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              <text>College student tenants have duties and rights</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, April 23, 1981&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 27&#13;
College student tenants&#13;
have duties and rights&#13;
College students* are reminded&#13;
that if they rent a house or&#13;
apartment they, as tenants, have&#13;
certain duties and rights.&#13;
According to Mary K. Ryan,&#13;
consumer protection division&#13;
administrator with the Wisconsin&#13;
Department of Agriculture, Trade&#13;
and Consumer Protection, it is&#13;
important for tenants to know&#13;
what their duties and rights are.&#13;
As a tenant, students must pay&#13;
rent and hold up their end of the&#13;
rental agreement. At the end of&#13;
the term, the property must be&#13;
returned in the same condition as&#13;
received, excepting for normal&#13;
wear and tear. Tenants are&#13;
responsible for any damages&#13;
which they or their guests have&#13;
caused. Unless otherwise agreed,&#13;
tenants are also responsible for&#13;
routine minor repairs, such as the&#13;
replacement of faucet washers&#13;
and light bulbs, which can be&#13;
handled at a minimum cost.&#13;
As a tenant, students have&#13;
certain important rights, such as&#13;
the right of peaceful possession.&#13;
The concept that "one's home is&#13;
one's castle" applies here.&#13;
Tenants have the right of&#13;
privacy. No one may invade their&#13;
"home" without legally specified&#13;
authority. Even the landlord, who&#13;
has the right to repair, inspect and&#13;
show the premises at reasonable&#13;
times, may enter only after 12&#13;
hours advance notice, or with the&#13;
tenant's specific permission&#13;
except in emergencies.&#13;
The dwelling must be safe am.&#13;
sanitary and "habitable." It&#13;
should be free of pests and&#13;
structural defects. There should&#13;
be proper wiring, plumbing and&#13;
heating and adequate locks. A&#13;
landlord must tell tenants about&#13;
any serious defects before rental&#13;
of the property.&#13;
If the property is unsafe or&#13;
unsanitary, and the landlord&#13;
refuses to make the necessary&#13;
repairs, the landlord should be&#13;
notified in writing about any intention&#13;
to move out without further&#13;
obligation to pay rent. This&#13;
does not necessarily mean that&#13;
rent can be withheld, while continuing&#13;
to live in the property. In&#13;
Madison and Milwaukee, rent&#13;
may be paid into a city escrow&#13;
fund until the landlord corrects&#13;
housing code violations. Only then&#13;
is the money released to the&#13;
landlord.&#13;
Before a tenant agrees to rent,&#13;
he or she should insist that all&#13;
repair promises be made . in&#13;
writing and that a completion date&#13;
is specified. This is a tenant's&#13;
right under the law.&#13;
If a security deposit is paid, the&#13;
landlord must return it within 21&#13;
days after the property is left.&#13;
Unpaid rent and actual physical&#13;
damages which the tenant caused&#13;
may be deducted from the&#13;
security deposit, but the landlord&#13;
must provide a written, itemized&#13;
explanation.&#13;
If the property is not rented for&#13;
a specific period of t ime or until a&#13;
specific date, this is a month - to -&#13;
month tenancy, which the landlord&#13;
may terminate at any time,&#13;
by giving written notice at least 28&#13;
days before the next rent date.&#13;
The tenant may terminate a&#13;
month - to - month tenancy the&#13;
same way. The landlord may also&#13;
raise the rent by giving at least 28&#13;
days notice before the next rent&#13;
date. If the rent is not paid, the&#13;
property recklessly damaged, or&#13;
the rental agreement broken, the&#13;
landlord can terminate the&#13;
tenancy on short notice, either&#13;
five or 14 days.&#13;
If the rental agreement is for a&#13;
specific time (one year lease, for&#13;
example), the rent may not ordinarily&#13;
be raised during that&#13;
period. The landlord may not&#13;
terminate the tenancy during the&#13;
lease period, unless the rent is not&#13;
paid, the property recklessly&#13;
damaged, or the rental agreement&#13;
broken. Meanwhile, the tenant has&#13;
an obligation to rent for the full&#13;
lease period. If the lease is broken&#13;
by moving out early, the landlord&#13;
theoretically has the option of&#13;
going to court to recover lost&#13;
rents. However, the landlord must&#13;
try to minimize these losses by rerenting&#13;
the property. If no rents&#13;
are lost, the landlord may have no&#13;
legal claim. Some landlords may&#13;
voluntarily release tenants from&#13;
the lease, and most will allow&#13;
subleasing to a new tenant. If&#13;
tenants refuse to leave the&#13;
property after their tenancy has&#13;
been terminated by the landlord,&#13;
the landlord may start eviction&#13;
action in small claims court. The&#13;
tenants must be properly served&#13;
with all notices, including notice&#13;
of t he court hearing. At the court&#13;
hearing, the landlord's request&#13;
may be challenged. Until a court&#13;
Easter&#13;
Treat&#13;
RANGER Photo by Steve Myers&#13;
UW-Parkside's Child Care Center was&#13;
treated to an Easter egg hunt by&#13;
Marketing Club and Marvey the&#13;
Heritage Hare From Heritage Banks of&#13;
Racine on April 15.&#13;
eviction notice is carried out by&#13;
the sheriff, the landlord may not&#13;
"take the law into his own hands"&#13;
by confiscating or "locking in"&#13;
your personal belongings, or by&#13;
using deception or force. If the&#13;
landlord has suffered rental&#13;
losses, the tenant may be required&#13;
to pay twice the amount of those&#13;
losses.&#13;
Information and assistance for&#13;
landlord problems may be&#13;
available from local groups and&#13;
agencies, including housing code&#13;
officials, landlord and tenant&#13;
associations, university housing&#13;
officials, city rental relations&#13;
boards, and perhaps an attorney.&#13;
In small claims court, tenants&#13;
should be prepared with facts,&#13;
witnesses and documentation to&#13;
support their claim. To start a&#13;
small claims action, tenants&#13;
should contact the clerk of the&#13;
small claims court in the county.&#13;
Small claims procedures are&#13;
simple and informal. An attorney&#13;
is not required, although it may be&#13;
a good idea.&#13;
If the landlord violates certain&#13;
state rules, for example, by&#13;
refusing to return or account for&#13;
the security deposit, the tenant&#13;
may be able to start an action in&#13;
small claims court.&#13;
A copy of the state rules may be&#13;
obtained from the Wisconsin&#13;
Department of Agriculture, Trade&#13;
and Consumer Protection, P.O.&#13;
Box 8911, Madison, Wisconsin&#13;
53708, or from department&#13;
regional offices in Altoona, Green&#13;
Bay and Milwaukee.&#13;
Nuclear waste dumping in Wis. is possibility&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
On March 26, Robert Litzau, a&#13;
representative from the Black&#13;
Hills Alliance, spoke at Parkside&#13;
about a bill, which is currently&#13;
being discussed, that could result&#13;
in Waupaca, Waushara, and&#13;
Shawano counties becoming a&#13;
high level nuclear waste dump.&#13;
The biggest political problem in&#13;
the world is high level radioactive&#13;
waste disposal, according to&#13;
Litzau. He said that the fuel pools&#13;
are all full and that the waste has&#13;
to be disposed someplace.&#13;
Litzau said that the granite&#13;
bedrock, contained in the&#13;
Canadian Shield which extends&#13;
down across Wisconsin, is high on&#13;
the list for waste disposal. He&#13;
said, "Minnesota and Michigan&#13;
have publicly stated, through&#13;
their government, that they do not&#13;
want any radioactive waste."&#13;
Litzau said, "Last summer the&#13;
DOE (Department of Energy)&#13;
came into Wisconsin and had a&#13;
meeting with Governor Dreyfus&#13;
because Governor Dreyfus invited&#13;
them here. The meeting was held&#13;
in Madison, and was supposed to&#13;
be a public meeting, but they tried&#13;
to make it a private meeting.&#13;
Eighty people went and pounded&#13;
on the door, and they had to open&#13;
it."&#13;
A committee, "The Ad Hoc&#13;
Committee on Radioactive&#13;
Waste," composed of Joseph&#13;
Strohl from Racine, Democratic&#13;
State Senator and Chairman of the&#13;
Wisconsin Senate Energy Committee,&#13;
and Mary Lou Muntz from&#13;
Madison, State Democratic&#13;
Representative and Chairperson&#13;
of the Wisconsin Environmental&#13;
Resources Committee, formed to&#13;
review waste disposal policy,&#13;
according to Litzau.&#13;
Litzau said that Bill WLCS:&#13;
146/3, written by the Strohl -&#13;
Muntz committee on 3-4-81, woul d&#13;
provide for the establishment of a&#13;
Radioactive Waste Review Board,&#13;
having a policy advisory committee&#13;
composed of various local&#13;
representatives and a technical&#13;
advisory committee made up of&#13;
representatives from various&#13;
state agencies, such as Department&#13;
of Natural Resources,&#13;
Health and Social Services, and&#13;
Department of Transportation.&#13;
Litzau said that this bill will go&#13;
to the Senate Energy Committee&#13;
and the Assembly Environmental&#13;
Resources Committee for&#13;
hearings, and perhaps amendments&#13;
and a public hearing.&#13;
Litzau said that after the bill&#13;
passes through the committees, it&#13;
will be voted on by the legislature,&#13;
and then signed by the governor&#13;
into law.&#13;
"The Radioactive Waste&#13;
Review Board will negotiate with&#13;
the DOE," Litzau said. "If they&#13;
agree about a plan for the site of&#13;
investigation for radioactive&#13;
waste in Wisconsin, then the&#13;
agreement would become a&#13;
contract in the form of a bill."&#13;
Litzau explained that, next, this&#13;
bill would seek approval by a vote&#13;
in the Wisconsin Legislature. "If&#13;
they voted "no" that they did not&#13;
like the plan, then the bill would go&#13;
back to negotiations until they&#13;
came up with a new plan," Litzau&#13;
said. "It's like a labor negotiation,&#13;
you keep on doing it until you&#13;
agree."&#13;
"So, essentially, we're being&#13;
locked into a process," Litzau&#13;
warned.&#13;
"Several reports about&#13;
radioactive waste storage consider&#13;
the granite in Wisconsin's&#13;
geology very good, but the main&#13;
thing that they are looking for is&#13;
favorable public opinion," Litzau&#13;
stated. "They want people to say&#13;
'Yes, we need it. We want it. It will&#13;
be good for the economy and&#13;
national security'."&#13;
"One of the interesting&#13;
provisions of this Bill 146 is that&#13;
the DOE would have to obey all&#13;
state laws, county resolutions,&#13;
town board resolutions, and Indian&#13;
Reservation laws," Litzau&#13;
said. "The problem is that the&#13;
, federal government has not yet&#13;
written any legislation for dealing&#13;
with commercial nuclear waste,"&#13;
he warned.&#13;
Litzau said that during the last&#13;
Congressional session just before^&#13;
Carter left office, a flurry of a ction&#13;
was taken on nuclear waste.&#13;
However, Litzau pointed out that&#13;
during the last day of th e session,&#13;
high level waste was deleted from&#13;
the bills, while low level waste&#13;
remained.&#13;
He said that although there is&#13;
not any federal legislation dealing&#13;
with high level waste, the state of&#13;
Wisconsin is still in the process of&#13;
writing contracts and negotiating&#13;
with the DOE. "It is presumed&#13;
that when the DOE finally gets&#13;
federal legislation that it will over&#13;
- ride all state, local, municipal,&#13;
and town board resolutions,"&#13;
Litzau commented.&#13;
According to Litzau, the Reagan&#13;
plan is to consolidate the DOE and&#13;
the DOD (Department of&#13;
Defense), having the DOD administer&#13;
the functions currently&#13;
managed by the DOE. "So very&#13;
likely," said Litzau, "the military&#13;
will take over the transportation&#13;
of high level nuclear waste, and&#13;
Wisconsin will be locked in by&#13;
virtue of signing a contract. Then&#13;
we will not have any knowledge&#13;
about nuclear waste, except what&#13;
comes through the military as&#13;
unclassified."&#13;
Six days before Carter left office,&#13;
the federal Department of&#13;
Transportation (DOT) finalized'&#13;
some rules for the transportation&#13;
of high level nuclear waste, according&#13;
to Litzau. He said that&#13;
"all military wastes are exempt&#13;
from the rules."&#13;
"In the Appendix to these rules,&#13;
which were dated about 1-6-81, an&#13;
interesting thing is that they are&#13;
not to be finalized and&#13;
promulgated until February of&#13;
1982," Litzau said. "This is by&#13;
Carter's, not Reagan's,&#13;
deregulation. That creates the&#13;
question: Why are they being&#13;
delayed?"&#13;
"In the Appendix, the DOT rules&#13;
on transportation say that the&#13;
states, first, will not be notified of&#13;
when shipments are coming&#13;
through. Second, all rules and&#13;
laws on state, local, township, and&#13;
county board levels are null and&#13;
void. Three, the states have no&#13;
control over routes, times of&#13;
shipments, or anything else,"&#13;
Litzau said.&#13;
Litzau said that in the last year&#13;
about eight counties, eleven&#13;
townships, and five Indian&#13;
reservations in Wisconsin have&#13;
put bans on storing and transporting&#13;
nuclear wastes within&#13;
their boundaries.&#13;
"It is suspected that the reasons&#13;
that the feds haven't written any&#13;
laws about the management and&#13;
storage of nuclear waste, is&#13;
because they want everything else&#13;
to be in place, to have some state&#13;
signed contracts, before they pass&#13;
the laws which say 'Nothing that&#13;
you folks want counts. None of&#13;
your rules will hold any water&#13;
because we are going to make&#13;
them all null and void'," Litzau&#13;
said.&#13;
"Why is Wisconsin involved&#13;
with the DOE when there are no&#13;
laws about what is going to&#13;
happen?" Litzau asked.&#13;
He concluded, "We are being&#13;
sold a bill of goods and the bill of&#13;
goods is going to leave us with no&#13;
strings attached through the&#13;
process."&#13;
Ranger is in contact with state&#13;
officials and will be reporting&#13;
additional information about Bill&#13;
146/3 in the near future. &#13;
2 Thursday, April 23,1981 RANGER&#13;
Remembrance of holocausts&#13;
"Days of Remembrance,"&#13;
memorializing the Jewish&#13;
holocaust in Nazi Germany and&#13;
the genocide of the Armenian&#13;
people at the hands of invading&#13;
Turks will be marked in a series of&#13;
programs at UW-Parkside under&#13;
sponsorship of the Center for&#13;
Multicultural Studies.&#13;
The "Days of Remembrance"&#13;
are being observed nationally&#13;
under auspices of the Holocaust&#13;
Memorial Council, established by&#13;
federal legislation last October.&#13;
Events at Parkside will begin&#13;
with free screening of the feature&#13;
film "Voyage of the Damned" at 8&#13;
p.m. on Tuesday, April 28, in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
The film is based on the story of&#13;
937 Jewish refugees who fled Nazi&#13;
Germany on an ocean liner in 1939&#13;
believing they had been granted&#13;
asylum in Cuba only to learn&#13;
Germany had secretly arranged&#13;
for Cuba to deny them entry and&#13;
force their return to Germany and&#13;
certain death. The film stars Faye&#13;
I Like to Jog!&#13;
Dunaway, Max von Sydow, Orson&#13;
Welles, James Mason, Lee Grant,&#13;
Malcolm McDowell and&#13;
Katharine Ross.&#13;
A State Historical Society of&#13;
Wisconsin slide tape, "A Story of&#13;
Renewed Lives," recounting the&#13;
experiences of Wisconsin survivors&#13;
of the holocaust, will be&#13;
shown at a special Social Science&#13;
Roundtable at noon on Wednesday,&#13;
April 29 in the Campus&#13;
Union, Room 107. Philosophy&#13;
Professor David Levin will&#13;
provide a commentary.&#13;
The slide tape will be repeated&#13;
with a commentary by Walter&#13;
Pelz, one of the Wisconsin survivors,&#13;
following a kosher - style&#13;
dinner at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
April 29, in the Campus Union,&#13;
Room 104. The menu will include&#13;
matzo ball soup, cole slaw,&#13;
braised brisket of beef, farfel (egg&#13;
barley), challah (egg bread) and&#13;
apple strudel.&#13;
The event is co-sponsored by&#13;
Beth Israel Sinai Congregation,&#13;
Racine, and Beth Hillel&#13;
Congregation, Kenosha. Advance&#13;
reservations, at $5.95 each, are&#13;
required and can be made in&#13;
person or by phone with the&#13;
Campus Union Information&#13;
Center (553-2345) by noon A pril 27.&#13;
Wine will be available by the&#13;
carafe.&#13;
A free program on Thursday,&#13;
April 30, at 8 p.m. will present two&#13;
short films, "Night and Fog," in&#13;
French with English subtitles,&#13;
which examines the world of the&#13;
Nazi concentration camps, and&#13;
"Where Are My People," which&#13;
traces the history of Armenia&#13;
from its origins to the massacre of&#13;
1-1/2 million people and subsequent&#13;
resurrection of the nation&#13;
by the survivors. The films are co&#13;
- sponsored by St. Mesrob and St.&#13;
Hagop Armenian Apostolic&#13;
Churches of Racine.&#13;
The program will conclude with&#13;
a free public talk on "The Armenian&#13;
Genocide in Historical&#13;
Perspective" by Marjorie&#13;
Housepian Dobkin, associate dean&#13;
of st udies at Barnard College and&#13;
a descendant of survivors erf the&#13;
massacre, at 4 p.m. on Saturday,&#13;
May 2, at St. Hagop's Church.&#13;
Dobkin has traveled extensively&#13;
in Armenia and Turkey and is the&#13;
author of a book "The Smyrna&#13;
Affair." She is married to Machbi&#13;
Dobkin, a Jew, giving her a unique&#13;
perspective on the history of bo th&#13;
the Armenian and the Jewish&#13;
people.&#13;
Beginning April 24, a display of&#13;
materials relating to the Jewish&#13;
holocaust and the Armenian&#13;
genocide will be on display in the&#13;
Parkside Library.&#13;
MORE THAN 400 arrowheads and other Indian artifacts including&#13;
spear points and fish hooks from 29 states and Mexico&#13;
and Canada have a new home at UW-Parkside. The collection is&#13;
the result of a "lifetime" hobby of collecting relics began by Otto&#13;
C. Otteson of 1109 Orchard St., Racine, wfien he found an&#13;
arrowhead in a plowed field near the Root River.&#13;
Reception honors Esser&#13;
But I Also&#13;
Enjoy Other&#13;
Things In Life&#13;
STOP IN AND&#13;
PICK UP SOME&#13;
NEW TOYS.&#13;
Special Of&#13;
The Week&#13;
ADULT MUGS&#13;
Chorus plans&#13;
spring concert&#13;
A** ajft v *&gt;&#13;
*654-9663&#13;
• •&#13;
2410 52nd St. Kenosha&#13;
The lyrical, light - hearted world&#13;
of o peretta will form the musical&#13;
setting for the spring concert of&#13;
the UW - Parkside chorus and&#13;
choral under the direction of Prof.&#13;
Frank Mueller at 3:30 p. m. on&#13;
Sunday, April 26, in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theater. Admission is&#13;
$1.50 at the door.&#13;
The singers will present&#13;
choruses from "LaBelle Helene"&#13;
by Offenbach and from the&#13;
"Yeomen of the Guard" by&#13;
Gilbert and Sullivan and selections&#13;
from "The Merry Widow" by&#13;
Lehar and "The Red Mill" by&#13;
Herbert.&#13;
The 55 voice combined chorus&#13;
and chorale will be accompanied&#13;
by pianists Laura Frisk and&#13;
Patricia Pedersen.&#13;
Dr. Robert Esser, an associate&#13;
professor of life science at&#13;
Parkside who is retiring at the end&#13;
of th e school year, will be honored&#13;
at an informal reception from 2 to&#13;
5 p. m. on Sunday, April 26, in the&#13;
Parkside Union. He has taught in&#13;
the UW System for 36 y ears.&#13;
His colleagues in the life science&#13;
faculty, who are arranging the&#13;
event, said Esser's friends and&#13;
current and former students are&#13;
invited to attend.&#13;
Esser, 65, began his teaching&#13;
career at Marquette University,&#13;
where he earned his PhD degree.&#13;
In 1945, he joined the UW&#13;
System as an instructor at the&#13;
Racine Extension Center, then&#13;
housed in the McMynn Building&#13;
which was located at 7th St. and&#13;
Lake Ave., and then at the Racine&#13;
Center Campus on Main St.&#13;
With the establishment of&#13;
Parkside, which incorporated the&#13;
former two - year campuses in&#13;
Racine and Kenosha, Esser&#13;
became one of the first faculty&#13;
members at the new four year&#13;
institution aiding in development&#13;
of the academic program and&#13;
recruiting in the life sciences.&#13;
Twice, in 1968 an d 1980, Esser&#13;
has been awarded distinguished&#13;
teaching awards based on student&#13;
nominations. During his career,&#13;
he had developed a number of&#13;
health - related courses and many&#13;
of his former students are&#13;
now health professionals in&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin. He also&#13;
developed such specialized and&#13;
innovative courses as organic&#13;
gardening and physiology of&#13;
vitamins.&#13;
Mystery opens in studio&#13;
"The Real Inspector Hound,"&#13;
Tom Stoppard's looking glass&#13;
comedy of m ystery and suspense,&#13;
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— Ballet Shoes — Tap Shoes —&#13;
All Dancing Supplies&#13;
|6204-22nd Avenue, Kenosha 658-2498&#13;
ganger&#13;
is now accepting applications for&#13;
Editor and&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
for the 1981-82 academic year.&#13;
Applicants must be registered UWParkside&#13;
students planning to take&#13;
at least 6 credits each semester.&#13;
Deadline for applications:&#13;
April 24, 1981&#13;
Send application&#13;
&amp; resume to:&#13;
Ranger&#13;
WLLC D139&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141&#13;
Written by Tom Stoppard _JDirectedby Norman Gano"&#13;
April29^30~ at 8:00 PM.., May 1, 2 at 8:00 PM.. . M^^T^Tp^&#13;
Presented by UW-Parkside Dramatic Arts Discipline&#13;
Communication Arts Studio Theatre. .Limited Seating Reserve Earlv&#13;
IjgkgigllljOJo^S^dents^^^ljOJor Non-sludentrri^to^l^-^^&#13;
will be performed by Parkside's&#13;
dramatic arts students April 29&#13;
through May 2 at 8 p.m. and May 3&#13;
at 2 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Studio Theater. Tickets are&#13;
$1 for students and senior citizens&#13;
and $1.50 f or others and can be&#13;
reserved by calling 553-2345 or 553-&#13;
2042&amp;&#13;
Director Norman Gano says&#13;
"The Real Inspector Hound" is&#13;
a mystery - comedy in which the&#13;
audience views the production of a&#13;
play and at the same time watches&#13;
and listens to two drama critics&#13;
who have come to review the&#13;
performance as the critics&#13;
become involved when both their&#13;
personal and professional lives&#13;
intertwine with the movement of&#13;
the play."&#13;
"The play within a play is set in&#13;
'Muldoon Manor', a strangely&#13;
inaccessible house from which no&#13;
roads lead, though there are ways&#13;
of getting to it, weather permitting,"&#13;
Gano says. "There are&#13;
disappearances, mysterious&#13;
strangers, enigmatic radio&#13;
reports, confusions of identity and&#13;
at least one dead body. Inspector&#13;
Hound must put the pieces of this&#13;
puzzle together to solve the&#13;
mystery," Gano says.&#13;
Jeff McKelvie of Cudahy plays&#13;
Inspector Hound. Others in the&#13;
cast are Richard O'Brien,&#13;
Richard Horton and Rebecca&#13;
Julich of Racine, Ron Schneider&#13;
and John Scenters of Kenosha,&#13;
Kathy Orschel of Powers Lake&#13;
and Pamela Tenuta of S omers.&#13;
Gano, who joined the dramatic&#13;
arts staff last fall, previously was&#13;
a director, actor and teacher in&#13;
New York and New England.&#13;
Since moving to the Milwaukee&#13;
area, he has directed productions&#13;
for the Festival Theater and the&#13;
Milwaukee Religious Drama&#13;
Guild and worked with the Performing&#13;
Arts Center Theater&#13;
School and the PAC Players. &#13;
Sternglass speaks&#13;
about radiation&#13;
Ernest Sternglass, a professor&#13;
of radiation at the University of&#13;
Pittsburgh School of Medicine&#13;
will present two talks at Parkside&#13;
on Wednesday, April 29, under&#13;
sponsorship of Mobilization for&#13;
Survival, a student organization&#13;
Sternglass will speak about&#13;
"Bomb Testing in the Southwest"&#13;
at 3 p. m. in Molinaro Hall, Room&#13;
111, and on "Effects of&#13;
Radiation," including health dat*&#13;
from the Three Mile Island ac-&#13;
?ic&#13;
ent&#13;
' at 7:30 p" m&lt; *&#13;
n Molinaro 1U5.&#13;
Sternglass is the author of more&#13;
than 100 articles on radiation&#13;
physics and related topics and of&#13;
two books, "Low Level&#13;
Radiation" and "Secret Fallout."&#13;
In addition to his Pittsburgh post,&#13;
he is an adjunct professor of&#13;
history and philosophy of s cience&#13;
at Indiana University at&#13;
Bloomington and a fellow of the&#13;
American Physics Society.&#13;
Arterberry presents&#13;
mime in "Silent Moves"&#13;
Trent Arterberry, billed as&#13;
"The Mick Jagger of M ime," will&#13;
bring his one man show "Silent&#13;
Moves" to the UW-Parkside&#13;
campus under sponsorship of the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board at 8&#13;
p.m. on Tuesday, April 28, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Tickets are $2.50 for UW-P&#13;
students and $3 for others and are&#13;
available at the Campus Union&#13;
Information Center or at the door.&#13;
A performer for the past ten&#13;
years, Arterberry, a native of Los&#13;
Angeles, first served a two-year&#13;
apprenticeship with a local mime&#13;
company before putting on his&#13;
own show. After touring in&#13;
California, he moved to Boston in&#13;
1973 and for the next three years&#13;
performed with Kenyon Martin's&#13;
National Mime Theatre.&#13;
He then teamed with producer&#13;
Mark Flashen to produce "Silent&#13;
Moves," which combines mime,&#13;
music and movement, and has&#13;
been presented at more than 250&#13;
theaters, art centers and&#13;
universities, including a critically&#13;
- acclaimed month - long&#13;
engagement at Boston's Music&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
Personals&#13;
TO BEE-KEEPER, my hive or yours?&#13;
Stinger&#13;
TO BEE-KEEPER, mine.&#13;
BEWARE of Big T's blood thirsty rodents!&#13;
DEBBIE who taught you how to park,&#13;
anyway? H's "wife"&#13;
NARIZt Give me that profile one more time!&#13;
Diego&#13;
LUSH AND BAD GIRL. Been to Chem.&#13;
lately? A. Banana&#13;
TO BEE-KEEPER (Pat M.) Let's pollenate&#13;
together — Stinger&#13;
ATTEND Aerobic dance classes, 2nd floor&#13;
library — Lori Maez instructor.&#13;
BRENDA PETERSON Happy 20th Birthday.&#13;
Hope it's special, just like you! Love,&#13;
Mary&#13;
BIG T - we love ya — R and J&#13;
ATTEND Aerobic exercise class - Human&#13;
Physiology and Reproduction Lab, Moln&#13;
515. Sat. evens. Penicillin included.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
SPORTS CAR. 1973 MGB. $2000. Evenings,&#13;
Douglas 843-3504.&#13;
TWO MEN'S SWEATSUITS. One small, one&#13;
large, like new. Used by Men's&#13;
Cheerleading Team. Contact Shirley Schmerling&#13;
553-2320.&#13;
Miscellaneous&#13;
BEWILDER your opponents. Impress your&#13;
friends. Learn expert BACKGAMMON&#13;
from top ranking Milwaukee professional.&#13;
All levels taught. Call Jim at 551-7404 for&#13;
reasonable rates.&#13;
EARN WHILE YOU LEARN. Assist retired&#13;
college teacher with correspondence&#13;
reading and organization of his library.&#13;
Hours can be arranged to suit your&#13;
schedule. Call 694-2251 for appointment.&#13;
BACKPACKERS, earn $1200 mth. enjoyably!&#13;
Information $3. Wilderness Expeditions, 97&#13;
Spadina Rd., 306, Toronto, Canada M5R&#13;
2T1.&#13;
He recently became the first&#13;
performing artist - in - residence&#13;
at Carnegie Institute's Three&#13;
Rivers Arts Festival and his&#13;
television appearances include a&#13;
feature which received an Emmy&#13;
nomination.&#13;
He has opened concerts for such&#13;
well - known artists as Buddy&#13;
Rich, Jean LucPonty and Billy&#13;
Preston.&#13;
Pre-Med elects&#13;
new officers&#13;
Earnest P. Celebre, vice -&#13;
president of St. Catherine's&#13;
Hospital, Kenosha, presented a&#13;
talk to Pre - Med Club, Monday,&#13;
April 20.&#13;
Celebre's presentation, entitled&#13;
"The Southeastern Family&#13;
Practice Clinic and its&#13;
Relationship to Parkside,"&#13;
focused on a nutshell explanation&#13;
of the clinic's first conceptions to&#13;
practices and procedures now&#13;
employed by the clinic.&#13;
Pre - Med students also took a&#13;
tour of the health care facility.&#13;
Club elections were also held.&#13;
Next year's officers are:&#13;
President, Kevin O'Hora; Vice -&#13;
President, Frank Cairo; and&#13;
Secretary, Chris Sartori.&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
FIRST&#13;
nauonai Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
Brian Felland Business Manager&#13;
Sue Michetti News Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Sports Editor&#13;
Brian Passino Photo Editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson Copy Editor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Dave Cramer, Dan Galbraith, Dan McCormack, Lori Meyer,&#13;
Steve Myers, Bruce Preston, Kim Schlater, Janet Well, Jeff Wicks&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of UW-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
Published every Thursday during the academic year except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
RANGER is printed by the Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UWParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wl 53141.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
paper with one inch margins. All letters must be signed and a telephone number in&#13;
eluded for verification.&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 9 a.m. for publication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
reserves all editorial privileges in refusing to print letters which contain false or&#13;
L defamatory content. .&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 23, 1981&#13;
Club&#13;
News&#13;
ew members join&#13;
~i AAu E psilon&#13;
Meetings to&#13;
Remember&#13;
Dr. Kelly Conrad, from Humber,&#13;
Mundie, and McClary, will&#13;
speak Wed. April 29 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
Moln. ill to the Industrial&#13;
Psychology Group about his work&#13;
as a psychological consultant to&#13;
management. He will also discuss&#13;
what possibilities graduates with&#13;
an industrial psychology concentration&#13;
might have in today's&#13;
job market.&#13;
Minority Student Union will be&#13;
holding their MSU Awards Day&#13;
for academic achievement as well&#13;
as service participation on April&#13;
29 f rom 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. in&#13;
Moln 107. All members are invited.&#13;
&#13;
The Parkside chapter of Pi Mu&#13;
Epsilon, national honorary&#13;
mathematics fraternity, initiated&#13;
18 new student members at its&#13;
spring meeting on April 13, in the&#13;
Campus Union.&#13;
Speaker for the event was&#13;
Professor Renzo Piccinini of&#13;
Memorial University, St. John's,&#13;
Newfoundland, whose topic was&#13;
"Some Examples of&#13;
Mathematical Research."&#13;
Piccinini is vice president of t he&#13;
Canadian Mathematical Society&#13;
and editor of the Canadian&#13;
Mathematical Bulletin and former&#13;
secretary - general of the&#13;
Brazilian Mathematical Society&#13;
as well as Dean of Arts and&#13;
Sciences at the University of&#13;
Brazilia. He also has taught at the&#13;
University of Sao Paolo and the&#13;
Swiss Federal Institute of&#13;
Technology in Zurich and in the&#13;
UW System.&#13;
Author of two books and 29 other&#13;
publications, he received his&#13;
undergraduate degree from the&#13;
University of S ao Paolo, the MS&#13;
from Harvard University and the&#13;
PhD from UW-Madison.&#13;
UW-P arksid e's Gam ma&#13;
Chapter of Pi Mu Epsilon is one of&#13;
6nly three in Wisconsin. The&#13;
organization is devoted to the&#13;
promotion of sc holarly activity in&#13;
mathematics.&#13;
Students initiated into the&#13;
fraternity are:&#13;
From Kenosha: James Andrea,&#13;
Natalie Bredek, Dino Druding,&#13;
Jeff Jurvis, Bernadette Kessler,&#13;
Valerie Vorel, and Kevin&#13;
Zuehlsdorf.&#13;
From 'Racine: Kenneth C.&#13;
Clark, Rhonda Dederich, Bonnie&#13;
Ertl, Bruce Klappauf, Robert Oik,&#13;
Sandra Pellegrino, and Robert&#13;
Quadracci.&#13;
From Great Lakes, 111.: Andres&#13;
C. Castillo.&#13;
From Caledonia: Todd&#13;
Laszewski.&#13;
From Neenah: Thomas Manteufel.&#13;
&#13;
POSTAL INSTANT PRESS&#13;
WILL GIVE g&#13;
THE BEARER&#13;
ON DEMAND&#13;
$1.00 TOWARD&#13;
ANY RESUME&#13;
PRINTING BUCK WHILE-YOU-WAIT&#13;
to a Customer&#13;
ONE FAST BUCK &#13;
4 Thursday, April 23, 1981 RANGER&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thursday, April 23&#13;
VIDEO TAPE at 1 p.m. in Union Square featuring "Kool and the Gang," Roger&#13;
Daltrey, Isaac Hayes, Pat Travers and Peter Gabriel. Admission is free.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
F&lt;&#13;
tf&#13;
ULTY RECITAL a* 1 P-m. in the Union Cinema with Martha Dodds, soprano.&#13;
The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, April 24&#13;
VIDEO TAPE will be repeated at 1 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
PLAY "Still Beat Noble Hearts" at 7:30 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
featuring Laurie James. Tickets are available at the Union Information Center.&#13;
Admission is $2.50.&#13;
MOVIES "Singing in the Rain" and "Shall We Dance" will be shown at 8 n m in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission at the door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1 50 for&#13;
a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, April 25&#13;
CT^&#13;
R&#13;
?&#13;
NCE&#13;
"&#13;
AACe&#13;
°L0&#13;
°&#13;
Wr,&#13;
en&#13;
" starts at 8:30 amCaU&#13;
ext&#13;
- 2351 for more&#13;
Ai mrSt fSSItVZQ' Z UW"&#13;
Parkside&#13;
- UW-Extension and GTI's Wo/Men's Bureau.&#13;
ALUMNI COLLEGE starts at 8:30 a.m. Call ext. 2515 for more information.&#13;
Sunday, April 26&#13;
C n&#13;
NCJ?S.&#13;
T a* 3:30 p nV the Union Cinema with Prof. Frank Mueller directing the&#13;
Parkside chorus and chorale. Admission at the door is $1.50.&#13;
MOVIES "Singing in the Rain" and "Shall We Dance" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m&#13;
in the Umon Cinema. F&#13;
Monday, April 27&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. Prof. Herb Kubly will talk on "Native's&#13;
Return: Switzerland s Turbulent March Into the 20th Century." The program is&#13;
free and open to the public. 8&#13;
"&#13;
Study SkiUs&#13;
" at 1 p.m. in CA142. All students are welcome.&#13;
CONCERT at 8 p.m. in GR 103 featuring the Parkside Guitar Ensemble. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Tuesday, April 28&#13;
FILM "Voyage of the Damned" will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema. The&#13;
film is free and open to the public.&#13;
MIME with Trent Arterberry at 8p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre. Tickets&#13;
are available at the Union Information Center. Admission is $2.50 for Parkside&#13;
students and $3.00 for others. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Wednesday, April 29&#13;
ROUND TABLE/SLIDE TAPE at 12 noon in Union 207. P rof. David Levin will&#13;
comment after the showing of "A Story of Renewed Lives." The program is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
9®^&#13;
EERT by the Parkside Band at 2 p.m. in Main Place. All are welcome.&#13;
PuTJi. nw1?,' m 11L Dr&#13;
- Ernest Sternglass of the University of&#13;
Pittsburgh will talk on Bomb Testing in the Southwest." The program is free&#13;
a™0P®nk&gt; the public. Sponsored by Student Mobilization for Survival.&#13;
KOSHER DINNER/SLIDE TAPE at 6:30 p.m. After the dinner the slide tape "A&#13;
Story of Renewed Lives" will be repeated with a commentary by Walter Peltz,&#13;
i pr-Tirnif ™sc&#13;
°&#13;
nsin TY1™" of the Holocaust. CaU ext. 2345 for information,&#13;
n Vr£° p,m' M0LN105, Dr&#13;
-&#13;
Ernest Sternglass wiU talk on "Effects of&#13;
Radiation. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
COURSES "Women and Practical Financial Planning" and "Financial&#13;
Management and Marketing for Recreation Businesses" at 7 p.m. in Tallent&#13;
"&#13;
aU_Call ext. 2312 for more information. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
$LW sJoM^fed by PAB0 SqUarC featuring&#13;
"&#13;
Bermuda Triangle". Admission is&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
Joseph.&#13;
4433 22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
Women take fifth at NIU&#13;
The women's track team ended&#13;
up fifth in the Northern Illinois&#13;
Invitational last Saturday behind&#13;
the Northern Illinois squad, Northern&#13;
Iowa, Marquette, and UW -&#13;
Milwaukee. However, individual&#13;
performances were good, keyed&#13;
by the warm temperatures and&#13;
the lack of wind.&#13;
Wendy Burman started the&#13;
running events off by winning the&#13;
10,000 meter run in 35:58.9, her&#13;
best time this year. Kellie Benzow&#13;
followed by winning the 5000&#13;
meters in 17:42.5, good enough to&#13;
qualify for the nationals. They&#13;
both later doubled, Kellie taking&#13;
fifth in the 800 and Wendy taking&#13;
fourth in the 3000. Cindy Spaciel&#13;
tied for second in the 200 and took&#13;
third in the 100. Dona Driscoll&#13;
lowered her own school record in&#13;
the 400 me ter hurdles to 1:07.9 in&#13;
taking fifth place.&#13;
The 800 medley relay team of&#13;
JoAnne Carey, Pam Carey, Rose&#13;
Martin and Dona Driscoll took&#13;
third place with a time only four -&#13;
tenths of a second off their time of&#13;
last week. The 4x100 meter relay&#13;
team of JoAnne Carey, Spaciel,&#13;
Driscoll, and Martin were contending&#13;
for the lead until a&#13;
dropped baton slowed their efforts,&#13;
and as a result they placed&#13;
fifth with a time of 53.2 seconds.&#13;
In the field events, Denise&#13;
Schreiber upped her team record&#13;
in the discus by six feet to 122 feet&#13;
1 inch, good enough for third&#13;
place. JoAnne and Cindy placed&#13;
third and fifth in the long jump&#13;
with leaps of 17'6" and 17'4"&#13;
respectively.&#13;
This weekend the team travels&#13;
to Platteville for a triangular&#13;
meet with Luther College and UW&#13;
- Platteville as a tuneup to the&#13;
WWIAC Championships on May 1 -&#13;
2.&#13;
Wargames played with USA walkers&#13;
by Steve Brunner&#13;
One of the biggest athletic&#13;
events ever to be harvested at&#13;
Parkside will take place on the&#13;
inner loop road on May 3. Walkers&#13;
from around the country will&#13;
compete at Parkside in the 20&#13;
kilometer championship starting&#13;
at 11 a .m.&#13;
Lack of funds for the event,&#13;
which is sponsored strictly by&#13;
Parkside, have hindered it from&#13;
becoming a formal national race.&#13;
$1500 is needed for the event.&#13;
Parkside has produced only $700&#13;
thus far. The majority of this&#13;
money was donated by the&#13;
Parkside Wargames Club.&#13;
Coordinator of the event Bob&#13;
Lawson said, "It's a great gesture&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
of this club to help out another&#13;
school function which is in&#13;
desperate need. Their funds will&#13;
help pay for the banquet."&#13;
An event such as this is usually&#13;
ceremonial. The past winners are&#13;
flown in, and the judges are paid.&#13;
However, this will not be the case&#13;
at this race. "The event could&#13;
havfe been cited somewhere else&#13;
which could have been funded&#13;
better, but many of the walkers,&#13;
as well as the officials, wanted it&#13;
at Parkside because of its&#13;
facilities and association as being&#13;
one of the top race walking&#13;
schools."&#13;
The last racewalking championship&#13;
was held in 1979. The top&#13;
two finishers of this race will&#13;
represent the United States at the&#13;
Laguno Cup in Valencia, Spain in&#13;
October. The Laguno Cup is the&#13;
biggest event for race walkers&#13;
outside &lt;rf th e Olympics. The last&#13;
U.S. team consisted of Jim&#13;
Hiering, Chris Hanson, both&#13;
Parkside alumni, and Maro&#13;
Evonuik of Longmont, Colorado.&#13;
Hiering is favored to repeat as&#13;
champion, but Parkside's&#13;
awesome freshman Ray Sharp&#13;
should give Hiering all he can&#13;
handle.&#13;
Students and faculty are asked&#13;
to help with funds if they can. One&#13;
may donate by making out his/her&#13;
check to: "Parkside Walking&#13;
Fund"; and drop it off at the&#13;
Physical Education offices on the&#13;
second floor by May 1.&#13;
L I N S fvT- LIN G&#13;
CkMn.&#13;
Coupon&#13;
% Off&#13;
on the second buffe t&#13;
Eat All You&#13;
Want Buffet&#13;
Lunch Buffet $4.35&#13;
Dinner Buffet $6.55&#13;
10% Discount&#13;
with UW-P I.D.&#13;
*41 Villa Capri&#13;
1 Shopping Center&#13;
I 2116-20th Place&#13;
551-7883&#13;
The&#13;
IMlfH&#13;
SALES - PARTS&#13;
552-7070&#13;
County Hwy. "H" At Hwy. 11,&#13;
Stvrtovant, Wit.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654-2932&#13;
MAMA MIA!&#13;
PARKSIDE F OOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
ITALIAN&#13;
ETHNIC FRIDAY&#13;
COMBINATION PLATE SPECIAL&#13;
FRI. APRIL 24 —&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
• HOMEMADE LASAGNA&#13;
• FRESH ITALIAN SAUSAGE&#13;
• FETTUCINI ALFREDO&#13;
• ZUCHINNI OR G REEN BEANS&#13;
• GARLIC BREAD&#13;
• COMPLIMENTARY GLASS OF&#13;
CHIANTI WIN E&#13;
ALL FOR ONLY $2.49&#13;
ALSO: ITALIAN BOMBERS &amp; MINESTROb </text>
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              <text>Breadth of Knowledge - Requirement revision proposed</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, April 9, 1981&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 25&#13;
Requirement revision proposed&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
A subcommittee of the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee&#13;
(APC) has proposed !V new&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
requirements for Parkside&#13;
graduates. The proposal needs to&#13;
be approved by the entire APC&#13;
and the Faculty Senate.&#13;
"We are trying to think&#13;
seriously about the Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge as a requirement for a&#13;
baccalaureate degree," said&#13;
Beecham Robinson, APC&#13;
chairman. "We're trying to make&#13;
everybody meet the problem.&#13;
What does general education&#13;
mean? If a person has a B.A.&#13;
degree, no matter what their&#13;
major is, what are some things&#13;
that we think should make up their&#13;
preparation?"&#13;
"If you allow students to&#13;
specialize, just focus very&#13;
narrowly, all the way through a&#13;
four - year program, then they&#13;
probably don't need to be in a&#13;
liberal arts institution," said&#13;
Robinson.&#13;
"Many students are reluctant to&#13;
explore unfamiliar areas of&#13;
knowledge," the subcommittee&#13;
said in its report, "either because&#13;
they worry about their grade point&#13;
averages or because they prefer&#13;
courses relevant to their immediate&#13;
vocational goals. The&#13;
existing UW-Parkside distribution&#13;
requirements do not provide&#13;
balancing incentives for students&#13;
to broaden their interests."&#13;
The term "Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge," applied to the&#13;
distribution requirements, comes&#13;
from a report adopted by the&#13;
Faculty Senate in 1976. That&#13;
report contained some discussion&#13;
of the ultimate aims of general&#13;
education: "The university's&#13;
graduates must have studied this&#13;
society and the ideas — human,&#13;
social and scientific — which have&#13;
shaped it and which continue to&#13;
influence it and have developed&#13;
the open and questioning habits of&#13;
thought which will enable him or&#13;
her to evaluate new ideas effectively."&#13;
&#13;
The goals of the existing&#13;
requirements remain unclear and&#13;
do not fairly reflect the "special&#13;
character" of Parkside and its&#13;
students, according to the subcommittee's&#13;
report. "We concede&#13;
that existing requirements allow&#13;
students sufficient freedom of&#13;
choice to meet diverse needs and&#13;
backgrounds, and that some&#13;
alternative routes are available&#13;
(CLEP tests, credit for high&#13;
school foreign language)," reads&#13;
the report. "We do not feel that&#13;
they embody any positive vision of&#13;
this institution's character."&#13;
The subcommittee feels that the&#13;
existing program fails to embody&#13;
the institution's commitment to&#13;
academic excellence. Compared&#13;
to other universities, Parkside&#13;
requires relatively few credits&#13;
and makes relatively few&#13;
restrictions on what courses may&#13;
count toward a degree. "We are&#13;
doing only half of our job if we&#13;
graduate first - rate specialists&#13;
with second - rate general&#13;
educations," the report said.&#13;
The subcommittee believes that&#13;
the entire program needs to be&#13;
strengthened and made applicable&#13;
to all Parkside graduates.&#13;
To that end, the subcommittee&#13;
made a series of proposed&#13;
requirements which they feel&#13;
should accomplish those aims.&#13;
The report summarizes that the&#13;
proposed requirements would call&#13;
for every Parkside graduate to&#13;
have a basic understanding of: 1)&#13;
alternative culture forms and&#13;
intellectual systems; 2) the&#13;
purposes, philosophy and&#13;
procedures of the behavioral and&#13;
social sciences; 3) a variety of&#13;
literary forms and some&#13;
familiarity with important works&#13;
in those forms; 4) the purposes,&#13;
philosophy and procedures of the&#13;
natural sciences; 5) the structure&#13;
and a fluency in the use of a self -&#13;
contained symbolic system other&#13;
than English; and 6) some experience&#13;
of the expressive arts&#13;
and some basic understanding of&#13;
their concepts.&#13;
"Students will still have options,"&#13;
said Robinson, "but it&#13;
looks like the options are&#13;
narrower. The titles and the&#13;
courses are going to start to be&#13;
closer to whatever they represent&#13;
... It won't be a baby course to&#13;
accommodate someone who isn't&#13;
really ready to do science, to do&#13;
art, to do music, (etc.). It will be a&#13;
course that is appropriate for&#13;
credit and that people will have to&#13;
deal with a real body of knowledge&#13;
and get their hands dirty doing&#13;
whatever the course is really&#13;
about."&#13;
There are still, however,&#13;
alternative routes. The specific&#13;
goals of the proposed&#13;
requirements, the committee&#13;
reports, should make it possible to&#13;
expand present opportunities for&#13;
students to satisfy requirements&#13;
without taking formal courses,&#13;
either on the basis of work done&#13;
before college or on the basis of&#13;
other life experiences.&#13;
Decisions on allowing students&#13;
to satisfy requirements by&#13;
alternative routes should be based&#13;
on their demonstrating those&#13;
The current requirements&#13;
30 credits,&#13;
distributed as follows:&#13;
1. Nine credits in Fine Arts&#13;
and Humanities (excluding&#13;
English 100, 101, 102 and&#13;
courses taken to fulfill the&#13;
foreign langu age&#13;
requirement).&#13;
2. Nine credits in Social and&#13;
Behavioral Sciences&#13;
3. Nine credits in Science&#13;
(excluding mathematics&#13;
courses numbered below&#13;
100). In each of the above&#13;
areas, the work must include&#13;
at least two&#13;
disciplines, with no more&#13;
than six credits in any one&#13;
discipline.&#13;
4. Three credits in&#13;
Management Science,&#13;
Engineering Science, Labor&#13;
Economics, or Education&#13;
(excluding Physical&#13;
Education courses).&#13;
competencies rather than on&#13;
being required to pass an&#13;
examination designed for a&#13;
particular Parkside course, according&#13;
to the report.&#13;
The subcommittee recommends&#13;
the continuation of satisfying&#13;
Parkside degree requirements&#13;
through high school foreign&#13;
language work. "It might be&#13;
possible to extend this to&#13;
mathematics," the subcommittee&#13;
reports, "perhaps using a combination&#13;
of a year in high school&#13;
calculus and performance on a&#13;
P a r k s i de p l a c e m e n t&#13;
examination."&#13;
The report concludes: "General&#13;
education requirements, which&#13;
affect all of our students and&#13;
reflect our deepest value commitments,&#13;
are and should be&#13;
subject to on-going debate in a&#13;
university which cares about the&#13;
quality of e ducation it offers. We&#13;
do not present this report in the&#13;
hope that it will end that debate,&#13;
and we do not expect that many of&#13;
our colleagues will find that they&#13;
agree with every feature of the&#13;
proposals we make. We hope,&#13;
instead, that most of our&#13;
colleagues will agree that the set&#13;
of requirements we propose is a&#13;
reasonable and superior alternative&#13;
to those now in effect at&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
The subcommittee's detailed,&#13;
38-page report was submitted to&#13;
the APC, which discussed the&#13;
report and decided to get as much&#13;
feedback as possible from all&#13;
interested parties.&#13;
Shortly after April 15 the APC&#13;
will consider formal action,&#13;
possibly amending it with&#13;
suggestions received. If approved,&#13;
it will be forwarded to the Faculty&#13;
Senate for action in May .&#13;
The APC is now requesting&#13;
input on the subcommittee's&#13;
proposal. A summary of the&#13;
proposal can be found in last&#13;
week's Ranger; the full text is&#13;
available at the Union Information&#13;
Kiosk. Students wishing&#13;
to comment on the proposal&#13;
should contact PSGA or attend the&#13;
April 10 PSGA Senate meeting in&#13;
Union 104.&#13;
ELF system essential to Trident submarine&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
"ELF, Trigger for Trident" was&#13;
discussed at Parkside on March&#13;
26, by John Stauber, President of&#13;
"Stop Project ELF."&#13;
"The Pentagon and the Navy&#13;
have said that ELF is absolutely&#13;
essential as a communication link&#13;
with the Trident Submarine,"&#13;
Stauber said.&#13;
Stauber described the Trident&#13;
as a 600 foot long submarine&#13;
capable of 2000 tim es the nuclear&#13;
destruction potential of the&#13;
Hiroshima bomb, which would&#13;
only receive ELF messages to&#13;
destruct without ever being able&#13;
to double check and make sure of&#13;
the message received. Stauber&#13;
said that the Navy wants to build&#13;
between 10 and 30 Tridents. "Each&#13;
submarine would also, through its&#13;
multiple independent re-entry&#13;
vehicle, be able to target&#13;
somewhere like 260 separate&#13;
cities," Stauber said.&#13;
"The main difference between&#13;
the Trident, . . . estimated to cost&#13;
about $50 billion, and existing&#13;
nuclear submarines is in the&#13;
Evening bus service&#13;
to continue next fall&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Carla&#13;
J. Stoffle announces that&#13;
evening bus service from UW -&#13;
Parkside to Kenosha and&#13;
Racine will continue during&#13;
fall semester 1982. Students&#13;
can thus plan to participate in&#13;
early registration for fall&#13;
classes assured that public&#13;
transportation will be&#13;
available to both Kenosha and&#13;
Racine, Monday through&#13;
Thursday evenings.&#13;
Although details of the&#13;
service are still being worked&#13;
out, the Assistant Chancellor&#13;
expects that the routes,&#13;
schedule and cost of the&#13;
service will be similar to that&#13;
of the trial evening bus service&#13;
now being offered through&#13;
May 14, Currently, two buses&#13;
depart from the UW - P Union&#13;
at 9:30 p. m., Monday through&#13;
Thursday, making extensive&#13;
routes through Kenosha and&#13;
Racine. (Brochures on the&#13;
current service indicating&#13;
routes are available at the&#13;
Information Desks.) Anyone&#13;
wishing to make suggestions&#13;
on next year's bus service&#13;
should contact the Assistant&#13;
Chancellor's office at 553-2598.&#13;
Trident's ability to launch a first&#13;
strike," Stauber said. "The&#13;
Trident II Missile, which is under&#13;
development by Lockheed, will be&#13;
so accurate that it could target&#13;
and wipe out Soviet missile silos."&#13;
Robert Aldridge, former&#13;
aerospace engineer who has&#13;
worked with submarine - launched&#13;
strategic missiles, said, in the 6-&#13;
16-79 issue of The Nation,&#13;
"Because of its slow transmission&#13;
rate, ELF would be practically&#13;
invulnerable to nuclear blackouts&#13;
that would plague other types of&#13;
communication. Also, jamming&#13;
an ELF transmitter would be&#13;
virtually impossible. In short, the&#13;
message, although slightly&#13;
delayed, would get through under&#13;
all conditions."&#13;
"That's, unfortunately, the vent&#13;
of this ouclear weapons build-up&#13;
that we're on the verge of,"&#13;
Stauber said. "The U.S. is about to&#13;
spend the most money that has&#13;
ever been spent on nuclear&#13;
weapons build-up, mainly around&#13;
the Trident Submarine and the&#13;
MX Missile."&#13;
"What ELF will allow the Navy&#13;
to do, if it works, is to send a&#13;
simultaneous attack message to&#13;
its Trident Submarines, while&#13;
they are running deep and fast&#13;
half a world away," Stauber said.&#13;
Stauber said that the ELF&#13;
system is designed to command&#13;
the submarines to move into&#13;
Soviet waters, launch a nuclear&#13;
Pearl Harbor against the Soviet&#13;
land - based ICBM's, which&#13;
comprise about 65% of the Soviet&#13;
missile force, and knock out&#13;
enough ICBM's in 12 minutes to&#13;
have won a first strike war.&#13;
Stauber said that President&#13;
Reagan has recently requested&#13;
$97 million for more ELF testing,&#13;
research, development, and&#13;
procurement. "A week ago . . .&#13;
Les Aspin's office said that&#13;
Reagan was also going to request&#13;
. . . $130 million to build the ELF&#13;
system from Marquette to&#13;
Michigan, and to upgrade Clam&#13;
Lake technologically," Stauber&#13;
said.&#13;
"However," Stauber said, "last&#13;
week the story came out of&#13;
Senator Proxmire's office and&#13;
Senator Levin's office (Mich.),&#13;
saying that Admiral Thomas&#13;
Hayward, Chief of Naval&#13;
Operations, is going to recommend&#13;
to the Secretary of D efense&#13;
that ELF not be deployed at this&#13;
time, but that the test facility at&#13;
Clam Lake be maintained."&#13;
Stauber expressed concern that&#13;
statements saying ELF will be&#13;
scrapped may be a ploy to diffuse&#13;
interest in the April 7 ELF&#13;
referendum in Ashland County.&#13;
G.T. Sylvania, the prime contractor&#13;
for Project ELF, has been&#13;
sending out - of - state speakers to&#13;
various state groups and&#13;
gatherings, such as Republican&#13;
meetings, MATC and veteran&#13;
meetings, to promote Project&#13;
ELF, according to Stauber.&#13;
Although the Navy claims to&#13;
want the ELF facility in&#13;
Wisconsin because of the nonconductive&#13;
granite which forces&#13;
the signal miles down into the&#13;
earth, Stauber said that a state&#13;
geologist could not understand&#13;
why the Navy thinks that the&#13;
geology up north is solid granite&#13;
because anomalies exist all over&#13;
the area.&#13;
Using mapping by University of&#13;
Wisconsin scientists, Stauber said&#13;
that the north - south antenna at&#13;
Clam Lake appears to be almost&#13;
grounded into the anomaly.&#13;
Stauber said that some theories&#13;
suggest that the real ELF antenna&#13;
is the anomaly, and that perhaps&#13;
the anomaly is being charged in&#13;
some way to magnify or create an&#13;
ELF electromagnetic field.&#13;
"An interesting coincidence&#13;
with the path of the (unique&#13;
downburst) storm (on 7-4-77) is&#13;
that, as near as we can tell,"&#13;
Stauber said, "the storm practically&#13;
followed the line that&#13;
marks the southern boundary of&#13;
this anomaly."&#13;
Before the test facility was&#13;
built, "classified" studies of the&#13;
conductivity of the rock in the&#13;
area were conducted, according to&#13;
Stauber.&#13;
Prior knowledge about the&#13;
existence of this anomaly has&#13;
Continued On Page Two &#13;
2 Thursday, April 9,1981 RANGER&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Parkside Security&#13;
is unreasonable&#13;
Asst. Prof. Starrett dies&#13;
Let's be reasonable. Apparently&#13;
Parkside Security doesn't understand&#13;
what reasonable is.&#13;
In the evening hours, the&#13;
Parkside Phy Ed building is&#13;
guarded by pseudo stormtroopers&#13;
protecting it from bombings and&#13;
attempted hijacking. Policy at the&#13;
door is I.D.'s required. Undoubtedly&#13;
a reasonable request. I&#13;
presented the plastic badge I&#13;
received at the beginning of the&#13;
semester. The host at the door&#13;
informed me I was not valid and&#13;
therefore not eligible for entry.&#13;
Obviously I had broken a rule. I&#13;
was informed that my I.D. was&#13;
lacking the proper stamp and as a&#13;
result I was declared invalid.&#13;
After trying to convince the&#13;
Security person I was a properly&#13;
authorized student and a victim of&#13;
circumstance, I was informed I&#13;
was not valid and not eligible for&#13;
entry. I left a bit disgruntled but&#13;
confirmed in my belief that some&#13;
Security employees are unable to&#13;
be reasonable.&#13;
I have since received my stamp&#13;
of validity but the point I would&#13;
like to make is why can't Security&#13;
look beyond the rule book and take&#13;
the human factor in account&#13;
before making some decisions.&#13;
Generally Security does a fine job&#13;
in protecting Parkside from evil.&#13;
But there does seem to be a new&#13;
brand of Hitler youth working the&#13;
P.M. hours. Please Mr. Brinkman,&#13;
expound your people on&#13;
normal interaction with the&#13;
sometimes less than perfect&#13;
person like myself.&#13;
Gary Strathman&#13;
Trip postponed&#13;
The trip to Abbott Labs,&#13;
sponsored by the Life Science&#13;
Club, has been postponed until&#13;
April 17.&#13;
The bus to Abbott Labs will&#13;
leave at noon from the bus stop&#13;
under the bridge between the&#13;
Union building and Molinaro Hall.&#13;
All who are attending should meet&#13;
at the bus stop at no later than&#13;
11:45 a. m.&#13;
Funeral services for John C.&#13;
Starrett, 46, an assistant professor&#13;
of business management at&#13;
Parkside, were held Tuesday,&#13;
April 7 in Arlington Heights, 111.&#13;
Starrett, who had been on medical&#13;
leave from the university, died&#13;
Friday in an Arlington Heights&#13;
hospital.&#13;
A specialist in managment&#13;
information computer networks,&#13;
Starrett joined the UW - Parkside&#13;
faculty in 1974 and in 1979 received&#13;
an award for distinguished&#13;
teaching based on nominations by&#13;
students. Prior to coming to&#13;
Parkside, Starrett was vice&#13;
president for computer systems&#13;
for the Midwest Stock Exchange&#13;
in Chicago.&#13;
'Battle of Algiers' shown&#13;
"The Battle of Algiers," a film&#13;
sponsored by the Library Learning&#13;
Center, will be shown in two&#13;
parts: Part I on Monday, April 13,&#13;
and Part II on Wednesday, April&#13;
15. Both showings will be held in&#13;
Greenquist 101 from 1 - 2 p. m. and&#13;
are free and open to students,&#13;
faculty and staff. After each&#13;
sho win g, c o m m u n ica tio n&#13;
professor Carlos Boker will lead a&#13;
discussion.&#13;
Filmed almost 20 years ago,&#13;
"The Battle of Algiers" is a two&#13;
hour film that used a realistic.&#13;
documentary approach to draw&#13;
viewers into the rebellion of 1954&#13;
and the suffering of the rebels and&#13;
patriots who established their own&#13;
free territory in the Casbah. The&#13;
film is about courage, liberty and&#13;
dignity; both opposing forces&#13;
exhibit these qualities in the harsh&#13;
poverty of the streets and in the&#13;
barracks that form the environment&#13;
of the film. It is also&#13;
contemporary in its non -&#13;
judgemental depiction of the&#13;
human search for dignity and&#13;
freedom.&#13;
JOHNSTARRETT&#13;
j ACADEMY OF B ATON A DANCE&#13;
;Headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits,&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — Tap Shoes —&#13;
All Dancing Supplies&#13;
Anti-ELF rally to be held&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
John Stauber, President of&#13;
"Stop Project ELF," said that&#13;
there will be a non - violent&#13;
rally calling for the&#13;
dismantling and removal of&#13;
the. Clam Lake ELF Test&#13;
Facility on April 25 in the&#13;
forest where the facility is&#13;
located.&#13;
The rally is being held in&#13;
conjunction with other anti -&#13;
nuclear weapons protests&#13;
across the nation.&#13;
Transportation to the rally&#13;
up north is being coordinated&#13;
by Milwaukee Mobilization for&#13;
Survival. Interested persons&#13;
may contact them at 1016&#13;
North 9th Street, Milwaukee,&#13;
Wi. 53233, or a member of the&#13;
Parkside chapter.&#13;
History Club&#13;
sponsors talk&#13;
The Parkside History Club is&#13;
sponsoring a talk by Dr. Dominic&#13;
Caldeloro, visiting assistant&#13;
professor of history at Univ. of&#13;
Illinois at Chicago Circle, on April&#13;
14 at 8 p. m. in Molinaro 105.&#13;
Dr. Caldeloro will talk about his&#13;
exhibit "Italians in Chicago:&#13;
Collections from Three&#13;
Generations, 1880-1965." The&#13;
exhibit, based on 5000 photos,&#13;
documents and memorabilia and&#13;
100 oral histories, is currently on&#13;
display at the Chicago Public&#13;
Library Cultural Center through&#13;
April 25.&#13;
ELF system essential to Trident submarine&#13;
WANTED: Student Managers&#13;
Parkside Union&#13;
QUALIFICATIONS: Work flexible hours (weekends)&#13;
Responsible&#13;
Able to work under pressure&#13;
Must enjoy working with people&#13;
Applications will be accepted in Room 209 of the&#13;
Union beginning Mon., April 13.&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
been denied publicly, yet the Navy&#13;
still wants to keep the system at&#13;
Clam Lake, according to Stauber.&#13;
"We're a little suspicious of ways&#13;
that they might be testing and&#13;
using this anomaly," Stauber&#13;
said.&#13;
Since the most observable effect&#13;
of exposure to electromagnetic&#13;
radiation is heating, Stauber said&#13;
that the standard in the U.S. is set&#13;
at the level where no observable&#13;
heating occurs. "They've always&#13;
assumed that below that level of&#13;
thermal effects, there are no&#13;
effects. (However), the Soviet&#13;
standards are a thousand times&#13;
stricter than ours," Stauber said.&#13;
Nikola Tesla, inventor of the&#13;
first alternating generator,&#13;
theorized about a number of&#13;
possibilities with ELF technology,&#13;
according to Stauber. Stauber&#13;
said that Tesla knew how to build&#13;
an ELF generator that would&#13;
drive the atmosphere, and by&#13;
building a receiving antenna that&#13;
he could draw a renewable source&#13;
of the energy from the voltage&#13;
potential in the atmosphere.&#13;
Tesla's research at Long Island&#13;
during the 1920's was funded by&#13;
J.P. Morgan, whose interest was&#13;
worldwide communication, not&#13;
power production, according to&#13;
Stauber.&#13;
Tesla said that ELF could be&#13;
used to control the weather and&#13;
human behavior and health&#13;
through cyclotronic weaponry by&#13;
elect roma gnet ic means, according&#13;
to Stauber. When Tesla&#13;
died in the 1940's, the U.S.&#13;
government confiscated Tesla's&#13;
research because he had said that&#13;
he knew how to create a death ray,&#13;
according to Stauber. He said that&#13;
Tesla's research was later sent to&#13;
his birthplace in Yogoslavia.&#13;
Stauber said that Liberty&#13;
Lobby, the group associated with&#13;
The Spotlight claims that the&#13;
USSR studied Tesla's research&#13;
about ELF technology, and now&#13;
has an ELF system operating in&#13;
Latvia, which is being used to&#13;
wage cyclotronic warfare and&#13;
manipulate weather worldwide.&#13;
"So the whole story tends to&#13;
taper off in the bizarre world of&#13;
science fiction," Stauber said. He&#13;
expressed concern that knowledge&#13;
about ELF might remain in the&#13;
realm of the unknown unless&#13;
objective researchers examine&#13;
the various aspects of ELF.&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
ALL STUDENTS! I&#13;
AVAILABLE IN WLLC D175&#13;
1. YOUR REGISTRATION PACKET FOR FALL 1981.&#13;
2. AN UP-DATED LIST OF THE CLASSES you are officially enrolled in for&#13;
Spring 1981 You should check the list for accuracy. Questions regarding this&#13;
listing should be directed to the Records Office, in D191, WLLC. Remember all&#13;
semester program changes must be accomplished prior to APRIL 17 1981&#13;
Module program change deadlines differ and can be found in the Spring 1981&#13;
course schedule.&#13;
PLEASE NOTE: Neither of these items will be mailed this semester!!&#13;
3&#13;
- A DROP AND ADD DAY for students who completed registration eariy will be&#13;
held on August 31, 1981, s o that program changes can be made prior to the&#13;
start of classes. See the Fall course schedule for details.&#13;
OFFICE OF INSTITUTIONAL&#13;
ANALYSIS AND REGISTRATION&#13;
Member Parkside 2 00&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
Joseph.&#13;
4433 22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
Brian Felland Business Manager&#13;
® I".&#13;
Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Editor&#13;
Brian Passino Photo Editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson Edjtor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
?irnl £lITen,&#13;
Ml&#13;
k&#13;
.&#13;
e&#13;
/&#13;
arre&#13;
",: ?&#13;
an Galhrai,h&#13;
' "ike Holmdohl, Carol Klees, Dan Mc Cor mack, Lori Meyer, Bruce Preston, Kim&#13;
Schlater, Janet Wells, Jeff Wicks&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of UW Parkside and thev are solelv&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content V y&#13;
?&amp;!££! every Thursda&#13;
y during the academic year except during breaks and holidays&#13;
RANGER is printed by the Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER&#13;
A" correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139 UW&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, WI 53141. y ' uwLetters&#13;
to the Editor will be accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on standard sire&#13;
Kd'tr,vTlficSnnr,ar8&#13;
'&#13;
nS&#13;
' A" '&#13;
etterS mUSt bC Si9ned ancl a ?eleP&#13;
hone number in"&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 9 a.m. for publication on Thursday The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content PriV"&#13;
e9eS ^ &#13;
Education experience&#13;
by by DDan Galbraith student* P Qflreirln ni.vJ ian&#13;
Galbraith&#13;
UW-Parkside students are&#13;
needed to participate in an outdoor&#13;
education experience to&#13;
supervise and teach 5th and 6th&#13;
grade students at various camping&#13;
trips. Credit is available, in&#13;
the way of specialized field experience,&#13;
according to Dwayne&#13;
Olsen, associate professor of&#13;
education.&#13;
According to John Kleist,&#13;
principal of Jefferson Elementary&#13;
School in Kenosha, the camping&#13;
experience with Parkside&#13;
students supervising has been&#13;
done successfully for the past&#13;
eight years. It offers college&#13;
students the experience to teach&#13;
and live with elementary&#13;
students. Parkside students can&#13;
use their training in areas like art&#13;
t0 teach elementary&#13;
students during the camping trip.&#13;
Kleist said that the college help&#13;
would be spending 3 days with the&#13;
children and that the help would&#13;
have all expenses paid for.&#13;
Activities range from horse&#13;
«hn r ng&#13;
' boating, rifle&#13;
shooting, arts and crafts, and&#13;
music, Kleist said. The college&#13;
help would work with a group of 5&#13;
to 8 children, he said, adding that&#13;
there are cabins and indoor&#13;
facilities for the groups to work in.&#13;
The following schools need help&#13;
during their respective camping&#13;
'Film and Politics'&#13;
series to be presented&#13;
FILM AND POLITICS, a series&#13;
of feature films, will be presented&#13;
by the Kenosha Public Library&#13;
with a grant from the Wisconsin&#13;
Humanities Committee. The films&#13;
will be shown at the Southwest&#13;
Library, 7979-38 Avenue at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Films featured in the series are:&#13;
April 14 - Ninotchka (1939); April&#13;
21 - Casablanca (1942); April 28 -&#13;
Battle of Algiers (1965); and May&#13;
5 - Dr. Strangelove (1964). Following&#13;
each film a discussion&#13;
will be led by Dr. Carlos Boker of&#13;
the Humanities Division at UWParkside.&#13;
Dr. Boker is involved in&#13;
the art of film making, and&#13;
teaches Cinema and Social&#13;
Change.&#13;
The series, planned for adults,&#13;
will explore politics through the&#13;
medium of film and define the&#13;
uses of cinema to create understanding&#13;
at various levels.&#13;
The program is free and open to&#13;
the general public.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
RON, yes, can we all visit Parkside blindfolded?!&#13;
&#13;
'ATTENTION SEPTATES: Meeting next&#13;
Tuesday to discuss Septate National Song.&#13;
ORGY QUEEN, must you do it with Oriental&#13;
Swine? Sowface&#13;
SEPTATES: Meeting in GRNQ next Tuesday&#13;
to discuss Hypha Party.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S WARRANTED&#13;
JEWELRY at a 30% discount until April&#13;
22nd. Makes perfect gifts! Call Mary at 633-&#13;
9863.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE. Kenosha&#13;
country setting. 634-8562 weekdays, 862-2883&#13;
weekends.&#13;
GIRLS: Rooms. Racine, near bus route. 634-&#13;
8562 weekdays, 862-2883 weekends.&#13;
LOST AND FOUND&#13;
$10 REWARD for return of woman's gold -&#13;
plated Bulova watch. Please contact Gerri&#13;
at 552-7028.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
NEEDED ASAP: Woman to share small&#13;
house very close to campus. Pets welcome.&#13;
Please call 554-5407 of 551-9116. Very&#13;
reasonable rent.&#13;
GIRLS do you often buy cosmetics and don't&#13;
know how to apply them? I am a beauty&#13;
consultant for a name brand company that&#13;
gives free demonstrations to six or less in&#13;
your home. Call Mary at 633-9863.&#13;
BACKPACKERS: earn $1200 mth. enloyably!&#13;
Information $3. Wilderness Expeditions, 97&#13;
Spadina Rd., 306, Toronto, Canada M5R&#13;
2T1,&#13;
BEWILDER YOUR OPPONENTS. Impress&#13;
your friends. Learn expert BACKGAM-*&#13;
MON from top - ranking Milwaukee&#13;
, professional. All levels taught. Call Jim at&#13;
551-7404 for reasonable rates.&#13;
EARN WHILE YOU LEARN. Assist retired&#13;
college teacher with correspondence&#13;
reading and organization of his library.&#13;
Hours can be arranged to suit your&#13;
schedule. Call 694-2251 for appointment.&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
. I Like to Jog!&#13;
But I Also STOP IN AND&#13;
Enjoy Other PICK UP SOME&#13;
Things In Life NEW TOYS.&#13;
Special Of&#13;
The Week&#13;
ADULT MUGS&#13;
Adult Gift f&#13;
2410 52nd St. Kenosha&#13;
VXX3t30a6X36363636X30636X36X30636XXXS363636S36S6963636300636XX96963e&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
-Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654-2932 g&#13;
trips: Kenosha schools — Grant&#13;
Elementary, May 11-13; Harvey&#13;
Elementary, May 13-15; McKinley&#13;
Elementary, May 13-15; Jefferson&#13;
Elementary, May 20-22; Southport&#13;
Elementary, May 27-29. All o f the&#13;
schools, except McKinley, will be&#13;
going to Phantom Ranch in East&#13;
Troy. McKinley Elementary will&#13;
be going to Timberlee Camp in&#13;
East Troy. Shepard Hills in Oak&#13;
Creek will be going on May 26-29 to&#13;
Eagle River.&#13;
People who are interested or&#13;
would like iqore information can&#13;
contact Olsen (Greenquist 211) or&#13;
Jeannine Ebner (Greenquist 210)&#13;
before the end of April.&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thursday, April 9&#13;
RECITAL at 8 p. m. in GR 103 with Carol Kestell, flute; Terry Naidicz, violinFrances&#13;
Bedford, harpsichord. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, April 10&#13;
RECITAL by Polish Pianist Jolanta Brachel at 1 p. m. in CA D118. The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
LECTURE/DEMONSTRATION by the Erick Hawkins Dance Group at 3-30 p m&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. The program is free and open to the public!&#13;
MOVIE Up in Smoke will be shown at 8 p. m. in the Union Cinema. Admission at&#13;
the door is *1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, April 11&#13;
KIDDIE FLICKS "101 Dalmations" will be shown at 10 a. m. in the Union Cinema&#13;
for the Parkside community and their families. Those 16 and older will be admitted&#13;
free when accompanied by a paying child. Admission for children 15 and&#13;
younger is $1.00. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
ACCENT ON ENRICHMENT presents the Erick Hawkins Dance Group at 8 p m&#13;
in the Communication Arts Theatre. Tickets are available at the Union Information&#13;
Colter and will be available at the door. Admission is $4.00 for&#13;
Parkside students and $7.00 for others. ^&#13;
Sunday, April 12&#13;
CONCERT at 3:30 p. m in GR 103 featuring the Parkside Chamber Singers&#13;
/nT Admission is $1.00 for adults and 50t for students.&#13;
MOVIE Up in Smoke will be repeated at 7:30 p. m. in Ihe Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, April 13&#13;
-&#13;
at 12 Union 106&#13;
• p&#13;
rof. Chelvadurai Manogaran will talk on&#13;
"Cultural Plurism and Nation - building in Asian Democracies". The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
v Tuesday, April 14&#13;
VIDEO TAPE "The Groove Tube" will be shown at 1 p. m. in Union Square.&#13;
Admission is free for Parkside students, faculty and staff. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
A FRIDAY&#13;
FOOD-FEST&#13;
FEATURING THE FOODS OF&#13;
MEXICO&#13;
CHEESE ENCHILADA&#13;
CHORISO (SPICED SAUSAGE)&#13;
BEEF TACO&#13;
REFRIED BEANS&#13;
SPANISH RICE&#13;
COMPLIMENTARY GLASS OF&#13;
SANGRIA OR JUICE&#13;
ALL FOR $2.49&#13;
JHISFRI., APRIL 10 DINING ROOM&#13;
Academic Advising&#13;
for Fall Semester&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are&#13;
seeking a degree at UW-Parkside) should consult their&#13;
academic adviser prior to registration for Fall Semester.&#13;
A Certification of Advising form, signed by the adviser, is&#13;
required for registration.&#13;
Fall Semester Course Schedules will be available on&#13;
April 3. April 6-17 has been designated as an academic&#13;
advising period, and advisers will make every effort to&#13;
meet with you then.&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
CONTACT YOUR ADVISER FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
If you have any questions, contact the Office of the Dean&#13;
of Faculty&#13;
348 Wyllie Library-Learning Center, 553-2144&#13;
NOTE: Non-matriculant students (students not seeking&#13;
a degree at UW-Parkside) are exempt from this&#13;
requirement. &#13;
Thursday, April 9,1981&#13;
Women win&#13;
season debut&#13;
by Doug Ederihauser&#13;
The Parkside women's Softball&#13;
team started its season last&#13;
weekend and got off to a very good&#13;
start, winning all four of the&#13;
games it played.&#13;
Last Saturday the team competed&#13;
in the St. Xavier Mini -&#13;
Tournament and won the&#13;
championship by defeating&#13;
Wheaton College 15-9 in the first&#13;
round and St. Xavier 8-0 in the title&#13;
game.&#13;
In the first game, Paula Sandahl&#13;
came on to pitch in the first inning&#13;
and finished the game to take&#13;
credit for the win. Debbie Lopez&#13;
hit a three run home run in the&#13;
opening game and hit a solo&#13;
homer in the second game.&#13;
The story in the second game&#13;
was the sensational pitching of&#13;
Lynn Barth who earned a complete&#13;
game win while giving up&#13;
just one hit to go along with five&#13;
strikeouts.&#13;
Monday afternoon UW -&#13;
Oshkosh came down to Parkside&#13;
and was defeated twice by the&#13;
Rangers. The first game was a&#13;
real slugfest that went into extra&#13;
innings before the Rangers won&#13;
16-15. S andahl again came on to&#13;
pitch in relief in the third inning&#13;
and finished the game to earn the&#13;
win. Kathy Tobin went 5 for 6 in&#13;
the game to take hitting honors.&#13;
Lynn Barth again controlled the&#13;
second game, giving up just two&#13;
hits and striking out seven in the&#13;
Ranger's 7-2 vi ctory.&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
Baseball&#13;
U N G LING&#13;
Coupon&#13;
% Off&#13;
on the second buffet&#13;
Eat All You&#13;
Want Buffet&#13;
Lunch Buffet $4.35&#13;
Dinner Buffet $6.55&#13;
10% Discount&#13;
with UW-PI.D.&#13;
Villa Capri&#13;
Shopping Center&#13;
2116-20th Place&#13;
551-7883&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
Men win home opener&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
FRESHMAN PITCHER Paula Sandahl pitching in relief during&#13;
win against UW - Oshkosh last Monday.&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
The Parkside men's baseball&#13;
team opened its home season last&#13;
weekend by beating Waukesha&#13;
Tech 7-4 on Saturday and splitting&#13;
a doubleheader on Sunday with St.&#13;
Mary's College, losing the first&#13;
game 6-2 and winning the second&#13;
game 4-3.&#13;
In the game against Waukesha&#13;
Tech, the Rangers were trailing 2-&#13;
1 in the sixth inning. Parkside then&#13;
proceeded to load the bases in the&#13;
last four innings and scored six&#13;
runs in that span to take the game.&#13;
Junior Rick Gramza pitched the&#13;
first six innings before being&#13;
relieved by senior John Vocino,&#13;
who finished the game and got&#13;
credit for the win.&#13;
Sunday against St. Mary's, the&#13;
Rangers had some trouble with&#13;
errors in the first game as Jamie&#13;
Oberbruner, an All - American&#13;
last year, lost the game 6-2 ev en&#13;
though he gave up just three hits&#13;
and pitched the entire game. Head&#13;
coach Red Oberbruner said&#13;
"Jamie had a little difficulty&#13;
finding the plate with his fast&#13;
ball." This is Oberbruner's fourth&#13;
year at Parkside and the game&#13;
against St. Mary's was only the&#13;
fourth loss of his career to go&#13;
along with 22 w ins.&#13;
Parkside won the second game&#13;
in the last half of the seventh inning.&#13;
The score was tied 3-3 when&#13;
catcher Dick Sykes walked with&#13;
one out. Kip Gustavson came in to&#13;
run for Sykes when Rich Salisbury&#13;
hit a double down the third base&#13;
line. Sykes then hit a single which&#13;
scored Gustavson with the game -&#13;
winning run.&#13;
The winning pitcher for the&#13;
game was Jack Zurawick who&#13;
went the distrance and recorded&#13;
seven strikeouts.&#13;
FROM ONE BEER L OVER TO ANOTHER&#13;
Schedule your next French class&#13;
in France.&#13;
It s a lot easier than you think. As you'll discover in the next issue of Insider the free&#13;
supplement to your college newspaper from Ford. And it makes a lot of sense. If you're&#13;
going to learn French, why not learn it from the experts.&#13;
Insider will include everything you need to know to do just that. We'll tell you how&#13;
to get there, what it costs, how to plan, differences between American-affiliated&#13;
universities and foreign learning institutions, an outline of language requirements&#13;
and, most importantly, how to find a job.&#13;
So if you've been thinking about taking a semester or two&#13;
abroad, stop thinking. And next time registration comes&#13;
around, schedule your French class where you'll learn the&#13;
, most...in France.&#13;
Don t miss the next issue of Insider. Besides travel tips you'll&#13;
p j*?, ! 90231 ,ineuP of Forcl cars for 1981. Featuring&#13;
Escort, Mustang and the exciting new EXP.. .tomorrow is here&#13;
from the world of Ford.&#13;
Look for Insider. Ford's continuing series&#13;
of college newspaper supplements.&#13;
FORD&#13;
FORD DIVISION </text>
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              <text>President, Vice-President - Kreuser, Bambrough win posts</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, March 26, 1981&#13;
President&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 23&#13;
Kreuser, Bambrough win posts&#13;
by Da[)Bn n GGfalbllhrarniith fh&#13;
Jim Kreuser was elected as the&#13;
new president during the PSGA&#13;
spring elections held March 11 and&#13;
12. He received 409 votes, while&#13;
Kay Mullikin received 128, Jan&#13;
Oechler 87 and Gary Strathman&#13;
29.&#13;
Kathy Bambrough won the vice&#13;
- presidential race with 373 votes.&#13;
She defeated Chuck Neu, 179&#13;
votes, and Kathie Seliga, 90 votes.&#13;
"I hope for the students' sake,&#13;
while in office we can live up to&#13;
our overwhelming victory," said&#13;
Kreuser. "I'm looking forward to&#13;
taking office."&#13;
"I feel that the students will&#13;
benefit by having elected such&#13;
compatable officers," said&#13;
Bambrough.&#13;
Jim and Kathy will be sworn in&#13;
at the Monday, March 30, PSGA&#13;
Senate meeting.&#13;
The eight senatorial candidates&#13;
were elected to the senate. The&#13;
vote total for each was: Kathy&#13;
Slama, 353; S teve Kaufman, 333;&#13;
Mike Loos, 326; Bill Morrone, 321;&#13;
Joe Ripp, 321; Louis Valldejuli,&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
JIM KREUSER AND KATHY BAMBROUGH&#13;
310; Phil Pogreba, 291; Bradley&#13;
Faust, 269.&#13;
Ken Meyer was elected as&#13;
member of SUFAC with 404 votes&#13;
a&#13;
Chuck Neu - 179&#13;
President&#13;
Jim Kreuser - 409 Jan Oechler - 87&#13;
Kay Mullikin - 128 Gary Strathman - 29&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Kathy Bambrough - 373&#13;
Kathy Seliga - 90&#13;
Senators&#13;
Kathy Slama - 353 Joe Ripp - 321&#13;
Steve Kaufman - 333 Louis Valldejuli - 310&#13;
Mike Loos • 326 Phil Pogreba - 291&#13;
Bill Morrone - 321 Bradley Faust - 269&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
Ken Meyer • 404&#13;
Reagan submits budget proposal to Congress&#13;
by Susan J. Aluise&#13;
"On Tuesday morning, I submitted&#13;
my revised 1982 budg et to&#13;
Congress, then promptly crossed&#13;
the border."&#13;
This comment provided a&#13;
humorous note in President&#13;
Reagan's March 11 address to the&#13;
Canadian parliament, but in view&#13;
of the massive budget cuts&#13;
proposed by the President, the&#13;
Canadian trip could not have&#13;
come at a better time.&#13;
"The budget cuts proposed by&#13;
the President make my mind&#13;
boggle," said Senator Robert&#13;
Dole, (R-Kansas). "It is a welfare&#13;
program for the rich at the expense&#13;
of the needy," said House&#13;
Ways and Means Chairman Don&#13;
Rostenkowski (D-Ill).&#13;
Although the White House&#13;
maintains that the so-called&#13;
'safety net' programs will be&#13;
preserved and that the truly needy&#13;
will not suffer, there is growing&#13;
suspicion that this may not be the&#13;
case.&#13;
The President's proposal, which&#13;
would slash $48.6 billion from the&#13;
federal budget during fiscal 1982,&#13;
would affect over 200 social&#13;
programs including unemployment&#13;
compensation, welfare&#13;
and education.&#13;
Under the budget revisions,&#13;
restrictions would be placed on&#13;
the payment of extended unemployment&#13;
benefits and special&#13;
benefits for workers laid off due to&#13;
export competition. The&#13;
restrictions placed upon these&#13;
benefits are expected to save $3&#13;
billion.&#13;
Tighter eligibility for welfare&#13;
programs and an undefined&#13;
proposal requiring recipients to&#13;
work off their benefits would save&#13;
$1.2 billion. Food stamp spending&#13;
would be cut by $2.3 billion,&#13;
denying benefits to 400,000&#13;
households, with an additional&#13;
$200 million cut in food stamp aid&#13;
to Puerto Rico.&#13;
Federally subsidized housing&#13;
unit construction and&#13;
rehabilitation would be either&#13;
scrapped or delayed at a savings&#13;
of more than $500 million. The&#13;
Comprehensive Employment and&#13;
Training program (CETA) is&#13;
almost gutted by the Reagan cuts.&#13;
The program will face the&#13;
elimination of 310,000 public&#13;
service jobs at a savings of more&#13;
than $4.5 b illion.&#13;
Under the White House&#13;
program, Medicaid and Black&#13;
Lung benefits will be reduced by&#13;
$900 million and $378 million&#13;
respectively, and child nutrition&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Complaints bring films&#13;
to Parkside&#13;
• Review: "Raging Bull&#13;
• Women's track team&#13;
ready for state&#13;
99&#13;
programs like school lunch&#13;
programs, would be cut in half to&#13;
about $1.2 billion.&#13;
In the area of education,&#13;
categorical grants for 44&#13;
educational programs would be&#13;
lumped into two block grants for&#13;
states and municipalities, which&#13;
means a 25 pe r cent reduction in&#13;
the allocated $5.6 billion. Those&#13;
savings are expected to total&#13;
upward of $1.4 billion.&#13;
In addition, reform of student&#13;
financial aid programs are expected&#13;
to net a savings of $423&#13;
million. Among these reforms are&#13;
the following: 1.) A requirement&#13;
that parents pay market interest&#13;
rates rather than the government&#13;
subsidized 9 per cent they&#13;
currently pay. 2.) A requirement&#13;
that students pay 9 per cent interest&#13;
on their government subsidized&#13;
loans during their school&#13;
years. At present, the government&#13;
pays this interest while the&#13;
students are in school. 3.) The&#13;
total amount of credit that the&#13;
federal government makes&#13;
available to banks which offer&#13;
subsidized student loans will be&#13;
limited, reducing the number of&#13;
loans available. 4.) The&#13;
elimination of Social Security&#13;
student benefits. 5.) A "needs&#13;
analysis" will be imposed on&#13;
student loans.&#13;
These are not the only areas of&#13;
major cuts. Federal aid to the&#13;
states for the maintenance of 40&#13;
social service programs (including&#13;
community aid, fuel oil&#13;
programs, and child welfare)&#13;
would be cut 25 per cent for a&#13;
savings of $1.8 billion. Minimum&#13;
Social Security benefits would be&#13;
eliminated, disability insurance&#13;
eligibility tightened and burial&#13;
benefits reduced for a savings of&#13;
$2.8 billion.&#13;
Even veterans, a group which&#13;
Reagan courted during the&#13;
presidential campaign, will be&#13;
affected by the new budget cuts.&#13;
Cutbacks in planned Veterans'&#13;
Administration (VA) hospital&#13;
construction, reductions in personnel,&#13;
reduced federal subsidies&#13;
on VA loans, elimination of&#13;
Vietnam veteran counseling&#13;
centers, and assorted other cuts&#13;
would save $700 mil lion.&#13;
Many of the other cuts are&#13;
equally, if not more, painful,&#13;
particularly to low - income individuals&#13;
and families. Legal&#13;
assistance for the poor would be&#13;
eliminated for a savings of $321&#13;
million. At Congressional budget&#13;
hearings last week, Office of&#13;
Management and Budget Director&#13;
David Stockman announced this&#13;
shocking cut by stating "the right&#13;
to a lawyer is not a basic right of&#13;
citizens." Also cut will be funds&#13;
for the Equal Employment Opportunity&#13;
Commission (EEOC)&#13;
which promotes affirmitive action.&#13;
The EEOC cut of 5 per cent&#13;
will mean a savings of $20 million.&#13;
Even programs which are not&#13;
on the Budget Office hit list may&#13;
feel the cleaver. Many programs&#13;
which are now funded by&#13;
categorical grants (money&#13;
handed to the states but earU.S.-Mexico&#13;
&#13;
to be topic&#13;
Former Wisconsin Governor&#13;
Patrick Lucey, who served as U.S.&#13;
ambassador to Mexico during the&#13;
Carter administration, will be&#13;
among panelists at a UWParkside&#13;
public forum on&#13;
"Mexico - U.S. Relations: Immigration&#13;
and the Labor Market"&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, March&#13;
31, in the Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
Other panelists will be Everett&#13;
Ellis Briggs, Director of Mexican&#13;
Affairs for the U.S. Department of&#13;
State; Richard Perlman, a labor&#13;
economist and Latin American&#13;
specialist at UW-Milwaukee; and&#13;
Lionel Maldonado, moderator,&#13;
chairman of the Behavioral&#13;
Science Division at UW-Parkside&#13;
and co-author of an article,&#13;
"Chicanos in the U.S.: A H istory&#13;
of Exploitation and Resistance,"&#13;
in the current issue of Daedalus.&#13;
Briggs, a member of the U.S.&#13;
Foreign Service since 1956, has&#13;
served in a variety of overseas&#13;
posts including La Paz, Bolivia,&#13;
marked for specific programs)&#13;
would be subject to the discretion&#13;
of t he states in managing federal&#13;
funds allocated through block&#13;
grants. For example, funds which&#13;
were voted by Congress for Child&#13;
Adoption programs last August&#13;
will go to the states in block grants&#13;
with no instructions that these&#13;
funds be used toward the&#13;
children's behalf.&#13;
In view of these cuts and the&#13;
hundreds of others in the&#13;
voluminous Reagan Budget&#13;
Proposal and 1982 Budget&#13;
Revisions, it is no wonder that the&#13;
President was pleased to be in&#13;
Ottawa on the day his new budget&#13;
made its Congressional debut. But&#13;
the tax and budget cuts do not&#13;
represent the sum total of the new&#13;
White House program. In the&#13;
fourth part of this series we will&#13;
look at the obsequious component&#13;
of th e Reagan plan: the program&#13;
for regulatory reform.&#13;
relations&#13;
of forum&#13;
Berlin, Lisbon, Luanda, Asuncio&#13;
and Bogota. He also has served in&#13;
the Department of State's Bureau&#13;
of Inter - American Affairs,&#13;
Bureau of International&#13;
Organizations and European&#13;
Bureau.&#13;
Havana - born Briggs holds a&#13;
graduate degree in international&#13;
relations from George&#13;
Washington University and is&#13;
fluent in Spanish and Portuguese.&#13;
The forum, which is free and&#13;
open to the public, is co-sponsored&#13;
by the University Extension&#13;
Department of Governmental&#13;
Affairs, the UW System American&#13;
Ethics Studies Coordinating&#13;
Committee and the UW-Parkside&#13;
Center for Multicultural Studies.&#13;
The Parkside public forum is a&#13;
continuing series devoted to exploration&#13;
of timely and significant&#13;
issues as they occur and is&#13;
directed by Prof. Kenneth R.&#13;
Hoover of the political science&#13;
faculty. &#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
Ranger covers club events poorly&#13;
Response to Editorial,&#13;
For the last 2-1/2'years, the&#13;
Ranger has given poor coverage&#13;
of club events. In my two years as&#13;
president of MSU, I have been told&#13;
by the Ranger staff that I must&#13;
write my own articles on the MSU&#13;
or I would not get coverage. The&#13;
staff has kept their word on this,&#13;
for they will not cover events. Yet,&#13;
each week there is a paper&#13;
printed. In the paper there are 7&#13;
editors and at least 10 staff people&#13;
listed. So, why can't someone&#13;
cover club events?&#13;
The editors complained about&#13;
not enough people to write. Well I&#13;
wrote for the Ranger in 1978/79 as&#13;
a sports writer for MSU. At grade&#13;
time, Prof. Rubin did not want to&#13;
give me one credit for writing 25&#13;
articles. I had to go through every&#13;
paper for that entire semester to&#13;
prove I had written those articles.&#13;
I wonder if he even read my articles.&#13;
Why would anyone want to&#13;
go through this?&#13;
The organizations on this&#13;
campus address issues of news.&#13;
The Ranger is a school newspaper&#13;
which should cover these events.&#13;
Even though the staff are not&#13;
journalists or anticipating in the&#13;
future, they do have a responsibility&#13;
to this University.&#13;
There seems to always be&#13;
someone to cover negative events.&#13;
If a student began breaking&#13;
windows, I would be willing to bet&#13;
someone would cover that, maybe&#13;
even front page. Or as in the last&#13;
paper the negative information on&#13;
athletes, specifically basketball&#13;
players, which made the front&#13;
page. One thing that article did&#13;
not talk about is how could this go&#13;
on for so long and who made this&#13;
situation possible. The players of&#13;
any sport could not do this by&#13;
themselves.&#13;
The MSU sponsors over 50&#13;
events each year. The Ranger&#13;
may cover two or three of those&#13;
events. If the MSU did not write&#13;
articles on the other events, you&#13;
would not know minorities attended&#13;
this university unless you&#13;
turned to the sports page. The&#13;
MSU academic programs are&#13;
never covered.&#13;
The issue of Black children&#13;
killed in Atlanta has not made the&#13;
front page. In fact, if I did not&#13;
have a big discussion with Susan&#13;
Michelli (sic), it would not have&#13;
made the paper at all. This is&#13;
national news.&#13;
Negative articles get priority&#13;
coverage while the constructive&#13;
and supportive articles which&#13;
need and should be written are&#13;
ignored. If the Ranger is going to&#13;
be a school newspaper, it must&#13;
serve the student organizations.&#13;
These organizations make&#13;
reportable news. Most should be&#13;
reported by Ranger staff.&#13;
Chavez Epps&#13;
Editor's response&#13;
No basis for criticism of coverage&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
When I received the above letter&#13;
written by MSU President Chavez&#13;
Epps, my initial reaction was to&#13;
reply to the letter sentence by&#13;
sentence.&#13;
But then I thought better of it, so&#13;
I will clarify only the major&#13;
errors.&#13;
The letter states that Ranger&#13;
has "seven editors and at least 10&#13;
staff people listed. So, why can't&#13;
someone cover club events?" As I&#13;
told an MSU member who, unlike&#13;
Epps, came to talk to me about the&#13;
matter, those seven editors include&#13;
three non - writers and the&#13;
II staffers consist of one sportswriter,&#13;
one album reviewer,&#13;
three photographers, three&#13;
business people, and only three&#13;
news writers.&#13;
That doesn't sound like an extensive&#13;
staff to me. It's adequate,&#13;
though, because our staff includes&#13;
many people who care about&#13;
Ranger enough to sacrifice their&#13;
valuable and limited time without&#13;
receiving their just reward.&#13;
Another clarification is needed&#13;
for Epps' statement that for two&#13;
years he has been told that he&#13;
must write articles on MSU events&#13;
or they wouldn't be covered. Epps&#13;
was told that submitting short&#13;
stories about MSU activities&#13;
would be more beneficial to the&#13;
coverage and greatly increase the&#13;
possibility of the topic being&#13;
covered. But saying that we make&#13;
it mandatory for organizations to&#13;
write their own stories is pure&#13;
nonsense.&#13;
Another point: MSU events&#13;
weren't covered? MSU events&#13;
were covered in 14 of this year's&#13;
first 22 issues, sometimes in&#13;
Coming Events, but also over a&#13;
half dozen times with stories,&#13;
including three on the front page.&#13;
So what's all the complaining&#13;
about? I really wonder, especially&#13;
after my last editorial in which I&#13;
explained what Ranger should&#13;
and is able to do. (I invite all&#13;
members of organizations to read&#13;
it if they haven't.)&#13;
Read Epps' letter in response to&#13;
my editorial. If you can't see the&#13;
incompleteness and irrelevancy&#13;
of mo st of the comments, come to&#13;
me and I'll be happy to tell you the&#13;
whole, real stories.&#13;
I don't want to take any more&#13;
space rebutting the letter because&#13;
I want to stop this fighting between&#13;
student organizations when&#13;
there is no basis for the criticism.&#13;
Black History Month a big success&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
U.W. Parkside's Minority&#13;
Student Union sponsored the&#13;
greatest celebration of Black&#13;
History Month in the State of Wis.&#13;
The MSU hosted 20 events, with 25&#13;
different speakers and five films.&#13;
We sponsored major events such&#13;
as Black Women's Recognition&#13;
Day with key speaker Vel Phillips,&#13;
Sec. of State. The other major&#13;
event featured national&#13;
moderator Tony Brown, host of&#13;
nationally televised "Black&#13;
Journal." There is a video tape&#13;
interview with Prof. Boker and&#13;
Mr. Brown available in the&#13;
library. There were also displays&#13;
of Black businesses from Racine&#13;
and Milwaukee.&#13;
Within the month of Feb. there&#13;
were student participation events&#13;
such as poetry reading,&#13;
recreation night and student&#13;
recital.&#13;
There were several informative&#13;
panel discussions held. Some of&#13;
the topics addressed were The&#13;
Future of B lacks in America with&#13;
speaker Ray Mathews - Exec.&#13;
Director Urban League and Atty.&#13;
Charles Swanson: A Look at&#13;
Africa with Atty. Swanson and&#13;
Prof. L. Trager; The Black&#13;
Business: The Black Woman in&#13;
Today's society and a Tribute to&#13;
Martin Luther King Jr. with Paul&#13;
Blackmon.&#13;
The MSU also sponsored other&#13;
events such as a Gospel Program&#13;
with choirs from Racine and&#13;
Kenosha with speaker Rev.&#13;
George Thomas.&#13;
The months ended with a&#13;
semiformal celebration at the&#13;
Clayton House in Racine. The&#13;
Black History month King and&#13;
Queen were crowned. The 1981&#13;
Black History Queen is Miss&#13;
Tracy Lane and King Mr. Chavez&#13;
Epps. Runner up were Queen&#13;
Felica Krikwood and King&#13;
Michael Johnson. This was a&#13;
fantastic way to end a celebration.&#13;
As President, I am very pleased&#13;
with the success of Black History&#13;
Month events. I would like to say&#13;
thanks to the many people that&#13;
helped set up the events. I hope&#13;
that those who attended the&#13;
programs enjoyed and learned&#13;
from them. February was a very&#13;
informative month. The MSU is&#13;
looking forward to bigger and&#13;
better events for next year.&#13;
Chavez Epps&#13;
Good luck to PSGA President Jim Kreuser&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Well one more Parkside election&#13;
is history, and once again that&#13;
vast wasteland known as the silent&#13;
majority has made its decision by&#13;
not voting. The students have&#13;
chosen to let about 15% of the&#13;
student body dictate what affects&#13;
their lives in the daily business of&#13;
college. I hope you are ready to&#13;
accept the consequence.&#13;
In the past years I have seen&#13;
P.S.G.A. slip from the control of&#13;
the students to a form of puppet&#13;
government. You students have&#13;
let this happen, by creating your&#13;
own worlds light years away from&#13;
any known planet. Wake up, you&#13;
are here and these people spend&#13;
your money and have a great&#13;
influence on your college life. This&#13;
government has become a tool for&#13;
state bureaucrats to dictate, what&#13;
they believe, student life should&#13;
be. How do we gain control? We&#13;
are indeed lucky. We now have&#13;
Jim Kreuser. Our own American&#13;
Hero to battle bureaucrat control.&#13;
Good luck Jim.&#13;
I have had a few short&#13;
Proposed United Council&#13;
plan would favor Madison&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
The proposed UC Council proportional representation plan is based on&#13;
the assumption that a proportional distribution of council seats among&#13;
the university branches will result in a proportional distribution of power&#13;
in the council. In fact, the proposed plan will result in a slight distortion&#13;
of power that favors Madison at the expense of m ost of t he other twelve&#13;
branches.&#13;
The power of a given actor in a coaltion situation depends upon two&#13;
things: first, the number of s eats or resources that a given actor controls,&#13;
and; second, the distribution of seats among the other actors. The&#13;
distribution of po wer, in other words, is not strictly proportional to the&#13;
distribution of seats. A simple example will demonstrate this principle&#13;
Consider a coalition situation in which there are three actors and io&#13;
seats. The seats are distributed among the actors in the following&#13;
manner:&#13;
Actor A: 4 seats&#13;
Actor B: 3 seats&#13;
Actor C: 3 seats&#13;
In this situation, three minimum winning coalitions, AB (7 seats), AC&#13;
(7 seats), and BC (6seats), can be formed. A minimum winning coalition&#13;
is one that can be rendered non - winning if one member withdraws.&#13;
Power, in a coaltion situation, is defined in terms of participation in&#13;
minimum winning coalitions. A critical or pivotal member can render a&#13;
coaltion non - winning by his withdrawal.&#13;
In the example above, each actor is a pivotal member of two coalitions&#13;
(A is a pivotal member of AB and AC, B is a pivotal member of AB and&#13;
BC and, C is a pivotal member of BC and AC), so there are a total of six&#13;
power pivots. By dividing the number of pivots that a given actor controls&#13;
by the total number of pivots, we get a measure, called the Banzhaf&#13;
power index, of the relative distribution of power among the three&#13;
actors, A, B, and C.&#13;
As Table I, below, shows, the distribution of power is not always&#13;
proportional to the distribution of seats.&#13;
Table I. The Distribution of Seats and Power.&#13;
Pet. Pet.&#13;
Actor Seats Seats Pivots Pivots Distortion&#13;
A 4 .400 2 .333 minus .066&#13;
B 3 .300 2 .333 plus .033&#13;
C 3 .300 2 .333 plus .033&#13;
In this situation, actor A is penalized by the distribution of seats among&#13;
the other actors while B and C gain. Actor A, in other words, doesn't have&#13;
as much power as one would expect if the proportion of s eats were the&#13;
sole criterion of an actor's power. The total distortion (i.e., the sum of&#13;
the absolute value of the difference between an actor's proportion of&#13;
seats and its proportion of power pivots) in this case is equal to .133.&#13;
The proposed UC Council plan results in similar distortion. Madison&#13;
gains from the distortion while most of t he other twelve branches lose.&#13;
Table II, below, shows the relevant figures.&#13;
Table II. The Proposed UC Council Plan.&#13;
Actor(s)&#13;
Madison&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Eau, Lac, Osh,&#13;
StP, Whw (total)&#13;
Prk, Pla, GrB,&#13;
RuF, Sto (total)&#13;
Superior&#13;
Pet. of Pet. of&#13;
Seats Seats Pivots Pivots Distortion&#13;
13 .276 2956 .344 plus .068&#13;
8 .170 1112 .129 minus .041&#13;
15 .320 2660 .309 minus .011&#13;
10 .210 1660 .192 minus .018&#13;
1 .021 212 .024 plus .003&#13;
The total distortion under this plan will be .142, a nd the gains will&#13;
accrue almost exclusively to Madison.&#13;
A trivial adjustment in the proposed plan would minimize distortion&#13;
and remove most of Madison's advantage. It would also result in the&#13;
improvement of t he fit between the proportion of students that a particular&#13;
branch has and its proportion of p ower in the UC Council. Table&#13;
III, below, shows the amended alternative.&#13;
Table III. Amended UC Council Plan.&#13;
Actor (s)&#13;
Madison&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Eau, LaC, Osh,&#13;
StP, Whw (tot)&#13;
Prk, Pla, GrB,&#13;
RuF, Sto (tot)&#13;
Superior&#13;
Seats&#13;
12&#13;
9&#13;
15&#13;
10&#13;
1&#13;
Pet. of Pet. of Pet. of&#13;
Seats Pivots Pivots Students&#13;
.255 2604 .284 .276&#13;
.191 1464 160 .170&#13;
.320 2920 ,320 .320&#13;
.210 2000 .220 .210&#13;
.021 160 .017 .021&#13;
Thus, by switching one council seat from Madison to Milwaukee, the&#13;
total distortion between proportion of students and proportion of power&#13;
~"°PS f&#13;
rom -141 to .036, the five schools with 3 seats each break even, and&#13;
the five schools with 2 v otes each gain slightly. Clearly, the amended&#13;
plan provides a more appropriate alternative for achieving the Council's&#13;
aim of proportional representation.&#13;
Who said political science can't solve trivial problems?&#13;
Jack Moran&#13;
discussions with Mr. Kreuser and&#13;
was relieved to hear that he also is&#13;
aware of major changes that need&#13;
to be made.&#13;
I for one will be very interested&#13;
in his efforts to reaffirm student&#13;
values and help students regain&#13;
control of student government.&#13;
But what can we do now? Let&#13;
him know your ideas, fire up when&#13;
he blows it and support him if he is&#13;
right, but let him hear you.&#13;
Remember, we are responsible&#13;
for ourselves.&#13;
GaryStrathman&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer EdMor&#13;
?&#13;
ria&#13;
" .&#13;
F®"f"d Business Manager&#13;
SueM,chett,.. News Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Sports Ed|tor&#13;
BnanPass.no Photo Editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson Edi,pr&#13;
STAFF&#13;
?arol KleeTn '"m*/"&#13;
1&#13;
'&#13;
6&#13;
",: Dan Galb™'&#13;
h&#13;
- Mike Holmdohl, Carol Klees, Dan McCormack, Lori Meyer, Bruce Preston, Kim&#13;
Schlater, Janet Wells, Jeff Wicks&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of UW-Parkside and thev are soieiv&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content. orKsiae ana rney are solely&#13;
RANGER MUr&#13;
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irL9^&#13;
he acadamic Vear exceP&#13;
t during breaks and holidays,&#13;
wr tti n. Printed by the Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER&#13;
ParSTenS^MU,"&#13;
6 addr6SSed ^ ParkSide Ra&#13;
"^ '^LLC Dl». UWpaepe&#13;
e&#13;
r&#13;
Sw!?h&#13;
,one&#13;
Ed&#13;
inch marnL^u^t " ,ype&#13;
^&#13;
rit,en&#13;
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9&#13;
ned a&#13;
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Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 9 a.m. for publication on Thursday The RANGFR&#13;
defamatory ccm'tenf8&#13;
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'&#13;
ett*rs which contain false or &#13;
RANGER Thursday, March 26, 1981&#13;
Philippe Enfremnnt&#13;
AOE brings famous Orchestre&#13;
du Capitole de Toulouse here&#13;
Internationally - acclaimed&#13;
Pianist Philippe Entremont will&#13;
^ soloist with the 100-&#13;
memher Orchestre du Capitole de&#13;
Toulouse under the baton of&#13;
Michel Plasson at the Parkside&#13;
Communications Arts Theater at 8&#13;
p.m. on March 26.&#13;
The orchestra has been ranked&#13;
as among the ten best in the world&#13;
rising rapidly into the first ranks&#13;
since Plasson assumed its musical&#13;
directorship in 1968.&#13;
The program is a part of UWParkside's&#13;
Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series. Individual tickets are $9&#13;
for the public, $5 for Parkside&#13;
students, and are available&#13;
through the Union Information&#13;
Center. Telephone reservations&#13;
can be made by calling 553-2345.&#13;
The concert program includes&#13;
Berlioz' Overture to "Le Corsaire,"&#13;
Ravel's Concerto in G&#13;
Major for Piano, Schumann's&#13;
Symphony No. 4 in d minor, Op.&#13;
120, and Serge Nigg's Million&#13;
d'Oiseux d'or (Millions of Golden&#13;
Birds), a new work written&#13;
especially for Plasson and the&#13;
Toulouse orchestra.&#13;
Entremont, who has won&#13;
recognition as both a concert&#13;
pianist and conductor, was born in&#13;
Polish culture&#13;
to be discussed&#13;
PIANIST PHILIPPE&#13;
ENTREMONT&#13;
Rheims, France in 1934, studied at&#13;
the Paris Conservatory, won the&#13;
Marguerite Long - Jacques&#13;
Thibaud Competition in 1953 and&#13;
made his U.S. debut in the same&#13;
year.&#13;
Entremont has been a leading&#13;
international pianist ever since,&#13;
performing with the major orchestras&#13;
and as a recitalist or&#13;
chamber musician on five continents.&#13;
He began conducting in&#13;
the mid-60s, has led major&#13;
European and U.S. orchestras and&#13;
last fall accepted an appointment&#13;
as principal conductor of the New&#13;
Orleans Philharmonic Symphony.&#13;
Entremont will be performing&#13;
on a $65,000 B osendorfer concert&#13;
grand piano, which is being&#13;
specially shipped to Parkside for&#13;
the concert by the U.S.&#13;
representatives of the German&#13;
piano firm.&#13;
The Toulouse orchestra&#13;
currently is on its third North&#13;
American tour after garnering&#13;
critical bouquets in Canada,&#13;
Mexico and the U.S. during tours&#13;
in 1978 and 1979. According to the&#13;
New York Post, "The Orchestra&#13;
de Toulouse is one of the most&#13;
eminent orchestras of Europe."&#13;
Last year, the orchestra made a&#13;
20-concert tour of Federal Germany&#13;
with Entremont as soloist.&#13;
Under Plasson, who is considered&#13;
one of the leading operatic&#13;
and symphonic conductors, the&#13;
orchestra performs in France&#13;
both in its "home" 3500-seat&#13;
theater in Toulouse and at the&#13;
Theatre des Champs Elysees in&#13;
Paris. Since 1975, it has been&#13;
orchestra-in-residence at the Aixen-Provence&#13;
Festival and has also&#13;
been the official orchestra of the&#13;
Academie Maurice Ravel.&#13;
Brachel to appear in dinner concert here&#13;
"The Mighty Wurlitzer Musical&#13;
Revue," a dinner concert&#13;
featuring Polish pianist Jolanta&#13;
Brachel on her U.S. debut tour and&#13;
three guest organists playing&#13;
music ranging from classical to&#13;
country, will be presented at the&#13;
Parkside Union on Saturday,&#13;
March 28.&#13;
The organists, Craig Knudsen&#13;
and Chris Yochens, have won a&#13;
local following because of&#13;
previous appearances in the area,&#13;
and Sheila Flanagan, who toured&#13;
for six years with the Fred Waring&#13;
Show and has been a featured&#13;
performer on radio and television.&#13;
They will be joined by singerdancer&#13;
Terri Mason.&#13;
The event is being sponsored by&#13;
The Music Mall of Racine in&#13;
cooperation with the Parkside&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
PSGA thanked&#13;
for effort&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
During the past several weeks,&#13;
members of SUFAC and the&#13;
Student Senate have allocated&#13;
$524.00 to the Child Care Center.&#13;
The members of the 1980-81&#13;
student government have donated&#13;
a lot of time and effort to serve&#13;
Parkside students. We would like&#13;
to express our appreciation to&#13;
them. Thank you very much:&#13;
Kathy Bambrough, Greg Davies,&#13;
Renee Gillmore, Tracy Gruber,&#13;
Chris Hammelev, Tim Hovey,&#13;
Steve Kaufman, Randy Klees,&#13;
Eric Klinkhammer, Jim Kreuser,&#13;
Todd Laxzewski, Mike Loos, Bill&#13;
Morrone, Kay Mullikin, Chuck&#13;
Neu, Dan Rasch, Kathy Slama,&#13;
Louis Valldejuli.&#13;
Maureen Budowle&#13;
Director&#13;
Parkside Child&#13;
Care Center&#13;
Union. Admission is $15 per&#13;
person. Admission includes dinner&#13;
at 6 p.m. in the union cafeteria and&#13;
the show at 7:30 p.m. in the union&#13;
theater. Admission for the concert&#13;
only is $7.50. Reservations are&#13;
required and can be made by&#13;
calling The Music Mall (637-5744)&#13;
or the Union Information Center&#13;
(553-2345).&#13;
Chuck Rogers of The Music Mall&#13;
said that the show, which uses&#13;
three organs and a vertical grand&#13;
piano, originally was developed&#13;
for Wurlitzer dealers and is being&#13;
presented at Parkside for the first&#13;
time for a general audience.&#13;
Brachel, winner of several&#13;
international piano competitions,&#13;
is currently performing in the&#13;
area as part of a tour arranged by&#13;
the Wisconsin Institute for International&#13;
Education. A veteran&#13;
of the European concert stage, she&#13;
holds a virtuoso diploma from the&#13;
Moscow Musical Conservatory.&#13;
Yochens, both a keyboard artist&#13;
and vocalist, has developed a&#13;
reputation for his versatility on&#13;
the three powerful organ&#13;
keyboards, which he uses to&#13;
produce sounds ranging from an&#13;
orchestra to a country or disco&#13;
group.&#13;
Knudsen provides a repertory&#13;
including pop, classical, standard,&#13;
jazz and blues. Flanagan won the&#13;
Kansas State Music Championship&#13;
at age 12 and, after&#13;
competing in the U.S. Championships,&#13;
turned professional. In&#13;
addition to touring with Waring&#13;
and serving as artist-in-residence&#13;
at his workshop, Flanagan is&#13;
organist for the Kansas City&#13;
Royals baseball team.&#13;
Congressman Clement J.&#13;
Zabl ocki (D- Mil wau kee ),&#13;
Chairman of the House Foreign&#13;
Relations Committee, and the&#13;
Rev. Leonard F. Chrobot, an&#13;
exponent of "the new ethnicity" in&#13;
America, will be the featured&#13;
speakers at a Polish Culture Day&#13;
sponsored by Parkside's Center&#13;
for Multicultural Studies on&#13;
Saturday, April 4, at St. Stanislaus&#13;
Parish, 1754 Grand Ave., Racine.&#13;
Zablocki, who has represented&#13;
Milwaukee's heavily Polish south&#13;
side for 32 years, is viewed as the&#13;
highest - ranking Democratic&#13;
spokesman on foreign affairs now&#13;
that Republicans control the U.S.&#13;
Senate. He will speak on "The&#13;
Role of Poles in Politics — U.S.A."&#13;
Father Chrobot is president of&#13;
St. Mary's College of Liberal Arts,&#13;
Orchard Lake, Mich., a part of a&#13;
complex of schools and centers&#13;
whose purpose is "to enrich&#13;
American culture with the best of&#13;
the heritage of people of Polish&#13;
background in the United States."&#13;
Chrobot received his PfcD from&#13;
Wayne State University where his&#13;
research centered on the expansion&#13;
of folk culture to urban&#13;
culture in society and the impact&#13;
on education. He has lectured&#13;
widely on "the new ethnicity, a&#13;
growing awareness that we are a&#13;
nation of groups, culturally&#13;
distinct but mutually interdependent,&#13;
each striving to&#13;
preserve the best of its heritage."&#13;
His talk is titled "Proxemics: An&#13;
Approach to the Study of&#13;
Cultures."&#13;
Other speakers are: Dr. Alfred&#13;
Sokolnicki, Dean of the College of&#13;
Speech at Marquette University,&#13;
on "Preserving Polish Culture in&#13;
the Fine Arts"; Mrs. Helen&#13;
Chrzymanowicz, vice president of&#13;
the Polish National Alliance of&#13;
Chicago, on "The Role of&#13;
Fraternal Organizations in&#13;
Cultural Preservation"; the Rev.&#13;
Donald S. Bilinski, curator of the&#13;
Polish Museum of America in&#13;
Chicago, on "Preserving Polish&#13;
Culture: The Role of Museums";&#13;
Alfons Hering, editor of -Gwiazda&#13;
Polarna, a Polish - language&#13;
newspaper published in Stevens&#13;
Point, on "The Role of the Polish&#13;
Press in Cultural Preservation";&#13;
and Msgr. Stanley Witkowiak,&#13;
pastor of St. Stanislaus parish, on&#13;
"The Polish Community in&#13;
Racine."&#13;
The program scheduled for 8:45&#13;
a.m. to 4:30 p.m., will also include&#13;
a performance by the Mazur&#13;
Dancers, a Milwaukee troupe of&#13;
eight costumed dancers, and a&#13;
Polish buffet luncheon.&#13;
Advance registration is&#13;
required for the day's program,&#13;
which carries one UW-Parkside&#13;
undergraduate credit. The fee is&#13;
$52.50 for the program and $6 for&#13;
the luncheon. Registration information&#13;
is available from the&#13;
Social Science Division at 553-&#13;
2316. Deadline for luncheon&#13;
reservations is March 27.&#13;
As a prelude to Polish Culture&#13;
Day, Polish pianist Jolanta&#13;
Brachel will present a free public&#13;
concert at 8 p.m. on April 3 in&#13;
Parkside's Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. *&#13;
In conjunction with the event, a&#13;
pictorial display of "One&#13;
Thousand Years of P olish History&#13;
and Culture" prepared by the&#13;
American Institute of Polish&#13;
Culture will be on display in the&#13;
Library - Learning Center through&#13;
April 10.&#13;
Member P arkside 200&#13;
Mention this ad! ^ oJseph.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
4433 22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
HIS FIRST YEAR OUT OF COLLEGE,&#13;
FRANK QUACKENBUSH RENOVATED THREE&#13;
BUILDINGS, WORKED ON A DAM, PAVED A ROAD,&#13;
AND BUILT TWO CHOPPER PADS.&#13;
"Most of the engineers 1 graduated&#13;
with probably wound upasan&#13;
assistant engineer to somebody else.&#13;
Maybe doing the details for somebody&#13;
else's design or supervising some&#13;
small aspect of construction.&#13;
"But my first year as an&#13;
Engineer Lt.. I've designed many of&#13;
my own projects and supervised the&#13;
construction on everything from&#13;
baseball dugouts to the concrete work&#13;
on a dam. Earthmoving, grading, filling,&#13;
paving, concrete work, masonry&#13;
-you name it, I've supervised it.&#13;
"Whether I stay in the&#13;
Army or go into civilian construction&#13;
work later, I've got experience that&#13;
some engineers won't have when&#13;
they're 30!"&#13;
Army ROTC got Frank&#13;
Quackenbush off to a good start in his&#13;
field. It can do the same for you&#13;
whether you're a civil engineer or an&#13;
English major. For more information&#13;
stop by the Army ROTC office on&#13;
campus.&#13;
And begin your future as&#13;
an officer.&#13;
AT UW-P CALL:&#13;
Capt. Fred Herron&#13;
Marquette U. ROTC&#13;
Call Collect:&#13;
1-224-7229/7195&#13;
2nd Lt. Frank Quackenbush majored in civil&#13;
engineering at the L'niversitv of Arizona and was&#13;
a member of Armv ROTC ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BEALLYOUCANBE. &#13;
FELLOWSHIPS&#13;
AVAILABLE&#13;
The Department of Linguistics at the University of Iaa™ Ch&#13;
leago Circle offers work leading to the&#13;
^ MA in°Trc^ a&#13;
"^&#13;
applled&#13;
"&#13;
n9&#13;
u&#13;
lstlcs, including&#13;
Other Languages^ En9&#13;
"&#13;
Sh 10 Speakers&#13;
°&#13;
f&#13;
A generous number of Fellowships are available to&#13;
qualifying graduate students. The Fellowships indude&#13;
a stipend of $1,000 for the academic year, plus a&#13;
InllTJZ Wa,Ven&#13;
'&#13;
n addlt,on&#13;
' other ki^ds of&#13;
Thp Hmhi f&#13;
e ava,lable to Prospective students.&#13;
x&#13;
d ?&#13;
r aPP''cations Is April 30, 1981. For&#13;
application and information, write to:&#13;
Andrew Schiller, Head&#13;
Department of Linguistics&#13;
University of Illinois at Chicago Circle&#13;
Box 4348, Chicago, IL 60680&#13;
Thursday, March 26, 1981&#13;
RANGER&#13;
iqu - f ,!&lt;,&#13;
2i&#13;
TS in&#13;
/&#13;
h« Ve&#13;
[y Spedal Arts Festival held during spring break gather for a sing&#13;
long In Main Place (above). (Left) wandering clowns paint designs on the childrens' faces.&#13;
* RA NGER Photos by Dan McCormack&#13;
Limerick writers: Forgive u&#13;
TThhic uroolr Don^AM .... is week, Ranger was&#13;
supposed to print the results of&#13;
the Second Annual Parking&#13;
Lot St. Patrick's Day&#13;
Limerick Contest. We didn't.&#13;
To those of you who submitted&#13;
the wonderfully entertaining&#13;
limericks we have received,&#13;
we're sorry, but the winners&#13;
haven't been chosen yet.&#13;
Last week, we met to choose&#13;
the winners. We tried, but the&#13;
competition was so keen&#13;
(Parkside students are really&#13;
very clever, you know) that&#13;
we judges just could not agree&#13;
on the winners. It's a long&#13;
story; there were some fist&#13;
fights, and name - calling&#13;
episodes, not to mention the&#13;
coercion used by contestants&#13;
— but don't worry, we'll&#13;
decide by next week's issue of&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
Make plans for 'Theatre '81"&#13;
ciucung periormances, workshops&#13;
and demonstrations.&#13;
Theatre artists from around the&#13;
country will conduct specialized&#13;
workshops in acting, directing,&#13;
performance production,&#13;
costuming, movement ami theatre&#13;
education. Highlighting the&#13;
workshop series are such leaders&#13;
as Lee Baygan, one of NBC's top&#13;
makeup artists, Jared Oswegan, a&#13;
Guthrie Theatre costume designer&#13;
and James McKenzie, producer of&#13;
the American Conservatory&#13;
Theatre in San Francisco.&#13;
A wide variety of stage performances&#13;
will also be available&#13;
to participants. The Independent&#13;
Eye theatre will travel from&#13;
Lancaster, PA to perform their&#13;
production of FAMILIES and&#13;
Shorewood High School will bring&#13;
their performance of THE&#13;
MIRACLE WORKER. This&#13;
production will be interpreted in&#13;
sign language ior tne hearing&#13;
impaired.&#13;
Mime, dance, stage combat and&#13;
improvisational theatre will be&#13;
presented to complete the ll&#13;
scheduled performances. Friends&#13;
Mime Theatre and Ring of Steel&#13;
Ltd. have been invited as feature&#13;
companies.&#13;
The general public may participate&#13;
in the entire convention or&#13;
purchase single - event&#13;
registrations for $1.50 each.&#13;
Convention rates and housing are&#13;
available at a reduced cost to&#13;
students. Pre - registration ends&#13;
March 27. On-site registration will&#13;
begin Friday, April 3 at the Music&#13;
- Drama Center on the Lawrence&#13;
University campus.&#13;
For more information, contact&#13;
Sheila Hilke, Wisconsin Theatre&#13;
Association, 610 Langdon Street,&#13;
723 Lowell Hall, Madison, WI53706&#13;
(608 / 263-6945).&#13;
Kinship meeting tonight&#13;
"My name is Mike. I'm eight&#13;
years old. I've got two little sisters&#13;
and I guess I lose my temper&#13;
sometimes and hit them. My mom&#13;
and dad are separated and I don't&#13;
get to do very much. I can't stand&#13;
it when there's nothing to do. So I&#13;
guess maybe that's why I'm a&#13;
bully sometimes to the smaller&#13;
kids. I would rather be a friend to&#13;
somebody — anybody! I'll do just&#13;
about anything. Biking and soccer&#13;
are two things I enjoy. I really like&#13;
trains. I don't want to be in reform&#13;
school like my dad says I probably&#13;
will be. I'd rather be like everyone&#13;
else. I just want to be liked by&#13;
everyone."&#13;
Mike's story is not much different&#13;
from a lot of other kids,&#13;
except that he has a chance to&#13;
make it. He's part of the Kinship&#13;
Program, and he hopes to find his&#13;
friend soon. His chance will only&#13;
work if someone takes a chance on&#13;
him.&#13;
Kinship is a child service&#13;
agency that matches children&#13;
from single parent homes to&#13;
adults in the community. For&#13;
more information, please come to&#13;
the next Kinship Orientation&#13;
meeting, Thurs., March 26th at&#13;
7:00 P.M. at St. Mary's Lutheran&#13;
Church, 200I-80th S t. or call the&#13;
Kinship office at 658-0151.&#13;
This could be the start of&#13;
something very exciting in your&#13;
life.&#13;
Lawrence University in Appleton&#13;
will host "Theatre '81:&#13;
Wisconsin On Stage," April 3-5,&#13;
the ninth annual Statewide&#13;
Theatre Convention. Theatre&#13;
students and professionals from&#13;
throughout the state will participate&#13;
in the three day theatre&#13;
event.&#13;
"Theatre '81" offers unique&#13;
opportunities to students and&#13;
teachers who have a casual interest&#13;
in theatre or for those who&#13;
have professional interests. Over&#13;
60 activities are scheduled in-&#13;
Lakeside opens&#13;
with third show&#13;
Review&#13;
fkH?l&#13;
SitteP&#13;
c&#13;
laJ&#13;
ers wil1 open their third show of the season, "Cat on a&#13;
Hot Tin Roof," Friday, March 27&#13;
at 8 p .m. in the Kemper Center&#13;
gymnasium, located at 124-66 St&#13;
Kenosha. "&#13;
«r^&#13;
pical&#13;
,&#13;
of most Tennessee&#13;
Williams plays, "Cat on a Hot Tin&#13;
Roof" is set in the South and&#13;
reveals the struggle of family&#13;
members seeking power, wealth&#13;
and love. In the play, Big Daddy's&#13;
birthday has brought the family&#13;
together, but the festive occasion&#13;
is tainted by conflict.&#13;
Terry Lawler, an English&#13;
teacher at Tremper High School,&#13;
directs the play, which marks the&#13;
eleventh production he has&#13;
directed for Lakeside. Earlier this&#13;
year, he directed "The Man Who&#13;
Came to Dinner."&#13;
Millie Clark, a member of&#13;
Racine Theater Guild, portrays&#13;
Maggie, the part made famous by&#13;
Elizabeth Taylor.&#13;
Like Lawler and Clark, Michael&#13;
Skewes, who plays Brick, divides&#13;
his time between the Racine&#13;
Theater Guild and Lakeside&#13;
Players. Although involved in the&#13;
office cleaning business during&#13;
the day, he spares evening hours&#13;
to participate in numerous shows.&#13;
A part time employee in the&#13;
Kenosha News composing room,&#13;
Carol Oatsvall portrays the role of&#13;
Mae.&#13;
Wally Christofferson, a social&#13;
studies teacher at Lance Junior&#13;
High, has acquired a long list of&#13;
credits in the past two years at&#13;
Lakeside. Prior to his current role&#13;
as Gooper, he performed in "Wait&#13;
Until Dark," "Dracula," "John&#13;
Loves Mary" and "Come Blow&#13;
Your Horn." Joining him in this&#13;
production are his two daughters,&#13;
Holly and Sarah, who play Dixie&#13;
and Polly. Both attend Southport&#13;
Elementary School and both have&#13;
appeared in Lakeside's "Pale&#13;
Pink Dragon."&#13;
A busy housewife and mother,&#13;
Kay Batassa still finds time for&#13;
her role as Big Mama in "Cat on a&#13;
Hot Tin Roof." Kay has appeared&#13;
in Lakeside's last two productions,&#13;
"The Man Who Came to&#13;
Dinner" and "Come Blow Your&#13;
Horn," as well as o thers.&#13;
Ron Kelly, an active member of&#13;
Bullen Junior High's drama Club,&#13;
portrays Buster. He has been&#13;
involved in summer recreation&#13;
department plays. Sonny will be&#13;
played by Steve DeAngelis,&#13;
another Bullen student.&#13;
Kris Hansen, who plays Trixie,&#13;
participated in Lakeside's&#13;
summer production, "Pale Pink&#13;
Dragon," and several school&#13;
productions.&#13;
The Chief of Racine's Fire&#13;
Prevention Bureau, Frank&#13;
Reisenauer, will play Big Daddy.&#13;
He has had many roles with the&#13;
Racine Theater Guild, including&#13;
parts in "Bullshot Crummond,"&#13;
"Walsh," "Play It Again, Sam"&#13;
and "Ah, Wilderness."&#13;
Reverend Tooker will be portrayed&#13;
by Jay Woodbury, teacher&#13;
of the emotionally disturbed in&#13;
Kenosha Unified Schools.&#13;
Woodbury often works behind the&#13;
scenes an d has appeared in two&#13;
productions, "Sweet Charity" and&#13;
"The Man Who Came to Dinner."&#13;
Robert Erickson assumes his&#13;
second doctor role in his portrayal&#13;
of Doctor Baugh. He earlier&#13;
played the doctor in "Dracula."&#13;
Erickson has appeared in "John&#13;
Loves Mary" and "My Three&#13;
Angels." He is also Lakeside's&#13;
perennial prop master.&#13;
Performance dates for "Cat on&#13;
a Hot Tin Roof" are March 27, 28,&#13;
29 an d April 3, 4, 5, 10, 11. All&#13;
performances are given in the&#13;
Kemper Center gymnasium at&#13;
8:00 p.m., except the Sunday&#13;
productions which are at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
on March 29 and 3:00 p.m. on April&#13;
5.&#13;
Tickets are available at&#13;
Bidingers and Scandinavian&#13;
Design or may be purchased at&#13;
the door.&#13;
Auditions held for Faire&#13;
Auditions for five parts in&#13;
"Diabenzaiten: Misplaced&#13;
Goddess," a Japanese Kyogen&#13;
play which will be performed at&#13;
King Richard's Faire this summer,&#13;
will be held in Milwaukee,&#13;
according to director Katherine&#13;
Amato-von Hemert.&#13;
The roles to be cast include a&#13;
priest, acolyte, two merchants&#13;
and a goddess. Auditions will be&#13;
held from 10 a. m. to 5 p.m. and&#13;
from 7 p.m. to 10 p .m. Sunday,&#13;
March 29 i n 4th floor rehearsal&#13;
hall "A" at the Performing Arts&#13;
Center, 123 State Street.&#13;
Amato-von Hemert says that&#13;
Kyogen is a Japanese form of&#13;
theatre which was refined between&#13;
1380 and 1466. Kyogen is&#13;
farce which deals with simple,&#13;
spontaneous, human problems.&#13;
Rendered into English, Kyogen&#13;
means "crazy words" or "to be&#13;
completely absorbed&#13;
speaking."&#13;
in&#13;
"Diabenzaiten: Misplaced&#13;
Goddess," which deals with&#13;
themes of lust and greed, was&#13;
written by playwright Donald&#13;
Richee and was first performed in&#13;
1969 at Theatre Scorpio in Tokyo.&#13;
The play will open July 3 and&#13;
run consecutive weekends&#13;
through August 15-16, the duration&#13;
of the Ninth Annual King&#13;
Richard's Faire, in Bristol&#13;
Township near the Wisconsin /&#13;
Illinois border. The Faire is a recreation&#13;
of life in England more&#13;
than 400 years ago, and&#13;
Renaissance theatre is one of the&#13;
highlights.&#13;
Shakespedre's "A Midsummer&#13;
Night's Dream" will also be cast&#13;
at the auditions. While appointments&#13;
for auditions are not&#13;
necessary, they can be made by&#13;
contacting John T. Mills at King&#13;
Richard's Faire, 12420 - 128th St.,&#13;
Kenosha, Wise. 63412. Mills can be&#13;
reached by phone at 414 / 396-4385&#13;
or 312 / 689-2800.&#13;
k&#13;
0&#13;
jsSMjg&gt;&#13;
Dock&#13;
'KENOSHA'S LARGEST LOUNGE'&#13;
CHUBBY CHECKER!!&#13;
8:00 pm til 12:00 am&#13;
TONIGHT ONLY! $10.00 Cover Charge&#13;
GET A GRIP Sunday-Thursday! I 7pm&lt;losing&#13;
Highballs 50« Pitchers $1.50&#13;
(bar booze only)&#13;
Cover Charge $1.00 Proof of age Required&#13;
8625 14th Ave. Kenosha Behind Market Square Theatres&#13;
"Raging Bull": a work of art&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
"Raging Bull" effectively&#13;
paints a portrait of a man's life. It&#13;
opens with brutal realism and&#13;
reveals the life story of welterweight&#13;
boxing champion Jake La&#13;
Motta (played by Robert De&#13;
Niro). From his rough climb to&#13;
victory, to his arrest and conviction,&#13;
to his weak career as&#13;
night club entertainer, the film is&#13;
packed with real human emotions.&#13;
De Niro is a definite shoe-in for&#13;
Best Actor honors for his extraordinary&#13;
performance. Constantly&#13;
striving for realism in his&#13;
films, De Niro went so f ar as to&#13;
learn La Motta's style from the&#13;
boxer himself (La Motta&#13;
remarked that De Niro became&#13;
good enough to make a career out&#13;
of boxing); he even took a two&#13;
month haitus to gain 50 pounds to&#13;
play La Motta in his later years.&#13;
De Niro deserves these honors not&#13;
merely because of the extents he&#13;
went through to look like La Motta&#13;
but because of his acute ability to&#13;
create a character which the&#13;
audience can hate, love, pity and,&#13;
most importantly, understand.&#13;
La Motta was an obsessed&#13;
person. He was obsessed with&#13;
winning and he was obsessed with&#13;
jealousy. He incessantly accused&#13;
his wife of sleeping with other men&#13;
to the point that he destroys their&#13;
marriage and eventually himself.&#13;
Some interesting scenes are&#13;
filmed between De Miro and&#13;
Cathy Moriarty (as Vickie La&#13;
Motta) exploring these obsessions,&#13;
especially the one before&#13;
a fight where she is kissing his&#13;
bruises.&#13;
This marks the fourth work&#13;
which De Niro and director&#13;
Martin Scorsese have&#13;
collaborated on and Scorsese is&#13;
sure to obtain Best Director&#13;
honors for artistic ability expressed&#13;
throughout this film. He&#13;
mixes brutal scenes with light&#13;
hearted ones to achieve the&#13;
realism of life. It's interesting the&#13;
way he has slow, beautiful music&#13;
playing while we see the boxing&#13;
matches; it's another way of&#13;
showing the contrasting ways of a&#13;
man's life. One of the most unique&#13;
scenes is the passing of time. It is&#13;
the only time in the movie in&#13;
which color film is used and the&#13;
music gives one a melancholy&#13;
feeling.&#13;
Joe Pesci should carry away the&#13;
Best Supporting Actor award for&#13;
his portrayal of La Motta's&#13;
younger brother and manager&#13;
Joey. Pesci has a fun character&#13;
and is used to help us gain insight&#13;
to Jake through their conversations.&#13;
Pesci never fails to&#13;
make us believe that he is Joey La&#13;
Motta.&#13;
The camera work in this film is&#13;
innovative; we see things from the&#13;
most unusual and interesting&#13;
angles. One of the more interesting&#13;
examples is after La&#13;
Motta loses the title to Sugar Ray&#13;
Robinson and the camera follows&#13;
the rope of the boxing ring to the&#13;
point where La Motta had been&#13;
hanging on. The spot was drenched&#13;
in and dripping blood and&#13;
sweat. Who else but Scorsese&#13;
would have thought of something&#13;
like that?&#13;
Although "Raging Bull" will&#13;
capture Best Actor, Best Director,&#13;
and Best Supporting Actor honors&#13;
at the Academy Awards&#13;
presentation, whether Moriarty&#13;
will receive Best Supporting&#13;
Actress is anybody's guess. It&#13;
probably won't be named Best&#13;
Picture because of its brutality,&#13;
extreme graphic language, and&#13;
explicit content. "Ordinary&#13;
People" will probably win Best&#13;
Picture, but "Raging Bull" should&#13;
not be missed. It is a work of art, a&#13;
film maker's film.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
Meeting&#13;
Tuesday March 31&#13;
3:30 pm in Union 207&#13;
Nominations for Accounting Club&#13;
officers for J 981 -82 will be accepted&#13;
only at this meeting.&#13;
Paul Fischer, Ph.D., LPA, Professor&#13;
of Accounting at UW-M will be&#13;
representing The CPA Review of&#13;
Wisconsin and talking to our club&#13;
about the CPA exam.&#13;
Everyone is welcome!&#13;
Refreshments will be served &#13;
Thursday, March 26, 1981&#13;
Flynn discusses courts&#13;
V Jeff Wicks&#13;
Tnvo'&#13;
1&#13;
! Options For&#13;
Juveniles and Adults" was the&#13;
lnPM pr&#13;
^&#13;
ented by "Houndtable"&#13;
frnm a&#13;
fh 2* Judge Dennis Flynn&#13;
(W?® RaC1&#13;
j&#13;
le Count&#13;
y Felony&#13;
£r fhASCUSSed t he court ^tem tor the Racine and Kenosha area&#13;
and offered some insight to the&#13;
procedures and reasoning behind&#13;
his verdicts on court cases.&#13;
Judge Flynn stated that there&#13;
are 'two overviews of sentencing"&#13;
should the defendant be&#13;
found guilty - rehabilitation and&#13;
punishment.&#13;
There are many "dispositional&#13;
alternatives" used in the&#13;
rehabilitation process, ranging&#13;
from a simple apology to&#13;
probation or prison, according to&#13;
Flynn.&#13;
"Last year there were 648 cases&#13;
that were in the Racine court and&#13;
124 pe rsons who went to prison.&#13;
Obviously the majority of the&#13;
people do not go to prison. The&#13;
majority are placed on&#13;
probation," Flynn said.&#13;
Flynn said that since prison is&#13;
used as an alternative, under the&#13;
law, 13 factors must be dealt with&#13;
as well as a statement made on&#13;
record as to why confinement is&#13;
necessary.&#13;
The considerations in adult&#13;
sentencing are crime, maximum&#13;
penalties, age, prior record,&#13;
education, marital status and&#13;
children, employment record,&#13;
defendant's demeanor, drug or&#13;
alcohol dependency, recommendation&#13;
of probation agent,&#13;
nature of the crime (against&#13;
person or property, aggravated,&#13;
degree of culpability), protection&#13;
of the public, rehabilitation needs&#13;
of defendant, and gravity of the&#13;
offense. Imprisonment is called&#13;
for when: confinement is&#13;
necessary to protect the public&#13;
from further criminal activity, the&#13;
offender is in need of correctional&#13;
and rehabilitative treatment&#13;
which can most effectively be&#13;
provided if the offender is confined,&#13;
or it would unduly&#13;
depreciate the seriousness of the&#13;
offense if a sentence of probation&#13;
were imposed.&#13;
Films now here&#13;
Complaints move showings&#13;
Martin to discuss Hamlet&#13;
Professor Peter Martin of the&#13;
English Discipline will present a&#13;
videotape / lecture on Hamlet by&#13;
William Shakespeare on Monday,&#13;
March 30, from 1-2 p.m. in Union&#13;
104.&#13;
Martin will focus on identification&#13;
of a central theme in&#13;
Hamlet. By showing excerpts&#13;
from the BBC production, which&#13;
aired on PBS last November, he&#13;
will be able to show how the BBC&#13;
production builds toward the&#13;
stating of that theme. If time&#13;
permits, there will be discussion&#13;
of one or two scenes that have&#13;
been variously interpreted over&#13;
the years.&#13;
The lecture is sponsored by the&#13;
Library / Learning Center and is&#13;
free and open to students, faculty&#13;
and staff.&#13;
by Janet Wells&#13;
Jacques Brel is Alive and Well&#13;
and Living in Paris, Luther, and&#13;
Rhinoceros — famed American&#13;
Film Theatre productions — will&#13;
be shown in Parkside's Union&#13;
Cinema instead of at the Golden&#13;
Rondelle as o riginally scheduled.&#13;
A part of Professor Rhoda - Gale&#13;
Pollack's course on contemporary&#13;
drama, the films are free and&#13;
open to the public on Wednesday&#13;
evenings at 7 p.m. Brel was shown&#13;
on March 25; Luther will be shown&#13;
on April 1; and Rhinoceros on&#13;
April 15. Reservations may be&#13;
made by calling 553-2042.&#13;
The six-film series, which is cosponsored&#13;
by Parkside and the&#13;
Golden Rondelle, began on&#13;
February 25 at the Rondelle"with&#13;
Edward Albee's In Delicate&#13;
Balance. Harold Pinter's filmed&#13;
play, The Homecoming, was the&#13;
second in the series, and the last to&#13;
be shown at the Rondelle.&#13;
The showings at the Rondelle&#13;
had received considerable advance&#13;
publicity through theatre&#13;
ads, in interviews broadcast on&#13;
local radio station WGTD and in&#13;
local newspaper articles about&#13;
Pollack's California interviews&#13;
with Ely and Edythe Landau, the&#13;
husband and wife producing team.&#13;
Because the films feature stars&#13;
like Katherine Hepburn, Paul&#13;
Scofield, and the Royal&#13;
Shakespeare Company, and&#13;
directors like Tony Richardson&#13;
and Peter Hall, the AFT series is&#13;
considered something of a feast&#13;
for film and theatre buffs.&#13;
Pollack said that the Rondelle&#13;
management cancelled the&#13;
showing of the four remaining&#13;
films because of some telephoned&#13;
objections to The Homecoming.&#13;
Pollack said that she was contacted&#13;
by the Rondelle's&#13;
management on March 5, the day&#13;
after Pinter's avant - garde&#13;
drama was shown.&#13;
On March 6, she was told that,&#13;
because of the calls, the Rondelle&#13;
had taken a limited, impromptu&#13;
survey of audience opinion. "I&#13;
think they called people who have&#13;
had reservations (for films) in the&#13;
past and that they knew were at&#13;
the film," Pollack said.&#13;
Pollack explained that the&#13;
Rondelle's phone survey elicited&#13;
such comments as "I didn't like it&#13;
one bit," as well as positive&#13;
comment. "One person commented&#13;
on how lovely the&#13;
photography was," Pollack said,&#13;
but 'I didn't understand it' was the&#13;
most common comment."&#13;
"I think the response was really&#13;
out of fright . . . people took it&#13;
realistically," Pollack observed.&#13;
"I never thought it was anything&#13;
that would ever cause any kind of&#13;
reaction. The language is PGrated,&#13;
not R, and there is no&#13;
nudity."&#13;
Racine's Journal Times was in&#13;
error when it reported on March&#13;
11, "The film, starring Jane&#13;
Fonda, had a love scene involving&#13;
nudity." Jane Fonda does not&#13;
even appear in the film.&#13;
Pollack had not planned to&#13;
deliver any explanatory comments&#13;
before or after the&#13;
showings because of the film's&#13;
complexities. However, she said,&#13;
"I felt the program notes would&#13;
prepare the audience and enhance&#13;
understanding of the drama.'&#13;
These notes were made available&#13;
to all audience members. Those&#13;
that accompanied The&#13;
Homecoming stated, "The game&#13;
that progresses through familial&#13;
love / hate ... is harsh, uncompromising,&#13;
funny, and&#13;
shocking." Absurdist plays, said&#13;
Pollack, "are thought - provoking&#13;
and provocative. They say, 'We're&#13;
showing you what you really are&#13;
underneath.' "&#13;
Absurdist plays were once&#13;
considered controversial, but,&#13;
Pollack said, "With so much&#13;
violence and sex on TV and film, I&#13;
expected no outcry sixteen years&#13;
after Pinter's play was first&#13;
produced. I don't say he's a&#13;
household word, but he's certainly&#13;
better known now." The strength&#13;
of the film continues to amaze her.&#13;
"You know," she said, "It's&#13;
almost exciting to think that&#13;
Pinter still causes such strong&#13;
reactions."&#13;
Pollack said that one of her&#13;
primary concerns now is ensuring&#13;
public access to these filmed&#13;
plays, which were initially&#13;
distributed as part of a unique,&#13;
nation - wide subscription series in&#13;
which 600 theaters participated.&#13;
UW-Parkside and S.C. Johnson's&#13;
Golden Rondelle have&#13;
cooperated in several past ventures.&#13;
Last summer's Agatha&#13;
Christie films at the Rondelle&#13;
were selected by Pollack in&#13;
conjunction with a course she was&#13;
then teaching. Next summer,&#13;
Pollack and the Rondelle will&#13;
again work together on a series of&#13;
w D I r VHUMUVV mUIJysOVter W y J (4anUU d suspense lfil Allmlll s.&#13;
Flash talk to be given | Ontario peace workshop offered this fall&#13;
"Electroronniir. c Fla Flassh* h: Do Fin VYou nn nf tho 11CO r \f flnoVi nn«l ««&gt;«!! nln« mi . . « - .&#13;
Realize the Potential?" is the title&#13;
of a talk to be given by Jim&#13;
Maguire, head of the Media&#13;
Services Division of Parkside's&#13;
Library/Learning Center on&#13;
Wednesday, April 1, from 1:00 -&#13;
2:00 p.m. in Television Studio,&#13;
D157A, Comm Arts.&#13;
Maguire will discuss the basics&#13;
of the use of flash and will also&#13;
cover synchronization, different&#13;
kinds of flash units, exposure and&#13;
choosing the correct lighting&#13;
situation.&#13;
The workshop is sponsored by&#13;
the Library/Learning Center and&#13;
is free and open to students,&#13;
faculty and staff.&#13;
The tenth annual Grindstone&#13;
Island School for Peace will offer&#13;
a five - day overview between&#13;
August 23-28, to analyze and&#13;
discuss the current crises in&#13;
Central America, Southeast Asia,&#13;
the Middle East and Southern&#13;
Africa, with attention given to the&#13;
implications of the U.S. / Soviet&#13;
arms race.&#13;
The program, designed for&#13;
students, teachers and activists,&#13;
will feature 10 noted speakers:&#13;
Don Luce of Clergy and Laity&#13;
Concerned (New York City);&#13;
Ernie Regehr of Project&#13;
Ploughshares (Waterloo, Ontario);&#13;
Jennifer Davis of the&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
-Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654 2932&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
c&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
C.C., who Is your psyco-orfhodontlst? Chain&#13;
Gang&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS Parkside Baseball&#13;
team on your fine showing at I.S.U.&#13;
INTRAMURAL basketball rets should be&#13;
erased from the census — Animals&#13;
FINAL SCORE: Refs and Scorekeepers 50,&#13;
Animals 34.&#13;
C.C.: Backstabber extraordlnairel&#13;
Reasonable rates Inquire M118. Chain Gang&#13;
SAL, you ole bitch, you're a terrible&#13;
basketball ref. — Animals&#13;
THE ANIMALS say the marketing Club sucks&#13;
— so d o lOP's.&#13;
R.S., You suck, get off the earth — The&#13;
Animals&#13;
IT IS A CONSPIRACY — the Animals.&#13;
ROOE 'O the future Is ours I&#13;
WANTED&#13;
WANTED: Woman to share small house close&#13;
to campus. Reasonable rent. Call 551-9116&#13;
days.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
T9 GRAND PRIX V6 excellent condition.&#13;
Dark metallic blue. 694-1799&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
TWO BEDROOM HOUSE. Kenosha. 6417 12th&#13;
Ave. Call 654-6810 after 2 p. m.&#13;
GIRLS: Rooms. Racine, near bus route. 634-&#13;
8562 weekdays, 862-2883 w eekends.&#13;
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE. Kenosha&#13;
country setting. 634-8562 weekdays, 862-2883&#13;
weekends.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
PARKSIDE'S JOB SERVICE is now interviewing&#13;
students for part or full - time&#13;
employment. Contact Mike Plate, ext. 2656&#13;
or in WLLC D173.&#13;
LOST — opal ring, March 7th In 2nd floor&#13;
Union. Reward. 554-2151 or 632-9060.&#13;
BEWILDER YOUR OPPONENTS. Impress&#13;
your friends. Learn expert BACKGAMMON&#13;
from top - ranking Milwaukee&#13;
professional. All levels taught. Call Jim at&#13;
551-7404 for reasonable rates.&#13;
EARN WHILE YOU LEARN. Assist retired&#13;
college teacher with correspondence&#13;
reading and organisation of his library,&#13;
Hours can be arranged to suit your&#13;
schedule. Call 694-2251 for appointment.&#13;
American Committee on Africa&#13;
(New York); Nancy Pocock of&#13;
Canadian Friends Service&#13;
Commission (Toronto); Howard&#13;
Adelman of York University&#13;
(Downsview, Ontario); and Ed&#13;
Azar of the University of North&#13;
Carolina.&#13;
Since 1963, the Grindstone&#13;
Island Centre has been sponsoring&#13;
programs on peace and justice in&#13;
the relaxed setting of the 12 acre&#13;
island.&#13;
Registration for the overview is&#13;
limited. The total cost for tuition,&#13;
room and board for the five days&#13;
is $100. A limited number of&#13;
partial scholarships are available.&#13;
All interested persons may apply.&#13;
For more information on the&#13;
Grindstone Island School for&#13;
Peace and/or registration, write&#13;
to the: Grindstone Co-op, P.O. Box&#13;
564, Station P, Toronto, Ontario&#13;
M5S 2T1 or call (416) 923-4215.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads —&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30$ will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words&#13;
or less.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
[ DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE&#13;
Any registered UW-P student or student organization is qualified&#13;
to insert a classified line ad in the Ranger at no cost if under or&#13;
equivalent to 10 words. (Phone numbers equal 1 word.)&#13;
I&#13;
! Classification:&#13;
i Name&#13;
SS No.. Ranger&#13;
_WLLC D139 &#13;
RANGER Thursday, March 26, 1981&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
VIDEO TAPE "Son of FootbaUpSSS^'iUintr i c&#13;
free for Parkside students, faculty and staff SiSninrl^H AdmiMl&#13;
°n is&#13;
CONCERT "L'Orchestre Toulouse" with SSh-fS ^ by PAB"&#13;
Philippe Entremont as solo pianist. TicketsJm to «v?n iS*1&#13;
"? I™1 featurln«&#13;
mission is $5 for Parkside student"and « for oLrs rSUlL "i?* d&#13;
°°&#13;
r&#13;
-&#13;
Ad&#13;
"&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series. The program Jurtfat Il mT!. ^&#13;
part ot 1116&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
8 m starts at 8 p. m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
M O V I E " f f i ^ i ^ R a t a S i g h t " 1 u V * ' r i t a U n i °&#13;
n S q u a r e -&#13;
at*e door is „for*&#13;
DINNER/CONCERT "Wurlitze^M^cal RJvue^Admi,.ion u&#13;
the dinner, at 6 p. m. in the Union Dining Room and the shSi ?• 5 ^ per8&#13;
?&#13;
n&#13;
?&#13;
8&#13;
-&#13;
*•&lt;*--&#13;
at the Union Information Center. Admissionto |1 W "* available&#13;
"S&#13;
Sunday, March 29&#13;
tote" jSE* """ EdC° Va&#13;
"&#13;
i&#13;
"&#13;
8&#13;
"« vtolto. The&#13;
MOVIE "Hide in Plain Sight" will be repeated at 7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, March 30&#13;
R®J&#13;
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a Union 106. Colin Hargrave, Labour Council Member&#13;
of London, Borough of Bexley, will talk on "The End of the Broad ChtSS?&#13;
F^mentaiism in the British Labor Party." program&#13;
L^.^Jv,&#13;
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? TAPE at 1 P- "»• in Union 104. Prof. Peter Martin will talk on&#13;
stS&#13;
a&#13;
and&#13;
a&#13;
fSy Hamlet." Admission is free tor Parkside students,&#13;
Tuesday, March 31&#13;
s®!&#13;
dIIUAR "Mentally Retarded Offender" at 9 a. m. and again at 7 p. m in MOLN&#13;
105. The program is free and open to professionals in the field. Please call ext.&#13;
2312 for reservations. Sponsored by UW - Extenation&#13;
P^?»h&#13;
ICp&#13;
F&#13;
I!fVMT "&#13;
Mexic&#13;
° •&#13;
u&#13;
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s&#13;
- Relations: Immigration it The Labor Market"&#13;
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Cey&#13;
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ett BriM». Richard Periman and Prof. Lionel&#13;
public*1 P- m. in the Union Cinema. The program is free and open to the&#13;
Z2Tld 5L2ftCat2&#13;
:8&#13;
° P- m- !*&gt; Tallent HaU. Call ext. 2312 for more details. Sponsored by UW - Extension.&#13;
Wednesday, April 1&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE at 12 noon in Union 104-106, with folk music by "Huns and Dr.&#13;
®®®*&#13;
er '• Admission is free for Parkside students. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
WORKSHIP "Electronic Flash: Do You Realize the Potential?" with Jim Maguire&#13;
at 1 p. m. in CA D157 A. Admission is free tor Parkside students, faculty and staff.&#13;
FILM "Luther" will be shown at 7 p. m. in the Union Cinema. Reservations atext.&#13;
2042. Admission is free. The American Film Series is sponsored by UW - Extension&#13;
and UW - Parkside.&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
A two session Career Skills&#13;
Identification Workshop will be&#13;
offered by Community Student&#13;
Services and Student Development&#13;
on Monday, March 30 and&#13;
Monday, April 6 in UW-Parkside's&#13;
Molinaro 113 from 1 p.m. to 1:50&#13;
p.m.&#13;
During the first session, participants&#13;
will learn how to identify&#13;
their skills, and will discuss what&#13;
is meant by "career skills." In the&#13;
second session, each participant&#13;
will develop a list of his/her skills,&#13;
using information written since&#13;
the first session. Relating this&#13;
information to choosing a career&#13;
will be the final topic.&#13;
It is not necessary to sign up in&#13;
advance, but those wishing more&#13;
information can call Barbara&#13;
Larson at 553-2122 or Wendi&#13;
Schneider at 553-24%.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
™Parkskte6&#13;
/toch&#13;
k19&#13;
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tab 3t Winn&#13;
'&#13;
n9 the NCAA FenC'&#13;
n9 ChamP&#13;
|0&#13;
"ships which were held here&#13;
Women's track ready for state&#13;
The UW - Parkside women's&#13;
track team concludes its indoor&#13;
season this weekend at the&#13;
WWIAC S tate Championships at&#13;
UW - LaCrosse. The meet will&#13;
involve 14 universities and&#13;
colleges from the state and&#13;
competition will be fierce in all&#13;
events.&#13;
Coming off a fine third - place&#13;
finish at the UW - M Invitational&#13;
on March 7, the Rangers show a&#13;
lot of promise in many events.&#13;
According to the lastest Conference&#13;
listings, freshman Cindy&#13;
Spaciel (Oak Creek) is the&#13;
favorite in the 60 and 300; she'll&#13;
also run a leg on the Mile Relay&#13;
and could place in the top three in&#13;
the Long Jump. Running a close&#13;
second in the 300 will be Dona&#13;
Driscoll (Muskego) who will also&#13;
attempt the 600 (in 1980 she placed&#13;
DeVinney awarded&#13;
Parkside's professor of Art,&#13;
Douglas DeVinny, received the&#13;
Burpee Art Museum Purchase&#13;
Award in the 57th Annual Rockford&#13;
(111.) and Vicinity Jury Show,&#13;
on display at the museum through&#13;
March 29.&#13;
DeVinny will also be&#13;
represented in the Boston Printmakers&#13;
33rd National Exhibition&#13;
April 5 through 26 a t the Boston&#13;
Center for the Arts and May 10&#13;
through June 21 at the Fitchburg&#13;
(Mass.) Art Museum.&#13;
DeVinny, who joined the&#13;
Parkside faculty in 1979, earned&#13;
his graduate degree in printmaking&#13;
from Indiana University.&#13;
Last fall, he won an award for&#13;
excellence in the Wisconsin&#13;
Watercolor '80 show and exhibited&#13;
a group of his prints and drawings&#13;
at Colorado State University, Fort&#13;
Collins.&#13;
Job Service interviewing&#13;
WITH THE ADVENT OF SPRING comes the increase of&#13;
students spending time outdoors between classes pursuing&#13;
recreation such as these frisbee enthusiasts.&#13;
Career Workshop offered&#13;
Wisconsin Job Service's&#13;
Parkside outreach worker Mike&#13;
Plate is now interviewing&#13;
Parkside students in WLLC D-173.&#13;
Plate said he is looking for part or&#13;
full - time students interested in&#13;
part time and/or summer employment.&#13;
&#13;
"We're primarily looking for*"&#13;
students for casual or seasonal&#13;
employment," Plate said, adding&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
"In the past, we've placed&#13;
students as file clerks, clerk&#13;
typists, restaurant workers and&#13;
sales clerks, to name a few of the&#13;
positions that have been available&#13;
to students."&#13;
For more information about Job&#13;
Service employment, students can&#13;
call Plate at ext. 2656 b etween 8&#13;
a.m. and 3 p.m. Monday through&#13;
Friday.&#13;
second in this event) as well as the&#13;
Mile Relay. The top contender for&#13;
UW-P in the Long Jump will be&#13;
JoAnne Carey (Racine Case) who&#13;
is jumping near her best for the&#13;
indoor season.&#13;
Other team points are expected&#13;
from KeUie Benzow in the Mile&#13;
and 1000, an event well suited to&#13;
her talents and from Wendy&#13;
Burman who will have to put out a&#13;
short burst 2 Mile effort. Also&#13;
competing will be Nicola Haylor&#13;
the Hurdles, Denise Schreiber in&#13;
the Shot Put, Sandy Venne in the&#13;
600 and Pam Carey in the 880&#13;
Relay with JoAnne Carey, Haylor,&#13;
Venne, or Spaciel.&#13;
"As a team," said Coach Barb&#13;
Lawson, "we can expect to be at&#13;
least in the top five teams.&#13;
LaCrosse has won the meet in the&#13;
past, but this year too many teams&#13;
have top point - getters including&#13;
us as well as Marquette,&#13;
Milwaukee and a few surprises&#13;
from Eau Claire. If things go as&#13;
planned we could end up with&#13;
about 60 points which could give&#13;
us second place. We're ready."&#13;
C&amp;R AUTO SERVICE&#13;
Quality Auto Work&#13;
Done At&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
10% OFF FOR&#13;
UW-P STUDENTS&#13;
Call 553-9092or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00&#13;
ACADEMY OF BATON &amp; DANCE&#13;
;Headquarters for "Gym Kin"Body Suits,:&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — Tap Shoes —&#13;
All Dancing Supplies&#13;
i!6204-22nd Avenue, Kenosha 658-2498&#13;
"A zany comedy of brilliant wit."&#13;
— Boston Globe&#13;
LA C AGE&#13;
AUX FOLLES&#13;
(Birds of a Feather)&#13;
A FILM BY EDOUARDMOLINARO&#13;
SUNDAY, MARCH 29, 1981&#13;
5 pm, MARKET SQUARE THEATERS, $3.50&#13;
8600 Sheridan Road, Kenosha&#13;
Sponsored by Friends of the Kenosha Public Library &#13;
8 Thursday, March 26, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Financial aid deadline April 15&#13;
An important message to students&#13;
from Chancellor Alan E. Guskin&#13;
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              <text>PSGA elections March 11-12 - Presidential candidates</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
••••• PSGA elections March 11-12&#13;
Presidential&#13;
candidates:&#13;
Stories by Dan Galbraith&#13;
Jim Kreuser&#13;
Jim Kreuser, sophomore, is a&#13;
political science major, currently&#13;
a senator, and is running for the&#13;
office of President of PSGA.&#13;
Jim wants to set up an&#13;
emergency loan fund for students,&#13;
currently there is one, but it's&#13;
always dry. The fund will be used&#13;
as lay over for financial aid&#13;
checks that are late.&#13;
Kreuser also wants to work with&#13;
the new SOC president, when&#13;
elected later in the spring, to form&#13;
some cohesion between PSGA and&#13;
SOC. He would like to set down&#13;
some guidelines and procedures,&#13;
so at meetings they're not always&#13;
fighting for money.&#13;
Planning on taking a closer grip&#13;
on the Physical Plant is another&#13;
thing Kreuser wants to do when he&#13;
gets in office. The administration&#13;
tell the physical plant what to do&#13;
and their jobs get done first, according&#13;
to Kreuser. Students have&#13;
to wait for things to get done, lor&#13;
example there has been a gaping&#13;
hole in the rec center for the past&#13;
year and a half. He wants to know&#13;
where they are putting their&#13;
priorities.&#13;
He's running on a campaign of&#13;
questioning faculty and its&#13;
spending.&#13;
He would like to implement a&#13;
new thing at registration time&#13;
where students would sign a form,&#13;
which would bond them for a&#13;
certain amount, if caught for&#13;
vandalism. Students would have&#13;
their records held until they paid&#13;
for the damage. He'll be checking&#13;
on the legalities over the summer.&#13;
Jim's for effective government.&#13;
He wants things to be run cut and&#13;
dry, black and white and PSGA is&#13;
not going to be caught with a&#13;
bunch of gray all over the place&#13;
JIM KREUSER&#13;
and nothing getting done. He will&#13;
make sure things will get done.&#13;
Kay Mullikin&#13;
Kay Mullikin, junior, is a&#13;
business major and currently the&#13;
vice president of PSGA.&#13;
Kay wants PSGA more up on the&#13;
issues that they need to be up on so&#13;
that they know what might effect&#13;
the students and they can get this&#13;
information out to the students.&#13;
Example of this: the Sexual&#13;
harassment.The Board of Hegents&#13;
have to make sure they think of&#13;
the students way of how they&#13;
would like to handle the situation.&#13;
With PSGA growing bigger, Kay&#13;
says that it has to continue to let&#13;
the students know what's going on&#13;
even though they may not get&#13;
involved. They still need to know&#13;
how this is going to effect them.&#13;
There are a lot of things that&#13;
students have a right, because of&#13;
Merger's law, to have a say in&#13;
everything that effects them,&#13;
according to Kay.&#13;
When someone comes in with a&#13;
problem we have to know before&#13;
the students, so PSGA can, if not&#13;
give an answer, they can give&#13;
them an explanation.&#13;
There are some internal&#13;
organizational restructuring that&#13;
has to be done within PSGA and&#13;
KAY MU LLIKIN&#13;
SOC that are being worked on&#13;
currently. Kay thinks SOC should&#13;
spend time on club activities. She&#13;
does not think they should spend&#13;
their time so much on budgeting.&#13;
With the new proposal, she feels&#13;
that this kind of c uts that out.&#13;
With the continuation growth of&#13;
PSGA they should have a better&#13;
chance to let other students know&#13;
what's going on. They need to&#13;
reach out to other students to see&#13;
what their problems or their&#13;
feelings are on certain issues. We&#13;
have to let students know we are&#13;
looking out for them.&#13;
Jan Oechler&#13;
Jan Oechler, junior, is a&#13;
business major and currently SOC&#13;
president who is running for the&#13;
position of President.&#13;
Jan feels students have to start&#13;
speaking up and get students&#13;
involved, even if it means to get a&#13;
rally together. Students don't&#13;
realize that they do have a big&#13;
voice in what is going to happen to&#13;
them and they are not using that&#13;
voice now.&#13;
She feels that a night bus is&#13;
necessary so people who are out&#13;
here from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. don't&#13;
have to drive. She would be&#13;
looking into the parking situation,&#13;
such as a shuttle bus from Tallent&#13;
JAN OECHLER&#13;
Hall, opening up the east parking&#13;
lot again and running a shuttle bus&#13;
from there, and getting security to&#13;
really give out the tickets to the&#13;
people who don't have a sticker or&#13;
who are parked illegally.&#13;
Jan thinks that SOC d oes need&#13;
some work and that is something&#13;
she would like to accomplish while&#13;
in office. .&#13;
Tuition is going to be a big topic&#13;
next year with financial aid being&#13;
cut and she is looking into the&#13;
problem in case something does&#13;
happen. She feels that the cut&#13;
might be beneficial to Parkside&#13;
because people probably won't be&#13;
able to afford Madison or&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
She thinks that the older&#13;
students' voice needs to be heard&#13;
because they are paying tuition.&#13;
She thinks that they have to get&#13;
involved.&#13;
The Senate meetings need to be&#13;
publicized, the minutes and the&#13;
agenda need to be publicized also.&#13;
Basically, students need to&#13;
become involved with issues that&#13;
come up during the year, according&#13;
to Jan.&#13;
Gary Strathman&#13;
Gary Strathman, sophomore, is&#13;
a business major and is running&#13;
for president.&#13;
GARY STRATHMAN&#13;
He would like people to get more&#13;
interested in what is going on&#13;
around Parkside. He wants to&#13;
bring the student government to&#13;
the attention of the student&#13;
population because he had many&#13;
questions like, president of w hat?&#13;
He'll be running on the party&#13;
issue. He wants to make people&#13;
feel decent about the parties. It&#13;
seems to him that the same people&#13;
attend the dances and maybe it's&#13;
time for some fresh ideas on how&#13;
to get people to go to the dances.&#13;
He figures by spending money on&#13;
students in ways they appreciate&#13;
will make them feel better and get&#13;
them interested in something.&#13;
He would like to work on the&#13;
grievance committee problems&#13;
because some students seem to be&#13;
disenchanted with the way the&#13;
situation has been handled as far&#13;
as grades. To get an open avenue&#13;
to debate with the professors was&#13;
an idea.&#13;
Gary wants to get more people&#13;
involved in PSGA by making it&#13;
highly visible and make it appealing.&#13;
According to Gary, the&#13;
mood of the school is 'what is it&#13;
going to do for me?' He feels that&#13;
one way to get people to the Senate&#13;
meetings would be to have a small&#13;
door prize or by bringing up&#13;
controversial issues.&#13;
Vice-presidential candidates:&#13;
(Pictures on Page 2) Stories by Dan Galbraith&#13;
Kathy Bambrough&#13;
Kathy Bambrough, freshman,&#13;
an Organizational communication&#13;
major, a member of the PSGA&#13;
senate, is running for the office of&#13;
Vice President.&#13;
Kathy wants to see the Senate&#13;
more advertised and to let the&#13;
students know what is going on,&#13;
not just bits and pieces through&#13;
Contact articles in the Ranger.&#13;
She would like the Senate to move&#13;
out into the student body because&#13;
it seems that the students don't&#13;
want to come to PSGA with their&#13;
problems. She wants the Senate to&#13;
go out and look for the problems&#13;
rather than to sit around the office&#13;
and wait for them to come in.&#13;
She feels if a person like herself&#13;
or someone else in the Senate that&#13;
understands the SOC situation and&#13;
the proposal, working with SOC at&#13;
first would get things running&#13;
smoothly.&#13;
She feels that students should&#13;
have a voice, not necessarily a&#13;
vote, in tenure decisions. Kathy&#13;
would like to see the library kept&#13;
open 24 hours, Sunday through&#13;
Thursday. Other campuses have it&#13;
and it works very well. She thinks&#13;
a lot of students would be there till&#13;
2 or 3 in the morning and would&#13;
come early in the morning.&#13;
To help report sexual&#13;
harassment, she feels that a&#13;
hotline should be set up where&#13;
nobody would know who they were&#13;
talking to and there wouldn't be a&#13;
problem of b eing afraid to report&#13;
it.&#13;
Kathy thinks that the Senate&#13;
needs a strong V.P. and they need&#13;
to put a lot of t ime and effort into&#13;
making the Senate work.&#13;
Chuck Neu&#13;
Chuck Neu, junior, is a math&#13;
major and a member of the Senate&#13;
and is running for Vice President.&#13;
According to Chuck, the major&#13;
problem of t he Senate is a lack of&#13;
communication between the&#13;
students and the Senate and the&#13;
other organizations. The Senate is&#13;
supposed to represent the&#13;
students' interests. Most of the&#13;
students don't realize that they&#13;
can come to the Senate meetings.&#13;
He feels that SOC needs time to&#13;
reorganize internally. They have&#13;
to have the major input on the&#13;
Senate proposal, because&#13;
otherwise they have to implement&#13;
it and live with it.&#13;
The major thing inside of PS GA&#13;
is to motivate the committees.&#13;
The only problem he feels is to&#13;
find out what the students want.&#13;
Due to Merger's law, the students&#13;
have a right to have input on what&#13;
will effect them.&#13;
Chuck believes that there needs&#13;
to be enough protection for the&#13;
harassed and the harassee. And&#13;
that there is student representation&#13;
on the committee on sexual&#13;
harassment.&#13;
He feels the book co-op will have&#13;
accessable hours during peak&#13;
times during the semester and all&#13;
through the semester. It will have&#13;
two work / study students and one&#13;
manager. They need people to put&#13;
time into it.&#13;
Chuck is supporting the evening&#13;
bus services for the eight week&#13;
trial period.&#13;
Chuck also stated that they need&#13;
to advertise the fact that the&#13;
senate is the voice and that they&#13;
can't represent you without first&#13;
listening to you.&#13;
Kathy Seliga&#13;
Kathy Seliga, junior, is an&#13;
accounting major and is running&#13;
for the office erf Vice President.&#13;
One of the main reasons that she&#13;
decided to run is to get more input&#13;
and involvement from the non -&#13;
traditional student. The student&#13;
body is comprised of 40% of the&#13;
non - traditional students and she&#13;
feels that they should voice their&#13;
opinions.&#13;
One of the big things she feels&#13;
that students should be voicing&#13;
their opinion on is the evening bus&#13;
service due to the fact that a lot of&#13;
people do attend at night and they&#13;
have no bus service. She thinks&#13;
there should be one bus leaving at&#13;
least at 9:30 p.m. and maybe an&#13;
early one at 6:30 or 7 p.m.&#13;
Other issues that would be of&#13;
concern to students would be the&#13;
courses being offered, and when&#13;
they're offered, information on&#13;
the different type of child care and&#13;
car pools that could be formed.&#13;
She feels the students should&#13;
determine the hours of the Book&#13;
Co-op. She feels the PSGA&#13;
meeting, topics, time and place of&#13;
the meeting should be posted.&#13;
Kathy feels that what is needed&#13;
is input from the students.&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Toxic chemicals denounced&#13;
• "Matchmaker" opens&#13;
• Basketball team in&#13;
championship game &#13;
2 Thursday, March 5,1981 RANGER&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
Jim Kreuser for PSGA President&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
In recent years, the PSGA&#13;
presidents have been unsympathetic&#13;
to the Union and&#13;
students in general. The administration&#13;
has drastically cut&#13;
back on the Union without so&#13;
much as a fight or a reasonable&#13;
and extensive line of questioning&#13;
from the past "President."&#13;
Finally there is a candidate&#13;
running who knows the workings&#13;
of the Union and all of its functions.&#13;
I believe he could fully be&#13;
comprehensive of the students&#13;
needs along with the budgeting of&#13;
fiscal expenditures. Jim Kreuser&#13;
is this presidential candidate who&#13;
will challenge administrative&#13;
spending instead of worrying&#13;
about just budgeting. He has kept&#13;
administration honest with care&#13;
and respectability. He also takes a&#13;
firm hand in that he refuses to&#13;
rubber stamp administrative&#13;
whims.&#13;
Kreuser also takes a stand&#13;
against the basic skills&#13;
requirements and sees a great&#13;
need for an emergency loan fund.&#13;
Jim Kreuser has been on the&#13;
Senate for over a year and knows&#13;
how it functions. His emphasis has&#13;
been on student services, parking&#13;
appeals committee and helping&#13;
individual students with administrative&#13;
problems.&#13;
Jan Oechler, another candidate&#13;
for president, has been president&#13;
of t he unorganized S.O.C. Clearly&#13;
seeing that she could not effectively&#13;
run S.O.C., a subcommittee&#13;
of the Senate, it is&#13;
unclear to me how she could run&#13;
the Senate.&#13;
Kay Mulliken is the third&#13;
candidate that I know is running&#13;
for president. The past semester,&#13;
while she was in office, she has&#13;
done an adequate job; not a great&#13;
job, but an adequate one. The&#13;
question is: Do we want a great&#13;
student government president, or&#13;
an adequate one?&#13;
Lets all make this coming year&#13;
different and vote for someone&#13;
who will watch out for the students&#13;
needs and is willing to question&#13;
administration. JIM KREUSER&#13;
FOR PRESIDENT OF YOUR&#13;
STUDENT GOVERNMENT!!&#13;
Steve Mertz&#13;
PSGA Vice-presidential candidates:&#13;
KATHY BAMBROUGH CHUCK NEU KATHY SELIGA&#13;
Students run for Senate&#13;
by Dan Galbraith&#13;
Kathy Slama&#13;
Kathy Slama, senior, is a life&#13;
science major, a member of the&#13;
senate and is running for a seat on&#13;
the senate.&#13;
Kathy wants the reorganization&#13;
and restructing of the SOC&#13;
budgeting process to be implemented&#13;
as smoothly as possible&#13;
while opening the communication&#13;
between SOC and the Senate.&#13;
She wants to publicize the&#13;
happenings of student government&#13;
so that it is more available to&#13;
the student body.&#13;
According to Kathy, there are&#13;
faculty member committees that&#13;
have student voting member seats&#13;
that are not presently used to their&#13;
fullest. She would like to see these&#13;
student seats filled with qualified&#13;
people, who will voice their&#13;
opinions and inform the students&#13;
of the committees' activities.&#13;
To inform the students of what&#13;
is happening, he said he would&#13;
maybe publish a bulletin and by&#13;
having direct contact with&#13;
students.&#13;
Michael Loos&#13;
Michael Loos, junior, an&#13;
engineering technology major,&#13;
currently a Senator, is running for&#13;
a seat on the Senate.&#13;
Michael has been working on&#13;
the parking problems and intends&#13;
to present the results of a recent&#13;
survey to Asst. Chancellor Gary&#13;
Goetz. He is also interested in the&#13;
Book Co-op and SOC. He is&#13;
planning on continuing his work&#13;
with the Student Services Committee&#13;
to help the students.&#13;
He is planning on using his&#13;
position to help the students in any&#13;
way on any problem.&#13;
Joe Ripp&#13;
Joe Ripp, senior, is a life science&#13;
and anthropology major and is&#13;
running for a seat on the Senate.&#13;
Joe wants to see more students&#13;
get involved. If an issue would&#13;
arise, that he would vote on, he&#13;
would ask for students' opinions.&#13;
In classes and the friends that he&#13;
knows directly, he would keep&#13;
them involved.&#13;
He would continue working on&#13;
the Student Services committee.&#13;
While on that committee he will be&#13;
looking into the closing of t he post&#13;
office for private mail.&#13;
Steve Kaufman&#13;
Steve Kaufman, junior, a&#13;
sociology major, currently a&#13;
Senator, is running for a seat on&#13;
the Senate.&#13;
His main concern is in&#13;
developing the book co-op into a&#13;
workable student service. He has&#13;
already been elected to manage&#13;
the service if re-elected.&#13;
Among the many changes that&#13;
will come for the book co-op will&#13;
be the elimination of m embership&#13;
requirements and fees. The&#13;
service will be absolutely without&#13;
any charge for selling or buying&#13;
books. This plans to greatly expand&#13;
the business hours. He believes&#13;
that there is a tremendous amount&#13;
of potential in a book exchange&#13;
service of this type and that it&#13;
would enable students to save a&#13;
great deal of money.&#13;
Brad Faust&#13;
Brad Faust, sophomore, a&#13;
business and psychology major, is&#13;
running for a senate seat.&#13;
Brad basically feels that the&#13;
athletes at Parkside do not have&#13;
any representation in the senate&#13;
and he would like to fill that need.&#13;
He feels that students should be&#13;
able to approach him with their&#13;
problems and that will be the&#13;
basis for his involvement in&#13;
PSGA. He said that he can't&#13;
promise that he can change every&#13;
situation, but he said he would try&#13;
his best.&#13;
Louis Valldejuli&#13;
Louis Valldejuli, freshman, a&#13;
political science major is running&#13;
for a senate position.&#13;
He believes one of the problems&#13;
on our campus is the lack of&#13;
communication between different&#13;
interest groups that form the&#13;
student body. He thinks that we&#13;
need to make sure that our voices&#13;
and our opinions are heard loud&#13;
and clear in the United Council.&#13;
Louis wants to make sure that&#13;
student money is used for the&#13;
benefit of the student body. He is&#13;
trying very hard by learning&#13;
about all aspects of our institution&#13;
to join different interest groups&#13;
with the purpose of finding exactly&#13;
what the students want for our&#13;
school.&#13;
Viewpoint RANGER Photos&#13;
by Dan McCormack&#13;
Should degree - seeking students be required to take the&#13;
Collegiate Skills Requirements?&#13;
Lori Belashka, sophomore:&#13;
"No, if you can pass your&#13;
classes that should be enough.&#13;
You shouldn't have to worry about&#13;
these requirements when you&#13;
have other tests to worry about."&#13;
Michelle, Kuchera, freshman:&#13;
"Yes, there are a lot of people&#13;
who don't really know how to read&#13;
very well and they passed high&#13;
school because someone wanted to&#13;
get rid of them."&#13;
Donna Sahakian, freshman&#13;
"Yes. There are a lot of people&#13;
who don't really know how to read&#13;
very well and they passed high&#13;
school because someone wanted to&#13;
get rid of them."&#13;
Ron Pedersen, senior:&#13;
"Hell no! They told me you need&#13;
them to get through college, I'm&#13;
almost done with college and I&#13;
haven't needed them. If you're&#13;
going through college, you should&#13;
be smart enough. I'm a music&#13;
major; why should I need math?&#13;
They should give a music theory&#13;
test to math majors."&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
Brian Felland Business Manager&#13;
Sue Michetti Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Sports Editor&#13;
Brian Passino Editor&#13;
Ginger Heigeson copy Editor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Dave Cramer, Mike Farrell, Dan Galbraith, Mike Holmdohl,&#13;
Carol Kiees, Dan McCormack, Lori Meyer, Bruce Preston, Kim&#13;
Schlater, Janet Wells, Jeff Wicks&#13;
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wr&#13;
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ttennd ?&#13;
di,ed by students of UW-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
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Un,on Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER&#13;
ParteTdeTJSTha! Wl^T* addreSS6d f&#13;
°&#13;
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Reserves Si" S If Tu&#13;
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Publication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content S re,usin&#13;
9 to print letters which contain false or &#13;
Reagan introduces&#13;
economic proposal&#13;
RANGER Thursday, March 5,1981&#13;
Maris contract not renewed&#13;
by Susan J. Aulise&#13;
6 *• can no longer&#13;
Procrastinate and hope things will&#13;
get better. They will not. If we do&#13;
not act forcefully, and now, the&#13;
economy will get worse."&#13;
With these words President&#13;
Reagan introduced the most&#13;
dramatic economic proposal since&#13;
Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal —&#13;
and while the New Deal is not yet&#13;
dead and buried, the Reagan&#13;
proposal has certainly chipped&#13;
away at its veneer.&#13;
The Reagan economic proposal,&#13;
known at the White House as&#13;
"America's New Beginning: A&#13;
Program for ' Economic&#13;
Recovery" is threefold, concentrating&#13;
on reductions in personal&#13;
tax rates and business&#13;
taxes; spending cuts and other&#13;
measures to reduce the budget&#13;
deficit; and reductions in the&#13;
number of federal regulations.&#13;
The results anticipated by the&#13;
Reagan administration in the&#13;
event that the entire program is&#13;
adopted by Congress are quite&#13;
dramatic. The White House has&#13;
projected that the entire program&#13;
of ta x reductions and budget cuts&#13;
would cut inflation in half in the&#13;
next two years. Specifically, inflation&#13;
would drop from 12.4 per&#13;
cent in 1980 to 11.1 per cent in 1981;&#13;
to 8.3 per cent in 1982; to 6 per cent&#13;
in 1983 and to an impressive 4 per&#13;
cent in 1984.&#13;
In addition to the dramatic drop&#13;
in inflation, real economic growth&#13;
would average four to five per&#13;
cent starting in 1982. Though&#13;
White House projections indicate&#13;
unemployment would rise .4 per&#13;
cent to 7.7 per cent by the end of&#13;
1981, the administration expects a&#13;
slow but steady decline to 5.6 per&#13;
cent by 1986. •&#13;
What exactly do we lose in this&#13;
yet unproven gamble for&#13;
economic stability? President&#13;
Reagan's proposed budget cuts&#13;
for five month old fiscal 1981 total&#13;
$4.8 billion, and for fiscal 1982,&#13;
cuts amount to a whopping $41.4&#13;
billion. With these cuts, hundreds&#13;
of thousands of college students&#13;
will lose their government loans.&#13;
400,000 families will lose their food&#13;
stamps, 300,000 public service&#13;
trainees will lose their jobs,&#13;
millions of a ir travelers will pay&#13;
nine per cent more per one way&#13;
fare, and* that doesn't even&#13;
scratch the surface.&#13;
Nearly everyone will find&#13;
something in the close to 300 pages&#13;
of c uts that will affect his or her&#13;
daily life. Of course, there are,&#13;
despite assertions by Office of&#13;
Management and Budget (OMB)&#13;
Director David Stockman to the&#13;
contrary, some "sacred cows" —&#13;
areas which escape the budget&#13;
office cleaver unscathed.&#13;
Some are explainable, like&#13;
defense. True to his campaign&#13;
promises, President Reagan will&#13;
not only exempt the Defense&#13;
Department from cuts but increase&#13;
real defense spending by&#13;
almost $100 billion by 1984.&#13;
Other "sacred cows" are less&#13;
explainable. Among the vast&#13;
number of cuts are significant&#13;
drops in dairy price supports, an&#13;
area of special concern in&#13;
Wisconsin, while tobacco subsidies&#13;
remain untouched.&#13;
The area of the Reagan proposal&#13;
most enthusiastically pitched by&#13;
the administration is the two part&#13;
plan for tax reductions. This plan,&#13;
basically the Kemp - Roth tax bill,&#13;
would reduce individual tax rates&#13;
by 10 per cent a year for three&#13;
years and provide for more rapid&#13;
depreciation of new plants and&#13;
equipment for business and industry.&#13;
&#13;
Perhaps the most controversial&#13;
aspect of the Reagan plan, and the&#13;
one which he will have the&#13;
greatest difficulty selling to&#13;
Congress, is that first part, individual&#13;
income tax deduction.&#13;
Under this plan, a family of four&#13;
earning $20,000 a year would&#13;
receive tax cuts of $114 in 1981,&#13;
$300 in 1982, $464 in 1983, and $881 in&#13;
1984. On the other hand, a family&#13;
of four making $100,000 a year&#13;
would have its tax burden reduced&#13;
by $920 in 1981, $3,343 in 1982,&#13;
$5,823 in 1983, and $5,974 i n 1984.&#13;
This theory, termed "supply -&#13;
side" economics, assumes that&#13;
middle and upper income&#13;
Americans will spend and save&#13;
more, hence creating more jobs,&#13;
less inflation and a greater incentive&#13;
to work.&#13;
In the second part of t his series,&#13;
we will examine the Reagan tax&#13;
proposal and why Congress and&#13;
the banking community remain&#13;
wary of its success.&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
On Feb. 2, the Fine Arts&#13;
Executive Committee met to&#13;
reconsider their contract renewal&#13;
non-recommendation decision&#13;
made in the case of • Music&#13;
Assistant Professor Barbara&#13;
Maris, who started teaching in the&#13;
fall of 1978, and whose current *&#13;
contract expires in May of 1982.&#13;
Although Maris was awarded a&#13;
distinguished service award for&#13;
teaching excellence on August 29,&#13;
1980, the Fine Arts Executive&#13;
Committee found that her&#13;
creative activity was insufficient&#13;
for recommendation for renewal.&#13;
On N ovember 21, th e Fine Arts&#13;
Executive Committee met and&#13;
deliberated for five hours and&#13;
forty minutes over the Maris case.&#13;
The tenured faculty comprising&#13;
the seven voting members of the&#13;
committee consist of the&#13;
following: Rhoda-Gale Pollack,&#13;
Tim Bell, Frances Bedford, Rollin&#13;
Jansky, Frank Mueller, John&#13;
ASST. PROF.&#13;
BARBARA MARIS&#13;
Murphy, and August Wegner. The&#13;
sealed ballot vote contained seven&#13;
"no" votes.&#13;
Since a candidate for tenure or&#13;
renewal has the right to ask for&#13;
reconsideration and to introduce&#13;
any new material or new perspectives&#13;
on old material, Maris&#13;
requested reconsideration. The&#13;
outcome of the Feb. 2 meeting&#13;
resulted in one "yes" vote and six&#13;
"no" votes.&#13;
Maris, who has played a role in&#13;
communications between&#13;
musicians in the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha area and Parkside&#13;
faculty, stated, "I was very&#13;
disappointed by the decision of the&#13;
committee last November, and I&#13;
was disappointed that the&#13;
majority of the committee chose&#13;
not to reverse their decision&#13;
earlier this month. I feel that the&#13;
Parkside concept of outreach to&#13;
the community, of lifetime&#13;
education, and communication&#13;
between disciplines is terribly&#13;
important to our country. I think&#13;
Parkside has really provided a&#13;
model for institutions throughout&#13;
the United States."&#13;
Parkside lost and found to be disposed&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
Bill Carter, Assistant Director&#13;
of Parkside Security, said that&#13;
any persons who have lost items&#13;
on campus should contact&#13;
Security immediately by calling&#13;
553-2455 or by stopping in the&#13;
Security headquarters at Tallent&#13;
Hall in room 188.&#13;
Carter said that Security will be&#13;
disposing of all unclaimed items&#13;
within the next month. Although&#13;
many people ask for "lost and&#13;
found" items at the information&#13;
desks in the Union Building and&#13;
Library Learning Center&#13;
Building, they may not be aware&#13;
of the official "lost and found"&#13;
collected by Security.&#13;
The "lost and found" currently&#13;
contains an overabundance of&#13;
books, glasses, calculators,&#13;
jewelry, tape recorders, watches,&#13;
folders, notebooks, and other&#13;
items, according to Carter.&#13;
Disposal of items will follow a&#13;
set procedure which is used after&#13;
every four to six months of accumulation,&#13;
according to Carter.&#13;
He said that the procedure&#13;
requires that all expensive items&#13;
be turned over to the Madison&#13;
system, while other items are&#13;
distributed to agencies like the&#13;
Lyons Club and Goodwill.&#13;
Bayuzick to talk about Surrealism&#13;
Art Prof. Dennis Bayuzick will&#13;
speak about "The Surrealist&#13;
Vision: a personal perspective on&#13;
dream imagery and the creative&#13;
unconscious in painting" on&#13;
Wednesday, March 11 in CA 125&#13;
from 1 - 2 p. m.&#13;
The program will consist of&#13;
introductory slides and commentary&#13;
surveying the general&#13;
thrust of Surrealist theory,&#13;
psychology and stylistic practice.&#13;
This will be illustrated by selected&#13;
paintings by DeChirico, Ernst,&#13;
Miro, Dali, Magritte, etc. The&#13;
remainder of the lecture will focus&#13;
on the Surrealist influence of Prof.&#13;
Bayuzick's development as an&#13;
artist. He will show slides of his&#13;
own work and will discuss the&#13;
creative methods and themes he&#13;
uses to involve dream - inspiration&#13;
and image - generation. The&#13;
program is free and open to&#13;
students, faculty and staff.&#13;
Other events planned toy the&#13;
Library - Learning Center are:&#13;
"What happens in the BBC&#13;
Hamlet," a videotape - lecture by&#13;
Prof. Peter Martin, March 30;&#13;
"Electronic flash: do you realize&#13;
the potential?" a photography&#13;
workshop by Jim Maguire, April&#13;
1; a film, "The Battle of A lgiers",&#13;
Part I, April 13; Part II, April 15;&#13;
"Russia", a slide - lecture by&#13;
Prof. Dan McGovern, April 22. All&#13;
programs will be from l - 2 p. m.&#13;
and will take pTace m Union 104"&#13;
except the photography workshop&#13;
which will be held in Television&#13;
Studio, D157A, Comm. Arts.&#13;
The programs will give students&#13;
an opportunity to attend events of&#13;
a varying and cultural nature&#13;
during the free period afforded by&#13;
the Activity Period.&#13;
Population explosion talk to be given&#13;
"Is the Population Explosion&#13;
Still Exploding?" will be the topic&#13;
of a lecture by Richard Walasek, a&#13;
Parkside geography professor&#13;
who specializes in resource issues,&#13;
Radar elected&#13;
to council&#13;
Hannelaore B. Rader, Director&#13;
of Parkside's Library - Learning&#13;
Center, has been elected to a two&#13;
year term as a member - at - large&#13;
of the Council of UW Libraries.&#13;
The Council is a new group&#13;
instituted by University System&#13;
President Robert M. O'Neil to&#13;
augment cooperative library&#13;
planning within the system and to&#13;
provide a base of expert counsel to&#13;
the president on library matters.&#13;
The Council is chaired by Joseph&#13;
Treyz, Director of the UW&#13;
Madison Libraries.&#13;
at 1 p.m. on Thursday, March 19,&#13;
in Molinaro Hall.&#13;
Walasek's talk will explore&#13;
global and national population&#13;
issues including population&#13;
trends, the gap between rich and&#13;
poor nations, pressures on food,&#13;
energy and other resources and&#13;
prospects for slowing population&#13;
growth.&#13;
Persons wishing to attend&#13;
should pre-register by calling the&#13;
University Extension Office&#13;
(Phone 553-2312).&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Ranger&#13;
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Quality Auto Work&#13;
Done At&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
10% OFF FOR&#13;
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Call 553-9092 or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00&#13;
*&#13;
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ALL STUDENTS INTERESTED IN&#13;
FINANCIAL AID FOR 1981-82&#13;
Financial aid forms are now available in&#13;
the Financial Aids Office. These forms&#13;
should be filed by March 15,1981. Late&#13;
applications may not be processed in time&#13;
for fall registration. Late Fees will be&#13;
added if you file after June 15,1981!&#13;
Please Stop in Financial Aids Office 284&#13;
Tallent Hall for Forms and Information &#13;
RANGER photo by Kim Schlater&#13;
MARY BETH KELLEHER posing in finished costume.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records''&#13;
626 56th St. 654-2932&#13;
Parkside preview&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
Midterms&#13;
fluence on the actors. Breathing&#13;
and movement are limited. The&#13;
actresses have to learn how to&#13;
move naturally in corsets, petticoats&#13;
and long skirts. The feeling&#13;
is different from wearing blue&#13;
jeans and less undergarments.&#13;
"Costumes provide the actors&#13;
with the look and feeling of their&#13;
character," said Thompson.&#13;
Thompson and the other&#13;
designers, director Leon Van&#13;
Dyke, and cast and crew members&#13;
have worked long and hard to&#13;
recreate the time period of 1898.&#13;
As a result, viewing "The Matchmaker"&#13;
is like taking time out&#13;
of the present and becoming part&#13;
of the past.&#13;
"TI4 P AA ATru 11 A 1/ p w\u * kmnuck pnoTo o y Kim&#13;
lit mai CHMAKER cast rehearsing in preparation for tonight's opening performance.&#13;
Play recreates atmosphere&#13;
MEMBERSHIPS:&#13;
ONE MONTH (Introduction) - $20.00&#13;
FOUR MONTH MEMBERSHIP - $95.00&#13;
ONE YEAR MEMBERSHIP - $195.00&#13;
COLLEGE ATHLETES - $150.00&#13;
planned&#13;
Adults returning to college,&#13;
seniors heading for college and&#13;
parents paying for college are&#13;
invited to Parkside Preview, a&#13;
program designed to provide&#13;
information about Parkside's&#13;
academic programs and student&#13;
services, from 6:45 to 9:30 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, March 11, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
The program includes an opportunity&#13;
for classroom visits with&#13;
faculty from various fields of&#13;
study and conversation with&#13;
counselors, admissions personnel&#13;
and alumni. Student services to be&#13;
detailed include educational and&#13;
career counseling, career planning&#13;
and placement, special&#13;
services for adult students and&#13;
financial aid, currently a major&#13;
concern of the college-bound.&#13;
The program will conclude with&#13;
a social hour with entertainment&#13;
by the award-winning Parkside&#13;
Jazz Ensemble.&#13;
ACADEMY OF BATON &amp; DANCE&#13;
Headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits,&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — Tap Shoes —&#13;
All Dancing Supplies&#13;
22nd Avenue, Kenosha&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
One time I went without sleep&#13;
for 52 hours straight so I Could&#13;
study for midterms without interruptions.&#13;
Big deal, you may&#13;
say. Who cares?&#13;
Well, for the last ten hours of the&#13;
ordeal, I was seeing little shiny&#13;
people running around my room&#13;
(or at least that's what I thought I&#13;
saw).&#13;
Big deal? It was and it is.&#13;
At that time, I wondered why&#13;
midterms couldn't be scheduled&#13;
&lt;mce ye arly, with the void left by&#13;
extracting the March midterms in&#13;
the spring filled by the insertion of&#13;
an extra Christmas, Independence&#13;
Day or Labor Day.&#13;
Even another President's Birthday&#13;
would probably fit in nicely&#13;
right there in mid - March.&#13;
Anyway, midterm time is&#13;
almost here again. It's time to&#13;
deck the classrooms with balls of&#13;
study sheets again. It's time to&#13;
roast equations over an open fire.&#13;
It's only too bad there's not more&#13;
time left before midterms to write&#13;
to Santa Short - course with pleas&#13;
for passing grades in modular&#13;
classes.&#13;
Despite the jollity and&#13;
merrymaking this season brings&#13;
out in students, for many college&#13;
students it is a time of want. Yes,&#13;
there are lots of c ollege students&#13;
who, like me, will undoubtedly&#13;
unwisely waste their precious&#13;
study time in marathon cramming.&#13;
&#13;
No, it doesn't help to cram. I&#13;
mean, have you ever tried dealing&#13;
coherently with the objectives and&#13;
strategies of the early capitalists&#13;
during the Industrial Revolution&#13;
while shiny little people are&#13;
hopping all over your little blue&#13;
book and question sheet? What&#13;
kind of grade do you think those&#13;
little people will let you get? Do&#13;
you think they care? All they want&#13;
you to do is sleep (your head&#13;
falling down on your hands, the&#13;
little blue book in front of you&#13;
blurring and puffing into a cozy&#13;
little blue pillow, your pen rolling&#13;
off the desk and onto your knees).&#13;
Then, after all that awful coffee&#13;
and those invigorating but nerve -&#13;
shattering cold showers, you flunk&#13;
anyway.&#13;
At some universities in the U.S.&#13;
and elsewhere, students used to&#13;
actually make games out of not&#13;
sleeping. Maybe they were just a&#13;
little neurotic from midterms, but&#13;
they used to (and who knows, cults&#13;
probably still survive those archaic&#13;
habits) dance or kiss or sit&#13;
in crowded Volkswagens for&#13;
extended periods of time —&#13;
without sleeping. It's no wonder&#13;
Volkswagen stopped making&#13;
Beetles.&#13;
Farce provides escape&#13;
NAUTILUS machines are&#13;
designed to increase&#13;
strength, flexibility and&#13;
cardiovascular condition.&#13;
by Wendy Westphal&#13;
"The Matchmaker" opens&#13;
tonight in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. Time will stand still&#13;
and the year of 1898 will be&#13;
recreated. Since we are in the&#13;
1980's many alterations had to be&#13;
achieved. Anything that meets the&#13;
eye has to be changed.&#13;
Barbara Thompson, costume&#13;
designer, was called upon to help&#13;
with the change. In order to&#13;
complete her task many books&#13;
were searched through.&#13;
Knowledge of the characters is&#13;
required for building their&#13;
costumes. She must decide what&#13;
the character would have pulled&#13;
out of his/her closec to wear that&#13;
day.&#13;
Written material and talk is&#13;
abundant. This information must&#13;
be produced in visual form. She&#13;
sketches and paints the costume&#13;
in the color scheme she has&#13;
chosen. This produces a rendering.&#13;
Renderings allow the&#13;
director and other designers to&#13;
view her ideas.&#13;
Designing for a period show&#13;
requires historical background&#13;
and compromises between the&#13;
styles. She incorporated the&#13;
present princess line for the front&#13;
of D olly's costume and made the&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
Thorton Wilder created a large&#13;
cast for "The Matchmaker,"&#13;
which is the original play from&#13;
which "Hello, Dolly" was taken.&#13;
This classical farce is the story of&#13;
a financially successful merchant&#13;
who decides to travel to New York&#13;
to find a wife.&#13;
An old fashioned quality similar&#13;
to that found in vaudeville or&#13;
performances by George Burns&#13;
permeates "The Matchmaker."&#13;
Often a player alone on stage will&#13;
directly address the audience with&#13;
some of Wilder's most witty observations&#13;
(Mi li fe.&#13;
Director Lee Van Dyke&#13;
remarked about Wilder's&#13;
philosophy: "I think he's&#13;
irreverant towards the kind of&#13;
businessman ethic. All of us want&#13;
to escape once in awhile, and&#13;
Wilder shows characters making&#13;
that escape." Parkside's performances&#13;
of "The Matchmaker"&#13;
promise to provide the kind erf&#13;
escape Wilder and Van Dyke&#13;
envision.&#13;
Performances will be given at 8&#13;
p.m. tonight and March 6 and 7.&#13;
On March 8, a Sunday matinee&#13;
will be given at 2 p .m. Admission&#13;
is $2.50 for students, staff, and&#13;
senior citizens; $3.50 f or others.&#13;
Reservations can be made by&#13;
calling 553-2345 or 553-2042.&#13;
THE RENDERING of Dolly's&#13;
costume.&#13;
back completely in period style.&#13;
A d istinct fashion feature from&#13;
1895-1898 affects the design of the&#13;
sleeves. During this period sleeve&#13;
trim at the shoulders was popular.&#13;
If the sleeves were not full, then a&#13;
ruffle was designed at the&#13;
shoulder. Also corsets and petticoats&#13;
were worn by the women.&#13;
Period costumes have an inRANGER&#13;
phoro dy Dan McCormack &#13;
Review&#13;
Streetcar" done in&#13;
RANGER Thursday, March 5,1981&#13;
by Wendy Westphal&#13;
When a playwright writes a&#13;
play, he has more than one interpretation&#13;
in mind. He ensures&#13;
that ^the same meaning is&#13;
delivered in whichever interpretation&#13;
is chosen. The&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Theater&#13;
presents "A Streetcar Named&#13;
Desire" by Tennessee Williams in&#13;
a fashionable style but plays with&#13;
the time element.&#13;
The play lasts for a lenghty&#13;
three hours with two ten-minute&#13;
intermissions. Usually an&#13;
audience is satisfied with one 15-&#13;
minute intermission. By the&#13;
second intermission the play is so&#13;
drawn out that lack of interest sets&#13;
in. This is too bad because the&#13;
actors pull off a very touching&#13;
ending.&#13;
Speaking of the actors, Tom&#13;
Berenger should be commended&#13;
for his performance of Stanley&#13;
Kowalski. Stanley projects a&#13;
roughness and brutish style with&#13;
finesse. His comical air is similar&#13;
to "Wojo" on Barney Miller.&#13;
Peggy Cowles achieves the&#13;
gentle Southern veneer in Blanche&#13;
Du Bois. She seems like a stable&#13;
woman until her illusions of&#13;
grandeur slowly mix with reality.&#13;
But Cowles plays through to the&#13;
end in a remarkable style.&#13;
On the other hand, Stella shows&#13;
little or none of this gentle&#13;
Southern veneer. Janni Brenn&#13;
seems no relation to Blanche. She&#13;
falls down to Stanley's level when&#13;
she should be in between Stanley&#13;
and Blanche. Desire is plainly&#13;
shown in her character.&#13;
style&#13;
J A N N I B R ENN as Stella and&#13;
Tom Berenger as Stanley.&#13;
New Orleans provides&#13;
background for the characters. In&#13;
the Todd Wehr Theater performance&#13;
space is limited. The set&#13;
worked very well for the thrust&#13;
stage. The design allowed for&#13;
street space, the upstairs neighbor's&#13;
level, a kitchen, bedroom,&#13;
bathroom, dressing and sitting&#13;
room to be viewed all at once. The&#13;
see-through curtain which divided&#13;
the room brought laughter to the&#13;
audience. Imagination was put to&#13;
work.&#13;
Not only did the actors move&#13;
well on the set, the property crew&#13;
did a super job. All props were&#13;
moved and placed meticulously in&#13;
their right place. Even a new&#13;
Union workers display art&#13;
Opening in Kenosha is an&#13;
unusual art exhibit. For the first&#13;
time in local history, UAW Local&#13;
72 is sponsoring an Art Contest&#13;
and Exhibit.&#13;
It is a remarkable outpouring of&#13;
creativity. Members of Local 72&#13;
have already produced dozens of&#13;
art pieces for this exhibit. Works&#13;
range from woodcarvings, metal&#13;
sculpture, charcoal drawings, to&#13;
oil and watercolor and includes&#13;
photography.&#13;
Judging will be done by Nancy&#13;
Brigham, head of Publications&#13;
and Public Relations of UAW from&#13;
Solidarity House in Detroit,&#13;
Denise Zingg and Julie Kozenski&#13;
from Spectrum School of A rt. Ms.&#13;
Zingg is also an instructor at&#13;
G.T.I.&#13;
Catherine Doll (winner of UAW&#13;
National Art Contest) will also&#13;
display "Dept. 828 Final&#13;
Assembly" (published on the&#13;
UAW Calendar cover) as well as&#13;
some of her other pieces, entitled&#13;
"Plight of the American&#13;
Auto worker."&#13;
The public is cordially invited&#13;
Sat., March 14 at 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.&#13;
to view this unique exhibit at UAW&#13;
Local 72 Headquarters, 3615&#13;
Washington Road, Kenosha, WI.&#13;
Contact&#13;
U.C. may cut equal votes&#13;
by Kathy Bambrough&#13;
The issue of proportional&#13;
representation was one of the&#13;
main concerns at the last United&#13;
Council meeting held in River&#13;
Falls on February 14.&#13;
United Council is a Wisconsin&#13;
lobbying group which represents&#13;
over 155,000 students in the UW&#13;
System. U.C. Legislative Affairs&#13;
Director Mark Hazelbacker has&#13;
proposed a new constitution which&#13;
includes in it proportional&#13;
representation for the UW Extensions.&#13;
If the new constitution is&#13;
passed it will allow Parkside,&#13;
along with four other UW campuses,&#13;
two voting representatives&#13;
each; another five campuses&#13;
would be allowed three&#13;
representatives; one campus,&#13;
eight votes; and another with&#13;
thirteen representatives. At&#13;
present all schools are allowed&#13;
four voting representatives.&#13;
As Legislative Affairs Committee&#13;
chairperson at Parkside, I&#13;
feel this would be unfair to&#13;
Parkside students. U.C. is funded&#13;
by all students covered by their&#13;
constitution. Each student pays 50&#13;
cents per semester as passed by a&#13;
referendum last year. If U.C. is to&#13;
be funded equally by all students,&#13;
I feel all students deserve equal&#13;
say in all voting matters.&#13;
I have told you how I feel; now I&#13;
need to know how you feel! The&#13;
P.S.G.A. Senate needs to know&#13;
what the students want. Come see&#13;
us in our office, just outside the D1&#13;
level of the library.&#13;
Member Parkside 2 00&#13;
Mention this ad! ^osepfi&#13;
4433 22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
Chinese lantern hanging overhead&#13;
was replaced with a dusty, half -&#13;
collapsed one to show the passing&#13;
of time.&#13;
In the event of an emergency&#13;
the property crew must take care&#13;
of it. During the first scene,&#13;
Stanley bounced on the bed and it&#13;
fell in. The property crew during&#13;
the scene change struggled with&#13;
putting it back together in front of&#13;
the audience. It was done so well&#13;
the audience thought it was&#13;
supposed to happen. A special&#13;
task well done lends support to the&#13;
whole production.&#13;
They say that clothing makes&#13;
the person. So costumes must&#13;
enhance the character. Blanche&#13;
wore some gorgeous dresses;&#13;
expensive looking but with very&#13;
good taste. An added attraction&#13;
was the variety of street costumes&#13;
which paraded in front of the set&#13;
during scene changes. Far-out&#13;
hookers, punks, mobsters,&#13;
Mexicans and hoodlums back up&#13;
the saying that New Orleans is a&#13;
melting pot melted down.&#13;
"Bowling is a man's game," the&#13;
bowling jackets said loud and&#13;
clear. The tacky, bright, green&#13;
silk jackets with embroidering on&#13;
the back displays the taste these&#13;
men have.&#13;
The MRT achieves a delightful&#13;
and colorful performance of "A&#13;
Streetcar Named Desire." Be&#13;
prepared for a long evening but&#13;
remain for the ending. It's worth&#13;
the wait.&#13;
Performances are nightly except&#13;
Mondays at the Todd Wehr&#13;
Theater in Milwaukee's Performing&#13;
Arts Center until April 5.&#13;
The Streetcar "Desire"&#13;
Your Name&#13;
Printed FREE!&#13;
WITH ANY T-SHIRT&#13;
PURCHASE!&#13;
With this ad only)&#13;
OFFERGOODTHRU&#13;
MARCH9ONLY&#13;
Fashions&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140&#13;
(414) 694-4123 &#13;
Thursday, March 5,1981&#13;
CominJ,&#13;
Events Toxic chemicals denounced&#13;
UniversitywUltalkon"Bbm^dical^thic^'Th&#13;
1&#13;
'&#13;
T&#13;
' Engel£&#13;
a&#13;
*J&#13;
t of Georgetown&#13;
public. omeaical Ethics. The program is free and open to the&#13;
University ViU tallum" MoH^^i°ni^?™a&#13;
' Prof&#13;
^&#13;
HT&#13;
;. Engelhardt of Georgetown&#13;
is free and open to the&#13;
AY The Matchmaker" at 8 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre. Tickets&#13;
The program&#13;
are available atth* TTni„«fJ communication Arts Theatre. Tickets&#13;
will be available at thfrdonr^ AH™? ?&#13;
D C,&#13;
en&#13;
.&#13;
ter&#13;
'&#13;
the Fine Arts Division 0fflce and&#13;
citizens and $3.50 fo r other ssion is&#13;
*&#13;
250 for Parkside students and senior&#13;
PLAY "Tt,0 v , .. Friday, March 6&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
Matchmaker wlU be repeated at 8 p.nj. in the Communication Arts&#13;
5® Sh0Wn at 8 p m" in the Union Cinema Theatre. Adby&#13;
PAB lS 3 Parkside student and n.50 for a guest. Sponsored&#13;
PLAY "The Matchmaker'&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
Saturday, March 7&#13;
will be repeated at 8 p.m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Sunday, March 8&#13;
P will be repeated at 2 p.m. in the Communication Arts LAY "The Matchmaker&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
MOVIE "Prizefighter" will be repeated at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
D.IIvnir&lt;n Monday, March 9&#13;
r» i TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. Prof. Bonnie Smith will talk on "The&#13;
Development of Property Law in the 19th Century." The program is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
C?S??&#13;
E&#13;
"&#13;
Basi5 Research Skills" at 1:00 p.m. in D110 of he t library. Call ext.&#13;
2312 for more details. Sponsored by UW - Extension.&#13;
SEMINAR "Student Study Skills" at 1 p.m. in CA 142. All students are welcome.&#13;
Sponsored by EPS.&#13;
Tuesday, March 10&#13;
SEMINAR "On Surviving Divorce" at 7 p.m. in Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312 for more&#13;
details. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
Wednesday, March 11&#13;
COURSE "Financial Management for Minority Owned Businesses" at 9 a m&#13;
Sponsored by UW-Extension. Call ext. 2312 for more information.&#13;
MOVIE "Power of the Resurrection" from 1-2 p.m. in Union Cinema. Everyone is&#13;
welcome to come and bring their lunch. Sponsored by IVCF.&#13;
LECTURE at 1 p.m. in CA 125. Prof. Dennis Bayuzick will talk on "The Surrealist&#13;
Vision: a Personal Perspective on Dream Imagery and the Creative Unconscious&#13;
in Painting." The program is free and open to Parkside students, faculty and&#13;
staff.&#13;
OPEN HOUSE Parkside Preview starts at 6:45 p.m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
MOVIE "In Celebration" will be shown at 7 p.m. at the Golden Rondelle. Call ext.&#13;
2312 for more information. The American Film Theatre Series is sponsored by&#13;
UW-Extension and UW-Parkside.&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
A panel discussion was held&#13;
Feb. 23 as part of the evening&#13;
program of Toxic Chemical&#13;
Awareness Day. The keynote&#13;
speakers stressed the need for&#13;
discontinued use and control over&#13;
chemicals like Dioxin, 2-4-D, 2-4-5-&#13;
T, and Agent Orange. The&#13;
program was sponsored by the&#13;
Student Group Mobilization For&#13;
Survival.&#13;
Tom Larson, President of Local&#13;
320 National Advisory Committee&#13;
on Health and Safety, said, "It is&#13;
estimated by the U. S. Public&#13;
Service that at least 30% of all&#13;
diseases in the U. S. are job -&#13;
related. That means 390,000&#13;
workers are made sick by their&#13;
jobs annually." Yet, according to&#13;
Larson, employers fail to look for&#13;
diseases which often come from&#13;
untested and relatively unknown&#13;
chemicals.&#13;
Larson said that worker compensation&#13;
is not enough. "Work&#13;
hazards are . . . (somewhat) . . .&#13;
easy to take care of", Larson said.&#13;
"Health hazards, on the other&#13;
hand, are more difficult to&#13;
identify. Both the hazard and the&#13;
disease can be invisible. In addition,&#13;
controls can be complicated."&#13;
&#13;
Irene Steeger, Chief Steward of&#13;
Clericals of UW-M and executive&#13;
board member of Local 82 - AFSME,&#13;
said that the big companies&#13;
do not care about their employees&#13;
or do not want to bother with&#13;
safety threatened by some&#13;
chemicals. Steeger said that some&#13;
companies don't even know what&#13;
Parkside Concourse Presents:&#13;
"THE WOODHULL"&#13;
o &lt; m' m - *' Ip! IfJIMp Based on the life of 19th century&#13;
feminist, stockbroker, "free lover," and&#13;
first woman candidate for the&#13;
presidency of the U.S., Victoria&#13;
Woodhull.&#13;
with playwright/actress:&#13;
Elizabeth Garry&#13;
March 14 8 pm&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Tickets available at Union Info Desk&#13;
SI.00 students; SI.50 public&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads —&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30o will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words&#13;
or less.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AMI&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE&#13;
Any registered UW-P student or student organization is qualified&#13;
to insert a classified line ad in the Ranger at no cost if under or&#13;
equivalent to 10 words. (Phone numbers equal 1 word.)&#13;
Classification:&#13;
Name&#13;
they are using or what effects a&#13;
certain chemical might have on&#13;
an employee.&#13;
"The companies are only&#13;
worried about cost", Steeger said.&#13;
"They are not considering the&#13;
basic safety of the employee."&#13;
Steeger stated that state&#13;
legislation is currently being&#13;
proposed in Madison which will&#13;
provide workers with information&#13;
about what they are working with.&#13;
Attorney Walter Stern, Member&#13;
of the American Academy of&#13;
Forensic Science, said that court&#13;
action is the first step toward&#13;
ending toxic herbicide use in&#13;
Wisconsin. He is currently in-,&#13;
volved in a case against Dow&#13;
Chemical, which Stern says has&#13;
"evicted (safety) from the Statute&#13;
erf Lim itations in our progressive&#13;
state, and where I will powerfully&#13;
suggest to the court that we have&#13;
to revise our thinking in terms of&#13;
chemical exposure." Stern said&#13;
that there are many physical and&#13;
emotional problems caused by the&#13;
exposure of chemicals in "raw&#13;
chemical form", such as Dioxin.&#13;
John Lindquist, WAW - Viet&#13;
Nam Veteran, said that the&#13;
government "used us once, then&#13;
threw us away," referring to his&#13;
involvement in Viet Nam where&#13;
Agent Orange was used to destroy&#13;
jungle vegetation to reduce&#13;
ambush.&#13;
Herbicides like 2-4-5-T and&#13;
others were mixed and sprayed&#13;
over everything, according to&#13;
Lindquist. Ten million gallons of&#13;
Agent Orange and nine million&#13;
gallons of other chemicals were&#13;
dumped on Viet Nam. Lindquist&#13;
said that 193 missions were flown&#13;
in his area during his tour in Viet&#13;
Nam.&#13;
He estimated that between&#13;
250,000 and 500,000 gallons of&#13;
chemicals were in his environment&#13;
at that time. Lindquist&#13;
stated that some of these very&#13;
chemicals being used commercially&#13;
today have been known&#13;
to cause liver disfunctions, nervous&#13;
disorders, cancers, and birth&#13;
defects.&#13;
"We have to fight back in order&#13;
to make sure something like this&#13;
doesn't happen again", Lindquist&#13;
stated. "We have to build a mass&#13;
movement, in our case, fighting&#13;
for compensation, testing, and&#13;
treatment of problems caused by&#13;
Agent Orange."&#13;
"Students are just starting to&#13;
get involved," said Katy Leonard,&#13;
a Parkside Life Science major.&#13;
She stated that toxic wastes effect&#13;
everyone because of where they&#13;
are dumped and how. She gave&#13;
two Milwaukee dump sites and a&#13;
Racine dump site as nearby&#13;
examples. Dumping methods at&#13;
landfill sites are "very discrete,&#13;
very cheap methods," according&#13;
to Leonard. She explained that&#13;
sometimes chemical control&#13;
companies will take chemicals&#13;
and dump them in creek beds.&#13;
"Until 1976, there were no laws&#13;
safeguarding against these&#13;
practices," Leonard said.&#13;
Jeff Myers, a Parkside&#13;
chemistry major, stressed that&#13;
some chemicals are only tested&#13;
once and sometimes it takes many&#13;
tests to get effective results.&#13;
Myers stated that 2-4-D is being&#13;
sprayed on Parkside's campus&#13;
lawn without being posted and&#13;
without workers knowing about its&#13;
toxicity. Myers stated that there&#13;
must be more student involvement,&#13;
referring to a petition&#13;
currently going around to stop&#13;
spraying 2-4-D at Parkside.&#13;
Myers stressed involvement,&#13;
guidelined by the Freedom of&#13;
Information Act, contacting the&#13;
Department of Natural Resources&#13;
about information regarding&#13;
chemicals being used and dumped&#13;
in local areas.&#13;
Lea Zeldin, Editor of Health&#13;
Writers Journal called for better&#13;
control of dangerous chemicals.&#13;
Zeldin described examples of&#13;
factories in Italy and West Germany&#13;
that have been shut down&#13;
and even destroyed brick by brick&#13;
from the inside out in efforts to&#13;
d e c o nta m i n a te h a r m f u l&#13;
chemicals like Dioxin from the&#13;
walls. Zelden said that the time is&#13;
now to get involved in the&#13;
awareness of toxic chemicals.&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
SS No..&#13;
Ranger&#13;
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PERSONALS&#13;
IF YOU LIKE to party vote Kreuser he does it&#13;
hearty.&#13;
APRIL is ZSU month. Calendar of events is&#13;
coming soon.&#13;
U. P. needs Kreuser for president because&#13;
he's a full time student resident.&#13;
WANTED: Willing female for pornographic&#13;
films. Contact - T ed Schlong.&#13;
THE THIRD floor "flash" — the flasher&#13;
endorses Jim — he wants Jim.&#13;
MOLN. 118: "Pop" goes the housepet.&#13;
I BELIEVE Jim Kreuser is the most qualified&#13;
person for the job.&#13;
JUST WHEN you thought it was safe to get&#13;
back in the organization. . . . Zimmer&#13;
Syndrome II.&#13;
WANTED: Kreuser as president of YOUR&#13;
student government.&#13;
AN ANONYMOUS IOP was once as happy as&#13;
could be and then he met Andy his life&#13;
seemed quite dandy but she'll own him&#13;
through eternity. ZEDOSOBU&#13;
IS MONTY HALL Sabine chase - a ll. Chain&#13;
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KNIGHT — What is the airspeed velocity of&#13;
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YOUR CHOICE isgrim —if you don't vote for&#13;
Jim I Rapido Eduardo&#13;
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vaces . . . Raquel&#13;
KREUSER SCREWSER but he's AGAINST&#13;
sexual harrasment — vote for Jim&#13;
M.M. AND R.S. make a great couple.&#13;
TIM, KIM, AND LORI might love you, but I&#13;
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Helgeson for quick, painless diagnosis.&#13;
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too small. lOP's&#13;
TOCS — you are cursed to a life on Lesbos —&#13;
Evets&#13;
lOP's are Ignoble Obstreperous Punks&#13;
Vol tar&#13;
WANTED: 10% magnesium sulfate for&#13;
biology experiment.&#13;
ALSO WANTED: Large tank for bioloqv&#13;
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TIRED of your organization? Come see us in&#13;
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Syndrome Union (ZSU)&#13;
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ENSLAVEMENT PARTY Mill. Starring:&#13;
Master Andy over slave Rodnev&#13;
ZEOSUBOD&#13;
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FERRET: What are you searching for? A fly&#13;
. . trap!? lOP's&#13;
N.O.R.M.A.L. endorses Jim Kreuser&#13;
KNIGHT — what is your: Name? Quest?&#13;
Favorite color?&#13;
WANTED, something slightly wierd or effective&#13;
for our student body. Kreuser as&#13;
president of student government.&#13;
J. BUSSIE—nexttimeyou write an ad please&#13;
try to make tl legible.&#13;
IF YOU DON'T vote Kreuser, you deserve&#13;
what you get!! I&#13;
"= YOU don't vote for Kreuser you're a loser.&#13;
A VOTE for Jim is a vote for sex - n - dru gs - n&#13;
rock - n - r oll.&#13;
TO: Will Prieschel — caminas mucho? Muy&#13;
rapidamente, verdad? Raquel&#13;
FOOD SERVICE supports Jim as president,&#13;
because excellence deserves excellence.&#13;
HBD, try naire, meow • m eow.&#13;
THE JOKE was dead until you brought it up.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
ANYONE wanting to join new choral group&#13;
contact John, 652-5512.&#13;
NEEDS SLEEPING PLACE - Mon. - W ed.&#13;
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reasonable rates.&#13;
TO THE MEMORY of Maria — We all loved&#13;
you very much. We pray that the Lord&#13;
receives you into His eternal Family. From&#13;
Good Friends.&#13;
/ &#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
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AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
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MEMBER F.D.i.C.&#13;
Winter to wrestle&#13;
in NCAA-I Mar. 12-14&#13;
Parkside hosts tourney&#13;
hby v rDiaavun e fCr Va amer&#13;
UW-Parkside has been selected&#13;
to host three prestigious fencing&#13;
tournaments in the upcoming&#13;
weeks.&#13;
On Saturday, March 14&#13;
Parkside hosts the Great Lakes&#13;
Championships. The following&#13;
day, Sunday, March 15, Parkside&#13;
plays host—for the first time ever&#13;
— to the Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics for Women&#13;
(AIAW) Region 4 Tournament.&#13;
But the biggest tournament will be&#13;
the National Collegiate Athletic&#13;
Association (NCAA) Championships&#13;
on March 19 through 21.&#13;
The Great Lakes Tournament&#13;
which is free of c harge, begins at&#13;
9:30 a. m. This tournament fields&#13;
the top 25 teams in the midwest&#13;
area, featuring both men's and&#13;
women's competition. Headlining&#13;
this event will be last year's&#13;
champion Wayne State&#13;
(Michigan), and perennial power&#13;
Notre Dame.&#13;
Each team will be represented&#13;
by two fencers at each weapon.&#13;
Captain David Wick and Bruce&#13;
Klappauf will represent Parkside&#13;
in the foil, 6'9" freshman Mark&#13;
Spiess in the epie and Jeff&#13;
McKelvie in the sabre. June&#13;
Bauer and Sabine Claus will&#13;
represent Ranger women fencers&#13;
in the foil.&#13;
The action continues the next&#13;
&lt;&amp;y a s Parkside hosts the AIAW&#13;
Rogion 4 Championships. The&#13;
tl?f&#13;
COmP&#13;
ing teams wil1 be the&#13;
top ftve finishers at the Great&#13;
Lakes Tournament along with the&#13;
top three teams in the Big io&#13;
conference.&#13;
6&#13;
The top three placing teams at&#13;
the regional tournament advance&#13;
to the National AIAW Championships&#13;
at Notre Dame in April.&#13;
The following weekend, March&#13;
- 21, is the men's NCAA&#13;
Championships. Wayne State will&#13;
be attempting to repeat as&#13;
national champions. The competition&#13;
is extremely keen as only&#13;
the top 40 fencers at each weapon&#13;
will be competing.&#13;
The Ranger's best bet to be&#13;
represented is Spiess. However, to&#13;
advance to the NCAA finals, he&#13;
must place in the top six finishers&#13;
at the Great Lakes Tournament.&#13;
This will be the first time in&#13;
history that the NCAA fencing&#13;
championships will have computerized&#13;
scoring, which will&#13;
enable each fencer to know his&#13;
personal standings after each&#13;
match. The new computer&#13;
programming was developed for&#13;
the NCAA by UW - Parkside&#13;
mathematics professor Don Piele.&#13;
Burman, Benzow&#13;
pace team&#13;
me some direction before going&#13;
away to school."&#13;
Since this duo of runners has&#13;
gotten together last fall, they have&#13;
given needed ink to Parkside's&#13;
women's program by contributing&#13;
to a national championship, by&#13;
taking a third place finish in the&#13;
national indoor meet, and capturing&#13;
three individual titles.&#13;
Next year, both of th ese women&#13;
will depart for different schools.&#13;
Burman will be heading west to&#13;
the city of Fort Collins where she&#13;
will pursue a degree in natural&#13;
resources at Colorado State.&#13;
Benzow will be making tracks&#13;
north as she plans to attend the&#13;
University of Minnesota.&#13;
Both women intend on running&#13;
at their new schools next fall, and&#13;
Continued From Page Eight&#13;
they are anxiously anticipating&#13;
running against NCAA Division I&#13;
competition. "There is nothing&#13;
left at this level (NAIA) anymore&#13;
to achieve because I've reached&#13;
all my goals," said Burman, "I'm&#13;
not being conceited, it's just that&#13;
now I must move up to division&#13;
level where I can establish new&#13;
goals to strive for."&#13;
Benzow, on the other hand, is&#13;
greeting the new challenge with&#13;
uncertainty: "I think Minnesota&#13;
might be a little too big, but I'll&#13;
have to take the chance and see&#13;
how I do."&#13;
After the fine performances&#13;
they've had already, both Benzow&#13;
and Burman should find acceptable&#13;
homes on the rosters of&#13;
their new universities next year.&#13;
PARKSIDE WOMEN'S BASKETBALL TEAM ranger Photo by Steve Myers&#13;
Women cagers take title&#13;
by Pete Cramer&#13;
Parkside's women's basketball&#13;
team won their first NAIA District&#13;
Championship game last Thursday&#13;
as they beat their guest team&#13;
Milton 75-70.&#13;
The first half started slow with&#13;
each team playing a little tight.&#13;
Then with 14 minutes left on the&#13;
clock the Rangers started playing&#13;
run and gun offense and broke&#13;
away from Milton 27-11 outscoring&#13;
them 14-6 in a four minute spurt.&#13;
Midway into the first half&#13;
Parkside fell into a slump. Turning&#13;
the ball over five consecutive&#13;
times on three offensive fouls and&#13;
two traveling calls left them&#13;
scoreless for two minutes. Milton&#13;
then applied a tough 2-3 zone&#13;
which forced Parkside to take low&#13;
percentage outside shots and got&#13;
them back into the game against a&#13;
suddenly stagnated Ranger offense.&#13;
&#13;
With under a minute left in the&#13;
first half Milton pulled within one&#13;
point of the Rangers at 35-34. Then&#13;
a last second desperation shot by&#13;
cento1 Laurie Pope gave Parkside&#13;
a 37-34 ha lftime advantage.&#13;
In the second half both teams&#13;
came out smoking, playing a fast&#13;
paced error - free ball game,&#13;
trading hoops with each other for&#13;
the first eight minutes after&#13;
Milton tied the game up early on.&#13;
The last 10 minutes were an&#13;
example of a classic playoff&#13;
game. Underneath the basket a&#13;
hard physical contest began&#13;
between the two teams, with&#13;
Parkside's Laurie Pope controlling&#13;
the boards while Robin&#13;
Henschel and Callie Lee con&#13;
trolled the outside, dominating&#13;
Milton's Cindy Powers and Diane&#13;
Pieper.&#13;
Lead scorers for Parkside were&#13;
Laurie Pope with 21 points anc&#13;
both Callie Lee and Robin Hen&#13;
schel with 17 each. Leading&#13;
rebounder for Parkside wai&#13;
Laurie Pope with 12.&#13;
The Rangers shot 42% from th&#13;
floor in the first half and 38% ii&#13;
the second for a game average&#13;
40%. From the free throw line the&#13;
Rangers had a game average o:&#13;
81%.&#13;
The win now gives Parkside the&#13;
opportunity to go to Iowa for the&#13;
regional championship.&#13;
by Dan McCormack&#13;
Last weekend in Davis,&#13;
California Dan Winter was successful&#13;
in placing third in the&#13;
NCAA-II wrestling tournament.&#13;
Winter won his first three matches,&#13;
two of them by pins and&#13;
advanced to the semifinals. There&#13;
he met Nebraska's Bob Hoffman&#13;
who he tied 6-6 in regulation time&#13;
but then lost 2-3 in overtime.&#13;
It is hard not hard to think of&#13;
this match having a quite different&#13;
outcome had Winter not&#13;
been injured earlier in the season.&#13;
He then came back to win two&#13;
more matches which placed him&#13;
third.&#13;
Because of his performance in&#13;
this tournament Winter will&#13;
qualify to wrestle in the NCAA-I&#13;
tournament held March 12 -14 at&#13;
Princeton.&#13;
Winter, who now boasts a 33-2&#13;
season record, is the second&#13;
wrestler from Parkside ever to&#13;
qualify for the NCAA-I tournament.&#13;
&#13;
Bob Pekarske and Brian Irek,&#13;
who also went to Davis for this&#13;
tournament, both lost their first&#13;
matches which eliminated them&#13;
from further competition.&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Pasiino&#13;
WENDY BURMAN&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
UNION&#13;
DINING ROOM&#13;
V* LB. HAMBURGERS&#13;
Cooked To Order&#13;
On "Fresh " Hard Rolls&#13;
"OUR WIMPY IS&#13;
NOT SKIMPY" &#13;
Rangers play in championship game&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
and&#13;
., pave Cramer&#13;
t&#13;
J&#13;
me ** this writing, the&#13;
men s basketball team is a single&#13;
Kar^^r-H P a&#13;
^&#13;
3y from a triP t(&gt; 5? a £&#13;
lty and foe chance to&#13;
play in the NAIA national tournament&#13;
After disposing of&#13;
Lakeland College 91-69 and UW-La&#13;
65&#13;
3 *** Angers will face&#13;
H^.favi Claire, the third ranked&#13;
NAIA team in the country, for the&#13;
District 14 championship. If the&#13;
Rangers manage to beat the&#13;
Blugolds, it will be the fifth time&#13;
the Hangers have represented the&#13;
district in the last seven years.&#13;
Eau Claire has gone to the tournament&#13;
the last two years.&#13;
The game was held in Eau&#13;
Claire last night (Wednesday) and&#13;
time prohibits us from being able&#13;
to report the results in this week's&#13;
paper.&#13;
The Rangers drew a bye in the&#13;
first round of the Wisconsin Independant&#13;
College Association&#13;
playoffs and waited for their&#13;
chance to play the winner of the&#13;
Lakeland - Milton game. Lakeland&#13;
prevailed by 25 p oints and came&#13;
into town trying to snap an eight&#13;
game tournament losing streak to&#13;
the Rangers.&#13;
The game was for all practical&#13;
purposes over with 12 minutes left&#13;
in the game when freshman guard&#13;
Chuckie Perry scored on a layup&#13;
following a steal, that gave the&#13;
Rangers a 70-44 lead. They&#13;
coasted the rest of the way&#13;
enroute to a 22 point thrashing of&#13;
Lakeland.&#13;
Reggie Anderson paced the&#13;
Rangers with 27 points, 20 of&#13;
which he scored in the first half.&#13;
"Reggie played a very mature&#13;
game tonight," coach Steve&#13;
Stephens said after the game. "If&#13;
he wanted to score 40, he could&#13;
have had 40."&#13;
"We were flat tonight," added&#13;
Stephens. "I don't think we were&#13;
crisp. We'll have to play much&#13;
better against La Crosse." And&#13;
that they did.&#13;
La Crosse beat the Rangers&#13;
here by three points, 63-60, earlier&#13;
in the season and gave the&#13;
Rangers a good run for toe money&#13;
in this one also. That first game&#13;
with La Crosse was only toe&#13;
second game of the season for toe&#13;
Rangers, who at that time didn't&#13;
have a set starting lineup. The&#13;
most important difference is toe&#13;
emergence of guard Perry, who&#13;
wasn't starting at that point of the&#13;
season.&#13;
The game was close all the way&#13;
and very physical. La Crosse&#13;
guard Dick Iverson missed most&#13;
of the game due to an eye injury&#13;
he sustained in the first half.&#13;
La Crosse's strategy in this&#13;
game appeared to be to shut down&#13;
toe outside shooting of Reggie&#13;
Anderson, who scored 12 points&#13;
but only took eight shots from the&#13;
field compared to 18 in toe&#13;
Lakeland game.&#13;
La Crosse took the game right to&#13;
the Rangers by jumping off to a 6-&#13;
0 lead and went into the intermission&#13;
leading 31-29. Guard&#13;
Walter Greene and forward -&#13;
center Curtis Green kept the&#13;
Rangers in toe game in the first&#13;
half by combining for 18 points.&#13;
Parkside came out in toe second&#13;
half with the first six points and&#13;
ran away for a 54-45 lead on a two -&#13;
handed dunk by John Herndon&#13;
with nine minutes left in the game.&#13;
La Crosse made one more run at&#13;
toe Rangers before Chuckie Perry&#13;
scored toe last two decisive points&#13;
from the free throw line to put the&#13;
game away.&#13;
A balanced Ranger scoring&#13;
attack was led by Herndon's 14&#13;
points followed by Anderson,&#13;
Perry, and Walter Greene with 12&#13;
points each.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
PARKSIDE'S John Herndon excited crowd and teammates with&#13;
dunk.&#13;
Modest champions keep shining bright&#13;
by Steve Brunner&#13;
It is late afternoon on a cold&#13;
winter day as two runners are&#13;
seen silhouetted on toe western&#13;
horizon against a vivid sunset. As&#13;
the runners draw nearer to view&#13;
they can be identified as Kellie&#13;
Benzow and Wendy Burman of&#13;
UW-Parkside, both of whom have&#13;
captured national running titles.&#13;
By establishing themselves as&#13;
the premiere distance runners in&#13;
the women's division of the&#13;
National Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA),&#13;
Parkside's Wendy Burman and&#13;
Kellie Benzow have made their&#13;
names outlawed in the books of&#13;
frustrated competitors.&#13;
Burman, who is a sophomore&#13;
from Fond du Lac, won toe NAIA&#13;
women's national cross country&#13;
title last November; two&#13;
weekends ago she won the indoor&#13;
two mile run at the national meet&#13;
in Kansas City. Benzow, a freshman&#13;
from Racine, complimented,&#13;
Burman at the national cross&#13;
country meet by capturing third&#13;
place, and proceeded to excell by&#13;
winning the national indopr title in&#13;
toe mile run by surging past a&#13;
befuddled opponent in the last five&#13;
yards.&#13;
The blue-ribbon tandem of&#13;
runners modestly attest to their&#13;
recent individual success, as well&#13;
as their lead roles in capturing the&#13;
team championship in cross&#13;
country. Benzow said, "I was&#13;
happy to have won the ihdoor mile&#13;
but I was disappointed in my time&#13;
— I should have done better."&#13;
Burman said of her indoor accomplishments,&#13;
"It's not that big&#13;
of a thing because I didn't do as&#13;
well as I intended to do. I would&#13;
have been happier with a better&#13;
time." She added, "I was relieved&#13;
to have won the cross country title&#13;
because I was out of shape and&#13;
injured at the time."&#13;
The twosome didn't start&#13;
running until their sophomore&#13;
years in high school. "I didn't&#13;
start running year - round until&#13;
my senior year in high school,"&#13;
said Benzow. The tall slender&#13;
freshman first got her start in&#13;
running at Sheboygan North. In&#13;
the middle of her junior year she&#13;
moved to Racine where she attended&#13;
Case High School, a&#13;
perennial state powerhouse in&#13;
cross country.&#13;
Burman, who hails from Fond&#13;
du Lac Goodrich High School,&#13;
said, "Like Kellie, I didn't really&#13;
start training until my senior year&#13;
in high school."&#13;
Both runners consistently train&#13;
hard year - round and intend to&#13;
specialize in different events after&#13;
their collegiate careers are&#13;
finished. "I run about 90 miles a&#13;
week now," said Burman, who&#13;
eventually wants to be a&#13;
maratooner. She showed promise&#13;
in that event last July when she&#13;
trudged over a hilly course in&#13;
Hurley, Wisconsin at the "Paavo&#13;
Nurmi Marathon." She completed&#13;
the course in 3 hours and 13&#13;
minutes and placed first in her&#13;
age category.&#13;
Benzow logs about 60 miles a&#13;
For the&#13;
Bride and Groom&#13;
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week during the season, and close&#13;
to 75 miles in the summer. After&#13;
college she plans on training for&#13;
toe 10,000 meter (6.2 miles) run&#13;
which she believes she can excell&#13;
in the most. Cross country coach&#13;
Bob Lawson speaks highly of the&#13;
two young distance runners:&#13;
"Both girls have great potential,&#13;
and they can be two of toe top&#13;
runners in the country if they want&#13;
to work hard." "Wendy is one of&#13;
toe most dedicated women I've&#13;
ever coached. She has more&#13;
determination than a lot of men.&#13;
Kellie has the potential to be the&#13;
best 880 or miler we have ever had&#13;
at Parkside."&#13;
Before deciding to come to&#13;
Parkside both women were&#13;
recruited differently. Even after&#13;
taking second in the state cross&#13;
country meet as a senior, Burman&#13;
was not clouded as a top college&#13;
prospect. 'The rally schools who&#13;
really pursued me were Parkside&#13;
and Wisconsin," she said, "and&#13;
even Wisconsin doesn't seem too&#13;
enthusiastic about me." The fleet -&#13;
footed sophomore has proven&#13;
skeptics wrong and is quickly&#13;
making a name for herself around&#13;
the country.&#13;
The other half of toe duo,&#13;
Benzow, was highly recruited by&#13;
state schools. "The reason I chose&#13;
Parkside was because I knew they&#13;
had a good program," she said,&#13;
"plus it is close to my home and&#13;
my mother thought it would give&#13;
Continued On Page Seven&#13;
HIS FIRST YEAR OUT OF COLLEGE.&#13;
_,: K 9JJAC KEN B USH RENOVATED THREE&#13;
BUILDINGS, WORKED ON A DAM, RAVED A ROAD,&#13;
AND BUILT TWO CHOPPER FADS.&#13;
"Most of the engineers I graduated&#13;
with probably wound up as an&#13;
assistant engineer to somebody else.&#13;
Maybe doing the details for somebody&#13;
else's design or supervising some&#13;
small aspect of construction.&#13;
"But my first year as an&#13;
Engineer Lt., I've designed many of&#13;
my own projects and supervised the&#13;
construction on everything from&#13;
baseball dugouts to the concrete work&#13;
on a dam. Earthmoving, grading, filling,&#13;
paving, concrete work, masonry&#13;
—you name it, I've supervised it.&#13;
"Whether I stay in the&#13;
Army or go into civilian construction&#13;
work later, I've got experience that&#13;
some engineers won't have when&#13;
they're 30!"&#13;
Army ROTC got Frank&#13;
Quackenbush off to a good start in his&#13;
field. It can do the same for you&#13;
whether you're a civil engineer or an&#13;
English major. For more information&#13;
stop by the Army ROTC office on&#13;
campus.&#13;
And begin your future as&#13;
an officer.&#13;
2nd Lt. Frank Quackenbush majored in civil&#13;
engineering at the University ot Ari:ona and was&#13;
a member of Armv ROTC ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BEALLYOUCANBE. </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 9, issue 21, March 5, 1981</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
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              <text>Weaver loses renewal decision 7-6</text>
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              <text>Thursday, February 19, 1981&#13;
^IT University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 19&#13;
Weaver loses renewal decision 7-6&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
The Executive Committee of the&#13;
Humanities Division reconsidered&#13;
on Feb. 13. the non - renewal&#13;
decision made in the case of&#13;
Communication Assistant&#13;
Professor Bruce Weaver.&#13;
Earlier the Humanities Subcommittee&#13;
found that Weaver's&#13;
teaching falls within the division&#13;
average, indicating strength; that&#13;
his service record is strong,&#13;
especially in terms of the communication&#13;
discipline and the&#13;
area of c urriculum planning; and&#13;
that while Weaver has published&#13;
some articles appearing in&#13;
journals of na tional reputation, on&#13;
balance the quantity and quality&#13;
of his research was judged insufficient&#13;
for recommendation for&#13;
renewal and tenure. The subcommittee&#13;
found that neither his&#13;
teaching nor service were sufficiently&#13;
outstanding to compensate&#13;
for the less strong&#13;
category of creative activity.&#13;
The Committee voted 7-6 to&#13;
affirm the opinion of the&#13;
Humanities Sub - committee.&#13;
James Dean, Lee Thayer, Andrew&#13;
McLean, Emmett Bedford,&#13;
Richard Carrington, Wayne&#13;
Johnson, and Eugene Norwood&#13;
voted in favor of re - affirmation,&#13;
while Carole Vopat. Carl Lindner,&#13;
Dennis Dean, Donald Kummings,&#13;
Robert Canary, and 0. L. Johnson&#13;
voted against affirming the sub -&#13;
committee's denial.&#13;
Weaver asserted that his service&#13;
was "very strong on the&#13;
divisional, university, community,&#13;
state, and national&#13;
levels."&#13;
As communication coordinator&#13;
working on curriculum changes&#13;
demanded by APPR, Weaver and&#13;
others developed a program with&#13;
a strong theoretical base, making&#13;
65 curricular changes.&#13;
Dr. Redding, professor at&#13;
Purdue, evaluated that program&#13;
on March 3, 1979: "I agree in&#13;
substance with the 14 page . . .&#13;
document submitted by Professor&#13;
Weaver. More specifically, the&#13;
statement of basic philosophies&#13;
and goals ... is one of the best of&#13;
any I have come across in the&#13;
nation, particularly, that is, in the&#13;
context of an undergraduate&#13;
program." Redding stated that&#13;
these goals were congruent with&#13;
current opinions in the field&#13;
nationally, and appropriate to the&#13;
industrial community mission of&#13;
UW - P, while being feasible,&#13;
considering available physical&#13;
and human resouces.&#13;
Weaver stated that he has been&#13;
active serving on many university&#13;
committees, coaching debate and&#13;
forensics at UW - P, lecturing,&#13;
conducting debate workshops, and&#13;
judging tournaments in Racine,&#13;
Whitewater, Kenosha and&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
ASST. PROF.&#13;
BRUCE WEAVER&#13;
"On the state level, I've served&#13;
as Chairman of the Rhetorical&#13;
Theory and Criticism Interest&#13;
Group for the Wisconsin Communication&#13;
Association. In this&#13;
capacity, I've coordinated three&#13;
programs for the state convention.&#13;
On the national level, I&#13;
was elected to membership in the&#13;
steering committee, the alternative&#13;
communication caucus for&#13;
the Speech and Communication&#13;
Association of American,"&#13;
Weaver said. "I would assert from&#13;
the evidence presented to you that&#13;
my service record is not just&#13;
strong, but exceptional."&#13;
In the teaching area, Weaver&#13;
has received consistently high&#13;
student evaluations (.2 to .5 points&#13;
above divisional average on a 5&#13;
point scale), even when teaching&#13;
out of his formal training in&#13;
rhetorical theory and criticism.&#13;
Judy Pugh, Communication 101&#13;
co - teacher, said, "Dr. Weaver's&#13;
goal is not just to introduce new&#13;
material to the students. Additionally,&#13;
he challenges the&#13;
student to make him think for&#13;
perhaps the first ume about&#13;
himself, his judgments, ethics,&#13;
beliefs, and the kind of communication&#13;
messages he sends&#13;
and receives."&#13;
Rebbecca Rubin, Communication&#13;
Coordinator, said that&#13;
Weaver's teaching has positively&#13;
and significantly affected both&#13;
students' education and communication&#13;
enrollments.&#13;
"I would like to point out,"&#13;
Weaver stated, "three new pieces&#13;
of information... Number one, an&#13;
article has recently appeared in&#13;
print which was not mentioned at&#13;
all in my original file: an article&#13;
dealing with heterosexual&#13;
presumption in communication&#13;
research which appeared in&#13;
Alternative Communications,&#13;
January 19, 1981."&#13;
"Second, I have received an&#13;
acceptance from the editor of t he&#13;
Journal of the American&#13;
Forensics Association for my&#13;
article entitled, "Arguments for&#13;
Circumstance and Definition: the&#13;
Substance of Parliamentary&#13;
Polarization." Weaver said, "The&#13;
revised article was sent out 2-1/2&#13;
weeks ago."&#13;
"The third piece of new information&#13;
was the letter from&#13;
.Professor Jerry Frye, who was&#13;
one of the three persons asked by&#13;
the subcommittee to respond to&#13;
my research," Weaver stated.&#13;
"Currently, I have eight articles&#13;
in print, with another definitely&#13;
accepted. I've given 11 papers at&#13;
professional meetings. I've held a&#13;
National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities Summer Seminar on&#13;
Aristotle's rhetoric at the&#13;
University of Nebraska in Lincoln.&#13;
I believe if o ne were to look&#13;
at the quantity of my creative&#13;
activity in research, one would&#13;
conclude that I certainly have a&#13;
strong commitment to scholarship&#13;
and that I would probably continue&#13;
to produce in years ahead,"&#13;
Weaver stated.&#13;
"I believe my research is of&#13;
high quality," Weaver said.&#13;
"First, I will present to you&#13;
statements made by respected&#13;
communication scholars outside&#13;
UW-P who have read and&#13;
evaluated my work. Second, I will&#13;
Continued On Page Two&#13;
Local businesses compared to Twin Cities&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
On Feb. 2 at the Social Science&#13;
Roundtable, David Beal, Business&#13;
Editor of the Milwaukee Journal,&#13;
compared entrepreneurship and&#13;
innovation in Minnesota's Twin&#13;
Cities area with southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
Beal stated that a survey taken&#13;
last June in Wisconsin underscored&#13;
the lack of new companies&#13;
selling stock to the public&#13;
for the first time. Yet, at the same&#13;
time, many acquisitions and&#13;
mergers of Wisconsin - based&#13;
companies into other companies,&#13;
have occured.&#13;
Despite the rugged market&#13;
climate, the Twin Cities area has&#13;
had many more successful&#13;
companies than Wisconsin, according&#13;
to Beal. He also said that&#13;
many of these companies went&#13;
public.&#13;
Beal noted that although&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin tends to&#13;
have smaller service businesses,&#13;
such as florists, this type does not&#13;
tend to grow and create jobs.&#13;
During the current recession,&#13;
Beal found that the Minneapolis&#13;
and St. Paul area's summer&#13;
unemployment rate was about&#13;
4.5% while the Milwaukee area&#13;
rate was between 6% - 7%. The&#13;
Twin Cities area also had quite a&#13;
lot of construction. Beal&#13;
remarked, "It did seem to have a&#13;
lot of th e earmarks of the kind of&#13;
growth that you see in the Sun&#13;
Belt."&#13;
Beal reported that a comparison&#13;
between the 10 largest companies&#13;
in Milwaukee and in the St. Paul&#13;
area found that those in the St.&#13;
Paul area had three times the&#13;
sales. He added, "But more important.&#13;
.. was the fact that these&#13;
companies were, in terms of&#13;
dollars that they made from sales,&#13;
twice as profitable."&#13;
"Southeastern Wisconsin and&#13;
the band of industrial regions&#13;
along the lakefront, stretching&#13;
from Kenosha right up through&#13;
Milwaukee to north of M ilwaukee&#13;
... is an area where ... a lot of&#13;
the talk about the word 're - industrialization'&#13;
and the concern&#13;
about that applies," Beal said.&#13;
Although Detroit, Ohio, and&#13;
Pennsylvania have seen more of&#13;
the problem, Beal explained that&#13;
the maturing industries in&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin are no&#13;
longer the job centers that they&#13;
(Mice were. However, he believes,&#13;
"If you have other growing&#13;
companies coming along to&#13;
replace them, then you're in&#13;
pretty good shape."&#13;
However, there aren't as many&#13;
growing companies who are&#13;
willing to take risks in Southeast&#13;
Wisconsin as there are around the&#13;
Twin Cities, according to Beal.&#13;
One difference that Beal noted:&#13;
"They have proposed a series of&#13;
changes in stock laws which would&#13;
make it easier for small companies&#13;
to issue their first public&#13;
stock. They are concerned that&#13;
they aren't building enough; that&#13;
they are going over too far to the&#13;
side of protecting the investor, on&#13;
the one hand, as opposed to encouraging&#13;
business risk, on the&#13;
other."&#13;
Beal continued, "Another thing&#13;
was the effort of big business to&#13;
help small business, and, maybe,&#13;
more of a recognition that small&#13;
business is an innovator and has&#13;
bet i, (certainly that is the&#13;
record) in the seventies."&#13;
"The company that is particularly&#13;
interesting to look at,"&#13;
Beal said, "around Minneapolis&#13;
and St. Paul is Control Data which&#13;
has set up a small business and&#13;
technology center and brought in&#13;
about 40-50 small businesses to try&#13;
to help them in their formative&#13;
stages," Beal said.&#13;
Mature business and industry in&#13;
the Twin Cities has supported the&#13;
creation of The Minnesota&#13;
Cooperation Office which, according&#13;
to Beal, "seeks to identify&#13;
— t he entrepreneurs and the inventors&#13;
who have not very many&#13;
places to go. They need to talk to&#13;
somebody about it."&#13;
"Some of these people are&#13;
straight off the wall and some of&#13;
the others might have great ideas.&#13;
They just need to get a little help&#13;
in the formative stages," explained&#13;
Beal. "They might have&#13;
the kind of idea that would lead to&#13;
a company that might be a substantial&#13;
job center to replace other&#13;
companies that are moving down&#13;
toward the mature stage of their&#13;
product cycles."&#13;
According to Beal, this effort&#13;
provides the link between entrepreneurs&#13;
with seed capital and&#13;
inventors with promising ideas.&#13;
Here, big business is helping&#13;
small business because big&#13;
business recognizes that it is too&#13;
bureaucratic and does not have&#13;
the structure to bring about innovations&#13;
that would be desirable&#13;
from the community standpoint,&#13;
he said.&#13;
Innovation centers are being&#13;
talked about in Wisconsin, Beal&#13;
noted. In fact UW-Whitewater has&#13;
recently set up an invention&#13;
center. Possibilities are being&#13;
discussed by the Milwaukee&#13;
School of Engineering. A Madison&#13;
group, Wisconsin for Research,&#13;
has studied the Princeton, New&#13;
Jersey area, the Silicon Valley&#13;
area south of Sa n Francisco, and&#13;
Nbrth Carolina's research&#13;
triangle where cooperative efforts&#13;
between industries and universities&#13;
have led to major job centers;&#13;
Wisconsin for Research is&#13;
currently trying to assemble land&#13;
for a research park in the Madison&#13;
area.&#13;
Governor Dreyfus relates the&#13;
comeback of the Massachusetts'&#13;
milltowns and Boston area to the&#13;
number of high technology&#13;
companies recently spawned&#13;
there, according to Beal. As a&#13;
result, Dreyfus is trying to encourage&#13;
more high technology&#13;
industries in Wisconsin by holding&#13;
small business forums around the&#13;
state; having the State Security&#13;
Commission look at easing&#13;
s e c u r i t i e s' r e g is t r a t i on&#13;
requirements of new companies;&#13;
and focusing attention on efforts&#13;
to ease the capital gains tax, he&#13;
said.&#13;
Beal referred to the book,&#13;
Wealth and Poverty, which argues&#13;
that rugged treatment of capital&#13;
gains has a side effect of being a&#13;
big business protection act&#13;
because the capital gains treatment&#13;
is crucial to the formation&#13;
and early growth of small companies.&#13;
Yet, small high technology&#13;
companies generated most of the&#13;
employment growth in America&#13;
during 1969 -1976 at a rate thirteen&#13;
times faster than mature firms.&#13;
UW-P political science&#13;
professor Ken Hoover, remarked,&#13;
"It seems like these heavily&#13;
durable goods manufacturers are&#13;
being taken over by outside&#13;
corporations, and that we are&#13;
losing local control on the&#13;
manufacturing end and on the&#13;
consumption end because the&#13;
malls take the money that is spent&#13;
on consumer goods out of the&#13;
community. So it doesn't recycle&#13;
here. So it is becoming&#13;
recolonization where they get the&#13;
cheap labor and raw materials out&#13;
of here and take it some place else&#13;
or send the money someplace&#13;
else."&#13;
"It is going on, and it is a big&#13;
concern," Beal agreed. Then he&#13;
sadly commented on the fact that&#13;
many companies based away&#13;
from the local area, for example&#13;
in New York, don't care about the&#13;
plant town.&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Dirty limerick entry form&#13;
• Review: 'Something's&#13;
Afoot' live show&#13;
• Chuckie Perry kills&#13;
'em dead &#13;
2 Thursday, February 19,1981 RANGER&#13;
Parking tickets&#13;
create problems&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Parking has always been, and&#13;
probably always will be, a thorn in&#13;
many Parkside students' sides.&#13;
The 1.55 oversell factor of white&#13;
parking stickers is the main&#13;
cause. After all, how can 2000&#13;
white permit holders find parking&#13;
places when there's only 1500&#13;
white permit spaces?&#13;
This has caused problems for&#13;
some Parkside students, one of&#13;
whom telephoned me after&#13;
complaining to Security about&#13;
receiving a ticket.&#13;
The student argued that she had&#13;
read in Ranger that two warning&#13;
tickets would first be given. The&#13;
student was then told that Ranger&#13;
made a mistake concerning the&#13;
ticket policy.&#13;
Ranger wasn't wrong, but the&#13;
student made a mistake because,&#13;
in her case, two warning tickets&#13;
were previously issued.&#13;
The policy that Ranger earlier&#13;
reported was that a minimum of&#13;
two warning tickets will be issued&#13;
to any vehicle violating any of the&#13;
following parking violations&#13;
before a parking violation ticket is&#13;
issued: A. parking prohibited&#13;
(posted), B. parking in non -&#13;
designated area, C. no permit, D.&#13;
parking with improper permit for&#13;
area, E. improper parking in&#13;
designated area, F. parked in&#13;
physically disabled stall, G.&#13;
restricted parking (specific time).&#13;
The only change in the above&#13;
procedure is letter F., because&#13;
state statutes concerning&#13;
physically disabled parking were&#13;
recently changed. "Anybody&#13;
parking in a handcap zone without&#13;
the (handicap) plate or the plaque&#13;
(distributed by the Department of&#13;
Transportation)... is going to get&#13;
a ticket," said Ron Brinkmann,&#13;
Director of Security.&#13;
But there are exceptions to the&#13;
"two - warnings - first" policy,&#13;
according to Brinkmann. "These&#13;
are at the discretion of the officer.&#13;
If he feels that somebody is&#13;
blocking traffic or impeding the&#13;
flow of traffic, no warning is going&#13;
to be given out," said Brinkmann.&#13;
"It's asinine to even think a&#13;
warning should be given to&#13;
someone that blocks traffic."&#13;
But a warning need not always&#13;
be given. "If the officer feels he&#13;
wants to issue one, he can. He does&#13;
not have to ticket it if he doesn't&#13;
feel that it's warranted or he can if&#13;
he feels the condition warrants a&#13;
warning ticket for some reason,"&#13;
Brinkmann said.&#13;
Brinkmann feels that many&#13;
students have a misconception&#13;
about the warning ticket policy.&#13;
The policy is that two warning&#13;
tickets will be given for any&#13;
violation, not two warnings per&#13;
violation.&#13;
"It's two warnings mainly to get&#13;
them aware of 'Hey, you better&#13;
start reading the rules and&#13;
regulations'," said Brinkmann.&#13;
Bruce Weaver loses&#13;
renewal decision&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
discuss specifically the journals in&#13;
which I have been published, and&#13;
will conclude from that, that all of&#13;
these journals are of high&#13;
quality."&#13;
Donovan Ochs, professor at&#13;
University of Iowa, wrote to&#13;
Weaver about an article which&#13;
appeared in Communication&#13;
Quarterly. Ochs felt the article&#13;
was provocative and enabled him&#13;
to understand cultural association.&#13;
&#13;
Howard Martin, professor at&#13;
University of Michigan, found&#13;
Weaver's research appealing in&#13;
broad humanistic interest. Martin&#13;
stated that Weaver's careful&#13;
analysis of the "Peace Debate and&#13;
the Destruction of Friendhip"&#13;
which appeared in the Quarterly&#13;
Journal of Speech "attests to its&#13;
substance, interest, and quality of&#13;
presentation."&#13;
Keith Erickson, professor at&#13;
Texas Technical University,&#13;
writes: "Weaver is articulate,&#13;
original, and thought provoking.&#13;
Ranger wants&#13;
to hear from&#13;
YOU I&#13;
Got a gripe, a question, a startling revelation,&#13;
a compliment, a rebuttal, or something on&#13;
your mind that you want to share?&#13;
Write a letter to the editor!&#13;
Just follow the guidelines printed in&#13;
the masthead (to the right).&#13;
Photos by Brian Passino&#13;
Outdoor fun&#13;
Physics Club shows its winning form in the outdoor volleyball&#13;
tournament held during Winter Carnival last week. More Winter&#13;
Carnival pictures are on page 5.&#13;
Offer financial aid to go abroad&#13;
He is, in my estimation, a&#13;
disciplined scholar who will have&#13;
a long productive academic life.&#13;
His articles published in highly&#13;
respected journals in the field of&#13;
speech communication are excellent."&#13;
&#13;
Jerry Frye, professor at the&#13;
University of Minnesota, said, "It&#13;
is interesting to me that he has&#13;
been successful at the state,&#13;
regional, and national levels . . .&#13;
Overall, in my opinion, Communication&#13;
Quarterly and&#13;
Quarterly Journal of Speech&#13;
articles are sound and represent&#13;
useful contributions to the a rea of&#13;
rhetorical theory."&#13;
Weaver said, "I believe it is&#13;
reasonable to conclude from these&#13;
statements that scholars . . .&#13;
believe my research is of good&#13;
quality."&#13;
Weaver said that he has&#13;
published in the Quarterly Journal&#13;
of Speech which was the first&#13;
American journal to be devoted&#13;
exclusively to rhetoric and speech&#13;
A special King Cola Fund, to&#13;
assist men and women college&#13;
students who may need some&#13;
Financial aid to go abroad this&#13;
summer as "YMCA World Ambassadors,"&#13;
to promote peace&#13;
through friendship and understanding&#13;
among the peoples of&#13;
the world, has been announced by&#13;
Walter S. Mack, Chairman of the&#13;
Board of King Cola World Corporation,&#13;
the new national cola&#13;
company.&#13;
Mr. Mack further stated that&#13;
while all needful, qualifying&#13;
and is the major journal of the&#13;
Spe ech Communication&#13;
Association. This journal has&#13;
printed more articles which have&#13;
become classics of the field than&#13;
any other journal.&#13;
Weaver discussed the Journal of&#13;
Communication Quarterly, the&#13;
Journal of the American&#13;
Forensics Association, and&#13;
Alternative Communications.&#13;
Weaver named numerous well -&#13;
known scholars who have&#13;
published in these journals.&#13;
Weaver said that the Journal of&#13;
Wisconsin Communication&#13;
Association is a state journal with&#13;
various Wisconsin researchers'&#13;
work published in it.&#13;
"In all the journals in which my&#13;
research has appeared, it has&#13;
been in excellent company. I&#13;
believe this argument combined&#13;
with the statements of prominent&#13;
persons in my field allows me to&#13;
conclude that the quality of my&#13;
research is satisfactory," Weaver&#13;
said.&#13;
Turning to research plans,&#13;
Weaver said, "I'm interested in&#13;
the polarization of rhetorical&#13;
positions which occur in particularly&#13;
emotional times, such as&#13;
those experienced in Greece ... in&#13;
18th centur y England during the&#13;
French Revolution, and in&#13;
America during Viet Nam, and so&#13;
forth. I'm concerned in all of these&#13;
investigations with looking at&#13;
what happens to persons who&#13;
attempt to publicly present a&#13;
moderate position when the&#13;
rhetoric has become polarized and&#13;
fixed, and when rhetors are no&#13;
longer talking constructively, but&#13;
are merely restating their&#13;
positions in ever more emotional&#13;
and strident ways." Weaver said,&#13;
Little work has been done to find&#13;
the genre of rhetoric of&#13;
polarization or the genre of the&#13;
frustrated moderate rhetoric. I&#13;
hope to eventually draw some&#13;
generalized conclusions from&#13;
these and other studies."&#13;
college students will be eligible for&#13;
such assistance without regard to&#13;
race, creed, or color, special&#13;
consideration for financial aid will&#13;
be given to Black and Hispanic&#13;
students who wish to become&#13;
YMCA World Ambassadors.&#13;
An impartial Judging Committee,&#13;
headed by officers and&#13;
directors of the King Cola&#13;
Foundation, will judge applicants&#13;
for this assistance.&#13;
Mr. Mack is Honorary Chairman&#13;
of the YMCA World Ambassadors&#13;
project, by which&#13;
young American college students&#13;
are recruited to go in small groups&#13;
as volunteers to various parts of&#13;
the world to help develop the&#13;
peace objective among the&#13;
peoples of the world, including&#13;
Africa, Asia, Europe, and the&#13;
Americas. In those localities, the&#13;
"Ambassadors" work as volunteers&#13;
in various service projects,&#13;
including camp counseling,&#13;
conversational English teaching,&#13;
rural development work camps,&#13;
YMCA intern training, day-care&#13;
center activity and missionary&#13;
hospital service.&#13;
For the summer experience of&#13;
five to seven weeks — and since&#13;
the projects usually take place in&#13;
developing nations — participants&#13;
ordinarily pay their own travel&#13;
and living expenses, so as not to be&#13;
a burden on the host country or the&#13;
local community. These expenses,&#13;
which are about $1500 to $2000&#13;
(depending on location and&#13;
duration) cover round trip air&#13;
fare, and modest, but adequate&#13;
room and board. Each team stays&#13;
at some time at a private home&#13;
abroad, to enhance intercultural&#13;
understanding.&#13;
The King Cola Fund has been&#13;
designed to relieve selected&#13;
college students of some of this&#13;
expense.&#13;
The World Ambassadors project&#13;
has been described as a "mini&#13;
Peace Corps." Over 300 young&#13;
Americans have been past participants&#13;
of the program, assisted&#13;
by hundreds of indigenous&#13;
"Ambassadors" in over 45&#13;
countries that have hosted&#13;
American "Ambassador" teams.&#13;
Thousands of international&#13;
youths, in camps, villages, and&#13;
cities have been touched by the&#13;
World Ambassadors, and the&#13;
World Ambassadors have met&#13;
with Prime Ministers, peasants,&#13;
and others in various stations of&#13;
life.&#13;
The proposed summer of 1981&#13;
YMCA World Ambassadors&#13;
Project includes the following&#13;
areas: Japan, Hokkaido,&#13;
Thailand, Hong Kong, Philippines,&#13;
Taiwan, India, Egypt,&#13;
Israel, Portugal, Italy, Greece,&#13;
Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico,&#13;
Panama, Columbia, Costa Rica,&#13;
Ecuador, Ghana, Nigeria and&#13;
Senegal.&#13;
Application should be made on&#13;
the form which is available in the&#13;
Ranger office, WLLC D-139 .&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
SSl-W ..'.'...'...'.Business Manager&#13;
Edltor S»&#13;
hal Feature Edjtor&#13;
Edenhauser Editor&#13;
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lno Editor Ginger Helgeson Edjtor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
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taroi K lees, D an McCormack, Lor i M eyer, Br uc e P re ston, K im&#13;
Schlater, Janet Wells&#13;
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RANGER fs'printpd'hu'thV ?"r&#13;
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he academic year except during breaks and holidays, Written DermiV^^L - j^ Co°Perative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin. All rnrr^nnoni rf^'red for reprint of any portion of R ANGER.&#13;
Parkside Kenos"" MM?** addreSSecI ,0; Parkside Ranger&#13;
' WLLC D13&#13;
'&lt; UWpaoe^&#13;
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13^'"&#13;
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Wi" wi,hheld f°r val id re asons.&#13;
reserves6 a° l « /tor to? I-TV at&#13;
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on °n T hursday. The R ANGER defamatory c^fmt pr,v,leges in refusing to pri nt lett ers w hich con tain fal se or &#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 19,1981&#13;
lnternational scholar Thayer teaches here&#13;
by Janet Wells&#13;
Communication Professor Lee&#13;
Thayer will address two forthcoming&#13;
conferences on communication&#13;
and culture His&#13;
lecture on "Culture and Communicability"&#13;
will open the&#13;
Fourth Conference on Culture and&#13;
Communication, which will be&#13;
held at Temple University in&#13;
Philadelphia on April 9 - 10&#13;
On February 20 - 22, Thayer will&#13;
be a featured speaker at the San&#13;
Diego Conference on Communication&#13;
and Culture His&#13;
paper, "The Media, Morality, and&#13;
American Culture," is related to&#13;
his recently published book,&#13;
Ethics, Morality, and the Media:&#13;
Reflections on American Culture.&#13;
Last November, the First International&#13;
Conference on&#13;
Communicology drew Thayer and&#13;
eight other international scholars&#13;
to Cortez' palace in Cocoyoc,&#13;
Mexico, to discuss communication's&#13;
potential for&#13;
restoring humanity to civilization.&#13;
The paper he presented at that&#13;
conference "Communication and&#13;
the Dilemma of Modern Man:&#13;
Reach vs. Grasp," has since been&#13;
widely discussed. It is probable&#13;
that the topic will be further explored&#13;
in book form.&#13;
Thayer has published nine&#13;
books and authored nearly 100&#13;
major articles and presentations.&#13;
A member of Parkside's faculty&#13;
since fall of 1978, T hayer teaches&#13;
courses in organizational communication&#13;
and in communication&#13;
and culture, and coordinates the&#13;
university's Honors Program.&#13;
Immediately prior to his arrival&#13;
at Parkside, he was&#13;
simultaneously a Fulbright&#13;
Scholar at the University of&#13;
Helsinki (Finland) and a&#13;
Distinguished Visiting Professor&#13;
at the University of Houston.&#13;
COMMUNICATION PROFESSOR&#13;
Recruited to Parkside's faculty&#13;
by a university search team,&#13;
Thayer was attracted by the&#13;
administration's "commitment to&#13;
quality," and by the Wisconsin&#13;
University system. "Wisconsin,&#13;
by and large, is a very intelligent&#13;
system, and a good one to work in&#13;
Community services offered&#13;
Parkside an education equal to&#13;
what is available at any school in&#13;
the country. Thayer's familiarity&#13;
with other institutions of higher&#13;
learning includes lecturing and&#13;
teaching at most of the major&#13;
universities in the United States,&#13;
including all of the Big Ten.&#13;
Parkside's pastoral campus&#13;
also appealed to the professor,&#13;
who was tired of urban settings. In&#13;
Houston, he says, they planted&#13;
fourteen trees, all sycamores, and&#13;
none of them was doing well."&#13;
Parkside's abundant trees and&#13;
rolling hills — described to him in&#13;
a telephone conversation with a&#13;
member of the search team —&#13;
were persuasive.&#13;
The University's location in&#13;
what he calls "a cultural&#13;
corridor" was another important&#13;
element in Thayer's decision to&#13;
move here. "From south of&#13;
Chicago up to Milwaukee is&#13;
culturally the most active area in&#13;
the country," he said.&#13;
A fervent student of and participant&#13;
in culture in all of its&#13;
forms, Thayer's background&#13;
spans widely diverse experiences.&#13;
His poetry has been published in a&#13;
college collection. He withheld his&#13;
first novel from publication rather&#13;
then submit it to the publisher's&#13;
proposed changes. Earlier, as a&#13;
brass player and arranger,&#13;
Thayer dropped out of hi gh school&#13;
and left his Grenola, Kansas, farm&#13;
home to travel with a band. He&#13;
_ played jazz for three years with&#13;
LEE THAYER 11118 "territory dance band."&#13;
A chance gig near the&#13;
.... Mr. Guskin sold me on the University of Wichita led to a B.A.&#13;
place," he said. in English and Psychology, and&#13;
Two years after his arrival then a position with a&#13;
Thayer's enthusiasm for Parkside technological marketing firm,&#13;
is undiminished, though he notes He earned a second degree —&#13;
that "the students and the faculty this one in Civil Engineering —&#13;
here underrate themselves." It is while serving on a naval escort&#13;
possible, he believes, to secure at vessel in the South Pacific.&#13;
Returning to the University of&#13;
Wichita, he completed a Masters&#13;
Degree in English in eight months.&#13;
&#13;
A new directory of " University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside Services&#13;
for the Community" is available&#13;
from the UW-P Public Information&#13;
Office and at libraries&#13;
in Racine and Kenosha Counties.&#13;
Faculty - staff services include&#13;
a speakers' bureau for civic,&#13;
professional, service and cultural&#13;
organizations; the Parkside&#13;
Resource Enrichment Professor&#13;
(PREP) program which provides&#13;
speakers for high schools; performing&#13;
arts programs in music&#13;
and dramatic arts; business -&#13;
industry - governmental resource&#13;
professors; media resource&#13;
professors; and a foreign&#13;
language translation service.&#13;
Other community services are&#13;
offered by UW - Parkside's Center&#13;
for Economic Education and&#13;
Research, Institute of Local&#13;
Government and Human Services,&#13;
Business Outreach Office,&#13;
the Office of Community&#13;
Educational Programs which&#13;
coordinates educational outreach&#13;
activities including credit courses&#13;
and the Office of Community&#13;
Student Services which provides&#13;
information and counseling to&#13;
current and prospective adult&#13;
students.&#13;
The Library - Learning Center&#13;
has a variety of community&#13;
services available. Free community&#13;
borrower cards give access&#13;
to most library materials&#13;
including bound volumes,&#13;
periodicals, films and videotapes&#13;
and phonograph records and&#13;
educational borrowers cards are&#13;
available to many institutions,&#13;
organizations and businesses. The&#13;
University Archives and Area&#13;
Research Center, located in the&#13;
library, has additional research&#13;
sources available to the community,&#13;
especially those interested&#13;
in genealogical and&#13;
governmental research and state&#13;
and local history.&#13;
Physical facilities of the&#13;
university are available to civic,&#13;
cultural, service, educational and&#13;
similar organizations on a space&#13;
available basis and individual and&#13;
group tours of the campus are&#13;
available.&#13;
Information about campus&#13;
events such as concerts, plays,&#13;
lectures and films is available on&#13;
a 24 - hour basis by calling the&#13;
Parkside Information Center at&#13;
553-2345.&#13;
It was while he was teaching at&#13;
the University of Oklahoma that&#13;
Thayer began to consult in&#13;
communication and management&#13;
with business and government.&#13;
Since then, he has served as a&#13;
c o n s u l t a n t t o B o e i n g , A T &amp; T ,&#13;
Bendix, IBM, Curtiss - Wright,&#13;
Hallmark, Sealtest Foods, and the&#13;
USAF, among scores of others. He&#13;
has been a consultant to every&#13;
major segment of the government&#13;
at both national and local levels,&#13;
and has done funded and grant&#13;
research for both government and&#13;
business. Thayer devoted the next&#13;
few years full - time to business,&#13;
serving as Vice President of&#13;
Planning for a national firm.&#13;
Thayer returned to teaching&#13;
because he says, "I thought it was&#13;
a higher challenge." Becoming an&#13;
Associate Professor at the&#13;
University of Wichita, he was&#13;
favorably impressed with the&#13;
university's innovative teaching&#13;
methods. Mostly case and&#13;
simulation teaching were used.&#13;
A Danforth Foundation teaching&#13;
award helped him to complete his&#13;
Ph.D. in Social and Clinical&#13;
Psychology at the University of&#13;
Oklahoma.&#13;
Since then, he has held eminent&#13;
positions at the Universities of&#13;
Missouri, Massachusetts, Simon&#13;
Fraser, and Iowa, where he was&#13;
selected as the second Gallup&#13;
Professor of Communication.&#13;
Nearly every major communication&#13;
program in the&#13;
country has taken advantage of&#13;
his consulting services.&#13;
Standing invitations to teach at&#13;
the Universities of Strasbourg,&#13;
Bordeaux III, and Bergen (in&#13;
Norway), and an invitation from&#13;
the Hungarian Minister of Cu lture&#13;
to be a Visiting Scholar at&#13;
Budapest's Institute for Culture&#13;
provide Thayer with an international&#13;
lecture platform.&#13;
ACADEMY OF BATON &amp; DANCE&#13;
FIRST&#13;
'National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
| Headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits, 1&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — T ap Shoes —&#13;
|; All Dancing Supplies&#13;
16204; 22nd Avenue, Kenosha 658-2498$&#13;
DECISIONS RECENT&#13;
COLLEGE GRADS MAKE ALLDAY&#13;
"I'm a cavalry platoon leader,&#13;
in charge of 43 men," says Hal. "I'm&#13;
responsible for their education, their&#13;
training, their well-being. So you can&#13;
bet I'm making rapid-fire decisions&#13;
all day. Decisions that have an impact&#13;
on people's lives."&#13;
Army ROTC is a great way&#13;
to prepare for being an Army officer.&#13;
ROTC helps you develop discipline&#13;
of mind and spirit. As well as your&#13;
ability to make decisions under&#13;
pressure.&#13;
Taking Army ROTC pays off&#13;
in other ways. Like financial assistance&#13;
—up to $1,000 a year for your last&#13;
two years of ROTC. You could also&#13;
win an ROTC scholarship, as Hal&#13;
did. Each scholarship covers tuition,&#13;
books, and more.&#13;
If you d like to step out of college&#13;
and into a job with responsibility,&#13;
do what Hal Davis did. Step into&#13;
Army ROTC now.&#13;
And begin your future as an&#13;
officer.&#13;
ARMY ROTC AT&#13;
UW-P ARKSIDE&#13;
CALL CAPTAIN FRED&#13;
2nd Lt Hal Davis was an industrial management&#13;
major at the University of Tennessee and a&#13;
member of Army ROTC. ARMY ROK.&#13;
BEAU YOU CAN &#13;
Thursday, February 19,1981 RANGER&#13;
Coming Events Submit your entry soon&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 19 g g&#13;
"MHS 'if Blble study ,rom 12:30&#13;
-&#13;
1:30&#13;
MUSICAL TRIBUTE to Cole Porter by Theatre Three of Dallas in "Porter Please"&#13;
5»&#13;
p&#13;
- Comm. Arts Theatre. Admission is *3 for Parkside students and 15for&#13;
others. Tickets are available at Union Information Center. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Friday, Feb. 20&#13;
pJSit??S?&#13;
S&#13;
it&#13;
I0N&#13;
"&#13;
Ai°°&#13;
k at&#13;
,&#13;
Af&#13;
r&#13;
i&#13;
?" at 1P- m. In Union 207 featuring a panel of&#13;
aad studcn,s&#13;
'&#13;
1,10 progr&#13;
"&#13;
m'»«•" •» «•»&#13;
Mby&#13;
rp&#13;
EABHeaVeD Ca&#13;
° WaU WUlbe 8h0Wn at 8P&#13;
'&#13;
m' ta 0,0 Uni0n Cinema&#13;
' Sponsored&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 21&#13;
FASCHINGFEST starts at 6 p. m. in the Union building. Sponsored by Student Life.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 22&#13;
DINNE R THE ATE R "Plaza Suite" at 6 p. m. in the Union Dining Room. Tickets are&#13;
available at the Union Information Center. Admission is $6.50 fo r Parkside&#13;
students and $8 for others. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Monday, Feb. 23&#13;
VIDEOTAPES Pat Benetar, Jethro Tull, Ian Hunter and The Babies at 1 p. m in&#13;
Union Square. Free admission.&#13;
FILM AND SPEAKERS "Tribute to Martin Luther King, Jr." in Union 207 at 1 p m&#13;
Free admission and open to the public.&#13;
MEETING Inter - Varsity Corinthians small group in Moln D128 from 1 - 2 p. m&#13;
Open to aU in terested.&#13;
ROUNDTABLE "The 1980 Census: The Undercount and What's Left" at 12 noon in&#13;
Union 106. Free and open to the public.&#13;
Correction&#13;
"The Woodhull," Elizabeth&#13;
Garry's one-person drama based&#13;
on the life of 19th century feminist,&#13;
stockbroker, publisher and the&#13;
first woman to run for the&#13;
Presidency of the United States,&#13;
Victoria Woodhull, will be&#13;
presented on March 14 in the&#13;
Union Cinema, not the Comm.&#13;
Arts Theatre, at 8 p.m.&#13;
Tickets are available at the&#13;
Union Information Desk. They are&#13;
priced at $1 for students and $1.50&#13;
for the public. "The Woodhull" is&#13;
being sponsored by Parkside&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
One Of Wisconsin's Finest Furriers&#13;
ati/l'(hftfiwl&#13;
FURS SINCE 191 2 SINCE 19 12&#13;
COMPLETE STOCK OF FURS&#13;
COATS • JACKETS • LEATHERS&#13;
CLEANING GLAZING REMODELING&#13;
STORAGE&#13;
'54-2138 5601 6th Ave.&#13;
Rumor has it that this year's&#13;
limerick competition is tough, so&#13;
you better start scribbling now.&#13;
You have until March 1 at noon to&#13;
submit your own lucky lascivious&#13;
limericks to Ranger's Second&#13;
Annual Parking Lot Limerick&#13;
Contest.&#13;
Remember, limericks must be&#13;
original creations and will be&#13;
judged on the following basis: Wit,&#13;
originality, crudeness and&#13;
neatness.&#13;
This year's prizes are:&#13;
First Prized) $15.00&#13;
Second Prize (1) $10.00&#13;
Third (3)-A Pitcher&#13;
of Union Beer&#13;
Special Award&#13;
for Most Gross (1)&#13;
Another Pitcher&#13;
Winners will be announced in&#13;
Ranger's first post - St. Patrick's&#13;
Day issue on March 19. All&#13;
limericks submitted will become&#13;
sole property of R anger.&#13;
RANGER'S SECOND ANNUAL ST. PATRICK'S DAY&#13;
PARKING LOT LIMERICK CONTEST&#13;
Official Entry Blank&#13;
Name&#13;
Phone Soc. Sec. No.&#13;
Duo presents free program&#13;
The Parkside Piano Duo of&#13;
Carol Bell and August Wegner will&#13;
present a free public program&#13;
ranging from J. S. Bach's&#13;
sonorous 18th century Wachet auf&#13;
to works by two 20th century&#13;
American composers at 3:30 p. m.&#13;
on Sunday, Feb. 22 in the UW -&#13;
Parkside's Communication Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
The featured work will be&#13;
Debussy's En blanc et noir,&#13;
written during World War I.&#13;
Wegner notes the music contains&#13;
war motifs including marching&#13;
and bugle calls with echoes of&#13;
Martin Luther's "A Mighty&#13;
Fortress" (is our God).&#13;
American works on the&#13;
program include Paul Bowies'.&#13;
1949 Sonata, a work full of&#13;
Americana including jazz,&#13;
ragtime, tone clusters and, in the&#13;
last movement, a sort of machine -&#13;
parody which Wegner calls "a non&#13;
- stop mechanistic thing." The&#13;
multi - talented Bowles, a native&#13;
New Yorker who studied with&#13;
Aaron Copland, Nadia Bourlanger&#13;
and Virgil Thompson, also is&#13;
known as a novelist.&#13;
The other American composer&#13;
represented is Henry Gilbert,&#13;
whose interest in Black and Indian&#13;
culture is incorporated into many&#13;
of his works. The duo will play&#13;
PIANO DUO of Carol Bell and August Wegner.&#13;
Three American Dances — Uncle&#13;
Remus, Delphine and B'rer&#13;
Rabbit — which he wrote for&#13;
orchestra in 1911. Wegner has&#13;
received permission from the&#13;
publisher for the arrangement for&#13;
two pianos which he has made for&#13;
the duo.&#13;
The program also includes&#13;
Mozart's Fugue in C Minor, K. 426.&#13;
Ensemble participates in joint concert&#13;
The Wind Ensembles of UWParkside&#13;
and Tremper High&#13;
School will present a joint concert&#13;
at Reuther High School&#13;
Auditorium in Kenosha with Dr.&#13;
James Neilson, director of the&#13;
Educational Department of the G.&#13;
Leblanc Corp., as guest conductor&#13;
at 8 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 19.&#13;
Admission is $1.50.&#13;
Neilson will conduct a triple&#13;
brass choir in the opening number,&#13;
Gabrieli's Canon a 12, and&#13;
will direct the combined ensembles&#13;
in the finale, Fisher&#13;
Tull's Sketches on a Tudor Psalm.&#13;
Neilson is a Leblanc staff&#13;
conductor for chorus, band and&#13;
orchestra and has directed a&#13;
number of famous bands including&#13;
the United States Navy&#13;
Band and the Air Force Band. For&#13;
25 ye ars, he was a professor of&#13;
music education at Oklahoma City&#13;
University as well as being its&#13;
Director of Musical Organizations&#13;
conducting the Symphonic Band,&#13;
Symphony Orchestra and Opera&#13;
Workshop productions.&#13;
,,, * W. »».ocSott uii lviauier, Mather, in his secondnd&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
h 626 56,&#13;
b St. 654 2932&#13;
season at UW-Parkside, will&#13;
conduct the university ensemble&#13;
in works by Tull, Nagel,&#13;
Boismortier and Rogers. The&#13;
Rogers work, three Japanese&#13;
Dances, will feature two guest&#13;
artists, Nancy Ohnstad, Racine,&#13;
harp, and Susanne Swenson,&#13;
Racine, English horn.&#13;
Mather, who also is assistant&#13;
conductor and principal trumpet&#13;
with the Kenosha Symphony&#13;
Orchestra, was associate principal&#13;
trumpet with the Spokane&#13;
Symphony Orchestra for five&#13;
years before coming to the&#13;
Kenosha area. His free - lance&#13;
playing experience has included&#13;
performances with the Modern&#13;
Jazz Quartet, Ella Fitzgerald,&#13;
Helen Reddy, Bob Hope, Carol&#13;
Lawrence and the Joffrey Ballet.&#13;
C&amp;R AUTO SERVICE&#13;
Quality Auto Work&#13;
Done At&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
10% OFF FOR&#13;
UW-P STUDENTS&#13;
Call 553-9092or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00 • &#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 19,1981 5&#13;
vV-i&#13;
Winter&#13;
Carnival&#13;
Review&#13;
P^fdl&#13;
h&#13;
piZer!&#13;
r&#13;
:^&#13;
r&#13;
^&#13;
al COmpeti,ion and winners were the&#13;
of Marketina Ouh W'&#13;
nners of charades&#13;
' aad a member&#13;
-•wswa m trasss "*"»-&#13;
"Something's Afoot" at late show&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
Petretti Productions has done it&#13;
again (only this time to music)&#13;
with their second Late Live Show&#13;
"Something's Afoot," a murder -&#13;
mystery - musical - whodunit.&#13;
Book, music and lyrics by James&#13;
McDonald, David Vos and Robert&#13;
Gerlach, with additional music by&#13;
Ed Linderman.&#13;
The cast includes everyone who&#13;
was in "When You Comin Back,&#13;
Red Ryder?" with three new&#13;
members added. One might get&#13;
the impression that this is just&#13;
going to be the same people in&#13;
different roles acting the same as&#13;
they did in "Red Ryder". The&#13;
truth is that the troupe demonstrates&#13;
its versatility; characters&#13;
played are exact opposites of&#13;
those played previously (one went&#13;
so far as to shave part of his head&#13;
to give the appearance that he was&#13;
balding).&#13;
The play opens in an interesting&#13;
way and the cast breaks immediately&#13;
into song, which is well&#13;
done and accompanied by cute&#13;
choreography. The set, which&#13;
remains as background&#13;
throughout the play, is quite an&#13;
accomplishment and a marvel to&#13;
look at.&#13;
Average student&#13;
bill up 4.4%&#13;
The median student bill for a&#13;
year's attendance at one of the&#13;
nation's major public universities&#13;
jumped 4.4% for the current&#13;
academic year, from $795 in 1979-&#13;
80 to $830 in 1980-81.&#13;
The median total charge for&#13;
tuition and fees, room and board&#13;
for in-state residents attending&#13;
state and land-grant universities&#13;
is $2,542, up 9.3% since 1979-80,&#13;
says the National Association of&#13;
State Universities and LandGrant&#13;
Colleges.&#13;
The action takes place on the&#13;
country estate of Lord Dudley&#13;
Rancor. He has invited various&#13;
guests to spend the weekend (for&#13;
reasons unknown) and one by one,&#13;
each guest is fiendishly done in.&#13;
The story has been done time and&#13;
again but never in such a fresh&#13;
and funny way.&#13;
Anyone who has ever watched a&#13;
BBC production will find Michael&#13;
Skewes' portrayal of Miss Tweed&#13;
(an amateur inspector) hilarious&#13;
and convincing and very much in&#13;
the tradition of "Benny Hill" and&#13;
"Monty Python" characters. His&#13;
singing and dancing are just as&#13;
good as his acting; he is a gem.&#13;
Jim Iaquinta, as Col.&#13;
Gillweather, Lord Rancor's&#13;
hunting partner, displays total&#13;
devotion to his character. Joya&#13;
Del Conte Zamora is equally good&#13;
as a Grande - dame who finds&#13;
herself slightly lacking in funds.&#13;
She is commanding in every&#13;
respect.&#13;
Cynthia Paplaczyk's character&#13;
is very confusing. Paplaczyk&#13;
never decides how to play her, and&#13;
leaves us totally in the dark as to&#13;
how her character will react in&#13;
any situation.&#13;
Newcomer to the troupe Nick&#13;
Sturino makes his entrance on the&#13;
wrong foot. He overacts to the&#13;
extent that he becomes irritating.&#13;
Many times actors who can't sing&#13;
can appear in musicals because of&#13;
their ability to dance (they can&#13;
usually be found in a chorus line)&#13;
and Sturino's solo proves he&#13;
should have been in a chorus&#13;
somewhere. His off - key yelling,&#13;
is extremely unpleasant; it's&#13;
obvious he has never had any&#13;
form of vocal training.&#13;
Kevin Johnson (also new to the&#13;
troupe) also seems a little shaky&#13;
in the vocal department, but his&#13;
acting is well received. His&#13;
dancing, however, leaves much to&#13;
be desired. He is often on the&#13;
wrong foot and never loosens up.&#13;
It's very hard to enjoy a dance&#13;
number when one of the members&#13;
is as tense and uncomfortable as&#13;
Johnson.&#13;
As this is an English comedy,&#13;
the play is performed with the&#13;
characters using accents. The&#13;
men all use convincing forms of&#13;
dialect, but the women's accents&#13;
(except the maid) fade in and out&#13;
throughout the play.&#13;
Linda Martin, pianist, deserves&#13;
credit for being the sole accompianist.&#13;
She played very well,&#13;
but a piano does not create the&#13;
atmosphere that an orchestra&#13;
does.&#13;
"Something's Afoot" will be&#13;
playing weekends thru March 8, at&#13;
the Roosevelt Theater in Kenosha.&#13;
It is a very entertaining, very&#13;
humorous adult comedy and&#13;
should be the perfect end to a&#13;
perfect evening.&#13;
Member Parkside 2 00&#13;
Mention this ad! Joseph.&#13;
4433 22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
COLLEGE NIGHT&#13;
EVERY FR IDAY NIGHT&#13;
25*&#13;
Beer&#13;
after&#13;
9:00P.m&#13;
75*&#13;
Bowling&#13;
after&#13;
10:30 p.m.&#13;
GUTTORMSEN LANES WEST&#13;
5411-GREENBAY ROAD 658-8191&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter. &#13;
Thursday, February 19,1981 RANGER&#13;
UW enrollments climb&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
enrollments are at record levels&#13;
and still climbing, the system's&#13;
board of regents was told Friday.&#13;
The upswing has received little&#13;
public attention, President Robert&#13;
M. O'Neil said, because it runs&#13;
contrary to long - standing and&#13;
well - publicized predictions of&#13;
enrollment downturns in the 1980s.&#13;
An all-time high of 155,499&#13;
students attended the system's 13&#13;
universities and 14 two-year&#13;
centers last semester. The total&#13;
was 3,831 more than expected and&#13;
4,870 more than the previous high&#13;
of 150,629 in the fall of 1979.&#13;
Preliminary reports indicate&#13;
the current semester will continue&#13;
the record - setting trend despite a&#13;
1980 dip in Wisconsin high school&#13;
graduates and predictions of a&#13;
corresponding decline in&#13;
university and college&#13;
enrollments.&#13;
Applications for the fall&#13;
semester of 1981 a re 18 percent&#13;
ahead of a year ago and estimates&#13;
set the fall enrollment increase at&#13;
1,849. An increase of 674 s tudents&#13;
is predicted for the fall of 1982.&#13;
Estimates being developed for&#13;
regent review in March indicate&#13;
that by 1982-83 the UW System will&#13;
be teaching 6,507 more students&#13;
than funded in the 1979-81 biennial&#13;
budget. That figure is higher than&#13;
the enrollment at any of the&#13;
system's five smaller universities.&#13;
&#13;
Though the decline in high&#13;
school graduates will continue in&#13;
the 1980s, university officials now&#13;
say the percentage that will go on&#13;
to higher education will be heavily&#13;
influenced by the state of the&#13;
economy and prospects for future&#13;
employment. When jobs are&#13;
scarce, more graduates apparently&#13;
seek additional&#13;
schooling.&#13;
About half the unanticipated&#13;
enrollment growth last fall was in&#13;
the freshman class. It included a&#13;
larger than expected percentage&#13;
of 1980 high school graduates as&#13;
well as older students choosing to&#13;
enroll in college after years of&#13;
being out of school.&#13;
The other half of th e enrollment&#13;
increase was due to larger&#13;
numbers of students staying in&#13;
school rather than interrupting&#13;
their studies or dropping out.&#13;
In addition to more new&#13;
students and more continuing&#13;
students, the UW System is attracting&#13;
an increasing number of&#13;
job holders who want to upgrade&#13;
their skills or retrain for new&#13;
occupations.&#13;
Here are the 1980 fall enrollment&#13;
totals by campus: Eau Claire,&#13;
11,054; Green Bay, 4,164; La&#13;
Crosse, 9,016; Madison, 41,242;&#13;
Milwaukee, 25,933; Oshkosh,&#13;
10,200; Parkside, 5,368; Platteville,&#13;
4,955; River Falls, 5,339;&#13;
Stevens Point, 9,183; Stout, 7,411;&#13;
Superior, 2,323; Whitewater,&#13;
10,006; Center System, 9,305.&#13;
I Student activities funded&#13;
Concerts and student government&#13;
led the student fee funding&#13;
parade in 1979-80, says a National&#13;
Entertainment and Campus&#13;
Activities Association survey.&#13;
Almost 93% of campuses&#13;
responding used activity fees to&#13;
fund concerts, while 91.5% funded&#13;
student government.&#13;
Movies were funded by 78.1%,&#13;
followed by student publications,&#13;
75%; lectures, 67.9%; choral or&#13;
band music, 57.1%; intramurals,&#13;
56.7%, and drama or performing&#13;
arts, 56.3%.&#13;
Almost three-fourths of s chools&#13;
responding financed student&#13;
activities through a mandatory&#13;
fee. About 18% used a direct&#13;
appropriation from the college or&#13;
university.&#13;
Christoph teaches here&#13;
GERMAN PROFESSOR&#13;
S.RICHARD CHRISTOPH&#13;
Last semester, Dr. S. Richard&#13;
Christoph, a German professor,&#13;
was hired on tenure track at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Christoph teaches courses in&#13;
German Conversation and&#13;
Composition, Civilization and&#13;
Culture, and Masterpieces in&#13;
German Literature.&#13;
Christoph, who was born in West&#13;
Berlin,' was a Graduate Student&#13;
and taught at University of Illinois&#13;
in Champaign - Urbana before&#13;
coming to Parkside. He received&#13;
his BS in International Relations&#13;
from Parkland Community&#13;
College and taught in Austria for 6&#13;
years before receiving his MA and&#13;
Ph. D. at University of Illinois in&#13;
January of 1980.&#13;
Although Christoph has no&#13;
current research projects planned&#13;
as yet, he does have a new book,&#13;
which was published in Amsterdam,&#13;
Wolfram von Eschenbach's&#13;
Couples that will be out&#13;
sometime this month.&#13;
Physics Club plans trip to Argonne&#13;
The Physics Club has set&#13;
Saturday, April 4 for their trip to&#13;
Argonne National Laboratory.&#13;
They will leave Parkside at 11 a.m.&#13;
and return at 7 p.m. They will tour&#13;
Argonne from 1-5 p. m. The tour is&#13;
open to all interested students and&#13;
faculty.&#13;
Argonne is one of the U. S.&#13;
Department of Energy's major&#13;
research and development centers.&#13;
Argonne's major mission is&#13;
energy related research and&#13;
development. Originally devoted&#13;
almost exclusively to nuclear&#13;
reactor research, Argonne's efforts&#13;
have expanded to include a&#13;
wide range of research programs&#13;
relating to fossil energy, solar&#13;
energy and environmental impact.&#13;
&#13;
There will be a Physics Club&#13;
meeting on Monday, Feb. 23 at&#13;
12:45 in Greenquist 230 to answer&#13;
any questions and to give people a&#13;
chance to sign up for the trip. The&#13;
short meeting will be followed by&#13;
a talk on "Laser - driven quantum&#13;
beat spectroscopy" by guest&#13;
speaker Professor John R.&#13;
Brandenberger of Lawrence&#13;
University.&#13;
Anyone interested in the&#13;
Argonne trip must sign up at the&#13;
meeting Monday or in Dr.&#13;
Behroozi's office GRNQ 331 by&#13;
Feb. 25.&#13;
1981-82 student loan money is tight&#13;
Students receiving guaranteed&#13;
loans can relax now since the lopn&#13;
money has come in. Students in&#13;
need of financial support can&#13;
apply for loans.&#13;
On January 15 final approval&#13;
was given to the $10 million&#13;
repurchase agreement between&#13;
the Wisconsin Higher Education&#13;
Aids Board (HEAB) and the&#13;
Student Loan Marketing&#13;
Association. The $10 million in&#13;
promised loans for second&#13;
semester will be sold to the&#13;
Student Loan Marketing&#13;
Association, and then brought&#13;
back at the end of March by&#13;
HEAB.&#13;
The proceeds of the sale of $100&#13;
million in student loan revenue&#13;
bonds should reach HEAB by&#13;
February 15. This money will be&#13;
used to fund student loans in&#13;
Wisconsin for the next three&#13;
years.&#13;
Students who are first time&#13;
borrowers as of January 1, 1981&#13;
will pay 9 per cent interest rate&#13;
rather than the previous 7 per cent&#13;
rate.&#13;
However, money for financial&#13;
aid is tight due to the increases in&#13;
the number of eligible students&#13;
applying for financial aid.&#13;
Students, seeking aid for the 1981-&#13;
82 academic year, are strongly&#13;
encouraged to meet the March 1&#13;
deadline for financial aid applications.&#13;
&#13;
Contact Julie Fleming-Huck,&#13;
Academic Director United&#13;
Council for further information at&#13;
(608) 263-5362.&#13;
Bible study offered&#13;
"Women Work on Paper" exhibited here&#13;
'Women Work on Paper," an&#13;
exhibit by nine women artists&#13;
working with various imagery on&#13;
paper media, will be displayed&#13;
through March 8 in Parkside's&#13;
Communication Arts Gallery.&#13;
Gallery hours are 12:30 to 5:30&#13;
p.m. Monday through Thursday.&#13;
The artists are: Jane Abrams, a&#13;
graduate of UW-Stout, who lives in&#13;
Albuquerque, New Mexico and&#13;
teaches at the University of New&#13;
Mexico; Wendy Walman of&#13;
Bloomington, Ind., who teaches at&#13;
Indiana University; Hope Cook,&#13;
Mankato, Minn., a teacher at&#13;
Mankato State University; Susan&#13;
Hamilton Bolt of Allen, Texas,&#13;
whose work is in the permanent&#13;
collections of the Library of&#13;
Congress, Minnesota Museum of&#13;
Art at U.S. Information Agency;&#13;
Cima Katz of Baldwin City,&#13;
Kansas, who teaches at the&#13;
University of Kansas; Colleen&#13;
Kenyon, Shady, N.Y., a&#13;
photographer and exhibition&#13;
coordinator of t he Catskill Center&#13;
for Photography; Kathleen&#13;
Kenyon, Shady, N.Y., a&#13;
photographer who teaches at Bard&#13;
College; Catherine Peckham,&#13;
Grand Junction, Colo.; and&#13;
Marilyn Torre - Whitesell, of&#13;
Bloomington, Ind., a teacher at&#13;
Indiana University.&#13;
Inter-Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship is offering a Bible&#13;
Study second semester on&#13;
"Prayer — A Christian Answer to&#13;
Stress." This study is designed in&#13;
particular for U.W. Parkside&#13;
faculty, staff and classified em&lt;&#13;
ployees and older students.&#13;
An informal format will enable&#13;
members to participate in the&#13;
discussion based on their own&#13;
experiences, their own reading&#13;
from the Bible, from one of the&#13;
two recommended supplementary&#13;
books, or from other books on&#13;
prayer of their choice.&#13;
The study will be every Friday&#13;
in Molinaro Hall, room 236, from&#13;
1-1:50 p.m. If you have questions&#13;
call the Bible Study Leader, June&#13;
Pomatto at 552-8650 or the faculty&#13;
advisor to Inter - Varsity&#13;
Christian Fellowship, Barbara&#13;
Larson at 553-2122.&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
CLASSIFIED A DS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
ANIMAL BAND MEMBERS are blatant,&#13;
autonomously acrimonious, anamalous&#13;
cacophoners. Voltar&#13;
PROFESSORA ROBINSON — Aquella es a&#13;
muy romantico hombre, verdad? Raquel&#13;
lOP'S total I.Q. is a negative number — J.M.,&#13;
Joker, R.B.&#13;
SUE — how much did you pay for Dino's&#13;
floppy disk?&#13;
WANTED: American Gigolo — must be wild,&#13;
willing, innocent. Sue. MOLN 118&#13;
WANTED: Housepet ferret training manual;&#13;
running out of Rangers. Jeffy&#13;
BLACK SILK takes a licking and keeps on&#13;
tickina. Sabre&#13;
HOUSEPET: Who holds your leash? Tinfoil&#13;
WANTED: Six men to lay Virginia Pipeline.&#13;
Contact Ms. V. Pipeline.&#13;
BIOCHEMISTRY 215 lecture — It's "amino"&#13;
world without Dr. Clough.&#13;
204 &amp; 210 we want our trophies — and soon I A&#13;
&amp; K&#13;
KEVIN — Happy Birthdayl You're not&#13;
getting older, you're getting BETTER! —&#13;
Love, Linda&#13;
RANGER BEAR: How would you know about&#13;
MOLN 118???&#13;
WANTED: Photographer. Inquire at&#13;
Bluebird Motel. (Tinfoil sees all)&#13;
GINGER probably researched "Playboys"&#13;
for Limerick Contest. Chain Groupies&#13;
Q: What do the Parkside Players do when no&#13;
one will play with them? A: They play with&#13;
themselves!&#13;
FOR SALE: Body paint. 32 edible flavors, 40&#13;
colors some dayglow cleans up with water.&#13;
See Sue MOLN 118.&#13;
MR. &amp; MRS. — Smile when you're happy.&#13;
Rodney&#13;
RABBI — We wanta kiss, kiss, kiss your&#13;
yellow submarine. Wild things&#13;
BRIAN — We've discovered your lingo.&#13;
Watch out! Wild things&#13;
RODNEY — Strip ping - p ong In Rec Center&#13;
Fri. 20. Love, Andy&#13;
WHOEVER won the beer drinking contest&#13;
really knows how to suck.&#13;
R.B. OF P.v. Anytime you want it, call me —&#13;
Joker&#13;
BRIAN &amp; ANDREA of lOP's: Everyone&#13;
knows about you two in Moln. 111.&#13;
BONES wanted for iumping—MOLN 118 Sue&#13;
please - signed.&#13;
EPHEMERAL altercations are caused by&#13;
harangues from debauched neophytes.&#13;
Voltar&#13;
DOC — BONJOUR! Don't punk out on your&#13;
birthday. Wild things.&#13;
RABBI — We wanta hold your hand in&#13;
Strawberry fields. Wild things&#13;
ZORRO; "Walking", Love song", and the&#13;
king equals dyno!! Raquel&#13;
AN INTREPID, bellicose equestrian even&#13;
tually metamorphotizes into a misanthrope.&#13;
Voltar&#13;
THE JOKER lost his poker.&#13;
BLACK SILK, thanks for the ride last&#13;
Thursday — The Joker&#13;
PARKSIDE — Watch out for the Danger&#13;
Brothers — They're coming soon.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
ALTOS AND TENORSfor new chorale group.&#13;
Contact John, 652-5512.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1980 SUZUKI 550L black call 553-9262 after 4 p.&#13;
m.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
GIRLS: Rooms. Racine, near bus route. 634-&#13;
8562 weekdays, 862-2883 weekends.&#13;
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE. Kenosha&#13;
country setting. 634-8562 weekdays, 862-2883&#13;
weekends.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
EARN WHILE YOU LEARN. Assist retired&#13;
college teacher with correspondence&#13;
reading, and organization of his library.&#13;
Hours can be arranged to suit your&#13;
schedule. Call 694-2251 for appointment.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads —&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30$ will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words&#13;
or less.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE&#13;
Any registered UW-P student or student organization is aualifiec&#13;
to insert a classified line ad in the Ranger at no cost if under 01&#13;
equivalent to 10 words. (Phone numbers equal 1 word.)&#13;
I Classification:&#13;
Name&#13;
SS No. Ranger&#13;
WLLCD139 &#13;
Cross-country events announced&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 19,1981&#13;
UW - Parkside will sponsor road&#13;
races on its campus from April&#13;
through October.&#13;
Dates for the 10 - kilometer and&#13;
two - mile races are Sunday April&#13;
26; Sunday, May 10; Satirday&#13;
June 20; Saturday, Aug 15-'&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 20; and Sunday'&#13;
Oct. 18. y&#13;
'&#13;
The June and August dates will&#13;
have the 10 kilometer run at 8:30&#13;
a. m. and the two mile at 9:30&#13;
while the other four dates show&#13;
the 10 kilometer at 1:30 p. m. and&#13;
the two - mile at 2:30.&#13;
ton h&#13;
l&#13;
e&#13;
i&#13;
ltry fee for aU six races is&#13;
$20 before April 1. Individual&#13;
entry wui be $5 in advance&#13;
and $6 on race day.&#13;
There will be nine age group&#13;
categories for both men and&#13;
women in the 10 kilometer run and&#13;
a similar number plus a joggers'&#13;
division in the two - mile. Men&#13;
may select either an age group or&#13;
a weight group of 175 lbs. and over&#13;
or 200 l bs. and over.&#13;
Awards will be given to the top&#13;
15 runners in the 10 kilo race and to&#13;
the first three in each age group.&#13;
Medals will go to the top three&#13;
finishers in each age group in the&#13;
two - mile with jogger medals to&#13;
the top three over 16 minutes.&#13;
Pre - registered runners will&#13;
receive a T-shirt or other comparable&#13;
item; late entries will get&#13;
similar items while they last.&#13;
All runners may dress, shower&#13;
and swim at the Physical&#13;
Education Budding and may also&#13;
bring families and friends to&#13;
swim. Free soda and beer will be&#13;
available after the awards&#13;
presentation.&#13;
For more information, or to&#13;
receive a registration form, call&#13;
(414) 553-2245.&#13;
Sharp breaks fieldhouse record&#13;
by Steve Brunner&#13;
Propelling himself around the&#13;
track in a record time of 13:07,&#13;
Parkside's Ray Sharp broke a UW&#13;
- Oshkosh fieldhouse record by&#13;
winning the two mile walk in a&#13;
triangular meet last Friday&#13;
against UW - Oshkosh and UW -&#13;
Stevens Point.&#13;
The record, set in 1978 by ex -&#13;
Parkside walker Jim Heiring,&#13;
almost seemed like a disappointment&#13;
for Sharp, who said, "I&#13;
need to perform a lot better the&#13;
next two weekends if I intend to&#13;
win." Sharp was referring to this&#13;
weekend's NAIA national indoor&#13;
championships and the following&#13;
weekend meet in Madision Square&#13;
Garden, where he will compete in&#13;
the Athletics Congress (AAU)&#13;
national meet. Sharp added, "The&#13;
main competition for next&#13;
weekend was felt today walking&#13;
against Jeff Ellis." Ellis, who&#13;
walks for UW - Stevens Point, was&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Playoffs&#13;
UW - Parkside has again been&#13;
seeded first in the Wisconsin&#13;
Independent College Assn.&#13;
(WICA) playoffs.&#13;
The Rangers, 13 -11, were rated&#13;
first by the group's coaches for the&#13;
seventh straight year and thus&#13;
will draw a bye in first round&#13;
games Tuesday, Feb. 24.&#13;
Parkside will host the winner of&#13;
the fourth - seeded Lakeland vs.&#13;
fifth - seeded Milton game on&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 26. The Muskies&#13;
and Wildcats will play in&#13;
Sheboygan Feb. 24.&#13;
St. Norbert, seeded second, also&#13;
drew a bye in the first round.&#13;
Carroll, rated third, will host sixth&#13;
- rated Milwaukee School of&#13;
Engineering Monday, Feb. 23, for&#13;
the right to play St. Norbert at&#13;
DePere on Feb. 26.&#13;
The survivors of the WICA&#13;
playoffs will advance to the NAIA&#13;
District 14 tournament the&#13;
following week against the top two&#13;
finishers in the Wisconsin State&#13;
University Conference.&#13;
UW - Eau Claire is already&#13;
assured of a tie for the conference&#13;
title and the top berth in the&#13;
playoffs and will host the winner&#13;
of the game at St. Norbert on&#13;
March 2. The winner at UW -&#13;
Parkside will host the WSUC&#13;
runner - up, either UW - La Crosse&#13;
or UW - Stevens Point, also on&#13;
March 2.&#13;
The championship game is&#13;
slated for Wednesday, March 4, at&#13;
the WSUC site or on the higher -&#13;
seeded WICA team's court if two&#13;
independents remain.&#13;
UW - Eau Claire won district&#13;
titles in 1979 and 1980, breaking a&#13;
four - year UW - Parkside&#13;
stranglehold on the tournament.&#13;
last years national champ. The&#13;
rest of the field was dominated by&#13;
Parkside, who placed the next two&#13;
finishers, Will Preischel, and&#13;
Steve Ball.&#13;
In other events, Paul Cannestra&#13;
blew out a field of nine runners in&#13;
the 1000 yard run beating his&#13;
closest opponent by 20 yards,&#13;
posting a time of 2:17.0. Other first'&#13;
place finishers were John Anderson&#13;
and Bill Rothmier who tied&#13;
in the Pole Vault by jumping 14&#13;
feet. In addition, Rothmier placed&#13;
fourth in the High Jump.&#13;
In the three mile run, freshman&#13;
Dan Stublaski ran an impressive&#13;
time of 15:02 to take fourth.&#13;
Another freshman, Bruce Schmierer,&#13;
took fourth in the mile and&#13;
880, posting times of 4: 30 and 2:00&#13;
respectively. Greg Sanders took&#13;
second in the triple jump with a&#13;
leap of 41' - 6-3/4".&#13;
Sharp, Preischel, and Ball will&#13;
compete in the NAIA national&#13;
championships in Kansas City,&#13;
Missouri this weekend.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
PARKSIDE'S Laurie Pope (left) and Jeanne Jacobs scrap for&#13;
arclel^t^^k 64&#13;
'°&#13;
SS f&#13;
° Universlty of »&gt;inois - Chicago&#13;
Green Bay trip planned&#13;
After the lack of success of the&#13;
last basketball trip, all you fans&#13;
out there have another chance to&#13;
redeem yourself. Another trip is&#13;
being planned for the Rangers'&#13;
final game of the regular season&#13;
this Saturday. The game is in&#13;
Green Bay and the bus will leave&#13;
the P. E. parking lot at 2:15 p. m.&#13;
The price of this trip is $15.00, and&#13;
includes a ticket to the game. All&#13;
interested persons should sign up&#13;
early in the Ranger office today or&#13;
tomorrow between 11:30 a.m. and&#13;
1:00 p.m.&#13;
Remember that this is the last&#13;
game before playoffs and Green&#13;
Bay always gives Parkside a good&#13;
game up there.&#13;
Ken Netland&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, 1979&#13;
BBA Accounting &amp; Finance&#13;
Investment Accounting Supervisor&#13;
Sharon Abel&#13;
UW, Madison, 1978&#13;
MBA&#13;
Staff Assistant&#13;
Catherine Hoffman&#13;
UW-Whitewater, 1980&#13;
BBA&#13;
Staff Accountant&#13;
Nancy L. Nelson&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, 1977&#13;
BBA Accounting&#13;
Corporate Accounting Supervisor&#13;
Mary Kaltinger&#13;
UW- Eau Claire, 1980&#13;
BBA Accounting&#13;
Staff Accountant&#13;
)im Burke&#13;
UW-Parkside, 1980&#13;
BS Business Administration&#13;
Assistant Programmer&#13;
Grow With Us&#13;
If you ar e a management information systems major and are interested&#13;
in a position as a Programmer Trainee or Assistant Programmer, contact&#13;
Verna Zimmermann, Alumni Placement Office, WLLC, D-173&#13;
for an interview with the Northwestern National Insurance Company.&#13;
Interviewing February 25,1981.&#13;
Northwestern National Insurance Company&#13;
property, casualty and life insurance &#13;
Thursday, February 19,1981 RANGER&#13;
Rangers extend&#13;
winning streak&#13;
RANGER photo by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
PARKSIDE'S freshman guard Greg Carlson scores his first&#13;
point of the season as Bobby Burns (35 in white) watches.&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Parkside's men's basketball&#13;
team continued its drive down the&#13;
homestretch last week with two&#13;
wins to run their winning streak to&#13;
nine games and improve their&#13;
season record to 14-11.&#13;
Last Saturday night the team&#13;
travelled up to De Pere to take on&#13;
an unexpectedly tough St. Norbert&#13;
team. In past seasons the Rangers&#13;
have been able to handle St.&#13;
Norbert rather easily, but it appeared&#13;
as though Parkside was&#13;
playing against seven players&#13;
throughout the first half as the&#13;
refs didn't seem to be watching&#13;
the ball game.&#13;
St. Norbert jumped off to a&#13;
quick 7-2. lead in the first couple&#13;
minutes of the game before&#13;
Parkside went on a scoring spurt&#13;
to go ahead 14-7 with 8-1/2 minutes&#13;
left in the half. St. Norbert came&#13;
back to close the gap to one for an&#13;
18-17 P arkside halftime lead.&#13;
In the second half St. Norbert&#13;
tried unsuccessfully to run a stall&#13;
against the Rangers and tough&#13;
defense caused some costly&#13;
turnovers, while Parkside went on&#13;
to win 44-36.&#13;
Parkside was led by all -&#13;
American senior Reggie Anderson&#13;
with 12 points and eight rebounds;&#13;
Chuckie Perry added 12 points.&#13;
Monday night against Lewis&#13;
University, a team that Parkside&#13;
has never faced, the Rangers had&#13;
a much easier time. Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens utilized his entire team&#13;
in this 81-55 blowout. Freshman&#13;
guard Greg Carlson sank two free&#13;
throws to score his first two points&#13;
of the season.&#13;
During the first six minutes of&#13;
the game the two teams traded&#13;
baskets before the Rangers,&#13;
behind 16 first half points from&#13;
center John Herndon and 11 from&#13;
Perry, pulled out to a commanding&#13;
39-25 ha lftime lead.&#13;
Herndon, who has done well&#13;
lately in his starting assignments,&#13;
was praised by Stephens: "When&#13;
he's on his game he gets off the&#13;
mark quick and scores early. He&#13;
also puts a lot of pressure on&#13;
defense."&#13;
Once again the Rangers were&#13;
outmuscled as Lewis easily&#13;
worked the ball inside to their big&#13;
men for layups. But in the end the&#13;
Rangers were much too quick for&#13;
Lewis. "It was strength against&#13;
quickness in this one, and we had&#13;
a little too much quickness," said&#13;
Stephens. "We went to a matchup&#13;
zone and it got us some quick&#13;
breaks." •&#13;
Stephens again had nothing but&#13;
good words for guard Chuckie&#13;
Perry, who scored 16 points,&#13;
grabbed six rebounds and dished&#13;
out six assists. "Chuckie gives us&#13;
a dimension that we haven't had&#13;
since Stevie King," he said. "He&#13;
sure puts pressure on the defense.&#13;
He's one of the best freshman&#13;
point guards in the country."&#13;
Parkside is on the road this&#13;
week for the last two games of t he&#13;
regular season as they travel to&#13;
Northern Michigan on Thursday&#13;
and to Green Bay on Saturday.&#13;
Stephens looks at these as very&#13;
tough games: "They're just like&#13;
tournament games and we would&#13;
like to win them both, but they&#13;
could go either way."&#13;
Chuckie" Perry kills 'em dead&#13;
Edenhauser maintains high goals, both for the all-star whn hoc by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
and&#13;
Dave Cramer&#13;
Charles Dee Perry, Jr., or&#13;
"Chuckie" as his teammates and&#13;
friends know him, is the new star&#13;
on the horizon of the Parkside&#13;
men's basketball team. He is a&#13;
freshman from Gordon Tech High&#13;
School in Chicago. He has started&#13;
in all but three of Parkside's&#13;
games this year and is proving to&#13;
everyone that he is a star.&#13;
In high school he averaged 20&#13;
points and 5.4 assists a game and&#13;
was named second team AilAmerican&#13;
as a senior. This year,&#13;
his first at what will probably be a&#13;
very successful college career&#13;
here at Parkside, he is averaging&#13;
around 10 points and four assists a&#13;
game and is coach Steve&#13;
Stephens' floor leader.&#13;
He has a positive attitude and&#13;
maintains high goals, both for the&#13;
team and himself, that if not&#13;
reached this year, will more likely&#13;
than not be achieved during his&#13;
next three years, here. "I said to&#13;
myself that I want to win the&#13;
national tournament my first&#13;
year. I would like to get my&#13;
average up to 15 points a game&#13;
this year, but the team comes&#13;
first," Perry said.&#13;
His positive attitude came from&#13;
home. "When I was younger, all&#13;
my mom taught me were positive&#13;
things, so I go out and think&#13;
positive each game. If you kill a&#13;
roach you kill it dead, and I think&#13;
of the opponents as roaches," he&#13;
said. A unique thought, and one&#13;
which seems to be doing the iob&#13;
for Chuckie.&#13;
The transition for Perry from&#13;
high school ball to college ball was&#13;
not an easy one, especially for an&#13;
FLORIDA&#13;
Don't be left in the cold! Sign up now for&#13;
7 days &amp; nights of sunshine &amp; goodtimes&#13;
excellent accomodations at a gulf-side&#13;
hotel. Many extra activities available&#13;
such as tennis, golf deep sea fishing,&#13;
jet skiing and much more!&#13;
Price includes cost of hotel and&#13;
transportation on charter bus&#13;
For More Information Contact:&#13;
Lori Haapala or Patty Mish&#13;
at 654-2168&#13;
or Cheryl Rannick at&#13;
652-3476&#13;
Before Feb. 20th&#13;
all-star who has to start new and&#13;
prove himself all over again. A&#13;
change of roles was involved for&#13;
Perry, who was primarily a&#13;
shooting guard in high school.&#13;
'It's hard to adjust from wing&#13;
guard, or shooting guard, to point&#13;
guard. I didn't know how to go&#13;
about being the team's floor&#13;
leader" he said, but he seems to&#13;
be handling the change very well.&#13;
Coach made me floor leader on&#13;
court, and that's important. If&#13;
Reggie Anderson isn't hitting his&#13;
shot, I tell him to work on his&#13;
defense, and I'll go to somebody&#13;
else." Chuckie adds, "To be point&#13;
guard, my relationship with the&#13;
coaches has to be very close."&#13;
Head coach Stephens sees Perry&#13;
as an additional plus to the team.&#13;
He said: "For a freshman, he&#13;
really took charge and became&#13;
competive. He's allowing us to do&#13;
some things that we didn't think&#13;
we could do. We are looking for&#13;
the break as a team more now&#13;
than in the last two or three years.&#13;
We're getting more scoring from&#13;
the point guard than expected."&#13;
Stephens doesn't hesitate to&#13;
mention that Perry will improve.&#13;
"He's not as good yet as he will&#13;
be!"&#13;
Chuckie also realizes that he has&#13;
much to learn, and also has his&#13;
own theories about running the&#13;
team: "When I came here, I&#13;
learned that turnovers are very&#13;
critical. We have to capitalize&#13;
when the other team turns the ball&#13;
over. I also learned that the game&#13;
is more physical. I ran into tough&#13;
guards that are bigger and&#13;
stronger than me." He wants to be&#13;
scoring more, and like all players,&#13;
wants to be an All - American, like&#13;
teammate Reggie Anderson. He&#13;
said, "I just try to play consistent.&#13;
I've got to concentrate more to&#13;
make my shots fall, trying to get&#13;
my jump shot back like it was in&#13;
high school. I haven't been&#13;
working on my shots as much as I&#13;
should. Mostly I'm concerned with&#13;
running the team and playing&#13;
defense."&#13;
The team's early losing streak&#13;
is believed to have been caused by&#13;
the inexperience of the team&#13;
along with a tough schedule. The&#13;
players were still trying to get to&#13;
know each other on the court. This&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
FRESHMAN GUARD CHARLES PERRY&#13;
involves some talking on the&#13;
court, but only to a certain extent&#13;
Communication on the court can&#13;
little&#13;
," said Perry,&#13;
laik on defense is okav, but we&#13;
Wouldn't have to talk on'offense&#13;
We should have our offense&#13;
perfected. In the early part of the&#13;
season we were bickering on the&#13;
court I didn't really know how to&#13;
talk to guys on the court."&#13;
Perry s decision to come to&#13;
Parkside was one that was not&#13;
looked upon favorably by his&#13;
family and friends in Chicago.&#13;
l m a blue chipper Peoole&#13;
stopped recruiting me when an&#13;
article came out in the Chicago&#13;
SU"iT,meLa^&#13;
0Ut my S^des. They&#13;
said I couldn t get up to 2.0 GPA. I&#13;
finished with a 2.3. After colleges&#13;
started backing off of me, my&#13;
mom said that I should go to a&#13;
junior college and prove myself. I&#13;
didn't want to go. I put in all that&#13;
hard work, I thought I proved&#13;
myself already. Parkside was the&#13;
last place they wanted me to go.&#13;
My coach, my mom and my&#13;
friends were all Upset."&#13;
The way things are going during&#13;
the second half of the season&#13;
Perry's goals of going to the&#13;
national tournament, as well as&#13;
winning the championship are not&#13;
totally out of the question. Good&#13;
luck to Chuckie and his teammates.&#13;
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 9, issue 19, February 19, 1981</text>
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                <text> Student publications</text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>English</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="69719">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69722">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
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        <name>dean eugene norwood</name>
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              <text>Winter carnival ready to roll</text>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Feb. 9-13&#13;
Winter Carnival ready to roll&#13;
1 Galbraith M U U&#13;
iQfixr fA 11?&#13;
by Dan Galbraith&#13;
Things are ready to start rolling&#13;
for the 1981 Winter Carnival,&#13;
"Laughter Has A Snowball Effect."&#13;
For all groups and individuals&#13;
interested in participating&#13;
in any of the events,&#13;
contest entry forms and rules are&#13;
available at the information&#13;
centers and Student Life office,&#13;
Union 209. F orms must be filled&#13;
out for each event and must be&#13;
submitted to the Student Life&#13;
office by Friday, Feb. 6. The&#13;
following is a list of some of the&#13;
activities and what they involve:&#13;
"FREEZE FANTASIA" -&#13;
Window painting can be done by&#13;
anyone interested in painting any&#13;
wintery theme. Taste and&#13;
discretion should be used and only&#13;
designated windows can be&#13;
painted. Windows available for&#13;
painting are located at the&#13;
Ranger, SOC and PSGA offices&#13;
and lower and upper Main Place.&#13;
The paints used must be those&#13;
supplied by the Winter Carnival&#13;
Committee and must be mixed&#13;
with a soap base. Idividuals or&#13;
groups who paint windows will be&#13;
responsible for cleaning their&#13;
windows within one week after&#13;
Winter Carnival.&#13;
"SNOW BEAST" - Snow&#13;
sculpturing may be done by any&#13;
group or individual. A snow&#13;
creature must be constructed that&#13;
either relates to Parkside or the&#13;
Winter Carnival theme,&#13;
"Laughter Has a Snowball Effect."&#13;
The Beast must be constructed&#13;
in the area north of the&#13;
Comm. Arts Building and west of&#13;
the Bookstore. Upon completion of&#13;
the Beast, a picture should be&#13;
taken and submitted to Student&#13;
Life by Feb. 13 at 4 p .m.&#13;
"LAUGHTER HAS A&#13;
SNOWBALL EFFECT" Indoor&#13;
Parade. Floats and entries should&#13;
be designed to follow any&#13;
humorous or wintery theme.&#13;
Taste and discretion should be&#13;
used. More information is&#13;
available during sign - ups. Sign -&#13;
up by Friday, Feb. 6.&#13;
T-SHIRTS with the Winter&#13;
Carnival theme on them are&#13;
available at the Union Information&#13;
Desk for $2.00.&#13;
BEER MUGS will go on sale&#13;
Monday, Feb. 9 in the Union&#13;
Square for a cost of $1.50. The&#13;
mugs will be filled with 32 oz. of&#13;
beer with the initial purchase.&#13;
Refills will be available the whole&#13;
week for $1. The sale is being co -&#13;
sponsored by the Union, Pabst,&#13;
and the Alumni Association.&#13;
BLOOD DRIVE. The Campus&#13;
Health Office, in cooperation with&#13;
the Blood Center of Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin, will sponsor the Blood&#13;
Drive (Mi Tuesday, Feb. 10 from 9&#13;
a.m. to 2:30 p.m. in Union 104 and&#13;
106.&#13;
A c ompetition will be held and&#13;
prizes given to the student&#13;
Luu^icr Has&#13;
Featuring:&#13;
8pm&#13;
9pm&#13;
organization which donates the&#13;
most blood. The Blood Center of&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin will&#13;
award a plaque to the&#13;
organization with the most blood&#13;
donors. Cash prizes of $100 for&#13;
first, $50 for second, $25 for third,&#13;
$15 for fourth, and $10 for fifth will&#13;
be awarded. Individuals who wish&#13;
to donate blood can ask that credit&#13;
be given to their favorite student&#13;
organization.&#13;
Student organizations will also&#13;
receive credit for student hours in&#13;
assisting with the set up and&#13;
canteen.&#13;
Pledge cards may be filled out&#13;
before the Blood Drive or on the&#13;
same day and may be obtained&#13;
from any student organization or&#13;
the Campus Health Office. Just&#13;
walk in; no appointment is&#13;
necessary to donate blood.&#13;
VOLLEYBALL TOURNAMENT&#13;
will be Tuesday, Feb.&#13;
10 and Thursday, Feb. 12 at 12:00&#13;
p.m. Entrants will need six people&#13;
per team. Rules will be flexible.&#13;
There is an entry fee of $6 and&#13;
cash prizes as well as points will&#13;
be awarded. The more teams&#13;
participating, the more prizes.&#13;
The cash prizes are $20 for first&#13;
and $10 for second, so far.&#13;
CHARADES will be held in the&#13;
Union Square, Tuesday, Feb. 10.&#13;
See the rules for this competition&#13;
because they are just a little to&#13;
long to reprint.&#13;
HAYRIDE to run Tuesday, Feb.&#13;
10. Bring your favorite body to&#13;
snuggle up to.&#13;
"CHEERLEADERS'&#13;
ORIGINAL CHEER CONTEST"&#13;
will be held Wednesday, Feb. 11.&#13;
Cheers should not contain foul&#13;
language, but should be short (4-5&#13;
lines) and creative!&#13;
"MIDWAY MADNESS" -&#13;
(Almost Anything Goes) The night&#13;
will feature such contests as joke&#13;
telling, which consists of at least 3&#13;
jokes or a monologue, no longer&#13;
than 2 minutes in length, 1 person&#13;
per club; beer drinking relays of 4&#13;
member teams, 1 team per club;&#13;
nerf basketball games, 3 member&#13;
teams, 1 team per club; "Family&#13;
Feud", 5 member teams, 1 team&#13;
per club; Popcorn Toss, 2 member&#13;
teams, 2 teams per club; Tug - a -&#13;
war, 5 member team, l team per&#13;
club; Egg toss, 2 member teams, 2&#13;
teams per club; "Watch Out&#13;
Where the Huskies Go" dog&#13;
sledding, 5 member teams, 1 team&#13;
per club. Rules for the above&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
Editorial-SOC budget review&#13;
system unjust&#13;
Review: "Incredible Shrinking&#13;
Woman"&#13;
Basketball streak reaches four&#13;
Winter&#13;
Cornivol8l&#13;
Fefcx9-I3&#13;
\&#13;
cr&#13;
3&#13;
contests and maybe even a few&#13;
surprises will be given prior to the&#13;
competitions.&#13;
"DON'T EAT YELLOW&#13;
SNOW" - The pie eating contest&#13;
must consist of 2 member teams&#13;
of UW -Parkside students, faculty,&#13;
staff, administration, or alumni.&#13;
Partners will sit at tables in the&#13;
Union Dining Room, facing each&#13;
other. Each person must sit on&#13;
their hands during the contest.&#13;
The contest will be done in relay&#13;
style; the first partner ihust finish&#13;
his / her pie before the second&#13;
partner will be allowed to start.&#13;
The winner is the first pair to&#13;
finish their pies and in unison&#13;
shout "I ate yellow snow."&#13;
"FREE HOT LUNCH" will be&#13;
playing at the P.A.B. Coffeehouse&#13;
in the Union Square Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 11. Last week's Ranger&#13;
reported that there was to be a&#13;
free hot lunch. There will be no&#13;
free hot lunches unless you want&#13;
to eat a band.&#13;
The schedule is set and the&#13;
snowball is ready to start rolling.&#13;
The only way to get this year's&#13;
Winter Carnival to really have a&#13;
"snowball effect" is for all&#13;
Parkside students, faculty, staff&#13;
and alumni to actively participate&#13;
in the events the Winter Carnival&#13;
Committee and the sponsoring&#13;
organizations are providing.&#13;
Schedule of events&#13;
Thursday &amp; Friday, Feb. 5&amp; 6&#13;
All D ay Freeze Fantasia" window painting&#13;
Monday, Feb. 9&#13;
All Day Snow Beast" snow sculpturing&#13;
1:00 p.m. "Laughter Has A Snowball Effect" Indoor Parade&#13;
1:00 p.m. Video Games Tournament in Union Rec Center&#13;
7:30 p.m. Parkside Ranger basketball game vs. Saginaw Valley State&#13;
9:00 p.m. Rhythm &amp; Blues Cadets" in Union Square&#13;
Tuesday, Feb. 10&#13;
9:30 - 2:30 p.m. Blood Drive in Union 104 &amp; 106&#13;
All D ay "Snow Beast" continued&#13;
!&#13;
2&#13;
^&#13;
P&#13;
-&#13;
m^&#13;
V0ll7&#13;
baI1TT0&#13;
Urnent&#13;
,&#13;
sP°&#13;
n&#13;
sored by Volleyball Club&#13;
l. 00 p.m. Charades in Union Square, sponsored by Parkside Players&#13;
7:30 p.m. Hayride under Union Bridge&#13;
8&#13;
'square' "&#13;
Sn&#13;
°&#13;
W BlaS&#13;
'" " °&#13;
ld Style Nite featuring&#13;
"&#13;
Sierra&#13;
" in Uni&#13;
°&#13;
n&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 11&#13;
All D ay "Snow Beast" continued&#13;
» m P&#13;
'&#13;
m'«F&#13;
a&#13;
ee&#13;
t&#13;
IS&#13;
&gt;t LunCh&#13;
'" a PAB&#13;
^chouse in the Union Square&#13;
12.00 p.m. Student Organization Fair on the Union Bridge&#13;
1:00 p.m. Video Games Tournament in Union Rec Center&#13;
1:00 p.m. Softball Tournament, sponsored by Marketing Club&#13;
1.00 p.m. Original Cheer Contest, sponsored by Cheerleaders&#13;
7:30 p.m. Parkside Ranger basketball game vs. Lakeland College&#13;
9:00 p.m. Another Beginning" in Union Square&#13;
Thursday Feb. 12&#13;
All D ay "Snow Beast" continued&#13;
11:00 a.m. Indoor Picnic in Union Cafeteria&#13;
12pi°k'&#13;
m' V0lleybail Tournament continues, sponsored by Volleyball&#13;
viUu&#13;
12:00 p.m. "Bullwinkle" &amp; "Underdog" cartoons in Union Square&#13;
sponsored by PAB Video&#13;
2 Club™*' Cr&#13;
°&#13;
SS Country Ski Race&#13;
' sP°&#13;
nsored by Parkside Nordic Ski&#13;
7:00 p.m "Midway Madness" Almost Anything Goes Competition in the&#13;
Umon Square&#13;
Friday, Feb. 13&#13;
All D ay "Snow Beast" continued&#13;
11:00 a.m. Indoor Picnic in Union Cafeteria&#13;
12:00 p.m. Carnival in Union Square sponsored by Minority Student&#13;
Union&#13;
1:00 p.m. "Don't Eat Yellow Snow" Pie Eating Contest&#13;
1:00 p.m. Video Games Tournament in Union Rec Center&#13;
8:00 p.m. "Warriors" in Union Cinema, sponsored by PAB Film&#13;
9:00 p.m. "Bad Boy" in Union Square&#13;
PAB presents "Porter, Please"&#13;
"Porter, Please," a musical&#13;
tribute to composer Cole Porter,&#13;
will be presented by Theatre&#13;
Three of Dallas, currently on a&#13;
25th anniversary national tour, at&#13;
Parkside's Communication Arts&#13;
Theater at 8 p.m. on Thursday,&#13;
Feb. 19.&#13;
Tickets for the event, sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Activities Board,&#13;
are $3 for UW-P students and $5&#13;
for others and are available at the&#13;
Campus Union Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
"Porter, Please," is an entertaining&#13;
glimpse at an artist&#13;
whose sophisticated lyrics and&#13;
sassy melodies spiced the&#13;
American musical scene for more&#13;
than three decades.&#13;
During that period, Porter&#13;
provided the music to more than&#13;
twenth - five Broadway musicals&#13;
and numerous films featuring&#13;
such stars as Fred Astaire, Ethel&#13;
Merman, Rita Hayworth, Judy&#13;
Garland, Gene Kelly and Bert&#13;
Lahr. He is remembered for such&#13;
classic tunes as "I Get A Kick Out&#13;
Of You," "You're The Top," "It's&#13;
All Right With Me," "Begin the&#13;
Beguine," "Anything Goes" and&#13;
"Don't Fence Me In."&#13;
As a member of the international&#13;
social set, Cole lived a&#13;
dazzling lifestyle, trotting around&#13;
MEMBERS of the&#13;
"Porter, Please."&#13;
the globe with the "beautiful&#13;
people" of his era. He wrote songs&#13;
while sunning on the Riviera,&#13;
drinking espresso in Venice and&#13;
cruising up the Nile. To capture&#13;
Theatre Three troupe scene from&#13;
the glamour of Porter's world,&#13;
"Porter, Please" is staged as a&#13;
dazzling penthouse soiree hosted&#13;
by five elegantly contumed&#13;
Continued On Page Six &#13;
Thursday, February 5,1981 RANGER&#13;
SOC President Oechler's Zophy challenges reductions&#13;
letter on budget cuts&#13;
T0 January 19,1981&#13;
FROM: Jan Oechler, Chairperson SOC&#13;
With the beginning of the spring semester things are renewed&#13;
and reviewed, one of which is the club accounts. Some of you will&#13;
be receiving letters pertaining to your absence from meetings in&#13;
addition to this letter.&#13;
During break I looked over the accounts and was amazed to see&#13;
the balances in these accounts. This could be due to a couple of&#13;
things. In any event, those clubs that haven't been making good&#13;
use of their funds have had some deducted. The amount deducted&#13;
from your account is $ .&#13;
If you have any questions regarding this amount, please contact&#13;
me at 2594 or leave a message in the Student Life Office.&#13;
We hope to see you at the next SOC meeting on January 28, 1981&#13;
at 1:00 p.m. in the SOC office.&#13;
JO.sw&#13;
SOC needs legislation:&#13;
review system unjust&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
On Wednesday, January 28, the&#13;
spring semester's first Student&#13;
Organizations Council meeting&#13;
was held.&#13;
It was an interesting meeting, to&#13;
say the least. Someone had stolen&#13;
the wall clock in the SOC o ffice&#13;
and hardly anyone of the 45 or so&#13;
club members and officers attending&#13;
noticed as the "50&#13;
Minutes" period drew to a close. I&#13;
didn't even see many people&#13;
checking their watches and only a&#13;
few left early. It was that interesting.&#13;
&#13;
What could have pre - empted&#13;
the expected discusssion of Winter&#13;
Carnival? Money. Quite a few&#13;
clubs have received unannounced&#13;
letters in the mail the previous&#13;
week that informed them that&#13;
their club's budget had been&#13;
reviewed and had been docked a&#13;
percentage of previously&#13;
allocated funds because they&#13;
hadn't spent enough money by the&#13;
end of last semester, (see letter)&#13;
At the meeting, Jan Oechler,&#13;
SOC Chairperson, and Chavez&#13;
Epps, SOC vice - chairperson,&#13;
defended their action to a large&#13;
percentage of openly angry&#13;
student group representatives and&#13;
a small percentage of supporters.&#13;
SUFAC, Oechler said, will not&#13;
put up with the yearly rising&#13;
return of unused SOC funds&#13;
anymore. Last year's return&#13;
figure, she reported, was around&#13;
$8,000 out of an original SOC&#13;
budget of $24,000. Oechler and&#13;
Epps expected this May's return&#13;
figure to rise, she said, and so they&#13;
deducted funds accordingly.&#13;
"Next year," Oechler warned,&#13;
"maybe SUFAC will only be&#13;
willing to give SOC $16,000 to work&#13;
with if the return figure stays so&#13;
high."&#13;
To students who protested that&#13;
the action was without precedent&#13;
and was not backed by legislation,&#13;
Oechler said that if she and Epps&#13;
could not have the power to make&#13;
decisions regarding funding,&#13;
individual groups would have to&#13;
face going to SOC them selves or&#13;
working with PSGA.&#13;
When asked whether the "SOC&#13;
Constitution or by-laws" provided&#13;
for this type of funding review&#13;
procedure, Oechler produced a&#13;
one - page list of rules and pointed&#13;
out that "SOC falls, in part, under&#13;
the PSGA Constitution, too."&#13;
Rule ten of the SOC "Rules"&#13;
sheet states: "The first SOC&#13;
meeting in January will be to&#13;
review all club budgets to check&#13;
for inactive clubs."&#13;
According to PSGA vice -&#13;
president Kay Mullikin, "SOC is a&#13;
Senate sub - committee, covered&#13;
under the nine sections of Article&#13;
II of the PSGA Constitution. It's&#13;
really kind of a vague article.&#13;
"As a standing sub - committee&#13;
the Senate, that's all SOC needs,"&#13;
said Tim Zimmer, PSGA Constitution&#13;
Justice. Zimmer is one of&#13;
the authors of Article II. He said&#13;
that any by - laws SOC makes&#13;
must be ok'd by the Senate. In&#13;
addition, Zimmer said, they must&#13;
follow all Senate rules.&#13;
"As a standing sub - committee&#13;
of the Senate, SOC s hould be attending&#13;
all Senate meetings and&#13;
filing reports," Zimmer said,&#13;
adding: "Whether or not they are,&#13;
I can't comment."&#13;
"They were at our last meeting&#13;
and made a report," Mullikin&#13;
said.&#13;
None of the existing legislation&#13;
pertinent to SOC specifies the type&#13;
of budget reviews that are to be&#13;
conducted. Similarly none of the&#13;
existing legislation pertinent to&#13;
SOC gives SOC officers, or anyone&#13;
else, the power to remove funds&#13;
from student group accounts as a&#13;
result of an unfavorable budget&#13;
Editor's note: The following is a&#13;
letter written by Angela Howard&#13;
Zophy, Parkside Concourse advisor,&#13;
to Jan Oechler, SOC&#13;
President, concerning .recent&#13;
budget reductions.)&#13;
Jan. 27,1981&#13;
Dear Ms. Oechler,&#13;
As advisor to the Parkside&#13;
Concourse, I challenge your&#13;
recent arbitrary reduction of&#13;
Concourse budget by two - thirds.&#13;
This action on your part as&#13;
President of the Student&#13;
Organization Committee lacks&#13;
either justice or due process&#13;
toward this group. I have long&#13;
been appalled at the irrational&#13;
process by which S.O.C. conreview.&#13;
&#13;
On Monday of this .week,&#13;
Oechler said that out of a total of&#13;
38 SOC - budgeted student groups,&#13;
17 groups were docked for non - or&#13;
under - usage of funds, for an&#13;
original total of $2,738.48 in funds&#13;
deducted from Student Life accounts.&#13;
&#13;
For individual groups, the range&#13;
was between $233 deduc ted from&#13;
an original budget of $641 and $50&#13;
deducted from an original budget&#13;
of $750.: Some newer clubs, according&#13;
to Oechler, are to be&#13;
reviewed again in February or&#13;
March, since they have not had a&#13;
lot of time to use their funds.&#13;
As of Monday, $1,346.69 was still&#13;
deducted from accounts. Oechler&#13;
said, "If nobody from these clubs&#13;
comes and contacts me, these&#13;
funds will be voted cm as t o re -&#13;
allocation to new clubs and to&#13;
clubs who ask for additional&#13;
funding."&#13;
"Some funds won't be given&#13;
back even if a group representative&#13;
comes and talks to me&#13;
because at least one club has&#13;
probably folded," Oechler said.&#13;
by Bill Haight&#13;
(NOCR) When Arthur Levine&#13;
set out to research a book about&#13;
today's college students, he expected&#13;
to find "a return to the&#13;
'50s." He admits he is depressed&#13;
about what he did find:&#13;
pessimism, cynicism and "meism."&#13;
&#13;
The Kennedy and King&#13;
assassinations, urban riots,&#13;
Vietnam and Watergate have&#13;
helped breed an attitude that "The&#13;
world about me is going to hell but&#13;
I'm going to do OK," according to&#13;
Levine. He calls this the Titanic&#13;
Ethic — scrapping for personal&#13;
survival in the midst of a bleak&#13;
situation.&#13;
Levine is senior fellow at the&#13;
Carnegie Foundation for the&#13;
Advancement of Teaching in&#13;
Washington D.C. His book, "When&#13;
Dreams and Heroes Died: A&#13;
portrait of Today's College&#13;
Student," makes use of numerous&#13;
Carnegie surveys as well as&#13;
Levine's own interviews of&#13;
students on 26 campuses.&#13;
Survey after survey confirms&#13;
Levine's findings: students are&#13;
ducted its meetings and its vital&#13;
business. My concerns center now&#13;
upon the ex post facto nature of&#13;
your notification of the budget&#13;
reductions. I submit that this&#13;
action of your is a breach of the&#13;
democratic process so cherished&#13;
at all levels of administration at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
I protest the two - thirds budget&#13;
reduction both on procedural and&#13;
substantive grounds. As a student&#13;
group advisor, I have yet to&#13;
receive anything in writing from&#13;
S.O.C. which explains either its&#13;
process or its purpose in this&#13;
matter. Our group received no&#13;
written notice of any spending&#13;
deadline at the time our budget&#13;
was finally given last fall. Such an&#13;
important proviso cannot be&#13;
conveyed verbally or just inhouse;&#13;
it must be publicized&#13;
widely, as should S.O.C. meeting&#13;
times and dates, so the general&#13;
student body may be advised and&#13;
possibly observe how S.O.C.&#13;
student monies are spent. The&#13;
lack of proper procedure in this&#13;
action echoes the chaotic atmosphere&#13;
that has pervaded&#13;
"One club had an amount&#13;
deducted that wasn't supposed to&#13;
be," she said. "The accountant&#13;
transposed the figures and the&#13;
amount deducted came to almost&#13;
the group's total budget."&#13;
Quite a few clubs, according to&#13;
Oechler, "have shown me that&#13;
they will use their funds. Those&#13;
should have been debited back&#13;
into their Student Life accounts as&#13;
of last Thursday."&#13;
According to Oechler, the&#13;
money had been credited out of&#13;
the accounts, but no one can use it&#13;
until it is re - allocated by SOC.&#13;
"These funds are sitting in a kind&#13;
of limbo," Oechler said.&#13;
"The only reason we are doing&#13;
this is because the rules say that&#13;
there will be a review process,"&#13;
Oechler said. This year, we had to&#13;
get started somehow. SUFAC is&#13;
putting pressure on SOC. They&#13;
wanted us to be more accountable.&#13;
We're just trying to make SOC&#13;
more accountable.&#13;
optimistic about their personal&#13;
futures, while rapidly losing&#13;
confidence in society's institutions.&#13;
&#13;
Is there apathy on campus? No,&#13;
but methods and issues have&#13;
changed, according to Levine.&#13;
Professional student lobbyists fill&#13;
the role of yesterday's protesters,&#13;
he says. "Unseen activity is being&#13;
confused with nonexistent activity,"&#13;
he says. "It is interesting&#13;
to speculate whether other&#13;
historical periods which have&#13;
been labeled quiet or non - activist&#13;
such as the 1940s and '50s were, in&#13;
fact, simply periods of unobserved&#13;
protest."&#13;
In keeping with the me-ism&#13;
Levine found, campus protest&#13;
issues have moved from broad&#13;
social causes to more personal&#13;
gripes, he says. A 1978 Carn egie&#13;
study showed, for instance, that&#13;
the proportion of campuses&#13;
having minority affairs protests&#13;
dropped from 35% to 12% between&#13;
1969 and 1978, and Vietnam&#13;
protests, of course, dropped from&#13;
68% to zero. At the same time, the&#13;
study showed that&#13;
S.O.C. meetings since last SeDtember.&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
As to my substantive challenge&#13;
of your action, I submit that&#13;
responsible scheduling of major&#13;
events within one month of&#13;
receiving budget approval is not&#13;
possible. It seems to me that this&#13;
reduction harms most of the&#13;
groups which are putting the most&#13;
preparation into their scheduling&#13;
of events. One cannot get a big&#13;
name speaker on a few days&#13;
notice nor can one engage such a&#13;
speaker without absolute&#13;
knowledge of the funds available&#13;
Thus, your action is as ill - conceived&#13;
as it is reprehensible.&#13;
Finally I request, in duplicate,&#13;
copies of all budget reductions&#13;
sustained by all the student&#13;
organizations as soon as possible.&#13;
I also request immediately&#13;
complete copies of the policy&#13;
statement under which the budget&#13;
reductions were initiated. I further&#13;
require written notice of your&#13;
regularly scheduled Spring 1981&#13;
meetings and any other meetings&#13;
called for the duration of this&#13;
semester.&#13;
Angela Howard Zophy&#13;
During last week's meeting, two&#13;
motions were made toward&#13;
change. A motion was made, and&#13;
passed unanimously, that the one&#13;
page list of SOC "Rules" (and any&#13;
additions to them) be posted in the&#13;
SOC office. A motion was also&#13;
made, and also passed, to form a&#13;
volunteer committee of SOC&#13;
members to set up guidelines for&#13;
future funding reviews.&#13;
It is doubtful that these motions&#13;
toward change will be enough.&#13;
The problem of left - over funds is&#13;
a big one but hopefully, this&#13;
problem can be solved without the&#13;
use of further scare tactics..&#13;
But a larger problem facing&#13;
SOC is the lack of some sort of&#13;
binding legislation, designed to&#13;
designate and limit the duties and&#13;
powers of SOC officers and&#13;
members.&#13;
During last week's meeting,&#13;
Oechler said, "There's nothing&#13;
wrong with the system; it's just&#13;
that you won't let it work." I&#13;
disagree.&#13;
having student unrest over&#13;
student fees and financial aid&#13;
2% t o 20%.&#13;
It doesn't help that the public&#13;
wants to hang a label on each&#13;
generation of students. These&#13;
images are only caricatures, says&#13;
Levine, pointing out that students&#13;
of the late '60s have become&#13;
bigger than life. Levine says he&#13;
was "shocked and surprised at the&#13;
extent to which today's college&#13;
students compare themselves to&#13;
the mythical creature who walked&#13;
our campuses a decade ago. I was&#13;
1&#13;
told with sadness more times than&#13;
I care to ran ember, 'We're not&#13;
real college kids like the people&#13;
who went to school in the 1960s'."&#13;
Levine pulls out a survey to&#13;
remind us that in 1969 only 28% of&#13;
college students had ever participated&#13;
in a demonstration of&#13;
any type.&#13;
Written in a popular, not&#13;
academic style, "When Dreams&#13;
and Heroes Died" should be top&#13;
priority reading for any serious&#13;
student - watcher. It is published&#13;
by Jossey - Bass and can be organger&#13;
&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
SulMich"?^&#13;
Wendy Westphal '.'.V.'.'.V.'.'.Feature Idllor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser ts Edjtor&#13;
®r^&#13;
nP2"&#13;
,no Photo Editor Ginger Helgeson Edi,or&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Dave Cramer, Mike Farrell, Dan Galbraith, Mike Holmdohl,&#13;
Carol Klees, Dan McCormack, Lori Meyer, Bruce Preston, Kim&#13;
Schlater, Jim Wick&#13;
RR™FIH,JS,^&#13;
RI&#13;
T,EN.-FND&#13;
,&#13;
EDITED BY S,UDENTS OF UW-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
RANCFR ^ring the academic year except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
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the masthead (to the left).&#13;
Today's college students a new breed &#13;
Eastern media trip planned&#13;
Valter Graffin, professor of&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 5,1981&#13;
o&#13;
GJ&#13;
a&#13;
T&#13;
ffin&#13;
' P&#13;
rofessOr of&#13;
English, and Jim Maguire head&#13;
of Media Services, are ' coo*&#13;
dmatmg a drama, art, and&#13;
communications practicum trip to&#13;
Washington, D.C. and New York&#13;
City. The cost of the trip, tentatively&#13;
set for March 12-21 will&#13;
be approximately $450, including&#13;
airfare, lodging, and most activities.&#13;
&#13;
The objectives of t he trip are to:&#13;
tour facilities; engage in dialogue&#13;
with people who are in the arts&#13;
and communication field; actual&#13;
observation of dailty activities in&#13;
T V., radio, print, art and dramaincrease&#13;
students' geographic and&#13;
cultural knowledge of the Eastern&#13;
U.S. .urban corridor; and give&#13;
students insight into employment&#13;
possibilities upon graduation or as&#13;
summer interns.&#13;
Tentative arrangements are&#13;
being made to visit many media&#13;
related areas such as National&#13;
Public Radio, the Senate and&#13;
House Recording Studios, the&#13;
National Press Gallery with&#13;
dinner at the National Press Club,&#13;
the National Broadcasting Corporation,&#13;
the Associated Press&#13;
the New York Times, the United&#13;
National Office of Telecommunications&#13;
and People&#13;
Magazine.&#13;
Art and Drama participants&#13;
may be treated to Broadway&#13;
Theater, the Metropolitan&#13;
Museum, the Museum of Modern&#13;
Art, the Smithsonian, the&#13;
Guggenheim, Kennedy Center and&#13;
CHARLES JONES, Director of U. S. Senate and House TV and&#13;
!?&#13;
c&#13;
,?&#13;
rdin9 s*&#13;
udios, talks with Parkside students in Sprinq,&#13;
1980: Xleft to right) Jan Parenteau, Henrietta Hanson (hidden),&#13;
Kim Scarf, Mary McDonald, Ruth Ann Wojtak, Rachel King,&#13;
Vivian De Hahn (hidden), Andy Parenteau, and Blake Howe.&#13;
off - Broadway productions.&#13;
An informational meeting will&#13;
be held on Wednesday, February&#13;
11 at 3:30 p.m. in Television Studio&#13;
A, CA D157. Slides will also be&#13;
shown of last year's trip.&#13;
Credit is available for this trip.&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
Jim Maguire at 553-2622 o r Walt&#13;
Graffin at 553-2424.&#13;
Draft dodgers' college records checked?&#13;
If the Selective Service System&#13;
(SSS) decides to use college and&#13;
university records to track down&#13;
men who didn't register for the&#13;
draft, each school will have to&#13;
decide for itself if records can be&#13;
released, according to an SSS&#13;
spokesperson.&#13;
Estimates of the percentage of&#13;
non - registration range from the&#13;
Selective Service's 5-7% guess, to&#13;
anti - draft and media reports of&#13;
25% noncompliance.&#13;
"Using student records is a&#13;
possibility we're considering,"&#13;
said Betty Alexander, public&#13;
information officer for the SSS.&#13;
Alexander says the SSS doesn't&#13;
believe the federal privacy law&#13;
would protect directory information&#13;
contained in college&#13;
records, but says each school&#13;
would determine its own privacy&#13;
standards. "If they (school officials)&#13;
believe it would be a&#13;
violation of a student's privacy,&#13;
then those would be the records&#13;
we couldn't use," said Alexander.&#13;
"It's up to them to decide."&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin said that the SSS has made&#13;
no contact with UW-P and if they&#13;
did, the only information they&#13;
would have access to is the&#13;
student directory. No other information&#13;
concerning students&#13;
would be given out, according to&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Some students aren't waiting&#13;
until Selective Service acts to find&#13;
out what their school's decision&#13;
will be. At the U. of California -&#13;
Santa Barbara, over 300 students&#13;
marched on the chancellor's office&#13;
demanding that personal information&#13;
in their university files&#13;
not be turned over to any outside&#13;
authorities.&#13;
Students outside California&#13;
don't seem to be too concerned&#13;
about a possible on - campus&#13;
record hunt. Doug Tuthill,&#13;
president of the United States&#13;
Student Association, admits he's&#13;
heard little discussion of the&#13;
records release issue in his travels&#13;
around the country. "I think most&#13;
students don't think the government&#13;
will go as far as finding&#13;
people who didn't register," says&#13;
Tuthill. "I think students also feel&#13;
that they're protected through the&#13;
Buckley Amendment (privacy&#13;
law)."&#13;
Alexander said, however, that if&#13;
the Selective Service System&#13;
doesn't seek student records, it&#13;
won't be for political reasons but&#13;
practical ones. "Most of the&#13;
people eligible for the draft aren't&#13;
in college," she said, "so those&#13;
records would only help us find a&#13;
small percentage of those who&#13;
didn't register."&#13;
Sfyei&amp;fuim'&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
"Plaza Suite" promises laughter&#13;
A dinner theater production of&#13;
Neil Simon's triple barreled&#13;
comedy "Plaza Suite" will be&#13;
presented by the Alpha Omega&#13;
Players, performing arm of the&#13;
Repertory Theater of America, at&#13;
6 p.m. on Sunday, Feb. 22, in the&#13;
Union dining room.&#13;
Admission is $8 and includes a&#13;
dinner of soup, a "deluxe deli&#13;
buffet," dessert and a glass of&#13;
wine. Cocktails will be available.&#13;
Tickets for the event, sponsored&#13;
by PAB, are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center.&#13;
Deadline is Feb. 18 for reservations,&#13;
which can be made by&#13;
calling 553-2345.&#13;
"Plaza Suite," which ran for&#13;
1,097 performances on Broadway,&#13;
consists of three playlets all set, at&#13;
different times, in the same suite&#13;
of New York's Plaza Hotel. All&#13;
concern a man and a woman who&#13;
are at the end of something rather&#13;
than the beginning of anything.&#13;
In the first segment, a wealthy&#13;
suburban couple comes to the&#13;
Plaza for a night commemorating&#13;
their honeymoon in the same suite&#13;
22 years earlier. In the second, a&#13;
Hollywood film producer cagily&#13;
plots the seduction of an old high&#13;
school flame, now a housewife&#13;
awed by his fame.&#13;
The third play is a witty farce&#13;
about a wealthy couple's attempts&#13;
to get their daughter to emerge&#13;
from behind a locked door, where&#13;
she has fled in panic — and in&#13;
bridal attire — while hundreds of&#13;
wedding guests await her appearance&#13;
in the hotel ballroom.&#13;
"What you laugh at so hard,"&#13;
one critic commented, "is&#13;
recognizable situations stretched&#13;
to ludricrous lengths without&#13;
losing their identity."&#13;
"Plaza Suite" is the seventh in&#13;
order of production of Simon's&#13;
phenomenal series of stage hits.&#13;
Others include "Come Blow Your&#13;
Horn," "Barefoot in the Park,"&#13;
"The Odd Couple," "Promises&#13;
Promises" and "The Last of the&#13;
Red Hot Lovers."&#13;
American "New Music" featured here&#13;
Works by living American&#13;
composers will be featured in the&#13;
New Music at Parkside series&#13;
program on Sunday, Feb. 8, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater at&#13;
3:30 p.m.&#13;
Ned Rorem's Trio will be&#13;
performed by Frank Suetholz&#13;
(flutist), Harry Sturm (cellist),&#13;
and Carol Bell (pianist).&#13;
Also on the program of chamber&#13;
music are William Bergsma's&#13;
Clandestine Dialogues, performed&#13;
by Sturm and Linda Raymond&#13;
(percussion); Will Gay Bottje's&#13;
Sonata by the Bedford Duo&#13;
comprised of Monte Bedford&#13;
(oboe), and Frances Bedford&#13;
(harpsichord); and Paul Bowies'&#13;
Sonata performed by the Parkside&#13;
Piano Duo of Carol Bell and&#13;
August Wegner.&#13;
Admission for the program,&#13;
which will precede a wine and&#13;
chesse reception for concert -&#13;
goers, is $2 for the public and $1&#13;
for students. The new music series&#13;
is directed by Sturm and Wegner.&#13;
Parkside's music discipline&#13;
recently won national recognition&#13;
for performance and promotion of&#13;
new music. The National&#13;
Federation of Music Clubs&#13;
awarded its 1980 prize for encouragement&#13;
of new music to&#13;
Parkside in the public educational&#13;
division and to the prestigious&#13;
Eastman School of Music in the&#13;
private education division.&#13;
UW-P was cited for the New&#13;
Music at Parkside series, its&#13;
Oriana Trio international composition&#13;
contest, its composer - in -&#13;
residence program and other&#13;
faculty and student programs&#13;
featuring contemporary works.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654-2932&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
lYTONA BE;&#13;
LAST CHANCE TO SIGN UP FOR&#13;
FUN IN THE SUN I&#13;
(Already Half Filled)&#13;
FROM&#13;
$ 219&#13;
FLOP&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• GREYHOUND TYPE BUS&#13;
• 7 NIGHT'S LODGING OCEANSIDE HOTEL&#13;
• OPTIONAL POPULAR SIDETRIPS&#13;
FOR APPLICATION AND FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION, ROOM 209 - 553-2200 &#13;
4 Thursday, Februarys, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Prof. Pollack visits husband&#13;
and wife film producers&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
STUDENT gladly donates blood. Give blood during the Winter&#13;
Carnival blood donor drive.&#13;
Donate blood during drive&#13;
Everybody is invited to participate&#13;
in a blood donor drive on&#13;
Tuesday, Feb. 10 from 9 a.m. to 4&#13;
p m. in Union 104. The drive will&#13;
be conducted by the Blood Center&#13;
of So utheastern Wisconsin and is&#13;
sponsored by the Campus Health&#13;
Office. Campus nurse Edith&#13;
Isenberg said no appointments&#13;
are necessary.&#13;
Research doesn't always involve&#13;
sophisticated scientific&#13;
equipment. Sometimes a simple&#13;
tape recorder will do and the&#13;
results when the research reaches&#13;
the classroom can be equally&#13;
effective.&#13;
So, a tape recorder accompanied&#13;
Parkside's dramatic&#13;
arts professor Rhoda Gale Pollack&#13;
on a recent trip to Hollywood to&#13;
track down background information&#13;
on Ely and Edythe&#13;
Landau, an innovative husband&#13;
and wife team of f ilm producers.&#13;
The Landaus' projects include&#13;
the American Film Theatre&#13;
(AFT) series of 13 plays, mostly&#13;
representative of the theater of&#13;
the absurd. The unique feature of&#13;
the series, Pollack says, is that the&#13;
Landaus' film versions are&#13;
remarkably faithful to the&#13;
original playscripts. While&#13;
cinema techniques rather than&#13;
stage techniques were used in&#13;
shooting the films, in most cases&#13;
there was no screenplay adaptation,&#13;
so that the films fully&#13;
reflect the playwrights' intent, she&#13;
notes.&#13;
Since six of the films are the&#13;
subject matter of a course Pollack&#13;
is teaching this semester, she set&#13;
about tracking down information&#13;
about their creators. Because the&#13;
Landaus' work has been largely&#13;
non - commercial, aimed at select&#13;
rather than mass audiences,&#13;
Pollack found little material in&#13;
standard reference sources. Still,&#13;
she felt information on the Landaus&#13;
and their pioneering work on&#13;
film as literature would add a&#13;
significant dimension to the&#13;
course.&#13;
So Pollack -got her "chutzpah"&#13;
together, called the Landaus and&#13;
outlined her project. The result&#13;
was two hectic days of taping&#13;
interviews with the pair in their&#13;
Holly wood p r o d u c tio n&#13;
headquarters.&#13;
Pollack found the Landaus' idea&#13;
for American Film Theater grew&#13;
out of th eir experience in the late&#13;
'50s and 60s when they were&#13;
producing a "Play of the Week"&#13;
series emphasizing high artistic&#13;
standards for a non - commercial&#13;
television station in New York&#13;
City.&#13;
Following that experience, the&#13;
pair hit upon the idea of p roducing&#13;
LILY TOMLIN IN AN EPIC COMEDY&#13;
(GIVE OR TAKE w&#13;
SHRINKING sill:&#13;
• « &gt;' P O M L IN • CHAMGS GKOOs M G 8 5 GGGrGG r A G | 1 : A s-' G w y&#13;
: :&#13;
Written by JANE WAGNER Musk: by SUZANNE CtANI Produced bv HANK MOONJEAN&#13;
Executive Producer JANE WAGNER • D irected by JOEL SCHUMACHER • A UNIVERSAL PICTURE&#13;
* MATCH'*! WAY MOT OS SUltAfiif «)H CHAOItt*&#13;
NOW PLAYING AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU&#13;
film versions of plays, again insisting&#13;
on high standards of excellence,&#13;
but giving them&#13;
simultaneous nationwide exposure&#13;
by developing a chain of&#13;
theaters to show the films on a&#13;
pre-paid basis. That concept grew&#13;
into American Film Theater,&#13;
which eventually had almost 700&#13;
theaters showing its film plays.&#13;
AFT productions include stars&#13;
like Katharine Hepburn,&#13;
Maximillian Schell, Alan Bates,&#13;
Sir Laurence Olivier, Glenda&#13;
Jackson, Robert Ryan, Fredric&#13;
March, Lee Marvin, Gene Wilder,&#13;
Karen Black and Zero Mostel&#13;
under the direction of Lindsay&#13;
Anderson, Arthur Hiller, John&#13;
Frankenheimer, Tony Richardson,&#13;
Joseph Losey and other&#13;
greats of the directing world.&#13;
The six films from the series&#13;
which Pollack has selected for her&#13;
course are "A Delicate Balance,"&#13;
"The Homecoming," "In&#13;
Celebration," "Jacques Brel is&#13;
Alive and Well and Living in&#13;
Paris," "Luther" and&#13;
"Rhinoceros." The films will be&#13;
shown at the Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theater beginning Feb. 25 and can&#13;
be viewed by the public by&#13;
reservation, taken at the Rondelle&#13;
two weeks in advance.&#13;
The lecture portion of the&#13;
course, which can be taken either&#13;
for dramatic arts or English&#13;
credit, is offered on the Parkside&#13;
campus. Pollack said she plans to&#13;
use her taped interviews with the&#13;
Landaus both as background in&#13;
the lectures and, in some cases, to&#13;
play portions of the tapes letting&#13;
the Landaus tell their story in&#13;
their own words providing an oral&#13;
history of their unusual careers.&#13;
Valentine's&#13;
Day*&#13;
Lovely Gifts&#13;
from Andrea's ...&#13;
to be treasured&#13;
long after the&#13;
14th. For every&#13;
special person&#13;
on y o u r l i s t . . .&#13;
And gift wrapped&#13;
to make it&#13;
extra special.&#13;
* Trifari Jewelry&#13;
* Go r h am L e ad&#13;
Crystal&#13;
* Fancy Hearts with&#13;
Russell Stover or&#13;
F a n n ie May&#13;
Chocolate&#13;
&gt; Delicious Jelly Belly&#13;
G o urm et Jel ly&#13;
Beans&#13;
) Unusua l and&#13;
delightful Valentine&#13;
Cards&#13;
OPEN DAILY&#13;
9a.m. til 5:30 p.m.&#13;
Friday til 8 p.m.&#13;
Saturday til 5 p.m.&#13;
ArKjra&amp;&#13;
2401 -60th Street, Kenosha &#13;
S^&#13;
n9Woman" not incredibly funny&#13;
It's been a long time sinre J?_° a serum which will Pn«hi» _&#13;
# *&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
It's been a long time since&#13;
Disney has released any new&#13;
films, but "The Incredible&#13;
Shrinking Woman" brings back&#13;
fond memories of Sunday&#13;
matinees the whole family could&#13;
enjoy. Although it won't appeal to&#13;
everyone, it's definitely one you&#13;
can feel safe about bringing the&#13;
children to.&#13;
Pat Kramer (Lily Tomlin) is a&#13;
wife and a mother of two. She&#13;
leads the normal life of a suburban&#13;
wife until one day, as a result&#13;
of too much perfume, hygiene&#13;
spray, face cream, deodorant,&#13;
etc., she starts to shrink. At first&#13;
it's hardly noticeable but she soon&#13;
becomes small enough to live in&#13;
her daughter's doll house.&#13;
Some cute scenes show how Pat&#13;
lives from day to day, still trying&#13;
to perform her motherly duties at&#13;
a height of just over six inches.&#13;
The storyline, however, becomes&#13;
downright silly when she is kidnapped&#13;
by the Organization For&#13;
World Management (OWFM).&#13;
The OWFM wants to collect a&#13;
sample of h er blood and make it&#13;
auditions&#13;
Wisconsin theatre producers&#13;
will audition actors, dancers,&#13;
singers, designers, technicians&#13;
and managers at the Fifth Annual&#13;
Statewide Theatre Auditions on&#13;
February 7-8 in Madison at the&#13;
UW-Extension Wisconsin Center.&#13;
The auditions, which are cosponsored&#13;
by the UW-Extension&#13;
Arts Development and the&#13;
Wisconsin Theatre Association&#13;
(WTA), are open to theatre enthusiasts&#13;
of all ages.&#13;
Twenty-four producing&#13;
organizations will be represented&#13;
at the auditions, including The&#13;
Fireside Playhouse (Fort&#13;
Atkinson), Peninsula Players&#13;
(Green Bay), Heritage Ensemble&#13;
(State parks), Friends Mime&#13;
Theatre (Milwaukee), Northern&#13;
Lights Summer Playhouse&#13;
(Tomahawk), Wilson Street East&#13;
Dinner Playhouse (Madison) and&#13;
various University of Wisconsin&#13;
theatres.&#13;
Singers and actors should&#13;
prepare musical and spoken&#13;
material of t heir choice. A pianist&#13;
will be available. Dancers will&#13;
work out with a choreographer&#13;
while producers observe. Dance&#13;
auditions will only be held on&#13;
Saturday, February 7. Interviews&#13;
will be scheduled on Saturday for&#13;
those participants seeking offstage&#13;
positions. All participants&#13;
should be prepared to supply&#13;
photos and resumes for callbacks.&#13;
A 1981 P roducers Catalogue is&#13;
available to all registered&#13;
auditionees. The catalogue&#13;
describes the individual needs of&#13;
participating theatres.&#13;
Registration fees are $2.00 for&#13;
WTA members and $5.00 for nonmembers.&#13;
Registration forms are&#13;
available from the Wisconsin&#13;
Theatre Association, 610 Langdon&#13;
St., Room 723, Madison, 53706.&#13;
Phone registration will not be&#13;
accepted and on site registration,&#13;
u space is available, will be on a&#13;
hrst come, first served basis. Call&#13;
Sheila Hilke at 608/263-6945 for&#13;
more information.&#13;
C&amp;R AUTO SERVICE&#13;
Quality Auto Work&#13;
Done At&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
10% OFF FOR&#13;
UW-P STUDENTS&#13;
Call 553-9092or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00&#13;
them fn&#13;
GrT- YWch wiU enable&#13;
°.&#13;
shrink the world bv&#13;
S a « 8 r&#13;
i n to e a c h c o u n t r y 's&#13;
fiPnScWl&#13;
les&#13;
-&#13;
Pat&#13;
.learns of this fiendish plot and calls upon the aid&#13;
aP&#13;
e who knows sign&#13;
language, but the bumbling lab&#13;
attendant finds them out and&#13;
who cares? You know it just has to&#13;
have a happy ending.&#13;
best qhf&#13;
ml&#13;
-&#13;
n&#13;
'&#13;
38 alway&#13;
s»» at her&#13;
oest. She mixes a little of each of&#13;
her characters to produce a&#13;
we* rii ?ff,&#13;
erm\&#13;
ned woman whom&#13;
Tif J u, m love with- Tomlin&#13;
also doubles as Pat's best - friend -&#13;
and - neighbor, Judith Beasley.&#13;
Some interesting camera work is&#13;
t25 y&#13;
°&#13;
u never suspect any&#13;
who arG 118 play&#13;
ed on you when you see both ladies together EJ? S&#13;
?&#13;
me ;°°&#13;
mAs&#13;
a sPecial&#13;
treat Ernestine the telephone&#13;
operator (also played bv Tomlin)&#13;
makes a cameo appearance.&#13;
Charies Crodin plays Vance,&#13;
Pat s husband. Again, Grodin has&#13;
a mediocre part (he was last seen&#13;
f«! &lt;Sol&#13;
?.f Hawn's spouse in&#13;
Seems Like Old Times"). Grodin&#13;
is an actor with quite a bit of&#13;
talent, both comical and&#13;
dramatic, but he is constantly&#13;
given second and third banana&#13;
roles. What the man really needs&#13;
is a starring role in which he can&#13;
extent show us&#13;
abilities.&#13;
Ned Beatty's performance is&#13;
also disappointing. He is Dan&#13;
Beame, Vance's boss, who turns&#13;
Pat over to the OFWM. Beatty has&#13;
proved himself competent in films&#13;
like "Deliverance" and "Network"&#13;
and the impressive TV&#13;
movie "Friendly Fire," so why&#13;
does he play these silly roles? One&#13;
would have thought he'd have&#13;
learned his lesson in "Superman"&#13;
and "Hopscotch." His character&#13;
has no substance and is predictable&#13;
from the moment he first&#13;
appears.&#13;
Predictability is a disease which&#13;
infectiously spreads to the plot. It&#13;
runs rampant from the opening to&#13;
the "surprise" ending (which was&#13;
obvious, so it really wasn't a&#13;
surprise) and is present in every&#13;
scene in between.&#13;
"The Incredible Shrinking&#13;
Woman" falls short of fulfilling&#13;
high viewer expectations (caused&#13;
because it has so much potential&#13;
but if it is taken as a light - hearted&#13;
comedy for children, it could be&#13;
enjoyed.&#13;
"Come Blow Your Horn" in Kenosha&#13;
Lakeside Players, Inc. debuts&#13;
the second production of their&#13;
season, "Come Blow Your Horn,"&#13;
at the Kemper gymnasium, 124' -&#13;
66th St., Kenosha, on Friday, Feb.&#13;
6. This delightful comedy is about&#13;
two brothers — one a playboy and&#13;
sophisticated man-about-town,&#13;
the other a young and inexperienced&#13;
kid trying to emulate&#13;
his older brother. Their antics&#13;
panic their par aits, but provide&#13;
an evening of laughter for the&#13;
audience.&#13;
Directing this production is Noel&#13;
Gentz, who has appeared on&#13;
Lakeside's stage in "The Good&#13;
Doctor," "Dracula," and most&#13;
recently, "The Man Who Came to&#13;
Dinner." He also appeared in&#13;
Petretti Productions first play,&#13;
"When You Coming Home Red&#13;
Rider?"&#13;
Gentz' assistant director, Wally&#13;
Christofferson, is also a familiar&#13;
face on the Lakeside stage. He has&#13;
appeared in "Wait Until Dark,"&#13;
"John Loves Mary," "Dracula"&#13;
and "The Good Doctor."&#13;
Christofferson is doubling his&#13;
duties during this production by&#13;
portraying Alan Baker and&#13;
assisting with the direction. Other&#13;
performers include Barb Guttormsen&#13;
as Peggy Evens, Rick&#13;
Vacarello as Buddy Baker, Fred&#13;
Batassa as Mr. Baker, Lori&#13;
Oatsvall as Mrs. Baker and&#13;
Debbie Bruckner as a guest.&#13;
Performance dates are Feb. 6,&#13;
7,8,13,14,15,20 and 21. Curtain is&#13;
at 8 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays,&#13;
7:30 p.m. Sunday Feb. 8 and&#13;
3 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 15.&#13;
Tickets may be purchased at the&#13;
door before all performances or&#13;
by calling the Lakeside hotline,&#13;
652-5999.&#13;
§ Member Parkside 2 00&#13;
t Mention this ad!&#13;
y^oieph&#13;
443322nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
Z Wm 44jj /ma avi&#13;
W § ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION&#13;
HAS ALWAYS BEEN IMPORTANT&#13;
Man learned at a very early age that good ideas have to be&#13;
heard to be effective. So he devised his own method of&#13;
getting those ideas across. Today, on ht e job ... or in&#13;
school, communication remains a vital part of our world.&#13;
Which is exactly what we'll be talking about in the upcoming&#13;
issue of "Insider" — the free supplement to your college&#13;
newspaper from Ford.&#13;
We'll tell you how to improve your communication skills&#13;
.. from writing term papers and doing oral presentations&#13;
to communicating with friends, parents and persons of&#13;
authority. And whether you're looking for an internship or&#13;
a full-time job, we've got loads of info to help you get there.&#13;
With tips on how to write a persuasive resume, handle an&#13;
interview gracefully, use the telephone effectively, and&#13;
much more.&#13;
Check out the next issue of "Insider," and while you're looking,&#13;
be sure to check out Ford's great new lineup for 1981&#13;
Including Escort, the new world car that's built in America&#13;
to take on the world.&#13;
FORD &#13;
Thursday, February 5,1981 RANGER&#13;
Gold risks to be discussed I Computer expert to speak here&#13;
Opp innAtiiniftAo • • n . • otunities and risks in investing&#13;
in gold will be the subject&#13;
of a public seminar at Parkside on&#13;
Tuesday, February 10, at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union, Room 104.&#13;
The seminar will explain and&#13;
compare the various means of&#13;
investing in gold (including coins&#13;
and bullion), gold futures and gold&#13;
stocks, according to Richard&#13;
Keehn, professor of e conomics at&#13;
Parkside and director of its&#13;
Economic Education and&#13;
Research Institute, the sponsor of&#13;
the seminar.&#13;
Other seminar panelists will be&#13;
Marsha Stewart of E.F. Hutton&#13;
Co., Inc.; Peter Foerster of&#13;
Foerster Derizon Investment Co.;&#13;
and Ayse Somersan, UW Extension&#13;
professor of economics.&#13;
Keehn said the panel will cover&#13;
the risks and returns of the&#13;
various forms of gold investments,&#13;
mechanics of investing&#13;
in gold and the pros and&#13;
cons of gold as compared to investing&#13;
in other financial assets&#13;
and commodities. There will be&#13;
opportunity for a question and&#13;
answer session, according to&#13;
Keehn.&#13;
A $5 fee will be collected at the&#13;
door which will open at 7 p.m:&#13;
Concert to be presented&#13;
Percussion ensembles of&#13;
Parkside and UW - Milwaukee will&#13;
present a joint concert at UW-P on&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 15, at 3 p.m. in the&#13;
Comm. Arts Theater. The&#13;
program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
The UW-P ensemble will open&#13;
the program with Alan&#13;
Hovhaness' Sextet, featuring&#13;
Eden Vaning as violin soloist, and&#13;
Thomas A. Lacina's Three Poems&#13;
to Handicapped Children with&#13;
Frank Mueller as narrator. Both&#13;
Vaning and Mueller are members&#13;
of the UW-P faculty. Linda&#13;
Raymond, a Milwaukee Symphony&#13;
percussionist, directs the&#13;
UW-P group.&#13;
The post - intermission program&#13;
will be presented by the UWM&#13;
Music With Percussion Ensemble&#13;
directed by Pavel Burda. The&#13;
UWM percussionists will be&#13;
assisted by Sigmund Snowpeck III&#13;
and Group and members of&#13;
Milwaukee's 20th Century Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
They will perform Carlos&#13;
Chavez' Toccata, Leonard&#13;
Salzedo's Concerto for Percussion&#13;
and Snowpeck's Roy Rogers&#13;
Meets Albert Einstein. The&#13;
Snowpeck work, recently&#13;
premiered in Milwaukee, combines&#13;
percussion, rock music,&#13;
special lighting effects and acting,&#13;
with Louise Arrata in the role of&#13;
Albert Einstein and Jim Butchart&#13;
as Roy Rogers.&#13;
"Porter, Please"&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
performers who present over fifty&#13;
of Cole's magnificent tunes.&#13;
Theatre Three, one of Dallas'&#13;
finest professional theatres, has&#13;
earned high praise from&#13;
audiences and critics alike for its&#13;
annual composer salutes.&#13;
"Porter, Please," first presented&#13;
during the theatre's '77-78 season,&#13;
is the creation of T heatre Three's&#13;
Producer - Director Jac Alder,&#13;
who has also devised musical&#13;
revues showcasing the works of&#13;
the Gershwin brothers, movie&#13;
composer Harry Warren and&#13;
"The Wizard of Oz " lyricist, E.Y.&#13;
"Yip" Harburg.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
FALINE, cut out any good stag pictures&#13;
lately? Brick Maker&#13;
BLACK SILK: Sharp heels, whips, foils. Good&#13;
punishment? Lovingly Tinfoil&#13;
IN NEED of underexposed young women:&#13;
exposure guaranteed, "Student Militants".&#13;
lOP'S AND CHAIN GANG want to paint&#13;
Ranger's window.&#13;
WHEN WILL the cowbells chime again?&#13;
Dead - Ringer&#13;
NOWBODY KNOWS what goes on behind&#13;
closed doors. — MOLN 118&#13;
BLACK SILK: How long beforethe bed stops?&#13;
Silk Moth&#13;
JIM KASTEN loves Derby Queens.&#13;
Cheerleader.&#13;
A PRODUGIOUS GROUP of vociferous artisans&#13;
attempted to castigate their heinous&#13;
employer through ominous&#13;
prognostications of his ephemeral life?&#13;
Voltar&#13;
ANYONE anti - |oker is also antl - Ranger&#13;
Bear. Ranger Bear&#13;
KENNY, write anything compelling and&#13;
thought provoking lately?&#13;
K.M. — Never mind.&#13;
GRITS— Happy (Belated) Birthday!.. .Just&#13;
wait. Grey Sweater&#13;
ANITA RAASCH, Happy Birthday I Welcome&#13;
home, John! Ranger Bear.&#13;
KEN MEYER isn't old enough to wear&#13;
Plnnochlo underwear! lOP's&#13;
COME ON you guys can't you be a little more&#13;
original? This Is the third time you've used&#13;
that Plnnochlo bit, and this Is the third time&#13;
it's failed.&#13;
CHRISI? Kind of a knothole sounding word!&#13;
Up yours.&#13;
WHO HAS an I .Q. of 3? Anyone who picks on&#13;
J.M., R.S., or the Joker!&#13;
TO THE KAMICAZI GIRLS at OMS. Whip It.&#13;
Whip it good! And remember don't try&#13;
suicide! I c an't wait to scan you fr„om nine&#13;
to five! — Your FAVORITE UsherMIKE&#13;
H., Becky G. has gone peroxide. Give&#13;
her a hug,&#13;
KEN MEYER salivates at the sight of mittens.&#13;
Chain Gang&#13;
HP is a terminal case. lOP's&#13;
BEGGARS can't be choosers about colors,&#13;
Chain Gang&#13;
DOES Sabine play the part of the hound? Play&#13;
Watcher&#13;
FOR SALE: Parkside Girls Tennis Outfits —&#13;
contact Cheerleaders. (Pretty bad, aren't&#13;
they?)&#13;
MUGSY — next time don't catch me in my&#13;
morning routine.&#13;
MINI-CAR PARKERS keep your doors and&#13;
bumpers to yourself 1111 Dented&#13;
JEFF, give me liberty or give me hell. The&#13;
Phantom&#13;
HEY! Leave our shit alone — The Enema&#13;
Band&#13;
NOW I KNOW why they call It "Elementary&#13;
Logic".&#13;
BILL: Porka chops and mashed potatoes —&#13;
come and get It.&#13;
SALLY — How about breakfast; Dick. Paula&#13;
— keep on smiling.&#13;
COLLEGIATE SKILLS is like a vacuum&#13;
cleaner, it sucks.&#13;
WRONG. Collegiate skills Is like a&#13;
cheerleader . . .&#13;
WRONG AGAIN. Collegiate Skills Is a bunch&#13;
of horseshit.&#13;
HEY! Let's leave me out of thlsl Jeff&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV is a real stud!!—From&#13;
her Ranger admirers.&#13;
WHOEVER insults the Joker doesn't know&#13;
what they're In for.&#13;
B-A-C-K-D-O-O-R11 Backdoor I Pow!l&#13;
JOE, traveling incognito as an amiable&#13;
buffoon, is not only a lackadaisical and&#13;
licentious person, but he Is also a narcissist.&#13;
Voltar&#13;
ANDY — I don't want to sleep, I lust&#13;
Rodney&#13;
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: For three&#13;
years, we, the official Parkside Pep Band,&#13;
have been taken hostage by a group of&#13;
militant musicians. Please tell Bonzo we're&#13;
here because we're here.&#13;
WANTED: Conductor with sense of humor to&#13;
lead group of wholesome, clean cut band&#13;
members. Apply at shlthouse.&#13;
OUR MUSIC speaks for itself — The Enema&#13;
Band&#13;
SO . . . ou y f i n a l l y adm it it! !!&#13;
KIDSI Let's score at Notre Dame! My House&#13;
(Junle)&#13;
BLACK SILK: Poor Fish try again I W e know&#13;
you aren't harmless ... Hot Stuff&#13;
BLACK SILK: Death and pain really turns&#13;
you on? Sick! M.J. (J)&#13;
JEFF — skin comes in pastel color,&#13;
especially mine. — Black Silk&#13;
FOR ROLL on vibrating bed with Junle, she&#13;
can be reached at Coffeey Shop at 8:00, take&#13;
a number.&#13;
MY HOUSE (JUNIE) — Sauna's make you&#13;
sweat? Try S.E.X.I—L.S.S.&#13;
TINFOIL — since bondage gets you hot try&#13;
discipline!—Black Silk&#13;
CHIPPER — Why not kinky? Open zippers&#13;
get you hot. Black Silk&#13;
DAWN — Painted in rainbow colors to have&#13;
sex? Black Silk&#13;
BRIAN — Vibrating bed? See me at Holiday&#13;
Inn. Guess Who&#13;
WANTED: One pair of used panties for&#13;
chewing on. Call 634-0915.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
HOST FAMfLlESfor American Field Service&#13;
foreign exchange students. Contact: Amy&#13;
Petersen at 554-6865.&#13;
TWO PASSENGERS to fly to Houston. Call&#13;
Mark 681-1773&#13;
ROOMMATE: $120/month Including heat, 20&#13;
minutes. 878-4504, Tuesday, Thursday.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
COLLEGE REP wanted to distribute&#13;
"Student Rate" subscription cards at this&#13;
campus. Good income, no selling involved.&#13;
For Information and application write to :&#13;
TIME, INC. College Bureau, 4337 W Indian&#13;
School Rd., Phoenix, AZ. 85031.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE. Kenosha&#13;
country setting. 634-8562 weekdays, 862-2883&#13;
weekends.&#13;
GIRLS: rooms, Racine, near bus route. 634-&#13;
8562 weekdays, 862-2883 weekends.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1980 SUZUKI 550L black. Call 553-9362 after 4&#13;
p. m.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
AUTOMOBILE REPAIR. Engine and Body.&#13;
UWP students 10% discount. 654-0876&#13;
"Trends in Microprocessors"&#13;
will be the topic of a free public&#13;
lecture by Dr. Bernard L. Peuto,&#13;
director of computer design&#13;
engineering for Zilog, Inc., an&#13;
Exxon subsidiary, at 3 p.m. on&#13;
Friday, February 6, at Parkside&#13;
in Greenquist Hall, Room-103.&#13;
Peuto previously was manager&#13;
of computer architecture for Zilog&#13;
and held a similar position at&#13;
Amdahl Corp. where he worked in&#13;
the areas of computer architecture,&#13;
operating systems and&#13;
performance measurements.&#13;
He received an electrical&#13;
engineering degree and a computer&#13;
science degree from&#13;
L'Ecole Superieure D'Electricite&#13;
in France and MA and PhD&#13;
degrees in computer science from&#13;
the University of California at&#13;
Berkeley.&#13;
The program is aimed at&#13;
engineers and professionals in&#13;
computer sciences as well as&#13;
hobbyists. It is sponsored by the&#13;
campus Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee, the Applied Computer&#13;
Science discipline and the&#13;
Parkside Computer Club.&#13;
Pabst promotes college sweepstakes&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer is&#13;
promoting a sweepstakes for&#13;
college students that will pay&#13;
more than $13,000 in tuition fees.&#13;
The theme of the promotion,&#13;
"Give That Student a Blue Ribbon,"&#13;
is geared toward the&#13;
nation's eleven million college&#13;
students.&#13;
Pabst College Marketing&#13;
Manager Janice Blankenburg&#13;
said, "Students today are more&#13;
concerned than ever before about&#13;
the spiraling costs of going to&#13;
college. For some lucky students,&#13;
the Blue Ribbon Sweepstakes will&#13;
serve as a vehicle to alleviate&#13;
some of those concerns."&#13;
Several prizes will be awarded.&#13;
The grand prize is a $5,000 tui tion&#13;
check. First prize is a $2,500&#13;
tuition check; second prize is a&#13;
$1,000 tuition check; 50 third place&#13;
prizes of $100 tuition checks will be&#13;
given; 1,000 fourth prizes of "Give&#13;
That Student a Blue Ribbon" Tshirts&#13;
will also be awarded.&#13;
Entry forms may be obtained in&#13;
most places where Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon Beer is sold. The Pabst&#13;
Blue Ribbon Tuition Sweepstakes&#13;
ends March 15, 1981. All entries&#13;
must be received by March 22,&#13;
1981.&#13;
Sign up for employment interviews&#13;
February is the big month for&#13;
employers looking for candidates&#13;
to fill job openings. May and&#13;
August 1981 graduates and alumni&#13;
may sign up for employment&#13;
interviews if they have a completed&#13;
personal data sheet on file&#13;
with the Alumni and Placement&#13;
Office.&#13;
Sometimes students are so&#13;
eager to obtain their ideal position&#13;
that they don't realize that the&#13;
position is possible, but not&#13;
probably, attainable as the first&#13;
step (Mi a graduate's career ladder.&#13;
The practical approach is to&#13;
investigate any position for which&#13;
one qualifies, even though it may&#13;
not be related to the student&#13;
major.&#13;
Sales and retailing employers&#13;
are looking for all majors. These&#13;
two areas are the most available&#13;
starting points in today's&#13;
economy. Many sales opportunities&#13;
involve more than just&#13;
selling a product or service. They&#13;
offer additional opportunities for&#13;
business analysis, management&#13;
training and marketing; these&#13;
positions often progress to the&#13;
executive level. One out of every&#13;
four U. S. presidents started in&#13;
sales. The range of e xperience in&#13;
these fields is invaluable.&#13;
In addition to campus interviews,&#13;
job openings are either&#13;
telephoned or mailed to the&#13;
Alumni and Placement Office.&#13;
Postings of all openings are&#13;
placed in notebooks on a table in&#13;
WLLC D173.&#13;
Job Service is also affiliated&#13;
with the Placement Office. Job&#13;
Service offers opportunities for&#13;
summer and part - time positions&#13;
for students. Mike Plate (553-2656)&#13;
is responsible for that part of the&#13;
operation.&#13;
For further information about&#13;
placement services, call 553-2452&#13;
between 8 a. m. and 4:30 p. m.&#13;
weekdays and until 7 p. m.&#13;
Monday and Wednesday evenings.&#13;
Product expert explains test history&#13;
by Janet Wells&#13;
Roger L. DeRose, New Products&#13;
Manager for S.C. Johnson &amp; Son,&#13;
Inc., of Racine, shared the&#13;
development of Agree, a leading&#13;
personal care product, with an&#13;
audience of about 55 persons on&#13;
Monday evening, January 26, in&#13;
the Student Union. Presented&#13;
under the auspices of the&#13;
Marketing Club, DeRose traced&#13;
Agree from 1970, when&#13;
preliminary market and chemical&#13;
research began, to its 1976 introduction&#13;
to the nation's consumers.&#13;
&#13;
Films of early trial commercials&#13;
and slides of test and&#13;
survey results illustrated the&#13;
stages of product formulation and&#13;
the professional care devoted to&#13;
discovering consumer needs and&#13;
preferences. According to&#13;
DeRose, consumer comments led&#13;
to the selection of a young target&#13;
market and a product concept —&#13;
"the greasies" — which is&#13;
reserved to Johnson's use. An&#13;
"honest" package shape with a&#13;
"hang-tag" history around its&#13;
neck was launched first in a&#13;
simulated test market, using the&#13;
assessor technique. After controlled&#13;
store tests and media&#13;
promotions, followed by measures&#13;
of consumer response to product&#13;
trials and product awareness, the&#13;
company introduced Agree to its&#13;
national sales force in November&#13;
1976. DeRose said that the&#13;
product, which represented a $24&#13;
million investment, set company&#13;
sales records in its first year of&#13;
national sales.&#13;
DeRose, a 1972 graduate of&#13;
Parkside with a Masters Degree&#13;
from Marquette University,&#13;
responded to a series of a udience&#13;
questions after the presentation.&#13;
Kai Kazarian of the Marketing&#13;
Club closed the program.&#13;
Regular meetings of Parkside's&#13;
Marketing Club are held in the&#13;
Molinaro faculty lounge on&#13;
Monday afternoons at 5 p.m.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads —&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30$ will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words&#13;
or less.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE&#13;
Any registered UW-P student or student organization is qualified&#13;
to insert a classified line ad in the Ranger at no cost if under or&#13;
equivalent to 10 words. (Phone numbers equal 1 word.)&#13;
Classification:&#13;
Name.&#13;
SS No..&#13;
Ranger&#13;
WLLCD139 &#13;
Coining Events&#13;
C^^a^nt^^&#13;
0rCau!B^^i2^or^^ree&#13;
ndrtaQs&#13;
VSp&#13;
CerS&#13;
'' %£**t0Dight at 7:30 pm"&#13;
MEETING Inter-Varsity Rough eXsS5r&#13;
P&#13;
°&#13;
nSOredbyuw-Extension.&#13;
Main D1S1. O pen to aU i nterested Gr&#13;
°&#13;
UP meeting 12:30&#13;
"&#13;
1:30 P ™- in&#13;
FILM "The Black Woman" will&#13;
MSU. The program is free and own to SenuhLP'm' Uni°&#13;
n 20 7&#13;
' SP°&#13;
nsored &amp;X&#13;
LECTURE at 3p.m. in GR103 D BpImS, !&#13;
C' ™&#13;
Zilog, Inc., will talk on "Trends ^£0^^- ^&#13;
t&#13;
2I&#13;
of ComP&#13;
uter Design of&#13;
open to the public. oprocessers. The program is free and&#13;
MOVIE "Coal Miner's Daughter" will he «hnum „» 0 . .. tSSSS £ fab"&#13;
0" is «•" ?—£&#13;
'&#13;
PeM,r&#13;
*&#13;
tor&#13;
'' AdmlMi&#13;
°° »'&#13;
n a&#13;
-«&#13;
$1.00 for students and |S for others ParksIde&#13;
- Admission at the door is&#13;
MSma&#13;
C°&#13;
al Miner&#13;
'&#13;
S Daughter&#13;
" '*• repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
•ssasssssttsraM:&#13;
Monday. Feb. 9&#13;
ROUNDTARLEat 12 noon in Union 106. Prof. Florence Shipek will talk on&#13;
Economic and Social Impacts of W ater Rights Issues of Native Americans "&#13;
The program is free and open to the public. Americans.&#13;
COURSE "Effective Leadership, Motivating Employees and rnm&#13;
UW^Extension t&#13;
°&#13;
day&#13;
' CaU ®Xt 2312 for more detafls&#13;
- Sponsored by&#13;
Corinthians Smau Group meeUng&#13;
'&#13;
Tuesday, Feb. 10&#13;
BLOOD DR IVE from 9 a.m. 'til 2:30 p.m. in Union 104-106. All are welcome&#13;
Sponsored by the ParksIde Health Office. welcome.&#13;
S&#13;
^™*il5°&#13;
ld: ?,&#13;
PP&#13;
°^&#13;
tles and Risks&#13;
" at 7:30 p.m. in Union 104. Call ext. 2259&#13;
for more information. The program is open to the public.&#13;
DANCE " Old Style Night" featuring "Sierra" at 9 p.m. in Union Square. Admission&#13;
is free. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
MEETING Peer Support meeting at 1 p.m. in Moln. 111. S ubject: study tips.&#13;
Refreshments served. .&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 11&#13;
COFFEE HOUSE at 12 noon in Union Square featuring "Free Hot Lunch " Admission&#13;
is free. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
FILM "Wilmington 10" will be shown at 1 p.m. in Union 207. The program is free&#13;
and open to the public. Sponsored by the Minority Student Union.&#13;
MEETING Peer Support meeting at 7:30 p.m. in Moln. 111. Subject: study tips.&#13;
Refreshments served.&#13;
BROWN BAG LUNCH/LECTURE Inter-Varsity Brown Bag Lunch Lecture, 1-2&#13;
p.m., Union 106. Everyone is welcome.&#13;
MEETING Medical technology freshmen and sophomores are requested to attend&#13;
an important meeting at 1 p.m. in Union 104. D iscussion will be the Medical&#13;
Technology curriculum by the Med. Tech. faculty.&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
MEN'S BOWLING TEAM MEMBERS (back row, left to right)&#13;
Jerry Zlgner, Andy Slkorskl, (front row, left to right) Jay&#13;
Podella and John Peterson.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
Meatmen take Invitational&#13;
by Dan McCormack&#13;
The Parkside wrestling team&#13;
travelled last weekend to the&#13;
Windy City to take part in the&#13;
Chicago State Invitational&#13;
wrestling meet. Parkside came&#13;
back with a good first place finish.&#13;
AH ten of the Rangers entered in&#13;
the various weight classes scored&#13;
points toward the overall team&#13;
championship.&#13;
Parkside's only first place&#13;
finisher at the meet was Ron&#13;
Perron in the 142 pound weight&#13;
class. Second place finishers for&#13;
coach Jim Koch's team were&#13;
Dean Quam at 118 pounds, Brian&#13;
Bowling team&#13;
wins tourney&#13;
The Parkside men's bowling&#13;
team won it's first invitational&#13;
tournament of the year at Northern&#13;
Illinois University at&#13;
DeKalb. John Peterson, Jay&#13;
Podella, Andy Sikorski, and Jerry&#13;
Zigner represented Parkside as&#13;
they rolled a 2570 3 -game series&#13;
and defeated the host school by&#13;
one pin.&#13;
Over semester break the&#13;
Parkside men's and women's&#13;
teams competed in the collegiate&#13;
spectacular in Las Vegas against&#13;
over 100 colleges and universities&#13;
from all over the country. The&#13;
Parkside men made the best&#13;
showing with a 44th place total for&#13;
all events (team, doubles and&#13;
singles combined). Haig Derderian&#13;
and John Peterson led the&#13;
way as both bowled at a 200&#13;
average clip for the entire tournament.&#13;
A highlight for the&#13;
Parkside men was when they met&#13;
and defeated Wichita State&#13;
University, the number one&#13;
ranked team in the country, in an&#13;
individual team match. The&#13;
Parkside women showed consistent&#13;
form throughout the&#13;
tournament. While not placing&#13;
high in the overall competition,&#13;
the women's team of Lisa Peckus,&#13;
Sharon Murphy, Ellie Becwar and&#13;
Jan Oechler rolled games consistently&#13;
in the 150 - 160 range.&#13;
Table tennis&#13;
winners&#13;
Khai Luc, Tom Webers and&#13;
Brian Walley placed 1st, 2nd, and&#13;
3rd respectively among 11 competitors&#13;
in Parkside's ACU-I&#13;
qualifying table tennis tourney&#13;
held Jan. 26. Luc and Walley will&#13;
advance to the ACU-I Regional&#13;
Tournament in Milwaukee on Feb.&#13;
12-14, playing both singles and&#13;
doubles matches.&#13;
The other eight competitors&#13;
were Tom Barrett, Colin Cronin,&#13;
Marcello Greco, Tod Harding,&#13;
Dave Koenen, Gary Ledger and&#13;
Gary Neu.&#13;
One Of Wisconsin's Finest Furriers&#13;
Cefifi ati/l fjMifxiHj&#13;
FURS "SINCE 1912 SINCE 1912&#13;
COMPLETE STOCK OF FURS&#13;
COATS • JACKETS • LEATHERS&#13;
CLEANING GLAZING REMODELING&#13;
STORAGE&#13;
654-2138 5601 6th Ave.&#13;
Irek at 190 and Paul Roth at&#13;
heavyweight.&#13;
Third place finishers were Tom&#13;
Vania at 126, Bob Pekarske at 150,&#13;
Russ Drankiewicz at 167 and Kieth&#13;
Reicher at 177 pounds.&#13;
Finishing fourth for the Rangers&#13;
in the eight - team event were&#13;
Mike Muckerheide at 158 and Kieth&#13;
Olson, who is filling in for the&#13;
injured Dan Winter at 134. Winter&#13;
injured his knee in practice. At&#13;
this time, it is not known what the&#13;
extent of the injury is and whether&#13;
or not it will keep him out of the&#13;
national tournaments, which are&#13;
less than a month away.&#13;
This Saturday the Rangers&#13;
travel to Marquette, Michigan to&#13;
take on a tough Northern&#13;
Michigan team which, like the&#13;
Rangers, is ranked among the top&#13;
ten NCAA Division II schools in&#13;
the country.&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
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— Ballet Shoes — T ap Shoes —&#13;
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share the day...&#13;
Good times, good food&#13;
and the easy taste of Bud*.&#13;
Welcome home.&#13;
Budweiser KING OF BEERS' • ANHEUSER BUSCH INC • SI LOUIS &#13;
Thursday, Februarys, 1981 RANGER&#13;
ssrer «•=-&gt;.&#13;
Rangers streak reaches four&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Despite Parkside's losing&#13;
record, men's basketball coach&#13;
Steve Stephens' tough early&#13;
season scheduling for his team&#13;
seems to be paying off right now&#13;
against some very tough opponents&#13;
in their own division.&#13;
After losing the year's first seven&#13;
games, the Rangers improved&#13;
their season record to 9-11 with&#13;
wins over two strong opponents&#13;
last week. On Thursday, they&#13;
overpowered Northern Michigan&#13;
78-63. They beat Chicago State&#13;
Saturday on a last second shot 60-&#13;
58 to run their present winning&#13;
streak to four games.&#13;
Northern Michigan had a rare&#13;
height advantage over Parkside&#13;
and gave the Rangers a little&#13;
trouble in the first half, at times&#13;
holding a 10 point lead. With four&#13;
and a half minutes left in the first&#13;
half, Northern Michigan called a&#13;
time-out and the Rangers used&#13;
that time-out to regroup and rally&#13;
to close the gap to two points at&#13;
half time, 33-31.&#13;
The two teams played evenly for&#13;
the opening 3 1/2 minutes of the&#13;
second half before the Rangers&#13;
put together an 18-6 scoring spurt&#13;
to take a 59-46 lead with 10:35 left&#13;
to play. Try as they may, Northern&#13;
Michigan couldn't get&#13;
together to overcome Parkside's&#13;
quickness. "I knew that if we got a&#13;
good lead and forced them into a&#13;
man-to-man defense, it was our&#13;
game," commented coach&#13;
Stephens.&#13;
Stephens started 6-5 John&#13;
Herndon at center in place of&#13;
Curtis Green. "Curtis is a little&#13;
rusty from his absence," said&#13;
Stephens. "John (Herndon)&#13;
played very well inside for us." On&#13;
Herndon's starting assignment&#13;
Stephens said, "I don't decide who&#13;
plays; the players do."&#13;
"Our defense was the key to the&#13;
game," Stephens said. "Chuckie&#13;
Perry put pressure on their point&#13;
guard and that let the rest of the&#13;
team anticipate better."&#13;
Parkside may have to pay some&#13;
dues to Northern Michigan later in&#13;
the season in Marquette. With the&#13;
reputation and record that Northern&#13;
Michigan has built up,&#13;
which is now 14-5, the Rangers&#13;
better not get overconfident when&#13;
they visit them.&#13;
If there ever was a game that&#13;
could really be termed' as a nail&#13;
biter, Parkside's game Saturday&#13;
night against Chicago State would&#13;
go down in nail biter history. For&#13;
such a small crowd, the noise that&#13;
followed Curtis Green's tip-in at&#13;
the buzzer was impressive to say&#13;
the least. The opposing coach&#13;
complained to the officials about&#13;
the noise, stating that it was&#13;
impossible to hear the buzzer over&#13;
the crowd. All of the Parkside fans&#13;
that I talked to after the game&#13;
swore that they were sure they&#13;
heard the buzzer that ends the&#13;
game after the ball went through&#13;
the net, although admittedly with&#13;
some bias.&#13;
About the tip-in that the fans&#13;
that were at the game will&#13;
remember for awhile, coach&#13;
Stephens commented, "I don't&#13;
know how he did it."&#13;
Parkside and Chicago State&#13;
played evenly during most of the&#13;
first half until Chicago State put&#13;
on a scoring spurt in the last four&#13;
RANGER photo by Mark Anderson&#13;
BUSTER WEBB pulls down defensive rebound In Ranger's win&#13;
over Chicago State last Saturday.&#13;
minutes of the first half, outscoring&#13;
the Rangers 12-4, to take a&#13;
six point lead at the intermission,&#13;
33-27.&#13;
Parkside trailed most of the&#13;
second half, if only by a few&#13;
points, until John Herndon scored&#13;
on a short jumper to tie the score&#13;
for the final time at 58. Chicago&#13;
State committed a fatal turnover&#13;
shortly thereafter to allow&#13;
Parkside to run a successful stall&#13;
to set up a last shot. A Parkside&#13;
time-out with 15 seconds left on&#13;
the clock was called to set up for&#13;
the winning shot.&#13;
"We were debating about going&#13;
for an out of bo unds play last shot&#13;
or a set up play last shot. They&#13;
made it tough to get the ball to&#13;
Chuckie, so Blue (Reggie Anderson)&#13;
took over at that point,"&#13;
Stephens said.&#13;
Anderson, one of Parkside's two&#13;
ail-Americans last year, took the&#13;
ball inside and handed it off to&#13;
Green, who missed his first lay up&#13;
attempt but went up for the game&#13;
tip-in as the buzzer sounded.&#13;
Stephens has nothing but praise&#13;
after the game for all of his&#13;
players. "Reggie is an ailAmerican&#13;
and he's playing like&#13;
it," he said. As for Herndon, who&#13;
led the Rangers with 15 points and&#13;
contributed six rebounds,&#13;
Stephens said, "John's playing the&#13;
hell out of it right now. He's&#13;
playing the game like it's supposed&#13;
to be played."&#13;
"The teams were tight in the&#13;
first half," said Stephens. "A lot of&#13;
the guys (from both teams) grew&#13;
up together in Chicago and&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
PARKSIDE'S John Herndon goes up to take ball away from&#13;
Northern Michigan opponent.&#13;
everybody was trying to feel each&#13;
other out. Both teams have&#13;
respect for each other."&#13;
Both teams play much the same&#13;
style. Many balls were tipped&#13;
around a few times before either&#13;
team gained control. "It got a&#13;
little ragged and rough out there&#13;
at times," said Stephens, "but&#13;
that's how we play and that's how&#13;
they play. That's the kind of game&#13;
I like."&#13;
The Rangers are on the road&#13;
this week, travelling to UWWhitewater&#13;
on Tuesday and to&#13;
Dubuque, Iowa to battle Loras&#13;
College this Saturday. On Monday&#13;
night, the Rangers will be home to&#13;
battle a tough team from Saginaw&#13;
Valley State, and then will host&#13;
Lakeland College on Wednesday&#13;
For a small fee of $2 students can&#13;
come and see a hell of a good&#13;
basketball game on either one of&#13;
those nights.&#13;
RESULTS&#13;
Tuesday, Feb. 3&#13;
Parkside - 66&#13;
Whitewater - 48&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
Eric Posey&#13;
Matthew Johnson&#13;
M. Mindeman&#13;
Bruce Lamb&#13;
Gregg Upton&#13;
E. Montgomery&#13;
Andy Kaufman&#13;
Pete Marana&#13;
Jeff Buelow&#13;
J. Sobolewski&#13;
Box Scores&#13;
FG-FGA FT REB TP UW-Parkside&#13;
TOTALS&#13;
2 8 0 3 4&#13;
4 9 7 6 15&#13;
4 13 6 5 14&#13;
1 1 0 2 2&#13;
4 7 0 8 8&#13;
2 6 4 3 8&#13;
1 2 0 2 2&#13;
0 1 4 1 4&#13;
0 0 2 0 2&#13;
2 2 0 0 4&#13;
20 49 23 35 63&#13;
Arthur Bright&#13;
Reggie Anderson&#13;
John Herndon&#13;
Walter Greene&#13;
Charles Perry&#13;
Don Blythe&#13;
Curtis Green&#13;
WilbertWebb&#13;
Dave McLiesh&#13;
Tom Trotter&#13;
Darrell Space&#13;
Peril Hood&#13;
UW-Parkside FG-FGA FT REB TP&#13;
Arthur Bright&#13;
Reggie Anderson&#13;
John Herndon&#13;
Walter Greene&#13;
Charles Perry&#13;
WilbertWebb&#13;
Curtis Green&#13;
Tom Trotter&#13;
Dave McLeish&#13;
Don Blythe&#13;
TOTALS&#13;
FG-FGA FT REB TP&#13;
2 8 2 8 6&#13;
10 18 2 7 22&#13;
10 14 0 5 20&#13;
6 12 3 4 15&#13;
4 12 0 4 8&#13;
0 1 0 1 0&#13;
2 4 1 2 5&#13;
0 2 0 0 0&#13;
1 2 0 0 2&#13;
0 0 1 0 0 0&#13;
0 0 0 0 0&#13;
o 0 0 0 0&#13;
0&#13;
o&#13;
35 73 8 39 78&#13;
TOTALS&#13;
2 6 0 1 4&#13;
6 10 1 11 13&#13;
V 12 1 6 15&#13;
4 10 0 2 8&#13;
4 10 2 4 10&#13;
1 3 0 2 2&#13;
1 5 2 5 4&#13;
0 3 0 1 0&#13;
2 5 0 2 4&#13;
0 0 0 0 0&#13;
27 64 6 38 60&#13;
Chicago State FG-FGA FT REB TP&#13;
Ray Coleman&#13;
Ron Collum&#13;
Larry Lowe&#13;
James Stephens&#13;
Percy Leonard&#13;
Curtis Tillman&#13;
Jim Linn&#13;
17&#13;
2&#13;
12&#13;
11&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
1&#13;
17&#13;
6&#13;
10&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
8&#13;
0&#13;
TOTALS 27 60 35 58 </text>
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              <text>SUFAC OKs final budget</text>
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              <text>l&#13;
IP University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
SUFAC OKs final budget&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
The Segregated University Fees&#13;
Allocations Committee (SUFAC)&#13;
has approved the final auxiliary&#13;
budget for the 1981-82 academic&#13;
year. The final figure, as approved&#13;
by P.S.G.A. Senate's&#13;
emergency meeting held on&#13;
December 22 a nd reaffirmed on&#13;
January 19, is $583,441. This figure&#13;
represents a 4.55% i ncrease over&#13;
the 1980-81 final allocations&#13;
($556,893). Alan Guskin, Chancellor,&#13;
is expected to approve this&#13;
auxiliary budget within the next&#13;
few days.&#13;
Greg Davies, chairman of&#13;
SUFAC, estimated that each fulltime&#13;
student at Parkside will be&#13;
paying about $144 in segregated&#13;
fees for the 1981-82 academic year.&#13;
The segregated fees plus the 50&#13;
cent United Council fee should not&#13;
increase in cost over the 1980-81&#13;
fees if the projected student&#13;
enrollment is correctly estimated.&#13;
Student Health was granted a&#13;
budget increased by $8637. K athy&#13;
Slama, PSGA assistant President&#13;
Pro Tempore, reports that this&#13;
increase will provide another&#13;
nurse, increase typist hours, and&#13;
permit TB testing for both nursing&#13;
and education students. Last year,&#13;
Student Health received the major&#13;
budget hike, which amounted to&#13;
$14,129.&#13;
Budget increases ranging&#13;
around $3000 were granted to&#13;
Union Operations, Athletics,&#13;
Intramurals and Recreation,&#13;
,PAB, Student Activities Office,&#13;
and Housing. SOC received an&#13;
increase of $2,250. PS GA, Student&#13;
Activities Building and Ranger&#13;
received increases of $450, $650,&#13;
and $976, respectively. Central&#13;
Administration suggested that an&#13;
8% increase in all budgets would&#13;
be reasonable, considering&#13;
current inflation.&#13;
SUFAC and Child Care Center&#13;
received budget decreases of $100&#13;
and $425 respectively.&#13;
Cooperative Services Collective&#13;
(CSC) was dropped from the&#13;
budget. Slama said that CSC is no&#13;
longer considered a student&#13;
organization because CSC would&#13;
not sign a rental agreement with&#13;
the university.&#13;
Business Services for auxiliary&#13;
accounting costs was added to the&#13;
budget for the first time. This&#13;
represents a charge made by&#13;
Central Administration for&#13;
computer time.&#13;
Winter Carnival was also added&#13;
to the budget. Entertainment&#13;
from Bad Boy and Sierra will cost&#13;
$1550. Publicity will cost about&#13;
$700. The remaining expenditures&#13;
will be used for prizes, the Blood&#13;
Drive and miscellaneous expenses.&#13;
&#13;
Any further information&#13;
regarding SUFAC's budget&#13;
allocations can be obtained from&#13;
the PSGA Office or by calling&#13;
extension 2244.&#13;
FINAL REQUEST PRELIM. FINAL&#13;
NAME&#13;
Union&#13;
1980/81&#13;
Operations 194,857&#13;
Union&#13;
Debt Service 105,500&#13;
Athletics 48,790&#13;
Intramurals/&#13;
48,790&#13;
Recreation 35,000&#13;
Health 49,685&#13;
Parkside&#13;
49,685&#13;
Activities Board 33,460&#13;
Performing Arts&#13;
33,460&#13;
&amp; L ectures&#13;
Student Organization&#13;
Council 22,320&#13;
Student Activities&#13;
22,320&#13;
Office 14,793&#13;
Ranger 14,286&#13;
Housing 10,448&#13;
Child Care&#13;
Center 6,931&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. 6,300&#13;
Student Activities&#13;
6,300&#13;
Building 2,400&#13;
SUFAC 300&#13;
Co-operative Services&#13;
Collective 8,823&#13;
Business Services -&#13;
8,823&#13;
Aux. Accounting Costs&#13;
Winter&#13;
Carnival&#13;
TOTALS $556,893&#13;
1981-82 1981-82 1981-82&#13;
194,857 197,857 197,857&#13;
105,500&#13;
51,585&#13;
105,500&#13;
51,585&#13;
105,500&#13;
51,585&#13;
37,605&#13;
58,322&#13;
37,605&#13;
58,322&#13;
37,605&#13;
58,322&#13;
25,210 27,227*&#13;
8,910 8,910&#13;
26,920 24,570 24,570&#13;
15,976&#13;
15,261.60&#13;
13,789&#13;
17,586&#13;
15,261.60&#13;
13,789&#13;
15,976&#13;
15,261.60&#13;
13,789&#13;
17,586&#13;
15,261.60&#13;
13,789&#13;
17,586&#13;
15,262*&#13;
13,789&#13;
6,506&#13;
6,750&#13;
6,506&#13;
6,750&#13;
6,506&#13;
6,750&#13;
3,050&#13;
200&#13;
3,050&#13;
200&#13;
5,722 5,722&#13;
3,000 3,000 3,000&#13;
$581,423.60 $583,441&#13;
•Changed during finals&#13;
Workers^ HAGGLUND (left), Director of the School for&#13;
Labor Studies program&#13;
to begin this spring&#13;
University of Wisconsin officials&#13;
and state labor leaders outlined&#13;
plans here Jan. 14 for a Labor&#13;
Studies program; the first of its&#13;
kind in the state, to be offered&#13;
jointly by UW-Parkside and&#13;
University Extension's School for&#13;
Workers.&#13;
The new program, scheduled to&#13;
begin in September, 1981, will lead&#13;
either to a bachelor's degree in&#13;
Labor and Industrial Relations or&#13;
to a two - year certificate in Labor&#13;
Studies. Neither option previously&#13;
has been available in a&#13;
collaborative program between a&#13;
UW campus and the School for&#13;
Workers.&#13;
A recent survey of 59 unions&#13;
representing about 50,000 union&#13;
members in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin and northern Illinois&#13;
determined overwhelming support&#13;
for a structured Labor&#13;
Studies program. The survey,&#13;
conducted jointly by UW-Parkside&#13;
and Gateway Technical Institute,&#13;
also revealed that programs run&#13;
by the School for Workers are the&#13;
most frequently used source of&#13;
labor education by both large and&#13;
small unions.&#13;
A director for the new program&#13;
will be jointly selected and funded&#13;
by UW-Parkside and the School&#13;
for Workers, and faculty from&#13;
both units will teach courses in the&#13;
program, according to UW-P&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin and&#13;
School for Workers Director&#13;
George Hagglund.&#13;
At Wednesday's meeting,&#13;
Guskin, Hagglund and other&#13;
university officials discussed the&#13;
program with a number of labor&#13;
leaders including Ralph Koenig,&#13;
director of United Auto Workers'&#13;
Region 10, and other UAW officials&#13;
including Jack Rice, international&#13;
representative, Ralph&#13;
Amerling, education director,&#13;
Tony Valeo, former international&#13;
representative; John Schmitt,&#13;
president of the Wisconsin AFLCIO;&#13;
Bert McNamara, director of&#13;
United Steelworkers District 32,&#13;
and Don Marzec, Steelworkers'&#13;
international representative; and&#13;
Arnie Potthast, chief supervisor,&#13;
state Vocational - Techinical&#13;
Education Board.&#13;
A primary goal of t he program,&#13;
planners say, is to provide the&#13;
education necessary for union&#13;
members to assume leadership&#13;
positions within their unions. In&#13;
addition to providing specialized&#13;
labor courses, the program will&#13;
offer courses emphasizing the&#13;
economic, social, political and&#13;
cultural contributions of labor.&#13;
General university degree&#13;
requirements also will have to be&#13;
met.&#13;
The specialized labor courses&#13;
which will be part of t he program&#13;
reflect the interests of the labor&#13;
unions which responded to the&#13;
needs assessment Survey. These&#13;
courses include Labor&#13;
Management Relations, Labor&#13;
History, Protective Labor&#13;
Legislation, Grievance Handling&#13;
and Arbitration, Collective&#13;
Bargaining, Union Administration,&#13;
Production Standards&#13;
/ Job Evaluation / Wage&#13;
Incentive, and Comparative&#13;
Labor Movements.&#13;
Students who complete the two -&#13;
year certificate will have satisfied&#13;
about 60 percent of the&#13;
requirements for a B.S. degree in&#13;
Labor and Industrial Relations&#13;
and half of the university's&#13;
general degree requirements.&#13;
Scheduling of courses in the&#13;
program will be geared to the&#13;
needs of part - time students.&#13;
Many students will find that&#13;
employers will reimburse their&#13;
tuition costs. Such reimbursement,&#13;
for example, is part of&#13;
the new labor contract between&#13;
the UAW and American Motors&#13;
Corp.&#13;
Mourning in&#13;
Main Place&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
Parkside students participated in a silent vigil Tuesday afternoon&#13;
"to protest the inauguration of Reagan and to say we&#13;
will stand together for the next four years."&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• From the Parking Lot: John Lennon&#13;
• Movie reviews: Christmas's big&#13;
moneymakers&#13;
• Basketball improves record &#13;
2 Thursday, January 22, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Student clarifies parking problem, policy&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In the November 20, 1980 iss ue&#13;
of the Ranger there was, what I&#13;
would call, an inaccurate&#13;
statement in he t Contact section of&#13;
the paper. I am the Parkside&#13;
student who brought the Security&#13;
situation to the attention of PSGA.&#13;
The article contained the&#13;
following statement: "Brinkman&#13;
said that, in this case procedure&#13;
was not followed. He was more&#13;
than glad to clear up the&#13;
problem." This is the statement&#13;
which I have written about earlier&#13;
in this editorial reply.&#13;
Mr. Brinkman was much less&#13;
than helpful, in fact, he was rude.&#13;
Extremely rude. I would just like&#13;
to clear up this statement. Mr.&#13;
Brinkman also was not glad to&#13;
clear up the problem at hand. Mr.&#13;
Brinkman would not listen to my&#13;
problem until after I had spoken&#13;
with Mr. Goetz, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Administration and&#13;
Fiscal Affairs. It was not until&#13;
after I had told Mr. Goetz how&#13;
Brinkman had treated me that&#13;
Mr. Brinkman would listen to and&#13;
take care of this problem.&#13;
I would also like to take this&#13;
chance to remind the student body&#13;
of policy for parking tickets.&#13;
Procedure states: A minimum of&#13;
two warning tickets will be issued&#13;
to any vehicle violating any of the&#13;
following parking violations&#13;
before a parking violation ticket is&#13;
issued: A. parking prohibited&#13;
(posted) B. parking in non -&#13;
designated area C. no permit D&#13;
parking with improper permit for&#13;
area E. improper parking in&#13;
designated area F. parked in&#13;
physically disabled stall G.&#13;
restricted parking (specific time)!&#13;
Thank you for this chance to&#13;
express my feelings and clear up&#13;
something that has been bothering&#13;
me. c. Sincerely,&#13;
Mike Loos&#13;
Refutes article on nuclear power's 'malignant' nature&#13;
by Kelly Starks&#13;
Ms. Elzinga wrote an article in&#13;
the last 1980 issue of the Ranger in&#13;
which she disagrees with the&#13;
previous article by Terry&#13;
Rasmussen and myself, and lists&#13;
what she believes to be proof of&#13;
nuclear power's "malignant"&#13;
nature, although she doesn't&#13;
argue any of our points. I will&#13;
attempt to prove that her&#13;
statements are inaccurate and&#13;
strongly biased by her personal&#13;
beliefs rather than by any&#13;
research she has done.&#13;
Ms. Elzinga expresses her belief&#13;
that uranium miners who are&#13;
subjected to radon gas have&#13;
greatly increased chances of lung&#13;
cancer. Radon is common in all&#13;
deep rock mines, although not to&#13;
the same extent as in uranium&#13;
mines. Even before ventilating&#13;
systems were required, the lung&#13;
cancer rates were about average&#13;
for deep - rock miners with the&#13;
exception of the rates for coal&#13;
miners, which were far higher.&#13;
With the new ventilation systems,&#13;
the lung cancer rates for uranium&#13;
miners are among the lowest for&#13;
the mining industry.&#13;
Mention is made of the ore&#13;
tailings which now constitute&#13;
approximately 140 million tons.&#13;
These tailings still contain&#13;
uranium, but in concentrations too&#13;
low to be presently economically&#13;
recoverable. Previous to 1976 the&#13;
federal government had no&#13;
regulations regarding disposal, so&#13;
many companies dumped them&#13;
into piles. Some of these tailings&#13;
were even used in making concrete&#13;
for the foundations of local&#13;
homes. Since its formation, the&#13;
Nuclear Regulatory Commission&#13;
has been attempting to regulate&#13;
this, and is now in the process of&#13;
properly disposing of these&#13;
tailings. The federal government&#13;
is also removing the contaminated&#13;
concrete. Although it is important,&#13;
Ms. Elzinga greatly exaggerates&#13;
the danger to public health,&#13;
claiming ". . . an abnormal increase&#13;
in babies with congenital&#13;
defects, and an abnormally high&#13;
rate of leukemia in one of these&#13;
areas." This conflicts with the&#13;
statistics from over the last fifty&#13;
years, which have shown no increase&#13;
in the cancer rates of the&#13;
occupants of these homes, and no&#13;
increase in the birth defect rates.&#13;
The particular incident Ms.&#13;
Elzinga notes pertaining to fuel&#13;
fabrication is that of the Kerr -&#13;
McGee plant which became&#13;
famous due to the case of Karen&#13;
Silkwood. Since this, is the only&#13;
example she cites, it seems fair to&#13;
point out that not only is it not an&#13;
average standard for processing&#13;
plants, this plant only produced&#13;
fuel elements for experimental&#13;
reactors. The Kerr - McGee plant&#13;
was noted for its poor performance,&#13;
and eventually went&#13;
out of business due to poor workmanship.&#13;
There has never been&#13;
any documented claim of safety&#13;
violations in this plant, and no&#13;
workers are known to have been&#13;
contaminated. Ms. Elzinga's&#13;
article flatly states that 87&#13;
workers at the Kerr - McGee plant&#13;
had been contaminated with&#13;
plutonium.&#13;
The case of Karen Silkwood has&#13;
been stated as being a classic&#13;
example of the nuclear industry's&#13;
inhumanity in the interests of&#13;
profit. Ms. Silkwood had&#13;
originally charged Kerr - McGee&#13;
with safety violations and was&#13;
attempting to prosecute through&#13;
the union. She was then found to&#13;
be contaminated with plutonium&#13;
and died shortly thereafter in an&#13;
automobile accident while driving&#13;
to a meeting with union&#13;
representatives and a New York&#13;
Times reporter. Supposedly she&#13;
was bringing documentation to&#13;
prove her charges of safety&#13;
violations at the plant.&#13;
Immediately claims arose that&#13;
she had been deliberately contaminated,&#13;
and later run off the&#13;
road and killed by Kerr - McGee&#13;
as part of the a cover - up effort.&#13;
The investigation showed no&#13;
evidence of foul play in the car&#13;
accident, and her autopsy&#13;
revealed excessive amounts of&#13;
tranquilizers and alcohol in her&#13;
blood. There is no evidence&#13;
supporting the existance of the file&#13;
she was reportedly carrying.&#13;
The idea that the company had&#13;
contaminated her is somewhat&#13;
ridiculous when you consider that&#13;
her contamination with plutonium&#13;
is the last thing the company&#13;
would want, since it would lend&#13;
credence to her claims of the plant&#13;
contaminating personnel. It&#13;
seems probable that Ms. Silkwood&#13;
inadvertently contaminated&#13;
herself while trying to doctor&#13;
urine samples that were going to&#13;
be used to test her for contamination,&#13;
especially since there&#13;
were irregularities in these&#13;
samples. In any event, Kerr -&#13;
McGee was never charged with&#13;
contaminating her, they were&#13;
instead charged with lax security&#13;
procedures which allowed&#13;
someone to smuggle out tiny&#13;
quantities of plutonium which&#13;
were then used to contaminate her&#13;
(sources for this are the New York&#13;
Times, and Time and Science&#13;
magazines).&#13;
Ms. Elzinga then goes from fuel&#13;
fabrication to its use in reactors&#13;
with the statement ". . . the&#13;
uranium has been converted into&#13;
fuel for for the dragon ...," which&#13;
seems to represent a somewhat&#13;
biased attitude. She mentions that&#13;
Three Mile Island (TMI) serves as&#13;
a warning "to move swiftly away&#13;
from this ominous source of&#13;
power."&#13;
The TMI accident has served to&#13;
greatly reassure all those connected&#13;
with nuclear power of the&#13;
resiliency and failsafe nature of&#13;
the design of the safety systems&#13;
and reactors used commercially&#13;
in this country. As more evidence&#13;
and test results on the TMI&#13;
reactor and the area surrounding&#13;
it has come in, it has been proven&#13;
that no member of the public or&#13;
public property has in any way&#13;
been harmed, with the exception&#13;
of economic and psychological&#13;
effects. These psychological effects&#13;
are due'mainly to the incredibly&#13;
inaccurate and sensationalized&#13;
news reporting&#13;
surrounding the accident. Horror&#13;
stories of deformed fetuses&#13;
conflict strongly with the drop in&#13;
miscarriages and pre - natal&#13;
abnormalities in the area after the&#13;
accident, and the fears of long -&#13;
term damage from radiation&#13;
conflict with the total lack of&#13;
detectable radiation contamination.&#13;
&#13;
The reactor, despite rather than&#13;
because of the actions of the&#13;
control room personnel,&#13;
automatically shut itself down&#13;
safety. All safety systems and&#13;
structures performed perfectly,&#13;
and in many instances far exRanger&#13;
wants&#13;
to hear from you!&#13;
Got a gripe, a question, a startling revelation,&#13;
a compliment, a rebuttal, or something on your&#13;
mind that you want to share? Write a letter to&#13;
the editor! Just follow the guidelines printed in&#13;
the masthead (to the right).&#13;
ceeded their design performance.&#13;
The TMI accident — although&#13;
important — can hardly be used&#13;
as a prophetic warning against&#13;
nuclear power since it proved that&#13;
the designed reactor safety&#13;
systems do perform as expected&#13;
in actual reactor accidents.&#13;
Ms. Elzinga mentions three&#13;
scientists from General Electric&#13;
who resigned their management&#13;
positions in order to ". . . commit&#13;
(themselves) totally to the&#13;
education of the public on all&#13;
aspects and dangers of nuclear&#13;
power ..." There are about 50,000&#13;
scientists and engineers working&#13;
in the nuclear power industry,&#13;
30,000 of which recently signed&#13;
and sent to the president a petition&#13;
advocating the immediate, accelerated&#13;
development of the&#13;
nuclear power industry. Along&#13;
with this came the strong endorsement&#13;
of nuclear power by&#13;
professional societies ranging&#13;
from the American Association of&#13;
Engineering Societies to the&#13;
American Medical Association.&#13;
The recent international meeting&#13;
in Europe of the heads of all major&#13;
world governments in regard to&#13;
possible solutions to the energy&#13;
crisis strongly and unanimously&#13;
advocated the expansion of&#13;
nuclear power. If one is attempting&#13;
to decide the issue of&#13;
nuclear power on the basis of the&#13;
reputations and numbers of advocates&#13;
of the particular points of&#13;
view, three G. E. scientists can&#13;
hardly be considered a decisive&#13;
edge.&#13;
Mention is also made of the&#13;
"problem" of nuclear wastes, that&#13;
there "... is no known permanent&#13;
storage method." There are actually&#13;
several known methods.&#13;
The two Ms. Elzinga lists; granite&#13;
and salt burial, are either in&#13;
commercial operation or are&#13;
under construction internationally.&#13;
The chief problem&#13;
that stands in the way of a permanent&#13;
disposal site in the United&#13;
States is political, not technical.&#13;
Fortunately the political climate&#13;
has changed drastically in the last&#13;
year, resulting in a dramatic&#13;
increase in effort and funding to&#13;
resolve the issue.&#13;
It is important to remember&#13;
that most nuclear wastes are not&#13;
in any way a product of nuclear&#13;
power. Under one - tenth of high -&#13;
level nuclear waste is a result of&#13;
nuclear power; some is medical&#13;
waste, and 90% of the total is&#13;
from the military.&#13;
Ms. Elzinga's statement that&#13;
salt is unsuitable because it's&#13;
water - soluble is based on&#13;
ignorance. The main reason for&#13;
choosing salt formations is that&#13;
there can't be ground water if&#13;
there's salt, otherwise the salt&#13;
wouldn't still be there. If ground&#13;
water were suddenly introduced,&#13;
it would take thousands to tens of&#13;
thousands of years to dissolve the&#13;
salt surrounding the wastes and&#13;
expose the wastes to ground&#13;
water. Since the wastes are sealed&#13;
in glass, which is immune to&#13;
water, they would have to be&#13;
crushed, and the uranium&#13;
dissolved. After about seven&#13;
centuries the wastes are less toxic&#13;
than the original uranium ore.&#13;
After the thousands of years that&#13;
it would take to dissolve the salt,&#13;
the wastes would be effectively&#13;
harmless.&#13;
If Ms. Elzinga had bothered to&#13;
attend the guest lecture put on by&#13;
the Geology Club, or the&#13;
discussion by the Students for&#13;
Nuclear Rationality on nuclear&#13;
waste disposal (not to mention&#13;
doing a little research on the&#13;
topic), she might have realized&#13;
this. Considering the fact that Mr.&#13;
Rasmussen and I stated this all in&#13;
a previous article for the Ranger,&#13;
she might have become curious&#13;
enough to check it out.&#13;
Ms. Elizinga's articles usually&#13;
paint a picture of her as a town&#13;
crier alerting the public to an as -&#13;
yet unperceived danger that she&#13;
has discovered, and that the pro -&#13;
nuclear faction is trying to conceal.&#13;
I and most others who have&#13;
investigated Ms. Elzinga's&#13;
statements have found them to be&#13;
more of her misunderstanding of&#13;
the facts and technologies than&#13;
any actual danger. We've also&#13;
found that most of her new and&#13;
alarming information is old information&#13;
that others, rather than&#13;
concealing, had already investigated&#13;
and discredited years&#13;
ago.&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Q™3&#13;
" Business Manager&#13;
¥&#13;
ICii, 4* I News Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Edit0r&#13;
Brian Passino photo Edit0r&#13;
Ginger Helgeson Editor&#13;
n ^ STAFF&#13;
5:&#13;
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' M,ke Farrell# Dan Galbraith, Mike Holmdohl,&#13;
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RANGER fsVprinted&#13;
Uhv&#13;
CthA?,Ur&#13;
.&#13;
in9&#13;
(t&#13;
he academic year except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
Written oermisTin!?ic the&#13;
.&#13;
Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
All corrKDonrinnr J Wi* ,0r reprint any portion of RANGER.&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha wl 53141 addressed ,0: parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UWpapeTwIth'one6&#13;
Wk Wi&#13;
" be accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
eluded for verification"^&#13;
9&#13;
'"&#13;
5&#13;
' A" let,ers musf be signed and a telephone number inwi"&#13;
be withheld for valid reasons&#13;
reserves a°f editortaf Tues?&#13;
ay at 9 a.m. for publication on Thursday. The R&#13;
defamatory content privile9es 10 refusing to print letters which contain &#13;
RANGER&#13;
Writes book&#13;
Thursday, January 22, 1981&#13;
Kubly probes Swiss psyche&#13;
f\f Annma TV. 1&#13;
Sabbatical leaves approved!&#13;
Parkside Professor Herbert&#13;
Kubly dates the beginning of work&#13;
on his new book, "Native's&#13;
Return," to a 1951 v isit to Switzerland.&#13;
But in a special sense this&#13;
11th volume by the Wisconsin -&#13;
born author and National Book&#13;
Award winner has been a lifetime&#13;
in the making.&#13;
"An American of Swiss descent&#13;
unmasks an enigmatic land and&#13;
people," the book's dust jacket&#13;
trumpets beneath the title. Stein&#13;
and Day, the New York publishing&#13;
firm, will issue the book in mid -&#13;
April. &lt;&#13;
Though Kubly's home port is&#13;
Wisconsin — he has taught&#13;
creative writing at Parkside since&#13;
1969 and maintains a farm home&#13;
at New Glarus, a Wisconsin&#13;
community founded by Swiss&#13;
immigrants — his literary log&#13;
carries entries from moorings&#13;
across the face of Europe,&#13;
amassed in years as a traveler,&#13;
humanist and author.&#13;
Kubly's first book, "An&#13;
American in Italy," won a&#13;
National Book Award and was&#13;
followed by a number of sharply&#13;
observant reports from other&#13;
European locales including&#13;
"Easter in Sicily" and "Gods and&#13;
Heroes", a book on Greece in the&#13;
year before the military coup&#13;
which toppled King Constantine.&#13;
"Gods and Heroes" won a first&#13;
place award for non - fict ion from&#13;
the Council for Wisconsin Writers&#13;
and his latest fictional work, "The&#13;
Duchess of Glover" which is set&#13;
both in the U. S. and in a variety of&#13;
European countries, won the&#13;
council's fiction award.&#13;
Now, Kubly adds a new&#13;
dimension, probing what he calls&#13;
the "psychological human landscape"&#13;
of Switzerland. The book is&#13;
both "deeper" than its&#13;
predecessors and closer to his&#13;
heart, Kubly says, for he speaks&#13;
both as an observer and an insider&#13;
of the Swiss psyche.&#13;
A descendant of the Swiss who&#13;
settled in New Glarus more than&#13;
100 years ago, Kubly retains&#13;
hereditary Swiss citizenship in&#13;
addition to U. S. citizenship. He&#13;
has kept in touch with his Swiss&#13;
roots through frequent visits and&#13;
residences including a teaching&#13;
assignment at the University of&#13;
Zurich and, most recently, a 1977&#13;
summer stay.&#13;
'The Swiss are a very complex&#13;
people psychologically," says&#13;
Kubly. "They live in the oldest&#13;
democracy in the world. They are&#13;
intensely individualisti c;&#13;
traditional fighters for liberty;&#13;
each so aware of his own rights."&#13;
Yet, says Kubly, Switzerland is&#13;
an "artificial" country embracing&#13;
two religions, four languages and&#13;
three national groups, German,&#13;
French, and Italian, all crowded&#13;
together and forced into dialogue&#13;
by the omnipresent Alps.&#13;
"Jung (the psychologist) could&#13;
only happen in Switzerland," says&#13;
Kubly.&#13;
The turbulent alpine landscape,&#13;
subject to. avalanches, fierce&#13;
winter storms and spring floods&#13;
profoundly influences the Swiss&#13;
psyche, Kubly says.&#13;
Although the country is rapidly&#13;
becoming industrialized and&#13;
urbanized, each Swiss is only one&#13;
or two generations removed from&#13;
his parochial mountain village,&#13;
says Kubly. The isolated village&#13;
life led to intermarriage and inbreeding,&#13;
mental illness and a&#13;
profound depression rooted in the&#13;
oppression of the mountains, he&#13;
says.&#13;
A sort of national schizophrenia&#13;
prevails. Switzerland is the&#13;
richest nation in the world on a per&#13;
capita basis, has produced the&#13;
world's most sophisticated&#13;
bankers and boasts some of the&#13;
globe's best private art collections,&#13;
yet "emotionally, the people&#13;
still are subject to demonology,"&#13;
the heritage of v illage life, Kubly&#13;
says.&#13;
Survival in the modern world, a&#13;
persistent theme in both Kubly's&#13;
fiction and non - fiction, is evident&#13;
PROFESSOR HERBERT KUBLY&#13;
in the latest volume as well. The&#13;
Swiss are survivors. "They&#13;
squabble, but they manage well,"&#13;
says Kubly.&#13;
"I have been aware through the&#13;
years of social and political,&#13;
changes," Kubly writes in a&#13;
forward to the book. "But the&#13;
Swiss psyche and character are&#13;
slow in changing and my attention&#13;
has been focused on an introverted&#13;
and troubled people that&#13;
most of the world has met but few&#13;
have understood."&#13;
Kubly hopes his new book will&#13;
shed some light on the dark night&#13;
of the Swiss soul.&#13;
Though the critical notices&#13;
aren't in yet for "Native's&#13;
Return," his previous "travel&#13;
books" (Kubly abhors the term)&#13;
have received rave reviews with&#13;
critics who place them on a par&#13;
with such well - known "travel&#13;
writers" as D. H. Lawrence and&#13;
E. M. Forester.&#13;
Already embarked on yet&#13;
another new book, Kubly also is&#13;
immersed in classroom activities.&#13;
This spring, he will teach a&#13;
creative writing course for both&#13;
graduate and undergraduate&#13;
students at Parkside. The course&#13;
will take the form of a working&#13;
seminar with students working on&#13;
short stories, a novel or&#13;
playwriting.&#13;
"Emphasis will be on the&#13;
recognition and use of personal&#13;
experiences as source and&#13;
character as well as the substance&#13;
of both fiction and drama," he&#13;
said.&#13;
If the students master the&#13;
principal, they may be on their&#13;
way to careers as writers. It's&#13;
worked well for their teacher.&#13;
Sabbatical leave during the&#13;
1981-82 ac ademic year has been&#13;
approved for two Parkside faculty&#13;
members, Prof. Alan Grossberg,&#13;
physics and engineering science,&#13;
and Prof. John D. Buenker,&#13;
history.&#13;
A total of 60 UW System faculty&#13;
members was selected to participate&#13;
in the 1981-82 sabbatical&#13;
program, which is designed both&#13;
to provide opportunity for&#13;
professional growth and to bring&#13;
contemporary work in the participants'&#13;
academic areas into the&#13;
classroom. Each UW System&#13;
campus is awarded roughly one&#13;
sabbatical for each 100 tenured&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
Grossberg has been a member,&#13;
of the UW-Parkside faculty since&#13;
the campus opened in 1968 and&#13;
previously taught at the university's&#13;
Racine and Kenosha&#13;
campuses. He will use his sabbatical&#13;
to update two laboratory&#13;
manuals in engineering physics,&#13;
which he authored in the early&#13;
1970's using FORTRAN comp uter&#13;
language, to BASIC, a more easily&#13;
- learned introductory computer&#13;
language which has come into&#13;
increased usage with the advent of&#13;
inexpensive microcomputer&#13;
equipment.&#13;
Grossberg, who will be on leave&#13;
for both the fall and spring&#13;
semesters, also will develop a new&#13;
general introductory physics&#13;
course for science, engineering&#13;
and pre - medical students at UWP&#13;
and will be working in the field&#13;
of advanced digital electronics&#13;
with emphasis on the study of&#13;
microprocessors.&#13;
Buenker, a UW-P faculty&#13;
member since 1970 and director of&#13;
its Center for Multi - cultural&#13;
Studies since 1977, will use his&#13;
sabbatical for studies in U.S.&#13;
urban history.&#13;
Buenker plans to develop a&#13;
series of sample research projects&#13;
using resources of the Area&#13;
Research Center at UW-P to investigate&#13;
the course of urban&#13;
development in Rac ine and&#13;
Kenosha and to prepare a source&#13;
book adaptable to any city with&#13;
similar research materials. Die&#13;
research approach, designed to&#13;
heighten student appreciation of&#13;
the processes of urban development,&#13;
would be incorporated into&#13;
urban history courses at Parkside&#13;
and also would be available to&#13;
historians on other campuses.&#13;
Buenker, author of a number of&#13;
books and articles on urban&#13;
history, urban reform and immigration,&#13;
will be on sabbatical&#13;
during the s pring, 1982, s emester.&#13;
Career planning offered&#13;
A six session Career Planning&#13;
Seminar will be offered by&#13;
Community Student Services and&#13;
Student Development February 9,&#13;
11, 16, 18, 23, an d 25, 1981, from&#13;
1:00 p.m. to 1:50 p.m. Participants&#13;
will analyze their skills, values,&#13;
and interests, and learn different&#13;
ways of using the Career&#13;
Resource Center and how to&#13;
research a career. If you are&#13;
uncertain about your chosen&#13;
career, or would like some&#13;
assistance in making a career&#13;
choice, plan to attend this&#13;
seminar. Call Barbara Larson at&#13;
553-2122 or Wendi Schneider at 553-&#13;
2496 for more information or to&#13;
sign up. Deadline is Febraury 4.&#13;
Women abuse class given&#13;
"How to Counsel Men Who&#13;
Batter Their Wives/Women" is&#13;
the focus of an all-day educational&#13;
course and training program at&#13;
Parkside, in Tallent Hall, on&#13;
Friday, January 23, 8:30 a .m. to&#13;
3:45 p. m.&#13;
The course is directed at&#13;
professional counselors, social&#13;
workers, human service personnel,&#13;
and clergy, who have&#13;
initial and on-going contacts with&#13;
men who are known to have&#13;
physically abused their wives or&#13;
girl friends. The goal of the&#13;
program is to teach counselors&#13;
how to "deprogram" these men so&#13;
that wife/woman battery will be&#13;
eliminated from the couple's&#13;
relationship.&#13;
Faculty for the course include&#13;
Samuel D. Stellman, Professor of&#13;
Criminal Justice for the UWExtension&#13;
Criminal Justice Institute,&#13;
and Ralph A. Magnus,&#13;
A.C.S.W.&#13;
Registration will be accepted at&#13;
UW-Extension at Parkside. Call&#13;
Professor Kim Baugrud at 553-&#13;
2312. Fee for the all-day course is&#13;
$20.00.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
"National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO B ANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SONNE RS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F .D.I.C.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
'The Place To Buy Records'&#13;
^ 626 56th St. 654-2932 9&#13;
Rec Center&#13;
Winter Specials&#13;
Vi PRICE X-COUNTRY SKI RENTAL: M,W,F 1-2 pm&#13;
RED PIN BOWLING: 507GAME (M 9 am-noon F 3-6 pm)&#13;
BILLIARDS FOR A BUCK: $1.00 per HOUR M,W,F 1-2 pm&#13;
TABLE TENNIS: FREE M,W,F 1-2 pm &#13;
Thursday, January 22, 1981 RANGER&#13;
AOE series offers historical&#13;
theater piece with music&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
John Lennon&#13;
"Brahms and Clara," a fully&#13;
staged and costumed historical&#13;
theater piece with music featuring&#13;
Robert Guralnik as Johannes&#13;
Brahms and Sandra Jennings as&#13;
Clara Schumann, is the next offering&#13;
in the Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series at Parkside.&#13;
Curtain time is 8 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 29, in the Comm.&#13;
Arts Theater. Tickets are $7 a nd&#13;
are available at the Campus&#13;
Union Information Center (phone&#13;
553-2345). UW-P student tickets&#13;
are $4.&#13;
Written and directed by Harold&#13;
Guskin, "Brahms and Clara" tells&#13;
the poignant triangular love story&#13;
of the young Brahms, a self -&#13;
taught pianist who supported&#13;
himself by playing in brothels;&#13;
Robert Schumann, the immensely&#13;
talented composer who sank into&#13;
madness; and Clara Schumann,&#13;
the woman who gave up a&#13;
promising concert career to&#13;
marry Robert and, on his death,&#13;
continued her relationship with&#13;
Robert's protegee, Brahms.&#13;
Much of the dialogue in the&#13;
production is "imagined," but is&#13;
based on Guskin's extensive&#13;
research into the period and the&#13;
lives of the principals.&#13;
The music is an important part&#13;
of their story and includes&#13;
selections from the great song&#13;
cycles of Brahms and Robert&#13;
Schumann, piano works of Brahms&#13;
such as the G minor Rhapsody&#13;
and selections from his Intermezzi,&#13;
Cappriccios and&#13;
Ballades, as well as parts of&#13;
Robert Schumann's "Scenes from&#13;
Childhood" and Fantasy Pieces.&#13;
This is a return engagement for&#13;
Pianist Guralnik, whose 1979&#13;
WANTED:&#13;
PEOPLE&#13;
LOOKING FOR&#13;
ADVENTURE.&#13;
The Navy is looking for people&#13;
to work on submarines,&#13;
jets, and surface ships. Tbp&#13;
benefits. Career training.&#13;
Great future. For more information&#13;
see:&#13;
Rick Gallaher&#13;
(Old Market Square)&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140&#13;
Ph. 694-6994&#13;
show, "Chopin Lives," was&#13;
warmly received by Accent&#13;
audiences. A v eteran of C arnegie&#13;
Hall recitals and widely acclaimed&#13;
American and European&#13;
concert tours, Guralnik has&#13;
pioneered the concert / theater&#13;
form typified by "Brahms and&#13;
Clara" which combines great&#13;
music with dramatic dialogue to&#13;
create a new "double category" of&#13;
entertainment. This is his third&#13;
such collaboration with Guskin, a&#13;
New York director, who&#13;
previously worked with him to&#13;
create programs featuring Chopin&#13;
and Liszt.&#13;
Ms. Jennings also displays&#13;
multiple talents, as singer, actress&#13;
and author. She studied&#13;
voice and opera at Indiana&#13;
University's School of Music and&#13;
on graduation was awarded a&#13;
fellowship to sing with the Opera&#13;
Theater at the Philadelphia&#13;
Musical Academy. As a&#13;
professional actress, she has&#13;
appeared in leading roles off -&#13;
Broadway and has completed a&#13;
second play under a National&#13;
Endowment Grant for videotape&#13;
performance. She also has&#13;
completed a novel and composed&#13;
a number of a rt songs.&#13;
Guskin recently directed a new&#13;
jazz, poetry and dance piece,&#13;
"Life Dance of Is," performed at&#13;
the New York Shakespeare&#13;
Festival and the Lenox Art Center&#13;
and directed Ms. Jennings' play&#13;
"Beware of the Jubjub Bird" and&#13;
Brecht's "Jungle of Cities." He&#13;
directed the New York City Opera&#13;
Theatre production "Opera&#13;
Americana" and was associate&#13;
artistic director of opera at the&#13;
Philadelphia Musical Academy&#13;
before coming to New York. He&#13;
also has been on the faculties of&#13;
New York University and Illinois&#13;
Wesleyan University and has&#13;
written several screenplays.&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Where were you the day John&#13;
Lennon was supposedly shot and&#13;
killed by a slimy worm who&#13;
identified so closely with Lennon,&#13;
his idol, that he couldn't stand to&#13;
see Him suffer through the pain of&#13;
mortal existence another second?&#13;
Yes, it says "supposedly" in&#13;
that last paragraph. He's not&#13;
really dead, you know. He's&#13;
recording an album in Brooklyn.&#13;
It's called "Double Pharmacy."&#13;
There's going to be a movie,&#13;
maybe a couple of them: Pharmacies&#13;
I and II.&#13;
Yoko has already begun work on&#13;
the screenplay. Brian Eno and&#13;
Stevie Wonder and Paul McCartney&#13;
and Neil Young are&#13;
battling for the lead role. It's a&#13;
very multi - dimensional role.&#13;
Special effects are to be handled&#13;
by the entire "Star Wars" crew.&#13;
Filming will be on location in&#13;
Cambodia — w here "Apocolypse&#13;
Now" sets and props are waiting&#13;
for further use.&#13;
The movie is going to cost over&#13;
$500,000,000,000 to make.&#13;
Then there will be a book.&#13;
Lennon and Yoko are writing it&#13;
together. The first four chapters&#13;
have been distributed to major&#13;
literary minds all over the world.&#13;
In the first four chapters alone, it&#13;
has been said that "the entire&#13;
mind and soul of modern man and&#13;
woman, with all the inherent&#13;
human primal longings for peace&#13;
and conflicting urges toward&#13;
annihilation of the species is&#13;
contained in these 29 pages of&#13;
beautiful prose - poetry. It rivals&#13;
the Bible in scope, and the combined&#13;
works of e very great artist&#13;
known to humankind for depth."&#13;
Lennon says the central idea of&#13;
his latest endeavor is "the interaction&#13;
between two very&#13;
human, fragile people. It's about&#13;
their attempts to transcend&#13;
identity. And it's about chance,&#13;
too, you know? Which is mostly&#13;
what life is about."&#13;
Students prepare&#13;
dinner theatre&#13;
Parkside Players cordially&#13;
invites you to attend the first&#13;
annual dinner theatre party in the&#13;
cafeteria on January 23.&#13;
Cocktails will begin at 6 p.m.,&#13;
followed by a sit - down dinner at 7&#13;
p.m. You may select either the&#13;
turkey dinner or the sea - food&#13;
platter when you place your ticket&#13;
order.&#13;
For your entertainment,&#13;
Parkside Players will present&#13;
three segments of student&#13;
directed, student designed, and&#13;
student performed drama.&#13;
The first segment includes&#13;
Elaine May's charming rendition&#13;
of th e game of life, "Adaptation."&#13;
The second segment will consist of&#13;
four short Harold Pinter sketches&#13;
from the "Dwarfs." Finally, we&#13;
will bring you our production of&#13;
the notable Off - Broadway success,&#13;
"Next", by Terrence McNally.&#13;
&#13;
Tickets will be available at $8.00&#13;
per person from the Parkside&#13;
Union Information Center (553-&#13;
2345) today only. They ask that&#13;
you have the following information&#13;
available at the time of&#13;
purchase: One name under which&#13;
your party may be listed for&#13;
seating, the number of p ersons in&#13;
your party, and their choices of&#13;
turkey or sea-food platter. _ « mi RKy ui sea-iooa ]&#13;
Parsons' Project still creates classical rock&#13;
by Carol Klees&#13;
Classical rock bands are&#13;
becoming harder and harder to&#13;
find nowadays with the return of&#13;
more simplistic music as&#13;
evidenced by the popularity of&#13;
New Wave groups. The general&#13;
taste towards rock music slides&#13;
between the hard rock groups, the&#13;
rock balladeers, and the newer&#13;
slice as presented by talents as&#13;
diverse as Pat Benatar, Elvis&#13;
Costello and Gary Newman.&#13;
One of the extremely few groups&#13;
left creating classical - flavored&#13;
"'"/^University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
IYTONA BEACH&#13;
SPRING BREAK&#13;
'81&#13;
J / \J MARCH&#13;
/ y r 13-22&#13;
FtOR&#13;
rock music is the Alan Parsons'&#13;
Project. Their newest effort, "The&#13;
Turn of a Friendly Card," is a&#13;
smooth, classy album which&#13;
fluctuates between classical,&#13;
bluesy and ballad'ish.' It's&#13;
definitely APP in tonal flavor,&#13;
blending feelings which were&#13;
successful on earlier albums into&#13;
the sometimes - ethereal style of&#13;
music which is their trademark,&#13;
and yet easily succeeding in&#13;
avoiding the creation of a carbon -&#13;
copy of their earlier work. The&#13;
Project always manages to give a&#13;
fresh performance, and on&#13;
"Turn" they triumph.&#13;
After the free-for-all composition&#13;
of " Eve," Eric Woolfson&#13;
and Alan Parsons are back at the&#13;
reins, composing all eight tracks&#13;
so that every piece fits smoothly.&#13;
Each melody surges cleanly with&#13;
the next so that there are quiet&#13;
shallows and swift rapids. Alan&#13;
Parsons, who also produced and&#13;
engineered the album, knows how&#13;
to arrange the tracks extremely&#13;
well. The placement of a song on&#13;
an album is very important; it can&#13;
mean the difference between&#13;
monotony and excellence. This&#13;
quality is especially important on&#13;
classic - rock albums. The mixing&#13;
and placement must be clean,&#13;
fluid and masterfully handled, or&#13;
else it can turn out bad.&#13;
"The Turn of a Friendly Card"&#13;
never lags in the story it tells. Oh&#13;
yes. As usual, there is a theme&#13;
involved, and this time APP enters&#13;
the world of the gambler with&#13;
songs such as the pulsing, rhythmic&#13;
"Snake Eyes," the quiet&#13;
ballad "Nothing Left to Lose,"&#13;
and the title cut, where "There&#13;
are unsmiling faces in fetters and&#13;
chains/On a wheel of perpetual&#13;
motion/Who belong to all races&#13;
and answer all names/With no&#13;
show of an outward emotion."&#13;
"Turn" is a lyrical success for&#13;
the Project. The group has never&#13;
suffered backsliding other than&#13;
minimal lapses on "Pyramid"&#13;
and "Eve." Their style continues&#13;
to evolve, and hasn't yet suffered&#13;
from stagnation. Perhaps it is the&#13;
contact of all tracks conforming to&#13;
a central theme which is to account&#13;
for it. Still, a musical story&#13;
can die more easily than a conventional&#13;
hodgepodge album.&#13;
The Alan Parsons' Project has&#13;
come a long way from "Tales of&#13;
Mystery and Imagination." The&#13;
creative leaders, Parsons and&#13;
Woolfson, continue to create&#13;
beauty even when the message&#13;
they relate is bitter, as evidenced&#13;
by "Turn's" central statement:&#13;
— And they think it will make&#13;
their lives easier / But the doorway&#13;
before them is barred / And&#13;
FROM INCLUDES:&#13;
EA ^ #GREYHOUNDTYPE BUS&#13;
10®7NIGHTSLODGINGOCEANSIDEHOTEL Z&#13;
* MM • OPTIONAL POPULAR SIDETRTPS 1&#13;
FOR APPLICATION AND FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: S&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION. R OOM 209 553-2200 !&#13;
A&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha.&#13;
Elmwood Plaza Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kehosha for women's wear&#13;
^ r&#13;
the game never ends when&#13;
your whole world depends / On the&#13;
turn of a friendly card."&#13;
* * *&#13;
When I first listened to the&#13;
Photos' debut album I thought oh,&#13;
hell. I have to review that? I let it&#13;
sit and indulged in procrastination&#13;
until I realized the origin of&#13;
several of the tunes which kept&#13;
running through my head.&#13;
There's something quaint in the&#13;
lyrics and something just this side&#13;
of repetitious in the melodies.&#13;
They're good enough to be catchy,&#13;
if you listen several times. I really&#13;
don't know what the Photos were&#13;
shooting for (no pun intended).&#13;
Maybe they like silliness. "She's&#13;
So Attractive," for example,&#13;
sports such profound lyrical&#13;
passages as * "I could be a&#13;
covergirl / So demure and divine /&#13;
My clothes are so heavenly / Da&#13;
da da da da." You can't get much&#13;
worse than that.&#13;
Such silliness could be intended,&#13;
or at least I hope so. This also goes&#13;
for Wendy Wu's vocals. She does&#13;
Blondie's Debbie Harry's flat -&#13;
toned vocals one better by singing&#13;
flatly through her nose. The other&#13;
three band members create a&#13;
solid foundation for Wu's vocals,&#13;
and Wu's quirky voice lends&#13;
strange accents to the instrumentals.&#13;
&#13;
In most of the album's tracks,&#13;
the refrains are the liveliest&#13;
sections — t he verses, accept in&#13;
"Loss of Contact," "Irene," and&#13;
"All I Want" are rather sleepy&#13;
musically. "All I Want" is so&#13;
damned fast I thought someone&#13;
kicked the speed up on my turntable.&#13;
Here, Steve Eagles is&#13;
finally given the chance to let his&#13;
guitar sing. He's the best edge the&#13;
group has, and it's good to hear&#13;
him get in at least one solo riff.&#13;
The Photos are somewhat like&#13;
mold. They grow on you. &#13;
Member P arkside 2 00&#13;
Mentisa t his a d!&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phon* *54-0774&#13;
ALL M AJOR C REDIT C ARDS A CCEPTED&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, January 22,1981&#13;
®°™"'&#13;
ce X-mas hits not all worth the money&#13;
„ by Ke by Ken " Me Meyeyer r old Erands„n) . M&#13;
The Christmas season has&#13;
always been the biggest money -&#13;
making time of the year for the&#13;
movie industry, and this past&#13;
holiday season set a new record.&#13;
The top four box - office hits ("Stir&#13;
Crazy," "Any Which Way You&#13;
Can," "Popeye" and "9 to 5")&#13;
brought in a total of $142 million&#13;
by the first week of January.&#13;
All four films have some things&#13;
in common: all are comedies of&#13;
some sort and none of them are&#13;
completely successful. "Popeye"&#13;
and "9 to 5" are about three -&#13;
fourths successful while "Stir&#13;
Crazy" and "Any Which Way You&#13;
Can" are as bad as they are good.&#13;
"Popeye"&#13;
The best of the four, I feel, is&#13;
"Popeye," which has received&#13;
very mixed reactions. Many&#13;
people complain that there is too&#13;
much music and too little comedy&#13;
in this musical - comedy.&#13;
True, there are too many songs&#13;
and they are all forgettable, but it&#13;
is the originality of the film and&#13;
the people involved that make the&#13;
music less of an irritation.&#13;
Director Robert Altman&#13;
("M*A*S*H," "Nashville") is in&#13;
fine form, Robin Williams is&#13;
totally convincing as Popeye, and&#13;
Shelley Duvall found her ideal role&#13;
in Olive Oyl.&#13;
The film opens with Popeye the&#13;
sailor rowing into the port of&#13;
shantytown Sweethaven in search&#13;
of hi s pappy. It's hard at first to&#13;
understand Williams' muttering,&#13;
but one has to adapt to it, just like&#13;
one has to adjust to Sweethaven&#13;
and its residents. An entire&#13;
shantytown was constructed on&#13;
the Mediterranean island of Malta&#13;
for the movie. The town and its&#13;
people look like they are from a&#13;
cartoon, not in a silly way but in a&#13;
realistic way.&#13;
Popeye rents a room at Nana&#13;
Oyl's house and meets the constantly&#13;
complaining Olive Oyl,&#13;
who is engaged to the much -&#13;
feared Bluto. While Bluto destroys&#13;
the Oyl house waiting for Olive,&#13;
she and Popeye discover a baby&#13;
left in a basket. Popeye becomes&#13;
the baby's mother, as he says, and&#13;
calls him Swee'pea. "What you&#13;
want me to call him?" he asks&#13;
Olive. "Baby Oyl?"&#13;
The baby (Altman's one - year -&#13;
grandson) will win&#13;
SEW ^&#13;
r t&#13;
'&#13;
a n d A" ™-&#13;
uses the baby's cuteness extensively.&#13;
&#13;
The major distinction between&#13;
r. ?&#13;
nd the other three&#13;
Christmas hits is that "Popeye" is&#13;
T?e only one not to lose its&#13;
direction or momentum halfway&#13;
through the picture. The film&#13;
opens leisurely, showing the&#13;
unique people of Sweethaven and&#13;
then moves into Popeye's&#13;
relationship with Olive and&#13;
Swee pea. Bluto kidnaps&#13;
Swee pea so Popeye searches for&#13;
both his baby and pappy.&#13;
f:„K?&#13;
pey?L only Sets into three&#13;
fights m the movie, but the special&#13;
effects in each are well done&#13;
cartoon - style. One major change&#13;
is that Williams' Popeye hates&#13;
spinach, the source of his great&#13;
strength.&#13;
Put simply, "Popeye" brings&#13;
the cartoon to life, quite an accomplishment&#13;
considering the&#13;
unique characters. Sure it would&#13;
have been better without so much&#13;
music, but this adaptation is&#13;
entertaining because one gets the&#13;
feeling of being in a completely&#13;
different environment. The&#13;
cartoon characters seemed real&#13;
and the fun was just beginning&#13;
when the movie ended.&#13;
"9 to 5"&#13;
"9 to 5" is good overall, but not&#13;
as good as "Popeye" because the&#13;
story turns too ridiculous at about&#13;
the midway point.&#13;
The premise is promising: Lily&#13;
Tomlin, Dolly Parton and Jane&#13;
Fonda play three secretaries who&#13;
get fed up with their male&#13;
chauvinistic boss and want&#13;
to get even.&#13;
Each of them has a good reason.&#13;
Tomlin has repeatedly lost&#13;
promotions to less - deserving&#13;
men, Parton was shunned by her&#13;
co-workers because the boss&#13;
spread rumors that they were&#13;
having an affair, and Fonda's exhusband&#13;
left her after having an&#13;
affair with his secretary. And&#13;
besides, he's a man who deserves&#13;
to be hated.&#13;
The film reaches its highest&#13;
point (no pun intended) when the&#13;
ladies smoke a joint of Maui-Waui.&#13;
During all their giggling, they&#13;
each tell their fantasy of how to&#13;
kill the boss. Fonda's and Parton's&#13;
fantasies are good, but Tomlin's is&#13;
one of the best scenes, in the&#13;
movie. She becomes Snow White&#13;
and dispenses death with a happy&#13;
smile and song.&#13;
Tomlin's fantasy also marks the&#13;
point of whe n a good examination&#13;
of wo men in the work force turns&#13;
into a harmless, silly piece of fluff.&#13;
Tomlin accidentally puts rat&#13;
poison in the boss's coffee and&#13;
after a few mishaps, believes that&#13;
she really killed him. Tomlin&#13;
steals a body from the hospital&#13;
and speeds around the city, not&#13;
realizing she has the wrong&#13;
corpse. The ladies soon discover&#13;
the boss isn't dead, but he finds&#13;
out about the near - poisoning and&#13;
threatens to turn Tomlin in. So&#13;
they kidnap him until they find&#13;
evidence to blackmail him.&#13;
They finally find something —&#13;
but they have to wait six weeks for&#13;
the incriminating invoices to&#13;
arrive. The secretaries pretend&#13;
their boss is in his office working,&#13;
making changes as they see fit (an&#13;
in-house day care center, flexible&#13;
hours, job sharing and completely&#13;
refurnishing the office). What&#13;
started as a funny, biting look at&#13;
the working woman turns into a&#13;
lame - brained comedy with an&#13;
intricate kidnapping plot. It's not&#13;
a disaster, not by a long shot. It&#13;
just changes its focus in the&#13;
middle of the picture and takes the&#13;
easy way out.&#13;
The actresses are in fine form,&#13;
overall. Tomlin's quiet humor&#13;
steals many scenes, as does&#13;
Parton's screen charm. Fonda,&#13;
however, is lackluster in a&#13;
lackluster role.&#13;
The only problem lies in the&#13;
script. If "9 to 5" had continued&#13;
as it began, it would&#13;
have been a fruitful workday.&#13;
But here the filmmakers took&#13;
a lunchbreak and never came&#13;
back, or they had a liquid&#13;
lunch.&#13;
"Any Which Way&#13;
You Can"&#13;
"Any Which Way You Can" is&#13;
very easy to describe. Clint&#13;
Eastwood fights and Clyde, his&#13;
orangutan, monkeys around. If&#13;
that's your idea of a fun movie,&#13;
you'll love this sequel to "Every&#13;
Which Way But Loose," because&#13;
x YAM&#13;
WHAT&#13;
YAM&#13;
mm.&#13;
mm&#13;
that's all there is to it.&#13;
The bare plot has Eastwood&#13;
retired from his successful bare -&#13;
knuckled fighting career, but&#13;
some big thugs put up some big&#13;
money and persuade him to fight.&#13;
But he changes his mind so the&#13;
thugs kidnap his girlfriend to&#13;
persuade him again.&#13;
So he agrees to fight. The catch&#13;
is (there's always a catch) that&#13;
the man he is to fight is the same&#13;
man who owes his life to Eastwood&#13;
after cool Clint saved his life. But&#13;
then that favor was returned&#13;
during a bar fight, and&#13;
then.... .who really cares?&#13;
The only hit of the movie is&#13;
Clyde. The orangutan handles&#13;
Eastwood's finances, scraps cars,&#13;
drinks beer, punches people and&#13;
(everybody's favorite) leaves a&#13;
mess in every police car he&#13;
manages to sit in. The monkey is&#13;
the real second banana to Eastwood,&#13;
none of the other characters&#13;
are given as much screen time.&#13;
Clyde is a full - fledged character&#13;
who contributes to the film's&#13;
actions.&#13;
Need any more be said about the&#13;
film's actions?&#13;
"Stir Crazy"&#13;
The teaming of Gene Wilder and&#13;
Richard Pryor worked well in&#13;
"Silver Streak" and now they're&#13;
reunited in "Stir Crazy." The&#13;
same is true for both movies:&#13;
Richard Pryor is the only good&#13;
thing.&#13;
In "Stir Crazy" they are&#13;
mistakenly arrested for robbing a&#13;
bank and get sentenced to 125&#13;
years in prison. The prison&#13;
warden's pet project is a prison&#13;
rodeo, and he discovers that&#13;
Wilder can ride a bucking bronco&#13;
exceptionally well. The warden&#13;
tries to force Wilder into competing,&#13;
but Wilder holds out until&#13;
he gets what he wants — to be able&#13;
to bring his own crew. Why? So&#13;
they can escape, of c ourse.&#13;
That's where "Stir Crazy" loses&#13;
the little comic thrust it had&#13;
managed to pick up despite&#13;
Wilder's obnoxiousness overshadowing&#13;
Pryor's wonderful&#13;
underplaying. When the escape&#13;
plan is launched, the humor gets&#13;
away. The film doesn't even tiy to&#13;
be funny; the comedy that&#13;
everybody came to see becomes a&#13;
prison escape drama.&#13;
But the first half is what people&#13;
will remember because of P ryor.&#13;
He gets almost all the laughs&#13;
while Wilder repeatedly spouts off&#13;
about how people only need to be&#13;
talked to gently. This is the only&#13;
film in which I didn't care for a&#13;
Wilder performance, but this time&#13;
he was too much.&#13;
If an ything does, it's Pryor who&#13;
makes "Stir Crazy" worthwhile.&#13;
His task now is to find a comedy&#13;
suitable for his talents because&#13;
•"Stir Crazy" isn't it. It's a&#13;
schizophrenic film with a costar&#13;
and a prison escape that get in the&#13;
way of t he film's real funny man.&#13;
TRANSFERS&#13;
Photograph or Your Artwork&#13;
NO MINIMUM!&#13;
$2&#13;
00 each&#13;
CUSTOM LETTERING&#13;
ALSO AVAILABLE&#13;
Old Market Square&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd. &#13;
Thursday, January 22, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Students applaud surcharge withdrawal&#13;
Pr PrpessiHont H'Moil'c . . . ident O'Neil's decision to&#13;
withdraw a request for a second&#13;
$30 surcharge on University of&#13;
Wisconsin student tuition will&#13;
avoid the problem of harming&#13;
access to the U.W. system for the&#13;
students, but creates new&#13;
problems of determining where&#13;
the budget axe will fall, said Kim&#13;
Kachlemyer, President of United&#13;
Council, the statewide U.W.&#13;
student lobby.&#13;
"While it is certainly positive&#13;
that students' ability to afford an&#13;
education will not be $30 f urther&#13;
eroded next semester," said&#13;
Kachelmyer, "we fully realize&#13;
that this is a pyrhhic victory in&#13;
that it means the U.W. will have to&#13;
trim $3.75 million from some&#13;
portion of its budget."&#13;
The students are prepared to&#13;
assist the administration in&#13;
planning the necessary cuts, said&#13;
Kachelmyer. "In a sense, the&#13;
U.W. is going to be a laboratory&#13;
testing whether it is possible, as&#13;
Governor Dreyfus insists, to trim&#13;
spending without seriously harming&#13;
education. We don't believe&#13;
the Governor is correct, and we&#13;
see what will happen as the&#13;
Governor's policies backfiring on&#13;
him."&#13;
The students do not blame the&#13;
Regents or administration for&#13;
trying to avoid cutting spending,&#13;
said Kachelmyer, but do not&#13;
believe that another surcharge&#13;
would have been fair to the&#13;
students, who already accepted 20&#13;
percent of the burden of the&#13;
cutback with a first semester&#13;
surcharge. "We blame a&#13;
politically gutless state government&#13;
which found it politically&#13;
easy to give away $942 million in&#13;
tax revenue and now can't find $10&#13;
million to save its own university,"&#13;
said Kachelmyer.&#13;
The request for the second&#13;
surcharge was probably withdrawn&#13;
because it had become&#13;
increasingly evident that the&#13;
Legislatures Joint Finance&#13;
Committee, which would have had&#13;
to approve the expenditure of&#13;
another surcharge, was not likely&#13;
to do that. "Our lobbyist has&#13;
coordinated a low key campaign&#13;
against the surcharge in Joint&#13;
Finance," said Kachelmyer, "and&#13;
we feel a great deal of the&#13;
reasoning behind O'Neil's&#13;
reversal on the surcharge was the&#13;
realization that the votes on Joint&#13;
Finance weren't there. No one&#13;
wants to take the heat the Regents&#13;
would for adopting another surcharge&#13;
only to lose the whole thing&#13;
in the Legislature."&#13;
Students do believe the fiscal&#13;
Kidney Foundation rebuts rumor&#13;
There is no truth to the rumor&#13;
that collecting empty cigarette&#13;
packages, tea bag tags, yogurt&#13;
tops, universal price codes found&#13;
on frozen food packages or&#13;
anything of the sort can lead to the&#13;
purchase of dialysis equipment or&#13;
to pay for time on a dialysis&#13;
machine.&#13;
According to the National&#13;
Kidney Foundation, these rumors&#13;
have sprung up periodically&#13;
throughout the nation for the past&#13;
30 years. No one knows how the&#13;
rumors were started or how they&#13;
are perpetuated.&#13;
Persons interested in helping&#13;
the fight against kidney disease&#13;
should contact their local Kidney&#13;
Foundation or write to the&#13;
National Kidney Foundation, 2&#13;
Park Avenue, New York, New&#13;
York, 10016, for information.&#13;
There are many ways to help.&#13;
Unfortunately, collecting tea bag&#13;
tags is not one of them.&#13;
Group counseling programs offered here&#13;
Do you want help to develop&#13;
assertive skills? dating skills? To&#13;
overcome public speaking&#13;
anxiety? To overcome&#13;
depression? To overcome fear of&#13;
heights, snakes, water activities,&#13;
or some other specific nonsocial&#13;
fear?&#13;
Special group counseling&#13;
programs are being offered this&#13;
semester to Parkside students&#13;
(and other interested persons)&#13;
concerned with any of these&#13;
problems. The programs are&#13;
sponsored by professor of&#13;
psychology William Morrow and&#13;
| ACADEMY OF BATON &amp; DANCE&#13;
| Headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits, 1&#13;
Gymnastic Suits; Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — Tap Shoes —&#13;
| All Dancing Supplies&#13;
|6204 22nd Avenue. Kenosha 658-2498&#13;
students in his class in Behavioral&#13;
Counseling. Students will conduct&#13;
the counseling under his supervision&#13;
as part of the course&#13;
requirements.&#13;
The programs will employ&#13;
structured counseling and&#13;
training procedures which have&#13;
been found in controlled outcome&#13;
studies to be relatively effective&#13;
for the particular problem. Each&#13;
program will involve about six to&#13;
eight scheduled counseling&#13;
sessions, plus homework activities.&#13;
&#13;
Sign-up cards to register for any&#13;
of these programs are available at&#13;
the following locations:&#13;
Behavioral Science Division&#13;
Office, Molinaro 275; Main Place&#13;
Information Kiosk; Union Information&#13;
Kiosk. Those interested&#13;
are asked to sign up by not later&#13;
than Friday, February 6.&#13;
problems of the U.W. are real and&#13;
serious. "We intend to pursue two&#13;
main avenues of involvement.&#13;
First, we will insist on having a&#13;
voice in the determination of what&#13;
services and programs are cut.&#13;
Second, we will further intensify&#13;
our campaign to persuade the&#13;
Legislature to help out the U.W. in&#13;
January when it meets to review&#13;
Dreyfus' cutback order, and the&#13;
regular session debate over the&#13;
biennial budget. We've seen the&#13;
U.W. lose more than $140 per&#13;
student in real dollar funding&#13;
since 1972, and we're determined&#13;
to reverse that trend."&#13;
Arguing that the U.W. is not to&#13;
blame for state tax problems,&#13;
Kachelmyer pointed out that the&#13;
U.W. has added only 100 positions&#13;
since 1972 while the rest of state&#13;
government has added more than&#13;
5,000 p ositions. U.W. funding has&#13;
climbed by about 60 percent since&#13;
1972 while other state spending&#13;
has climbed by 153 percent. The&#13;
U.W. spent 1.32 percent of&#13;
Wisconsin personal income in&#13;
1970; today, it spends barely more&#13;
than one percent.&#13;
"Students will fight to maintain&#13;
education as a right for all people&#13;
in the state, and a major element&#13;
of that battle will be fighting for&#13;
more state money next year."&#13;
Soviet trip offered&#13;
Parkside will sponsor a 15 - day&#13;
trip to the Soviet Union in March.&#13;
The trip will include guided tours&#13;
of Moscow, Leningrad and Tallin,&#13;
visits to state farms, schools,&#13;
factories and museums and an&#13;
evening at the Bolshoi ballet.&#13;
The trip is being offered in&#13;
conjunction with a series of lectures&#13;
by UW - Parkside faculty on&#13;
Soviet history, economics,&#13;
culture, politics and philosophy.&#13;
The lecture series and trip can be&#13;
taken for 1 to 3 credits or on a&#13;
noncredit audit basis.&#13;
Cost of the trip including&#13;
transportation, meals, lodging&#13;
and registration for one credit is&#13;
$1,345. Registration deadline is&#13;
Jan. 30. Additional information is&#13;
available from Prof. Daniel&#13;
McGovern at 553-2316 or 637-8402.&#13;
Prof. McGovern, who will lead&#13;
the Parkside group, said they will&#13;
join students from ll other UW&#13;
campuses on the tour March 8 to&#13;
23. Twelve UW - P students participated&#13;
in a similar tour last&#13;
year. McGovern said participants&#13;
will stay at the best Soviet hotels,&#13;
eat authentic Russian food and&#13;
visit English - speaking students&#13;
at Soviet friendship houses.&#13;
New nurse on campus&#13;
Nancy Kachel Wild recently&#13;
joined the staff at the Campus&#13;
Health Office.&#13;
Nan is originally from Minneapolis,&#13;
Minnesota, attended&#13;
Augustana College in Sioux Falls,&#13;
South Dakota from 1970 to 1974,&#13;
and graduated with a Bachelor of&#13;
Science in nursing. She first&#13;
practiced as a Medical - Surgical&#13;
staff nurse at Lutheran Deaconess&#13;
Hospital in Minneapolis. In 1975,&#13;
she became a public health nurse&#13;
in the Twin Cities, making home&#13;
visits and working on a research&#13;
project in child abuse prevention.&#13;
In 1978, she moved to Anchorage,&#13;
Alaska, and worked in physical&#13;
rehabilitation.&#13;
Uttech's art displayed here&#13;
and&#13;
by&#13;
An exhibition of oil&#13;
watercolor paintings&#13;
Milwaukee artist Tom Uttech will&#13;
be on display in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery from&#13;
Jan. 14 through Feb. 10. The one -&#13;
man show will consist mainly of&#13;
figurative landscapes inspired by&#13;
the northern Wisconsin wilderness&#13;
and treated in a unique symbolic -&#13;
visionary stylistic approach.&#13;
Uttech is an associate professor&#13;
of art at UW - Milwaukee, where&#13;
he has taught since 1969. He&#13;
received his Master of Fine Arts&#13;
degree in painting from the&#13;
University of Cincinnati in 1967.&#13;
During his career Uttech has&#13;
exhibited in many major juried&#13;
and invitational shows throughout&#13;
the mid - west and the nation,&#13;
including the Whitney Museum&#13;
Biennial in New York City and the&#13;
Chicago &amp; Vicinty Show at the&#13;
Chicago Art Institute, both in 1975.&#13;
In 1977 he was featured in a major&#13;
two - man show, with artist&#13;
Jerome Krause, at the Milwaukee&#13;
Art Center. He recently received a&#13;
grant from the Wisconsin Arts&#13;
Board to pursue his painting and&#13;
photography of the landscape&#13;
theme.&#13;
Regular gallery hours at the&#13;
Communications Arts Gallery are&#13;
Monday through Thursday from&#13;
12:30 to 5:30 p. m. and Tuesday&#13;
and Wednesday from 7 to 10 p. m&#13;
In conjunction with the&#13;
exhibition, a free public slide -&#13;
lecture will be presented by the&#13;
artist on Tuesday, Jan. 27, at 4 p.&#13;
m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Building.&#13;
Nominate students for award&#13;
Parkside students have been&#13;
nominated as Truman Scholars&#13;
under the Harry S. Truman&#13;
S c h o l a r s h i p F o u n d a t i on&#13;
established by Congress in 1974 to&#13;
honor the 33rd U. S. President and&#13;
encourage young people to&#13;
prepare for careers in public&#13;
service.&#13;
The nominees are Shelly Zavala&#13;
and Brian Ebener, both of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The foundation awards one&#13;
scholarship per state each&#13;
academic year on the basis of&#13;
merit as shown by academic&#13;
performance and potential for a&#13;
career in public service. Students&#13;
are nominated by their faculty.&#13;
Awards are made to college&#13;
juniors and may be renewed for&#13;
up to four years, through a&#13;
master's degree program. Names&#13;
of scholarship winners will be&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
ANYONE picking on Jeff Manian will be&#13;
exterminated. The Joker&#13;
MARY! Be nice to your brother for a change.&#13;
Me&#13;
RORY SPEARS is a woosy. M.E.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1980 SUZUKI S50L black, very clean. Call 553&#13;
9262 a fter 4 p . m.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
A G ENETICS TEXT BOOK by Jenkins, used&#13;
spring 1980 — 654-7598.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
EARN UP TO $1000 or more for a&#13;
evenings work. No selling. Just&#13;
posters on your campus advertising our&#13;
half price tours of Europe. For details,&#13;
write: TRAVEL STUDY INTERNATIONAL,&#13;
2030 East 4800 South,&#13;
Suite 101, Salt Lake City, UT 84117&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED: To assist group&#13;
home Staff in providing tutoring and&#13;
recreational services for adolescents.&#13;
Schedule is flexible, five hours per week&#13;
and mileage reimbursment. Some college&#13;
background In human service field or&#13;
education. Training in group home model&#13;
w.li be provided. Contact Michael Angeli,&#13;
657-7188.&#13;
few&#13;
hang&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
r~&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads —&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30$ will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words &lt;&#13;
or less.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE.&#13;
Any registered UW-P student or student organization is qualified&#13;
to insert a classified line ad in the Ranger at no cost if under or&#13;
equivalent to 10 words. (Phone numbers equal 1 word.)&#13;
Classification:&#13;
Name&#13;
SS No.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
WLLC D139&#13;
nietUs&#13;
CAN&#13;
YburGift&#13;
Birthday&#13;
I ivr&#13;
Transfer&#13;
Fashions&#13;
Old Market Square&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd. &#13;
Coming Events&#13;
are available at the Union Information CeJtPr RS W®dmissio—n Price. —Tickets -&#13;
MOVIE "Kramer vs. Kramer" wSMEt ®{&gt;^&#13;
180re&#13;
^&#13;
d by the Parkside Players.&#13;
at the Coor U a&#13;
MOVIE "Kramer vs. Kramer" «• , will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
VIDEO TAPES "Football Follies"wffl h^S" ** * ,&#13;
miSSi0h iS free tor Par^e K£35®£&#13;
- ext. *3. tor&#13;
==frSt"SS • — aot a&#13;
=&#13;
e&#13;
«St'ST&amp;V&#13;
and the&#13;
RANGER Thursday, January 22, 1981&#13;
Photo by Brian Passino&#13;
Women win&#13;
tournament&#13;
Parkside's women's basketball&#13;
team took its own tournament&#13;
here last weekend with wins over&#13;
St. Xavier 76-67, and Milton&#13;
College 73-65 in the championship&#13;
game.&#13;
Parkside beat an outmanned St.&#13;
Xavier squad Friday night with a&#13;
balanced scoring attack and good&#13;
shooting. Freshman Robin&#13;
Henschal led all scorers with 17&#13;
points followed by five women&#13;
with eight points a piece; Cindy&#13;
Ruffert, Julie Leszczynski,&#13;
Jeanne Hintz, Debbie Lopez and&#13;
Laurie Pope. Parkside shot 49 per&#13;
cent from the field compared to 43&#13;
per cent for St. Xavier.&#13;
In the championship game&#13;
Parkside used its height advantage,&#13;
along with a little help&#13;
from Milton's coach in the form of&#13;
three technical fouls, to win the&#13;
tourney.&#13;
Parkside led the entire way and&#13;
again outshot their opponents&#13;
from the field 40 to 31 per cent.&#13;
The Rangers totally outclassed&#13;
their opponents on the boards,&#13;
taking a 45-23 rebounding edge.&#13;
The big difference came on&#13;
Milton's offensive rebounds.&#13;
Milton managed just one offensive&#13;
rebound while the Rangers pulled&#13;
down 32 defensive rebounds, led&#13;
by Laurie Pope's nine and 14&#13;
overall. She also led the team with&#13;
26 po ints and four blocked shots.&#13;
Parkside, now 4-7, will host UW -&#13;
Green Bay Saturday afternoon at&#13;
1:30 and Marquette Tuesday night&#13;
at 7 p. m.&#13;
C&amp;R AUTO SERVICE&#13;
Quality Auto Work&#13;
Done At&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
10% OFF FOR&#13;
UW-P STUDENTS&#13;
Call 553-9092or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00&#13;
Wrestlers compete over break&#13;
by Dan McCormack&#13;
The UW-P wrestling team was&#13;
active in two tournaments over&#13;
semester break. The first was on&#13;
Jan. 10th at Carthage and the&#13;
second took place this past&#13;
weekend at the Midwest Classic,&#13;
Anderson, Ind.&#13;
At Carthage, the Ranger&#13;
matmen piaced first with nine&#13;
place - winners. Dan Winter,&#13;
undefeated at 134, placed first&#13;
along with Bob Pekarske at 158&#13;
and Freshman Brian Irek who&#13;
won the 177 weight class with&#13;
three pins. Placing second were&#13;
Dean Quam at 118, Tom Vania at&#13;
126 and Kevin Casper at 142.&#13;
Placing third were Ron Perron at&#13;
150, Rus Drankiewicz at 167 an d&#13;
Paul Roth at HWT.&#13;
Last weekend, in the twenty&#13;
team Midwest Classic, the&#13;
Rangers placed fourth. Bob&#13;
Pekarske was the Rangers only&#13;
champion with Dan Winter losing&#13;
his first match of the season in&#13;
overtime, placing second. Dean&#13;
Quam, who lost his semi - final&#13;
match in overtime came back to&#13;
win third place. Mike&#13;
Muckerheide -158 and Paul Roth&#13;
both placed fourth.&#13;
The UW-Parkside matmen&#13;
meet UW-LaCrosse&#13;
here, Friday at 4 p.m.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
r^KSIDE assistant coach Bob Gruner pins opponent in finals&#13;
winte^bSak&#13;
Sm e9&#13;
'&#13;
ate wre&#13;
stling tournament held over&#13;
Mudwrestling takes hold&#13;
Colleges and universities&#13;
usually attract the best in cultural&#13;
events — concerts, speakers, rock&#13;
stars, road shows, mud wrestling.&#13;
Mud wrestling?&#13;
That's right, the new entertainment&#13;
craze that's showing&#13;
up in bars from coast to coast is&#13;
now coming to campuses as well.&#13;
Regency Artists is beginning a&#13;
national tour of a mud wrestling&#13;
show with a few test dates in&#13;
November and a limited tour this&#13;
winter. By next year, says&#13;
Regency's David Snyder, the&#13;
show will be going coast to coast.&#13;
Snyder is quick to point out that&#13;
the only thing the Regency show&#13;
has in common with what's seen in&#13;
bars is the mud. "The bar show is&#13;
a real sexist thing —you've got a&#13;
bunch of sc antily dressed women&#13;
jumping around in the mud while&#13;
the men watch," says Snyder.&#13;
"Ours will be more like pro&#13;
wrestling." That means bringing&#13;
"celebrity" mud wrestlers on the&#13;
tour, letting both men and women&#13;
wrestle and using some real&#13;
wrestling technique.&#13;
On each campus, fraternities,&#13;
sororities and other groups will be&#13;
encouraged to challenge each&#13;
other, with the winners facing the&#13;
"celebrity wrestlers." The shov&#13;
comes complete with music&#13;
costumes and more, he promises&#13;
"It'll be sheer buffoonery, pie-in&#13;
the-face stuff."&#13;
Thus far, a direct mai!&#13;
promotion has produced "mostlj&#13;
total shock," says Snyder. "II&#13;
ranges from people laughing sc&#13;
hard they can't talk to those whc&#13;
call me up and say it's the mosl&#13;
obscene thing they've evei&#13;
heard." One women's college sem&#13;
the material back unopened, says&#13;
Snyder, although he later admits,&#13;
"That was probably because it&#13;
was addressed wrong."&#13;
Ranger needs sports writers&#13;
Inquire at Ranger office&#13;
WLLC D 139&#13;
(Next to Coffee Shoppe)&#13;
Rati Centex&#13;
Bottling Special's&#13;
MmMk Ming: Sat, 8 pm-Midnite&#13;
Cash prizes awarded&#13;
% bow&amp;wj: M, 9 am-Noon&#13;
Fri, 3 pm-6 pm&#13;
towftwj: Sat, 1-6 pm, Sun, 1-6 pm&#13;
all yo u can bowl $3.00/hr.&#13;
Hcb Fwc-Bcui£! &#13;
8 Thursday, January 22,1981 RANGER&#13;
Rangers improve on worst season start ever&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
at Kansas State, Dec. 13&#13;
The Parkside men's basketball&#13;
team lost it's seventh straight&#13;
game that Saturday to Kansas&#13;
State 72-58 for the worst start in&#13;
the team's 12 year history.&#13;
The Rangers led the Wildcats&#13;
27-24 with just over five minutes&#13;
left in the first half before the Big&#13;
Eight conference favorite took&#13;
over for good.&#13;
Parkside trailed only 36-31 at&#13;
half time, but couldn't stay with&#13;
their major college foes, who&#13;
outscored Parkside 8-2 in the&#13;
opening 7-1/2 minutes of the&#13;
second half. Curtis Green led the&#13;
Rangers with 19 points and freshman&#13;
guard Chucky Perry added&#13;
17. Ed Nealy led Kansas State&#13;
with 16 points and 17 rebounds,&#13;
vs UW-Milwaukee, Dec 15&#13;
The Rangers finally got that&#13;
much needed and deserved first&#13;
win of the year by outclassing&#13;
Milwaukee 83-67 at home.&#13;
Parkside jumped out to a huge&#13;
27-6 lead midway through the first&#13;
half and utilized its quickness,&#13;
both on offense and defense, to&#13;
maintain that margin for a 42-22&#13;
halftime lead.&#13;
The Panthers outscored&#13;
Parkside 45-41 in the second half&#13;
as coach Steve Stephens used his&#13;
bench at will. Milwaukee couldn't&#13;
outrun the somewhat tired&#13;
Rangers to overcome such a large&#13;
deficit.&#13;
Senior forward Reggie Anderson&#13;
led the Rangers in scoring&#13;
with 19 points and Chucky Perry&#13;
added 18. Perry also had seven&#13;
steals, five of which he turned into&#13;
baskets. Curtis Green added 13&#13;
points and reserve John Herndon&#13;
added 12. Ricky Trotter of UW-M&#13;
led all scorers with 20 p oints.&#13;
Ranger Classic, Dec 29-30&#13;
First round&#13;
The Rangers began their fourth&#13;
annual Ranger Classic by beating&#13;
Kenosha rival Carthage College&#13;
80-62 in the second game of the&#13;
first round. Ouachita Baptist of&#13;
Arkansas beat Minnesota - Duluth&#13;
69-58 in the opening game.&#13;
Parkside jumped on Carthage&#13;
quickly to gain a 10-0 lead in the&#13;
opening three minutes. The&#13;
Redmen called a timeout and&#13;
settled down to cut the Ranger&#13;
lead to 18-11. The Rangers then&#13;
went to their inside game to&#13;
maintain a 36-30 h alftime lead.&#13;
At the start of the second half&#13;
the Rangers pulled away to a 49-32&#13;
lead that they never relinquished.&#13;
Center - forward Curtis Green&#13;
led all scorers with 19 points while&#13;
Reggie Anderson and guard&#13;
Walter Greene added 18 each.&#13;
Gordie Zastrow led Carthage with&#13;
18 points.&#13;
Second round&#13;
Parkside won its fourth successive&#13;
Ranger Classic with a 76-&#13;
58 win over Ouachita Baptist in&#13;
the championship game.&#13;
Ouachita kept pace with a&#13;
healthy Ranger club in the first&#13;
eleven minutes of the game to stay&#13;
tied at 19. The Rangers then&#13;
switched to their tough zone&#13;
defense to shut down Ouachita's&#13;
quick guard Willie Hall and forward&#13;
Terry Woods and take a 38-&#13;
26 lea d.&#13;
Ranger coach Stephens used his&#13;
bench in the second half to outlast&#13;
Ouachita, whose players were in&#13;
constant foul trouble the entire&#13;
second half.&#13;
Reggie Anderson paced the&#13;
Rangers in scoring with 18 points,&#13;
Walter Greene added 14 and&#13;
Curtis Green scored 10 points and&#13;
grabbed six rebounds. John&#13;
Herndon came off the bench again&#13;
for a fine performance with eight&#13;
points and seven rebounds.&#13;
Wilbert 'Buster' Webb, playing in&#13;
only his second game for the&#13;
Rangers, added eight points and&#13;
four rebounds.&#13;
The last-second shot for&#13;
Parkside typified the whole&#13;
tourney, as Bobby Burns gunned&#13;
in a 35-footer with one second left.&#13;
Parkside dominated the all -&#13;
tournament team placing Walter&#13;
Greene, Curtis Green and most&#13;
valuable player Reggie Anderson.&#13;
Willie Hall of Ouachita Baptist,&#13;
Chris Neumann of Minnesota -&#13;
Duluth and Gordie Zastrow of&#13;
Carthage rounded out the team,&#13;
vs UW-Green Bay, Jan 3&#13;
The Rangers ran their winning&#13;
streak to four games with a tough&#13;
74-66 win over a strong Green Bay&#13;
team. The Phoenix recently took&#13;
the Wisconsin Badgers into two&#13;
overtimes before losing by a&#13;
basket.&#13;
Parkside dominated the game&#13;
throughout most of the first half&#13;
until Green Bay took the lead at&#13;
33-31 with less than a minute to&#13;
play in the half. Parkside tied the&#13;
score at 35 just before the intermission.&#13;
&#13;
The lead seesawed back and&#13;
forth throughout most of the&#13;
second half until Green Bay got&#13;
into foul trouble. Parkside's final&#13;
10 points came on the foul line to&#13;
put the game away.&#13;
Parkside forward Arthur Bright&#13;
had possibly his best game as a&#13;
Ranger by leading the team with&#13;
19 points and eight rebounds.&#13;
Walter Greene added 16 points&#13;
and Curtis Green 13. Green Bay's&#13;
6-8 center Nathan Barnes took&#13;
game honors in both scoring, with&#13;
21 points, and rebounds, with 12.&#13;
at Iowa State, Jan 5&#13;
Parkside started their third&#13;
major college road trip of the&#13;
season by throwing a scare into&#13;
Iowa State before yielding 67-58.&#13;
The Rangers held the lead&#13;
throughout most of the game&#13;
behind hot shooting from freshman&#13;
star Chucky Perry and All -&#13;
American Reggie Anderson. The&#13;
Rangers led 25-21 at the half.&#13;
Iowa State too^ it's first lead of&#13;
the game midway through the&#13;
second half at 40-39, but the&#13;
Rangers came back to lead 47-42&#13;
with 9:24 left to play. Iowa State&#13;
then went on a 12-4 scoring binge&#13;
to take the lead and the game over&#13;
for good.&#13;
Parkside's downfall was the&#13;
poor shooting of Walter Greene&#13;
and Curtis Green, who between&#13;
them scored just seven points.&#13;
Chucky Perry led the Rangers&#13;
with 20 points and Reggie Anderson&#13;
had 18.&#13;
Ron Harris of Iow a " ate led all&#13;
scorers with 21 points along with&#13;
10 r ebounds,&#13;
at Colorado, Jan 7&#13;
Parkside played its worst game&#13;
of the season that Wednesday&#13;
night as they were totally outclassed&#13;
by Colorado 91-51.&#13;
The Rangers shot a horrid 31&#13;
percent from the field compared&#13;
to 50 p ercent for Colorado. Coach&#13;
Stephens said that it lr ked like&#13;
his team "had their feei nailed to&#13;
the floor."&#13;
Parkside trailed 44-21 t halftime&#13;
and was never in the game.&#13;
None of the Rangers scored more&#13;
than eight points, while Wilbert&#13;
Webb led all rebounders with 11.&#13;
at Cal State - Fullerton, Jan 10&#13;
The Rangers first victory over a&#13;
major college opponent this&#13;
season came mainly from the hot&#13;
shooting of senior guard Walter&#13;
Greene, who led all scorers with a&#13;
season high 25 points.&#13;
The lead went back and forth&#13;
between the two teams all&#13;
throughout regulation play. The&#13;
score was tied at the end of the&#13;
first half 22-22 and again at the end&#13;
of the second half 54-54. Buster&#13;
Webb scored on a free throw to tie&#13;
the game with six seconds left on&#13;
the clock. He could have sealed&#13;
the victory but missed the second&#13;
free throw and sent the game into&#13;
overtime.&#13;
The Rangers scored 11 of their&#13;
15 overtime points from the free&#13;
throw line to take a 69-61 win.&#13;
Along with Greene's 25 points,&#13;
Reggie Anderson had 16 and&#13;
Chucky Perry 12. Center Dave&#13;
Wear led Fullerton with 19 points&#13;
and 10 rebounds,&#13;
at Hawaii - Hilo, Jan 13-14&#13;
The Rangers ended their west&#13;
coast road trip with back - to -&#13;
back games in the harsh climate&#13;
of Ha waii. The tough opponent on&#13;
this, the teams first ever trip to&#13;
the islands, was NAIA power&#13;
Hawaii - Hilo, which at the time&#13;
was ranked in the top 20 in the&#13;
NAIA with a record of 12-3.&#13;
The first game was well played&#13;
with the score close all the way.&#13;
Hilo led 38-35 at the half and beat&#13;
the Rangers by that same margin&#13;
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
PARKSIDE'S Curtis 'Tree' Green goes up for a rebound over&#13;
Ouchita Baptist's Charles Dilworth in the championship game of&#13;
the Fourth Annual Ranger Classic basketball tournament.&#13;
74-71. The Rangers lost the game&#13;
at the free throw line, where they&#13;
were outscored 18-7.&#13;
Parkside was led by Chucky&#13;
Perry with 17 points and a Ranger&#13;
season high 10 assists. Reggie&#13;
Anderson added 16 points. Ia&#13;
Saipaia led all scorers for Hilo&#13;
with 24 po ints.&#13;
The second game wasn't nearly&#13;
as close as Hilo outgunned&#13;
Parkside 8(F68. T he Rangers got&#13;
into foul trouble in this game, as&#13;
their whole starting front line,&#13;
Anderson, Webb and Green fouled&#13;
out.&#13;
Parkside was tired and couldn't&#13;
keep up with the hot shooting Hilo&#13;
team. Parkside trailed 36-30 at&#13;
halftime.&#13;
Anderson led Parkside with 16&#13;
points while Walter Greene added&#13;
14. Ia Saipaia again led all scorers&#13;
with 20 points.&#13;
The Rangers ended up the break&#13;
with a 5-11 record, not a bad start&#13;
considering the caliber of teams&#13;
Parkside has played thus far. /&#13;
"instant justice" for rowdy fans&#13;
Rowdy football fans at Clemson&#13;
University don't have to fear&#13;
being taken across town to jail if&#13;
picked up by police. Thanks to an&#13;
"instant justice" court set up&#13;
during games in a building right&#13;
Awards announced at Fall Sports Banquet&#13;
Most valuable nlavers rantains PlwoknfK i : i„ rr„n r^._&#13;
next to the stadium, those picked&#13;
up for drunken or disorderly&#13;
behavior can appear before a&#13;
magistrate, have bond set, pay it&#13;
and return to the game without&#13;
missing many of the big plays.&#13;
Most valuable players, captains&#13;
and letterwinners from UWParkside&#13;
fall sports teams were&#13;
honored December 10, 1980 at the&#13;
annual fall sports awards banquet&#13;
at the Parkside Union.&#13;
Most valuables included NAIA&#13;
national champion Wendy Burman,&#13;
a sophomore from Fond&#13;
du Lac (Gaxirich), for women's&#13;
cross-country; Paul Cannestra,&#13;
a junior from Milwaukee (Messmer),&#13;
for men's cross-country;&#13;
Todd Schalinske, a junior from&#13;
Racine (Horlick) for men's golf;&#13;
Mike Kiefer, a senior from&#13;
Cudahy, for men's soccer ; Kathy&#13;
Thomas, a senior from Kenosha&#13;
(Bradford) for women's tennis;&#13;
and Terri Rieser, a senior from&#13;
Wauwatosa (West), for women's&#13;
volleyball.&#13;
Captains honored at the banquet&#13;
were Cannestra and Dave&#13;
Mueller, a junior from New Berlin&#13;
(West Allis Hale), for men's crosscountry;&#13;
Burman for women's&#13;
cross - country; Brian Graham, a&#13;
junior from Racine (Horlick), for&#13;
men's golf; Kiefer for soccer;&#13;
Thomas for women's tennis; and&#13;
Elizabeth Venci and Linda Zeihen,&#13;
both seniors from Kenosha&#13;
(Bradford), for women's&#13;
volleyball.&#13;
Mark Peterson, a sophomore&#13;
from Oak Creek, was named 1981&#13;
men's golf captain while three&#13;
players will captain the soccer&#13;
squad. They are Racine&#13;
(Lutheran) sophomore Alan&#13;
Gibson, St. Paul, Minn. (Hill -&#13;
Murray) sophomore John McNulty&#13;
and Minneapolis (Robbindale)&#13;
sophomore Bob&#13;
Newstrom.&#13;
Awards for "most improved"&#13;
went to Kimberly freshman Jeff&#13;
Bolwerk for men's soccer and to&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper) freshman A1&#13;
Correa for men's cross - country.&#13;
Letterwinners, by sport, follow:&#13;
Men's Cross - Country&#13;
Tom Barrett, freshman,'&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper); Steve&#13;
Brunner, freshman, Kenosha (St.&#13;
Joseph); Paul Cannestra, junior,&#13;
Milwaukee (Messmer); A1&#13;
Correa, freshman, Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper); Dave Mueller, junior,&#13;
New Berlin (West Allis Hale);&#13;
Dan Stublaski, freshman, Racine&#13;
(Park).&#13;
Women's Cross - Country&#13;
Kelli Benzow, freshman, Racine&#13;
(Case); Wendy Burman,&#13;
sophomore, Fond du Lac&#13;
(Goodrich); JoAnne Carey, freshman,&#13;
Racine (Case); Dona&#13;
Driscoll, sophomore, Muskego;&#13;
Linda Pfeilstifter, freshman,&#13;
Racine (Case); and Sandra&#13;
Venne, freshman, Racine&#13;
(Horlick).&#13;
Men's Golf&#13;
Brian Graham, junior, Racine&#13;
(Horlick); Jeff MuzertSki, freshman,&#13;
Racine (Horlick); Mark&#13;
Peterson, sophomore, Oak Creek:&#13;
Mike Redfearn, senior, Racine&#13;
(Green Bay West); Todd&#13;
Schalinske, junior, Racine&#13;
(Horlick); John Schneider, freshman,&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper).&#13;
Men's Soccer&#13;
John Bieser, freshman,&#13;
Wauwatosa (West); Jeff Bolwerk,&#13;
freshman, Kimberly; Don Cops,&#13;
freshman, Appleton (Xavier);&#13;
Jim Cops, freshman, Kimberly;&#13;
Ralph DeGraff, freshman,&#13;
Chicago, 111. (Qui gley South); Jeff&#13;
Dennehy, freshman, Minneapolis,&#13;
Minn. (Irondale); Brad Faust,&#13;
sophomore, White Bear Lake,&#13;
Minn. (Mariner); Scott Gerhartz,&#13;
freshman, Kimberly; Alan&#13;
Gibson, sophomore, Racine&#13;
(Lutheran); Mike Kiefer, senior,&#13;
Cudahy; Jeff King, freshman,&#13;
Kimberly; Ignacio Marchena,&#13;
freshman, Panama (Subiaco&#13;
Academy, Art.); John McNulty,&#13;
sophomore, St. Paul, Minn. (Hill -&#13;
Murray); Jeff Medin, freshman,&#13;
New Brighton, Minn. (Mounds&#13;
View); John Monks, freshman,&#13;
Chicago, 111. (Qui gley South); Bob&#13;
Newstrom, sophomore, Minneapolis,&#13;
Minn. (Robbinsdale);&#13;
Chiedu Okomah, freshman,&#13;
Chicago, 111. (Quigley South); Dan&#13;
Opferman, freshman, Chicago,&#13;
111. (Quigley South); Dave Schwartz,&#13;
freshman, Kenosha&#13;
(Shoreland Lutheran); Todd&#13;
Wenslaff, sophomore Milwaukee&#13;
(Juneau); Paul Wieland, freshman,&#13;
Milwaukee (Tech).&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
Laura Bianco, junior, Kenosha&#13;
(St. Joseph); Laura Bleashka,&#13;
sophomore, Kenosha (Bradford);&#13;
Nancy Kivi, junior, Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper); Lisa Lindsay, freshman,&#13;
Racine (Horlick); Emily&#13;
Modiz, senior, Albert Lea, Minn.&#13;
(Central); Pam Sumi,&#13;
sophomore, Racine (Horlick);&#13;
Kathy Thomas, senior, Kenosha&#13;
(Bradford).&#13;
Women's Volleyball&#13;
Terri Bieser, senior,&#13;
Wauwatosa (West); Chris&#13;
Dament, freshman, Racine (St.&#13;
Catherine's); Sally Heiring,&#13;
freshman, Kenosha (Bradford);&#13;
Robin Henschel, freshman,&#13;
Hartland (Arrowhead); Laurie&#13;
Hess, freshman, Neenah; Jeanne&#13;
Jacobs, freshman, Milwaukee (St.&#13;
Mary's Academy); Callie Lee,&#13;
freshman, Sterling, 111.; Roxanne&#13;
Nelson, senior, West Allis (Hale) ;&#13;
Laurie Pope, sophomore, Omro;&#13;
Jane Prissel, freshman, Durand;&#13;
Paula Sandahl, freshman,&#13;
Waukegan, 111. (East); Elizabeth&#13;
Venci, senior, Kenosha (Bradford);&#13;
Linda Zeihen, senior,&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford). </text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>Workers' struggle creates unique society in Poland</text>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Porkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, December 11, 1980&#13;
Workers' struggle creates&#13;
unique society in Poland&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
"Poland in Crisis: Workers vs&#13;
the State," the public forum held&#13;
Monday night examined the&#13;
current situation in Poland from&#13;
three aspects: the labor&#13;
movement's viewpoint, the&#13;
current historical, political and&#13;
economical status of Poland and&#13;
the Soviet Union viewpoint.&#13;
The labor viewpoint was&#13;
presented by Franklin Wallick,&#13;
editor of U.A.W. Washington&#13;
Report; Adam Przeworski, a&#13;
Poland native and political&#13;
science professor at the&#13;
University of Chicago, commented&#13;
on the current Polish&#13;
society; and Dan McGovern,&#13;
visiting assistant professor at&#13;
Parkside talked about the Soviet&#13;
view of Poland. Kenneth Hoover,&#13;
associate professor of political&#13;
science at Parkside served as&#13;
moderator.&#13;
"What is happening in Poland is&#13;
really an attempt to create a new&#13;
society," said Przeworski, "a kind&#13;
of society that doesn't exist&#13;
anywhere. (It's) an experiment in&#13;
the construction of a society which&#13;
would be at the same time&#13;
socialist and democratic."&#13;
Calling the situation 'labor&#13;
unrest' is a misnomer, according&#13;
to Przeworski. "There is no&#13;
question of unrest," he said. "It's&#13;
a struggle by workers to organize&#13;
independently of their employers.&#13;
This is not a group of workers who&#13;
suddenly became insubordinate,&#13;
irresponsible and restless."&#13;
A strike in Gdansk, a large&#13;
shipyard with about 17,000&#13;
workers, brought about the&#13;
establishment of independent&#13;
unions that are not connected to&#13;
the government. "The unions in&#13;
the past," said Wallick, "have felt&#13;
that their job was to provide&#13;
vacation spas for the members or&#13;
to be cheerleaders to the regime.&#13;
(The new unions) believe in&#13;
negotiating with the powers that&#13;
decide on wages and hours."&#13;
"We must not limit the events in&#13;
Poland to union organization,"&#13;
commented Przeworski,&#13;
"because although the decisive&#13;
breakthrough was indeed a wave&#13;
of strikes that took place during&#13;
the summer and that ended on&#13;
Sept. 1 with the government&#13;
recognizing the right to form free&#13;
and independent unions. As a&#13;
result of that victory by workers,&#13;
the entire society suddenly awoke&#13;
and began to organize itself."&#13;
The newly established unions&#13;
have not succeeded to consolidate&#13;
themselves as an organization,&#13;
according to Przeworski. "The&#13;
hierarchy of leadership is not very&#13;
clear, the leadership is already&#13;
divided and, most importantly,&#13;
the leadership no longer controls&#13;
the rank and file."&#13;
That is one side of the picture;&#13;
the same is true for the other side.&#13;
The communist party has, to a&#13;
great extent, fallen apart during&#13;
the crisis, said Przeworski. "The&#13;
party of revolt within the party is&#13;
so pronounced that the party&#13;
leadership is not able to control&#13;
the followers, to deliver on&#13;
whatever commitments they may&#13;
want to make and to pursue a&#13;
consistent strategy," he said.&#13;
What happens in that type of&#13;
situation, according to Przeworski,&#13;
is that the leaders&#13;
negotiate with each other, but it's&#13;
not clear whether the leaders are&#13;
negotiating on anybody's behalf.&#13;
Przeworski feels the situation has&#13;
become more consolidated over&#13;
the last few days due to the increasing&#13;
threat of a Russian intervention.&#13;
&#13;
The big question mark has been&#13;
the Soviet Union's intentions in the&#13;
Poland crisis. "In the last couple&#13;
of days the Soviet leadership has&#13;
given the Polish leadership some&#13;
breathing space," said&#13;
McGovern, "in which to take&#13;
control of their own nation. But&#13;
still at this time as the Soviet&#13;
leadership watches and waits it's&#13;
not clear, probably to them, what&#13;
they're going to do about Poland."&#13;
"I agree that they haven't yet&#13;
decided," said Przeworski, "or&#13;
that they have decided to make&#13;
their action contingent upon the&#13;
developments."&#13;
McGovern believes that Soviet&#13;
concerns over economic and&#13;
political situations may be influential&#13;
in deciding what type of&#13;
action the Soviets will take. The&#13;
Soviet economy is suffering from&#13;
very slow growth, less than a fifth&#13;
of what they had anticipated.&#13;
The Soviets are having&#13;
problems with labor productivity,&#13;
old machinery and providing their&#13;
people with basic consumer&#13;
goods, said McGovern. This year&#13;
the Soviet leadership hoped to&#13;
obtain 260 million metric tons .of&#13;
grain due to insufficient crops, but&#13;
they fell short of their goal by 100&#13;
million tons. Droughts during&#13;
three of the last five years made it&#13;
impossible to produce enough&#13;
grain to feed their people, thus&#13;
forcing them to turn to the world&#13;
market and to countries such as&#13;
the United States, Canada and&#13;
Australia.&#13;
"Another major problem that&#13;
the Soviet leadership faces," said&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• From the Parking Lot:&#13;
Ranger's letter to Santa&#13;
• Review: "Flash Gordon 99&#13;
• Wrestlers show potential&#13;
McGovern, "is political control&#13;
over their own country.&#13;
Throughout the course of Soviet&#13;
history, they have been willing to&#13;
give up economic efficiency, goals&#13;
we think are important like a&#13;
standard of living, and meeting&#13;
marginal revenue and marginal&#13;
cost. They'd rather throw those&#13;
out the window than lose political&#13;
control over their own country."&#13;
Poland has a mutual defense&#13;
agreement with the Soviet Union&#13;
so that they will come to each&#13;
other's defense should either&#13;
country be attacked. "This will be&#13;
the justification for military intervention&#13;
if one comes," said&#13;
McGovern.&#13;
"What's happening in Poland is&#13;
not a threat to the strategic interests&#13;
of the Soviet Union," said&#13;
Przeworski. "There are no&#13;
political forces organized in&#13;
Poland which see as their goal any&#13;
type of anti-Soviet action or even a&#13;
change of the Polish membership&#13;
in the Warsaw Pact."&#13;
Some British sources indicate&#13;
that the Soviets had as many as&#13;
12,000 casualties in Afghanistan in&#13;
the last year. This kind of loss will&#13;
be weighed heavily when they&#13;
determine what, if any, military&#13;
action they take in Poland, noted&#13;
McGovern.&#13;
Money presents a very serious&#13;
problem to the Soviets and to the&#13;
Poles. The Poles have a $20 billion&#13;
foreign debt with interest&#13;
payments of $7 billion a year.&#13;
"Last month," said McGovern,&#13;
"the Soviets promised about $1.3&#13;
billion to pay off the interest fees.&#13;
The Soviets can't continually help&#13;
bail them out. So there's a&#13;
question about how far they're&#13;
going to go to bail out their Polish&#13;
brothers."&#13;
Przeworski doesn't believe the&#13;
Soviets care about the West, the&#13;
moral opinions of the West and&#13;
economic sanctions. "But I do&#13;
think there's one thing they do&#13;
care about — and that's China.&#13;
The fact that the Chinese just&#13;
offered a warning today to the&#13;
Soviet Union is a significant fact."&#13;
"On all rational grounds, it will&#13;
be irrational for the Soviets to&#13;
intervene," concluded Przeworski.&#13;
"The problem is that&#13;
I'm not persuaded that they'd act&#13;
rationally."&#13;
Tuition now *433&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 14&#13;
ci./aus&#13;
Graphics by Mark Christiansen&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
De&#13;
tLb To£*&#13;
$30 surcharge withdrawn&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
UW System President Robert&#13;
O'Neil last week withdrew his&#13;
request for another $30 tuition&#13;
surcharge for the second&#13;
semester. A similar surcharge&#13;
was initiated last fall after Gov.&#13;
Lee Dreyfus ordered a state - wide&#13;
4.4% budget cut.&#13;
The state's worsening revenue&#13;
situation, inflation and increasing&#13;
enrollment were the reasons&#13;
O'Neil cited to the Board of&#13;
Regents for the revival of the&#13;
surcharge. In his letter to the&#13;
Regents on Nov. 26, O'Neil said&#13;
that the $30 surcharge would&#13;
prevent "further harm to&#13;
educational quality and student&#13;
access."&#13;
The surcharge would have&#13;
needed the approval of the&#13;
Regents, Gov. Dreyfus and the&#13;
. wMk WMLWm&#13;
ASSISTANT CHANCELLOR&#13;
GARY GOETZ&#13;
state legislature's Joint Finance&#13;
Committee. Gov. Dreyfus and the&#13;
chairmen of the committee have&#13;
expressed opposition to the second&#13;
surcharge. The Regents approved&#13;
the first fee by only a close&#13;
margin.&#13;
O'Neil withdrew his request for&#13;
the second surcharge because he&#13;
didn't see any use in advocating&#13;
something that would get shot&#13;
down, according to Gary Goetz,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor of Administration&#13;
and Fiscal Affairs.&#13;
What the request's withdrawl&#13;
means at Parkside is that the fulltime&#13;
undergraduate tuition fee for&#13;
the spring semester is now $433,&#13;
not $463 as was anticipated during&#13;
the registration in November.&#13;
Tuition for part-time students was&#13;
also altered during early&#13;
registration, according to Thomas&#13;
Peltier, Bursar. A fee of two&#13;
dollar-fifty cent per credit was&#13;
added on to part-time tuition&#13;
rates. &#13;
Thursday, December 11,1980&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Surcharge money&#13;
comes in handv&#13;
by Ken Meyer M&#13;
Editor&#13;
com^Theh^Tea^n.'&#13;
5 fina&#13;
"&#13;
y a&#13;
"&#13;
d W"&#13;
h «" s™&#13;
The gloomy economic situation threatening to dampen Christmas&#13;
R^herm-Np^f&#13;
3 turning gloomier when UW System President&#13;
RuSS Sl&#13;
rTl&#13;
Sted&#13;
.&#13;
an0t&#13;
?&#13;
er $3&#13;
° surcharge *&gt;r spring semester.&#13;
But after hearing objections from Governor Lee Dreyfus and the State&#13;
Regents"&#13;
1^' rightfully withdrew his request from the Board of&#13;
writl^nin fh?n&#13;
anS h6re *1 P&#13;
f&#13;
a&#13;
f&#13;
k&#13;
,fde is that the fig&#13;
ure of $463 that was ° the Bursar cards of full-time undergraduate students at early&#13;
!RXi.read $433&#13;
-&#13;
Part&#13;
-time students will not have to&#13;
pay the $2.50 per credit that was added on to their tuition fees because of&#13;
the surcharge Bursar&#13;
's office was only anticipating the return of&#13;
Many students had already planned on paying the $463 (no t quietly&#13;
IhTrSUre&#13;
'i^ payir? 11 ^ ^ same)&gt; so $30 is "extra money," if there really is such a thing.&#13;
J&#13;
What that money should be used for, considering the holiday season&#13;
and all, is to help those who need help. Ideally, the holiday season is the&#13;
time people care about and live in harmony with their fellow human&#13;
beings. I ve always wondered why that spirit is not extended throughout&#13;
the year as it should be.&#13;
It s getting harder to see this caring spirit through the immense&#13;
commercialization of Christmas, but the feeling still remains. And now&#13;
is the perfect opportunity for us students to prove it.&#13;
If yo u want to help those nearby, do so through an organization that&#13;
!r V j^&#13;
needy !" y&#13;
°&#13;
ur local area&#13;
-&#13;
0ne example, and there are many, is&#13;
the food drive that has been organized on campus. Dry goods can be&#13;
brought to the table on the Concourse Bridge through Friday, Dec. 12, to&#13;
help the impoverished in the Kenosha, Racine and outlying areas&#13;
Dotting a few dollars' worth of food for a food drive, or contributing&#13;
time, money or goods to some other worthwhile cause seems feasible for&#13;
many considering the $30 that isn't being taxed onto ourTuTtion&#13;
Of y remember those who aren't having too merry&#13;
?he\?n nnJPt&#13;
aLaP J" 1 ®xpect a Appier New Year. Then remember&#13;
tn? $ I n r vf gr&#13;
tf&#13;
dy ~ keep most of il but contribute what you can if&#13;
you can. Consider the joy you'll bring by giving just a little.&#13;
Warn Bam Singing Telegram!&#13;
"Songs for any Occasion"&#13;
2 FOR 1 SALE&#13;
551-9095 December 3-14&#13;
SANTAS, GORILLAS, BELLY DANCERS&#13;
UNICYCLIST, MARCHING BAND&#13;
for&#13;
Parties, Birthdays, Love Songs,&#13;
_ Apologies, Thank You, Any Occasion At All&#13;
7 Day s A W e e k 8a.m.- 8p,m.&#13;
AUDIO SYSTEMS&#13;
Audio Retailer of 1980&#13;
Audio Video Magazine asked&#13;
1,399 manufacturers and representatives&#13;
nationwide to&#13;
vote for their ten best retailers&#13;
based on professionalism,&#13;
customer service,&#13;
product knowledge-ability,&#13;
and they chose us as one.&#13;
AUDIO SYSTEMS&#13;
7535 Twenty-second Avenue, Kenosha Telephone 658-3796&#13;
'Ranger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
Brian Feliand Executive Business Manager&#13;
h Business Manager&#13;
SueMlchetti News Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Dave Cramer Sports Editor&#13;
Brian Passino Photo Editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson r _&#13;
Mlke *"•« Advertising Manager"&#13;
ST A F p&#13;
Ripp^TsiougTar'T6" ChriS,i"&#13;
e&#13;
°'&#13;
Nei"' F"s.on, Joe&#13;
Nukes pose threats&#13;
by Deb Elzinga&#13;
This is in response to the recent&#13;
articles defending centralized&#13;
forms of energy. It was argued,&#13;
among other things, that my&#13;
article on the solar alternative&#13;
was misleading. I still maintain&#13;
that the soft path based on&#13;
decentralized solar energy and&#13;
conservation is the best answer to&#13;
our energy crisis.&#13;
The claim was made that&#13;
nuclear energy is an environmentally&#13;
benign source of&#13;
power. It is beyond my comprehension&#13;
how anyone can make&#13;
a statement like that when there&#13;
are many facts about nuclear&#13;
power which suggest that it is a&#13;
potentially malignant, rather than&#13;
benign source of power. From the&#13;
beginning of the fuel cycle there&#13;
are serious threats to people and&#13;
the environment. During the&#13;
initial search for uranium though&#13;
drilling there is a risk that ground&#13;
water could be contaminated with&#13;
uranium.&#13;
After the uranium has been&#13;
located it is mined, which poses&#13;
threats. First, there is the danger&#13;
to the miners; radon gas is&#13;
emitted into the air and inhaled by&#13;
the miners greatly increasing&#13;
their chances of lung cancer.&#13;
Secondly, a by-product of mining&#13;
are the tailings which also pose&#13;
potential dangers. As of now there&#13;
are 140 million tons of low - level&#13;
radioactive ore tailings. In areas&#13;
where uranium is mined people,&#13;
unaware that the tailings are&#13;
dangerous, used these seemingly&#13;
neutral piles to build schools,&#13;
churches, and houses. These piles&#13;
are radioactively dangerous,&#13;
consequently there has been an&#13;
abnormal increase in babies with&#13;
congenital defects, and an abnormally&#13;
high rate of leukemia in&#13;
one of these areas.&#13;
In other aspects of th e fuel cycle&#13;
there are also significant dangers&#13;
During the fuel fabrication&#13;
process, for example, there have&#13;
been many incidents of dangers to&#13;
the workers. At the Kerr-McGee&#13;
plant in Oklahoma which made&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
mixed plutonium uranium fuel&#13;
rods, at least 87 workers were&#13;
exposed to excessive levels of&#13;
plutonium.&#13;
Karen Silkwood is one such&#13;
worker who was exposed. When&#13;
she first began at Kerr-McGee she&#13;
had faith if the nuclear promise&#13;
until she learned that many&#13;
workers were frequently exposed&#13;
to airbourne plutonium, which&#13;
cannot be retrieved once it&#13;
escapes into the air. Plutonium is&#13;
a fiercely toxic substance — one&#13;
millionth of a gram has caused&#13;
cancer in animals. Karen eventually&#13;
became involved with the&#13;
union and set out to investigate the&#13;
hazards which existed at the&#13;
plant. During her investigation it&#13;
was found out that plant&#13;
operations were often dangerous.&#13;
Leaking pipes and defective&#13;
equipment regularly contaminated&#13;
workers with&#13;
plutonium, and the company&#13;
sometimes ordered them to&#13;
continue working while leaks went&#13;
unrepaired for days.&#13;
Unfortunately, Karen Silkwood&#13;
was never able to see the case&#13;
brought to court. In 1974 she was&#13;
on her way to meet with a health&#13;
expert for the Oil, Chemical, and&#13;
Atomic Workers International&#13;
Union (OCAW) and a New York&#13;
Times reporter. She had with her&#13;
documentation regarding the&#13;
health hazards at the Kerr-McGee&#13;
plant. However, she died in a car&#13;
accident before she reached her&#13;
destination. There is substantial&#13;
evidence that her car was&#13;
deliberately run off the road. On&#13;
Karen's bumper there were fresh&#13;
dent marks and somehow the&#13;
folder had mysteriously disappeared.&#13;
&#13;
After the uranium has been&#13;
converted into fuel for the dragon,&#13;
the problems which have been&#13;
virtually isolated in the southwestern&#13;
part of the U.S. are now&#13;
extended, thus the danger of&#13;
disasters is increased. The&#13;
nuclear plant itself, poses an&#13;
additional threat. There is always&#13;
a possibility that mistakes will&#13;
occur during construction which&#13;
can lead to later problems. Backup&#13;
systems may break down&#13;
during an emergency. The accident&#13;
at Three Mile Island should&#13;
be another warning to move&#13;
swiftly away from this ominous&#13;
source of power. There are others&#13;
who share this view. In February&#13;
of 1976, three scientists in&#13;
management positions resigned&#13;
from General Electric's nuclear&#13;
research center in San Jose,&#13;
California. Two weeks later in&#13;
introducing their technical&#13;
testimony on reactor safety&#13;
GUTTORMSEN'S&#13;
_ v PRO SHOP&#13;
_ 5160 6th Avenue&#13;
Has a perfect way to&#13;
say Merry Christmas to&#13;
\ the bowler on your list.&#13;
Balls from $29'&#13;
5&#13;
Bags from&#13;
Shoes from $20&#13;
95&#13;
Doubtful about,&#13;
weight, size&#13;
or style?&#13;
We have&#13;
BOB MEYER DICK BELTOYA&#13;
deficiencies, the three said in a&#13;
joint statement: "We resigned our&#13;
jobs to commit ourselves totally to&#13;
the education of the public on all&#13;
aspects and dangers of nuclear&#13;
power as we have learned them&#13;
over our many years of ex&#13;
perience in the industry."&#13;
Still another problem with this&#13;
"benign" source of energy is 0f&#13;
course, the waste. Despite the fact&#13;
that nuclear power plants have&#13;
been operating for some 20 years&#13;
there is still no permanent safe&#13;
medium in which will hold these&#13;
highly lethal wastes. According to&#13;
Sierra Club Bulletin, "approximately&#13;
73 million gallons of&#13;
liquid high-level wastes among&#13;
the most toxic and hazardous&#13;
substances known, are now on&#13;
hand awaiting a permanent&#13;
method of disposal."&#13;
There are many different&#13;
classifications of nuclear waste.&#13;
Equipment used during mining&#13;
and other miscellaneous items&#13;
begin to accumulate through the&#13;
entire fuel cycle. As the fuel cycle&#13;
continues, so does the waste&#13;
Towards the end of the fuel cycle&#13;
there are the spent fuel rods being&#13;
stored at the plant site. Again,&#13;
there is no known permanent&#13;
storage method. Some of the spent&#13;
fuel has been cooling for 20 years&#13;
in pools that were designed for&#13;
five year storage. In addition,&#13;
these rods are now being packed&#13;
closer together which poses still&#13;
another possible threat. It is&#13;
speculated that these spent fuel&#13;
rods could form a critical mass&#13;
producing a small scale melt&#13;
down effect.&#13;
At the very end of the fuel cycle&#13;
there remains the problem of&#13;
decommissioning or dismantling&#13;
the nuclear power plants when it&#13;
becomes obsolete. Dismantling a&#13;
nuclear facility is probably the&#13;
safest in terms of the environment;&#13;
however, it would be&#13;
extremely expensive. Another&#13;
idea is to simply "mothball" the&#13;
facility. This would mean that the&#13;
still dangerous monster would&#13;
have to be guarded for literally&#13;
hundreds of thousands of years.&#13;
There have been theories&#13;
pertaining to how wastes could be&#13;
permanently stored, but none of&#13;
these seem to be viable solutions.&#13;
The two methods which have&#13;
recently been considered are&#13;
storage in granite or salt. Strong&#13;
evidence points to the fact that&#13;
neither one of these proposed&#13;
plans will be the answer to the&#13;
storage problem. Salt is extremely&#13;
water - soluble, is highly&#13;
corrosive and cannot hold&#13;
radionuclides effectively. When&#13;
Continued On P age Three&#13;
Fashions&#13;
Old Market Square&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd. &#13;
RANGER&#13;
National student&#13;
Thursday, December 11,1980&#13;
The 20-year-old University of&#13;
Wisconsin state student&#13;
association, United Council, was&#13;
one of the more than 25 state&#13;
student lobbying organizations&#13;
which met at the University of&#13;
Kansas October 24-26 to create a&#13;
new national student&#13;
organization, The National&#13;
Alliance of State Student&#13;
Nuclear power&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
wastes are stored in this manner&#13;
there is the possibility that radioactive&#13;
materials will leach out&#13;
in months rather than thousands&#13;
of years, as previously assumed.&#13;
When this leaching occurs there is&#13;
also the possibility that the waste&#13;
will escape from the container,&#13;
filter down through the fissures in&#13;
the rock and underground&#13;
aquifiers into rivers and waterways.&#13;
Ultimately they will reach&#13;
the oceans. There are also many&#13;
unforeseen factors which could&#13;
lead to a disaster from the storage&#13;
of these very hazardous wastes&#13;
which are generated from the&#13;
"benign" energy source.&#13;
The accusation is often made&#13;
against anti-nuclear people that&#13;
they are anti - establishment and&#13;
anti - scientific. This is done to&#13;
paint a negative picture of those&#13;
who oppose this type of energy.&#13;
However, can one really be accused&#13;
of being anti - establishment&#13;
for realizing the very grave threat&#13;
that nuclear power poses? There&#13;
are many scientists who were&#13;
once devoted to the nuclear industry&#13;
who left after coming to the&#13;
conclusion that nuclear power is&#13;
not the answer. Are those&#13;
scientists anti - establishment as&#13;
well? Senator John Glenn recently&#13;
expressed similar reservations&#13;
about nuclear power. Does this&#13;
make John Glenn just another anti&#13;
- establishment villain?&#13;
sophomores&#13;
COLLEGE.&#13;
Army ROTC offers you a&#13;
two - year management&#13;
training program during&#13;
college. To give you a head&#13;
start on life after college.&#13;
You'll learn to lead. To&#13;
manage people, money and&#13;
material. You'll also earn a&#13;
commission as an Army officer.&#13;
Credentials which will&#13;
set you apart in the job&#13;
market.&#13;
Whatever you're planning to&#13;
do after college, Army ROTC&#13;
provides career opportunities&#13;
that fit right in . . . part-time&#13;
Reserve service while you're&#13;
employed in the civilian&#13;
community or full - time&#13;
active duty starting at $11,000&#13;
per year.&#13;
Get a head start on life after&#13;
college. Get started in Army&#13;
ROTC. For details, contact:&#13;
Enrollment Officer&#13;
Military Science Dept.&#13;
Marquette U.&#13;
1-224-7195&#13;
THE ARMY ROTC&#13;
TWO-YEAR PR06RAM.&#13;
FOR THE&#13;
SliO LIFE.&#13;
Associations (NASSA). The&#13;
conference, according to United&#13;
Council Administration Director&#13;
Terry Lohr, was held to build&#13;
student lobbying and&#13;
organizational power for student&#13;
governments on the state level.&#13;
Lohr, who was elected to serve&#13;
on the Executive Committee on&#13;
NASSA said the conference was&#13;
"a significant and historic event&#13;
in the national student movement.&#13;
Students as an interest group on&#13;
the state and national level have&#13;
never been more organized."&#13;
United Council, one of the first&#13;
state student associations to&#13;
organize in 1960, is respected&#13;
nationwide, according to Bob&#13;
Bingham, the elected Chairperson&#13;
of NASSA. " If we had the same&#13;
kind of organization nationwide as&#13;
United Council has in Wisconsin,&#13;
students would be one of the most&#13;
powerful interest groups in&#13;
Washington, D.C.," said&#13;
Bingham.&#13;
NASSA is the creation of two&#13;
grows&#13;
national student organizations&#13;
tha t sponsored the conference, the&#13;
United State Student Association,&#13;
(USSA) and the National Student&#13;
Educational Fund (NSEF), according&#13;
to Joe Sweeney, project&#13;
director for NSEF.&#13;
Sweeney said that NSEF&#13;
received a grant of $113, 000 from&#13;
the Carnegie Foundation to&#13;
sponsor the USSA Development&#13;
Fund which helped NASSA get&#13;
organized. "Last summer USSA&#13;
and NSEF voted to form a&#13;
national organization that could&#13;
help give technical assistance to&#13;
state student associations like&#13;
Wisconsin's United Council," said&#13;
Sweeney.&#13;
NASSA is important for several&#13;
reasons, according to Sweeney:&#13;
"Individual student governments&#13;
cannot realistically expect to&#13;
address the increasingly complex&#13;
number of issues facing higher&#13;
education today. By organizing&#13;
collectively to address these&#13;
issues, they will become more&#13;
effective."&#13;
The USSA was formed in 1978&#13;
when the National Student&#13;
Association (formed in 1946)&#13;
merged with the National Student&#13;
Lobby (formed in 1971) at the&#13;
annual national student congress.&#13;
Doug Tuthill, National Chair of&#13;
USSA, believes that state student&#13;
associations will be the key&#13;
building blocks of USSA an d the&#13;
national student movement.&#13;
Racine express stopped&#13;
During finals and registration,&#13;
the Racine express bus will not be&#13;
running. Only one bus will be&#13;
available at 7:20 a. m. and 8:30 a.&#13;
m. The second express will be put&#13;
back on the same schedule when&#13;
spring semester begins.&#13;
If any students experience bus&#13;
overload problems, they should&#13;
contact Ronald Brinkmann at 553-&#13;
2455 immediately so that the&#13;
problem can be rectified.&#13;
Pomazal tenure denied&#13;
Richard Pomazal, assistant&#13;
professor of p sychology, appealed&#13;
his tenure denial to the Board of&#13;
Regents to no avail.&#13;
The Board, during a Nov. 7&#13;
meeting, decided, "that the Board&#13;
of Regents considers the Chancellor's&#13;
decision to be final under&#13;
UWS 3.08 (3), Wisconsin Administrative&#13;
Code, and declines to&#13;
give further consideration to the&#13;
matter referred to in (Pomazel's)&#13;
letter of A ugust 5."&#13;
vJ ACADEMY OF BATON A DANCE&#13;
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Christmas—&#13;
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For Something Special:&#13;
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uptown&#13;
kenosha Jewelry&#13;
#/HDV39 aiDsnw 33SOO,, Records&#13;
A HOLIDAY TRADITION.&#13;
Be sure to bring some old friends home for the holidays. Look for&#13;
the Budweiser.Clydesdales at your favorite store. They're bringing&#13;
you a convenient way to buy Bud for all your holiday guests!&#13;
THIS BUD'S FOR YOU&#13;
E.F MADRIGRANO&#13;
1831- 55th St&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
658-3553 &#13;
4 Thursday, December 11,1980 RANGER&#13;
Coming Events From the Parking Lot&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 11&#13;
CONCERT at 1 pm in the Union Cinema featuring the Parkside Percussion and&#13;
Guitar Ensembles. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 12&#13;
DANCE featuring "Muscle Beach" at 8 pm in Union Square. In advance, admission&#13;
is $1.50 for students, $2.00 for others, $2.50 at the door. Tickets are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center. ID cards are required.&#13;
MOVIE "Heroes" will be shown at 8 pm in the Union Cinema. Admission at the door&#13;
is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 13&#13;
CONCERT with the Racine Symphony Orchestra at 8 pm in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. Admission will be charged at the door.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 14&#13;
MOVIE "Heroes" will be repeated at 7:30 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Dec. 15&#13;
BASKETBALL vs. UW-Milwaukee at 7:30 pm. In advance, admission is $1.50 for&#13;
Parkside students and $2.00 for others. Tickets are available at the Union Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT at 9:15 pm in Union Square featuring "R &amp; B " Rhythm and&#13;
Blues Band. Admission is free with your basketball ticket. The same ticket entitles&#13;
you to a free beer or soda. Sponsored by Student Life.&#13;
A letter to Santa&#13;
by G. Helgeson and&#13;
Assorted Staff Members&#13;
It's that time of year again, so&#13;
here's our list. We were going to&#13;
ask you for the usual stuff&#13;
(Lamborghinis and Texas instrument&#13;
calculators) but times&#13;
are tough this year and we figured&#13;
it's been no picnic for you, either.&#13;
We know you have to pay all those&#13;
elves and your materials costs&#13;
must be skyrocketing. It's no&#13;
wonder you don't supply batteries!&#13;
&#13;
Anyway, after some deep&#13;
digging into our consciences, we&#13;
shortened our list considerably.&#13;
Here it is:&#13;
Ex-editor Susan Stevens wants&#13;
to be recognized for the beauty of&#13;
her fine mind, not because she's&#13;
cute and a has-been.&#13;
Ken Meyer, Editor, wants a&#13;
meaningful relationship with a&#13;
significant other person of the&#13;
opposite sex of his choice (and&#13;
dreams); he deserves a 12-page&#13;
paper, too.&#13;
Brian Felland, Chairman of the&#13;
Board of Directors, wants a Board&#13;
meeting without jokes, with applause&#13;
at the end and a dramatic&#13;
exit, including a beautiful sunset&#13;
and sad music.&#13;
Dan Galbraith, Business&#13;
Manager, wants a winning entry&#13;
in the Homemaker's Tuna Dessert&#13;
Recipe Contest worth $5,000,000,&#13;
and a bottle of Quaaludes.&#13;
Sue Michetti, News Editor,&#13;
wants a meaningful relationship&#13;
with a significant person of the&#13;
opposite sex who can write "A"&#13;
term papers.&#13;
Wendy Westphal, Feature&#13;
Editor, wants a shadow for Mike&#13;
to make sure he goes to class and&#13;
a stylish movie critic.&#13;
Dave Cramer, Sports Editor,&#13;
wants a new position on Ranger as&#13;
Gossip Columnist.&#13;
Brian Passino, Photo Editor,&#13;
wants another adventure, somone&#13;
to share it with and some&#13;
nuerotransmitter altering&#13;
chemicals. Possibly all the same&#13;
thing.&#13;
Ginger Helgeson, Copy Editor,&#13;
wants a meaningless relationship&#13;
with an insignificant other person&#13;
of the opposite sex or an IBM&#13;
typewriter, whichever is cheaper.&#13;
Mike Farrel, Ad Manager,&#13;
wants all the ads in Happenings&#13;
and a managership at Ponderosa.&#13;
Pete Cramer, "Ace" Sports&#13;
Writer, wants $50,000 a year for&#13;
life and a degree from Parkside.&#13;
That's a lot to ask for, Santa, but&#13;
he promised to put us all in his will&#13;
so we'd really appreciate it.&#13;
Doug Edenhauser, Sports&#13;
Writer, wants the Wreckreator of&#13;
the Year Award. Boy, does he&#13;
deserve it, Santa.&#13;
Lori Meyer, Classified Ad&#13;
Manager, wants readable&#13;
classifieds.&#13;
Mike Holmdohl, Photographer,&#13;
wants a camera motor - drive that&#13;
works and a working internship&#13;
with the National Enquirer.&#13;
Dan McCormack, Photographer,&#13;
wants Laura and&#13;
"total annihilation of the world."&#13;
Yes, Santa, that's what he said.&#13;
Bruce Preston, Feature Writer,&#13;
wants "no more patronizing&#13;
remarks" and How to Defend&#13;
Yourself From Verbal Attacks by&#13;
the Ranger Staff.&#13;
Remember, there's no fireplace&#13;
or even a chimney in the office —&#13;
we'll leave the key taped on the&#13;
door for you. The milk and cookies&#13;
will be on the first desk on the left.&#13;
Have a good Christmas, Santa&#13;
dear.&#13;
Love,&#13;
The Ranger Staff&#13;
Albums contain good to mediocre music&#13;
by Carol Klees&#13;
The Tremblers are the general&#13;
fare you can expect to hear on a&#13;
night out on the town, and never&#13;
seem to rise above that level on&#13;
their first album, "Twice&#13;
Nightly." Their second album, if&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
AAAIN O FFICE&#13;
AUTO B ANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.l.C.&#13;
they ever record it, can only get&#13;
better.&#13;
They seem to muddle their way&#13;
through "Twice Nightly," and&#13;
their hit-and-miss music is mostly&#13;
misses or near-misses. If the&#13;
lyrics are semi-decent, the&#13;
.melody is mundane, and viceversa.&#13;
By rights, this group should&#13;
still be hitting their local bars as&#13;
often as the title suggests, or&#13;
more.&#13;
On the other hand, Steve Forbert&#13;
is about five times better than&#13;
the Tremblers. He's not a great&#13;
musician yet, I doubt that he will&#13;
be, but he is good. In his latest&#13;
effort, "Little Stevie Orbit," he&#13;
attains a middle-of-the-road&#13;
quality, and stays there through&#13;
most of the album's cuts, which&#13;
range in style from country to&#13;
rock to blues.&#13;
There is such great variety in&#13;
his music that something is bound&#13;
to hit on almost anyone's interests.&#13;
Apparently, he has&#13;
decided to elude the reputation of&#13;
being a one-style performer, but&#13;
this hinders the flow of music in&#13;
"Orbit." There's just too much on&#13;
the album to be comfortable to&#13;
any one listener, and nothing&#13;
above average in all that variety.&#13;
Promotion for these albums&#13;
hasn't been very emphasized; it&#13;
will take more than a casual&#13;
glance to find them in the stores.&#13;
Forbert is pleasant at best, The&#13;
Tremblers need to work at their&#13;
music. Unless a taste for the good&#13;
to mediocre has been acquired,&#13;
consider your funds before&#13;
picking up on either of. these.&#13;
OUR EVERYDAY PRICES ARE LOWER&#13;
THAN OTHER'S "DISCOUNT PRICES"&#13;
COME IN &amp; COMPARE&#13;
Christmas Hours&#13;
starting December 6&#13;
MONDAY-FRIDAY9:30to9:00&#13;
SATURDAY 9:30 to 5:15&#13;
SUNDAY 12:00 to4:00&#13;
THE STORE WITH MORE —&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST JEWELER&#13;
• SPECIALS *&#13;
WOMEN'S FRENCH&#13;
CUTTEES-6 COLORS&#13;
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ADULT NITE TEES&#13;
10% OH&#13;
REGULAR PRICE!&#13;
BRING IN THIS AD&#13;
TO RECEIVE THESE&#13;
SPECIAL PRICES&#13;
VALID UNTIL&#13;
DECEMBER20th ONLY&#13;
HERBERT'S!! Transfer&#13;
CORNER 58th ST. &amp; 7th AVE.&#13;
Fashions&#13;
Old Market Square&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
A&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha,&#13;
Elmwood Plaza Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
• Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
^ —. r&#13;
:£»£ £« £££ ifcsac £££ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
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Our Advertisers&#13;
For Your&#13;
Christmas Needs&#13;
Academy of Baton &amp; Dance&#13;
Audio Systems&#13;
Bidinger's&#13;
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C &amp; R Auto Service&#13;
Kenosha Savings &amp; Loan&#13;
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assures was &#13;
Review&#13;
RANGER Thursday, December 11,1980&#13;
..£!??!? Gordon' achieves fantasy feeling&#13;
iding outrageous sums of The film'sT" nGXt&#13;
" "Saturday Night Fever" is to * ' "&#13;
r to make a movie nims humor is'at. first « i _ T e /ever is 10 w _&#13;
Spending outrageous sums of&#13;
money to make a movie doesn't&#13;
always insure its success ("1941"&#13;
and more recently "Heaven's&#13;
Gate"), yet some directors still&#13;
insist on spending absurd amounts&#13;
in hopes of drawing large crowds&#13;
at the box. Producer Dino De&#13;
Laurentiis has recently coupled&#13;
this practice with subject matter&#13;
which he feels will be a big draw&#13;
He has already produced such&#13;
forgettable flops as "Orca" and&#13;
the remake of "King Kong." But&#13;
De Laurentiis may have hit upon&#13;
something this time with "Flash&#13;
Gordon".&#13;
The plot is simple. Ming the&#13;
Merciless (Max Van Sydow) is&#13;
destroying the earth, while Flash&#13;
Gordon (Sam Jones) and Dale&#13;
Arden (Melody Anderson) are led&#13;
to Mongo by Dr. Hans Zarkow&#13;
(Ornella Muti) to try and save the&#13;
earth. What makes it interesting is&#13;
that all of the inhabitants of&#13;
Mongo are violently against each&#13;
other and are forced to be loyal to&#13;
Ming. When Flash appeals to the&#13;
Hawkmen for help, you don't&#13;
know whether they are going to&#13;
capture him or aide him, as is the&#13;
case with the Forestmen and&#13;
everybody else or Mongo. This&#13;
type of confusion holds your attention,&#13;
as you try to figure out it seems the trend since&#13;
S ENVIRONMENT PLANT CART&#13;
| IN O LD MARKET SQUARE&#13;
th. r,&#13;
appen next&#13;
-&#13;
lifS S umor is&#13;
"&#13;
at first a&#13;
httle corny (the football - fight&#13;
Pected and becomes&#13;
^expected&#13;
and entertaining. There is&#13;
quite a bfi of sexual innuendo as in&#13;
the rites of passage scene, which&#13;
"Flash? i° thoug&#13;
ht that&#13;
cult fUm may become a&#13;
and&#13;
l&#13;
rfff?&#13;
borate cos&#13;
tumes, sets&#13;
and effects mjx to give a feeling of&#13;
a cross between "The Wizard of&#13;
Uz and "Star Wars". Some&#13;
scenes and music seem to be&#13;
Sr? o f from&#13;
"&#13;
The Empire&#13;
Strikes Back." So many different&#13;
colors and images come your way&#13;
that you get the same fantasy&#13;
feeling achieved when Dorothy&#13;
first stepped from her black - and -&#13;
white house into the vivid colors of&#13;
Munchkinland.&#13;
Although some of the effects are&#13;
elaborate, such as the colors of the&#13;
iJ\!£?&#13;
ny are reminiscent of the&#13;
old Flash Gordon" serial. This&#13;
could have worked, but instead it&#13;
comes across as if De Laurentiis&#13;
was too cheap to hire a good gaffer&#13;
(special effects person) and&#13;
copped out by showing things&#13;
such as space craftlandings as thev&#13;
were done in the primitive days of&#13;
film making when the serial was&#13;
made.&#13;
It seems the trend since&#13;
I We're Saying "Happy Holidays" With A&#13;
I 10% DISCOUNT&#13;
(With This Ad)&#13;
K Come in and see our wide variety of «&#13;
g Desert &amp; Tropical House Plants, Pottery &amp; More! $&#13;
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•FRUITS ard VEGETABLES*&#13;
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it poinscttdS&#13;
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decorations and gifts&#13;
Take Hwy 31 to Hwy L 1 Mile West on Hwy. L&#13;
OPtM YEAR 'ftoUNO - E*CEPT JAW . R0S€A«A«J &lt; JBUtf, WoPRl€10«5&#13;
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OPTIONAL POPULAR SIDETRIPS&#13;
FOR APPLICATION AND FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
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•&#13;
"Saturday Night Fever" is to&#13;
have a top vocal group do a&#13;
movie's soundtrack. And although&#13;
Queen's music has a big drawing&#13;
effect for "Flash", many fans will&#13;
be disappointed to hear that they&#13;
only sing one song. They do many&#13;
heavy metal backgrounds, but&#13;
only vocalize at the beginning and&#13;
at the end with the same song.&#13;
All the actors and actresses are&#13;
perfect in their roles. Although a&#13;
few of the characters' personalities&#13;
are slightly altered to fit&#13;
with the '80's (Dale is a more&#13;
modern, more bold woman, and&#13;
Flash is a slightly cocky quarterback&#13;
who has his picture on the&#13;
cover of People) many are held&#13;
true to the old series.&#13;
One thing that differs from the&#13;
old series that is unnecessary is&#13;
the exploitation of Flash's body.&#13;
He appears topless and even in&#13;
leather underwear. This obvious&#13;
"beefcaking" is another of De.&#13;
Laurentiis' ploys to capture an&#13;
audience and it succeeds to the&#13;
squeals of many pre - pubescent&#13;
female fans.&#13;
The ending is full of surprises&#13;
and has a Christmas message of&#13;
peace. But it also contains&#13;
something which taunted many&#13;
Empire Strikes Back" viewers:&#13;
a "to be continued" type ending&#13;
(the words at the close of the film&#13;
read "the end?").&#13;
"Flash Gordon" is a fantasy to&#13;
be enjoyed for what it is: a good&#13;
time for the child in all of us&#13;
(although an obvious attempt at&#13;
making money).&#13;
m&#13;
m&#13;
w •v.v&#13;
Si:*:&#13;
:SSS:&#13;
&gt;$&gt;&gt;&#13;
X-COUNTRY&#13;
SKIING&#13;
TRY I T . . .&#13;
YOU'LL LIKE IT !&#13;
* UNION SKI SHOP HOURS *&#13;
Semester Break 2nd Semester&#13;
SAT. J AN. 3&#13;
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TUE.&#13;
WE D.&#13;
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11 am - 2 pr&#13;
8:30 am - 9:30 a n&#13;
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8 : 3 0 am -9 : 3 0 an&#13;
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Rent Your Ski Package By:&#13;
The % Day,&#13;
The Day,&#13;
The Weekend,&#13;
Or All Week&#13;
TO RESERVE YOUR SKI EQUIPMENT STOP BY&#13;
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BASEMENT OF THE UNION IN THE REC CENTER&#13;
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* &#13;
6 Thursday, December 11,1980 RANGER&#13;
II Pot" goes to court I Student values change&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
National Organization for the&#13;
Reform of Marijuana Laws&#13;
(NORML), a non - profit public&#13;
interest group, has several major&#13;
lawsuits currently pending in the&#13;
courts.&#13;
On June 19,1980, NORML filed a&#13;
lawsuit in Federal District Court&#13;
in Washington, D. C. focusing on&#13;
the Sinsemilla Strike Force set up&#13;
by state and federal officials in&#13;
California. Hopefully, the suit will&#13;
stop the U. S. Drug Enforcement&#13;
Administration and other federal&#13;
agencies from aiding eradication&#13;
programs against marijuana&#13;
fields in the U. S.&#13;
The suit states that the U. S.&#13;
Constitution and environmental&#13;
laws are being violated with the&#13;
help of federal money and other&#13;
assistance. The Sinsemilla Strike&#13;
Force uses airplanes, helicopters,&#13;
high - technology aerial surveillance&#13;
systems, and undercover&#13;
agents.&#13;
Peter H. Meyers, NORML's&#13;
chief counsel, said that, "We&#13;
consider this program to be both&#13;
illegal and a waste of tax - payer&#13;
dollars."&#13;
NORML is currently&#13;
challenging the classification of&#13;
marijuana in Schedule I of the&#13;
Federal Controlled Substances&#13;
Act in another pending lawsuit.&#13;
This schedule is the classification&#13;
with the strictest controls, dealing&#13;
with drugs lacking any accepted&#13;
medical use.&#13;
Another lawsuit challenges a 40&#13;
year sentence levied for the sale of&#13;
less than nine ounces of&#13;
marijuana in Virginia. This is the&#13;
Roger Davis Case.&#13;
In an earlier case, the District&#13;
Court ordered the State Department&#13;
to prepare an environmental&#13;
assessment of paraquat spraying.&#13;
NORML currently has an appeal&#13;
in court which challenges the U. S.&#13;
government's assistance in the&#13;
Mexican paraquat spraying above&#13;
marijuana fields.&#13;
Additional information can be&#13;
obtained by writing NORML, 530&#13;
8th Street, S. E., Washington, D.&#13;
C. 20003 or by calling (202) 223-&#13;
3170.&#13;
Education program offered&#13;
Parkside students wishing to&#13;
earn 1-2 credits in Education, plus&#13;
actual classroom type experience,&#13;
will be able to do so during spring&#13;
semester 1981, when selected&#13;
students will administer a&#13;
prepared career development&#13;
program to junior high school&#13;
students in the Racine Unified&#13;
School System.&#13;
The program, under the&#13;
direction of Professor Dwayne&#13;
Olson, is sponsored by the Girl&#13;
Scouts of Racine County, Inc. and&#13;
is being initiated through the&#13;
cooperation of area guidance&#13;
counselors.&#13;
Interested students should&#13;
contact Prof. Dwayne Olson at&#13;
Parkside or call Rusty Smith at&#13;
633-2409 before the end of this&#13;
semester.&#13;
by Mike Pfaffl&#13;
William Boyd, Johnson Foundation&#13;
President and former&#13;
President of the University of&#13;
Oregon, began the new cycle of&#13;
Social Science Roundtable&#13;
programs on Monday, November&#13;
3rd, by discussing "The Post -&#13;
Modern Student: The Berkeley&#13;
Experience."&#13;
In his discussion of changing&#13;
student attitudes during the last&#13;
two decades, Boyd drew on his&#13;
experience at the University of&#13;
California at Berkeley as Vice -&#13;
Chancellor for Student Affairs&#13;
from 1966 to 1968. Boyd opened the&#13;
talk with a view of the traditional&#13;
university before the Sixties&#13;
movement. The university student&#13;
population, he said, was consistently&#13;
traditional and conservative&#13;
during the "silent&#13;
generation" of the Fifties.&#13;
During this period, Boyd said,&#13;
three types of student groups&#13;
existed. The collegiate type, a&#13;
"Greek" sub-culture dominated&#13;
by fraternities and sororities,&#13;
Boyd compared to students&#13;
protrayed in the movie "Animal&#13;
House." The vocational student,&#13;
Boyd said, came into college with&#13;
goals already in mind, and these&#13;
students created few problems for&#13;
school administrators. The intellectual&#13;
students were the&#13;
"Professors' Delights," Boyd&#13;
said, because they craved&#13;
knowledge of all kinds.&#13;
During the late Fifties and early&#13;
Sixties, many issues began to&#13;
erode these traditional student&#13;
groups, according to Boyd. Civil&#13;
rights movements and voter&#13;
registration efforts brought about&#13;
v v j r PRECISION&#13;
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HOLIDAYS&#13;
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Ph. 654-6154&#13;
Art faculty wins prizes&#13;
Two Parkside art faculty members&#13;
were among award winners&#13;
in the recent Wisconsin Watercolor&#13;
'80 show at the Wustum&#13;
Museum of Fine Arts in Racine.&#13;
Doug De Vinny won a $75&#13;
Wisconsin Watercolor Society&#13;
award for excellence for his&#13;
Variation on a Landscape - Racine&#13;
#1 and #2. Dennis Bayuzixck&#13;
received an honorable mention for&#13;
his acrylic and ink airbrush,&#13;
Resurrection of Jo - Jo.&#13;
De Vinny also has been&#13;
represented this fall in an exhibit&#13;
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UW-P STUDENTS&#13;
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of his prints and drawings at&#13;
Colorado State University, Fort&#13;
Collins.&#13;
a new awareness among the poor&#13;
and disadvantaged, Boyd said,&#13;
that carried over to universities&#13;
during the early Sixties. Student&#13;
awareness, Boyd said, was then&#13;
triggered by the 1964 "free speech&#13;
movement" and the beginning of&#13;
the Vietnam conflict.&#13;
As a result, some students&#13;
became "activists," Boyd said.&#13;
According to him, these students&#13;
had strong intellectual desires,&#13;
valued personal freedom highly,&#13;
did not desire material wealth,&#13;
and felt a high level of anxiety.&#13;
Activists, Boyd said, defined&#13;
themselves as critical, idealistic,&#13;
moody, rebellious, and restless.&#13;
During the development of the&#13;
activist student population in&#13;
America, one half of the student&#13;
population in America was under&#13;
25 y ears old, and activist values&#13;
affected the values of other groups&#13;
of students, Boyd said. Presentmindedness&#13;
became important,&#13;
Boyd said, as students became&#13;
concerned with the quality of life&#13;
rather than long-term material&#13;
goals.&#13;
Personalism also became&#13;
valued during the Sixties, as&#13;
students became concerned with&#13;
the authenticity of personal&#13;
relationships. Today's cliches —&#13;
"I can relate to that " and&#13;
"meaningful relationships" —&#13;
came out of this time, Boyd&#13;
stated. These values, Boyd said,&#13;
conflicted with government&#13;
beaurocracy, which he called,&#13;
"dominated by conflicting individual&#13;
and organizational&#13;
goals."&#13;
Boyd said that sexual permissiveness&#13;
increased on campuses&#13;
as students became more&#13;
pleasure-oriented. He cited&#13;
students' mass consumption of&#13;
drugs.as a cause for the abandonment&#13;
of the work ethic and&#13;
subsequent student hedonism.&#13;
Conversely, Boyd said that&#13;
activist students wanted to get&#13;
involved in every aspect of the&#13;
university and community. This&#13;
trend was the beginning of antiintellectualism,&#13;
according to&#13;
Boyd, a period when effective and&#13;
non-cognitive learning became&#13;
stressed. This was the period that&#13;
started many cult groups, he said,&#13;
and horoscopes were a common&#13;
appearance in student&#13;
newspapers.&#13;
These new values were spread&#13;
by romanticists, Boyd said,&#13;
who were journalists, media&#13;
professionals, professors,&#13;
and Sixties liberals. Popular&#13;
music spread these&#13;
values, according to Boyd.&#13;
Rock music by Jefferson Airplane,&#13;
Janis Joplin, and The&#13;
Doors, and musicals like "Hair"&#13;
and "Jesus Christ Superstar" all&#13;
contributed to the spread of new&#13;
values and awareness into the&#13;
daily lives of Americans, Boyd&#13;
said.&#13;
Boyd said that by the early&#13;
Seventies, blue collar workers&#13;
joined the student activist&#13;
movement, and their children&#13;
were heir to their parents' values.&#13;
Although Boyd is still trying to&#13;
find out how the student&#13;
movements of the Sixties have&#13;
affected today's American&#13;
society, he thinks there has been a&#13;
"dangerously high" level of&#13;
abandonment of the Protestant&#13;
work ethic due to the values&#13;
created by the Sixties and carried&#13;
over into the Seventies. Boyd said&#13;
that problems created by the&#13;
desertion of traditional values&#13;
were first noticed in the&#13;
classrooms of the Sixties, and are&#13;
now evident in the assembly lines&#13;
in Detroit. He stated that the drop&#13;
in productivity that has occurred&#13;
during the last decade can be&#13;
linked to these new values: "We&#13;
have been far more affected than&#13;
we realize and this will be a great&#13;
distress to our lives in the long&#13;
run."&#13;
Sign Up NOW&#13;
For A&#13;
Winter Bowling&#13;
League&#13;
Sunday Mixed League&#13;
— Begins January 31st —&#13;
Every-Other Friday Mixed League&#13;
— Begins January 30th —&#13;
For More Information&#13;
Or To Sign Up&#13;
Stop By The Recreation Desk&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
HARVEY'S going to be sorry he took the&#13;
Diesel back.&#13;
ORGY QUEEN, UCLA doesn't know what&#13;
he's missing!&#13;
FOR UNHEALTHY COBOL KNIGHTS: Get&#13;
into new Greek education routines.&#13;
JEFF MANIAN, have you found your true&#13;
love, again, yet!?&#13;
JEFF — the Ferret has its bounce back.&#13;
Missed you. Ferret.&#13;
ARE THERE any females at Parkside&#13;
Village?—No, just ugly wenches!! TA&#13;
YOU NEVER see MEN at Parkside Village&#13;
because we don't hang around the ugly&#13;
female WENCHES. TA&#13;
HARVEY'S going to be.sorry he took the&#13;
diesel back.&#13;
TEN TELETYPES type ten types of type.&#13;
Ten times fast.&#13;
JEFF AND DAWN, sitting in a tub, k-i-s-s,&#13;
rub-a-dub-dub.&#13;
ANGEL ANKA knobby ankle angle angles&#13;
askew. Ten times fast.&#13;
I'M NOT CHANGING my diaper, or me. I&#13;
hope my jokes really hurt next time, you&#13;
stupid turkey — The Joker&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV, beggers can't be&#13;
choosers! lOP's&#13;
KIM, lubrication and lots of men spell fun.&#13;
Orgy Queen&#13;
JULIE — cute monkey buns, but you still&#13;
have more experience.&#13;
BILL TATMAN, talks easily to girls and guys.&#13;
Dick? Teeth! 634-0989 and ask for piss. Put&#13;
him to bed, too.&#13;
JULIE NEHMER, what do you eat, when you&#13;
eat chicken???&#13;
ORGY QUEEN: You've missed J. C. and the&#13;
rest of us, stop by, we'll be home! TA-216&#13;
KEN MEYER should be sprayed, spayed and&#13;
layed. Chain Gang&#13;
P. G. HOOKER — Twin sons. Nov. 1, 1980 . 9&#13;
lbs, 4 oz. Congratulations!&#13;
HAVING PROBLEMS with your tongue? Call&#13;
Julie 632-2652.&#13;
JEFF Pair-a-dice is a typical SALLY at the&#13;
Lounge.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
HARVEY'S going to be sorry he took the&#13;
Diesel back.&#13;
TWO NIPPLES equal one byte. lOP's&#13;
RANGER challenges Cheerleaders to&#13;
volleyball. See ya on the floor.&#13;
L. HEIN — We'll be careful, aim better,&#13;
O.K.?—The Kids&#13;
IF YOU can't reach Ron Hill at home, call&#13;
Open Pantry on Rapids - 637-8230.&#13;
K. M. wears Pinocchio underwear, but he&#13;
never tells a lie.&#13;
HEY BILL. He'll give what's in his drawers. .&#13;
. KJ&#13;
SUE C. You're a great cheerleader.&#13;
BILL, Tongue, 360 degrees, camera!! Julie&#13;
lOP'S — Dec compatibility. Thanks a lot for a&#13;
fun week. Ferret&#13;
JOHN —Sexy black shorts, ooh! Watch out at&#13;
waterfountain. Twins&#13;
HARVEY'S going to be sorry he took the&#13;
Diesel back.&#13;
ANYONE dumb enought to insult the Joker,&#13;
will also deal with me. The Riddler&#13;
SABINE the teenage witch is too "adventurous"&#13;
for us. lOP's&#13;
THUMPER, was the party in the house or&#13;
car? Bambi&#13;
JUNIE — tired Mondays? Six guys from&#13;
Marquette Friday - Saturday. L.S.S.&#13;
HOW CAN Security shoot us? They have to&#13;
run to Tallent to get their bullets! lOP's&#13;
JEFF, what happened to your true love&#13;
, again?&#13;
RANGER and Security: Don't "tread" on us.&#13;
lOP's&#13;
HARVEY'S going to be sorry he took the&#13;
Diesel back.&#13;
CHUG, Do you always sleep in Beloit cornfields&#13;
waiting for a tequila sunrise? If not,&#13;
try the monastery by the overpass. They&#13;
serve mm-mm good onion rings. PSS&#13;
KATHY N. Help! J.C.&#13;
IF YOU CALLED to help Ron Hill and line&#13;
was busy, go to 2062 Wustem Ave to help in&#13;
person.&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV, there's no accounting&#13;
for taste! Chain Gang&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
-Records—Sheet Music-&#13;
—Instruction MusicLowest&#13;
Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654-293'&gt; »&#13;
THE CHAIN GANG proves that true!!&#13;
BROKEN DECWRITER. Thought it was toy.&#13;
Broke bell. Inquire CA 120&#13;
JEFF —Act I S cene 3 go for it, lunge! Ferret&#13;
MARY, I love you! Me&#13;
GINGER — read the "For Unhealthy ... ad&#13;
very carefully. Chain Groupies&#13;
SEE YA ALL later Ranger gang. It was fun.&#13;
Dave&#13;
MERRY CHRISTMAS EVERYBODY! —&#13;
Ranger staff&#13;
MEETINGS&#13;
RANGER MEMBERS - There will be a&#13;
general membership meeting on Friday,&#13;
January 30, 1981, at 1:00p. m. in the Ranger&#13;
Office.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
OLYMPUS —OM —2, Vivltar 283 flash, 50 m&#13;
1.4 lens, accessories — 551-9095&#13;
1980 SUZUKI 550L, Black, very clean. Call&#13;
553 9262 after 4 p. m.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
WANTED: Anybody interested in modeling&#13;
for a photographer. Call 637-2274,&gt;[ • go&#13;
ROOMMATE NEEDED: To share nice&#13;
furnished apartment in Kenosha area. Age&#13;
preferred 20-35. Please call Jim evenings or&#13;
weekends. 658-3686.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
WALK, TALK AND ASSIST retired (blind)&#13;
college teacher in straightening out his&#13;
library. Earn while you learn. Call 694-2251&#13;
for appointment.&#13;
HELPWANTED&#13;
EARN $1,000 OR MORE for a few evenings&#13;
work. No selling. Just hang posters on your&#13;
campus advertising our half price tours of&#13;
Europe. For details, write: Travel Study&#13;
International, 2030 East 4800 South, Suite&#13;
101, Salt Lake City, Utah 84117.&#13;
MEMBER PRO BOWLERS TOUR&#13;
LOU CELEBRE&#13;
PRO SHOP&#13;
Everything&#13;
Clearance Priced&#13;
For Christmas&#13;
Some Of The&#13;
Lowest Prices&#13;
In Town&#13;
6821 39th Ave.&#13;
Kenosha, Wl 53142&#13;
(414 ) 652-4043 &#13;
Women's basketball&#13;
Team drops season opener&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
Coach Noreen Goggin might be&#13;
in for a long season this year with&#13;
her team of 13 players. Goggin has&#13;
only three letter winners coming&#13;
back; Jeanne Hintz, Debbie Lopez&#13;
and Laurie Pope, all sophomores.&#13;
The remaining ten players are&#13;
freshmen. Simply put, the team&#13;
lacks experience.&#13;
"We may be young," Goggin&#13;
said, "but we're talented. We need&#13;
a little experience. If we get beat&#13;
it may be because of our lack of&#13;
quickness and height, not just our&#13;
inexperience."&#13;
Parkside possesses ju st one s ix&#13;
footer on the team, returning&#13;
center, Laurie Pope. The 6'1" 185 -&#13;
pound center may have the bulk&#13;
required of a center, but she lacks&#13;
the necessary quickness.&#13;
Goggins isn't extremely worried&#13;
about going into the season with&#13;
ten freshmen, and realizes she&#13;
must try to turn this shortcoming&#13;
into an advantage. "Sure, we have&#13;
ten freshmen but I can't do&#13;
anything about that. We'll try to&#13;
do the best we can, and with a&#13;
young, excited team, we should&#13;
be able to make a lot of good&#13;
things happen," she commented.&#13;
The Rangers opened their&#13;
season l ast week against an experienced&#13;
Oshkosh team, and&#13;
there was an evident contrast&#13;
between a veteran team and a new&#13;
team. Oshkosh won 86-68.&#13;
Oshkosh jumped out to a&#13;
commanding 44-30 halftime lead,&#13;
paced by Jodi Eissen's 13 points.&#13;
The timing was right for the young&#13;
Ranger team to fold, but they&#13;
fought back in the second half. Six&#13;
minutes into the second half, the&#13;
women were down by a single&#13;
point, 46-45.&#13;
From that point on, it was a&#13;
matter of Oshkosh forging ahead&#13;
and Parkside fighting back. The&#13;
Rangers came within two points&#13;
Wrestling team&#13;
shows potential&#13;
with four minutes remaining in&#13;
the game, but that was the closest&#13;
they would get. In those last four&#13;
minutes Oshkosh hit nine&#13;
freethrows and scored two&#13;
baskets to run up their lead and&#13;
put the game out of r each.&#13;
Goggin was at a loss for words&#13;
to describe her team's breakdown:&#13;
"In the end, I don't know&#13;
what happened. We made some&#13;
fundamental mistakes, some bad&#13;
passes. They were silly errors."&#13;
Call it a lack of experience.&#13;
The Rangers shot a cool 40%&#13;
from the floor. Cindy Ruffert (8-12&#13;
from the floor) led Parkside with&#13;
18 point s. She was supported by&#13;
Callie Lee with 12 and Robin&#13;
Henschel's 11.&#13;
Oshkosh shot 46% from the floor&#13;
and had balanced scoring with&#13;
four of their starters finishing&#13;
with more than 15 points.&#13;
The Rangers are on the road&#13;
tomorrow against Stevens Point,&#13;
then travel to St. Francis for the&#13;
St. Francis Tourney. The next&#13;
home game is January 10, against&#13;
Carroll College.&#13;
by Dan McCormack&#13;
"Optimistic" is what Jim Koch,&#13;
Parkside's head wrestling coach&#13;
has to say to describe his feelings&#13;
about this years team. And why&#13;
shouldn't he be? He has two&#13;
returning NAIA place winners in&#13;
Dan Winter, a three time all -&#13;
American as a junior who placed&#13;
third the last two years in the&#13;
NAIA and seventh in the NCAA-II&#13;
meet; and Bob Pekarske who&#13;
placed second last year in NAIA&#13;
competition.&#13;
At the 118 pound weight class,&#13;
Koch expects some leadership&#13;
from senior Dean Quam. Junior&#13;
Jeff Debe, who wrestled&#13;
heavyweight last season, is at 190&#13;
this season. Both Quam and Debe&#13;
should be looking to place in&#13;
nationals if they can get over&#13;
early season injuries.&#13;
Sophomores Kevin Casper and&#13;
Dave Fedie and junior transfer&#13;
Ron Perron all vie for the 142&#13;
pound weight class.&#13;
At 126 are freshmen Dave&#13;
Carbajal and Tom Vania. At 158 is&#13;
freshman Mike Muckerheide and&#13;
at 167 are two freshmen, Rus&#13;
Drankiewicz and Keith Reicher.&#13;
At 177 are freshmen Ardell&#13;
Dworak and Brian Irek. Paul&#13;
Roth, who has been out of competition&#13;
for a few years, will&#13;
wrestle at heavyweight.&#13;
Last weekend, five Parkside&#13;
wrestlers placed in the Warhawk&#13;
Open held in Whitewater. Dan&#13;
Winter won the 134 pound weight&#13;
Merry Christmas&#13;
class and also the Outstanding&#13;
Wrestler of the Tournament&#13;
honors. At 126, Tom Vania, who&#13;
comes from Anchorage, Alaska,&#13;
captured second place. At. 158,&#13;
Mike Muckerheide, a freshman&#13;
from Westbend beat two very&#13;
experienced wrestlers for second&#13;
place. Heavyweight Paul Roth&#13;
placed second and also had the&#13;
fastest pin of the tournament in 20&#13;
seconds. At 167, Keith Reicher&#13;
placed third and won the award&#13;
for most pins with 4.&#13;
Coach Koch's goals for the&#13;
season a re to be in the top five&#13;
NAIA and top ten NCAA-II.&#13;
This Saturday Parkside hosts&#13;
the Wisconsin Collegiate Open&#13;
starting at 10 a.m., with finals&#13;
starting at 6:30 p.m.&#13;
Sheridan&#13;
PRE 5MHP&#13;
CHRISTMAS SPECIALS&#13;
CROWN JEWEL Reg. 42.95&#13;
NOW 36.95&#13;
"BRIEFCASE" Reg. 59.95&#13;
Double-bag NOW 49.95&#13;
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of new ball&#13;
(Our bags carry a 3 year&#13;
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GIFT CERTIFICATES&#13;
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Precision Fitting&#13;
And Drilling&#13;
For The&#13;
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SEMESTER BREAK HOURS&#13;
FOR THE RECCENTER&#13;
SAT.&#13;
SUN.&#13;
MON.&#13;
TUE.&#13;
WED.&#13;
THUR.&#13;
FRI.&#13;
JAN. 3, 10, 1 7&#13;
JAN. 4, 11, 18&#13;
JAN. 5, 12&#13;
JAN. 6, 13&#13;
JAN. 7, 14&#13;
JAN. 8, 15&#13;
JAN. 9, 16&#13;
1-10 p.m.&#13;
1- 5 p.m.&#13;
5-10 p.m.&#13;
5-10 p.m.&#13;
5-10 p.m.&#13;
5-10 p.m.&#13;
5-10 p.m&#13;
Semester Break Specials&#13;
Moonlight Bowling Sat. 8-10 p.m.&#13;
Regular Bowling ONLY 50&#13;
c Per Gomel&#13;
Cramer's Comer&#13;
Good-bye Ranger&#13;
Bowlers&#13;
finish&#13;
season&#13;
The UW-Parkside men's&#13;
bowling team bowled in the&#13;
National Collegiate Matchgame&#13;
Championship bowling tournament&#13;
held in St. Louis, Missouri&#13;
last weekend. Jay Podella led the&#13;
team with a 208 average for nine&#13;
games, with a high game of 257.&#13;
He was followed by John Peterson&#13;
who averaged 201, with a high&#13;
game of 243.&#13;
Other team members for&#13;
Parkside were Jerry Zigner, Rich&#13;
Salisbury and Willy Yee. The&#13;
team finished 17th of 33 competing&#13;
teams.&#13;
Dear Readers,&#13;
I would like to take this opportunity&#13;
to thank everyone who&#13;
helped me while I was Sports&#13;
editor here at RANGER. The list&#13;
would be never ending if I were to&#13;
name each individually, but I feel&#13;
that I have to express my thanks&#13;
to Athletic Director Wayne&#13;
Dannehl, all the coaches, the&#13;
athletes, and Don Kopriva (Public&#13;
Sports Information Director at&#13;
Parkside). I want to thank all the&#13;
people on the RANGER staff, but I&#13;
would particularly like to&#13;
acknowledge the good job the&#13;
editorial staff has done, and the&#13;
time and devotion of the&#13;
photography staff. Without their&#13;
help, I would have been in even&#13;
bigger binds than the ones I often&#13;
found myself in. These are people&#13;
I care about, respect and will&#13;
always have a special place in my&#13;
heart for.&#13;
When I took this job, I set&#13;
several personal goals. Some I&#13;
attained, others I fell short of. It's&#13;
difficult to give each sport equal&#13;
coverage when you have a staff of&#13;
one — yourself. Hopefully, the&#13;
next Sports editor will find some&#13;
writers.&#13;
This job gave me the opportunity&#13;
to experience things I&#13;
otherwise never would have experienced&#13;
had I not been Sports&#13;
editor. I went to several&#13;
Milwaukee Brewer games where I&#13;
conducted on - field personal interviews&#13;
with people like Billy&#13;
Martin, Yogi Berra, and Reggie&#13;
Jackson of the New York&#13;
Yankees; and Sal Bando, Don&#13;
Money, and George Bamberger of&#13;
the Brewers. I also had the opportunity&#13;
to go to Chicago Cub&#13;
games where I spoke with Ivan&#13;
DeJesus, Manny Trillo, and&#13;
Herman Franks of the Cubs.&#13;
But even more than that, this&#13;
job gave me the chance to meet,&#13;
work with and form lifetime&#13;
friendships with other students. Of&#13;
course, I'm talking about other&#13;
student organizations, but mainly&#13;
about RANGER members. These&#13;
people put up with my practical&#13;
jokes, my many moods and my&#13;
victories as well as defeats. I've&#13;
developed friendships that I'll&#13;
cherish for the rest of my life.&#13;
Many of these people have been&#13;
part of my life for the last three&#13;
years and it's hard to leave.&#13;
I know that even though I'll be&#13;
gone, the RANGER will continue&#13;
to produce an enjoyable and&#13;
worthwhile product. I will always&#13;
be proud to have been associated&#13;
with the RANGER.&#13;
^^HEADQUARTERS&#13;
HAIRCARE GIFTS&#13;
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Belson 1250 ONLY $22.95&#13;
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• Ear Piercing&#13;
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Mon-Wed 8-5:30&#13;
Tue-Tliur-Fri. 8-9 Sat. 8-4&#13;
lairstudlo&#13;
3519 52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
REDKEN'&#13;
PARKSIDE PLAYERS PRESENT&#13;
MUSCLE BEACH&#13;
PARTY&#13;
Proof of Age Required!&#13;
Friday, Doc. 12&#13;
Union Squaro&#13;
Doors Opon 8 p. m.&#13;
ADVANCE TICKETS&#13;
1.50 Student&#13;
2.00 Non-Student&#13;
AT THE DOOR&#13;
2.50 Student &amp;&#13;
Non-Student&#13;
Tickets Available at&#13;
UNION INFORMATION CENTER &#13;
Parkside Food Service &amp;&#13;
The Parkside Union&#13;
invite you to attend&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE'S ANNUAL&#13;
CHRISTMAS PARTY&#13;
FREE&#13;
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12&#13;
11:00 am-l:00 pm&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
COOKIES, CAKE, COFFEE &amp; PUNCH&#13;
PLUS... A VISIT BY SANTA CLAUS&#13;
SPECIAL CHRISTMAS DINNER&#13;
• Carved, Baked Ham With&#13;
Fruit Sauce&#13;
• Sweet Potato or Escalloped&#13;
Potatoes&#13;
• Asparagus Spears or Buttered&#13;
Cauliflower&#13;
• Spiced Crabapple&#13;
• Ginger Bread With Whipped&#13;
Topping&#13;
• Complimentary Glass of&#13;
Wine or Holiday Punch&#13;
149&#13;
Thursday, December 11,1980 RANGER </text>
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            <name>Title</name>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 9, issue 14, December 11, 1980</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="69665">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
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                <text>1980-12-11</text>
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              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="69670">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="69671">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>Forum to examine "Poland in Crisis'</text>
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              <text>anger&#13;
Thursday, December 4, 1980 Vol. 9 - No. 13&#13;
Forum to examine 'Poland in Crisis'&#13;
"Poland in Crisis: Workers and&#13;
the State" will be the topic of a&#13;
Parkside public forum at 7:30&#13;
p.m. on Monday, December 8, in&#13;
the Union Cinema Theater. The&#13;
program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Panelists will be Adam Przeworski,&#13;
professor of political&#13;
science at the University of&#13;
Chicago; Franklin Wallick, editor&#13;
of the United Auto Workers&#13;
Washington Report and a board&#13;
member of Amnesty International;&#13;
and Daniel&#13;
McGovern, visiting professor of&#13;
political science at Parkside and a&#13;
specialist in Communist political&#13;
systems.&#13;
Kenneth Hoover, director of the&#13;
public forum program and&#13;
professor of political science for&#13;
UW-Parkside and the University&#13;
Extension Department of&#13;
Governmental Affairs, will&#13;
moderate.&#13;
Both Przeworski and Wallick&#13;
have recently returned from&#13;
Poland.&#13;
A Polish native, Przeworski is&#13;
the author of an article, "Promise&#13;
and Progress in Poland" in the&#13;
current issue of In These Times&#13;
magazine. He also is the author of&#13;
Local Politics in Poland,&#13;
published by the Polish Academy&#13;
of Sciences and a number of oth er&#13;
studies on socialism and social&#13;
structure. He holds an MA degree&#13;
in philosophy and sociology from&#13;
the University of Warsaw and the&#13;
PhD degree in political science&#13;
from Northwestern University.&#13;
Wallick is the author of The&#13;
American Worker: An Endangered&#13;
Species, a popularized&#13;
book on occupational health and&#13;
the workplace environment which&#13;
The Washington Post ranked with&#13;
Ralph Nader's "Unsafe At Any&#13;
Speed" and Rachel Carson's&#13;
"Silent Spring." He currently is&#13;
involved in efforts by the international&#13;
labor movement to&#13;
assist Polish workers. Wallick&#13;
lived in China from 1946 to 1948&#13;
and since 1950 h as been a labor&#13;
writer, editor and publicist, with&#13;
20 years of s eniority in the UAW.&#13;
The forum is co-sponsored by&#13;
the Extension Department of&#13;
Governmental Affairs and is&#13;
made possible with the assistance&#13;
of the Johnson Foundation of&#13;
Racine.&#13;
The Parkside Public Forum is a&#13;
continuing series devoted to exploration&#13;
of timely and significant&#13;
issues. Previous forums have&#13;
dealt with such issues as nuclear&#13;
power in the aftermath of T hree&#13;
Mile Island, the SALT II treaty&#13;
and the arms race, the draft and&#13;
the Reagan-Carter debate.&#13;
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
Rangers open season with two home losses&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
See story&#13;
on back page &#13;
Thursday, December 4,1980&#13;
Sing-a-long concert Sunday&#13;
Invites sent&#13;
to graduates&#13;
Students who are planning to&#13;
graduate at the end of this&#13;
semester should have received a&#13;
letter of invitation to the&#13;
graduation reception to be held 2 -&#13;
4 p.m. Dec. 21 in WLLC 363.&#13;
Any graduating student who did&#13;
not receive an invitation should&#13;
inquire at Student Records, 553-&#13;
2284.&#13;
Choral ensembles of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside will present a sing-along&#13;
carol concert at 4 p.m. on Sunday,&#13;
Dec. 7 in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater under the direction of&#13;
Frank Mueller and Glenda&#13;
Mossman.&#13;
Participating groups are the&#13;
chorale, chorus, chamber singers&#13;
and a brass ensemble.&#13;
The audience will be invited to&#13;
join with the combined choirs of&#13;
some 70 voices in such familiar&#13;
carols as Deck the Hall, Silent&#13;
Night, Joy to the World, Hark the&#13;
Herald Angels Sing and 0 Come&#13;
All Y e Faithful.&#13;
The choral groups will present&#13;
songs of the seasons ranging from&#13;
Pachelbel's Magnificat and&#13;
Praetorius' Sing't Ihr Lieben&#13;
Christen All to Benjamin Britten's&#13;
The Sycamore Tree and Alice&#13;
Parker — R obert Shaw arrangement&#13;
of Master's in This Hall.&#13;
Scott Tench, Kenosha, will be&#13;
soloist in the latter work.&#13;
Admission is 50* for students&#13;
and senior citizens and $1 for&#13;
others.&#13;
Feminist health worker&#13;
to speak on womens' health&#13;
sophomores&#13;
You're working for a college&#13;
degree to get started&#13;
in life. You can reinforce&#13;
that degree and get a&#13;
better start through the&#13;
Army ROTC two-year&#13;
program.&#13;
Army ROTC offers you&#13;
••|P.9Q§fl6iTjeQt.. |rtraininQ.&#13;
Leadership experience.&#13;
And a commission as an&#13;
Army officer. Extra credentials&#13;
that will set you&#13;
apart in the job market.&#13;
Army ROTC also offers&#13;
you new opportunities in&#13;
life after college — parttime&#13;
leadership in Reserve&#13;
while employed in the civilian&#13;
community or full-time&#13;
active duty starting at&#13;
$11,000 per year.&#13;
For details, contact:&#13;
IKE ARMY ROTC&#13;
TWO-YEAR PROGRAM.&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Barbara Federlin, a healthworker&#13;
at Milwaukee's Bread and&#13;
Roses Women's Health Center,&#13;
will speak on "Women's Health"&#13;
this Friday at 10 a.m. in&#13;
Parkside's Union Cinema&#13;
Theater. Federlin's appearance at&#13;
Parkside is sponsored by&#13;
Parkside Concourse. There will be&#13;
no admission charge.&#13;
Bread and Roses, "a women's&#13;
health center designed for women&#13;
by women," is "committed to&#13;
women having knowledge of their&#13;
bodies and control over their&#13;
reproductive lives."&#13;
Federlin holds degrees in&#13;
psychology and religion from UWMilwaukee,&#13;
is a member of the&#13;
Milwaukee Women's Health&#13;
Collective and has worked at&#13;
Bread and Roses since it opened.&#13;
Currently, she is coordinator of&#13;
Bread and Roses' cervical cap&#13;
program.&#13;
The cervical cap is a thimbleshaped,&#13;
diaphram - like birth&#13;
control device that has recently&#13;
been reintroduced to the United&#13;
States. It has since been&#13;
categorized by the Food and Drug&#13;
Administration (FDA) as a&#13;
"significant risk device," since it&#13;
has not been tested in the U.S. to&#13;
FDA satisfaction.&#13;
According to Federlin and&#13;
Executive Director Fran Kaplan,&#13;
"other FDA-approved contraceptives,&#13;
such as the birth&#13;
control pill and intrauterine&#13;
devices present additional risks to&#13;
the health of women in ways&#13;
which the cap does not. The cap&#13;
has been in use for more than a&#13;
century (mostly in European&#13;
countries) and clearly does not&#13;
threaten its used with the toxicity&#13;
of a drug or an implant in the&#13;
body."&#13;
"There's clearly a lot of i nterest&#13;
in the cap," according to Federlin.&#13;
"However, the cap is not available&#13;
everywhere. Bread and Roses&#13;
appears to be the only provider of&#13;
caps in Wisconsin at this time."&#13;
Bread and Roses also offers&#13;
pregnancy testing and counWarn&#13;
Bam Singing Telegram!&#13;
"Songs for any Occasion"&#13;
2 FOR 1 SALE&#13;
December 3-14&#13;
SANTAS, GORILLAS, BELLY DANCERS&#13;
UNICYCLIST, COSTUMED SINGERS '&#13;
for&#13;
Parties, Birthdays, Love Songs,&#13;
Apologies, Thank You, Any Occasion At All&#13;
7 D a ys A W e e k 8 a . r n .- 8 D . r n .&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer . _ Editor&#13;
Dan Qafbra?th Executive Business Manager ESSSS":::::::::::: Busln&#13;
rS **£ SE&#13;
Rri?no!«!I ...Sports Editor&#13;
Brian Passmo _ Photo Editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson . _J„&#13;
Mike Farrell Copy Editor Mike Farrell Advertising Manager&#13;
c?&#13;
e u&#13;
Cramer&#13;
' Mark Christiansen, Patty DeLuisa Doua&#13;
Edenhauser, Mike Holmdohl, Carol Klees, Gary Ledoer.^aS&#13;
Rip^'BIH'stoujaard&#13;
61&#13;
'&#13;
6&#13;
'' Chr&#13;
'&#13;
S,ine&#13;
°'&#13;
NS&#13;
"&#13;
1&#13;
' Bru&#13;
" Pres,&#13;
°"' J&lt;*&#13;
•« •" —v&#13;
RANGER MUr&#13;
,&#13;
inVhe academlc Vear during breaks and holidays,&#13;
zsssessssr&amp;fr addressed tor parkside ^ w Dw. uw.&#13;
plie&#13;
r&#13;
rw!?h one&#13;
Ed&#13;
|nch if d0&#13;
"&#13;
bl«paced on standard size&#13;
Ktr v^lficKn * mUSt be S&#13;
'°&#13;
ned and a tal*PhP"« ™mber&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 9 a. m. for publication on Thursday The rancpd&#13;
defamatory cmtent?' priVi,efles in refus,ln* ,0 P&#13;
rlnt leMer&#13;
s which contain false or&#13;
McCormack&#13;
REHEARSING "Cream in the Well", the studio production&#13;
being presented through Dec. 7, are (from left to right) Bobbie&#13;
Menniear, Jeff McKelvie and Vicki Knapp.&#13;
seling; abortion counseling and eluding routine exams and inprocedure&#13;
through the 14th week struction for self - examination;&#13;
of pregnancy ; reproductive health and support, problem - solving&#13;
care for women and men, in- and therapy groups.&#13;
Workshop on Slovak culture&#13;
The history and culture of the&#13;
Slovak Community in the United&#13;
States will be the topic of a daylong&#13;
workshop on Saturday,&#13;
December 6, sponsored by&#13;
Parkside's Center for&#13;
Multicultural Studies. Sessions&#13;
will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 4&#13;
p.m. at St. Anthony Catholic&#13;
Church, 2223 51st St., Kenosha.&#13;
Speakers will include Northwestern&#13;
University history&#13;
professor Josef Barton, author of&#13;
a book on immigrants titled&#13;
Peasants and Strangers, who will&#13;
talk on Slovaks in America; UWMilwaukee&#13;
geography professor&#13;
Karel Bayer, on the history and&#13;
geography of Slovak immigration;&#13;
and Kenosha Unified&#13;
School Superintendent John J.&#13;
Hosmanek, who will give a slide&#13;
presentation.&#13;
The program also will include a&#13;
performance by the Tatra Slovak&#13;
Dancers of Milwaukee, a&#13;
demonstration of Slovak folk art&#13;
and an ethnic luncheon.&#13;
Advance registration is&#13;
required for the workshop, which&#13;
carries one UW-Parkside undergraduate&#13;
credit. The fee is&#13;
$52.50 for the workshop and $6 for&#13;
the luncheon. Registration can be&#13;
made by calling the Social Science&#13;
Division at 553-2316.&#13;
Powntown/Konoshq&#13;
Elm wood Plaza Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear;&#13;
Do You Hove&#13;
HOUSING NEEDS?&#13;
CAMPUS HOUSING OFFICE&#13;
CAN HELP YOU&#13;
WITH:&#13;
1. LOCATING SUITABLE HOUSING&#13;
2. ROOMMATES.&#13;
3. LOW COST HOUSING.&#13;
4. TRANSPORTATION INFORMATION.&#13;
5. BUDGET PLANNING.&#13;
6. LEASE INFORMATION.&#13;
7. INSURANCE INFORMATION SHIRLEY&#13;
SCHMERLING.&#13;
UT&#13;
CALL 553-2320&#13;
Or Stop in at Room 284 Tallent Hall&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
C&amp;R AUTO SERVICE&#13;
Quality Auto Work&#13;
Done At&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
10% OFF FOR&#13;
UW-P STUDENTS&#13;
Call 553-9092or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00 &#13;
—•————— Thursday, December 4,1980&#13;
M,nority education explored Coming Events&#13;
ur/u-lr harH anH oii/u&lt;n«J i_ , . ® UTimigrflntS.'' 8 nprpontinn n.j it , .. . -5^&#13;
•Why can't minorities today&#13;
work hard and succeed in school&#13;
like the white ethnic groups of&#13;
Wisconsin's past?" This is not&#13;
Archie Bunker asking a question&#13;
that's been edited by an English&#13;
teacher.&#13;
It is among questions about&#13;
intercultural education in urban&#13;
communities that will be explored&#13;
in three courses being developed&#13;
for both adult citizens and&#13;
professional educators by an&#13;
interdisciplinary team of four&#13;
University of Wisconsin faculty&#13;
members.&#13;
Participating faculty are Prof.&#13;
Ronald L. Podeschi and Prof.&#13;
Frank C. Nelsen of the UWMilwaukee&#13;
education department,&#13;
Prof. John D. Buenker, UWParkside&#13;
history faculty member&#13;
and director of the UW-P Center&#13;
for Multicultural Studies and&#13;
Nicholas C. Burckel, historian and&#13;
Director of Archives and the Area&#13;
Research Center at UW-P.&#13;
Members of the interdisciplinary&#13;
team developing&#13;
the course point out that there is&#13;
controversy among educators&#13;
about the past effects of schooling&#13;
on European immigrants just as&#13;
there is about present effects of&#13;
schooling on racial minorities.&#13;
Educational historians during&#13;
the 1970s have questioned the&#13;
popular belief that all European&#13;
immigrants succeeded in and&#13;
through schooling, the teams say.&#13;
Another popular misconception,&#13;
they add, is the view of the current&#13;
racial minorities as "the last of&#13;
Pvksi*2U&#13;
the immigrants," a perception&#13;
that assumes the present&#13;
sociological situation of racial&#13;
minorities parallels that of past&#13;
European immigrants.&#13;
The goal of the courses, the&#13;
team says, is to place such&#13;
questions about contemporary&#13;
urban education in an interdisciplinary&#13;
framework to&#13;
allow educators and other adult&#13;
citizens to explore them in a broad&#13;
humanities context as opposed to&#13;
the more common educational&#13;
focusi on skills or methods courses.&#13;
All three courses will explore a&#13;
common question: "What are&#13;
significant similarities and&#13;
contrasts between the school&#13;
experience of European immigrant&#13;
groups in Wisconsin's&#13;
past and the experience of&#13;
minority groups in Wisconsin's&#13;
present?"&#13;
Students will be exposed to such&#13;
primary sources as immigrant&#13;
diaries in addition to scholarly&#13;
literature. They also will be involved&#13;
in an oral history project in&#13;
which they will interview 19th&#13;
century European immigrants&#13;
and their children as well as&#13;
members of current minority&#13;
groups.&#13;
The faculty team itself reflects&#13;
the broad-spectrum nature of t his&#13;
project, drawing its Milwaukee&#13;
members from the ranks of&#13;
professional teacher trainers and&#13;
its Parkside component from&#13;
among social historians concerned&#13;
with the urban past and&#13;
present.&#13;
4433-22ftd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
AU. MAJOR C REDIT C ARDS A CCEPTED&#13;
PATRICK DEWAERE&#13;
n u Coup de Tete&#13;
SUNDAY, DEC.7-5 P.M.&#13;
MARKET SQUARE — 8600 Sheridan Road&#13;
$3.50 Donation&#13;
"Zesty comedy about a soccer player ... a critique of&#13;
French society." N. Y. Times&#13;
AUDIO SYSTEMS&#13;
Audio Retailer of 1980&#13;
Audio Video Magazine a deed&#13;
1,399 manufacturers and representatives&#13;
nationwide to&#13;
vote for their^ten best retailers&#13;
based on professionalism,&#13;
customer service,&#13;
product knowledge-ability,&#13;
and they chose us as one.&#13;
AUDIO SYSTEMS&#13;
7535 Twenty-second Avenue, Kenosha Telephone 658-3796&#13;
Both Podeschi and Nelsen of&#13;
Milwaukee have personal as well&#13;
as professional ties to the study of&#13;
schooling and minority groups:&#13;
Podeschi grew up as the son of an&#13;
Italian immigrant and Nelsen was&#13;
a child immigrant from Norway.&#13;
Much of t heir recent research has&#13;
focused on urban education.&#13;
Buenker and Burckel of&#13;
Parkside bring to the project both&#13;
teaching and research activities&#13;
in ethnicity and the Progressive&#13;
era with its emphasis on&#13;
humanizing urbanization and&#13;
industrialization through social&#13;
legislation. They have already&#13;
collaborated on three books and&#13;
are at work on a fourth.&#13;
University administrators cite&#13;
the project as an example of interinstitutional&#13;
cooperation and&#13;
sharing of resources among the&#13;
system's urban campuses. The&#13;
project has been funded by the&#13;
National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities with a grant of&#13;
$48,849.&#13;
The first of the three courses,&#13;
"Research in Cultural Foundations&#13;
of Education: Urban&#13;
,Education and Social History,"&#13;
will be offered for graduate&#13;
students at UW-Milwaukee during&#13;
the spring semester, 1981.&#13;
The second, "Workshop in&#13;
Foundations of Human Relations:&#13;
Immigrants, Minorities and&#13;
Schools," will be offered as a oneweek&#13;
intensive course for 75 to 100&#13;
elementary and secondary school&#13;
, r^nriini, Thursday, Dec. 4&#13;
wSSfrSUIi&#13;
5 am ta Prof&#13;
-&#13;
Ken Hoover wiU ta,k on "Marxism and&#13;
bptita?iP&#13;
a&#13;
! Movements . The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
ttie publkf at 1 pm in 1,16 Union Cinema&#13;
- The program is free and open to&#13;
P st^dPnt&#13;
C«r»nH " J*® ufU" at l&#13;
pm ** CA Studi0&#13;
"&#13;
B"- Admission is $1.00 for&#13;
c£Kr •&#13;
1&#13;
'&#13;
50 for ot her&#13;
'&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
Tickets ar e a"&#13;
aiiai&gt;ie a t&#13;
Friday, Dec. 5&#13;
,&#13;
Two&#13;
" wil&#13;
J ^ at 8 pm in the Union Cinema. Admission at&#13;
PLAY "Tiin m w awSSt ! a&#13;
°&#13;
d SL50 for a «&#13;
ues&#13;
t- Sponsored by PAB. PLAY Cream in the Well" will be repeated at 8pm in Studio "B".&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 6&#13;
FAIBfr&#13;
?&#13;
m 10 am to 4 pm in the Union, Molinaro and Greenquist&#13;
».&#13;
event is free and&#13;
°P&#13;
en 10 the public. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
PLAY Cream in the Well" will be repeated at 8 pm.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 7 ,&#13;
""A®® Wel1&#13;
" wiU he repeated at 1:30 pm in CA Studio "B".&#13;
^ h S U C h&#13;
f ? i C °&#13;
n c e r t " a t 3 : 3 0 p m i n t h e C o m m u n i c a t i o n A r t s&#13;
Theatre directed by Frank Mueller. Admission at the door is 50t for students and&#13;
senior citizens and $1.00 for others. ana&#13;
MOVIE "Chapter Two" will be repeated at 7:30 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Dec. 8&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. The program will consist of a discussion of&#13;
programs for second semester. The event is free and open to the public.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 9&#13;
VIDEO TAPES "Genesis", "Black Sabbath" and "Jimmy Hendrix" will be shown&#13;
PABPm Square&#13;
- Admission is free for Parkside students. Sponsored by&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 10&#13;
CONCERT at 12:30 pm in Main Place, with the Parkside Wind and Choral Ensembles.&#13;
The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
teachers and administrators from&#13;
throughout the state during the&#13;
summer at UWM.&#13;
The third, "Foundations of&#13;
Human Relations in Education:&#13;
Childhood and Youth Experiences&#13;
Through Oral History," will be&#13;
offered for a target population of&#13;
adult citizens of all ages and&#13;
backgrounds at three locations in&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin during&#13;
fall semester, 1981. Sites selected&#13;
will be in Kenosha, Waukesha and&#13;
Mequon.&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
(S&amp;ee* *&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654-2932&#13;
FIRST&#13;
'National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
member f.d.i.c.&#13;
Cream in the Well&#13;
Written by Lynn Riggs.. .Directed by Norman Gano&#13;
— Decem— ber 3-6 — at 8PM and December 7 at 1:30PM • mwi i at i.ouriVI&#13;
Presented by UW-Parkside Dramatic Arts Discipline&#13;
Communicat ion Arts Studio Theatre*&#13;
,.. Limited Seating Reserve Early 553-2345.&#13;
Information 553-2042&#13;
Tickets at $1.00 for Students.. .$1.50 forNon-sturtem^&#13;
Must be Pre-paid&#13;
MERRITTS&#13;
RUNNING&#13;
CENTER&#13;
Footwear for&#13;
Jogger&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
Racquetball&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Tennis&#13;
Running&#13;
Footwear by&#13;
Nike&#13;
Brooks&#13;
New Balance&#13;
Etonic&#13;
Adidas&#13;
Pony&#13;
Tiger&#13;
Osaga&#13;
Mon.- Fri. 10-8&#13;
S a t u r d ay 10-5&#13;
S u n d ay 12-4&#13;
Call: 632-4699&#13;
MERRIII'S&#13;
RUNNING&#13;
CENTER&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
(Washington Square)&#13;
Racine &#13;
Thursday, December 4,1980&#13;
Rangers off to bad start&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
It's been a long time since the&#13;
men's basketball team has&#13;
dropped two home games in one&#13;
year, and it's been even longer&#13;
since it dropped back-to-back&#13;
home games. But that's what&#13;
happened when the Rangers&#13;
opened their season last week&#13;
against St. Xavier and LaCrosse.&#13;
On Friday, the Rangers were&#13;
upset by the St. Xavier Cougars&#13;
70-64 and on Saturday they were&#13;
dumped by LaCrosse 63-60.&#13;
On Friday, Parkside jumped out&#13;
to a quick 13-4 lead and it appeared&#13;
to be a rerun of last year's&#13;
79-62 Ranger rout of the Cougars.&#13;
However, after the first six&#13;
minutes the Cougars settled down&#13;
and started to run their offense.&#13;
Meanwhile, the Ranger's head&#13;
coach, Steve Stephens, was forced&#13;
to bench 6'8" center Curtis Green,&#13;
who was suffering from a virus.&#13;
The Cougars exploited the&#13;
smaller Ranger team and were&#13;
able to penetrate and get the ball&#13;
inside for high - percentage shots.&#13;
They also began to box out on&#13;
defense and limit the Rangers to&#13;
one shot at the basket. St. Xavier&#13;
led 35-31 at halftime.&#13;
It wasn't a typical first half for a&#13;
Parkside team. They were being&#13;
beaten in every phase of the&#13;
game. It should be noted that&#13;
because of Green's illness,&#13;
Stephens was forced to substitute&#13;
and used several combinations,&#13;
none that were overly successful.&#13;
The second half was more of the&#13;
same. The Rangers battled back&#13;
within a basket and then either&#13;
committed a costly turnover or&#13;
took a bad shot. "We had our&#13;
opportunities but we would&#13;
panic," said Stephens. "We&#13;
played silly. We'd get within one&#13;
or two (points) and one guy tried&#13;
to do it by himself."&#13;
The Rangers were plagued with&#13;
costly and untimely turnovers the&#13;
entire evening. "We had too many&#13;
turnovers. I was not pleased with&#13;
the play of our guards. I wasn't&#13;
happy with anyone," Stephens&#13;
said.&#13;
Parkside shot a respectable 48%&#13;
from the floor but was outshot by&#13;
St. Xavier's 50%. The Rangers&#13;
were hurt at the freethrow line&#13;
where they converted four of&#13;
seven while the Cougars hit 18 of&#13;
27.&#13;
"We need a lot of help and work&#13;
with our defense," Stephens said&#13;
following the game. "We can't&#13;
beat anyone when we give ud 70&#13;
points."&#13;
The following evening Parkside&#13;
faced LaCrosse and gave up 63&#13;
points but still found themselves&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
BJ: Too bad! Soccer players are all losers!&#13;
too' V°&#13;
U really h8ve 8 nice&#13;
''' Dick says 50&#13;
ARE THERE any MEN living at Parkside&#13;
Village? Maybe not.&#13;
LOREN: I know about Kathy; what about the&#13;
hots? Rubber band&#13;
MOLDY AND MARY sitting in a tree, k-i-s-si-n-g;&#13;
next comes?&#13;
°KVp&#13;
S°&#13;
ft L&#13;
'&#13;
PS Sue&#13;
" S'°&#13;
n for S8le&#13;
" Con,ac,&#13;
DENISEI I have cravings for a lasagna'&#13;
dinner — Casa Kid&#13;
JULIE, what do small cars and radios have in&#13;
common?&#13;
MEYERS &lt;*'«=) is one of those filthy&#13;
little crustaceans — lOP's&#13;
CAN YOU SAY mmm-mmm good and&#13;
mushroom in the mirror? Ron Hill can't! If'&#13;
you can help him, call 637-3802.&#13;
COFFEE SHOPPE chalr-klcklng contest, 10&#13;
a.m. Fridays I Sponsor: Chain Gang&#13;
SU2Y, SALLY, ETHYL - HI sweet I -&#13;
Oscar, Arnold, Irving.&#13;
KATHY AND SABINE, teach me arts, I'll&#13;
teach crafts. KBUCK.&#13;
"ADVENTURE II" coming to a theater or&#13;
drive-In near you.&#13;
ADIDAS SHIRT and shoe wearers: You do?&#13;
Chain Gang&#13;
LUCKY — submit offer. Include name,&#13;
telephone, time, place, etc. Todd H.&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV, where Is your ad?l&#13;
We're desperate! Chain Gang&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV would have been more&#13;
desperate had she gone to lOP's and Chain&#13;
Gang. (Ranger staff you were wonderful.)&#13;
STUDSI We know your functional Items are&#13;
your belly buttons. lOP's&#13;
lOP's at least we all know that your functional&#13;
Items are not your brains.&#13;
CLAIRE — sorry about hockey bruises. Can I&#13;
make it up?&#13;
SIR RODNEY — but why a knight without a&#13;
horse? — Andy&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS Parkslde's women's&#13;
cross country team — NAIA champions!&#13;
ORGY QUEEN, J.c. must be the only one&#13;
you've missed!!&#13;
SYNTHETIC OIL. Great part&#13;
time opportunities in this fast&#13;
growing market of synthetic&#13;
lubricants - lubricants that are&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
on the short end of the 63-60 score.&#13;
The Rangers controlled the&#13;
boards (34-31) but shot an anemic&#13;
39% from the floor. LaCrosse shot&#13;
a blistering 64% from the floor and&#13;
hit 17 of 21 freethrows. The&#13;
Rangers managed but four of ten&#13;
from the foul line. Senior Arthur&#13;
Bright led Parkside in scoring&#13;
with 14 points while Reggie Anderson&#13;
(6-22 from the floor) had&#13;
13. Dave McLeish was the only&#13;
other player in double figures for&#13;
Parkside with 10 points. Green&#13;
was still suffering from the virus&#13;
and didn't suit up for the game.&#13;
The team is now on the road for&#13;
their next five games as they face&#13;
South Alabama, Murray State,&#13;
Drake, Stevens Point and Kansas&#13;
State. The Ranger's next home&#13;
game is December 15th against&#13;
UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
IMPEACH K.M.! Restore Sue Stevens to the&#13;
throne! Chain Gang&#13;
DO SOCCER PLAYERS know what men are!&#13;
I BET NOT!&#13;
RS: Get your diaper changed! You and your&#13;
iokes STINK!&#13;
LUT2Y, what's going on between you and&#13;
Buck that your nipples, are dancing and&#13;
your crotch Is wet?&#13;
MARY — Happy Birthday, a week late. —&#13;
Curtis&#13;
JUNIE — no, but do you want to? — Chipper&#13;
THE ANIMALS need "Neu" Blood. Chain&#13;
Gang&#13;
"Elk'&#13;
8 UP' ,h6n d0Wn&#13;
' thBn UP 898in&#13;
' Anne&#13;
PLUSH BOTTOM — Sorry I hit you In the&#13;
nose. The Klutz&#13;
LUCKY — My Laredo and I accept&#13;
reasonable offers! Todd H.&#13;
MELODY — Are you piss ... ed off at Tiny?&#13;
Fencer&#13;
IS K.M.'s middle name really Nessman?&#13;
lOP's&#13;
ERADICATE microorganism Erica iensenlca&#13;
from Parkside Village Parties&#13;
Thanks turkey!&#13;
SEBINI gives out to trolls, for details contact&#13;
"the Wall".&#13;
GINGER: Noticed the Improvement In last&#13;
Parking Lot again. It didn't even have any&#13;
errors! Chain Groupies&#13;
WE ALWAYS KNEW the Ranger staff were a&#13;
bunch of turkeys! (page 2, 11/20/80) lOP's&#13;
AT LEAST we're In season.&#13;
BILL, how could you grill your manhood to&#13;
well done.&#13;
ANNETTE (ALI) GAPINSKI has a mean left&#13;
foot.&#13;
ANDY: I.L.Y.A.H.L. - Rodney&#13;
THE lOP's are really the AOP's&#13;
Wt'L&#13;
L&#13;
*&#13;
EC,VR'T,&#13;
Y GUARDS start shooting trres on illegally parked cars?&#13;
HOPEFULLY, they'll shoot the lOP's&#13;
RON, growl, stage, tequila, Belolt, waitress,&#13;
overpass, monestary, cornfield, remember?&#13;
&#13;
sort of like, it's like, really man."&#13;
DO-JA — Buying out Milwaukee? O.K. Fine'&#13;
How's M's closet? Deb&#13;
HEY GUYS) Don't forget Sheryl's Birthday I&#13;
• December 7th! y&#13;
SHERYL —When ya bringing M.E. and M E&#13;
over again? Phone! Deb&#13;
CAROL S. has a bun In the oven.&#13;
ri2S.&#13;
L&#13;
' went wrono (or was lf right)? CAROL, It s people like you and Paul who&#13;
™ake «)ls a year 'round |ob. The Stork&#13;
CAROL AND PAUL — Congratulations on&#13;
your wonderful news. May it always be&#13;
healthy and bring you nothing but iov —&#13;
Ranger 1 '&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOUR RIVIERA, good condition, sport&#13;
wheels with hubs and two mounted. Low&#13;
$190 *633 4879 15&#13;
^&#13;
,e&#13;
*' be&#13;
"&#13;
ed radlals. Lot&#13;
TOASTER OVEN/BROILER $25, C apehart&#13;
stereo, am/fm/8 track, 2 speakers, $75;&#13;
high chair, $15; antique buffet, mirrored&#13;
back, $175. Ph. 657-1805.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FREE - mild-mannered, male cat; neutered,&#13;
black. Call Rosemary, 636-9177.&#13;
WALK, TALK, AND ASSIST retired (blind)&#13;
college teacher in straightening out his&#13;
library. Earn while you learn. Call 694-2251&#13;
for appointment.&#13;
revolutionizing the automotive&#13;
industry. AMS/OIL is the world's&#13;
largest producer of synthetic&#13;
Inhnnanto Vai. A... .&#13;
1 U ' Vi OJ 1U11CUL&#13;
lubricants. You can earn extra&#13;
cash as an independent AMS/OIL&#13;
dealer. A realistic beginner's goal&#13;
is about $25.00 weekly. You will&#13;
also enjoy sizeable tax advantages&#13;
of owning your own&#13;
business. Dealerships cost $27.60.&#13;
Call or write for information.&#13;
Mitmoen Brothers, 6634 - 30th&#13;
Ave., Kenosha, WI, 53142. Phone:&#13;
(414) 652-3399.&#13;
10% DISCOUNT&#13;
To Parkside students and faculty&#13;
members only, on all merchandise&#13;
in our store. Parkside I.D. required&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
Vwih'ka&amp;Sani&#13;
JEWELERS&#13;
Itonotha's Oiomond Center&#13;
5617 • 6th Avenue&#13;
^hone 658-2525 Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of beer? All you have to do is fill&#13;
out this entry form and pick the most correct winners. Put a check&#13;
mark by your picks and bring the form down to the Ranger office&#13;
D139 WLLC.&#13;
Baltimore at Cincinnati&#13;
Denver at Kansas City -&#13;
N. Y. Jets at Cleveland&#13;
Atlanta at Philadelphia&#13;
Detroit at St. Louis&#13;
Green Bay at Chicago&#13;
Minnesota at Tampa Bay&#13;
New Orleans at San Francisco&#13;
Dallas at Oakland&#13;
Los Angeles at Buffalo —-—&#13;
New York Giants at Seattle —&#13;
San Diego at Washington&#13;
New England at Miami&#13;
Tie - breaker: will be the total combined&#13;
points scored in the New England - Miami game.&#13;
Last week's winner: Stephen E. Hansen; 11 correct, 48points&#13;
Name:-&#13;
S.S. No. —&#13;
Rules: /&#13;
1) One entry per person&#13;
2) Must be a student at UW-Parkside&#13;
3) Person with most correct picks win (in case of tie, the total&#13;
points will be used as a tie - breaker)&#13;
4) Entry must be clipped from Ranger issue&#13;
5) Ranger members ineligible&#13;
6) Entries must be turned into Ranger office by noon on the&#13;
Friday proceeding the games&#13;
7) Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks&#13;
8) Entries must be legible to be considered&#13;
PRELIMINARY JURYING&#13;
Saturday, January 10, entries due before 10 a. m.&#13;
®™.Vm&#13;
P;f&#13;
es ,0: or mail 10 slides to: Wustum Museum ooq Ath c. .&#13;
2519 Northwestern Ave. Racine WI SWM&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin C Wl 53403&#13;
19th ANNUAL&#13;
Monument Square Art Fair&#13;
June 13-14,1980&#13;
For more information call:&#13;
^&#13;
414&#13;
) 637-7706 or 633-3215&#13;
i* v.j&#13;
I ACADEMY OF BATON A DANCE&#13;
f&#13;
is&#13;
X;&#13;
Headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits, §&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights |&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — Tap Shoes —&#13;
All Dancing Supplies&#13;
Applications Aro&#13;
Being Accepted&#13;
For&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
A AAiic+ JOB REQUIREMENTS&#13;
| S ** st&#13;
^&#13;
ent enrolled with 6 credits&#13;
Assigns, edits, and writes sports stories.&#13;
® Lays out sports pages&#13;
® Previous editorial experience.&#13;
This is a paid position&#13;
.&#13;
UE. ^PP,ica^°&#13;
n at the Ranger Office,&#13;
WLLC D139, Next to the Coffee Shoppe&#13;
Deadline: Monday, Decembers </text>
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              <text>Elements of society add to racism problem</text>
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              <text>jMT University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, November 20, 1980&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 12&#13;
Food prices to increase 3 percent&#13;
by Janet Wells&#13;
An overall increase of th ree per&#13;
cent in the price of food at&#13;
Parkside is projected for January&#13;
1981, according to Bill Niebuhr&#13;
Director of the Student Union.&#13;
Many food item prices will remain&#13;
the same, while selected items&#13;
will probably be penny - increased.&#13;
&#13;
This method is similar to that&#13;
used last spring, when the overall&#13;
price of food at Parkside was&#13;
adjusted upward by eight per cent.&#13;
Niebuhr and Steve Spencer,&#13;
Manager of the Heritage Food&#13;
Systems operation at Parkside&#13;
since June 1, are currently&#13;
determining those food and&#13;
beverage items whose sale&#13;
volume and comparative prices&#13;
can carry a small price increase&#13;
to offset the general effect of inflation&#13;
«i food costs.&#13;
Comparison pricing helps&#13;
Parkside's food prices to remain&#13;
competitive. Niebuhr and Spencer&#13;
check the cost of a hamburger or&#13;
sandwich, for instance, at fast&#13;
food restaurants popular in the&#13;
local communities, and compare&#13;
that with the cost, convenience,&#13;
and quality of Parkside's food.&#13;
Niebuhr believes that Parkside&#13;
retains the competitive edge in the&#13;
communities and in the UWSystem.&#13;
&#13;
He cites the fact that Parkside's&#13;
food prices are at the approximate&#13;
median when compared with food&#13;
prices throughout the UW-System.&#13;
The food price index published&#13;
quarterly by Madison projects a&#13;
twelve to fifteen per cent increase&#13;
in food prices overall from last&#13;
January to next. In view of that&#13;
and of nation-wide inflation,&#13;
Niebuhr declares that the Union&#13;
and Heritage Foods have done&#13;
well in holding price increases to a&#13;
necessary minimum, though&#13;
Heritage loses money in its day -&#13;
to - day operations.&#13;
Feeding such customers as&#13;
Parkside's summer camp attendees&#13;
and Gen Con participants&#13;
helps to keep Heritage "slightly in&#13;
the black," Niebuhr says.&#13;
Catering meals scheduled in&#13;
Parkside facilities is Heritage's&#13;
main source of revenue, compensating&#13;
for the loss sustained in&#13;
daily operations. Heritage pays&#13;
the Student Union contracted fees&#13;
which vary according to the&#13;
revenue source.&#13;
Sixty-two per cent of the Union's&#13;
current budget is comprised of&#13;
revenues from the food service&#13;
and other Union - sponsored activities,&#13;
such as bowling. The&#13;
budget is charged for most of the&#13;
costs of operating the building,&#13;
including utilities, amortizing the&#13;
building loan, and paying the&#13;
salaries of university employees.&#13;
Heritage employs its own staff.&#13;
Niebuhr is extremely proud of&#13;
the Union budget's reduced&#13;
reliance on student segregated&#13;
fees. Five years ago, fifty per cent&#13;
of the Union's budget was derived&#13;
from segregated fees, fifty per&#13;
cent from revenues. Today,&#13;
despite increased costs, the same&#13;
segregated fee dollars are only&#13;
thirty-eight per cent of the budget,&#13;
with the remainder coming from&#13;
revenue - producing operations&#13;
like the food service.&#13;
RANGER ph&#13;
STUDENTS purchase food at the Coffee Shoppe.&#13;
Elements of society&#13;
add to racism problem&#13;
J. P. STEVENS WORKERS In Roanoke Rapids, N. C., cheer&#13;
after they voted to ratify historic contract on October 19.&#13;
Workers ratify contract&#13;
ACTWU and Stevens, ACTWU has&#13;
terminated the four-year consumer&#13;
boycott of J.P. Stevens&#13;
products and the Corporate&#13;
Campaign in which Stevens'&#13;
various business and financial ties&#13;
were publicized and protested.&#13;
The workers gathered at&#13;
Roanoke Rapids High School to&#13;
ratify the historic 2 1/2-year&#13;
contract with the company, whose&#13;
officials had vowed for almost two&#13;
decades that they would never&#13;
sign a collective bargaining&#13;
agreement. The ratification came&#13;
six years and two months after&#13;
Stevens workers chose the union&#13;
in an NLRB-supervised election at&#13;
the seven plants which were the&#13;
inspiration for last year's awardwinning&#13;
movie, "Norma Rae."&#13;
Under the terms of the&#13;
agreement, workers here won&#13;
more than $3 million in back&#13;
wages unlawfully withheld from&#13;
their pay in the last two years.&#13;
A cheering, jubilant crowd of&#13;
.P. Stevens workers roared their&#13;
pproval of a union contract at&#13;
toanoke Rapids, North Carolina&#13;
)ctober 19. The contract brings&#13;
hem fundamental union&#13;
&gt;rotection and benefits including&#13;
eniority, arbitration, a grievance&#13;
&gt;rocedure, shop stewards, safety&#13;
:ommittees and a 19.35% back&#13;
&gt;ay s ettlement.&#13;
Later the same day, the same&#13;
&gt;asic contract was ratified&#13;
manimously by Stevens workers&#13;
n High Point, North Carolina,&#13;
\llendale, South Carolina, and&#13;
West Boylston (Montgomery)&#13;
\labama, where negotiations on&#13;
specific local issues are under&#13;
way. In all four locations, some&#13;
3,500 Stevens workers in ten plants&#13;
are now covered by Amalgamated&#13;
Clothing and Textile Workers&#13;
Union (ACTWU) contracts.&#13;
As part of the national settlement&#13;
agreement between&#13;
by Gloria Gonzales&#13;
Roberto Rivera, who helped&#13;
establish a state - mandated&#13;
Human Relations Department at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
LaCrosse, spoke on November 14&#13;
at Parkside on "The Hidden&#13;
Curriculum in Education." The&#13;
lecture, sponsored by Minority&#13;
Student Union, examined the&#13;
production of racism in American&#13;
society.&#13;
Rivera introduced concepts and&#13;
dimensions of the problem of&#13;
racism that he stated were helpful&#13;
to all students who will be working&#13;
with people in the fields of communication,&#13;
history, psychology&#13;
and education.&#13;
Racism, according to Rivera, is&#13;
produced by three elements of&#13;
society, each working to reinforce&#13;
the others. "Institutions, the&#13;
dominant culture and individualized&#13;
behavior all contribute&#13;
to the problem of r acism,"&#13;
he said, and to the "inequitable&#13;
distribution of socio - economic&#13;
resources."&#13;
Institutions, according to&#13;
Rivera, "legitimize who gets&#13;
what," while the dominant culture&#13;
provides a pattern for individuals&#13;
They will get a retroactive hourly&#13;
pay increase of 19.35% and will&#13;
receive sums averaging $1,300 per&#13;
full-time worker, payable in&#13;
November.&#13;
AFL-CIO President Lane&#13;
Kirkland hailed the contracts and&#13;
the settlement agreement as "a&#13;
tremendous step forward for the&#13;
textile and apparel workers of the&#13;
south who have been denied,&#13;
through illegal repression and&#13;
coercion, their basic right to be&#13;
represented by a union."&#13;
to base their opinions and beliefs&#13;
on. -&#13;
In addition, American society&#13;
fails to produce "critical&#13;
thinkers," according to Rivera.&#13;
As a result, racists, sexists and&#13;
elitists help form the foundations&#13;
for a class system, he said. One&#13;
example of the lack of critical&#13;
thinking done by the American&#13;
public cited by Rivera was the&#13;
election of Ronald Reagan. Since&#13;
American voters lacked the&#13;
ability to anlyze current problems&#13;
systematically, he said, their&#13;
answer was Reagan. At the same&#13;
time, Rivera pointed out, how&#13;
many voters realized that Puerto&#13;
Ricans on the island were allowed&#13;
to vote, for the first time, but were&#13;
still not allowed an electoral&#13;
college delegate?&#13;
Rivera said that racism is often&#13;
dealt with by blaming the victim&#13;
rather than the victimizers.&#13;
"There are no classes on white&#13;
racism or male sexism," he said.&#13;
"Victim blaming is also revealed&#13;
in statements like 'they won't go&#13;
to school,' and 'they have too&#13;
many children'."&#13;
Denial of the problem is another&#13;
way that racism is dealt with in&#13;
America, according to Rivera. He&#13;
called this "the infamous 'the&#13;
slaves were always happily&#13;
singing on the plantation' myth."&#13;
The rationality approach to&#13;
dealing with racism is what&#13;
Rivera called the "if only we could&#13;
learn to communicate with each&#13;
other" approach.&#13;
According to Rivera, these are&#13;
all ineffective ways of dealing&#13;
with racism. More effective,&#13;
Rivera said, would be the understanding&#13;
of the three reinforcers&#13;
of racism (institutions, the&#13;
dominant culture and individualized&#13;
behavior) and the&#13;
rewriting of history. Rivera asked,&#13;
"Whose history is being taught for&#13;
whom?" To demonstrate his&#13;
point, he asked if Thanksgiving&#13;
should actually be a day of&#13;
mourning for native Americans&#13;
and wondered how Columbus, who&#13;
was "lost," could have "discovered"&#13;
America.&#13;
Rivera also advised would-be&#13;
counselors to develop "authenticity&#13;
techniques" because many&#13;
counselors, he said, unconsciously&#13;
separate what they really believe&#13;
from what they say they believe.&#13;
On the institutional level, Rivera&#13;
said, the term "qualified&#13;
minority", should be dropped&#13;
because it actually asserts that&#13;
most minorities are not qualified.&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Students to tour Russia&#13;
• 'Cream in the Well' opens&#13;
• Women cross country&#13;
take national title &#13;
Thursday, November 20,1980 Ranger&#13;
Article against nuclear energy was misleading&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This letter is in response to the&#13;
article in the November 13&#13;
RANGER in which Deb Elzinga&#13;
attacks a previous RANGER&#13;
article, 'The Case for Nuclear&#13;
Energy", and makes what I&#13;
consider several false or&#13;
misleading statements concerning&#13;
both solar and nuclear&#13;
energy. Since I feel that both solar&#13;
and nuclear energy have a great&#13;
potential for providing environmentally&#13;
benign power, it is&#13;
essential to correct these&#13;
misunderstandings.&#13;
First, she attacks the October 16&#13;
RANGER article as "flawed." I&#13;
found that article to be carefully&#13;
researched and correct in&#13;
essentially every detail.&#13;
Next, she cites the FORD/&#13;
MITRE study, "Nuclear Power —&#13;
Issues and Choices", as&#13;
illustrating that "energy companies&#13;
have a rather callous attitude&#13;
about our well being." The&#13;
facts are that the 21 members of&#13;
this study contained not a single&#13;
representative from an "energy&#13;
company", but rather consisted of&#13;
a most distinguished group,&#13;
almost exclusively academic,&#13;
none of whom had taken a strong&#13;
position for or against nuclear&#13;
power. It included Seymour&#13;
Abrahamson, professor of&#13;
genetics, UW-Madison; Harold&#13;
Brown, then president of Cal&#13;
Tech; Marvin Goldberger,&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
professor of physics, Princeton;&#13;
Wolfgang Panofsky, director of&#13;
Stanford Linear Accelerator; and&#13;
John Sawhill, then president of&#13;
New York University. In the&#13;
course of their study they consulted&#13;
with such stout nuclear&#13;
opponents as Dean Abrahamson,&#13;
Tom Cochran, Gus Speth, and Art&#13;
Tamplin, and their recommendations&#13;
became the basis for&#13;
the Carter Administration nuclear&#13;
policy when a number of the study&#13;
members joined his Administration.&#13;
How this document&#13;
which provided the basis for&#13;
Carter's nonproliferation policy,&#13;
his decision to halt breeder&#13;
reactor development, and his&#13;
decision to stop nuclear fuel&#13;
reprocessing can be considered as&#13;
callous completely escapes me.&#13;
The study did conclude that&#13;
solar, geothermal, and fusion&#13;
energy "cannot compete with&#13;
nuclear, coal, or other fossil fuels&#13;
as major sources of electric power&#13;
until well in the next century." In&#13;
referring to conclij§i,QpsL o f- this&#13;
sort, Ms. Elzinga states "The&#13;
sources from which this type of&#13;
information comes have many&#13;
ties to the energy conglomerates."&#13;
The only conclusion&#13;
I can draw is that she must&#13;
consider the major universities of&#13;
this country as energy&#13;
conglomerates since seven&#13;
members of the study group are&#13;
from Harvard, two from MIT, and&#13;
all but three from other major&#13;
universities.&#13;
Another major study, "Solar&#13;
Photovoltaic Energy Conversion"&#13;
by the American Physical Society,&#13;
concluded, "It is unlikely that&#13;
photovoltaics will contribute more&#13;
than about 1% of the U.S. electrical&#13;
energy produced near the&#13;
end of the century." This study&#13;
group was made up of 7 members&#13;
from major universities and 4&#13;
members representing companies&#13;
with a vested interest in&#13;
promoting solar energy (IBM,&#13;
GE, and two from Bell Labs).&#13;
Again, unless major universities&#13;
and solar cell manufacturers are&#13;
considered energy conglomerates,&#13;
Ms. Elzinga has&#13;
misled you.&#13;
There is no question that solar&#13;
energy has great potential as an&#13;
energy source, particularly for&#13;
space and water heating. But I am&#13;
greatly disturbed by Ms. Elzinga's&#13;
attack on the "experts" and the&#13;
fundamental antiestablishment&#13;
and antiscientific attitudes behind&#13;
such attacks. The underlying&#13;
ideology first clearly presented by&#13;
Amory Lovins is that any centralized&#13;
form of energy such as&#13;
nuclear, coal, or hydroelectric is&#13;
evil and any decentralized, "soft"&#13;
technology such as solar, wind,&#13;
and biomass is intrinsically good,&#13;
primarily because it is decentralized.&#13;
&#13;
What these proponents of soft&#13;
technology fail to consider are the&#13;
lessons of history, and I would like&#13;
to cite two examples. The first is&#13;
that of the American farmer prior&#13;
to the 1930's. This is a perfect case&#13;
study in soft technology. Solar&#13;
energy was used to dry his crops&#13;
and raise fuel (crops) for his&#13;
motive power (horses). Solar&#13;
energy in the form of wind was&#13;
used to pump his water and&#13;
generate his electricity, with&#13;
batteries for storage. But as soon&#13;
as the American farmer had the&#13;
opportunity to switch from this&#13;
soft, decentralized technology&#13;
with all the splendid virtues extolled&#13;
by Amory Lovins to the&#13;
hard technology represented by&#13;
central power station electricity,&#13;
they did so to a man. Why?&#13;
Because centralized electricity&#13;
was cheaper and more dependable.&#13;
This was a clear cut&#13;
referendum on soft vs hard&#13;
technology, and hard technology&#13;
won.&#13;
The second example is that of&#13;
The case for centralized energy sources&#13;
hv KaIIv Starlrc 11 j 1 ». «&#13;
the Chinese Great Leap Forward&#13;
experiment in which the Chinese&#13;
people were urged to develop&#13;
(decentralized) home industries&#13;
and backyard foundries with the&#13;
express goal of overtaking the&#13;
(centralized) Capitalistic mass&#13;
production industry. This&#13;
program couldn't have been&#13;
better designed to fit the ideology&#13;
of "soft technology" had Amory&#13;
Lovins drawn it up himself. Not&#13;
only did it fit the production mode&#13;
advocated by soft technologists,&#13;
but it incorporated their antiestablishment&#13;
attitudes as well,&#13;
as university professors!&#13;
government bureaucrats, and&#13;
intellectuals were humiliated as&#13;
being "socalled experts" and&#13;
"elitist".&#13;
As we all know, this attempt to&#13;
build the perfect soft technology&#13;
society was a massive failure, and&#13;
the Chinese are now seeking&#13;
American help in designing the&#13;
world's largest hydroelectric&#13;
establishment and their first&#13;
nuclear reactor. Apparently the&#13;
American farmer and the Chinese&#13;
people have learned lessons by&#13;
living through (and struggling to&#13;
escape) soft technology which&#13;
have escaped the theoreticians of&#13;
soft technology who mere$ fly&#13;
about the world in jet airplanes&#13;
advocating a return to the simpler&#13;
life.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Morris Firebaugh&#13;
by Kelly Starks&#13;
and Terry Rasmussen "&#13;
The article in the November 13&#13;
Ranger, "Solar power is the best&#13;
energy alternative," had stated&#13;
that our article of October 16 was&#13;
" J'!? ita&#13;
&gt; ",rnl&#13;
'&#13;
nngo."-..on&#13;
centralized forms of energy7We&#13;
are taking this opportunity to&#13;
reply.&#13;
In our previous article we had&#13;
briefly mentioned (due to space&#13;
limitations) alternative energy&#13;
sources, among them solar. We&#13;
had also mentioned the disadvantages&#13;
of decentralized systems&#13;
in their innate expence and inconvenience.&#13;
&#13;
Our society did not go into a&#13;
centralized form of energy&#13;
production due to the whim of&#13;
government or private corporations.&#13;
There are distinct and&#13;
extreme scales of power&#13;
production. Large scale plants&#13;
can take advantage of more&#13;
sophisticated and economical&#13;
power production methods than&#13;
could small scale personal&#13;
systems, resulting in the centralized&#13;
system being more&#13;
economical, by at least a factor of&#13;
10 per kilowatt produced.&#13;
The convenience of centralized&#13;
systems is rather evident when&#13;
you consider that approximately&#13;
200 people per power plant can&#13;
produce electricity for millions, as&#13;
well as industry. On the other&#13;
hand the decentralized systems&#13;
require the owner of the system to&#13;
be continuously supervising and&#13;
maintaining the system personally.&#13;
This is especially&#13;
prevalent with solar systems&#13;
owner '®'lF§Srimmediately&#13;
after a wind or snow&#13;
storm.&#13;
Much has been made of the fact&#13;
that large scale energy production&#13;
is produced by large corporations.&#13;
This is a somewhat deceptive&#13;
argument since the corporations&#13;
producing the decentralized&#13;
systems would be at least as large&#13;
as the corporations now producing&#13;
centralized energy systems.&#13;
Considering the inefficiencies of&#13;
the decentralized systems these&#13;
corporations would probably be&#13;
considerably larger.&#13;
Solar energy has become&#13;
somewhat of a legend among the&#13;
decentralized energy advocates.&#13;
Little, however, has been made of&#13;
its inherent costs and why it has&#13;
never been popular. Solar power&#13;
technology is not a new&#13;
technology; it is over a century&#13;
old for photoelectric cells alone.&#13;
Over this time the cost has been&#13;
greatly reduced, as a result of&#13;
"spin-offs" from new electrical&#13;
technologies, but they are still far&#13;
more expensive than other&#13;
alternatives. Further great&#13;
reductions in the expense of&#13;
conventional solar cells cannot be&#13;
expected since the cost of these&#13;
cells has been reduced almost&#13;
exclusively to the cost of&#13;
producing the silicon base.&#13;
Theoretically, there are less&#13;
expensive procedures for&#13;
producing this silicon base, which&#13;
. ie electronic concerns without&#13;
any notable success.&#13;
Solar energy becomes more&#13;
expensive when it must be&#13;
decentralized and independent.&#13;
This requires that sufficient&#13;
power be generated and stored&#13;
during "sunny" periods to last&#13;
through prolonged inclement&#13;
weather. If the system is incapable&#13;
of this, then it must rely&#13;
upon some centralized source&#13;
during these periods, thus&#13;
negating its "advantage" as a&#13;
decentralized system, greatly&#13;
increasing the cost of the centralized&#13;
systems required to fulfill&#13;
the energy needs of these unpredictable&#13;
periods.&#13;
Solar energy advocates dismiss&#13;
these problems and claim that&#13;
solar energy would have become a&#13;
dominant energy source had it not&#13;
been "bought out" by the large&#13;
centralized energy concerns, such&#13;
as the oil companies. This is&#13;
somewhat ironic considering the&#13;
fact that the major investors and&#13;
producers of solar systems and&#13;
research have been oil companies;&#13;
for example, Exxon is one&#13;
of the largest producers.&#13;
We have in the past noted a&#13;
tendency to discount all of the&#13;
anti-solar facts by claiming that&#13;
they are from the large centralized&#13;
energy interests,&#13;
primarily the oil conglomerates.&#13;
The authors' personal information&#13;
sources consist mainly of&#13;
journals and technical&#13;
publications, as well as training in&#13;
this general background. All such&#13;
information sources are in&#13;
agreement of solar powers'&#13;
present usefulness and estimate&#13;
its full and ultimate potential at&#13;
under 20% of our present total&#13;
energy consumption.&#13;
Mention was made of Amory B.&#13;
Lovins, specifically with his&#13;
background as a "physicist." This&#13;
is incorrect since Mr. Lovins has&#13;
no degree of any kind having to do&#13;
with physics or any other science&#13;
or technology, although he does&#13;
have a degree in fine arts from&#13;
Oxford. Our opinion of Mr. Lovins&#13;
can be best summed up in a quote&#13;
from Hans Bethe (a noted Nobel&#13;
Prize winner in physics): "He&#13;
takes partial results of other&#13;
people's work and leaves behind&#13;
the numbers he doesn't like."&#13;
The statement has been made&#13;
about nuclear and other conventional&#13;
technologies as being&#13;
"uncontrollable" and as being so&#13;
complex as to be beyond the&#13;
comprehension of the average&#13;
•individual. We are baffled by this&#13;
misconception. Technologies are&#13;
developed and "controlled"&#13;
because of the interests and&#13;
desires of the society that creates&#13;
and uses them. Technologies that&#13;
Jo not belong in this category tend&#13;
to quickly disappear due to&#13;
apathy. As to the complexity of&#13;
these systems, the basic principles&#13;
behind these technologies&#13;
are much simpler than most&#13;
conventional technologies, such as&#13;
television sets, automobiles,&#13;
refrigerators, etc. . . . The&#13;
theoretical background needed to&#13;
create such systems are not&#13;
necessary to understand these&#13;
systems and are no more complex&#13;
than the theories behind solar&#13;
cells and electronic technologies&#13;
which require a background in&#13;
quantum physics which is considerably&#13;
more complex than&#13;
nuclear physics and not as well&#13;
understood. Wc agree that solar&#13;
energy techology "works" and&#13;
that it is an energy alternative.&#13;
However, we do note that&#13;
presently it is an expensive&#13;
energy source. It is evident that&#13;
energy sources that are more&#13;
expensive and less reliable than&#13;
conventional systems are hardly&#13;
the "best energy alternative" hnd&#13;
will not be so until considerably&#13;
improved.&#13;
LU u iov.uuiii uu 01 in&#13;
Ranger staff wishes you a&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
THANKSGIVING&#13;
9a1&#13;
Ken Meyer ...i Editor&#13;
Dfin r*fhl«?!h Executive Business Manager&#13;
SuSSfchell! BU&#13;
ni„&#13;
Ms&#13;
aEn&#13;
r&#13;
Wend,Westpha, Feat™ EdUor&#13;
Dave Cramer Sports Editor&#13;
BnanPass.no Photo Editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson _ _ ...&#13;
Mike Farrell *&#13;
v * * C°Py Ed,tor&#13;
6 Farrell Advertising Manager&#13;
Friienha&#13;
Cramer&#13;
/«-.&#13;
Mark Chrlstiansen, Patty DeLuisa, Doug&#13;
Mrrnrmf&#13;
e&#13;
[' . VHolmdohl&#13;
' Caro1 Klees, Gary Ledger, Dan&#13;
Rip^ S!nCSt'o!;g&#13;
0aar?Ver&#13;
' °'&#13;
Nel&#13;
"' Bruce Pr«&#13;
,on&#13;
' Joe&#13;
- - - -*&#13;
All correrDnnriPnr J chq f0r repr,nt 0f any P°&#13;
rtlonof RANGER.&#13;
Parkslde KenoTha fSll 8ddreSSed ,0: Parkslde Ranger&#13;
' WLLC D139&#13;
' Uw"&#13;
pape^wlth'one^inrh aCA?.P.&#13;
te^ " fVPewritten, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
eluded for verification. letters must be signed and a telephone number InNames&#13;
will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
reserves a°[ ed'i'toru'f nri^&#13;
89 at&#13;
.&#13;
9 a&#13;
'&#13;
m' f0r Publlcation on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content p ivileges ln ref&#13;
"stlng to print letters which contain false or &#13;
Seminar students will tour USSR&#13;
Parkside is sponsoring A frir» fr * a&#13;
Ranger Thursday, November 20,1980&#13;
fhT o 1S sP°&#13;
nsoring a trip to&#13;
the Soviet Union tWs Sng&#13;
semester Students will v7sU&#13;
Moscow, Leningrad, and Tallinn&#13;
paasaassg&#13;
ajffaar23&#13;
&#13;
Wl11 provide the groups&#13;
with the opportunity to observe&#13;
the diversity of Soviet culture and&#13;
wn Et&#13;
1?;™8 the ™&#13;
- O0pportunity to meet&#13;
with their Soviet counterparts.&#13;
SnviS q&#13;
P 1S&#13;
- ^ of a three credit Soviet Seminar which is an interdisciplinary&#13;
survey of Soviet&#13;
^&#13;
or&#13;
y» economics, culture, art&#13;
and politics. The Russian tour will&#13;
Jjf on&#13;
, ^ ro&#13;
ad from March 7&#13;
through March 23, 1981.&#13;
• ^&#13;
e&#13;
. Projected cost of $i 300&#13;
includes all transportation, hotels,&#13;
food and touring from Chicago to&#13;
the Soviet Union and back.&#13;
Financial aid is available. All&#13;
interested individuals should&#13;
C&#13;
?&#13;
n&#13;
cc&#13;
ao&#13;
CLprofessor Dan McGovern&#13;
at 553-2316 or Moln. 125. ipmifes&#13;
American ethnic study funds available&#13;
TKa TTiir n i The UW-System American&#13;
Ethnic Studies Coordinating&#13;
Committee (AESCC), operating&#13;
under the auspices of the Urban&#13;
Corridor Consortium, has grants&#13;
of up to $1000 for a variety of&#13;
projects pertaining to American&#13;
Ethnic Studies. These monies may&#13;
be used for workshops, seminars,&#13;
instructional improvement,&#13;
curriculum development',&#13;
honoraria for guest lecturers,&#13;
travel, research with curricular&#13;
applications, fine arts performances&#13;
and materials&#13;
acquisition. The project's focus&#13;
must fall under the category of&#13;
American Ethnic Studies and it&#13;
must deal primarily with UWSystem&#13;
populations.&#13;
Faculty, staff, and individual&#13;
student organizations are eligible&#13;
to apply. Proposals should include&#13;
a title page, narrative explanation,&#13;
personnel identification&#13;
and a budget breakdown. Applicants&#13;
should be as specific and&#13;
thorough as possible in explaining&#13;
the nature of the proposal.&#13;
Proposals are due in the AESCC&#13;
office no later than Friday&#13;
December 5, 1980. Funding&#13;
decisions will be made by Monday,&#13;
December 15. These monies&#13;
were funded for the 1980-81 fiscal&#13;
year so all proposal activities&#13;
must be completed by June 30&#13;
1981. A final report will be due at&#13;
that time.&#13;
To be considered for the AESCC&#13;
grants, eight copies of the&#13;
proposal should be sent to: UWSystem&#13;
American Ethnic Studies&#13;
Coordinating Committee; c/o&#13;
Thomas V. Tonnesen, Program&#13;
Coordinator; UW-Milwaukee -&#13;
Bolton 840; P.O. Box 413-&#13;
Milwaukee, WI 53201. For further&#13;
information, contact the AESCC&#13;
Office at (414) 963-4700/6701.&#13;
Campus food drive is organizing&#13;
by Craig Dvorak&#13;
Thanksgiving marks a peculiar&#13;
time of year, the onset of the&#13;
Christmas season, engulfing and&#13;
enticing our minds in many ways.&#13;
Final exams are a couple ominous&#13;
weeks ahead, presents must be&#13;
bought, and excited friends are&#13;
traveling home from distant&#13;
campuses for vacation. A lot of&#13;
events are beginning to grab our&#13;
attention.&#13;
Unfortunately, the main event&#13;
in the lives of many local people is&#13;
scarcity - the lack of work and of&#13;
food. Ironically, the Christmas&#13;
season is the most difficult time of&#13;
year for these people. Even if they&#13;
have been fortunate enough to&#13;
have found a job, seasonal&#13;
unemployment and holiday&#13;
layoffs appear.&#13;
As a solution, Inter - Varsity&#13;
Christian Fellowship and Minority&#13;
Student Union are co - sponsoring&#13;
a campus - wide food drive to meet&#13;
these needs in our own area.&#13;
Beginning Monday, December 1,&#13;
students and faculty are urged to&#13;
bring food items to the Book Co-op&#13;
alcove (across from the library)&#13;
from 9a. m. -2p. m. Needed itenis&#13;
are any nonperishables: canned&#13;
vegetables and fruits, cereals,&#13;
potatoes, nuts and snack items.&#13;
Parkside 200&#13;
Mufti this al!&#13;
These goods will then be boxed&#13;
and delivered to needy families in&#13;
Racine, Kenosha, and outlying&#13;
areas.&#13;
Inter - Varsity and Minority&#13;
Student Union challenge everyone&#13;
on campus to practice the real&#13;
spirit of Christmas by supporting&#13;
the hungry December 1 - 12.&#13;
^ o$eph.&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phon* 454-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR C REDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
Students interested in the&#13;
Soviet Seminar and Tour will&#13;
meet on Monday, December 1,&#13;
at 1 p. m. in Union 106. Further&#13;
details of the trip will be&#13;
tour meeting&#13;
discussed, and one of last&#13;
year's seminar participants&#13;
will present a slide show on&#13;
the U.S.S.R.&#13;
Roundtable continues talks&#13;
Two topics remain in the&#13;
current Social Science Roundtable&#13;
series at Parkside.&#13;
"Labor and the Economy in the&#13;
1980s" will be the subject of&#13;
United Auto Workers Region 10&#13;
director Ralph Koenig on&#13;
November 24.&#13;
Peace Corps organizers and&#13;
volunteers Alan Guskin, UW-P&#13;
chancellor, and Judy Guskin&#13;
adjunct associate professor of&#13;
anthropology, will present the&#13;
final program of the semester,&#13;
"The Peace Corps: Past and&#13;
Future, on December l. The&#13;
Guskins recently were featured&#13;
participants in Peace Corps&#13;
rededication ceremonies marking&#13;
the corps' 20th anniversary at the&#13;
University of Michigan where the&#13;
organization was born during&#13;
John F. Kennedy's presidential&#13;
campaign.&#13;
Roundtable sessions are at 12:15&#13;
p.m. in the Parkside Union, Room&#13;
106.&#13;
Library to hold book sale&#13;
The Wyllie Library Learning&#13;
Center will hold a book sale on&#13;
December 2, 3 and 4, from 10 a m&#13;
- 3 p.m. outside the level one&#13;
library entrance.&#13;
Approximately 1400 books&#13;
covering a variety of subjects will&#13;
be sold. Hardcover books will be&#13;
priced at one dollar and paperbacks&#13;
at 25 cents.&#13;
These books consist of&#13;
duplicates, discards, and gift&#13;
items which are not needed for the&#13;
library collection, according to&#13;
Hannelore B. Rader, director of&#13;
the Library learning Center.&#13;
Wind ensemble to perform&#13;
Admission is 50 cents for UW-P&#13;
students; $1 for others.&#13;
rvis.^&#13;
Parkside's Wind Ensemble will&#13;
perform at 8 p.m. tonight in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theater under the&#13;
direction of S cott Mather.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
Patmos, a work by Donald J.&#13;
Young, director of bands at&#13;
William Horlick High School in&#13;
Racine. Patmos was selected as&#13;
winner of the 1975 composition&#13;
contest of the southwest division&#13;
of the College Band Directors&#13;
National Association.&#13;
Also programmed are Darius&#13;
Milhaud's Concerto for Percussion&#13;
with Michael Heberling as&#13;
soloist, as well as works by Harry&#13;
Alford, Aaron Copland, Gordon&#13;
Jacob and Marcel Poot.&#13;
IS IHlltl&#13;
Lift AFTER&#13;
COLLEGE?&#13;
kWHG PLAN&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654-2932&#13;
1)&#13;
2)&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
HAPPY THANKSGIVING&#13;
FREE '• '• FROZEN TURKEYS ( 1 0 lb. a v g . )&#13;
THURS. NOV. 20 &amp; FRI. NOV. 21 WHEN THE ALARM&#13;
SOUNDS AT THE UNION DINING ROOM CHECK-OUT&#13;
THANKSGIVING DINNER SPECIAL&#13;
WED.r NOV. 26&#13;
• Roast Turkey • Sage Dressing • Whipped Potato • Gravy&#13;
• Whole Kernel Corn or Green Peas • Cranberry Sauce&#13;
• Pumpkin Pie • Complimentary Glass of Wine or Cider&#13;
ONLY $2&#13;
49 (&#13;
$3&#13;
19&#13;
v alue) &#13;
4 Thursday, November 20,1980 Ranger&#13;
Gano added to staff&#13;
by Wendy Westphai&#13;
The successful production of&#13;
"The Fourposter," presented for&#13;
Accent on Enrichment, was&#13;
directed by Norman Gano. He is&#13;
currently directing the studio&#13;
production "The Cream in the&#13;
Well."&#13;
Gano has been in professional&#13;
theater for 22 years in New York&#13;
City, Philadelphia, Connecticut&#13;
and now Wisconsin. Here at&#13;
Parkside, he teaches Acting II and&#13;
directs the studio production class.&#13;
During his career he has been in&#13;
stage productions, films and&#13;
television. Some recent films&#13;
which he performed in are "The&#13;
French Connection," "Out-ofTowners"&#13;
and "On a Clear Day&#13;
You Can See Forever." He missed&#13;
performing in "The Godfather"&#13;
because he would not claim to&#13;
have Italian descent.&#13;
In the Milwaukee area, he has&#13;
acted with and directed for the&#13;
Festival Theatre for two years. He&#13;
recently directed a production of&#13;
"Our Town" for the Milwaukee&#13;
Religious Drama Guild.&#13;
The Parkside studio production,&#13;
"The Cream in the Well" is written&#13;
by Lynn Riggs. He is best known&#13;
for his play "Green Grow the&#13;
Lilacs," which formed the basis&#13;
for the musical "Oklahoma."&#13;
This play was chosen for a&#13;
number of reasons. The&#13;
characters have depth and need a&#13;
certain texture. This provides the&#13;
student actors with an opportunity&#13;
to dig inside of themselves for&#13;
character depth.&#13;
Gano says "Cream in the Well"&#13;
is a play of d ark and lights with&#13;
somber tones and struggles within&#13;
shadows. But there is hope and&#13;
light on the horizon.&#13;
"I am pleased with the students'&#13;
development within their roles,"&#13;
said Gano. "Also I am finding&#13;
harmony and cooperation with&#13;
other faculty and students&#13;
associated with my work."&#13;
Next semester, there will be two&#13;
more Dramatic Art productions.&#13;
Gano encourages anyone who is&#13;
interested to audition. Auditions&#13;
will be the first week of the Spring&#13;
Semester.&#13;
"The Cream in the Well," Lynn&#13;
Riggs' slightly Gothic tale of&#13;
passion, romance, fear and&#13;
superstition set in territorial&#13;
Oklahoma, will be the fall&#13;
dramatic arts studio production at'&#13;
Parkside with performances at 8&#13;
p.m., Dec. 3 through 6 and at .1:30&#13;
p.m. on Dec. 7.&#13;
The production will be center -&#13;
staged in the Communication Arts&#13;
Studio with the audience in ranked&#13;
seating on four sides. Because of&#13;
limited seating in the studio&#13;
theater, pre-paid reservations are&#13;
suggested. Tickets are available&#13;
at the Campus Union Information&#13;
Center and information on ticket&#13;
availability can be obtained by&#13;
calling 553-2042 or 553-2345. Admission&#13;
is $1 for students; $1.50 for&#13;
others.&#13;
Contact&#13;
VICKI KNAPP AND BOBBIE MINNIEAR rehearse a scene&#13;
from "The Cream In the Well." Security problem solved&#13;
Course to follow&#13;
'Body in Question'&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
The Science division is offering&#13;
a new course for the Spring&#13;
semester. Allied Health 69-290 is a&#13;
travel through the circulatory&#13;
system; and the final segment&#13;
shows an actual autopsy.&#13;
Throughout the program Miller&#13;
uses his own body for tests (such&#13;
as tying a tourniquet around his&#13;
Body in Question," and will meet&#13;
11 - 12:15 a.m. Tuesdays and&#13;
Thursdays.&#13;
The main objective of the course&#13;
is to create an awareness and&#13;
appreciation of various levels of&#13;
health through a multi - faceted&#13;
analysis of selected disease&#13;
states.&#13;
"The Body in Question" is&#13;
written and hosted by Jonathan&#13;
Miller and will be presented in 13&#13;
segments. The segments cover&#13;
such topics as "Naming of Parts"&#13;
in which Miller asks people on the&#13;
street various questions about&#13;
their internal organs; "Blood&#13;
Relations" where red automobiles&#13;
«i a highway are used to&#13;
demonstrate how red blood cells&#13;
flows in a vein, and depriving&#13;
himself of exygen to the extent&#13;
that he loses consciousness before&#13;
the cameras). He also uses special&#13;
effects, art, literature, and&#13;
laboratory experiments to clarify&#13;
and distill medical knowledge.&#13;
Time magazine calls the series,&#13;
"— alternately informative....&#13;
and provacative. Miller brings&#13;
some of (his) engaging wit and&#13;
lunacy."&#13;
The instructor for the class is&#13;
Professor S.P. Datta, a specialist&#13;
in the areas of genetics and immunology.&#13;
Professor Datta&#13;
received his PhD from UWMadison.&#13;
There are no&#13;
prerequisites required for the&#13;
course.&#13;
by Jim Kreuser&#13;
A Parkside student came to the&#13;
Student Senate with a complaint&#13;
about Campus Security. The&#13;
student said that he felt that the&#13;
ticketing procedure was insufficient&#13;
and arbitrary. He had&#13;
been given a ticket for parking on&#13;
the striped lines (which are&#13;
designated no parking areas) in&#13;
the parking lot. A violation of t his&#13;
type should be given a warning&#13;
ticket. Procedure states: A&#13;
minimum of two warning tickets&#13;
IB issued to any vehicle&#13;
violating any of the following&#13;
parking violations before a&#13;
parking violation ticket is issued:&#13;
A. parking prohibited (posted) B.&#13;
parking in non-designated area C.&#13;
no permit D. parking with improper&#13;
permit for area E. improper&#13;
parking in designated area&#13;
F. parked in physically disabled&#13;
stall G. restricted parking&#13;
(specific time).&#13;
It is then the officers duty to&#13;
check on his computer printout in&#13;
the squad to determine if a vehicle&#13;
has received two or more warnings&#13;
before a ticket is given. In&#13;
this case, it is clear that procedure&#13;
was not followed. The student&#13;
went to Tallent Hall and complained&#13;
to Ron Brinkman,&#13;
Director of Campus Security.&#13;
Brinkman said that, in this case,&#13;
procedure was not followed. He&#13;
was more than glad to clear up the&#13;
problem.&#13;
Any cxie who feels he or she has&#13;
been treated unfairly by Campus&#13;
Security can go over to Tallent&#13;
Hall and check it out with the&#13;
security department. Anyone who&#13;
feels he or she has been treated&#13;
unfairly on ANY campus issue can&#13;
come to Student Senate for&#13;
assistance.&#13;
Kinship orientation today in Union 106&#13;
GRADONI'S&#13;
52nd street&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
Now Featuring&#13;
Mini-Service Sit-Down Dining&#13;
plus Carry-Outs&#13;
Open Noon til Midnight&#13;
Sat 4 til 1, Sun 4 til 10&#13;
BOMBERS - LASAGNA- SPAGHETTI&#13;
If you wish — Call ahead&#13;
and your order will be hot and&#13;
ready to eat in our private booths.&#13;
3308-52nd St. Kenosha&#13;
654-5068&#13;
Kinship of Kenosha is a child&#13;
service agency working with&#13;
children (boys and girls ages 7 to&#13;
17) from single-parent homes and&#13;
children with special problems.&#13;
They match a child with a mature,&#13;
stable adult who can provide&#13;
regular guidance, understanding&#13;
and acceptance.&#13;
Kinship is a preventative&#13;
program that is concerned with&#13;
providing the friendship and&#13;
guidance a child needs to avoid&#13;
serious problems in the future.&#13;
Kinship feels it is important to&#13;
expose the children to different&#13;
environments and give them a&#13;
chance to do some of the things&#13;
they are unable to do because of&#13;
their situation.&#13;
The ingredients of Kinship are&#13;
kindness and understanding,&#13;
improving the adult-child&#13;
relationship, never letting a child&#13;
down, sharing a little of yo ur time&#13;
and love, having fun with your&#13;
child, increasing a child's self -&#13;
confidence, and providing stable&#13;
companionship.&#13;
If you are the kind of person who&#13;
likes being with children, Kinship&#13;
has a child waiting to be your&#13;
"Special Friend." Kinship is&#13;
having an orientation here at&#13;
Parkside, Thursday, November 20&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Union 106. All interested&#13;
students, faculty, and&#13;
staff are welcome to attend. If&#13;
unable to attend, please contact&#13;
Kinship of Kenosha Co., Inc., 2001-&#13;
80th St., 658-0151 for other&#13;
orientation dates.&#13;
Fellowship offers film&#13;
Inte r-Va rsit y Christia n&#13;
Fellowship continues its free&#13;
movie series this year with "Facts&#13;
of F aith" — a Moody Science film&#13;
which examines the relationship&#13;
between objectivity and faith in&#13;
10% DISCOUNT&#13;
To Parkside students and faculty&#13;
members only, on all merchandise&#13;
in our store. Parkside l.D. required&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
JEWELERS&#13;
Rtnoilti't Diamond Contor&#13;
5617 - 6th Avenue&#13;
Phone 656-2525 Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
the field of physical science.&#13;
Among the topics explored by the&#13;
film are the cause of the&#13;
phenomenon of heat and exceptions&#13;
to the Law of Gravity.&#13;
"Facts of Faith" emphasizes&#13;
understanding of the limits of&#13;
faith and objective investigation&#13;
in research and practical living.&#13;
All students are welcome to the&#13;
free color film, to be shown&#13;
Wednesday, November 26, at 1&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
SYNTHETIC OIL. Great part&#13;
time opportunities in this fast&#13;
growing market of synthetic&#13;
lubricants - lubricants that are&#13;
revolutionizing the automotive&#13;
industry. AMS/OIL is the world's&#13;
largest producer of synthetic&#13;
lubricants. You can earn extra&#13;
cash as an independent AMS/OIL&#13;
dealer. A realistic beginner's goal&#13;
is about $25.00 weekly. You will&#13;
also enjoy sizeable tax advantages&#13;
of owning your own&#13;
business. Dealerships cost $27.60.&#13;
Call or write for information.&#13;
Mitmoen Brothers, 6634 - 30th&#13;
Ave., Kenosha, WI, 53142. Phone:&#13;
(414) 652-3399. &#13;
Ranger&#13;
Review&#13;
Thursday, November 20, 1980&#13;
Red Ryder brings live show&#13;
hv byBruce R. PrPreeston ... _&#13;
Professional theatre has finally&#13;
been brought to Kenosha in&#13;
Petretti Productions' Late Live&#13;
Show, "When You Comin Back&#13;
Red Ryder?" playing at the&#13;
Roosevelt Theatre. The Obie and&#13;
Outer Critics Circle Award&#13;
winning play was written by&#13;
Pulitzer prize winner Mark&#13;
Medoff.&#13;
The entire play, which takes&#13;
place in a small roadside diner in&#13;
New Mexico, shows what happens&#13;
when a punk terrorizes the diner's&#13;
patrons and workers. The sets&#13;
have all the elements of a diner,&#13;
but se em a little lacking in atmosphere.&#13;
&#13;
As the play opens, the first two&#13;
characters we meet are Steven&#13;
AmaT rfWM '&#13;
N„&#13;
oel&#13;
,&#13;
G&lt;!nt« and Angel (Cynthia Paplaczyk), the&#13;
dmers two employees. Gentz is&#13;
good but tries a bit too hard in the&#13;
opening scenes to be funny and&#13;
loses it, Had he tried to be mc£e&#13;
^mCdhaveaddedt0his&#13;
Paplaczyk starts a little weak&#13;
bymg to decide what type of&#13;
accent to use, but grows to&#13;
become one of the best components&#13;
of this play. Her naivete is&#13;
realistic; she does a fine job of&#13;
presenting Angel as she really is.&#13;
In the scene where she runs for the&#13;
door, is pushed down and&#13;
M m a k e s y o u P ^ y h e r . Michael Sewes is Lyle Stirker,&#13;
the owner of the gas station and&#13;
motel next door to the diner. He is&#13;
to Kenosha&#13;
talented, but not up to the par of&#13;
the other performers in this play&#13;
He is a good actor, but the others&#13;
are,real characters.&#13;
Richard (David Moon) and&#13;
Clarisse (Joya Del Conte Zamora)&#13;
are a married couple from New&#13;
York on their way to a concert in&#13;
which Clarisse is performing.&#13;
Moon's character is absolutely&#13;
flawless. He does exactly what&#13;
you expect him to do with expert&#13;
realism. Zamora is very good, but&#13;
we've come to expect so much&#13;
more from her, that this small&#13;
role is a disappointment. She only&#13;
gets one scene to really show her&#13;
stuff, but in that scene is bold and&#13;
assertive.&#13;
Jimmy Iaquinta plays the punk,&#13;
Teddy, and Nancee Vaicelunas is&#13;
Oriana Trio to perform&#13;
The pre Dremiere mie performance of Swnn^&#13;
the winning work in the 1980&#13;
Oriana Trio International Composer's&#13;
Competition, which&#13;
carries a $1,500 top prize, will be&#13;
presented by the trio at a 3:30 p.m.&#13;
concert on Sunday, Nov. 23 in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater here&#13;
at Parkside. The trio, composed of&#13;
violinist Eden Vaning, cellist&#13;
Harry Sturm and pianist Carol&#13;
Bell is the resident chamber&#13;
ensemble h ere.&#13;
The p erformance will premiere&#13;
Truman Rex Fisher's Piano Trio,&#13;
a lyrical, contemporary work in&#13;
three movements which won the&#13;
major award, as well as Randall&#13;
Shinn's Forgotten Letters, a&#13;
montage of impressions of&#13;
American historical events, which&#13;
won a special honorable mention&#13;
prize of $300. B oth of the award&#13;
winners will be present for the&#13;
concert, which also will include&#13;
performance of Joaquin Turina's&#13;
Second Trio.&#13;
Fisher, a composition professor&#13;
at Pasadena (Calif.) City College,&#13;
will arnve fresh from a gig with&#13;
the Inkspots m California. He has&#13;
written a number of large scale&#13;
works including "Celebration&#13;
Mass for mixed chorus, soloists&#13;
and orchestra, which won first&#13;
prize in the National Composers'&#13;
Guild Contest and his&#13;
Harlequinade" for concert band&#13;
was a winner in the annual New&#13;
Music for Bands Contest. His&#13;
"Symphony of the Desert" was&#13;
premiered by the Santa Maria&#13;
Symphony and also performed by&#13;
the Santa Barbara Symphony and&#13;
Jus "Lincoln, The Man of the&#13;
People" for chorus and orchestra&#13;
has been commercially recorded&#13;
on CAPRA.&#13;
Shinn, a professor of composition&#13;
and theory at Arizona&#13;
State University, has published a&#13;
number of compositions for&#13;
chorus in addition to his instrumental&#13;
works and has had&#13;
compositions performed at the&#13;
National Conference of the&#13;
American Society of University&#13;
Composers in 1977 and 1978. Prizes&#13;
in the competition,&#13;
established in 1979 to encourage&#13;
modern works for piano trio, are&#13;
funded by private donors.&#13;
The 1981 competition will add a&#13;
new element, soliciting compositions&#13;
for piano trio and&#13;
soprano, contralto or tenor voice,&#13;
incorporating the vocal as a part&#13;
of the chamber ensemble. The&#13;
1980 competition drew from 15&#13;
states as well as Europe and&#13;
Canada.&#13;
Concert-goers are invited to join&#13;
trio members and the awardwinning&#13;
composers at a wine and&#13;
cheese reception immediately&#13;
following the performance. The&#13;
program is free.&#13;
New international club organizing&#13;
by Chris O'Neill&#13;
To the number of student&#13;
organizations existing at Parkside&#13;
(many of them with worthwhile&#13;
goals) there has been added a new&#13;
club, with equally high&#13;
aspirations, and this is the Intern&#13;
atio nal S t u d e n t s'&#13;
Organization. The club was actually&#13;
founded in May of t his year,&#13;
and since then has seen considerable&#13;
growth in membership.&#13;
Currently holding office are&#13;
Sarkis Yoghourtdjian as&#13;
President, Vice - President Sunny&#13;
Wong, Secretary Verika Bojovic,&#13;
Treasurer John Momoima, and&#13;
Activities Advisors Saeid Rahmanpanah&#13;
and Beejan Beheshti.&#13;
The club's counsellor is Esrold&#13;
Nurse.&#13;
In a recent interview; President&#13;
Yoghourtdjian stated that he&#13;
hopes that an International&#13;
students' Organization will create&#13;
an awareness among faculty, staff&#13;
and students of the presence of&#13;
foreign students at Parkside.&#13;
There are sixty - three foreign&#13;
students enrolled in the school,&#13;
and the ISO will serve to help new&#13;
foreign students accommodate&#13;
and get used to the American way&#13;
of life. It will provide a forum for&#13;
contact among foreign students. It&#13;
will also be a means of e xchange&#13;
of cultural experiences and&#13;
backgrounds with American&#13;
students. Hopefully, the club will&#13;
play a role in attracting students&#13;
from all over the world to&#13;
Parkside. The ultimate goal of the&#13;
ISO is to see Parkside become a&#13;
multicultural center of higher&#13;
education.&#13;
The club openly invites the&#13;
participation of American&#13;
students, and has planned a&#13;
number of a ctivities for this year.&#13;
Projected activities include international&#13;
movies, an international&#13;
arts and crafts fair,&#13;
inviting an ethnic dance group to&#13;
perform at the Parkside theatre,&#13;
panel discussions among foreign&#13;
professors at Parkside, and an&#13;
international banquet. To make&#13;
newly - arrived students more&#13;
aware of the American cultural&#13;
heritage there have been proposed&#13;
field trips to museums and so on,&#13;
in various cities.&#13;
The ISO meets every other&#13;
Friday at 1:00 p. m. in DUO of t he&#13;
Wyllie Library - Learning Center.&#13;
For students interested in foreign&#13;
relations (an increasingly crucial&#13;
issue in today's world) the ISO&#13;
provides a forum for interactions.&#13;
All students are invited to take&#13;
part in what is anticipated to be a&#13;
great year.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
"National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN O FFICE&#13;
AUTO B ANK&#13;
24 HOUR T ELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phono 658*2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
The&#13;
Cream in the Well&#13;
Written by Lynn Riggs.. .Directed by Norman Gano&#13;
December 3-6 at 8PM and December 7 at 1:30PM&#13;
Presented by UW-Parkside Dramatic Arts Discipline&#13;
Communication Arts Studio Theatre"&#13;
. .Limited Seating Reserve Early 553-2345..&#13;
Information 553-2042&#13;
Tickets at $1.00 for Students.. .$1.50~for Non-students&#13;
Must be Pre-paid&#13;
Cheryl, his girlfriend. Vaicelunas&#13;
looks the part (a gorgeous blonde)&#13;
but when she speaks, her lines&#13;
sound forced. This appears to be&#13;
her first job on stage and with a&#13;
cast of professionals along side&#13;
her, she really sticks out.&#13;
Iaquinta, however, is stunning.&#13;
He flows naturally across the&#13;
stage, commanding it at every&#13;
turn. He begins by toying with the&#13;
local yokels and then revels in the&#13;
act of human degradation as he&#13;
submits them to fulfill his barbaric&#13;
fantasies. His is an&#13;
extremely demanding role and&#13;
this is definitely his play.&#13;
The fight scene between Teddy&#13;
and Richard at the end of the first&#13;
act is very well choreographed&#13;
and perfectly executed. The music&#13;
used to set the mood does its job as&#13;
it swells and adds to the suspense.&#13;
This act has an intensely dramatic&#13;
ending.&#13;
Music is used throughout the&#13;
play to add to the scenes and a&#13;
very good job was done in accurately&#13;
picking the right song for&#13;
the right scene. Although the&#13;
music was so loud that it became&#13;
distracting opening night, the&#13;
problem was quickly remedied by&#13;
the second performance and it&#13;
became an asset rather than a&#13;
hinderance.&#13;
Producer/dirctor, Patricia&#13;
Petretti has done a wonderful job&#13;
in giving Kenosha something&#13;
Kenoshans have had to travel to&#13;
Chicago and Milwaukee for:&#13;
legitimate theatre. The next two&#13;
performances (Friday and&#13;
Saturday) may be the last. "When&#13;
You Comin Back, Red Ryder?" is&#13;
a play that should not be missed.&#13;
Complete a three-year nursing diploma program&#13;
in two years and one summer session.&#13;
An alternative to the first year nursing course&#13;
is now offered in a seven-week summer program at&#13;
St. Luke s Hospital School of Nursing&#13;
1301 College Avenue&#13;
Racine, Wl 53403&#13;
414/636-2372&#13;
Prerequisites:&#13;
1. Meet admission criteria&#13;
2. Complete university/college&#13;
courses in anatomy and physiology,&#13;
chemistry, English, nutrition,&#13;
psychology and sociology. til!&#13;
Call or write now for admission information.&#13;
STUDENT/FACULTY&#13;
Phone Directories&#13;
On sale now at&#13;
Union Information Kiosk&#13;
$ 1.00&#13;
Proceeds to go toward an&#13;
EMERGENCY LOAN FUND&#13;
For UW-Parkside Students&#13;
Help Yourself &amp; A Friend&#13;
P.S.G.A. &#13;
6&#13;
Coming Events Actual draft feared&#13;
movie&#13;
"&#13;
w°&#13;
men Right&#13;
°&#13;
ut&#13;
°&#13;
f&#13;
History. The Making of J udy Chicago's 'Dinner Party' " will be shown followed&#13;
Coifr?i&#13;
CRSS1wled ?&#13;
y Barbara Lindquist (Racine artist and co - owner of Mother&#13;
nrntrfm Bookstore) and Prof. Carol Lee Saffioti of UWP Women's Studies. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
"• Com""&#13;
micaU°° Arta The program i»&#13;
M?nVd&#13;
r„^f™,hoTblTcm * M0LN 107&#13;
' The ia&#13;
To&#13;
cmlY„„&#13;
a&#13;
it&#13;
8&#13;
th&#13;
pe&#13;
mo&#13;
^z&#13;
n&#13;
ssrt: Wind Eos™ble&#13;
-&#13;
Friday, Nov. 21&#13;
2SS- «Th&#13;
^&#13;
ham|" JS,&#13;
1* shown at8pmin Un»on Cinema. Admission at the&#13;
JAMNITFPIITR A e ^ndent and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB. AAJ?J -J? V pm in Union Square featuring the "Michael Drake Group".&#13;
Admission will be charged at the door. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
„ Saturday,Nov.22&#13;
f&#13;
LICKS "Black Stallion" will be shown at 10 am in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission at the door is $1.00. Children must be accompanied by a Parkside&#13;
student with a current ID card. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
„ Sunday, November 23&#13;
(XJNCERT at 3:30 pm in the Communication Arts Theatre featuring the Oriana&#13;
Trio. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
MOVIE "The Champ" will be repeated at 7:30pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, November 24&#13;
AB«F 12no&#13;
?&#13;
n&#13;
,&#13;
111 Union 106. Ralph Koenig, Director, Region 10 (UAW)&#13;
toUmpublic Economy in the 1980s". The program is free and open&#13;
Arts and crafts fair here&#13;
A record . number of 148&#13;
exhibitors will participate in the&#13;
Sixth Annual Holiday Arts and&#13;
Crafts Fair at Parkside on&#13;
Saturday, December 6, from 10&#13;
a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
The event, sponsored by PAB,&#13;
will take place in the Campus&#13;
Union and on the concourse levels&#13;
of Greenquist and Molinaro Halls.&#13;
There is no admission charge and&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
free parking is available in the&#13;
Union and Communication Arts&#13;
parking lots.&#13;
In conjunction with the fair, the&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center will&#13;
operate a free Kiddie Korner,&#13;
where children will be supervised&#13;
in making gifts to take home.&#13;
Santa also will make an appearance&#13;
in the Kiddie Korner, in&#13;
Union Rooms 104-106.&#13;
Exhibitors will display a wide&#13;
variety of items including&#13;
jewelry, stained glass, decoupage,&#13;
silk flower arrangements,&#13;
macrame, ceramics, copper&#13;
enameling, pine cone arts, wooden&#13;
craft articles, paintings, doll&#13;
clothes, wreaths, ornaments, toys,&#13;
quilts, sculptures, needlework,&#13;
calligraphy, lead crystal&#13;
creations, lapidary, tole painting,&#13;
dough arts, candles and leather&#13;
items.&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
CHIPPER — Played "footsie" under any&#13;
taMas lately? Baby cakes&#13;
LARRY — You sure can hide good, but I'm&#13;
still crazy about yal&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV must be desperate to&#13;
resort to Ranger ads.&#13;
JBPP — Is communication, art? Can I l eam&#13;
ballroom dancing? Ferret&#13;
TOOO H. — I happen to get lucky with&#13;
blondes and new Laredos.&#13;
JULIE — Ron says Carlos is right 11&#13;
SOMEWHERE In the Ranger this week there&#13;
is an.&#13;
AMPRBA: Saved your *485 yet? Rodney&#13;
HOW DO YOU SPELL EEE EKKI THUMM?,&#13;
THE BOO came first. Ranger Insulters suck'&#13;
them and lay chickens.&#13;
SAEINI — Have you gotten lucky with any&#13;
trolls lately?&#13;
DENISE — Find any REALLY concrete&#13;
objects lately?&#13;
HEY, DA VINCI are you afraid of going to Art&#13;
Day?&#13;
NO, MICHELANGELO, I'm brave. When is&#13;
it?&#13;
IT'S ON DEC. 3 in Main Place.&#13;
GREAT, I can't wait.&#13;
EVA — A medium pizza with everything is too&#13;
much! Junie B.&#13;
WHO SHOT H.P.? — lOP's&#13;
PG-HOOKER — Are walls really that exciting&#13;
I? Fat Mouse&#13;
FROM THE PARKING LOT isn't habit&#13;
forming but it causes cancer.&#13;
XENOPHOBIC XAVIER'S Xenon&#13;
xylophone's a xerlc xebec. Ten times fast.&#13;
3 THINGS they never told me when I was&#13;
made: Free sex isn't free, love isn't&#13;
abundant, and loneliness can kill. See ya.&#13;
HOW SAD.&#13;
MY HOUSE (Junie) — invited guys Into&#13;
locker room with her. Ferret?&#13;
ORGY QUEEN, what's an orgy? Can you&#13;
show me? J.C.&#13;
YOU REALLY have a nice... old man.&#13;
BOBBY L.: Bundle up, because you'll never&#13;
be able to hong loose. ^&#13;
HEY BILL — You're really kinky! Arrfff,&#13;
ribbitl K &amp; J&#13;
SABINE — how much did you pay for your&#13;
plaque? Junie&#13;
RODNEY: I have to save more for your&#13;
dinner. Andy&#13;
IF YOU WERE to die tonight — where would&#13;
you go? For info, see the Inter-Varsity book&#13;
table on Mondays.&#13;
WHEN YOU ROTATE the "s" in "skis" you&#13;
get "kiss".&#13;
BABYCAKES: Wanna go play Frlbee with&#13;
cold bonkers? Sweetums&#13;
I'M AT UW(KR)P in Kenosha!&#13;
KMW: I only sleep with the best —Pig&#13;
ALL WOMEN wishing to check out my cute&#13;
and functionable Item leave your name and&#13;
number in the next issue! Stud #1.&#13;
HEY STUD #1, my name is B.J. Farley and&#13;
my phone number is 553-2295. Can you&#13;
match my functionable item? Stud A-l&#13;
CONNIE SIBILSKY: Here it is! Have you&#13;
Samboed all over the world lately? Have a&#13;
Jappy day! — me&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1980 SUZUKI 5S0L black, 553-9262 after 4&#13;
p.m. Low miles.&#13;
UNBELIEVABLE VEHICLEI 1968 Six&#13;
cylinder Dodge van. $1750. Nights 634-0988.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
FEMALE to share apartment with myself. In&#13;
the Racine area. Please call Virginia after&#13;
5:00 p.m. 637-1306.&#13;
ROOMMATE NEEDED: College student&#13;
preferred. Southside Racine. Upper flat.&#13;
637-2274.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
WALK, TALK AND ASSIST retired (blind)&#13;
college teacher In straightening out his&#13;
library. Earn while you learn. Call 694-2251&#13;
for appointment.&#13;
GUYS! Can you pick up girls? Then join the&#13;
UW-P Pep Squad. Work with 12 beautiful&#13;
cheerleaders! Travel to various state&#13;
colleges. If interested, contact Shirley 553-&#13;
2320.&#13;
RIDE URGENTLY NEEDED from Parkside&#13;
to Kenosha, 9:15 p.m. or later, Monday or&#13;
Tuesday or Wednesday or Thursday. Ph.&#13;
657-0581.&#13;
The Central Committee for&#13;
Conscientious Objectors (CCCO),&#13;
the nation's largest draft counseling&#13;
agency, warned this month&#13;
that the start of d raft registration&#13;
has added to the increased&#13;
likelihood of an actual draft.&#13;
"This past summer's draft&#13;
registration of men born in 1960&#13;
and 1961 was just the first step&#13;
toward returning to the draft,"&#13;
said Larry Spears, director of&#13;
CCCO's Youth and Conscientious&#13;
Objection Campaign. "This&#13;
coming January, Selective Service&#13;
plans to register those men&#13;
born in 1962. After January 5, men&#13;
(and perhaps women) born in 1963&#13;
will be required to register as they&#13;
turn 18. It should be noted that the&#13;
U. S. has never had a registration&#13;
without a draft, and rarely a draft&#13;
without a war."&#13;
"The need for young people to&#13;
be informed and to consider going&#13;
on record as a conscientious objector&#13;
to war has never been&#13;
greater than it is this Fall, said&#13;
Spears.&#13;
"The Supreme Court's decision&#13;
on Goldberg vs. Tarr, a sex -&#13;
discrimination case involving the&#13;
draft and registration, will be&#13;
final this winter," commented&#13;
Spears. "It is especially important&#13;
for women to realize that&#13;
they could be ordered to register&#13;
for the draft, and perhaps be&#13;
drafted. They too must consider&#13;
their position on war."&#13;
CCCO has sued Selective Service&#13;
for their draft plans and&#13;
learned that they plan to allow&#13;
registrants to claim hardship,&#13;
medical, and conscientious objector&#13;
status only at the last&#13;
possible moment after induction&#13;
orders are issued.&#13;
"Unless students begin to think&#13;
about, and collect evidence for,&#13;
conscientious objection dlaims&#13;
and other options, they are certain&#13;
to be caught unprepared," said&#13;
Spears.&#13;
"There is also growing sentiment&#13;
within Congress to begin&#13;
debate early next year on whether&#13;
a peace - time draft should be&#13;
started," he said. "It is important&#13;
for young people to realize that&#13;
under the current draft law, all&#13;
men between the ages of 18 and 26&#13;
are eligible to be drafted. Also,&#13;
students should know that there is&#13;
no longer a college student&#13;
deferment under the new draft&#13;
laws."&#13;
"Young Americans must start&#13;
thinking about whether they could&#13;
participate in the military."&#13;
Spears states that CCCO has&#13;
already registered over 20,000&#13;
young people through its conscientious&#13;
objection card. "These&#13;
cards are available, free of&#13;
charge, from CCCO, P. O. Box&#13;
15796, Philadelphia, PA 19103.&#13;
They simply state 'Because of my&#13;
beliefs about war, I am opposed to&#13;
participating in the military.&#13;
1 "&#13;
"The usefulness of this card,"&#13;
says Spears, "is that it provides a&#13;
record of an individual's opposition&#13;
to war and the military.&#13;
This CO card will help to&#13;
demonstrate to the military that&#13;
hundreds of thousands of young&#13;
people will not serve in the&#13;
military. Conscientious objectors,&#13;
along with the large number of&#13;
non - registrants and the vocal&#13;
anti - draft movement may help to&#13;
deter Congress from establishing&#13;
a peace - time draft."&#13;
CCCO was founded in 1948 as the&#13;
Central Committee for Conscientious&#13;
Objectors and is a&#13;
national, non - profit agency&#13;
counseling young Americans&#13;
facing the prospect of military&#13;
service, or those already in the&#13;
military.&#13;
Expeditions recruit students&#13;
Have you ever wanted to sail the&#13;
South Pacific, climb mountains in&#13;
Alaska, study wildlife in Africa,&#13;
dig for pre - historic man in India,&#13;
or trace the route of Marco Polo&#13;
through China? A new firm —&#13;
Expedition Research Inc. — has&#13;
launched a campaign to register&#13;
adventure - minded college&#13;
students who are looking to join&#13;
expeditions.&#13;
Expedition Research, Inc., a&#13;
placement service for adventurers&#13;
and explorers, is now&#13;
accepting applications from&#13;
college students, photographers,&#13;
scuba divers, mountain climbers,&#13;
archaeologists, ocean sailors,&#13;
scientists, and other explorers&#13;
who want to be placed on various&#13;
scientific and exploratory expeditions&#13;
worldwide.&#13;
These projects range from&#13;
archaeological excavations to&#13;
Himalayan mountaineering, from&#13;
oceanographic surveys and cave&#13;
exploration to scientific investigations&#13;
on all six continents.&#13;
Some expeditions award salaries,&#13;
commissions, and royalties to&#13;
team members; others require&#13;
cost sharing. Expeditions last&#13;
from several days to several&#13;
months. College credit and&#13;
scholarships are often available.&#13;
Students, either undergraduate&#13;
or graduate, are in demand. They&#13;
gain field experience by working&#13;
with professors and scientists&#13;
involved in their field of study.&#13;
Expedition Research, the&#13;
brainchild of two experienced&#13;
mountaineers, was formed on the&#13;
premise that there are thousands&#13;
of young scientists and adventurers&#13;
around the world who&#13;
would like to put their talents and&#13;
interests to use in the field, but&#13;
who do not know how to go about&#13;
it. ERI provides a service not only&#13;
to these individuals, but to the&#13;
groups who are looking for them.&#13;
The firm assists leaders of&#13;
expeditions in their search for&#13;
sponsorship, funding, and&#13;
equipment, as well as team&#13;
members.&#13;
Requests for members in the&#13;
last month include an array of&#13;
expeditions open to college&#13;
students:&#13;
• Little Cayman Expedition:&#13;
University of New Hampshire&#13;
professor leads marine botany&#13;
study in the Caribbean, with&#13;
SCUBA instruction;&#13;
• Mapping the Valley of the&#13;
Queens; archaeological survey in&#13;
Egypt, Sponsored by the&#13;
University of California,&#13;
Berkeley;&#13;
• Mountaineering expeditions&#13;
to McKinley and Mt. Aconcagua in&#13;
Argentina;&#13;
• Wildlife studies in Chile; an&#13;
attempt to preserve the rare&#13;
Andean mountain deer (sponsored&#13;
by the Government of Chile);&#13;
• Circumnavigation of the&#13;
Globe; an American team sets out&#13;
to sail around the world; and&#13;
• Nile River Expedition: a&#13;
descent of the world's longest&#13;
river by kayak.&#13;
Expeditions registered with&#13;
ERI have been endorsed by such&#13;
organizations as the Explorers&#13;
Club, National Geographic&#13;
Society, and the Smithsonian&#13;
Institution.&#13;
Chris White, a Princeton&#13;
University biologist, and Jim&#13;
Stout, a geographer from the&#13;
University of Washington, are co -&#13;
directors of the firm.&#13;
Registration with ERI cost $15&#13;
per year for students ($20&#13;
regular). Registrants receive&#13;
monthly issues of EXPLORATION,&#13;
resume forms, and&#13;
a 20% mail order discount on&#13;
outdoor equipment ordered&#13;
through Eastern Mountain Sports.&#13;
Register or write for further&#13;
questions by contacting Expedition&#13;
Research, Inc. P. O. Box&#13;
467R, Cathedral and Franklin Sts.,&#13;
Annapolis, Maryland 21404.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization I&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads — '&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30c will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words &gt;&#13;
or less.&#13;
i&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE^&#13;
t)TincD?tS2&#13;
e&#13;
/rL? V.yv"&#13;
p&#13;
1?&#13;
,uden&#13;
t&#13;
or student organization is qualified&#13;
f . 5- 1 '*ne '&#13;
n the Ranger at no cost if under or&#13;
equivalent to 10 words. (Phone numbers equal 1 word.)&#13;
Classification:&#13;
| Name_&#13;
SS No.&#13;
I&#13;
Ranger&#13;
WLLC D139 &#13;
RANGER SPOPT*&#13;
rmss-Counfry&#13;
Women take national title&#13;
UnWW-P-Par arksksidide e wwoon n ththe e fires* t&#13;
National Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA)&#13;
women's cross - country championship&#13;
Saturday at Salina,&#13;
Kansas.&#13;
Coach Bob Lawson's team&#13;
WENDY BU RMAN&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
miMtel 52 P0ints to&#13;
outdistance second place finisher&#13;
haTS* (KanSas) State&gt; wh&#13;
ich&#13;
Wendy Burman, UW-Parkside&#13;
sophomore from Fond Du Lac&#13;
wo" the individual tide over the&#13;
5,000 m eter course in 17:54 while&#13;
Racine freshman Kellie Benzow&#13;
18:29&#13;
'&#13;
just three&#13;
seconds behind runner-up Kathie&#13;
Daffer of Hastings (Nebr.).&#13;
In addition to Burman and&#13;
Benzow, two other Parkside&#13;
runners earned all-American&#13;
honors by finishing in the top 25&#13;
finishers. Sharon Keller a&#13;
sophomore from Mayville, was&#13;
13th with 19:06 while Dona&#13;
Dnscoll, a sophomore from&#13;
Muskego, placed 17th with 19:31&#13;
Other Ranger finishers were&#13;
Racine freshman Sandy Venne in&#13;
37 th, Kenosha junior Barb&#13;
Osborne in 50th and Racine freshman&#13;
JoAnne Carey in 86th.&#13;
Twelve teams completed the&#13;
field. After Parkside and Emporia,&#13;
they were Midland&#13;
Lutheran (Nebr.) with 115, Berry&#13;
(Ga.) with 124, Fort Hays State&#13;
with 126, Kansas State-Pittsburg&#13;
with 152, Kearney State and&#13;
Jackson State with 172, Park with&#13;
^ Martymount with 259,&#13;
Hillsdale with 263 and Wiley&#13;
College (Tex.) with 279.&#13;
KELLIE BE NZOW&#13;
Season ends on sour note&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
took the number one seed into the&#13;
WWIAC State Tournament last&#13;
weekend after the League&#13;
Commissioner broke a ranking tie&#13;
between Milwaukee and Parkside.&#13;
Last week Coach Linda Henderson&#13;
stated: "We have the seed&#13;
but now we have to live up to its&#13;
ranking, as it was ousted from the&#13;
double elimination tournament&#13;
after three matches. The Rangers&#13;
defeated Carthage, then lost to&#13;
Milwaukee and number three seed&#13;
Marquette. It was a fitting end to&#13;
an up and down season.&#13;
The Rangers took on Carthage&#13;
in their first match and could do&#13;
no wrong, The Rangers gave&#13;
Carthage a lesson in how to play&#13;
successful team volleyball. "We&#13;
played great," Henderson said&#13;
following her team's 15-12, 15-3&#13;
dumping of the Redmen. "It was&#13;
the best I've ever seen this team&#13;
play." Parkside appeared to have&#13;
the momentum necessary to win&#13;
the tournament but couldn't&#13;
sustain it.&#13;
On Saturday morning, the&#13;
Rangers faced Milwaukee in what&#13;
would be Parkside's first tournament&#13;
loss. The Rangers tensed&#13;
up and couldn't get untracked as&#13;
the Panthers easily won the match&#13;
15-9, 16-14. Henderson had no&#13;
excuses for her team's poor&#13;
performance. "We looked scared&#13;
on the court and I don't know why.&#13;
We cou ldn't serve and we didn't&#13;
block." in other words, the&#13;
Rangers didn't deserve to win.&#13;
With their elimination on the&#13;
une, Henderson knew the Rangers&#13;
"®eded a supreme effort to defeat&#13;
their next opponent, Marquette&#13;
University. What the team gave&#13;
Henderson was a severe&#13;
headache. Marquette ousted&#13;
LINDA HENDERSON&#13;
Parkside from the tournament&#13;
with a 15-1, 15-11 victory.&#13;
"It was another case of being&#13;
too tight and not playing well,"&#13;
Henderson said of the Marquette&#13;
loss. "We played like six individuals.&#13;
We were anything but&#13;
the team we looked like on Fridav&#13;
night."&#13;
Parkside suffered through a&#13;
season of peaks and valleys. When&#13;
the Rangers were on, it seemed&#13;
like no one could beat them.&#13;
However, when they were off,&#13;
they couldn't even manage a&#13;
scrimmage victory. Needless to&#13;
say, the Rangers were off this&#13;
tournament. "Milwaukee peaked&#13;
at this tournament and that made&#13;
the difference. They played really&#13;
well and deserved to win,"&#13;
Henderson said. Parkside finished&#13;
their season with a 26-20 r ecord.&#13;
Milwaukee advances to&#13;
Regional play in Chicago this&#13;
weekend. The Panthers will be&#13;
seeded seventh in the eight - team&#13;
playoff. Lewis is ranked first&#13;
followed by Wright State (Ohio),&#13;
Indiana Tech, Lake Superior&#13;
(Michigan), University of Dayton&#13;
(Ohio), Eastern Illinois,&#13;
Milwaukee and West Virginia&#13;
Marshall.&#13;
C&amp;R AUTO SERVICE&#13;
Quality Auto Work&#13;
Done At&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
10% OFF FOR&#13;
UW-P STUDENTS&#13;
Call 553-9092or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00&#13;
Applications Are&#13;
Being Accepted&#13;
For&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
JOB REQUIREMENTS&#13;
Must be student enrolled with 6 credits&#13;
Assigns, edits, and writes sports stories.&#13;
Lays out sports pages&#13;
Previous editorial experience.&#13;
This is a paid position&#13;
Pick up Application at the Ranger Office,&#13;
WLLC D139, Next to the Coffee Shoppe&#13;
Deadline: Monday, Decembers&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of beer? All you have to do is fill&#13;
out this entry form and pick the most correct winners. Put a check&#13;
mark by your picks and bring the form down to the Ranger office,&#13;
D139 WLLC.&#13;
Baltimore at New England —&#13;
Cincinnati at Cleveland&#13;
Houston at N. Y. Jets&#13;
Pittsburgh at Buffalo&#13;
Seattle at Denver&#13;
Chicago at Atlanta&#13;
Detroit at Tampa Bay&#13;
Green Bay at Minnesota&#13;
N. Y. Giants at San Francisco&#13;
Washington at Dallas&#13;
Kansas City at St. Louis&#13;
Oakland at Philadelphia&#13;
Los Angeles at New Orleans&#13;
Tiebreaker:&#13;
- will be the total combined points&#13;
scored in the Los Angeles - New Orleans game.&#13;
Last week's winner: Robert Cooper; 12 correct, 42 points&#13;
Name:-&#13;
S.S. No.&#13;
Rules: /&#13;
1) One entry per person&#13;
2) Must be a student at UW-Parkside&#13;
3) Person with most correct picks win (in case of tie, the total&#13;
points will be used as a tie - breaker)&#13;
4) Entry must be clipped from Ranger issue&#13;
5) Ranger members ineligible&#13;
6) Entries must be turned into Ranger office by noon on the&#13;
Friday preceeding the games&#13;
7) Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks&#13;
8) Entries must be legible to be considered&#13;
Basketball&#13;
scrimmage&#13;
The men's basketball team is&#13;
ready to showcase their talent to&#13;
the public tonight when it holds its&#13;
annual intra - squad game at 7:30&#13;
p. m. in the Parkside Fieldhouse.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens' team will&#13;
be split into Green and White&#13;
units. The game is open to public&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Table tennis&#13;
tournament&#13;
The Parkside Table Tennis Club&#13;
(PTTC) has accepted Inter -&#13;
Varsity Christian Fellowship's&#13;
(IVCF) challenge to a table tennis&#13;
contest for Friday, November 21&#13;
at 1 p.m.&#13;
All matches are best of three,&#13;
and will be held in the Rec Center&#13;
Table Tennis Room. Everyone is&#13;
welcome to watch.&#13;
C0UE6E?&#13;
Sure. But its quality depends on&#13;
your life during college.&#13;
Your college degree and grades are&#13;
most important. But, in today's competitive&#13;
job market, you may need&#13;
additional credentials to land the job&#13;
you really want.&#13;
As a sophomore, you need to look&#13;
ahead. At what you can offer an&#13;
employer... your education, work&#13;
experience, leadership abilities. And&#13;
at how you can increase these assets&#13;
during your last two years of college.&#13;
While looking ahead, look at the&#13;
Army ROTC two-year program.&#13;
Management training. Leadership&#13;
experience. Financial assistance.&#13;
And new opportunities for your life&#13;
after college as an officer in the&#13;
active Army, Reserve or National&#13;
Guard.&#13;
For details, contact:&#13;
Enrollment Officer&#13;
Military Science Dept.&#13;
Marquette U.&#13;
1-224-7195 &#13;
8 Thursday, November 20,1980 Ranger&#13;
At Parkside&#13;
Humboldt State claims title&#13;
RANGER photo by Kim Schiater&#13;
Garry Henry of Pembroke State&#13;
(N.C.) repeated his 1977 NAIA&#13;
cross-country win at Parkside&#13;
Saturday as he won the individual&#13;
crown in the 23rd annual NCAA-II&#13;
championship meet.&#13;
Henry's time of 29:32 for the&#13;
10,000 meter course, as well as a&#13;
course mark, was the best ever&#13;
recorded in this championship,&#13;
eclipsing the 29:42 run by Ralph&#13;
Serna of California - Irvine in&#13;
1976.&#13;
Humboldt State (Cal.)&#13;
dethroned two-time champion Cal&#13;
Poly San Luis Obispo as it won&#13;
with 115 p oints, five better than&#13;
Pembroke. Cal Poly was third at&#13;
132 followed by Ferris State&#13;
(Mich.) at 153 and Mankato&#13;
(Minn.) State at 176. Twenty - two&#13;
teams filled out the field and 174&#13;
runners finished the race.&#13;
Best season ever but&#13;
Soccer ousted from playoffs&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The men's soccer team ended&#13;
its 1980 sea son last week with a&#13;
heartbreaking 1-0 loss to St.&#13;
John's University of Minnesota in&#13;
the semi - finals of A rea 3 playoff&#13;
competition. It was the fourth&#13;
time in the last seven years&#13;
Parkside lost to the Johnnies in&#13;
the playoffs with each game being&#13;
determined by a single goal.&#13;
Parkside finished their season&#13;
with an 11-6-1 r ecord, by far the&#13;
most successful season the team&#13;
has ever played.&#13;
The Rangers have never advanced&#13;
past Area 3 competition&#13;
and the Johnnies made sure&#13;
Ranger playoff misfortunes&#13;
continued. Before the game,&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson predicted&#13;
that his players would have to&#13;
take advantage of their opportunities&#13;
if they were to win.&#13;
The Rangers had several scoring&#13;
opportunities but couldn't&#13;
capitalize on them.&#13;
Parkside managed 13 shots but&#13;
couldn't find the net. "We played&#13;
well enough to win. We just&#13;
couldn't score any goals," said&#13;
Hederson. "St. John's is an&#13;
aggressive and physical team. We&#13;
knew they were going to be like&#13;
that."&#13;
The Johnnies scored the only&#13;
goal they needed with ten minutes&#13;
left in the first half. "After that&#13;
goal they seemed to have the&#13;
momentum. It took awhile for us&#13;
to reorganize after that." The&#13;
Rangers managed to stay in the&#13;
fame with their usual sparkling&#13;
defensive performance, but never&#13;
got the game equalizer. Henderson&#13;
commented, "We controlled the&#13;
last 30 minutes of the game but&#13;
they dropped back to protect thenlead&#13;
and didn't allow us the goal&#13;
we needed."&#13;
Henderson was disappointed&#13;
with the outcome of the St. John's&#13;
game but was elated about the&#13;
rest of the season. The Rangers&#13;
set four goals before the season&#13;
started and accomplished two of&#13;
them. They wanted to go to the&#13;
Area semi - finals, which they did,&#13;
they wanted to finish above .500,&#13;
and did so (.628), but they fell&#13;
short on their other goals of&#13;
winning 14 games and reaching&#13;
the Area finals.&#13;
With the completion of this&#13;
season, Henderson has his sights&#13;
focused on next year. "We have a&#13;
few holes to fill, but we're already&#13;
recruiting a number of kids. We're&#13;
losing only one starter (senior&#13;
Mike Kiefer, this year's leading&#13;
scorer), so we should be tough. We&#13;
have an extremely strong&#13;
nucleus."&#13;
Kiefer's shoes will be tough to&#13;
fill, but with the returning players&#13;
Henderson has, there is nothing&#13;
but continued success looming in&#13;
the very near future for the&#13;
Parkside soccer team.&#13;
Local ski club plans first meeting&#13;
„!!!f„&#13;
No&#13;
I&#13;
&lt;&#13;
!&#13;
ic&#13;
,&#13;
T™i&#13;
;&#13;
b&#13;
!&#13;
az&#13;
!.&#13;
rs&#13;
'&#13;
a The schedule of this year's ski slides of t he Nordic evmt* 7, The Nordic Trailblazers, a cross&#13;
country ski club of the Kenosha -&#13;
Racine area, will hold their first&#13;
meeting of the season on Tuesday,&#13;
Nov. 25 at 7:30 p.m. in Moln 107.&#13;
The schedule of this year's&#13;
outings will be presented.&#13;
Wilho Knuuti and Archie&#13;
Lowman, officials at the 1980&#13;
Winter Olympics, will present&#13;
slides of t he Nordic events at the&#13;
Olympics. Art Bloxdorf of The&#13;
Pack Shop will give a presentation&#13;
on the various types of cross&#13;
country skiing and equipment. EVEN WITH heads up plays such as this&#13;
cou'dn t avoid a 1-0 loss to St. John's last week&#13;
one, the Rangers&#13;
AUDIO SYSTEMS&#13;
Audio Retailer of 1980&#13;
Audio Video Magazine asked&#13;
1,399 manufacturers and representatives&#13;
nationwide to&#13;
vote for their ten best retailers&#13;
based on professionalism,&#13;
customer service,&#13;
product knowledge-ability,&#13;
and they chose us as one.&#13;
AUDIO SYSTEMS&#13;
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ADIDAS • PONEY • NIKE • COBRA&#13;
JOGGING • RACING • TENNIS&#13;
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"All Reduced"&#13;
Shorts • Singlets • Books • Bags&#13;
HOURS&#13;
Monday - Friday io.g&#13;
Saturday . 10-5&#13;
Sunday </text>
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