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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Starts Feb. 22 - Winter Carnival set to go</text>
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              <text>&#13;
^I  P &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
- &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Starts &#13;
Feb. &#13;
22 &#13;
Winter &#13;
Carnival &#13;
set &#13;
to &#13;
go &#13;
Ms &#13;
SWSNSl &#13;
\\ &#13;
by &#13;
Jeff &#13;
Wicks &#13;
Brace &#13;
yourself &#13;
Parkside, &#13;
because &#13;
once &#13;
again &#13;
Winter &#13;
Carnival &#13;
is &#13;
coming. &#13;
"Take &#13;
This &#13;
Snow &#13;
and &#13;
Shovel &#13;
It" &#13;
is &#13;
the &#13;
theme &#13;
and &#13;
it &#13;
starts &#13;
Monday, &#13;
Feb. &#13;
22 &#13;
an d &#13;
runs &#13;
until &#13;
Friday, &#13;
Feb. &#13;
26. &#13;
This &#13;
year's &#13;
Winter &#13;
Carnival &#13;
promises &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
the &#13;
best &#13;
ever, &#13;
with &#13;
many &#13;
club &#13;
and &#13;
individual &#13;
events &#13;
offered. &#13;
The &#13;
Winter &#13;
Carnival &#13;
Committee &#13;
will &#13;
award &#13;
$150 &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
Winter &#13;
Carnival &#13;
Traveling &#13;
Trophy &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
organization &#13;
that &#13;
scores &#13;
the &#13;
most  points &#13;
during &#13;
the &#13;
carnival &#13;
through &#13;
club &#13;
events. &#13;
Second &#13;
and &#13;
third &#13;
places &#13;
will &#13;
receive &#13;
$100 &#13;
and &#13;
$50 &#13;
respectively, &#13;
and &#13;
trophies. &#13;
All &#13;
winners &#13;
are &#13;
determined &#13;
by &#13;
a &#13;
point &#13;
system. &#13;
First &#13;
place &#13;
is &#13;
150 &#13;
pts., &#13;
second &#13;
place &#13;
is &#13;
100 &#13;
pts. &#13;
and &#13;
third &#13;
place &#13;
is &#13;
50 &#13;
pts. &#13;
All &#13;
clubs &#13;
that &#13;
participated &#13;
in &#13;
an &#13;
event &#13;
but &#13;
did &#13;
not &#13;
place &#13;
receive &#13;
25 &#13;
pts. &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
club &#13;
that &#13;
sponsors &#13;
an &#13;
event &#13;
receives &#13;
125 &#13;
pts. &#13;
Steve &#13;
Kalmar, &#13;
Chairperson &#13;
of &#13;
this &#13;
years' &#13;
Winter &#13;
Carnival &#13;
Committee, &#13;
said   that &#13;
he &#13;
hopes &#13;
that &#13;
many &#13;
people &#13;
will &#13;
get &#13;
involved &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
events. &#13;
"For &#13;
the &#13;
individual &#13;
events, &#13;
there &#13;
will  be &#13;
first, &#13;
second, &#13;
and third &#13;
place &#13;
cash &#13;
prizes &#13;
of &#13;
$20, &#13;
$15 &#13;
a nd &#13;
$10 &#13;
dollars, &#13;
respectively. &#13;
That's &#13;
the &#13;
biggest &#13;
incentive &#13;
we &#13;
(the &#13;
committee) &#13;
could &#13;
think &#13;
of," &#13;
he &#13;
said. &#13;
Winter &#13;
Carnival &#13;
schedule: &#13;
SCHEDULE &#13;
OF &#13;
EVENTS &#13;
Monday, &#13;
Feb. &#13;
22 &#13;
8:30 &#13;
a.m. &#13;
- &#13;
4:00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
Snow &#13;
sculpturing &#13;
1:00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
Winter &#13;
Carnival &#13;
Parade &#13;
8:00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
M*A»S*H &#13;
Party &#13;
featuring &#13;
the &#13;
rock &#13;
group &#13;
"Speed &#13;
Kings." &#13;
Also, &#13;
Beer &#13;
Drinking &#13;
Relays &#13;
and &#13;
Jello &#13;
Slurping  Contest &#13;
Tuesday, &#13;
Feb. &#13;
23 &#13;
8:30 &#13;
a.m. &#13;
• &#13;
4:00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
Snow &#13;
Sculpturing &#13;
12:30 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
Rubik's &#13;
Cube &#13;
Contest &#13;
12:30 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
Outdoor &#13;
Vblleyball &#13;
5:00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
College &#13;
Family &#13;
Feud &#13;
7:30 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
Basketball &#13;
Playoffs &#13;
Wednesday, &#13;
Feb. &#13;
24 &#13;
8:30 &#13;
a.m. &#13;
• &#13;
4 :00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
Snow &#13;
Sculpturing &#13;
1:00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
Egg &#13;
Drop &#13;
Contest &#13;
1:00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
Outdoor &#13;
Volleyball &#13;
8:00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
"Frank &#13;
Abagnale" &#13;
in &#13;
Comm. &#13;
Arts &#13;
Theatre &#13;
Thursday, &#13;
Feb. &#13;
25 &#13;
8:30 &#13;
a.m. &#13;
• &#13;
4:00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
Snow &#13;
Sculpturing &#13;
12:30 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
Outdoor &#13;
Volleyball &#13;
1:00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
Legs &#13;
Contest &#13;
7:30 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
Fashion &#13;
Show &#13;
8:00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
"Best &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
Worst &#13;
Film &#13;
Festival" &#13;
Friday, &#13;
Feb. &#13;
26 &#13;
12:00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
Snow &#13;
Sculptures &#13;
completed &#13;
for &#13;
judging &#13;
12:00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
Dirty &#13;
Joke &#13;
Contest &#13;
1:00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
U.S. &#13;
Air &#13;
Force &#13;
Jazz &#13;
Band &#13;
Concert &#13;
1:00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
Outdoor &#13;
Volleyball &#13;
9:00 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
PAB &#13;
Dance &#13;
featuring &#13;
the &#13;
rock &#13;
group &#13;
"Overkill" &#13;
The &#13;
theme, &#13;
"Take &#13;
This &#13;
Snow &#13;
and &#13;
Shovel &#13;
It", &#13;
was &#13;
picked &#13;
last &#13;
year, &#13;
but &#13;
was &#13;
not &#13;
selected. &#13;
But &#13;
Kalmar &#13;
felt &#13;
that &#13;
since &#13;
it &#13;
was &#13;
somewhat &#13;
of &#13;
a &#13;
"radical &#13;
theme", &#13;
it &#13;
would &#13;
help &#13;
to &#13;
"arouse &#13;
interest." &#13;
Kalmar &#13;
said  that &#13;
everyone &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
committee &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
very &#13;
helpful &#13;
in &#13;
making &#13;
Winter &#13;
Carnival &#13;
a &#13;
success. &#13;
"(Asst. &#13;
Chancellor) &#13;
Carla &#13;
Stoffle &#13;
provided &#13;
the &#13;
trophies. &#13;
She's &#13;
been &#13;
extremely &#13;
supportive &#13;
and &#13;
patient &#13;
with &#13;
us &#13;
this &#13;
year &#13;
because &#13;
we've &#13;
had &#13;
a &#13;
lot &#13;
of &#13;
problems," &#13;
he &#13;
said. &#13;
"She &#13;
really &#13;
helped &#13;
a &#13;
great &#13;
deal." &#13;
One &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
"problems" &#13;
Kalmar &#13;
is &#13;
referring &#13;
to &#13;
is &#13;
the &#13;
postponement &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
original &#13;
dates &#13;
Winter &#13;
Carnival &#13;
was &#13;
supposed   to &#13;
run &#13;
(Feb. &#13;
1-5). &#13;
The &#13;
committee, &#13;
faced &#13;
with &#13;
a &#13;
long &#13;
Christmas &#13;
break, &#13;
bad &#13;
Late &#13;
budgets &#13;
ruled &#13;
unconstitutional &#13;
The  judicial &#13;
branch &#13;
of &#13;
PSGA, &#13;
Inc. &#13;
(Parkside &#13;
Student &#13;
Govern­&#13;
ment &#13;
Association) &#13;
has &#13;
ruled &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
resubmission &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
PSGA &#13;
budget &#13;
to &#13;
SUFAC &#13;
(Segregated &#13;
University &#13;
Fees &#13;
Allocation &#13;
Committee) &#13;
was &#13;
unconstitutional. &#13;
The &#13;
PSGA &#13;
Senate &#13;
rejected &#13;
the &#13;
recommended &#13;
total &#13;
SUFAC &#13;
budget &#13;
of &#13;
$607,527.10 &#13;
on &#13;
Jan. &#13;
22 &#13;
saying &#13;
it &#13;
was &#13;
too &#13;
low. &#13;
PSGA, &#13;
Inc. &#13;
then &#13;
submitted &#13;
a &#13;
budget &#13;
of &#13;
$15,780, &#13;
replacing &#13;
their &#13;
original &#13;
budget &#13;
of &#13;
$7,503 &#13;
which &#13;
was &#13;
approved &#13;
by &#13;
SUFAC &#13;
during &#13;
preliminary &#13;
and &#13;
final &#13;
budgeting. &#13;
There &#13;
are &#13;
currently &#13;
no &#13;
rules &#13;
stating  that &#13;
major &#13;
organizations &#13;
cannot &#13;
submit &#13;
new &#13;
budgets &#13;
once &#13;
the &#13;
Senate &#13;
has &#13;
rejected &#13;
the &#13;
final &#13;
overall &#13;
SUFAC &#13;
budget. &#13;
On &#13;
Feb. &#13;
5 &#13;
SUFAC &#13;
decided &#13;
to &#13;
stay &#13;
with &#13;
the &#13;
original &#13;
PSGA &#13;
budget &#13;
until &#13;
the &#13;
PSGA &#13;
justices &#13;
ruled &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
con­&#13;
stitutionality &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
new &#13;
request. &#13;
On &#13;
Feb. &#13;
10 &#13;
the &#13;
justices &#13;
(Irene &#13;
Vilona, &#13;
Tim &#13;
Zimmer &#13;
and &#13;
John &#13;
Kudella) &#13;
issued &#13;
their &#13;
ruling &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
request &#13;
was &#13;
unconstitutional. &#13;
"(We) &#13;
feel &#13;
that &#13;
if &#13;
any &#13;
major &#13;
organization &#13;
is &#13;
allowed &#13;
to &#13;
resubmit &#13;
a &#13;
budget, &#13;
then &#13;
the &#13;
process &#13;
should &#13;
be &#13;
reopened &#13;
to &#13;
all &#13;
major &#13;
organizations &#13;
on &#13;
campus," &#13;
read &#13;
their &#13;
ruling. &#13;
"We &#13;
feel &#13;
that &#13;
this &#13;
would &#13;
undermine &#13;
the &#13;
SUFAC &#13;
Correction &#13;
The &#13;
information &#13;
in &#13;
last &#13;
week's &#13;
story &#13;
about &#13;
PSGA's &#13;
new &#13;
budget &#13;
request &#13;
contained &#13;
errors &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
area &#13;
of &#13;
salaries. &#13;
The &#13;
proposed &#13;
increase &#13;
would &#13;
have &#13;
raised &#13;
the &#13;
President's &#13;
salary &#13;
from &#13;
$1000 &#13;
to &#13;
$1500 &#13;
an d &#13;
raised &#13;
the &#13;
Vice &#13;
- &#13;
President's &#13;
salary &#13;
from &#13;
$500 &#13;
to &#13;
$700. &#13;
budgeting &#13;
process &#13;
and &#13;
would &#13;
be &#13;
detrimental &#13;
rather &#13;
than &#13;
beneficial &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
Parkside &#13;
student &#13;
body." &#13;
The &#13;
ruling &#13;
continued: &#13;
"The &#13;
justices &#13;
interpret &#13;
the &#13;
Constitution &#13;
to &#13;
say &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
role &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
Senate &#13;
in &#13;
voting &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
SUFAC &#13;
budget &#13;
recommendation &#13;
is &#13;
to &#13;
insure &#13;
that &#13;
all &#13;
major &#13;
organizations &#13;
are &#13;
treated &#13;
fairly. &#13;
According &#13;
to &#13;
all &#13;
information &#13;
{resented &#13;
to &#13;
us &#13;
... &#13;
all &#13;
major &#13;
organzations &#13;
had &#13;
ample &#13;
opportunity &#13;
to &#13;
prepare &#13;
their &#13;
budgets &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
Nov. &#13;
2, &#13;
1981 &#13;
deadline. &#13;
In &#13;
addition, &#13;
each &#13;
organization &#13;
had &#13;
two &#13;
further &#13;
opportunities &#13;
to &#13;
appear &#13;
before &#13;
SUFAC &#13;
to &#13;
submit &#13;
additional &#13;
in­&#13;
formation &#13;
or &#13;
to &#13;
request &#13;
changes. &#13;
Therefore, &#13;
by &#13;
Dec. &#13;
11, &#13;
1981 &#13;
w hen &#13;
SUFAC &#13;
finished &#13;
its &#13;
total &#13;
review &#13;
of &#13;
budgets, &#13;
all &#13;
changes &#13;
should &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
completed." &#13;
For &#13;
those &#13;
reasons &#13;
the &#13;
justices &#13;
ruled &#13;
that &#13;
resubmission &#13;
of &#13;
a &#13;
budget &#13;
after &#13;
SUFAC &#13;
has &#13;
com­&#13;
pleted &#13;
its &#13;
final &#13;
reviews &#13;
is &#13;
un­&#13;
constitutional &#13;
unless &#13;
it &#13;
can &#13;
be &#13;
shown &#13;
that &#13;
a &#13;
major &#13;
organization &#13;
was &#13;
given &#13;
unfair &#13;
treatment. &#13;
SUFAC &#13;
met &#13;
Feb. &#13;
12 &#13;
to &#13;
decide &#13;
what &#13;
to &#13;
do &#13;
next. &#13;
Their &#13;
options &#13;
included: &#13;
submitting &#13;
the &#13;
same &#13;
total &#13;
budget &#13;
recommendation &#13;
toi &#13;
the &#13;
PSGA &#13;
Senate, &#13;
or &#13;
increasing' &#13;
the &#13;
total &#13;
budget. &#13;
The &#13;
only &#13;
way &#13;
SUFAC &#13;
could &#13;
increase &#13;
the &#13;
budget &#13;
was &#13;
by &#13;
adding &#13;
more &#13;
to &#13;
an &#13;
in­&#13;
dividual &#13;
budget &#13;
that &#13;
was &#13;
reduced &#13;
from &#13;
its &#13;
original &#13;
request. &#13;
The &#13;
only &#13;
two &#13;
budgets &#13;
that &#13;
were &#13;
reduced &#13;
were &#13;
SOC &#13;
and &#13;
Housing. &#13;
SUFAC &#13;
approved &#13;
a &#13;
motion &#13;
to &#13;
submit &#13;
the &#13;
same &#13;
total &#13;
budget &#13;
of &#13;
$607,527.10 &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
PSGA &#13;
Senate. &#13;
The &#13;
Senate &#13;
was &#13;
to &#13;
address &#13;
the &#13;
issue &#13;
in &#13;
this &#13;
week's &#13;
Senate &#13;
meeting. &#13;
See &#13;
next &#13;
week's &#13;
Ranger &#13;
for &#13;
details. &#13;
weather, &#13;
and &#13;
four &#13;
days &#13;
when &#13;
duplicating &#13;
broke &#13;
down, &#13;
decided &#13;
to &#13;
re-schedule &#13;
"Take &#13;
This &#13;
Snow &#13;
. &#13;
. &#13;
." &#13;
"It &#13;
was &#13;
the &#13;
committee's &#13;
decision &#13;
that &#13;
postponing &#13;
it &#13;
would &#13;
make &#13;
it &#13;
a &#13;
more &#13;
successful &#13;
event," &#13;
said &#13;
Buddy &#13;
Couvion, &#13;
the &#13;
Coor­&#13;
dinator &#13;
of &#13;
Student &#13;
Activities. &#13;
"The &#13;
end &#13;
result &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
that &#13;
more &#13;
interest &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
expressed &#13;
because &#13;
of &#13;
postponing &#13;
it," &#13;
he &#13;
said. &#13;
For &#13;
all &#13;
interested &#13;
clubs &#13;
and &#13;
individuals &#13;
wanting to &#13;
participate &#13;
in &#13;
any &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
events, &#13;
contest &#13;
entry &#13;
forms &#13;
and &#13;
complete &#13;
rules &#13;
are &#13;
available &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
Union &#13;
In­&#13;
formation &#13;
Desk &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
Student &#13;
Life &#13;
Office, &#13;
Union &#13;
209. &#13;
All &#13;
forms &#13;
must &#13;
be &#13;
filled &#13;
out &#13;
and &#13;
submitted &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
Student &#13;
Life &#13;
Office &#13;
by &#13;
4 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
on &#13;
Friday, &#13;
Feb. &#13;
19. &#13;
There &#13;
are &#13;
five &#13;
events &#13;
that &#13;
any &#13;
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five &#13;
events &#13;
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started &#13;
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Feb. &#13;
15 &#13;
and &#13;
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19. &#13;
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by &#13;
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Winter &#13;
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Egg &#13;
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fair &#13;
and, &#13;
hopefully, &#13;
intelligent &#13;
means. &#13;
We &#13;
should &#13;
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by &#13;
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ourselves &#13;
three &#13;
basic  questions: &#13;
How &#13;
could &#13;
a &#13;
71 - &#13;
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- &#13;
old &#13;
man &#13;
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as &#13;
a &#13;
symbol &#13;
of &#13;
a &#13;
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rising, &#13;
young &#13;
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bold &#13;
America? &#13;
Why &#13;
is &#13;
the &#13;
dismantling &#13;
of &#13;
social &#13;
and &#13;
welfare &#13;
programs, &#13;
which, &#13;
if &#13;
anything, &#13;
keep &#13;
moral, &#13;
God &#13;
-&#13;
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Christian &#13;
America &#13;
free &#13;
from &#13;
guilt, &#13;
considered &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
the &#13;
cure &#13;
- &#13;
all &#13;
for &#13;
America's &#13;
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And &#13;
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are &#13;
there &#13;
so &#13;
few &#13;
people &#13;
who &#13;
don't &#13;
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Reagan &#13;
for &#13;
what &#13;
he &#13;
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is &#13;
— &#13;
a &#13;
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policies &#13;
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- &#13;
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incoherent, &#13;
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First &#13;
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this &#13;
71 &#13;
- &#13;
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- &#13;
old &#13;
Chief &#13;
Executive &#13;
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not &#13;
at &#13;
all &#13;
a &#13;
symbol &#13;
of &#13;
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he &#13;
likes &#13;
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rising, &#13;
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and &#13;
bold &#13;
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What &#13;
he &#13;
is, &#13;
though, &#13;
is &#13;
the &#13;
American &#13;
public's &#13;
last &#13;
fling &#13;
with &#13;
the &#13;
"good &#13;
old &#13;
days" &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
1940's &#13;
and &#13;
1950's &#13;
(segregation, &#13;
discrimination, &#13;
sexism, &#13;
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and &#13;
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witch &#13;
- &#13;
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This &#13;
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it! &#13;
After &#13;
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our &#13;
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will &#13;
be &#13;
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Breed" &#13;
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whose &#13;
memories &#13;
begin &#13;
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instead &#13;
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talk &#13;
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begins. &#13;
Secondly, &#13;
despite &#13;
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to &#13;
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we &#13;
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ability." &#13;
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water &#13;
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and &#13;
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accumulation &#13;
of &#13;
power &#13;
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in &#13;
are &#13;
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few &#13;
of &#13;
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many &#13;
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will &#13;
remain, &#13;
if &#13;
not &#13;
actually &#13;
increase &#13;
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size, &#13;
during &#13;
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rule. &#13;
Also, &#13;
the &#13;
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and &#13;
his &#13;
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backers' &#13;
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also &#13;
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be &#13;
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with. &#13;
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prosecution &#13;
of &#13;
women &#13;
who &#13;
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abortions; &#13;
the &#13;
right &#13;
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school &#13;
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to &#13;
lead &#13;
their &#13;
students &#13;
in &#13;
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prayer"; &#13;
continued &#13;
availability &#13;
of &#13;
guns, &#13;
rifles, &#13;
and &#13;
ammunition &#13;
to &#13;
anybody &#13;
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and, &#13;
of &#13;
great &#13;
concern &#13;
to &#13;
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partial &#13;
elimination &#13;
of &#13;
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grant &#13;
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total &#13;
elimination &#13;
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government &#13;
loan &#13;
money &#13;
to &#13;
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students. &#13;
Each &#13;
of &#13;
these &#13;
will &#13;
have &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
dealt &#13;
with. &#13;
Lastly, &#13;
and &#13;
I &#13;
think &#13;
the &#13;
most &#13;
important &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
three &#13;
questions &#13;
asked, &#13;
the &#13;
American &#13;
public &#13;
received &#13;
and &#13;
is &#13;
receiving &#13;
everything &#13;
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asked &#13;
for. &#13;
They &#13;
weren't &#13;
looking &#13;
for &#13;
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man &#13;
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ideas, &#13;
who, &#13;
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old &#13;
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of &#13;
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were &#13;
more &#13;
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to &#13;
accept &#13;
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limitations &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
late &#13;
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and, &#13;
for &#13;
example, &#13;
support &#13;
a &#13;
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which &#13;
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crisis &#13;
through &#13;
massive &#13;
solarization &#13;
of &#13;
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economy. &#13;
But &#13;
the &#13;
American &#13;
voter &#13;
wanted &#13;
somebody &#13;
to &#13;
"lead" &#13;
them. &#13;
The &#13;
only &#13;
problem &#13;
was &#13;
that &#13;
nobody &#13;
cared &#13;
where! &#13;
So &#13;
here &#13;
we &#13;
are. &#13;
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years &#13;
ago &#13;
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teachers &#13;
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The &#13;
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Ranger, &#13;
February &#13;
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1977 &#13;
— &#13;
I &#13;
year &#13;
ago &#13;
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loses &#13;
renewal &#13;
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7-6" &#13;
by &#13;
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of &#13;
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on &#13;
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Lee &#13;
Thayer, &#13;
Andrew &#13;
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Emmett &#13;
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Richard &#13;
Carrington, &#13;
Wayne &#13;
Johnson &#13;
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        <name>outdoor volleyball tournament</name>
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              <text>Fallfest kicks off today</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, September 17, 1981&#13;
Vol. 10 - No. 2&#13;
Fallfest kicks off todav&#13;
by G. Heeleegsonn fk/&gt;&#13;
Editor&#13;
Parkside's first Fallfest, a&#13;
welcome back event designed to&#13;
a&#13;
f&#13;
n^&#13;
re&#13;
t&#13;
tu&#13;
,&#13;
rnin8 stents a&#13;
taste of student life on campus,&#13;
starts today at 4:30 p.m. with the&#13;
Supersport contest. Events are&#13;
scheduled through Saturday night&#13;
to appeal to a wide variety of&#13;
student tastes.&#13;
Supersport is designed to award&#13;
Parkside s most versatile game&#13;
player with the championship of&#13;
the school. Registered students&#13;
will compete in a variety of&#13;
games, including Las Vegas&#13;
solitaire, pool, bowling, video&#13;
games and basketball. The top&#13;
five finalists will return on Friday&#13;
to compete in an elimination&#13;
contest, and the winner will be&#13;
announced on Saturday night at&#13;
the Fallfest dance.&#13;
Trophies will be awarded for the&#13;
high scorer — the "Supersport" —&#13;
to the runner-up, and to each of&#13;
the five high scorers for each&#13;
event. All winners will also&#13;
receive a free admission to the&#13;
dance on Saturday. To open the&#13;
Supersport contest, there is a $1&#13;
entry fee for the contest. Tonight&#13;
will also be "Let's Get Acquainted&#13;
Night" in the Rec Center.&#13;
Tomorrow, the Union pad, and&#13;
outdoor addition to the Student&#13;
Union, will open at 11 a.m. with&#13;
Regents set 1981-82&#13;
UW-P student grants&#13;
Federal financial aid funds&#13;
for students at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
totaling $852,031 for the 1981-82&#13;
academic year were accepted&#13;
Friday, Sept. 11 by the UW&#13;
System Board of Regents.&#13;
The sum includes $388,988&#13;
for Supplemental Educational&#13;
Opportunity Grants, $324,430&#13;
for Basic Educational Opportunity&#13;
Grants and $138,613&#13;
for the College Work-Study&#13;
Program.&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
the country rock and jazz of&#13;
Buntline Special." At the same&#13;
time, a cook - your - own food&#13;
special will allow students to grill&#13;
their own hot dogs, hamburgers&#13;
and steaks for a special price.&#13;
Between l and 2 p.m., Chancellor&#13;
Alan Guskin will be officially&#13;
christening the pad. Music by&#13;
'Hans and Dr. Becker" will last&#13;
until 4 p .m.&#13;
According to Dean of Student&#13;
Life Dave Pederson, "the area&#13;
will be ready. Picnic tables will be&#13;
out of storage; the horseshoe pits&#13;
will be ready; the volleyball&#13;
standards will be up." Pederson&#13;
also commented, "The patio area&#13;
will be subject to the same hours&#13;
as the Square. Weekend and&#13;
evening hours haven't been set&#13;
yet." Tomorrow, the pad will be&#13;
officially opened for the first time,&#13;
although the basketball portion of&#13;
the Supersport contest will be&#13;
played on the pad tonight.&#13;
At 4:30 p.m., the Supersport&#13;
contest will continue and at 7:30,&#13;
Parkside Activities Board will&#13;
present "My Bodyguard," a&#13;
Fallfest sample of their weekly&#13;
movie special for students. The&#13;
film will be repeated on Sunday at&#13;
the same time. The PAB film&#13;
series admission price for&#13;
students is $1.50 per movie.&#13;
Op Saturday, a special showing&#13;
of m orping cartoons will start the&#13;
day for children and the young - at&#13;
heart at 10 a.m. There is no&#13;
admission for the cartoons. Also&#13;
at 10 a.m., the co-ed volleyball&#13;
tournament will start. The winning&#13;
team will receive admission&#13;
to the dance Saturday night. Soda&#13;
and beer will be available&#13;
Saturday morning.&#13;
Saturday night, the Union&#13;
Square doors will open at 8 p.m.&#13;
and "Champion" will begin to&#13;
play at 9. The doors will close&#13;
again at 12:30 a.m. Sunday. Admission&#13;
to the dance is $1.50 fo r&#13;
Parkside students and $1.50 for&#13;
guests.&#13;
Fallfest will end Saturday night,&#13;
but according to Buddy Couvion,&#13;
Coordinator of St udent Activities,&#13;
"It is the beginning of t his year's&#13;
student activities."&#13;
A contest begins today to name&#13;
the new Union pad, and the&#13;
winning entry will receive tickets&#13;
for 2 to this year's ethnic dinner.&#13;
"Entries will be submitted to the&#13;
Chancellor," Couvion said, "and&#13;
there will be a winner, although&#13;
the University will not be held to&#13;
using the winner's idea." The&#13;
contest deadline is September 30th&#13;
at 4 p.m.&#13;
For more information about&#13;
Fallfest or other student activities,&#13;
call the Student Life&#13;
Fallfest schedule&#13;
Thursday: 4:30 p. m. Supersport contest. Through Saturday.&#13;
Friday: U a. m. Union pad opens.&#13;
"Buntline Special" Music.&#13;
"Grill - your - own". Food service special.&#13;
1 p. m. Pad christening.&#13;
2 p . m. "Hans and Dr. Beeker" Music.&#13;
4:30 p. m. Supersport finals.&#13;
7:30 p. m. "My Bodyguard" Film.&#13;
Saturday: 10 a. m. Cartoons.&#13;
Co-ed volleyball tournament.&#13;
• 9 p. m. "Champion" Music.&#13;
Until September 30th: ... ^ame the Pad" contest.&#13;
New communication faculty mark new beginning&#13;
by Susan Stevens&#13;
Four new faculty members&#13;
have joined the communication&#13;
department at Parkside this fall to&#13;
temporarily fill positions left open&#13;
during the summer. The new&#13;
people are David Habbel, JoAnn&#13;
Levy - Habbel, Debra Paschke,&#13;
and Martin Paskov. Rebecca and&#13;
Alan Rubin, Bruce Weaver, and&#13;
Diane Grattinger all left Parkside&#13;
this summer for positions&#13;
elsewhere.&#13;
The turnover of personnel in this&#13;
area marks a new beginning for&#13;
Problems still exist&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The situation at Parkside's&#13;
bookstore is a familiar one: long&#13;
lines, higher prices, and some&#13;
books not arriving in time for the&#13;
opening weeks of s chool.&#13;
But don't always blame the&#13;
bookstore.&#13;
The main reasons for the&#13;
problems that have come up thus&#13;
far are faculty member errors in&#13;
ordering books and the inability of&#13;
publishers to fill the orders&#13;
quickly, if at all.&#13;
Some faculty members ordered&#13;
their textbooks late or they made&#13;
some type of mistake in ordering&#13;
them, such as inaccuracies in the&#13;
exact book title. The book may&#13;
also be out of p rint or out of sto ck&#13;
at the publishing house.&#13;
"This semester we were notified&#13;
of o ut of stocks and out of prints&#13;
from publishers much later than&#13;
we should have been," said Jan&#13;
Becker, manager of the book&#13;
store.&#13;
Parkside's bookstore is&#13;
managed by the Follett Corporation,&#13;
which operates campus&#13;
and community bookstores all&#13;
over the U.S. The bookstore&#13;
receives the majority of its used&#13;
books from Follett. According to&#13;
Becker, book orders placed&#13;
through Follett take approximately&#13;
one week while going&#13;
directly to the publishers would&#13;
take from two to four weeks.&#13;
Over 100 publishers do business&#13;
with Parkside's bookstore and&#13;
they are the ones who set' the&#13;
suggested retail prices for the&#13;
books. The increase in textbook&#13;
prices is chiefly attributable to the&#13;
increase in printing costs.&#13;
The rising costs of textbooks&#13;
have affected all students this fall,&#13;
but in varying degrees. Nursing&#13;
students face the largest total&#13;
book fee at Parkside. One nursing&#13;
student had to pay over $230 for&#13;
three nursing classes while the&#13;
"grand prize" goes to a single&#13;
nursing class in which books total&#13;
around $200.&#13;
One student complaint that&#13;
repeatedly surfaces is about&#13;
trying to resell a textbook at the&#13;
end of the semester. The&#13;
bookstore purchases books back&#13;
at 50 percent of the price for which&#13;
it was last sold, whether it was&#13;
new or old. If the book is to be used&#13;
the next semester, it is then sold&#13;
for 75 percent of t hat same price.&#13;
If the book will not be used the&#13;
following semester, the bookstore&#13;
refers to the Blue Book to see what&#13;
to pay the student.&#13;
One of the new features at&#13;
Parkside this fall is the Campus&#13;
Book Exchange, located on the&#13;
the communication program here.&#13;
While the fact that four people left&#13;
at once presents hardships for the&#13;
discipline and many of its&#13;
students, it gives the program the&#13;
transitional period needed for&#13;
changes.&#13;
The business world today is&#13;
constantly changing, and the&#13;
communication program here will&#13;
change with it. According to&#13;
communication professor Lee&#13;
Thayer, "In the 80's and 90's we'll&#13;
see an explosion of o pportunities&#13;
in the communication and information&#13;
fields, and we want to&#13;
be sure we have our students&#13;
ready to meet the challenge."&#13;
"While the journalism (particularly&#13;
the broadcasting) industry&#13;
has about three to four&#13;
hundred jobs open each year and&#13;
three to four thousand students,!&#13;
other applications of communication&#13;
will need many more&#13;
people each year, and the demand&#13;
will keep increasing instead of&#13;
decreasing," Thayer added.&#13;
The program here will take on a&#13;
new direction in order to acLevel&#13;
1 Concourse in WLLC. After&#13;
a student brings in a used book,&#13;
the Book Exchange sells the book&#13;
for 65 percent of the book's&#13;
original list price, even if the book&#13;
was initially bought used. The&#13;
Book Exchange keeps 6.5 percent&#13;
of th e original price for operating&#13;
expenses and the student who&#13;
previously owned the book&#13;
receives 59.5 percent of the&#13;
original price.&#13;
The only notable change at the&#13;
bookstore this fall is in its trade&#13;
department, which includes&#13;
everything that isn't textbooks or&#13;
supplies. There are now more&#13;
books in the trade department,&#13;
such as reference, educational aid&#13;
and children's books. The&#13;
bookstore also sells plants, has a&#13;
new line of backpacks and will&#13;
have a record sale once&#13;
semester. New merchandise&#13;
the sportswear department&#13;
eludes women's shorts and shirts.&#13;
comodate this demand. The new&#13;
faculty members will help in this&#13;
redirection effort. "We're&#13;
strengthening the academic and&#13;
intellectual side of the program&#13;
and extending the professional&#13;
qualities of the discipline. There&#13;
are unique aspects emerging as&#13;
we redo the personnel roster,"&#13;
Thayer said.&#13;
"We were very fortunate to get&#13;
these first class people in the&#13;
amount of time we had. These&#13;
people were chosen through a&#13;
general search and screen&#13;
process. They were all hired for&#13;
temporary positions in order for&#13;
more time to be given to the hiring&#13;
procedures to fill the vacancies&#13;
permanently." Thayer stresses&#13;
that, although the four were taken&#13;
on temporarily, they are all first&#13;
rate candidates for permanent&#13;
positions. Applications will be&#13;
accepted at the end of this&#13;
academic year to fill the communication&#13;
roster permanently.&#13;
The following is the result of a n&#13;
interview with David Habbel.&#13;
Watch next week's Ranger for&#13;
interviews with other new communication&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
David Habbel received a&#13;
Bachelor of Science degree in&#13;
Interdisciplinary Communication&#13;
from the State University College&#13;
of Brockport, New York. He&#13;
earned a Master of Arts degree in&#13;
Communication Theory and is&#13;
presently working on his doctoral&#13;
dissertation for Suny State&#13;
University at Buffalo, New York.&#13;
Habbel decided to enter the field&#13;
of communication because he&#13;
feels that we can improve our&#13;
abilities to communicate. "There&#13;
seems to be a low level of communication&#13;
ability in our society&#13;
today," he said. "People don't&#13;
communicate as well as they&#13;
could, and I'd like to help create&#13;
some understanding of communication&#13;
theory and its&#13;
relevance in our world."&#13;
"I hope to help students&#13;
organize their knowledge of&#13;
communication rather than give&#13;
them bits of information to deal&#13;
with," Habbel added.&#13;
Habbel chose Parkside as a&#13;
place to teach for several reasons.&#13;
'The size of the university is good,&#13;
there is an emphasis on teaching&#13;
rather than on research (not that&#13;
research isn't important), the&#13;
program is flexible and&#13;
developing, and the population erf&#13;
older students is interesting," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Habbel and his wife, JoAnn&#13;
Levy - Habbel, have been married&#13;
for 10 years and attended&#13;
graduate school together. He likes&#13;
the Racine area. "It reminds me&#13;
of the Finger Lakes area of New&#13;
York state," he said.&#13;
When asked if he would like to&#13;
stay here, he responded "Yes, I&#13;
like it here, and that's very&#13;
probable."&#13;
Parkside students may also&#13;
enjoy the new ideas brought to the&#13;
communication discipline by&#13;
Habbel and his counterparts.&#13;
Watch next week's Ranger for&#13;
more information about JoAnn&#13;
Levy - Habbel, Debra Paschke,&#13;
and Martin Paskov.&#13;
a&#13;
in&#13;
inINSIDE...&#13;
&#13;
• More editorials; no letters yet&#13;
• Review: "Atlantic City"&#13;
• Coach Lawson resigns&#13;
• Volleyball: Women slaughtered &#13;
Editorials&#13;
areas (where minors could&#13;
have un - I.D. - checked access&#13;
to alcoholic beverages) and&#13;
because of Heritage's contract&#13;
with the University (students&#13;
may not consume any alcohol&#13;
but theirs).&#13;
There is another way to look&#13;
at this "white elephant." At&#13;
least Physical Plant, who built&#13;
the fence, care about students&#13;
in a way that Parkside administrators&#13;
don't. Administrators&#13;
want students to&#13;
drive home after they drink;&#13;
Physical Plant wants students&#13;
to be able to roll under, climb&#13;
over and knock down the&#13;
fencing so that they can sleep&#13;
it off on the grounds and make&#13;
it to classes in the morning.&#13;
Thank you, Physical Plant,&#13;
for caring about students&#13;
more than you do about&#13;
students' money.&#13;
Ranger editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the editorial&#13;
stajf. Parkside students may submit editorial ideas to the editor for&#13;
consideration. Editorial ideas need not be typed to be considered.&#13;
A white elephant?&#13;
After expenditures, totaling&#13;
approximately $17,000 —&#13;
much of it contributed by&#13;
students segregated fee&#13;
monies — Parkside is ready to&#13;
christen the new Union pad.&#13;
The pad is supposed to be an&#13;
area for students to relax and&#13;
enjoy the outdoors while&#13;
consuming beer and wine&#13;
supplied (of course) by our&#13;
own Heritage Food Service. It&#13;
is also supposed to provide&#13;
grounds outside the Union for&#13;
students to enjoy outdoor&#13;
games.&#13;
But at this date, it is difficult&#13;
to see many students actually&#13;
enjoying the pad. After all,&#13;
what did they get for their&#13;
contribution? So far, a fence&#13;
that falls down and isn't worth&#13;
much when its standing up.&#13;
By the way, the fence is&#13;
there because of a state law&#13;
that prohibits drinking in open&#13;
Empty space!&#13;
Although no one dares to mention it, the space inhabited until&#13;
last June by the Chiwaukee Prairie Co-op is still up for grabs&#13;
The vacant area is in the Child Care Center building next to&#13;
Parkside Village.&#13;
After noticing that some faculty and staff are tripling up in&#13;
offices, that student groups are being asked to give up office&#13;
space to other concerns and that there is never even a place to&#13;
eat lunch in the Coffee Shoppe, it seems odd that Jim Kreuser,&#13;
President of PSGA and the person in charge of re - allocating the&#13;
vacant space, has not been contacted by any individual or group&#13;
on campus with a request to use the space.&#13;
Why? There seems to be some sentimental voluntary hold for&#13;
bids on it. For one thing, no one wants to mention the Co-op for&#13;
any reason (the battle between them and Parkside's administration&#13;
was bitter). For another, no one wants to be seen&#13;
moving into the space, or profiting off of the Co-op's problems.&#13;
At any rate, there is a stigma of association that everyone would&#13;
like to avoid.&#13;
However, this is a very practical time and it calls for very&#13;
practical moves. For example, Central Receiving is now surviving&#13;
very nicely-way over in Tallent Hall. Somehow, it must&#13;
be practical.&#13;
It would only be reasonable to be as practical about the old Coop&#13;
space. Space is valuable and it is not economical or conducive&#13;
to a good atmosphere on campus to squeeze in some places and&#13;
leave other space vacant.&#13;
We are not suggesting that faculty, staff or even students take&#13;
up residence, since the building is so far from other resources&#13;
that all three groups need easy access to.&#13;
We are "ot even suggesting a specific use for it - at this time.&#13;
What we do suggest is that some brave soul who doesn't mind the&#13;
hike dare to petition for the space.&#13;
HEAVENS FOR&#13;
rea&#13;
gan; rr's about&#13;
T.&#13;
15Ji=&#13;
s&#13;
^?&#13;
NE freed us&#13;
JWES FROM UNDER THE.&#13;
.THUMB OF THE HAVE-NOTS1&#13;
.&#13;
Editor's notes&#13;
The bookstore, hives &amp; ads&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
Since today is the first day of&#13;
Fallfest, the cool weather this&#13;
week seems to make sense&#13;
somehow. You would think the&#13;
Student Life office could have&#13;
arranged for a few more dried&#13;
leaves to make an appearance on&#13;
the pad, though. Oh, well. You&#13;
can't have everything the way you&#13;
want it to go.&#13;
Another page one story this&#13;
week, by News Editor Ken Meyer,&#13;
makes it clear that not even the&#13;
bookstore can have everything&#13;
run smoothly. There are major&#13;
problems with the bookstore at&#13;
Parkside, as just about every&#13;
student knows, and it seems we&#13;
need some ideas for change. Two&#13;
ways you can present your ideas&#13;
to other students (along with&#13;
faculty and staff) are by writing a&#13;
letter to the Ranger or by&#13;
presenting an editorial idea to me&#13;
Either way, you'll get farther than&#13;
you do when you give up, go to the&#13;
Union and gripe to your friends.&#13;
Of course, friends can help you&#13;
over the bumps of everyday&#13;
frustrations, but if you want&#13;
something done about a campus&#13;
problem, your best bet is to let&#13;
people know you want to see&#13;
10 years ago —&#13;
"Parkside Village Nears Completion"&#13;
by Larry Jones&#13;
Parkside Village is nearing&#13;
completion ... at last. All&#13;
students who have already signed&#13;
leases to live in the the new&#13;
student apartment complex will&#13;
be in... by the end of September.&#13;
As of now, Global Business and&#13;
Residential Centers, Inc., owner&#13;
of the complex, is providing free&#13;
housing for more than 24 students&#13;
at the Holiday Inn, and for 10&#13;
students at partially completed&#13;
units at the site. In addition, many&#13;
students are continuing to commute&#13;
until their places are ready.&#13;
The Village, which will contain&#13;
66 units for single students and 22&#13;
for married students and faculty,&#13;
was supposed to be ready for&#13;
occupancy by September 1st.&#13;
However, the project has been&#13;
plagued from its outset by&#13;
numerous setbacks.&#13;
(A land purchase agreement)&#13;
was not reached with the owner&#13;
until May. By that time several&#13;
small contractors had decided not&#13;
to undertake the project... in the&#13;
first week of June, the crews sent&#13;
in were not large enough to make&#13;
the rapid progress needed. A final&#13;
touch was a recent carpenters'&#13;
From the Files&#13;
strike in the area which stopped&#13;
construction completely for a full&#13;
week.&#13;
— from the UW-Parkside&#13;
Newscope, vol. 5, no. 2&#13;
September 13, 1971&#13;
5 years ago —&#13;
"UW-P employees accept state&#13;
offer" by Christopher Clause&#13;
Last June, 40 Parkside employees,&#13;
all members of the&#13;
American Federation of State,&#13;
County and Municipal Employees&#13;
(AFSCME), began negotiations in&#13;
an attempt to obtain their first&#13;
contract with the state.&#13;
At stake has been employee&#13;
wages, which union spokeswoman&#13;
Mary Lou France said have not&#13;
kept pace with those of private&#13;
industry.&#13;
The union had been holding out&#13;
for a 9percent (.34 hr.) raise. The&#13;
state had offered 6 percent (.25&#13;
hr.). (The state) told the union&#13;
members there were plenty of&#13;
unemployed people who would be&#13;
glad to have their jobs.&#13;
According to France, the state&#13;
also refused to take the matter to&#13;
a fact - finding committee or bring&#13;
in an independent mediator . . .&#13;
Union members were left with two&#13;
choices; to strike or to accept the&#13;
state's offer.&#13;
. . . members voted to accept&#13;
the state's offer of 6 percent.&#13;
— from the Ranger, vol. 5, no. 2&#13;
Wednesday, September 15, 1976&#13;
1 year ago —&#13;
"Enrollment causes parking&#13;
problems" by Patty DeLouisa&#13;
Parkside students have found&#13;
campus parking limited during&#13;
the first week of school. Many&#13;
students have complained about&#13;
the lack of parking places.&#13;
Ronald Brinkman, Director of&#13;
Campus Security, said that the&#13;
probably cause of the parking&#13;
problem was this year's increased&#13;
enrollment . . . According to&#13;
Brinkman, 160 additional mini-car&#13;
spaces have been added to the&#13;
Union parking lot. This brings the&#13;
total to 2,650 spaces on campus.&#13;
Brinkman optimistically&#13;
commented, "Watching the lots, I&#13;
was encouraged by the mini - car&#13;
parking."&#13;
There are 1,433 white permit&#13;
spaces. Using a 1.55 oversell&#13;
factor, 1.967 white student permits&#13;
were sold . . . One thousand two&#13;
hundred twenty - five green&#13;
permits were sold for the Tallent&#13;
Hall parking lot area which&#13;
contains 428 actual spaces.&#13;
— from the Ranger, vol. 9, no. 2&#13;
Thursday, September 11, 1980&#13;
change. There's no better way to&#13;
do that than to let the Ranger&#13;
know. We may not be able to do&#13;
anything about unruly children or&#13;
hives. And we are not ever going&#13;
to run an advice to the lovelorn&#13;
column. But if you want to see&#13;
changes in campus organizations&#13;
or rules or facilities, you'll&#13;
probably reach the right person&#13;
through the Ranger.&#13;
In case you've forgotten,&#13;
Ranger letters must be 1) concise,&#13;
2) typed neatly, 3) signed, and 4)&#13;
somewhat factual. Don't call&#13;
anyone a bad name in the Ranger.&#13;
Along with the new editoriai&#13;
policy printed on this page, please&#13;
take a look at the cartoon below.&#13;
You'll be seeing this artist's work&#13;
weekly this year in the Ranger.&#13;
Last week, it seemed like there&#13;
were an awful lot of press releases&#13;
in the Ranger about new faculty&#13;
members (for a university facing&#13;
hiring freezes). This week, Sue&#13;
Stevens has begun a 2-part story&#13;
on the new faculty in communication.&#13;
Next week, along&#13;
with the conclusion of her interviews,&#13;
look for Pat Hensiak's&#13;
story on Parkside graduates&#13;
teaching here. Did you ever&#13;
suspect that you would never&#13;
graduate, or worse, that you'd end&#13;
up spending as much time here&#13;
after graduation as before?&#13;
In the midst of all this hiring,&#13;
one faculty member and coach&#13;
left Parkside this week. For the&#13;
details, read Sports Editor Karen&#13;
Norwood's story on page 6. And&#13;
fill out your Pro Picks forms!&#13;
Even if you've never won the&#13;
Illinois State lottery, you can&#13;
probably pick up some beer from&#13;
the Ranger.&#13;
This week, Feature Editor Tony&#13;
Rogers' movie review is on&#13;
"Atlantic City." Next week, you&#13;
will get a peek at a movie not yet&#13;
released — "Continental Divide."&#13;
Carol Burns, who recently joined&#13;
the staff, got the review from a&#13;
preview in Milwaukee.&#13;
A couple of stories got left out of&#13;
the paper this week — mostly&#13;
because of space considerations.&#13;
We need ad reps to help us pay for&#13;
the paper. Even if you don't want&#13;
to sell ads, wouldn't you have&#13;
liked to read Jim Kreuser's&#13;
"Strollin' Boner" awards? He's&#13;
trying to be another Proxmire,&#13;
with a local twist. Or, wouldn't&#13;
you like to know what the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association does at their&#13;
meetings? Maybe that one doesn't&#13;
sound too interesting, but they do&#13;
control quite a bit of your&#13;
segregated fee money. So if we&#13;
can sell a few more ads and reach&#13;
a few more writers, you'll be&#13;
reading about these and other&#13;
things soon.&#13;
Enough of that mercenary rot.&#13;
Enjoy Fallfest: I hope I'm there&#13;
when Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
christens the pad and knocks&#13;
down the wobbly fencing.&#13;
Use Ranger Contact Sheets!&#13;
Wewant to hear from you!&#13;
Ginger Helgeson&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Dan McCormack&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
Frank Falduto&#13;
ganger&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Advisor&#13;
VVkks&#13;
61*' J&#13;
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m Mer,ins&#13;
' Charles&#13;
uw"'&#13;
rRs&#13;
"&#13;
,e ana&#13;
- —»&#13;
W r m e n ^ e r&#13;
5 b y the U n i o n&#13;
' c o S S S l S ' P u b l i s h 6 * " , ^ d U r i "&#13;
9 breaks a n d h o l i d a y s, An Permission is required for renr£?Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
All correspondence should be" sddre^HP&#13;
°&#13;
rUon of RANGER '&#13;
WISCOnsin&#13;
-&#13;
Parkside, Ken osha, wi * addre«ed to: Parkside Ranger Rancor , WLLC D139, UW I - .lore ~ ' ,VI&#13;
"""• r^anyer, w Leners to the Editor will K o&#13;
SSTSr'sC'i:&#13;
1&#13;
?&#13;
&amp;2£Z£r&gt; - ' ' S i K &#13;
Social Science&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 17,1981&#13;
Roundtable offered&#13;
"Island in tv^/v o % Island in the Shade- tk„&#13;
Politics of Barbados," a talk h&#13;
Parkside English Prof ai y&#13;
Shucard, who spent the las'!&#13;
academic year as a FiikJ S&#13;
Fellow at the U^versitv&#13;
West Indies in Barbados nl S&#13;
the Social Science r*\ T^&#13;
d&#13;
s e r i e s a t U W - P t h i s f a l l ?&#13;
Monday. '&#13;
as&#13;
t&#13;
Roundtable sessions, free anri&#13;
£5 D°m ??&#13;
Wic&#13;
-&#13;
a™ held at&#13;
12..15 p.m. in Union Room 106&#13;
Bmiffpfw10nS schedul&#13;
ed are: Budget Wars - Part TTwf&#13;
E NPirK Strikes Back&#13;
" by fep Jeff Neubauer (D-RadJ) „&#13;
P&#13;
n&#13;
"Worker Education: An Invtstbte&#13;
Dimension of DmVers ty&#13;
Director ^^Univerafty^Ex&#13;
temim &amp;hooi for Workers, on&#13;
,5 ,&#13;
Th&#13;
.&#13;
e Social Sciences in the High&#13;
Schools: Current Status and New&#13;
SKSr; by Donald Thompson,&#13;
Director of Social Studies for the&#13;
Oct&#13;
C15&#13;
C ied Sch(X)1 District, on&#13;
"Predicting the Academic&#13;
°&#13;
f Black Students in&#13;
Higher Education" by Marvin&#13;
nrn7 p&#13;
arkside sociology&#13;
professor and co-author of an&#13;
nf kiL L°n f'&#13;
cademic Performance&#13;
ol blacks at a predominately white&#13;
university which appeared in the&#13;
Winter 1980 issue of "College and&#13;
University";&#13;
And, "The Perils of Academic&#13;
Publishing" by Thomas Reeves,&#13;
Parkside history professor and&#13;
author of "The Life and Times of&#13;
Joe McCarthy," to be published&#13;
by Stein and Day in November.&#13;
Reeves also is the author of&#13;
several other books including&#13;
"Gentleman Boss: The Life of&#13;
Chester A. Arthur," a major study&#13;
of the nation's 21st president.&#13;
Bible study&#13;
offered Fridays&#13;
There will be a Bible Study in&#13;
Communication Arts 132 from&#13;
11:45 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. every&#13;
Friday this semester for UWParkside&#13;
faculty, staff, classified&#13;
employees, and non - traditional,&#13;
adult students.&#13;
June Pomatto, a Kenosha artist&#13;
and long - time Bible student, is&#13;
leading the study which is on the&#13;
Book of Acts. Everyone is invited&#13;
to bring a lunch and join us&#13;
regularly or as one's schedule&#13;
permits. The study is sponsored&#13;
by Inter - Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship.&#13;
If you have any questions call&#13;
June Pomatto at 552-8650 or&#13;
Barbara Larson (faculty adviser&#13;
of I. V. C. F.) at 553-2122.&#13;
UW-P leads energy savings&#13;
UP-Parkside showed the&#13;
greatest energy savings of any&#13;
state facility in 1979-80, according&#13;
to the State Department of Administration's&#13;
annual report.&#13;
Energy use at UW-Paricside&#13;
dropped 21.7 percent from 1978-79,&#13;
which was best among the 30&#13;
facilities listed. Parkside's energy&#13;
use since the base year of the&#13;
report, 1972-73, is down 32 percent.&#13;
Overall, state facilities dropped&#13;
10.1 percent in energy use last&#13;
year, and 19.8 since 1972-73. The&#13;
top seven energy savers were&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
campuses. UW-Eau Claire was&#13;
next best, down 18.8 percent. All&#13;
but three of the state facilities —&#13;
the Ethan Allen and Fox Lake&#13;
correctional institutions and the&#13;
Waupon prison complex — showed&#13;
improvement over the previous&#13;
year.&#13;
The 13 UW four - year campuses&#13;
showed savings of 11.7 percentthe&#13;
12 Department of Human and&#13;
Social Services facilities saved 3.7&#13;
percent; two Department of&#13;
Administration facilities saved 5.7&#13;
percent; two Department of&#13;
Public Instruction facilities saved&#13;
11 percent; and the veteran's&#13;
home at King saved 2 percent.&#13;
Parkside Physical Plant&#13;
Director Jack Dudley cited&#13;
"mechanical improvements and&#13;
ingenuity" by the staff of Robert&#13;
McGrath, assistant director for&#13;
utilities, as accounting for at least&#13;
one - third of the savings.&#13;
RALPH'S CORNER&#13;
NEW HOURS&#13;
Monday thru Thursday&#13;
3pm til closing&#13;
Friday, Saturday, Sunday&#13;
12 noon til closing&#13;
TAP BEER&#13;
PITCHER $2.75&#13;
-RALPH'S PACKER BACKERSSunday&#13;
Afternoon Packer Games&#13;
FREE FOOD - Hot Beef - Potato Salad - Chips&#13;
$2.00 PITCHERS&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
3-5 pm&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
-HAPPY HOUR&#13;
HIGHBALLS 60&lt;&#13;
TAP BEERS25C&#13;
Tap Beer ALL YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
7-11 PM $3.00&#13;
-TUESDAY&#13;
Pitcher Night $2.00 PITCHER&#13;
WEDNESDAY&#13;
Ladies Night 1/2 PRICE ALL DRINKS&#13;
50C CAN OR BOTTLE DOMESTIC BEER&#13;
Kame - Kaze Madness $5.00 PITCHER&#13;
— THURSDAY&#13;
HEINEKEN, BECKS $1.00 BOTTLE&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
$2.00 Cover At Door&#13;
1 5C TAP BEER8-11 pm&#13;
2 Pool labia* - Vldaa «aow*&#13;
2232 ROOSEVELT RD. KENOSHA *54-1601&#13;
NEWS&#13;
BRIEFS&#13;
Tenure granted to 6 profs.&#13;
Computer logic&#13;
to be offered&#13;
A course in computer logic for&#13;
junior high school students will be&#13;
offered at Parkside on Saturdays&#13;
Sept. 26 through Nov. 21, from 9:30&#13;
to 11:30 a.m.&#13;
The course, using BASIC&#13;
computer language, will include&#13;
computer arithmetic, logic&#13;
flowcharting, use of the computer&#13;
terminal, gaming and problem&#13;
solving and individual projects.&#13;
Registration information is&#13;
available from the University&#13;
Extension Office (553-2312) in&#13;
Tallent Hall. Fee for the course is&#13;
$45.&#13;
Harvest Festival&#13;
to be held&#13;
River Bend Nature Center is&#13;
holding its annual Harvest&#13;
Festival from 1-5 p.m. on Sunday,&#13;
Sept. 20 at the Nature Center, 3600&#13;
Green Bay Road, Racine.&#13;
Activities include hayrides,&#13;
cider making, canoe rides,&#13;
pumpkin painting, quilt making,&#13;
beekeeping, wigwam making and&#13;
the blue grass band "Just&#13;
Pickins" will perform.&#13;
Admission is $2 for adults, $1 for&#13;
children or $5 for a family.&#13;
For further information call&#13;
River Bend Nature Center, 639-&#13;
0930.&#13;
Tenure was granted to six&#13;
Parkside professors over the&#13;
summer by the UW System Board&#13;
of Regents.&#13;
Promoted from assistant&#13;
professor to associate professor&#13;
with tenure are Bruce R. Branching&#13;
chemistry; Leo P.&#13;
Comerford, mathematics; David&#13;
V. Holmes, art; James J. Polczynski,&#13;
business and administrative&#13;
science; and Donald&#13;
A. Walker, psychology. Dileep G.&#13;
Dhavale, business and administrative&#13;
science, was granted&#13;
tenure at his current rank of&#13;
associate professor.&#13;
Associate professor of life&#13;
science Robert E. Esser and&#13;
professor of German Harry A.&#13;
Walbruck were granted emeritus&#13;
status.&#13;
Esser, who retired at the end of&#13;
the spring semester 1981, began&#13;
teaching at Parkside when the&#13;
campus was extablished.&#13;
Walbruck retired in the spring of&#13;
1980 and is a consultant and editor&#13;
for publishers of German&#13;
language textbooks.&#13;
"Buy union products&#13;
and services&#13;
as you would have&#13;
union wages&#13;
paid unto you."&#13;
UNION L ABEL-COLDEN RULE"&#13;
ucnj i&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
REC&#13;
CENTER&#13;
WEEKLY&#13;
TOURNEYS/SPECIALS&#13;
SEPT. 21 - SEPT. 26&#13;
RED PIN BOWLING&#13;
$3.00 NITE&#13;
MOON LITE BOWLING&#13;
MON.9am - 12 pm&#13;
TUE. 12pm -6pm&#13;
FRI. 3 pm -6 pm&#13;
THUR. 7 pm -10 pm&#13;
FRI. 10 pm -1 am&#13;
SAT. 8 pm -1 am&#13;
« - — V I D E O G A M E T O U R N E Y&#13;
WED. 1 pm - 2 pm&#13;
* FOOSBALLTOURNEY&#13;
FRI. 1 pm - 2pm&#13;
Sign up for Tournaments at Rec Center Desk&#13;
Earn your&#13;
degree&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
and your&#13;
commission&#13;
at Marquette&#13;
Army ROTC is a leadership&#13;
development program on college&#13;
campuses throughout the country. It&#13;
prepares students for responsible&#13;
positions as officers in the active&#13;
Army and Reserves.&#13;
Even though Army ROTC is not a&#13;
department on your campus, you can&#13;
take the courses through M. U. at&#13;
UWP.&#13;
You'll get the same management&#13;
training and experience that students&#13;
at M. U. get. You'll get the same&#13;
opportunities for scholarships and&#13;
the same financial benefits during&#13;
your junior and senior years ($100&#13;
per month, up to 20 months).&#13;
So while you earn your chosen&#13;
degree at your college, you can earn&#13;
your officer's commission through&#13;
ours.&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
LEARN WHAT IT TAKES TO LEAD.&#13;
For details, contact:&#13;
Enrollment Officer&#13;
Military Science Dept.&#13;
Marquette U.&#13;
1-224-7195 &#13;
Thursday, September 17,1981 RANGER&#13;
Rebirth and renewal in "Atlantic City"&#13;
by bv Tnnv Tony RoRncrpr gers c .•» «« «»,. . •&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Renewal and rebirth: two&#13;
recurring themes in many of&#13;
todays' films. In "Atlantic City,"&#13;
the latest offering from director&#13;
Louis Malle, renewal is found in&#13;
the re-building of Atlantic City,&#13;
and rebirth takes place in the&#13;
spirit of Burt Lancaster as "Lou."&#13;
Like the city itself, Lou is aging&#13;
and decaying in the supposed&#13;
glory of his past. Once a&#13;
messenger for the local underworld,&#13;
Lou now makes his&#13;
living by serving as a kind of&#13;
bodyguard / servant to Grace&#13;
(Kate Reid), a one-time beauty&#13;
contestant who lives her life in a&#13;
pink - pillowed bed. Grace, like&#13;
Lou, is a "has-been" who has&#13;
retreated from life.&#13;
Enter Sally. The picture of the&#13;
drive and ambition of youth, Sally&#13;
entertains dreams of someday&#13;
becoming a blackjack dealer in&#13;
Monte Carlo. Sally, played by&#13;
Susan Sarandon (remember Janet&#13;
from "The Rocky Horror Picture&#13;
Show?") encounters problems&#13;
when her estranged husband and&#13;
pregnant sister arrive at her&#13;
doorstep to live. Sally's husband&#13;
Dave is a cocaine dealer; to make&#13;
contacts to sell coke within the&#13;
city, Dave enlists Lou's aid. But&#13;
the mob soon catches up to Dave,&#13;
and he is killed after stashing the&#13;
drugs at Lou's apartment. Lou&#13;
sells the rest of t he coke and uses&#13;
the money to pay for Dave's&#13;
funeral and to wine and dine Sally.&#13;
Lou is deeply infatuated with&#13;
Sally, and uses his new - found&#13;
wealth to present a facade of&#13;
upper - class elegance to impress&#13;
her. Eventually a love relationOPEN&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
65*&#13;
per GAME&#13;
'Aha," says Strollin' Bowlin', "Automatic: Bowling lanes.'&#13;
AS HE CONTINUES HIS INVESTIGATION HE FINDS&#13;
THAT OPEN BOWLING IS ONLY 65C PER GAME IN THE&#13;
REC CENTER. WHY NOT FIND OUT WHAT STROLLIN'&#13;
BOWLIN' HAS ALREADY LEARNED; HOW MUCH FUN&#13;
OPEN BOWLING IS IN THE REC CENTER.&#13;
ship develops between them, and&#13;
Lou's rebirth is almost complete.&#13;
At the conclusion of "Atlantic&#13;
City" Lou and Sally both seem to&#13;
find their niche in the world. Lou&#13;
goes back to Atlantic City to spend&#13;
his life with Grace, and Sally&#13;
heads towards Monte Carlo. The&#13;
films' conclusion may be a bit&#13;
optimistic when compared with&#13;
the overall outlook of the film, but&#13;
I sensed that there could have&#13;
been no other proper ending for&#13;
the film. Lou belongs with "his"&#13;
city, the city that fit his personality&#13;
like an dd worn coat.&#13;
Sally belongs in the world of her&#13;
hopes and dreams, in the glamor&#13;
and splendor of Monte Carlo. In&#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;
this sense, "Atlantic City" is&#13;
somewhat prophetic from the&#13;
first.&#13;
"Atlantic City" is an adult&#13;
drama — a respite from&#13;
teenybopper thrills - and - chills&#13;
flicks. Malle's direction is&#13;
definetely low-key, and at times&#13;
the storyline could be "tighter"&#13;
and more evenly paced. But the&#13;
excellence of the film as a whole&#13;
overshadows these flaws. The&#13;
film's cinematography, while not&#13;
visually exciting, is graphically&#13;
realistic in its' portrayal of&#13;
Atlantic City — decaying&#13;
buildings and garbage fill the&#13;
screen. The film is mature&#13;
technically, made somewhat in&#13;
the classic tradition of o lder film&#13;
dramas.&#13;
Unfortunately, however, this&#13;
type of film almost always garners&#13;
a low box-office turnout.&#13;
Other films, like "Eye of The&#13;
Needle," have been met with the&#13;
same type of unenthusiastic&#13;
reception from movie - going&#13;
audiences. This is a disturbing&#13;
trend in the movies: lunatic&#13;
killers slashing innocent people to&#13;
death seems to be more popular in&#13;
films than do serious human&#13;
dramas. It is sure that movie&#13;
companies will see little reason to&#13;
make mature dramas in the&#13;
future when they bomb at the boxoffice.&#13;
Consequently, we should all&#13;
prepare ourselves for a barrage of&#13;
thriller - slasher - bloody - gore&#13;
flicks. In the meantime, be sure to&#13;
see "Atlantic City" soon, as it is&#13;
on a limited engagement in&#13;
Racine only.&#13;
Youthgrants offers&#13;
research programs&#13;
The Youthgrants Program of&#13;
the National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities is alive and well and&#13;
will once again offer a limited&#13;
number of awards to young people&#13;
in their teens and twenties to&#13;
pursue non - credit out - of - the -&#13;
classroom research projects in&#13;
the humanities. The deadline for&#13;
receipt of completed application&#13;
forms is November 16, and funded&#13;
projects begin next.May.&#13;
Some examples of college - level&#13;
projects funded in this highly&#13;
competitive program are: an&#13;
annotated exhibition of 20th&#13;
century war - time "home - front"&#13;
activities in Minnesota and&#13;
Wisconsin; a complete historical&#13;
survey, presentation, and&#13;
guidebook on a tradition - steeped&#13;
small Florida coastal island; a&#13;
collection and study of migrant&#13;
worker border ballads in South&#13;
Texas; and a film on a small&#13;
Oregon town's innovative survival&#13;
method — backyard goldmining&#13;
during the Great Depression.&#13;
Up to 75 grants will be awarded,&#13;
offering as much as $2,500 for&#13;
individuals, and a few group&#13;
grants up to $10,000 ($15,000 for&#13;
exceptional media projects).&#13;
Youthgrants are intended&#13;
primarily for those between 18&#13;
and 25 who have not yet completed&#13;
academic or professional training&#13;
but can demonstrate the ability to&#13;
design and perform outstanding&#13;
humanities research and translate&#13;
that into an end product to&#13;
share with others. The humanities&#13;
include such subjects as history,&#13;
comparative religion, ethnic&#13;
studies, folklore, anthropology,&#13;
linguistics, the history of a rt, and&#13;
philosophy. The program does not&#13;
offer scholarships, tuition aid, or&#13;
support for degree - related work,&#13;
internships, or foreign travel&#13;
projects.&#13;
If you are interested in the&#13;
program, write to:&#13;
Youthgrants Guidelines&#13;
Mail Stop 103-C&#13;
National Endowment for&#13;
the Humanities&#13;
Washington, D.C. 20506&#13;
This Friday&#13;
Sept. 18&#13;
FALLFEST SPECIAL&#13;
GRILL YOUR OWN&#13;
LUNCH&#13;
UNION SQUARE PATIO 11:00 am - 2:00 pm&#13;
'/, Lb. Burgers, % Lb. Brats, % Lb. Jumba Dog,&#13;
with Potato Salad &amp; Pi ckle&#13;
$1.50&#13;
(Additional Sandwich M.00 Extra)&#13;
RIB E YE STEAK '2.50&#13;
LIVE ENT ERTAINMENT BY: MINE UNE SPECIAL &#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 17,1981&#13;
^•°!!!!&#13;
lLbrin9s&#13;
'&#13;
a&#13;
S Club meetings announced&#13;
Center will open its fall season on&#13;
The Prairie Performing Arts&#13;
Center will open its fall season on&#13;
Friday, September 18 with a&#13;
concert featuring Milwaukean&#13;
Don Nedobeck's Water Street&#13;
Tavern Band.&#13;
The six-man combo is well -&#13;
known throughout the midwest for&#13;
its free - wheeling Dixieland style.&#13;
Nedobeck himself plays jazz&#13;
clarinet and trumpet. For two&#13;
years he played with the legendary&#13;
Clyde McCoy's Band.&#13;
Tickets for the concert are $5.00&#13;
and are available at the three&#13;
•&#13;
Heritage Banks in Racine and at&#13;
the Schmitt Music Co., 1409&#13;
Washington Ave.&#13;
Artist O Keefe film to bo shown&#13;
The film "Georgia O'Keeffe: A&#13;
Celebration" will be shown during&#13;
the 1-2 p.m. activity period on&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 23 in Moln 105.&#13;
The 60-minute color film,&#13;
produced in 1977, presents the&#13;
artist discussing her life and her&#13;
work. She tells of h er marriage to&#13;
IMMM&#13;
photographer Alfred Stieglitz and&#13;
recounts their involvement in the&#13;
formative years of the modern art&#13;
™en&#13;
i!&#13;
nt in America. It includes&#13;
O Keeffe's paintings, showing&#13;
their wide range in subject and&#13;
style.&#13;
The event is being sponsored by&#13;
the Library / Learning Center.&#13;
Pre-Med&#13;
Itching to listen to a good&#13;
speaker? Dr. Zaezeung Kim, a&#13;
Raane allergist, will speak to&#13;
Parkside's Pre-Med Club about&#13;
his busy practice on Thursday,&#13;
September 17, in the Library Staff&#13;
Lounge, D-l level at 7:30 p.m. The&#13;
meeting is free of charge and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
History&#13;
The Parkside History Club will&#13;
meet Monday, Sept. 21 from 1-2&#13;
p.m. in Union 104.&#13;
Election of club officers will&#13;
take place, along with discussion&#13;
of the club's SOC budget and&#13;
setting the agenda for fall, and&#13;
some spring, activities.&#13;
Accounting&#13;
Budget cuts aimed at&#13;
Veterans Administration&#13;
By ending or reducing four&#13;
Veterans Administration (VA)&#13;
programs that failed to achieve&#13;
their original objectives, VA&#13;
estimates that $110 million will be&#13;
saved toward carrying out the&#13;
pledge of Congress and the&#13;
President that important veterans&#13;
benefits will not be curtailed.&#13;
Congressional legislation signed&#13;
into law by the President in&#13;
August ended most subsidized&#13;
flight training, reduced payments&#13;
for correspondence training, put&#13;
severe restrictions on education&#13;
loans to veterans receiving&#13;
education payment and changed&#13;
dental and burial benefits for&#13;
some veterans.&#13;
The programs and savings&#13;
involved are:&#13;
• Flight Training. Effective&#13;
Oct. 1, VA payments for flight&#13;
training will end for all those not&#13;
participating in the program on&#13;
August 31. Those who enroll in&#13;
flight training in September will&#13;
be paid only for flight training&#13;
performed before Oct. 1. In July,&#13;
5,840 veterans were receiving&#13;
benefits for flight training.&#13;
Elimination of the program will&#13;
save $14.1 m illion in fiscal year&#13;
1982, VA said.&#13;
Rationale for ending the&#13;
program was based on General&#13;
Accounting Office and VA studies&#13;
which showed that most trainees&#13;
in GI Bill funded flight training&#13;
programs used the skill only for&#13;
avocational purposes. Only 16 per&#13;
cent of the graduates had full -&#13;
time jobs related to the training,&#13;
according to the GAO report.&#13;
• Correspondence Training.&#13;
Based on a number of studies that&#13;
show an extremely high dropout&#13;
rate among trainees enrolled in&#13;
correspondence training&#13;
programs and a high incidence of&#13;
fraud and abuse, the law now&#13;
requires that veterans who train&#13;
in correspondence programs&#13;
share a larger part of the cost. The&#13;
amount reimbursable by VA for&#13;
such programs will be reduced on&#13;
Oct. 1 to 55 per cent of the cost of&#13;
training. VA now pays 70 per cent&#13;
of the cost. Estimated savings in&#13;
fiscal year 1982 will be $3.2&#13;
million. Enrollment at the end of&#13;
July in such programs totaled&#13;
25,615.&#13;
• Education Loans. Ending for&#13;
most veterans on Oct. 1 is a&#13;
&lt;?,\&#13;
addition to their GI Bill payments,&#13;
low interest loans from VA. A&#13;
savings of approximately $6&#13;
million is expected from sharply&#13;
curtailing this program in fiscal&#13;
year 1982 and avoiding the losses&#13;
from the high default rate in the&#13;
loan program.&#13;
• Dental Care. The period of&#13;
time under Which former servicemen&#13;
could get free dental care&#13;
for up to a year after leaving&#13;
military service has been reduced&#13;
to 90 days. This reduction will&#13;
save an estimated $17.7 million.&#13;
• Burial Benefits. A burial&#13;
allowance of $300, previously&#13;
available to all war veterans, will&#13;
be limited to veterans eligible for&#13;
VA pension or compensation and&#13;
to those who die in VA medical&#13;
facilities. The estimated savings&#13;
is $75.2 million.&#13;
VA officials said that&#13;
regulations governing the administration&#13;
of these changes are&#13;
now being written and will be&#13;
forwarded shortly to VA regional&#13;
offices in each state.&#13;
For the first time in Parkside's&#13;
history, "Big 8" accounting firms&#13;
will be recruiting here this year.&#13;
To help students prepare for these&#13;
interviews, Accounting Club is&#13;
sponsoring a 2-part workshop on&#13;
"Interviewing Strategy." The&#13;
first part, conducted by the "Big&#13;
8" firm Peat, Marwick, Mitchell&#13;
and Co., will give business majors&#13;
an opportunity to develop interviewing&#13;
skills and strategies.&#13;
The workshop will feature a&#13;
simulated interview. • T he&#13;
workshop* will take place on&#13;
September 17 at 7 p.m. in rooms&#13;
104 and 106 in the Union.&#13;
A second workshop on September&#13;
30th will feature several&#13;
mock interviews between students&#13;
and representatives of four "Big&#13;
8" firms.&#13;
vi Women in Business&#13;
The new Women in Business&#13;
Club will be holding their first&#13;
meeting on Friday, September 18,&#13;
at 2:30 p.m. in Union 207. The&#13;
purpose of the Women in Business&#13;
Club is to promote participation in&#13;
social, community and school&#13;
activities as well as provide&#13;
educational experiences for&#13;
women entering all fields of&#13;
employment.&#13;
The meeting agenda is as&#13;
CAN YOU&#13;
HANDLE?&#13;
THE&#13;
BEAST&#13;
COMING TO&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
follows:&#13;
— Elect new officers.&#13;
— Set up new committees.&#13;
— Complete plans for tentative&#13;
events such as: seminars to attend,&#13;
guest speakers, membership&#13;
in Phi Gamma Nu, fund raisers&#13;
and community involvement.&#13;
— Wine and cheese will be&#13;
served.&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Like to bowl? Travel? Meet new&#13;
people? Why not try out for the&#13;
1981-82 Parkside Intercollegiate&#13;
Bowling Team! A 24 game&#13;
qualifier is being held to determine&#13;
the 8 men and 8 women that&#13;
will make up the Intercollegiate&#13;
teams.&#13;
The Parkside Bowling team&#13;
currently participates in the&#13;
Wisconsin Big 6 bowling conference&#13;
which includes five other&#13;
UW schools: Milwaukee Madison,&#13;
Oshkosh, Whitewater and Platteville.&#13;
In addition the team annually&#13;
competes in a number of&#13;
local, area and national tournaments&#13;
with the highlights being&#13;
the Collegiate Team Match game&#13;
in St. Louis and the Walt Peabody&#13;
Classic in Las Vegas.&#13;
If you are interested in trying&#13;
out for this year's team, contact&#13;
Mike Menzhuber in the Rec.&#13;
Center. Qualifiers will end Sept.&#13;
27, so if you are interested in&#13;
bowling this year, stop down now&#13;
in the Rec. Center and sign up for&#13;
your Qualifying times.&#13;
Sunnysirte Club&#13;
7517 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Store Hours: Daily 8 A. M. to 2 P. M.&#13;
HOME OF THE INFLATION FIGHTERS&#13;
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Come See Our 2 For 1 Board&#13;
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Lasagne&#13;
Fri.&#13;
Fish &amp; Fries&#13;
Sat.&#13;
Stuffed&#13;
Shells&#13;
FEELRIG THE SQUEES?&#13;
ART SUPPLIES&#13;
10% off&#13;
(With Parkside I.D.)&#13;
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Saturday, Sept. 19&#13;
9 p. m. Union Square&#13;
$&#13;
l&#13;
so Parkside Students&#13;
*2.00 Ouests&#13;
A contemporary entertainment event &#13;
Thursday, September 17,1981 RANGER&#13;
Lawson resigns&#13;
by Steve Brunner&#13;
As the grass begins to turn&#13;
green this March a familiar face&#13;
will be missing from the Parkside&#13;
track and field scene.&#13;
Bob Lawson, who is the only&#13;
original Parkside coach&#13;
remaining since the university&#13;
was erected in 1969, officially&#13;
bowed out as. associate professor&#13;
of physical education and men's&#13;
head track coach on Tuesday.&#13;
Lawson will be heading east to&#13;
the United States Naval Academy&#13;
in Annapolis, Maryland where he&#13;
will be associate professor of&#13;
physical education and assistant&#13;
track coach.&#13;
The reason for his departure is&#13;
simple. "Professional betterment.&#13;
Plus the track program and&#13;
development are ideal," Lawson&#13;
said.&#13;
Lawson, who was a world class&#13;
decathalete in the late 1950's, will&#13;
be joining newly elected coach A1&#13;
Cantello, a long time friend and&#13;
former world record holder in the&#13;
javelin at the Naval Academy.&#13;
During his 12 years of c oaching&#13;
at Parkside, Lawson has&#13;
demonstrated why he is thought of&#13;
as one of the best coaches of track&#13;
and field in America. He has&#13;
coached 20 athletes to 26 na tional&#13;
titles within the past decade. His&#13;
record is unsurpassed by other&#13;
Wisconsin collegiate track and&#13;
field coaches.&#13;
Lawson also led Ranger teams&#13;
into the top 10 finishes at the NAIA&#13;
national track meet for seven&#13;
consecutive years between 1973-&#13;
1979. In addition, he coached cross&#13;
country for three years with&#13;
sensational results. In 1971 he le d&#13;
the men's team to seventh place in&#13;
the national meet. Correspondingly,&#13;
after a nine year layoff, he&#13;
guided the women's cross country&#13;
team to a national title last year.&#13;
Yet Lawson still has reluctance&#13;
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WEEK'S&#13;
MOVIE&#13;
FEATURE&#13;
F&#13;
A&#13;
E&#13;
Athletic budget cut&#13;
BOB LAWSON&#13;
towards his days at Parkside.&#13;
"The biggest disappointment&#13;
while being here was that we&#13;
didn't have the numbers of&#13;
athletes to work with. But the&#13;
talent we produced was good," he&#13;
said, adding "Most of our personnel&#13;
came from right here in&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin."&#13;
Although Lawso n's&#13;
achievements shine through as&#13;
being a great coach of runners,&#13;
jumpers and throwers, he is also&#13;
the American pioneer coach of&#13;
race walkers. His talents have&#13;
helped develop numerous&#13;
collegiate as well as national&#13;
champions.&#13;
"I had never intended to coach&#13;
walkers until an athlete of mine,&#13;
Mike DeWitt, came and asked me&#13;
to put him in exhibitions as a race&#13;
walker in the 1971 season,"&#13;
Lawson said. "I agreed, and since&#13;
the sport was new to me I began to&#13;
investigate and learn more about&#13;
the event." Since then, he has&#13;
become known as the guru of the&#13;
American walking scene and is&#13;
now responsible for the training of&#13;
Olympic Development Program&#13;
for Race Walking.&#13;
Career Center to&#13;
hold workshop&#13;
Wednesday, September 23 from&#13;
1:00 to 1:50 p.m. a mini - workshop&#13;
will be given on how to use&#13;
Parkside's Career Resource&#13;
Center for occupational related&#13;
research. The session will take&#13;
place in Wyllie Library Learning&#13;
Center, D-174.&#13;
No advanced registration is&#13;
necessary. For more information&#13;
contact Wendi Schneider, Community&#13;
Student Service (553-24%)&#13;
or Barbara Larson, Student&#13;
Development (553-2122).&#13;
by Karen Norwood&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Never say die! This seems to be&#13;
the motto of the Athletic Department&#13;
after $77,000 wa s cut out of&#13;
their budget to meet state - ordered&#13;
reductions. The Athletic&#13;
Department not only will lose&#13;
equipment and supplies money,&#13;
but also 2.5 presently occupied&#13;
positions.&#13;
Parkside's men's and women's&#13;
swimming teams will be cut, and&#13;
the coaching position presently&#13;
held by Barb Lawson will be&#13;
eliminated during the 1982-83&#13;
school year. Also cut is the faculty&#13;
position held by Rudy Collum.&#13;
Men's and women's track teams&#13;
will be combined under one coach&#13;
in the 1982-83 school year.&#13;
Presently the two track coach&#13;
positions are held by Barb and&#13;
Bob Lawson; however, according&#13;
to some sources, Bob Lawson has&#13;
accepted the position of A ssistant&#13;
Track Coach at the Naval&#13;
Academy in Annapolis, Maryland.&#13;
Wayne Dannehl, Parkside's&#13;
Athletic Director, commenting on&#13;
the athletic budget cuts, said that&#13;
the University has gone through a&#13;
reordering of priorities and that&#13;
the athletic program "came out a&#13;
little short." Although Dannehl&#13;
didn't necessarily agree with the&#13;
budget cuts, he felt that it was the&#13;
athletic department's turn to be&#13;
trimmed.&#13;
Dannehl also said that the&#13;
coaches whose positions were&#13;
eliminated would not be placed in&#13;
other positions. He went on to say&#13;
that they would not be rehired&#13;
until the budget cuts were&#13;
restored, and he is "not optimistic&#13;
that the money will be returned."&#13;
Linda Henderson, women's&#13;
volleyball coach, was "very&#13;
disappointed" with the athletic&#13;
budget cuts, but she believes that&#13;
"We (the athletic department)&#13;
will survive and be strong."&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Carla&#13;
Stoffle, when asked to comment&#13;
on the budget cuts, remarked,&#13;
"Dannehl and the coaches have&#13;
done a good job, but athletics&#13;
could not go untouched." Obviously,&#13;
they could not cut the&#13;
academic budget and leave the&#13;
athletic budget untouched.."&#13;
Stoffle felt that "Parkside has&#13;
had an excellent athletic&#13;
program." Parkside athletics will&#13;
have to get through this period as&#13;
best it can.".&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of beer? All you have to do is fill out this&#13;
form and pick the correct winners. Put a check mark by your picks and&#13;
bring the form down to the Ranger office, WLLC D139.&#13;
Atlanta at Cleveland&#13;
Buffalo at Cincinnati&#13;
Houston at N.Y. Jets&#13;
Kansas at Seattle —7-&#13;
Miami at Baltimore&#13;
Minnesota vs. Green Bay at Milw.&#13;
New England at Pittsburgh&#13;
New Orleans at San Francisco —&#13;
N.Y. Giants at Dallas&#13;
Oakland at Detroit&#13;
St. Louis at Tampa Bay&#13;
San Diego at Denver&#13;
Washington at Philadelphia&#13;
Rams at Chicago&#13;
Tie Breaker:&#13;
the Minnesota - Green Bay game.&#13;
will be the total combined points scored in&#13;
Name —&#13;
S.S. No.&#13;
Rules:&#13;
1. One entry per person.&#13;
2. Entrants must be Parkside students.&#13;
4 5n?Sf&#13;
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emb€rs and their families are ineligible. 4. Entry must be clipped from Ranger issue&#13;
preceedin^ ttTgamS™"'° "* Ranger&#13;
°&#13;
fflCe by noon of the Friday&#13;
6. Winners will be chosen by the Sports Editor.&#13;
7. Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks&#13;
8. Entries must be legible to be considered.&#13;
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IN THE PARKSIDE UNION 10:00 am - 4:00 pm&#13;
Over 40 Varieties of Candies,&#13;
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• SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
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RANGER Thursday, September 17,1981&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Women get slaughtered&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
The Parkside women's&#13;
volleyball team got off to an up&#13;
and down start this past week with&#13;
wins over UW-Whitewater and&#13;
UW-Madison and two losses to&#13;
UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
The Rangers started the season&#13;
last Wednesday with a poorly&#13;
played victory over Whitewater in&#13;
an away game. "We played really&#13;
poorly, but they played worse,"&#13;
commented coach Linda Henderson,&#13;
adding, "They&#13;
(Whitewater) have a new coach&#13;
and they're not really organized.&#13;
They never were a volleyball&#13;
power."&#13;
Last Friday the Rangers&#13;
travelled to Madison for games&#13;
against Wisconsin and UWGolf&#13;
opener&#13;
Milwaukee. Parkside turned the&#13;
tide in their first match with the&#13;
Madison team. After losing the&#13;
first game 12-15 Parkside came&#13;
back taking the next three games,&#13;
15-7, 15-12 an d 15-10.&#13;
"The kids played extremely&#13;
well, and Madison had difficulty,"&#13;
said Henderson. Sherry Festge,&#13;
Lauri Pope, Callie Lee and Laurie&#13;
Hess were all outstanding in this&#13;
match.&#13;
The Rangers then lost to&#13;
Milwaukee in three straight&#13;
games, 9-15, 1-15, and 12-15. "We'&#13;
started out awfully slow. They're&#13;
old and intelligent," said Henderson.&#13;
&#13;
The bad luck and bad play&#13;
carried into Monday's match at&#13;
Mi'waukee, which the Rangers&#13;
again lost in three games, 13-15, 9-&#13;
15 and 5-15. "Every time you dress&#13;
them in black (Parkside's away&#13;
uniforms) they play like they're in&#13;
a morgue," said Henderson.&#13;
The Rangers will take their 2-2&#13;
record into this weekend's Ranger&#13;
Invitational. Ten teams will take&#13;
part with games starting on&#13;
Friday at 3 p.m. and Saturday at&#13;
8:30 a.m. The championship game&#13;
will be Saturday afternoon at 5&#13;
p.m. Teams competing with&#13;
Parkside in the tournament will&#13;
be Loras College, Carthage&#13;
College, Northern Illinois&#13;
University, Chicago Circle,&#13;
College of St. Francis, UW--&#13;
LaCrosse, Chicago State, St.&#13;
Xavier and Valparaiso.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
THE WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL TEAM in action Tuesday night.&#13;
Rangers place 10th sP&#13;
orts Calendar&#13;
• Thursday, Sept. 17-Tennis vs. Marquette, (3 p.m.)&#13;
by Earlene Frederick&#13;
Parkside's golf team began its&#13;
season last Friday by competing&#13;
in the Stevens Point Open at the&#13;
Stevens Point Country Club. The&#13;
Rangers finished tenth out of&#13;
fourteen teams with a score of 419.&#13;
UW-Madison won the tournament&#13;
with a score of 387. Tied for&#13;
medalist in the 18 hole event were&#13;
Scott Turnbull of LaCrosse and&#13;
Rob Peters of Madison with one&#13;
over par 73.&#13;
Scoring for the Rangers was led&#13;
by fourth year player Todd&#13;
Schalinske with 79. Todd was last&#13;
years' most valuable player.&#13;
Mark Peterson, third year&#13;
player, scored 80. Second year&#13;
players Bob Sobol, Gary Fox and&#13;
John Schneider scored 82, 88, a nd&#13;
90 re spectively.&#13;
"I'm hoping we'll be pretty good&#13;
this year," said Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens. "They are all very&#13;
capable."&#13;
Sunday and Monday the team&#13;
competed in a tournament in Eau&#13;
Clair at the Eau Clair Country&#13;
Club. The Rangers finished&#13;
eleventh out of sixteen teams with&#13;
a score of 810. UW-Whitewater&#13;
won the tournament with a score&#13;
of 756.&#13;
"The team will progressively&#13;
get better," said Bob Sobol. "It&#13;
has a lot of potential."&#13;
Todd Schalinske was the&#13;
tournament medalist with a first&#13;
-19 _ day score of 69, two under par, and&#13;
Sign up for intramurals now ^T44&#13;
onddayscoreof75 foratoM&#13;
"I feel I did pretty good,&#13;
especially since it's a big tournament,"&#13;
said Todd. "Off the tee&#13;
made the difference because it's a&#13;
tight course." |&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 17 — Tennis vs. Marquette, (3 p.m.)&#13;
Fr?.&#13;
d&#13;
f,&#13;
y&#13;
' lf* "" Golf vs&#13;
- UW-Oshkosh Invitational, Appleton;&#13;
Volleyball vs. Ranger Invitational, (3 p.m.)&#13;
Saturday^ Sept. 19 — Volleyball vs. Ranger Invitational, (8:30 a m )•&#13;
Marquette, Mitchell Park, Milwaukee; Tennis vs'.&#13;
UW-Oshkosh Tournament, (8 a.m.)&#13;
SUpm^' SCPt 20 ~~ S&#13;
°&#13;
CCer VS&#13;
' West Michigan, Kalamazoo, Mich. (2&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 22 - Tennis vs. Carthage College (3 p.m.); Soccer vs&#13;
Aurora 111. College (3:30 p.m.); Golf v s. Marquette &amp; UW-Milwaukee&#13;
at rumblebrook C.C.&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 24—Tennis vs. DePaul University (2:30 p.m.)&#13;
Parkside's Intramural&#13;
Department is offering several&#13;
events this fall. The purpose of&#13;
intramural sports is to provide&#13;
students with an opportunity to&#13;
participate, learn lifelong sports&#13;
skills and achieve physical fitness.&#13;
The scheduled events are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
FLAG FOOTBALL (COED) —&#13;
Sign up is through Sept. 16. Flag&#13;
Football League is from Sept. 21 -&#13;
Nov. 6. S ign up sheets are in the&#13;
PE Building on the wall opposite&#13;
the trophy showpase. There will&#13;
be nine players to a side.&#13;
4th annual CROP&#13;
Walk to be held&#13;
The fourth annual CROP Walk&#13;
for Hunger will be held Sunday,&#13;
Oct. 4.&#13;
The walk will begin at the First&#13;
United Methodist Church parking&#13;
lot, at the corner of 60th St. and&#13;
Sheridan Road in Kenosha.&#13;
Registration will begin at 12:30&#13;
p.m. and the walk starts at 1 p.m.&#13;
Ten miles later, the route will end&#13;
at the same parking lot.&#13;
Last year 25% or about $2,400&#13;
was returned to Kenosha for the&#13;
Kenosha Ecumenical Hunger&#13;
Committee to use to supplement&#13;
their emergency food program in&#13;
the country.&#13;
For more information contact&#13;
Pat Elmer at 658-8966.&#13;
GOLF (MEN'S AND&#13;
WOMEN'S) — Peoria Golf will be&#13;
played at Petrifying Springs at the&#13;
players' convenience and expense.&#13;
All players must play with&#13;
partners to verify scores.&#13;
TENNIS (MEN'S AND&#13;
WOMEN'S) — September and&#13;
October, singles only. Round&#13;
robin; two out of three sets. No&#13;
add scoring, tie breaker at 6-6.&#13;
Sign up sheets are in the PE&#13;
Building.&#13;
SOFTBALL ONE DAY&#13;
TOURNAMENT (COED) — O ct.&#13;
17. A team consists of 11 players.&#13;
Sign up sheets are in the PE&#13;
Building.&#13;
RACQUETBALL — A tournament&#13;
will be played after opponents&#13;
contact each other and&#13;
arrange for their court time.&#13;
Tournament arrangements will be&#13;
determined according to the&#13;
number of entries received. Both&#13;
singles, male and female, and&#13;
mixed female and male doubles&#13;
will be offered.&#13;
TABLE TENNIS — The table&#13;
tennis table is in the upstairs&#13;
lobby in front of the FencingRoom.&#13;
Opponents are to sign up&#13;
for their matches and pick up&#13;
their rule sheets in the Issue Room&#13;
to avoid conflicts. The type of&#13;
tournament is dependent upon the&#13;
number of entries. Paddles may&#13;
be checked out, but you must&#13;
provide your own table tennis&#13;
balls.&#13;
Bob Sobol finished with 163&#13;
Gary Fox, 163, Mark Peterson, 165&#13;
and John Schneider, 175.&#13;
"The attitude of the team is&#13;
very good," said Coach Stephens.&#13;
"They really know their game&#13;
they like golf, and it makes it fun&#13;
for the team and the coach."&#13;
The team's next tournament is&#13;
Friday in Appleton at the Chaska&#13;
Golf Course. The event is hosted&#13;
by Oshkosh.&#13;
THE&#13;
BEAST&#13;
IS C OMING&#13;
U NI ON S QUARE&#13;
i&#13;
s&#13;
i&#13;
W&amp;HM&#13;
SPEC]&#13;
csZfe*-&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUA RE&#13;
Hungry Head's money saver&#13;
SAVE 50* when you buy a regular size&#13;
HOT BEEF BOMBER&#13;
Meaty mounds of sliced hot beef, piled inside of a fresh trench roll. Try a hot&#13;
beef topped with two slices of melting mozzarella, swiss, or your favorite&#13;
cheese. Expires 9/30/81&#13;
'&#13;
Hungry Head Sandwich Shops&#13;
Two heads ARE better than one!&#13;
HEAD WEST 3812 Roosevelt Road 694-1212&#13;
HEAD EAST 506 - 56th Street 652-1212&#13;
•&#13;
(next to the Lake Theatres)&#13;
WE RE OPEN WHEN YOU RE HUNGRY&#13;
Sun-Thur: 10:30am til 2 30am&#13;
Fri-Sat: 10:30am til 3am&#13;
PR 9/17 TP_&#13;
[COUPON'&#13;
\c&#13;
Barbara&#13;
and&#13;
\*&#13;
c&#13;
cP*&#13;
Mike Smith&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 23&#13;
12 noon-2 p.m.&#13;
Union 104-106&#13;
NO ADMISSION&#13;
CHARGE&#13;
Wine will be sold&#13;
"YASOU" PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
EVERY&#13;
Thursday&#13;
IS GREEK&#13;
GYROS&#13;
DAY&#13;
Spiced Greek meet slices in&#13;
folded pita bread, topped wifti&#13;
sliced onions, tomatoes and&#13;
a creamy dressing.&#13;
51 ~ &#13;
Thursday, September 17,1981 RANGER&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Rangers win at home&#13;
by Charles Perce&#13;
In their second effort away from&#13;
home, the Parkside soccer team&#13;
dropped a 3-2 overtime decision to&#13;
Northern Illinois University&#13;
(NIU) on September 9th. As in the&#13;
Madison (Camp Randall) game of&#13;
September 5th, the team played&#13;
on artificial turf. Their lack of&#13;
experience on turf was a major&#13;
factor in the loss at DeKalb as well&#13;
as at Camp Randall. On natural&#13;
"home" turf, Parkside overturned&#13;
Beloit 9-0 on Saturday.&#13;
The score at half-time (1-1) was&#13;
the result of only three shots taken&#13;
at NIU's goal. NIU had taken&#13;
thirteen shots at our goal by halftime.&#13;
&#13;
In the second half, Parkside&#13;
took sixteen shots at their goal,&#13;
while NIU took three. At the end of&#13;
the game, Parkside outshot NIU&#13;
19-16. Jeff Dennehy had the "hotfoot"&#13;
that knocked in both goals.&#13;
Game's end score was 2-2.&#13;
In the ten minute overtime,&#13;
Parkside had plenty of opportunities&#13;
to score, but only one&#13;
shot hit the goal. Three others&#13;
were deflected with six minutes to&#13;
go.&#13;
* * *&#13;
Jeff Dennehy had the "hot-foot"&#13;
again on Saturday when Parkside&#13;
played Beloit at home on natural&#13;
turf. He scored four goals, and set&#13;
a new school record. Dennehy&#13;
scored a record six goals in two&#13;
games, breaking the old record of&#13;
five. Dennehy's spectacular&#13;
performance aided in Parkside's&#13;
9-0 slaughter over Beloit. Also&#13;
scoring for Parkside were John&#13;
Onyiego (with one goal and two&#13;
assists), Rich Blay, Don Cops,&#13;
Ralph DeGraff, and Dan Theisen.&#13;
Carlos Duchicela and Bob&#13;
Newstrom had three and four&#13;
assists respectively.&#13;
Within the first 4 1 /2 minutes,&#13;
Parkside had three chances to&#13;
score. Roger Menk added some&#13;
excitement by kicking two shots&#13;
over the goal. Later Menk injured&#13;
his ankle attempting to steal the&#13;
ball.&#13;
Dennehy started the rally off by&#13;
scoring at the 12:45 mark. Theisen&#13;
then scored at the 21:10 mark&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 23&#13;
SEMINAR "Child Abuse" at 8:30 a.m. in Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312 for more information.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE at 12 noon in Union 104-106 featuring Mike and Barbara Smith&#13;
Admission is free for Parkside students, staff and faculty. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
MOVIE "Georgia O'Keefe: A Celebration" will be shown at 1 p.m. in MOLN 105.&#13;
Admission is free for Parkside students, faculty and staff.&#13;
SEMINAR "Sexual Assault" at 3 p.m. in Union 207. Panel participants are: Barb&#13;
Wooden of St. Catherine's Hospital, Kathy Geniesse of the Sexual Assault&#13;
Treatment Center; Robert Zapf, the District Attorney of Kenosha County, Paula&#13;
Michaelson of the Kenosha Police Department and Linda Marcussen of the&#13;
Kenoshans Against Sexual Assault, Inc. Admission is free for Parkside students,&#13;
staff and faculty. Sponsored by the Parkside Health Office.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
WANTED&#13;
EXPERIENCED babysitter needed.&#13;
Daytime hours to fit your schedule, occasional&#13;
or routine. Own transportation&#13;
desirable, wind Point, Racine. Call 639-&#13;
0996.&#13;
RIDE TO UW-P by 7 a.m. Tuesday and&#13;
Wednesday. Call 637-3705.&#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;
Campus Service/Time Inc., 4337 W. Indian&#13;
School "C", Phoenix, Ar. 85031.&#13;
STUDENT PHOTOGRAPHER at UWParkside&#13;
needs female nude models, ages&#13;
20 and up of more or less average proportions,&#13;
for independent study proiect exploring&#13;
deeper aspects of beauty (working&#13;
title: "Archetypes" - advisor: Dennis&#13;
Bayuzick). Most photographs will not show&#13;
model's face. Photographs chosen may be&#13;
exhibited at Parkside, published In portfolio;&#13;
signed releases required. Sessions&#13;
chaperoned If r equested. Write: D.R., P.O.&#13;
Box 5112, Racine, wis. 53405. Include full&#13;
length photo (returnable, need not be&#13;
nude), brief description.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
HANDBOOK • Psychology 101, three books&#13;
for English .101. 654-0595.&#13;
DORMATORY SIZE REFRIGERATOR, 4.4&#13;
cu. feet, coppertone Coldspot. 19" high, 19"&#13;
deep, 21" wide. 652-0324 after 9 p.m.&#13;
USED BOOKS AT Martha Merrell's "old&#13;
book corner." 3096 off all books If y ou bring&#13;
this ad with you. Hardcover books at&#13;
r^r.&#13;
b&#13;
."&#13;
CL&#13;
p&#13;
I&#13;
lces&#13;
-&#13;
312 Six,h st ' Racine,&#13;
-&#13;
B00K EXCHANGE is a better&#13;
deal! Open M-W-F, 1 - 2 p.m. See ad this&#13;
Issue.&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
TYPING. Resumes, term papers, theses,&#13;
manuscripts, etc. 14 years experience.&#13;
Reasonable rates. 694-1825 or 652-6599.&#13;
LOST AND FOUND&#13;
LOST - Two black Samsonlte briefcases in&#13;
Comm Arts parking lot. Contents: government&#13;
forms and grad school textbooks.&#13;
R^ard. Contact Mr. Oberbruner, phone&#13;
553-2269.&#13;
SKI THE&#13;
AUSTRIAN&#13;
ALPS&#13;
Includes:&#13;
• Transportation to&#13;
and from Innsbruck&#13;
• 8 Nights Hotel&#13;
• 15 Meals &amp; More&#13;
$ 200 deposit due 10/15/81&#13;
Jan. 2-11, 1982 Just*821&#13;
Contact Glenn Loschenkohl&#13;
554-6224&#13;
from twenty feet out. The next&#13;
score on a kick by Rich Blay at&#13;
23:36 into the half. Dennehy then&#13;
added his second goal at 26:48,&#13;
and 3 minutes later John Onyiego&#13;
added to the score. At this point,&#13;
the crowd came alive and&#13;
cheered. With 1:44 left to go in the&#13;
half, Ralph DeGraff boosted&#13;
Parkside's score higher with a&#13;
goal that deflected off of the&#13;
goalies' hand. The half-time score&#13;
was 6-0.&#13;
Within the first five minutes erf&#13;
the second half, Parkside had two&#13;
goals invalidated due to penalties.&#13;
Fifteen minutes later, Don Cops&#13;
scored, bringing the crowd&#13;
scattered throughout the stands&#13;
back to life. Dennehy then struck&#13;
again with 24:39 and 18:14&#13;
remaining on the clock. The final&#13;
score stood at 9-0.&#13;
The first time Beloit shot at our&#13;
goal was 23:24 into the game.&#13;
Beloit put up a good fight in the&#13;
second half, despite the number of&#13;
injured players.&#13;
Coach Henderson said: "Injuries&#13;
can happen. It is just unfortunate&#13;
that it had to happen&#13;
now. Any team can have an&#13;
abundance of injuries at any one&#13;
time."&#13;
At half-time, Beloit had taken&#13;
two shots at our goal, compared to&#13;
twenty-seven shots at theirs. The&#13;
total at the end of the game was&#13;
44-5. Parkside had four goalie&#13;
saves, and Beloit had 18. The&#13;
Rangers had twenty-two personal&#13;
fouls to Beloit's 11, plus one yellow&#13;
card.&#13;
* • *&#13;
Parkside will be on the road for&#13;
the next four games. Their next&#13;
home game, the UW Chancellor's&#13;
Cup Tournament, is Oct. 2-3. The&#13;
game will be held behind the Phy&#13;
Ed Building.&#13;
photo by Jim Mertins&#13;
THE SOCCER TEAM has better luck on their home turf.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414-248-9141&#13;
24726&#13;
-&#13;
75th Street - Rt. 50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wi&#13;
414 - 843-2388&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5V4% Interest Iff Your Dally&#13;
Balance Is $500.00 er Mere!&#13;
WE'RE HIRE TO HHP YOU GRO¥ </text>
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              <text>PSGA Senate rejects SUFAC budget for second time</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside PSGA election&#13;
Grievance filed&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Presidential hopefuls talk&#13;
by 7 .Ipff Jeff Wirlfc Wicks&#13;
Students had a chance to see&#13;
and hear the PSGA presidential&#13;
candidates for this year's elections&#13;
Monday afternoon when The&#13;
Ranger sponsored a presidential&#13;
forum in mid - Main Place. Approximately&#13;
100 people attended&#13;
the event, which was moderated&#13;
by the Ranger Editor, Ken Meyer.&#13;
Each of the four candidates made&#13;
a speech first, with a question&#13;
session afterward.&#13;
The first person to speak was&#13;
Mike Axelson, a write - in candidate.&#13;
Axelson spoke about the&#13;
"basic problem" of student&#13;
apathy, and stressed more student&#13;
responsibility and awareness in&#13;
student government. "It is the&#13;
problem of apathy that I have&#13;
tried to find a solution to;" he&#13;
said. "I am aware of the other&#13;
issues that confront us at&#13;
Parkside, but I feel that the&#13;
number one problem is apathy,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Next to speak was Jim Kreuser,&#13;
the incumbant who is running for&#13;
a second term. Kreuser pointed&#13;
out major achievements of his&#13;
past performance as President,&#13;
including the pad outside the&#13;
Union being extended and fenced&#13;
in. "My biggest concern was our&#13;
biggest tradition, The End," he&#13;
said. "There was a possibility of&#13;
limiting it, and this, at least in the&#13;
short run, will not limit The End."&#13;
Kreuser also mentioned the first&#13;
United Council meeting ever held&#13;
at Parkside in June, and the fact&#13;
that a new bookstore company&#13;
was unanimously decided to take&#13;
over for next fall. "I've been to&#13;
many University Committees,&#13;
and I believe all the Faculty&#13;
Senate meetings, and I have a&#13;
good rapport with them (faculty),&#13;
and they are really willing to&#13;
listen to students' concerns. I'm&#13;
sorry to say that my colleagues&#13;
Jim Bearden&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
PSGA presidential candidate&#13;
Phil Pogreba filed an official&#13;
grievance with the Elections&#13;
Committee Monday against fellow&#13;
candidate, current PSGA&#13;
President Jim Kreuser.&#13;
The following is the text of&#13;
Pogreba's grievance letter to the&#13;
committee:&#13;
"On Sunday, Feb. 28 at approximately&#13;
10:40 p. m. four&#13;
members of my campaign&#13;
committee and myself entered the&#13;
building with the intent to put up&#13;
posters. As we were unrolling&#13;
posters and getting organized to&#13;
put them up a security guard&#13;
came up to us and said we had to&#13;
leave the building. While we were&#13;
putting the posters away the&#13;
security guard stayed and watched&#13;
us. While I was in the office&#13;
putting the posters away the&#13;
security guard was telling Kathy,&#13;
one of my campaign committee&#13;
chairs, that personally he didn't&#13;
care if we put them up but that&#13;
'he' called and that he wanted us&#13;
out of the building. When asked&#13;
who 'he' was he replied, Jim&#13;
Kreuser, who was working in the&#13;
Union building. He then went on to&#13;
say that he didn't know much of&#13;
what was going on in student&#13;
government but that he knew Jim&#13;
personally and that Jim had done&#13;
personal favors for him in the&#13;
past.&#13;
"When I returned to school the&#13;
next day there were posters of Mr.&#13;
Kreuser's up that hadn't been&#13;
there the night before. When I got&#13;
to the PSGA office I learned that&#13;
Mr. Kreuser had stayed in the&#13;
building all night.&#13;
"There are a few questions I&#13;
would like to ask. First of all, what&#13;
was Mr. Kreuser's jurisdiction in&#13;
buildings other than the Union&#13;
building? What is the policy for&#13;
university employees showing&#13;
favoritism for PSGA candidates?&#13;
How trustworthy is a security&#13;
guard that performs favors for&#13;
favors? If a rule exists for one&#13;
party, does it not apply to another&#13;
or are some people above the&#13;
law?&#13;
"I trust there will be an investigation&#13;
into this matter so it&#13;
can be resolved quickly."&#13;
Pogreba and Kreuser met with&#13;
Dean of Student Life Dave&#13;
Pedersen Monday to discuss the&#13;
issue. Pedersen will investigate&#13;
Pogreba's complaint by talking to&#13;
Director of Campus Security&#13;
Ronald Brinkman about the policy&#13;
concerning students in the&#13;
building after hours.&#13;
The campus used to close at&#13;
midnight on Sundays, but was&#13;
changed to 10:30 p. m. almost a&#13;
year ago, Brinkman told Ranger.&#13;
Signs posted by the doorways give&#13;
Continued On Page Seven&#13;
Photo by Masood Shafiq&#13;
^ MEYER (far left) moderates forum&#13;
with the four PSGA presidential candidates (from I. to r Mike&#13;
Axelson, Jim Kreuser, Loretta Lacy and Phil Pogreba).&#13;
Pogreba wins presidential poll&#13;
have not been to any of these,"&#13;
Kreuser said.&#13;
The third candidate, Loretta&#13;
Lacy spoke next, saying that if&#13;
elected, she would address "the&#13;
issues that concern every student&#13;
at Parkside, as well as students at&#13;
every University in Wisconsin."&#13;
Lacy stated that she would&#13;
attack the rising tuition and book&#13;
costs, and oversee the new&#13;
bookstore's intitial operation. She&#13;
also stressed the need for a book&#13;
rental system which she would&#13;
also seek to be installed on&#13;
campus.&#13;
"At the present time, I don't feel&#13;
that the Parkside Student&#13;
Government is being run to its&#13;
fullest capacity. I don't feel the&#13;
present administration really&#13;
realizes how much power it has,"&#13;
Lacy said.&#13;
Lacy also stressed the need for&#13;
more parking spaces and&#13;
adequate lighting in the parking&#13;
lot.&#13;
The last candidate to speak was&#13;
Phil Pogreba, who is currently&#13;
President Pro Tempore of the&#13;
Senate. "By working with the&#13;
Senate over the year, I've learned&#13;
the organizational structure of&#13;
PSGA and how it works," he said.&#13;
"The Senate has made great&#13;
strides this year in making sure&#13;
that the students' voices are heard&#13;
on issues that affect them. What&#13;
I'd like the Senate to do over the&#13;
next year is strengthen the ground&#13;
they covered. Get the procedures&#13;
used to achieve those goals down&#13;
to an art so that from now on it will&#13;
be routine," Pogreba said.&#13;
Pogreba denounced student&#13;
apathy and said that if elected, he&#13;
would help to create more "unity&#13;
among the students".&#13;
A random survey was conducted&#13;
Monday concerning the&#13;
PSGA presidential election&#13;
concluding today (Thursday).&#13;
Seventy - five students (38 female&#13;
and 37 male) were randomly&#13;
selected and asked the following&#13;
question: "I'm taking an independent&#13;
survey or poll — out of&#13;
the four students running for&#13;
PSGA president, which are you&#13;
planning to vote for?"&#13;
Phil Pogreba received 34 vot es,&#13;
Jim Kreuser 20, Loretta Lacy 17&#13;
and Mike Axelson four.&#13;
Out of the students asked, 35&#13;
attended the presidential forum&#13;
held Monday afternoon and 40 did&#13;
not. Students who answered that&#13;
they did not intend to vote were&#13;
not included in the survey.&#13;
Remember that this was only a&#13;
random survey, thus the results&#13;
were not scientificaly derived.&#13;
The renewal criteria:&#13;
Nonrenewal decision discussed&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
On March 4 the PSGA Senate&#13;
heard information about&#13;
Sociology instructor Jim Bearden's&#13;
nonrenewal of contract from&#13;
a student representing a student&#13;
group protesting the nonrenewal&#13;
decision.&#13;
A group of about 12 students&#13;
have been working for the past&#13;
few weeks trying to bring the issue&#13;
out in the open, hoping for support&#13;
to reverse the decision not to&#13;
renew Bearden's contract.&#13;
The group of students have&#13;
collected over 200 signatures on a&#13;
petition and held a rally yesterday&#13;
in support of Bearden.&#13;
Sue Larsen, Vice - President of&#13;
the Sociology Club, addressed the&#13;
Senate last week, saying "We're&#13;
doing as much as we can and&#13;
support from the student&#13;
government would be more than&#13;
welcome." This was the first time&#13;
the issue was brought up to the&#13;
Senate, so no action was taken.&#13;
PSGA Senator Mike Pfaffl said,&#13;
"I think that as representatives of&#13;
the students at Parkside, we have&#13;
an important stake here. Myself, I&#13;
feel if certain people and ideas are&#13;
kept off an organization on&#13;
campus, it will affect many other&#13;
students."&#13;
Larsen read to the Senate a&#13;
letter Bearden received from Vice&#13;
Chancellor / Dean of Faculty&#13;
Lorman Ratner stating the&#13;
reasons for the decision not to&#13;
renew Bearden's contract. The&#13;
nonrenewal decision came from&#13;
the Executive Committee of the&#13;
Behavorial Science Division,&#13;
made up of senior faculty&#13;
members within the division.&#13;
Ratner's letter, dated Feb. 18,&#13;
stated:&#13;
"The reason for this recommendation&#13;
has to do with Mr.&#13;
Bearden's record and program of&#13;
research and scholarly activity.&#13;
The committee was not satisfied&#13;
with Mr. Bearden's progress in&#13;
producing the quality research&#13;
expected of a faculty member in&#13;
his discipline."&#13;
"Mr. Bearden's teaching activities&#13;
were evaluated as good&#13;
and were not a factor in the&#13;
nonrenewal recommendation. His&#13;
service activities were seen as&#13;
adequate to date and were also not&#13;
a factor in the nonrenewal&#13;
recommendation."&#13;
"On balance, the Committee&#13;
was unable to give Mr. Bearden&#13;
an endorsement of the kind that&#13;
would warrant a positive&#13;
recommendation for contract&#13;
renewal."&#13;
JIM BEARDEN&#13;
Larsen said, "Nonrenewal of a&#13;
contract is very rarely done on&#13;
this campus — even more rare&#13;
when it's a new faculty member&#13;
like Jim Bearden, who has only&#13;
been here a year and a half."&#13;
Larsen called the committee's&#13;
decision on the basis of inadequate&#13;
research "pretty rediculous&#13;
because of the fact that he's been&#13;
here a year and a half and just&#13;
finished his Ph.D. No one . . . can&#13;
publish a book while working on&#13;
their dissertation."&#13;
Continued On Page Two&#13;
The following is the criteria for&#13;
renewal of faculty appointments&#13;
and granting tenure, according to&#13;
UWPF 6.07.&#13;
Faculty appointments may be&#13;
granted only upon the recommendation&#13;
of the executive committee&#13;
of an academic division and&#13;
the chancellor. An academic&#13;
division executive committee shall&#13;
forward its recommendations for&#13;
certain appointments or&#13;
promotions directly to the Personnel&#13;
Review Committee.&#13;
Criteria:&#13;
(a) The decision regarding a&#13;
recommendation to renew an appointment&#13;
or to make a tenure appointment&#13;
shall be based primarily&#13;
on a faculty member's contribuion&#13;
in the areas of teaching, creative&#13;
activity, and service. Special&#13;
consideration shall be given to&#13;
contributions in the area of&#13;
teaching.&#13;
At the academic division level,&#13;
programmatic considerations Shall&#13;
also be taken into consideration.&#13;
Every recommendation for&#13;
renewal or granting of tenure shall&#13;
be accompanied by a statement&#13;
setting forth the evaluations in each&#13;
area on which the recommendation&#13;
is based.&#13;
(b) Teaching&#13;
Definition — Teaching includes&#13;
any activity related to course&#13;
development, course presentation,&#13;
course related interaction with&#13;
students, evaluation of student&#13;
progress, tutoring, advising, and to&#13;
other learning services required by&#13;
students.&#13;
Evaluation — The source of information&#13;
regarding the quality of&#13;
teaching shall be student course&#13;
evaluations conducted each fall and&#13;
spring semester. A faculty member&#13;
shall be afforded opportunity to&#13;
present other evidence regarding&#13;
teaching quality such as reading&#13;
lists, course outlines, innovations,&#13;
samples of student work, reports of&#13;
colleague observers, participation&#13;
in teaching improvement&#13;
workshops, video tapes of&#13;
presentations, and impact on&#13;
former students. Evidence from all&#13;
of the above sources shall be&#13;
considered in the evaluation of&#13;
teaching quality.&#13;
(b) Creative Activity&#13;
Definition — Creative activity&#13;
consists of contributions by an&#13;
individual in the forms or media&#13;
typical of his discipline, art or&#13;
profession, and which are available&#13;
for critical evaluation by his / her&#13;
peers within his / her discipline, art&#13;
or profession. Contributions include,&#13;
but are not limited to, books,&#13;
monographs, articles, reviews and&#13;
conference papers; works of art,&#13;
concert performances, dramatic&#13;
performances and literary works;&#13;
and research reports and design&#13;
proposals. Contributions in the&#13;
process of preparation may be&#13;
considered as evidence of creative&#13;
activity.&#13;
Evaluation — Quality shall be&#13;
considered more important than&#13;
quantity in the evaluation of&#13;
creative activity. There should be&#13;
evidence of sustained creative&#13;
activity.&#13;
(d) Service&#13;
Definition •— Service consists of&#13;
contributions to the affairs of the&#13;
University, community, and&#13;
profession. University service&#13;
includes contributions to the&#13;
governance, administration and&#13;
operation (but excluding teaching)&#13;
of UW Parkside or the UW System;&#13;
community service includes only&#13;
those contributions in which the&#13;
faculty member represents UW&#13;
Parkside or his profession; and&#13;
professional service includes&#13;
contributions to the administration,&#13;
governance and operation of&#13;
professional organizations.&#13;
Evaluation — Evaluation of&#13;
service shall be based on an assessment&#13;
of the overall quality of&#13;
the record of service. Contributions&#13;
in all three areas of service shall&#13;
not be required.&#13;
(e) Programmatic considerations&#13;
include an assessment&#13;
of the present and future needs of&#13;
an academic program, and the&#13;
relative importance to the program&#13;
of the faculty member under&#13;
review.&#13;
(f) The relative importance of the&#13;
criteria of teaching, creative activity,&#13;
and service, and&#13;
programmatic considerations,&#13;
shall be judged by the faculties of&#13;
the academic divisions, except that&#13;
special consideration shall be given&#13;
to contributions in the area of&#13;
teaching. &#13;
2 Thursday, March 11,1982 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
VSOOOO! «OC«COCOCCOOOOOCCOOOOOOOOeOOOOO©OOS'&#13;
Ranger editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the editorial&#13;
staff. Parkside students may submit editorial ideas to the editor for&#13;
consideration. Editorial ideas need not be typed to be considered.&#13;
oocccooocwcoccoooccaaccosceoccooccososccooocoos&#13;
Forum s uccessful, el ection d isgraced&#13;
The forum of PSGA presidential candidates Monday, sponsored&#13;
by Ranger, was a success — t he attendance was at least&#13;
125. That doesn't sound like much, but considering student interest&#13;
in past PSGA elections this qualifies as a success. V oter&#13;
turnout (last year was 12 percent) should also be improved.&#13;
This year's presidential election has drawn much attention&#13;
and has turned into a bitter, hard - fought campaign. Not only&#13;
has a grievance been filed with the Elections Committee, but&#13;
rumors have been rampant, candidate behavior questionable&#13;
and elections posters vandalized.&#13;
The destruction of election posters was common this election&#13;
and the childish vandals are a blemish on the university. Maybe&#13;
they don't know the severity of the punishment (a few years ago&#13;
a student was placed on disciplinary probation and barred from&#13;
involvement in any student organization) or maybe they just&#13;
don't care. But whatever the reason, those responsible should&#13;
remember they are now in college and should act their age.&#13;
Reagan succeeds where&#13;
others have failed&#13;
by Chuck Ostrowski&#13;
Despite my ardent opposition to&#13;
the programs and policies of&#13;
President Reagan, I must admit&#13;
that he's succeeded immeasurably&#13;
where other&#13;
presidents have failed. No&#13;
president has singly caused the&#13;
political rejunivation of this&#13;
country the way Ronald Reagan&#13;
has.&#13;
Of course, he's done it not&#13;
through positive and idealistic&#13;
initiatives the way President&#13;
Kennedy tried, but through&#13;
conservative fanaticism that has&#13;
profited the small minority at the&#13;
top of the economic and social&#13;
ladder while tyrannizing the large&#13;
majority in the middle and at the&#13;
bottom.&#13;
His many policies, represented&#13;
by James Watt's environmental&#13;
"initiatives" and Secretary&#13;
Haig's and Weinberger's right -&#13;
wing ideological bullshit, to Attorney&#13;
General Smith's non -&#13;
prosecution of conglomerate&#13;
mergers and prosecution of non -&#13;
registered 18 year-olds, has&#13;
triggered something! Grassroot&#13;
campaigns representing wide -&#13;
ranging interests, including&#13;
women's suffrage, nuclear power,&#13;
disarmament, the environment,&#13;
the arts, and education have&#13;
emerged everywhere.&#13;
Never before has the&#13;
President's power to inflict pain,&#13;
discomfort, and anger; and&#13;
pleasure, comfort, and happiness&#13;
been apparent. Usually the Chief&#13;
Executive has used the office to&#13;
promote the betterment of life for&#13;
all citizens, not just the few who&#13;
directly control him. And the&#13;
strange thing about that is&#13;
President Reagan putting this&#13;
policy of helping the "poor rich&#13;
guys" in the center of his&#13;
economic programs and social&#13;
policies. He not only believes in&#13;
supporting the wealthy, he's incredibly&#13;
brash enough to do it&#13;
openly — and as the cornerstone&#13;
of his "economic revitalization&#13;
program" (whatever that means)&#13;
no less!&#13;
This could mean two things.&#13;
One, that President Reagan&#13;
considers himself a one - term&#13;
office holder, and thus has decided&#13;
to go for broke and not bend to&#13;
prevailing pressures; or two, that&#13;
President Reagan considers&#13;
himself a two - term office holder&#13;
and is incredibly out - of - touch&#13;
with the electorate. If the former,&#13;
only God can help us. If the latter,&#13;
he's in for quite a shock come.&#13;
November.&#13;
Why God could only help us is&#13;
pretty much self - explanatory.&#13;
The results of an all - out push by&#13;
the President of the United States,&#13;
-and especially this one, would be&#13;
devestating. Not only would it, as&#13;
we have seen by some of Reagan's&#13;
recent initiatives, push back civil&#13;
rights gains several decades and&#13;
make equal treatment of women&#13;
through legislation non - existant,&#13;
it also would cause irreparable&#13;
damage to the environment, a&#13;
further widening between&#13;
economic classes, and a general&#13;
attitude on the part of government&#13;
favoring bootstraps over any real,&#13;
meaningful social and employment&#13;
programs.&#13;
But if, on the other hand,&#13;
Reagan considers himself a two -&#13;
term president, why is he acting&#13;
like Karl Marx's alterego? Surely&#13;
he can't believe alienation of&#13;
millions of people constitutes&#13;
support? In theory, alienation&#13;
means non r s upport!&#13;
There is a third explanation for&#13;
President Reagan's actions. He&#13;
could be just as sincere and level -&#13;
headed as he appears. Maybe he&#13;
does actually believe that, yes, the&#13;
betterment of all would be best&#13;
advanced through economic&#13;
programs benefiting the rich and&#13;
advantaged. Maybe we should&#13;
look closer at the economic costs&#13;
of pollution - control systems.&#13;
Maybe rehabilitation of housing,&#13;
funding of mass - transit, and&#13;
availability of day - care facilities&#13;
should be left to the private sector.&#13;
Any maybe every college student&#13;
would be better served if government&#13;
funding were cut - off, and&#13;
we spent seven years studying for&#13;
a bachelors degree instead of four.&#13;
Maybe this is the right way to go.&#13;
But then again, maybe not.&#13;
Bearden contract not renewed&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
Larsen said the committee&#13;
didn't do justice when it said his&#13;
teaching abilities were evaluated&#13;
as good. "They were excellent,"&#13;
said Larsen, who has gone&#13;
through student evaluations of&#13;
Bearden's teaching. Larsen also&#13;
sat on the search and screen&#13;
committee that brought Bearden&#13;
to Parkside and had a full vote in&#13;
the committee's actions.&#13;
- There have been many rumors&#13;
circulating since the nonrenewal&#13;
PUSHING THE ATOMIC CLOCK FORWARD&#13;
Coach Stephens has done great job&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Last evening, your UWParkside&#13;
Rangers lost a Men's&#13;
Basketball NAIA Playoff game to&#13;
a strong UW-Eau Claire team.&#13;
UW-Parkside suffered another&#13;
major loss last night. The&#13;
Parkside - Eau Claire game&#13;
marked the end of Steve Stephens'&#13;
most successful coaching career&#13;
at your school. All of us involved&#13;
in athletics at Lakeland College&#13;
are sorry to see him go. Steve has&#13;
been with your basketball&#13;
program since its inception and&#13;
our Lakeland Muskies have&#13;
competed with his Rangers, often&#13;
unsuccessfully, each and every&#13;
year. I would like to make a few&#13;
comments about your Coach&#13;
Stephens.&#13;
Steve Stephens has built a&#13;
basketball program from scratch&#13;
and has given Parkside teams&#13;
which have gained respect&#13;
throughout the United States. His&#13;
teams have always been highly&#13;
competitive and extremely well -&#13;
coached. They were sound fundamentally,&#13;
played excellent&#13;
defense, rebounded with&#13;
authority, and were poised. The&#13;
Stephens - coached Rangers&#13;
played hard but clean basketball&#13;
and never seemed to quit&#13;
regardless of the score.&#13;
Coach Stephens is a GENTLEMAN&#13;
on and off the court. He&#13;
has earned tremendous respect&#13;
from knowledgable basketball&#13;
leaders throughout the nation and&#13;
the multitude of special honors&#13;
that his peers have bestowed upon&#13;
this outstanding athletic leader&#13;
speak well of Steve Stephens the&#13;
MAN, and Steve Stephens the&#13;
COACH.&#13;
Parkside has been most fortunate&#13;
to have Coach Stephens in&#13;
charge of the Men's Basketball&#13;
Program. His act will be most&#13;
difficult to follow.&#13;
I am hopeful that the UWParkside&#13;
administration, faculty,&#13;
students, and alumni realize what&#13;
a great job Steve has done in&#13;
giving your school a truly "class"&#13;
basketball operation.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Duane A. Woltzen&#13;
Basketball Coach&#13;
Lakeland College&#13;
Student evaluations are underrated&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am extremely concerned&#13;
about the new attitude towards&#13;
University students. The new&#13;
trend in administration&#13;
throughout, the University sytem&#13;
seems to be to underrate students'&#13;
evaluative talents. Students'&#13;
evaluation of their professors&#13;
have become a detriment to the&#13;
good professors. If an inept&#13;
professor receives poor teaching&#13;
scores from his students, the&#13;
professor simply tells the powers&#13;
that be that his/her students don't&#13;
truly want to learn. The professor&#13;
sometimes even believes this&#13;
nonsense, and the administration&#13;
seems to believe it.&#13;
Let's face the facts at Parkside.&#13;
Students at Parkside want to&#13;
learn, and they are capable of&#13;
evaluating the people who teach&#13;
them. First, forty percent (40%)&#13;
of the students at Parkside are&#13;
"non - traditional" students.&#13;
These adult students do not&#13;
participate in "popularity votes."&#13;
Secondly, the students who attend&#13;
Parkside are not sent here by&#13;
wealthy mommas and poppas.&#13;
Parkside students want a good&#13;
education from good professors so&#13;
that they can survive in today's&#13;
NRA responds to super-bullet cartoon&#13;
world. In my classes at Parkside,&#13;
I have encountered people who&#13;
work forty hours and go to school&#13;
full time. I have met older women&#13;
(with children) taking 15 to 18&#13;
credits. And, I know students&#13;
studying hard to become the first&#13;
college graduated family member.&#13;
These persons are not here to&#13;
be entertained. We are here to be&#13;
taught by capable individuals.&#13;
And, if the administration&#13;
receives a favorable evaluation of&#13;
a professor, you may be sure that&#13;
the professor has NOT entertained,&#13;
she/he has taught, and&#13;
taught well.&#13;
Dana Goetz&#13;
recommendation was made, said&#13;
Larsen, One prevalent rumor was&#13;
that a certain senior faculty&#13;
member felt that the committee&#13;
was pressured into hiring Bearden&#13;
by the junior faculty members.&#13;
"I know for a fact that this&#13;
certain professor voted for Jim&#13;
Bearden from the beginning with&#13;
no pressure and the junior faculty&#13;
was split in the decision to hire&#13;
him," said Larsen.&#13;
Bearden is requesting a review&#13;
of the nonrenewal decision.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am writing in response to a&#13;
cartoon recently appearing in the&#13;
Ranger. On Thursday, February&#13;
11, 198 2 your paper ran a cartoon&#13;
on page two, projecting a satirical&#13;
and incorrect view of a new&#13;
firearms product recently put on&#13;
the market connecting it to the&#13;
National Rifle Association. These&#13;
so - c alled super bullets actually&#13;
do have great destructive power,&#13;
but in no way does the NRA approve&#13;
of their sale, use or&#13;
production. The NRA is not a sales&#13;
promotion group, but an&#13;
organization of U.S. citizens who&#13;
reserve the constitutional right to&#13;
possess arms. This cartoon may&#13;
not seem like a vital issue until&#13;
you consider the growing anti -&#13;
gun movement in this country.&#13;
After the example Morton Grove&#13;
set less than 100 miles from here, I&#13;
dislike the NRA receiving this&#13;
type of undeserved negative&#13;
publicity. I wrote this letter to&#13;
express the views of NRA&#13;
members who are students here at&#13;
Parkside, and myself. I hope this&#13;
Students not apathetic&#13;
letter will be taken as an attem&#13;
to clarify the actual statement ti&#13;
cartoon made.&#13;
Thank yo&#13;
Brian Schuet&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
An important part of the&#13;
semester is now upon us. It is the&#13;
time when many students are&#13;
involved in their courses (possibly&#13;
as a result of mid-terms) to the&#13;
extent that there is little time for&#13;
extracurricular activities. Even&#13;
when certain events are scheduled&#13;
such as the Winter Carnival,&#13;
many of us cannot participate in&#13;
them because of the enormous&#13;
amount of study required to&#13;
prepare for tests. The March 4&#13;
letter, "Winter Carnival Marred"&#13;
(Jack Kemper) is an example of&#13;
what I am talking about.&#13;
But there is still hope for those&#13;
among us who have refused to be&#13;
beaten!&#13;
During the recent election&#13;
campaign, the reference was&#13;
made that the student populace&#13;
had become athathetic and&#13;
disinterested in the workings of&#13;
this institution. To this I say,&#13;
BULL!!! Never before have I&#13;
seen such interest in any PSGA&#13;
election (maybe because of such&#13;
comments).&#13;
Believe it or not Mr. Politician,&#13;
WE ARE ALIVE! And one more&#13;
thing, we'll be watching to see&#13;
whether apathy sets in among the&#13;
PSGA during the next term!&#13;
Rick Reimer &#13;
Club Events&#13;
Computer Club&#13;
The Parkside Computer Club&#13;
will be holding weekly meetings&#13;
for the planning of the Computer&#13;
Fair. These meetings will be held&#13;
every Monday in Moln D137 at 1&#13;
p.m. We would also like to remind&#13;
members that elections for club&#13;
officers are scheduled for the&#13;
April 5 meeting. Members interested&#13;
in running for office&#13;
should announce their intentions&#13;
at the March 29 meeting.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
PSE had their first initiation&#13;
last Friday as a reactivated&#13;
chapter. Some 35 students were&#13;
initiated into this professional&#13;
organization. Also present were&#13;
several members of the Racine&#13;
and Kenosha Sales and Marketing&#13;
Executive Board, including Dr.&#13;
Art Dudycha, chairman of the&#13;
Parkside business division.&#13;
PSE meetings are held every&#13;
Wednesday from 1-2 p.m. At the&#13;
March 31 meeting, Verna Zimmerman&#13;
will give a talk on the&#13;
services offered by the Alumni&#13;
and Placement Office. PSE is&#13;
open to all interested students.&#13;
Meeting places will be posted&#13;
every Wednesday along the concourse.&#13;
&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
What does Women in Business&#13;
have that would interest you???&#13;
Aerobic dance class every&#13;
Monday and Wednesday from 1-2&#13;
p.m., in the wrestling room in the&#13;
P.E. building.&#13;
The Very Special Arts Festival&#13;
for handicapped children will be&#13;
on March 16. Volunteers are still&#13;
needed. Call Kathy Kexel at 553-&#13;
2278 if interested.&#13;
Plus, the variety of workshops&#13;
and seminars which follow:&#13;
March 17 — American&#13;
Businesswomen's Association will&#13;
be holding its monthly meeting in&#13;
Gurnee, 111.&#13;
March 22 — A workshop by&#13;
Margaret Rdzak will be held from&#13;
5:15-6:15 p.m.&#13;
March 27 — Womanhostel&#13;
meeting in Lake Geneva.&#13;
April 3 — Phi Gamma Nu&#13;
Regional meeting in Bloomington.&#13;
A luncheon will be served in addition&#13;
to a number of workshops&#13;
and seminars.&#13;
Data Processing&#13;
The Parkside Data Processing&#13;
Club will hold a meeting on March&#13;
29 at 6:30 p.m. in Union 207. Ron&#13;
Over son will talk on the Job&#13;
Control Language. New members&#13;
are welcome. Refreshments will&#13;
be served following the meeting.&#13;
Geology Colloquium&#13;
"The Fourteen Fallacies of&#13;
Uniformitarianism," will be&#13;
presented by Dr. James H. Shea,&#13;
of the Earth Science Program at&#13;
Parkside. The colloquium will be&#13;
held on Friday, March 12, at 1&#13;
p.m. in Grnq. 113.&#13;
Hispana American&#13;
The Hispano American Club will&#13;
hold a meeting on the first&#13;
Tuesday after Break, in Union 204&#13;
at 2 p.m. We need participation.&#13;
Wind &amp; Sail&#13;
230 S. Main&#13;
Racine&#13;
Preppy Deck&#13;
Shoe Special&#13;
•35.95&#13;
With This Ad&#13;
CSA bookstore bid accepted&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Bookstore Committee has&#13;
given a unanimous vote to accept&#13;
the bid on the bookstore contract&#13;
made by College Stores&#13;
Associates (CSA). The decision&#13;
was made after a report from&#13;
Tom Moore and Nick Burckel,&#13;
who made a trip to Boston to see&#13;
how other CSA operations are run.&#13;
Follett, Inc., which currently&#13;
operates the bookstore, did not&#13;
place a bid and will soon leave&#13;
campus.&#13;
"My overall impression of&#13;
CSA," said Moore, chairman of&#13;
the Bookstore Committee, "is that&#13;
they are a very aggressive and&#13;
remarkably fast growing company.&#13;
If you have any extra&#13;
money, and if they are public, I&#13;
would suggest going to invest in&#13;
them. I think in the short run, CSA&#13;
will provide significant and better&#13;
service than we are getting now."&#13;
Records show that CSA has been&#13;
successful in retaining the&#13;
required number of texts and&#13;
obtaining the books on time. The&#13;
university has been assured of not&#13;
having to pay for any incompetence&#13;
on the part of CSA.&#13;
Flexibility could be low on&#13;
contractual matters. CSA has&#13;
offered Parkside 2.5% of gross&#13;
sales, or a minimum of $16,000.&#13;
That means the university will be&#13;
getting less than it currently is.&#13;
Records also show that CSA offers&#13;
7% to 7.5% to many of the other&#13;
campuses. There are plans being&#13;
made to have a full - time staff of&#13;
four or five people, but the salary&#13;
for the manager will be $16,000.&#13;
The chances for good, competent&#13;
managers are good right now,&#13;
because promotion opportunities&#13;
will hold them. The committee&#13;
was concerned about what would&#13;
happen when advancement stops&#13;
and this fast - growing company&#13;
begins to slow down. Unfortunately,&#13;
there is no way of&#13;
telling.&#13;
The layout and attractiveness of&#13;
the bookstore will be changing too.&#13;
The main floor on Level 1 will&#13;
probably be used for trade books&#13;
and soft goods. It would be turned&#13;
into somewhat of a little store.&#13;
Moore reported that all of the CSA&#13;
stores had a very attractive soft&#13;
goods area. There is also a&#13;
remarkable amount of merchandise&#13;
in comparison to what&#13;
there is now. Textbooks will be&#13;
sold out of an outlet in the&#13;
basement. During the rush period,&#13;
students will simply hand in their&#13;
class lists and a runner will&#13;
retrieve their books. When the&#13;
rush period is over, the basement&#13;
outlet will be opened up. The&#13;
reason for this system of order&#13;
and retrieve is for efficiency and&#13;
probably a cutback in the amount&#13;
of theft that takes place. There&#13;
will also be a definite cutdown in&#13;
confusion.&#13;
Three things that the Bookstore&#13;
Committee didn't agree with were&#13;
not being able to see a text before&#13;
you buy it, the request for possible&#13;
work study students, and the&#13;
clause in the contract that states a&#13;
surcharge can be negotiated.&#13;
It was agreed that most&#13;
students like to see the texts&#13;
before they purchase them, if for&#13;
no other reason than simply to see&#13;
the context of the book. If the book&#13;
purchasing area were off limits&#13;
during the rush period, a student&#13;
would not be able to do this. A&#13;
suggestion was made to have one&#13;
copy of every book being used,&#13;
either on display within the store,&#13;
or having all of the books&#13;
available on reserve in the&#13;
library.&#13;
Work study students were also&#13;
requested from CSA. It was&#13;
agreed that if working in the&#13;
bookstore actually did offer&#13;
Continued On Page Seven&#13;
University&#13;
Budget released&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The 1982-83 university budget&#13;
has been released by the Parkside&#13;
administration. Through the&#13;
Retrenchment Program (money&#13;
cut from the budget to make up for&#13;
the state mandated budget cuts)&#13;
there was money reallocated and&#13;
actually put back into the system.&#13;
The Retrenchment /&#13;
Reallocation process began this&#13;
year and enabled the campus to&#13;
add money to certain areas with&#13;
need. The Vice Chancellor and&#13;
Assistant Chancellors met with&#13;
their directors / chairpersons&#13;
earlier this year to identify areas&#13;
needing supplemental dollars.&#13;
Significant additions were made&#13;
to adjunct faculty, student help,&#13;
limited - term employees, supply&#13;
and expense budgets in some&#13;
academic divisions. A special&#13;
base allocation of $50,000 was&#13;
made to the library for books and&#13;
periodicals. The periodical subscription&#13;
list may still have to be&#13;
cut, since rates are rising so fast.&#13;
As required by federal audit,&#13;
money was added to financial aids&#13;
for a computer service contract&#13;
for the NDSL Loan Program.&#13;
Money was added to the&#13;
publications area to cover higher&#13;
costs and some administrative&#13;
areas received added supply and&#13;
expense money.&#13;
The Academic Area was&#13;
granted an $89,529 b udget with a&#13;
savings of $73,645 i n the Retrenchment&#13;
program. Athletics was&#13;
cut $65,000 b y 2.5 positions.&#13;
In the Administrative and the&#13;
Physical Plant area, there is a&#13;
$63,412 budget with a $48,658&#13;
savings in the Retrenchment&#13;
Program. The Chancellor was&#13;
granted $73,289 budget for supply&#13;
and expenses and publications&#13;
such as course schedules,&#13;
discipline guides and advertising.&#13;
Educational Services was&#13;
granted a base allocation of $8,997&#13;
with $64,589 saved through the&#13;
Retrenchment Program.&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin feels&#13;
that the campus is in a good&#13;
position to absorb a moderate cut&#13;
without affecting essential&#13;
operations. He feels that we do not&#13;
have to expect a large cut and that&#13;
any general cut would be offset by&#13;
an enrollment funding increase.&#13;
COMPUTER&#13;
CENTER&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
SESSIONS&#13;
The Computer Center has scheduled three information&#13;
sessions for students, faculty and staff who&#13;
use UW - Parkside's Instructional and Research&#13;
Timesharing System (PIRTS) or the IBM academic&#13;
computing system.&#13;
The main idea behind the sessions is to make&#13;
available regular times when users can get together&#13;
informally with the Center's Operations Manager,&#13;
Academic Consultant and Systems Programmer and&#13;
discuss users' questions, suggestions and concerns.&#13;
The sessions will be held in the MOLN - ill faculty&#13;
lounge on:&#13;
Tuesday, March 23, 10-11 am&#13;
Wednesday, April 14, 1-2 pm&#13;
Monday, May 3, 4-5 pm&#13;
Students, faculty and staff are encouraged to attend&#13;
any or all of the sessions.&#13;
How a sophomore at U.W. Parkside&#13;
can graduate an Army officer.&#13;
During the next 2 years, while&#13;
9 99^9^ if 1 you're earning your chosen degree,&#13;
you can also prepare for an officer's&#13;
commission in the United States&#13;
Army.&#13;
You start right now. By applying&#13;
m '-J#? for 6 weeks of ROTC summer school&#13;
J It: • llii at Fort Knox, Ky. With pay (over&#13;
•= 1;... ... . .J;;:£&gt; $500).&#13;
Your average summer school isn't&#13;
exactly what we have in mind, however.&#13;
Because we'll be packing your&#13;
mind and body with the 2 years of&#13;
ROTC leadership training you've&#13;
missed. ' Vv f &lt; V- ff* "" Do well and you can qualify for advanced&#13;
Army ROTC courses and&#13;
nearly $2000 worth of financial aid&#13;
during your junior and senior years.&#13;
And graduate as an officer in the active&#13;
Army or Reserves.&#13;
Apply by April 1.&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
LEARN WHAT IJ TAKES TO LEAD.&#13;
At U.W.P. Call:&#13;
Capt. Fred Herron&#13;
Marquette Uv. A. ROTC&#13;
| Call Collect 1/224-7229/7915 &#13;
4 Thursday, March 11,1982 RANGER&#13;
Wally Cleaver rocks Union&#13;
by Joe Kimm&#13;
The Union was pulsating with&#13;
over 400 q uivering people as the&#13;
Wally Cleaver band hit the stage.&#13;
Armed with an arsenal of post -&#13;
metal pop and new wave, the dual&#13;
- axed quintet put the dance floor&#13;
in orbit for three hours of power&#13;
pop frenzy. Bringing with them a&#13;
mob following of leopard skin&#13;
tights and multi - colored hair -&#13;
dos, the Racine - based Cleaver re&#13;
- defined the word fun as the&#13;
crowd pogoed and frugged their&#13;
way into the night.&#13;
It is a familiar story, of three&#13;
boys growing up on the north side&#13;
of Racine, putting a high school&#13;
band together to earn some cash&#13;
playing Holiday Inns and junior&#13;
high school dances. Gary, Grant&#13;
and Greg went their separate&#13;
ways after minor qualms about&#13;
how the music should be played.&#13;
After five years of individually&#13;
unsuccessful attempts to cut their&#13;
path to local recognition in many&#13;
rock bands, they reunited to form&#13;
Wally Cleaver, bringing together&#13;
a wealth of playing experience&#13;
and musical notes.&#13;
After recruiting two boys from&#13;
the Wind Point band "Trix", they&#13;
decided to forego the heavy metal&#13;
scheme that other local bands&#13;
were after and decided to do&#13;
something lighter, something&#13;
easier to dance to, and something&#13;
that still sounded modern and&#13;
innovative like the new stuff that&#13;
was coming out. So they compiled&#13;
the definitive songlist that included&#13;
songs like Starry Eyes by&#13;
the Records, 867-5309 by Tommy&#13;
Tutone, and What She Does To Me&#13;
by the Producers as well as old&#13;
standards like I Saw Her Standing&#13;
There by the Beatles, No Matter&#13;
What by Badfinger and Let's&#13;
Spend the Night Together by the&#13;
Rolling Stones. Added were some&#13;
originals, My Secrets, Cleaver&#13;
Shuffle, and Shara to name a few&#13;
and after a few solid months of&#13;
rehearsals in the basement, they&#13;
wee ready to tackle the world.&#13;
What they did was enter and win&#13;
last year's Palms Rock Showcase.&#13;
Palms, as you know, (Electric&#13;
Ballroom to you old timers), is the&#13;
biggest rock club in Milwaukee on&#13;
the north side. It books regional&#13;
and national acts for its fervent&#13;
patronage and has a capacity for&#13;
about 800 people and infinitely&#13;
more drinks. Well, the Cleavers&#13;
won that contest and the first&#13;
thing they knew they were playing&#13;
in front of 10,000 pe ople on Wells&#13;
Street in Milwaukee as part of t he&#13;
Radio Doctors Street Festival.&#13;
The other thing was that they got a&#13;
chance to record a track on an&#13;
album put out by another&#13;
Milwaukee night club, the Fantasy's&#13;
to further escalate their&#13;
snowball start.&#13;
Well, the story continues and&#13;
they hired Total Concepts&#13;
Management and Climax Entertainment&#13;
to take care of the&#13;
business and of the deal so they&#13;
could concentrate more on music.&#13;
With them they did some gigs in&#13;
Minneapolis and St. Paul, as well&#13;
as some clubs around&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin like City&#13;
Slick in Lake Geneva.&#13;
Everywhere they went they took&#13;
on an easy acceptance. Perhaps it&#13;
was their punchy sound, or maybe&#13;
it was their visual appeal, but the&#13;
Cleavers looked pretty comical,&#13;
caught on quickly on stage actually,&#13;
sort of like something&#13;
you'd see on Three Stooges.&#13;
Simply bouncing around the stage&#13;
bumping into each other, and&#13;
careening off to the left and to the&#13;
right, they were an immediate&#13;
smash.&#13;
Now let's meet the band. Steve,&#13;
Leger, that's Billy Budd up there&#13;
singing into the microphone,&#13;
shaking his blond hair and&#13;
winking at the girls. He's the lead&#13;
singer. He's talking about Grant,&#13;
who's playing a Flying V t o your&#13;
right, that ear splitting grin underlining&#13;
his curly mop. Off in the&#13;
other corner, Gary's playing&#13;
tough guy with his Stratocaster,&#13;
acting like a jock, while Curt is&#13;
bouncing like a rubber ball in the&#13;
middle somewhere with his big&#13;
bass guitar. Greg the drummer is&#13;
trying to get into the act but he has&#13;
WALLY CLEAVER played last Friday&#13;
Square.&#13;
no risers for his kit so he jumps up&#13;
and down in between measures,&#13;
waving his stick in the air. There&#13;
they go, twirled up in the air,&#13;
caught just in time by an outstretched&#13;
hand, and bam, crash,&#13;
right on the down beat. The crowd&#13;
goes wild.&#13;
Okay, so I had a couple of beers&#13;
when I walked into the place and&#13;
eventually even made my way&#13;
onto the dance floor and shook my&#13;
protoplasm with the female&#13;
gender right up there by the stage&#13;
monitors. But the point is, when I&#13;
went backstage during the break&#13;
to talk to them, they were actually&#13;
singing in two part harmony&#13;
getting ready for their next!&#13;
muro »y r viarK b anaers&#13;
night in the Union&#13;
'Treshmen wait&#13;
for the weekend&#13;
to have a Michelob.&#13;
Seniors know better"&#13;
During a break! These guys really&#13;
like playing!&#13;
I have to hand it to them.&#13;
Although there were other bands&#13;
like Britins, The Booze Brothers,&#13;
and BadBoy at the Union who&#13;
were more experienced and drew&#13;
a bigger crowd, I really liked&#13;
these guys and hope they build on&#13;
their act to start that snowball&#13;
toward bigger markets. They've&#13;
got youth, vigor, and stamina to&#13;
hang in there, so we might be&#13;
hearing more about them in the&#13;
near future.&#13;
The PAB has them booked for&#13;
THE END on May 22, so you&#13;
might have a chance to look them&#13;
over on the outdoor stage in the&#13;
back of the Union. You'll be&#13;
hearing more about that later on&#13;
in April.&#13;
So Wally Cleaver's the band of&#13;
the hour. They're from Racine, so&#13;
here's your chance to get in on the&#13;
bandwagon and say I saw these&#13;
guys when they were just starting&#13;
out. And they're from your&#13;
hometown so let's root for them&#13;
(those of you from K town have&#13;
the Britins but they're already&#13;
plateaued so we'll let you switch&#13;
over, come on.) Give me a&#13;
W&#13;
Arts festival&#13;
for handicapped&#13;
More than 1,200 handicapped&#13;
young people five to 21 years old&#13;
will participate in the third Racine&#13;
/ Kenosha Very Special Arts&#13;
Festival on Tuesday, March 16, at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The program offers the young&#13;
people hands-on workshop experience,&#13;
performances and&#13;
exhibits involving both the fine&#13;
and performing arts. About 80&#13;
artists, performers and craftsmen&#13;
from the Kenosha / Racine area&#13;
will be involved. A number of&#13;
volunteers from student and&#13;
community organizations also will&#13;
assist with the program.&#13;
The handicapped youths will&#13;
come from the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha Unified School Districts&#13;
and the Western Complex Schools&#13;
of Racine County. They include&#13;
mentally handicapped, hearing&#13;
impaired, vision impaired, orthopedically&#13;
handicapped,&#13;
learning disabled, behavioral&#13;
disabled and those with chronic&#13;
disease.&#13;
The festival is organized by t he&#13;
Very Special Arts Festival&#13;
Committee, an organization of&#13;
educators and other interested&#13;
community residents, and is&#13;
funded by individuals and&#13;
businesses in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha. Co-directors are Eadie&#13;
Koch of th e Racine Unified School&#13;
System and Buddy Couvion of&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The festival will run from 9:45&#13;
a.m. to 1:15 p.m. on the concourse&#13;
level of Parkside's academic&#13;
complex.&#13;
' In conjunction with the festival,&#13;
an art show of work by handicapped&#13;
young people is on&#13;
display in the Parkside Comm.&#13;
Arts Gallery March 8 through 19.&#13;
Kathleen Kexel, public relations&#13;
and promotion chairman for the&#13;
event, said additional volunteers&#13;
are needed and can get additional&#13;
information by calling Koch or&#13;
Couvion.&#13;
Put a tittle&#13;
weekend&#13;
in your week.&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
E. F. MA DRIGRANO&#13;
1831 - 55th St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wise.&#13;
658*3553 &#13;
Dead Men could be funnv Burned Up&#13;
by Dick Oberbruner HO * r\ « * " Yep, it's going to be a good long&#13;
wait for the premiere of Steve&#13;
Martin's new movie, "Dead Men&#13;
Don't Wear Plaid." At the time&#13;
the supplement came out, in a&#13;
recent Ranger, the due date of&#13;
May 21 was three months away!&#13;
(Check the Guinness Book for the&#13;
record on the longest length of&#13;
time between earliest promotion&#13;
material distributed and a film's&#13;
debut.) Since the semester will be&#13;
ending at this time there won't be&#13;
a Ranger for anyone to read. So&#13;
I'll do it now.&#13;
Judging by the supplement,&#13;
"Dead Men" should be pretty&#13;
funny. Martin's acting will&#13;
probably reflect his past style, but&#13;
look for fresh new differences.&#13;
With "Pennies From Heaven," his&#13;
most recent film, Martin has&#13;
shown quite a change from his&#13;
"Jerk" appearance.&#13;
There's some funny stuff in that&#13;
supplement. The picture of Ma rtin&#13;
choking the Nazi is funny. I bet the&#13;
whole scene is. But maybe not.&#13;
The pallid look on his face answering&#13;
the telephone is equally&#13;
amusing. I wonder it if has&#13;
anything to do with the movie?&#13;
And the "Detecto - Vision" it is&#13;
allegedly filmed in is something. I&#13;
don't know what, but I'll find out if&#13;
I have the money to watch it.&#13;
Carl Reiner is a veteran comedy&#13;
writer. He, Martin and another&#13;
guy, George Gipe, wrote the&#13;
screenplay. Directed by Reiner,&#13;
"Dead Men" is well - conceived.&#13;
Anybody who can make a two -&#13;
hour movie deserves some credit.&#13;
You know, E for effort.&#13;
Well, that's my review, sort of a&#13;
"Sneak Preview" from the supplement.&#13;
But how else could I put&#13;
it? (Right — not at all, but that's&#13;
no fun!)&#13;
Now what? Should we like it&#13;
already because of the funny&#13;
supplement? Do the makers of the&#13;
film, Universal City Studios, want&#13;
US to prepare for the coming attraction,&#13;
giving us enough time in&#13;
0 do so? Maybe we&#13;
should start reading Dick Tracy&#13;
comic books under a magnifying&#13;
glass, or be listening to the radio&#13;
n?r&#13;
.&#13;
Ellery Queen Minute&#13;
Mysteries. Whatever the motive,&#13;
don t you think three months is a&#13;
bit premature to ingrain&#13;
something of average interest&#13;
upon our memories?&#13;
It seems odd that a lot of things&#13;
of more importance could, and&#13;
will, happen within this time span&#13;
we could get 30 inches of sno w,&#13;
there s finals to cram for, some of&#13;
us will graduate, some might get&#13;
married, theater ticket prices&#13;
could go up — and this Hollywood&#13;
film studio wants us to remember&#13;
to see their product. Unless you've&#13;
hung the supplement on your wall,&#13;
and showed it to all your friends&#13;
outside of school, the excitement&#13;
created by this early hype should&#13;
pass by quickly. But watch for an&#13;
advertised wave of "Detectomania"&#13;
these next couple of&#13;
months.&#13;
No one I've heard has said&#13;
they're going to see it, which is the&#13;
exception rather than the rule for&#13;
a new movie starring a celebrity.&#13;
And why worry? Do you know&#13;
what your plans are that&#13;
weekend?&#13;
"Hey Dick, let's go see the Steve&#13;
Martin flick."&#13;
"O.K. Call me in Portland."&#13;
I think Steve Martin is funny,&#13;
but I can't afford to spend the&#13;
month of A pril sitting on the edge&#13;
of my s eat. There's a theater near&#13;
me but this particular movie&#13;
won't be coming soon. I have&#13;
enough time to find a date, work in&#13;
the Peace Corps and make it back&#13;
for the cartoon.&#13;
Meantime, this supplement lies&#13;
as another piece of garbage for&#13;
the janitors to pick up.&#13;
This is truly a movie to wait for.&#13;
We have no choice.&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC.&#13;
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR&#13;
FOR ALL SPORTS&#13;
TROPMH AMD AWAftM&#13;
FAST. WHOUSt CfKMAVMQ BCAVICE&#13;
TEAM SALES — ALL SPO RTS&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
• BAOOKS • CONVEftSf&#13;
• TIGER • 9FOT-BULT&#13;
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• PUMA • SPALDING&#13;
• PONY • NEW BALANCE&#13;
MON.-FM. IfeOB AJi. • IM PM.&#13;
SAT. 1MOAM.-MOPM.&#13;
CLOSED SUNDAYS A HOUOAVS&#13;
The Active AtNetes One Stop&#13;
694-9206 KM MM ft.&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
(1) WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
Miller times sew&#13;
""jliose college&#13;
k&lt;ds thfak&#13;
they're so&#13;
Smart.&#13;
Veah,&#13;
but onlu we&#13;
know if the&#13;
light's on in&#13;
here: ,&#13;
Belushi will be missed&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
It doesn't seem fair. It happened&#13;
again. Another light went out.&#13;
What's going on? Why are&#13;
talented people dying off? It all&#13;
goes so fast. They give us what&#13;
they can and then they're gone.&#13;
There's got to be a reason for&#13;
this. Perhaps our younger&#13;
generation was never meant to&#13;
suffer through the hell of war.&#13;
Then we won't have to look to&#13;
.generals with medals to play the&#13;
heroes.&#13;
Our heroes will simply be the&#13;
people who helped us escape for a&#13;
little while. Far from being&#13;
martyrs, they will just be personalities&#13;
with a little something&#13;
extra — a person that might have&#13;
been a classmate, fellow worker,&#13;
ttr* •&#13;
JOHN BELUSHI&#13;
1949-1982&#13;
or best friend.&#13;
We need somebody to lighten&#13;
our load every once in a while. It&#13;
makes everything so much easier.&#13;
But often we don't realize how&#13;
much someone reached us until&#13;
they're gone. And once they die,,&#13;
they move a generation away.&#13;
We feel bad about it: we feel&#13;
cheated. It's not fair. Life's not&#13;
fair. Can't some people stay&#13;
around just a little longer for us to&#13;
enjoy? Is that too much to ask?&#13;
Probably.&#13;
At any rate, the sudden death of&#13;
a young, talented entertainer has&#13;
got to make a lot of people wonder&#13;
about life. Everybody tries to&#13;
figure it out at one time or&#13;
another. The answer is always&#13;
just beyond our grasp.&#13;
And now . . . Killer Bees will&#13;
never be the same. Here's to you,&#13;
John Belushi.&#13;
Private Lessons" done well&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
"Private Lessons" is the enbodiment&#13;
of a very common male&#13;
fantasy, that is, being seduced by&#13;
a beautiful older woman.&#13;
The plot concerns Philly, a&#13;
fifteen year old boy who, like most&#13;
boys his age is preoccupied with&#13;
adolescent thoughts of girls and&#13;
sex. Philly's father goes out of&#13;
town on business, leaving Philly in&#13;
the care of the new housekeeper,&#13;
Nicole Mallow. Philly begins&#13;
hiding outside Miss Mallow's&#13;
window, hoping to catch a glimpse&#13;
of her in the nude. One night&#13;
Nicole sees him, and to Philly's&#13;
surprise she asks him to come in&#13;
and watch her undress. Not&#13;
believing his eyes or ears, Philly&#13;
agrees. However, when Nicole&#13;
asks him if he would like to stay&#13;
the night, his teenage nervousness&#13;
gets the best of him, and he&#13;
leaves. From that point on, Nicole&#13;
seems intent on seducing Philly.&#13;
The plot is not simply about the&#13;
sexual initiation of a teenage boy,&#13;
as there is a twist in the plot that&#13;
involves the chauffer, a slimy&#13;
creep named Lester.&#13;
"Private Lessons" is not what&#13;
you consider great art. There is&#13;
really nothing spectacular about&#13;
it, but it is very funny. The&#13;
screenplay by Dan Greenburg,&#13;
based on his book, "Philly," is&#13;
very insightful and understanding&#13;
towards the feelings of young&#13;
teenage boys. Philly's character&#13;
is very well defined, and had a&#13;
realistic sense about it. Audiences&#13;
will believe that he is a real&#13;
person, not just a film character.&#13;
Eric Brown gives a very good&#13;
performance in this role. You can&#13;
feel his nervousness and share it,&#13;
especially in the scene where he&#13;
watches Nicole undress.&#13;
Sylvia Kristel, who received&#13;
international exposure (no pun&#13;
intended) in the French erotic&#13;
classic "Emmanualle," is the&#13;
type of woman that I'm sure most&#13;
young men would not mind losing&#13;
their virginity with.&#13;
As Lester, the blackmailing&#13;
chauffer, Howard Hesseman is&#13;
very different from his Dr. Johnny&#13;
Fever character on "WKRP." In&#13;
fact, he makes a very convincing&#13;
villian. The supporting cast is&#13;
adequate. A standout is Peter&#13;
Elbling in a small role as a snotty,&#13;
pseudo - French waiter.&#13;
All in all, "Private Lessons" is a&#13;
warm, funny, and perceptive&#13;
movie that is well worth your&#13;
time. I recommend that you see it&#13;
— you may learn something.&#13;
©1981 Beer Brewed by Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis.&#13;
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SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCI ATI ON&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-4861&#13;
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Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
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CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5V*% Interest Iff Your Daily&#13;
Balance Is $500.00 er Mere!&#13;
WE'RE MERE TO HELP YOU 6R0WI &#13;
6 Thursday, March 11,1982 RANGER&#13;
Sports S potlight&#13;
Walking in rhythm with Jim Heiring&#13;
by Steve Brunner&#13;
The abstract sport of "race -&#13;
walking" has finally landed in the&#13;
United States. The once thought of&#13;
bizarre track event is finally being&#13;
fed to the American public after&#13;
being starved by the media for so&#13;
long.&#13;
Much of the new media hype is&#13;
reflected on former Parkside race&#13;
walker, Jim Heiring. He has&#13;
broken world indoor records for&#13;
race walking at distances of 1500&#13;
meters, 1 mile, and 2 miles this&#13;
winter.&#13;
"Race walking is finally getting&#13;
exposure. It is getting some&#13;
overdue recognition and it is being&#13;
seen as a sport for athletes, not&#13;
'participants'," said Heiring.&#13;
The tall, slender athlete has&#13;
established himself as America's&#13;
premier walker. In May of last&#13;
year he won the national 20&#13;
kilometer (12.4 miles) championship.&#13;
In addition to his three&#13;
world records during this year's&#13;
indoor season, he has gone unRangers&#13;
finish 7th&#13;
by Patty DeLuisa&#13;
Parkside's men's track team&#13;
scored 38 points to finish seventh&#13;
in UWM's John Tierny Invitational&#13;
Saturday. Eleven teams&#13;
competed.&#13;
Miler Dan Stublaski, who is&#13;
improving weekly, placed second&#13;
with a time of 4:19.2. Coach&#13;
Lucian Rosa, impressed by&#13;
Stublaski's progress, commented&#13;
that Dan ran a "good race."&#13;
Mark Witherspoon sprinted to&#13;
two high - scoring places as he&#13;
won the 60 yard dash in 6.5&#13;
seconds and finished fourth in the&#13;
300 yard run with a clocking of 32.4&#13;
seconds.&#13;
John Anderson cleared 14' 0",&#13;
placing third in the pole vault.&#13;
Glenn Schultz also participated in&#13;
the meet, running well in the two -&#13;
mile.&#13;
The Ranger men will travel to&#13;
Oshkosh this Friday to take on&#13;
Oshkosh, Stout, and Stevens&#13;
Point. Coach Rosa seemed optimistic&#13;
about a new recruit,&#13;
Dwight Cooper, who will run the&#13;
440 and compete in the long jump.&#13;
District squad&#13;
announced&#13;
High scoring Eau Claire guard&#13;
Tony Carr will head the 1981-82&#13;
NAIA District 14 all - district&#13;
squad, announced Wayne Dannehl&#13;
last week.&#13;
Carr, a 6-3 senior from Beloit&#13;
(Memorial), is averaging 25.7&#13;
points a game and led his team&#13;
into the district title game at&#13;
Stevens Point last Wednesday&#13;
night.&#13;
Also on the team from Eau&#13;
Claire are 6-9 senior center Bob&#13;
Coenen and 6-7 senior forward&#13;
Rich DiBenedetto. WSUC cochampion&#13;
and district finalist&#13;
Stevens Point placed 6-4 junior&#13;
forward John Mack on the team&#13;
and had the district coach of the&#13;
year in Dick Bennett.&#13;
Parkside, which lost 86-80 to&#13;
Eau Claire in the district semi -&#13;
finals, was represented on the&#13;
squad by 5-11 sophomore guard&#13;
Charles Perry and 6-10 1/2 junior&#13;
center Wilbert Webb. Lakeland,&#13;
which lost to Stevens Point in semi&#13;
- final action, had 6-4 senior forward&#13;
Ken Depies on the honor&#13;
squad.&#13;
Stout's Craig Summers, a 6-3&#13;
senior guard, also made the team,&#13;
as did 6-3 junior forward Jeff&#13;
Payton of River Falls and 6-3&#13;
junior guard Jeff Brezovar of the&#13;
Milwaukee School of Engineering.&#13;
Ranger Needs&#13;
Sports Writers&#13;
defeated, capturing titles in such&#13;
prestigious meets as the Millrose&#13;
Games and the TAC national&#13;
indoor championships.&#13;
Yet, the 1980 Olympian said,&#13;
"The indoor records are great to&#13;
have, but what I'm really aiming&#13;
for is to defend my 20K title outdoors."&#13;
&#13;
The road being paved by&#13;
Heiring started in his junior year&#13;
in high school. "I first competed in&#13;
Junior Olympics and did well.&#13;
Mike DeWitt, who was a walker at&#13;
Parkside at the time, helped me&#13;
quite a bit. So I started with all&#13;
positive influences, which encouraged&#13;
me to keep walking."&#13;
The promise continued to&#13;
college where Heiring became a&#13;
ten time all-American in walking&#13;
events at two miles (indoors) and&#13;
10,000 meters (outdoors).&#13;
Preceding his graduation in 1977&#13;
from Parkside, he had a bout with&#13;
the California life style, training&#13;
and working in Los Angeles.&#13;
After the "imaginary" 1980&#13;
Olympics for U.S. athletes, the&#13;
Kenosha native returned home to&#13;
train.&#13;
His daily regime the past two&#13;
years has consisted of: a 30&#13;
minute run in the morning; an&#13;
RACE WALKER JIM HEIRING&#13;
eight hour work day ; then a speed limited and I had a hard time&#13;
or long distance workout walking training 100% because of work,"&#13;
at night. "My time was very explained the bearded athlete.&#13;
However, this routine has just&#13;
changed as of March l. Heiring&#13;
will be blazing trails in the Rocky&#13;
Mountains at the Olympic&#13;
Training Center in Colorado&#13;
Springs. He will be devoting all his&#13;
efforts preparing for the 1984&#13;
Olympics in Los Angeles. "My&#13;
goal is for a medal at 20K." The&#13;
last American to win a medal in&#13;
any Olympic walking event for the&#13;
U.S. was Larry Young at 50K in&#13;
Munich in 1972. No American has&#13;
ever won a medal at 20K.&#13;
Heiring said the key to a good&#13;
racer is technique. If one can&#13;
establish a fluid stride, such as he&#13;
has, without breaking the rules of&#13;
having one foot on the ground at&#13;
all times and keeping the knees&#13;
locked, times will improve with&#13;
the addition of speed work.&#13;
"I was tested biochemically last&#13;
year at the Olympic Training&#13;
Center and found that my pure&#13;
potential for a 20K race walk is 1&#13;
hour and 22 minutes. That's the&#13;
level I must be on if I'm to shoot&#13;
for a medal."&#13;
The way things have been going&#13;
for Heiring this season, the odds of&#13;
an American winning an Olympic&#13;
medal at 20K in Los Angeles in&#13;
1984 a re looking real fine.&#13;
After a real fascinating lecture...&#13;
study the real taste of beer.&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon&#13;
©1982 Pabst Brewing Company. Milwaukee. Wisconsin &#13;
Rangers finish seventeenth in Forest Grove&#13;
by Tammv yShuematP ate&#13;
The Parkside wrestling team&#13;
concluded their season last week&#13;
at the NAIA National Tournament&#13;
held in Forest Grove, Oregon.&#13;
Parkside placed 17th out of the 78&#13;
teams that participated.&#13;
Top rankers for Parkside were&#13;
Dan Winter at 134 and Mike&#13;
Muckerheide at 150, who both&#13;
placed seventh in their respective&#13;
weight classes.&#13;
Winter, still bothered by a&#13;
broken nose suffered during the&#13;
NCAA, II National Tournament,&#13;
defeated his opponent, Tim&#13;
Martin of Wilamette College, by&#13;
an 8-7 decision. In his second&#13;
match, he decisioned Lynn&#13;
Plumley of Southwest Minnesota&#13;
9-7. Tony Algiers of Eau Claire&#13;
Pogreba files&#13;
grievance&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
midnight as the closing time.&#13;
Brinkman explained that they&#13;
haven't gotten around to changing&#13;
the signs yet.&#13;
Brinkman also said that&#13;
Kreuser, who is a manager in the&#13;
Union, has no jurisdiction to have&#13;
anybody kicked out of the&#13;
building.&#13;
"I did not break an election&#13;
rule," Kreuser told Ranger.&#13;
Pogreba said he didn't know if an&#13;
election rule was broken, and that&#13;
that decision is up to the Elections&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The committee will decide&#13;
whether or not it is necessary to&#13;
take any action after Pedersen&#13;
reports his findings to the committee.&#13;
Kathy Slama, chairperson&#13;
of the committee, said the&#13;
decision should be reached before&#13;
the election, which began&#13;
yesterday and concludes today.&#13;
defeated Winter in the quarter&#13;
finals 5-3.&#13;
Winter went on to beat Archie&#13;
Clark of Graceland College by a&#13;
score of .13-5 in the wrestle back.&#13;
He then lost his fifth match to&#13;
John Kranz of Loras College by a&#13;
6-4 decision. In his sixth and final&#13;
match, he defeated Keith Harpster&#13;
of Malone College by a score&#13;
ol 13-4, thereby taking seventh&#13;
place overall and becoming a&#13;
seven time ail-American.&#13;
Parkside's other place winner&#13;
was sophomore Mike&#13;
Muckerheide. Muckerheide, who&#13;
placed sixth in this tournament&#13;
last year, defeated Peter Shepard&#13;
of Oregon Tech 17-5 i n his first&#13;
match. He then went on to defeat&#13;
Eric Lugan of Ft. Lewis with a&#13;
decision of 8-6.&#13;
In his third match, he was&#13;
beaten by his opponent, Mimmo&#13;
Marello of Simon Frasier by a&#13;
score of 20-6. During the wrestle&#13;
back, Muckerheide was victorious&#13;
over Barry Schmitt of Eau Claire&#13;
8-6. He then was defeated by Rick&#13;
Bid accepted&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
valuable experience, and if it kept&#13;
the cost of the books down, that it&#13;
would be a good plan. If, on the&#13;
other hand, the students would not&#13;
get the needed experience in the&#13;
bookstore, it would be better to&#13;
use them in a different area of the&#13;
university.&#13;
It has also been pointed out that&#13;
CSA has never found any need for&#13;
a surcharge. If this is the case, it&#13;
was suggested that the clause in&#13;
the contract giving negotiable&#13;
surcharge, be removed.&#13;
The university has sent a letter&#13;
of acceptance of the CSA bid to&#13;
CSA. More information willbe&#13;
available after the letter has been&#13;
received by CSA.&#13;
How to&#13;
do well in&#13;
Economy Class&#13;
Simple. Fly Capitol Air's Economy Class. Our&#13;
fares are the lowest of any scheduled airline so&#13;
you can use the money you save for lots of&#13;
other things. Like a Eurail pass if you fly us to&#13;
Brussels, Frankfurt or Zurich. More time in the&#13;
sun if you're headed for Miami, San Juan or&#13;
Puerto Plata. Or for even more fun in New York,&#13;
Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago or Boston.&#13;
And, if you are flying to Europe this summer,&#13;
make your reservation and buy your ticket&#13;
now. With our guaranteed fare policy you are&#13;
protected against any fare increases from now&#13;
until departure.&#13;
So if you want to do well in Economy Class,&#13;
fly Capitol's.&#13;
For reservations, call your Travel Agent or&#13;
Capitol at 312-347-0230 in Chicago, 800-572-&#13;
5788 in Illinois or 800-621-5330 outside Illinois.&#13;
No one makes Economy Class&#13;
as economical as we do.&#13;
SCHEDULED AIRLINE SERVICE&#13;
y THE LOWEST FARES&#13;
bd Brussels&#13;
San&#13;
Morkel of Huron College 6-3.&#13;
Muckerheide won his final match&#13;
by forfeit from Rob Yahner from&#13;
the University of Pittsburgh -&#13;
Jonestown.&#13;
Several other Parkside&#13;
wrestlers - Matt Kluge, Brian&#13;
Irek and Paul Roth — also competed&#13;
in the tournament.&#13;
Kluge, at 126, who was only one&#13;
match away from placing, won his&#13;
first two bouts, then lost to the new&#13;
national champion. Kluge&#13;
defeated Dennis Prise of Liberty&#13;
Baptist 8-4 and Bryan Wetz of&#13;
Northern Montana with a pin in&#13;
5:46. In the quarter finals, the&#13;
national champion, Scott Ritzen of&#13;
Adam State defeated Kluge 7-1&#13;
and in the wrestle back, Kluge&#13;
was beaten by Randy Pry or of&#13;
West Liberty State 10-4.&#13;
Brian Irek, at 177, lost his only&#13;
match to Craig Nightingale of the&#13;
University of South Dakota -&#13;
Springfield by a score of 6-2.&#13;
Nightingale became the 7th place&#13;
finisher.&#13;
Heavyweight Paul Roth pinned&#13;
his first opponent, Richard&#13;
Mitiaglo of Carson Newman in a&#13;
time of 2:32. He then went on to&#13;
lose his second match to Robert&#13;
LeGrande from Central State&#13;
Oklahoma 5-1.&#13;
Parkside wrestling coach Jim&#13;
Koch said that their goal was to&#13;
place in the top ten, so they really&#13;
weren't too far off from where&#13;
they were ranked.&#13;
As he looked back over the&#13;
whole season, he is pleased with&#13;
his wrestlers in that several new&#13;
records were set throughout the&#13;
past year and Dan Winter ended&#13;
his wrestling career as a seven&#13;
time all-American.&#13;
PARKSIDE'S DAN WINTER wrestles opponent at nationals&#13;
two weeks ago.&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
*&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
•&#13;
v % *&#13;
CELEBRATE&#13;
ST. PATTY'S DAY&#13;
EARLY&#13;
FRIDAY MARCH 12, 1982&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
11:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.&#13;
featuring&#13;
fa CORNED BEEF &amp; CABBAGE&#13;
fa SMALL IRISH POTATOES&#13;
^ COOKED CARROTS OR BEETS&#13;
fa SHAMROCK CAKE&#13;
COMPLIMENTARY GREEN&#13;
BEER O R OL'BLAREY PUNCH&#13;
SPRING BREAK&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
REC CENTER WIL L REOPEN&#13;
FOR REGULAR OPERATION&#13;
ON MONDAY, MARCH 22.&#13;
SAT - M ARCH 13 9 a.m. - Noon&#13;
SUN - M ARCH 14 CLOSED&#13;
MON - M ARCH 15 CLOSED&#13;
TUE - MARCH 16 CLOSED&#13;
WED - M ARCH 17 CLOSED&#13;
THR - M ARCH 18 CLOSED&#13;
FRI - MARCH 19 7 p.m. - 12 a.m.&#13;
SAT - MARCH 20 9 a.m. - Noon&#13;
SUN - MARCH 21 6 p.m. - 10 p .m. &#13;
8 Thursday, March 11,1982 RANGER&#13;
Baseball team opens new season March 16&#13;
__ . u ,..;n nn u/ntrh us That's PnoH nmuc » »&#13;
by Tammy Shuemate&#13;
While most of us are concerned&#13;
about finding our way to a warm&#13;
climate over spring break, the&#13;
Parkside baseball team will be&#13;
concerned about their season&#13;
opener, which commences at&#13;
Indiana State University on&#13;
March 16.&#13;
Yes, believe it or not, baseball is&#13;
beginning once again despite the&#13;
bad weather we've been experiencing.&#13;
According to&#13;
Parkside's baseball coach Ken&#13;
"Red" Oberbruner, the team has&#13;
been practicing in the gym&#13;
frequently since early January.&#13;
"As far as preconditioning is&#13;
concerned, I think we're in&#13;
halfway decent shape. We could&#13;
go right out of the gym and into&#13;
the snow and play ball," he said.&#13;
As for the strengths of the team,&#13;
Oberbrunner said, "It's always&#13;
your pitching staff and your&#13;
defense that tells you how good&#13;
you're going to do this year." And&#13;
this year, unfortunately, the&#13;
pitching staff will be minus two of&#13;
last year's top pitchers. Jamie&#13;
Oberbruner, the coach's son,&#13;
signed with the San Diego Padres&#13;
and Kevin Erwin decided against&#13;
returning to school.&#13;
Even though this loss may hurt&#13;
the team, Oberbruner feels he has&#13;
a fairly good staff coming back. "I&#13;
think we have two players who I&#13;
think could be stoppers," he said,&#13;
"Brian Steinhoff who transferred&#13;
from Carthage, and the other is&#13;
Joe Krisik who transferred from&#13;
Wichita State. They're both&#13;
juniors so they've had several&#13;
years experience and I'm looking&#13;
for them to really help us out and&#13;
take over."&#13;
Oberbruner also mentioned&#13;
sophomores Jim Anderson and&#13;
Scott Hartnell, who are first year&#13;
players. He said, "I'm looking&#13;
forward to them giving us some&#13;
relief as far as starting&#13;
assignments are concerned."&#13;
Oberbruner feels he has a good&#13;
lefty in Mark Schmitz, who is from&#13;
Cashton High School, winner of&#13;
the Class C State Tournament last&#13;
year. He is looking to freshman&#13;
right handers Glenn Lowe and&#13;
Paul Czarny for some extra help.&#13;
"So I guess as we look at it now,&#13;
we'll have seven pitchers," he&#13;
said, "and hopefully, two of them&#13;
can be our stoppers and the other&#13;
five will come along in games. I&#13;
would say that probably it will&#13;
take till the third week in April, I&#13;
think, before this team will really&#13;
come around."&#13;
Due to the fact that last year's&#13;
right and center fielders will not&#13;
be back, Oberbruner will have to&#13;
do some switching of positions in&#13;
the outfield.&#13;
"I think the strength in our&#13;
outfield will be adequate," he&#13;
said. As of now, Chris Rozell will&#13;
be playing right field. Said&#13;
Oberbruner, "He's a very fine&#13;
looking ballplayer so I think we&#13;
could get some mileage out of&#13;
him. And then in center field we're&#13;
moving our John Hyatt from left&#13;
field over to center field this year&#13;
and so we have left field open."&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
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rates. Fast Service. South Kenosha. 657-&#13;
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Loree at 632-5788 evenings.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
DORM SIZE REFRIGERATOR&#13;
Ken or Andy in Ranger office.&#13;
Looking over his catching staff,&#13;
Oberbruner said, "We have good&#13;
strength this year, this is one of&#13;
the best catching staffs that I've&#13;
ever had since I've been here."&#13;
The staff consists of Dick Sykes,&#13;
who is going into his fourth year&#13;
for Coach Oberbruner, Rick&#13;
Marino, a junior, and Zar Matic&#13;
and Rick Marino, both freshmen.&#13;
"Those four boys look good to me&#13;
and I may try them in the outfield&#13;
also, or in different positions,"&#13;
said the coach.&#13;
He went on to say that, "Our&#13;
infield should be pretty classy. We&#13;
have two All - State men back. At&#13;
third base is Rick Salisbury and at&#13;
second base is Danny Sykes, so&#13;
they'll really help us. Then we&#13;
have at short stop, Kevan Bytnar,&#13;
who's back, and first base is kind&#13;
of open this year. We're looking&#13;
for somebody right now to put in&#13;
there, and I think that Tony&#13;
Laning is one possibility and Mike&#13;
Carey is another possibility. He&#13;
(Carey) played a little bit of first&#13;
base for us last year. And Joe&#13;
Krisik, when he isn't pitching,&#13;
might be a possibility for playing&#13;
first base."&#13;
Other alternatives for infield&#13;
positions are freshmen BJ McMahon,&#13;
who probably can play&#13;
any position in the infield and&#13;
could be of help to the team and A1&#13;
Dorff, who was a good third&#13;
baseman last year for Kenosha&#13;
Tremper.&#13;
Most likely, the coach will go&#13;
with John Hyatt as the lead-off&#13;
batter, followed by Dan Sykes,&#13;
Rich Salisbury and, perhaps,&#13;
Chris Rozell.&#13;
Parkside has had some past&#13;
success with a few of their&#13;
players. Ray Gallo was signed by&#13;
the Brewers and Jamie Oberbruner&#13;
was signed by the San&#13;
Diego Padres. This gives&#13;
Parkside some exposure, as far as&#13;
baseball scouts are concerned.&#13;
According to Coach Oberbruner,&#13;
"They get to know that if you've&#13;
had some luck with players&#13;
moving up the ladder, they'll&#13;
always watch you. I know now&#13;
that there's going to be at least&#13;
four to six down in Indiana to&#13;
watch us. That's good news.'&#13;
Oberbruner feels that the team&#13;
has gotten one of the best&#13;
schedules they've had in a long&#13;
time. They will be playing such&#13;
teams as University of Chicago -&#13;
Circle, UW - Madison, Carthage&#13;
and Chicago State, to name a few.&#13;
Following the three games they&#13;
will be playing at Indiana State&#13;
next week, their first home game&#13;
will be held on April 8, a&#13;
doubleheader against Chicago&#13;
State.&#13;
Once the Parkside baseball&#13;
team gets into the swing of thi ngs&#13;
and the weather starts warming&#13;
up, baseball fans can hopefully&#13;
look forward to an exciting and&#13;
successful season.&#13;
Contact&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
PENTAX 135mm f3.5 tele-photo lens. Inquire&#13;
at Ranger office.&#13;
USED PENTAX K1000 with 50mm f2 - 13 5mm&#13;
f2.8 - 2x teleconverter - fl ash - camera bag -&#13;
case for camera - individual lens cases&#13;
$150. Inquire Ranger office, c/o S.S.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
TO PAM, Jenny, Cindy. Thanks for being my&#13;
friends. Joey.&#13;
HAVE YOU KICKED a chair in the Coffee&#13;
Shoppe today?&#13;
COME ON EVERYBODY write classifieds.&#13;
10 words are free!&#13;
I BET FOLLETT CO. runs the best&#13;
bookstores in the world, don't you? Nobody&#13;
important.&#13;
GET YOUR ADS IN GEAR! Write&#13;
classifieds! Free up to 10 words!&#13;
HAVE A GREAT SPRING BREAK&#13;
everyone! We all deserve it, right?&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Li&#13;
mav III— R^the Seven&#13;
EnlCI .. We-t| be rafflinc,&#13;
Wa-C -&#13;
&amp; Seven&#13;
17-20,&#13;
State. </text>
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              <text>NT University of Wisconsin - Parkside The struggle of&#13;
granting tenure&#13;
Jim Kreuser Loretta Lacy Phil Pogreba&#13;
by Edward Beal&#13;
Parkside's history, it seems, is&#13;
known for not granting tenure or&#13;
renewing of junior faculty appointments,&#13;
for reasons which&#13;
aren't very concise. What are the&#13;
objective standards in determining&#13;
who leaves or stays?&#13;
Where do the students come into&#13;
focus? How does such a decision&#13;
affect the optimism of the&#13;
remaining staff members?&#13;
According to UWPF 6.07 article&#13;
two in the faculty handbook,&#13;
criteria is based on three major&#13;
areas: creativity, teaching&#13;
ability, and service. Yet, there are&#13;
reports of teachers not being&#13;
granted tenure or contract&#13;
renewals in the past, and present,&#13;
even though they can prove their&#13;
efficiency in each of the three&#13;
classifications. Why?&#13;
It is the strong belief of many&#13;
other students that personal attitudes&#13;
on the part of the senior&#13;
faculty is a basis for judgement of&#13;
a junior faculty member informally,&#13;
but there is no way to&#13;
verify this claim: "I won't deny&#13;
that possibility and I agree, there&#13;
is no way of verification," stated&#13;
Eon Pavalko, chairman of the&#13;
Behavioral Science Division.&#13;
"However, any faculty member&#13;
who feels that they have been&#13;
judged informally should appeal&#13;
such a case." He also added that,&#13;
"Sometimes students don't&#13;
always see important criteria that&#13;
faculty members do."&#13;
Could it be informal criteria&#13;
then, that the senior faculty in the&#13;
sociology division has judged Jim&#13;
Bear den's non - renewal of contract&#13;
on? The faculty handbook&#13;
clearly states that special consideration&#13;
will be given to t he area&#13;
of teaching. Well, Jim's student&#13;
evaluations are outstanding — the&#13;
ratio is 99-1 in his favor. With odds&#13;
like that alone he shouldn't lose,&#13;
but he has a forty to sixty percent&#13;
chance of it, if Parkside's history&#13;
repeats itself.&#13;
In the area of research, he has&#13;
obtained his Ph.D, a year later&#13;
than expected, because of circumstances&#13;
surrounding his Ph.D&#13;
Continued On Page Eight&#13;
PSGA to hold elections March 10 § II by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
PSGA elections are being held&#13;
on Wednesday and Thursday,&#13;
March 10 and 11, from 9 a.m. to 8&#13;
p.m. The polls will be located on&#13;
the concourse level in Molinaro&#13;
Hall. The elections committee and&#13;
the Judicial branch of P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. will conduct the elections. No&#13;
candidate for any office or any&#13;
member of an organization endorsing&#13;
a candidate or any&#13;
electioneering will be allowed&#13;
within 50 feet of the polls.&#13;
The counting of the ballots will&#13;
be conducted by the elections&#13;
committee and the Judicial&#13;
branch of P.S.G.A., Inc. The&#13;
ballots will be counted directly&#13;
after the closing of the polls at 8&#13;
p.m. on Thursday, March 11. Any&#13;
interested persons are welcome.&#13;
All ballots must be counted by an&#13;
authorized person in order to be&#13;
counted as valid. Any contestation,&#13;
complaint, or comment&#13;
on the conduct or results of the&#13;
elections must be filed in writing&#13;
with any member of the elections&#13;
committee by March 25. The&#13;
decision of the P.S.G.A. Senate&#13;
shall be final and binding when&#13;
dealing with contestation and&#13;
complaint.&#13;
Running for the office of&#13;
President erf P.S.G.A. this year&#13;
are Jim Kreuser, Loretta Lacy,&#13;
and Phil Pogreba.&#13;
JIM KREUSER&#13;
"The issues that I intend to&#13;
address are ones that directly&#13;
affect the students here at&#13;
Parkside," said Kreuser. "On the&#13;
state-wide level, there are&#13;
basically about six items. The&#13;
areas are tuition increases,&#13;
collective bargaining, drinking&#13;
age, landlord tenant reforms, the&#13;
freezing of faculty salaries and&#13;
fighting against cutbacks in&#13;
general from the Parkside&#13;
budget," he said.&#13;
"On the local level, I have made&#13;
a commitment to have students sit&#13;
on faculty committees to ensure&#13;
student input on issues and concerns&#13;
that deal with students here&#13;
at Parkside," continued Kreuser.&#13;
"I would like to have a meeting a&#13;
week with the other heads of&#13;
organizations to discuss the&#13;
various concerns of students and&#13;
how we could most effectively&#13;
address them. To have a more&#13;
active student services committee&#13;
would be an asset to the students&#13;
for that is the committee that&#13;
relates tangible accomplishments&#13;
to the students."&#13;
"I feel that I would be best for&#13;
the position of president of&#13;
P.S.G.A. because I have gained&#13;
much experience in decision&#13;
making for what is the majority of&#13;
UW-P students," he said. "I have&#13;
gained more experience in&#13;
organizational structure,&#13;
procedure and problems that lay&#13;
with student government leaders&#13;
than the other candidates. I&#13;
already know the university&#13;
system and how the campus is r un&#13;
and governed. I believe that my&#13;
leadership abilities have proven to&#13;
be very progressive in terms of&#13;
student input and rights and&#13;
visibility. The organization, this&#13;
year, has made great strides&#13;
statewide in expressing the views&#13;
of Parkside while some schools&#13;
didn't know we existed. Last year&#13;
P.S.G.A. didn't exist, it advanced&#13;
in great strides to accomplish&#13;
student representation of&#13;
Parkside students."&#13;
"The changes that need to be&#13;
made in P.S.G.A. are few,"&#13;
Kreuser said. "Now we have&#13;
progressive outlook and see the&#13;
need for positive change. There&#13;
are a few organizational rough -&#13;
spots, but it is to be in any&#13;
organization. Some inhouse&#13;
operations must be changed to let&#13;
P.S.G.A. become more efficient."&#13;
LORETTA LACY&#13;
^Loretta has had some past&#13;
experience with student government.&#13;
"I intend to address the&#13;
issues such as the constant rise in&#13;
tuition, the decline in financial&#13;
aid, the alternatives to the&#13;
bookstore and grievances for and&#13;
against professors," she s aid. "I&#13;
think all of these can be accomplished&#13;
through the use of&#13;
open forum, and a strong sense of&#13;
student input. Meetings with the&#13;
Chancellor and the faculty must&#13;
be consistent and the use of lobbying&#13;
through United Council and&#13;
the Board of Regents is a&#13;
necessity to a successful government.&#13;
My main goal is simply to&#13;
make sure that the students are&#13;
heard, and that the students have&#13;
a strong voice."&#13;
PHIL POGREBA&#13;
"Whenever a problem arises at&#13;
Parkside, people sit down and ask&#13;
themselves what the reasons are&#13;
for that particular problem," said&#13;
Pogreba. "In attacking a problem&#13;
in this manner, two main issues&#13;
are blamed for almost every&#13;
problem, those being the commuter&#13;
status of Parkside and the&#13;
high level of apathy of the average&#13;
Parkside student."&#13;
Pogreba has intentions of addressing&#13;
the question of why&#13;
haven't the dorms that were&#13;
supposed to be built here, on&#13;
campus, ever been built.&#13;
Projections were made when&#13;
Parkside opened f or dorms to be&#13;
built. "As president of P.S.G.A. I&#13;
would like to set up a task force to&#13;
look into the reasons why dorms&#13;
aren't yet built at Parkside, and&#13;
I'd like to get the ball rolling on&#13;
this issue," he said. "Another&#13;
issue at Parkside is the problem of&#13;
apathy. There simply is little or no&#13;
student input or activity on&#13;
decision making that directly&#13;
affects them. The law gives&#13;
students power to have input on&#13;
virtually anything that affects&#13;
them. If more students were to&#13;
know this, I'm sure there would be&#13;
more students interested in what&#13;
was happening."&#13;
Pogreba sees some of the&#13;
reasons for apathy as a non -&#13;
PSGA&#13;
traditional campus. Many&#13;
students have responsibilities&#13;
outside of the campus. His answer&#13;
to this problem is larger installation&#13;
of services to the&#13;
students.&#13;
"This year SUFAC had&#13;
problems getting the budget&#13;
passed by the Senate. I was a&#13;
member of SUFAC this past year&#13;
and on the whole was unsatisfied&#13;
with the results of SUFAC. At the&#13;
beginning of the new SUFAC, last&#13;
spring, the committee set some&#13;
goals and objectives for the&#13;
budgeting process to take place&#13;
during the fall semester. I feel&#13;
that these goals and objectives&#13;
were in no way reached, and a&#13;
great disservice to the students&#13;
was the result. SUFAC is going to&#13;
have to sit down and make up&#13;
guidelines for the budgeting&#13;
process to insure that the students&#13;
money is being utilized to its&#13;
maximum potential."&#13;
Other subjects that Pogreba&#13;
touched on were the Teaching&#13;
Excellence Awards, and the&#13;
concept that P.S.G.A. has a&#13;
responsibility to change things to&#13;
prevent future controversy.&#13;
Voting registration is a definite&#13;
link in student voting, and&#13;
Pogreba would like to see&#13;
registration get set up on the&#13;
campus area..&#13;
Senate OKs budget,&#13;
election referendums by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
In its Feb. 25 meeting, the PSGA&#13;
Senate approved the total SUFAC&#13;
budget of $610,225.10 after twice&#13;
voting down a budget approximately&#13;
$2700 lower.&#13;
Ironically, the third discussion&#13;
on the budget took considerably&#13;
less time than did discussion on&#13;
how to word a referendum&#13;
question concerning the Union&#13;
Square jukebox. The Senate voted&#13;
to place five referendums on the&#13;
March 10 a nd 11 e lection ballot.&#13;
SUFAC chairman Luis&#13;
Valldejuli explained to the Senate&#13;
the only different item on the total&#13;
SUFAC budget. The Housing&#13;
budget was increased $2000 in the&#13;
area of salaries and $698 in fringe&#13;
benefits in a move to reach a&#13;
compromise with Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin. The original Housing&#13;
budget request of $26,771 was cu t&#13;
to $20,153 by SUFAC during&#13;
preliminary budgeting. The new&#13;
Housing budget totals $22,851.&#13;
Valldejuli also said that in the&#13;
SUFAC proposal was a stipulation&#13;
that there is to be a task force&#13;
established to analyze the extent&#13;
of Parkside's housing needs and&#13;
services.&#13;
The only comment about the&#13;
SUFAC budget came from&#13;
Senator Mike Pfaffl, who asked if&#13;
SUFAC could look into the&#13;
Athletics budget. PSGA Vice -&#13;
President Kathy Slama replied&#13;
that the committee was free to&#13;
look into any budget at any time —&#13;
not only during budgeting.&#13;
The Dave Higgens / Phil&#13;
Pogreba move to approve the&#13;
$610,225.10 budget passed 9-1-0&#13;
with Pfaffl voting "no." The&#13;
budget now goes to Chancellor&#13;
Guskin and the UW Board of&#13;
Regents for approval.&#13;
Referendums&#13;
The Senate also approved to&#13;
place five referendum questions&#13;
on the election ballot. Elections&#13;
will be held March 10 and 11 for&#13;
President, Vice - President,&#13;
Senate and SUFAC.&#13;
The five referendum topics are:&#13;
• Do you support a peace - time&#13;
military draft (Yes or No)&#13;
• Do you favor decriminalization&#13;
of up to one ounce of&#13;
marijuana? (Yes or No)&#13;
• Which do you favor in the&#13;
Union Square — a jukebox, more -&#13;
often changing the music on a&#13;
jukebox, a stereo system, or&#13;
other?&#13;
• Do you know if there is a&#13;
housing system on campus? (Yes&#13;
or No)&#13;
• Do you agree to support the&#13;
UW System Student Lobby,&#13;
United Council, through a mandatory&#13;
fee, refundable upon&#13;
written request, of 50 cents per&#13;
semester? (Yes or No)&#13;
Candidates t o hold forum Monday&#13;
Ranger is sponsoring a&#13;
PSGA Presidential forum,&#13;
March 8 at 1p . m. in mid - Main&#13;
Place.&#13;
The three candidates for&#13;
PSGA President — Loretta&#13;
Lacy, Jim Kreuser and Phil&#13;
Pogreba will make prepared&#13;
statements and answer&#13;
questions from the audience.&#13;
Everyone is invited to come&#13;
and ask questions.&#13;
Demonstration against budget cuts&#13;
On Friday, March 5 Vice -&#13;
President George Bush and&#13;
Governor Lee Dreyfus will&#13;
attend a Republican party fund&#13;
raiser in downtown Milwaukee.&#13;
The PSGA Senate voted&#13;
unanimously Feb. 18 to support&#13;
a demonstration to express&#13;
opposition to the cuts administered&#13;
to the UW System.&#13;
The Mike Pfaffl/Dave&#13;
Higgens resolution stated,&#13;
"The Republican party has&#13;
come out against higher&#13;
education here and around the&#13;
nation by drastically reducing&#13;
expenditures allocated for&#13;
education."&#13;
Anybody wishing to attend&#13;
the demonstration should&#13;
contact Mike Pfaffl at the&#13;
PSGA office, located by the&#13;
Coffee Shoppe.&#13;
2 Thursday, March 4,1982 RANGER&#13;
lOCOOC*&#13;
Editorials&#13;
^s^s^^ocooooooccoocoeooocco cooooco&#13;
Ranger editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the editorial&#13;
staff. Parkside students may submit editorial ideas to the editor for&#13;
consideration. Editorial ideas need not be typed to be considered.&#13;
5CCCCOOOOCCCCCO®®c«fi«OC050COOOCOOOCOOCOeoOOK&gt;S!&#13;
Ranger endorses voting&#13;
The only endorsement Ranger is making for the spring PSGA&#13;
elections March 10 and 11 is not for any specific candidate, but&#13;
the act of voting itself.&#13;
Voting is important for many reasons. The number one reason&#13;
is that whoever is elected to PSGA represents the student body&#13;
whenever university administrators want to know (or are told)&#13;
how the students feel about an issue. Since PSGA represents the&#13;
student body, all students should be represented by choosing the&#13;
office - holders of PSGA.&#13;
When only four or five percent of the students vote in PSGA&#13;
elections, the real student body may not be fairly served. Some&#13;
students may think that it doesn't really matter who is elected&#13;
President, Vice - President or Senator of PSGA because things&#13;
will continue like they always have in the past.&#13;
But in fact, the people in those positions are important. PSGA&#13;
is only as powerful as the people in it. PSGA has the opportunity&#13;
to be strong in representing the students in university&#13;
operations. This can only be accomplished by having a large&#13;
number of students participating in university affairs. If&#13;
students are unable to do that by being a member of a student&#13;
organization or being a student representative on one of the&#13;
many campus committees, they should at least do the quick,&#13;
painless — and important — act of voting in the PSGA elections.&#13;
Remember to attend the presidential forum Monday, March 8&#13;
in mid-Main Place and vote Wednesday and Thursday, March 10&#13;
and 11.&#13;
Lacy wins Round One&#13;
Although Ranger isn't endorsing a PSGA presidential or vice -&#13;
presidential candidate, we feel obligated to report the trouble&#13;
we've had getting the candidates to help us tell the students how&#13;
they stand on the issues and what their plans are for their&#13;
respective offices.&#13;
That is, all candidates but one. Loretta Lacy was the only&#13;
presidential or vice - presidential candidate to return a one&#13;
sheet, four question handout distributed for Ranger by PSGA&#13;
Elections Committee chairperson Kathy Slama when the candidates&#13;
first took out petition papers. Lacy was the only one who&#13;
handed her questionnaire in on the deadline day, Friday, Feb.&#13;
26.&#13;
That is even more astounding considering Lacy received her&#13;
questionnaire only two days before the deadline while all the&#13;
other candidates received theirs one to two weeks earlier and&#13;
were constantly reminded to hand theirs in.&#13;
If Round One of the presidential election is the responsibility to&#13;
let their constituents know about their stands on issues (within a&#13;
lenient deadline), the clear winner is Loretta Lacy. This is only&#13;
Round One of th e long, hard fight of t he campaign, but it is still&#13;
something to be remembered.&#13;
Remember to vote&#13;
March 10 § II&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Steve Myers&#13;
Mark Sanders&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Andy Petersen&#13;
Linda Andersen&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
ganger Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Co-Photo Editor&#13;
Co-Photo Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Linda Adams, Edward Beal, Greg Bonofiglio, Carol Burns,&#13;
Patty DeLuisa, Mary Kaddatz, Joe Kimm, Karla Kobal,&#13;
Lisa Linstroth, Rick Luehr, Dick Oberbruner, Chuck&#13;
Ostrowski, Masood Shafiq, Tammy Shuemate, 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 soieiy&#13;
eV6ry durin9 the ^ademic vear except during breaks and holidays&#13;
»• 'S Pr'n,edbv ,heUn'on 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, University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside, Box No. 2000, Kenosha, Wisconsin, 53141. university of Wisconsin&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
cTucTed^for verification"3"9 A" 'e,,erS muSt be Si9"ed and a ,elephone 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;
reserves all editorial privileges in refusing to print letters which contain false or&#13;
defamatory content.&#13;
Kreuser is&#13;
"egotistical"&#13;
To the Editor and&#13;
All Concerned Students,&#13;
As you can tell, there is a PSGA&#13;
Presidential election soon. This&#13;
election, unlike others we have&#13;
had at Parkside, brings to mind a&#13;
question of decency and loyalty.&#13;
In my opinion, we have been&#13;
fooled into believing that we really&#13;
have student leadership. This&#13;
fault does not lie with the PSGA&#13;
itself, but more with the&#13;
egotistical President of the whole&#13;
organization. Our "Concerned and&#13;
Committed" buddy, Jim&#13;
Kreuser, must not be re-elected.&#13;
By this time, you are no doubt&#13;
being inundated with election&#13;
posters. One poster even refers to&#13;
Parkside as "Kreuser's Land", do&#13;
I need his permission to use the&#13;
bathroom?&#13;
Students of Parkside, I ask you,&#13;
do we want another year of&#13;
watching Jim's ego grow, or do we&#13;
want what we really need? This&#13;
must be our year of change! We&#13;
need real meaning and action&#13;
behind the voices — we need PHIL&#13;
POGREBA for President of&#13;
PSGA.&#13;
Do yourself a favor — attend the&#13;
open debate on Monday, March 8&#13;
at 1 o'clock in the Union Concourse.&#13;
Phil will show you that he&#13;
is the best candidate.&#13;
Bill Reed&#13;
Frederick is best&#13;
for V.P.&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
I am writing in support of&#13;
Earlene Frederick for Vice&#13;
President. She has been an actively&#13;
involved Senator, learning&#13;
about each facet of the&#13;
organization. She is well&#13;
organized and has needed&#13;
knowledge to work effectively.&#13;
She has been to United Council&#13;
and knows how it operates.&#13;
Earlene also has seen how other&#13;
student organizations are run and&#13;
could use the experience to&#13;
P.S.G.A. grow.&#13;
I feel Earlene Frederick is the&#13;
best qualified for Vice President.&#13;
Name withheld&#13;
Write RANGER&#13;
A Letter!&#13;
Pogreba feels he's best&#13;
To all the students&#13;
at Parkside:&#13;
The elections of P SGA are close&#13;
at hand. I feel that this year in&#13;
particular there is going to be&#13;
more student involvement than&#13;
ever before at Parkside. I feel the&#13;
reasons for this increase in involvement&#13;
is the interest students&#13;
have developed on issues that&#13;
directly affect them.&#13;
As President Pro Tempore of&#13;
the Senate since last semester and&#13;
an active member of PSGA since&#13;
last year, I am well aware of the&#13;
importance of the issues affecting&#13;
the students of Parkside.&#13;
However, I do not intend to simply&#13;
remain aware of these issues.&#13;
Instead I intend to take affirmative&#13;
action to ensure that the&#13;
students' rights, grievances and&#13;
interests are properly&#13;
represented.&#13;
This year the Senate has increased&#13;
its activity in areas of&#13;
particular concern to the students.&#13;
However, I do believe that with&#13;
better leadership we can increase&#13;
to even greater extents. I feel that&#13;
my working relationship with the&#13;
Senate is such that this can be&#13;
accomplished.&#13;
One of the duties of P resident is&#13;
to keep in constant contact with&#13;
administration. This is important&#13;
to guarantee that student input is&#13;
heard on all administrative&#13;
decisions that affect students&#13;
directly. As President&#13;
Tempore I have had the&#13;
portunity to work with&#13;
ministration and am aware of the&#13;
administrative process that&#13;
governs this institution.&#13;
For these reasons I feel that I&#13;
am the best candidate for the&#13;
Pro&#13;
op-&#13;
Adoffice&#13;
of President of PSGA and&#13;
would like to invite all students to&#13;
attend an open debate to be held&#13;
on March 8 at 1:00 p. m. in mid -&#13;
Main Place. This debate will&#13;
make students aware of where all&#13;
candidates stand on student issues&#13;
and show students where the true&#13;
meaning behind the voices lie.&#13;
Phil Pogreba&#13;
Kreuser&#13;
compatible&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In regard to the letter to the&#13;
editor of last week entitled&#13;
"Kreuser is 'concerned and&#13;
committed' ", I can only state thai&#13;
I was in favor of those accomplishments&#13;
mentioned. I was&#13;
extremely lucky to have a&#13;
working senate that coincided&#13;
with my ideology. It takes a&#13;
coordinated effort to make results&#13;
happen. Most if not all of the&#13;
accomplishments that occurred&#13;
through PSGA this year was on&#13;
account of the initiative and&#13;
striving nature that took place&#13;
which only complimented my&#13;
presidency. It is true that a lot of&#13;
firsts happened this year, but I&#13;
couldn't have done it all alone.&#13;
I encourage all students of&#13;
Parkside to participate in the&#13;
upcoming elections. It is essential&#13;
to vote YES to the United Council&#13;
funding formula to be an effective&#13;
student lobbying organization. It&#13;
also wouldn't hurt any to vote for&#13;
me and keep PSGA flowing in the&#13;
right direction for the next year.&#13;
Jim Kreuser&#13;
PSGA President&#13;
Students urged to vote&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
As a Senator in student&#13;
government, I would like to add&#13;
some thoughts to the upcoming&#13;
P.S.G.A. elections. This past week&#13;
you have probably noticed the&#13;
immense amount of campaign&#13;
writings on our hallowed halls&#13;
What do they all mean? There are&#13;
meaning behind the voices,&#13;
Kreuser Land, etc. They mean&#13;
that there are two individuals at&#13;
Parkside who want you to vote for&#13;
them. One is our present&#13;
president, Jim Kreuser and the&#13;
Jner. ,sT^hil pogreba, now a&#13;
Senator. I have seen both of these&#13;
students in action and highly&#13;
recommend both of them for the&#13;
job as president. But their final&#13;
victory is only up to you, the&#13;
students. I urge all students to&#13;
participate in the election and to&#13;
find out all they can about each&#13;
candidate, not just what the&#13;
banners say.&#13;
The future of American&#13;
Education is at stake in the near&#13;
future, because of the Reagan /&#13;
Dreyfus cutbacks on higher&#13;
education. We must have a strong&#13;
student leader to deal with these&#13;
issues effectively, not to shun&#13;
them away like a chicken in a hen&#13;
house. So again, I urge you to take&#13;
part in this political process,&#13;
which affects you more than you&#13;
could ever imagine!!!&#13;
Thank You&#13;
Senator Michael Pfaffl&#13;
RANGER Thursday, March 4,1982&#13;
PSGA candidates speak out on issues&#13;
Vice-president&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Running for the office of vice -&#13;
president this year are Chuck Betz&#13;
and Earlene Frederick.&#13;
Chuck Betz&#13;
"My main priority would be to&#13;
look into those issues which most&#13;
directly affect the majority of&#13;
students," said Betz. "These&#13;
would include where our tuition&#13;
money goes, why they keep&#13;
tacking on these tuition surcharges,&#13;
whether or not the&#13;
bookstore is being run most efficiently,&#13;
and what other complaints&#13;
the students have. I would&#13;
address these issues by going&#13;
through the necessary channels&#13;
and talking to the people most&#13;
responsible. The Chancellor holds&#13;
open forums throughout the&#13;
semester and hopefully I will be&#13;
able to pick up on the wants and&#13;
needs of the students at these&#13;
forums."&#13;
Betz was appointed as a senator&#13;
two months ago, and during that&#13;
time, has found out how the&#13;
P.S.G.A. functions.&#13;
"The only way I would change&#13;
things within P.S.G.A. would be to&#13;
get more active as far as student&#13;
needs are concerned," he said.&#13;
"Not enough students realize how&#13;
much we can do for them if they&#13;
would only let us know their&#13;
needs."&#13;
Earlene Frederick&#13;
"I would like to take a look into&#13;
the problems and issues of&#13;
financial aid, the issues being&#13;
dealt with at the time in the state&#13;
legislature that pertain to&#13;
students and the lack of communication&#13;
to and from the&#13;
students and the organizations,"&#13;
said Frederick.&#13;
"Through United Council and&#13;
lobbying, some of these things will&#13;
be accomplished. Building&#13;
P.S.G.A. as a better student&#13;
service organization will be a way&#13;
of bringing the problems of the&#13;
students to the administration's&#13;
attention," said Frederick. Also,&#13;
the senators would have to be&#13;
more informed, and P.S.G.A.&#13;
should work on ways to make&#13;
itself more accessible. I believe to&#13;
get a lot out of an organization, a&#13;
lot must be put into it. I'm willing&#13;
to give the time and effort. I would&#13;
like to see i t grow and expand."&#13;
Earlene is a Senator at the&#13;
present time and is familiar with&#13;
parliamentary procedure. She is a&#13;
member of the legislative affairs&#13;
and student services committees&#13;
and belongs to Academic Affairs,&#13;
a United. Council subcommittee. EARLENE FREDERICK&#13;
Kreuser Jvoooooosocoaocooeoa «ooccooe©sGcosoeo«©!&#13;
! To the Editor To the Editor,&#13;
To my surprise and horror our&#13;
illustrious President Mr. Jim&#13;
Kreuser has decided to run for&#13;
president of PSGA again. I hope&#13;
the students of Parkside can see&#13;
through the paper mache image of&#13;
being "Concerned and Committed"&#13;
that he thinks he&#13;
possesses.&#13;
Since we are all students of&#13;
higher education I think we&#13;
students of Parkside should ask&#13;
the question just what Mr.&#13;
Kreuser is "Concerned and&#13;
Committed" to — h imself or the&#13;
students of Parkside. Personally I&#13;
don't think it is to the students of&#13;
Parkside, but to himself.&#13;
Very little has changed during&#13;
his administration over the last&#13;
year — the bookstore is still the&#13;
same, parking hasn't improved,&#13;
and the procedure for selecting&#13;
the teaching awards have not been&#13;
revised (even though the&#13;
University Committee recommended&#13;
that they be changed).&#13;
Where then are Mr. Kreuser's&#13;
"Concerns and Committments"?&#13;
I think they are for himself. Mr.&#13;
Kreuser is just another politician&#13;
that will:&#13;
1. Do anything to get elected, i.e.&#13;
buy beers for students in the&#13;
Union the night before last year's&#13;
election.&#13;
2. Use his position as president&#13;
of PSGA to open doors for himself,&#13;
i.e. the job that he has with&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin.&#13;
Parkside doesn't need another&#13;
part - time president, and Jim&#13;
Kreuser doesn't even qualify as a&#13;
part - time president. In the April&#13;
30, 1981 Ranger, Mr. Kreuser&#13;
advertised office hours of 12 - 1&#13;
o'clock down in the Union Square.&#13;
First, Mr. Kreuser doesn't have&#13;
an office in the Union Square and&#13;
second, he is only avaialable to&#13;
students one hour a day.&#13;
Students of Parkside this incompetent&#13;
President needs to be&#13;
removed from office and replaced&#13;
not with another politician but&#13;
with an active member of PSGA,&#13;
PHIL POGREBA.&#13;
M. Scoon&#13;
L6,C COSO800COSOCO80O006O8COOCOQOSO! •osooocoscscA&#13;
Kreuser: broken promises&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In the March 5,1981 issue of the&#13;
Ranger, the candidates for PSGA&#13;
president stated their intentions if&#13;
elected. One i n particular stated&#13;
some of the following: "... wants&#13;
to set up an emergency loan fund&#13;
for students . . .," ". . . wants to&#13;
work with the new SOC president&#13;
. . .," "Planning on taking a closer&#13;
grip on the Physical Plant. . ., " "&#13;
. . . running on a campaign of&#13;
questioning faculty and its&#13;
spending ..." and lastely, "He&#13;
will get things done." I would like&#13;
to question if Jim Kreuser has&#13;
done any of the above.&#13;
As a senator of PSGA until&#13;
August 1981, I found it near impossible&#13;
to work with Kreuser.&#13;
Many of th e things I had planned&#13;
to work on were cut short because&#13;
of Kreuser's lack of enthusiasm.&#13;
Admittedly, Jim has done much&#13;
for Student activities but little for&#13;
student life. His main interest lies&#13;
in the Union activities, not in the&#13;
students.&#13;
I find it hard to believe that the&#13;
students of Parkside can re-elect a&#13;
man who has l ittle to show f or a&#13;
years work.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Mike Loos&#13;
King and I" was disappointment&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
I am writing in regards to the&#13;
letter to the editor concerning the&#13;
disappointment of a girl in the&#13;
review of "The King and I". I&#13;
have been involved with the&#13;
theater since junior high, which&#13;
gives me years of experience, and&#13;
I must say that I agree with Miss&#13;
Linstroth's opinion of the show.&#13;
Although I would have put it more&#13;
politely than she, the show was a&#13;
disappointment.&#13;
Miss Martin had a strong&#13;
musical performance, but she was&#13;
often too bubbly and high spirited,&#13;
especially in the death scene&#13;
towards the end. In the song&#13;
"Getting to Know You" Anna is&#13;
supposed to be singing to the&#13;
children, but Miss Martin almost&#13;
totally ignored the children and&#13;
sang it to the audience. Overall,&#13;
her performance was musically&#13;
beautiful, but terribly over-acted.&#13;
I could name several more instances&#13;
of this, but this serves to&#13;
prove my point.&#13;
Miss Tunks, it is true that the&#13;
Reuther Civic Auditorium is&#13;
known for its acoustics, this only&#13;
applies to music. The auditorium&#13;
is so live that spoken words were&#13;
sometimes unintelligible.&#13;
Also, not mentioned by Miss&#13;
Linstroth's review, was the&#13;
hideous costumes (for the most&#13;
part) in the show. Whoever heard&#13;
of Chinese wives wearing chiffon&#13;
prom dresses and plaid outfits?&#13;
There were some bright spots in&#13;
the show however. Miss Linstroth&#13;
mentioned John Miskulin's&#13;
wonderful portrayal of the King.&#13;
But, she also overlooked Andrew&#13;
Brhel's performance. It was&#13;
wonderful to see someone else on&#13;
stage with presence.&#13;
Also, in reference to Miss&#13;
Linstroth's experience, I do&#13;
believe she is a theater major, and&#13;
has been involved with several&#13;
productions, and it doesn't take a&#13;
13 year old child to see the lack of&#13;
quality in most of the performances&#13;
of the show.&#13;
One suggestio n I have for Miss&#13;
Linstroth about her reviewing is&#13;
this: If she doesn't like something&#13;
about the show, she should state it&#13;
in a more eloquent and polite&#13;
manner. Her references to Miss&#13;
Martin were quite a bit more than&#13;
tacky.&#13;
Name withheld&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Student government Senators&#13;
are also being elected next week.&#13;
Running this year is Todd&#13;
Bernhardt, Allan Levy, David&#13;
Higgens, Jill Nielsen, Brian&#13;
Schuetta, Ruth Slama and Luis&#13;
Valldejuli.&#13;
Todd Bernhardt&#13;
"I don't think it matters what&#13;
issues I want to cover, but what&#13;
issues the students want me to&#13;
cover," said Bernhardt. "If they&#13;
want to talk to me, we can go down&#13;
to the Union, have a beer, and see&#13;
what they want. The issues that&#13;
are brought to me will be taken&#13;
care of. I'll bring up proposals to&#13;
the Senate and do my damndest to&#13;
get it through. I am interested in&#13;
what students want to have done&#13;
around the campus. Things can&#13;
get done with cooperation of the&#13;
students and the Senate. Students&#13;
need to help out by making their&#13;
opinions heard, and by getting on&#13;
seats of committees."&#13;
David Higgens&#13;
"I would like to see som ething&#13;
done about the $24 million budget&#13;
cuts, and the extra 4 or 5 percent&#13;
that will get cut," said Higgens.&#13;
"How will it affect the schools? I&#13;
would also like to recruit more&#13;
Senators and offer more services&#13;
to the students. By using the&#13;
power of P.S.G.A., we can do this.&#13;
The powers aren't fully utilized&#13;
now. It's hard to get anything done&#13;
without student involvement.&#13;
Being a Senator has given me the&#13;
know-how on developing communication&#13;
within the Senate. A&#13;
work load division is an important&#13;
thing for any business type area to&#13;
work and through my time in&#13;
P.S.G.A. I've come to see that."&#13;
Allan Levy&#13;
Levy said, "I would like to see&#13;
something done about the&#13;
following issues: the constant rise&#13;
in educational costs, and the&#13;
decline in the amount of financial&#13;
aid available. Something needs to&#13;
be done about the grieve set-up.&#13;
* Students have to be able to file a&#13;
grievance quickly, if they have a&#13;
problem. We could also find an&#13;
alternative to the bookstore, like a&#13;
book loan program."&#13;
"Open Forum is a good way to&#13;
allow these issues to be dealt&#13;
with," he said. "We need a student&#13;
input program and setting up&#13;
consistant meetings between the&#13;
Chancellor and the students. The&#13;
use of lobbying by the United&#13;
Council is also important. I will&#13;
work hard for the students, and&#13;
although I have never run for&#13;
office before, I have worked&#13;
closely with student associates."&#13;
Jill Whitney Nielsen&#13;
"I would like to address the&#13;
issues that are pertinent to&#13;
students, especially in women's&#13;
affairs," said Nielsen. "I think&#13;
letters and references and&#13;
communication are the effective&#13;
way to carry out plans. I enjoy&#13;
working with people, and I am&#13;
always open to new suggestions&#13;
and ideas. If anything, I would like&#13;
to see P.S .G.A. more unified and&#13;
play an even larger role in state&#13;
affairs."&#13;
Brian Schuetta&#13;
"The three most important&#13;
things are student awareness, the&#13;
SUFAC budget and housing and&#13;
legal services," said Schuetta.&#13;
"Many students are unaware that&#13;
they have a voice in what goes on&#13;
at Parkside, and segregated fees&#13;
need to be held at a reasonable&#13;
level. The other thing is&#13;
establishing legal and housing&#13;
services at Parkside, and eventually&#13;
combining the two. My&#13;
previous research and experience&#13;
with the issues and the knowledge&#13;
of P.S.G.A. operations will enable&#13;
me to perform effectively in office."&#13;
Ruth Slama&#13;
"I will be directing my attentions&#13;
toward the area of&#13;
finances at Parkside," said&#13;
Slama. "This is a real concern for&#13;
students, and needs to be addressed.&#13;
A good Senator must be&#13;
informed, and that means that it's&#13;
necessary to attend all Senate&#13;
meetings. I hope that more&#13;
students will feel free to attend in&#13;
the future. I have had a lot of&#13;
experience with student governments.&#13;
Although I haven't served&#13;
in an office yet, I know enough to&#13;
be very effective. I hope to see&#13;
more of a student awareness as to&#13;
what is happening in the student&#13;
government. It's important for&#13;
students to know what's going&#13;
on."&#13;
Luis Valldejuli&#13;
"Student apathy is big issue,&#13;
and we have to increase student&#13;
services at the lowest possible&#13;
cost," said Valldejuli, "I also&#13;
intend to run for SUFAC again and&#13;
work on some of the issues&#13;
through that. I have been in&#13;
P.S.G.A. and SUFAC for more&#13;
than one year. I would like to&#13;
change things, very much. There&#13;
is a lot of tension existing within&#13;
the Senate together with the&#13;
"power play." Together, with&#13;
some other Senators, I've been&#13;
trying to stop the struggle, and I'll&#13;
keep trying in the f uture."&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
"I would like to see SUFAC&#13;
follow through with the things we&#13;
discussed this year — mainly&#13;
looking more closely into such&#13;
budgets as Athletics and Intramurals,"&#13;
said Meyer. "The&#13;
housing needs for Parkside should&#13;
also be investigated in order to see&#13;
exactly what the needs are . This&#13;
can be done through an audit for&#13;
athletics and a task force for&#13;
housing."&#13;
Meyer is a SUFAC member this&#13;
year, and feels that he knows&#13;
most of the different campus&#13;
organizations after working on&#13;
Ranger for the past years.&#13;
"I would like to see SUFAC and&#13;
the P.S.G.A. Senate work more&#13;
closely together, rather than have&#13;
all the petty bickering that went&#13;
on this year."&#13;
Winter Carnival marred&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I believe the decision by the&#13;
Winter Carnival Committee to&#13;
delay the carnival was a good&#13;
idea, but they made a big mistake&#13;
in changing it to the sixth week of&#13;
classes. The sixth week&#13;
traditionally is a heavy testing&#13;
week, which prohibited many&#13;
people from participating in the&#13;
activities. If the committee&#13;
delayed the carnival so more&#13;
people could get involved, it&#13;
should have been rescheduled for&#13;
the fifth or seventh week, times&#13;
with fewer tests. I work in Union&#13;
Square and get a chance to talk to&#13;
many people. Many were&#13;
disappointed because the extra&#13;
studies required for their tests&#13;
prohibited them from participating&#13;
in carnival events. I ask&#13;
the Winter Carnival Committee to&#13;
take this into consideration when&#13;
they plan next year's carnival, so&#13;
it can be enjoyed by a maximum&#13;
number of people.&#13;
Jack Kemper&#13;
4 Thursday, March 4,1982 RANGER&#13;
Individual Events&#13;
Winter Carnival 1982&#13;
BLOOD DRIVE&#13;
1st Place — Inter Varsity&#13;
Christian Fellowship&#13;
2nd Place — Accounting Club&#13;
3rd Place — Physics Club&#13;
WINDOW PAINTING&#13;
1st Place — Women in Business&#13;
2nd Place — Cheerleaders&#13;
(tie) — Peer Support&#13;
BANNER&#13;
1st Place — Ranger&#13;
2nd Place — Accounting Club&#13;
FLOAT COMPETITION&#13;
1st Place — Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
2nd Place — Cheerleaders&#13;
3rd Place — P SGA&#13;
Events&#13;
Winter Carnival 1982&#13;
Club Events&#13;
Grand Prize Winners&#13;
1st Place — Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
2nd Place — Cheerleaders&#13;
3rd Place — Accounting Club&#13;
VOLLEYBALL&#13;
1st Place — Weightlifters&#13;
2nd Place — Cheerleaders&#13;
3rd Place — Accounting Club ABOVE: Guys dressed in drag for Thursday night's Fashion Show. r-nuiu uy men * odiiucib&#13;
lWA o H TRIVIA CONTEST&#13;
1st Place — Jonathan Klokow&#13;
2nd Place — Ken Eschmann&#13;
3rd Place — Eric Suhr&#13;
JELLO SLURPING CONTEST&#13;
1st Place — Brenda Buchanan&#13;
2nd Place — Mike S. Nelson&#13;
3rd Place — Steve Jacob&#13;
EGG DROP CONTEST&#13;
1st Place — Brenda Buchanan&#13;
2nd Place — Karen Norwood&#13;
LEGS CONTEST — MALE&#13;
1st Place — Jack Zurawik&#13;
2nd Place — Mark King&#13;
3rd Place — Dick Oberbruner&#13;
BEER DRINKING RELAYS&#13;
(team captains)&#13;
1st Place — Ken Eschmann&#13;
2nd Place — David White&#13;
3rd Place — Andy Buchanan&#13;
RUBIK'S CUBE CONTEST&#13;
1st Place — Kurt Jacob&#13;
2nd Place — Norbert Wiele&#13;
berg&#13;
DIRTY JOKE CONTEST&#13;
1st Place — Mark W. Schrade&#13;
2nd Place — A1 Frahm&#13;
3rd Place — David Lock&#13;
LEGS CONTEST — FEMALE&#13;
1st Place — Aina Jamir&#13;
2nd Place — Shelley Pace&#13;
3rd Place — Carmella Im&#13;
brogna&#13;
COLLEGE FAMILY FEUD&#13;
1st Place — Andy Buchanan,&#13;
Brenda Buchanan, Rick Luehr,&#13;
Linda Andersen, Jeff Frederick.&#13;
2nd Place — Aina Jamir, Steve&#13;
Blaser, Kent Willetts, Menno&#13;
Buys, Ruth Bahr.&#13;
3rd Place — Mike Mowry, Nick&#13;
Thome, Shelbe Skildum, Pam&#13;
Rathman, Shelly Pace.&#13;
i_n outdoor volleyball contest was&#13;
conducted throughout the week.&#13;
Photo by Steve Myers&#13;
RIGHT: Brenda Buchanan&#13;
(third from right) won&#13;
Monday night's Jello Slurping&#13;
Contest.&#13;
BELOW: The winners of&#13;
Tuesday's College Family&#13;
Feud were (left to right): Rick&#13;
Luehr, Linda Andersen, Andy&#13;
Buchanan, Brenda Buchanan,&#13;
and Jeff Frederick.&#13;
Photo by Steve Myers&#13;
ABOVE: Sixteen teams entered&#13;
the Beer Drinking&#13;
Relays during Monday night's&#13;
M*A*S*H party.&#13;
Ranger offers&#13;
free classifieds&#13;
Classified ads for Parkside&#13;
students and faculty are free&#13;
for 10 words or less. There is a&#13;
limit of one free ad per person&#13;
per week. Additional ads cost&#13;
50 cents per 10 words.&#13;
Classified ads for other&#13;
people cost $1.00 per 10 words.&#13;
Deadline for publication&#13;
Thursday is at noon the&#13;
Friday before.&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
E. F. MADRIGRANO&#13;
1831 - 55th St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wise.&#13;
658-3553&#13;
Club&#13;
Events&#13;
Political Science&#13;
The Poli Sci Club will be&#13;
sponsoring Frank Wilkonson,&#13;
speaking on the subject of&#13;
Reagonomics and repressive&#13;
legislation. This legislation is&#13;
currently being passed and could&#13;
have a long time effect on our&#13;
society. Remember, Poli Sci Club&#13;
meets on Monday at 1 n. m in&#13;
Moln 112.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
On Monday, March 8, at 1 p. m.&#13;
the Accounting Club will hold a&#13;
general meeting for all members&#13;
in Union 104. Topics of the&#13;
meetings will include committee&#13;
nominations, deadline collectionfor&#13;
dues and much more. Refreshments&#13;
will be served.&#13;
S.W.E.A&#13;
S.W.E.A. will have a general&#13;
meeting on Monday, March 8,&#13;
from 1-2 p. m. in Moln. D128.&#13;
Please try to attend.&#13;
s.o.c.&#13;
On Wednesday, March 10,&#13;
S.O.C. invites all P.S.G.A. candidates&#13;
to address a forum of&#13;
S.O.C. representatives and&#13;
students. The time is 1 p. m. in&#13;
Comm. Arts 125. All interested&#13;
students, please attend.&#13;
Geology Colloquium&#13;
This week's Geology Colloquim&#13;
will be "Karst in the Gunong -&#13;
Mulu National Park, Borneo".&#13;
The lecture will be given by Dr.&#13;
Michael Day of the Geology&#13;
departmen at UW - Milwaukee.&#13;
The lecture will be given on&#13;
Friday, March 5, at 1 p. m. in&#13;
Greenquist 113.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
Calendar of Events: March 6,&#13;
Family Day will take place at&#13;
Parkside. This event is intended to&#13;
allow students and their families&#13;
to use the facilities. Volunteers&#13;
are needed to work with the&#13;
children. If interested please call&#13;
Carla Thomas at 553-2351.&#13;
March 8-10: Aerobics will be&#13;
held from 1-2 p. m. in the wrestling&#13;
room, in the Phy. Ed. building.&#13;
Everyone is invited.&#13;
March 10: Women in Business&#13;
will be sponsoring a bake sale.&#13;
March 16: "The Very Special&#13;
Arts Festival" will be held at&#13;
Parkside. This event allows&#13;
handicapped children to participate&#13;
in the arts. Volunteers are&#13;
needed for this event. If interested,&#13;
please call Kathy Kexel&#13;
at 553-2278. A training session will&#13;
be held on March 8 in Union 104&#13;
from 6:30 to 7:30 p. m. for all&#13;
volunteers.&#13;
Student Mobe.&#13;
"The Wargame", a BBC&#13;
documentary film depicting mock&#13;
nuclear war, will be shown&#13;
Thursday, March 4 at 1 p. m. in&#13;
Molinaro 109 and at 7 p. m. in&#13;
Moln. 163. Sponsored by Student&#13;
Mobilization for Survival. The&#13;
film is free and open to the public.&#13;
INicaraguans stand up&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Church leaders from Nicaragua&#13;
appeared at Parkside as part of a&#13;
national speaking tour to give&#13;
direct information concerning the&#13;
economic, political and religious&#13;
processes underway in Nicaragua&#13;
and Central America and to&#13;
counter the mis-information&#13;
circulating about Nicaragua.&#13;
Father Lyle Gundrum was the&#13;
first speaker. He is a Capuchin&#13;
priest from Canada and has spent&#13;
the last ten years as a member of&#13;
a pastoral team in Estali,&#13;
Nicaragua. "What we want is our&#13;
freedom," said Gundrum. "From&#13;
our people I have learned what it&#13;
is to be a Christian. To see the way&#13;
they live has opened me up. I&#13;
remember beginning to understand&#13;
what kind of life it was.&#13;
The people don't vote, like they do&#13;
here. Sure, the people vote, but&#13;
two weeks before the voting, the&#13;
mayor has a victory party. If it is&#13;
ever found out that you didn't vote&#13;
for the mayor, you lose your job.&#13;
The Nicaraguan revolution really&#13;
is a democratic revolution. It's&#13;
more democratic than the country&#13;
you live in. The people of&#13;
Nicaragua finally won their&#13;
victory, justice had begun to&#13;
spread within our land. We have&#13;
been authors of our own&#13;
salvation."&#13;
Reverend Patricia Castro was&#13;
the second speaker. She is a native&#13;
Nicaraguan and a baptist&#13;
minister. She has been an editor of&#13;
both religious and secular journals&#13;
and heads the formation of&#13;
Christian youth in Managua, the&#13;
capital city. She stated that the&#13;
Nicaraguans are content that the&#13;
North Americans are interested in&#13;
the situation in Nicaragua. She&#13;
feels that this demonstrates quite&#13;
a difference between the Reagan&#13;
administration and the people that&#13;
live with it.&#13;
In 1934, th e Somoza family took&#13;
over the country of Nicaragua,"&#13;
said Rev. Castro. "The years of&#13;
the Somoza dictatorship were&#13;
years of misery and suffering. Our&#13;
peasants have been assassinated.&#13;
Their farms were burned and&#13;
ruined. The yough who felt a need&#13;
to help found themselves persecuted.&#13;
Women suffered doubly,&#13;
because they are the mothers of&#13;
suffering children and they must&#13;
work. They work for a less wage&#13;
simply because they are women.&#13;
The people themselves have been&#13;
the ones fighting for freedom —&#13;
God has not just given it to us. On&#13;
July 19, 1979, we got the freedom&#13;
and the liberation we have been&#13;
seeking. It is faith that lets us&#13;
bring our strength here today and&#13;
share it with you. We will continue&#13;
to fight for our rights and freedom&#13;
as long as you will continue to&#13;
support us. Through this, we will&#13;
for civil rights&#13;
"Michelob after work&#13;
makes you glad&#13;
there's a rush hour'.'&#13;
Put a little&#13;
. weekend&#13;
in your week.&#13;
Bible with the sister, it was new&#13;
for her, because the story of the&#13;
Ten Lepers and the story of the&#13;
prostitute, selling herself for food&#13;
for her children, took on a whole&#13;
new meaning. These people were&#13;
living what she had been reading&#13;
for years. She also came to realize&#13;
that if people want something to&#13;
happen within their lives, they&#13;
have to enter into the current of&#13;
life.&#13;
The second thing she realized,&#13;
was that the problem in&#13;
Nicaragua had to be questioned&#13;
before it could be answered. One&#13;
of the first problems was, the aid&#13;
that was supposed to be sent over&#13;
for the people wasn't getting to&#13;
them. When the sister was in&#13;
America, she publicly complained&#13;
about this, but it didn't do any&#13;
good, because an official found a&#13;
way to cover it up.&#13;
One year, near Christmas time,&#13;
there were many prisoners, and&#13;
the families that had their&#13;
husbands and sons in prison held a&#13;
demonstration to free these&#13;
prisoners. Jeeps and helicopters&#13;
came and ransacked the church&#13;
and the demonstrators were told&#13;
what they were doing was forbidden.&#13;
"The following year," explained&#13;
Hartman, "in a span ,of four&#13;
months, over 4000 young people&#13;
Continued On Page Eight&#13;
have a better world."&#13;
The third speaker was Sister&#13;
Mary Hartman. She is Wisconsin -&#13;
born, and a member of the Sisters&#13;
of St. Agnes from Fond du Lac.&#13;
She has spent the past 20 years in&#13;
Nicaragua, teaching high school&#13;
and doing missionary work. She is&#13;
a member of the independent&#13;
Human Rights Commission in&#13;
Nicaragua, which was set up by&#13;
the United Nations request.&#13;
When she first went to the&#13;
country, she taught school at a&#13;
very wealthy high school. On&#13;
Saturdays, the Sister would visit a&#13;
leper colony, and she soon&#13;
discovered that the director of the&#13;
school didn't like this idea. The&#13;
director didn't forbid them to go to&#13;
the colony, but it was as if he&#13;
didn't approve ... he questioned&#13;
how it would look to the parents of&#13;
the students to know that the&#13;
sisters were doing this.&#13;
Hartman then was sent to work&#13;
with the Mosquito Indians, and&#13;
discovered that entire families&#13;
had been stricken with tuberculosis.&#13;
The husbands had worked&#13;
in mines owned by North&#13;
Americans and Canadians, and&#13;
when they were too ill to work, or&#13;
simply could no longer work, they&#13;
were sent home to die. When she&#13;
returned to Managua, she started&#13;
to do two things. The first was&#13;
reading the Bible with the poor&#13;
people. When the people read the&#13;
6 Thursday, March 4,1982 RANGER&#13;
Frank Abagnale turned his life around&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
He found a million ways to fool&#13;
the people he met every day.&#13;
People looked at him as someone&#13;
who is rich and glamorous. Frank&#13;
Abagnale has never seen his life in&#13;
that same light. What he did from&#13;
the age of 16 until he turned 21, he&#13;
would never do again. Abagnale&#13;
found himself growing up with his&#13;
only mother being the room&#13;
service in the hotels he stayed in.&#13;
He'll never know what it's like to&#13;
be 16, and go to a high school&#13;
prom, or go to a homecoming&#13;
game. He feels like he's wasted&#13;
ten years of his life. He's given a&#13;
lot up. If he ever met someone that&#13;
he took a liking to, he started off&#13;
deceiving them, it was the way&#13;
that he started off with all of the&#13;
people he met. Maybe he wasn't&#13;
cheating them out of anything, but&#13;
he certainly had a problem telling&#13;
them the truth about who he really&#13;
was.&#13;
What follows is Frank&#13;
Abagnale's story as he told it to&#13;
the Ranger in an exclusive interview.&#13;
Things started for Abagnale&#13;
when he was sixteen. His father&#13;
had gotten him a '52 Chevy, and&#13;
Abagnale found that paying for&#13;
the gas all of the time got to be a&#13;
bother. "One day I came in and&#13;
said, 'I can't handle this gas,&#13;
having to come up with this cash.'&#13;
I asked my dad if it would be&#13;
alright to get a credit card," he&#13;
explained. "He said that he didn't&#13;
see any problem with that.&#13;
Because I'm a junior, and I look a&#13;
lot older, it was never a problem&#13;
until about three months later."&#13;
"My dad got a call from the&#13;
Mobil security people and they&#13;
said that they had never had any&#13;
problems with his credit, but that&#13;
if t heir records were correct," he&#13;
said, "my dad should be buying a&#13;
new car. They were trying to&#13;
figure out why my dad had a $4000&#13;
Mobil bill. According to their&#13;
records, I had purchased 100&#13;
batteries, 40 sets of tires and had&#13;
30 tune-ups. My dad told them that&#13;
1 had the card, and I had to explain&#13;
to them what I had done.&#13;
What I did was, I would drive into&#13;
a gas station, 16 years old, and I&#13;
would say to the attendant that I&#13;
wanted the most expensive set of&#13;
tires that Mobil sold. They turned&#13;
out to be $280 and the guy would go&#13;
and write up the charge. When he&#13;
came back, he would ask if I 'd like&#13;
to have the tires mounted. I would&#13;
always say 'no' and then I would&#13;
tell this guy that I would sell his&#13;
tires back to him for $200. That&#13;
means he'll get $280 f rom Mobil,&#13;
plus the tires, and I would get the&#13;
ABAGNALE on the Johnny Carson Show.&#13;
$200 cash. That was all that I&#13;
wanted, was the cash. I never had&#13;
any intention of paying the bill."&#13;
Abagnale has payed back every&#13;
penny of the $2.5 million he has&#13;
cashed in forged checks over a&#13;
period of five years. It took quite&#13;
some time for him to do it, but he&#13;
did it so that he could have a&#13;
clearer conscience. "The original&#13;
money that I had left over was&#13;
confiscated by the IRA for back&#13;
taxes," he said. "The government&#13;
doesn't care how you make your&#13;
money, income is income. You&#13;
have to pay taxes on it. When I&#13;
went to prison, nobody knew, who&#13;
ever dreamed that I would have&#13;
$2.5 million. So, there was no&#13;
obligation to pay it back. When&#13;
you pay your debt in prison, that's&#13;
it, it's been paid. About two years&#13;
ago, I was bothered by the fact&#13;
that I had taken all of this money,&#13;
and I had never paid it back. I was&#13;
SOCOOGOOCCOCCOCCCCOCCOS&#13;
1 myself have ne ver&#13;
considered in my whole&#13;
career any of what I've&#13;
done as bei ng glamorous"-&#13;
aooooosecoooooooooscoss&#13;
really wealthy, so I took $2.5&#13;
million from our company profit&#13;
and all of the money has been&#13;
returned to the banks and hotels&#13;
that took the checks over fifteen&#13;
years ago."&#13;
Some funny things happened to&#13;
Abagnale in the process of paying&#13;
this money back. First of all, he&#13;
had to hire someone to go back&#13;
through the government and look&#13;
up all of these checks. That in&#13;
itself cost him $75,000. The hard&#13;
part was finding the people that&#13;
had gone out of business, or, after&#13;
finally locating a place, having&#13;
them say that they didn't want the&#13;
money, because it would "mess up&#13;
their taxes." Abagnale also&#13;
thought that he could write off the&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents this week's movie&#13;
j BRIIBAKER j • •&#13;
Fri., Mar. 5 Sun., Mar. 7&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
Admission $1.50 Rated "R"&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
NEXT MOVIE&#13;
Cheech &amp; Chong's&#13;
Next Movie&#13;
$2.5 million. The government said&#13;
NO! The government told him&#13;
that he had to pay taxes on the&#13;
money, because it was not a&#13;
corporate expense within his&#13;
company. The company didn't&#13;
incur the debt. Abagnale had, so&#13;
he had to take a bonus. The bonus&#13;
was small, just $2.5 million. He got&#13;
stuck paying taxes on the bonus,&#13;
and the venture he took in paying&#13;
the companies back cost him a lot&#13;
more than he had ever taken.&#13;
A question that many have&#13;
asked in the past is, why was&#13;
Frank Abagnale so difficult to&#13;
catch? "I looked so much older,&#13;
and I had never been fingerprinted.&#13;
Really, that was the&#13;
downfall. Everyone thought that I&#13;
was 28, and there shouldn't have&#13;
been a 28 year old that didn't have&#13;
fingerprints on file, because of the&#13;
draft and all. Once they realized I&#13;
had to be a runaway, they started&#13;
piecing things together very&#13;
quickly. The other thing that&#13;
made me difficult to catch, was&#13;
the idea that none of my crimes&#13;
were premeditated. I didn't sit in&#13;
my room at night and look for&#13;
ways to rip off the establishment.&#13;
I was strictly an opportunist. If&#13;
something came up, it had a&#13;
chance at working out."&#13;
Abagnale was glad that he was&#13;
caught in the end, he was glad that&#13;
it was finally over. He spent six&#13;
months in a French prison, and his&#13;
description of it was incredible.&#13;
"They tried me first in France,&#13;
and they never told me how long I&#13;
was supposed to stay in their&#13;
prison before being shifted to the&#13;
next country. They took me down&#13;
to the cell, and it was like a box.&#13;
About 5 x 5 or 6 x 6 fete. They stuck&#13;
me in this box, and there was a&#13;
bucket inside of the box. The box&#13;
was completely dark. I learned&#13;
quickly that the bucket was the&#13;
bathroom, and it never got emptied.&#13;
By the time that I was out (6&#13;
months) the urine was knee deep&#13;
in the cell. I went from 190 pounds&#13;
to 109.1 was sick, and I thank God&#13;
that the next stop was Sweden,&#13;
because the judge there took one&#13;
look at me and said 'When this&#13;
man is well, and when he can&#13;
stand before me, bring him back.&#13;
For now, put him in the hospital.'&#13;
"&#13;
Abagnale would never do what&#13;
he did once, again.&#13;
Abagnale has always been&#13;
fascinated by the idea that if you&#13;
are dressed right, and look like&#13;
you belong somewhere, people&#13;
don't question you. People are&#13;
usually so impressed by what they&#13;
see around them, that they ignore&#13;
everything else. Abagnale claims&#13;
to have cashed some of the&#13;
sloppiest checks when he first&#13;
started out, and he wonders how&#13;
he got away with it. He came to&#13;
see that people don't cash checks,&#13;
people cash people. Time was&#13;
never taken to have a look at&#13;
Abagnale's checks, because&#13;
people were so busy wondering&#13;
who he was.&#13;
Now though, it's something else&#13;
that fascinates Abagnale. "It's&#13;
real ironic," he said, "but when I&#13;
came out of prison, I thought that&#13;
what I had done was wrong. I&#13;
didn't want to tell anyone about&#13;
my past. Then I was fired from&#13;
that grocery store in Houston and&#13;
one of the papers picked up on it&#13;
and ran an article about who I&#13;
really was. It didn't say anything&#13;
bad, it just said that I was at one&#13;
time a master thief, and now I was&#13;
living in Houston. I saw the article,&#13;
and had no intention of going&#13;
home, because I was worried&#13;
about the people in the complex&#13;
where I was living. But, I finally&#13;
had to go home, and all of the&#13;
people thought I was a big hero —&#13;
probably because everyone sees&#13;
what I did as ripping the&#13;
establishment off. Everybody&#13;
feels like the establishment rips&#13;
them off, and it made them feel&#13;
just a little better to know that a&#13;
kid had gotten away with it. It's&#13;
not so much the criminal part that&#13;
they admire, as much as the fact&#13;
as someone did it."&#13;
If Frank Abagnale had it to do&#13;
all over again, he wouldn't. "You&#13;
see, people see what I did as being&#13;
very glamorous. But you see,&#13;
glamour is in the eye of the&#13;
beholder. I myself have never&#13;
considered in my whole career&#13;
any of what I've done as being&#13;
glamorous. I certainly didn't find&#13;
it very nice to be growing with my&#13;
only mother being room service in&#13;
some hotel, a different hotel most&#13;
of th e time too. I think I gave up a&#13;
great deal. It was a very lonely&#13;
life, and I was smart enough to&#13;
know that I'd get caught. When I&#13;
finally was caught, I was glad it&#13;
was over with. Today, I'm 33,&#13;
going on 70.1 feel as if I 've wasted&#13;
five years of my life as an imposter&#13;
and five in prison. I don't&#13;
know of anything that is worth&#13;
going to prison for even a day. I&#13;
consider that a big waste."&#13;
"I used my reputation to make a&#13;
living for myself," he said&#13;
"because it was so negative, that&#13;
was all I could do. I was paroled to&#13;
Houston, and never intended to&#13;
tell anyone who I really was. I&#13;
called on the talents I had to do all&#13;
of those things I had done before&#13;
so that I could change my life to&#13;
something positive. I think it's the&#13;
greatest achievement of my life —&#13;
to take something negative and&#13;
make it positive. I turned things&#13;
around. Believe me, I thank God&#13;
every day that I was born in a&#13;
country that allowed for mistakes.&#13;
I made a mistake, and this&#13;
country let me pay for that&#13;
mistake and then held out it's&#13;
hand and said 'come on back now,&#13;
and be what you can be.' I feel&#13;
very fortunate."&#13;
From a 16 year old kid, to a&#13;
man, overnight. From the world's&#13;
greatest imposter to the man who&#13;
helps America stop bouncing to&#13;
the bank. He's led a full life, one&#13;
that many people will only dream&#13;
about. Abagnale has shown the&#13;
world that not all dreams are as&#13;
wonderful as they look.&#13;
Test Anxiety Workshops set&#13;
The Offices of Educational&#13;
Support and Student Development&#13;
are offering a workshop designed&#13;
for students who are seeking help&#13;
in coping with anxiety which is&#13;
related to taking an exam or test.&#13;
This four session workshop will be&#13;
on March 8, 10, 22, 24 (Mondays&#13;
and Wednesdays) from 1-2 p.m.&#13;
Participants in the workshop&#13;
will spend time identifying the&#13;
causes of their test anxiety and&#13;
will be offered specific&#13;
suggestions for the prevention and&#13;
treatment of their anxiety. Tapes&#13;
by Richard Suinn will be used&#13;
which teach deep muscle&#13;
relaxation and the use of imagery&#13;
for test anxiety desensitization.&#13;
Students interested in attending&#13;
this workshop should call Olivia&#13;
Lui-Hayne at 553-2391 or Barbara&#13;
Larson at 553-2122 for an appointment&#13;
for an in-take interview.&#13;
If you have questions cal&#13;
either Olivia or Barbara.&#13;
look Great.&#13;
Feel Great.&#13;
# PRECISION ^ fMt' Mm FOR GUYS AND GIRLS&#13;
• 3532 MEACHEM RD. • 3519 52nd ST. (HWY 158)&#13;
RACINE. Wl 53405 KENOSHA. Wl 53142&#13;
PHONE (414) 554-8600 PHONE (414) 654-6154&#13;
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Mon. Wed. 8-5:30 Tues. Thurs. Fri. 8-9 §at. 8-4&#13;
LI jq THIS COUPON WORTH * - I $1.00 OFF ANY SERVICE $ 1 00 Expires March 31st, 1982 •&#13;
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FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
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MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
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Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
"Seduction" not worth effort&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
I will admit, when I want to see&#13;
"The Seduction," I thought it&#13;
might be a ripoff of "Play Misty&#13;
For Me," but I was wrong . . . i t's&#13;
not that good.&#13;
The story concerns Jamie&#13;
Douglas, a TV newscaster who is&#13;
watched from afar by a&#13;
photographer named Derek.&#13;
Derek is in love with Jamie and he&#13;
thinks that she is in love with him.&#13;
He begins calling her and sending&#13;
her gifts. Even though Jamie tells&#13;
him to stop bothering her, Derek&#13;
persists, still convinced that she&#13;
loves him. Finally, this&#13;
harassment gets out of hand, and&#13;
Jamie's lover Brandon goes to the&#13;
police. The police say that nothing&#13;
can be done. As the movie goes on,&#13;
Derek's harassment gets more&#13;
intense, ending in a final confrontation&#13;
between Jamie and&#13;
Derek.&#13;
There are many things wrong&#13;
with this movie. The script is&#13;
ridden with cliches and inane&#13;
dialogue. It is never explained&#13;
how Derek gets Jamie's phone&#13;
number, or how he gets into her&#13;
dressing room. In one scene,&#13;
Derek goes into the newsroom,&#13;
sits down at someone's desk, and&#13;
types a note to Jamie. He is never&#13;
questioned as to who he is and&#13;
what he is doing.&#13;
Characters are brought into the&#13;
film for no apparent reason. At&#13;
one point, Derek talks to one of&#13;
Jamie's friends to try to get her to&#13;
talk Jamie into seeing him. After&#13;
she calls him a "slimy creep" and&#13;
tells him to leave, Derek says,&#13;
"You'll pay for that!" Do we ever&#13;
see what Derek does to make her&#13;
pay for it? No. In fact, her&#13;
character is never seen or mentioned&#13;
again. Near the end, the&#13;
movie picks up pace and gets&#13;
better, but it's too little and too&#13;
late. The film's conclusion shows&#13;
no imagination whatsoever.&#13;
As Jamie, Morgan Fairchild has&#13;
the best part(s) in the movie. She&#13;
is forever bathing, showering, or&#13;
swimming nude. However, most&#13;
of the time the director merely&#13;
teases the viewer with brief&#13;
glimpses of Miss Fairchild's&#13;
Alone...Terrified...Trapped like an animal.&#13;
Now she's fighting back with the only&#13;
weapon she has...Herself!&#13;
MORGAN FAIRCHILD&#13;
MICHAEL SARRAZIN&#13;
VINCE EDWARDS&#13;
ANDREW STEVENS&#13;
Seduction.&#13;
AVCO tMBASSV PICTURES&#13;
admittedly lovely form. Andrew&#13;
Stevens, who plays Derek, is a&#13;
fairly convincing psycho. The rest&#13;
of the cast, which includes&#13;
Michael Sarrazin, Vince Edwards,&#13;
and Colleen Camp, is&#13;
wasted in throwaway roles.&#13;
Overall, "The Seduction" is&#13;
poorly acted, badly written, and&#13;
resembles a TV movie or a soap&#13;
opera rather than a major motion&#13;
picture. I recommend that, if you&#13;
want to see a movie that has more&#13;
to offer than merely a frequently&#13;
undressed, good - looking starlet,&#13;
that you pass up "The Seduction."&#13;
Reui'eu)&#13;
Nicholson shines in dull "Border"&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
There's a coupkfof reasons to&#13;
see "The Border". One of them is&#13;
Jack Nicholson. He plays Charlie&#13;
Smith, a new and slightly confused&#13;
member of a border patrol&#13;
unit in El Paso, Texas, considerably&#13;
less gung - ho than his&#13;
corrupt colleagues. Considering&#13;
his surroundings, Nicholson does&#13;
a good job.&#13;
If you're a fan of blood and gore,&#13;
that's another reason to see it.&#13;
Nicholson, finally outraged by the&#13;
dishonesty around him, stages a&#13;
short and violent revolution&#13;
against corruption.&#13;
Unfortunately, those are the&#13;
only two reasons to see "Border".&#13;
If you haven't figured it out yet,&#13;
this is a variation on the "good cop&#13;
versus bad cop" theme. Never&#13;
mind that it's set in Texas and the&#13;
victims are mostly Mexican, there&#13;
aren't any plot twists any Dirty&#13;
Harry fan couldn't anticipate.&#13;
The supporting cast, especially&#13;
Charlie's credit - card wife Marcie&#13;
(Valerie Perrine), doesn't have&#13;
the depth of character they need&#13;
to carry the plot to a believable&#13;
conclusion. Supposedly, Marcie is&#13;
a negative influence on her&#13;
husband, whose impulse buying is&#13;
what first drives Charlie Smith to&#13;
go on the take. It doesn't last long,&#13;
though, when Charlie discovers&#13;
the extent of the patrol's involvement&#13;
in drug and human&#13;
traffic. When Charlie starts&#13;
rocking the boat, his neighbor,&#13;
also a patrolman, naturally leads&#13;
the plot to have him snuffed out.&#13;
The film has technical flaws,&#13;
too. The soundtrack is one of the&#13;
tackiest I've ever hear in a big -&#13;
budget production. Director of&#13;
Photography Ric Waite's shaky&#13;
camera work never quite matches&#13;
the dialog, and the feeble lighting&#13;
makes the whole thing look as if i t&#13;
were filmed under a blanket of L.&#13;
A. smog.&#13;
"The Border" doesn't live up to&#13;
its billing as an honest - to -&#13;
goodness human drama. It's just&#13;
another movie in the "tough guy"&#13;
genre. And for that, you're better&#13;
off with Clint Eastwood.&#13;
Burned Up&#13;
Family planning hangs in there&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
It was bound to happen.&#13;
Parkside has been into everything&#13;
— day care centers, peer support&#13;
groups, career counseling — and&#13;
now, family planning. Of course, it&#13;
has all been very discreet.&#13;
In fact, right now only the&#13;
Comm. Arts building has put the&#13;
measures into action. There, the&#13;
propagation of a species has been&#13;
ingeniously prevented by the use&#13;
of permanency. We're talking&#13;
coat hangers here.&#13;
Luckily, the hangers in that&#13;
building are permanently attached.&#13;
Those hummers have a&#13;
way of multiplying when left to&#13;
their own devices. Think of it —&#13;
have you ever bought a metal coat&#13;
hanger? Probably not. They just&#13;
seem to appear in closets through&#13;
their own volition. Sort of like life&#13;
in a swamp.&#13;
Imagine the mess of hangers we&#13;
would have if they were free to&#13;
move about. They'd wrestle with&#13;
you when you'd try to hang up&#13;
your coat. And you know how&#13;
stubborn they can get when&#13;
they're on your closet floor.&#13;
Some people might think it is&#13;
mean to prevent hangers from&#13;
doing what they were meant to do.&#13;
But we have to draw the line&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thursday, March 4&#13;
FILM at 1 p.m. in MOLN109 and at 6p.m. in MOLN163. The film is free and open to&#13;
the public. Sponsored by Student Mobilization for Survival.&#13;
Friday, March 5&#13;
COMEDIAN/MAGIC SHOW at 12 noon in Union Square featuring Mark Kornhouser.&#13;
Admission is free for Parkside students, faculty and staff. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
MOVIE "Brubaker" will be shown at 7:30 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;
DANCE/CONCERT at 9 p.m. in Union Square featuring "Wally Cleaver". Admission&#13;
at the door is $2.00 for a Parkside student and $2.50 for a guest. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, March 6&#13;
FAMILY DAY with demonstrations, workshops and activities for Parkside&#13;
community and their families from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Call ext. 2200 f or&#13;
registration information.&#13;
VIDEO TAPES "The Cars" will be shown at 1 p.m. in Union Square for the participants&#13;
of Family Day.&#13;
MOVIE "The Road to Bali" will be shown at 7 p. m. at the Golden Rondelle. Call&#13;
631-2154 for reservations. The movie is free and open to the public, and being&#13;
sponsored by UW - Extension.&#13;
Sunday, March 7&#13;
FILM at 4 p.m. in the Union Cinema. Admission is $2.50 for a student and $3.50 for&#13;
others. Sponsored by the Kenosha Friends of the Library.&#13;
MOVIE "Brubaker" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, March 8&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12:15 p.m. in Union 106. Prof. David Levin will talk on "The&#13;
Concept of Class in Social Stratification and Marxist Theories." The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
VIDEO TAPES "The Cars" will be shown at 1 p.m. in Union Square. Admission is&#13;
free for Parkside students, faculty and staff. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Wednesday, March 10&#13;
VIDEOTAPES "The Cars" willbe repeated at 1 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
MOVIE "Camille" will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema. The movie is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
'Chapter Two"&#13;
performed well&#13;
by Lisa Linstroth&#13;
Neil Simon's "Chapter Two"&#13;
was presented by the Alpha -&#13;
Omega Players in the Union&#13;
Theatre on Feb. 28. This was a&#13;
performance well worth attending.&#13;
Neil Simon is notorious&#13;
for his fine plays and this cast&#13;
credited his talent.&#13;
The scenery used was a small&#13;
backdrop that served for two&#13;
apartments simultaneously. The&#13;
set also included: a desk, two&#13;
chairs, an end table and two&#13;
telephones. It wasn't much to look&#13;
at but the actors brought the stage&#13;
to life.&#13;
The play cast consisted of four&#13;
actors, Wiley Wisdom (George&#13;
Schneider), Rick Woods (Leo&#13;
Schneider), Liza Howe (Jenni&#13;
Malone), and Allison Dukes (Faye&#13;
Medwick). These actors gave an&#13;
outstanding performance. The&#13;
audience was captivated during&#13;
the entire play.&#13;
The play was witty, funny, and&#13;
touching. And the ability of these&#13;
four actors to present a realistic&#13;
performance was incredible.&#13;
Thank you to the Alpha Omega&#13;
Players, and the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board's sponsorship, for a&#13;
very pleasurable evening.&#13;
somewhere. Who wants to walk&#13;
into a room and find a gang of&#13;
hangers shamelessly mating?&#13;
What gives them the right to&#13;
wantonly reproduce? Who's going&#13;
to support all those unwanted&#13;
hangers?&#13;
For once, someone was&#13;
thinking. Certain things have to be&#13;
stopped before they get started.&#13;
As far as Parkside's coat hangers&#13;
are concerned, planned parenthood&#13;
is the only answer.&#13;
ATTENTION A LL STUDENTS&#13;
Financial Aid funds for 1982-83are limited.&#13;
Early applications are encouraged.&#13;
Apply by March 15 for priority consideration.&#13;
FINANCIAL AIDS OFFICE&#13;
284 TALLENT HALL&#13;
SUNDAY, AAARCH 7 th 4:30 p.m.&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION CINEMA&#13;
Students $2.50&#13;
General Public $3.50&#13;
Sponsored by Friends of the Kenosha&#13;
Public Library &amp; the Activities Office&#13;
DARE JO VENTURE&#13;
- i&#13;
Sign on&#13;
lor a voyage&#13;
into the luture&#13;
- SAn I n t e l l e c t u a l Chall e n g e&#13;
'ENTERPRISES OF GREAT&#13;
PITH AND MOMENT' ( H a n k e s )&#13;
snows how, bv working together, we can&#13;
create a universally acceptable second&#13;
language, tree of the archaic problems of&#13;
spelling, pronunciation, syntax, irregularities&#13;
and snobbishness. Completely&#13;
integrated and logical, it enfolds the handicapped,&#13;
accommodates computers and&#13;
probes the limits of human intelligence and&#13;
expression. Its structural patterns make&#13;
learning and use easy and delightful,&#13;
tyopies have been deposited in your school&#13;
nprary. Look one over and then get a copy&#13;
ot your own — We need your help!&#13;
100pg s . $8. 5 0 US ppd.&#13;
" I f you pl ea s e "&#13;
CAMILLA PUBLISHING CO. INC.&#13;
BOX 510 MPLS., MN 55440&#13;
BY MAIL ONLV-SEND CHECK OR M.O.&#13;
FROM MAO 'to&#13;
MOZART'-&#13;
ISAAC STERN IN CHINA&#13;
This Academy Award-winn i n g f i lm abou t&#13;
Amer i c a n v i o l i n i s t I s a a c S t e r n' s t o u r o f&#13;
Chi n a i s u n i q u e l y e n t e r t a i n i ng , i n t e r e s t i n g ,&#13;
and movin g . Focusi n g o n S t e rn ' s a t ten da n c e&#13;
o f v a r i o us r e c i t a l s t h r o ughou t t h e c o u n t r y,&#13;
we have t h e r a r e o p p o r t u n it y t o w i t n e s s t h e&#13;
immen s e t a l e nt s o f Chi n a ' s young peop l e&#13;
p l a y i n g c o n v en t i o n a l i n s t r ume n t s , a s we l la s&#13;
anci e n t Chine s e i n s trume n t s Se e i n g t h e&#13;
e x p r e s s i o n s o n t h e i rf a c e s a n d h ea r i n g t h e i r&#13;
v i r t u o s o p l a y i n g p r o v es t h a t musi c i s t r u l y a n&#13;
international language, FROM MAOTO MOZART&#13;
i s a warm l y comp a ss i o n a t e f i l m t h a t wil l&#13;
d e l i g h t e v e r yone.&#13;
8 Thursday, March 4,1982 RANGER&#13;
Review ,&#13;
Nick Lowe hits groove in "Nic k the Knife"&#13;
by Joe Kimm&#13;
If you have ever heard a Nick&#13;
Lowe tune on the radio, you&#13;
probably would not recognize it as&#13;
such, although you'd get the&#13;
impression that you have heard it&#13;
elsewhere. Such is his musical&#13;
style. Like a good martini, it is&#13;
never too dry and not overpowering.&#13;
Drawing from his vast&#13;
pool of musical knowledge, he&#13;
writes songs that are not Top 40&#13;
oriented but could pass off as one&#13;
anytime.&#13;
His lyrics are humorous,&#13;
usually about situations that&#13;
would normally make anyone give&#13;
up, but in his songs he always&#13;
comes out on top. In "Burning" he&#13;
says, "It was the sight of you in&#13;
those ten dollar shoes that first&#13;
made me jump for joy, your&#13;
foreign kiss in Indianapolis, it's&#13;
out on my mind, heartache&#13;
anytime." In "My Heart Hurts"&#13;
he says, "Even though I get it&#13;
every day and I'm getting used to&#13;
it, when it comes down to it, my&#13;
Viewpoint&#13;
College&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Republican National&#13;
Committee supports a group of&#13;
political youths called the College&#13;
Republicans. Their goal is to&#13;
make the youth of America active&#13;
in government. The Reagan task -&#13;
force may have answers for&#13;
problems of what is considered by&#13;
many to be a failing system.&#13;
Catherine Turner is a member&#13;
of the College Republicans. She&#13;
and Michael Waldman go to&#13;
various campuses in the midwest&#13;
in an attempt to promote student&#13;
activity in the American government.&#13;
Turner states, "Our purpose&#13;
is to find out who the&#13;
Republicans on the campus are so&#13;
they organize as a group and&#13;
stand behind the issues and&#13;
Republican candidates. It's important&#13;
that the facts and figures&#13;
are used, not opinion. People have&#13;
to be willing to sort things out&#13;
intelligently."&#13;
Some of the issues are inflation,&#13;
social security and federal&#13;
regulations. Inflation seems to be&#13;
a common concern among&#13;
Americans. An increase in the&#13;
amounts of money in circulation&#13;
creates a decline in its value and a&#13;
rise in price levels. Today's dollar&#13;
is worth the paper it's printed on&#13;
—• about .03 cents. In 1971,&#13;
America left the gold standard&#13;
heart hurts." He takes everything&#13;
with a grain of salt, and with good&#13;
reason.&#13;
Nick Lowe, or Nick the Knife as&#13;
he is known in this album, is actually&#13;
a veteran solo artist with&#13;
albums dating back almost 12&#13;
years. He's a product of the 50's, a&#13;
child of the 60's, and a 70's artist&#13;
struggling in the 80's. He's been&#13;
around the best and the worst that&#13;
rock and roll has had to offer. He's&#13;
an encyclopedia of pop music in&#13;
that respect. On this album he has&#13;
top session musicians from New&#13;
York playing everything from&#13;
country rhythms to reggae&#13;
punctuations. He produced this&#13;
particular album, and had total&#13;
artistic control. He's not out to put&#13;
out a top 10 album, but rather a&#13;
good album that's fun to listen to&#13;
and easy to keep listening to. Sort&#13;
of-like a record you'd take to a&#13;
party.&#13;
Side one starts out with "Burning,"&#13;
an uptempo Paul Simon -&#13;
like song with a good piano riffing&#13;
and our currency became&#13;
irredeemable paper money. Some&#13;
Republicans feel that the answer&#13;
to the problem is bringing back&#13;
the gold - based currency. This&#13;
would create the restoration of a&#13;
stable dollars.&#13;
Social security is an issue that&#13;
many people have mixed&#13;
emotions about. Because Social&#13;
Security pays out more than it&#13;
takes in, it is seen as a threat to&#13;
our financial solvency. Reducing&#13;
the outflow of funds is felt to be the&#13;
only responsible approach to this&#13;
problem. Raising taxes to cover&#13;
the system would only lead to the&#13;
repetition of the same mistake.&#13;
There are 41,000 government&#13;
regulations on the hamburger.&#13;
The Lyric Opera of C hicago has&#13;
announced the operas that are&#13;
scheduled for the fall season 1982,&#13;
and the Parkside Opera Guild&#13;
reminds those who might wish to&#13;
attend the Saturday night D-l&#13;
series of five operas that the Guild&#13;
arranges bus tours to Chicago for&#13;
these events.&#13;
The operas are: Sept. 25,&#13;
"Tristan Und Isolde" by Richard&#13;
Wagner (in German); Oct. 23,&#13;
"Cosi Fan Tutte" by Mozart (in&#13;
between verses. The chorus is&#13;
done with two tracks of vocals,&#13;
one high and one low.&#13;
The next tune is a reggae - type&#13;
of song called "Heart." It has a&#13;
America is perceived as the&#13;
country caught in red tape.&#13;
Regulations cost a lot of money.&#13;
About $700 is added to the price of&#13;
the car, due to the hidden cost of&#13;
regulations. Every American&#13;
family paid more than $1000 l ast&#13;
year in regulatory costs.&#13;
Turner continued, "Information&#13;
is so important, but yet so uncommon.&#13;
People have to realize&#13;
that it's their money. They should&#13;
be concerned about how it's spent.&#13;
As American citizens, we are very&#13;
irresponsible to each other in our&#13;
behavior. A first step in helping&#13;
out would be people seeing what's&#13;
right and wrong within their own&#13;
community and work together to&#13;
find a remedy."&#13;
Italian); Nov. 6, "La Voix&#13;
Humaine" by Poulenc (in&#13;
English) and "I Pagliacci" by&#13;
Leoncavallo (in Italian); Nov. 20,&#13;
"Madama Butterfly" by Puccini&#13;
(in Italian); and Dec. 4, "Luisa&#13;
Miller" by Verdi (in Italian).&#13;
For further ticket and bus information,&#13;
call the Parkside&#13;
Opera Guild, in care of University&#13;
Extension at Parkside, phone&#13;
(414) 553-2312. The registration&#13;
deadline is March 13.&#13;
standard pop format with the&#13;
chorus modulating up to a subdominant&#13;
major. The organ hooks&#13;
and the twangy guitar adds to a&#13;
colorful instrumental solo.&#13;
The third is a rip - roaring back -.&#13;
talk song called "Stick It Where&#13;
the Sun Don't Shine." It bites&#13;
musically, lyrically, and it flows&#13;
like wine. This is a great party&#13;
song. It's got a chorus everyone&#13;
can identify with at one time or&#13;
another.&#13;
"Queen of Sheba" is a fiftyish&#13;
song with a couple of well - placed&#13;
breaks and "My Heart Hurts" has&#13;
a "Sweet Jane" type of structure&#13;
and chords, too. "Couldn't Love&#13;
You" is a legitimate love song&#13;
sung with an acoustic guitar in the&#13;
mode of "As Tears Go By." Great&#13;
stuff.&#13;
Side two takes off with "Let Me&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
work. Nevertheless, he did accomplish&#13;
that and in addition coauthored&#13;
journal articles. In view&#13;
of the fact that he also has four&#13;
years of previous teaching experience&#13;
in Scotland, why hasn't&#13;
he been given the chance to show&#13;
how researchful he can be?&#13;
Vice - Chancellor Lorman&#13;
Ratner answered that question&#13;
indirectly when he was interviewed&#13;
on the topic of tenure or&#13;
denial. He explained, "This is a&#13;
tough field — one must meet&#13;
demands." He went on to say of&#13;
the school's democratic system,&#13;
that it allows for mistakes. "We're&#13;
all non-infallible. Somtimes we&#13;
make the wrong decisions and&#13;
realize it later." He also added&#13;
that we must live up to our ex-&#13;
Kiss You." It's about a guy who&#13;
falls for a girl and his opening line&#13;
is, well, "let me kiss you."&#13;
"Too Many Teardrops" is a&#13;
tribute to John Mayall's&#13;
Bluesbreakers, while "Ba Doom"&#13;
is a tribute to Fats Domino.&#13;
"Raining Raining" is a country&#13;
song that tells a story of a man&#13;
who laments, all because it's&#13;
raining.&#13;
The last two songs on the album&#13;
are actually throwaways. "One's&#13;
Too Many" reminds one of a cross&#13;
between the theme songs from&#13;
"Happy Days" and "Bozo's&#13;
Circus," with a blues guitar&#13;
superimposed over a latin based&#13;
rhythm section with maracas in&#13;
the back.&#13;
"Zulu Kiss" speaks for itself. It&#13;
comes off similar to "I Am the&#13;
Walrus" of Sergeant Pepper and&#13;
it's about "nymphos on pills" who&#13;
want to "zulu kiss" everything.&#13;
As you can see, every song has&#13;
its particular message and feel&#13;
and nothing goes wasted on long&#13;
ego - inspiring solos or tedious&#13;
sound effects. At today's record&#13;
prices, this album's a bargain.&#13;
My favorites are: "Stick It&#13;
Where the Sun Don't Shine," "Let&#13;
Me Kiss You," "Ba Doom," and&#13;
"My Heart Hurts." They are all&#13;
mixtures of pop lyrics, country&#13;
rhythms, Top 40 hooks, and&#13;
reggae guitars. You could even&#13;
call some songs "third wave."&#13;
It's obvious that Nick Lowe has&#13;
enjoyed himself creating this&#13;
album and I've enjoyed listening&#13;
to it, trying to figure out his witty&#13;
lyrics and catchy hooks. I'd&#13;
recommend it for any record&#13;
collection and I'd give it a B-plus.&#13;
pectations. "If you are expected to&#13;
accomplish something by a&#13;
certain time, you must live up to&#13;
it." Next he implied that a good&#13;
instructor whose popularity with&#13;
the students, in the form of&#13;
making a class entertaining more&#13;
so than educational, is likely to&#13;
subordinate research to teaching,&#13;
therefore lacking in current&#13;
knowledge of the area(s) being&#13;
presented 10 students.&#13;
The students, on the other hand,&#13;
feel as though they are being&#13;
cheated out of the power they have&#13;
in tenure decision - making. Is&#13;
another mistake going to be made&#13;
by terminating Jim Bearden? It is&#13;
the students who stand to lose the&#13;
most — a good education.&#13;
Nicaragua&#13;
Continued From Page Five&#13;
were killed. Men, women and&#13;
children all were killed — 4000 in&#13;
four months. All assassinated. We&#13;
knew from about 1973 on that&#13;
there wouldn't be any solution to&#13;
this, except a violent revolution.&#13;
We didn't want it to be violent, but&#13;
there was must no other answer.&#13;
The people that came to&#13;
Parkside to speak about their&#13;
homeland don't see themselves as&#13;
Marxist/Lenin followers. They&#13;
are people struggling to find a way&#13;
to survive and find some sort of&#13;
happiness in the meek lives they&#13;
live.&#13;
Remember&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
lume W TM&#13;
USER:&#13;
It is with regret we have to announce that the&#13;
Parkside Union Automatic Bank Teller will soon be&#13;
removed due to its limited amount of u se. It is hoped&#13;
that at some future date the service may again be&#13;
returned to campus when the Kenosha Banking&#13;
community takes a different position regarding&#13;
T.Y.M.E.&#13;
If y ou have specific questions, please call ext. 2294 or&#13;
2201 bet ween 8:00 AM a nd 4:30 PM.&#13;
Director,&#13;
The Parkside Union&#13;
"Parkside&#13;
STILL&#13;
Has Style"&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
Visit Kenosha's&#13;
LARGEST&#13;
Record Department&#13;
— Records —&#13;
— Sheet Music —&#13;
— Instructional Music —&#13;
MUDC HOUSE&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
626 56th St.&#13;
The Place To Buy Records" Phone 654*2932&#13;
Opera schedule announced&#13;
Republicans organize&#13;
Tenure decisions&#13;
to&#13;
VOTE&#13;
March&#13;
I 0 S II&#13;
paid advertisement&#13;
^ R A N G E R Thursday, March 4,1982&#13;
P.S.G.A. Constitution paid advertisement&#13;
We, the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside do hereby organize&#13;
ourselves pursuant to Wisconsin Statute&#13;
36.09(5) and the Parkside Student Govern&#13;
ment Association Inc. Constitution Art A ] in&#13;
the manner set forth in this constitution and&#13;
select our representatives to participate in&#13;
institutional governance in the manner set&#13;
forth below. We invest the powers of this&#13;
constitution in the Parkside Student'&#13;
Government Association Inc. All previous&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
constitutions shall be null and void upon&#13;
ratification of this constitution on March 5&#13;
and 6, 1980. This constitution shall be the sole&#13;
constitution of Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. and the student body and&#13;
subject only to amendments.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. shall be responsible to the&#13;
students of the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. shall have the power to en&#13;
force and protect the following articles by&#13;
passing motions, resolutions or taking legal&#13;
action to insure that no student's rights are&#13;
violated.&#13;
Those students seeking positions in the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc. (P.S.G.A., Inc.) must fulfill all&#13;
requirements of that office in accordance&#13;
with Student Life Eligibility Criteria specified&#13;
in the Senate Rules.&#13;
ARTICLE I&#13;
Section l. All legislative powers granted&#13;
herein shall be vested in the Senate of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Section 2. The Senate of the P.S.G.A., inc&#13;
shall consist of 18 student members, half of&#13;
which will be elected in the spring and half in&#13;
the fall, whose term shall be for one year.&#13;
Section 3. The Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
shall choose their own officers and also a&#13;
President Pro Tempore.&#13;
Section 4. In the absence of the Vice-&#13;
President of P.S.G.A., Inc. who shall be the&#13;
president of the Senate, the President Pro&#13;
Tempore shall be the President of the Senate.&#13;
The President Pro Tempore shall be a&#13;
Senator and shall be a member of all Senate&#13;
Committees.&#13;
When vacancies happen in the representation&#13;
from any at large seat, the President&#13;
Pro Tempore shall fill such vacancies with&#13;
the concurrence of a simple majority of the&#13;
entire legislative branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Section 5. A simple majority of the total&#13;
Senate shall constitute a quorum to do&#13;
business.&#13;
Section 6. The Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
shall have the power to determine the rules of&#13;
its proceedings, censure its members for&#13;
disorderly conduct and, with the concurrence&#13;
of two thirds of the entire Senate, expel a&#13;
member. The Senate shall keep a journal of&#13;
its proceedings, and publish the same monthly&#13;
at the minimum, a copy of the journal&#13;
shall be available for review by the public In&#13;
the P.S.G.A., Inc. offices.&#13;
The Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall meet&#13;
at an established place and time no less than&#13;
once a week during the fall and spring&#13;
semesters, and no less than once a month&#13;
during the summer session.&#13;
Upon presentation of a petition by a simple&#13;
majority of the entire Senate a meeting shall&#13;
be called by the Vice-President or in the case&#13;
of the Vice-President's absence the President&#13;
Pro Tempore shall have the responsibility to&#13;
call a meeting within 48 hours.&#13;
Section 7. Bills may either originate in the&#13;
Senate or be sent to the Senate from the&#13;
executive branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Every&#13;
bill, order, resolution, or vote on which the&#13;
concurrence of the Senate is necessary shall&#13;
have passed the Senate by a simple majority&#13;
and shall be presented to the President of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., inc. before it takes effect. If the&#13;
President does not approve, he/she shall send&#13;
it back to the Senate for reconsidertlon with&#13;
his/her reasons for rejection.&#13;
If, after such reconsideration a simple&#13;
majority of the entire Senate shall agree to&#13;
pass the bill, it shall become law. But in all&#13;
such cases the votes of Senate shall be&#13;
determined by a roll call vote, and the names&#13;
of persons voting for and against the bill shall&#13;
be entered in the journal of the Senate. If any&#13;
bill shall not be returned by the President&#13;
within ten school days after it has been&#13;
presented to him/her, the same shall become&#13;
law, in the manner as if he/she had signed It.&#13;
All proceedings of the Senate of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. shall be sent to the executive branch for&#13;
incorporation purposes. If the President&#13;
vetoes the legislation, he/she shall send it&#13;
back to the Senate. A two-thirds vote of the&#13;
entire Senate shall be required to override the&#13;
veto.&#13;
Section 8. The Senate shall have the power&#13;
to make motions, resolutions, or take legal&#13;
actions which shall be necessary and proper&#13;
for carrying into execution the foregoing&#13;
bv ,his&#13;
. ^?.ct'on '• The Senate of the P.S.G A Inc&#13;
stit tionVKe ,he. P0Wer ,0 amend 'his com&#13;
Velatf I L ,wo"'hirds vote of the entire&#13;
Senate. In the event of an amendment beina&#13;
^Sns.e"bHy ,hfhSe"ate' said amendment shall&#13;
th I t °.n ballot o' the next election If&#13;
!nS;a;n.ts .«»"itm the amendment by a&#13;
i v0,e' if sha" be added to the&#13;
Constitution. If the students vote against it&#13;
he asTnantemd^Will(be deleted' ln the event&#13;
Jit Sana,e does n°t confirm the proposed&#13;
hTi' xa'd amendment will not appear&#13;
that c • 6 pr°P°nent of an amendment&#13;
that is turned down may, if he or she so&#13;
tSeT'secCn2he Pr°CedUreS ** Up in Ar&#13;
When amendments are up for approval they&#13;
hauL Tar °n ,he 0ctober and March&#13;
ballots. In cases of urgency, a special&#13;
referendum may be held at any time&#13;
Section 10. The Senate shall have the sole&#13;
power of impeachment and the power to trv&#13;
all impeachments. When sitting for that&#13;
Whin^h dV Sba" be °f 0a,h or affirmation.&#13;
When the President of the P.S.G.A , Inc is&#13;
tried the Chief Justice of the Judicial court&#13;
shaM preside, and no person shall be con&#13;
victed without the concurrence of two-thirds&#13;
of the entire Senate. Judgement in cases of&#13;
impeachment shall not extend further than&#13;
removal from office and disqualification to&#13;
hold and enjoy any office or position that the&#13;
r.S.G.A., Inc. has jurisdiction over, appointment&#13;
to, or election for. Impeachment&#13;
shall not begin until two-thirds of the entire&#13;
Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc. have voted to hold&#13;
an impeachment hearing.&#13;
Section 11. Roberts Rules of Order shall&#13;
govern the proceedings of all Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association, Inc.&#13;
meetings except when inconsistent with the&#13;
Constitution of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
ARTICLE II&#13;
Section 1. All executive powers, within this&#13;
article, shall be vested in the President of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Section 2. The President shall hold office&#13;
during the term of one year together with the&#13;
Vice-President who will be chosen for the&#13;
same term. They shall be eligible for reelection&#13;
and shall not serve more than 2&#13;
consecutive terms.&#13;
Before the President and the Vice-&#13;
President elect enters on the execution of the&#13;
office of the Presidency or Vice-Presidency,&#13;
he or she shall take the following oath:&#13;
"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will&#13;
faithfully execute the office of President (or&#13;
Vice President) of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. and will to the&#13;
best of my ability preserve, protect and&#13;
defend the constitution and actions of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc."&#13;
The President of the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall&#13;
also be able to draw compensation while In&#13;
office, the amount of which shall be determined&#13;
by a majority vote of the entire&#13;
Legislative branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc. This&#13;
compensation can be suspended by the Senate&#13;
while the President is on trial for purposes of&#13;
impeachment. If, however, after impeachment&#13;
proceedings the President is&#13;
found to be innocent, all benefits will be paid&#13;
to him/her retroactive from the date of&#13;
suspension. Increases in compensation will&#13;
not be awarded to a President while in office&#13;
unless he/she is re-elected to another term of&#13;
office or to his/her immediate successor, at&#13;
which time such benefits would begin to be&#13;
implemented. All increases must be approved&#13;
by a majority of the entire Senate.&#13;
Upon resignation or removal from office or&#13;
inability to discharge power and duties of the&#13;
Presidency, the Vice-President shall assume&#13;
the office of President of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
and shall meet the constitutional&#13;
requirements of the Presidency of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Section 3. The President shall have the&#13;
power by and with the advice and consent of&#13;
the majority of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate to&#13;
nominate and appoint the treasurer,&#13;
corresponding secretary and all other officers&#13;
of the executive branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
and all student judges with the consent of twothirds&#13;
of the entire Senate.&#13;
The President shall have the power to lineitem&#13;
veto specific portions of Senate bills.&#13;
He/she may line-item veto the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
budget, but shall not line-item veto the&#13;
Segregated Fee Budget. The President may&#13;
not veto legislation or any portion of it, passed&#13;
by the Senate which deals with the Senate&#13;
Procedural Rules, Regulations or Senate&#13;
appointments.&#13;
The President shall have the power to&#13;
require written reports from all standing or&#13;
special committees and individuals to whom&#13;
responsibilities have been delegated within&#13;
the P.S.G.A., Inc. and shall be required to&#13;
furnish written reports on his/her executive&#13;
activities to the legislative branch of the&#13;
« y a mai°ri'V vote of the&#13;
^ squired written reports shall be&#13;
within on 10 T'tin9 and shaM be received&#13;
rem.ILt °f ,he Presentation of such&#13;
quest to the r-.S.G.A., inc. member being&#13;
required to furnish the report.&#13;
w^£r*!!iden1 ShaM have ,he power' bV and&#13;
with the advice and consent of the Legislative&#13;
nLovvi Jf(Lhe.P'S G'A'' lnc',0 si9n contracts,&#13;
provided that a majority of the entire Senate&#13;
concurs.&#13;
The President shall draw up the P S G A&#13;
Inc. budget and send it to the Legislative&#13;
branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc. for approval.&#13;
The President shall take care that the&#13;
constitution of the P.S.G.A., Inc. and its bylaws&#13;
be faithfully executed&#13;
The President, Vice-President and all officers&#13;
of the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be removed&#13;
from office for dereliction of duty or failure to&#13;
take care that the constitution of the P.S G A&#13;
Inc. and its by-laws be faithfully executed.&#13;
Section 4. The President of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. shall nominate student appointees to all&#13;
faculty codified committees with a simple&#13;
maiority of the entire Senate needed for&#13;
approval and shall publish such vacancies in&#13;
the student newspaper.&#13;
Section 5. The treasurer of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. shall keep records and recipts on all&#13;
expenditures of all P.S.G.A,, Inc. monies and&#13;
shall make such records public.&#13;
ARTICLE III&#13;
Section l. All judicial powers of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc, shall be vested in judiciary&#13;
court, and in lower courts that the Senate of&#13;
the P.S.G.A., Inc. may establish. The judges,&#13;
of all courts, shall maintain good behavior&#13;
and character during their terms of office.&#13;
Section 2. The judicial court shall consist of&#13;
four judges and one Chief Justice. Student&#13;
members of the judicial branch of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be University of&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside students, and must be&#13;
confirmed by the Chancellor of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside after a two-thirds&#13;
approval by the entire Senate of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. Appointments to the judicial branch of&#13;
the P.S.G.A., Inc., shall be for three years.&#13;
Section 3. In the case of deciding the constitutionality&#13;
of the actions of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. the decisions shall be binding on all&#13;
parties involved, and shall be forwarded to&#13;
the designated disciplinary head of the administrative&#13;
branch of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside on to the appropriate&#13;
authorities for implementation.&#13;
ARTICLE IV&#13;
Section 1. The P.S.G.A., Inc., subject to the&#13;
responsibilities and powers of the Board of&#13;
Regents, the President of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin system, the Chancellor of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside, and the&#13;
faculty of the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside shall be active participants in the&#13;
immediate governance of and policy&#13;
development for such institutions. As such,&#13;
the P.S.G.A. shall have primary responsibility&#13;
for the formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student life, services, and&#13;
interests. As such, the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be&#13;
the sole representative student group of the&#13;
students of the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside allowed to participate in institutional&#13;
governance.&#13;
SUB—ARTICLE I&#13;
Section 1. The P.S.G.A., Inc., in consultation&#13;
with the Chancellor of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside and subject to the&#13;
final confirmation of the Board of Regents&#13;
shall have the responsibility for the&#13;
disposition of those student fees which constitute&#13;
substantial support for campus&#13;
student activities.&#13;
Section 2. An Allocation Committee shall be&#13;
established as a subcommittee of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate. The committee shall&#13;
review requests for program support and&#13;
budget allocations of the allocable portion of&#13;
the segregated University fee. All action of&#13;
said committee shall be subject to the final&#13;
approval of the P.S.G.A., Inc. in conjunction&#13;
with the Chancellor of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside.&#13;
A. MEMBERSHIP. The Allocations&#13;
Committee shall consist of 8 voting members,&#13;
6 of whom shall be P.S.G.A., Inc. Senators.&#13;
The remaining 2 shall be chosen by the .&#13;
student body of the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside, one elected in the spring, one&#13;
elected in the fall. Three P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Senators shall be chosen in the spring and&#13;
three shall be chosen in the fall by blind&#13;
drawing of interested P.S.G.A., Inc. Senators.&#13;
The drawing shall be conducted by the&#13;
Judicial Branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc. The&#13;
term of office shall be one year. The committee&#13;
shall elect its own chairperson after&#13;
each spring election. In addition, the&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Educational Services,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Administration&#13;
and Fiscal Affairs) and the&#13;
Campus Controller may sit with the com&#13;
mittee as non-voting members. Should a&#13;
vacancy occur on the Allocations Committee&#13;
the following procedures shall be used:&#13;
1. The President Pro Tempore of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate, in consultation with the&#13;
Chancellor or designee, will fill any unoccupied&#13;
Senatorial seat with the confirmation&#13;
of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate.&#13;
2. The President of the P.S.G.A., Inc., in&#13;
consultation with the Chancellor or designee,&#13;
shall appoint to any at-large seat on the&#13;
Allocations Committee. The P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Senate does not need to approve the&#13;
President's appointment.&#13;
B. PROCEDURES. Upon the call of the&#13;
Chancellor and the President of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. the Committee shall annually prepare&#13;
recommendations on the disbursal of the&#13;
Segregated University Fee. Should the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. concur in the recommendation,&#13;
the President of P.S.G.A., Inc. shall so advise&#13;
the Chancellor and Chairperson of the&#13;
Allocations Committee. Should the Chancellor&#13;
concur in the P.S.G.A., Inc. recommendation,&#13;
he/she shall arrange for its implementation.&#13;
Should the Chancellor not&#13;
concur, the provisions under negotiations&#13;
shall be used. The Senate may not amend the&#13;
Allocations Committee recommendation.&#13;
Rejection of the Committees' recommendation&#13;
takes a 2/3 vote of the entire&#13;
Senate. In the case of rejection by the Senate,&#13;
the reasons for rejection shall be agreed to&#13;
and forwarded to the Chairperson of the&#13;
Allocations Committee. The Allocations&#13;
Committee shall reconsider its recommendation&#13;
and again forward it to the Senate.&#13;
C. NEGOTIATIONS. The President of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc., the Chairperson of S.U.F.A.C.&#13;
and the President Pro Tempore of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate or their designees (who&#13;
must be members of the P.S.G.A., Inc.) shall&#13;
be representatives of the P.S.G.A., Inc. in any&#13;
consultation with the Chancellor or his/her&#13;
designee in dealing with the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Allocations Committee. If the President Pro&#13;
Tempore of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate is a&#13;
member of S.U.F.A.C. then the Senator with&#13;
the most seniority of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate&#13;
will assume the duties of the Pro Tempore in&#13;
negotiations with the Chancellor.&#13;
If the P.S.G.A., Inc. and the Chancellor&#13;
cannot reconcile their differences in the&#13;
allocation of the allocable portion of&#13;
Segregated University Fees, each will submit&#13;
a set of recommendations to the Board of&#13;
Regents for final disposition.&#13;
D. DUTIES. The Allocations Committee&#13;
shall have primary responsibility in setting&#13;
the allocable portion of the auxiliary budget&#13;
and to insure proper monetary expenditures&#13;
in total and within budgetary categories. The&#13;
Allocations Committee shall meet year round&#13;
to review the allocable portion of the&#13;
Segregated "Fees Budget according to the&#13;
procedures set up in the Senate Rules.&#13;
SUB ARTICLE II&#13;
Section 1. A standing Senate Committee,&#13;
the Student Organization Council, shall be&#13;
established consisting of the Presidents (or&#13;
their designees) of all student organizations&#13;
who choose to participate.&#13;
Section 2. No student shall be denied&#13;
membership to any on-campus organization&#13;
for reasons of race, color, religious creed,&#13;
national origin, sex, past criminal record,&#13;
political belief, political action, or sexual&#13;
preference.&#13;
Section 3. Students shall be free to&#13;
assemble, to demonstrate, to communicate,&#13;
and to protest individually or through a&#13;
student organization so long as no federal,&#13;
state, or municipal law is violated.&#13;
Section 4. Students shall be free to use&#13;
campus facilities for meetings of student&#13;
organizations, subject to uniform regulations&#13;
to time and manner governing the facility.&#13;
Section 5. Students shall have the right to&#13;
invite and hear speakers of their choice and&#13;
approval shall not be witheld by the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. or university authorities for purposes of&#13;
censorship.&#13;
Section 6. Affiliation with an extramural&#13;
organization shall not in itself disqualify a&#13;
student organization from student government&#13;
recognition or institutional recognition.&#13;
Section 7. The student press shall be free of&#13;
censorship and advance approval of copy,&#13;
and its editors shall be free to develop their&#13;
own editorial policies and news coverage.&#13;
Section 8. The student press shall be accorded&#13;
all those rights as stated in the United&#13;
States Constitution.&#13;
Section 9. Students shall have the right to&#13;
distribute or sell information of a printed&#13;
nature that does not conflict with University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside binding contracts.&#13;
ARTICLE V&#13;
Section 1. Fall elections for the P.S.G.A.,.&#13;
Inc. shall be held the third week of October.&#13;
At that time, one half of the representatives&#13;
from the legislative branch as well as one at&#13;
large S.U.F.A.C. seat shall be elected. Spring&#13;
elections for the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be held&#13;
during the eighth week of the spring&#13;
semester. At that time the President, Vice -&#13;
President, remaining legislative seats, one at&#13;
large S.U.F.A.C. seat and five Union&#13;
Operating Board seats shall be elected.&#13;
Section 2. The students, upon requesting a&#13;
petition with 10 percent of the signatures of&#13;
the entire student body, shall have the right to&#13;
request a constitutional referendum to amend&#13;
this constitution, or to request an advisory&#13;
referendum. The petition shall be presented&#13;
to both the President and the Vice-President&#13;
and the President Pro Tempore of P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Section 3.&#13;
1) For recall against a Senator or officer of&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc., any University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside student may start the petition and&#13;
any University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
student may sign it. Fifteen percent of the&#13;
Parkside student body must sign the petition.&#13;
2) The recall petition must have a&#13;
statement of the reason(s) for removal from&#13;
office. This must deal with actions committed&#13;
in the present term of office.&#13;
3) The student(s) shall present the petition&#13;
to the Senate. Upon receiving verification of&#13;
the petition, the Senate must immediately&#13;
notify the school paper that a recall is in&#13;
progress and a special election will take&#13;
place. There must be an election within 15&#13;
school days after notification of the valid&#13;
petition is received by the Senate.&#13;
4) Upon receiving the recall petition the&#13;
Senate must immediately turn it over to the&#13;
election committee. The election committee&#13;
shall have five days to verify the names on the&#13;
petition. In the event that there is no election&#13;
committee, the Senate must appoint one&#13;
within five days.&#13;
If illegal names are found on the petition,&#13;
and the number of legal names drop to less&#13;
than 15%, the election committee must notify&#13;
the student(s) who presented the petition.&#13;
Upon notification, the students have five&#13;
school days to get the required number of&#13;
names. If they fail to do so, their recall&#13;
petition shall be declared null. At the request&#13;
of the student(s) who presented the petition,&#13;
the election committee must show that the&#13;
names are illegal.&#13;
No legal name can be removed from the&#13;
petition after filing. Once the petition is&#13;
presented to the Senate, it cannot be withdrawn.&#13;
A person can be recalled only once per&#13;
offense during his/her term in office. The&#13;
person who is cited in the recall petition shall&#13;
have his/her name placed on the ballot&#13;
automatically unless he/she resigns. Students&#13;
who wish to run for the position shall follow&#13;
normal election procedure.&#13;
5) If a Senator or Officer resigns and is&#13;
reappointed to a position within the term of&#13;
office he/she last held, it shall be considered&#13;
only a continuation of his term.&#13;
ARTICLE VI&#13;
Section 1. An applicant shall not be denied&#13;
admission to the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside for reasons of race, color, national&#13;
origin, religious creed, sex, previous criminal&#13;
record, political beliefs, political action, or&#13;
sexual preference.&#13;
Section 2. Financial aid shall not be denied&#13;
for reasons of race, color, national origin,&#13;
religious creed, sex, previous criminal&#13;
record, political beliefs, political action, or&#13;
sexual preference.&#13;
Section 3. Students are free to take exception&#13;
to the data presented or views offered&#13;
in any course of study and may advocate&#13;
alternative opinions to those presented within&#13;
the classroom.&#13;
Section 4. All Student Disciplinary matters&#13;
will be processed through the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside Student Disciplinary&#13;
Procedures Chapter UWS 17.&#13;
Section 5. Students shall be evaluated only&#13;
on their knowledge of the subject and&#13;
academic performance and in turn are&#13;
responsible to maintain standards of&#13;
academic performance established for each&#13;
course they have enrolled in.&#13;
Section 6. Disclosure of students political or&#13;
f rsonal beliefs in connection with course&#13;
work shall not be made public without express&#13;
permission of the student.&#13;
Section 7. Student records on academic&#13;
performance and disciplinary actions shall be&#13;
separate.&#13;
Section 8. Information from counseling and&#13;
disciplinary files shall not be made available&#13;
to persons on or off campus without the express&#13;
consent of the student involved, except&#13;
under legal compulsion.&#13;
Section 9. All records and information kept&#13;
on file shall be readily accesible to the student&#13;
to whom they pertain.&#13;
Section 10. Students shall have the right to&#13;
be present at all committee meetings directly&#13;
affecting the students.&#13;
Section 11. The constitutional rights of any&#13;
student, as stated in the United States Constitution,&#13;
shall not be denied anyone, at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside.&#13;
VOTE&#13;
MARCH&#13;
10 &amp; 11&#13;
REFERENDUMS:&#13;
• Do you support a peace - time military draft?&#13;
• Do you favor decriminalization of up to one ounce of&#13;
marijuana?&#13;
• Which do you favor in the Union Square — a juke box, more -&#13;
often changing music on a jukebox, a stereo system, or other?&#13;
• Do you know if there is a housing system on campus?&#13;
• Do you agree to support the UW System Student Lobby&#13;
United Council, through a mandatory fee, refundable upon&#13;
written request, of 50 cents per semester?&#13;
10 Thursday, March 4,1982 RANGER&#13;
by Tammy Shuemate&#13;
This past weekend, Parkside&#13;
hosted the NCAA II National&#13;
Wrestling Tournament which&#13;
resulted in Parkside's Dan Winter&#13;
being named All - American for&#13;
the sixth time in his wrestling&#13;
career.&#13;
During the preliminary bouts,&#13;
Winter, at 134, defeated Jay&#13;
Patterson of Morgan State by an 8-&#13;
5 decision. He then defeated David&#13;
Navarre of Humbolt 9-5 in the&#13;
second round and went on to att ain&#13;
another victory with a 12-4&#13;
decision over Willie Dye of&#13;
Pembroke in the third round.&#13;
In the semi - finals, Winter was&#13;
defeated by Mike Garcia of&#13;
Central Missouri 9-8 and Ted&#13;
Navarre of Eastern Washington 7-&#13;
4. Garcia later went on to become&#13;
the national champion in the 134&#13;
weight class.&#13;
In his sixth and final match,&#13;
Winter took fifth place overall and&#13;
attained All - American status by&#13;
overcoming George Stone of&#13;
Northern Michigan with a 13-6&#13;
decision.&#13;
Other Parkside wrestlers who&#13;
competed, but did not place were&#13;
Matt Kluge, Mike Muckerheide&#13;
and Brian Irek.&#13;
Kluge, at 126, beat Jack&#13;
Greegne of North Dakota State 12-&#13;
5, but then lost to Don Stevens of&#13;
Southern Illinois University -&#13;
Edwardsville 11-7.&#13;
At 150, Mike Muckerheide lost&#13;
his only match to Randy Goette of&#13;
South Dakota State 14-7.&#13;
Brian Irek, at 177, won his first&#13;
match by the disqualification of&#13;
Joe Glowacki of Central Connecticut.&#13;
In Irek's second&#13;
preliminary match, he was&#13;
defeated by Joe Loose of Mankato&#13;
State 8-6 and in his third and final&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
DAN WINTER pins opponent.&#13;
match Irek was defeated by Dave&#13;
Iverson of Northern Michigan 19-&#13;
6.&#13;
The ten new national champions&#13;
as a result of this tournament are:&#13;
Adam Cuestas at 118 of California&#13;
State - Bakersfield; his brother,&#13;
Dan Cuestas at 126, also from&#13;
Bakersfield; Mike Garcia at 134 of&#13;
Central Missouri; Mike Langais&#13;
at 142 of North Dakota State; Gary&#13;
Erwin at 150 from Jacksonville&#13;
State University; Perry Shea at&#13;
158 from Bakersfield; Mike Cribbs&#13;
at 167 of Lake Superior State;&#13;
Mark Loomis at 177 of Bakersfield;&#13;
Jeff Ermont at 190 of&#13;
Ashland College, and in the&#13;
unlimited weight division, Mark&#13;
Rigatuso from Nebraska - Omaha.&#13;
The top team scores are&#13;
California State - Bakersfield with&#13;
a score of 166.5, North Dakota&#13;
State with 78.75 and Southern&#13;
Illinois - Edwardsville with 61.75.&#13;
Of the 49 colleges that participated,&#13;
Parkside placed 24th&#13;
with a score of 13.5.&#13;
Parkside's Coach Koch felt that&#13;
his wrestlers did extremely well,&#13;
although his goal was to have a&#13;
national champion.&#13;
Some of the problems that&#13;
hampered Dan Winter from&#13;
achieving his coach's goal of&#13;
becoming a national champion&#13;
were due to an elbow injury which&#13;
occurred earlier in the season and&#13;
a broken nose suffered during the&#13;
tournament.&#13;
"He (Winter) probably has been&#13;
one of the best wrestlers we have&#13;
ever had at Parkside," Koch said.&#13;
Winter now holds a 103-22 car eer&#13;
record.&#13;
Although Koch was pleased with&#13;
his wrestlers' performances, he&#13;
feels that they have learned a lot&#13;
and he is now anticipating the&#13;
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Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
WRESTLING COACH KOCH (right).&#13;
final tournament of the season —&#13;
the NAIA Nationals to be held in&#13;
Forest Grove, Oregon on March 4-&#13;
6. Winter, along with Kluge,&#13;
Muckerheide, Irek and Paul Roth&#13;
will be competing in that tournament.&#13;
Even with this final tournament&#13;
still ahead, Koch is already&#13;
looking forward to next season.&#13;
Even though Dan Winter, the lost&#13;
senior, will not be back, Koch feels&#13;
confident with sophomores Kluge,&#13;
Muckerheide and Irek and junior&#13;
Paul Roth.&#13;
"We think we've got the nucleus&#13;
for a real fine team next year," he&#13;
said. "We've got a couple of boys&#13;
coming back and another boy that&#13;
transferred in here by the name of&#13;
Ted Keyes from the University of&#13;
Nebraska. I think he's probably&#13;
been the top wrestler to come out&#13;
of this area, this state, in the last&#13;
couple of years. He had a&#13;
scholarship to wrestle at the&#13;
University of Nebraska and he'll&#13;
be a real asset to our team next&#13;
year."&#13;
Koch went on to say that "Dan&#13;
Winter's brother, Mike, had a&#13;
record of about 75 wins and maybe&#13;
two, three losses i n the last two&#13;
years at Waukesha Tech and he's&#13;
probably going to transfer here&#13;
next year."&#13;
Another Parkside wrestler,&#13;
Mike Vania, who was hurt early in&#13;
the year, is also one of the top&#13;
wrestlers. He transferred to&#13;
Parkside from Pacific University,&#13;
where he was a two - time All -&#13;
American. Said Koch, "He&#13;
would've been a real asset to our&#13;
team this year."&#13;
So the outlook for next year's&#13;
wrestling team seems quite&#13;
promising. Koch said, "We've got&#13;
the makings of possibly the best&#13;
team we've ever had next year,"&#13;
however, he went on to add, "but&#13;
the injuries, you know, things like&#13;
that can change the outlook in a&#13;
hurry."&#13;
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Wrestling&#13;
Dan Winter wins sixth Ail-American&#13;
RANGER Thursday, March 4,1982&#13;
Eau Claire ends Stephens' championship hopes&#13;
Kenosha -— Wilbert Webb and hearts&#13;
John Herndon have been declared&#13;
academically ineligible, making&#13;
them unavailable to the Parkside&#13;
basketball team for tonight's&#13;
game against Eau Claire and for&#13;
the balance of the season.&#13;
Webb, a 6 -11 junior center, and&#13;
Herndon, a 6 - 6 senior forward,&#13;
failed to satisfactorily complete&#13;
required work under a time extension&#13;
which had been granted by&#13;
an instructor of a course they had&#13;
taken first semester, according to&#13;
UW - Parkside academic officials.&#13;
The two had received passing&#13;
grades in the course after meeting&#13;
all requirements except for the&#13;
completion of term papers. Their&#13;
passing grades for the course&#13;
were changed to failing grades&#13;
Monday afternoon, thus makng&#13;
them ineligible immediately for&#13;
further intercollegiate competition&#13;
under NAIA rules.&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
This was the release that&#13;
arrived on head coach Steve&#13;
Stephens desk at approximately&#13;
4:35 p. m. Monday afternoon. The&#13;
big game against Eau Claire was&#13;
less than three hours away,. John&#13;
Herndon didn't find out until 6 p.&#13;
m. as he was on the training table&#13;
getting his ankles taped for the&#13;
game.&#13;
} The Parkside - Eau Claire game&#13;
has become a tradition for the&#13;
district championship for years.&#13;
This year's meeting, however,&#13;
was not for the title. Eau Claire&#13;
had recently lost three games and&#13;
came in second in their conference&#13;
to Stevens Point. The&#13;
winner of Monday night's game&#13;
would face Stevens Point for the&#13;
title. For Parkside, Eau Claire&#13;
would have been a most formidable&#13;
opponent with the two big&#13;
men in the lineup. Without them, it&#13;
seemed like the Rangers forgot&#13;
about their apparent lack of&#13;
talent, compared to Eau Claire,&#13;
and were playing with their&#13;
hearts.&#13;
With Herndon and Webb out of&#13;
he lineup the Rangers lost more&#13;
than 26 points and 17 rebounds a&#13;
game from the team's average It&#13;
also took away 10 fouls from the&#13;
center postion.&#13;
• If C!f5e came away from the&#13;
battle with a 86 - 80 victory and a&#13;
chance to equal Parkside's record&#13;
of four consecutive trips to the&#13;
NAIA national tournament in&#13;
Kansas City.&#13;
The Rangers also had to contend&#13;
with Eau Claire's senior All -&#13;
American Tony Carr, a 6 - 3 guard&#13;
who averages 25.9 points a game&#13;
and is a shoe - in to be named first&#13;
team All - American again this&#13;
season. Ranger Charles Perry had&#13;
the unenviable task of guarding&#13;
Carr Monday night and although&#13;
Carr scored 28 points to lead both&#13;
teams. Perry hounded him and&#13;
kept him from really going crazy.&#13;
The game seemed to run in&#13;
streaks, with Eau Claire running&#13;
off six or seven straight points&#13;
only to see the Rangers go on their&#13;
own short spurt to pull back to&#13;
within a point or two. The Rangers&#13;
used the quickness of their three&#13;
guard lineup to keep pressure on&#13;
the Blugolds. That lineup&#13;
however, left the Rangers far&#13;
short on the inside and allowed&#13;
Eau Claire to work the ball inside&#13;
for a lot of easy baskets. This was&#13;
revealed in the game's final&#13;
statistics, as Eau Claire shot a&#13;
truly amazing 70 per cent for the&#13;
game, including 84 per cent in the&#13;
second half, missing on just four&#13;
of 25 shots. "They knew we were&#13;
short inside," said Stephens, "and&#13;
they took advantage of i t." If is a&#13;
big word, and sometimes it's not&#13;
good to use it, but if the Rangers&#13;
had their two big men in the lineup&#13;
they may have been able to stop,&#13;
or at least slow down Eau Claire's&#13;
inside game. At least that's what&#13;
senior guard Dave McLeish&#13;
thought. "If we had those two guys&#13;
we would have won it," he said.&#13;
In the stands you could hear&#13;
tans all over saying that ihey&#13;
wasted four dollars. That was&#13;
after the announcer said that&#13;
numbers 34 and 50 would be&#13;
scratched from the Parkside&#13;
roster. They were surprised,&#13;
b^ever, when the Rangers ran&#13;
oft the last minute and a half of th e&#13;
clock and tied the game at 31 at&#13;
the buzzer.&#13;
The teams played even for the&#13;
first three minutes of the second&#13;
half when the Rangers took their&#13;
last lead of t he game at 40 - 39. The&#13;
Blugolds went on from there to&#13;
maintain a lead of between four&#13;
and 11 points for the remander of&#13;
the contest.&#13;
With the loss, as it turned out,&#13;
the game was the last for&#13;
Parkside's successful coaching&#13;
duo of Steve Stephens and Rudy&#13;
Collum. Collum, the assistant&#13;
coach, was notified before the&#13;
season that because of budget cuts&#13;
his contract as a teacher would&#13;
not be renewed, and he would not&#13;
have a job here as of June 1.&#13;
Stephens decided that he would&#13;
not want to run a one man&#13;
operation and announced that he&#13;
would retire at the end of the&#13;
season as basketball coach. Along&#13;
with the standing ovations each of&#13;
them got from the crowd, they got&#13;
the most out of their players&#13;
during the game. Center freshman&#13;
Ray Duckworth played his&#13;
best game of the year scoring 23&#13;
points and grabbing 12 rebounds.&#13;
"Duck came ready to play,"&#13;
commented Stephens, after the&#13;
game. "They were all ready to&#13;
play. They've been kicked in the&#13;
tail sometimes this year and they&#13;
just keep coming back. There&#13;
wasn't a kid out there that didn't&#13;
play his heart out."&#13;
Freshman guard Darron&#13;
Brittman tied Duckworth for team&#13;
scoring honors with 23 points.&#13;
Perry added 18, which was right&#13;
on his season's team leading&#13;
average of 1 8.2.&#13;
Pfioto by Mark Sanders&#13;
STEVE STEPHENS coaches Ray Duckworth during a time out.&#13;
It could be said that the Rangers&#13;
were defeated on the free throw&#13;
line. Parkside was called for 23&#13;
fouls for the game to just 12 for&#13;
Eau Claire. Parkside converted&#13;
on six of only eight attempts from&#13;
the line while the Blugolds made&#13;
16 of 26 attempts. It could also be&#13;
said that if Eau Claire didn't get&#13;
its points from the line, they would&#13;
have got them from somewhere&#13;
else. Although they seemed to be&#13;
stoppable Monday night, their 23 -&#13;
5 record indicates that they know&#13;
how to win.&#13;
The Rangers, by the way, advanced&#13;
to the Eau Claire game by&#13;
handily defeating Northland&#13;
College by a score of 87 - 66 last&#13;
Wednesday. Parkside's starting&#13;
guard trio of Perry, Brittman, and&#13;
McLeish accounted for 53 points&#13;
as the Rangers out - quicked&#13;
Northland, who has never been&#13;
much trouble for the Rangers.&#13;
The Rangers ended the season&#13;
with a 14 - 15 record, a deceptive&#13;
one in that seven losses came&#13;
against NCAA Division I foes.&#13;
What the future holds for Parkside&#13;
basketball is very much up in the&#13;
air at this moment. Whatever it&#13;
may be, Parkside fans should&#13;
consider themselves lucky to have&#13;
seen what they have seen over the&#13;
years.&#13;
Inside UW-P sports&#13;
A different perspective of the game — from the stands by Greg Bonofiglio&#13;
Forget the fact that every&#13;
member of Eau Claire's starting&#13;
line up was taller than Parkside's&#13;
starting five. Forget the fact that&#13;
Parkside started three freshmen,&#13;
whereas Eau Claire started three&#13;
seniors. Forget , the fact that&#13;
Parkside's starting center and&#13;
starting forward were declared&#13;
academically ineligible to play in&#13;
the game.&#13;
The difference in the game was&#13;
at the free throw line. Eau Claire&#13;
hit on 16 of 26 from the line;&#13;
Parkside connected on six of&#13;
eight.&#13;
Prior to the start of the game,&#13;
Parkside center Wilbert Webb and&#13;
forward John Herndon were ruled&#13;
academically ineligible to play for&#13;
the remainder of the season. The&#13;
ruling came after the two players&#13;
had failed to meet a March 1&#13;
Knoio Dy Mark Sanders&#13;
FAN SUPPORT was more abundant at Monday night's game&#13;
an it h as been in the past.&#13;
deadline for submitting term&#13;
papers for courses they had taken&#13;
last semester. Both players were&#13;
given an extension period to&#13;
submit term papers for courses&#13;
that they had passed last&#13;
semester.&#13;
The Blugolds free throw edge&#13;
came about when the Rangers, in&#13;
an attempt to catch up, were&#13;
forced to foul Eau Claire late in&#13;
the game. Eau Claire shot 84&#13;
percent from the field in the&#13;
second half, as the Blugolds&#13;
shifted to an inside game.&#13;
The contest marked the end of&#13;
Steve Stephens' 13 year tenure as&#13;
UW-Parkside coach. Stephens&#13;
announced his resignation at the&#13;
start of this season. His decision,&#13;
came in part as a response to the&#13;
de - emphasis of the University's&#13;
basketball program. The game&#13;
also marked the final appearance&#13;
of assistant coach Rudy Collum.&#13;
One couldn't help but have an&#13;
eerie feeling for what the future&#13;
holds for the Parkside basketball&#13;
program. At the beginning of the&#13;
game, announcer Lou DiCastri&#13;
instructed the capacity crowd to&#13;
stand and participate in the&#13;
National Anthem. The crowd&#13;
stood in silence for what seemed&#13;
to be a long nervous minute.&#13;
Something was wrong. The flag&#13;
was missing. Someone forgot to&#13;
put the flag up. Either that or the&#13;
flag was another victim of the&#13;
budget cuts.&#13;
A slight rumbling filtered&#13;
through the crowd as the organist,&#13;
in apparent desperation,&#13;
struggled through the beginning of&#13;
the National Anthem. When it was&#13;
finished, the crowd, in utter&#13;
disbelief, returned to their seats.&#13;
Parkside outscored Eau Claire&#13;
15-5 in the last six minutes and&#13;
nineteen seconds of the first half&#13;
to tie it up at 31 apiece.&#13;
In the second half, Parkside&#13;
came out fast and took an early 40-&#13;
39 lead. But Eau Claire quickly&#13;
regained the lead and went up 58-&#13;
54 at the 8:45 mark. The Blugolds&#13;
put on a 16-4 sc oring spurt in the&#13;
next two and one - half minutes&#13;
and went up 72-58 with six minutes&#13;
and twelve seconds left in&#13;
game. Parkside's last min&#13;
rally fell short and the sea:&#13;
came to a solemn end.&#13;
The Parkside faithful, abs«&#13;
for much of the year, came out&#13;
strength to cheer the Range&#13;
Coach Stephens and assist;&#13;
coach Collum were both gi\&#13;
standing ovations near the end&#13;
the game. It was indeed the end&#13;
an era for Parkside basketb;&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
CORNELL SADLER shoots for two over Eau Claire.&#13;
12 Thursday, March 4,1982 RANGER&#13;
Fencing&#13;
Rangers comeback&#13;
by Karen Norwood&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside men's and&#13;
women's fencing team travelled&#13;
to Cleveland, OH this past&#13;
weekend and took on such names&#13;
as Cleveland State, Ohio State,&#13;
Miami of Ohio, Oberlin College&#13;
and Case Western Reserve. All&#13;
three of the men's teams (foil,&#13;
epee and sabre) were short one&#13;
member, and accordingly each&#13;
team had to forfeit three bouts to&#13;
each school. The team members&#13;
that were there, however, did&#13;
quite well, especially when&#13;
compared with recent matches.&#13;
The men's foil team did well,&#13;
with Bruce Klappauf finishing the&#13;
day with an 11-4 record. Klappauf&#13;
won all three of h is bouts against&#13;
Cleveland State and Oberlin&#13;
College. Klappauf also managed&#13;
to win two of three bouts against&#13;
Miami of Ohio. Terry Eisenbart, a&#13;
new face on the fencing team as of&#13;
this fall, brought up his average&#13;
by winning four bouts during the&#13;
day.&#13;
The men's sabre team did extremely&#13;
well for the day as Sam&#13;
Waller, also new to the fencing&#13;
team, went over fifty percent with&#13;
an 8-7 record. Steve Kalmar, who&#13;
joined the fencing team just this&#13;
semester, surprised a few by&#13;
ending up the day with a 6-9&#13;
record.&#13;
The men's epee team did not do&#13;
quite as well as they would have&#13;
liked but didn't do all that badly&#13;
last Saturday. Mark Spiess,&#13;
recently back from the Junior&#13;
Olympics, concluded the day with&#13;
a 5-10, as Tom Ogle, the captain of&#13;
the men's epee team, also finished&#13;
up with 5-10. Spiess won two of&#13;
three bouts against Miami of Ohio&#13;
while Ogle won all three of his.&#13;
Ogle also took two against&#13;
Oberlin, but neither Spiess nor&#13;
Ogle managed anything against&#13;
Ohio State.&#13;
The women's team did very well&#13;
last Saturday, losing to only one&#13;
school, Ohio State. The women's&#13;
team, not being plagued with a&#13;
shortage of fencers, had ample&#13;
opportunity to show their talent.&#13;
Sabine Claus, the star fencer for&#13;
the team, ended the day with an&#13;
11-4 record, losing three of the four&#13;
to Ohio State, and the fourth to the&#13;
host school, Case Western&#13;
Reserve. Another new face on the&#13;
mostly new team was Peggy&#13;
Perozzo, who wrapped up the day&#13;
with a 7-8 score. The women's&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
SERVICES OFFERED&#13;
TYPING Professionally done. Reasonable&#13;
rates. Fast Service. South Kenosha. 657&#13;
6068.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1977 PLYMOUTH ARROW Excellent conditlon,&#13;
asking $2500. Call 552 9232.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
WANTED: Kodak slide projector, CHEAP!&#13;
Phone 697-0577.&#13;
WANTED: Students to sell advertising for&#13;
Ranger. 15% commission plus bonus.&#13;
Here's the perfect chance to make $$$! Stop&#13;
in Ranger office (next to Coffee Shoppe) if&#13;
you're interested.&#13;
WANTED: News, feature and sports writers,&#13;
photographers, graphic artists. Stop by&#13;
Ranger office.&#13;
WANTED: Dependable babysitter for&#13;
Thursday evenings, 6-11:30 p.m. My home,&#13;
must like children. Phone 657-7790.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Needs&#13;
Sports Writers&#13;
team has also had its share of&#13;
injuries this semester with Kirsten&#13;
Reeves out with a cracked&#13;
rib.&#13;
Loran Hein, the coach of the&#13;
fencing team, commented on the&#13;
considerable amount of inexperience&#13;
his team had. Hein said,&#13;
"I'm already looking forward to&#13;
next year." Hein will be working&#13;
with a few more seasoned fencers,&#13;
and will hopefully have a few more&#13;
new fencers to cover up the bare&#13;
spots in the men's team.&#13;
The fencing team has ended its&#13;
regular season, and now a few of&#13;
Parkside's best fencers will be&#13;
moving to the Great Lakes&#13;
tournament that will be held next&#13;
weekend in Detroit, MI. BRUCE KLAPPAUF makes a fatal mistake. Photo by Karen Norwood&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
THANKS Sharon. Richard.&#13;
AWW SHUCKS, N.E.! That's really sweet of&#13;
you.&#13;
DR. DREW, I'm sorry to inform you that the&#13;
cheerleaders have changed their minds!&#13;
BRENDA BUCHANAN is the campus all&#13;
round Winter Carnival champion!&#13;
Congratulations!!&#13;
VOTE KEN MEYER for SUFAC March 10&#13;
and 11!&#13;
(TED) - You are 10 of the most lousiest&#13;
photographers we know of.&#13;
HEY INFER! How's your complex today?&#13;
SABINE - How much for 15 minutes? M.S.&#13;
Improve your memory.&#13;
Order this memo board now-before you forget!&#13;
¥%4mSm&#13;
And remember,&#13;
good times stir with&#13;
Seagrams 7 Crown.&#13;
KK? A?EhR,"N WHISKEY-A BLEND. 80 PROOF&#13;
are trademarks of the Seven-Up Company C 1982</text>
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              <text>PSGA election - grievance filed</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside PSGA election&#13;
Grievance filed&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Presidential hopefuls talk&#13;
by 7 .Ipff Jeff Wirlfc Wicks&#13;
Students had a chance to see&#13;
and hear the PSGA presidential&#13;
candidates for this year's elections&#13;
Monday afternoon when The&#13;
Ranger sponsored a presidential&#13;
forum in mid - Main Place. Approximately&#13;
100 people attended&#13;
the event, which was moderated&#13;
by the Ranger Editor, Ken Meyer.&#13;
Each of the four candidates made&#13;
a speech first, with a question&#13;
session afterward.&#13;
The first person to speak was&#13;
Mike Axelson, a write - in candidate.&#13;
Axelson spoke about the&#13;
"basic problem" of student&#13;
apathy, and stressed more student&#13;
responsibility and awareness in&#13;
student government. "It is the&#13;
problem of apathy that I have&#13;
tried to find a solution to;" he&#13;
said. "I am aware of the other&#13;
issues that confront us at&#13;
Parkside, but I feel that the&#13;
number one problem is apathy,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Next to speak was Jim Kreuser,&#13;
the incumbant who is running for&#13;
a second term. Kreuser pointed&#13;
out major achievements of his&#13;
past performance as President,&#13;
including the pad outside the&#13;
Union being extended and fenced&#13;
in. "My biggest concern was our&#13;
biggest tradition, The End," he&#13;
said. "There was a possibility of&#13;
limiting it, and this, at least in the&#13;
short run, will not limit The End."&#13;
Kreuser also mentioned the first&#13;
United Council meeting ever held&#13;
at Parkside in June, and the fact&#13;
that a new bookstore company&#13;
was unanimously decided to take&#13;
over for next fall. "I've been to&#13;
many University Committees,&#13;
and I believe all the Faculty&#13;
Senate meetings, and I have a&#13;
good rapport with them (faculty),&#13;
and they are really willing to&#13;
listen to students' concerns. I'm&#13;
sorry to say that my colleagues&#13;
Jim Bearden&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
PSGA presidential candidate&#13;
Phil Pogreba filed an official&#13;
grievance with the Elections&#13;
Committee Monday against fellow&#13;
candidate, current PSGA&#13;
President Jim Kreuser.&#13;
The following is the text of&#13;
Pogreba's grievance letter to the&#13;
committee:&#13;
"On Sunday, Feb. 28 at approximately&#13;
10:40 p. m. four&#13;
members of my campaign&#13;
committee and myself entered the&#13;
building with the intent to put up&#13;
posters. As we were unrolling&#13;
posters and getting organized to&#13;
put them up a security guard&#13;
came up to us and said we had to&#13;
leave the building. While we were&#13;
putting the posters away the&#13;
security guard stayed and watched&#13;
us. While I was in the office&#13;
putting the posters away the&#13;
security guard was telling Kathy,&#13;
one of my campaign committee&#13;
chairs, that personally he didn't&#13;
care if we put them up but that&#13;
'he' called and that he wanted us&#13;
out of the building. When asked&#13;
who 'he' was he replied, Jim&#13;
Kreuser, who was working in the&#13;
Union building. He then went on to&#13;
say that he didn't know much of&#13;
what was going on in student&#13;
government but that he knew Jim&#13;
personally and that Jim had done&#13;
personal favors for him in the&#13;
past.&#13;
"When I returned to school the&#13;
next day there were posters of Mr.&#13;
Kreuser's up that hadn't been&#13;
there the night before. When I got&#13;
to the PSGA office I learned that&#13;
Mr. Kreuser had stayed in the&#13;
building all night.&#13;
"There are a few questions I&#13;
would like to ask. First of all, what&#13;
was Mr. Kreuser's jurisdiction in&#13;
buildings other than the Union&#13;
building? What is the policy for&#13;
university employees showing&#13;
favoritism for PSGA candidates?&#13;
How trustworthy is a security&#13;
guard that performs favors for&#13;
favors? If a rule exists for one&#13;
party, does it not apply to another&#13;
or are some people above the&#13;
law?&#13;
"I trust there will be an investigation&#13;
into this matter so it&#13;
can be resolved quickly."&#13;
Pogreba and Kreuser met with&#13;
Dean of Student Life Dave&#13;
Pedersen Monday to discuss the&#13;
issue. Pedersen will investigate&#13;
Pogreba's complaint by talking to&#13;
Director of Campus Security&#13;
Ronald Brinkman about the policy&#13;
concerning students in the&#13;
building after hours.&#13;
The campus used to close at&#13;
midnight on Sundays, but was&#13;
changed to 10:30 p. m. almost a&#13;
year ago, Brinkman told Ranger.&#13;
Signs posted by the doorways give&#13;
Continued On Page Seven&#13;
Photo by Masood Shafiq&#13;
^ MEYER (far left) moderates forum&#13;
with the four PSGA presidential candidates (from I. to r Mike&#13;
Axelson, Jim Kreuser, Loretta Lacy and Phil Pogreba).&#13;
Pogreba wins presidential poll&#13;
have not been to any of these,"&#13;
Kreuser said.&#13;
The third candidate, Loretta&#13;
Lacy spoke next, saying that if&#13;
elected, she would address "the&#13;
issues that concern every student&#13;
at Parkside, as well as students at&#13;
every University in Wisconsin."&#13;
Lacy stated that she would&#13;
attack the rising tuition and book&#13;
costs, and oversee the new&#13;
bookstore's intitial operation. She&#13;
also stressed the need for a book&#13;
rental system which she would&#13;
also seek to be installed on&#13;
campus.&#13;
"At the present time, I don't feel&#13;
that the Parkside Student&#13;
Government is being run to its&#13;
fullest capacity. I don't feel the&#13;
present administration really&#13;
realizes how much power it has,"&#13;
Lacy said.&#13;
Lacy also stressed the need for&#13;
more parking spaces and&#13;
adequate lighting in the parking&#13;
lot.&#13;
The last candidate to speak was&#13;
Phil Pogreba, who is currently&#13;
President Pro Tempore of the&#13;
Senate. "By working with the&#13;
Senate over the year, I've learned&#13;
the organizational structure of&#13;
PSGA and how it works," he said.&#13;
"The Senate has made great&#13;
strides this year in making sure&#13;
that the students' voices are heard&#13;
on issues that affect them. What&#13;
I'd like the Senate to do over the&#13;
next year is strengthen the ground&#13;
they covered. Get the procedures&#13;
used to achieve those goals down&#13;
to an art so that from now on it will&#13;
be routine," Pogreba said.&#13;
Pogreba denounced student&#13;
apathy and said that if elected, he&#13;
would help to create more "unity&#13;
among the students".&#13;
A random survey was conducted&#13;
Monday concerning the&#13;
PSGA presidential election&#13;
concluding today (Thursday).&#13;
Seventy - five students (38 female&#13;
and 37 male) were randomly&#13;
selected and asked the following&#13;
question: "I'm taking an independent&#13;
survey or poll — out of&#13;
the four students running for&#13;
PSGA president, which are you&#13;
planning to vote for?"&#13;
Phil Pogreba received 34 vot es,&#13;
Jim Kreuser 20, Loretta Lacy 17&#13;
and Mike Axelson four.&#13;
Out of the students asked, 35&#13;
attended the presidential forum&#13;
held Monday afternoon and 40 did&#13;
not. Students who answered that&#13;
they did not intend to vote were&#13;
not included in the survey.&#13;
Remember that this was only a&#13;
random survey, thus the results&#13;
were not scientificaly derived.&#13;
The renewal criteria:&#13;
Nonrenewal decision discussed&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
On March 4 the PSGA Senate&#13;
heard information about&#13;
Sociology instructor Jim Bearden's&#13;
nonrenewal of contract from&#13;
a student representing a student&#13;
group protesting the nonrenewal&#13;
decision.&#13;
A group of about 12 students&#13;
have been working for the past&#13;
few weeks trying to bring the issue&#13;
out in the open, hoping for support&#13;
to reverse the decision not to&#13;
renew Bearden's contract.&#13;
The group of students have&#13;
collected over 200 signatures on a&#13;
petition and held a rally yesterday&#13;
in support of Bearden.&#13;
Sue Larsen, Vice - President of&#13;
the Sociology Club, addressed the&#13;
Senate last week, saying "We're&#13;
doing as much as we can and&#13;
support from the student&#13;
government would be more than&#13;
welcome." This was the first time&#13;
the issue was brought up to the&#13;
Senate, so no action was taken.&#13;
PSGA Senator Mike Pfaffl said,&#13;
"I think that as representatives of&#13;
the students at Parkside, we have&#13;
an important stake here. Myself, I&#13;
feel if certain people and ideas are&#13;
kept off an organization on&#13;
campus, it will affect many other&#13;
students."&#13;
Larsen read to the Senate a&#13;
letter Bearden received from Vice&#13;
Chancellor / Dean of Faculty&#13;
Lorman Ratner stating the&#13;
reasons for the decision not to&#13;
renew Bearden's contract. The&#13;
nonrenewal decision came from&#13;
the Executive Committee of the&#13;
Behavorial Science Division,&#13;
made up of senior faculty&#13;
members within the division.&#13;
Ratner's letter, dated Feb. 18,&#13;
stated:&#13;
"The reason for this recommendation&#13;
has to do with Mr.&#13;
Bearden's record and program of&#13;
research and scholarly activity.&#13;
The committee was not satisfied&#13;
with Mr. Bearden's progress in&#13;
producing the quality research&#13;
expected of a faculty member in&#13;
his discipline."&#13;
"Mr. Bearden's teaching activities&#13;
were evaluated as good&#13;
and were not a factor in the&#13;
nonrenewal recommendation. His&#13;
service activities were seen as&#13;
adequate to date and were also not&#13;
a factor in the nonrenewal&#13;
recommendation."&#13;
"On balance, the Committee&#13;
was unable to give Mr. Bearden&#13;
an endorsement of the kind that&#13;
would warrant a positive&#13;
recommendation for contract&#13;
renewal."&#13;
JIM BEARDEN&#13;
Larsen said, "Nonrenewal of a&#13;
contract is very rarely done on&#13;
this campus — even more rare&#13;
when it's a new faculty member&#13;
like Jim Bearden, who has only&#13;
been here a year and a half."&#13;
Larsen called the committee's&#13;
decision on the basis of inadequate&#13;
research "pretty rediculous&#13;
because of the fact that he's been&#13;
here a year and a half and just&#13;
finished his Ph.D. No one . . . can&#13;
publish a book while working on&#13;
their dissertation."&#13;
Continued On Page Two&#13;
The following is the criteria for&#13;
renewal of faculty appointments&#13;
and granting tenure, according to&#13;
UWPF 6.07.&#13;
Faculty appointments may be&#13;
granted only upon the recommendation&#13;
of the executive committee&#13;
of an academic division and&#13;
the chancellor. An academic&#13;
division executive committee shall&#13;
forward its recommendations for&#13;
certain appointments or&#13;
promotions directly to the Personnel&#13;
Review Committee.&#13;
Criteria:&#13;
(a) The decision regarding a&#13;
recommendation to renew an appointment&#13;
or to make a tenure appointment&#13;
shall be based primarily&#13;
on a faculty member's contribuion&#13;
in the areas of teaching, creative&#13;
activity, and service. Special&#13;
consideration shall be given to&#13;
contributions in the area of&#13;
teaching.&#13;
At the academic division level,&#13;
programmatic considerations Shall&#13;
also be taken into consideration.&#13;
Every recommendation for&#13;
renewal or granting of tenure shall&#13;
be accompanied by a statement&#13;
setting forth the evaluations in each&#13;
area on which the recommendation&#13;
is based.&#13;
(b) Teaching&#13;
Definition — Teaching includes&#13;
any activity related to course&#13;
development, course presentation,&#13;
course related interaction with&#13;
students, evaluation of student&#13;
progress, tutoring, advising, and to&#13;
other learning services required by&#13;
students.&#13;
Evaluation — The source of information&#13;
regarding the quality of&#13;
teaching shall be student course&#13;
evaluations conducted each fall and&#13;
spring semester. A faculty member&#13;
shall be afforded opportunity to&#13;
present other evidence regarding&#13;
teaching quality such as reading&#13;
lists, course outlines, innovations,&#13;
samples of student work, reports of&#13;
colleague observers, participation&#13;
in teaching improvement&#13;
workshops, video tapes of&#13;
presentations, and impact on&#13;
former students. Evidence from all&#13;
of the above sources shall be&#13;
considered in the evaluation of&#13;
teaching quality.&#13;
(b) Creative Activity&#13;
Definition — Creative activity&#13;
consists of contributions by an&#13;
individual in the forms or media&#13;
typical of his discipline, art or&#13;
profession, and which are available&#13;
for critical evaluation by his / her&#13;
peers within his / her discipline, art&#13;
or profession. Contributions include,&#13;
but are not limited to, books,&#13;
monographs, articles, reviews and&#13;
conference papers; works of art,&#13;
concert performances, dramatic&#13;
performances and literary works;&#13;
and research reports and design&#13;
proposals. Contributions in the&#13;
process of preparation may be&#13;
considered as evidence of creative&#13;
activity.&#13;
Evaluation — Quality shall be&#13;
considered more important than&#13;
quantity in the evaluation of&#13;
creative activity. There should be&#13;
evidence of sustained creative&#13;
activity.&#13;
(d) Service&#13;
Definition •— Service consists of&#13;
contributions to the affairs of the&#13;
University, community, and&#13;
profession. University service&#13;
includes contributions to the&#13;
governance, administration and&#13;
operation (but excluding teaching)&#13;
of UW Parkside or the UW System;&#13;
community service includes only&#13;
those contributions in which the&#13;
faculty member represents UW&#13;
Parkside or his profession; and&#13;
professional service includes&#13;
contributions to the administration,&#13;
governance and operation of&#13;
professional organizations.&#13;
Evaluation — Evaluation of&#13;
service shall be based on an assessment&#13;
of the overall quality of&#13;
the record of service. Contributions&#13;
in all three areas of service shall&#13;
not be required.&#13;
(e) Programmatic considerations&#13;
include an assessment&#13;
of the present and future needs of&#13;
an academic program, and the&#13;
relative importance to the program&#13;
of the faculty member under&#13;
review.&#13;
(f) The relative importance of the&#13;
criteria of teaching, creative activity,&#13;
and service, and&#13;
programmatic considerations,&#13;
shall be judged by the faculties of&#13;
the academic divisions, except that&#13;
special consideration shall be given&#13;
to contributions in the area of&#13;
teaching. &#13;
2 Thursday, March 11,1982 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
VSOOOO! «OC«COCOCCOOOOOCCOOOOOOOOeOOOOO©OOS'&#13;
Ranger editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the editorial&#13;
staff. Parkside students may submit editorial ideas to the editor for&#13;
consideration. Editorial ideas need not be typed to be considered.&#13;
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Forum s uccessful, el ection d isgraced&#13;
The forum of PSGA presidential candidates Monday, sponsored&#13;
by Ranger, was a success — t he attendance was at least&#13;
125. That doesn't sound like much, but considering student interest&#13;
in past PSGA elections this qualifies as a success. V oter&#13;
turnout (last year was 12 percent) should also be improved.&#13;
This year's presidential election has drawn much attention&#13;
and has turned into a bitter, hard - fought campaign. Not only&#13;
has a grievance been filed with the Elections Committee, but&#13;
rumors have been rampant, candidate behavior questionable&#13;
and elections posters vandalized.&#13;
The destruction of election posters was common this election&#13;
and the childish vandals are a blemish on the university. Maybe&#13;
they don't know the severity of the punishment (a few years ago&#13;
a student was placed on disciplinary probation and barred from&#13;
involvement in any student organization) or maybe they just&#13;
don't care. But whatever the reason, those responsible should&#13;
remember they are now in college and should act their age.&#13;
Reagan succeeds where&#13;
others have failed&#13;
by Chuck Ostrowski&#13;
Despite my ardent opposition to&#13;
the programs and policies of&#13;
President Reagan, I must admit&#13;
that he's succeeded immeasurably&#13;
where other&#13;
presidents have failed. No&#13;
president has singly caused the&#13;
political rejunivation of this&#13;
country the way Ronald Reagan&#13;
has.&#13;
Of course, he's done it not&#13;
through positive and idealistic&#13;
initiatives the way President&#13;
Kennedy tried, but through&#13;
conservative fanaticism that has&#13;
profited the small minority at the&#13;
top of the economic and social&#13;
ladder while tyrannizing the large&#13;
majority in the middle and at the&#13;
bottom.&#13;
His many policies, represented&#13;
by James Watt's environmental&#13;
"initiatives" and Secretary&#13;
Haig's and Weinberger's right -&#13;
wing ideological bullshit, to Attorney&#13;
General Smith's non -&#13;
prosecution of conglomerate&#13;
mergers and prosecution of non -&#13;
registered 18 year-olds, has&#13;
triggered something! Grassroot&#13;
campaigns representing wide -&#13;
ranging interests, including&#13;
women's suffrage, nuclear power,&#13;
disarmament, the environment,&#13;
the arts, and education have&#13;
emerged everywhere.&#13;
Never before has the&#13;
President's power to inflict pain,&#13;
discomfort, and anger; and&#13;
pleasure, comfort, and happiness&#13;
been apparent. Usually the Chief&#13;
Executive has used the office to&#13;
promote the betterment of life for&#13;
all citizens, not just the few who&#13;
directly control him. And the&#13;
strange thing about that is&#13;
President Reagan putting this&#13;
policy of helping the "poor rich&#13;
guys" in the center of his&#13;
economic programs and social&#13;
policies. He not only believes in&#13;
supporting the wealthy, he's incredibly&#13;
brash enough to do it&#13;
openly — and as the cornerstone&#13;
of his "economic revitalization&#13;
program" (whatever that means)&#13;
no less!&#13;
This could mean two things.&#13;
One, that President Reagan&#13;
considers himself a one - term&#13;
office holder, and thus has decided&#13;
to go for broke and not bend to&#13;
prevailing pressures; or two, that&#13;
President Reagan considers&#13;
himself a two - term office holder&#13;
and is incredibly out - of - touch&#13;
with the electorate. If the former,&#13;
only God can help us. If the latter,&#13;
he's in for quite a shock come.&#13;
November.&#13;
Why God could only help us is&#13;
pretty much self - explanatory.&#13;
The results of an all - out push by&#13;
the President of the United States,&#13;
-and especially this one, would be&#13;
devestating. Not only would it, as&#13;
we have seen by some of Reagan's&#13;
recent initiatives, push back civil&#13;
rights gains several decades and&#13;
make equal treatment of women&#13;
through legislation non - existant,&#13;
it also would cause irreparable&#13;
damage to the environment, a&#13;
further widening between&#13;
economic classes, and a general&#13;
attitude on the part of government&#13;
favoring bootstraps over any real,&#13;
meaningful social and employment&#13;
programs.&#13;
But if, on the other hand,&#13;
Reagan considers himself a two -&#13;
term president, why is he acting&#13;
like Karl Marx's alterego? Surely&#13;
he can't believe alienation of&#13;
millions of people constitutes&#13;
support? In theory, alienation&#13;
means non r s upport!&#13;
There is a third explanation for&#13;
President Reagan's actions. He&#13;
could be just as sincere and level -&#13;
headed as he appears. Maybe he&#13;
does actually believe that, yes, the&#13;
betterment of all would be best&#13;
advanced through economic&#13;
programs benefiting the rich and&#13;
advantaged. Maybe we should&#13;
look closer at the economic costs&#13;
of pollution - control systems.&#13;
Maybe rehabilitation of housing,&#13;
funding of mass - transit, and&#13;
availability of day - care facilities&#13;
should be left to the private sector.&#13;
Any maybe every college student&#13;
would be better served if government&#13;
funding were cut - off, and&#13;
we spent seven years studying for&#13;
a bachelors degree instead of four.&#13;
Maybe this is the right way to go.&#13;
But then again, maybe not.&#13;
Bearden contract not renewed&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
Larsen said the committee&#13;
didn't do justice when it said his&#13;
teaching abilities were evaluated&#13;
as good. "They were excellent,"&#13;
said Larsen, who has gone&#13;
through student evaluations of&#13;
Bearden's teaching. Larsen also&#13;
sat on the search and screen&#13;
committee that brought Bearden&#13;
to Parkside and had a full vote in&#13;
the committee's actions.&#13;
- There have been many rumors&#13;
circulating since the nonrenewal&#13;
PUSHING THE ATOMIC CLOCK FORWARD&#13;
Coach Stephens has done great job&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Last evening, your UWParkside&#13;
Rangers lost a Men's&#13;
Basketball NAIA Playoff game to&#13;
a strong UW-Eau Claire team.&#13;
UW-Parkside suffered another&#13;
major loss last night. The&#13;
Parkside - Eau Claire game&#13;
marked the end of Steve Stephens'&#13;
most successful coaching career&#13;
at your school. All of us involved&#13;
in athletics at Lakeland College&#13;
are sorry to see him go. Steve has&#13;
been with your basketball&#13;
program since its inception and&#13;
our Lakeland Muskies have&#13;
competed with his Rangers, often&#13;
unsuccessfully, each and every&#13;
year. I would like to make a few&#13;
comments about your Coach&#13;
Stephens.&#13;
Steve Stephens has built a&#13;
basketball program from scratch&#13;
and has given Parkside teams&#13;
which have gained respect&#13;
throughout the United States. His&#13;
teams have always been highly&#13;
competitive and extremely well -&#13;
coached. They were sound fundamentally,&#13;
played excellent&#13;
defense, rebounded with&#13;
authority, and were poised. The&#13;
Stephens - coached Rangers&#13;
played hard but clean basketball&#13;
and never seemed to quit&#13;
regardless of the score.&#13;
Coach Stephens is a GENTLEMAN&#13;
on and off the court. He&#13;
has earned tremendous respect&#13;
from knowledgable basketball&#13;
leaders throughout the nation and&#13;
the multitude of special honors&#13;
that his peers have bestowed upon&#13;
this outstanding athletic leader&#13;
speak well of Steve Stephens the&#13;
MAN, and Steve Stephens the&#13;
COACH.&#13;
Parkside has been most fortunate&#13;
to have Coach Stephens in&#13;
charge of the Men's Basketball&#13;
Program. His act will be most&#13;
difficult to follow.&#13;
I am hopeful that the UWParkside&#13;
administration, faculty,&#13;
students, and alumni realize what&#13;
a great job Steve has done in&#13;
giving your school a truly "class"&#13;
basketball operation.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Duane A. Woltzen&#13;
Basketball Coach&#13;
Lakeland College&#13;
Student evaluations are underrated&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am extremely concerned&#13;
about the new attitude towards&#13;
University students. The new&#13;
trend in administration&#13;
throughout, the University sytem&#13;
seems to be to underrate students'&#13;
evaluative talents. Students'&#13;
evaluation of their professors&#13;
have become a detriment to the&#13;
good professors. If an inept&#13;
professor receives poor teaching&#13;
scores from his students, the&#13;
professor simply tells the powers&#13;
that be that his/her students don't&#13;
truly want to learn. The professor&#13;
sometimes even believes this&#13;
nonsense, and the administration&#13;
seems to believe it.&#13;
Let's face the facts at Parkside.&#13;
Students at Parkside want to&#13;
learn, and they are capable of&#13;
evaluating the people who teach&#13;
them. First, forty percent (40%)&#13;
of the students at Parkside are&#13;
"non - traditional" students.&#13;
These adult students do not&#13;
participate in "popularity votes."&#13;
Secondly, the students who attend&#13;
Parkside are not sent here by&#13;
wealthy mommas and poppas.&#13;
Parkside students want a good&#13;
education from good professors so&#13;
that they can survive in today's&#13;
NRA responds to super-bullet cartoon&#13;
world. In my classes at Parkside,&#13;
I have encountered people who&#13;
work forty hours and go to school&#13;
full time. I have met older women&#13;
(with children) taking 15 to 18&#13;
credits. And, I know students&#13;
studying hard to become the first&#13;
college graduated family member.&#13;
These persons are not here to&#13;
be entertained. We are here to be&#13;
taught by capable individuals.&#13;
And, if the administration&#13;
receives a favorable evaluation of&#13;
a professor, you may be sure that&#13;
the professor has NOT entertained,&#13;
she/he has taught, and&#13;
taught well.&#13;
Dana Goetz&#13;
recommendation was made, said&#13;
Larsen, One prevalent rumor was&#13;
that a certain senior faculty&#13;
member felt that the committee&#13;
was pressured into hiring Bearden&#13;
by the junior faculty members.&#13;
"I know for a fact that this&#13;
certain professor voted for Jim&#13;
Bearden from the beginning with&#13;
no pressure and the junior faculty&#13;
was split in the decision to hire&#13;
him," said Larsen.&#13;
Bearden is requesting a review&#13;
of the nonrenewal decision.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am writing in response to a&#13;
cartoon recently appearing in the&#13;
Ranger. On Thursday, February&#13;
11, 198 2 your paper ran a cartoon&#13;
on page two, projecting a satirical&#13;
and incorrect view of a new&#13;
firearms product recently put on&#13;
the market connecting it to the&#13;
National Rifle Association. These&#13;
so - c alled super bullets actually&#13;
do have great destructive power,&#13;
but in no way does the NRA approve&#13;
of their sale, use or&#13;
production. The NRA is not a sales&#13;
promotion group, but an&#13;
organization of U.S. citizens who&#13;
reserve the constitutional right to&#13;
possess arms. This cartoon may&#13;
not seem like a vital issue until&#13;
you consider the growing anti -&#13;
gun movement in this country.&#13;
After the example Morton Grove&#13;
set less than 100 miles from here, I&#13;
dislike the NRA receiving this&#13;
type of undeserved negative&#13;
publicity. I wrote this letter to&#13;
express the views of NRA&#13;
members who are students here at&#13;
Parkside, and myself. I hope this&#13;
Students not apathetic&#13;
letter will be taken as an attem&#13;
to clarify the actual statement ti&#13;
cartoon made.&#13;
Thank yo&#13;
Brian Schuet&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
An important part of the&#13;
semester is now upon us. It is the&#13;
time when many students are&#13;
involved in their courses (possibly&#13;
as a result of mid-terms) to the&#13;
extent that there is little time for&#13;
extracurricular activities. Even&#13;
when certain events are scheduled&#13;
such as the Winter Carnival,&#13;
many of us cannot participate in&#13;
them because of the enormous&#13;
amount of study required to&#13;
prepare for tests. The March 4&#13;
letter, "Winter Carnival Marred"&#13;
(Jack Kemper) is an example of&#13;
what I am talking about.&#13;
But there is still hope for those&#13;
among us who have refused to be&#13;
beaten!&#13;
During the recent election&#13;
campaign, the reference was&#13;
made that the student populace&#13;
had become athathetic and&#13;
disinterested in the workings of&#13;
this institution. To this I say,&#13;
BULL!!! Never before have I&#13;
seen such interest in any PSGA&#13;
election (maybe because of such&#13;
comments).&#13;
Believe it or not Mr. Politician,&#13;
WE ARE ALIVE! And one more&#13;
thing, we'll be watching to see&#13;
whether apathy sets in among the&#13;
PSGA during the next term!&#13;
Rick Reimer &#13;
Club Events&#13;
Computer Club&#13;
The Parkside Computer Club&#13;
will be holding weekly meetings&#13;
for the planning of the Computer&#13;
Fair. These meetings will be held&#13;
every Monday in Moln D137 at 1&#13;
p.m. We would also like to remind&#13;
members that elections for club&#13;
officers are scheduled for the&#13;
April 5 meeting. Members interested&#13;
in running for office&#13;
should announce their intentions&#13;
at the March 29 meeting.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
PSE had their first initiation&#13;
last Friday as a reactivated&#13;
chapter. Some 35 students were&#13;
initiated into this professional&#13;
organization. Also present were&#13;
several members of the Racine&#13;
and Kenosha Sales and Marketing&#13;
Executive Board, including Dr.&#13;
Art Dudycha, chairman of the&#13;
Parkside business division.&#13;
PSE meetings are held every&#13;
Wednesday from 1-2 p.m. At the&#13;
March 31 meeting, Verna Zimmerman&#13;
will give a talk on the&#13;
services offered by the Alumni&#13;
and Placement Office. PSE is&#13;
open to all interested students.&#13;
Meeting places will be posted&#13;
every Wednesday along the concourse.&#13;
&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
What does Women in Business&#13;
have that would interest you???&#13;
Aerobic dance class every&#13;
Monday and Wednesday from 1-2&#13;
p.m., in the wrestling room in the&#13;
P.E. building.&#13;
The Very Special Arts Festival&#13;
for handicapped children will be&#13;
on March 16. Volunteers are still&#13;
needed. Call Kathy Kexel at 553-&#13;
2278 if interested.&#13;
Plus, the variety of workshops&#13;
and seminars which follow:&#13;
March 17 — American&#13;
Businesswomen's Association will&#13;
be holding its monthly meeting in&#13;
Gurnee, 111.&#13;
March 22 — A workshop by&#13;
Margaret Rdzak will be held from&#13;
5:15-6:15 p.m.&#13;
March 27 — Womanhostel&#13;
meeting in Lake Geneva.&#13;
April 3 — Phi Gamma Nu&#13;
Regional meeting in Bloomington.&#13;
A luncheon will be served in addition&#13;
to a number of workshops&#13;
and seminars.&#13;
Data Processing&#13;
The Parkside Data Processing&#13;
Club will hold a meeting on March&#13;
29 at 6:30 p.m. in Union 207. Ron&#13;
Over son will talk on the Job&#13;
Control Language. New members&#13;
are welcome. Refreshments will&#13;
be served following the meeting.&#13;
Geology Colloquium&#13;
"The Fourteen Fallacies of&#13;
Uniformitarianism," will be&#13;
presented by Dr. James H. Shea,&#13;
of the Earth Science Program at&#13;
Parkside. The colloquium will be&#13;
held on Friday, March 12, at 1&#13;
p.m. in Grnq. 113.&#13;
Hispana American&#13;
The Hispano American Club will&#13;
hold a meeting on the first&#13;
Tuesday after Break, in Union 204&#13;
at 2 p.m. We need participation.&#13;
Wind &amp; Sail&#13;
230 S. Main&#13;
Racine&#13;
Preppy Deck&#13;
Shoe Special&#13;
•35.95&#13;
With This Ad&#13;
CSA bookstore bid accepted&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Bookstore Committee has&#13;
given a unanimous vote to accept&#13;
the bid on the bookstore contract&#13;
made by College Stores&#13;
Associates (CSA). The decision&#13;
was made after a report from&#13;
Tom Moore and Nick Burckel,&#13;
who made a trip to Boston to see&#13;
how other CSA operations are run.&#13;
Follett, Inc., which currently&#13;
operates the bookstore, did not&#13;
place a bid and will soon leave&#13;
campus.&#13;
"My overall impression of&#13;
CSA," said Moore, chairman of&#13;
the Bookstore Committee, "is that&#13;
they are a very aggressive and&#13;
remarkably fast growing company.&#13;
If you have any extra&#13;
money, and if they are public, I&#13;
would suggest going to invest in&#13;
them. I think in the short run, CSA&#13;
will provide significant and better&#13;
service than we are getting now."&#13;
Records show that CSA has been&#13;
successful in retaining the&#13;
required number of texts and&#13;
obtaining the books on time. The&#13;
university has been assured of not&#13;
having to pay for any incompetence&#13;
on the part of CSA.&#13;
Flexibility could be low on&#13;
contractual matters. CSA has&#13;
offered Parkside 2.5% of gross&#13;
sales, or a minimum of $16,000.&#13;
That means the university will be&#13;
getting less than it currently is.&#13;
Records also show that CSA offers&#13;
7% to 7.5% to many of the other&#13;
campuses. There are plans being&#13;
made to have a full - time staff of&#13;
four or five people, but the salary&#13;
for the manager will be $16,000.&#13;
The chances for good, competent&#13;
managers are good right now,&#13;
because promotion opportunities&#13;
will hold them. The committee&#13;
was concerned about what would&#13;
happen when advancement stops&#13;
and this fast - growing company&#13;
begins to slow down. Unfortunately,&#13;
there is no way of&#13;
telling.&#13;
The layout and attractiveness of&#13;
the bookstore will be changing too.&#13;
The main floor on Level 1 will&#13;
probably be used for trade books&#13;
and soft goods. It would be turned&#13;
into somewhat of a little store.&#13;
Moore reported that all of the CSA&#13;
stores had a very attractive soft&#13;
goods area. There is also a&#13;
remarkable amount of merchandise&#13;
in comparison to what&#13;
there is now. Textbooks will be&#13;
sold out of an outlet in the&#13;
basement. During the rush period,&#13;
students will simply hand in their&#13;
class lists and a runner will&#13;
retrieve their books. When the&#13;
rush period is over, the basement&#13;
outlet will be opened up. The&#13;
reason for this system of order&#13;
and retrieve is for efficiency and&#13;
probably a cutback in the amount&#13;
of theft that takes place. There&#13;
will also be a definite cutdown in&#13;
confusion.&#13;
Three things that the Bookstore&#13;
Committee didn't agree with were&#13;
not being able to see a text before&#13;
you buy it, the request for possible&#13;
work study students, and the&#13;
clause in the contract that states a&#13;
surcharge can be negotiated.&#13;
It was agreed that most&#13;
students like to see the texts&#13;
before they purchase them, if for&#13;
no other reason than simply to see&#13;
the context of the book. If the book&#13;
purchasing area were off limits&#13;
during the rush period, a student&#13;
would not be able to do this. A&#13;
suggestion was made to have one&#13;
copy of every book being used,&#13;
either on display within the store,&#13;
or having all of the books&#13;
available on reserve in the&#13;
library.&#13;
Work study students were also&#13;
requested from CSA. It was&#13;
agreed that if working in the&#13;
bookstore actually did offer&#13;
Continued On Page Seven&#13;
University&#13;
Budget released&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The 1982-83 university budget&#13;
has been released by the Parkside&#13;
administration. Through the&#13;
Retrenchment Program (money&#13;
cut from the budget to make up for&#13;
the state mandated budget cuts)&#13;
there was money reallocated and&#13;
actually put back into the system.&#13;
The Retrenchment /&#13;
Reallocation process began this&#13;
year and enabled the campus to&#13;
add money to certain areas with&#13;
need. The Vice Chancellor and&#13;
Assistant Chancellors met with&#13;
their directors / chairpersons&#13;
earlier this year to identify areas&#13;
needing supplemental dollars.&#13;
Significant additions were made&#13;
to adjunct faculty, student help,&#13;
limited - term employees, supply&#13;
and expense budgets in some&#13;
academic divisions. A special&#13;
base allocation of $50,000 was&#13;
made to the library for books and&#13;
periodicals. The periodical subscription&#13;
list may still have to be&#13;
cut, since rates are rising so fast.&#13;
As required by federal audit,&#13;
money was added to financial aids&#13;
for a computer service contract&#13;
for the NDSL Loan Program.&#13;
Money was added to the&#13;
publications area to cover higher&#13;
costs and some administrative&#13;
areas received added supply and&#13;
expense money.&#13;
The Academic Area was&#13;
granted an $89,529 b udget with a&#13;
savings of $73,645 i n the Retrenchment&#13;
program. Athletics was&#13;
cut $65,000 b y 2.5 positions.&#13;
In the Administrative and the&#13;
Physical Plant area, there is a&#13;
$63,412 budget with a $48,658&#13;
savings in the Retrenchment&#13;
Program. The Chancellor was&#13;
granted $73,289 budget for supply&#13;
and expenses and publications&#13;
such as course schedules,&#13;
discipline guides and advertising.&#13;
Educational Services was&#13;
granted a base allocation of $8,997&#13;
with $64,589 saved through the&#13;
Retrenchment Program.&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin feels&#13;
that the campus is in a good&#13;
position to absorb a moderate cut&#13;
without affecting essential&#13;
operations. He feels that we do not&#13;
have to expect a large cut and that&#13;
any general cut would be offset by&#13;
an enrollment funding increase.&#13;
COMPUTER&#13;
CENTER&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
SESSIONS&#13;
The Computer Center has scheduled three information&#13;
sessions for students, faculty and staff who&#13;
use UW - Parkside's Instructional and Research&#13;
Timesharing System (PIRTS) or the IBM academic&#13;
computing system.&#13;
The main idea behind the sessions is to make&#13;
available regular times when users can get together&#13;
informally with the Center's Operations Manager,&#13;
Academic Consultant and Systems Programmer and&#13;
discuss users' questions, suggestions and concerns.&#13;
The sessions will be held in the MOLN - ill faculty&#13;
lounge on:&#13;
Tuesday, March 23, 10-11 am&#13;
Wednesday, April 14, 1-2 pm&#13;
Monday, May 3, 4-5 pm&#13;
Students, faculty and staff are encouraged to attend&#13;
any or all of the sessions.&#13;
How a sophomore at U.W. Parkside&#13;
can graduate an Army officer.&#13;
During the next 2 years, while&#13;
9 99^9^ if 1 you're earning your chosen degree,&#13;
you can also prepare for an officer's&#13;
commission in the United States&#13;
Army.&#13;
You start right now. By applying&#13;
m '-J#? for 6 weeks of ROTC summer school&#13;
J It: • llii at Fort Knox, Ky. With pay (over&#13;
•= 1;... ... . .J;;:£&gt; $500).&#13;
Your average summer school isn't&#13;
exactly what we have in mind, however.&#13;
Because we'll be packing your&#13;
mind and body with the 2 years of&#13;
ROTC leadership training you've&#13;
missed. ' Vv f &lt; V- ff* "" Do well and you can qualify for advanced&#13;
Army ROTC courses and&#13;
nearly $2000 worth of financial aid&#13;
during your junior and senior years.&#13;
And graduate as an officer in the active&#13;
Army or Reserves.&#13;
Apply by April 1.&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
LEARN WHAT IJ TAKES TO LEAD.&#13;
At U.W.P. Call:&#13;
Capt. Fred Herron&#13;
Marquette Uv. A. ROTC&#13;
| Call Collect 1/224-7229/7915 &#13;
4 Thursday, March 11,1982 RANGER&#13;
Wally Cleaver rocks Union&#13;
by Joe Kimm&#13;
The Union was pulsating with&#13;
over 400 q uivering people as the&#13;
Wally Cleaver band hit the stage.&#13;
Armed with an arsenal of post -&#13;
metal pop and new wave, the dual&#13;
- axed quintet put the dance floor&#13;
in orbit for three hours of power&#13;
pop frenzy. Bringing with them a&#13;
mob following of leopard skin&#13;
tights and multi - colored hair -&#13;
dos, the Racine - based Cleaver re&#13;
- defined the word fun as the&#13;
crowd pogoed and frugged their&#13;
way into the night.&#13;
It is a familiar story, of three&#13;
boys growing up on the north side&#13;
of Racine, putting a high school&#13;
band together to earn some cash&#13;
playing Holiday Inns and junior&#13;
high school dances. Gary, Grant&#13;
and Greg went their separate&#13;
ways after minor qualms about&#13;
how the music should be played.&#13;
After five years of individually&#13;
unsuccessful attempts to cut their&#13;
path to local recognition in many&#13;
rock bands, they reunited to form&#13;
Wally Cleaver, bringing together&#13;
a wealth of playing experience&#13;
and musical notes.&#13;
After recruiting two boys from&#13;
the Wind Point band "Trix", they&#13;
decided to forego the heavy metal&#13;
scheme that other local bands&#13;
were after and decided to do&#13;
something lighter, something&#13;
easier to dance to, and something&#13;
that still sounded modern and&#13;
innovative like the new stuff that&#13;
was coming out. So they compiled&#13;
the definitive songlist that included&#13;
songs like Starry Eyes by&#13;
the Records, 867-5309 by Tommy&#13;
Tutone, and What She Does To Me&#13;
by the Producers as well as old&#13;
standards like I Saw Her Standing&#13;
There by the Beatles, No Matter&#13;
What by Badfinger and Let's&#13;
Spend the Night Together by the&#13;
Rolling Stones. Added were some&#13;
originals, My Secrets, Cleaver&#13;
Shuffle, and Shara to name a few&#13;
and after a few solid months of&#13;
rehearsals in the basement, they&#13;
wee ready to tackle the world.&#13;
What they did was enter and win&#13;
last year's Palms Rock Showcase.&#13;
Palms, as you know, (Electric&#13;
Ballroom to you old timers), is the&#13;
biggest rock club in Milwaukee on&#13;
the north side. It books regional&#13;
and national acts for its fervent&#13;
patronage and has a capacity for&#13;
about 800 people and infinitely&#13;
more drinks. Well, the Cleavers&#13;
won that contest and the first&#13;
thing they knew they were playing&#13;
in front of 10,000 pe ople on Wells&#13;
Street in Milwaukee as part of t he&#13;
Radio Doctors Street Festival.&#13;
The other thing was that they got a&#13;
chance to record a track on an&#13;
album put out by another&#13;
Milwaukee night club, the Fantasy's&#13;
to further escalate their&#13;
snowball start.&#13;
Well, the story continues and&#13;
they hired Total Concepts&#13;
Management and Climax Entertainment&#13;
to take care of the&#13;
business and of the deal so they&#13;
could concentrate more on music.&#13;
With them they did some gigs in&#13;
Minneapolis and St. Paul, as well&#13;
as some clubs around&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin like City&#13;
Slick in Lake Geneva.&#13;
Everywhere they went they took&#13;
on an easy acceptance. Perhaps it&#13;
was their punchy sound, or maybe&#13;
it was their visual appeal, but the&#13;
Cleavers looked pretty comical,&#13;
caught on quickly on stage actually,&#13;
sort of like something&#13;
you'd see on Three Stooges.&#13;
Simply bouncing around the stage&#13;
bumping into each other, and&#13;
careening off to the left and to the&#13;
right, they were an immediate&#13;
smash.&#13;
Now let's meet the band. Steve,&#13;
Leger, that's Billy Budd up there&#13;
singing into the microphone,&#13;
shaking his blond hair and&#13;
winking at the girls. He's the lead&#13;
singer. He's talking about Grant,&#13;
who's playing a Flying V t o your&#13;
right, that ear splitting grin underlining&#13;
his curly mop. Off in the&#13;
other corner, Gary's playing&#13;
tough guy with his Stratocaster,&#13;
acting like a jock, while Curt is&#13;
bouncing like a rubber ball in the&#13;
middle somewhere with his big&#13;
bass guitar. Greg the drummer is&#13;
trying to get into the act but he has&#13;
WALLY CLEAVER played last Friday&#13;
Square.&#13;
no risers for his kit so he jumps up&#13;
and down in between measures,&#13;
waving his stick in the air. There&#13;
they go, twirled up in the air,&#13;
caught just in time by an outstretched&#13;
hand, and bam, crash,&#13;
right on the down beat. The crowd&#13;
goes wild.&#13;
Okay, so I had a couple of beers&#13;
when I walked into the place and&#13;
eventually even made my way&#13;
onto the dance floor and shook my&#13;
protoplasm with the female&#13;
gender right up there by the stage&#13;
monitors. But the point is, when I&#13;
went backstage during the break&#13;
to talk to them, they were actually&#13;
singing in two part harmony&#13;
getting ready for their next!&#13;
muro »y r viarK b anaers&#13;
night in the Union&#13;
'Treshmen wait&#13;
for the weekend&#13;
to have a Michelob.&#13;
Seniors know better"&#13;
During a break! These guys really&#13;
like playing!&#13;
I have to hand it to them.&#13;
Although there were other bands&#13;
like Britins, The Booze Brothers,&#13;
and BadBoy at the Union who&#13;
were more experienced and drew&#13;
a bigger crowd, I really liked&#13;
these guys and hope they build on&#13;
their act to start that snowball&#13;
toward bigger markets. They've&#13;
got youth, vigor, and stamina to&#13;
hang in there, so we might be&#13;
hearing more about them in the&#13;
near future.&#13;
The PAB has them booked for&#13;
THE END on May 22, so you&#13;
might have a chance to look them&#13;
over on the outdoor stage in the&#13;
back of the Union. You'll be&#13;
hearing more about that later on&#13;
in April.&#13;
So Wally Cleaver's the band of&#13;
the hour. They're from Racine, so&#13;
here's your chance to get in on the&#13;
bandwagon and say I saw these&#13;
guys when they were just starting&#13;
out. And they're from your&#13;
hometown so let's root for them&#13;
(those of you from K town have&#13;
the Britins but they're already&#13;
plateaued so we'll let you switch&#13;
over, come on.) Give me a&#13;
W&#13;
Arts festival&#13;
for handicapped&#13;
More than 1,200 handicapped&#13;
young people five to 21 years old&#13;
will participate in the third Racine&#13;
/ Kenosha Very Special Arts&#13;
Festival on Tuesday, March 16, at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The program offers the young&#13;
people hands-on workshop experience,&#13;
performances and&#13;
exhibits involving both the fine&#13;
and performing arts. About 80&#13;
artists, performers and craftsmen&#13;
from the Kenosha / Racine area&#13;
will be involved. A number of&#13;
volunteers from student and&#13;
community organizations also will&#13;
assist with the program.&#13;
The handicapped youths will&#13;
come from the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha Unified School Districts&#13;
and the Western Complex Schools&#13;
of Racine County. They include&#13;
mentally handicapped, hearing&#13;
impaired, vision impaired, orthopedically&#13;
handicapped,&#13;
learning disabled, behavioral&#13;
disabled and those with chronic&#13;
disease.&#13;
The festival is organized by t he&#13;
Very Special Arts Festival&#13;
Committee, an organization of&#13;
educators and other interested&#13;
community residents, and is&#13;
funded by individuals and&#13;
businesses in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha. Co-directors are Eadie&#13;
Koch of th e Racine Unified School&#13;
System and Buddy Couvion of&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The festival will run from 9:45&#13;
a.m. to 1:15 p.m. on the concourse&#13;
level of Parkside's academic&#13;
complex.&#13;
' In conjunction with the festival,&#13;
an art show of work by handicapped&#13;
young people is on&#13;
display in the Parkside Comm.&#13;
Arts Gallery March 8 through 19.&#13;
Kathleen Kexel, public relations&#13;
and promotion chairman for the&#13;
event, said additional volunteers&#13;
are needed and can get additional&#13;
information by calling Koch or&#13;
Couvion.&#13;
Put a tittle&#13;
weekend&#13;
in your week.&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
E. F. MA DRIGRANO&#13;
1831 - 55th St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wise.&#13;
658*3553 &#13;
Dead Men could be funnv Burned Up&#13;
by Dick Oberbruner HO * r\ « * " Yep, it's going to be a good long&#13;
wait for the premiere of Steve&#13;
Martin's new movie, "Dead Men&#13;
Don't Wear Plaid." At the time&#13;
the supplement came out, in a&#13;
recent Ranger, the due date of&#13;
May 21 was three months away!&#13;
(Check the Guinness Book for the&#13;
record on the longest length of&#13;
time between earliest promotion&#13;
material distributed and a film's&#13;
debut.) Since the semester will be&#13;
ending at this time there won't be&#13;
a Ranger for anyone to read. So&#13;
I'll do it now.&#13;
Judging by the supplement,&#13;
"Dead Men" should be pretty&#13;
funny. Martin's acting will&#13;
probably reflect his past style, but&#13;
look for fresh new differences.&#13;
With "Pennies From Heaven," his&#13;
most recent film, Martin has&#13;
shown quite a change from his&#13;
"Jerk" appearance.&#13;
There's some funny stuff in that&#13;
supplement. The picture of Ma rtin&#13;
choking the Nazi is funny. I bet the&#13;
whole scene is. But maybe not.&#13;
The pallid look on his face answering&#13;
the telephone is equally&#13;
amusing. I wonder it if has&#13;
anything to do with the movie?&#13;
And the "Detecto - Vision" it is&#13;
allegedly filmed in is something. I&#13;
don't know what, but I'll find out if&#13;
I have the money to watch it.&#13;
Carl Reiner is a veteran comedy&#13;
writer. He, Martin and another&#13;
guy, George Gipe, wrote the&#13;
screenplay. Directed by Reiner,&#13;
"Dead Men" is well - conceived.&#13;
Anybody who can make a two -&#13;
hour movie deserves some credit.&#13;
You know, E for effort.&#13;
Well, that's my review, sort of a&#13;
"Sneak Preview" from the supplement.&#13;
But how else could I put&#13;
it? (Right — not at all, but that's&#13;
no fun!)&#13;
Now what? Should we like it&#13;
already because of the funny&#13;
supplement? Do the makers of the&#13;
film, Universal City Studios, want&#13;
US to prepare for the coming attraction,&#13;
giving us enough time in&#13;
0 do so? Maybe we&#13;
should start reading Dick Tracy&#13;
comic books under a magnifying&#13;
glass, or be listening to the radio&#13;
n?r&#13;
.&#13;
Ellery Queen Minute&#13;
Mysteries. Whatever the motive,&#13;
don t you think three months is a&#13;
bit premature to ingrain&#13;
something of average interest&#13;
upon our memories?&#13;
It seems odd that a lot of things&#13;
of more importance could, and&#13;
will, happen within this time span&#13;
we could get 30 inches of sno w,&#13;
there s finals to cram for, some of&#13;
us will graduate, some might get&#13;
married, theater ticket prices&#13;
could go up — and this Hollywood&#13;
film studio wants us to remember&#13;
to see their product. Unless you've&#13;
hung the supplement on your wall,&#13;
and showed it to all your friends&#13;
outside of school, the excitement&#13;
created by this early hype should&#13;
pass by quickly. But watch for an&#13;
advertised wave of "Detectomania"&#13;
these next couple of&#13;
months.&#13;
No one I've heard has said&#13;
they're going to see it, which is the&#13;
exception rather than the rule for&#13;
a new movie starring a celebrity.&#13;
And why worry? Do you know&#13;
what your plans are that&#13;
weekend?&#13;
"Hey Dick, let's go see the Steve&#13;
Martin flick."&#13;
"O.K. Call me in Portland."&#13;
I think Steve Martin is funny,&#13;
but I can't afford to spend the&#13;
month of A pril sitting on the edge&#13;
of my s eat. There's a theater near&#13;
me but this particular movie&#13;
won't be coming soon. I have&#13;
enough time to find a date, work in&#13;
the Peace Corps and make it back&#13;
for the cartoon.&#13;
Meantime, this supplement lies&#13;
as another piece of garbage for&#13;
the janitors to pick up.&#13;
This is truly a movie to wait for.&#13;
We have no choice.&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC.&#13;
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FOR ALL SPORTS&#13;
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THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
(1) WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
Miller times sew&#13;
""jliose college&#13;
k&lt;ds thfak&#13;
they're so&#13;
Smart.&#13;
Veah,&#13;
but onlu we&#13;
know if the&#13;
light's on in&#13;
here: ,&#13;
Belushi will be missed&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
It doesn't seem fair. It happened&#13;
again. Another light went out.&#13;
What's going on? Why are&#13;
talented people dying off? It all&#13;
goes so fast. They give us what&#13;
they can and then they're gone.&#13;
There's got to be a reason for&#13;
this. Perhaps our younger&#13;
generation was never meant to&#13;
suffer through the hell of war.&#13;
Then we won't have to look to&#13;
.generals with medals to play the&#13;
heroes.&#13;
Our heroes will simply be the&#13;
people who helped us escape for a&#13;
little while. Far from being&#13;
martyrs, they will just be personalities&#13;
with a little something&#13;
extra — a person that might have&#13;
been a classmate, fellow worker,&#13;
ttr* •&#13;
JOHN BELUSHI&#13;
1949-1982&#13;
or best friend.&#13;
We need somebody to lighten&#13;
our load every once in a while. It&#13;
makes everything so much easier.&#13;
But often we don't realize how&#13;
much someone reached us until&#13;
they're gone. And once they die,,&#13;
they move a generation away.&#13;
We feel bad about it: we feel&#13;
cheated. It's not fair. Life's not&#13;
fair. Can't some people stay&#13;
around just a little longer for us to&#13;
enjoy? Is that too much to ask?&#13;
Probably.&#13;
At any rate, the sudden death of&#13;
a young, talented entertainer has&#13;
got to make a lot of people wonder&#13;
about life. Everybody tries to&#13;
figure it out at one time or&#13;
another. The answer is always&#13;
just beyond our grasp.&#13;
And now . . . Killer Bees will&#13;
never be the same. Here's to you,&#13;
John Belushi.&#13;
Private Lessons" done well&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
"Private Lessons" is the enbodiment&#13;
of a very common male&#13;
fantasy, that is, being seduced by&#13;
a beautiful older woman.&#13;
The plot concerns Philly, a&#13;
fifteen year old boy who, like most&#13;
boys his age is preoccupied with&#13;
adolescent thoughts of girls and&#13;
sex. Philly's father goes out of&#13;
town on business, leaving Philly in&#13;
the care of the new housekeeper,&#13;
Nicole Mallow. Philly begins&#13;
hiding outside Miss Mallow's&#13;
window, hoping to catch a glimpse&#13;
of her in the nude. One night&#13;
Nicole sees him, and to Philly's&#13;
surprise she asks him to come in&#13;
and watch her undress. Not&#13;
believing his eyes or ears, Philly&#13;
agrees. However, when Nicole&#13;
asks him if he would like to stay&#13;
the night, his teenage nervousness&#13;
gets the best of him, and he&#13;
leaves. From that point on, Nicole&#13;
seems intent on seducing Philly.&#13;
The plot is not simply about the&#13;
sexual initiation of a teenage boy,&#13;
as there is a twist in the plot that&#13;
involves the chauffer, a slimy&#13;
creep named Lester.&#13;
"Private Lessons" is not what&#13;
you consider great art. There is&#13;
really nothing spectacular about&#13;
it, but it is very funny. The&#13;
screenplay by Dan Greenburg,&#13;
based on his book, "Philly," is&#13;
very insightful and understanding&#13;
towards the feelings of young&#13;
teenage boys. Philly's character&#13;
is very well defined, and had a&#13;
realistic sense about it. Audiences&#13;
will believe that he is a real&#13;
person, not just a film character.&#13;
Eric Brown gives a very good&#13;
performance in this role. You can&#13;
feel his nervousness and share it,&#13;
especially in the scene where he&#13;
watches Nicole undress.&#13;
Sylvia Kristel, who received&#13;
international exposure (no pun&#13;
intended) in the French erotic&#13;
classic "Emmanualle," is the&#13;
type of woman that I'm sure most&#13;
young men would not mind losing&#13;
their virginity with.&#13;
As Lester, the blackmailing&#13;
chauffer, Howard Hesseman is&#13;
very different from his Dr. Johnny&#13;
Fever character on "WKRP." In&#13;
fact, he makes a very convincing&#13;
villian. The supporting cast is&#13;
adequate. A standout is Peter&#13;
Elbling in a small role as a snotty,&#13;
pseudo - French waiter.&#13;
All in all, "Private Lessons" is a&#13;
warm, funny, and perceptive&#13;
movie that is well worth your&#13;
time. I recommend that you see it&#13;
— you may learn something.&#13;
©1981 Beer Brewed by Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCI ATI ON&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-4861&#13;
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414-694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
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414-248-9141&#13;
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(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wis.&#13;
414 - 843-2388&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5V*% Interest Iff Your Daily&#13;
Balance Is $500.00 er Mere!&#13;
WE'RE MERE TO HELP YOU 6R0WI &#13;
6 Thursday, March 11,1982 RANGER&#13;
Sports S potlight&#13;
Walking in rhythm with Jim Heiring&#13;
by Steve Brunner&#13;
The abstract sport of "race -&#13;
walking" has finally landed in the&#13;
United States. The once thought of&#13;
bizarre track event is finally being&#13;
fed to the American public after&#13;
being starved by the media for so&#13;
long.&#13;
Much of the new media hype is&#13;
reflected on former Parkside race&#13;
walker, Jim Heiring. He has&#13;
broken world indoor records for&#13;
race walking at distances of 1500&#13;
meters, 1 mile, and 2 miles this&#13;
winter.&#13;
"Race walking is finally getting&#13;
exposure. It is getting some&#13;
overdue recognition and it is being&#13;
seen as a sport for athletes, not&#13;
'participants'," said Heiring.&#13;
The tall, slender athlete has&#13;
established himself as America's&#13;
premier walker. In May of last&#13;
year he won the national 20&#13;
kilometer (12.4 miles) championship.&#13;
In addition to his three&#13;
world records during this year's&#13;
indoor season, he has gone unRangers&#13;
finish 7th&#13;
by Patty DeLuisa&#13;
Parkside's men's track team&#13;
scored 38 points to finish seventh&#13;
in UWM's John Tierny Invitational&#13;
Saturday. Eleven teams&#13;
competed.&#13;
Miler Dan Stublaski, who is&#13;
improving weekly, placed second&#13;
with a time of 4:19.2. Coach&#13;
Lucian Rosa, impressed by&#13;
Stublaski's progress, commented&#13;
that Dan ran a "good race."&#13;
Mark Witherspoon sprinted to&#13;
two high - scoring places as he&#13;
won the 60 yard dash in 6.5&#13;
seconds and finished fourth in the&#13;
300 yard run with a clocking of 32.4&#13;
seconds.&#13;
John Anderson cleared 14' 0",&#13;
placing third in the pole vault.&#13;
Glenn Schultz also participated in&#13;
the meet, running well in the two -&#13;
mile.&#13;
The Ranger men will travel to&#13;
Oshkosh this Friday to take on&#13;
Oshkosh, Stout, and Stevens&#13;
Point. Coach Rosa seemed optimistic&#13;
about a new recruit,&#13;
Dwight Cooper, who will run the&#13;
440 and compete in the long jump.&#13;
District squad&#13;
announced&#13;
High scoring Eau Claire guard&#13;
Tony Carr will head the 1981-82&#13;
NAIA District 14 all - district&#13;
squad, announced Wayne Dannehl&#13;
last week.&#13;
Carr, a 6-3 senior from Beloit&#13;
(Memorial), is averaging 25.7&#13;
points a game and led his team&#13;
into the district title game at&#13;
Stevens Point last Wednesday&#13;
night.&#13;
Also on the team from Eau&#13;
Claire are 6-9 senior center Bob&#13;
Coenen and 6-7 senior forward&#13;
Rich DiBenedetto. WSUC cochampion&#13;
and district finalist&#13;
Stevens Point placed 6-4 junior&#13;
forward John Mack on the team&#13;
and had the district coach of the&#13;
year in Dick Bennett.&#13;
Parkside, which lost 86-80 to&#13;
Eau Claire in the district semi -&#13;
finals, was represented on the&#13;
squad by 5-11 sophomore guard&#13;
Charles Perry and 6-10 1/2 junior&#13;
center Wilbert Webb. Lakeland,&#13;
which lost to Stevens Point in semi&#13;
- final action, had 6-4 senior forward&#13;
Ken Depies on the honor&#13;
squad.&#13;
Stout's Craig Summers, a 6-3&#13;
senior guard, also made the team,&#13;
as did 6-3 junior forward Jeff&#13;
Payton of River Falls and 6-3&#13;
junior guard Jeff Brezovar of the&#13;
Milwaukee School of Engineering.&#13;
Ranger Needs&#13;
Sports Writers&#13;
defeated, capturing titles in such&#13;
prestigious meets as the Millrose&#13;
Games and the TAC national&#13;
indoor championships.&#13;
Yet, the 1980 Olympian said,&#13;
"The indoor records are great to&#13;
have, but what I'm really aiming&#13;
for is to defend my 20K title outdoors."&#13;
&#13;
The road being paved by&#13;
Heiring started in his junior year&#13;
in high school. "I first competed in&#13;
Junior Olympics and did well.&#13;
Mike DeWitt, who was a walker at&#13;
Parkside at the time, helped me&#13;
quite a bit. So I started with all&#13;
positive influences, which encouraged&#13;
me to keep walking."&#13;
The promise continued to&#13;
college where Heiring became a&#13;
ten time all-American in walking&#13;
events at two miles (indoors) and&#13;
10,000 meters (outdoors).&#13;
Preceding his graduation in 1977&#13;
from Parkside, he had a bout with&#13;
the California life style, training&#13;
and working in Los Angeles.&#13;
After the "imaginary" 1980&#13;
Olympics for U.S. athletes, the&#13;
Kenosha native returned home to&#13;
train.&#13;
His daily regime the past two&#13;
years has consisted of: a 30&#13;
minute run in the morning; an&#13;
RACE WALKER JIM HEIRING&#13;
eight hour work day ; then a speed limited and I had a hard time&#13;
or long distance workout walking training 100% because of work,"&#13;
at night. "My time was very explained the bearded athlete.&#13;
However, this routine has just&#13;
changed as of March l. Heiring&#13;
will be blazing trails in the Rocky&#13;
Mountains at the Olympic&#13;
Training Center in Colorado&#13;
Springs. He will be devoting all his&#13;
efforts preparing for the 1984&#13;
Olympics in Los Angeles. "My&#13;
goal is for a medal at 20K." The&#13;
last American to win a medal in&#13;
any Olympic walking event for the&#13;
U.S. was Larry Young at 50K in&#13;
Munich in 1972. No American has&#13;
ever won a medal at 20K.&#13;
Heiring said the key to a good&#13;
racer is technique. If one can&#13;
establish a fluid stride, such as he&#13;
has, without breaking the rules of&#13;
having one foot on the ground at&#13;
all times and keeping the knees&#13;
locked, times will improve with&#13;
the addition of speed work.&#13;
"I was tested biochemically last&#13;
year at the Olympic Training&#13;
Center and found that my pure&#13;
potential for a 20K race walk is 1&#13;
hour and 22 minutes. That's the&#13;
level I must be on if I'm to shoot&#13;
for a medal."&#13;
The way things have been going&#13;
for Heiring this season, the odds of&#13;
an American winning an Olympic&#13;
medal at 20K in Los Angeles in&#13;
1984 a re looking real fine.&#13;
After a real fascinating lecture...&#13;
study the real taste of beer.&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon&#13;
©1982 Pabst Brewing Company. Milwaukee. Wisconsin &#13;
Rangers finish seventeenth in Forest Grove&#13;
by Tammv yShuematP ate&#13;
The Parkside wrestling team&#13;
concluded their season last week&#13;
at the NAIA National Tournament&#13;
held in Forest Grove, Oregon.&#13;
Parkside placed 17th out of the 78&#13;
teams that participated.&#13;
Top rankers for Parkside were&#13;
Dan Winter at 134 and Mike&#13;
Muckerheide at 150, who both&#13;
placed seventh in their respective&#13;
weight classes.&#13;
Winter, still bothered by a&#13;
broken nose suffered during the&#13;
NCAA, II National Tournament,&#13;
defeated his opponent, Tim&#13;
Martin of Wilamette College, by&#13;
an 8-7 decision. In his second&#13;
match, he decisioned Lynn&#13;
Plumley of Southwest Minnesota&#13;
9-7. Tony Algiers of Eau Claire&#13;
Pogreba files&#13;
grievance&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
midnight as the closing time.&#13;
Brinkman explained that they&#13;
haven't gotten around to changing&#13;
the signs yet.&#13;
Brinkman also said that&#13;
Kreuser, who is a manager in the&#13;
Union, has no jurisdiction to have&#13;
anybody kicked out of the&#13;
building.&#13;
"I did not break an election&#13;
rule," Kreuser told Ranger.&#13;
Pogreba said he didn't know if an&#13;
election rule was broken, and that&#13;
that decision is up to the Elections&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The committee will decide&#13;
whether or not it is necessary to&#13;
take any action after Pedersen&#13;
reports his findings to the committee.&#13;
Kathy Slama, chairperson&#13;
of the committee, said the&#13;
decision should be reached before&#13;
the election, which began&#13;
yesterday and concludes today.&#13;
defeated Winter in the quarter&#13;
finals 5-3.&#13;
Winter went on to beat Archie&#13;
Clark of Graceland College by a&#13;
score of .13-5 in the wrestle back.&#13;
He then lost his fifth match to&#13;
John Kranz of Loras College by a&#13;
6-4 decision. In his sixth and final&#13;
match, he defeated Keith Harpster&#13;
of Malone College by a score&#13;
ol 13-4, thereby taking seventh&#13;
place overall and becoming a&#13;
seven time ail-American.&#13;
Parkside's other place winner&#13;
was sophomore Mike&#13;
Muckerheide. Muckerheide, who&#13;
placed sixth in this tournament&#13;
last year, defeated Peter Shepard&#13;
of Oregon Tech 17-5 i n his first&#13;
match. He then went on to defeat&#13;
Eric Lugan of Ft. Lewis with a&#13;
decision of 8-6.&#13;
In his third match, he was&#13;
beaten by his opponent, Mimmo&#13;
Marello of Simon Frasier by a&#13;
score of 20-6. During the wrestle&#13;
back, Muckerheide was victorious&#13;
over Barry Schmitt of Eau Claire&#13;
8-6. He then was defeated by Rick&#13;
Bid accepted&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
valuable experience, and if it kept&#13;
the cost of the books down, that it&#13;
would be a good plan. If, on the&#13;
other hand, the students would not&#13;
get the needed experience in the&#13;
bookstore, it would be better to&#13;
use them in a different area of the&#13;
university.&#13;
It has also been pointed out that&#13;
CSA has never found any need for&#13;
a surcharge. If this is the case, it&#13;
was suggested that the clause in&#13;
the contract giving negotiable&#13;
surcharge, be removed.&#13;
The university has sent a letter&#13;
of acceptance of the CSA bid to&#13;
CSA. More information willbe&#13;
available after the letter has been&#13;
received by CSA.&#13;
How to&#13;
do well in&#13;
Economy Class&#13;
Simple. Fly Capitol Air's Economy Class. Our&#13;
fares are the lowest of any scheduled airline so&#13;
you can use the money you save for lots of&#13;
other things. Like a Eurail pass if you fly us to&#13;
Brussels, Frankfurt or Zurich. More time in the&#13;
sun if you're headed for Miami, San Juan or&#13;
Puerto Plata. Or for even more fun in New York,&#13;
Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago or Boston.&#13;
And, if you are flying to Europe this summer,&#13;
make your reservation and buy your ticket&#13;
now. With our guaranteed fare policy you are&#13;
protected against any fare increases from now&#13;
until departure.&#13;
So if you want to do well in Economy Class,&#13;
fly Capitol's.&#13;
For reservations, call your Travel Agent or&#13;
Capitol at 312-347-0230 in Chicago, 800-572-&#13;
5788 in Illinois or 800-621-5330 outside Illinois.&#13;
No one makes Economy Class&#13;
as economical as we do.&#13;
SCHEDULED AIRLINE SERVICE&#13;
y THE LOWEST FARES&#13;
bd Brussels&#13;
San&#13;
Morkel of Huron College 6-3.&#13;
Muckerheide won his final match&#13;
by forfeit from Rob Yahner from&#13;
the University of Pittsburgh -&#13;
Jonestown.&#13;
Several other Parkside&#13;
wrestlers - Matt Kluge, Brian&#13;
Irek and Paul Roth — also competed&#13;
in the tournament.&#13;
Kluge, at 126, who was only one&#13;
match away from placing, won his&#13;
first two bouts, then lost to the new&#13;
national champion. Kluge&#13;
defeated Dennis Prise of Liberty&#13;
Baptist 8-4 and Bryan Wetz of&#13;
Northern Montana with a pin in&#13;
5:46. In the quarter finals, the&#13;
national champion, Scott Ritzen of&#13;
Adam State defeated Kluge 7-1&#13;
and in the wrestle back, Kluge&#13;
was beaten by Randy Pry or of&#13;
West Liberty State 10-4.&#13;
Brian Irek, at 177, lost his only&#13;
match to Craig Nightingale of the&#13;
University of South Dakota -&#13;
Springfield by a score of 6-2.&#13;
Nightingale became the 7th place&#13;
finisher.&#13;
Heavyweight Paul Roth pinned&#13;
his first opponent, Richard&#13;
Mitiaglo of Carson Newman in a&#13;
time of 2:32. He then went on to&#13;
lose his second match to Robert&#13;
LeGrande from Central State&#13;
Oklahoma 5-1.&#13;
Parkside wrestling coach Jim&#13;
Koch said that their goal was to&#13;
place in the top ten, so they really&#13;
weren't too far off from where&#13;
they were ranked.&#13;
As he looked back over the&#13;
whole season, he is pleased with&#13;
his wrestlers in that several new&#13;
records were set throughout the&#13;
past year and Dan Winter ended&#13;
his wrestling career as a seven&#13;
time all-American.&#13;
PARKSIDE'S DAN WINTER wrestles opponent at nationals&#13;
two weeks ago.&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
*&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
•&#13;
v % *&#13;
CELEBRATE&#13;
ST. PATTY'S DAY&#13;
EARLY&#13;
FRIDAY MARCH 12, 1982&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
11:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.&#13;
featuring&#13;
fa CORNED BEEF &amp; CABBAGE&#13;
fa SMALL IRISH POTATOES&#13;
^ COOKED CARROTS OR BEETS&#13;
fa SHAMROCK CAKE&#13;
COMPLIMENTARY GREEN&#13;
BEER O R OL'BLAREY PUNCH&#13;
SPRING BREAK&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
REC CENTER WIL L REOPEN&#13;
FOR REGULAR OPERATION&#13;
ON MONDAY, MARCH 22.&#13;
SAT - M ARCH 13 9 a.m. - Noon&#13;
SUN - M ARCH 14 CLOSED&#13;
MON - M ARCH 15 CLOSED&#13;
TUE - MARCH 16 CLOSED&#13;
WED - M ARCH 17 CLOSED&#13;
THR - M ARCH 18 CLOSED&#13;
FRI - MARCH 19 7 p.m. - 12 a.m.&#13;
SAT - MARCH 20 9 a.m. - Noon&#13;
SUN - MARCH 21 6 p.m. - 10 p .m. &#13;
8 Thursday, March 11,1982 RANGER&#13;
Baseball team opens new season March 16&#13;
__ . u ,..;n nn u/ntrh us That's PnoH nmuc » »&#13;
by Tammy Shuemate&#13;
While most of us are concerned&#13;
about finding our way to a warm&#13;
climate over spring break, the&#13;
Parkside baseball team will be&#13;
concerned about their season&#13;
opener, which commences at&#13;
Indiana State University on&#13;
March 16.&#13;
Yes, believe it or not, baseball is&#13;
beginning once again despite the&#13;
bad weather we've been experiencing.&#13;
According to&#13;
Parkside's baseball coach Ken&#13;
"Red" Oberbruner, the team has&#13;
been practicing in the gym&#13;
frequently since early January.&#13;
"As far as preconditioning is&#13;
concerned, I think we're in&#13;
halfway decent shape. We could&#13;
go right out of the gym and into&#13;
the snow and play ball," he said.&#13;
As for the strengths of the team,&#13;
Oberbrunner said, "It's always&#13;
your pitching staff and your&#13;
defense that tells you how good&#13;
you're going to do this year." And&#13;
this year, unfortunately, the&#13;
pitching staff will be minus two of&#13;
last year's top pitchers. Jamie&#13;
Oberbruner, the coach's son,&#13;
signed with the San Diego Padres&#13;
and Kevin Erwin decided against&#13;
returning to school.&#13;
Even though this loss may hurt&#13;
the team, Oberbruner feels he has&#13;
a fairly good staff coming back. "I&#13;
think we have two players who I&#13;
think could be stoppers," he said,&#13;
"Brian Steinhoff who transferred&#13;
from Carthage, and the other is&#13;
Joe Krisik who transferred from&#13;
Wichita State. They're both&#13;
juniors so they've had several&#13;
years experience and I'm looking&#13;
for them to really help us out and&#13;
take over."&#13;
Oberbruner also mentioned&#13;
sophomores Jim Anderson and&#13;
Scott Hartnell, who are first year&#13;
players. He said, "I'm looking&#13;
forward to them giving us some&#13;
relief as far as starting&#13;
assignments are concerned."&#13;
Oberbruner feels he has a good&#13;
lefty in Mark Schmitz, who is from&#13;
Cashton High School, winner of&#13;
the Class C State Tournament last&#13;
year. He is looking to freshman&#13;
right handers Glenn Lowe and&#13;
Paul Czarny for some extra help.&#13;
"So I guess as we look at it now,&#13;
we'll have seven pitchers," he&#13;
said, "and hopefully, two of them&#13;
can be our stoppers and the other&#13;
five will come along in games. I&#13;
would say that probably it will&#13;
take till the third week in April, I&#13;
think, before this team will really&#13;
come around."&#13;
Due to the fact that last year's&#13;
right and center fielders will not&#13;
be back, Oberbruner will have to&#13;
do some switching of positions in&#13;
the outfield.&#13;
"I think the strength in our&#13;
outfield will be adequate," he&#13;
said. As of now, Chris Rozell will&#13;
be playing right field. Said&#13;
Oberbruner, "He's a very fine&#13;
looking ballplayer so I think we&#13;
could get some mileage out of&#13;
him. And then in center field we're&#13;
moving our John Hyatt from left&#13;
field over to center field this year&#13;
and so we have left field open."&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
SERVICES OFFERED&#13;
TYPING Professionally done. Reasonable&#13;
rates. Fast Service. South Kenosha. 657-&#13;
6068.&#13;
PIANO LESSONS Southwest Racine. Call&#13;
Loree at 632-5788 evenings.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
DORM SIZE REFRIGERATOR&#13;
Ken or Andy in Ranger office.&#13;
Looking over his catching staff,&#13;
Oberbruner said, "We have good&#13;
strength this year, this is one of&#13;
the best catching staffs that I've&#13;
ever had since I've been here."&#13;
The staff consists of Dick Sykes,&#13;
who is going into his fourth year&#13;
for Coach Oberbruner, Rick&#13;
Marino, a junior, and Zar Matic&#13;
and Rick Marino, both freshmen.&#13;
"Those four boys look good to me&#13;
and I may try them in the outfield&#13;
also, or in different positions,"&#13;
said the coach.&#13;
He went on to say that, "Our&#13;
infield should be pretty classy. We&#13;
have two All - State men back. At&#13;
third base is Rick Salisbury and at&#13;
second base is Danny Sykes, so&#13;
they'll really help us. Then we&#13;
have at short stop, Kevan Bytnar,&#13;
who's back, and first base is kind&#13;
of open this year. We're looking&#13;
for somebody right now to put in&#13;
there, and I think that Tony&#13;
Laning is one possibility and Mike&#13;
Carey is another possibility. He&#13;
(Carey) played a little bit of first&#13;
base for us last year. And Joe&#13;
Krisik, when he isn't pitching,&#13;
might be a possibility for playing&#13;
first base."&#13;
Other alternatives for infield&#13;
positions are freshmen BJ McMahon,&#13;
who probably can play&#13;
any position in the infield and&#13;
could be of help to the team and A1&#13;
Dorff, who was a good third&#13;
baseman last year for Kenosha&#13;
Tremper.&#13;
Most likely, the coach will go&#13;
with John Hyatt as the lead-off&#13;
batter, followed by Dan Sykes,&#13;
Rich Salisbury and, perhaps,&#13;
Chris Rozell.&#13;
Parkside has had some past&#13;
success with a few of their&#13;
players. Ray Gallo was signed by&#13;
the Brewers and Jamie Oberbruner&#13;
was signed by the San&#13;
Diego Padres. This gives&#13;
Parkside some exposure, as far as&#13;
baseball scouts are concerned.&#13;
According to Coach Oberbruner,&#13;
"They get to know that if you've&#13;
had some luck with players&#13;
moving up the ladder, they'll&#13;
always watch you. I know now&#13;
that there's going to be at least&#13;
four to six down in Indiana to&#13;
watch us. That's good news.'&#13;
Oberbruner feels that the team&#13;
has gotten one of the best&#13;
schedules they've had in a long&#13;
time. They will be playing such&#13;
teams as University of Chicago -&#13;
Circle, UW - Madison, Carthage&#13;
and Chicago State, to name a few.&#13;
Following the three games they&#13;
will be playing at Indiana State&#13;
next week, their first home game&#13;
will be held on April 8, a&#13;
doubleheader against Chicago&#13;
State.&#13;
Once the Parkside baseball&#13;
team gets into the swing of thi ngs&#13;
and the weather starts warming&#13;
up, baseball fans can hopefully&#13;
look forward to an exciting and&#13;
successful season.&#13;
Contact&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
PENTAX 135mm f3.5 tele-photo lens. Inquire&#13;
at Ranger office.&#13;
USED PENTAX K1000 with 50mm f2 - 13 5mm&#13;
f2.8 - 2x teleconverter - fl ash - camera bag -&#13;
case for camera - individual lens cases&#13;
$150. Inquire Ranger office, c/o S.S.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
TO PAM, Jenny, Cindy. Thanks for being my&#13;
friends. Joey.&#13;
HAVE YOU KICKED a chair in the Coffee&#13;
Shoppe today?&#13;
COME ON EVERYBODY write classifieds.&#13;
10 words are free!&#13;
I BET FOLLETT CO. runs the best&#13;
bookstores in the world, don't you? Nobody&#13;
important.&#13;
GET YOUR ADS IN GEAR! Write&#13;
classifieds! Free up to 10 words!&#13;
HAVE A GREAT SPRING BREAK&#13;
everyone! We all deserve it, right?&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Li&#13;
mav III— R^the Seven&#13;
EnlCI .. We-t| be rafflinc,&#13;
Wa-C -&#13;
&amp; Seven&#13;
17-20,&#13;
State. </text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>&#13;
grade &#13;
changes &#13;
protect &#13;
eligibility &#13;
Basketball &#13;
pl ayers &#13;
Timely &#13;
by &#13;
Ken &#13;
Meyer &#13;
Editor &#13;
When &#13;
two &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
starting &#13;
basketball &#13;
players &#13;
were &#13;
declared &#13;
academically &#13;
ineligible &#13;
hours &#13;
before &#13;
Parkside's &#13;
district &#13;
championship &#13;
playoff &#13;
game &#13;
against &#13;
Eau &#13;
Clair &#13;
on &#13;
March &#13;
1, &#13;
it &#13;
had &#13;
a &#13;
crippling &#13;
effect &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
team's &#13;
chance &#13;
of &#13;
advancing &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
national &#13;
tournament &#13;
in &#13;
Kansas &#13;
City. &#13;
The &#13;
Rangers &#13;
lost &#13;
86 &#13;
- &#13;
80. &#13;
The &#13;
universtity &#13;
press &#13;
release &#13;
distributed &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
game &#13;
stated: &#13;
"Wilbert &#13;
Webb &#13;
and &#13;
John &#13;
Herndon &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
declared &#13;
academically &#13;
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6 &#13;
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. &#13;
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Parkside &#13;
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findings &#13;
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• &#13;
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day &#13;
(around &#13;
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On &#13;
Page &#13;
Three &#13;
ijjT &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
- &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Financial &#13;
aid &#13;
$ &#13;
added &#13;
Start &#13;
April &#13;
I &#13;
College &#13;
Stores &#13;
Associates &#13;
prepares &#13;
to &#13;
operate &#13;
bookstore &#13;
by &#13;
Pat &#13;
Hensiak &#13;
News &#13;
Editor &#13;
CSA &#13;
will &#13;
definitely &#13;
take &#13;
over &#13;
the &#13;
bookstore &#13;
as &#13;
of &#13;
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1. &#13;
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plans &#13;
to &#13;
begin &#13;
with &#13;
a &#13;
small &#13;
operation, &#13;
probably &#13;
handling &#13;
just &#13;
textbooks &#13;
and &#13;
necessary &#13;
supplies. &#13;
Remodeling &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
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will &#13;
take &#13;
place &#13;
as &#13;
soon &#13;
as &#13;
possible. &#13;
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is &#13;
being &#13;
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a &#13;
change &#13;
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the &#13;
signage &#13;
will &#13;
also &#13;
take &#13;
place. &#13;
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fixtures &#13;
will &#13;
remain, &#13;
the &#13;
university &#13;
is &#13;
pur­&#13;
chasing &#13;
them &#13;
from &#13;
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the &#13;
D-2 &#13;
level &#13;
of &#13;
bookstore, &#13;
which &#13;
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being &#13;
used &#13;
for &#13;
stock. &#13;
The &#13;
possibility &#13;
to &#13;
handle &#13;
the &#13;
"book &#13;
rush" &#13;
through &#13;
the &#13;
basement &#13;
is &#13;
a &#13;
good &#13;
one. &#13;
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would &#13;
not &#13;
go &#13;
through &#13;
the &#13;
stacks &#13;
of &#13;
books &#13;
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there &#13;
would &#13;
be &#13;
a &#13;
clerk &#13;
to &#13;
retrieve &#13;
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books &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
student. &#13;
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the &#13;
upper &#13;
level, &#13;
there &#13;
would &#13;
be &#13;
a &#13;
complete   display &#13;
of &#13;
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present &#13;
semester. &#13;
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upper &#13;
level &#13;
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also &#13;
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greater &#13;
array &#13;
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merchandise, &#13;
items &#13;
that &#13;
have &#13;
never &#13;
been &#13;
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before. &#13;
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months &#13;
of &#13;
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operation, &#13;
CSA &#13;
will &#13;
have &#13;
a &#13;
con­&#13;
tinuous &#13;
rotation &#13;
of &#13;
high &#13;
- &#13;
ranking &#13;
corporate &#13;
officers &#13;
coming &#13;
to &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
to &#13;
supervise &#13;
the &#13;
operation. &#13;
Shortly &#13;
after &#13;
things &#13;
are &#13;
rolling, &#13;
the &#13;
decision &#13;
to &#13;
hire &#13;
a &#13;
manager &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
made. &#13;
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decision &#13;
on &#13;
who &#13;
the &#13;
manager &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
made &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
campus &#13;
and &#13;
CSA. &#13;
It &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
someone &#13;
that &#13;
both &#13;
groups &#13;
agree &#13;
on. &#13;
"We &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
working &#13;
closely &#13;
to &#13;
make &#13;
the &#13;
transition &#13;
as &#13;
smooth &#13;
as &#13;
possible," &#13;
commented &#13;
Dave &#13;
Pedersen, &#13;
Dean &#13;
of &#13;
Student &#13;
Life. &#13;
"CSA &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
a &#13;
partnership, &#13;
a &#13;
lot &#13;
like &#13;
the &#13;
food &#13;
service. There &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
a &#13;
day &#13;
to &#13;
day &#13;
communication &#13;
with &#13;
them. &#13;
It &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
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a &#13;
lot &#13;
like &#13;
a &#13;
campus &#13;
- &#13;
run &#13;
bookstore &#13;
would &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
run." &#13;
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optional &#13;
5% &#13;
surcharge &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
removed &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
contract &#13;
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surcharge &#13;
clause &#13;
has &#13;
never &#13;
been &#13;
used &#13;
by &#13;
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and &#13;
if &#13;
that &#13;
is &#13;
the &#13;
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it &#13;
was &#13;
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that &#13;
the &#13;
clause &#13;
be &#13;
removed &#13;
en­&#13;
tirely &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
contract. &#13;
This &#13;
should &#13;
affect &#13;
the &#13;
cost &#13;
of &#13;
books &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
positive &#13;
way &#13;
for &#13;
students. &#13;
Refunds &#13;
will &#13;
also &#13;
be &#13;
handled &#13;
differently. &#13;
At &#13;
present, &#13;
the &#13;
refund &#13;
available &#13;
on &#13;
texts &#13;
constantly &#13;
change. &#13;
CSA &#13;
does &#13;
not &#13;
have &#13;
a &#13;
diminishing &#13;
refund. &#13;
If &#13;
a &#13;
book &#13;
is &#13;
in &#13;
refundable &#13;
condition, &#13;
the &#13;
price &#13;
available &#13;
to &#13;
students &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
refund &#13;
will &#13;
not &#13;
change. &#13;
Work &#13;
study &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
made &#13;
ap­&#13;
plicable &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
CSA &#13;
operation. &#13;
The &#13;
program &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
required &#13;
to &#13;
run &#13;
through &#13;
Student &#13;
Life. &#13;
CSA &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
given &#13;
the &#13;
same &#13;
opportunity &#13;
for &#13;
work &#13;
- &#13;
study, &#13;
but &#13;
will &#13;
not &#13;
be &#13;
given &#13;
any &#13;
more &#13;
opportunity &#13;
than &#13;
the &#13;
other &#13;
departments. &#13;
Follett &#13;
has &#13;
the &#13;
necessary &#13;
books &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
modules &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
present &#13;
time. &#13;
Whatever &#13;
books &#13;
are &#13;
not &#13;
sold &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
time &#13;
Follett &#13;
leaves &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
sold &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
university, &#13;
and &#13;
then &#13;
the &#13;
university &#13;
will &#13;
sell &#13;
them &#13;
to &#13;
CSA. &#13;
They &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
made &#13;
available &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
students. &#13;
Within &#13;
a &#13;
short &#13;
period &#13;
of &#13;
time, &#13;
the &#13;
takeover &#13;
will &#13;
take &#13;
place. &#13;
As &#13;
soon &#13;
as &#13;
Follett &#13;
has &#13;
the &#13;
opportunity &#13;
to &#13;
move &#13;
their &#13;
stock &#13;
out, &#13;
and &#13;
as &#13;
soon &#13;
as &#13;
the &#13;
remodeling &#13;
is &#13;
finished, &#13;
CSA &#13;
will &#13;
step &#13;
in. &#13;
Jim &#13;
Bearden &#13;
Do &#13;
students &#13;
have &#13;
a &#13;
say &#13;
in &#13;
renewals? &#13;
by &#13;
Pat &#13;
Hensiak &#13;
News &#13;
Editor &#13;
Throughout &#13;
the &#13;
recent &#13;
Jim &#13;
Bearden &#13;
dispute, many &#13;
questions &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
raised. &#13;
Students &#13;
have &#13;
questioned &#13;
why &#13;
they &#13;
do &#13;
not &#13;
have &#13;
the &#13;
right &#13;
to &#13;
help &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
deter­&#13;
mination &#13;
of &#13;
a &#13;
teacher &#13;
receiving &#13;
a &#13;
contract &#13;
renewal &#13;
or   tenure. &#13;
Students &#13;
and &#13;
teachers &#13;
have &#13;
also &#13;
questioned &#13;
the &#13;
required &#13;
"creative &#13;
activity" &#13;
that &#13;
is &#13;
needed &#13;
for &#13;
a &#13;
contract &#13;
renewal. &#13;
They &#13;
have &#13;
wondered &#13;
how &#13;
much &#13;
is &#13;
enough &#13;
creative &#13;
activity, &#13;
and &#13;
then, &#13;
if &#13;
the &#13;
quality &#13;
is &#13;
good, &#13;
should &#13;
the &#13;
same &#13;
amount &#13;
be &#13;
needed. &#13;
Probably &#13;
the &#13;
biggest &#13;
challenge &#13;
for &#13;
students &#13;
to &#13;
understand, &#13;
is &#13;
if &#13;
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activity &#13;
holds &#13;
more &#13;
weight &#13;
than &#13;
the &#13;
also &#13;
required &#13;
teaching &#13;
and &#13;
service. &#13;
The &#13;
fact &#13;
is, &#13;
the &#13;
committees &#13;
that &#13;
determine &#13;
if &#13;
a &#13;
teacher &#13;
is &#13;
eligible &#13;
for &#13;
contract &#13;
renewal &#13;
or &#13;
tenure, &#13;
make &#13;
an &#13;
overall &#13;
assessment &#13;
of &#13;
a &#13;
teacher's &#13;
performance. &#13;
Teaching &#13;
does &#13;
weigh &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
decision &#13;
more &#13;
than &#13;
service &#13;
and &#13;
creative &#13;
activity, &#13;
but &#13;
the &#13;
teacher &#13;
is &#13;
responsible &#13;
for &#13;
all &#13;
three &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
requirements. &#13;
If &#13;
the &#13;
term &#13;
of &#13;
"how &#13;
much &#13;
is &#13;
enough," &#13;
were &#13;
to &#13;
become &#13;
too &#13;
defined &#13;
and &#13;
precise, &#13;
it &#13;
would &#13;
make &#13;
the &#13;
JIM &#13;
BEARDEN &#13;
assessment &#13;
very &#13;
mechanical &#13;
and &#13;
ineffective. &#13;
Unfortunately, &#13;
this &#13;
explanation &#13;
doesn't &#13;
help &#13;
students &#13;
understand &#13;
why &#13;
Jim &#13;
Bearden &#13;
was &#13;
denied &#13;
a &#13;
contract &#13;
renewal. &#13;
Bearden &#13;
said &#13;
that &#13;
nojhing &#13;
led &#13;
him &#13;
to &#13;
believe &#13;
that &#13;
he &#13;
would &#13;
not &#13;
receive &#13;
a &#13;
renewal. &#13;
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not &#13;
a &#13;
three &#13;
year, &#13;
some &#13;
other &#13;
sort &#13;
of &#13;
contract. &#13;
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were &#13;
never &#13;
any &#13;
statements &#13;
of &#13;
disapproval &#13;
conveyed &#13;
to &#13;
him &#13;
about &#13;
his &#13;
actions, or &#13;
lack &#13;
of. &#13;
When &#13;
Bearden &#13;
was &#13;
hired &#13;
here. &#13;
An &#13;
additional &#13;
$1.6 &#13;
million &#13;
in &#13;
state &#13;
financial &#13;
aid &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
1982-1983 &#13;
school &#13;
year &#13;
was &#13;
approved &#13;
unanimously &#13;
on &#13;
March &#13;
5 &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
Joint &#13;
Committee &#13;
of &#13;
Finance &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
state &#13;
Legislature, &#13;
thanks &#13;
largely &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
efforts &#13;
of &#13;
United &#13;
Council &#13;
— &#13;
the &#13;
statewide &#13;
association &#13;
of &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
Student &#13;
Governments. &#13;
Wendy &#13;
Strimling, &#13;
Legislative &#13;
Affairs &#13;
Director &#13;
of &#13;
United &#13;
Council, &#13;
had &#13;
urged &#13;
the &#13;
Joint &#13;
Committee &#13;
on &#13;
Finance &#13;
to &#13;
amend &#13;
Governor &#13;
Dreyfus' &#13;
budget &#13;
revision &#13;
proposal &#13;
to &#13;
increase &#13;
next &#13;
year's &#13;
appropriation &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
Higher &#13;
Education &#13;
Grant &#13;
(WHEG) &#13;
and &#13;
Tuition &#13;
Grant &#13;
Programs. &#13;
The &#13;
request &#13;
was &#13;
in &#13;
response &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
fact &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
Department &#13;
of &#13;
Administration &#13;
has &#13;
put &#13;
$1.9 &#13;
million &#13;
from &#13;
these &#13;
programs' &#13;
1981-1982 &#13;
budget &#13;
into &#13;
reserve; &#13;
the &#13;
money &#13;
will &#13;
thus &#13;
automatically &#13;
lapse &#13;
into &#13;
the &#13;
general &#13;
fund &#13;
as &#13;
of &#13;
July &#13;
1982. &#13;
According &#13;
to &#13;
Strimling, &#13;
rather &#13;
than &#13;
let &#13;
money &#13;
originally &#13;
designated &#13;
for &#13;
financial &#13;
aid &#13;
awards &#13;
disappear, &#13;
the &#13;
money &#13;
should &#13;
be &#13;
used &#13;
for &#13;
its &#13;
original &#13;
and &#13;
worthy &#13;
purpose &#13;
— &#13;
financial &#13;
aid &#13;
grants &#13;
to &#13;
university &#13;
students. &#13;
"In &#13;
a &#13;
time &#13;
when &#13;
the &#13;
federal &#13;
government &#13;
is &#13;
radically &#13;
cutting &#13;
financial &#13;
aid &#13;
programs &#13;
and &#13;
calling &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
states &#13;
to &#13;
pick &#13;
up &#13;
that &#13;
responsibility &#13;
and &#13;
when &#13;
budget &#13;
cuts &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
state &#13;
level &#13;
are &#13;
causing &#13;
UW &#13;
administrators &#13;
to &#13;
consider &#13;
dramatic &#13;
tuition &#13;
in­&#13;
creases, &#13;
access &#13;
to &#13;
public &#13;
higher &#13;
education &#13;
is &#13;
being &#13;
severely &#13;
threatened," &#13;
argued &#13;
Strimling. &#13;
"Financial &#13;
aid &#13;
is &#13;
the &#13;
most &#13;
direct &#13;
mechanism &#13;
for &#13;
preserving &#13;
that &#13;
access." &#13;
Representative &#13;
Sharon &#13;
Metz &#13;
(D-&#13;
Green &#13;
Bay) &#13;
authored &#13;
the &#13;
motion &#13;
which &#13;
restored &#13;
the &#13;
money &#13;
for &#13;
financial &#13;
aid &#13;
awards. &#13;
Her &#13;
motion &#13;
added &#13;
$1,092,600 &#13;
in &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
Higher &#13;
Education &#13;
Grant's &#13;
and &#13;
$507,400 &#13;
in &#13;
Tuition &#13;
Grants &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
1982-1983 &#13;
fiscal &#13;
year &#13;
— &#13;
the &#13;
money, &#13;
representing &#13;
about &#13;
a &#13;
10 &#13;
percent &#13;
increase &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
WHEG &#13;
program &#13;
and &#13;
a &#13;
5 &#13;
percent &#13;
increase &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Tuition &#13;
Grant &#13;
award &#13;
budget, &#13;
will &#13;
go &#13;
directly &#13;
to &#13;
student &#13;
awards &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
1982-1983 &#13;
academic &#13;
year. &#13;
Rep. &#13;
Metz' &#13;
motion &#13;
did &#13;
not &#13;
cost &#13;
the &#13;
state &#13;
money, &#13;
as &#13;
her &#13;
motion &#13;
also &#13;
deleted &#13;
the &#13;
proposed &#13;
federal &#13;
tax &#13;
treat­&#13;
ment &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
incentive &#13;
stock &#13;
op­&#13;
tions, &#13;
thereby &#13;
saving &#13;
the &#13;
state &#13;
exactly &#13;
the &#13;
amount &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
allocated &#13;
to &#13;
financial &#13;
aid &#13;
— &#13;
an &#13;
estimated &#13;
$1.6 &#13;
m illion. &#13;
The &#13;
additional &#13;
$1.6 &#13;
m illion &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
WHEG &#13;
and &#13;
Tuition &#13;
Grant &#13;
Programs &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
included &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Joint &#13;
Finance &#13;
Committee's &#13;
Substitute &#13;
to &#13;
SB &#13;
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a &#13;
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military &#13;
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2. &#13;
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decriminalization &#13;
of &#13;
up &#13;
to &#13;
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marijuana? &#13;
YES-468 &#13;
NO-359 &#13;
3. &#13;
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you &#13;
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if &#13;
there &#13;
is &#13;
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service &#13;
on &#13;
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YES-455 &#13;
NO-322 &#13;
4. &#13;
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in &#13;
the &#13;
Union &#13;
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- &#13;
210 &#13;
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changed &#13;
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through &#13;
a &#13;
mandatory &#13;
fee, &#13;
refundable &#13;
upon &#13;
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request, &#13;
of &#13;
50&lt; &#13;
per &#13;
semester. &#13;
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NO-228 &#13;
2 &#13;
Thursday, &#13;
March &#13;
25,1982 &#13;
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to &#13;
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for &#13;
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Sir: &#13;
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response &#13;
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              <text>New term begins - PSGA Senate supports Bearden</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
New ter m begins&#13;
PSGA Senate supports Bearden&#13;
hby v KKen pn MMpeyvper r • •&#13;
The March 25 PSGA Senate&#13;
meeting saw the inauguration of&#13;
President Jim Kreuser and Vice&#13;
President Chuck Betz and the&#13;
beginning of the Senators' term.&#13;
There were nine Senators at the&#13;
beginning of the meeting; there&#13;
were 14 at the end.&#13;
Two students, Loretta Lacy&#13;
(who was a presidential candidate)&#13;
and Mike Scoon, were&#13;
nominated by unanimous consent&#13;
to begin their two - week internships&#13;
to become Senators.&#13;
Phil Pogreba, an unsuccessful&#13;
presidential candidate in the&#13;
March 10 - 11 election whose&#13;
Senatorial term ended, was appointed&#13;
by unanimous consent to&#13;
the Senate. His two week internship&#13;
was waived.&#13;
The only resolution of the&#13;
meeting, calling for more student&#13;
input in faculty renewal and&#13;
tenure decisions, passed 9-0-0&#13;
before the new Senators took&#13;
office.&#13;
The Mike Pfaffl / Phil Pogreba&#13;
resolution was in reference to the&#13;
recent nonrenewal decision&#13;
concerning Sociology instructor&#13;
Jim Bearden. The resolution&#13;
read:&#13;
"Whereas the loss of junior&#13;
faculty at Parkside in Sociology /&#13;
Anthroprology will lower the&#13;
attractiveness of the discipline to&#13;
majors and non - majors, which&#13;
may result in a loss of students to&#13;
UW - Parkside.&#13;
"Whereas personnel decisions&#13;
that either remove or discourage&#13;
junior faculty from remaining at&#13;
UW - Parkside could have a&#13;
negative effect on students.&#13;
"Whereas students are the&#13;
group most immediately concerned.&#13;
&#13;
"Therefore let it be resolved&#13;
that PSGA, Inc., which is the&#13;
major voice for students at UW -&#13;
Parkside, will work with students&#13;
and faculty to incorporate a&#13;
broader voice in renewal and&#13;
tenure positions."&#13;
A separate, but related, motion&#13;
made by Pfaffl and seconded by&#13;
Pogreba, stated that PSGA should&#13;
establish a committee to look into&#13;
faculty tenure research and be&#13;
able to review faculty research.&#13;
The motion passed 8-1-0 with Luis&#13;
Valldejuli voting "no."&#13;
The meeting also marked the&#13;
last PSGA meeting for Vice&#13;
President Kathy Slama, who has&#13;
been involved with PSGA for the&#13;
past three years. Slama has&#13;
served as Senator, Asst. President&#13;
Pro Tempore and President Pro&#13;
Tempore in addition to Vice&#13;
President. She has also served on&#13;
SUFAC for 2-1/2 years; this year&#13;
she was chairperson of the&#13;
Elections Committee and&#13;
established and managed the&#13;
Campus Book Exchange.&#13;
Slama made this farewall&#13;
speech to the Senate:&#13;
"I would like to take this opportunity&#13;
to commend the Senate&#13;
for working hard to see that the&#13;
students' best interest was being&#13;
served.&#13;
"During SUFAC budgeting this&#13;
year we put our Constituation to&#13;
the test. It didn't fail us. You can&#13;
feel good that you're part of an&#13;
organization whose framework is&#13;
solid.&#13;
"We saw this year that when&#13;
individual blocks of the&#13;
framework start to shake, or&#13;
(there's) those who don't support&#13;
their share of i t, everyone feels it,&#13;
but the framework always stays&#13;
standing.&#13;
"Your duty as Senators is to see&#13;
KATHY SLAMA&#13;
that the organziation moves&#13;
ahead. Treading water is not&#13;
going to get you anywhere.&#13;
Remember that you must stay in&#13;
contact with the administration.&#13;
When you stop talking with them&#13;
and start undermining them, your&#13;
framework is going to feel it a lot.&#13;
"We have a unique situation&#13;
here at Parkside in that the administration&#13;
will discuss anything&#13;
with us. If you give that up you&#13;
will really be losing.&#13;
"If nothing else, the most important&#13;
idea that I want to leave&#13;
you with is that you, as the Senate,&#13;
are the decision - making body for&#13;
all the students of Parkside . . .&#13;
Take that responsibility the&#13;
students here at Parkside have&#13;
given you and use it effectively."&#13;
The unusually large number of&#13;
people who attended the meeting&#13;
gave Slama a round of applause as&#13;
she stepped down to let the new&#13;
office - holders begin their terms.&#13;
Teaching Excellence nominations open&#13;
Well, it's that time of year again&#13;
— time for teachers to be on their&#13;
best behavior — for the annual&#13;
Teaching Excellence Award&#13;
selection process is under way.&#13;
The award, which is given in&#13;
recognition of superior teaching&#13;
ability to any full- or part-time&#13;
faculty member who has not&#13;
previously received it, includes a&#13;
prize of $500 to each of the two&#13;
recipients.&#13;
Choosing the student&#13;
representatives who will serve on&#13;
the Nominations Committee was&#13;
completed later than usual this&#13;
year, leaving students with a&#13;
much more limited time span in&#13;
which to accomplish their task.&#13;
Because of this limited time&#13;
factor, the process of choosing&#13;
nominees to submit to the&#13;
Selections Committee — four&#13;
faculty members and four&#13;
students — will be slightly different.&#13;
The forms submitted by&#13;
students to the Nominations&#13;
Committee will also be used as&#13;
ballots. Therefore, the students&#13;
must present his or her I.D. when&#13;
handing in the nomination form.&#13;
After the forms have been&#13;
returned and counted, the two&#13;
faculty members with the most&#13;
nominations from each division&#13;
will be thoroughly reviewed by the&#13;
committee of students. The&#13;
review includes the use of student&#13;
evaluation forms and classroom&#13;
visits. A scope of five or six&#13;
candidates will be presented to the&#13;
Selection Committee for final&#13;
selection.&#13;
Each student is encouraged to&#13;
fill out a nomination form to&#13;
nominate some teacher who rates&#13;
highly in areas such as teaching&#13;
skills, providing a good learning&#13;
environment and rapport with&#13;
students. This is where personal&#13;
opinions count. Nomination forms&#13;
will be available beginning April 5&#13;
at the information Kiosks and&#13;
other key locations.&#13;
Students must act quickly, for&#13;
the forms must be returned to the&#13;
box in the Molinaro concourse by&#13;
noon Friday, April 9. Committee&#13;
members will accept the forms at&#13;
the scheduled time periods of 10&#13;
a.m. to 1 p.m., 2-4 p.m., and 6:30-&#13;
8:30 p.m. Monday through Friday&#13;
of next week.&#13;
Remember: A teacher cannot&#13;
win unless nominated.&#13;
•I&#13;
Academic staff to be rewarded&#13;
A distinguished service award&#13;
of $500 will be awarded to an&#13;
academic staff member for&#13;
"Exemplary University Service."&#13;
A subcommittee established by&#13;
the Academic Staff Committee&#13;
and the Chancellor will establish&#13;
criteria, invite nominations and&#13;
recommend a recipient to the&#13;
Chancellor.&#13;
Any member of the Parkside&#13;
community may make a&#13;
nomination. Non - teaching&#13;
members of the academic staff&#13;
who hold appointments of 50%&#13;
time or more may be nominated.&#13;
Those with joint instructional /&#13;
non - instructional responsibilities&#13;
(specialists / adjuncts) will be&#13;
eligible for their non - teaching&#13;
activities. Questions about&#13;
eligibility should be directed to&#13;
Inflation hits&#13;
library hard&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
At a recent meeting with the&#13;
Library / Learning Center&#13;
Faculty Committee, and&#13;
representatives of faculty and&#13;
students, Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
pointed out the inability of the&#13;
campus to maintain an adequate&#13;
library collection in light of inflation.&#13;
Within the past years, the&#13;
cost of library materials have&#13;
risen higher than any other costs,&#13;
with the exception of energy. As&#13;
examples, Guskin sited the cost&#13;
rise in clothing (66%), transportation&#13;
(112%), food (128%),&#13;
medical costs (140%), books&#13;
(273%), and periodicals (398%).&#13;
These rises have occurred since&#13;
1967.&#13;
"At UW - Parkside, the impact&#13;
of inflation on the library has led&#13;
to a distortion of the library&#13;
collection," stated Guskin. "As&#13;
periodicals and serial subscriptions&#13;
are a fixed cost of the&#13;
library materials budget paid&#13;
annually the additional cost of&#13;
these publications each year has&#13;
been taken from the book budget.&#13;
This has reduced the number of&#13;
books purchased annually."&#13;
The materials budget has also&#13;
been impacted by the rising cost&#13;
of automation. That is, the cost&#13;
and charges for inter - library loan&#13;
which is used widely to borrow&#13;
articles and books primarily from&#13;
UW - Madison collections,&#13;
automated cataloging which has&#13;
allowed the reduction of library&#13;
staff, and on - line data base&#13;
searching. (On - line search&#13;
service is limited to indexes and&#13;
abstracts, and could save on the&#13;
costs of journals. This computerized&#13;
search service can stock&#13;
indexes which are not frequented&#13;
by staff and students.)&#13;
Although the media materials&#13;
budget has been increased slightly&#13;
for the 1983 - 84 year, the increase&#13;
is not sufficient, in the opinion of&#13;
the library staff, to meet campus&#13;
needs. Due to the need to maintain&#13;
our book and periodical collections,&#13;
a larger increase in budget&#13;
has not been recommended. The&#13;
state of affairs for the book&#13;
collection is critical at this point,&#13;
due to the number of staff&#13;
members who rely on books&#13;
rather than periodicals for&#13;
teaching and research. There has&#13;
been a drop in book purchases to&#13;
under 3000 v olumes. Yet, to keep&#13;
up with new published information,&#13;
it has been estimated&#13;
by the library staff that a&#13;
minimum of 4000 - 5000 books must&#13;
be acquired each year. If the book&#13;
collection does not remain&#13;
current, it may be impossible to&#13;
catch up later.&#13;
Guskin requested that the&#13;
library prepare recommendations&#13;
on the situation. The recommendations&#13;
are not decisions at&#13;
this point. A decision has yet to be&#13;
rendered. While the staff of the&#13;
library would rather be provided&#13;
with additional monies, their&#13;
recommendations following a&#13;
year's investigation, is to cut the&#13;
periodical / serial budget by&#13;
$70,000. The cut would actually&#13;
allow the library to maintain&#13;
purchase of new books (4000 to&#13;
5000), allow for the addition of n ew&#13;
periodicals to support the needs of&#13;
new programs, help the library&#13;
maintain a basic level of collection&#13;
- related automated services,&#13;
and provide minimal support for&#13;
the maintenance of the media&#13;
collection.&#13;
An example of what is meant by&#13;
cutting while trying to maintain&#13;
maximum access is:&#13;
Engineering Index - present&#13;
cost is $1285. Monthly costs of&#13;
issues could be cut and annual&#13;
cumulatives retained for a&#13;
savings of $775. This publication is&#13;
also available on - line.&#13;
This is just one example of an&#13;
index. The same on - line service&#13;
is available with many other indexes.&#13;
Another consideration is.&#13;
that other book reviewing&#13;
publications may cover the&#13;
content of a particular index.&#13;
n&#13;
Carol Cashen, Chairperson of the&#13;
subcommittee.&#13;
Criteria will be especially&#13;
distinguished service which&#13;
demonstrably benefits Parkside&#13;
or the campus community, and&#13;
which exceeds the required&#13;
performance of his / her normal&#13;
duties or job responsibility.&#13;
Nominations should be submitted&#13;
on forms available at the&#13;
Information desks in the Union&#13;
and Main Place. All the information&#13;
requested on the form&#13;
must be supplied. Deadline for&#13;
nominations is Friday, April 30.&#13;
Persons who are nominated will&#13;
be notified and given an opportunity&#13;
to supply additional&#13;
relevant information. The&#13;
recipient will be announced at the&#13;
fall convocation.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
exposes&#13;
skeleton&#13;
in closet&#13;
This skeleton was found&#13;
in the food service's&#13;
refrigerator last week&#13;
Monday. Authorities&#13;
believe it is the remains of&#13;
Chuck E. Roast, the first&#13;
food inspector at Parkside&#13;
when the campus opened&#13;
12 years ago.&#13;
Roast was investigating&#13;
the meat quality of food&#13;
service meals. He had had&#13;
a reputation of throwing&#13;
himself into his job.&#13;
See inside&#13;
for more&#13;
Strange(r)&#13;
things&#13;
Stranger photo by Mark Minolta &#13;
2 Th ursday , April 1, 198 2 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Ranger editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the editorial&#13;
staff. Parkside students may submit editorial ideas to the editor for&#13;
consideration. Editorial ideas need not be typed to be considered.&#13;
Thank you, Kathy Slama&#13;
When the newly elected PSGA members began their terms&#13;
last week, it marked the end of an era — th e Kathy Slama era.&#13;
Slama has served as a Senator, Asst. President Pro Tempore,&#13;
President Pro Tempore and, most currently, Vice President&#13;
She also served on SUFAC for 2-1/2 years and the Disciplinary&#13;
Board for two years.&#13;
Some of her other accomplishments include:&#13;
• Establishing and managing the Campus Book Exchange&#13;
this year&#13;
• Evaluating the campus - wide Sexual Harrassment policy&#13;
for Parkside&#13;
• Restructuring Student Organizations Council (SOC), including&#13;
Budget and Review guidelines&#13;
• Being Parkside's delegate to Kenosha's Youth Committee&#13;
(she is currently chairperson)&#13;
• Establishing expenditure and reimbursement guidelines for&#13;
PSGA&#13;
• Revising the. PSGA Constitution and PSGA Senate Rules&#13;
• Establishing Evening Bus Service to Kenosha and Racine.&#13;
A couple months back Ranger published a letter to the editor&#13;
that questioned whether or not Vice Presidents (in general, but&#13;
also in PSGA) really did anything. Looking at the list of Slama's&#13;
accomplishments is ample proof that the Vice President does&#13;
indeed do things.&#13;
Not all students notice who does what (if anything) within&#13;
PSGA. By working with them and reporting their happenings,&#13;
Ranger knows that although the Senate is the decision - making&#13;
body of PSGA, the President and Vice President are very important&#13;
to the organization attaining its goals through effective&#13;
organization and execution.&#13;
Slama has proven throughout her tenure at PSGA that she&#13;
kept the students' best interests in mind while dealing with the&#13;
university administration. That is the major role PSGA plays in&#13;
the operations of Parkside and Slama has been a responsible,&#13;
and effective, representative of the student body.&#13;
Ranger wishes Slama well after her graduation in May and&#13;
thanks her for all of the hard work she put into her many accomplishments.&#13;
&#13;
Journals shouldn't be cut&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The library's staff recently&#13;
made a recommendation that, if&#13;
carried out, will be detrimental to&#13;
almost every student and faculty&#13;
member. I believe it could substantially&#13;
reduce the quality of&#13;
education here.&#13;
The library has decided to keep&#13;
steady, or even increase, the&#13;
number of books to be purchased,&#13;
while drastically reducing (up to&#13;
60%) the number of journals they&#13;
now receive. By the time the&#13;
library receives a book, the information&#13;
in it is often three to&#13;
five years out of date. Journals&#13;
provide up-to-date information&#13;
on a regular basis. Students in&#13;
upper division courses rely&#13;
heavily on journals in doing&#13;
research.&#13;
If we are to be competitive in&#13;
our fields after graduation, we&#13;
need a complete education, one&#13;
that includes easy access to a wide&#13;
range of journals. Faculty&#13;
members will also suffer by this&#13;
cut in journals. It will be harder to&#13;
conduct research, or to stay up to&#13;
date in their field, if adequate&#13;
materials are not available to&#13;
them in the library. I urge the&#13;
library to work with the Chancellor,&#13;
the students, and the&#13;
faculty to reach a compromise&#13;
decision, a solution we can all live&#13;
with. The future of us all may be&#13;
at stake.&#13;
Jack Kemper&#13;
Questions $4500 for Liddy&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
"On the night of the President's&#13;
speech in Moscow, members of&#13;
the White House burglary squad&#13;
broke into the headquarters of the&#13;
Democratic National Committee,&#13;
in the Watergate office building in&#13;
Washington. They photographed&#13;
documents and installed two&#13;
wiretaps. They were carrying out&#13;
the first stage of G. Gordon Biddy's&#13;
Gemstone plan. That night&#13;
they reconnoitered the&#13;
headquarters of the McGovern&#13;
campaign, hoping to install&#13;
wiretaps there, too, but there was&#13;
activity in the offices and they&#13;
were deterred.&#13;
"This was one of several such&#13;
visits that the burglary squad&#13;
made to the McGovern&#13;
headquarters, and on one of those&#13;
missions Gordon Liddy, who was&#13;
armed, shot out a street light for&#13;
no apparent reason." This is an&#13;
excerpt from the book Time of&#13;
Illusion by Jonathon Schell. I&#13;
would encourage, anybody who&#13;
wants to hear G. Gordon Liddy's&#13;
talk on "reality in government" to&#13;
read this book. I have nothing&#13;
against this man, even though he&#13;
wanted to hire muggers to beat up&#13;
student demonstrators, and he is a&#13;
convicted felon for the activities&#13;
he took part in, which is mentioned&#13;
above.&#13;
What I do have against this&#13;
speaking event is that it cost $4,500&#13;
to bring him to Parkside. This&#13;
money comes from S.U.F.A.C.,&#13;
which is paid into by you the&#13;
students. Therefore, at a time&#13;
when the library is struggling to&#13;
keep the level of periodicals at a&#13;
near status quo level, wouldn't it&#13;
be wise to invest in the students'&#13;
minds and not a man who shivers&#13;
from the sight of an open - minded&#13;
student.&#13;
Michael A. Pfaffl&#13;
/ GEE—IT'S THAT 'THE BUCK STOPS \&#13;
( HERE" DESK PLATE...I WONDER WHY )&#13;
\ MR. REAGAN S ENT ME rHfS/__V&#13;
What are we fighting for?&#13;
by Chuck Ostrowski&#13;
The current situation in El&#13;
Salvador should be one of concern&#13;
to all college students today. I&#13;
mean, we are not only paying for&#13;
our government's overzealousness&#13;
through our&#13;
pocketbooks, but may have a&#13;
chance to pay for it with our lives&#13;
as well.&#13;
To me, the "El Salvadoran&#13;
Situation" involves the U.S.&#13;
government's — and by extension,&#13;
each and every one of its citizens&#13;
— support of a military junta that&#13;
is terrorizing, maming, and&#13;
murdering its citizens. And these&#13;
citizens are pissed! So much so&#13;
that it accepts and supports a&#13;
guerrilla movement that itself has&#13;
committed several atrocities.&#13;
And that's the problem. The&#13;
U.S. government has used these&#13;
reports of guerrilla atrocities to&#13;
back up its position that individual&#13;
El Salvadorians need our support,&#13;
whether they want it or not. These&#13;
citizens don't realize that their&#13;
country is not a small, backward,&#13;
poor, Third World country where&#13;
food is a luxury item at times but a&#13;
battleground against forces of the&#13;
International Communist Conspiracy.&#13;
&#13;
It seems far - fetched to believe&#13;
the only reason citizens of El&#13;
Salvador, or any country for that&#13;
matter, would revolt is because&#13;
Fidel Castro, with Comrade&#13;
Brezhnev's consent, told them it&#13;
would speed-up the communist&#13;
take - over. Can't we see that&#13;
bloated bellies is as good a reason&#13;
as any for revolt?&#13;
Alexander Haig and Ronald&#13;
Reagan can't. But the American&#13;
public can! And that's why we're&#13;
not supporting Mr. Reagan. We&#13;
can see that Marxism, the brand&#13;
of Communism citizens in El&#13;
Salvador are fighting for is&#13;
markedly different from that&#13;
which citizens of the Soviet Union&#13;
are oppressed under.&#13;
And the differences are quite&#13;
strong. Mane did not at all support&#13;
the domination of a few as is&#13;
practiced today in the Soviet&#13;
Union. A free and open exchange&#13;
of idea is not only encouraged&#13;
under Marxism, but is its basis.&#13;
Under Marxism, government as&#13;
we know it would cease because&#13;
the people would be the government.&#13;
No more Politboros,&#13;
Congresses, Parliaments, etc.&#13;
The people would control the&#13;
factories, businesses, and farms.&#13;
It is the ultimate democracy, in&#13;
that no one person would&#13;
dominate — everybody would be&#13;
making decisions that affected&#13;
everybody else. A GM executive&#13;
making a decision in Detroit that&#13;
costs the job of an assembly - line&#13;
worker in Janesville would be a&#13;
thing of the past. Isn't that type of&#13;
democracy — economic&#13;
democracy — something we&#13;
should all support? And since it&#13;
would be more or less useless to&#13;
try and implement this system in&#13;
the United States, shouldn't we all&#13;
wish the citizens of El Salvador&#13;
good luck?&#13;
Alexander Haig is trying to&#13;
convince a very skeptical&#13;
Congress and American public&#13;
that if this junta is not supported,&#13;
it will fall immediately because of&#13;
the military power of its enemies.&#13;
Yet he never explains how a junta&#13;
that has the support of its citizens&#13;
could have so many enemies! How&#13;
could guerrilla activity remain so&#13;
strong and active without support&#13;
from the citizens of El Salvador?&#13;
To state the obvious, El&#13;
Salvador is a country led by&#13;
Pentagon - directed military men&#13;
whose only goal is to solidify their&#13;
military position to forestall the&#13;
inevitable. Do we really care if a&#13;
democracy is the final outcome of&#13;
all our time, monies, and&#13;
energies? Or are we only concerned&#13;
with a government supporting&#13;
any and all decisions of&#13;
the U.S. government? To say, as&#13;
Haig does, that this is a battle&#13;
between good and evil, right and&#13;
wrong, and freedom and&#13;
totalitarianism is a mockery.&#13;
"Good," "right," and "freedom,"&#13;
are concepts to fight for, but Haig&#13;
can't be serious if he believes the&#13;
United States has a monopoly on&#13;
them. He may like to regard&#13;
himself and this country as a&#13;
bearer of those concepts, but it's&#13;
just not the case.&#13;
Is being "good" reflected in our&#13;
government's support for Nestle,&#13;
a company who coerced mothers&#13;
in developing countries to feed&#13;
their babies formula made from&#13;
contaminated water, instead of&#13;
breast - feeding them? Is being for&#13;
"freedom" reflected in our&#13;
supporting dictatorships and&#13;
juntas because they are on our&#13;
side? It's not, and we're not the&#13;
country we see ourselves as.&#13;
But since we do see ourselves as&#13;
this example for all nations to&#13;
follow, let's begin setting&#13;
examples. End our support for the&#13;
corrupt and needlessly cruel&#13;
governments in Argentina, Chile,&#13;
El Salvador, South Africa ... Let&#13;
the citizens in each country decide&#13;
for themselves what type of&#13;
government they prefer. If worse&#13;
comes to worse and they favor a&#13;
Capitalist system to live and work&#13;
by, we can support that too.&#13;
Students lack interest&#13;
and desire for action&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
Recently, a special lecture was&#13;
presented by Peter Jones, a&#13;
leader of the Campaign for&#13;
Nuclear Disarmament in&#13;
England. He, like many others&#13;
these days, is becoming more and&#13;
more worried about the increasing&#13;
build - up of nuclear&#13;
weapons throughout the world&#13;
primarily in the United States and&#13;
the Soviet Union. Bringing him&#13;
here to Parkside was a direct&#13;
result of efforts by Mobilization&#13;
tor Survival, a very worthwhile&#13;
group.&#13;
Jone's lecture was the climax of&#13;
an entire day of films, workshops&#13;
and panel discussions on March&#13;
25. 1'he question I ask is why?&#13;
What's the use of going to all the&#13;
trouble of presenting an all - day&#13;
teach - in of current national and&#13;
international affairs at Parkside?&#13;
After all. it appears that very few&#13;
people care. Take for example,&#13;
last Ihursday, March 25. Only&#13;
about 30 people came for free to&#13;
hear Jones talk about reality and&#13;
the future of mankind, yet a near -&#13;
capacity crowd flocked to the&#13;
Union Cinema to see Ed and&#13;
Lorraine Warren, "seekers of the&#13;
Supernatural," for $2 a piece!&#13;
Where are the priorities of this&#13;
school? What does it take to make&#13;
the so - called "academic community"&#13;
wake up to real causes&#13;
and real concerns that affect all of&#13;
us? Whether its nuclear weapons,&#13;
nuclear reactors, political events,&#13;
or anything of that scope, it&#13;
becomes increasinly clear that&#13;
despite the noble efforts of a small&#13;
group of individuals, this&#13;
apathetic university is clearly&#13;
more interested in "Cheech and&#13;
Chong's Next Movie" than in&#13;
Mobilization for Survival.&#13;
It's ironic that a co - founder of&#13;
such a liberal and humane&#13;
organization as the Peace Corps&#13;
would end up heading a dead&#13;
school like Parkside, home of the&#13;
indifferent, inactive, and immobile.&#13;
As for Mobilization for&#13;
Survival, I applaud the time and&#13;
energy spent by this club in the&#13;
efforts of making the students&#13;
more aware of what's going on&#13;
around them. Unfortunately, the&#13;
lack of interest or desire for action&#13;
by students is reminiscent of a line&#13;
made famous in "Gone With The&#13;
Wind." I only hope that I am not&#13;
confusing apathy for ignorance. &#13;
Insurance agent argues case&#13;
by hv PP-at j( Helln nnsi ^ :.ak .I. ^&#13;
News Editor&#13;
In the sixth issue of the Ranger&#13;
last semester, on the front page&#13;
there was a story entitled, "Watch&#13;
out! Insurance rep. pressures&#13;
students." Peggy Simmer, of&#13;
Union Fidelity Life Insurance was&#13;
the insurance agent. Simmer feels&#13;
that the article was unfair, mainly&#13;
because it stated that her selling&#13;
tactics are illegal. The fact is, her&#13;
selling tactics are not illegal, but&#13;
the action that was taken in selling&#13;
insurance on this campus was&#13;
considered illegal.&#13;
According to the Board of&#13;
Regents' policy 74-15, Use of&#13;
University Facilities by Non -&#13;
University Groups, non -&#13;
university groups may use&#13;
university facilities when they are&#13;
available, "but only upon the&#13;
invitation of or under the sponsorship&#13;
of a university department&#13;
or organization." Simmer no&#13;
longer meets students on campus,&#13;
but feels that the article has&#13;
damaged her rapport with many&#13;
prospective clients.&#13;
The article claimed that a friend&#13;
of a student was not able to leave&#13;
one of the tables in the. coffee shop&#13;
unless she signed a contract. After&#13;
talking recently with two of her&#13;
prospective clients, it was&#13;
discovered that Simmer does not&#13;
actually chain her students to&#13;
tables and make them sign an&#13;
insurance contract.&#13;
"She was always really nice to&#13;
me," said Kelli Ehrick. "I enjoyed&#13;
talking with Peggy Simmer, and&#13;
she certainly never pressured me&#13;
into signing anything. When I said&#13;
there was no way that I could take&#13;
the insurance at this time, she&#13;
understood."&#13;
Carl Goetz has also talked with&#13;
Simmer. "I wasn't attacked or&#13;
anything, she just asked if we&#13;
could get together about my insurance&#13;
needs. I said 'sure.' She&#13;
was very pleasant; not pushv at&#13;
all."&#13;
There was one student that was&#13;
not quite as pleasant about&#13;
Simmer. "Peggy Simmer has&#13;
called me four or five times since&#13;
November," said Mark Sanders.&#13;
"On about the third call, I had&#13;
asked her to never call me again,&#13;
but she persisted. Since the second&#13;
call, 1 have told her that I am not&#13;
interested in anything she has to&#13;
sell." •&#13;
"The constant allegation to&#13;
illegality in selling tactics really&#13;
caught my eye," said Simmer.&#13;
"That wasn't really the issue. The&#13;
issue was whether or not I could&#13;
meet with students on campus and&#13;
talk to them about insurance."&#13;
Another misunderstanding that&#13;
has affected Simmer's reputation&#13;
was a letter that she was supposed&#13;
to have received from Dave&#13;
Pedersen, Dean of Student Life. "I&#13;
told security that I never got the&#13;
letter; it had been sent to the&#13;
wrong address," she said. "The&#13;
letter said something to the effect&#13;
that 'It has come to my attention&#13;
that you have been soliciting on&#13;
campus. If this is so, please stop&#13;
immediately.' I explained to the&#13;
guard that had approached me to&#13;
deliver the letter that I was not&#13;
soliciting on campus. All of the&#13;
contacts were made off of the&#13;
campus, and if it was convenient&#13;
Skin care discussed&#13;
to meet a student on campus. I&#13;
did. Security told me that I would&#13;
have to talk to Dave Pedersen&#13;
about it. and 1 did."&#13;
Pedersen explained to Simmer&#13;
that he had received complaints&#13;
from faculty and PSGA. Simmer&#13;
told Pedersen that she would be&#13;
happy to talk to anyone that had&#13;
questions and comments for her.&#13;
Pedersen said that that would not&#13;
be necessary, that he would take&#13;
care of it. Until he had a chance to&#13;
speak with the organizations,&#13;
Simmer was asked to meet in a&#13;
less visible place.&#13;
The article said that she was&#13;
meeting people on the third floor&#13;
of the library. Simmer was back&#13;
on the campus the following week,&#13;
and again, security approached&#13;
her, told her that she had been&#13;
warned to stay off campus, and&#13;
Simmer quickly told them that she&#13;
had never been warned.&#13;
"I told security about talking&#13;
with Dave Pedersen," said&#13;
Simmer. "The officer told me that&#13;
I would have to get something in&#13;
writing from Dave. It was&#13;
assumed that I had gotten a letter&#13;
from Dave, stating that I would&#13;
not be able to sell on campus, but&#13;
the letter was actually sitting on&#13;
Dave's desk, unsigned. The letter&#13;
was sent to me after the article&#13;
was printed. A lot of it was a big&#13;
communications problem."&#13;
Believe it or not, chemical&#13;
warfare does have a practical&#13;
purpose. Naturally, any government&#13;
intelligent enough to use&#13;
chemicals to help decimate people&#13;
will want to protect its own&#13;
citizens. Therefore, extensive&#13;
dermal research concerning the&#13;
detoxification of hazardous&#13;
Creationism&#13;
speaker&#13;
Creationism is a subject of great&#13;
controversy today. Is it a science?&#13;
Is it a religion? What is&#13;
creationism? This will be the topic&#13;
of a joint Earth Science - Physics&#13;
Colloquium to be given by Prof.&#13;
Steven Dutch of UW-Green Bay on&#13;
Friday, April 2. The title of Prof.&#13;
Dutch's talk is "Creationism:&#13;
Anatomy of a Pseudoscience".&#13;
Prof. Dutch, who is a geologist&#13;
at UW-Green Bay, has identified&#13;
certain logical and methodological&#13;
fallacies which appear to be&#13;
characteristic of many "fringe&#13;
sciences," such as astrology,&#13;
pyramid power, the cosmology of&#13;
Immanuel Velikovsky, etc. Prof.&#13;
Dutch will apply his criteria for&#13;
fringe science to creationism in&#13;
his talk on Friday. The colloquium&#13;
is at 1:00 p.m. in Molinaro 107. The&#13;
public is invited.&#13;
chemicals has been done. It is that&#13;
research which helps industries&#13;
and health institutions combat&#13;
more mundane problems such as&#13;
skin dryness, allergic reactions,&#13;
and protection of the skin in a&#13;
working environment.&#13;
Dr. Thomas Spencer, manager&#13;
of Dermal Research at the&#13;
Johnson Wax Biological Center,&#13;
will give a seminar on this subject&#13;
on Wed., April 7 in Greenquist&#13;
D-105 at 1:00 p.m. While his&#13;
speech will focus on the general&#13;
topic of protection of skin in the&#13;
working environment, Dr.&#13;
Spencer invites any questions&#13;
pertaining to the skin, including&#13;
such subjects as skin diseases, sun&#13;
exposure, skin permeability,&#13;
Agent Orange, etc.&#13;
Correction&#13;
In last week's story about the&#13;
grade changes of two&#13;
basketball players, it was&#13;
erroneously reported that the&#13;
third signature on the grade&#13;
change cards was that of&#13;
Athletic Director Wayne&#13;
Dannehl. The third signer of&#13;
the card was the Education&#13;
Division chairman Dwayne&#13;
Olsen.&#13;
Club Events&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
Anthropology Club&#13;
Dr. Lawrence B. Breitborde will&#13;
be the featured speaker at a&#13;
lecture entitled: "Identity,&#13;
Cultural Values, and Language in&#13;
a West African City." The lecture&#13;
will be held in Moln 324 on Wednesday,&#13;
April 7, at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Dr. Breitborde is currently the&#13;
chair of the Anthropology&#13;
Department at Beloit College.&#13;
I.E.H.&#13;
On Wednesday, April 7, the&#13;
Industrial and Environmental&#13;
Hygiene Association will sponsor&#13;
a seminar on skin protection in the&#13;
working environment. Dr.&#13;
Thomas Spencer, manager of&#13;
Dermal Research at the Johnson's&#13;
Wax Biological Center will be the&#13;
speaker. It will be held at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Moln D-133.&#13;
S.W.E.A.&#13;
Elections for officers for the&#13;
1982-83 year will be held on&#13;
Monday, April 5, in Moln D-128,&#13;
from 1-2 p.m. All members are&#13;
encouraged to attend and vote.&#13;
Employee Attitude&#13;
A workshop will be held at 7&#13;
p.m. on April 14, in Moln 109. The&#13;
speaker will be Steven H. Van&#13;
Wie. All faculty and students are&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
E. F. MA DRIGRANO&#13;
1831 - 55th St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wise.&#13;
658-3553&#13;
"If it feels like a weekend,&#13;
it must be Michelob "&#13;
Put a little&#13;
weekend&#13;
in your week.&#13;
Ranger Needs&#13;
news, feature&#13;
and sports&#13;
writers! &#13;
Nothing that is contained in this issue&#13;
of the Stranger is intended to be factual.&#13;
All names, pictures, and&#13;
references to real people are purposely&#13;
coincidental. However, if you wish to&#13;
take anything in this issue seriously,&#13;
that is your own damn problem and&#13;
since we are printing this disclaimer&#13;
you ugly people out there can't do a&#13;
thing to us, you bunch of morons.&#13;
Day 368 of Reagan's convalescence&#13;
Utellum Correspondence School&#13;
ranger&#13;
Vol. 2 cubic feet No. 1&#13;
Bombed in Union&#13;
A bomb blasted the Union&#13;
Square yesterday, the direct&#13;
result of a terrorist attack by a&#13;
group calling itself CRAP (Crazy&#13;
Radicals At Parkside). The group&#13;
claimed responsibility for the&#13;
incident, saying that it was the&#13;
only way it felt it could get attention&#13;
in an apathetic school such&#13;
as this one.&#13;
Parkside Security was immediately&#13;
called to the scene,&#13;
however, several security personnel&#13;
were already inside the&#13;
Square at the table in the back&#13;
corner when the bomb went off.&#13;
No one in the building was&#13;
severely hurt.&#13;
When asked why the bomb was&#13;
planted in the Union Square, a&#13;
spokesman for the terrorist group&#13;
said only, "It seemed like the&#13;
thing to do. We thought of the&#13;
library first, but we know there's&#13;
never anybody there."&#13;
No one has been arrested in&#13;
connection with the incident since,&#13;
of course, whoever planted the&#13;
bomb didn't stick around to watch&#13;
it go off. Damage to the Square is&#13;
estimated at about $23.68, not&#13;
counting tax.&#13;
Why do birds exist?&#13;
by Doug resuahnedE&#13;
FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION:&#13;
Did you ever wonder what birds&#13;
think about all the time? Do they&#13;
even think at all? Were they just&#13;
put on this planet to spew mindless,&#13;
albeit wonderfully melodic,&#13;
soliloquies? I prefer to think not.&#13;
After all, wouldn't it be a trifle&#13;
selfish of th e human race to deny&#13;
our feathered friends, or any other&#13;
of G od's creatures, the existence&#13;
of intelligence of any substance?&#13;
You should be ashamed of&#13;
yourselves! Just taking the liberty&#13;
to merely listen to the birds and&#13;
not trying to give them any&#13;
feedback, or at least trying to&#13;
understand them.&#13;
Birds could be very much like&#13;
humans, if they really wanted to.&#13;
But it just so happens that they&#13;
decided to journey upon a different&#13;
path of existence. They took&#13;
to the air, opening up to themselves&#13;
a much more efficient&#13;
mode of transportation than we&#13;
humans have. They don't have to&#13;
squabble with other groups of&#13;
birds over such subjects as fuel&#13;
prices or import tariffs.&#13;
I'm sorry. I just can't go on with&#13;
this masquerade anymore. Birds&#13;
are totally ignorant beasts that&#13;
often fly into windows because&#13;
they don't have the ability to tell&#13;
the difference between a wall and&#13;
their nests, and if they did have&#13;
any intelligence they'd be burning&#13;
each other's nests out of hatred&#13;
and jealousy. They would continually&#13;
be having species riots&#13;
between different factions.&#13;
What a laugh! Birds being intelligent.&#13;
&#13;
Nancy Reagan&#13;
gets new jeans&#13;
by C.B.&#13;
Everybody knows about Nancy&#13;
Reagan's clothes, and of the&#13;
controversy and condemnation&#13;
she creates by accepting new&#13;
ones. All the "great" designers&#13;
get to write these gifts off. Nancy,&#13;
in turn, gives these "gifts" to&#13;
museums, where visitors are sure&#13;
to beat down doors to see the&#13;
famous frocks.&#13;
Well, hey, we want a tax break&#13;
too! So Stranger proudly announces&#13;
that sweet ol' Nancy will&#13;
be the first recipient of our own&#13;
special brand of designer jeans.&#13;
These jeans will carry the elite&#13;
ESAD* label.&#13;
We feel Nancy is worthy of th ese&#13;
jeans and should feel honored to&#13;
wear them. Hopefully, they will&#13;
catch on, for there are several&#13;
other people in Washington who&#13;
deserve to wear the ESAD label.&#13;
* Eat Shit And Die&#13;
John Hingstson has a&#13;
problem.&#13;
He's a chain&#13;
smoker.&#13;
New&#13;
Dorms&#13;
Itranger photo by M. Mole&#13;
The administration announced yesterday that plans are being&#13;
made to open the Parkside Dormatories. A university&#13;
spokesman said the dorms will be located near the Village,&#13;
giving the residents a panoramic view of the beautiful countryside&#13;
surrounding Parkside. The building (pictured above)&#13;
will not need any renovating. "That's OK," said the spokesman,&#13;
"because we don't have enough money to even buy a welcome&#13;
mat."&#13;
And now, the news in brief by&#13;
the never ending searcher of truth&#13;
and justice, Pat Chickensiak.&#13;
The teaching awards committee&#13;
announced last week that they&#13;
have had to cancel this year's&#13;
teaching award. Associate Dean&#13;
Michael Chasis, head of the&#13;
committee was quoted as saying,&#13;
"We were too late, we finally&#13;
located a teacher worthy of the&#13;
award, but we discovered that&#13;
he'd just been non - renewed.&#13;
Apparently, he was the last one."&#13;
In other news, hundreds of&#13;
students waiting for the results of&#13;
their English competency exam&#13;
have staged a sit-in in front of th e&#13;
room where the faculty committee&#13;
is locked in a bitter debate&#13;
Gross Out&#13;
Students are real slobs&#13;
r&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
What's a quick way to get&#13;
grossed out? No, besides that.&#13;
How about the feeling you get&#13;
when you go to a drinking fountain&#13;
and find assorted filth floating&#13;
within? Many times this can&#13;
happen to you when you least&#13;
expect it: when you are running to&#13;
some class after charging up the&#13;
stairs; before a big test; or when&#13;
you are just plain thirsty.&#13;
Okay, so this isn't a pleasant&#13;
subject, but it happens rather&#13;
frequently at Parkside. The crud&#13;
found in these drinking fountains&#13;
is not the fault of the cleaning&#13;
staff. God knows they do their best&#13;
to keep Parkside one of the&#13;
cleanest in the state. They can&#13;
only do so much, though, and if&#13;
students keep filling Up the&#13;
"bubblers," who could blame&#13;
them if they go on strike?&#13;
Come on now! Let's have a little&#13;
class. This is the Big Time. Do all&#13;
you perverts out there have to spit&#13;
your chewed gum into our&#13;
drinking fountains? Can't some of&#13;
you smokers walk an extra ten&#13;
feet to an ashtray to dump your&#13;
butts? Do you people get some&#13;
kind of weird thrill out of plugging&#13;
up public fixtures?&#13;
And another thing: All you&#13;
rejects from "Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood"&#13;
who like to clean out&#13;
your noses with your fingers&#13;
should know that you have cornered&#13;
the market on gagging&#13;
people. Of co urse everybody gets&#13;
hungry when they have back - to -&#13;
back classes, but you nose -&#13;
pickers are going to have to try to&#13;
restrain yourselves. Everyone&#13;
praises self - reliance, but that's&#13;
ridiculous.&#13;
We are all adults, and there&#13;
really is no place for this type of&#13;
behavior at Parkside. Let's get&#13;
these slobs to clean up their act&#13;
before this school gets a bad&#13;
reputation.&#13;
as to what is correct. The faculty&#13;
committee started the argument&#13;
two months ago over the&#13;
placement of commas, ahd they&#13;
have gotten to the point where&#13;
they must be force fed. Local area&#13;
doctors have several times&#13;
requested that the fight be stopped,&#13;
but no one can seem to reach&#13;
them.&#13;
A plea has arisen from the&#13;
spouses and relatives of the&#13;
professors. Said S. Parakeet, wife&#13;
of one of the professors, "All we&#13;
want is to know that they are still&#13;
alive in there." The Ranger will&#13;
have more complete details on the&#13;
subject next week.&#13;
The Parkside security squad&#13;
has had more than its share of&#13;
trouble this past week. It seems&#13;
that the entire squad was arrested&#13;
by Kenosha authorities in connection&#13;
with drug smuggling&#13;
charges. According to police&#13;
reports, the security force had an&#13;
elaborate system of sm uggling in&#13;
drugs to the Parkside Village. See&#13;
next week's Ranger for more&#13;
details.&#13;
APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAKEN FOR&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR&#13;
MAKE $3.35 per/hr. —12 Hrs./Week&#13;
QUALIFICATIONS — Edit sport stories, write occasional&#13;
sports stories, work well with others, be able to jump&#13;
printing presses in a single bound, be innovative,&#13;
courageous, single with no dependent children. Hate for all&#13;
sports desirable but not mandatory.&#13;
Inquire at the&#13;
RANGER OFFICE WLLC D139 &#13;
Farewell Follett Follies&#13;
Stranger presents £ " ParkSid6&#13;
'&#13;
t0&#13;
"» •"** * *• theme from ..The&#13;
I'm so mad we've had this time together,&#13;
just to pay a lot for bad service.&#13;
Seems we just get started&#13;
and we pay a surcharge,&#13;
comes the time we can say, good riddance.&#13;
fvfit&#13;
Athletic dirt revealed&#13;
by Tammy Papermate&#13;
This reporter has heard through&#13;
very confidential sources, that&#13;
Jim Cooky, coach of the Parkside&#13;
wrestling team, will be announcing&#13;
the engagement to the&#13;
love of his life very shortly. The&#13;
blushing - bride - to - be, affectionately&#13;
known as the&#13;
'Crusher' to his closer friends is&#13;
somewhat of a famous figure after&#13;
his semi - weekly appearances on&#13;
All - Star Wrestling.&#13;
A few invitations have already&#13;
been sent out. Among others, the&#13;
'Bruiser', the 'Masked Marvel'&#13;
and 'Gorgeous George' have been&#13;
invited.&#13;
* * *&#13;
The Parkside baseball team,&#13;
newly dubbed the "Bad News&#13;
Rangers" has had some pretty&#13;
nice happenings as of late. This&#13;
columnist is pleased to announce&#13;
the signing of Kevin Biteher,&#13;
former Ranger Shortstop to the&#13;
Chicago Cubs. On Biteher's first&#13;
appearance during Spring&#13;
training, he attained the status of&#13;
leading the league with a batting&#13;
average of —.092. Way to go&#13;
Kevin!!&#13;
* # +&#13;
In another light of Parkside&#13;
sports, one of the main swimmers&#13;
of the now defunct Swim Club has&#13;
been approached by NGN movie&#13;
productions to star in the up - and -&#13;
coming new movie documentary&#13;
of Esther Williams' life. After&#13;
much snooping, or should I say&#13;
investigating, it has been&#13;
discovered that the swimmer with&#13;
the initials of K. Z. (who wishes to&#13;
remain anonymous) has signed&#13;
the contract, and filming will&#13;
commence sometime after his sex&#13;
change operation.&#13;
* * *&#13;
Dick Freckle, the men's tennis&#13;
team coach, was physically&#13;
ousted from the Racine YMCA&#13;
after trying to gain admittance to&#13;
the women's shower room. Police&#13;
reports have it that Freckle entered&#13;
the building at 7:15 p. m.&#13;
through a side entrance, and was&#13;
discovered only after he had shot&#13;
six rolls of Kodacolor film.&#13;
Freckle will be appearing before a&#13;
renowned judge in Racine on&#13;
June 5.&#13;
* * *&#13;
This reporter has learned&#13;
through VERY intimate relations&#13;
with a certain Rat that the next&#13;
men's basketball coach (if Bill&#13;
Coalfield refuses to come to&#13;
Parkside) will have the first name&#13;
of Mike. I will learn the last name&#13;
at my next interviews.&#13;
Interuiew&#13;
Godzilla and Gamera still battle it out&#13;
by Dick Oberbruner&#13;
Try as they may, Japan cannot&#13;
get Godzilla, the prehistoric fire&#13;
breathing lizard, and Gamera, the&#13;
flying tortoise, to be friends.&#13;
These two deadly giants have&#13;
been using this island nation as&#13;
their battleground for years. And&#13;
Basketball budget increased&#13;
by Karen Norweed&#13;
Athletic Director Dwayne&#13;
Whatthehell submitted the 1983 -&#13;
84 At hletic Budget to SUFAC last&#13;
Wednesday. Although the new&#13;
budget showed a marked increase&#13;
in funds, the single major increase&#13;
was for the basketball budget.&#13;
The coaching position, which&#13;
has now been vacated by Stephen&#13;
Steves, will be filled by Bill&#13;
Coalfield. The coach's salary will&#13;
show a 110% increase from last&#13;
year's salary with a sum of&#13;
$75,000.&#13;
Another new aspect of the&#13;
budget will be that the players&#13;
(for the first time) will be paid for&#13;
their performances. They will be&#13;
paid on a sliding scale for each&#13;
game they play, they will start at&#13;
$1,000 for the first win, graduating&#13;
to $1,500 for the next win and&#13;
receiving $500.00 in crements for&#13;
each future victory. The players&#13;
will also be penalized for losing&#13;
games at $10,000 for the first game&#13;
they lose, increasing by $5,000 per&#13;
each game lost.&#13;
Said Whatthehell, "We're&#13;
hoping that this incentive&#13;
program will improve Parkside's&#13;
future basketball record. If this&#13;
doesn't work, the basketball&#13;
trainer, Hal Henderson has&#13;
something else in store for those&#13;
S.O.B.'s."&#13;
As it stands now, there are&#13;
many big names considering&#13;
coming to Parkside next year.&#13;
Obituary&#13;
This week the Ranger staff is&#13;
sad to announce the death of a&#13;
fellow staffer, Karen Norweed.&#13;
Karen, the former Sports&#13;
Editor, was killed in a freak,&#13;
tragic accident Wednesday&#13;
when a large printing press&#13;
crushed her. According to&#13;
police reports, Karen was&#13;
killed when a press "undamped"&#13;
itself from the floor&#13;
and "jumped" her.&#13;
Karen has been the Sports&#13;
Editor for the Ranger since the&#13;
beginning of the fall semester,&#13;
and she will be sorely missed&#13;
by her fellow workers. One of&#13;
her favorite sayings was, "I&#13;
hate all sports."&#13;
Funeral services will take&#13;
place for the Smorlick High&#13;
School graduate April 2, at the&#13;
Swamp - Meridath Funeral&#13;
Home at 2 p. m., open&#13;
. visitation&#13;
THE LATE, GREAT KAREN&#13;
NORWEED&#13;
Among them are Julius Erving,&#13;
Meadowlark Lemon, Marcus&#13;
Johnson, Kareem Abdul - Jabar&#13;
and Fred Derf.&#13;
Another substantial sum will be&#13;
set aside for (in Whatthehell's&#13;
terms) "Educational Assistance".&#13;
Said Whatthehell, off the&#13;
record, "We're going to buy those&#13;
God - damned grades off of those&#13;
S. O. B. professors or, if that&#13;
doesn't work, I have confidential&#13;
information that the local mafia&#13;
(and you know who you are) will&#13;
'take care of it.' "&#13;
Whatthehell further stated "if&#13;
the Ranger prints one goddam&#13;
word of this interview, you'll find&#13;
your fricking printing press in a&#13;
very uncomfortable spot."&#13;
So, Ranger basketball fans, this&#13;
season looks to be the most&#13;
promising season in a long time.&#13;
By the way, does anyone know&#13;
where we can find another&#13;
printing press?&#13;
Register arms?&#13;
by Emily Latellum&#13;
What's all this fuss about arms&#13;
registration? People all over the&#13;
place are in a tizzy over whether&#13;
or not they should have to register&#13;
their arms. Well, I think it's silly.&#13;
I've had my arms all my life, and&#13;
nobody ever made me register&#13;
them! If we let them make us&#13;
register our arms, it won't be long&#13;
before we'll have to register our&#13;
legs. Next thing you know, they'll&#13;
want a running inventory on the&#13;
rest of our bodies!&#13;
We have to nip this in the bud.&#13;
Next time someone asks you if&#13;
you've registered your arms, say&#13;
"NO!" Tell them it's the most&#13;
ridiculous thing you've ever&#13;
heard! Tell them you have worn&#13;
bare arms all your life. Tell them&#13;
What? . . . Guns? ... oh . . .&#13;
NEVER MIND!&#13;
Tokyo, the capitol, always&#13;
sustains the most damage.&#13;
"I don't know why they use us&#13;
hmm," snorts Mayor Fuji.&#13;
"Every time the fight begins out&#13;
in the hillsides. Then they&#13;
gradually make way towards&#13;
town, right uh huh."&#13;
Tokyo has suffered uncalculable&#13;
damage over the past 20 y ears.&#13;
Fuji faults movie - makers for&#13;
"egging on" the two behemoths&#13;
for the sake of box office draw.&#13;
"They've gone Hollywood," he&#13;
lip - syncs. "Godzilla once&#13;
dem and ed per s o n a liz ed&#13;
sunglasses and we had to make&#13;
some for him that's right."&#13;
Godzilla claims Japan to be his&#13;
turf.&#13;
"I've been around a lot longer&#13;
than he has" (referring to&#13;
Gamera).&#13;
This is true. His movie career&#13;
spans the Japanese monster era.&#13;
Godzilla was there from day one.&#13;
The challenger, Gamera, came&#13;
from outer space in search of&#13;
another planet.&#13;
"Yeah — I was looking for&#13;
something closer to the sun. You&#13;
know, the warmth and all. Earth&#13;
is really fertile, and I like the&#13;
Japan area. It has good climate&#13;
and I especially like running&#13;
through the rice fields and&#13;
squishing the paddies between the&#13;
webbing in my toes."&#13;
Though quite concerned about&#13;
the damage inflicted upon his city,&#13;
Mayor Fuji is grateful to local&#13;
architects and construction&#13;
companies for their fine job of&#13;
replanning.&#13;
"We've been able to rebuild at&#13;
an amazingly fast rate uh, thanks&#13;
to complete cooperation from&#13;
people of Tokyo."&#13;
Asked about the troubles&#13;
between he and Godzilla, Gamera&#13;
responded: "He's ignorant. When&#13;
I first came here I was looking for&#13;
a place to stay. And, like I said, I&#13;
enjoy this area very much. But the&#13;
public thought I was attacking,&#13;
what with the flames shooting out&#13;
from my shell. But hey, that's just&#13;
me. I have to get around. And they&#13;
want protection, so they got that&#13;
goon and it's been war ever&#13;
since."&#13;
War indeed. Each time his&#13;
scales are ruffled, Godzilla uncontrollably&#13;
shoots fire from his&#13;
mouth, burning a city block or&#13;
two.&#13;
"I'll have to watch myself on&#13;
that. But this feud has been going&#13;
on for years. I get anxious&#13;
whenever I hear he's (Gamera)&#13;
around. I seem to kill him off but&#13;
he always comes back."&#13;
The two can usually be seen&#13;
battling it out on Saturday afternoons.&#13;
Check your local TV&#13;
listings.&#13;
Sneaky Previews reviews&#13;
"Big Green Thing"&#13;
by Gene Shiksa&#13;
and&#13;
Roger Prevert&#13;
Gene: Hi, I'm Gene Shiksa.&#13;
Roger: And I'm Roger Prevert.&#13;
On today's edition of Sneaky&#13;
Previews we will devote our entire&#13;
time to one movie, the new block -&#13;
buster film, co-directed by Steven&#13;
Spielberg, Ingmar Bergman, and&#13;
Orson Welles, "Really Big Green&#13;
Things That Eat People."&#13;
Gene: Let's look at a clip of that&#13;
movie right now.&#13;
INSERT FILM CLIP&#13;
Gene: Wasn't that marvelous? I&#13;
think this is one of the best movies&#13;
made in the last fifty years. Those&#13;
big green things really are scary.&#13;
The special effects are spectacular.&#13;
The acting is uniformly&#13;
excellent, especially from Shelly&#13;
Winters as the unwed teenage&#13;
mother. I recommend this movie&#13;
highly. Roger?&#13;
Roger: Are you nuts? This film is&#13;
abysmal. The directing sucks, and&#13;
the green things are terrible. You&#13;
know Gene, you have no taste&#13;
whatsoever, you balding geek!&#13;
Gene: Is that so, fatso? You want&#13;
to talk taste. You don't know what&#13;
the word means. After all, you&#13;
wrote the screenplay for 'The&#13;
Valley Beneath The Cave Of The&#13;
Ultrasluts' didn't you?&#13;
Roger: That movie was art, you&#13;
bozo.&#13;
Gene: Art my Aunt Fanny. That&#13;
movie belongs with our dogs of the&#13;
week, speaking of which, here&#13;
comes Spot the Wonder Dog.&#13;
Spot: Woof!&#13;
Roger: Get that damn dog away&#13;
from me. Last week he peed on&#13;
my leg.&#13;
Gene: Just shut up you slob.&#13;
Roger: I will not you freak.&#13;
Gene: What are you doing with&#13;
that gun?&#13;
Roger: I've had all I can take of&#13;
you. Take that!&#13;
Gene: Ha ha you missed. You&#13;
can't even shoot straight you . . .&#13;
Arg! You got me!&#13;
Roger: That's all for this week.&#13;
Goodnight.&#13;
Gene: Moan . . . thud. &#13;
6 Thursday, April 1,1982 RANGER&#13;
Peter Jones: limited nuclear war has no guarantee&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
Peter Jones, leader of Campaign&#13;
For Nuclear Disarmament&#13;
in England, was the featured&#13;
speaker of a slide lecture last&#13;
Thursday, March 25. His lecture&#13;
concluded an all day teach - in at&#13;
Parkside on the arms race,&#13;
sponsored by Mobilization For&#13;
Survival.&#13;
Jones discussed many types of&#13;
nuclear weapons, their&#13;
destructive power, and who has&#13;
them. "In the 50's and 60's, we&#13;
were brought up to believe that&#13;
nuclear weapons were a&#13;
deterrent. The whole idea was&#13;
that they were never to be used. So&#13;
there is some credibility to that,&#13;
since we've had nuclear weapons&#13;
in Europe since 1953," Jones said.&#13;
"But what we become aware of in&#13;
the 1970's is that the United States&#13;
is changing that strategy. It is now&#13;
actually planning to use nuclear&#13;
weapons."&#13;
Jones says he is fearful when he&#13;
hears about winning a "limited&#13;
nuclear war," and he sees Europe&#13;
as the catalyst. He pointed out&#13;
that you can only call off a nuclear&#13;
war if there is some understanding&#13;
between Moscow and&#13;
Washington. The problem, Jones&#13;
said, is that to this day, there is no&#13;
understanding.'With the advent of&#13;
a limited nuclear war, Jones said&#13;
that "there is no guarantee&#13;
whatsover that it will remain&#13;
limited."&#13;
Jones discussed the various&#13;
countries throughout the world&#13;
and where they rank with nuclear&#13;
weapons. He also stated that both&#13;
the Soviet Union and the United&#13;
States have about 41 different&#13;
types of tactical weapons, and the&#13;
senselessness of trying to argue&#13;
who has more. "When Brezhnev&#13;
and Reagan are bickering about&#13;
who is ahead, in terms of tactical&#13;
nuclear weapons in Europe, what&#13;
they are actually doing is taking&#13;
certain categories of those 41&#13;
different kinds of nuclear weapons&#13;
and arguing about who is ahead in&#13;
what area," Jones said. "So&#13;
Reagan picks out the medium -&#13;
range nuclear forces, and says to&#13;
Brezhnev, 'You're ahead!' and&#13;
Brezhnev says, 'No, you can't take&#13;
just those, you have to put those in&#13;
context with all the others, and&#13;
Well day promotes health awareness&#13;
"Well Day," a family - oriented&#13;
free public health fair featuring a&#13;
variety of health services and&#13;
information, will be held at&#13;
Parkside from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, April 7, in the&#13;
Campus Union and on the adjoining&#13;
Molinaro Hall Concourse.&#13;
The fair this year coincides with&#13;
the World Health Organization's&#13;
World Health Day, being observed&#13;
internationally under the theme&#13;
"Add Life to Years."&#13;
Edith Isenberg, Coordinator of&#13;
Campus Health Services, said&#13;
about 40 community health&#13;
agencies will participate in "Well&#13;
Day" activities, which are open to&#13;
area residents as well as UW-P&#13;
students, faculty and staff.&#13;
Isenberg said people are invited to&#13;
stop in for single health screening&#13;
services or to go through the&#13;
entire range of health fair offerings.&#13;
&#13;
About 2,500 people participated&#13;
in last year's "Well Day," she&#13;
said.&#13;
New features of "Well Day,"&#13;
being held for the fifth year on&#13;
campus, include the Medical&#13;
College of Wisconsin's "Help for&#13;
Health Show," a computerized&#13;
analysis of an individual's life&#13;
style which indicates health risk&#13;
factors and their effect on his&#13;
projected life expectancy, and a&#13;
puppet show, "Mr. Yuk and the&#13;
Three Bears," scheduled for 10&#13;
a.m. and designed to point out the&#13;
danger of poisons to children.&#13;
Screening services being offered&#13;
include sickle cell anemia,&#13;
diabetes, hypertension, hearing,&#13;
feet, posture, visual acuity,&#13;
pulmonary function, a self -&#13;
scored health risk inventory, body&#13;
composition, ABO blood typing,&#13;
and height, weight and blood&#13;
pressure. Computer diet analysis&#13;
also will be available.&#13;
Topics of various displays and&#13;
exhibits will include cancer, heart&#13;
disease, arthritis, alcohol and&#13;
drug abuse, CPR, physical&#13;
therapy, aerobic dancing,&#13;
developmental disabilities,&#13;
diabetes, ostomy, kidney disease,&#13;
birth defects, dentistry, mental&#13;
health, pharmaceuticals, physical&#13;
fitness, women's issues, family&#13;
planning and specific agency&#13;
services.&#13;
In addition, a display of art&#13;
work by students in the Parkside&#13;
Child Care Center titled "Health,&#13;
Through the Eyes of a Child," will&#13;
be on display and the Union&#13;
Cafeteria will feature a special&#13;
"Wellness menu" during the noon&#13;
hour.&#13;
Community residents planning&#13;
to attend should park in the&#13;
Tallent Hall lot. Free shuttle bus&#13;
service will be available from the&#13;
parking lot bus shelter to the&#13;
Union, about four blocks from the&#13;
Tallent Hall lot.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LO AN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-4861&#13;
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Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414-248-9141&#13;
24726- 75th Street-Rt. 50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wis.&#13;
414-843-2388&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5'/i% Intern! H Your Daily&#13;
Balance is *500.00 or Moral&#13;
WE'RE HERE 10 HELP YOU OROW!&#13;
you're ahead.' So both sides&#13;
disagree, with Reagan pointing&#13;
out one type of weapons the&#13;
Soviets have more of, and&#13;
Brezhnev points out other kinds,&#13;
and the countries in NATO with&#13;
nuclear weapons like Britain and&#13;
W. Germany, as well," he said.&#13;
"But the whole point is, when&#13;
you already have got 13,000 tactical&#13;
nuclear weapons in Europe,&#13;
it would take less than 100 of those&#13;
to land on our major cities to&#13;
destroy one - third of the&#13;
population of Europe," Jones&#13;
said. He went on to say that it is&#13;
useless for the U.S. to make more,&#13;
because the Soviets are willing to&#13;
match us step - for - step.&#13;
Jones called for a step - by - step&#13;
process of unilateral disarmament&#13;
in an effort to de-escalate&#13;
the arms race. Although&#13;
acknowledging that "it wouldn't&#13;
be done overnight," he called for&#13;
disarmament on both sides. He&#13;
urged everyone to take action by&#13;
participating in efforts to put&#13;
pressure on Washington to&#13;
disarmament in the arms race.&#13;
At present Jones is on a three -&#13;
month speaking tour of Canada&#13;
and the U.S. Later this year he&#13;
will be taking part in summer&#13;
action in Europe before going&#13;
through the Soviet Union to Japan&#13;
and back to Australia to work with&#13;
the Nuclear Free Pacific&#13;
movement as a staff person of the&#13;
Quaker Peace Committee in&#13;
Sydney.&#13;
The art of interviewing&#13;
workshop scheduled&#13;
Parkside's Organizational&#13;
Communications Group 2 will be&#13;
conducting a workshop on the two&#13;
types of interview structures and&#13;
die types of questions an interviewee&#13;
may expect and how&#13;
choosing the right interview&#13;
structure can help an interviewee&#13;
match the right person to the right&#13;
job.&#13;
"The Art of Interviewing"&#13;
workshop will be held Monday,&#13;
April 5 in Molinaro 107 from 6 to 7&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Speakers are: Janet Brown,&#13;
Director of Personnel, Goodwill&#13;
Industries of Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin, Inc.; Richard Gardner;&#13;
and Chris Markin.&#13;
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* .vol Beer Brewed by Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. &#13;
April's fools tell of their favorite pranks&#13;
hby v PPaat Ifpncial • At . » . t Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
April Fools is a day for fun&#13;
tricks, things that could never&#13;
really cause any trouble, but yet&#13;
things that are pretty embarrassing&#13;
for the victim.&#13;
HAHAHA. The best part often&#13;
times is watching the innocent&#13;
victim struggle to figure out who&#13;
the trickster is. Later finding out&#13;
of c ourse, that the trickster is the&#13;
one that sits and laughs the&#13;
hardest at the situation. Three&#13;
people have shared some of the&#13;
funny things that have happened&#13;
to them on April Fools day.&#13;
"When I was a sophomore, I&#13;
was kind of smart - mouth," said&#13;
Jim, "and I only heard one - tenth&#13;
of al l the things that I listened to.&#13;
My mom and I have always gotten&#13;
along fairly, and she saw that over&#13;
- all, I was really being a radical.&#13;
She thought it would be just&#13;
slightly out of the ordinary if she&#13;
taught me a lesson about the lack&#13;
of listening that I had be&lt;en d oing.&#13;
On April Fools Day, she had a plan&#13;
that almost sent me to the point of&#13;
no return.&#13;
"I can't remember what day of&#13;
the week April Fools fell on, but I&#13;
got up and was going through my&#13;
regular morning routine. The only&#13;
problem was that every time I&#13;
tried to use anything that needed&#13;
electricity, or some sort of power,&#13;
it wouldn't turn on. I was really&#13;
losing my cool. I looked at my&#13;
mom, she had pulled out all the&#13;
plugs, but I didn't know that, and I&#13;
asked her why everything was on&#13;
the blink. She looked up from the&#13;
paper, and mouthed 'I don't know,&#13;
why don't you put the plug in?' I&#13;
didn't know that she was just&#13;
mouthing that, I just knew that&#13;
she had said something, and I&#13;
never heard it. I started to get a&#13;
little panicky, well, actually it was&#13;
more than a little panicky. It was&#13;
a lot panicky. I screamed at her to&#13;
talk louder, and all of a sudden she&#13;
started laughing so hard, and I&#13;
was almost over the edge. I actually&#13;
thought for the slightest&#13;
second, that I couldn't hear&#13;
anything. After realizing the&#13;
truth, that my mother is actually a&#13;
dirty rat, I was fine. It was a trick&#13;
that I have used myself, and it's&#13;
always good for a laugh."&#13;
Larry's story is little different,&#13;
it has to do with thinking that you&#13;
are off balance physically. "I&#13;
don't know if I should tell you&#13;
this," said Larry. "It really is sort&#13;
of embarrassing, and I was really&#13;
shocked that my friends were&#13;
smart enough to think of it. What&#13;
happened, is we were having an&#13;
April Fools day party, and&#13;
everyone was smashed. I was no&#13;
exception, and I have some pretty&#13;
strange friends. Anyway, they&#13;
thought it would be just too much&#13;
if they found some way to make&#13;
someone think they were losing&#13;
their mind. Unfortunately for me,&#13;
I was the lucky one. The original&#13;
plan was to have everyone stand&#13;
slightly lower than they actually&#13;
Luening concert closes series&#13;
Music by Otto Luening and&#13;
friends of the 81 - year - old&#13;
Wisconsin - born composer will be&#13;
featured in the final 1981-82&#13;
concert in the New Music at&#13;
Parkside series at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Friday, April 2, in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Luening, the pioneer of electronic&#13;
music in America, will be&#13;
making his fourth visit to the&#13;
campus as "composer - in -&#13;
residence" March 30 through&#13;
April 3. Last year, he was named&#13;
an honorary alumnus of the&#13;
university.&#13;
Luening works on the concert&#13;
program include his "Coal Scuttle&#13;
Blues" for two pianos, performed&#13;
by the Parkside Piano Duo of&#13;
Carol Bell and August Wegner;&#13;
Introduction and Allegro, performed&#13;
by Scott Mather, trumpet,&#13;
and Wegner, piano; and the&#13;
Luening Piano Trio, performed by&#13;
the Oriana Trio of Elaine&#13;
Skorodin, violin, Harry Sturm,&#13;
cello, and Bell, piano. All of the&#13;
artists are UW-P faculty&#13;
musicians.&#13;
Other works on the concert&#13;
program are by Luening friends.&#13;
Burt Levy of the Wisconsin&#13;
Conservatory of Music will be&#13;
represented by "Five for Piano"&#13;
performed by Wegner and "Two&#13;
Studies" performed by Timothy&#13;
Bell of UW-P, clarinet, and Sturm,&#13;
cello, Three songs by John&#13;
Downey of UW-Milwaukee will be&#13;
performed by Daniel Nelson,&#13;
tenor, and Jeffrey Peterson,&#13;
piano, both of Milwaukee.&#13;
Concert admission is $1 for&#13;
students and senior citizens; $2 for&#13;
others. Concert - goers are invited&#13;
to a reception following the&#13;
program. The series is directed by&#13;
Sturm and Wegner.&#13;
During his visit to the campus,&#13;
Luening will give a free public&#13;
lecture on Friday, April 2, at 1&#13;
p.m. in the Comm. Arts Building,&#13;
Room D-118. He also will meet&#13;
with student composers during his&#13;
residency.&#13;
Luening, who was born in&#13;
Milwaukee, has had a long and&#13;
distinguished career in music. He&#13;
studied in the rich European&#13;
musical climate of the 1920s at the&#13;
Munich State Academy of Music,&#13;
the Zurich Conservatory of Music,&#13;
the University of Zurich and&#13;
privately with Ferruccio Busoni&#13;
and was flutist in orchestras&#13;
conducted by Strauss, Nikisch and&#13;
Busoni.&#13;
Returning to America, he held a&#13;
series of distinguished academic&#13;
posts, serving as executive&#13;
director of the opera department&#13;
at the Eastman School of Music,&#13;
chairman of the theory department&#13;
at the University of Arizona&#13;
and chairman of the music&#13;
departments of Barnard College&#13;
and Bennington College, where he&#13;
inaugurated the Bennington&#13;
Festivals.&#13;
He began teaching composition&#13;
at Columbia University in 1944&#13;
and is credited with wide influence&#13;
on the generation of&#13;
students he taught until 1968 when&#13;
he was named professor emeritus.&#13;
At Columbia, he also&#13;
established his stature as a&#13;
pioneer in electronic music. In&#13;
1952, he collaborated with&#13;
Vladimir Ussachevsky on the first&#13;
concert of electronic music in&#13;
America, held at Columbia.&#13;
tap&#13;
740 College Avenue&#13;
Racine, Wl 53403&#13;
633-3503&#13;
Your fickot to the world of&#13;
SURVIVAL&#13;
• Self - defense&#13;
• Advanced Lifesaving&#13;
• Red Cross Water Safety&#13;
Instructor Program&#13;
WOMEN&#13;
• Woman &amp; Anger&#13;
• Myths &amp; S tereotypes of Women&#13;
• Managing the Job Search&#13;
Richard Pryor&#13;
Live in Concert&#13;
Tuesday, April 6&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
Admission *1.50&#13;
NEXT WEEK'S MOVIE&#13;
Excalibur&#13;
are. To bend at the knees. Nobody&#13;
was sober enough to do it. So, they&#13;
all stood to one side, I mean they&#13;
all leaned to one side and I thought&#13;
that I was the one that was off&#13;
balance. Of course, that was the&#13;
whole point, but I thought I was off&#13;
balance for the longest time.&#13;
When I finally figured out that I&#13;
was the only one on balance, I was&#13;
never so happy in my entire life.&#13;
"The way I figured it was funny,&#13;
because one of those drunkies was&#13;
falling over, and when I looked&#13;
down at the floor, it wasn't&#13;
crooked. Then I started to break&#13;
through the charade. Then the&#13;
whole thing turned into a bust."&#13;
The final clever caper actually&#13;
took place right on midnight of&#13;
April 1. It all revolves around the&#13;
fact that Jenny is a night person.&#13;
"I have always stayed up late. I&#13;
can remember when I was a kid, I&#13;
always would go into my bedroom&#13;
at the time my mom would say,&#13;
'O.K., time for bed.' Then, instead&#13;
of going to bed, I would sit with a&#13;
light under my blankets and read&#13;
or something. I never got caught&#13;
though. It was probably really&#13;
lucky that I never got caught when&#13;
I did stuff like that.&#13;
"On this particular April Fools&#13;
Day, I was still awake at midnight,&#13;
and I was probably 19 years&#13;
old. Not that that was late for a 19&#13;
year old, but I had planned on&#13;
staying up for another two or&#13;
three hours, and then get up the&#13;
next day for school. My sister used&#13;
to stay out super - late, and she's&#13;
older than I am, and she was&#13;
always real quiet when she came&#13;
in. She saw my light on in my&#13;
bedroom, and invited her&#13;
boyfriend in for a while. She&#13;
thought it would be funny to make&#13;
me think that she and he were&#13;
going to, she wanted me to think&#13;
they were going to have some fun.&#13;
Of course, when you hear all of&#13;
this laughing, no, I guess it was&#13;
actually giggling from downstairs,&#13;
your mind starts to wander.&#13;
I have a mind that wanders&#13;
from here to the ends of t he earth.&#13;
It wandered that night. Two hours&#13;
had passed, and I had been&#13;
listening to these goings on for&#13;
that long. I was getting a little&#13;
tired of it , and then when I started&#13;
to concentrate on listening again,&#13;
there was no noise.&#13;
"Kathy is really funny, so she&#13;
had told John about the plan to&#13;
make me look dumb, because she&#13;
knew that I would still be up at&#13;
midnight, and she knew that I&#13;
would listen. When I didn't hear&#13;
anything, things really started to&#13;
run through my mind, and it got to&#13;
be too much. I opened my&#13;
bedroom door, and started to&#13;
tiptoe downstairs. As I got to the&#13;
bottom step, Kathy and John&#13;
jumped out right in front of me,&#13;
and screamed April Fool. She&#13;
knew that I would listen, and she&#13;
was really frustrated that I had&#13;
kept myself out of the trap so long.&#13;
She knew I would fall sooner or&#13;
later. It was just wild when I did."&#13;
Another April Fools, another&#13;
trick. Don't let yourself get caught&#13;
as April's Fool this year.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's&#13;
LARGEST&#13;
Record Department&#13;
— Records —&#13;
— Sheet Music —&#13;
— Instructional Music —&#13;
'The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
You're invited to the 5th Annuol&#13;
WELL DAY&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
626 56th St.&#13;
Phone 654-2932&#13;
University of WisconsirvParkside&#13;
Wednesday April 7&#13;
Campus Union 10AM- 3 PM&#13;
WELL DAY&#13;
is&#13;
the combined efforts of over -&#13;
40 Milwaukee, Racine, G Kenosha, Health&#13;
Agencies who will provide the following free&#13;
health screening, testing, and much more...&#13;
Physical Fitness Demonstration &amp; testing Visual Acuity testing&#13;
Alcohol, Drug, Information Sickle Cell screening&#13;
Aerobic Dance Demonstration CPR Demonstration&#13;
Breast Self-Examination Teoch-ln Diabetes screening&#13;
Pulmonary Function testing Preventive Dentistry&#13;
Computerized Diet Analysis Mental Health Info&#13;
Blood Pressure screening Exhibits&#13;
Height and Weight Checks Posture screening&#13;
sponsored by Compus Health Office /Student Life &#13;
Thursday, April 1,1982 RANGER&#13;
The better of the best in baseball&#13;
by Greg Bonofiglio&#13;
The eighth edition of Webster's&#13;
New Collegiate Dictionary hardly&#13;
seems to do justice to America's&#13;
"national past-time." The dictionary&#13;
defines baseball as "a&#13;
game played with a bat and a ball&#13;
between two teams of nine players&#13;
each on a field centering on four&#13;
bases that mark the course a&#13;
runner must take to score."&#13;
That's like saying the Space&#13;
Shuttle is merely a machine that&#13;
flies.&#13;
It was perhaps not the intention&#13;
of Webster to wax eloquent the&#13;
sport which stirs such vicarious&#13;
emotions within us. It is more&#13;
evident that Webster's intention&#13;
was to define "objectively" the&#13;
sport. It is from this point of view&#13;
that I will likewise "objectively"&#13;
analyze some statistics of major&#13;
league baseball.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
TYPING - Professionally done. Reasonable&#13;
rates. Fast service. South Kenosha. 657-&#13;
6068.&#13;
TYPING SERVICES for professionals and&#13;
students. Call mornings. 639-6871.&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
WANTED: Students to sell advertising for&#13;
Ranger, 15% commission and bonus. Here's&#13;
the perfect chance to make $$$$. Stop in&#13;
Ranger office (next to Coffee Shoppe) if&#13;
interested.&#13;
WANTED: News, feature and sports writers,&#13;
photographers, graphic artists. Stop by&#13;
Ranger office.&#13;
Wanted&#13;
DORM SIZE REFRIGERATOR Contact&#13;
Ken or Andy in Ranger office.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
CONCERT PICTURES: Rush, AC/DC,&#13;
Foreigner, REO, 707, Joe Perry, April&#13;
Wine, Blackfoot, ELO. 50ca print. Friday 12&#13;
1:30 near Bookstore.&#13;
LASER SAILBOAT w/trailer. 14 ft. Olympic&#13;
class, ex. condition. S1400 . 630 6635.&#13;
MILTARY BOOK SALE used and out of&#13;
print at the Old Book Corner, Martha&#13;
Merrell's, 312 6th Racine. Naval, tanks,&#13;
Nazis, WW I a nd WW II, etc.&#13;
Miscellaneous&#13;
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST SERMON&#13;
"The Problem With Jesus' Teachings"&#13;
Sunday 11 a. m.&#13;
Personals&#13;
TO KATE, Thank you for understanding and&#13;
caring. Joey.&#13;
HEY MERLIN! Every little thing you do is&#13;
magic! Bread.&#13;
ANDE have a happy seventh birthday!&#13;
JOY Thanks for all • Ha ve a great Birthday!&#13;
Pat.&#13;
KATHY S. Happy April Fool's Day to&#13;
Nobodies Fool and everyone's friend. Pat&#13;
HAPPY BELATED BIRTHDAY, Kathy S.&#13;
We hope you had a great one! Ranger&#13;
DREW I hope this br ain surgery is more&#13;
successful than the last.&#13;
THREE CHEERS for Mark S and the&#13;
Parkside fencing team.&#13;
The statistics cover three broad&#13;
areas. These areas or categories&#13;
are: batting average, home runs,&#13;
and runs batted in. Judging from&#13;
the statistics of each of these&#13;
categories, the American league&#13;
has been the better league in&#13;
baseball.&#13;
The first category concerns&#13;
batting averages. For the years&#13;
covering 1912-1977, the American&#13;
league's composite batting&#13;
average erf its leaders was .358;&#13;
the National league average was&#13;
.355. However, Roger Hornsby of&#13;
the National league's St. Louis&#13;
Cardinals holds the major league&#13;
record for the best average in one&#13;
season. Hornsby hit .424 in 1924.&#13;
Moreover, the National league&#13;
hitting champs have held the&#13;
higher batting averages in 35 out&#13;
of the 65 total years.&#13;
The second category deals with&#13;
home run leaders. Once again, the&#13;
American league has held the&#13;
advantage. This time, 44.2 to 42, in&#13;
the averagfe number of home runs&#13;
hit by each division's leaders from&#13;
1918 to 1977. Moreover, Roger&#13;
Maris of the American league's&#13;
New York Yankees holds the&#13;
major league record for the most&#13;
home runs in one season. Maris hit&#13;
61 homers in 1961.&#13;
The final category concerns&#13;
runs batted in. One finds the&#13;
American league RBI leaders&#13;
once again holding the advantage.&#13;
From 1914 t o 1977, the American&#13;
league leaders have averaged&#13;
139.59 runs batted in versus 126.73&#13;
for the National league.&#13;
Moreover, even though the&#13;
National league's Hack Wilson&#13;
(Chicago Cubs) holds the major&#13;
league record of 190 RBI's in. one&#13;
season (1930), American league&#13;
teams have had the higher RBI&#13;
figure in 33 of the 63 years (both&#13;
leagues tied in 1961).&#13;
Another point worth mentioning&#13;
deals with baseball's "triple&#13;
crown" winners. A triple crown&#13;
winner is a player who has won all&#13;
three categories for his division in&#13;
one year. The American league is&#13;
once again the dominant of the&#13;
two leagues. American leaguers&#13;
Lou Gehrig (New York Yankees,&#13;
1934), Ted Williams (Boston Red&#13;
Sox, 1942), and Mickey Mantle&#13;
(New York Yankees, 1956), have&#13;
all won baseball's triple crown for&#13;
their league. The only National&#13;
league hitter to do the same was&#13;
Roger Hornsby, who turned the&#13;
trick for the St. Louis Cardinals in&#13;
1925.&#13;
The American league batting&#13;
leaders have dominated the three&#13;
categories of batting averages,&#13;
home runs, and runs batted in.&#13;
For baseball's best, the American&#13;
league has been the better league.&#13;
S^-SeVcan.be toppe* j&#13;
! VIOW! l^fsSe^O^cUbedootton /^| \ I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
fc&#13;
I&#13;
L&#13;
WSemglan sleevesSSSSwa*"&#13;
&#13;
Name&#13;
College&#13;
Adult sizes only. Specify quantity.&#13;
. T-shirt @ $4.95 ea., S__ M___ L__ XL_ Amount Enclosed $&#13;
Oder expires December 31.1982 No purchas e necessary New York residen ts add 8 25% sales tax Please allow 4 to 6 weeksToTshrpment 101 </text>
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              <text>Recall for PSGA President - Students petition to hold recall election</text>
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              <text>i/T University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
For PSGA President&#13;
Students petition to hold recall election&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
A drive to collect the required&#13;
800 si gnatures in order to hold a&#13;
recall election for the PSGA&#13;
presidency is being spearheaded&#13;
by Phil Pogreba, members of&#13;
student organizations and other&#13;
students.&#13;
Jim Kreuser won t he March 10-&#13;
11 elections with 320 votes&#13;
(38.5%). Pogreba received 295&#13;
votes (35.5%), Loretta Lacy&#13;
placed third with 207 votes (25%)&#13;
and Mike Axelsen received eight&#13;
write - in votes (1%).&#13;
The recall petition gives five&#13;
reasons for having another&#13;
election:&#13;
• Kreuser failed to review&#13;
and/or revise the Teaching Excellence&#13;
Committee's guidelines&#13;
as requested by the Faculty&#13;
Senate and he failed to appoint&#13;
someone to the same;&#13;
• Kreuser failed to meet the&#13;
requested deadline by the&#13;
Chancellor for two appointments&#13;
to the Sexual Harassment Committee;&#13;
&#13;
• Lack of communication with&#13;
the administration on student -&#13;
related interests causing lack of&#13;
student input on administrative&#13;
decision - making;&#13;
• Lack of availability;&#13;
• The causation of bottle&#13;
necking information resulting in&#13;
the lack of information within&#13;
PSGA and flowing out of PSGA.&#13;
A table has been set up in Level&#13;
PSGA urges&#13;
fight budget&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
The Legislative Affairs committee&#13;
of PSGA is urging students&#13;
to help them combat the proposed&#13;
education cuts in the state&#13;
legislature by contacting their&#13;
legislators and telling them to&#13;
oppose the cuts.&#13;
PSGA members have been&#13;
calling area legislators in the last&#13;
couple weeks to find out how they&#13;
plan to vote on the cuts, said&#13;
Legislative Affairs director Mike&#13;
Pfaffl. Four of the six local&#13;
legislators have said they oppose&#13;
the proposed 4% b udget cut to the&#13;
"There has to be&#13;
a united front now.&#13;
There has to be&#13;
JIM KREUSER&#13;
1 of Molinaro Hall and students&#13;
will man the tables collecting&#13;
signatures until next week&#13;
Wednesday (the goal for collecting&#13;
the required amount of&#13;
signatures which is 15% of the&#13;
student body, or approximately&#13;
800).&#13;
Kreuser had not yet seen a copy&#13;
of the petition when interviewed&#13;
by Ranger, so he didn't know the&#13;
actual charges being made&#13;
against him.&#13;
"I think it's uncalled for,"&#13;
Kreuser said about the recall&#13;
petitions, "because there was an&#13;
election — o ne in which I didn't&#13;
campaign that hard and the&#13;
people voted for my name with the&#13;
issues."&#13;
"I do believe that nothing&#13;
positive will come out of these&#13;
students to actively&#13;
cuts to UW&#13;
PHIL POGREBA&#13;
petitions," said Kreuser. "I don't&#13;
believe there's going to be another&#13;
election (and if there is) the voters&#13;
will make another reasonable,&#13;
rational decision like they did in&#13;
the last one."&#13;
Kreuser believes the recall&#13;
"would hurt student government&#13;
more than it would help it." He&#13;
said the same thing happened in&#13;
United Council last year and it&#13;
caused a lot of f riction.&#13;
Pogreba said he doesn't feel the&#13;
recall would hurt PSGA "because&#13;
PSGA is hurting now. We need a&#13;
change in leadership," he said.&#13;
Pogreba thinks there is a&#13;
"mandate for change" because&#13;
62% of the voters voted against&#13;
Kreuser.&#13;
"That's obviously going to&#13;
happen when there are four people&#13;
running for an office," Kreuser&#13;
said about his winning by a&#13;
plurality. "You can't expect a&#13;
majority. That's the way the&#13;
election system is set up. There's&#13;
no primary, so obviously that's&#13;
going to happen. If they want to&#13;
change the rules for next year and&#13;
have a run - down or primary, I&#13;
think that would be a concern the&#13;
Elections Committee should look&#13;
into."&#13;
Pogreba takes issue with the&#13;
quantity, as well as the quality, of&#13;
Kreuser's leadership, noting that&#13;
Kreuser has missed two of th e last&#13;
three Senate meetings. PSGA&#13;
Senators are required to keep&#13;
three office hours per week at&#13;
times to be available to the&#13;
students. "If their leader isn't&#13;
doing that, why should they?"&#13;
Pogreba said. "He's supposed to&#13;
set an example."&#13;
According to the PSGA Constitution&#13;
:&#13;
If or when enough signatures&#13;
are gathered calling for a recall&#13;
election, the petitions will be&#13;
presented to the PSGA Senate.&#13;
The Senate will immediately turn&#13;
the petitions over to the Elections&#13;
Committee, which will have five&#13;
days to verify the names on the&#13;
petitions.&#13;
If illegal names are on the&#13;
petitions, causing the number of&#13;
valid signatures to fall under the&#13;
15% requirement, those issuing&#13;
the petition will have five days to&#13;
get the required number of&#13;
signatures. If they fail to do so,&#13;
their recall petition will be&#13;
declared null.&#13;
No legal name can be removed&#13;
from the petition after filing. Once&#13;
the petition is presented to the&#13;
Senate it cannot be withdrawn. A&#13;
person can be recalled only once&#13;
per offense during his / her term&#13;
in office. The person who is cited&#13;
in the recall petition will have his /&#13;
her name placed on the ballot&#13;
automatically unless he / she&#13;
resigns. Students who wish to run&#13;
for the position shall follow normal&#13;
election procedures&#13;
(gathering signatures in order to&#13;
be placed on the ballot, etc.).&#13;
There must be an election&#13;
within 15 school days after&#13;
notification of th e valid petition is&#13;
received by the Senate.&#13;
System&#13;
opposition now.&#13;
UW System; they favor a 2% cut,&#13;
which would save about $200,000.&#13;
A 4% cut would mean $422,200 at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
PSGA has been taking action in&#13;
hopes of making students more&#13;
aware of the issue and therefore&#13;
maybe save the UW System some&#13;
money. PSGA members have&#13;
gone to local high schools with&#13;
booklets outlining the proposed&#13;
cuts and the effects the cuts would&#13;
have on all the UW campuses. The&#13;
PSGA Senate voted unanimously&#13;
condemning the Dreyfus - Reagan&#13;
cutbacks. Plans are also being&#13;
made to have voter registration&#13;
during early fall registration later&#13;
this month.&#13;
The state legislature was&#13;
supposed to have deliberated the&#13;
budget before it recessed on April&#13;
2, but they didn't, so Governor&#13;
Dreyfus has to call a special&#13;
session.&#13;
"The main thing that I'm trying&#13;
to get through is we cannot do it&#13;
alone," said Pfaffl. "People can&#13;
still find out who their legislators&#13;
are or call Legislative Hotline and&#13;
tell their legislators that they're&#13;
students at Parkside and feel that&#13;
these education cuts are bad for&#13;
society.&#13;
"If a legislator gets 150 calls in&#13;
one day about education cuts&#13;
instead of two or three," said&#13;
Pfaffl, "he's going to think, 'Hey,&#13;
these people are involved — th ey&#13;
know what's happening.' There&#13;
has to be a united front now. There&#13;
has to be opposition now.&#13;
"We're having a drastic cutback&#13;
on the state and national&#13;
level," said Pfaffl. "Then you&#13;
have cutbacks on financial aid and&#13;
on top of it all you have higher&#13;
tuition. It's almost guaranteed&#13;
that tuition will go up $100 next&#13;
year." The reason for the tuition&#13;
increase is that the percentage&#13;
students pay of th e total education&#13;
costs of the UW System will be&#13;
raised from the current 25 percent&#13;
(the state picks up the other 75&#13;
percent).&#13;
Pfaffl said this will make access&#13;
to the universities harder. "What&#13;
are our priorities here?" he said.&#13;
"Are the people in control trying&#13;
to bring a more diversive split&#13;
between those who have and don't&#13;
have? A good wa y of doing that is&#13;
by cutting down education&#13;
because education is one of the&#13;
best ways of climbing the ladder."&#13;
The November elections can&#13;
make or break students, said&#13;
Pfaffl. "Legislators are growing&#13;
paranoid, I think, of the growing&#13;
awareness that's happening&#13;
throughout the campuses," he&#13;
said.&#13;
But Pfaffl says more students&#13;
have to become actively involved.&#13;
Students have to be concerned and&#13;
they have to activate their concern.&#13;
&#13;
"Help us," said Pfaffl. "Help&#13;
PSGA become a political force. It&#13;
will benefit the students in the&#13;
long run."&#13;
The toll - free number for&#13;
Legislative Hotline is 1-800-362-&#13;
9696.&#13;
G. Gordon Liddy&#13;
to speak April 19&#13;
G. Gordon Liddy, controversial&#13;
mastermind of the Watergate&#13;
break-ins, will give his version of&#13;
the scandal that scuttled the&#13;
Nixon administration in a talk at&#13;
Parkside at 8 p.m. on Monday,&#13;
April 19, in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Liddy's topic is "Government:&#13;
Public Perception vs. Reality."&#13;
His talk is sponsored by the&#13;
Performing Arts and Lecture&#13;
Committee of the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, a student&#13;
organization. Admission is $3 and&#13;
tickets are available at the&#13;
Campus Union Information&#13;
Center; $2 for UW-P students.&#13;
Liddy served 4-1/2 years in&#13;
prison for his role in the&#13;
Watergate break - ins. Subsequently,&#13;
he has been a successful&#13;
lecturer and author. His&#13;
autobiography, "Will," has been a&#13;
best - seller.&#13;
Born in New York City in 1930,&#13;
Liddy earned a bachelor of&#13;
science degree from Fordham&#13;
College and a doctor of law from&#13;
the Fordham Law School, where&#13;
he was a member of the Law&#13;
Review. Liddy served two years&#13;
as an Army officer and five as a&#13;
special agent of the FBI where,&#13;
after six commendations he&#13;
became, at 29, one of the youngest&#13;
men ever to serve as a Bureau&#13;
Supervisor on the staff of J. Edgar&#13;
GORDON LIDDY&#13;
Hoover.&#13;
After practicing international&#13;
law in Manhattan, serving as a&#13;
prosecutor and an unsuccessful&#13;
candidate for Congress, Liddy&#13;
returned to Washington where he&#13;
served as Special Assistant to the&#13;
Secretary of the Treasury and its&#13;
Enforcement Legislative Counsel&#13;
before becoming Staff Assistant to&#13;
the President in the first Nixon&#13;
administration.&#13;
There he served in the special&#13;
investigative unit "ODESSA",&#13;
later to become known as the&#13;
"Plumbers", then became&#13;
General Counsel to the Committee&#13;
to Re-elect the President, from&#13;
which he directed the Watergate&#13;
break-in.&#13;
Inside&#13;
• Letters, letters,&#13;
letters&#13;
New Music:&#13;
The Classics&#13;
• Women's softball&#13;
starts&#13;
• Creationism &#13;
2 Thursday, April 8,1982 RANGER&#13;
THE ADMINISTRATION'S EXECUTIVE&#13;
ORDER WOULD C LASSIFY&#13;
AS SECRET ANY INFORMATION&#13;
Recall would hurt PSGA&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
I am writing in response to the&#13;
harmful letter being distributed&#13;
concerning the recall of PSGA&#13;
President James Kreuser. I have&#13;
worked very closely with Jim as&#13;
Legislative Affairs Director, and&#13;
know how hard he works for his&#13;
fellow students. It isn't unusual to&#13;
see him working away in the office&#13;
at all hours of the night.&#13;
Jim and I have been in close&#13;
contact with our local and state&#13;
legislators, and are preparing to&#13;
campaign for Dem. Governor&#13;
candidate Tony Earl. Through the&#13;
Senate we have fought the tuition&#13;
surcharge, raising of the drinking&#13;
age, library cutbacks, tuition&#13;
increases, financial aid cutbacks,&#13;
and the $432,200 that Parkside&#13;
could lose next year furthering&#13;
our problems. On the domestic&#13;
front Jim has been working on the&#13;
proposed changes to the Breadth&#13;
of Knowledge requirements,&#13;
starting up the Union Operating&#13;
Board, starting a legal service on&#13;
campus, teaching evaluation&#13;
system, and a committee to look&#13;
into research requirements for&#13;
tenure and contract renewals,&#13;
among other things.&#13;
This recall, if to some horrid&#13;
possibility would work would only&#13;
break apart the great strides that&#13;
PSGA has made during the James&#13;
Kreuser ERA, and to future&#13;
possibilities. Can't the losers face&#13;
the fact that they lost the election&#13;
fair and square, and to go on their&#13;
merry way instead of trying to&#13;
divide an already divided Senate?&#13;
Michael Pfaffl&#13;
Legislative Affairs Director&#13;
PSGA Senate&#13;
...WHICH MIGHT SUGGEST&#13;
"VULNERABILITIES OR CAPABILITIES&#13;
O F S YSTEMS, INSTALLATIONS&#13;
PROJECTS OR PLANS THAT RELATE&#13;
T O NATIONAL SECURm) •&#13;
IN O THER NEWS THE KREMLIN ON THE GROUNDS THAT IT&#13;
WOULD REl£Asfe NO INFORMATION&#13;
ON LEONID BREZHNEV'S natutmai^ ww!tv 10&#13;
HOSPITALIZATION ^r-r^ N^I^^SECURlTY. -&#13;
Write Ranger a Letter!!!&#13;
Ex-PSGA officers rate Kreuser&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As previous Presidents and Vice&#13;
- Presidents of Parkside Student&#13;
Government we have observed&#13;
the last year's performance of our&#13;
current President Jim Krueser.&#13;
We believe he has not consistantly&#13;
upheld the constitutional and&#13;
traditional roles of PSGA&#13;
President, and has not always&#13;
served the best interests of the&#13;
students at UW-Parkside.&#13;
It is our concensus that an&#13;
adequate President would do the&#13;
following :&#13;
1. Provide faculty and administration&#13;
with student&#13;
response to various issues;&#13;
2. Transmit information from&#13;
faculty and administration to the&#13;
PSGA Senate and the student&#13;
body;&#13;
3. Publish and maintain office&#13;
hours (in the PSGA office) during&#13;
periods of prime student attendance&#13;
so that he/she is&#13;
available to the Senate and&#13;
students;&#13;
4. Appoint students to voting&#13;
positions on faculty committees;&#13;
5. Submit PSGA budget to&#13;
SUFAC on time, and appoint a&#13;
treasurer;&#13;
6. Exhibit model behavior. As a&#13;
leader of the campus representing&#13;
a wide variety of students, the&#13;
President should be a role model&#13;
who looks out for the interests of&#13;
all the students.&#13;
Jim Kreuser's actions as&#13;
President of PSGA during the past&#13;
year have been in contradiction to&#13;
the above basic criteria. Some&#13;
examples of this are:&#13;
Pogreba explains recall&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
By now I'm sure most of you&#13;
have read of heard something&#13;
about a recall election for the&#13;
office of President of PSGA. As it&#13;
will be evident, and as it should&#13;
be, there will be quite a controversy&#13;
over this issue. There are&#13;
some questions as to how this&#13;
controversy will affect PSGA as&#13;
an effective student representation&#13;
body. When I first heard&#13;
about this recall I too had&#13;
reservations as to the effects on&#13;
PSGA. But after analyzing the&#13;
current problems of the leadership&#13;
within PSGA, I feel that&#13;
ignoring the situation would be&#13;
even more detrimental to the&#13;
overall effectiveness of PSGA&#13;
than the controversy itself would&#13;
be.&#13;
The key word in the preceding&#13;
paragraph is REPRESENTATION;&#13;
specifically student&#13;
representation. Do we have it? Is&#13;
it effective? Obviously I feel we do&#13;
not have proper representation&#13;
and the representation we do have&#13;
is inferior to the standards we&#13;
have had in the past years. That&#13;
was my main reason for running&#13;
for President.&#13;
The office of President is a&#13;
critical position in any&#13;
organization. It is a position of&#13;
policy setting and decision&#13;
making and the administration of&#13;
those same policies and decisions.&#13;
These policies and decisions&#13;
reflect the interest of the entire&#13;
student body and therefore should&#13;
not be taken lightly.&#13;
The office of President also&#13;
holds power. That is the power to&#13;
delegate such things as authority&#13;
and credit. But the one thing the&#13;
President cannot delegate is&#13;
responsibility; responsibility to&#13;
his or her constituents. If the&#13;
President neglects those&#13;
responsibilities it not only makes&#13;
the organization look bad but also&#13;
the body that he represents.&#13;
The responsibilities of President&#13;
of PSGA are stated in the constitution;&#13;
they are varied and too&#13;
extensive to fully explain at this&#13;
time. However, there is one&#13;
responsibility which I feel is the&#13;
most important of all the&#13;
responsibilities of the President&#13;
and must be stated at this time.&#13;
That responsibility is the insurance&#13;
of communication flow.&#13;
The communication flow between&#13;
— administration, other student&#13;
organizations and anyone the&#13;
president comes in contact with —&#13;
and the Senate (which is the real&#13;
voice of the students and the true&#13;
governing body within PSGA).&#13;
An example of the neglect of this&#13;
responsibility is stated as one of&#13;
the reasons for the recall. That is:&#13;
lack of communication with administration&#13;
on student - related&#13;
interests. This reason by all&#13;
means is not exagerrated and can&#13;
even be carried to a further extent.&#13;
The current President has&#13;
not attended two out of the last&#13;
three Senate meetings. This not&#13;
only increases the lack of communication&#13;
flow but also leads to&#13;
the ignorance of the Senate on&#13;
administrative decisions concerning&#13;
students.&#13;
Basically what I'm trying to say&#13;
is that I do favor a recall election&#13;
and will do anything I can to see&#13;
that it becomes a reality. I feel&#13;
that the controversy over this&#13;
issue will not be detrimental to&#13;
PSGA but is necessary for the&#13;
positive growth of PSGA.&#13;
Phil Pogreba&#13;
1. Currently the modern&#13;
technology proposal of the&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
requirements is being evaluated.&#13;
Jim did not consult the Senate as&#13;
to their opinions regarding this&#13;
issue and therefore did not&#13;
transmit their feelings to the&#13;
faculty committee.&#13;
2. The Faculty Senate requested&#13;
that Student Government extablish&#13;
a new procedure for the&#13;
Teaching Excellence Award.&#13;
Traditionally, Student Government&#13;
has placed high value on this&#13;
issue. As President, Jim is&#13;
responsible to make sure this was&#13;
accomplished. To date no such&#13;
procedure has been developed.&#13;
Chancellor Guskin requested that&#13;
Jim appoint two students to the&#13;
Sexual Harrassment Task Force.&#13;
Jim delayed the actions of this&#13;
committee by neglecting this&#13;
charge.&#13;
3. Jim has not supplied a&#13;
schedule of office hours when he&#13;
would be available, prime times&#13;
for this would have been mornings,&#13;
afternoons and early&#13;
evenings. The only established&#13;
"office hours" Jim has ever admitted&#13;
to have been in the Union&#13;
Square or at home by phone.&#13;
4. There were many unfilled&#13;
student seats on faculty committees&#13;
because Jim did not take&#13;
the responsibility to fill them. He&#13;
also did not monitor the attendance&#13;
and proceedings of&#13;
many of the student representatives&#13;
on the remaining committees.&#13;
The result of these actions&#13;
was the loss of students'&#13;
voting voice on these committees.&#13;
A specific application of this was&#13;
in the Library Learning Center&#13;
Committee where no students&#13;
were on/or attending these&#13;
meetings where $70,000 of budget&#13;
cuts in periodical subscriptions&#13;
were proposed. There was no&#13;
student input on this issue until it&#13;
was specifically requested by the&#13;
Chancellor.&#13;
5. Since SUFAC provides the&#13;
funds that support student&#13;
government it is imperative to&#13;
have budget requests submitted to&#13;
them on time. During the past&#13;
year PSGA's budget was turned in&#13;
two weeks late. Perhaps if Jim&#13;
had appointed a treasurer as it&#13;
states in the Constitution he would&#13;
have had help in fulfilling this&#13;
commitment.&#13;
6. Examples of Jim Kreuser's&#13;
reo c c uri ng i n a p p r o p ria te&#13;
Presidential behavior are:&#13;
• consuming alcoholic&#13;
beverages outside of the Union&#13;
and in the PSGA office which&#13;
violates University policy.&#13;
t obtaining furniture for the&#13;
President's office that was not&#13;
properly requisitioned.&#13;
We have allowed Jim Kreuser&#13;
the past year to develop as&#13;
President of PSGA, we can no&#13;
longer afford incompetency in the&#13;
President's position for the sake of&#13;
the students, Parkside Student&#13;
Government and the University.&#13;
Tim Zimmer,&#13;
President 79-80&#13;
Dave Hale,&#13;
Vice President 79-8C&#13;
Tracy Gruber&#13;
President 80-81&#13;
Claire Tolstyga&#13;
Vice President 80-81&#13;
Kay Mullikin&#13;
Vice President 80-81&#13;
Kathy Bambrough&#13;
Vice President 81-82&#13;
Kathy Slama&#13;
Vice President 81-82&#13;
Recall ridiculous&#13;
We have noticed petitions circulating&#13;
on this campus recently.&#13;
These petitions are asking for a&#13;
new Presidential election,&#13;
because some people feel the&#13;
wrong man won. There is ideally&#13;
nothing wrong with fighting to&#13;
correct an injustice, but in this&#13;
case there was NO injustice done.&#13;
This whole idea is ridiculous. The&#13;
grounds for the recall are weak&#13;
and ambiguous at best.&#13;
It is true that Kreuser didn't&#13;
receive a majority, but in an&#13;
election with four candidates only&#13;
a plurality is needed to win. If a&#13;
majority were needed, then a&#13;
primary should have been held.&#13;
Furthermore, to address the&#13;
question of Presidential job&#13;
performance, it is clear to us that&#13;
Kreuser did far beyond the&#13;
"requirements" that are called&#13;
for in his position. As many people&#13;
know, the power in student&#13;
governance is with the Senate&#13;
The President is a guiding force&#13;
without supreme power&#13;
According to the PSGA Constitution,&#13;
"15% of the Parkside&#13;
student body must sign the&#13;
petition." Assuming that this&#13;
petition receives the required 800&#13;
student signatures, are these all&#13;
students that voted in the last&#13;
election? Hell No! Where were&#13;
these students on election day!&#13;
They had their chance — whose&#13;
fault is it that they did not utilize&#13;
their opportunity? In effect, the&#13;
petitioners are saying that the&#13;
election process that has served&#13;
this country for over two hundred&#13;
years is no longer good enough.&#13;
Losing is part of the game, and&#13;
it is obvious that some people just&#13;
don't know how to play. It seems&#13;
to us, this whole idea of a new&#13;
election is rather absurd. Why not&#13;
work with the President instead of&#13;
causing continual turmoil? Let's&#13;
work together to eliminate student&#13;
problems and continue to work&#13;
toward the students' goals.&#13;
A1 Spallato&#13;
PSGA Senator&#13;
Chuck Betz&#13;
PSGA Vice President&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Steve Myers&#13;
Mark Sanders&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Andy Petersen&#13;
Linda Andersen&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
ganger Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Co-Photo Editor&#13;
Co-Photo Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Pattv • ' ^&#13;
3rd Beal&#13;
' Gre« Bonofiglio, Carol Bui&#13;
Lisa l^h ^&#13;
ry Kaddatz&#13;
' Joe Kimm, Karla Kol&#13;
O^trowiuf iS Luehr&#13;
' Dick Oberbruner, Ch&#13;
Masood bhafiq, Tammy Shuemate, Jeff Wii&#13;
uw parkside and ,hey are&#13;
RANGER is printed bythe lUnion r™ '&#13;
1cad&#13;
,&#13;
emic vear except during breaks and hoi&#13;
Written permission is required for rTor m /r Publishin&#13;
9 Co&#13;
- Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
All correspondence should be artrtrfc 2 .&#13;
any P°&#13;
r,ion of RANGER.&#13;
Parkside, Box No. 2000 Kenn&gt;;hA \«? Parkside Ranger, University o&lt; Wisi&#13;
Letters to the Editor win ! ' Wisconsin, 53141.&#13;
paper with one inch marqins A?iP&#13;
iff, " ,ypewri,,en&#13;
' doublespaced on standar&#13;
c uded for verification etters must be signed and a telephone numb&#13;
Setts';:&#13;
1? ;v&#13;
iw "»»»»•&#13;
reserves all editorial pSae.f'in t ?' .&#13;
,or P&#13;
ubli«»ion on Thursday. The RAt&#13;
^defamatory content. refusing to print letters which contain fa &#13;
N N,&lt;» \&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 8,1982&#13;
vocated the basic precept of man&#13;
actualizing himself as an individual&#13;
without a basic moral&#13;
standard. This is the basic&#13;
foundation of punker philosophy.&#13;
However, Sartre's absurdity&#13;
becomes absurd. Sartre, himself,&#13;
in the development of his own self&#13;
- actualization, betrayed his own&#13;
ideology by signing the Algerian&#13;
Manifesto and aligning himself to&#13;
a moral cause. What good is a&#13;
philosophy of a man who cannot&#13;
live up to his own philosophy?&#13;
Furthermore, as Lord Devlin&#13;
advocates and past capitalistic&#13;
history indicates (capitalism as&#13;
we know it, so staunchly advocated&#13;
by John Hawls) the individual&#13;
and individual idiosyncracies&#13;
have no precedence over&#13;
society and, thus, sociological&#13;
unity must be maintained at the&#13;
invonvenience of a few irrational&#13;
and trivial sects. Thus, in lieu of&#13;
Sartre's philosophy, punkdom has&#13;
no place in the limelight of&#13;
American life, in view of its&#13;
socially unacceptable ideologies&#13;
and practices, e.g. slam dancing&#13;
and the pinning or stapling of&#13;
one's own cheek. Though the&#13;
movement as a whole is now&#13;
proven intolerable to capitalistic&#13;
society, so staunchy advocated by&#13;
Harvard Philosophy graduate&#13;
John Rawls, let us hope this does&#13;
not by association render a permanent&#13;
adverse effect on the&#13;
individual's intellectual maturity.&#13;
In maintaining our objectivity,&#13;
we see no concrete evidence of&#13;
any feasible alternatives advocated&#13;
by punkdom in regards to&#13;
more fruitful individual lifestyles&#13;
— somewhat ironically, though,&#13;
we see quite the opposite. Instead,&#13;
we perceive thousands upon&#13;
thousands of confused and&#13;
seemingly brainwashed individual's&#13;
advocating an extremely&#13;
vehement liberality for&#13;
the sake of being liberal. There is&#13;
no rational cause, no rational&#13;
alternative, or no rational standard&#13;
of living, hence there is no&#13;
rational movement. Simply&#13;
radical expression for the sake of&#13;
expressing radicality — all at the&#13;
expense of the fine capitalistic&#13;
tradition, so staunchly advocated&#13;
by John Rawls.&#13;
Instead, we have formulated a&#13;
more rational alternative to punk&#13;
rock. It is possible, in theory, to&#13;
advocate a new form of Neo -&#13;
Darwinism relating back to&#13;
Berlin, 1935, but, as one can&#13;
plainly see this is neither&#13;
workable nor ethical. We have&#13;
come to the conclusion that&#13;
punkers are attention seekers, a&#13;
paranoia of extreme socio -&#13;
psychological significance.&#13;
Viewed from the systems perspective&#13;
of communication,&#13;
developed by Professor Lee&#13;
Thayer of U.W. - Parkside,&#13;
punkers commit the actions they&#13;
do in search of feedback, positive&#13;
or negative, which, in turn, serves&#13;
as new input which, while being&#13;
unique to the model of Thayer's, is&#13;
mentally regressive; this process&#13;
is on - going and dynamic until it&#13;
renders the individual mentally&#13;
incompetent. This was not&#13;
Thayer's purpose — his purpose is&#13;
mental growth and social&#13;
awareness, the opposite of what&#13;
happens in the punk realm. The&#13;
only way to rid ourselves of this&#13;
growing influx of warped egos,&#13;
neurotic sensationalism and&#13;
social depravity is to socially&#13;
ignore, shun, and avoid punkdom&#13;
in hopes that it will no longer be&#13;
fueled by society's acknowledgement&#13;
of its existence,&#13;
that its flame will flicker and&#13;
Continued On Page Four&#13;
rationalized and advocated by&#13;
Harvard Philosophy graduate&#13;
John Rawls and, of course, ex-con,&#13;
country - western singer Merle&#13;
Haggard. Truly, in their blind&#13;
ignorance, punkers have attacked&#13;
the principles and roots that have&#13;
made America great; our&#13;
America, which has had such&#13;
tremendous success throughout&#13;
the world with its highly defined&#13;
moral code based on social&#13;
uniformity and its implementation&#13;
of a truly&#13;
democratic, capitalistic structure;&#13;
which is so staunchly advocated&#13;
by John Rawls. How then&#13;
do we defeat the parasitical entourage&#13;
of depravity, which has&#13;
eaten away at the basic foundation&#13;
of this country that the&#13;
middle - class has so diligently&#13;
worked to create?&#13;
According to Lord Patrick&#13;
Devlin's principles, there is a&#13;
moral right for society to silence&#13;
and sanction punk rock. It is clear&#13;
that a majority of people when&#13;
questioned, would find punk rock&#13;
"indignant, intolerable, and&#13;
disgusting," which according to&#13;
Lord Devlin allows society a&#13;
certain moral, right to sanction&#13;
and override the individual's&#13;
right, as long as it applies to the&#13;
destruction of society's basic&#13;
moral fibers. In contrast, Jean -&#13;
Paul Sartre, in his infinite&#13;
wisdom, became the forerunner of&#13;
punker ideology. Sartre adEVEN&#13;
STRAIGHT A'S CAN'T&#13;
HELP IF YOU FLUNK TUITION&#13;
Today, the toughest thing about going&#13;
to college is finding the money to pay tor it.&#13;
But Army ROTC can help - two&#13;
ways!&#13;
First, you can apply tor an Army&#13;
ROTC scholarship. It covers tuition,&#13;
books, and supplies, and pays you A&#13;
up to $1,000 each school year it's f .M.&#13;
But even if you're riot a iSB&#13;
scholarship recipient,&#13;
ROTC can still help QQJ&#13;
with financial assis- fhyz&#13;
tance—up to $1,000&#13;
last two years in&#13;
the program. I jB&#13;
contact your&#13;
M1A^ROTC!&#13;
CC' i&#13;
BEALLYOUCANBE. \\ **&#13;
Kircher plays dirty trick&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
One of my teachers, Kraig&#13;
Kircher, recently went a little too&#13;
far in using his authority as a&#13;
teacher. I am in his Process of&#13;
Management class. The primary&#13;
goal of the class is to learn how to&#13;
be a good manager (or so I&#13;
thought).&#13;
One of the points Mr. Kircher&#13;
has been stressing is the fact that&#13;
managers won't be in their&#13;
current job position long if th ey do&#13;
not listen to, and treat their&#13;
subordinates fairly. To me this&#13;
attitude was not demonstrated by&#13;
Kircher when he graded our last&#13;
exam. There were 2 bonus&#13;
questions, worth a total of 9 points,&#13;
in which he stated there would be&#13;
no penalization for not answering&#13;
them. He did not indicate anything&#13;
about being penalized for trying,&#13;
but I was. I got both questions&#13;
wrong and as a result had my&#13;
grade drop from a B plus to a C&#13;
(on a normal curve). This happened&#13;
because my percentage&#13;
was taken out of 110 instead of 101,&#13;
which was the total amount of&#13;
points without the bonus.&#13;
When someone complained to&#13;
him about it not being fair, he&#13;
simply stated that there had to be&#13;
an element of risk. Dirty pool,&#13;
Kraig, dirty pool. If h e plays these&#13;
kinds of tricks, I can imagine what&#13;
he would do to my next essay&#13;
exam and case if he found out I&#13;
wrote this.&#13;
Abused Student&#13;
'Parkside&#13;
STILL&#13;
Has Style"&#13;
Call: %&#13;
Cpt. Moldenhauer&#13;
Marquette Un. A. ROTC&#13;
Call collect 1-224-7229/7915&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
PARKSIDE FOODSERVICE&#13;
^ INVITES YOU TO. . .&#13;
^ Get 'em While&#13;
They're Hot&#13;
FRESH FROM OUR OVENS EACH DAY&#13;
BETWEEN 7:30 &amp; 8:00 am&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
hours for *&#13;
Easter Weekend&#13;
Saturday,&#13;
April 10&#13;
noon - 1 a.m.&#13;
Sunday, April 11&#13;
Closed&#13;
• APPLE OR CHERRY TURNOVERS&#13;
• CARMEL NUT ROLLS&#13;
• CINNAMON ROLLS&#13;
• APPLE OR CHERRY STRUDEL&#13;
ALSO: TRY YOUR OLD FAVORITES .. . NEW &amp; IMPROVED&#13;
CHOCOLATE BROWNIES, B.A.C.'s, BERRY PIES,&#13;
SPECIALTY CAKES, ETC. &#13;
6 Thursday, April 8,1982 RANGER&#13;
Club Events^w^w&#13;
Improving&#13;
employee attitude&#13;
A workshop will be held at 7&#13;
p.m. on April 14, in Moln 109. The&#13;
speaker will be Steven H. Van&#13;
Wie. All faculty and students&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Chemistry club&#13;
The chemistry club trip to Abbot&#13;
Labs will be held April 23.&#13;
Departure is 1 p.m. and return is&#13;
approximately 4:30 p.m. A sign -&#13;
up sheet will be posted in Grqst.&#13;
227.&#13;
TWO ARMY MP's demonstrated several moves capable with ChpPrlpArlprc&#13;
one of their specially trained dogs last Monday in Mainplace.&#13;
V,,CCI lcc,uw5&#13;
The MP's demonstrated how the dogs were trained to attack and&#13;
heel. For part of the demonstration, they asked for volunteers&#13;
from the audience and they showed how handy a trained dog&#13;
could be doing police work. The dog, "Moonshine" also showed&#13;
his intelligence by trying to take a bite out of his trainer's arm.&#13;
There's going to be a car wash&#13;
May 6 and 7, in the Tallent parking&#13;
lot. The event is sponsored by the&#13;
cheerleaders, other details will be&#13;
posted later.&#13;
Engineering contest held&#13;
The ultimate in energy saving —&#13;
a vehicle that runs on rubber band&#13;
power — will be the design&#13;
challenge facing high school&#13;
students participating in an&#13;
engineering contest this spring at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Deadline for entries is April 16&#13;
and the contest will take place at&#13;
1:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 2, in&#13;
Molinaro Hall. Both team and&#13;
individual entries are eligible and&#13;
design specifications are&#13;
available from the Parkside&#13;
Alumni Association in Wyllie&#13;
Library - Learning Center (Phone&#13;
553-2515).&#13;
Each design will be judged in&#13;
two categories, maximum&#13;
distance traveled on a circular&#13;
course and most creative and&#13;
innovative design. Cash prizes&#13;
will be awarded to the winners.&#13;
The event is sponsored by Gould&#13;
Inc. - Gettys Motion Control&#13;
Division, Unico, Inc., Young&#13;
Radiator Co. and Easton Corp. in&#13;
cooperation with the Parkside&#13;
Engineering Alumni Association&#13;
and the UW-P Engineering&#13;
Science Division.&#13;
Following the contest the&#13;
engineering facilities will be open&#13;
for inspection. ********•********•****•**********.**&#13;
Write a letter to Ranger&#13;
AUTOGRAPHING&#13;
PARTIES&#13;
April 10th — 12-2&#13;
Professor Thomas C. Reeves of UW - Parkside will discuss and&#13;
anWE^E MCTARTC1"&#13;
31 test selIer&#13;
-&#13;
THE L1FE&#13;
April 17th — 12 - 2&#13;
Aprils he tn £"h&#13;
meet U1&#13;
/&#13;
tr&#13;
r&#13;
dS and aUtogra&#13;
I&gt;&#13;
h his b&#13;
°°"s- On&#13;
Writers for bevondtwo RIVERS&#13;
8&#13;
" by Frie&#13;
"&#13;
dS&#13;
°&#13;
f America&#13;
"&#13;
• We have complete stocks of four beautiful lines of "alternative"&#13;
greeting cards, including those for Mothers' and Fathers' Dav&#13;
and graduation. These lines are proving very popular.&#13;
# ?l&#13;
rn&#13;
SAati2&#13;
n&#13;
f&#13;
ry deP&#13;
a&#13;
,&#13;
rt™ent now features Crane and Caspari&#13;
if&#13;
ml'- 1I&#13;
?&#13;
cludir&#13;
?&#13;
g invitations, place cards, thank - you&#13;
S stationery! " * PrmtCd a&#13;
"&#13;
d engraved weddil&#13;
« and&#13;
* Travel books have been increased, too. Make your&#13;
gufde book! C&#13;
°&#13;
r gn&#13;
' m°&#13;
re enjoyable by Purchasing a good&#13;
• The Old Book Corner offers over 1500 volumes of used, rare and&#13;
out - of - print books at very reasonable prices. Our April book&#13;
sale feautres actors, playwrights and Hollywood. To celebrate&#13;
Shakespeare s birthday, on April 23 - 24 we will offer&#13;
Shakespeariana.&#13;
f&gt;cofak CtXSL,&#13;
312 Sixth Street — Racine&#13;
Telephone 632-5195&#13;
Mastercard and VISA Cards Welcomed&#13;
Physics club&#13;
The Physics Club will be&#13;
traveling to Chicago April 16 for a&#13;
tour of Adler Planetarium.&#13;
vSpace&#13;
is limited to 15 seats; Physics club&#13;
members have priority.&#13;
Remaining spaces will be open to&#13;
anyone interested in attending.&#13;
For info, attend the April 12&#13;
meeting at 1 p.m., in Grqst 230.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
PSE is sponsoring a bake sale&#13;
on Thursday, April 8 to help send&#13;
representatives to the national&#13;
convention in Atlanta.&#13;
The second annual PSE LOOP&#13;
500 is scheduled for the end of&#13;
April.&#13;
PSE general meetings are held&#13;
every Wednesday at 1 p.m.&#13;
Meeting places will be posted&#13;
along the concourse. All interested&#13;
student are welcome.&#13;
Industrial&#13;
Psychology Group&#13;
The Industrial Psychology&#13;
Group will hold an organizational&#13;
meeting for students interested in&#13;
gaining information about the&#13;
Industrial / Organizational&#13;
Psychology concentration. The&#13;
meeting will be held at 1 p.m.,&#13;
April 14, in Union 209. Students&#13;
V&#13;
presently involved in the concentration&#13;
will be available to&#13;
provide information and answer&#13;
questions.&#13;
SNO&#13;
Elections for next year's officers&#13;
of the Parkside Student&#13;
Nurse Organization will take&#13;
place April 12-16. Ballots and&#13;
ballot boxes will be placed in&#13;
WLLC D-175 and Tallent Hall&#13;
Nursing Lab until 4 p.m.&#13;
The next SNO meeting will be&#13;
held Monday, April 19 at 12:30&#13;
p.m., Tallent Hall 182.&#13;
Special Appeal: To all R.N.'s&#13;
and any other present or former&#13;
nursing publication or medical&#13;
publication subscribers. (Journal&#13;
Nursing, Nursing Outlook, R.N.)&#13;
don't throw them out!!! The&#13;
Student Nurse Organization is&#13;
trying to establish a library in&#13;
Tallent Hall. Medical and Nursing&#13;
magazines, and donations are&#13;
needed. Tax exempt statements&#13;
will be issued to all donating individuals.&#13;
Contact Ann Boyle in&#13;
WLLD D-175, ext. 2480, or&#13;
Margaret Preston in Tallent Hall&#13;
at 553-2725 about donations.&#13;
Balancing Act is winner Women in Business&#13;
Parkside art professor Dennis&#13;
Bayuzick, of Kenosha, has been&#13;
awarded an honorable mention&#13;
cash award at the 25th Annual&#13;
Beloit and Vicinity Exhibition for&#13;
his airbrush acrylic painting titled&#13;
"Balancing Act."&#13;
The show, which remains on&#13;
view at the Wright Art Center at&#13;
Beloit College through April 10,&#13;
was judged by Katherine Mead,&#13;
director of the Elvehjem Museum&#13;
of Art at Madison.&#13;
Bayuzick also had paintings&#13;
accepted at four other juried&#13;
exhibits during March / April: the&#13;
58th Annual Rockford and Vicinity&#13;
Show at the Burpee Art Museum,&#13;
Rockford, 111.; the 6th National&#13;
Watercolor Exhibition at the&#13;
Springfield Art Assn. Galleries,&#13;
Springfield, Illinois; the 6th Annual&#13;
Seven State Competition at&#13;
the Nohr Gallery, UW-Platteville;&#13;
and the Galex 16 National Juried&#13;
Show at Galesburg Civic Art&#13;
Center, Galesburg, Illinois.&#13;
A member of the UW-Parkside&#13;
art faculty since 1977, and&#13;
cimrently coordinator of the Art&#13;
Discipline, Bayuzick received his&#13;
Master of Fine Arts degree from&#13;
Ohio University School of Art in&#13;
1975.&#13;
Women in Business will hold&#13;
aerobic dancing on Mondays and&#13;
Wednesdays from 1-2 p.m. in the&#13;
wrestling room of the P.E.&#13;
building.&#13;
Accounting club&#13;
On Monday, April 12, at 1 p.m.,&#13;
the Accounting Club will hold a&#13;
general meeting in Union 104.&#13;
Topics of the meeting will include&#13;
the Spring Banquet, the regional&#13;
public accounting night and much&#13;
more. Refreshments will be&#13;
served.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCI ATI ON&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wiscons&#13;
414-248-9141&#13;
, P&#13;
24J3&#13;
6 ",&#13;
75th street&#13;
- Rt. (Paddock Lake) Salem,'&#13;
414-843-2388&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5Vt% Interest R Tsar Daily&#13;
Balance Is &gt;500.00 or Morel&#13;
ISLE&#13;
WE'RE HIRE TO HHP YOU GROW! &#13;
Burned Up&#13;
Wargamers battle it out at Parkside&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
A military base on Parkside?&#13;
What's this world coming to? Just&#13;
when you thought you knew&#13;
everything about this place, you&#13;
can always manage to discover&#13;
something new.&#13;
Take, for instance, a certain&#13;
room (140) in Molinaro Hall.&#13;
Hundreds of students file past this&#13;
room daily. But how many notice&#13;
the peculiar events taking place&#13;
therein?&#13;
Strange noises and loud&#13;
laughter eminate from inside. A&#13;
green telephone hangs on the wall.&#13;
Students sit in there wearing&#13;
unny hats and stickers on their&#13;
foreheads. Whatever they do in&#13;
®re&gt; 5 sur&#13;
e seems like fun&#13;
nf rOZ ^T&#13;
c&#13;
"&#13;
riosity Sot the best&#13;
of me and I had to find out what&#13;
Zlf°!?&#13;
g&#13;
°&#13;
n UP°&#13;
n entering, I&#13;
found that this cubicle is affectionately&#13;
referred to as "The&#13;
Warroom," (much as Hawkeye's&#13;
abode is dubbed "The Swamp")&#13;
and is the headquarters of a bona -&#13;
fide'Student organization known&#13;
as the Parkside Association of&#13;
Wargamers."&#13;
So that's what they do all day&#13;
They play war games. The penViewpoint&#13;
&#13;
Mike Bassis enjoys Parkside&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
When a student has a problem&#13;
academically, they should see&#13;
their academic advisor. When an&#13;
academic advisor can't help, and&#13;
things are starting to get&#13;
desperate, students can go and see&#13;
Mike Bassis. Bassis is the&#13;
Associate Dean of Faculty, and he&#13;
deals with student academic&#13;
affairs.&#13;
The students that are on&#13;
academic probation, or have an&#13;
academic problem, usually find&#13;
their way to his office. Dropping&#13;
courses late involves the approval&#13;
of Bassis and the course instructor.&#13;
Withdrawn students&#13;
seeking re-entry also meet with&#13;
Bassis.&#13;
Bassis came to Parkside from&#13;
the University of Rhode Island on&#13;
July 1,1981. He spends about 25%&#13;
of hi s time working with special&#13;
cases within Student Academic&#13;
Affairs. The rest of his time is&#13;
spent with budgeting issues for the&#13;
divisions, evaluating faculty for&#13;
tenure and promotion, and getting&#13;
courses for the curriculum approved&#13;
through various levels.&#13;
Bassis is currently heading a&#13;
task force on student retention,&#13;
the purpose being to find ways to&#13;
upgrade the qualities of programs&#13;
and services so that Parkside is&#13;
able to retain more students. "I&#13;
would like to work t ings out so&#13;
that we can help students get what&#13;
they want right here," explained&#13;
Bassis.&#13;
He has two text books published&#13;
on S ociology, one of them being&#13;
used at Parkside. Bassis is the&#13;
Patronize R anger A duertisers&#13;
"Welcome back students!" Have fun!&#13;
ISMELLrS B AKERY&#13;
• DANISH TORTi CAKES • KilNOUS • WHJOiNG&#13;
CAKES • CAKES FOR AI L OCCASIONS • FINE&#13;
ITAUAN BR EAD • HARD ROLL A BUN S PECIALISTS&#13;
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BAKERY SERVICE&#13;
MON.-FRI. 6AM • 9PM&#13;
SAT. &amp; SUN. 6AM - 6PM Call&#13;
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SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC.&#13;
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR&#13;
FOR ALL SPORTS&#13;
TEAM SALE8 — ALL SPORTS&#13;
TRORHM AND AWARDS&#13;
f AST. M-HOUSE fNORAVMO SERVICE&#13;
HOURS: MOK.-FM. 1000 AM - B40 f.M.&#13;
SAT. 1040 AM.-SAOMl.&#13;
• BROOKS&#13;
• TIGER&#13;
• HIKE&#13;
• PUMA&#13;
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• CONVERSE&#13;
• SPOT-BUK T&#13;
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• NEW BALANCE&#13;
CLOSED SUNDAY! k HOUDAYS&#13;
The Activs Athletes Or* Stop&#13;
694-9206 aHMIH SI. •»««*.«&#13;
"His E NTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% I&#13;
» WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
tagon ought to love this. These&#13;
students have enough equipment&#13;
to re - choreograph almost any&#13;
war that has ever taken place. In&#13;
fact, they sometimes do research&#13;
on b attles and could probably tell&#13;
the military hot - shots just where&#13;
they went wrong. Perhaps that's&#13;
what the telephone is for — but&#13;
shouldn't it be red?&#13;
The Wargamers try to keep&#13;
their games as realistic as&#13;
possible by having members who&#13;
are qualified to play the parts of&#13;
demented officers. These people&#13;
should be in special demand if th e&#13;
U.S. would be so unfortunate as to&#13;
enter into another war.&#13;
If real battles aren't your bag,&#13;
fantasy war games such as the&#13;
fabled "Dungeons and Dragons"&#13;
can be found on the shelves. By&#13;
hosting the annual Gen - Con in&#13;
August, when wargamers from&#13;
across the country descend upon&#13;
Parkside, this student club actually&#13;
makes money for the&#13;
university every year. (Which in&#13;
turn distinguishes it from many of&#13;
the other parasitic student&#13;
organizations that infest&#13;
Parkside.)&#13;
So even though these students&#13;
appear only to be "wasting time&#13;
and their GPA's," they may&#13;
foreshadow a time when wars are&#13;
fought with cardboard tanks and&#13;
plastic dice, and the greatest&#13;
injuries inflicted are paper cuts.&#13;
Ensemble to&#13;
present concert&#13;
A joint concert by the Parkside&#13;
Percussion Encemble and the&#13;
Chamber Percussion Ensemble of&#13;
Carroll College will be presented&#13;
at 8 p.m. on Monday, April 12 in&#13;
Parkside's Comm. Arts Theater.&#13;
The ensembles will play charts&#13;
by Peters, Schiffman, Elias,&#13;
Beck, Latimer, Doemland and&#13;
Parchman. Linda Raymond&#13;
directs the UW-P group and&#13;
James Sewery the Carroll group.&#13;
Admission is $1 for students; $2&#13;
for others.&#13;
A faculty recital by classical&#13;
guitarist Susan Gulick scheduled&#13;
for April 18 has been cancelled.&#13;
Wouldn't that be great?&#13;
MICHAEL BASSIS&#13;
editor of the journal, "Teaching&#13;
Sociology." The publication is&#13;
released four times a year and&#13;
contains essays and research&#13;
papers on how to improve instruction&#13;
in Sociology.&#13;
Being new keeps him learning&#13;
new ways to be helpful and new&#13;
ways that he is expected to be&#13;
helpful. "I love this place," said&#13;
Bassis. "I like Wisconsin, I like&#13;
Parkside, and I like the people&#13;
I've met. I have an enormous&#13;
amount of respect for the institution.&#13;
The issues of teaching&#13;
and learning are very important&#13;
to me. I guess that's why I'm in&#13;
this type of work. I don't think I've&#13;
ever been more excited about&#13;
what I am doing. Sometimes it's&#13;
overwhelming,, but it doesn't&#13;
distract from the excitement."&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
ALL STUDENTS!&#13;
YOUR REGISTRATION PACKET FOR FALL 1982&#13;
will be available beginning Monday, April 12, 1982&#13;
at the Informational Kiosk in WLLC Main Pace.&#13;
OFFICE OF INSTITUTIONAL&#13;
* ANALYSIS AND REGISTRATION&#13;
4- *&#13;
r&#13;
*•••••••••••••••••••••••*•••••••*••••••••••••••••••••$&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
J * * * * * * * *&#13;
*•*-«- IX r&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
FOR&#13;
FALL SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are&#13;
seeking a degree at UW-Parkside) should consult their&#13;
academic advisor prior to registration for Fall Semester.&#13;
A Certification of Advising form, signed by the advisor, is&#13;
required for registration.&#13;
Fall Semester Course Schedules will be available on April&#13;
12. A pril 12-26 h as been designated as an academic advising&#13;
period, and advisors will make every effort to meet&#13;
with you then.&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
CONTACT YOUR ADVISOR FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
If you have any questions, contact the Office of the Dean&#13;
of F aculty, 348 Wyllie Library - Lear ning Center, 553-2144.&#13;
NOTE: Non - ma triculant students (students not seeking&#13;
a degree at UW-Parkside) are exempt from this&#13;
requirement. &#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 8,1982&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Creationism is a subject of great&#13;
controversy. Professor Steve&#13;
Dutch of UW - Green Bay led an&#13;
entertaining and informing lecture&#13;
last Friday on creationism.&#13;
Dutch started by explaining that&#13;
little children see the world as&#13;
being run by magic. For instance,&#13;
often times when an only child is&#13;
blessed with a baby brother or&#13;
sister, that only child would prefer&#13;
that the baby be taken back to the&#13;
store where it was purchased.&#13;
Dutch also pointed out that most&#13;
people spend their lives believing&#13;
the magic to some extent. Cause&#13;
and effect aren't really connected&#13;
as far as many people are concerned.&#13;
What one thinks, causes&#13;
things to happen. This is a very&#13;
magical kind of world. Even if&#13;
people are given some sort of&#13;
advanced information on a subject,&#13;
their opinion will often stay&#13;
the same as it was before they&#13;
were given the extra information.&#13;
"You can prove to people that&#13;
things will happen one way,"&#13;
explained Dutch, "but the people&#13;
still believe differently."&#13;
The different classifications of&#13;
science that Dutch explained&#13;
were: Center Science, which is a&#13;
very well - established set of rules&#13;
and results for something;&#13;
Reminder:&#13;
Checks available&#13;
Payroll&#13;
Student payroll checks will&#13;
be available in the Union&#13;
Bazaar Friday morning until&#13;
11:45 a. m. due to Good Friday.&#13;
Checks will also be available&#13;
Monday until 4 p. m. in the&#13;
Union Bazaar.&#13;
Winter Carnival&#13;
Students who won money&#13;
prizes during Winter Carnival&#13;
are reminded to pick up their&#13;
checks in Union 209.&#13;
Frontier Science relates to things&#13;
that are solidly based, but there&#13;
may be several equally possible&#13;
alternatives to something; Fringe&#13;
Science, that which is quite&#13;
speculative (perhaps ESP, or the&#13;
Loch Ness Monster. Basically,&#13;
things that may be true, but&#13;
evidence is equivicable); a&#13;
Pseudo Science is something that&#13;
has no chance of being true. According&#13;
to Dutch, creationism&#13;
tails squarely into the Pseudo&#13;
Science category.&#13;
There are many reasons why&#13;
people will believe in a Pseudo&#13;
Science. People can believe due to&#13;
a genuine conviction, or feelings&#13;
of powerlessness, and a desire for&#13;
fame or sense of rebellion: There&#13;
are also practical benefits, such&#13;
as diet fads. Pseudo Science can&#13;
offer adventure, escapism, and&#13;
maybe fun. Meeting up with&#13;
Bigfoot sounds like a wonderful&#13;
way to spend a Saturday afternoon.&#13;
Social concerns have an&#13;
effect on what people believe too.&#13;
Attention&#13;
comm. majors&#13;
All students who have declared&#13;
Communication as a major,&#13;
minor, or area of interest are&#13;
invited to attend an informational&#13;
meeting on Monday, April 12,1982,&#13;
at 1:00 p.m. in MOLN 105.&#13;
The meeting has been scheduled&#13;
by the Communication faculty to&#13;
inform students about up-coming&#13;
program revisions and the&#13;
provisions that have been made&#13;
for current Juniors and Seniors.&#13;
The Communication Program's&#13;
progressive direction and&#13;
professional emphasis will be&#13;
explained and discussed during&#13;
the hour - long meeting.&#13;
If you did not receive a meeting&#13;
notice in the mail, please notify&#13;
Professor Richard Carrington, CA&#13;
251, and plan to attend this important&#13;
gathering.&#13;
How to&#13;
do well in&#13;
Economy Class&#13;
Simple. Fly Capitol Air's Economy Class. Our&#13;
fares are the lowest of any scheduled airline so&#13;
you can use the money you save for lots of&#13;
other things. Like a Eurail pass if you fly us to&#13;
Brussels, Frankfurt or Zurich. More time in the&#13;
sun if you're headed for Miami, San Juan or&#13;
Puerto Plata. Or for even more fun in New York,&#13;
Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago or Boston.&#13;
And, if you are flying to Europe this summer,&#13;
make your reservation and buy your ticket&#13;
now. With our guaranteed fare policy you are&#13;
protected against any fare increases from now&#13;
until departure.&#13;
So if you want to do well in Economy Class,&#13;
fly Capitol's.&#13;
For reservations, call your Travel Agent or&#13;
Capitol at 312-347-0230 in Chicago, 800-572-&#13;
5788 in Illinois or 800-621 -5330 outside Illinois.&#13;
No one makes Economy Class&#13;
as economical as we do.&#13;
San Franciacof^V&#13;
Lo«&#13;
y THE LOWEST FARES&#13;
jfe Brussels&#13;
a pseudo science&#13;
As Professor Dutch started to&#13;
speak of religion and creationism,&#13;
there was a rumble of thunder&#13;
that sent the listeners and Dutch&#13;
into a small state of disbelief and&#13;
coincidence. Religion is the final&#13;
reason Dutch gave for believing a&#13;
Pseudo Science.&#13;
Dutch explained the creationists&#13;
view of earth history, containing&#13;
the following points: the earth is&#13;
young, about 10,000 years old, and&#13;
the earth actually did form during&#13;
a six - day period. Creationists&#13;
believe that the major event since&#13;
creation was the Biblical Deluge&#13;
(the flood of Noah). According to&#13;
the creationist, life was created&#13;
supernaturally, species were&#13;
created separately, and the earth&#13;
was shaped by supernatural&#13;
events.&#13;
If evolution is true, creationists&#13;
would see man as nothing more&#13;
than an animal. They are opposed&#13;
to the origin of species and plants&#13;
by evolution. "There is a&#13;
very strong, implicit statement in&#13;
creationism," stated Dutch. "It&#13;
says that you really can't believe&#13;
in God and evolution at the same&#13;
time."&#13;
What creationists are then&#13;
attempting to do is overturn&#13;
evolution by gathering and interpreting&#13;
data and convincing&#13;
others that there is reason to&#13;
doubt. They try to point out&#13;
deficiencies in current views and&#13;
point out logical errors. They also&#13;
try to answer criticism, but Dutch&#13;
doesn't believe they succeed in&#13;
doing any of those things.&#13;
Dutch feels that what a Pseudo&#13;
Science actually does is make&#13;
mistakes. Creationists actually&#13;
thrive on Methodological errors,&#13;
s a l e s m a n s h ip f a l l a c i e s,&#13;
exaggerating uncertainties and&#13;
raising doubts, by creating a&#13;
general mistrust of critical&#13;
reasoning, and by claiming that if&#13;
their own theory has not been&#13;
disproven, then it must be right.&#13;
By methodological errors,&#13;
Dutch refers to using outdated or&#13;
invalid information — to see&#13;
something cited from the 1930s&#13;
that has been long proven wrong.&#13;
A failure to follow up their information&#13;
with logical consequences&#13;
is also familiar. As&#13;
Dutch put it, "Extraordinary&#13;
claims require extraordinary&#13;
evidence."&#13;
The salesmanship fallacy&#13;
brings out the concept of persuading&#13;
people that there is a&#13;
legitimate reason to doubt. The&#13;
Galileo Fallacy points out that,&#13;
"Galileo was persecuted, and he&#13;
was right. Therefore, as a&#13;
creationist, I could be right."&#13;
Charges of persecution are quite&#13;
frequent by Creationists. Duane&#13;
Gish, a creationist, stated this&#13;
after an attack was made on&#13;
creationists by another scientist:&#13;
"Most scientists are unbelievers,&#13;
and unbelieving materialistic men&#13;
are forced to accept the&#13;
materialistic, naturalistic theory&#13;
for the origin of all living things."&#13;
What Dutch is pointing out by&#13;
using Gish's quote is that counter -&#13;
attack is viewed as a threat from&#13;
the establishment, no matter how&#13;
mild or civil it could be.&#13;
Fringe Science has a desire to&#13;
play by two sets of rules, that is, a&#13;
scientist is expected to account for&#13;
everything that happens. If a&#13;
fringe scientist can't account for&#13;
something, he makes it clear that&#13;
he deserves a better chance.&#13;
There are a lot of reasons why&#13;
things may not be explainable.&#13;
The first, there may be nothing to&#13;
explain. A possibility is always&#13;
present that there is bad data, a&#13;
trivial problem, or that some sort&#13;
of hoax has taken place. Systems&#13;
can be complex, or things could be&#13;
unexplainable due to the normal&#13;
unfinished business of science.&#13;
Chances also claim that a particular&#13;
issue is unexplainable by&#13;
known laws, and that new ones are&#13;
needed. Dutch pointed out that&#13;
this is where most creationists get&#13;
their lead - in.&#13;
ALL WISCONSIN COLLEGE COMPUTER MATCHUP&#13;
MEET SOMEONE NEW THIS SPRING&#13;
wi^telfo^rW6 ^ me6t&#13;
"°,r&#13;
0ne&#13;
°!&#13;
W this&#13;
,&#13;
sPrin9? Answer the following questions and you will be matched&#13;
with ten other Wisconsin Co lege students of the opposite sex. Each person who participates will receive a letter&#13;
ltnd*T°&#13;
Xr S) WhiCh Consists of ,he names&#13;
' addresses, and ages of ten Wisconsin College&#13;
students who you are most compatible with. Send your answer sheet and $5 to: ALL WISCONSIN MATCHUP&#13;
1. Are you: 20560 Orchard Road&#13;
1. Male 2. Female Marysville, Ohio 43040&#13;
10&#13;
11&#13;
1 wish to be matched with:&#13;
1. Asians&#13;
2. Blacks&#13;
3. Spanish&#13;
4. Whites&#13;
5. Does not matter&#13;
How tall are you?&#13;
1. Short&#13;
2. Medium height&#13;
3. Tall&#13;
4 Very tall&#13;
How tall do you prefer a date&#13;
to be?&#13;
1. Short&#13;
2. Medium height&#13;
3. Tall&#13;
4. Very tall&#13;
What is the color of your&#13;
hair?&#13;
1. Dark&#13;
2. Brown&#13;
3. Red&#13;
4. Blonde (light)&#13;
What color of hair do you&#13;
prefer a date to have?&#13;
1. Dark&#13;
2. Brown&#13;
3. Red&#13;
4 Blonde (light)&#13;
You consider yourself&#13;
1. Calm, cool, always in&#13;
control.&#13;
2 Alive, full of fun&#13;
3. Quiet and sensitive&#13;
4 None of these&#13;
People say I am&#13;
1 Very good looking&#13;
2. Better than average&#13;
3 Average&#13;
4 Less than average&#13;
I would rate my sex appeal:&#13;
1 Ten&#13;
2 Eight or nine&#13;
3 Six or seven&#13;
4 Five or below&#13;
What would you prefer to do&#13;
on a first date''&#13;
1 Go to a movie&#13;
2 Have a quiet dinner&#13;
3 Dance the night away&#13;
4 Go to a concert&#13;
Where would you rather&#13;
live''&#13;
1 A city&#13;
2 The country&#13;
3 A suburb of a city&#13;
4 A small town&#13;
12. What kind of music do you&#13;
most like to listen to?&#13;
1 Pop&#13;
2. Country&#13;
3. Jazz&#13;
4. Rock&#13;
13. How important is it to you to&#13;
have a lot of money (wealth)&#13;
someday?&#13;
1 Very important&#13;
2 Moderately important&#13;
3 Somewhat important&#13;
4. Not important&#13;
14. What size family would you&#13;
want to have?&#13;
1. No children&#13;
2. One or two children&#13;
3. Three or four children&#13;
4 Five or more children&#13;
15 In regard to world issues, 1&#13;
am&#13;
1 Very interested&#13;
2 Moderately interested&#13;
3 Slightly interested&#13;
4 Not interested&#13;
16. When kissing I&#13;
1 Keep my eyes open&#13;
2 Keep them closed&#13;
3 Both&#13;
4 Never paid any attention&#13;
17 What is your opinion of most&#13;
spectator sports'&#13;
1 Like to watch often&#13;
2 Like to watch occasionally&#13;
&#13;
3 Enjoy a few sj orts&#13;
4 Not interested in sports&#13;
18 What do you prefer&#13;
1 Republican&#13;
2 Democrat&#13;
3 Independent&#13;
4 Prefer not to vote&#13;
19 Does it bother you when&#13;
others smoke'&#13;
1 Yes 2 No 3 Sometimes&#13;
20 I find my horoscope&#13;
1 Interesting-check it often&#13;
2 Anuising-check it occasionally&#13;
&#13;
3 Ridiculous-don't belive in&#13;
it&#13;
21 Of the following&#13;
rather&#13;
1 Ski ir. Colorado&#13;
2 Sun in Florida&#13;
3 Theater in New York&#13;
4 Showtime in Las Vega&#13;
ould&#13;
22. Clothes and personal&#13;
appearance are:&#13;
1 Very important&#13;
2 Slightly important&#13;
3 Not important&#13;
23. In regards to alcoholic&#13;
beverages&#13;
1 "Love" to drink&#13;
2 Drink occasionally&#13;
3 Drink rarely&#13;
4 Do not drink alcohol&#13;
24 How intelligent are you?&#13;
1 Very intelligent (genipus&#13;
or near genious)&#13;
2. Above average intelligence&#13;
&#13;
3 Average intelligence&#13;
4 Below average intelligence&#13;
&#13;
25 Physical attractiveness is&#13;
1 Very important&#13;
2 Moderately important&#13;
3 Somewhat important&#13;
4 Not important&#13;
26 Do you enjoy opera?&#13;
1 Yes, very much&#13;
2 Occasionally (once, twice&#13;
per year)&#13;
3 Once in a great while&#13;
4 No&#13;
27. What is your idea ot a&#13;
romantic evening'&#13;
1 Candle-light dinner&#13;
2 Sitting by the lire&#13;
3 Watching the sun go&#13;
down (a beautiful sunset)&#13;
4 Gazing at the stars&#13;
5 All of the above&#13;
28 I believe&#13;
1 All convicted murderers&#13;
should receive the death&#13;
sentence&#13;
2 Some convicted murderers&#13;
should receive the death&#13;
sentence&#13;
3 Capital punishment&#13;
should be eliminated&#13;
29 1 go to church&#13;
1 Seldom or never&#13;
2 Once or twice a month&#13;
3 Nearly every week&#13;
4 Every week&#13;
30 At a dance. I preier to&#13;
1 Dance most dances&#13;
2 Dance fast&#13;
3 Da rice s|ow&#13;
•4 Stand around and talk&#13;
FIRST NAME n:&#13;
ANSWER SHEET&#13;
LAST NAME M i l IT I I 1 i 1 T T i 1 I 1 I T I&#13;
N4ME OF SCHOOL&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
M M 1 1 i n n&#13;
1TITTT&#13;
AGE 1~T~1&#13;
PLEASE CIRCLE ONE&#13;
Male Female&#13;
CITY. STATE. ZIP&#13;
QUESTIONS&#13;
ANSWERS&#13;
11 1 1 1 1 1 1 H ITTTTT HJ&#13;
"'I QUESTIONS&#13;
1 I ANSWERS &#13;
8 Thursday, April 8,1982 RANGER&#13;
Driscoll&#13;
named&#13;
Dona Driscoll, a junior from&#13;
Muskego, has been named to the&#13;
WWIAC all - conference indoor&#13;
track team by vote of th e coaches.&#13;
She won the WWIAC 600 last&#13;
week in 1:26.62, a Parkside record&#13;
and the fastest time recorded in&#13;
the state this year among WWIAC&#13;
schools. She had placed fifth in the&#13;
event in the NAIA championships&#13;
in February.&#13;
She also placed fifth in the 300 in&#13;
the WWIAC meet.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
TYPING Professionally done. Reasonable&#13;
rates. Fast service. South Kenosha. 657&#13;
6068.&#13;
TYPING SERVICES for professionals and&#13;
students. Call mornings. 639-6871.&#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;
CAMPUS SERVICE / TIME Inc. 4337 W.&#13;
Indian School "C", Phoenix, Az. 85031.&#13;
WANTED: Students to sell advertising for&#13;
Ranger. 15% commission plus bonus.&#13;
Here's the perfect chance to make $$$$.&#13;
Stop in Ranger office (next to Coffee&#13;
Shoppe) if interested.&#13;
WANTED: News, feature and sports writers,&#13;
photographers, graphic artists. Stop by&#13;
Ranger office.&#13;
HELP WANTED: Lawnkeeper and gardener&#13;
for semi - large estate. Must have&#13;
references and own transportation. Very&#13;
North Side of Racine, If interested contact&#13;
Karen in the Ranger office. Salary&#13;
negotiable.&#13;
Wanted&#13;
ROOMMATE WANTED. Responsible female&#13;
to share expenses and rent. 654-3868.&#13;
ROOMMATE NEEDED after graduation.&#13;
Wood Creek, 552-9175, Dick O.&#13;
ANY ATTRACTIVE GIRLS interested in&#13;
having formal fun? Brendan, 962-8081.&#13;
MARQUETTE ROTC needs attractive female&#13;
for Naval Ball. Brendan, 962-8081.&#13;
MARQUETTE STUDENT needs female&#13;
escort to Marc Plaza. Brendan, 962-8081.&#13;
MARQUETTE STUDENT needs Parkside&#13;
escort to formal dance. Brendan, 962-8081.&#13;
NEED DATE for Naval Ball. Will pay expenses.&#13;
Brendan, 962-8081.&#13;
I'M NOT DESPERATE! I just need a date.&#13;
Brendan, 962-8081.&#13;
For Rent&#13;
2 BEDROOM HOUSE in country. 25 miles&#13;
west of Kenosha. S250 a month plus utilities.&#13;
632-4005.&#13;
Miscellaneous&#13;
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST SERMON -&#13;
"Here comes the Sun" - S unday 11 a. m. -&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Personals&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY DAVE! Now you're&#13;
REALLY getting up there. LAM.&#13;
THIS WEEK on Monster Chiller Horror&#13;
Theater "Nerf Basketballs from Hell."&#13;
Count Floyd.&#13;
FREE BUDGIES at Tex 8. Edna Boils Organ&#13;
Emporium.&#13;
GET YOUR AOS IN GEAR! Free classifieds&#13;
really should be too good to pass up! Let's&#13;
get some student inter - communication!&#13;
TO KATHY SLAMA You are one of the most&#13;
wonderful people I know - G uess who?&#13;
HEY ATTRACTIVE GIRLS Brendan is&#13;
serious.and I think you should give him a&#13;
chance,&#13;
TO KEN MEYER - an Unforgettable Editor&#13;
has turned a year older - h ave a wonderful&#13;
year! N.E.&#13;
KEN - I hope that you had a great birthday.&#13;
• Now I c an't be accused of seducing a minor&#13;
in any State, ouy evol I! Your Linda!&#13;
small&#13;
Come to a&#13;
THURBER&#13;
CARNIVAL&#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;
Women split p air&#13;
by Kathleen Pohlman&#13;
Last Thursday the women's&#13;
softball team started their season.&#13;
Lynn Barth pitched a one - hitter&#13;
to shut out St. Xavier of Chicago 2-&#13;
0. Kathy Toban, the Ranger's&#13;
catcher, played a helpful game of&#13;
defense including several good&#13;
throw outs. Cindy Ruffert had a&#13;
triple and Bonnie Schmelter had a&#13;
double to assist Parkside with&#13;
their first victory. However, they&#13;
lost the second game when St.&#13;
Xavier scored in the last inning on&#13;
a long fly ball. The score ended at&#13;
5-4. Cindy Baker had a triple and a&#13;
double.&#13;
Due to inclement weather, last&#13;
Friday and Saturday's games&#13;
were cancelled. Nevertheless,&#13;
there are still many games left.&#13;
Next week's game schedule is:&#13;
Saturday at 11 a.m. against&#13;
Whitewater and Wednesday at&#13;
4:30 p.m. against Stevens Point.&#13;
Both games will be played at&#13;
Petrified Springs Park. Fans are&#13;
always welcome and admission is&#13;
free.&#13;
Last year the women's softball&#13;
team had a great season. Their&#13;
record was 19-8 which helped&#13;
them get invited to the NAIA&#13;
Tournament in Texas. They&#13;
placed seventh out of 14 and were&#13;
also State Champions of their&#13;
conference. Out of the total team&#13;
from last year, five decided not to&#13;
return. But with Laura Laurenzi,&#13;
who made All - American, and&#13;
Lynn Barth, Nancy Kivi, Cindy&#13;
Ruffert, Paula Sandahl, and&#13;
Kathy Toban (the six original&#13;
starters) the team is off to a good&#13;
beginning. The new players who&#13;
show great potential are Ann&#13;
Althaus, Cindy Baker, Janet&#13;
Broeren, Jeanne Jacobs (second&#13;
year), Kim Johnson, Michele&#13;
Martino, Linda Masters (second&#13;
year), Anita Ratsch, Bonnie Schmelter,&#13;
and Lori Windhorst.&#13;
be topped j&#13;
Please sendachec Qffer&#13;
Seagrams 7 Crown mv 10152&#13;
Please send a cnecK unnv.&#13;
roTo^TwYo^-N.Y 10:52&#13;
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• Adult sizes only. Specify quantity.&#13;
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Offer expires December 31,1982. No purchase necessary. New York residents add 8.25% sales tax Please allow 4 to ( 5_&#13;
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Classical music stands the test of time&#13;
•••••••••••••••••&#13;
Ranger&#13;
needs&#13;
writers!&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Classical music has been&#13;
around for hundreds of y ears, but&#13;
how many people listen to it&#13;
today? Everybody listens to that&#13;
god - awful pop - rock music. I&#13;
used to listen to it too, so I don't&#13;
want to sound like a snob or&#13;
anything. But I got tired of&#13;
popular music, and started&#13;
listening to the classics. I find it&#13;
interesting when I talk to other&#13;
people around school about&#13;
classical music, and they tell me&#13;
they think it is 'rtgid,' 'unchanging,'&#13;
and 'hard to listen to.'&#13;
Maybe I'm talking to the wrong&#13;
people, but I just don't understand&#13;
this attitude. Classical music is&#13;
not rigid, unchanging, and it's not&#13;
hard to listen to. In fact, it can be&#13;
downright pleasurable to listen to.&#13;
So in this article I'm not going to&#13;
try and be some kind of music&#13;
scholar (I'm not, believe me),&#13;
rather I will simply tell you about&#13;
some of my favorite compositions&#13;
in classical musieland, and you&#13;
can decide for yourself.&#13;
Now that I've written that big&#13;
introduction about classical&#13;
music, I'm not even going to write&#13;
about classical music. Bet I fooled&#13;
you, huh? No, actually I'm going&#13;
to begin with Baroque music,&#13;
which sort of came before what we&#13;
today know as the classics. Some&#13;
background info first: Baroque&#13;
comes, for the most part, from the&#13;
17th century, and by definition is&#13;
improvisational and contrasting&#13;
in nature. Baroque composers&#13;
include such names as Vivaldi,&#13;
Pachelbel, and Telemann. Most&#13;
scholars consider Baroque music&#13;
less intellectually stimulating&#13;
than classical, and if th ey say this&#13;
I suppose it is true. Nevertheless,&#13;
Baroque is both easy and fun to&#13;
listen to, and a good way to lead up&#13;
to the classics. Lots of Baroque&#13;
music has been featured in recent&#13;
films, including Kramer vs.&#13;
Kramer and Ordinary People. So&#13;
you see, Baroque can have&#13;
popular appeal.&#13;
I'll bet you're saying to yourself&#13;
now, "Well this is all fine and&#13;
dandy, but when I go to a record&#13;
store, how do I know what to&#13;
buy?" Fear not, this writer has&#13;
thought of every contingency.&#13;
What follows are some of my picks&#13;
for a basic- Baroque collection,&#13;
listed with the composer's name&#13;
• first and the compositions&#13;
following: Antonio Vivaldi - The&#13;
Four Seasons, Concerto in D for&#13;
Lute and Violins, and any of the&#13;
other Vivaldi concertos - He wrote&#13;
hundreds, including concertos for&#13;
Baroque trumpet, flute, strings,&#13;
and so forth. I especially like the&#13;
Lute and Mandolin concertos;&#13;
Johaan Pachelbel - Canon and&#13;
Gigue; Handel - Water Music;&#13;
Telemann - Canata for soprano&#13;
and orchestra.&#13;
There is, of co urse, much more&#13;
that I could recommend, but these&#13;
are a few that might catch your&#13;
ear. There are many Baroque&#13;
albums that have a collection of&#13;
various works by several different&#13;
composers, and these are good if&#13;
you are on a limited budget. The&#13;
Kramer vs. Kramer soundtrack is&#13;
one such album, as it contains a&#13;
wide range of material from both&#13;
Purcell and Vivaldi. In terms of&#13;
orchestras, Neville Mariner and&#13;
the Academy of St. Martin in the&#13;
Fields do Baroque proud. So if&#13;
you've got the money, go for&#13;
Baroque (no pun intended).&#13;
Now on to the classics. After&#13;
Baroque, neo - classical Baroque,&#13;
and whatever else Baroque you&#13;
can think of, came the classics,&#13;
sometime in the 18th century.&#13;
Classics are a step above Baroque&#13;
in terms of musical integrity, and&#13;
like a fine wine, take some getting&#13;
used to. A taste must be developed&#13;
for the clq^sics, and if you don't&#13;
like the classics, you don't have&#13;
taste. How's that for musical&#13;
snobbery? Just kidding.&#13;
I'm sure you've heard of the&#13;
three B's (Beethoven, Bach, and&#13;
Brahms) so I will use this clever&#13;
alliterative device as a starting&#13;
point. Bach came first, and was as&#13;
much a part of the Baroque era as&#13;
the classical. He composed choral&#13;
works, concertos, orchestral&#13;
f&#13;
no moresuites,&#13;
and about everything else.&#13;
In fact, Bach's genius seems to be&#13;
in his ability to take various forms&#13;
of mu sic and bring them to a state&#13;
of perfection. WFMR, the&#13;
classical radio station in&#13;
Milwaukee, has a bumper sticker&#13;
that says, "Keep Bach." Well put.&#13;
Ludwig Van Beethoven was a&#13;
frustrated, miserable, rebellious&#13;
man. He had a brusque,&#13;
disagreeable personality, could&#13;
not get along with women, and in&#13;
the latter part of his life went deaf.&#13;
Yet, he was probably, and still is,&#13;
the most original, revolutionary&#13;
"Michelob after work&#13;
makes you glad&#13;
there's a rush hour'.'&#13;
Put a little&#13;
weekend&#13;
in your week.&#13;
and passionate composer who&#13;
ever lived. His music is stormy,&#13;
tempestous, reflecting his life and&#13;
personality. His music takes time&#13;
to get used to, but it is truly great.&#13;
As a boy Johannes Brahms&#13;
earned a living playing piano in&#13;
whorehouses. After being&#13;
proclaimed a genius by Robert&#13;
Schumann, Brahms eventually&#13;
settled in Vienna and spent the&#13;
rest of his life composing. Brahms&#13;
is often seen as the 'heir' to&#13;
Beethoven. He remains one of the&#13;
most important composers.&#13;
There are over a hundred other&#13;
classical composers that have&#13;
received varying degrees of&#13;
recognition, so it's obviously&#13;
impossible to even begin to cover&#13;
any amount, of classical music.&#13;
But I can tell you what the most&#13;
famous composers are known for&#13;
composing. Here goes: Chopin&#13;
and Rachmaninoff for piano&#13;
pieces; Ravel, Debussy,&#13;
Tchaikovsky, for the romantic&#13;
nature of the compositions;&#13;
Wagner, for his almost mad&#13;
works. I could go on and on. I&#13;
won't though. Here are some of&#13;
my favorite classical works. See&#13;
what you think: Beethoven - The&#13;
Sixth Symphony, or 'Pastorale.';&#13;
Bach - The Brandenburg Concertos,&#13;
Toccata and Fugue in D&#13;
minor; Mendelssohn - Music for&#13;
'A Midsummer Night's Dream";&#13;
Mussorgsky - Pictures at an&#13;
Exhibition; Ravel - Bolero;&#13;
Copland - Appalachian Spring -&#13;
Fanfare for the Common Man;&#13;
Wagner - Ride of the Valkyries.&#13;
You might have heard Ravel's&#13;
Bolero in the film, "Ten," and you&#13;
probably heard Wagner's "Ride of&#13;
the Valkyries" in "Apocalypse&#13;
Now." Even if yo u've never heard&#13;
of any of these compositions, or&#13;
even of their composers, you&#13;
might, just might, try listening to&#13;
one of them. If, by chance, you&#13;
really enjoy what you hear, you&#13;
can come and thank me for&#13;
writing this article. If you can't&#13;
stand what you hear, however, I&#13;
will not reimburse you for the&#13;
album you buy. Sorry.&#13;
Punk rock -&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
E. F. MADRIGRANO&#13;
1831 - 55th St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wise.&#13;
658-3553&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
eventually die. We must get to the&#13;
point where we are so socially&#13;
unaware of this phenomena that&#13;
we don't even perceive it;&#13;
therefore, if it is not perceived, it&#13;
will not exist. We hope our efforts&#13;
will increase social awareness&#13;
and, subsequently, social&#13;
unawareness of the beforesaid&#13;
phenomena — whatever that was.&#13;
Dave Odders&#13;
Jack Zurawik </text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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              <text>Kreuser sets goals for second term</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
In temporary location&#13;
CSA operates bookstore&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
At present, College Stores&#13;
Associates (CSA) is operating in&#13;
the Rec - Center Ski Room. It&#13;
won't be long until they appear&#13;
where Follett's store was once&#13;
located, across from the library.&#13;
As Follett takes their stock out of&#13;
the store, CSA is making plans for&#13;
their store layout.&#13;
Steven Muhlfelder, Supervisor -&#13;
store operations is presently over -&#13;
seeing CSA's development. He&#13;
said that the basement will be&#13;
used for actual textbook sales and&#13;
that the bookstore will definitely&#13;
be patterned after all of the other&#13;
CSA stores. By having the book&#13;
sales run in the basement, runners&#13;
will be used to get the books for&#13;
students.&#13;
Runners will also be instructed&#13;
to ask if the customer would&#13;
prefer new or used books. The&#13;
availability of used textbooks will&#13;
vary according to the actual book&#13;
and will be based on a first come,&#13;
first served basis.&#13;
CSA will also buy books from&#13;
students that no longer have a use&#13;
for them. If a book is being used at&#13;
Parkside, and if CSA has a&#13;
professor's written order that a&#13;
book will be used next semester,&#13;
they will give a student 50% of t he&#13;
current list price. If the book will&#13;
not be used within the next&#13;
semester, a price guide is used to&#13;
decide what the student will&#13;
receive back for the book. If a&#13;
student gets 30% for a book that&#13;
will no longer be used, the student&#13;
is getting a good price for that&#13;
book.&#13;
Things to consider when selling&#13;
a book back, are that books are&#13;
returned in great quantity. The&#13;
more returns on a particular book,&#13;
the less the customer will receive,&#13;
for the book, simply because&#13;
everyone will be selling the same&#13;
book. It will be fairly easy to get a&#13;
hold of. Used books operate on a&#13;
strict supply and demand basis.&#13;
Another thing to keep in mind is&#13;
that every one who handles a book&#13;
has to get paid. The list of people&#13;
is long, but that's why some books&#13;
get so little in return. Also, the&#13;
books are not always retained at&#13;
Parkside, but are resold to used&#13;
book wholesalers.&#13;
CSA does plan to hire students&#13;
whenever possible; they do employ&#13;
student workers in all of their&#13;
s.o.c.&#13;
New leaders elected&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
SOC is the Student Organization&#13;
Council. Recently they have&#13;
elected a new chairman and vice -&#13;
chairman. Steve Kalmar was&#13;
elected as chairman and Carla&#13;
Thomas as the vice - chair.&#13;
Kalmar said one of the things&#13;
that motivated him to run for the&#13;
position of chairman was, "Last&#13;
year's chairman's apathetic attitude.&#13;
By being the chairman of&#13;
Winter Carnival," said Kalmar,&#13;
"I have learned the ins and outs of&#13;
the administrative bureaucracy."&#13;
One of Kalmar's contentions is&#13;
tha t he would like to see SOC be an&#13;
Committee&#13;
established&#13;
The Sexual Harassment&#13;
Advisory Committee has&#13;
established members to&#13;
represent the faculty,&#13;
academic staff, classified staff&#13;
and students. Representatives&#13;
of the faculty are: Stella Gray&#13;
and Wayne Johnson; academic&#13;
staff: Linda Piele and Stuart&#13;
Rubner; classified staff:&#13;
Karen Lourigan, Carrie Peters&#13;
and Jackie Willems; students:&#13;
Carla Thomas and Pat Hensiak.&#13;
The functions of the committee&#13;
will be to advise the&#13;
Chancellor on all matters&#13;
relating to sexual harassment;&#13;
to advise and assist the&#13;
Chancellor in devising&#13;
programs designed to inform&#13;
employees and students of the&#13;
nature of sexual harassment,&#13;
to increase their sensitivity to&#13;
it, and to publicize the&#13;
procedures, sanctions and&#13;
remedies available against it;&#13;
and to help people who feel that&#13;
they are victims of sexual&#13;
harassment, to bring about an&#13;
informal resolution.&#13;
equal with PSGA. "PSGA is a&#13;
s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t&#13;
organization," stated Kalmar.&#13;
"SOC is a social and intellectual&#13;
oriented group. The goals of SOC&#13;
are different from the specific&#13;
goals of PSGA. Having to go&#13;
through them slows us down."&#13;
There are about 40 clubs on&#13;
campus. The membership within&#13;
the clubs ranges from 15 to the&#13;
hundreds. SOC feels that by&#13;
representing that many students,&#13;
they need to define their goals and&#13;
not work as a subcommittee of&#13;
PSGA.&#13;
"Since I've taken office, I have&#13;
had several meetings with Jim&#13;
(Kreuser) and Chuck (Betz) to&#13;
define SOC's responsibilities, and&#13;
my own responsibilities. We have&#13;
a really hard time reaching the&#13;
students. We'll try to combine all&#13;
of the students in an organized&#13;
effort."&#13;
As the chairman, Kalmar would&#13;
like to promote a greater sense of&#13;
student concern. "It's a shame&#13;
that it's so hard to communicate,&#13;
but Carla (Thomas), the new vice&#13;
chairman, Annette, the new&#13;
secretary for SOC, and I will all&#13;
push hard to keep communication&#13;
open."&#13;
Carla Thomas is the new vice -&#13;
chair. Her goal for SOC is to make&#13;
SOC become a place for clubs to&#13;
interact with each other. A place&#13;
to sponsor activities jointly.&#13;
Carla Thomas is also the chair&#13;
of the Budget and Review Committee.&#13;
"I would like to see more&#13;
guidelines and interaction between&#13;
clubs, and make things run&#13;
more efficiently. There is a&#13;
problem with lack of interaction&#13;
between the clubs. Everyone is&#13;
pretty protective of their own.&#13;
Maybe we can break through that&#13;
barrier."&#13;
Thomas isn't sure about the&#13;
separation from PSGA for SOC. "I&#13;
can see it (the separation) further&#13;
down the line, but not until we&#13;
establish procedures. We need&#13;
more membership within SOC."&#13;
Forum to examine&#13;
Central America&#13;
stores. CSA would also like to hear&#13;
from the students, as they are&#13;
anxious to know what is going&#13;
right. They are also interested to&#13;
know if anything seems to be&#13;
going wrong. It is important that&#13;
the students realize what they do&#13;
is legitimate.&#13;
Plans have been made to have&#13;
an extensive supply of books as&#13;
well as supplies. A supply clerk&#13;
will be used to stay aware of the&#13;
stock conditions in the store. If&#13;
something is running low in the&#13;
store, a telex will be used to send&#13;
an order to Waltham, Mass.,&#13;
where the CSA central warehouse&#13;
is located. A stock check will be&#13;
done each week for order and&#13;
reorder.&#13;
A lot of central office control is&#13;
used. "We stay involved with what&#13;
is happening within the store,"&#13;
c omme n t e d Mu h l f e l d e r .&#13;
"Recognizing a need and communicating&#13;
it allows for a&#13;
smoother operation."&#13;
Book&#13;
Exchange&#13;
changes&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
At last week's PSGA meeting a&#13;
decision was made to keep the&#13;
Campus Book Exchange open, but&#13;
to give the accounting responsibility&#13;
for the Exchange to&#13;
Student Life. Kathy Slama,&#13;
coordinator of the Exchange, has&#13;
kept the book work for the life of&#13;
the Exchange, however, as Slama&#13;
graduates this May, someone will&#13;
have to take the responsibility of&#13;
balancing the books.&#13;
Jim Kreuser, PSGA President&#13;
commented, "It would be difficult&#13;
to find someone to replace Kathy.&#13;
She has done a good job, and we'll&#13;
miss her dearly."&#13;
Kreuser also pointed out that&#13;
there were a number of options&#13;
looked into concerning the welfare&#13;
of the Exchange. The first&#13;
alternative considered was&#13;
dropping the service of the Book&#13;
Exchange. There didn't seem to&#13;
be much support for dropping the&#13;
service. Other considerations&#13;
were to keep the exchange running&#13;
under PSGA, or simply&#13;
giving the Exchange over to the&#13;
Student Life. A medium was met&#13;
with the decision to have Student&#13;
Life act as the accountant for the&#13;
Exchange, and to have a contract&#13;
drawn up with Student Life so that&#13;
PSGA can get total responsibility&#13;
of the Book Exchange back, if the&#13;
PSGA Senate would deem it&#13;
necessary.&#13;
The actual date that the contract&#13;
would be drawn up was not&#13;
decided upon, but the Book Exchange&#13;
will definitely remain&#13;
open.&#13;
Photojoumalist Anne Nelson,&#13;
whose work has appeared in&#13;
Newsweek, The New York Times&#13;
and The Nation, will be among&#13;
participants in a Parkside Public&#13;
Forum on "War and Conflict in&#13;
Central America" from 12:30 to&#13;
2:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 20, in&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room 103.&#13;
Nelson, who recently returned&#13;
from El Salvador and Guatemala,&#13;
is the author of a forthcoming&#13;
book, "Little Wars: The United&#13;
States and the Caribbean Basin,"&#13;
and recently was a guest on the&#13;
McNeil - Lehrer Report. A display&#13;
of her photographs from Central&#13;
American will be on display&#13;
during the forum.&#13;
Other panelists will be:&#13;
• Richard Millett, a Southern&#13;
Illinois University historian,&#13;
author of "Guardians of the&#13;
Dynasty" on Nicaraguan politics&#13;
and "The Restless Caribbean"&#13;
and a congressional consultant on&#13;
Central American affairs.&#13;
• Rodolfo Cortina, Cuban - born&#13;
director of the UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Spanish Speaking Outreach&#13;
Center and a specialist in Central&#13;
American and Caribbean politics&#13;
and culture.&#13;
• Gerald Greenfield, UW -&#13;
Parkside historian, Latin&#13;
Amer i c a n s p e c i a l i s t and a&#13;
ANNE NELSON&#13;
Fulbright Fellow in Brazil in 1981.&#13;
• Kenneth Hoover, moderator&#13;
and director of the Public Forum&#13;
series and a UW - Parkside&#13;
political scientist.&#13;
The series is sponsored by UW -&#13;
Parkside and the UW Extension&#13;
Department of Governmental&#13;
Affairs. The program is free and&#13;
open to the public. Persons attending&#13;
should park in the Union&#13;
Parking lot in the north side of t he&#13;
campus.&#13;
Kreuser sets goals&#13;
for second term by Edward Beal&#13;
Recently petitions have been&#13;
circulating to recall PSGA&#13;
President Jim Kreuser for the&#13;
1982-83 academic school year.&#13;
Obviously, there are some&#13;
students who feel Kreuser is incompetent.&#13;
Kreuser, in opposition, raised&#13;
the question, "Are we moving&#13;
forward with student government&#13;
in expressing the students interests&#13;
or not?" He explained&#13;
several proposals that he has in&#13;
consideration and has accomplished&#13;
in his last term. One&#13;
accomplishment that occurred&#13;
during last year's term was the&#13;
establishment of an active United&#13;
Council at Parkside.&#13;
This year's proposals are:&#13;
changes in the Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge requirement of foreign&#13;
language courses. He suggests&#13;
that the proposal considers setting&#13;
up the courses in such a way that&#13;
there isn't a certain pattern that&#13;
students would have to follow&#13;
when taking the courses.&#13;
Kreuser explained that there is&#13;
a need for class availability,&#13;
saying, "Classes have to be&#13;
available if we're going to require&#13;
something like that." Another&#13;
requirement in the proposal is a&#13;
computer course. Understanding&#13;
that computer courses require&#13;
extra time to be spent at the&#13;
computer terminal, Jim said, "If&#13;
we don't have the time now, we&#13;
won't have the time then."&#13;
Taking a broader perspective on&#13;
his plans for the 1982-83 school&#13;
year, Kreuser revealed three&#13;
major long range goals: starting&#13;
voter registration at Parkside for&#13;
students who haven't yet&#13;
registered to vote, giving them an&#13;
opportunity to do so for the&#13;
November elections; making&#13;
changes, where necessary, in the&#13;
PSGA constitution; deterring&#13;
future traditional students from&#13;
taking high school level courses.&#13;
The latter is in progress right now.&#13;
It's hopefully being accomplished&#13;
through Kreuser visiting area&#13;
high schools, stressing the importance&#13;
of getting this foundation&#13;
of education free while they can.&#13;
On the subject of h is availability&#13;
to the students, Kreuser admits to&#13;
not having any office hours. "I&#13;
had office hours and no one&#13;
stopped in, but what my policy has&#13;
been is that if anyone wants to talk&#13;
to me, hang a number on the door,&#13;
and I'll get back to them. Fine, no&#13;
problem. If they require or want&#13;
office hours — I don't know how&#13;
many they want — but, I'll be glad&#13;
to do it. I will have day hours as&#13;
well as night hours."&#13;
As far as appointing students to&#13;
open slots on committees goes, he&#13;
says that he has done so, and when&#13;
it comes for a meeting the appointees&#13;
just don't show up. That&#13;
brings up the complaint of&#13;
Kreuser not supplying the PSGA&#13;
Senate with pertinent information.&#13;
According to Jim,&#13;
information from every faculty -&#13;
student government meeting is&#13;
available in his office. He says&#13;
that his political subordinates just&#13;
don't take the time to inform&#13;
themselves on the information&#13;
available.&#13;
Commenting further, he said,&#13;
"Th e i n f o r m a t i o n is a v a i l a b l e . I'm&#13;
not going to take them by the hand&#13;
and lead them to it." When asked&#13;
what his priorities were, Kreuser&#13;
replied, "Library cutbacks and&#13;
legislative affairs."&#13;
Hopefully, if the recall doesn't&#13;
occur, these and whatever other&#13;
proposals Kreuser has will be&#13;
carried out to their fullest&#13;
potential. On the other hand, if th e&#13;
recall does occur — wi ll the next&#13;
PSGA President please stand up?&#13;
Inside&#13;
Reeves' book&#13;
a big hit&#13;
Ron Cuzner&#13;
jazzes it up&#13;
Tennis season&#13;
starts well&#13;
Cubs, White Sox&#13;
open season&#13;
Thursday, April 15,1982 RANGER&#13;
PSGA should work together&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am currently the Secretary of&#13;
PSGA, Inc. and would like to&#13;
address the students of Parkside&#13;
on the controversy around the&#13;
recall election for the office of&#13;
President. I would like to directly&#13;
point out that I am neither for this&#13;
recall or against it. I am trying&#13;
very hard to maintain a middle&#13;
ground within this matter, since I&#13;
work directly with all the individuals&#13;
involved.&#13;
I have sat back and watched and&#13;
listened to back - stabbing,&#13;
derogatory remarks, and endless&#13;
heated discussions over this entire&#13;
matter. A few people have written&#13;
letters to the editor stating what&#13;
wasn't done and what should be&#13;
done. I respect their opinions and&#13;
hope they respect mine.&#13;
I feel that the controversy is&#13;
that PSGA should be working as&#13;
one organization instead of just as&#13;
individuals. Some individuals&#13;
seem to think that PSGA is run by:&#13;
ONE powerful person, the&#13;
President. This is NOT the case.&#13;
The power does not come from&#13;
just one person, but from ALL the&#13;
Senators, ALL the Justices, and&#13;
BOTH the President and Vice -&#13;
President. This also includes ALL&#13;
the students of Parkside. It is not&#13;
fair to give credit just to one&#13;
person because it takes the joint&#13;
efforts of the ENTIRE Student&#13;
Government Association to get&#13;
things done. I can personally&#13;
vouch for my last remark because&#13;
I take the minutes from the Senate&#13;
meetings and have recorded information&#13;
of these joint efforts.&#13;
PSGA, Inc. is a powerful&#13;
organization that can only function&#13;
correctly with all its members&#13;
working side - by - side, and&#13;
keeping one another informed.&#13;
PSGA does work hard towards&#13;
common goals but needs the help&#13;
of the students of Parkside. The&#13;
students have a very important&#13;
voice in everything PSGA does&#13;
and has done. It is extremely&#13;
imperative to the overall effectiveness&#13;
of PSGA to have&#13;
quality people working&#13;
TOGETHER. It is the responsibility&#13;
of the students of Parkside&#13;
to choose a quality President to&#13;
direct, but not over - power, the&#13;
members of PSGA, Inc. It is the&#13;
decision of you, the students, to&#13;
make PSGA something to work&#13;
TOGETHER with and be proud of.&#13;
Thank you for your time.&#13;
Jenny L. Fink,&#13;
Secretary PSGA, Inc.&#13;
P.S. Allstudents are welcome to&#13;
attend PSGA Senate meetings,&#13;
which are held each week. The&#13;
time and place is posted on the&#13;
PSGA window.&#13;
Punk-a new wave rock § roll&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Last week, RANGER printed a&#13;
letter from Dave Odders and Jack&#13;
Zurawik denouncing punk rock. I&#13;
would like to reply:&#13;
Dear Dave and Jack,&#13;
I realize that one's feelings&#13;
about punk rock (or, as I'll call it,&#13;
new wave) are a matter of personal&#13;
opinion. However, I have&#13;
never met anybody who called the&#13;
genre "intolerable and&#13;
disgusting," and I certainly hope I&#13;
never meet anybody who refers to&#13;
it as "indignant."&#13;
The reasoning that punk rock is,&#13;
as you state, destroying the moral&#13;
fabric of society sounds&#13;
suspiciously like the initial&#13;
reaction to rock and roll about&#13;
twenty - five years ago. People&#13;
back then thought that rock undermined&#13;
the principles of a&#13;
capitalistic, democratic society.&#13;
But take a look at what rock and&#13;
roll is today; a multi - billion&#13;
dollar industry (and worse off for&#13;
it), and just try to convince people&#13;
that this country turned communist&#13;
in 1965, as the critics of&#13;
rock and roll predicted it would.&#13;
This country has changed a lot in&#13;
the last two decades, but not&#13;
because of music. As a matter of&#13;
fact, it is a basic truth that the&#13;
times shape the art, not vice&#13;
versa.&#13;
Campus Security&#13;
Safety is the goal&#13;
by Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
The Parkside Campus Security&#13;
Department is not only on campus&#13;
just to write parking tickets.&#13;
Although maintaining the parking&#13;
lots and enforcement of the&#13;
parking regulations is a&#13;
responsibility of the Security&#13;
Department, it is not its sole&#13;
function. The major objective of&#13;
the department is the protection&#13;
and safety of the campus community.&#13;
The Security Department&#13;
has initiated and is actively involved&#13;
in many programs and&#13;
services to aid those who use&#13;
Parkside's facilities.&#13;
An example of some of the&#13;
services that are available are: a&#13;
reward program for information&#13;
on crimes being committed on&#13;
campus; the development of a&#13;
rape prevention program; continuation&#13;
of the evening bus&#13;
,pab BRAZENLY PRESENTS: -."••"maw&#13;
FANATIC P OLITICAL GOON AND FRUSTRATED&#13;
WOULD-BE MURDERER G. GORDON LIDDY&#13;
AUTHOR. OR SWILL&#13;
o&#13;
Comparing new wave music to a&#13;
mid - thirties fascist movement is&#13;
not only fatuous and unnecessarily&#13;
sarcastic, it is also&#13;
absurd. The Nazi movement&#13;
preached the need for an extreme&#13;
right - wing totalitarian government.&#13;
The message of new wave,&#13;
if there is a message, is in the&#13;
power of the individual (which you&#13;
conveniently disregard in your&#13;
letter), and the superfluousness of&#13;
centralized organization. This is&#13;
called individualism, or as&#13;
detractors would call it, nihilism.&#13;
As far as I know, though, the last&#13;
time new wave music preached&#13;
any form of nihilistic thought was&#13;
about five years ago. Most current&#13;
new wave, in fact, is concerned&#13;
with positive political change, like&#13;
the sixties' flower power, but on a&#13;
more realistic level.&#13;
In short, new wave is just that —&#13;
a new trend in rock and roll. There&#13;
are sound musical and&#13;
philosophical principles to back&#13;
this up. If you don't believe me,&#13;
listen to some alongside an old&#13;
Beatles album. You'll see what I&#13;
mean.&#13;
However, if y ou still want music&#13;
that uses correct etiquette, is&#13;
socially uniform, has highly attractive&#13;
fashions, and is&#13;
capitalistic in nature, I suggest&#13;
you try disco.&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
WHAT CAN PRODUCE:&#13;
LASH YOURSELF TO A SEAT AND HEAR G. Gordon l/iwy&#13;
ASL®&#13;
Columnist rebuts protesting letters&#13;
service and maintaining the&#13;
campus lost and found records.&#13;
The Campus Security Department&#13;
is open from 8 a.m. until&#13;
midnight, Monday through&#13;
Friday. Officers are on duty 24&#13;
hours a day, seven days a week.&#13;
Future articles will appear in&#13;
the Ranger dealing with the different&#13;
services and programs&#13;
available to the campus community.&#13;
Information on how to&#13;
better protect your property from&#13;
theft and safety tips will be included.&#13;
Clarification of the&#13;
parking situation at Parkside will&#13;
be presented along with future&#13;
plans for its improvement.&#13;
Specific questions and problems&#13;
submitted to the Security&#13;
Department will also be dealt&#13;
with.&#13;
The Security Department is&#13;
here to serve you, the campus&#13;
by Chuck Ostrowski&#13;
I have recently received several&#13;
nasty letters in regards to some of&#13;
my recent articles. Why?&#13;
Disagreeing is one thing, but&#13;
being so negative about my&#13;
positions is another. Everybody&#13;
has the same opportunity to express&#13;
their opinions in this paper.&#13;
If you have a particular, radical&#13;
opinion disagreeing with mine you&#13;
are free to enter the office and&#13;
express your ideas the way I am.&#13;
For those who have criticized or&#13;
objected to my "name calling"&#13;
(or "negative comments" as I&#13;
regard them) because they feel&#13;
they are the same unoriginal&#13;
views expressed by hundreds of&#13;
other campus papers across the&#13;
country, you're missing the point.&#13;
I personally don't speak for&#13;
anybody but myself. The&#13;
RANGER'S views are not at all&#13;
represented by mine, but are&#13;
represented in the editorials&#13;
written by the RANGER'S editor.&#13;
His comments are representative&#13;
of the RANGER as a newspaper.&#13;
My comments are my own.&#13;
Anybody writing for the paper in&#13;
any capacity other than editor&#13;
would be expressing their particular&#13;
feelings and stances, not&#13;
the newspapers'.&#13;
It so happens that my views&#13;
generally take a more soft - line&#13;
approach. If that stance is common&#13;
in campus newspapers&#13;
throughout the nation, it is more&#13;
coincidental than purposeful. I do&#13;
not sift through the editorial pages&#13;
of various college papers, as&#13;
someone recently suggested, to&#13;
see how similar our content can&#13;
be. It just so happens that most&#13;
college students today who write&#13;
for their respective newspapers&#13;
are open - minded and fairly&#13;
liberal.&#13;
What I don't understand is how&#13;
students today, or anytime for&#13;
that matter, could be anything but&#13;
liberal. We're just beginning in&#13;
the world and never really had to&#13;
face anything other than flunking&#13;
Intro, to Human Communications,&#13;
so what do we have to be so conservative&#13;
about anyway? I can&#13;
understand (not agree, though)&#13;
why persons older and more&#13;
experienced would have a more&#13;
hard - line, conservative approach,&#13;
as they've lived longer&#13;
and have seen what goes on and so&#13;
therefore tend to be less idealistic.&#13;
community. Protection, safety&#13;
and awareness are the department&#13;
goals. Enforcement of the&#13;
laws and regulations of the State&#13;
of Wisconsin and the University&#13;
are an important and necessary&#13;
part of the Security Department's&#13;
concern.&#13;
That doesn't explain why 19, 20&#13;
and 21 year - old students should&#13;
be expected to act and think like&#13;
them. We have nothing to lose&#13;
from viewing situations and&#13;
problems idealistically.&#13;
So why not go for it? It seems&#13;
more reasonable for us to take a&#13;
softer "utopianish" approach to&#13;
life than to be as conservative and&#13;
somewhat feeble - minded as&#13;
some older adults. This planet&#13;
surely won't get any better if we&#13;
view the world the way Ronald&#13;
Reagan does, will it?&#13;
I'm not saying all my ideas are&#13;
right, or even workable for that&#13;
matter. But unworkable ideas&#13;
never stopped anybody anyway,&#13;
did they? I just believe that it's up&#13;
to us to take the initiative and run&#13;
with it. And our country is certainly&#13;
not taking the initiative by&#13;
electing a 71 year - old man&#13;
president, is it?&#13;
What is our country and today's&#13;
students doing then? It seems to&#13;
me that the prevailing concern is&#13;
being "set" for life by getting a&#13;
degree that ensures them $45,000&#13;
plus benefits yearly. The&#13;
problems won't be solved but at&#13;
least they'll be able to get through&#13;
them more comfortably.&#13;
One of th e things I'm advocating&#13;
is that you settle for half that&#13;
$45,000 and not be "set" for life&#13;
and try and resolve some of our&#13;
problems. Of course, your taking&#13;
fifty percent less than you could&#13;
conceivably earn won't solve, for&#13;
example, the rising censorship&#13;
problems in the United States. But&#13;
maybe you could get a job informing&#13;
people about the subject&#13;
and trigger a movement that&#13;
would end it. Your value to society&#13;
would increase markedly if you&#13;
took that approach rather than&#13;
sitting in a passionless neon - lit&#13;
cubicle pushing buttons all day.&#13;
Which is not to say that all&#13;
humanities courses are a god -&#13;
send either, as many people do&#13;
take advantage of their training&#13;
and go for the money. But if they&#13;
do "go for the money" it is at least&#13;
a direct contradiction of the ideas&#13;
behind a liberal arts education,&#13;
which tries to instill in you the&#13;
value of an education alone, as&#13;
opposed to strict business, administrative,&#13;
engineering, or&#13;
science programs which are&#13;
gotten truthfully, for the purpose&#13;
of making money. As for these&#13;
degrees social contributions, just&#13;
look at nuclear weaponry and&#13;
power; Chase Manhattan Bank&#13;
and Wall Street;, and some&#13;
governmental bureaucracies.&#13;
Each was created and now&#13;
operates because of our beliefs&#13;
that the applied sciences are&#13;
supreme.&#13;
In conclusion, I'm really not&#13;
looking for a policy or set of i deas&#13;
based on my views alone. If the&#13;
current approaches to our&#13;
problems succeeds, that's&#13;
FANTASTIC! I'm not tallying any&#13;
scores. But I don't believe today's&#13;
approaches will be successful,&#13;
which is my reason for advocating&#13;
alternative ways.&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Steve Myers&#13;
Mark Sanders&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Andy Petersen&#13;
Linda Andersen&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
ganger Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Co-Photo Editor&#13;
Co-Photo Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Linda Adams, Edward Beal, Greg Bonofiglio, Carol Burns,&#13;
Patty DeLuisa, Mary Kaddatz, Joe Kimm, Karla Kobal,&#13;
Lisa Linstroth, Rick Luehr, Dick Oberbruner, Chuck&#13;
Ostrowski, Masood Shafiq, Tammy Shuemate, Jeff Wicks.&#13;
UW-Parkside and .he, are so...,&#13;
-—&#13;
paper with one inch maraTns^ATMMl * ,ypewri,ten' doublespaced on standard size&#13;
eluded for verification. letters must be signed and a telephone number in-&#13;
Narnes Will be with(,elcl {Qr va(id reasQns&#13;
reserves ah edVlwia* phv^eges^in ref?i'«u^ publica,ion on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
^defamatory content. refusing to print letters which contain false or&#13;
McCarthui'sm&#13;
Reeves' book considered real treasure "The Life and Times of Joe&#13;
McCarthy," a major new&#13;
biography of the Wisconsin&#13;
senator who made a career of anti&#13;
- Communism by Parkside&#13;
historian Thomas C. Reeves, has&#13;
just been issued by Stein and Day&#13;
New York.&#13;
The book is a selection of the&#13;
Book of the Month Club, the&#13;
History Book Club and the Quality&#13;
Paperback Book Club. It will be&#13;
republished in London, New&#13;
Zealand and Australia by Blond&#13;
and Briggs of London.&#13;
The Washington Monthly&#13;
Review, in praising the book, said&#13;
that Reeves "has put McCarthy&#13;
permanently in the Hall of Infamy."&#13;
Publishers Weekly, a major&#13;
trade journal, says ''This may be&#13;
as nearly definitive a biography&#13;
as we will ever have . . . Reeves&#13;
portrays America's most&#13;
celebrated demagogue as a brash,&#13;
ruthless political showman who&#13;
learned virtually by accident in&#13;
Wisconsin politics how to play the&#13;
press for headlines — and the&#13;
portrait makes the book throughout&#13;
... a complete page turner."&#13;
The reviewer adds "at awards&#13;
time, this excitingly readable&#13;
biography will be remembered."&#13;
Reeves begins a 10 - day media&#13;
tour on April 30 arranged by his&#13;
publisher and including a guest&#13;
appearance on "Good Morning,&#13;
America," and possibly several&#13;
other network talk shows. The&#13;
tour begins in Washington, D. C.,&#13;
and includes engagements in New&#13;
York, Boston, Dallas, Houston, St.&#13;
Louis, Chicago, Minneapolis, Los&#13;
Angeles and San Francisco.&#13;
Reviews are scheduled to appear&#13;
Sunday, April 11, in book sections&#13;
of major U. S. daily newspapers&#13;
including the New York Times.&#13;
Copies are now available in area&#13;
book stores.&#13;
Throughout the book, Reeves&#13;
portrays McCarthy as an opportunist&#13;
who played politics the&#13;
same way he played poker: there&#13;
was a lot of bluff involved.&#13;
Though McCarthy came to&#13;
national prominence by portraying&#13;
himself as a sort of one -&#13;
man army battling the Communists&#13;
he alleged had infiltrated&#13;
the government, Reeves says&#13;
McCarthy came to the issue&#13;
almost by accident.&#13;
"Joe turned to anti - Communism&#13;
... in large part because&#13;
he had run out of other issues that&#13;
could be used to vault his name&#13;
into headlines and help insure his&#13;
re - election."&#13;
Nor did McCarthy invent the&#13;
anti - Communist issue.&#13;
"The Dies Committee on Un -&#13;
American Activities, created in&#13;
1938, had pioneered virtually all&#13;
the techniques later ascribed to&#13;
'McCarthyism'," Reeves points&#13;
THOMAS REEVES&#13;
out. (The committee even attacked&#13;
the patriotism of child star&#13;
Shirley Temple.)&#13;
The difference, Reeves indicates,&#13;
was that McCarthy&#13;
raised the witch hunt to an art&#13;
form and became a kind of true&#13;
believer in his cause. That the&#13;
general public supported him was&#13;
largely a result of the political and&#13;
social frustration that followed&#13;
World War II.&#13;
The frank cynicism McCarthy&#13;
expressed about his early charges&#13;
of Communists in government&#13;
was replaced by "fanatical interest&#13;
in Reds who lurked in high&#13;
places," Reeves writes. "It was&#13;
ironic that while critics railed at&#13;
McCarthy for being wholly&#13;
cynical, immoral, and even&#13;
amoral, those closest to him knew&#13;
he had become a zealot."&#13;
Reeves comments that the&#13;
image McCarthy presented to the&#13;
public — the tough ex - Marine,&#13;
the super patriot, the martyr&#13;
waging a one - man war against&#13;
Communism — was strikingly&#13;
similar to the stereotypical John&#13;
Wayne movie role. It was also&#13;
good box office: McCarthy was&#13;
one of the GOP's most sought -&#13;
after speakers.&#13;
McCarthy's final fall from&#13;
grace was precipitated by the&#13;
Army - McCarthy hearings, which&#13;
the nation watched on television&#13;
as the senator ranted like a bar -&#13;
room brawler and "Point of order"&#13;
became a national catch -&#13;
phrase.&#13;
"Joe's behavior (at the&#13;
hearings) was a product of many&#13;
complex forces," Reeves writes.&#13;
"His temperment, of course,&#13;
played a vital role . . . ignorance&#13;
was also a factor . . . (he) studied&#13;
little, had no goals . . . thought&#13;
nothing out in advance . . . (his)&#13;
very real belief in the internal&#13;
Communist conspiracy."&#13;
His subsequent censure by the&#13;
Senate "destroyed McCarthy's&#13;
spirit, accelerated his physical&#13;
deterioration, and hastened his&#13;
death ... he was no longer a&#13;
national figure," Reeves says.&#13;
Reeves traces McCarthy's life&#13;
Opportunities in a changing&#13;
economy will be the theme of a&#13;
series of workshops on starting a&#13;
business and investing money at&#13;
Alumni Colloge '82 at Parkside.&#13;
The program is open to the interested&#13;
public as well as to UW -&#13;
P alumni and students.&#13;
An evening session devoted to&#13;
information on starting a small&#13;
business will be held at 7 p. m. on&#13;
Thursday, April 22.&#13;
An all - day program will be held&#13;
on Saturday, April 24, beginning&#13;
with a general session, "It It Time&#13;
to Begin Working for Yourself,"&#13;
presented by Sandra Herre, co -&#13;
owner of the Schoolhouse Gift&#13;
Shop, Racine and including a&#13;
luncheon address, "The Economic&#13;
Forecast for '82 and Beyond" by&#13;
UW - P economics professor&#13;
Richard Keehn.&#13;
Daytime workshop topics include&#13;
considerations when&#13;
starting a business, personal&#13;
finance, starting a service&#13;
Changing economy offers opportunity&#13;
or&#13;
consulting business, opportunities&#13;
in cottage and retail business and&#13;
mini - computers for home and&#13;
business. Instructors will be local&#13;
business people and university&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
The event is sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Alumni Association and&#13;
the Business Outreach and Small&#13;
Business Development Center at&#13;
UW - P. Fee for the evening&#13;
session is $3. The day fee is $10&#13;
including luncheon. Registration&#13;
information is available from the&#13;
Alumni and Placement Office at&#13;
UW - P (Phone 553-2452).&#13;
Speakers for the various&#13;
workshops sessions will be:&#13;
• Starting a Business - Timothy&#13;
P. Crawford, attorney at law,&#13;
Stewart, Peyton, Crawford and&#13;
Crawford, Racine, on legal&#13;
aspects of starting a business;&#13;
Kathy Venturelli, business loan&#13;
specialist, city of Kenosha, and&#13;
staff, Greater Kenosha&#13;
Development Program, on&#13;
developing a business plan; and&#13;
"Petrea Ann Durnan, president,&#13;
New Business Services, Flat Iron&#13;
Mall, Racine, on marketing and&#13;
promotion strategies.&#13;
• Personal Finances - Richard&#13;
Keehn, economics professor, UW -&#13;
P, Michael Poch, assistant vice&#13;
president, First National Bank of&#13;
Kenosha, and James Meyers, vice&#13;
president, Robert W. Baird &amp; Co.,&#13;
Racine, on IRA's, tax - deferred&#13;
annuities and traditional and new&#13;
investment opportunities.&#13;
• Starting a Service or Consulting&#13;
Business - Alan R. Bagg,&#13;
president, Corporate Images,&#13;
Inc., an advertising agency;&#13;
Durnan, whose firm assists clients&#13;
starting new businesses; and Rita&#13;
Nicholas and Pat Ruffolo, partners&#13;
in PR enterprises, a communication&#13;
support service for&#13;
business.&#13;
• Opportunities in Cottage and&#13;
Retail Businesses - Ralph Ruffolo,&#13;
owner, Ruffolo Enterprises, a ski&#13;
equipment manufacturer; Michele&#13;
Serpe, owner, Swiss Village, an&#13;
arts and crafts shop in Kenosha;&#13;
Joy Boatwright, owner Wesver's&#13;
Alley, Racine, which offers&#13;
custom designed weaving, yarns&#13;
and other supplies; Jack Haueter,&#13;
developer of Market Place, a&#13;
group of art, craft and specialty&#13;
shops in Oak Creek; and Richard&#13;
Wilson, president of Wilson&#13;
Variety, Inc., a Kenosha variety&#13;
store including a full - service&#13;
store. Jan Sinclair, UW - P, is&#13;
moderator.&#13;
• Mini - Computers for Home&#13;
and Business - Lance Evans,&#13;
representative of Colortron&#13;
Computer Division, a Racine firm&#13;
concentrating on specific applications&#13;
of small computers.&#13;
The evening session will feature&#13;
a panel of entrepeneurs and allow&#13;
for interaction with the audience. /&#13;
from his immigrant ancestors'&#13;
arrival in Wisconsin to his death&#13;
on May 2, 1957 in Bethesda Naval&#13;
Hospital, the victim of severe&#13;
liver damage caused by drinking.&#13;
Reeves shows vividly how&#13;
McCarthy's early Wisconsin years&#13;
shaped, almost fore - ordained, his&#13;
political career. He traces McCarthy's&#13;
youth: A drop - out, he&#13;
returned to finish four years of&#13;
high school in nine months after&#13;
an unsuccessful stint as a chicken&#13;
farmer. He completed Marquette&#13;
University Law School and&#13;
became, successively, a small -&#13;
town attorney, district attorney&#13;
and judge, perfecting his political&#13;
skills along the way.&#13;
On return from an undistinguished&#13;
tour of d uty with the&#13;
U. S. Marine Corps, he became, at&#13;
38, the youngest member of the&#13;
Senate.&#13;
Reeves has been at pains to&#13;
bring a balanced view of his&#13;
subject, avoiding what he considers&#13;
the biases, pro and con, of&#13;
earlier McCarthy biographers.&#13;
Unlike Richard Rovere, a&#13;
previous writer who believed&#13;
much of McCarthy's behavior was&#13;
rooted in a sense of inferiority,&#13;
Reeves sees McCarthy as a&#13;
creature of supreme self - confidence,&#13;
at least up to the time of&#13;
his censure and dissolution into&#13;
alcoholism.&#13;
The product of six years of&#13;
research, Reeves' book is richly&#13;
peopled both on the Wisconsin and&#13;
national levels. Almost anyone&#13;
with the remotest political&#13;
awareness will find people he&#13;
knows in its pages, a result both of&#13;
McCarthy's wide - ranging&#13;
acquaintances and Reeves'&#13;
tireless interviewing.&#13;
In preparing the volume,&#13;
Reeves talked to about 150 persons&#13;
with personal knowledge of McCarthy&#13;
and his career.&#13;
Among them was McCarthy's&#13;
wife, Jean McCarthy Minetti, who&#13;
granted the only interview she has&#13;
ever given to a McCarthy&#13;
biographer. The meeting took 3-&#13;
1/2 years to arrange.&#13;
Reeves also obtained interviews&#13;
with McCarthy's secret speechwriter,&#13;
his principal investigator&#13;
who was covertly assigned to the&#13;
senator by J. Edgar Hoover,&#13;
McCarthy's two closest personal&#13;
friends (Tom Korb of Milwaukee&#13;
and Judge Urban P. Van Susteren&#13;
of Appleton), and his brother&#13;
Stephen and sister Olive.&#13;
Reeves is a full professor of&#13;
history at Parkside and has been a&#13;
faculty member since 1970. ^LEADER^f&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Elm wood Plaza/Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
Visit Kenosha's&#13;
LARGEST&#13;
Record Department&#13;
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ATTENTION&#13;
ALL STUDENTS!&#13;
— Records —&#13;
— Sheet Music —&#13;
Instructional Music&#13;
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YOUR REGISTRATION PACKET FOR FALL 1982&#13;
*&#13;
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OFFICE OF INSTITUTIONAL&#13;
ANALYSIS AND REGISTRATION&#13;
The employer's side of the interview " I . . „ THAMCAL\RPC&#13;
by Mary Kirton Kaddatz&#13;
"The cost of poor personnel&#13;
selection was estimated in 1976 at&#13;
$1,750 per job vacancy; covering&#13;
newspaper advertising, employment&#13;
agency fees, interviewing&#13;
time, and administrative&#13;
costs," according to&#13;
Erwin S. Stanton (Successful&#13;
Personnel Recruiting and&#13;
Selection). By 1982 this figure has&#13;
doubled.&#13;
"The quality of a company's&#13;
personnel is frequently the single&#13;
factor that determines whether&#13;
the organization is going to be&#13;
successful, whether it will realize&#13;
a satisfactory return on its investment,"&#13;
said Stanton. It's&#13;
important that a sufficient&#13;
number of promotable candidates&#13;
are constantly brought into the&#13;
organization.&#13;
"People are our most important&#13;
asset. As labor costs rise, people&#13;
may very well be the&#13;
organization's prime asset," said&#13;
Stanton. When an employee is&#13;
unsuccessful (terminated), the&#13;
interviewing process begins all&#13;
over again and adds additional&#13;
hidden costs to the selection&#13;
process:&#13;
• The low quality of work&#13;
performed by the unsuccessful&#13;
employee while still on the job.&#13;
• The internal disorganization&#13;
and disruption that employee may&#13;
have caused.&#13;
• The customer ill - will and&#13;
alientation that may have been&#13;
generated, and perhaps&#13;
• The actual loss of a much&#13;
valued account.&#13;
Employers are exceptionally&#13;
wary of marginal employees.&#13;
These employees are not bad&#13;
enough to be grossly incompetent&#13;
or ineffective enough to be fired on&#13;
the spot. But they do lack basic&#13;
motivation, carry bad attitudes,&#13;
or just aren't capable of growing&#13;
with the company goals. The&#13;
marginal employee is tolerated,&#13;
kept on the payroll, never really&#13;
successful, failing completely to&#13;
generate a satisfactory volume of&#13;
business for the company. Some&#13;
danger signals to the employer&#13;
are:&#13;
• Sketchy, erratic job history,&#13;
brief periods of e mployment.&#13;
• Time gaps in employment&#13;
record (not reasonably accounted&#13;
for).&#13;
• Past salary requirements&#13;
higher than the company can&#13;
offer.&#13;
• Frequent moves suggests&#13;
personal instability or lack of&#13;
maturity.&#13;
• Past experience / education&#13;
not related to job specifications.&#13;
• Reasons for leaving are&#13;
undesirable, troublesome, or&#13;
suggest personal incompatibility&#13;
with other workers, superior.&#13;
• Physical disability or health&#13;
problem that would prevent&#13;
performance of the job.&#13;
Employers feel that good people&#13;
are always hard to find. Companies&#13;
are eager to attract, hire,&#13;
and retain a productive, satisfied,&#13;
and well - motivated employee.&#13;
There are four basic types of&#13;
screening interviews:&#13;
VISUAL SCREENING — very&#13;
noticeable in this area are the&#13;
applicants actions anytime near&#13;
or on the premises of the employer's&#13;
property. Sight Screening&#13;
can eliminate you quickly. Hostile&#13;
people who tear up applications,&#13;
under the influence of alcohol,&#13;
suffering from serious emotional&#13;
problems, accompanied by babies&#13;
/ dogs / friends, appearance and&#13;
dress unacceptable (for the&#13;
position a- dirty, slovenly, unshaven).&#13;
CRITICAL "KNOCK - OUT&#13;
QUESTIONS" — job&#13;
specifications are critical,&#13;
generally yes or no questions to&#13;
determine if you have related&#13;
experience or a specific degree&#13;
directly related to the position.&#13;
Motivation, positive attributes,&#13;
and good intentions are wily good&#13;
if you possess the critical&#13;
specifications required to perform&#13;
PREVIEWING APPLICATIONS&#13;
— give some indication whether or&#13;
not a more detailed, comprehensive&#13;
interview is called for.&#13;
Resumes tell what the applicant&#13;
wants the employer to know.&#13;
Applications tell companies what&#13;
they need to know (or what they&#13;
can legally ask on application&#13;
forms). A brief look at an application&#13;
can initiate a stand - up&#13;
interview to verify the information&#13;
/ impression given by&#13;
the applicant. If sent on your way&#13;
quickly, assume your impression&#13;
was not favorably disposed&#13;
toward the vacant position. If an&#13;
appointment is given to further&#13;
discuss your qualifications, some&#13;
interest has been generated. And&#13;
should be followed up on.&#13;
BRIEF JOB DESCRIPTION —&#13;
Job requirements and duties,&#13;
related conditions of employment&#13;
can be deterrants to the applicants&#13;
who are unfamiliar with&#13;
the full job requirements.&#13;
Examples are willingness to&#13;
accept shift assignments as a&#13;
condition of employment, compensation&#13;
may be less, relocation,&#13;
excessive amounts of travel or&#13;
time used to conduct business.&#13;
Enlightenment encourages&#13;
numerous applicants to remove&#13;
'Treshmen wait&#13;
for the weekend&#13;
to have a Michelob.&#13;
Seniors know betterV&#13;
Put a little&#13;
weekend&#13;
in your week.&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
E. F. MADRIGRANO&#13;
1831 - 55th St.&#13;
Kenosha. Wise.&#13;
658-3553&#13;
themselves voluntarily, over -&#13;
qualified applicants lost interest&#13;
(especially when low salary is&#13;
mentioned).&#13;
Potential applicants may get&#13;
through these initial screening&#13;
processes well, but when it comes&#13;
time for the 2nd, 3rd and&#13;
sometimes 4th interview, the&#13;
applicant falls short unexpectedly.&#13;
Many employers try&#13;
very diligently to put you at ease.&#13;
"Many applicants are so at ease,&#13;
they nonchalantly confide in the&#13;
employer that they really have&#13;
avid interests in other areas — not&#13;
relating to the job that they are&#13;
applying for. And the employer&#13;
says, sorry, we can't use you,"&#13;
says Verna Zimmermann of the&#13;
Alumni and Placement Office.&#13;
"Each interview can make or&#13;
break your chances of being accepted&#13;
for employment," says&#13;
Zimmermann.&#13;
How Reliable Are Interviews?&#13;
William F. Glueck has come up&#13;
with the following generalizations&#13;
about interviews (supported by&#13;
research): "The attitudes of the&#13;
interviewer and and interviewee&#13;
influence the reliability of the&#13;
interview, as does the form of&#13;
questions and answers," says&#13;
Glueck (Personnel, A Diagnostic&#13;
Approach).&#13;
• Unfavorable relevant information&#13;
influences interviewers&#13;
more than favorable information,&#13;
and the earlier in the interview the&#13;
negative information is introduced,&#13;
the greater the negative&#13;
effect is.&#13;
• The interviewer's decision&#13;
may be affected by the characteristics&#13;
erf a previous applicant&#13;
(your competition).&#13;
• Work at listening to what and&#13;
how the interviewer communicates&#13;
to you. Many interviewers&#13;
are planning questions&#13;
when they should be listening. Be&#13;
aware of the nonverbal cues that&#13;
indicate this.&#13;
Remember, it's your interview&#13;
too? Bring up anything the interviewer&#13;
skips over that you feel&#13;
is pertinent to the performance of&#13;
the job you are applying for.&#13;
Pregnancy—&#13;
when unwed,&#13;
the answer&#13;
is never easy&#13;
Continued From Page Nine&#13;
me wrong, there are times when I&#13;
could just, well, there are times&#13;
when I get mad at him, but I&#13;
learned quickly that the 'good'&#13;
outranks the 'bad.' You have to&#13;
look at it that way. It would be&#13;
easy for me to go home at night&#13;
and get mad at David all the time,&#13;
but that's not the way a mother&#13;
behaves. A mother is supposed to&#13;
be patient, and kind, and never let&#13;
her child be unloved. Sometimes it&#13;
turns out to be quite a chore, but&#13;
like I said, the good outweighs the&#13;
bad."&#13;
Cathy didn't want to put David&#13;
up for adoption, because she was&#13;
afraid that she would not be able&#13;
to give him up for good. "I didn't&#13;
think any option would be easy,&#13;
but adoption was out, because I'm&#13;
sure that after I would have given&#13;
him up, I would have wanted him&#13;
back, and things don't work like&#13;
that, so I did things in a way I&#13;
knew they (Vould work out. I h ave&#13;
my son, and I support him&#13;
financially, and emotionally, and&#13;
he gives me more happiness than I&#13;
know what to do with. During the&#13;
day, he stays with the neighbor,&#13;
and my job allows me to spend a&#13;
lot of time with David. When I&#13;
graduate, I'll just have to work&#13;
during the day, and before I kn ow&#13;
it, he'll be starting school. We'll&#13;
stick it out together though, and&#13;
we'll get by."&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 15,1982&#13;
Powerline construction studied ITake a stand ral|v held u_P"kAde. anthropologist. i»rSnn with . . V^MMIVVI I A Parkside anthropologist Black, whit.&#13;
Richard W Stoffle, is conducting&#13;
ethnographic field studies in Utah&#13;
and Nevada to determine the&#13;
potential effects of power line&#13;
construction on Native American&#13;
l!an tnbes in those areas,&#13;
ihe research is supported by&#13;
two grants totalling $118,183 f rom&#13;
Applied Conservation Technology&#13;
Inc., of Fullerton, Cal., which is&#13;
directing the research for the&#13;
Intermountain Power Agency.&#13;
The studies focus on the impact&#13;
ol the power lines on Indian&#13;
religious beliefs, and physical&#13;
sites, plant and animal life important&#13;
to religious and&#13;
ceremonial traditions.&#13;
Stoffle has a staff of 30 persons&#13;
working on the project, including&#13;
12 Native Americans. One of the&#13;
Indians, Dan Bullets, is a major&#13;
religious leader of the Kaibab&#13;
Paiute tribe. Stoffle says he&#13;
believes it is the first time that a&#13;
person with Bullets' background&#13;
and influence with the Indians has&#13;
been involved with such a study&#13;
The Native American staff has&#13;
enabled the research team to&#13;
conduct interviews and meetings&#13;
with tribal councils in the&#13;
language of the people, Stoffle&#13;
said, opening a "new world" of&#13;
ethnographic investigation.&#13;
Stoffle said the group has been'&#13;
taping oral histories with tribal&#13;
old timers" who learned from&#13;
their parents of the Indians' first&#13;
extensive contact with non - native&#13;
civilization and the transitions&#13;
that resulted in tribal life. "It's&#13;
information that won't be around&#13;
m another 10 years," Stoffle said&#13;
The research team also is&#13;
breaking new ground in anthropological&#13;
methodology by&#13;
using three - dimensional raised&#13;
topographical maps in communicating&#13;
with non - English&#13;
speakers.&#13;
Art-addicts to hold show&#13;
The research staff includes Dr.&#13;
Henry Dobyns, a former UW-P&#13;
anthropology faculty member,&#13;
who now is at the Newberry&#13;
Library Center for the Study of the&#13;
American Indian.&#13;
Stoffle expects to complete the&#13;
studies by August 1. They are the&#13;
fifth and sixth major social impact&#13;
projects he has completed in&#13;
their area, where he directed&#13;
Parkside Field Schools in Anthropology&#13;
from 1973 t o 1975.&#13;
Stoffle, who earned his PhD&#13;
degree from the University of&#13;
Kentucky, joined the UW-P&#13;
faculty in 1972 and currently is&#13;
director of its Urban Anthropology&#13;
Field School which&#13;
conducts continuing studies of the&#13;
social and economic impact of&#13;
Lake Michigan recreational&#13;
fishing on the Kenosha - Racine&#13;
area.&#13;
A rally to protest the direction&#13;
and effects of the Reagan Administration,&#13;
and to hear new&#13;
ideas and solutions is planned for&#13;
Milwaukee's MECCA on Saturday&#13;
evening, April 24,1982, in the East&#13;
Hall at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
It is sponsored by the "Take A&#13;
Stand" Rally Committee.&#13;
Sandra Jones, co - ordinator for&#13;
the Rally Committee, charged&#13;
today that "the working people of&#13;
Milwaukee are being backed up&#13;
against the wall by Reaganomics&#13;
and Governor Dreyfus' support&#13;
for the 'new federalism'. It is time&#13;
for the people themselves —&#13;
Black, white, Chicano, men,&#13;
women and youth — to take a&#13;
stand.&#13;
Gus Hall, General Secretary of&#13;
the Communist Party, U.S.A., and&#13;
its 1980 Presidential candidate has&#13;
accepted the Committee's invitation&#13;
to be the main speaker at&#13;
the "Take A Stand" Rally. Angela&#13;
Davis, author of the newly -&#13;
released book, "WOMEN, RACE&#13;
AND CLASS" and co - chairperson&#13;
of the National Alliance Against&#13;
Racist and Political Repression&#13;
will be a featured guest.&#13;
For information about tickets&#13;
for the rally, call 414-931-8&#13;
Job prospects worsen&#13;
On Monday, April 19, the Art&#13;
Addicts and the Art discipline will&#13;
be sponsoring the 1982 Student Art&#13;
Show opening and reception inthe&#13;
Communication Arts Gallery. The&#13;
special guest will be Charles&#13;
Toman, Assistant Curator of&#13;
Education at the Milwaukee Art&#13;
Museum.&#13;
Toman will give a presentation&#13;
on the works in the exhibit, and&#13;
present awards to artists and their&#13;
works. The reception is open to all&#13;
Parkside students and the public.&#13;
The reception begins at 7 p.m. and&#13;
will conclude at 9 p.m. Toman will&#13;
begin his presentation at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Any students desiring to enter&#13;
works of art done here at Parkside&#13;
within the last two years may do&#13;
so today and Friday. The drop off&#13;
area is the Comm. Arts gallery,&#13;
and may be dropped off between&#13;
Conscientious&#13;
objectors&#13;
Young men who want to get&#13;
conscientious objector status&#13;
should act now, says the New Call&#13;
to Peacemaking, a Eugene,&#13;
Oregon, draft counseling group&#13;
affiliated with three churches.&#13;
Whether or not they decide to&#13;
register for the draft, young men&#13;
should put a statement of their&#13;
feelings down on paper and file it&#13;
with a religious group or draft&#13;
counseling service, says the New&#13;
Call. Those who wait until an&#13;
actual draft is imminent before&#13;
expressing their feelings will have&#13;
less credibility.&#13;
Gunderson&#13;
given grant&#13;
A $93,480 grant from the&#13;
National Institutes of Health&#13;
(NIH) has been awarded to a&#13;
Parkside neurobiologist, Ross W.&#13;
Gundersen, to support a three -&#13;
year study of in vitro directional&#13;
growth of motor neurites in chick&#13;
embryos.&#13;
Gundersen's special interest is&#13;
developmental neurobiology,&#13;
particularly the factors which&#13;
help guide nerve cell processes to&#13;
their target tissues.&#13;
Gundersen says that such&#13;
studies are important because&#13;
they may one day have medical&#13;
implications for the treatment of&#13;
injuries to the central nervous&#13;
system which involve the&#13;
guidance of regenerating fibers to&#13;
their correct destinations.&#13;
Gundersen, an assistant&#13;
professor of life science, came to&#13;
UW-Parkside last fall. He&#13;
received his PhD at the University&#13;
of Illinois and spent four years as&#13;
a post - doctoral researcher at the&#13;
medical schools of the University&#13;
of Miami and the University of&#13;
Colorado.&#13;
10 a .m. and 5 p.m. on Thursday,&#13;
and 10 a.m. to3:30 p.m. on Friday.&#13;
See the exhibition prospectus for&#13;
other rules for entering, obtainable&#13;
on the D-l level of the&#13;
Comm. Arts area.&#13;
Job prospects for 1982 graduates&#13;
may not be as good as predicted&#13;
last November. Placement officers&#13;
at schools around the&#13;
country say a significant number&#13;
of companies have cancelled&#13;
spring interviews because of the&#13;
economy. One administrator of&#13;
Northwestern University's Endicott&#13;
Report on campus&#13;
recruiting plans says recent&#13;
economic changes, due to a slump&#13;
in retail sales, metals and the oil&#13;
industry, have made earlier&#13;
hiring predictions seem too optimistic.&#13;
When solitons meet. . .&#13;
Non-credit dance class&#13;
Non - credit dance classes for&#13;
teens and adults will be offered at&#13;
Parkside this summer under&#13;
auspices of the Community&#13;
Educational Programs Office.&#13;
A six - week ballet class for&#13;
junior and senior high school&#13;
students will run from 10 to 11:15&#13;
a.m. Mondays and Wednesdays&#13;
from June 21 to July 28. A jazz&#13;
class for adults will meet at 6:30&#13;
p.m. Tuesdays June 22 to Aug. 10.&#13;
Both classes will be in the Communication&#13;
Arts Building, Room&#13;
140.&#13;
Kathleen Zavada, dance instructor&#13;
at UW-Parkside and UWMilwaukee,&#13;
will teach the courses.&#13;
Cost for the ballet class is $40;&#13;
the jazz class, $30. For further&#13;
information, call 553-2312.&#13;
We are all familiar with waves&#13;
in nature — water waves, sound&#13;
waves, light waves, etc. But there&#13;
are also many phenomena which&#13;
are actually waves, even though&#13;
we may not think of them as&#13;
waves. These are the so-called&#13;
solitary waves, examples of which&#13;
are things like nerve impulses and&#13;
sonic booms. A special class of&#13;
solitary waves, called solitons,&#13;
has the unusual property that&#13;
when solitons meet, they can pass&#13;
through one another unchanged.&#13;
Solitons were first observed as&#13;
solitary water waves in a canal in&#13;
Scotland in the 19th century, but&#13;
their detailed study languished&#13;
until the advent of the modern&#13;
computer. Now the concept of the&#13;
soli ton has found application in&#13;
practically every branch of&#13;
physics from hydrodynamics to&#13;
elementary particles.&#13;
Solitons will be the subject of a&#13;
Physics Colloquium on Wednesday,&#13;
April 21. The speaker will&#13;
be Dr. Alwyn C. Scott, director of&#13;
the Center for Nonlinear Studies&#13;
at Los Alamos National&#13;
Laboratory. Dr. Scott has&#13;
published numerous books and&#13;
papers on the subject of solitons&#13;
and nonlinear wave propagation,&#13;
and is an internationally known&#13;
authority on those subjects. His&#13;
talk, entitled "Solitons," will be&#13;
given at 1:00 p.m., April 21, in 230&#13;
Greenquist Hall. The public is&#13;
invited.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside ^ .&#13;
Public forum&#13;
War and Conflict&#13;
in Central America&#13;
TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 12:50 PM, GREENQUIST H ALL 103&#13;
ANNE N ELSON, PHOTOJOURNALIST, RECENTLY R ETURNED F ROM EL SALVADOR A ND&#13;
GUATEMALA; AUTHOR, LITTLE-WARS: THE U NITED S TATES A ND TH F&#13;
(FORTHCOMING), PHOTOS /ARTICL ES IN NEWSWEEK, NEW YORK TI MES,&#13;
IN THESE TI MES, THE N ATION; GUEST O N M C N EIL-LEHRER REPORT ~&#13;
RICHARD M ILLETT, HISTORIAN, SOUTHERN ILLIN OIS UN IVERSITY, AUTHOR,&#13;
GUARDIANS O F T HE D YNASTY (ON N ICARAGUAN POL ITICS), 1977; THE&#13;
RESTLESS C ARIBBEAN, 1979; CONGRESSIONAL C ONSULTANT O N C ENTRAL&#13;
AMERICAN A FFAIRS&#13;
R0D0LF0 CO RTINA, DIRECTOR, SPANISH S PEAKING O UTREACH C ENTER, UNIVERSITY&#13;
OF W ISCONSIN-MILWAUKEE, SPECIALIST IN CENTRAL A MERICAN A ND C ARIBBEAN&#13;
POLITICS AND C ULTURE&#13;
GERALD G REENFIELD, HISTORIAN, UNIVERSITY OF W ISCONSIN-PARKSIDE, LATIN&#13;
AMERICAN SP ECIALIST, FULBRIGHT F ELLOW IN BRAZIL, 1981&#13;
KENNETH H OOVER, MODERATOR, DIRECTOR, PUBLIC F ORUM, POLITICAL SC IENTIST,&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF W ISCONSIN-PARKSIDE&#13;
FREE A ND O PEN T O T HE P UBLIC&#13;
*N0TE: THERE W ILL B E A D ISPLAY OF&#13;
MS. NELSON'S P HOTOGRAPHS A T T HE&#13;
PUBLIC F ORUM.&#13;
Co- S p o n s o r e d by the Uni v e r s i t y o f&#13;
W i s c o n s i n - P a r k s i d e and UW EX- D e p a r t -&#13;
men t of Gov e r nmen t a l Af f a i r s&#13;
mtiTv or .uromiw E&gt; TENSION ir «ive«|iTy o. »ncomiN p.m.ip.&#13;
6 Thursday, April 15,1982 RANGER&#13;
•• •• Club Events&#13;
S.W.E.A.&#13;
There will be a S.W.E.A.&#13;
meeting Monday, May 3. S.W.E.A.&#13;
received the Outstanding Student&#13;
Wisconsin Education Award for&#13;
1981-82 at the representative&#13;
assembly that was held in&#13;
Oshkosh. The award was given to&#13;
the club with most members,&#13;
participation, and club events.&#13;
Elections were held for 1982-83.&#13;
The officers for the next year are:&#13;
President, Todd Murray; Vice -&#13;
President, Bert Hartnell;&#13;
Secretary, Valerie Olson;&#13;
Treasurer, Sue Flaherty; and&#13;
Publicity, Linda Soukeyasian.&#13;
International&#13;
Student Organization&#13;
The International Students&#13;
Organization is sponsoring a talk&#13;
on "Protecting the World's&#13;
Resources — Is Time Running&#13;
OUT?" The talk will be given by&#13;
Paul Hayes, a science and energy&#13;
reporter for the Milwaukee&#13;
Journal, on April 21, at 1 p.m. in&#13;
MOLN 105. Everyone is welcome&#13;
to attend.&#13;
Computer Club&#13;
Part 3 of Computer Graphics on&#13;
Display will be shown Friday,&#13;
April 23, in Grnq. 103. There will&#13;
be two sessions this week, from 1-&#13;
2:30 p.m., and from 2:304 p.m.&#13;
Some of the topics are the Evans&#13;
• •••&#13;
and Sutherland Flight Simulator,&#13;
Vidsizer; a combination of&#13;
computer graphics and synthesizer&#13;
effects, ZGRASS; a&#13;
graphic system demonstration,&#13;
and Dubner demo tape. The event&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
Geology Colloquium&#13;
The Geology Colloquium for&#13;
Friday, April 16 is "Gideon&#13;
Mantell and the Discovery of&#13;
Dinosaurs." The talk will be given&#13;
by Dr. Dennis R. Dean of the&#13;
Humanities Program - Parkside,&#13;
and begins at 1 p.m.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon's second&#13;
annual LOOP 500 bike race is&#13;
scheduled for Wednesday, April&#13;
28, at 1 p.m. Four - member teams&#13;
can compete in the relay race&#13;
along the inner loop road. Each&#13;
team member receives a LOOP&#13;
500 T-shirt and a beer in the Union.&#13;
Teams can register for the event&#13;
on April 20-21 in the Molinaro&#13;
concourse.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
Women in Business invite all to&#13;
join them for Aerobic dancing in&#13;
the Phy Ed. Wrestling room on&#13;
April 19 and 20. On May 7 and 8,&#13;
Accent on Women will be&#13;
presented here at Parkside.&#13;
Please pick up a brochure and&#13;
register by April 30.&#13;
State budget decisions&#13;
could affect student fees&#13;
Students can expect a larger&#13;
tuition bill next fall, and just how&#13;
high tuition will go partly depends&#13;
on budget decisions state&#13;
Legislators make in the days&#13;
ahead. In the budget deliberations&#13;
scheduled for this Special Session&#13;
of th e Legislature, Legislators will&#13;
decide whether to reduce state&#13;
support of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin and whether to give the&#13;
UW Board of Regents the&#13;
authority to raise tuition to offset&#13;
the cut in state support.&#13;
The budget proposed by&#13;
Governor Dreyfus, SB 783, calls&#13;
fro cutting state support of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
by $25.2 million. That cut is part of&#13;
the Governor's proposal to reduce&#13;
the budgets of state agencies by&#13;
2% for this fiscal year (1981-1982)&#13;
and 4% for next fiscal year (1982-&#13;
19&amp;3). While other state agencies&#13;
in addition to the UW are affected,&#13;
the UW stands to lose the largest&#13;
amount in absolute dollars.&#13;
Action on the budget proposal is&#13;
now due in the state Assembly.&#13;
Speaker of the Assembly,&#13;
Representative Ed Jackamonis&#13;
(D - Waukesha), fielded a&#13;
proposal last month which would&#13;
reduce the proposed cuts to the&#13;
UW System. Instead of a 4% cut&#13;
for 1982 - 1983, the Jackamonis&#13;
plan calls for only a 2% reduction&#13;
in the UW budget for 1982 - 1983.&#13;
That would save the University&#13;
about $8.5 million for next year.&#13;
The Jackamonis proposal also&#13;
stipulates that the UW Board of&#13;
Regents could increase tuition&#13;
next fall to make up for cuts in&#13;
state support to the UW. Under the&#13;
current system, the Regents can&#13;
request a tuition increase but&#13;
must receive approval from the&#13;
Department of Administration&#13;
and the Joint Committee on&#13;
Finance to spend the money&#13;
collected from the fee increase.&#13;
The current system allowed&#13;
students to fight the spring&#13;
semester surcharge in the&#13;
Legislature and forced UW administrators&#13;
to specify how the&#13;
money collected from a surcharge&#13;
would be spent.&#13;
Under the Jackamonis plan, the&#13;
Regents would have the authority&#13;
to raise tuition to offset state cuts&#13;
without having to seek the approval&#13;
of the Department of&#13;
Administration and the Finance&#13;
Committee. Jackamonis is&#13;
suggesting that the cut to the UW&#13;
be reduced from 4% to 2% and&#13;
that the Regents be given the&#13;
authority to raise tuition to make&#13;
up for the 2% cut still in place.&#13;
Compensation for a 2% cut in the&#13;
1982 - 1983 UW budget would&#13;
require about a 15% increase in&#13;
tuition, more than a $100 i ncrease&#13;
in tuition for next year.&#13;
Whether either of Jackamonis'&#13;
proposals have support will&#13;
become clear as members of the&#13;
Assembly begin to debate the&#13;
budget. The state Senate, which&#13;
approved a modified version of&#13;
the Governor's budget proposal&#13;
last month, left the $25.2 million&#13;
cut to the UW intact and did not&#13;
alter the current system for&#13;
establishing" tuition levels.&#13;
The Board of Regents, who are&#13;
scheduled to make recommendations&#13;
on fall tuition at their&#13;
May or June meeting, are likely to&#13;
decide on tuition levels based on&#13;
what comes out.of the Legislature&#13;
this month. Whether the&#13;
Legislature reduces the 4% cut for&#13;
next year and whether the&#13;
Legislature gives the Regents a&#13;
green light on raising tuition will&#13;
show in student fees next fall.&#13;
Folk arts influence explored&#13;
McKeown memorial&#13;
scholarship accepted&#13;
The UW System Board of&#13;
Regents April 9 accepted contributions&#13;
of $1,176 to the James E.&#13;
McKeown Memorial Scholarship&#13;
Fund at Parkside.&#13;
The scholarship memorializes a&#13;
UW-P sociology professor who&#13;
died last December.&#13;
McKeown joined the UW-P&#13;
faculty in 1970 after serving as&#13;
Chair of the Sociology Department&#13;
at DePaul University from&#13;
1962 to 1970. He was the author of a&#13;
number of articles, monographs&#13;
and books dealing with a wide&#13;
range of subjcts including juvenile&#13;
delinquency, criminal justice,&#13;
.aging, urban politics, social&#13;
theory and race relations.&#13;
The scholarship fund is administered&#13;
by the Parkside&#13;
Behavioral Science Division.&#13;
"American Folk Art and Its&#13;
Influence on American Art" will&#13;
be the topic of a slide - lecture by&#13;
Russell Bowman, chief curator at&#13;
the Milwaukee Art Museum, on&#13;
Thursday, April 15, at Parkside at&#13;
3:30 p. m. in Greenquist Hall,&#13;
Room 101.&#13;
Bowman will discuss the influence&#13;
that American folk art, its&#13;
stylizations and iconography,&#13;
have had on the formal artists of&#13;
this century.&#13;
His talk is part of a free public&#13;
art history seminar series titled&#13;
"Art, Style and Society"&#13;
organized by the UW - Parkside&#13;
Art Discipline.&#13;
Last fall, Bowman organized an&#13;
exhibition of American Folk Art&#13;
from the Herbert Hemphill&#13;
Collection at the Milwaukee Art&#13;
Museum. The exhibit is now on&#13;
tour.&#13;
Before coming to the Milwaukee&#13;
Art Museum, Bowman was&#13;
Director of Education at The&#13;
Museum of Contemporary Art in&#13;
Chicago and was a lecturer in art&#13;
history at UW - Parkside. He&#13;
received his MA from the&#13;
University of Chicago, where he is&#13;
presently completing his doctorate.&#13;
He is the author of a&#13;
number of catalog essays and&#13;
articles for "Art in America" and&#13;
"Arts Magazine."&#13;
All of the lectures in the series&#13;
address the issue of h ow art forms&#13;
and styles relate to their social&#13;
contexts. Each lecture is followed&#13;
by a discussion period.&#13;
The final lecture in the series&#13;
will be on May 6, at 3:30 p. m. in&#13;
Greenquist 101. Jack Burnheim of&#13;
Northwestern University will&#13;
discuss "Duchamp's Mysticism:&#13;
Toward a Theory of Modernism&#13;
and Post - Modernism."&#13;
WE'LL PAY YOU 70 GET INTO&#13;
SHAPE THIS SUMMER.&#13;
If you have at least&#13;
two years of college left,&#13;
you can spend six weeks at&#13;
our Army ROTC Basic&#13;
Camp this summer and earn&#13;
approximately $600.&#13;
And if you qualify, you&#13;
can enter the ROTC 2-&#13;
Year Program this fall and&#13;
receive up to $ 1,000 a year.&#13;
But the big payoff&#13;
happens on graduation day.&#13;
That's when you receive&#13;
an officer's commission.&#13;
So get your body in&#13;
shape (not to mention your&#13;
bank account).&#13;
Enroll in Army ROTC.&#13;
For more information,&#13;
contact your Professor of&#13;
Military Science.&#13;
m ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BE ALLYOU CAN BE.&#13;
How to&#13;
do well in&#13;
Economy Class Simple. Fly Capitol Air's Economy Class. Our&#13;
fares are the lowest of any scheduled airline so&#13;
you can use the money you save for lots of&#13;
other things. Like a Eurail pass if you fly us to&#13;
Brussels, Frankfurt or Zurich. More time in the&#13;
sun if you're headed for Miami, San Juan or&#13;
Puerto Plata. Or for even more fun in New York,&#13;
Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago or Boston.&#13;
And, if you are flying to Europe this summer,&#13;
make your reservation and buy your ticket&#13;
now. With our guaranteed fare policy you are&#13;
protected against any fare increases from now&#13;
until departure.&#13;
So if you want to do well in Economy Class,&#13;
fly Capitol's.&#13;
For reservations, call your Travel Agent or&#13;
Capitol at 312-347-0230 in Chicago, 800-572-&#13;
5788 in Illinois or 800-621 -5330 outside Illinois.&#13;
No one makes Economy Class&#13;
as economical as we do*&#13;
SCHEDULED AIRLINE SERVICE&#13;
T THE LOWEST FARES&#13;
San Fronctacbi&#13;
Utopia rocks to the right&#13;
by Mark Sanders&#13;
Utopia, a group established in&#13;
the mid - seventies by Todd&#13;
Rundgren, capitalizes on the&#13;
recent trend toward conservatism&#13;
in this country on their latest&#13;
album, "Swing to the Right."&#13;
If you are not already familiar&#13;
with Utopia it is only because&#13;
Utopia songs are rarely played on&#13;
the local rock radio stations. Most&#13;
of the music played on popular&#13;
rock radio stations in recent times&#13;
could be described as mindless,&#13;
repetitive, uninspired (except by&#13;
drugs) and non - creative. Groups&#13;
like Genesis, Journey, Rush and&#13;
Billy Squier (while having&#13;
stylistic differences) insist on&#13;
turning out records that sound&#13;
like homogenized Led Zepplin&#13;
regurgitations. Don't get me&#13;
wrong — Led Zepplin WAS a great&#13;
rock and roll group, but that was&#13;
ten years ago. In case you have&#13;
not checked your calendar lately,&#13;
it is 1982 and you would think some&#13;
creative force would have brought&#13;
more variety and individuality to&#13;
rock and roll since the seventies.&#13;
Those creative forces do exist&#13;
(somewhere out in musicland) but&#13;
they are being stifled by the&#13;
broadcast medium to the point of&#13;
censorship — which is what&#13;
"Swing to the Right" is all about.&#13;
On the cover of this album,&#13;
photographs of a book burning&#13;
that probably took place in the&#13;
fifties by a group of J erry Falwell&#13;
types serves to illustrate the&#13;
lyrical content of this album.&#13;
Superimposed into the hands of a&#13;
child on the front cover picture is&#13;
a copy of the album — a nd it is&#13;
about to be censored at 451&#13;
degrees Fahrenheit. Whoever did&#13;
the artwork here was correct on&#13;
two counts: One — this is a very&#13;
"hot" album, and Two — it is&#13;
being "censored" by local radio&#13;
stations.&#13;
The album is similar to the late&#13;
sixties anti - establishment music&#13;
but with a 1980's flair that makes&#13;
it very interesting — and very&#13;
good. Todd Rundgren, who writes&#13;
computer programs in his spare&#13;
time (Todd made the "Utopia&#13;
Video Graphics Tablet" system&#13;
for Apple) displays much of his&#13;
masterfully refreshing guitar&#13;
work while Roger Powell competently&#13;
plays the synthesizers&#13;
that he builds himself in such a&#13;
way as to not sound like a video&#13;
arcade on a Saturday afternoon.&#13;
The powerful bass line of Kasim&#13;
Sulton is complemented by the&#13;
unique drumming style of Willie&#13;
Wilcox.&#13;
Highlights of this album include&#13;
"Lysistrata," an anti - war song&#13;
based on the Greek comedy made&#13;
relevant for today's pre-World&#13;
War Three society. Also good is&#13;
"For the Love of Money," a&#13;
synthesizer - laden remake of an&#13;
old Gamble and Huff song. This is&#13;
the only non - original cut on the&#13;
album. A parody of today's punk&#13;
rock fad "Junk Rock (Million&#13;
Monkeys)" has a purposely&#13;
monotonous rhythm that exemplifies&#13;
current punk hits. Most of&#13;
the other cuts on the album are&#13;
well done musically while dealing&#13;
lyrically with various attributes of&#13;
today's society. The low point of&#13;
the album, "Fahrenheit 451," is a&#13;
disco - influenced ditty based on&#13;
the Bradbury classic about book&#13;
burnings. This cut is made&#13;
tolerable only by its brevity.&#13;
Despite the cynical nature of the&#13;
music here, the last cut, "One&#13;
World," is a fast moving, optimistically&#13;
flavored tune that&#13;
confesses the idea that even&#13;
though some things in today's&#13;
society are not too good, in&#13;
general, things are still pretty&#13;
good in this country.&#13;
The only intrinsic fault on&#13;
"Swing to the Right" is the&#13;
mathematical precision by which&#13;
each note seems to be played. This&#13;
is a well - engineered album and&#13;
the sound quality is excellent.&#13;
Utopia albums are generally&#13;
unpredictable in content — a ll of&#13;
the past Utopia albums have been&#13;
completely different. A valid&#13;
comparison of these albums is&#13;
hard to make but I would label this&#13;
one an "average" Utopia album.&#13;
However, the average Utopia&#13;
album is twenty times better than&#13;
popular music played on the radio&#13;
so in this context I would give&#13;
"Swing to the Right" an A - minus.&#13;
Definitely a very good album, but&#13;
certainly not Utopia's best.&#13;
soncxxxmy&#13;
Take refuge in this jazz spot&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
I wrote an article for the&#13;
Christmas issue of the Ranger on&#13;
all the neat, cultured, and fun&#13;
places to go in Milwaukee at night.&#13;
It was a pretty good article (ha,&#13;
ha, ha) and it talked about several&#13;
different nightspots. But little did&#13;
I know that right here in my&#13;
hometown there would be a really&#13;
sharp place to eat, drink, and see&#13;
and hear live jazz. Yes, you heard&#13;
me right, there is a place like that&#13;
in Racine, and it is known as the&#13;
Sanctuary Restaurant.&#13;
I went to the Sanctuary for the&#13;
first time last Saturday night after&#13;
hearing that they were featuring a&#13;
live jazz combo that evening. I&#13;
arrived about nine p.m. or so, and&#13;
although it was crowded my group&#13;
managed to get good seats at a&#13;
large table. I looked around, and&#13;
got my first surprise of the&#13;
evening. It was really nice! I&#13;
mean, itwasn't fancy or anything,&#13;
but it wasn't inundated in&#13;
rusticism either, like a lot of&#13;
places are. The restaurant is&#13;
basically long and rectangular,&#13;
with an extremely high ceiling&#13;
holding large, low - lit lamps. The&#13;
bar is at the back, with tables in&#13;
the large middle space, and a&#13;
small stage for the musicians at&#13;
the front. The decor is understated:&#13;
lots of wood, not too&#13;
many silly paintings or anything,&#13;
very simple, austere, clean. Very&#13;
nice.&#13;
I was served by a very pleasant&#13;
waitress, and had the best grilled&#13;
ham and cheese sandwich I've&#13;
ever had, with a scrumptous piece&#13;
of french silk pie to top it off. The&#13;
menu includes quiche, crepes,&#13;
salads, all kinds of sandwiches,&#13;
and about anything else you can&#13;
think of. There are several different&#13;
kinds of wine, and a fairly,&#13;
large selection of domestic and&#13;
imported beers., I recommend the&#13;
Labatt's Ale.&#13;
The jazz group, a local one, was&#13;
pretty good, and included a drum&#13;
and acoustic bass backup for a&#13;
fine saxophone / clarinetist and an&#13;
excellent pianist. There were even&#13;
a few vocal numbers belted out by&#13;
an enjoyable singer. All in all, not&#13;
bad for a small local combo.&#13;
In sum, the Sanctuary has&#13;
friendly waitresses-serving great&#13;
food and drink at reasonable&#13;
prices in a jovial atmosphere with&#13;
a nice jazz group playing on&#13;
Saturday nights. Sound good? The&#13;
Sanctuary is located in downtown&#13;
Racine at 231 Main St., and is open&#13;
from 11:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.&#13;
Monday through Friday, and from&#13;
11:30 to 1:00 a.m. on Saturdays.&#13;
Burned u p&#13;
A contemplation of college to condo conversion&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
What if they gave a university&#13;
and nobody came? There's talk of&#13;
cutting the budget -again. Pretty&#13;
soon no one will be able to afford&#13;
to go on to school. Parkside could&#13;
get cancelled for lack of funds&#13;
rather than lack of interest.&#13;
What would the state of&#13;
Wisconsin do with a vacant set of&#13;
buildings the size o. Parkside?&#13;
Maybe Dreyfus would finally have&#13;
a site for his new prision. No, the&#13;
upstanding Kenosha and Racine&#13;
residents would never go for that.&#13;
Let's try something else. How&#13;
about another shopping center?&#13;
This area could use a Gimbles, but&#13;
everybody knows that the new&#13;
mall in Racine would be hard to&#13;
top. No, that would never go over&#13;
either — not enough parking&#13;
space.&#13;
What should the state do to&#13;
make the most money possible&#13;
from the sale of Parkside? Why,&#13;
that's easy: convert into time -&#13;
share condominiums! There's a&#13;
lot to offer prospective buyers —&#13;
a swimming pool, racquetball&#13;
courts, a gymnasium, tennis&#13;
courts, a weight room, baseball&#13;
diamonds, a well - stocked library,&#13;
a few on - site restaurants...&#13;
They could make tons of money&#13;
through a deal like that. People&#13;
could buy one wonderful week of&#13;
Kenosha residence for a few&#13;
thousand dollars plus a yearly&#13;
maintenance fee.&#13;
The individual condos would be&#13;
completely refurnished every five&#13;
years or so. In keeping with&#13;
tradition, textbooks would be&#13;
replaced annually.&#13;
If every state with budget&#13;
troubles would sell one university&#13;
on the time - share condo plan,&#13;
their monetary problems would&#13;
surely lessen. And people lucky&#13;
enough to own a week at Pakside&#13;
would be able to switch around for&#13;
a week at another defunct&#13;
university.&#13;
Of course, a week of prime time&#13;
at Parkside would be just a little&#13;
more expensive to buy than just&#13;
any old week. Now all we have to&#13;
do is figure out when it's "prime&#13;
time" in Kenosha.&#13;
EAT A BAGEL . . . WEAR A BAGEL&#13;
FREE BAGEL NECKLACE&#13;
WITH ANY BAGEL PURCHASE&#13;
— COURTESY PARKSIDE FOODSERVICE&#13;
Gommi/m«a£!oi\ Arts THeatre&#13;
April23-24, Bum&#13;
Apfil 25, 2pm /&#13;
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HUfiW,&#13;
CARNML lichets: Union info. DcsK. £t at tKc Doo/&#13;
S53-2345 of 553-2042&#13;
$ 2 5 0 Pu k r i d t St s d e n t s .St a fC,&#13;
$3.5© Public&#13;
Citizens&#13;
THIS FRIDAY, APRIL 16 7:30 am - 2:00 pm&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
featuring:&#13;
• EGG AAcBAGEL ( OPEN FACE BREAKFAST PLATE)&#13;
• TOASTED BAGEL WITH CREAM CHEESE &amp; JELLY&#13;
• PIZZA BAGELS • TUNA MELT BAGELS&#13;
• MUSHROOM &amp; CHEESE BAGELS&#13;
• BAGEL BURGER •PASTRAMI /BAGEL REUBEN&#13;
. •SPECIAL BAGEL &amp; SEAFOOD SALAD PLATE&#13;
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• BAGEL ICE CREAM SUNDAES WITH HONEY &amp; RAISIN BAGELS&#13;
"Be t h e f i r s t o n y o u r b l o c k t o j o iinn t h i s l a t e s t f a s h i on c r az e . .w .h i ch we v er y we l l c o ul d&#13;
be st a r t ing . "&#13;
Thursday, April 15,1982 RANGER&#13;
Profile&#13;
Ron Cuzner jazzes it up on "the dark side"&#13;
presented the idea of mixing jazz&#13;
with the classics. The&#13;
management liked the idea, and&#13;
Cuzner has been there ever since.&#13;
With twelve years on the air,&#13;
THE DARK SIDE is the longest&#13;
running show on Milwaukee radio,&#13;
and Cuzner has been there from&#13;
the beginning. He selects the&#13;
music from his own collection of&#13;
15,000 albums, but according to&#13;
Cuzner, he has no particular&#13;
favorites. "On any given night,&#13;
then I will have a favorite," he&#13;
says, "but it's like a person with&#13;
twelve children. I love them all."&#13;
He is completely in charge of the&#13;
show's unique structure.&#13;
Cuzner's announcing style is&#13;
also unique. "At first," he said, "I&#13;
sounded like every other top forty&#13;
d.j. on the radio, giving you all&#13;
kinds of information you don't&#13;
need. My announcing style is kind&#13;
of a de-evolutionary process,&#13;
because now I only state the&#13;
essentials, the things you absolutely&#13;
need to know.&#13;
"If you listen to me," elaborates&#13;
Cuzner, "and you try to&#13;
disassociate my voice from the&#13;
words I'm saying, and just listen&#13;
to the rhythm, and phrasing, and.&#13;
accent of my voice, you'll hear&#13;
music.&#13;
"It's a gimmick. 1 want people&#13;
to know they're listening to Ron&#13;
Cuzner. Of course, there's an&#13;
inherent danger that people won't&#13;
like what I'm doing. So I do what I&#13;
want to do, and hope more people&#13;
like it than dislike it.&#13;
"Last fall, I was interviewing&#13;
professor (Tim) Bell, who had a&#13;
group in Milwaukee at the time,&#13;
on my show. Afterwards he approached&#13;
me and asked if I would&#13;
like to teach a course at Parkside.&#13;
I thought about it for a few&#13;
months, and finally said I would."&#13;
Cuzner enjoys teaching. "I&#13;
would definitely like to do this&#13;
again next semester," he said. "I&#13;
would also like to get more involved&#13;
in other areas of the music&#13;
department, too."&#13;
A couple weeks later, I made a&#13;
three a.m. trek to WFMR's&#13;
Capitol Drive studios to watch&#13;
Cuzner in action. I was met at the&#13;
door of his third floor cubicle,&#13;
studio number one. Wearing a Tshirt&#13;
and slacks and sneakers, he&#13;
talked about his work while I&#13;
snapped pictures. The best part&#13;
was, of course, when he was actually&#13;
talking on the radio. Cuzner&#13;
easily has the most unique announcing&#13;
style in the business,&#13;
backed up with years of experience.&#13;
Imagine an announcer&#13;
who, instead of bombarding his&#13;
listeners with rapid fire information,&#13;
slowly and carefully&#13;
enunciates every word, every&#13;
inflection. The major benefit is&#13;
that instead of making his voice&#13;
an interruption of the music,&#13;
Cuzner is an integral part of the&#13;
show.&#13;
It is common knowledge by now&#13;
CUZNER on the air at WFMR.&#13;
that WFMR is changing owners in&#13;
the near future. The last thing that&#13;
Milwaukee needs is another rock&#13;
station. If that happens, and Ron&#13;
Cuzner decides to leave WFMR,&#13;
the loss to the Milwaukee music&#13;
scene would be incalculable.&#13;
Earl and Wood&#13;
Two Democratic candidates for&#13;
governor have scheduled visits to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
James Wood will speak at 3:30&#13;
p.m. on Wednesday, April 14, in&#13;
the Campus Union, Room 207, and&#13;
Tony Earl will speak at 1 p.m. on&#13;
April 28 in the Union, Room 106.&#13;
Both talks are sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Political Science Club&#13;
and will be followed by discussion&#13;
periods and receptions.&#13;
Wood, who served as chief aide&#13;
Ron Cuzner's television series,&#13;
"It's Called Jazz," appears&#13;
Thursday nights at 9 p.m. on&#13;
Channel 10. WUWM - FM/90&#13;
provides a stereo simulcast.&#13;
to speak here&#13;
to former governor Patrick&#13;
Lucey, has been deputy secretary,&#13;
of the Wisconsin Department of&#13;
Administration and founder and&#13;
president of the Center for Public&#13;
Policy.&#13;
Earl was a member of the&#13;
Wisconsin legislature from 1969 to&#13;
1974, serving as assembly&#13;
majority leader, and was&#13;
secretary of the Department of&#13;
Natural Resources from 1976 to&#13;
1980.&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
Ron Cuzner is a busy man these&#13;
days.&#13;
Best known as Milwaukee's only&#13;
full - time jazz d.j. and the host of&#13;
WFMR's THE DARK SIDE,&#13;
Cuzner is on the air six nights a&#13;
week, from midnight to six a.m.&#13;
Two days a week he teaches the&#13;
Jazz Appreciation course here at&#13;
Parkside, and just lately became&#13;
the host of his own TV series.&#13;
A veteran in the radio business,&#13;
Cuzner got his first radio gig when&#13;
he was fourteen. After graduating&#13;
from Racine Lutheran High, he&#13;
filled, at one time or another, the&#13;
various positions on announcing&#13;
staffs in the area, culminating&#13;
with his job as jazz d.j. at WTOS in&#13;
the late sixties. About 1970 he left&#13;
WTOS because, "We had to sell&#13;
our own ads. I hated that. I don't&#13;
do it anymore." WTOS was in the&#13;
process of being sold, and the&#13;
programming structure was&#13;
becoming too rigid for Cuzner's —&#13;
and another radio vet, Bob&#13;
Reitman's — taste. They left&#13;
WTOS, Reitman to WZMF and&#13;
Cuzner to WFMR, where he&#13;
RON CUZNER&#13;
ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
FOR&#13;
FALL SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are&#13;
seeking a degree at UW-Parkside) should consult their&#13;
academic advisor prior to registration for Fall Semester.&#13;
A Certification of Advising form, signed by the advisor, is&#13;
required for registration.&#13;
Fall Semester Course Schedules will be available on April&#13;
12. April 12-26 h as been designated as an academic advising&#13;
period, and advisors will make every effort to meet&#13;
with you then.&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
CONTACT YOUR ADVISOR FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
If you have any questions, contact the Office of the Dean&#13;
of Faculty, 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;
® MOVIE ®&#13;
•Xf iUhl l jM&#13;
Friday,&#13;
April 16 - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Sunday,&#13;
April 18 - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Rated "R'&#13;
$1.50&#13;
UNION CINEAAA&#13;
BREWERY TOUR &amp;&#13;
BREWER CAME TICKET HOLDERS:&#13;
The re-scheduling of opening day hi&#13;
forced the cancellation of the brewer&#13;
tour. The game has been moved to 1::&#13;
p.m., therefore the bus will leave at 11:&#13;
A M. on Friday uth from Union Circl&#13;
our ticket can be used for opening day i&#13;
refunded in full. Those unable to attend tt&#13;
game should contact Neil at 553-2650 &lt;&#13;
soon as possible.&#13;
Because of a potential availability&#13;
openmgs for this trip, interested perso.&#13;
should contact Neil at number above.&#13;
Hurry — tickets going fast!&#13;
Thursday, April 15,1982&#13;
Viewpoint&#13;
Pregnancy—when unwed, the answer is never easy&#13;
bbvy Pat HHeennssiiaakk IOVAH hor Kut -.O&#13;
News Editor&#13;
There is a lot of controversy&#13;
about abortion. When does life&#13;
start? Is abortion murder? For&#13;
some pregnant women, abortion is&#13;
out of the question because of&#13;
religious belief, or because of the&#13;
feelings of guilt that can develop&#13;
with an abortion.&#13;
Abbey was a college sophomore&#13;
when she found herself asking the&#13;
question, 'What should I do?' For&#13;
a number of reasons, Abbey chose&#13;
to have an abortion. "First, I'd&#13;
like to say that this wasn't an easy&#13;
thing for me. People think that&#13;
abortion is quick and easy. It isn't.&#13;
It was one of the most difficult&#13;
decisions I've ever made. Some&#13;
people see it as the simplest thing&#13;
to do. It's terrifying and impersonal.&#13;
I'll never do it again, but&#13;
I don't regret doing it. If there are&#13;
any regrets, they lie in not being&#13;
able to say no to some guy that&#13;
really couldn't have cared less."&#13;
Abbey went up to the Bread and&#13;
Roses Clinic in Milwaukee. A lot&#13;
ran through her mind as the&#13;
elevator started to move. One of&#13;
the things she started to think&#13;
about was the concept that once it&#13;
was over, you couldn't turn it&#13;
around. "If you decide to have the&#13;
baby, you have time to decide&#13;
whether you want to keep it or&#13;
give it up. Once you finally figure&#13;
out that you are pregnant, you&#13;
don't have a lot of time to decide if&#13;
abortion is right. I worried a little&#13;
about that, whether or not I was&#13;
doing the right thing. The one&#13;
thing I worried about more, was&#13;
all of the things that you year&#13;
about the action of abortion. From&#13;
one person you hear that you're&#13;
asleep and from the next you hear&#13;
that you aren't. I was awake.&#13;
Walking into a room with a lot of&#13;
machines, and knowing what you&#13;
are about to do, is earth shattering.&#13;
It was for me. I was&#13;
shaking, all because of what I&#13;
heard. Of course, it can't be expected&#13;
to be a pleasant experience.&#13;
I had the impression&#13;
that the people were cold, and that&#13;
you aren't well - r eceived. I have&#13;
never been given more comfort&#13;
and support than that day at&#13;
Bread and Roses. The people were&#13;
really good to me."&#13;
The staff at the clinic talked to&#13;
Abbey as long as she wanted after&#13;
the abortion. They didn't have to&#13;
convince her that what she did&#13;
was right for her. "I know what I&#13;
had to do. I wasn't ready for a&#13;
baby. Things happened at the&#13;
wrong time for me. I was a&#13;
sophomore, and a Business major.&#13;
There was no possible way for me&#13;
to fit a baby in. I knew it then, and&#13;
I know it now. I also could have&#13;
never afforded a baby, and I&#13;
wouldn't have felt right letting the&#13;
governor pay for my mistake. I&#13;
did it, and I pa id. I'm glad that the&#13;
entire society doesn't look down&#13;
on me for it."&#13;
Abbey said that adoption was&#13;
also out of the question for her,&#13;
because she felt if she would have&#13;
had the baby, she wouldn't have&#13;
been able to give it up. "I weighed&#13;
all of the options, and although I&#13;
did what I thought was best, I also&#13;
did what was the hardest of three.&#13;
The decision was as hard for me&#13;
as anyone else, but there are ways&#13;
that I could have survived with a&#13;
baby, but like I said, it was my&#13;
mistake."&#13;
On a hot summer day, one of the&#13;
families in America that was&#13;
waiting to adopt a child finally got&#13;
their baby. It was a girl, and Barb&#13;
remembers when the doctor told&#13;
her that. "I heard the sound of the&#13;
baby crying, and she just&#13;
screamed. It was quite a hello for&#13;
everyone involved. The doctor&#13;
held the baby up quickly and&#13;
smiled and said, 'Barb, it's a girl.&#13;
She's really big.' I was so glad&#13;
that she was healthy. I often&#13;
thought that if she wouldn't have&#13;
been, I would have kept her. I&#13;
believe in the idea that people love&#13;
their own if they aren't healthy. I&#13;
loved her, but as long as she was&#13;
healthy, I know that there was&#13;
someone else that could make her&#13;
happier. I never regreted my&#13;
decision to give her up, although&#13;
I m sure if the situation came up&#13;
again, I would keep the baby."&#13;
Barb has never regretted what&#13;
she did, but while she was&#13;
pregnant, she had a lot of second&#13;
thoughts about giving the baby up.&#13;
"For a long time, I thought it was&#13;
wrong to give something up that&#13;
was as much a part of you as a&#13;
baby is. It didn't seem fair. To be&#13;
straight, it seemed selfish. After a&#13;
lot of thought, and serious thought&#13;
at that, I realized that if I gave the&#13;
baby up, she would have a better&#13;
life, better than mine, and better&#13;
than what I could offer, that it was&#13;
a good thing. The only part of the&#13;
bargain that I a sked her before I&#13;
gave her away was that she adjust&#13;
to the life around her, no matter&#13;
what it was. I know it sounds&#13;
ridiculous to tell a newborn that,&#13;
but I had to be certain that she&#13;
would do her best. I am."&#13;
Barb is only worried about the&#13;
number of adopted children that&#13;
look for their parents now. It&#13;
seems to get easier and easier&#13;
every day. "I guess my idea is&#13;
that I gave her to someone else to&#13;
love and take care of. Unless she&#13;
feels as if s he has been neglected,&#13;
I have no intention of seeing her&#13;
again. Having two parents that&#13;
love her anough to say, 'Come and&#13;
live in our house, and be one of our&#13;
own' will have to be enough for&#13;
her. I think it will be. I wouldn't&#13;
want her to hurt her parents, and I&#13;
think kids that look for their 'real&#13;
parents' are really telling the&#13;
people that raise them that all&#13;
they have done for them hasn't&#13;
been enough."&#13;
Barb is happy with her life and&#13;
happy with her decision, and she&#13;
thinks about the baby a lot and&#13;
hopes that she is happy too. "I&#13;
gave away a big part of myself,&#13;
and it wasn't easy, but all of it was&#13;
done in the best interests of all&#13;
concerned. I think it worked out&#13;
for the best."&#13;
Cathy has been a mother for two&#13;
years. She has a son, and lives by&#13;
herself with her son. She made the&#13;
decision to keep her baby because&#13;
she didn't want to miss out on&#13;
seeing her son grow up. "I thought&#13;
for a long time that I might opt for&#13;
giving the baby up, but it just isn't&#13;
something that you opt for. By the&#13;
time the fifth month rolled&#13;
around, I knew that I would keep&#13;
the baby. He has been the happiest&#13;
thing that ever happened to me.&#13;
He is so cute, and he always&#13;
laughs, and he's always such a&#13;
gentleman, even at two. Don't get&#13;
Continued On Page Four Miller times^s Miller High life&#13;
10 Thursday, April 15,1982 RANGER&#13;
M New" Sox start new season&#13;
This is the time of year that&#13;
every baseball team talks about&#13;
being a contender, and the&#13;
Chicago White Sox are no exception.&#13;
However, this year just&#13;
may be different than the last few,&#13;
considering . . .&#13;
According to Dan Evans, White&#13;
Sox Public Relations, the Sox&#13;
Organization is very optimistic&#13;
about the upcoming year.&#13;
Two key off - season deals were&#13;
made resulting in the acquisition&#13;
of Steve Kemp from Detroit,&#13;
whom Evans describes as "a left -&#13;
handed hitting slugger and good&#13;
RBI man." The other new addition&#13;
to the team is Tom&#13;
Paciorek, former Seattle first&#13;
baseman who finished second in&#13;
hitting last year with a .326&#13;
average.&#13;
New to the team last year was&#13;
the dynamic Carlton Fisk, who&#13;
was awarded the American&#13;
League Silver Bat and was named&#13;
the most productive catcher. Also,&#13;
Greg Luzinski, the Comeback&#13;
Player of the Year and outstanding&#13;
designated hitter.&#13;
Luzinski's year resulted in 21&#13;
homers, 62 RBI's and a .265&#13;
batting average.&#13;
Another new signing of last&#13;
year was Bill Almon, that&#13;
phenomenal 29 - year - old shortstop&#13;
who had what can only be&#13;
called a fantastic season last year.&#13;
Almon, who had been released by&#13;
the Mets at the conclusion of the&#13;
1980 season, was invited to the Sox&#13;
Spring Training Camp in 1981 as a&#13;
non - roster player. Due to injuries&#13;
of two Sox infielders, Almon&#13;
became the starting shortstop on&#13;
opening day and has had the job&#13;
ever since. He had his best season&#13;
ever last year, attaining the&#13;
highest batting average of any&#13;
American League shortstop with a&#13;
.301.&#13;
The starting line - up for the&#13;
beginning of the season seems as&#13;
though it will be: Ron LeFlore,&#13;
CF, leading off; Tony Bernazard,&#13;
2B; Steve Kemp, LF; Greg&#13;
Luzinski, DH; Tom Paciorek, IB;&#13;
Harold Baines, RF; Carlton Fisk,&#13;
C; Jim Morrison, 3B; and Bill&#13;
Almon, SS.&#13;
Said former White Sox slugger&#13;
and five - decade player Minnie&#13;
Minoso, "This year I think that&#13;
we're going to have a good&#13;
baseball club. I didn't have the&#13;
opportunity to be at Spring&#13;
Training to watch, but I know&#13;
we're going to have power hitting&#13;
and good pitching." Minoso is now&#13;
involved in Public Relations for&#13;
his former team.&#13;
Minoso went on to say, "If we&#13;
give 100%, we have a chance at&#13;
the pennant. We're going to give&#13;
the fans the best of this Chicago&#13;
organization."&#13;
As Minoso said, the Sox do have&#13;
good pitching, but they need to&#13;
really be consistent this year in&#13;
order for it to pay off.&#13;
A most impressive pitcher is 22 ?&#13;
year - old left hander Britt Burns.&#13;
Last year Burns tied for fourth in&#13;
the league with an ERA of 2.64. He&#13;
was second in the league with 108&#13;
strikeouts and was named to the&#13;
American League All - Star team.&#13;
During a period in July and&#13;
August, he maintained 30 consecutive&#13;
scoreless innings.&#13;
Another starting pitcher is 23 -&#13;
year - old Richard Dotson, who&#13;
will be going into his third full&#13;
year for the White Sox. Last year,&#13;
Dotson, a right hander, had a&#13;
record of 9-8 with four shutouts.&#13;
Dennis Lamp, another right&#13;
handed pitcher, was traded to the&#13;
Sox last year from their cross -&#13;
town rivals, the Cubs, and proved&#13;
to be very successful with his new&#13;
Chicago team. He had a record of&#13;
7-6 and a 2.41 ERA. On August 25,&#13;
he pitched a one - hitter against&#13;
the Brewers at County Stadium.&#13;
Southpaw Steve Trout had a yo -&#13;
yo season, but is sure to wind up in&#13;
the starting rotation once again&#13;
this year. He finished the season&#13;
with an 8-7 record and an ERA of&#13;
3.71.&#13;
So there you have four of the&#13;
starting pitchers and, with the&#13;
recent trading away of Ross&#13;
Baumgarten to Pittsburgh, it&#13;
remains to be seen who will take&#13;
his place in the starting rotation.&#13;
So far, the bullpen will consist of&#13;
Kevin Hickey, Lamar Hoyt, Jerry&#13;
Koosman, Lynn McGlothen and,&#13;
perhaps, Salome Barojas.&#13;
Besides Baumgarten, recent&#13;
transactions have done away with&#13;
utilityman Greg Pryor, slugger&#13;
Wayne Nordhagen and Bobby&#13;
Molinaro.&#13;
In addition to the numerous new&#13;
players, the White Sox will begin&#13;
the season showing off their new&#13;
uniforms and their home field,&#13;
Comiskey Park, will boast its new&#13;
five million dollar scoreboard and&#13;
some new box seats as well.&#13;
SPORTS NOTEBOOK t ©&#13;
LAST SUNDAY Parkside held yet another roadrace, watch next&#13;
week's Ranger for results.&#13;
Coach finalists&#13;
Parkside has announced that&#13;
the following seven finalists will&#13;
be interviewed over the next two&#13;
weeks for the vacant head men's&#13;
basketball coaching position:&#13;
Rudy Collum, 35, assistant&#13;
basketball coach, Parkside.&#13;
Wiley Davis, 31, athletic&#13;
director and basketball coach,&#13;
Everett Community College,&#13;
Everett, Wash.&#13;
Frank Diskin, 42, athletic&#13;
director and basketball coach, St.&#13;
Mary of the Plains, Dodge City,&#13;
Kans.&#13;
Rees Johnson, 41, basketball&#13;
coach, Augsburg College, Minneapolis,&#13;
Minn.&#13;
Rod Popp, 32, assistant&#13;
basketball coach, UW - LaCrosse,&#13;
LaCrosse, Wis.&#13;
BfcGlNNER OR ADVANCFD Cost is about the same as a&#13;
semester in a U S college 52,989 Price includes jet round&#13;
tri|) to Seville from Me«v York room board, and tuition&#13;
complete Government grants and loans available for eligible&#13;
students.&#13;
Live with a Spanish family, attend classes tour hours a day&#13;
four days a week four months Earn 16 hrs of credit (equi&#13;
valent to 4 semesters taught in u S colleges over a two&#13;
year time span) Your Spanish studies will be enhanced by&#13;
opportunities not available in a U.S. classroom. Standard&#13;
t/ed tests show our students' language skills superior to&#13;
students completing two year programs in U.S.&#13;
Hurry, it takes a lot of time to make all arrangements.&#13;
FALL SEMESTER SEPT. 10 Dec. 22 SPRING SEMESTER&#13;
Feb. 1 June 1 each year.&#13;
FULLY ACCREDITED A program of Trinity Christian College. SEMESTER IN SPAIN 2442 E Collier S.E. Grand Rapids, Michigan 49506&#13;
(A Program of Trinity Christian College)&#13;
CALL TOLL FREE for full information 1-800-253-9008&#13;
(In Mich., or if toll free line inoperative call 1-616-942-2903 or 942-2541'collect)&#13;
Dale Race, 35, assistant&#13;
basketball coach, UW - Eau&#13;
Claire, Eau Claire, Wis.&#13;
Jeff Spielman, 30, athletic&#13;
director and basketball coach,&#13;
UW Center - Richland, Richland&#13;
Center, Wis.&#13;
Bike for M.D.&#13;
Well, it's time to dig that bicycle&#13;
up and out from the basement and&#13;
get it in working order. Greg&#13;
Scarlato and Chuck Neustifter&#13;
have already done just that, and&#13;
they have even planned their first&#13;
trip of the season.&#13;
The two intend to bike for two&#13;
weeks across Wisconsin for&#13;
Muscular Dystrophy (MD),&#13;
starting on June 1. Although the&#13;
exact route has not yet been&#13;
plotted, they plan to go 60 miles a&#13;
day, traveling on mostly county&#13;
highways through the central part&#13;
of the state.&#13;
Scarlato and Neustifter are&#13;
presently looking for people to join&#13;
their excursion, and they are also&#13;
looking for sponsors. Should they&#13;
raise $500 or more, they will get to&#13;
present a check to Jill Geisler on&#13;
Channel 6 television.&#13;
The trip is not, in the words of I&#13;
Scarlato, "for softies." There will&#13;
be no support vehicle, and each&#13;
particpant is expected to carry his&#13;
or her own equipment. They will&#13;
be camping overnight in state&#13;
parks.&#13;
Anyone interested should call&#13;
Greg Scarlato at 657-5714.&#13;
Intramural B-ball&#13;
The Parkside intramural&#13;
basketball program will be&#13;
hosting their annual basketball&#13;
championship next Sunday,&#13;
starting at 7:00 p.m. with the&#13;
"Super Cocks" taking on "The&#13;
Lords." On the second court, the&#13;
"Five Neat Guys" will meet the&#13;
"Gunners" for a game. At 8:30&#13;
p.m., the two winners will come&#13;
up against each other for the&#13;
"coveted Intramural crown."&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC.&#13;
TEAM SALES — ALL SPORTS&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR&#13;
FOR ALL SPORTS&#13;
TROPHM AND AWARDS&#13;
f AST. SMIOUSC ENORAVMO SCRVKX&#13;
s&#13;
•BROOKS&#13;
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• PONY&#13;
• CONVERSE&#13;
• SPOT-SUIT&#13;
• SAUCOMY&#13;
• SPALDING&#13;
• NSW BALANCI&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
MOR.-PRL IBM AM - *«0 P.M.&#13;
•AT tOMAM -BSOPM&#13;
CLOSED (LMDAYI A HOUDAYt&#13;
FOOTWEAR.&#13;
The Active Athletes One Stop&#13;
694-9206&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
EXCLUDEDAFTER °ATE 0F ,SSUE' sale ,tems&#13;
/$• $&#13;
TONIGHT!&#13;
THURSDAY, APRIL 15&#13;
UNION SQUARE 57 PAA&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
• THE LIVE MUSIC OF UW-PARKSIDE'S&#13;
AWARD WINNING JAZZ BAND&#13;
• 75&lt;t, $1.0 0 &amp; $1.25 OFF REGULAR PIZZA PRICES&#13;
• SPECIAL $1.99 SPAGHETTI DINNER WITH SALAD &amp; GARLIC BREAD&#13;
• FREE ADMISSION&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
LENDER&#13;
5%% Interest Iff Your Daily&#13;
Balance is $500.00 er Morel&#13;
WE'RE HERE ¥0 HELP YOU GROW!&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 15,1982&#13;
Tennis&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
The Parkside Union&#13;
AND&#13;
WTMJ-TV CHANNEL 4&#13;
PRESENTS FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414-248-9141&#13;
24726 - 75th Street - Rt. 50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wis&#13;
414-843-2388&#13;
A TORNADO SAFETY&#13;
SEMINAR&#13;
WITH METEOROLOGIST &amp; WEATHER FORECASTER JIAA on&#13;
TUESDAY, APRIL20&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATER&#13;
FILM—SLIDES—INFORMATION&#13;
FREE ADMISSION!&#13;
Season off to great start&#13;
Even though the weather has&#13;
stopped the Ranger tennis team&#13;
from practicing and playing their&#13;
meets outside, the team has&#13;
compensated by practicing many&#13;
hours in the gymnasium. The&#13;
team as a whole started their&#13;
season March 2, trying to develop&#13;
their consistency while getting&#13;
into shape. Although Coach Dick&#13;
Frecka was out the first two&#13;
weeks of practice for back&#13;
surgery, his assistant and team&#13;
captain Claude Cielonko ran most&#13;
of the practices. However, Coach&#13;
Frecka recovered very fast and&#13;
came back in plenty of time to&#13;
start the team play - offs.&#13;
In order to play most meets&#13;
against other colleges, the&#13;
Parkside team must have six&#13;
singles players and three double&#13;
teams, with the singles players&#13;
making up the doubles teams.&#13;
After the play - offs, the following&#13;
lineup was announced: Art&#13;
Shannon - one singles, Bob Schmook&#13;
- two singles, Tony Nielson -&#13;
three singles, Claude Cielonko -&#13;
four singles, Chris Truckey - five&#13;
singles, Mike Brinen - six singles.&#13;
The doubles teams proceeding&#13;
from number one to number three&#13;
are: Art Shannon and Bob Schmook,&#13;
Tony Nielson and Claude&#13;
Cielonko, and Chris Truckey and&#13;
Mike Brinen.&#13;
The first meet, played on April&#13;
2, was against Moraine Valley.&#13;
The meet was played indoors and&#13;
the Ranger tennis team won six&#13;
matches to three. The winning&#13;
singles players were: Art Shannon,&#13;
Bob Sehmook, Tony Nielson,&#13;
and Claude Cielonko; and the&#13;
winning doubles teams were:&#13;
Nielson - Cielonko, and Truckey -&#13;
Brinen.&#13;
The second meet, played&#13;
against Lake County College of&#13;
Illinois on April 7, also produced&#13;
another win for the Rangers, in&#13;
which the team won eight matches&#13;
out of nine. The oily loss came&#13;
when Rick Friegang, of Lake&#13;
County, beat Chris Truckey in&#13;
three sets, with the third set ending&#13;
a close tie - breaker.&#13;
The third meet, played against&#13;
Beloit College on April 9, gave the&#13;
Parkside team their third win,&#13;
with all the Ranger players&#13;
winning their matches. And&#13;
finally, on April 10, the Parkside&#13;
Ranger tennis team was able to&#13;
get their fourth straight win. The&#13;
Rangers beat North Eastern&#13;
Illinois six matches to three, with&#13;
the only losses coming from Art&#13;
Shannon and Bob Sehmook in both&#13;
their singles and doubles.&#13;
So far, the Ranger tennis team&#13;
has done very well and hopefully&#13;
will continue to do so. However,&#13;
lack of fan support has probably&#13;
cost the Rangers their lost matches.&#13;
The matches were very&#13;
close and could have been turned&#13;
around with more fan enthusiasm.&#13;
The continued success of the team&#13;
will not only depend on the experience&#13;
of the players and their&#13;
competitiveness, but also on&#13;
whether more Parkside fans take&#13;
more interest in their team.&#13;
lilt PARKSIDE men s tennis team has started their'82 season&#13;
with four straight wins! Go Rangers! ' Photo by Masood Shafjq&#13;
Sunday, April 18&#13;
MOVIE "Excalibur" (R) will be repeated at 7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Tuesday, April 20&#13;
COURSE "Using the Library" at 7 p. m. Call Ext. 2312 fo r more information.&#13;
Sponsored by UW - Extension.&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-4861&#13;
Thursday, April 15&#13;
WORKSHOP "Children of Alcohol &amp; Drug Impaired Parents" at 8 a. m Call ext&#13;
2312 for more information. Sponsored by UW - Extension.&#13;
SHOW "Patrol Dogs" at 12 noon in Main Place. All are welcome. Sponsored by the&#13;
Vet's Club.&#13;
LECTURE at 3:30 p. m. in GR 101. Russell Bowman of the Milwaukee Art Museum&#13;
will talk on "American Folk Art and Its Influence on 20th Century Art" The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
CONCERT "Pizza, Pasta, and All That Jazz" with the Parkside Jazz Band at 5 p.&#13;
m. in Union Square. All are welcome.&#13;
Friday, April 16&#13;
COURSE Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation at 1 p. m. in Union 104 - 106 Call ext&#13;
2366 for details. Sponsored by the Parkside Health Office.&#13;
MOVIE "Excalibur" (R) will be shown at 7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
at the door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored&#13;
participanfs^in^h^aerobiexerdses^ SP°nS°red ^ amUa' We" Day' Pidured are som&lt;&#13;
Photo by Masood Shafiq&#13;
Monday, April 19&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12:15 p. m. in Union 106. Prof. Lee Thayer will talk on "The&#13;
Functions of Incompetence".*The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
COURSE Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation at 9 a. m. in Union 104 - 106. Call ext.&#13;
2366 for more details.&#13;
LECTURE "Government: Public Perception vs. Reality" by G. Gordon Liddy at 8&#13;
p. m. in the Union Cinema. Tickets are available at the Union Information&#13;
Center. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-694-1380&#13;
Outside UW-P sports&#13;
Chicago Cubs create new hopes&#13;
by Greg Boilofiglio&#13;
A favorite story of Pete Rose's&#13;
on the Chicago Cubs goes&#13;
something like this:&#13;
"Every year we'd come to&#13;
Wrigley to play the Cubs and&#13;
everyone up there is fired up.&#13;
They'd say 'You just wait, we're&#13;
going to win the Series this year.&#13;
Just you wait!' As usual the Cubs&#13;
have started out playing fairly&#13;
well when we'd meet them again a&#13;
few weeks later. Everyone up&#13;
there is going nuts. 'We'll take it&#13;
all this year, just you wait and&#13;
see!' Then comes July and the&#13;
Cubs go into their annual dive and&#13;
you hear them say 'We're going to&#13;
take the pennant this year, just&#13;
you wait!' The next time we play&#13;
them is in August or something&#13;
like that but this time they're&#13;
saying 'We're going to win today,&#13;
we're going to win today, just you&#13;
wait and see!' "&#13;
That's a great story and one that&#13;
succinctly describes the modern&#13;
day fortunes of those bumblers of&#13;
the NL East. But alas, we are told,&#13;
a new tradition is underway for&#13;
these cubbies.&#13;
The Tribune Company Cubs&#13;
enter their first full season with&#13;
some big plans and a lot of high&#13;
hopes, if nothing else. And while&#13;
the prospects for a better record&#13;
appear rather remote, the 1982&#13;
version of the Chicago Cubs will at&#13;
least look different.&#13;
GM Dallas Green selected ex -&#13;
Phillie coach Lee Elia to be his&#13;
manager for this new venture.&#13;
Elia, in turn, selected ex - Phillies&#13;
Tom Harmon and John Vukovich&#13;
to be his third - base coach and&#13;
bullpen coach respectively.&#13;
Playing in compact Wrigley&#13;
Field has generally meant that&#13;
with a few power hitters in the line&#13;
- up you had a better than average&#13;
chance of winning a close game&#13;
with one decent swing of the bat.&#13;
For all practical purposes,&#13;
Chicago won't enjoy that luxury&#13;
this year.&#13;
The Cub's regular lineup will&#13;
feature second baseman Bump&#13;
Wills in the lead - off spot. Wills hit&#13;
.251 for the Texas Rangers in 1981.&#13;
Larry Bowa, who will play at&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
TYPING - professionally done. Reasonable&#13;
rates. Fast service. South Kenosha. 657&#13;
6068.&#13;
TYPING SERVICES for professionals and&#13;
students. Call mornings. 639 687!.&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
LAWNSKEEPER and gardener for semi -&#13;
large estate. Must have references and own&#13;
transportation. Very north side of Racine.&#13;
If interested contact Karen in the Ranger&#13;
office. Salary negotiable.&#13;
Wanted&#13;
ROOMMATE NEEDED after graduation.&#13;
Wood Creek, 552-9175 - Dick O.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
LASER SAILBOAT w/trailer. 14 ft. Olympic&#13;
class, ex. cond. S1400. 639-6635.&#13;
FILM - T HEATRE - SHAKESPEARE BOOK&#13;
SALE thru May 5. Quality used and out - of -&#13;
print books at The Old Book Corner at&#13;
Martha Merrell's Bookstore, 312 6th St.,&#13;
Racine, Also, to celebrate Shakespeare's&#13;
birthday on April 23, a selection of prints&#13;
and engravings from the 181h and 19th&#13;
centuries. Over 1200 used books in all areas&#13;
for sale.&#13;
Lost&#13;
BLUE BACKPACK with books taken from D&#13;
1 level of library on evening of April 5. If&#13;
found, please call 657-6216.&#13;
Miscellaneous&#13;
DONATIONS Unitarian Universalis! Book&#13;
Sale May 8 — Call McLean 632-8011.&#13;
Personals&#13;
LET'S GET YOUR ADS IN GEAR! We have&#13;
room for more classifieds. Free up to ten&#13;
words!&#13;
LINDA (ABM) — The main rule is keep cool!&#13;
You're the best -• (NE).&#13;
KATHY SLAMA — you are also one of my&#13;
favorite people — thanks for being my&#13;
friend — t he mystery writer.&#13;
WANTED: VIRGIN for ceremonial sacrifice&#13;
to winter storm god. Contact Bob H.&#13;
THE SECOND RULE is to live with your&#13;
mistakes.&#13;
GOT DEM OL' early registration blues agin'&#13;
PUNK ROCK LIVES! I Bring your safety pins&#13;
and leopard skin tights to your favorite&#13;
classroom.&#13;
A PERMANENT honeymoon, Loretta?&#13;
DR. DREW — I h ope that you choke on your&#13;
scarf!!!!!&#13;
BOB — May a vicious punk rock record attack&#13;
you late one evening!&#13;
NE — I thunk that you're preety great!&#13;
SE — I t hunk too much, and broke my brain.&#13;
Thanks for everything!&#13;
ED —You can catch moreflles with honey ...&#13;
People who live In glass offices ...&#13;
GARLIC TOAST — Happy Birthday —&#13;
French Bread&#13;
short and bat second, hit .283 f or&#13;
Philly last year. First baseman&#13;
Bill Buckner (.311 in 1981) and&#13;
right fielder Leon Durham (.290 in&#13;
1981) will remain in the number&#13;
three and four spots respectively.&#13;
Catcher Keith Moreland, who hit&#13;
.255 for Philadelphia last year will&#13;
bat fifth. Steve Henderson (.293 in&#13;
1981) will play left and hit sixth.&#13;
Rookie Ryne Sandberg (.167 for&#13;
Philadelphia in 13 games), who&#13;
knocked Ken Reitz out of baseball,&#13;
will play third and hit seventh.&#13;
And Tye Waller, who hit .268 in 30&#13;
games for the Cubs last year will&#13;
play in center and bat eighth.&#13;
— Team Strengths —&#13;
(What's that? A Cub team&#13;
having a strength?) Believe it or&#13;
not, the Cubs will have a few areas&#13;
of strength this season. Perhaps&#13;
their best asset is team speed.&#13;
Aside from Moreland, every&#13;
member in the starting lineup has&#13;
above average speed. Another&#13;
unique advantage in the Cub&#13;
lineup is the fact that the number&#13;
one and two men, Wills and Bowa,&#13;
are switch hitters. A f inal area of&#13;
strength lies in the bullpen. Dick&#13;
Tidrow, Bill Campbell, and Lee&#13;
Smith will definitely see a lot of&#13;
action in 1982.&#13;
Team Weaknesses —&#13;
The club lacks any serious home&#13;
run threat. To get runs, the Cubs&#13;
will have to scratch and claw their&#13;
way in much the same manner as&#13;
did the '59 White Sox. If anything&#13;
will ensure of northsiders of&#13;
another below .500 finish, it will be&#13;
their starters. Ferguson Jenkins,&#13;
Dickie Noles, and Doug Bird make&#13;
up Chicago's 3 man rotation which&#13;
on pure merit, is perhaps the&#13;
weakest in the major league.&#13;
— Outlook—1&#13;
In his wildest imaginations,&#13;
Dallas Green could not have&#13;
envisioned the situation he was&#13;
entering. But in a few short&#13;
months, Green has done much to&#13;
bring the slumbering Cubs into the&#13;
Twentieth Century. Forget about&#13;
the Bowas, the Buckners, and the&#13;
Jenkins; Green will build the Cubs&#13;
in much the same manner as the&#13;
Phillies were rebuilt: by&#13;
developing a sound farm system.&#13;
Ryne Sandberg represents just&#13;
one example of this. Sandberg&#13;
came from Philadelphia's&#13;
Oklahoma City farm club. The&#13;
Cub farm system however, is&#13;
years away from turning out such&#13;
excellent prospects. Green's other&#13;
acquisitions have at least made&#13;
this year's club a respectable one.&#13;
And while manager Lee Elia's&#13;
contention that the Cubs will be a&#13;
.500 team may be a bit optimistic,&#13;
the team will be competitive. For&#13;
the Cubs, that in itself is&#13;
promising.&#13;
Order now!&#13;
ssssawfe-&#13;
Name&#13;
College.&#13;
Adult sizes only. Specify quantity.&#13;
T-shirt @ $4.95 ea., S— M L XL Amount Enclosed $&#13;
Offer expires December 31.1982 No purchase necessary New York residents add 8 25% sales tax Please allow 4 to 6 weeks fo r shipment 101</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="70191">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Sy/P University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Watergate m astermind&#13;
Liddy creates stir at UW-P&#13;
Editor's note: This story is an&#13;
interpretive account about G.&#13;
Gordon Liddy's current appearance&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Never have I witnessed the&#13;
commotion and activity&#13;
surrounding a speaker at this&#13;
campus. The occasion: convicted&#13;
felon, and Watergate mastermind,&#13;
G. Gordon Liddy.&#13;
Liddy's three - hour program&#13;
was accompanied by students&#13;
protesting his appearance on&#13;
campus, citing that PAB was&#13;
showing that crime does pay, and&#13;
a press interview that was 4-1/2&#13;
hours after it was scheduled.&#13;
The interview, originally&#13;
scheduled for 7 p.m. (Liddy spoke&#13;
at 8 p.m.) was postponed until&#13;
after his speech because, according&#13;
to Coordinator of S tudent&#13;
Activities Buddy Couvion, Liddy&#13;
didn't want to have to repeat&#13;
himself by being asked the same&#13;
question twice.&#13;
Some people felt that for $4500,&#13;
which was Liddy's fee, he should&#13;
not mind answering the same&#13;
question twice — after all, he's&#13;
been on the lecture circuit for a&#13;
few years now, so he knows how to&#13;
give his programmed answers.&#13;
The one thing I noticed,&#13;
listening to the many questions&#13;
from the politically diverse&#13;
audience, was that Liddy, being&#13;
the astute speaker - on - the -&#13;
circuit that he is, was able to&#13;
"answer" the questions by&#13;
avoiding the point of the question&#13;
and slanting his reply to what he&#13;
wanted to say.&#13;
The crowd was so immense that&#13;
the 683 c apacity in the cafeteria&#13;
did not suffice in holding the&#13;
number of people present. The&#13;
solution to the problem was that&#13;
the late - comers without advance&#13;
tickets had the choice of not attending&#13;
or sitting in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theater where Liddy's&#13;
speech was piped in over the&#13;
sound system. But they still had to&#13;
pay the same price to hear him&#13;
while almost 700 people were able&#13;
to see and hear the fearless exFBI&#13;
agent and government official&#13;
speak about "Government:&#13;
Public Perception vs. Reality."&#13;
Those in the theater were allowed&#13;
to stand in the back of the&#13;
cafeteria after 20 minutes, giving&#13;
ticket - holders the first chance to&#13;
have a seat.&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
LIDDY spoke to approximately 700 people.&#13;
April 23&#13;
"Thurber Carnival" to open&#13;
"A Thurber Carnival," the zany&#13;
comic revue which showcases&#13;
both the visual and verbal wit of&#13;
one of America's favorite&#13;
humorists, is the Parkside&#13;
Dramatic Arts Discipline's spring&#13;
production, on stage for the next&#13;
two weekends in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Performances are at 8 p.m. on&#13;
April 23, 24 and 30 and May 1 and&#13;
at 2 p.m. on April 25. Admission is&#13;
$2.50 for UW-P students and staff&#13;
and for senior citizens ; $3.50 for&#13;
others. Advance tickets are&#13;
available at the Campus Union&#13;
Information Center and reservations&#13;
may be made by calling&#13;
553-2345 or 553-2042.&#13;
Thurber's special view of homo -&#13;
Americanus first appeared in New&#13;
Yorker magazine cartoons and&#13;
sketches. They gained a new&#13;
dimension in a Broadway stage&#13;
production in 1961 which featured&#13;
Liddy spoke for about one hour&#13;
and fifteen minutes before answering&#13;
questions from the&#13;
audience. His speech consisted of&#13;
such topics as the draft, the U.S. -&#13;
Russia weaponry war, spying,&#13;
government spending, government&#13;
bureaucracy, and his life&#13;
history, including stories about&#13;
the FBI and his trial for his part in&#13;
the Watergate scandal.&#13;
Among the comments he made&#13;
were:&#13;
On the draft, he has told his son,&#13;
"Count on it being a part of your&#13;
life."&#13;
Liddy said that the Soviets have&#13;
a larger military reserve and&#13;
while the United States' armed&#13;
forces consists of 17 divisions,&#13;
Russia's is made up of 180&#13;
divisions.&#13;
Spies, according to Liddy, "are&#13;
the nation's ears and eyes." Spies&#13;
look for two things: what are the&#13;
capabilities of other nations&#13;
(friend or foe) and what are their&#13;
intentions.&#13;
Concerning Ronald Reagan's&#13;
economic policies, Liddy offered&#13;
one of his many analogies: "You&#13;
can burn a house down in a night,&#13;
but you can't rebuilt (it) in a day."&#13;
Liddy said that 77% of the federal&#13;
budget is out of control and&#13;
nothing can be done until&#13;
Congress changes the laws, but it&#13;
won't.&#13;
Aides within a presidential&#13;
administration, said Liddy, are&#13;
not friends and are continually&#13;
jockeying for top position to the&#13;
President. That can be seen by&#13;
looking at the Nixon administration&#13;
in which Liddy was a&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
PROTESTORS were quite evident outside the door of the&#13;
cafeteria, where Liddy spoke.&#13;
part of.&#13;
Liddy summarized his&#13;
autobiography, "Will," saying&#13;
how he went through the FBI as an&#13;
agent for five years, became a&#13;
deputy prosecutor in the ultra -&#13;
conservative Duchess County in&#13;
New York and finally maneuvered&#13;
his way to Washington, D.C. as a&#13;
part of the Treasury Department.&#13;
Liddy took pot shots at many&#13;
others involved in the activities in&#13;
Washington, including John Dean,&#13;
Daniel Ellsberg and Judge John&#13;
Sirica.&#13;
Ellsberg leaked what became&#13;
known in the media as "The&#13;
Pentagon Papers," which gave&#13;
the detailed history of American&#13;
involvement in the Vietnam War.&#13;
In another of his many&#13;
analogies, Liddy compared "The&#13;
Pentagon Papers" to playing a&#13;
poker hand with somebody from&#13;
the opposing side standing behind&#13;
you looking at your carcb.&#13;
Liddy conceded that the editors&#13;
of the New York Times, which ran&#13;
"The Pentagon Papers," did not&#13;
print all of the information leaked&#13;
to them because some of the information&#13;
was a serious threat to&#13;
national security. But, Liddy&#13;
pointed out, somebody gave all the&#13;
information, including the highly&#13;
sensitive material, to the Soviet&#13;
Embassy, ruining the U.S.'s&#13;
"poker hand."&#13;
Sirica, who presided over the&#13;
Watergate hearings, was referred&#13;
to as "his eminence" by Liddy,&#13;
who criticized Sirica to the fullest.&#13;
Liddy said Sirica had two&#13;
problems, the first not being&#13;
Sirica's fault — "he was born&#13;
stupid." Sirica's second problem,&#13;
according to Liddy, was that while&#13;
he gave many pronouncements on&#13;
the law, Sirica wouldn't touch the&#13;
issue of pre - trial publicity. Liddy&#13;
said the pre - trial publicity of the&#13;
Watergate trial was the biggest&#13;
since the Lindbergh kidnapping.&#13;
Liddy facetiously called Sirica&#13;
"Time's Man of the Year" and&#13;
went on to say that one of the&#13;
jurors was found not to be able to&#13;
speak English. The whole episode,&#13;
according to Liddy, was sealed on&#13;
orders from Sirica, who would&#13;
have felt embarrassed if word&#13;
leaked out.&#13;
Liddy was sentenced to 21-1/2&#13;
years in prison for his part in the&#13;
Watergate scandal, which he&#13;
labeled as "political intelligence&#13;
gathering."&#13;
Liddy does not regard the&#13;
Watergate break-in, along with&#13;
breaking into Ellsberg's&#13;
psychiatrist's office, as an illegal&#13;
act because those laws don't apply&#13;
to the President "or somebody&#13;
acting for him" when national&#13;
security is involved.&#13;
When he went to prison, Liddy&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
Committee investigates harassment&#13;
Peggy Cass and Tom Ewell and&#13;
captured a special Tony award.&#13;
The revue includes such&#13;
Thurber classics as "Walter&#13;
Mitty" and "The Night the Bed&#13;
Fell" and "Fables for Our Time"&#13;
like "The Little Girl and the Wolf"&#13;
and "The Unicorn in the Graden."&#13;
All reflect the Thurber theme of&#13;
the little guy battered by a&#13;
bewildering civilization.&#13;
Members of the cast, appearing&#13;
in multiple roles, are Vicki Knapp,&#13;
Racine; Rebecca Julich, Racine;&#13;
Mary Beth Kelleher, Kenosha;&#13;
Patricia Casciaro, Kenosha; John&#13;
Vocino, Kenosha; John Miskulin,&#13;
Racine; Andrew Brhel, Cudahy;&#13;
Scott Reichelsdorf, Kenosha; and&#13;
David Schroeder, Kenosha.&#13;
Leon Van Dyke directs, scenic&#13;
design is by Charles Erven and&#13;
costumes by Barbara Thompson.&#13;
All are members of the dramatic&#13;
arts faculty.&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sexaual harassment is thought&#13;
to be by many a touchy subject. It&#13;
is difficult to determine what type&#13;
of behavior falls under sexual&#13;
harassment, and what does not.&#13;
On a finer scale, Parkside is&#13;
developing a means of education&#13;
and awareness to sexual&#13;
harassment and is establishing a&#13;
way to informally resolve any&#13;
cases of sexual harassment.&#13;
The definition of sexual&#13;
harassment has been described as&#13;
follows in the policy statment:&#13;
unwelcome sexual advances,&#13;
requests for sexual favors, and&#13;
other physical conduct and ex-&#13;
• pre ssive behavior of a sexual&#13;
nature where: (1) submission to&#13;
such conduct is made either explicitly&#13;
or implicitly a term or&#13;
condition of an individual's employment&#13;
or education; (2)&#13;
submission to or rejection of such&#13;
conduct by an individual is used as&#13;
the basis for academic or employment&#13;
decisions affecting that&#13;
individual; or (3) such conduct&#13;
has the purpose of effect of substantially&#13;
interfering with an&#13;
individual's academic or&#13;
professional performance or&#13;
creating an intimidating, hostile&#13;
or demeaning employment or&#13;
educational environment.&#13;
Sexual harassment is considered&#13;
a form of sex&#13;
discrimination. The situation may&#13;
occur in a number of varieties.&#13;
The common element that all of&#13;
these situations share is some sort&#13;
of inappropriate introduction of&#13;
sexual activities or comments into&#13;
the work or learning experience.&#13;
The relationships involved can be&#13;
of unequal power, in compliance&#13;
with requests for sexual favors as&#13;
a criterion for granting work,&#13;
study or grading benefits, or the&#13;
relationship can be one of equal&#13;
power and repeated sexual advances&#13;
or demeaning verbal&#13;
behavior can have a harmful&#13;
effect on a person's ability to&#13;
study or work in an academic&#13;
setting. A concerted effort is being&#13;
made to protect employees and&#13;
students from sexual harassment.&#13;
The establishment of programs&#13;
to educate members of the&#13;
university community on the&#13;
subject of sexual harassment, and&#13;
to make them more sensitive to its&#13;
forms and damaging consequences,&#13;
is being worked out at&#13;
this time. The main purpose of the&#13;
educational function being to&#13;
make people aware of the&#13;
definition of sexual harassment,&#13;
and to inform them of the&#13;
psychological impact of sexual&#13;
harassment. It is important that&#13;
the university community be&#13;
made aware of the differences&#13;
between legitimate behavior and&#13;
inappropriate behavior. The&#13;
program will be implemented by&#13;
the sexual harassment advisory&#13;
committee.&#13;
The committee will assist those&#13;
people who feel they are victims of&#13;
sexual harassment. The role of the&#13;
committee member will be one of&#13;
a mediator. Committee members&#13;
are individuals to whom the&#13;
victim can go and talk, on an&#13;
informal basis and confidentially.&#13;
The committee member will then&#13;
approach the accused and talk&#13;
with them on an informal basis. In&#13;
this format, everything is informal&#13;
and confidential. Perhaps&#13;
a resolution can be reached, never&#13;
having to put a complaint in&#13;
writing.&#13;
Within the policy statement, the&#13;
functions of the Advisory committee&#13;
are as follows:&#13;
• To advise the Chancellor on&#13;
all matters relating to sexual&#13;
harassment;&#13;
• To advise and assist the&#13;
Chancellor in devising programs&#13;
designed to inform employees and&#13;
students of the nature of sexual&#13;
harassment to increase their&#13;
sensitivity to it, and to publicize&#13;
the procedures, sanctions and&#13;
remedies available against it.&#13;
• To assist in informal&#13;
mediation efforts when so&#13;
requested by the Chancellor or&#13;
Chancellor's delegate;&#13;
• To serve in an ombudsman&#13;
role in matters relating to sexual&#13;
harassment;&#13;
• To give advice, counsel, and&#13;
assistance to members of the&#13;
university.&#13;
Members of the Sexual&#13;
Harassment Advisory Committee&#13;
are Stella Gray and Wayne&#13;
Johnson, representing the&#13;
faculty; Karen Lourigan, Carrie&#13;
Peters and Jackie Willems,&#13;
representing classified staff;&#13;
Linda Piele and Stuart Rubner,&#13;
representing academic staff;&#13;
Carla Thomas and Pat Hensiak,&#13;
representing students. If a&#13;
university member feels&#13;
mistreated, they should contact&#13;
one of the above mentioned. &#13;
2 Thursday, April 22,1982 RANGER&#13;
/'before we settle down to vote&#13;
ON T HE RESOLUTION A GAINST GUN C ONTROL&#13;
I'D L IKE T O T HANK BUCK SC HATZMAN FOR&#13;
HIS BEAUTIFUL PLAQUE OF THE SECOND&#13;
AMENDMENT HERE.&#13;
To the E ditor&#13;
Research does not make a good teacher&#13;
the opposition&#13;
to G. Gordon Liddy?&#13;
by Chuck Ostrowski&#13;
Last Monday, Parkside had the&#13;
good fortune to be exposed to a&#13;
point of view not usually&#13;
presented. I am referring to G.&#13;
Gordon Liddy, the author of&#13;
WILL, his testimonial about the&#13;
Watergate scandal of a decade&#13;
ago.&#13;
A controversy erupted several&#13;
weeks ago when Liddy's appearance&#13;
was announced.&#13;
Petitions were circulated in&#13;
protest of Liddy receiving $4500-&#13;
for his lecture on Monday. More&#13;
useful and needed items could be&#13;
purchased with that kind of&#13;
money, the argument went.&#13;
Paying a criminal to broadcast his&#13;
views and ideas was not in the best&#13;
interests of the students here,&#13;
whose tuition was used to pay for&#13;
Mr. Liddy's lecture.&#13;
However, others argued that G.&#13;
Gordon Liddy is a historical figure&#13;
directly involved in an illegal&#13;
break - in and wire - tapping that&#13;
led to the disclosure of other&#13;
crimes now headlined under the&#13;
common term "Watergate." Mr.&#13;
Liddy is directly part of a scandal&#13;
that forced the President of the&#13;
United States to resign his office.&#13;
That doesn't happen all the time,&#13;
and to be part of anybody connected&#13;
with this historical event&#13;
whose effects are unprecedented&#13;
is something we should all be&#13;
supporting, not challenging.&#13;
But I really don't believe that&#13;
opponents of Mr. Liddy were&#13;
necessarily concerned about&#13;
paying him $4500. Although that is&#13;
a significant amount of money it is&#13;
certainly not a large percentage of&#13;
the overall UW budget. I do&#13;
believe, however, that those opposed&#13;
to his presence here were&#13;
practicing what could be called&#13;
"liberal fascism."&#13;
This amounts to opposing any&#13;
point of view that is to the far right&#13;
of their own. Of course, I'm sure&#13;
these students wouldn't mind&#13;
Liddy appearing here if he paid all&#13;
the expenses, including lights and&#13;
hot water. But we'd certainly be&#13;
unable to have him speak if that&#13;
was the case. So, in order for us to&#13;
hear Mr. Liddy's extraordinary&#13;
views, expenses must be paid by&#13;
us. It's the price we pay to educate&#13;
ourselves with an assortment of&#13;
views.&#13;
I also cannot help but think that&#13;
if a convicted felon from the left,&#13;
like Abbey Hoffman, lectured&#13;
here for the same fee and petitions&#13;
were circulated protesting his&#13;
appearance, the same students&#13;
screaming because of Liddy's&#13;
presence would be screaming&#13;
"fascism" in response to opposition&#13;
of Hoffman.&#13;
This whole atmosphere&#13;
equating money with particular&#13;
points of view is wrong. It really&#13;
shouldn't matter the amount of&#13;
money we have to pay to hear any&#13;
type of view. (Of course, this&#13;
whole system of whoever has the&#13;
money to spend gets what he or&#13;
she wants is wrong, but that's&#13;
another topic.) What should&#13;
concern everybody, though, is&#13;
that any type of philosophy&#13;
available for us to consume should&#13;
be gotten. This is college, where&#13;
exposure to Reaganism and&#13;
Maoism should happen at the&#13;
same level. Decide for yourself.&#13;
That's why I cannot understand&#13;
opposition to Liddy. To deny&#13;
others the chance to hear him&#13;
because you don't agree with him&#13;
is something that regularly&#13;
happens in the USSR. And I'm&#13;
sure Parkside's resident leftists&#13;
would not all like to be accused of&#13;
censorship, since that would&#13;
definitely contradict what they&#13;
should stand for: freedom to&#13;
exposure to all ideas, regardless&#13;
of each's meaning or effects. But&#13;
maybe our residents aren't as&#13;
radical as they regard themselves.&#13;
How else could you explain&#13;
their reaction to an often incoherent&#13;
extremist like G. Gordon&#13;
Liddy?&#13;
Editor:&#13;
As a non - tr aditional student at&#13;
Parkside, I am really concerned&#13;
by the policies regarding teacher&#13;
contracts. I think my years of life&#13;
experiences, including raising&#13;
children, have given me some&#13;
insight into what can be great&#13;
about schools and what can be&#13;
damaging to the students. The&#13;
answer to both is 'teachers'.&#13;
Unfortunately, in the elementary&#13;
and secondary schools, good&#13;
teachers are definitely the exception&#13;
rather than the rule. The&#13;
same situation seems to exist here&#13;
at Parkside, where teachers are&#13;
judged on the basis of their&#13;
research. What are the&#13;
requirements of this research,&#13;
and who is capable of judging?&#13;
The administration seems to&#13;
think students are completely&#13;
incapable of passing judgment on&#13;
a teacher ; I think they are more&#13;
capable than an instructor's&#13;
peers, whose judgment is often&#13;
influenced by petty politics or&#13;
imagined threats to their&#13;
positions. I find it absolutely incredible&#13;
that this condition exists&#13;
here.&#13;
It should not surprise me, I&#13;
suppose. So many people my age&#13;
just accept things as they are,&#13;
without looking beneath the&#13;
surface or asking questions. I&#13;
have seen some really awful&#13;
teachers — both in public and&#13;
private sphools — and could not&#13;
believe that other parents were&#13;
unaware of them. Or perhaps it&#13;
was ignorance, or unconcern.&#13;
These same people, returning to&#13;
school, would probably not care if&#13;
they had mediocre teachers.&#13;
The traditional students, too,&#13;
seem very tolerant of poor&#13;
teaching. This is probably&#13;
because they simply have had so&#13;
many bad ones they don't expect&#13;
anything better. Most of these&#13;
students questions things about&#13;
our society, and are much more&#13;
politically aware than I was at&#13;
their age. Making changes is not&#13;
an easy process, but young adults&#13;
today certainly have the intelligence&#13;
and energy to bring it&#13;
about.&#13;
Good teachers teach their&#13;
students to THINK. But perhaps&#13;
that is not considered desirable by&#13;
everyone. People are much more&#13;
easily controlled, and society&#13;
much less complicated, if no one&#13;
questions anything.&#13;
Kindness and caring are traits&#13;
that are necessary for a good&#13;
teacher. Those that make petty&#13;
rules, with infractions punishable&#13;
by lower grades, must be very&#13;
insecure and resort to trivial&#13;
methods to exert their authority.&#13;
But perhaps the subject matter&#13;
does not lend itself to dedication.&#13;
Even a machine could fill one's&#13;
head with cold, hard facts,&#13;
necessary for technical fields, I&#13;
suppose, and certainly valued —&#13;
money wise — in our society today.&#13;
Behavioral science, on the other&#13;
hand, where one is dealing with&#13;
people and not machines, requires&#13;
special instructors. Jim Bearden&#13;
is one of these. Along with a few&#13;
other really special sociology&#13;
teachers, he is what teaching&#13;
should be about. It's unfortunate&#13;
that more students do not take&#13;
courses with these instructors; it&#13;
is an enlightening experience.&#13;
The world needs people who&#13;
care about other people. Teachers&#13;
certainly should set an example&#13;
by treating students as the intelligent&#13;
people they are, and by&#13;
teaching them to think. Otherwise,&#13;
who will question the actions&#13;
of our government, especially now&#13;
when our country is contributing&#13;
to the slaughter of i nnocent people&#13;
in other countries, while ignoring&#13;
starvation and poverty here at&#13;
home?&#13;
I hate to think that this&#13;
university favors research -&#13;
minded instructors who do not&#13;
have the inclination, or are not&#13;
allowed the time, to be dedicated&#13;
teachers. Somewhere along the&#13;
way the real purpose of schools&#13;
has been lost: namely, to teach&#13;
students. I wonder how many&#13;
taxpayers are aware of this trend,&#13;
and how would they vote if given a&#13;
choice: Should your tax - supported&#13;
university be for teaching&#13;
or research?&#13;
Lorene Wynn&#13;
Views on punk rock were "slanted"&#13;
Dear editor:&#13;
In response to a letter your&#13;
paper printed last week, we feel&#13;
the public has a "right to know"&#13;
the truth in regards to the punk&#13;
rock phenomena. The purpose of&#13;
this short, buf pertinent, letter will&#13;
be to highlight the misconceptions&#13;
in Mr. Kiesling's recent rebuttal.&#13;
We now will turn our attention to&#13;
the issue at hand.&#13;
Mr. Kiesling (or Bob; far be it&#13;
for us to intrude on the "power of&#13;
the individual"):&#13;
Your rebuttal has been&#13;
acknowledged. However, in the&#13;
interest of fairness (so staunchly&#13;
advocated by John Rawls), we&#13;
feel it is our obligation to the&#13;
public to reveal the truth. This&#13;
letter will concern itself with punk&#13;
rock and its underlying concepts.&#13;
Previous to the construction of&#13;
our earlier article we researched&#13;
several areas of the phenomena&#13;
(which we call punk rock) from&#13;
different sociological and&#13;
philosophical perspectives. From&#13;
this information it is plainly&#13;
visible that our statements were&#13;
not the expression of two irate&#13;
individuals, but instead the&#13;
response of society at large. You&#13;
stated you have never met anyone&#13;
who described the "genre" as&#13;
"intolerable and disgusting," and&#13;
hope never to meet anyone who&#13;
Stop opposition to punk rock&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
We're writing in reply to the&#13;
letter on stopping punk rock. We&#13;
were very impressed by the&#13;
grammar and usage of the&#13;
English language, however, we&#13;
felt the letter was quite repetitious&#13;
and the point simple enough to&#13;
have been condensed into one&#13;
paragraph, therefore our point&#13;
shall be kept short.&#13;
We felt discouraged by the&#13;
narrow thinking expressed in the&#13;
letter. While it is true that punk&#13;
rock is basically an anarchist&#13;
movement, and that if ignored&#13;
would vanish, letters of this&#13;
negative type keep the punk fires&#13;
burning. Punk rock has flourished&#13;
because of negative media attention.&#13;
Every time the words&#13;
"punk rock" are mentioned,&#13;
another curious person becomes&#13;
interested in finding out what it is&#13;
all about. Thus letters such as the&#13;
one that appeared in the Ranger&#13;
two weeks ago helped the&#13;
movement more than it hurt it.&#13;
What really scares us is the&#13;
flipped - out way in which the&#13;
authors of the letter in question&#13;
regard the first Amendment to the&#13;
Constitution of these United&#13;
States. Sure, they have freedom of&#13;
speech, but why should they&#13;
criticize and infringe on punk -&#13;
rockers' rights on Freedom of&#13;
Expression? They would ban punk&#13;
rock just because they didn't like&#13;
it. What if they didn't like&#13;
organized religion? Should we ban&#13;
it?&#13;
To tell the truth, while punks&#13;
loudly desecrate the American&#13;
way, and expand the ways of&#13;
Anarchy, they actually revere the&#13;
U.S. and Democracy, at least in&#13;
relation to Socialism and Communism.&#13;
Democracy is the only&#13;
system in which punk rock could&#13;
exist. Thus we say that although&#13;
punks and punk rock may express&#13;
the unjustness of today's&#13;
Democratic system, fear not that&#13;
they will ever become an&#13;
organized group vowing to spread&#13;
anarchy ; how can anarchy ever&#13;
become organized?&#13;
Obviously, those authors are&#13;
very close minded in the view of&#13;
people they don't understand. It is&#13;
this kind of view that breeds&#13;
prejudice which therefore induces&#13;
more separation of the people&#13;
which is just the opposite of what&#13;
our society needs today. This kind&#13;
of clear cut good and evil is encouraged&#13;
by Communist countries,&#13;
in which, from what we've&#13;
seen in the letter, "How Can We&#13;
Stop Punk Rock?", the authors&#13;
would have nothing to complain&#13;
about if they lived in one since&#13;
the government would already&#13;
dictate how the people act, dress&#13;
refers to it as "indignant." Obviously&#13;
you have certain social&#13;
boundaries outside of which you&#13;
must rarely venture. In fact, the&#13;
three terms must be used consecutively,&#13;
in one thought, to&#13;
capture the impact concerning&#13;
Middle - America's viewpoints on&#13;
punk rock. I am not speaking of&#13;
the Middle - American offspring of&#13;
the late fifties and early sixties, I&#13;
am speaking of t he mature Middle&#13;
- America: the working man. If&#13;
you still question the truth of such&#13;
assertions, we can give you the&#13;
names and addresses of various&#13;
social establishments, where you&#13;
can encounter a myriad of people&#13;
and ascertain whether our earlier&#13;
statements were objective.&#13;
In reference to your inference&#13;
that capitalistic society advocates&#13;
the rock music industry (in lieu of&#13;
its monetary input), we should&#13;
like to point out that prostitution&#13;
and pornography are also multi -&#13;
billion dollar businesses within the&#13;
capitalistic structure. It is evident&#13;
capitalistic society does not advocate&#13;
these degenerative&#13;
practices, yet they flourish. Why?&#13;
We feel the real problem is the&#13;
ever - increasing, egocentric&#13;
power of the individual and its&#13;
ever - rising consequent: a lack of&#13;
social responsibility. Such a&#13;
dilemma is analogous to a stubborn&#13;
and spoiled child, who&#13;
always wants to receive and never&#13;
replace. In essence, the individual&#13;
has been allowed to roam free&#13;
without regard to the costs society&#13;
has to bear. Thus, individual&#13;
autonomy has become perverse.&#13;
In summary, we see that although&#13;
certain practices exist in a&#13;
capitalistic culture, they are not&#13;
necessarily a benefit to that&#13;
culture — they are a detriment.&#13;
Speaking of individualism, you&#13;
have conveniently disregarded&#13;
(with or without intent) the main&#13;
crux of our first letter. It seems&#13;
you have not comprehended the&#13;
negative aspects of a founand&#13;
think.&#13;
We feel that no one should&#13;
criticize punk rock unless it really&#13;
affects them. No one has to be&#13;
involved in it. So why don't those&#13;
two authors just listen to their own&#13;
advice and ignore it. Just let it&#13;
be!!! . - -&#13;
The Deviants&#13;
dationless individualism as advocated&#13;
by modern arm - chair&#13;
philosophers (i.e. Jean - Paul&#13;
Sartre). This individualism, based&#13;
on moral and personal freedom, is&#13;
closely related to punker ideology.&#13;
Furthermore, it is an individualism&#13;
no one has been able&#13;
to completely live up to. Bob, if&#13;
you cannot grasp philosophical&#13;
jargon, then do not attempt to&#13;
refute philosophically based&#13;
arguments.&#13;
Your letter also contained a&#13;
misconception concerning Neo -&#13;
Darwinism (relating back to&#13;
1935). Perhaps if you had read the&#13;
letter a bit more discriminantly&#13;
you would have realized we did&#13;
not advocate a "right - wing&#13;
totalitarian" government (in fact,&#13;
we claimed it was neither ethical&#13;
or workable). Regardless, in&#13;
theory it would be a way to rid our&#13;
capitalistic society of the punk&#13;
rock menace.&#13;
In closing, you have, like punk&#13;
rock, failed to provide a viable&#13;
and rational alternative to&#13;
capitalism. Punkdom, based on&#13;
anarchy, only reinforces our&#13;
original concept of punk rock as a&#13;
trivial and socially "indignant"&#13;
cult. As you saw in our previous&#13;
article, this warrants society a&#13;
right to extinguish and dismantle&#13;
it. By the way Bob, we view disco&#13;
as socially distasteful and thus,&#13;
extinguishable also. Bob, we do&#13;
appreciate your concern, even&#13;
though your crucial issues were&#13;
expressed from a subjective point&#13;
of view (or what journalists term&#13;
as a "slanted" viewpoint). One&#13;
final suggestion, if you wish to&#13;
broaden your musical scope you&#13;
should try listening to the socially&#13;
and individually redeeming music&#13;
of Bob Wills and The Texas&#13;
Playboys.&#13;
Jack Zurawik&#13;
and Dave Odders &#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 22, 1982 3&#13;
Liddy&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
said, he saw fear on the faces of&#13;
the prison guards and prisoners&#13;
after revealing his educational&#13;
background. (He earned a&#13;
bachelor of science degree from&#13;
Fordham College and a doctor of&#13;
law from the Fordham Law&#13;
School.)&#13;
The most powerful weapon one&#13;
could have, said Liddy, is&#13;
education. This statement didn't&#13;
really prove itself to be reliable&#13;
when Liddy later answered&#13;
questions from the audience&#13;
concerning education.&#13;
Liddy first joked about the&#13;
question and answer session, as he&#13;
did with many other topics&#13;
throughout the evening, and&#13;
corrected the English used by the&#13;
first person posing a question.&#13;
Repeatedly throughout the rest of&#13;
the question and answer session&#13;
Liddy evaded the basic issue of&#13;
the questions and answered what&#13;
he wanted to say. Or else, he gave&#13;
one insignificant example to try to&#13;
prove a point that couldn't be&#13;
summed up in one selective&#13;
example.&#13;
The first question dealt with&#13;
how the U.S. and the Soviet Union&#13;
will go about the Cold War — wi ll&#13;
war break out or will there be&#13;
peace?&#13;
Liddy said that when you&#13;
prepare for peace, you also&#13;
prepare for war and that with the&#13;
nature of man, your enemies will&#13;
attack you. He compared it to the&#13;
Law of the Yukon — the weak&#13;
shall perish while the strong will&#13;
thrive.&#13;
Asked how America can get&#13;
strong and maintain a free society&#13;
without major, inhibiting fears,&#13;
Liddy said about Reagan, "He has&#13;
a chance (to do so) as long as you&#13;
the American people have&#13;
patience. Reagan knows what to&#13;
do — all we have to do is let him do&#13;
it." Liddy said that one major&#13;
problem is that the current&#13;
federal economic program is not&#13;
exactly what Reagan asked for, so&#13;
he can't be blamed if t he program&#13;
fails.&#13;
Liddy said that the television&#13;
movie based on his autobiography&#13;
was O.K. but that the original&#13;
three - hour version was edited an&#13;
hour and the story was fictionalized&#13;
a bit.&#13;
One question, from a conservative&#13;
audience member,&#13;
pointed out that some people&#13;
(mainly him) didn't want tax&#13;
money going for social change,&#13;
but would rather have it go&#13;
towards political change. Many&#13;
people in the audience amazedly&#13;
listened to the point of the&#13;
"question" (which was more of a&#13;
statement than a question).&#13;
That shows the diversity of the&#13;
audience — the entire political&#13;
spectrum that exists in the&#13;
American political system (which&#13;
isn't all that much, by the way)&#13;
was represented in the audience&#13;
and heard from the opposing&#13;
viewpoints.&#13;
In response to a question about&#13;
Richard Nixon's drinking while in&#13;
the White House, Liddy said, "I&#13;
never saw him drunk or even the&#13;
slightest bit under the influence of&#13;
alcohol."&#13;
The subject of nuclear war was&#13;
brought up and the point was&#13;
raised that why does American&#13;
have to match Russia in conventional&#13;
warfare weaponry when&#13;
the war will be a nuclear one.&#13;
Liddy said the U.S. needs more&#13;
tanks if we don't want Russia to&#13;
take over Europe. "If we want to&#13;
be isolationists, we don't have to&#13;
worry about tanks until they come&#13;
from north and south," Liddy&#13;
said. He also said that the worry is&#13;
more likely to come from the&#13;
south considering the Soviet influence&#13;
in Central America.&#13;
Liddy said that although he&#13;
recommended it be done, he was&#13;
not ordered to kill Washington&#13;
columnist Jack Anderson, who&#13;
wrote a revealing story that endangered&#13;
a spy's life. Liddy said&#13;
the government was justified to&#13;
have Anderson killed ("All&#13;
governments commit homicides&#13;
from time to time to protect their&#13;
nations.").&#13;
Some students asked Liddy&#13;
whether he approved of cutting&#13;
programs such as education to&#13;
build up the national defense.&#13;
Liddy said, "Yes." Liddy said you&#13;
cannot increase intelligence with&#13;
education — it's the raw material&#13;
that really counts. Liddy said that&#13;
people are trying to "put a price&#13;
on our freedom — a nd that's one&#13;
thing we can't afford to do." He&#13;
said people are still able to receive&#13;
a higher education — " It can be&#13;
done — it just takes a little&#13;
courage."&#13;
Asked what he would be doing&#13;
now if he didn't get caught in&#13;
Watergate, Liddy said, "I'd&#13;
probably be slaving away in the&#13;
Reagan administration." He was&#13;
also quuck to point out that he&#13;
doesn't know Reagan and that&#13;
he's never been offered any type&#13;
of job with the administration.&#13;
Looking back over his speech&#13;
and answers, many people, including&#13;
myself, found Liddy to be&#13;
very condescending toward&#13;
negative questions. "Let me&#13;
explain to you how it works ..." is&#13;
a sample start of on e of his replies&#13;
that eventually would ignore the&#13;
point of the question and consist of&#13;
what he wanted to say about the&#13;
topic at hand. If he didn't ignore it,&#13;
Liddy would touch on the specific&#13;
issue very vaguely and then&#13;
proceed on his merry way to&#13;
wherever he wanted to go.&#13;
Another problem was Liddy&#13;
turning the tables on the people&#13;
asking questions by going for a&#13;
laugh when asked about a touchy&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
LIDDY shows his scarred left hand to person who asked to see it&#13;
during the question - and - answer period.&#13;
issue. After disarming the&#13;
questioners with humor&#13;
(sometimes funny, sometimes&#13;
not) Liddy then answered the&#13;
questions in what I believe are his&#13;
programmed answers that he&#13;
knows so well after being on the&#13;
lecture circuit for a few years.&#13;
A sad point about his jokes —&#13;
the audience laughed and&#13;
acknowledged Liddy when Liddy&#13;
brought up killing John Dean and&#13;
Jack Anderson. I hope that that&#13;
doesn't directly reflect the nature&#13;
of today's society — th at criminal&#13;
government officials are spared&#13;
the application of the law because&#13;
they are who they are, and, after&#13;
serving one - fifth of their prison&#13;
term (if they get one) they are let&#13;
loose on the lecture circuit to&#13;
make a lot of money. And the&#13;
people support them.&#13;
Liddy did not allow taping of t he&#13;
program because, if broadcast, it&#13;
would "lower his market value."&#13;
The no taping rule is a double&#13;
standard considering he was&#13;
addressing about 700 people&#13;
(making it definitely "public" in&#13;
the legal sense of the word) while&#13;
Liddy illegally wire - tapped many&#13;
people throughout his career.&#13;
Concerning his market value,&#13;
the question was raised whether&#13;
or not Liddy's $4500 fee was too&#13;
much. Although I feel people&#13;
received their money's worth for&#13;
two, three or four dollars because&#13;
hearing different viewpoints is&#13;
necessary to become politically&#13;
mature, I feel that the $4500 fee&#13;
was too much to pay. If you can't&#13;
put a price on freedom, education,&#13;
etc., you certainly can't put a&#13;
price (such a high one) on&#13;
becoming politically aware.&#13;
Overall, the evening was very&#13;
stimulating and interesting, but&#13;
the question of whether or not it&#13;
tfas worth the money bringing&#13;
Liddy here has not — and&#13;
probably cannot — be satisfactorily&#13;
answered.&#13;
Q.: How does it feel knowing&#13;
that many people don't like you?&#13;
A.: By definition reputation&#13;
means what other people think of&#13;
you. That's not within your control.&#13;
By contrast, by definition,&#13;
character means what you really&#13;
are. There's no way in the world I&#13;
can affect your character — only&#13;
you can affect your character.&#13;
Character is 100% in your&#13;
control and your reputation is not&#13;
in your control. Wtat I do is not&#13;
really worry or care about&#13;
reputation. I just concentrate on&#13;
character.&#13;
Q.: You had a lot of ways you&#13;
met your fears head on to&#13;
eliminate them. Are there any you&#13;
prepared for, meeting your fears&#13;
in prison?&#13;
A.: By then I didn't have any.&#13;
When I went into prison my attitude&#13;
was not somehow in here I&#13;
must survive. My attitude was the&#13;
way it is whenever I go into any&#13;
situation and that is somehow in&#13;
here I shall prevail and let these&#13;
poor bastards survive me.&#13;
Q.: In your book you said you&#13;
would have had no qualms about&#13;
breaking the law if so ordered by&#13;
your superiors or if it was&#13;
something good for the government.&#13;
Yet you have this very&#13;
negative attitude towards people&#13;
in the '60s who practiced civil&#13;
disobedience as a protest to the&#13;
Vietnam War. Is there a&#13;
discrepency there?&#13;
A.: In the book I made the&#13;
distinction as to what I w ould and&#13;
would not do. Between malum in&#13;
se, evil in and of itself, which I&#13;
have never been asked to do and&#13;
wouldn't do even if I were asked,&#13;
and malum prohibitum, which&#13;
means the abscence of statutes&#13;
prohibiting it, is morally indifferent.&#13;
&#13;
I don't have any quarrel with an&#13;
individual who elects to practice&#13;
civil disobedience providing that&#13;
the individual is willing to do what&#13;
I did. You get caught, you get&#13;
convicted, you go to jail. What&#13;
kind of annoys me about those&#13;
people is that when they get&#13;
caught, get convicted and go to&#13;
jail they start to whine and play&#13;
the violin and snivel, and that does&#13;
not inspire in me either respect or&#13;
confidence.&#13;
An interview with G. Gordon Liddy&#13;
Q.: Do you really believe that if&#13;
John Dean hadn't talked that you&#13;
could have kept a lid on&#13;
Watergate?&#13;
A.: Absolutely. He and (Jeb)&#13;
Magruder. You'd have to add&#13;
Magruder into that.&#13;
Q.: What's your views on El&#13;
Salvador and how should the U.S.&#13;
go about aiding them or not aiding&#13;
them?&#13;
A.: El Salvador is a leftist&#13;
government under attack from&#13;
the right and from the Communists.&#13;
There are perhaps, tops,&#13;
6500 Communist guerrillas which&#13;
are attacking from that side. They&#13;
are, however, being directed by&#13;
very sophisticated directional and&#13;
communicational equipment&#13;
mounted in Nicaragua. They're&#13;
being armed by the Soviets and&#13;
Cuba and Nicaragua.&#13;
What we ought to be doing is&#13;
pretty much what we are doing,&#13;
which is economic aid because&#13;
what these Communists are doing&#13;
are attempting to destroy the&#13;
ability of the peasants to be able to&#13;
raise food. They do that by&#13;
blowing up water conduits and&#13;
blowing up dams so they can't get&#13;
their products to market.&#13;
As for military stuff, primarily&#13;
what we ought to be doing is&#13;
training their people. It doesn't do&#13;
any good to send over 60&#13;
helicopters if they've only got nine&#13;
pilots.&#13;
Q.: Do you see any relation&#13;
between El Salvador and Vietnam?&#13;
&#13;
A.: No, and I'll tell you why. El&#13;
Salvador is closer to Washington&#13;
D.C. than many major cities in the&#13;
U.S. Vietnam is 9 - 10,000 miles&#13;
away. El Salvador, as I said, you&#13;
have 6500 Communists. They&#13;
aren't all that well organized&#13;
amongst themselves nor have&#13;
they been for that long. Whereas&#13;
in Vietnam you had a Viet Cong&#13;
infrastructure that went back all&#13;
the way to . . . post WWII.&#13;
Q.: How do you feel about gun&#13;
control?&#13;
A.: Well, first of all, my position&#13;
in respect to guns is that I was in a&#13;
business in which a gun was as&#13;
much a tool as that pencil is to&#13;
yours . . . When you're in&#13;
something like the FBI a gun is a&#13;
tool and you would be well advised&#13;
to master it. There is also the&#13;
extra added element in the fact&#13;
that the mastery of that gun is the&#13;
best life insurance policy you&#13;
could ever buy in that kind of v ery&#13;
dangerous business.&#13;
Gun control doesn't work, never&#13;
has. We have 22,000 gun control&#13;
laws on the books of this country&#13;
today. Another one isn't going to&#13;
help it any.&#13;
If (I had) a magic wand and I&#13;
could go 1, 2, 3 and every gun —&#13;
shoulder guns, shotguns, handguns&#13;
— i n the U. S. would just&#13;
vanish in a puff of smoke overnight,&#13;
you'd still have 96.4% of a ll&#13;
serious crime ... as defined by&#13;
the FBI.&#13;
Q.: How about guns and&#13;
domestic quarrels, suicides,&#13;
accidents with children?&#13;
A.: There are relatively few&#13;
accidents with children. You do&#13;
have domestic quarrels . . . When&#13;
you get an individual in such a&#13;
rage that he is ready and willing to&#13;
take the life of his wife, if he's got&#13;
a gun he'll use it. If he doesn't&#13;
have a gun, he'll pick up an iron&#13;
and bash her skull in, pick up a&#13;
kitchen knife and cut her liver out.&#13;
That's what that kind of murderous&#13;
rage will do.&#13;
I've been in prisons and the&#13;
professional criminals tell me&#13;
they hope that there is gun control&#13;
because there's absolutely no way&#13;
that anyone is going to stop them&#13;
from having a gun. They would be&#13;
delighted to have the assurance&#13;
that when they go in someplace&#13;
that they're not going to be opposed&#13;
by (someone who) has a gun&#13;
who could possibly blow them&#13;
away.&#13;
Q.: How long have you been on&#13;
the speaking circuit?&#13;
A.: Theoretically, I suppose I&#13;
started in 1978. I got out of prison&#13;
in late 1977. T o the extent that I&#13;
lecture now, which is about 80&#13;
universities and colleges a year&#13;
and about 70 of what we call&#13;
corporate dates, all of which are&#13;
not for corporations.&#13;
Q.: And you get $4500 for each&#13;
speech?&#13;
A.: No, sometimes I get considerably&#13;
more.&#13;
Q.: How long is this going to be&#13;
lucrative?&#13;
A.: I'm told for as long as I want&#13;
to do it, probably for the rest of my&#13;
life.&#13;
Q.: Is that what you'll do? Do&#13;
you have anything else?&#13;
A.: Well, I hope to get some rest.&#13;
For example, I just came from&#13;
Berkeley today. Tomorrow I go to&#13;
North Carolina, then I go to&#13;
Buffalo, Indianapolis, Daytona&#13;
Beach and I hope that at some&#13;
point I'll be able to take it a little&#13;
easier because I have two other&#13;
businesses I have to attend to also.&#13;
I am one of the owners of Gemstone&#13;
Security; we have a full -&#13;
service industrial security corporation.&#13;
&#13;
I also have to spend one week&#13;
out of every four in Florida, where&#13;
I tape, two a day, the syndicated&#13;
television show "Cause and Effect."&#13;
&#13;
I'm going to go right back to&#13;
what I'm doing now. Then I have&#13;
to write an article for Playboy,&#13;
then I gotta write another book.&#13;
I'm negotiating to sell one of my&#13;
other books now for a movie, so I&#13;
really have a lot of things that I&#13;
have to do.&#13;
Q.: What kind of books are you&#13;
writing?&#13;
A.: The first one I wrote was&#13;
fiction and the one they want me&#13;
to write next will be another&#13;
fiction book.&#13;
Q.: Are they about all you know&#13;
about covert operations?&#13;
A.: You know, they say write&#13;
about what you know. I'm not at&#13;
all sure that I could turn out a very&#13;
credible novel about the inside&#13;
story on life in a girls' school.&#13;
Q.: How did your family take&#13;
Watergate?&#13;
A.: Well, adverse circumstances&#13;
are going to do one&#13;
thing or the other. They're either&#13;
going to defeat you or make you&#13;
much, much stronger. (The axiom&#13;
goes) what does not kill me makes&#13;
me stronger. And that's how it&#13;
worked out with my family.&#13;
Q.: Do you want your children to&#13;
follow in your footsteps?&#13;
A.: No, I would want my&#13;
children to follow life as they&#13;
perceive life ought to be . . . What&#13;
I tell my children is you do what&#13;
you want to do and whatever it is&#13;
you be the very best at it possible.&#13;
&#13;
Q.: Do you think that we could&#13;
have a conventional war with the&#13;
U.S.S.R.?&#13;
A.: If you mean, do I think we&#13;
could have a real war with the&#13;
U.S.S.R. with neither side using&#13;
nuclear weapons — n o. Once the&#13;
genie's out of the bottle, it's out of&#13;
the bottle.&#13;
Q.: Do you believe in the&#13;
possibility of a limited nuclear&#13;
war?&#13;
A.: I'm not at all sure that&#13;
there's any such thing as a limited&#13;
nuclear war. Period.&#13;
Q.: Let's say a limited exchange&#13;
— they throw one at us, we throw&#13;
one at them and that's it.&#13;
A.: I don't know. I can you&#13;
know, speculate on a scenario, if&#13;
you will, in which they throw a&#13;
thing at us and we throw one at&#13;
them and both are so horrified out&#13;
of it that no one goes further. I&#13;
don't know. What I know is the&#13;
nature of man.&#13;
Q.: Are you still on parole?&#13;
A.: No, that was a little joke I&#13;
always tell.&#13;
Q.: Do you carry a gun?&#13;
A.: I'm not allowed to carry a&#13;
gun. However, Mrs. Liddy has&#13;
quite a few guns in the house. And&#13;
if somebody were to come through&#13;
the window in my house I would&#13;
not hesitate to blow him right out&#13;
the other side of it.&#13;
Q.: Do you still burn yourself?&#13;
A.: No, the reason for that is&#13;
that just as in weightlifting you&#13;
have to keep increasing the&#13;
weight, otherwise it doesn't do you&#13;
any good. And the last time I did&#13;
it, which was years ago, I was told&#13;
by the surgeons that if I did it any&#13;
more severely I would disable&#13;
myself. At that point you are&#13;
clearly at the point of what they&#13;
Continued On Page Seven &#13;
4 Thursda y, April 22,1982 RANGER&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selection&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10:00 am - 4:00 pm&#13;
• S PE AR M I NT LEAV ES&#13;
• J UBE J EL LS&#13;
• C AR AM ELS&#13;
• C AR A M EL BULLIES&#13;
• ROYALS&#13;
• T OF FE ES&#13;
• J O TS&#13;
• B RI DGE M IX&#13;
• M A L TED MILK BALLS&#13;
• CHOC. C RE M E D RO P S&#13;
• CHOC. R AISIN S&#13;
• CHOC. P E A NU TS&#13;
• P E A NUT B U T TER C U PS&#13;
• STA RS&#13;
• Y OG U RT P E A NU TS&#13;
• CAROB M A L TED MILK&#13;
BALLS&#13;
• CAR OB P E A NU TS&#13;
• S UN FL OW ER SE EDS&#13;
• CARIBBEAN DELICACY&#13;
• CALIFORNIA MIX&#13;
• S TU D E NT FOO D&#13;
• GIANT CASHEWS&#13;
• NATURA L PISTACHIOS&#13;
• SPA NISH P E A NU TS&#13;
• BLA N C HED P E A NU TS&#13;
• Y OG U RT RAISINS&#13;
• Y O G U RT S E S A M E&#13;
B RITTLE&#13;
• RED SKIN P EA N U TS&#13;
• M INT COO LERS&#13;
• STA R LIGHT MINTS&#13;
• SOUR BALLS&#13;
• CINN AMON DISKS&#13;
• C O F FEE&#13;
• BUTTERSCOTCH DISKS&#13;
• ROO T B EER B A R RE LS&#13;
• P O PS&#13;
• P E A N UT B U T T ER&#13;
KISSES&#13;
• P EP PE RMI N T KISSES&#13;
• LICORICE B UL LIES&#13;
•JELLY BEA NS&#13;
• ASS ORTED P ER KYS&#13;
• O R A NGE S LICES&#13;
Burned u p&#13;
Daylight can't be saved&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
As the semester draws to a&#13;
close, Parkside students might be&#13;
asking themselves why it seemed&#13;
to take forever. This spring term&#13;
was three weeks longer than fall's&#13;
term to start with, but that's not&#13;
all that has added to its length.&#13;
No, students, we've been duped.&#13;
We spent the majority of the&#13;
present semester in regular time,&#13;
as opposed to "Daylight Savings&#13;
Time." The switchover happens&#13;
again this weekend. Sometime&#13;
during the night between Saturday&#13;
and Sunday, we will "lose" an&#13;
hour.&#13;
That means that for the next six&#13;
months, the days will only be 23&#13;
hours long, and for the last six&#13;
months they've been 25 hours&#13;
long! Just keep in mind that all&#13;
homosexual.&#13;
Dyan Cannon has always struck&#13;
me as a pretty good actress trying&#13;
to break out of one - dimensional&#13;
roles. Not that the role of Sidney&#13;
Bruhl's airy wife in this film has a&#13;
hell of a lot of depth, but it's not a&#13;
cardboard role either. And&#13;
Cannon plays it to the hilt,&#13;
displaying an acting talent I didn't&#13;
know she had. Or maybe she just&#13;
never got a chance to show it off.&#13;
Continued On Page Five&#13;
these days actually consist of 24&#13;
hours. (Have I lost you yet?)&#13;
Who set this mess up anyways?&#13;
Exactly what are we saving?&#13;
Daylight cannot be saved, except&#13;
on pictures or movies. It can't be&#13;
frozen. And it's all really too bad.&#13;
It sure would be nice to move&#13;
daylight around. Then we could&#13;
use it the way we can use video -&#13;
tape - recorders.&#13;
Daylight Savings Time has one&#13;
major flaw: It should have been&#13;
arranged so that the 25 - hour days&#13;
came in summer, when the&#13;
weather (hopefully) is better.&#13;
Instead, the winter days are&#13;
longer, even though they're&#13;
shorter.&#13;
The present set - up is also&#13;
detrimental to students — just&#13;
when we really need all the extra&#13;
time to catch up on classes, write&#13;
papers, etc., it gets taken away&#13;
from us. Well, maybe it's not all&#13;
that bad: Tuition could have been&#13;
set up by hours in time instead of&#13;
hours per semester.&#13;
Maybe someday it will be the&#13;
same time everywhere, even&#13;
though it has got to be earlier or&#13;
later somewhere else. I now leave&#13;
you, totally confused. If you want&#13;
to know what time it is, ask&#13;
somebody else — I'm planning to&#13;
lose my watch.&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
E. F. MADRIGRAN O&#13;
1831 - 55th St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wise.&#13;
658-3553&#13;
"Deathtrap" is most a lluring&#13;
Put a little&#13;
weekend&#13;
in your week.&#13;
bv Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
The mystery - thriller -&#13;
whodunit genre is one of the most&#13;
fun (for lack of a better word)&#13;
types of film, and it's not often&#13;
that a really interesting whodunit&#13;
is spotted. But Sidney Lumet's&#13;
new film "Deathtrap" has enough&#13;
plot twists to throw any armchair&#13;
detective off the trail, and is&#13;
worthy of investigation.&#13;
Michael Caine stars as Sidney&#13;
Bruhl, a middle - aged, 'written&#13;
out' playwright, who watches his&#13;
latest play royally bomb on&#13;
Broadway in the film's opening.&#13;
Returning home to his wife (Dyan&#13;
Cannon), Bruhl discovers the&#13;
complete script to a play sent to&#13;
him by one of his former students,&#13;
a play so good that, in Bruhl's&#13;
words, "Couldn't be destroyed,&#13;
even by a gifted director." Bruhl&#13;
is so intent on churning out a&#13;
successful play that he decides to&#13;
invite the former student to his&#13;
home, kill him, and then market&#13;
the play as his own. In fact, the&#13;
unwitting author does come to&#13;
Bruhl's abode, and Bruhl does kill&#13;
him. Or so we think. This is where&#13;
the film's numerous plot twists&#13;
begin, and so, instead of revealing&#13;
all of these twists and ruining the&#13;
movie for you, I'll let you see it for&#13;
yourself. One thing I can tell you&#13;
though. The plot is wickedly interesting.&#13;
&#13;
Christopher Reeve co - stars as&#13;
Clifford Anderson, the young&#13;
homosexual playwright. Quite a&#13;
change from playing Superman&#13;
obviously, but Reeve handles the&#13;
transition with ease. This is no&#13;
easy task, because no matter how&#13;
realistically Chris plays a&#13;
character, he still, well, looks like&#13;
Superman. That image of him as&#13;
the man of steel has quickly flown&#13;
into the American psyche, and it's&#13;
hard to forget about that and&#13;
suddenly believe that he is&#13;
playing, of all things, a &#13;
Synthesizers set 'Moog' of the day&#13;
by Joe Kimm&#13;
First came the theremin. It was&#13;
invented by a scientist in the&#13;
depths of the Bell laboratories. It&#13;
was in the sixties that commercial&#13;
groups first began using this&#13;
device to augment their sound in&#13;
search of a new gimmick. Bob&#13;
Moog developed it into the Moog&#13;
synthesizer which was later&#13;
utilized by several rock groups as&#13;
an addition to their array of&#13;
keyboards. Keith Emerson of&#13;
ELP, was one of the first&#13;
customers to use his prototype.&#13;
His stage show consisted of&#13;
alternating between traditional&#13;
church sounds of the Hammond&#13;
m-2 and the new innovative&#13;
sounds that came forth from this&#13;
new Moog synthesizer. Other&#13;
groups soon followed suit, including&#13;
groups like Yes, Genesis,&#13;
Gentle Giant, and the Moody&#13;
Blues. Some even went as far as to&#13;
form a group consisting entirely of&#13;
keyboard synthesizer musicians&#13;
aka Gary Wright and his band.&#13;
This later developed into fancy&#13;
loop effects and other fancy&#13;
computer sounds produced by&#13;
artists like Brian Eno who among&#13;
others were noted for his genius&#13;
with finding new sounds. Pretty&#13;
soon people were catching on to&#13;
this new dimension in sound and it&#13;
became a big fad to color disco&#13;
songs with crazy dittos. Recent&#13;
bands like Gary Neuman hit the&#13;
top 10 with this techno - rock&#13;
clique and it became a common&#13;
place thing. It is an integral part&#13;
of today's music and most bands&#13;
have a keyboard player who&#13;
fiddles with the knobs and cranks&#13;
out computer - like emissions.&#13;
So what does this all mean?&#13;
Well, for one thing, it reflects on&#13;
society's values that relies on&#13;
technology as a workhorse for the&#13;
Vangelis tops in electronic grandeur&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
This is the best synthesizer&#13;
album I've ever heard. I haven't&#13;
heard a hell of a lot of synthesizer&#13;
music, but I have sampled&#13;
Tangerine Dream, Isao Tomita,&#13;
Jean Micheal Jarre, Yes, Orchestral&#13;
Manouveres in the Dark,&#13;
among others. Not much. I've&#13;
always had trouble listening to&#13;
most synthesizer music though.&#13;
Most of it sounds like spacey&#13;
sound effects, synthesizer for the&#13;
sake of synthesizer, rather than&#13;
listenable music. Vangelis' music&#13;
is the exception.&#13;
I first heard Vangelis synthesizer&#13;
music as background&#13;
music for Carl Sagan's famous&#13;
t.v. show, "Cosmos." The music&#13;
was majestic and beautiful, a&#13;
perfect score to help Dr. Sagan&#13;
convey the grandeur of the&#13;
universe. I had to have the music,&#13;
so when the "Cosmos" soundtrack&#13;
came out I snatched it up immediately.&#13;
Reading the album&#13;
credits, I found that a Greek man&#13;
named Vangelis with an unpronounceable&#13;
last name had&#13;
done the excellent music. So I&#13;
started to buy Vangelis albums.&#13;
I've got about eight or ten now. All&#13;
are unique and immensely&#13;
creative, more so than any other&#13;
synthesizer music I've listened to,&#13;
but "Heaven and Hell" is my&#13;
favorite.&#13;
The album, like most Vangelis&#13;
albums, is a concept within itself.&#13;
Entitled "Heaven and Hell," the&#13;
music is about jus that. The&#13;
titletrack consists of two major&#13;
parts, each part about 21 minutes&#13;
in length, and the individual cuts&#13;
are distinguished by their supposed&#13;
place of origin. Some cuts&#13;
sound like people being tortured in&#13;
hell, while others sound like the&#13;
•heavenly hosts having a jam&#13;
session. The best passages include&#13;
the main theme from "Cosmos,"&#13;
several intricate synthesizer&#13;
pieces combined with conventional&#13;
keyboards pnd a&#13;
Bosendorfer piano, and a passage&#13;
that sounds something like a&#13;
Gregorian chant with a female&#13;
"Deathtrap"&#13;
VANGELIS won an Oscar for&#13;
his "Chariots" soundtrack.&#13;
vocal lead. The album also includes&#13;
a song that is separate&#13;
from the titletrack concept, a sort&#13;
of spacey love balland with Jon&#13;
Anderson of Yes doing the vocals.&#13;
In fact, Vangelis and Jon Anderson&#13;
have done several albums&#13;
together, Vangelis always composing&#13;
and performing all the&#13;
music, and Anderson writing and&#13;
singing all lyrics. They seem to&#13;
compliment each other nicely. Not&#13;
all Vangelis albums are totally&#13;
excellent and mind - blowing, but&#13;
"Heaven and Hell" has some of&#13;
the most violent and sporadic&#13;
music I've ever heard, and some&#13;
of the most tranquil and beautiful&#13;
music I've ever heard.&#13;
Recently Vangelis' popularity&#13;
has skyrocketed, having won the&#13;
Academy Award for the soundtrack&#13;
he did for "Chariots of&#13;
Fire." His albums are becoming&#13;
more and more available in&#13;
American stores, and for some&#13;
reason they are often cataloged&#13;
under the Jazz section. Oh well, if&#13;
you're interested in buying a&#13;
Vangelis album, look around,&#13;
you're sure to find some&#13;
somewhere. If you look. What&#13;
follows is a basic analysis of some&#13;
of his better and more popular&#13;
albums.&#13;
"666 - The Number of the Beast"&#13;
This is not a Vangelis solo album,&#13;
but one he did when he was with a&#13;
group called "Aphrodites' Child"&#13;
about 1970. This is more rock&#13;
music than anything else, and is a&#13;
pretty bizarre and creative musical&#13;
tale about the coming of a&#13;
supposed a nti-christ. Interesting,&#13;
but not synthesizer.&#13;
"Earth" An early solo album,&#13;
filled with tribal sounds, gutteral&#13;
chants, and rythmic drumbeats.&#13;
Not a hell of a lot of synthesizer on&#13;
this one either, and not much&#13;
listenable music, but definitely an&#13;
interesting venture on the artist's&#13;
part.&#13;
"Albedo .039" Now this is space&#13;
music, well polished and nice&#13;
sounding. A bit more commercial&#13;
and less creative than H &amp; H, but a&#13;
nice album.&#13;
Tgnacio" This is probably the&#13;
most quiet of all Vangelis albums,&#13;
the most soothing, and certainly&#13;
one of the most graceful. After&#13;
being bombarded by loud rock&#13;
music all day, this album is like a&#13;
cool breeze on a steamy summer&#13;
day. Some material from this&#13;
album was used for "Cosmos."&#13;
"Chariots of Fire" soundtrack.&#13;
This album includes all of the&#13;
music from the film as well as&#13;
some that was not used. Some of&#13;
his best synthesizer work.&#13;
Continued From Page Four&#13;
This film about a play is actually&#13;
based on a play. Got that?&#13;
You can tell that it is based on a&#13;
play — most of the action and&#13;
dialogue takes place in one setting&#13;
throughout the story, and there&#13;
are only a minimal number of&#13;
characters that populate this&#13;
setting. This does not make the&#13;
film boring, merely unique.&#13;
Sparkling performances by all the&#13;
actors within a witty and intriguing&#13;
plot by Ira Levin make&#13;
this film a most appealing trap.&#13;
Student art work exhibited&#13;
A juried show of work by&#13;
Parkside art students will hang in&#13;
the Comm. Arts Gallery through&#13;
May 6.&#13;
Chuck Toman, assistant curator&#13;
of education at the Milwaukee Art&#13;
Museum, will judge the show and&#13;
determine the winners of three&#13;
cash awards, to be presented at a&#13;
reception from 7 to 9 p.m. on&#13;
J • y&#13;
yeJ&amp;tde&#13;
rye&#13;
my&#13;
mOrChuman&#13;
endeavors. Maybe man&#13;
has lost touch with his inner soul&#13;
and has to rely on artificial&#13;
methods and means of producing&#13;
music, which is the most basic of&#13;
all human expressions. It has&#13;
taken the human element out of&#13;
the creativity that must accompany&#13;
the sensitive expression&#13;
of human spirit in forming a&#13;
viable means of aural communication.&#13;
It is no longer in the&#13;
hands of the artist in touch with&#13;
his human pool of feelings. It is&#13;
rather in the inner functions of a&#13;
computer that spews forth every&#13;
imaginable sound known to man&#13;
processed by a few microchips&#13;
smaller than the ordinary mind&#13;
can imagine and these sounds&#13;
have established themselves as&#13;
the future direction in music, the&#13;
definitive color of tomorrow's&#13;
musical spectrum.&#13;
On the other hand, it shows that&#13;
there is an openness, an innovative&#13;
curiosity toward ever -&#13;
expanding the horizon of human&#13;
aural experience. It points to a&#13;
trend that shows no limits in&#13;
generating new sounds with&#13;
countless shades of color and tone&#13;
to further stimulate the human&#13;
plectrum. There is no telling what&#13;
tomorrow holds in attractive new&#13;
looks and gimmicks that will&#13;
catch the listener's ear in expanding&#13;
the horizon for artistic&#13;
endeavors. It shows that&#13;
technology can play a part in the&#13;
arts which can lead to a new&#13;
synthesis of old and the new, the&#13;
sensual and the cerebral, the&#13;
expressive and the programmable.&#13;
It shows new promise in&#13;
the oldest art in human history.&#13;
Shakespeare forum to be held&#13;
opening day of the show. The&#13;
reception is open to the public.&#13;
About 50 students will be&#13;
represented by an estimated 150&#13;
works representing all media. The&#13;
show will include work done by&#13;
Parkside students under&#13;
classroom supervision during the&#13;
last two years and not previously&#13;
exhibited in a student show.&#13;
JM\AAAAAAAAAAAAA#VtAAAA#*AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA/W/&lt;&#13;
A forum on "The Public, the&#13;
Schools and the Performance of&#13;
Shakespeare" will conclude a two&#13;
- day conference of Shakespeare&#13;
scholars and teachers at Parkside&#13;
on April 23 and 24.&#13;
The forum, from 1:30 to 3:30&#13;
p.m. on April 24 in Molinaro Hall,&#13;
Room 105, is free and open to the&#13;
public. The conference on&#13;
"Shakespeare in the Classroom,"&#13;
is sponsored by Parkside and the&#13;
Wisconsin Department of Public&#13;
Instruction and the forum is&#13;
supported by the Wisconsin&#13;
Humanities Committee.&#13;
Forum panelists will include&#13;
John L. Styan, Franklin Bliss&#13;
Snyder Professor of English at&#13;
Northwestern University since&#13;
1977.&#13;
Styan, who also will address a&#13;
general session of the conference&#13;
on April 23, was born in London&#13;
and educated at Cambridge&#13;
University. He has been a&#13;
member of the British Broadcasting&#13;
Corp. and Independent TV&#13;
advisory committees in the United&#13;
Kingdom and is currently&#13;
chairman of the Academic&#13;
Council of the Shakespeare Globe&#13;
Theater Center for North&#13;
America.&#13;
Other panelists will include:&#13;
Susan Willis, associate&#13;
professor of English at Auburn&#13;
University, Montgomery, Ala.,&#13;
who spent the past summer observing&#13;
filming of several&#13;
Shakespearean productions in the&#13;
Graham Parker keeps Rumour's 'Gray Area' sparse&#13;
BBC/TV series which will complete&#13;
filming of all of the bard's&#13;
plays next year;&#13;
Thomas Collins, director of the&#13;
Platteville Shakespeare Festival&#13;
at UW-Platville, a summer troupe&#13;
which presents three plays each&#13;
year;&#13;
Michael W. Bartos, professor of&#13;
English at Harper College and&#13;
director of its Shakespeare&#13;
Festival, which includes performances,&#13;
films, lectures and&#13;
exhibits;&#13;
Ted Swetz, an actor with the&#13;
American Players Theater in&#13;
Spring Green, cast last season in&#13;
"Midsummer Night's Dream;"&#13;
Patrick Nowak, manager of&#13;
Ponderosa, Inc., of Racine, a 1976&#13;
English graduate of UW-P, who&#13;
received a master's degree in&#13;
business from UW-Whitewater.&#13;
Rhoda Gale Pollack, professor&#13;
of dramatic arts at UW-P and&#13;
chairman of the Fine Arts&#13;
Division, will act as moderator.&#13;
Conference keynoter will be&#13;
Gladys Veidemanis, English&#13;
chairperson of North High School,&#13;
Oshkosh, who is nationally known&#13;
for her activities with the National&#13;
Council of Teachers of English&#13;
and serves as NCTE representative&#13;
to the Educational Advisory&#13;
Panel for the BBC/TV series.&#13;
The conference was organized&#13;
by Parkside English professor&#13;
Andrew McLean, the author of a&#13;
number of articles on&#13;
Shakespeare on film and recipient&#13;
of a 198 0 National Endowment for&#13;
the Humanities grant for summer&#13;
study at Stratford - on - Avon.&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
Graham Parker is one of those&#13;
rare musicians who inhabits the&#13;
ground between new wave and&#13;
rock and roll. On his latest album,&#13;
"Another Gray Area", Parker&#13;
plays some high - intensity, but&#13;
not necessarily heavy, rock with&#13;
the anti - slick, anti - commercial&#13;
tinge that often characterizes&#13;
British new wave.&#13;
That is not to say, though, that&#13;
the record is poorly done. It is not.&#13;
Parker and his band do a fine job&#13;
of placing traditional rock idioms&#13;
in a modern context. And, as a&#13;
lyricist, Parker is one of the best&#13;
rock and roll songwriters around.&#13;
Most of the music is devoted to&#13;
Parker's personal anger at the&#13;
world. In the title song, he rages&#13;
against an indifferent girlfriend&#13;
who has left him "in another gray&#13;
area". Parker uses his words&#13;
sparingly, like Bob Dylan, to give&#13;
the music the tension it requires to&#13;
adequately express his feelings.&#13;
Girls aren't the only subject he&#13;
sings about, though. On "Dark&#13;
Side of the Bright Lights", he rails&#13;
against the degradation of the&#13;
rock and roll partying scene, thus:&#13;
"I an not gaining any ground here&#13;
/ You are not listening / You do&#13;
not care."&#13;
The one song on the album that&#13;
is even vaguely upbeat, "You Hit&#13;
the Spot", is also the most&#13;
punkish. The interesting thing&#13;
about Parker is that he is only&#13;
effective lyrically when he's&#13;
angry. It's just too much for him&#13;
to sound nice when he's actually&#13;
trying to be nice. Also interesting&#13;
is the fact that he can't work in a&#13;
straight new wave context either,&#13;
certainly not up to his potential.&#13;
Instrumentally, the album is&#13;
quite good. Parker, of course,&#13;
leads' the band on guitar, both&#13;
electric and acoustic. He doesn't&#13;
go in for fancy lead lines, and&#13;
what solos he does play are short&#13;
and concise. Aside from Parker,&#13;
the outstanding musician here is&#13;
Nicky Hopkins, the Who's session&#13;
pianist.&#13;
Except for an over-emphasis&#13;
on drums, Parker's group acquits&#13;
itself well. Not one of the solos is&#13;
over a minute in length. This can&#13;
be either good or bad, depending.&#13;
Here it works well. No ego trips on&#13;
this album. All in all, Parker is&#13;
one of the least egotistical leaders&#13;
to come along in years, and he has&#13;
polished up his act considerably,&#13;
even taking into account his excellent&#13;
earlier work with the&#13;
Rumour.&#13;
So if you like economy in your&#13;
music, and don't mind some&#13;
vehement lyrics along with it, this&#13;
record could be for you. Compared&#13;
to his last album, "The Up&#13;
Elevator", where he was in a good&#13;
mood, "Another Gray Area" puts&#13;
Parker back on familiar turf,&#13;
where he can sit and observe the&#13;
world while wearing his favorite&#13;
sneer.&#13;
Impressionists to&#13;
perform Monday&#13;
On Mon., April 26 the Union&#13;
Cinema will be the site of a free&#13;
show -entitled, "Men of a&#13;
Thousand Voices," starring Steve&#13;
Krause, Francis Beaumier, and&#13;
Rebecca Julich. The show will be&#13;
in the form of a play and will&#13;
feature American Presidents,&#13;
comedians, detectives, and entertainers,&#13;
including Ronald&#13;
Reagan, Peter Falk, Steve&#13;
Martin, and many others.&#13;
Steve and Francis have been&#13;
performing together for about two&#13;
years and have built up a&#13;
repertoire of about two hundred&#13;
voices. The show will be held at 1&#13;
p. m. &#13;
6 Thursday, April 22,1982 RANGER&#13;
2nd Annual&#13;
Accent on Women production set ^ coiioquim&#13;
Club Events&#13;
A theatrical production titled&#13;
"Ties That Bind" by the&#13;
Wisconsin Women's History&#13;
Ensemble and a keynote speech&#13;
on "How to Get What You Want&#13;
Out of Life" by Dr. Jessie Potter,&#13;
a nationally known authority on&#13;
human relationships, will&#13;
highlight the second annual Accent&#13;
on Women program at&#13;
Parkside. Deadline for&#13;
registration is April 30.&#13;
The performance, which will be&#13;
followed by a reception, will be at&#13;
8 p.m. on Friday, May 7 in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Drawn from documented sources,&#13;
the play weaves together music,,&#13;
drama, poetry, mime and dance&#13;
to portray the lives of real women&#13;
who lived in Wisconsin between&#13;
the 1840s and the 1920s. The&#13;
performance will preface a&#13;
moderated discussion between the&#13;
audience and the performers.&#13;
Potter's talk, also in the theater,&#13;
will begin an all - day program&#13;
including a selection of 35&#13;
workshops and seminars on topics&#13;
of interest to women at 9 a.m. on&#13;
Saturday, May 8.&#13;
Potter is a member of the&#13;
faculties of the - University of&#13;
Illinois Medical School, the Northwestern&#13;
University Medical&#13;
School, the National Sex Forum&#13;
JESSIE POTTER&#13;
and the Institute for the Advanced&#13;
Study of Human Sexuality. She is&#13;
nationally - known as an educator,&#13;
lecturer, writer and counselor on&#13;
marriage, human sexuality, intimacy&#13;
and communication. She&#13;
has been a guest on a number of&#13;
television and radio programs&#13;
including the Phil Donahue and&#13;
David Susskind shows.&#13;
Half - day seminar topics include&#13;
assertive communication,&#13;
choices by design, image makers,&#13;
time management, middle&#13;
essence, close encounter&#13;
relationships and relaxation&#13;
therapy and stress management.&#13;
Workshops, which last 75&#13;
minutes, include on - the - job&#13;
discrimination, confidence,&#13;
futurism, handling stress through&#13;
physical fitness, a Chicana perspective&#13;
on womenhood, marital&#13;
property reform, sex roles in&#13;
transition, managing your own&#13;
business, managing family and&#13;
career, male - female relationships,&#13;
aging families and investments.&#13;
&#13;
Registration forms and complete&#13;
course descriptions are&#13;
available by writing Accent on&#13;
Women, UW-Parkside, P.O. Box&#13;
2000, Kenosha 53141 or phoning 414&#13;
/ 553-2351 between 1 and 5 p.m.&#13;
Fee for the evening performance&#13;
and day - long program is $12.50&#13;
for the general public; $8.50 for&#13;
UW-P students and includes&#13;
luncheon. Tickets for the performance&#13;
only are $3 and will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
In conjunction with the&#13;
program, a number of community&#13;
organizations and agencies will&#13;
hold a fair to distribute information&#13;
on their activities and&#13;
services from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on&#13;
the Molinaro Hall Concourse.&#13;
Security tips help you out&#13;
by Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
Crime prevention and&#13;
awareness should be of concern to&#13;
all members of the Parkside&#13;
community. If an opportunity for&#13;
a crime does exist, there is always&#13;
someone available to take advantage&#13;
of the situation.&#13;
You can help stop crimes,&#13;
especially theft, by just being&#13;
aware of the scene of m ost crimes.&#13;
A purse, wallet, books or any&#13;
personal items left unattended in&#13;
the library or lounge areas is open&#13;
invitation for someone to become&#13;
a thief. Eliminate the opportunity&#13;
and you virtually eliminate crime.&#13;
Be aware of your surroundings; if&#13;
you see something that looks&#13;
suspicious, or you believe a crime&#13;
is being committed, notify the&#13;
Security Department immediately.&#13;
&#13;
If y ou are the victim of a crime,&#13;
call the Security Department at&#13;
once. Too many times complaints&#13;
are received hours or even days&#13;
after an event has occurred. When&#13;
Security is notified, an officer can&#13;
be at the scene in a few minutes.&#13;
The sooner a police officer is&#13;
there, the better chances are of&#13;
talking with other people in the&#13;
area who may have additional&#13;
information. The phone number&#13;
for the Campus Security&#13;
Department is on every phone,&#13;
don't hesitate to use it.&#13;
In an effort to help deter crime&#13;
on campus, the Security Department&#13;
in conjunction with the&#13;
Student Life Office, is sponsoring&#13;
a "Reward for Information on&#13;
Crimes on Campus" program.&#13;
Persons who give information on&#13;
crimes that leads to the apprehension&#13;
of the perpetrator may&#13;
be entitled to a reward. A code&#13;
system has been set up so that the&#13;
reporting person may remain&#13;
anonymous if they choose. A call&#13;
to Security with the information is&#13;
all that it takes to initiate the&#13;
program. One reward has already&#13;
been given out.&#13;
Help yourself and help your&#13;
friends, be aware of your&#13;
surroundings. Eliminate opportunity&#13;
for crime. Make the&#13;
campus a better and safer place&#13;
for everyone.&#13;
On Friday, April 23 at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist 113, Dr. Kelvin S.&#13;
Rodolfo, of the department of&#13;
Geology - University of Illinois,&#13;
Chicago Circle, will talk on&#13;
"Sedimentation, Arc Sundering,&#13;
and Back - Arc Spreading in the&#13;
Western Pacific."&#13;
Pre-med&#13;
On Wednesday, April 28 at 8&#13;
p.m., Lt. Lisa Lichter, M.D. will&#13;
give an informal talk on her&#13;
medical experiences. She has&#13;
done a rotating internship in the&#13;
Navy, and plans to specialize in&#13;
dermatology. In addition, Dr.&#13;
Lichter is one of the first two&#13;
women from Parkside to attend&#13;
medical school. Her experiences&#13;
in the Navy include learning to fly&#13;
and deep sea dive.&#13;
Elections for next year's officers&#13;
will take place at 7 p.m. The&#13;
meeting is in the library D-l&#13;
faculty lounge.&#13;
PSE&#13;
The second annual PSE LOOP&#13;
500 bicycle relay race will be held&#13;
on the inner loop road on Wednesday,&#13;
April 28, at 1 p.m. Each&#13;
member will receive a LOOP 500&#13;
T-shirt and a beer in the Union.&#13;
There is a nominal registration&#13;
fee to cover costs. The event is&#13;
expected to be as great a success&#13;
as last year's.&#13;
Computer Club&#13;
Part three of Computer&#13;
Graphics on display will be shown&#13;
on Friday, April 23 in Greenquist&#13;
103. There will be two sessions this&#13;
week from 1-2:30 and from 2:30-4&#13;
p.m. Some of the topics are the&#13;
Evans and Sutherland Flight&#13;
Simulator, Vidsizer — a combination&#13;
of computer graphics and&#13;
synthesizer effects, ZGRASS — a&#13;
graphics system demonstration,&#13;
and the Dubner demo tape. The&#13;
event is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
On Wednesday, April 28 at 7&#13;
p.m., the Accounting Club will&#13;
sponsor a regional public accounting&#13;
night. Representatives&#13;
from three area accounting firms&#13;
will speak at the meeting. It will&#13;
be held in Union 104. Refreshments&#13;
will be served.&#13;
Political Science&#13;
On Wednesday, April 28 in&#13;
Union 207 at 3:30 p.m. Tony Earl,&#13;
a Democratic candidate for&#13;
governor will speak on the issues&#13;
that will affect Wisconsin and the&#13;
race for the governorship. There&#13;
will be a time for questions and&#13;
refreshments will be served. All&#13;
students and faculty are welcome.&#13;
Remember, the Political Science&#13;
Club always needs new members.&#13;
All are welcome.&#13;
Pi Mu Epsilon&#13;
The annual initiation ceremony&#13;
for the Math Club is scheduled for&#13;
Wednesday, April 28, at 1 p. m., in&#13;
Grnqst. D127. Any student who is&#13;
in Math 221 or above who is interested&#13;
in joining is cordially&#13;
invited to attend. There will be a&#13;
discussion of mathematics as a&#13;
major or minor, and refreshments&#13;
will be served. A $4 initiation fee is&#13;
charged by the national office to&#13;
cover the expense of a membership&#13;
certificate and a year's&#13;
subscription to the mathematics&#13;
publication that is put out by Pi&#13;
Mu Epsilon.&#13;
Anne Gaylor on abortion&#13;
| Learn about McCarthy&#13;
Parkside history professor&#13;
Thomas C. Reeves, author &lt;5f a&#13;
major new biography, "The Life&#13;
and Times of Joe McCarthy," will&#13;
participate in a program on the&#13;
making of a film about the&#13;
Wisconsin senator from 1 to 3 p.&#13;
m. on Wednesday, April 28, in&#13;
Molinaro Hall, Room 105.&#13;
Reeves served as a consultant&#13;
for the 90 - minute film, "An&#13;
American Ism: Joe McCarthy,"&#13;
which will be shown after his talk.&#13;
The program, sponsored by the&#13;
Library - Learning Center, is free&#13;
and open to the public and will be&#13;
followed by an autographing&#13;
session where Reeves' book will&#13;
be available.&#13;
Concurrently, a display on Joe&#13;
McCarthy, including materials&#13;
Reeves used in researching his&#13;
book, is on display on the Concourse&#13;
Level of the library.&#13;
Anne Gaylor, president of&#13;
Protect Abortion Rights, an advocacy&#13;
group involved in lobbying&#13;
and educational programs, will&#13;
speak on "Women's Reproductive&#13;
Rights and the Hatch Amendment"&#13;
at 7:30 p. m. on Tuesday,&#13;
April 27 in Molinaro Hall, Room&#13;
107.&#13;
The free public program is&#13;
sponsored by Parkside Women's&#13;
Concourse, a student&#13;
organization.&#13;
Gaylor, active in the pro - choice&#13;
abortion movement since 1969, is&#13;
co - founder of the Women's&#13;
Medical Fund, a Madison&#13;
organization which helps women&#13;
fund abortions and is the author of&#13;
TJiuversityof "Wisconsin-fiarfutide —?&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre ——^ —&#13;
April 25,~2(u*. / /&#13;
ApriI30'^Yl,&#13;
"6pm&#13;
is now accepting applications for&#13;
Editor&#13;
HDRSER&#13;
CARNML&#13;
Tickets: Union lnfo.DesK fir at tho Doo/&#13;
553-2345 553-2042&#13;
$2.50 Partuid. Students. -Staff', Smtio**&#13;
$3.5© G«ne(U Public Citizens&#13;
for the 1982-83 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;
Noon, May 7, 1982&#13;
) Send application&#13;
&amp; resume to:&#13;
a book titled "Abortion is a&#13;
Blessing," published in 1975.&#13;
The president of a national state&#13;
- church separation group, she&#13;
was active in the movement to&#13;
recall Madison Judge Archie&#13;
Simonson and worked in behalf of&#13;
battered wife Jennifer Patri. She&#13;
formerly was the editor of an&#13;
award winning weekly&#13;
newspaper and is a graduate of&#13;
UW - Madison.&#13;
Support wanted&#13;
The University of Wis. Marshfield/Wood&#13;
Co. campus is&#13;
looking for former students to join&#13;
a newly organized Alumni&#13;
Association. The purpose of this&#13;
organization is to provide continued&#13;
support to the operations of&#13;
the Marshfield Campus and the&#13;
activities of its students and to&#13;
promote social activities for the&#13;
Alumni.&#13;
Upcoming events include an&#13;
open campus play day followed by&#13;
a pig roast and a dance.&#13;
Membership dues are $5 per&#13;
year. Anyone interested in joining&#13;
or obtaining further information&#13;
should contact Jim Kress c/o U.&#13;
W. - Marshfield, or call 384-3226.&#13;
Hanger&#13;
WLLC D139&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141&#13;
"A student&#13;
recital"&#13;
Parkside's Fine Arts Divi;&#13;
i, presents a "Student Recital"&#13;
Sunday, April 25, at 7:30 p.m&#13;
St. Mary's Lutheran Church&#13;
Kenosha. Featured at the rec&#13;
will be Shirley Grothe (organ&#13;
piano), Patricia Peder&#13;
(piano), and Judith Lei&#13;
(soprano). They will be assis&#13;
by Tom Turkowski (piano)&#13;
Marjorie Roth (flute). The ]&#13;
formers are students of Carol i&#13;
(piano), Martha Dodds (voi&lt;&#13;
Glenda Mossman (organ), ,&#13;
August Wegner (composition)&#13;
The public is invited to&#13;
recital and to the reception&#13;
fellowship Hall, immediat&#13;
iollowing the recital.&#13;
•'•My- . -&#13;
Thursday, April 22,1982&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS Intramural&#13;
Serviced Offered&#13;
TYPING— Professionally done. Reasonable&#13;
rates. North Kenosha. Call anytime 551-7438&#13;
or 658-9229.&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
LAWNSKEEPER AND GARDENER for&#13;
semi - la rge estate. Must have references&#13;
and own transportation. Very North Side of&#13;
Racine. If interested contact Karen in the&#13;
Ranger office. Salary negotiable.&#13;
WANTED: Students to sell advertising for&#13;
Ranger. 15%commission and bonus. Here's&#13;
the perfect chance to make $$$$. Stop in&#13;
Ranger office (next to Coffee Shoppe) if&#13;
interested,&#13;
WANTED: News, feature and sports writers,&#13;
photographers, graphic artists. Stop by&#13;
Ranger office.&#13;
Wanted&#13;
ROOMMATE NEEDED, after graduation.&#13;
Wood Creek, 552 9175 D ick O&#13;
WANTED: Chess players for the chess club.&#13;
Contact Gary at SOC.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
LASER SAILBOAT w/trailer, 14 ft. Olympic&#13;
class, exc. cond. $1400, 639 6635.&#13;
1979 Y AMAHA DT 12S Excellent condition.&#13;
Make offer. 637 5085&#13;
FILM - THEATRE - S HAKESPEARE BOOK&#13;
SALE THRU MAY 5. Quality used and out&#13;
of print books at the Old Book Corner at&#13;
Martha Merrell's Bookstore, 312 - 6th St.&#13;
Racine. Also, to celebrate Shakespeare's&#13;
birthday on April 23, a selection of prints&#13;
and engravings from the 18th and 19th&#13;
centuries. Over 1200 used books in all areas&#13;
for sale.&#13;
Personals&#13;
BIG PARTY — Apt. #107 P arkside Village,&#13;
Saturday the 24, 9 o'clock.&#13;
ANNETTE — Please leave note same place&#13;
this weekend. Jeff.&#13;
HARPO — If you had any brains you'd be in&#13;
science.&#13;
HARPO — feeble - mi nded should not talk of&#13;
the feeble • m inded.&#13;
CHUCK — What's it like to have tunnel •&#13;
vision?&#13;
CHUCK — Are you really as stupid as your&#13;
articles?&#13;
CHUCK — Want to buy some earrings?&#13;
.CHUCK — Are you going to live on Welfare&#13;
like most Humanities Majors?&#13;
CHUCK — Liberal Arts won't get you a iob.&#13;
CHUCK — Please give your hair back to your&#13;
poodle, his teeth chatter at night.&#13;
SUE: Happy #32. Thanks for the friendship&#13;
through the years!&#13;
TO: Participants in A Student Music Recital;&#13;
the recital was nothing less than wonderful.&#13;
TO ALL CHUCK AND HARPO WRITERS:&#13;
ESAD. If you can't argue opinions in&#13;
telligently, shut the -•-• up!&#13;
B-ball&#13;
Photo by Kim Schlater&#13;
KENOSHA VETOSPORT sponsored a bike training race on inner-loop road last Sunday. There&#13;
will be another race this Sunday.&#13;
Interview with G. Gordon Liddy . . .&#13;
Well, excitement filled the&#13;
gymnasium last Sunday when&#13;
Parkside held their annual Intramural&#13;
Basketball Championships.&#13;
The four teams that&#13;
vied for the coveted crown of&#13;
intramural basketball, only two&#13;
made it to the finals, the Parkside&#13;
"Super Cocks", and the "Five&#13;
Neat Guys". This left the two&#13;
other teams (the "Gunners" and&#13;
"The Lords") out in the dust.&#13;
The "Super Cocks" took an&#13;
early lead in the game, and the&#13;
"Five Neat Guys" just couldn't&#13;
seem to cut it, even though there&#13;
were valiant attempts. The&#13;
"Super Cocks" won it 68-59.&#13;
The high scorer for the "Super&#13;
Cocks" was Dan Sykes with 25&#13;
points, closely followed by Paul&#13;
Charapata with 19 points. Other&#13;
players for the Super Cocks were:&#13;
Kevan Bytnar, John Vocino,&#13;
Glenn Lowe, Rich Salisbury, Dick&#13;
Oberbruner and Mike Brinen.&#13;
Congratulations "Super Cocks"!&#13;
Bike for M.D.&#13;
Well, it's time to dig that bicycle&#13;
up and out from the basement and&#13;
get it in working order. Greg&#13;
Scarlato and Chuck Neustifter&#13;
have already done just that, and&#13;
they have even planned their first&#13;
trip of the season.&#13;
The two intend to bike for two&#13;
weeks across Wisconsin for&#13;
Muscular Dystrophy (MD),&#13;
starting on June 1. Although the&#13;
exact route has not yet been&#13;
plotted, they plan to go 60 miles a&#13;
day, traveling on mostly county&#13;
highways through the central part&#13;
of the state.&#13;
Scarlato and Neustifter are&#13;
presently looking for people to join&#13;
their excursion, and they are also&#13;
looking for sponsors. Should they&#13;
raise $500 or more, they will get to&#13;
present a check to Jill Geisler on&#13;
Channel 6 television.&#13;
The trip is not, in the words ofi&#13;
Scarlato, "for softies." There will&#13;
be no support vehicle, and each&#13;
particpant is expected to carry his&#13;
or her own equipment. They will&#13;
be camping overnight in state&#13;
parks.&#13;
Anyone interested should call&#13;
Greg Scarlato at 657-5714.&#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;
STUNNING STYLES&#13;
HAPPEN HERE&#13;
3519 52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wl&#13;
654-61 54&#13;
3532 Meachem Rd.&#13;
Racine. Wi Iair Studio 554-8600&#13;
i'REDKEN Salon Prescription CenterContinued&#13;
From Page Three&#13;
call diminished returns. And it no&#13;
longer makes sense.&#13;
Q.: How did you manage to go to&#13;
nine different prisons and get out&#13;
after only 4-1/2 years?&#13;
A.: In one prison, where I lasted&#13;
only five months, I was accused&#13;
by the associate warden and the&#13;
press of intimidating 450 convicts&#13;
into a strike which shut the prison&#13;
down. That was an exaggeration.&#13;
Yeah, I did very well in those&#13;
prisons. I was in one prison where&#13;
the murder rate was one every 90&#13;
days. I got thrown out of that&#13;
prison — they believed I was too&#13;
dangerous. They could not cope&#13;
with me.&#13;
I forced them to release me&#13;
(from solitary confinement).&#13;
There was nothing I couldn't do in&#13;
prison that I didn't want to do —&#13;
nothing. You get out of solitary&#13;
confinement by bringing a writ,&#13;
which you write on toilet paper&#13;
because you're smart enough to&#13;
know what to say.&#13;
Q.: Do you have any regrets&#13;
about anything you did — other&#13;
than getting caught?&#13;
A.: I certainly regret ever&#13;
having involved myself in that or&#13;
any other enterprise with the likes&#13;
of Dean and Magruder. Next time&#13;
I would certainly recruit a more&#13;
heartier crew.&#13;
Q.: Is that the only regret you&#13;
have?&#13;
A.: Exactly.&#13;
Q.: Do you shoot guns anymore?&#13;
A.: I'm not supposed to — (but)&#13;
I shoot a lot. I really don't pay&#13;
much attention to those rules. I'm&#13;
just very careful what I'm doing.&#13;
Q.: Do you think your success&#13;
shows that crime does pay?&#13;
A.: Firstly, if crime didn't pay,&#13;
would there by any crime?&#13;
Secondly, if someone does&#13;
something and you disagree with&#13;
it, you consider it a bad example,&#13;
what is the compulsion to emulate&#13;
him? If you don't like it, don't do&#13;
it.&#13;
Q.: Do you ever cry?&#13;
A.: No.&#13;
Q.: Do you have any emotions?&#13;
A.: Yes.&#13;
Q.: Not negative emotions, but&#13;
positive emotions?&#13;
A.: Oh sure. It's tremendously&#13;
thrilling to me to get behind the&#13;
controls of a high performance&#13;
aircraft. I live a very interesting&#13;
and full life, believe me. I have&#13;
lots of joys and happiness.&#13;
Q.: Are the major joys and&#13;
happiness derived from having&#13;
power, such as the aircraft.&#13;
A.: Oh, that's one of them, but&#13;
it's not the power of it — it's&#13;
controlling all that power. I can&#13;
make it do anything I want.&#13;
Q.: Is that what you enjoy the&#13;
most — power?&#13;
A.: What I enjoy pretty much&#13;
the most is being in bed with a&#13;
beautiful woman.&#13;
Q.: Does that mean your wife?&#13;
A.: No comment.&#13;
Q.: What is your annual income?&#13;
&#13;
A.: Very large — I don't even&#13;
know.&#13;
Q.: How many zeroes?&#13;
A.: Lots of them. Before all this&#13;
happened I was working for the&#13;
government. I think anybody will&#13;
tell you you'll never make any&#13;
money for the government. The&#13;
most I ever made with the&#13;
government was 30 (thousand)&#13;
dollars, back in the days it would&#13;
be equivalent to about $50,000&#13;
today.&#13;
You can't make any money&#13;
working for the government and&#13;
you won't make any money&#13;
working for somebody else.&#13;
RACE DATE&#13;
RPRIL 28&#13;
TOO&#13;
REGISTRATIOA&#13;
RPRIL 20 &amp;21&#13;
moLinflRo concouRse&#13;
sponsored bi| SkprnaHpsiiett &#13;
8 Thursday, April 22,1982 RANGER&#13;
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The Active AiWetet One Stop&#13;
694-9206&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
(1) WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414-248-9141&#13;
24726 - 75th Street - Rt. 50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wis&#13;
414 - 843-2388&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5Vi% Interest Iff Yo ur D aily&#13;
Balance is $500.00 or Mere! LENDER&#13;
WE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU OROWI&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Men delayed by cancellations, lose to Carthage&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
Parkside's best hitting came&#13;
from third baseman Rich&#13;
Salisbury. In the second inning,&#13;
Salisbury hit a double and then&#13;
scored on a two base error. At this&#13;
point Parkside led 1-0, but Carthage&#13;
tied it up in their half of the&#13;
second.&#13;
In the fourth inning, Parkside&#13;
again took the lead when Rich&#13;
Salisbury led off with a double.&#13;
Mike Carey knocked in Parkside's&#13;
second run due to a shortstop&#13;
error. Other hits made for&#13;
Parkside were by shortstop Kevan&#13;
Bytnar, second baseman Dan&#13;
Sykes and outfielder Dick Sykes.&#13;
Parkside kept a 2-1 lead up until&#13;
the Carthage half of the eighth&#13;
inning. The Redmen scored six&#13;
runs on only five hits in order to&#13;
win the game. Mark Schmitz and&#13;
Scott Hartnell pitched in relief for&#13;
Parkside. Schmitz was the losing&#13;
pitcher.&#13;
It is clear that Parkside played&#13;
a much better game than Carthage&#13;
up until that dreaded eighth&#13;
inning. With a little more power&#13;
hitting, perhaps Parkside could&#13;
have come back to make the score&#13;
a bit more even.&#13;
Last Monday, Parkside hosted&#13;
Milton College for a double -&#13;
header of which the second game&#13;
was called due to rain. The first&#13;
game, though, resulted in more&#13;
bad luck for the Rangers. They&#13;
were defeated 3-0.&#13;
Only seven innings were played&#13;
because it was to be a double -&#13;
header. Pitcher Joe Krisik went&#13;
the distance for the Rangers, but&#13;
unfortunately was not backed up&#13;
by his hitters.&#13;
Second baseman Dan Sykes,&#13;
outfielder John Hyatt and third&#13;
baseman Rich Salisbury provided&#13;
Parkside's only three hits of the&#13;
game.&#13;
Milton College looked real good,&#13;
scoring twice in the third inning&#13;
and once in the sixth. They had a&#13;
total of three stolen bases, one of&#13;
which resulted in a run.&#13;
There is no excuse for&#13;
Parkside's recent defeats except&#13;
poor hitting. Unless they can learn&#13;
to hit and to take advantage of&#13;
their opponents' errors, there are&#13;
going to be many more losses in&#13;
the future.&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING! ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR SUPER SPORTS u FOR ALL SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC.&#13;
M&#13;
FAST. M-MOUU EMORAVMQ MflVtCS&#13;
"Parkside&#13;
STILL&#13;
Has Style"&#13;
Softball&#13;
Women now 6-3&#13;
by Kathleen Pohlman&#13;
The women's softball team had&#13;
a busy and successful week last&#13;
week. On april 12 they played&#13;
away against Lewis University&#13;
and came home with a double&#13;
victory. The first game ended at 7-&#13;
3 with Lynn Barth as winning&#13;
pitcher. Bonnie Schmelter batted&#13;
2 for 3 including a triple with bases&#13;
loaded. In the second game&#13;
Michele Martino was the winning&#13;
pitcher which ended 2-0. After two&#13;
wins the Rangers played Stevens&#13;
Point and lost. The score was 3-1&#13;
and although all three pitchers&#13;
pitched, Paula Sandahl received&#13;
the loss. The Rangers were&#13;
scoreless until the seventh inning&#13;
when Lynn Barth doubled and was&#13;
brought home on an error. Bonnie&#13;
Schmelter hit another good game&#13;
and ended up 2 for 4.&#13;
On April 15 the Rangers split a&#13;
doubl e hea d e r a g ain st&#13;
Whitewater, losing the first 1-0.&#13;
Barth was the losing pitcher. The&#13;
second game the Rangers got&#13;
their chance to prove their talent,&#13;
winning 3-2. Michele Martino&#13;
pitched a one - hitter, keeing the&#13;
game tied until the fourth inning.&#13;
Nancy Kivi played a mean game&#13;
of defense catching a fast line&#13;
drive and picking off the woman&#13;
on first.&#13;
Friday's game was rained out,&#13;
giving the team a rest before the&#13;
St. Xavier Tournament on&#13;
Saturday. The first game of the&#13;
day was against George Williams&#13;
of Downers Grove. Even with the&#13;
cold and strong winds they came&#13;
out the winners in the 12th inning,&#13;
8-7. Michele Martino was the&#13;
winning pitcher. The Rangers&#13;
were down until the sixth inning,&#13;
but with Nancy Kivi's two triples&#13;
and (Hie single along with Paula&#13;
Sandahl's triple and single the&#13;
women ended victoriously. The&#13;
second game was against St.&#13;
Xavier which also ended in victory;&#13;
l-o. Lynn Barth pitched a one&#13;
- hitter. Janet Broeren played a&#13;
nice game of defense. The winning&#13;
run came when Lynn Barth&#13;
singled and Bonnie Schmelter&#13;
sacrificed to advance Lynn. Kathy&#13;
Tobin's hit resulted in an error on&#13;
St. Xavier's part, driving in Lynn.&#13;
Needless to say the Rangers&#13;
became the winners of the tournament&#13;
for the second year in a&#13;
row.&#13;
The women's record is now 6-3.&#13;
The next game they play is&#13;
another tournament, the Chicago&#13;
Circle Tournament in Chicago on&#13;
the 23rd and 24th.&#13;
by Tammy Shuemate&#13;
After cancelling five games due&#13;
to the recent weather situation,&#13;
the Parkside baseball team finally&#13;
had a chance to play last Thursday.&#13;
Unfortunately, the Rangers&#13;
played Carthage, who somehow&#13;
managed to pull out a 7-2 victory.&#13;
Throughout the first seven innings,&#13;
Parkside held the advantage&#13;
and showed some fine&#13;
pitching by Joe Krisik and Brian&#13;
Steinhoff.&#13;
Krisik, who pitched the first&#13;
three innings, allowed only four&#13;
hits and one run. Steinhoff, who&#13;
had an excellent outing, allowed&#13;
only one hit, no runs and struck&#13;
out five of the nine batters he&#13;
faced. </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 10, issue 27, April 22, 1982</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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