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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Volume 11, issue 28</text>
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              <text>Faculty Senate passes revision in yearly calendar formula</text>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Thursday, April 28, 1983&#13;
faculty Senate passes revision&#13;
yearly calendar formula&#13;
llIA11'ilI9,the Faculty Senate&#13;
,PUDide passed a proposed&#13;
__ in the calendar formula,&#13;
.IIepltinto effect either the Fall ,'Il. f1( the fall of '85. Currently&#13;
.. academic calendar at&#13;
fllIaide carries a fall semester&#13;
'14weeo, and a spring semester&#13;
'lIweeO. The proposed revision&#13;
.... for the calendar to be two&#13;
lI1aJI«d 15 week semesters.&#13;
.., divisions have had time&#13;
IiIIled problems in the fall&#13;
..... , as some lose up to 3 or 4&#13;
sessions with the Thanks'" . break . e-Vlng&#13;
, incomparison to the spring&#13;
schedule.&#13;
The proposed calendar is&#13;
balanced in terms of days of the&#13;
week, in that a three credit course&#13;
meeting on either a MWF roster&#13;
or a TR roster would have 45clas~&#13;
hours every Fall and Spring&#13;
semester. WIth the exception of&#13;
Good Friday afternoon. In classes&#13;
that. meet once a week, any&#13;
particular academic division may&#13;
PROPOSED REVISION&#13;
Event&#13;
Instruction begins&#13;
Labor Day recess&#13;
Tbanksgiving recess&#13;
Instruction ends&#13;
Finals begin&#13;
Finals end&#13;
Commencement&#13;
Instruction begins&#13;
Spring recess"&#13;
(after 8 weeks of class)&#13;
Good Friday recess&#13;
Instruction ends"&#13;
Finals begin'&#13;
Finals end"&#13;
commencement"&#13;
Instruction begins&#13;
Independence Day recess&#13;
Instruction ends&#13;
request that the registrar include&#13;
a note in the timetable that either&#13;
adds or deletes a session when&#13;
there are other than 15 meetings.&#13;
The calendar also holds breaks&#13;
of 2-1/2 or 3 weeks hetween&#13;
summer and fall, aDd 3 v.-eets or&#13;
more hetween Fall and Spring .&#13;
The spring semest ... will begin an&#13;
average of two days earlier. and&#13;
end an average of nine days&#13;
earlier thao the present formula&#13;
(see table). .&#13;
IN CALENDAR FORMULA&#13;
Range&#13;
Late Labor Day&#13;
Mon., Aug. 28, 29, 30, 31&#13;
Moo., Sept. 4, 5, 6, 7&#13;
Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Wed., Dec. 13, 14, IS, 16&#13;
Thurs., Dec. 14, IS, 16. 17&#13;
Wed., Dec. 20, 21, 22, 23&#13;
Sun., Dec. 17, 18, 19, 20&#13;
Mon., Jan. 15, 16, 17, 18&#13;
Mon.-&amp;t., March 12·17,&#13;
13-18,14-19,1:'&gt;-20&#13;
Fri. afternoon&#13;
Sat., May 5, 6,7,8&#13;
Mon., May 7, 8, 9, 10&#13;
Sal., May 12, 13, 14, 15&#13;
Sun., May 13, 14, 15, 16&#13;
Early Labor Day&#13;
Wed., Aug. 27, 28, 29&#13;
Mon., sept. 1, 2, 3&#13;
Thurs., Fri., Sal.&#13;
Sal., Dec. 13, 14, 15&#13;
fofon., Dec. 15, 16, 17&#13;
Sal., Dec. :?ll, 21, 22&#13;
Sun., Dec. 21, 22, 23&#13;
Mon., Jan. 12, 13, 14&#13;
. Mon.-&amp;l., March&#13;
9-4, 10-15, 11-16&#13;
Fri. afternoon&#13;
Sal., May 2, 3, 4&#13;
Mon., May 4, 5, 6&#13;
Sat., May 9, 10, 11&#13;
Sun., May 10, 11, 12&#13;
Mon., June 12·18&#13;
July 4 or Mon., July 5&#13;
Sat., Aug. :'&gt;-11&#13;
~ University of Wisconsin· Pari&lt; ide&#13;
0.28&#13;
Union expansion still&#13;
under consideration&#13;
b~J....... 8_ ...·PIoI1lll~&#13;
S&lt;Jme bme ago. the StDdmt Uf&#13;
Office Initiated 0 commIlt to&#13;
loot into the p&lt;8lbili of espa~&#13;
the l:nion buiIdI ..&#13;
committee ed 01 the po1tft1l of&#13;
use as well .. ot the srow1b of the&#13;
Union O\'e" four \..-n lbol&#13;
committee hlI$ .....•.... 'Iw&#13;
p1eted a ud thol&#13;
UlDon .- to be espaDlled If It&#13;
to pI'e\'ent future crowd!&#13;
1"be DU"ector of the l:nI....&#13;
\Ii illiam ,'ieIlulr •&#13;
committee ond cemJIlftl1ed tho&#13;
'"If il Hbi grO'lOth~ four&#13;
j ear period as to """liuo&gt;e&#13;
the no tlour j-ears. ,."OIIId&#13;
big trouble "1'1lia study CllClclutSed&#13;
that oddihoool poce rould&#13;
del Ulltel y be 1IIed&#13;
specifIcally '",be dUll&#13;
needs to be. DlIed ollll ad&#13;
d,tionol meettnl room oDd&#13;
\ouI1Ie ar_ would help olIo"u,l&lt;&#13;
space problems "&#13;
After the commt fi&#13;
proposal, they ~ t to&#13;
Assistant Chancellor earla Stof(Ie&#13;
and her stoff II \bell&#13;
presented 10 Chancellor&#13;
Guskin aod hi Execub&#13;
mittee.&#13;
1"be ............ thot the Ilioa&#13;
\COmposerOtto Luening back 5th year&#13;
lIIwoukee·horn composer Olio&#13;
,-"" a pioneer of electronic _In tile U.S., will be a visiting&#13;
for the fifth consecutive&#13;
IIIf al Parkside from Wed-&#13;
... ,April 27 throulh Sunday,&#13;
-, l.&#13;
11II Ylslt will culminate in a&#13;
COIlCertof his works and&#13;
IItwo Milwaukee friends,&#13;
Burt&#13;
!lowneofy UW • Milwaukee,&#13;
Levy of the Wisconsin&#13;
llay&#13;
tory of Music, on Sun-&#13;
, 1&#13;
llte """;'t, to be performed by&#13;
'P faculty and gradua tes as&#13;
• guest musicians from&#13;
and Kenosha, wlll&#13;
...:t 3:30 p.m. in the Comtim&#13;
Arts Tbeater as part&#13;
1IIe Now Music at Parkside&#13;
~iIolCltl is $1.SOfor students&#13;
• citizens and $3 for tbe&#13;
....!"'b'ic. A public reception til..... the concert.&#13;
i&#13;
le visi~ .UW - Parkside,&#13;
n~ win lDstruct music&#13;
lion atudents, meet with&#13;
Di\aic:ians, composers and&#13;
tors, and present a talk&#13;
to 1he public, at 1 p.m. o~&#13;
~ April 29 .inRoom D·1l8 of&#13;
_... mwucabon Arts Building.&#13;
by Luening to be per·&#13;
.at the concert are Organ&#13;
18, Bass Trio, Fantasia&#13;
~~ Ollte and piano, and&#13;
~ a Delicate Air for&#13;
Otbe quartet.&#13;
. rs performing in the&#13;
ot Otto Luening" concert U:.p facully members&#13;
.I:~eever, piano; Timothy&#13;
, - .... t; Mark Eichner, :ot: Glenda Mossman,&#13;
'n and Daryl Durran,&#13;
1lrJn' UW-P graduates to&#13;
are John Nepper,&#13;
and Marjorie Roth,&#13;
Roger Ruggeri, double bass,&#13;
principle bass of the Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony, also wlll perform, as&#13;
will Milwaukee area musicians&#13;
Steven Joyal, baritone and&#13;
William Wielgus, oboe. Kenosha&#13;
Symphony member Cynthia&#13;
Crump, horn, will also perform.&#13;
Luening has just finished a&#13;
commissioned symphony for the&#13;
Sage Community Symphony in&#13;
Bennington, Vermont, which wlll&#13;
be premiered in June. He recently&#13;
completed another commissioned&#13;
work, for the Music SChool at&#13;
Rivers in Weston, Mass., titled&#13;
"Sonority Forms," a piece for solo&#13;
piano. At the work's premiere this&#13;
summer Luening will share the&#13;
stage with John Cage, the well·&#13;
known American composer of&#13;
"chance" music.&#13;
Luening, wbo will be 83 in June,&#13;
has had a distinguished musical&#13;
career. In celebrabon of his upcoming&#13;
birthday, the Manhattan&#13;
School of Music in New York City&#13;
will perform a concert of Luening&#13;
works as a tribute to the composer&#13;
whose musical influence spans&#13;
over five decades.&#13;
Luening studied in the vibrant&#13;
European musical climate of the&#13;
1920's at the Zurich Conservatory&#13;
of Music, the Munich State&#13;
Academy of Music and the&#13;
University of Zurich and was a&#13;
private student of Ferrucclo&#13;
Busoni. A flutist, Luening has&#13;
performed in orchestras con·&#13;
ducted by Busoni, Nikisch and&#13;
Strauss. In the U.S. he has served as&#13;
executive direc10r of the opera&#13;
department at tbe Eastman&#13;
School of Music, chairman of the&#13;
theory department at the&#13;
University of Ariz~na, and&#13;
chairman of the mUSIC departments&#13;
of Bennington and Barnard&#13;
Colleges.&#13;
He hegan teaching compositioo&#13;
at Columbia University in 1944&#13;
and is credited with wide influence&#13;
on the generatioo of&#13;
students he taught until 1968 when&#13;
be was named professor emeritus.&#13;
At Columbia he established his&#13;
reputation as a pioneer in electronic&#13;
music. He collaborated&#13;
with Vladimir Usachevsky on the&#13;
first concert of electronic music in&#13;
America, held at Columbia in&#13;
1952.Luening also served as co .&#13;
director of the Columbia - Prin·&#13;
ceton Electronic Music Center at&#13;
its inception in 1959.&#13;
Luening, who has writtel'l an&#13;
autobiography, cootinues to write&#13;
musical compositions. He hlI$&#13;
received commissions from the&#13;
League of Composers, Louisville&#13;
Philharmonic Society, the&#13;
Chamber Orchestra of the ew&#13;
York Phitharmonic Symphony,&#13;
American Opera Theater and the&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony.&#13;
In 1980 Luening conducted the&#13;
world premiere of a work for&#13;
chamher orchestra commissioned&#13;
by UW - Parkside, "potawatomi&#13;
Legends," based on the lore of the&#13;
potawatomi trihe, the dommant&#13;
Indian people of southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin in the 1830's wben&#13;
Luening's maternal great&#13;
grandfalher established a&#13;
homestead near Franklin.&#13;
Graphics System chnWl at F ir&#13;
In COIIjUDl:Ii&lt;la Wlth the&#13;
puter Fair 00 Saturdoy. Apr •&#13;
Parkside re5eJlrchers will&#13;
demonstrate a newly ..... ind&#13;
Evans .. SUtherland PS 10-&#13;
teractive erophlcs CoInpu~ 0111&#13;
a. m. and 2 p. m. 1ft the moIecuIIt&#13;
graphics lab of the Iloameclical&#13;
Research Institute. G.--.cpabt&#13;
122.&#13;
1"be SISO,OOO computer gropbiCS&#13;
system ,.... a gift ... the un&#13;
from EvollS" SUtherland. 0 lab·&#13;
based compu~ ftrm.&#13;
CbemisttY Prof Keith ani.&#13;
INSIDE • • •&#13;
*&#13;
Honors visitors&#13;
*&#13;
Python review&#13;
*Job&#13;
*&#13;
lett&#13;
2 Thursdll y. Apr iI 28. 1913 RANGER&#13;
I&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Score one for Kasten&#13;
¥!1thho1dt.. em """,,mod Illcome as pusbed by the While House as a&#13;
y 01 cradlllll down on nc:h tax &lt;Maters who allow mlerest revenue to&#13;
10_ ed II a good Idea that would have saved the government&#13;
many mlUJona of cIoIJan .. c:h&gt;'ellr. W,UlholdJng.s also one 01 the most&#13;
elf u • 01 taxi .. the unearned recoroe.&#13;
Bob .... the R"P'bIiean from \II 1SCOfISlD put a stop to that.&#13;
Ilespondlnc 10 pn!IOIUn! from • StXIdenly • powerful banking lobby,&#13;
... pusbed f.... repeal 01the wlthholdtnlllaw againal the dictates 01&#13;
n s-rty. c:hhold&lt; a ma)Only in the same Senate thai passed&#13;
... in t/r first place&#13;
Republicll .. ha aJwa been the party 01 busmess. bul the hankers.&#13;
til .... /rIp eo!' lit too far What IS the thinking in the&#13;
ba'*blI commWllt) thaI allows ... !__ to push f... such an actiCII&#13;
Tbty mull • a~ 01 lboir newly tarnished image. 11le comprom&#13;
bill. II Oland&lt; no.... practically insures that the withholding&#13;
U _ cern 10 s-aa&#13;
Even n&gt;on! ...... OIlhan the actual repeal itsell ..... the way Kasten&#13;
ndIed II He broke a1m0ll ewry ...,ueman's rule in the Senale,&#13;
01 the Senate 10take a 1eS"'" look at sUffening the parliamentary&#13;
....... nd c:ha0lbll the way the Senate operatel from no'" on, It Is&#13;
Ullheanl 01 f.... freohman Sen#t... 10 take thaI kind 01 .COon in an&#13;
..... a1... tiCIIllke the Senate. whic:h has long oper.ted .. Ing many unwrillell&#13;
ruIs and ""Ilemen's ."..,...,enta. 11le Senate will never be&#13;
",lte the me&#13;
• malter 01 f.d .t mnind&lt; one 01 • certain other lresbm.n&#13;
t... from W.consln. no so very long .go.&#13;
J&amp;ners to the editor&#13;
Editor defended&#13;
Editor's notes&#13;
Old law could be big trouble&#13;
opinion about something she's&#13;
witnessed7~ U this is your expectabon,&#13;
that expectation seems&#13;
a little unfair. Could you remove&#13;
yourself 10 those expecl.tions??&#13;
Anolber thing Henslak holds&#13;
the rights to on this camp.- Mr.&#13;
Preston, Is the editorial page of&#13;
the paper. Vou do remember don't&#13;
you, al one point she even had a&#13;
weekly "OPINION COLUMN" by&#13;
the lamous Bruce Presion on that&#13;
page. Were you oot free to express&#13;
your thoughts and opinions,&#13;
regardless of what they were?? It&#13;
seems to me you were. Hensiak's&#13;
policy has always been, "if it&#13;
doesn't carry illegal (slanderous)&#13;
libelous, delamatory content, and&#13;
malt .. deadline, I'll do my best to&#13;
get it on page two." That's the&#13;
opinion page, that's where her&#13;
story or column or thoughts were&#13;
located. Objectivity has very little&#13;
10 do with page two of the Ranger.&#13;
As a "veteran columnist," Iwould&#13;
think you sbould koow that.&#13;
She even printed your letter,&#13;
and she is under NO obligation to&#13;
print any letters. Hensiak is fair&#13;
about freedom of expression,&#13;
wouldn't you say?&#13;
Curiously unintelligent sort 01&#13;
contradicts your description 01&#13;
what you were Mr. Preston. I&#13;
belie'\'e it said innovative and&#13;
unique1~"? Again, perhaps to&#13;
some you were. To Hensiat you&#13;
obviously were oot. "That is an&#13;
Issue of choice." to quote your&#13;
very own closing statement.&#13;
Hensiak has that choice reserved&#13;
too.&#13;
The point is Mr. Preston, belore&#13;
To t/r edi lor'&#13;
Manng wcrked with Pat Hen·&#13;
1000er than Bruce Preston&#13;
It Is hie that I un·&#13;
derIland Irr methodII 01 operali&lt;ln&#13;
ter than /r doos ,I'm not sure. I&#13;
_rn ure- how~vrr, that Mr.&#13;
PresIon has lJeIUn to put his foot&#13;
lnIo hi mouth f... the umpteenth&#13;
lime In Ii leiter last week, Mr&#13;
PresIon objected 10the oporuonthe&#13;
editor of this paper has developed&#13;
aft ... see, .. what she c.Ued "a&#13;
CUtlOIIJlyuruntelligent group" put&#13;
on a sorl 01 demonstration in tbe&#13;
l;Non Bazaar o\'er this X • rated&#13;
film&#13;
OIthal .. e hould, but ror a lew&#13;
mmutn, lei. l..-get about the&#13;
... ODD' cu.IY Let'. forwet&#13;
about the consao.-ness it raised&#13;
on thi c.mp.-. and let's take a&#13;
look at some of Mr. Preston's&#13;
attacks on this paper's editor. The&#13;
criteria one uses to make a&#13;
Judeement .re mOIl likely so deep&#13;
• _ted. that Hensiak probably&#13;
can't defUle exactly wbat criteria&#13;
she Iaed she ...as socialized to&#13;
-..oaate certain actions with&#13;
Cft'Iain thoUllhts as were the rest&#13;
of .. 'Having seen Mr. Preston in&#13;
some of the rarnolls communicali&lt;ln&#13;
classes Ithink it only&#13;
lair he ahouId know that.) What&#13;
HIIIIiak w was somellli .. she&#13;
mllly dic~l't 8pI&gt;I'OVe of. She&#13;
found It curlOU5 that someone&#13;
ouJcI perhapa put on such an act&#13;
r Preston. Is that not Irr right~&#13;
the edilor 01 a S-per have to&#13;
r move her If f{om human&#13;
01I0Il much tJia t she can't&#13;
• jud emenl .nd f... m an&#13;
commercial sexual acts between&#13;
consenting adults in private ... ) I&#13;
requested further explanation.&#13;
The petition carrier explained&#13;
that some thousand years ago, a&#13;
law was passed in the state of&#13;
Wisconsin, which allowed rather&#13;
drastic punishment for noncommercial&#13;
sexual acts of consenting&#13;
adults in private. So, if&#13;
someone asked you about your sex&#13;
. life, or just happened to walk in&#13;
on something, there could be&#13;
serious consequences, {l was in&#13;
shock&gt;. The petitioner continued&#13;
.to tell me that personnel working&#13;
for the justice system had some&#13;
sort of right to question and&#13;
"hassle" the common - folk about&#13;
just exactly what they had been&#13;
doing in bed. (Some of us would be&#13;
embarassed about our response.)&#13;
Nontheless, I decided to do a&#13;
lillie research into this dilemma&#13;
about noncommercial sexual acts,&#13;
which sounds like something&#13;
directly out of a computer or&#13;
perhaps a fortune cookie. The fact&#13;
of the matter is, lhere is indeed a&#13;
law out there in this fine state that&#13;
makes noncommercial sexual&#13;
acts punishable by law. This is a&#13;
law that kind of puts your justice&#13;
system into the sack righl along&#13;
next to you. How pleasant: not to&#13;
mention crowded. Recently the&#13;
state assembly. has passed a bill&#13;
repealing the law, and the state&#13;
senale is likely to pass the bill,&#13;
however, there does seem to be&#13;
some slight opposition to the&#13;
passing of this repeal.&#13;
Apparently some see the repeal&#13;
.. the condoning It sin. II1II It&#13;
encouragement ol_m ...&#13;
sexualacls, SOmeeven feel UIIIf&#13;
encourage homoleXUllltr&#13;
Whatever the "- far&#13;
postion, the chances lIlatdie:&#13;
won't pass are lairly dim, ••&#13;
seems that the churdlea Ia ..&#13;
stale can't even get ... larl&#13;
stand on this issue.&#13;
The bill would oot make ...&#13;
either sexual "Aalt •&#13;
prostitution, or combiDaU.&#13;
thereof, wbat il woulddo Is"&#13;
legal cohabilalilll and leIIlIlIadI&#13;
between single people. "...,&#13;
probably a lot It lIlat .....&#13;
already. There is. One IlIsIIII&#13;
asked me if it was ever II •&#13;
forced law. No ..,. to .,&#13;
knowledge has recenlly ..&#13;
arrested for being In \be ....&#13;
. bed, but I may be wrq •&#13;
probably depends SOlD........&#13;
one's interpretation It NOJl.&#13;
COMMERCIAL. HowimpenIIIl&#13;
No matter, my OIIIyadvIce.1I&#13;
watch out for any IIlIIJ JIIIIIt&#13;
before the stale senate _ •&#13;
way through to passing \be Iill&#13;
would ima~ne thaI if \be II1II&#13;
doesn't pass the law far -&#13;
insane reason, it wouldbe ....&#13;
idea to stop whatever 'f'IIIt&#13;
doing, because oow tblt \be 1st&#13;
has been broughl lD \be ....&#13;
of the law enforcers ...&#13;
==&#13;
II&#13;
do your best to control&#13;
And if anyone has lII1 ......&#13;
accurate" informaliOll,b1':&#13;
means, write in. I'm sa:':'..&#13;
of research I did OIIIy&#13;
.surface. No gossip slarifJ ~&#13;
by Pal Henslak&#13;
Editor&#13;
A few days ago someone approached&#13;
me and asked me to sign&#13;
a petition. I asked for a verbal&#13;
explanation as to what the petition&#13;
was about, and the person&#13;
responded, "Just read it." So I&#13;
did. The petition dealt with an old,&#13;
as a matter of fact a somewhat&#13;
prehistoric act on and against&#13;
noncommercial sexual - acts of&#13;
consenting adults in private. A bit&#13;
bewildered by what I had read,&#13;
(something like: We, the un·&#13;
dersigned do request the state of&#13;
Wisconsin to pass the bill&#13;
repealing the illegality of nonone&#13;
publicly attacks someone else,&#13;
one must question whether or not&#13;
they would he willing to give up&#13;
the rights they are criticizing&#13;
another for. If you aren't Mr,&#13;
Preston, then mayhe you should&#13;
think twice about what you have&#13;
accused HerlSiak of, and realize&#13;
that while she is a good editor she&#13;
is also a person. She has rights&#13;
too. She is very fair about the&#13;
rights of others in this newspaper.&#13;
There's no reason to be ashamed.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
and&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Cootinued On Page Eight&#13;
- E.-r G)an.ger NewS~ -~ F==&#13;
PhOIoE.-r&#13;
eopyE.-r&#13;
BUSine.. ~ MIM&#13;
Distributlon 1M....&#13;
Assistant Business IM=&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jo lene Tork iIsen&#13;
Herbert Kubly&#13;
STAFF&#13;
B Sharon Aken, Terry Byrne, Maureen Burke, ~&#13;
Puf~k~r • Phillips, Carra Cariello, Catherine ......~&#13;
a r1Cla Cumbie. Dan Dowbower Michael KellIS.&#13;
Kortendick, John Kovalic Rick Lu'ehr Robb LueIIt', l(ItlIr&#13;
Ra y b "JIf!I/I1I .urn, Napolean Scarbrough Dave Schroedel" Tunkleel. . I&#13;
RANGER· . ttlrr ". JI/III'&#13;
responsibl IS,wr.'tten .and, edited by students of UW . Parkslcle and&#13;
PUbl' h e or ItS edItOrial policy and content .-od""iIIH"&#13;
RAN~E~ ~ver,! ThurSday during Ihe academic ;ear el&lt;cepf during bf'H~&#13;
Written pe s p.f1~ted,by theynion Cooperative Publishing Co" Kenos/'l.,&#13;
All corres~:~SSIOl1 ISrequired for reprint of any porlionof RANGER, Ity of ~&#13;
Park.side Be ~ce shOUld be addressed to: Park.side Rangel", Unlv«'S f/III&#13;
Leiters t~ Ih: E~·t 2000" Kenosha, Wisconsin, 531&lt;41, eel on 'l~ "&#13;
paper with ,lOr Will b,e accepted if typewritten, doubtes~ ~&#13;
cluded for ::"\: In~h margms. All letters must be signed and a teffPhO"'&#13;
Names will ~I Ic.atlon. •&#13;
Deadline' I Wllhh,eld for valid reasons. TM R,lNGI"&#13;
reserves a~~ et,fer~ IS ~day at 3 p,m, for publication on Th~'Cont.II'lI""&#13;
delam.,o editorIal priVileges in refusing to print letters whldl&#13;
ry &lt;nnlent,&#13;
ibefense costs Wisconsin, .McLean, an expert on t e&#13;
Secretary laFollette says Refonnation, hits lecture circuit cinelost an average of $3,200&#13;
~amilY in 1982and the average&#13;
l":ay in Kenosha lost $3,300from&#13;
..... and loss of jobs due to in-&#13;
~ military spending, said&#13;
tary of State Douglas&#13;
~ette. '"&#13;
&amp;Numerous studies indicate&#13;
military spending does not&#13;
IlII ale jobs, but actually&#13;
~ns the unemployment&#13;
:'tion," LaFollette said in a&#13;
_ release.&#13;
~iiicited one study in particular,&#13;
.. Dr James Anderson, called :;...n.pting Our Cities." The&#13;
_ says that Wisconsin would&#13;
especially hard hil, owing 10&#13;
~ state's lack of defense inHonors&#13;
program schedule&#13;
set for Schon visit .&#13;
and business faculty and students&#13;
titled "Reflective Professionals"&#13;
at2:30 p.m. in Molinaro Room 1l0.&#13;
An expert 00 urban planning&#13;
lSI! technical Innovation, Donald&#13;
• , will be an Honors Program&#13;
~uished VISIting Scholar at&#13;
PsrIside on Monday, May 2&#13;
IIroUgh Wednesday, May 4.&#13;
Schona Ford Professor in the&#13;
~ent of Urban Studies and&#13;
Plsnning at the Massachusetts&#13;
Ioslitule of Technology, will&#13;
~r in a series of programs for&#13;
-..ts, faculty, staff and the&#13;
..... al public.&#13;
Sc:bon's visit is being coorIiDsted&#13;
by students in UWhrkside's&#13;
Honors Program,&#13;
IIicb is directed by Prof. Lee&#13;
layer, communication.&#13;
Scbonis an urban planner who&#13;
.. madeimportant contributions&#13;
• understanding how social and&#13;
II:bnological changes affect&#13;
llieIy. He is an authority on&#13;
.. tivityand the development of&#13;
Idmical innovation, educational&#13;
lIform and organizational&#13;
~. He holds a bachelor's&#13;
..... from Yale University and&#13;
_'. and PhD degrees from&#13;
IIrvard.&#13;
Scbon has written more than 50&#13;
U1icles for professional and&#13;
"'iy publications and has&#13;
.a.ared five books.&#13;
1111966,Schon helped establish&#13;
..... - profit Organization. for&#13;
IIdaI and Technical Innova tion,&#13;
Washington, D.C., a group&#13;
tIIcerned with community and&#13;
SIi&amp;Itborhood development, low -&#13;
• bouaing and health and&#13;
..... tion programs. Schon has&#13;
~ numerous posts in govern-&#13;
-, industry and education,&#13;
~ng an appointment as a&#13;
IIIl8rdi associate at the Kennedy&#13;
IIIlooJ 01Government at Harvard.&#13;
Scbon'smajor public address&#13;
till be an Honors Program&#13;
ltIture titled, "Making Things:&#13;
~ective Conversations with&#13;
·lerials," at I p.m. on Monday,&#13;
IIsy 2in Molinaro Hall Room 105.&#13;
The remainder of Schon's public&#13;
lIPoarances are: Monday, May&#13;
A talk on education and&#13;
cal change at 2:15 p.m. in&#13;
Hall Room 161; and a&#13;
;::'ion of technology and&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. in Com-&#13;
~tion Arts Building Room&#13;
!'bosday, May 3: A presentation&#13;
"increaSing Professional&#13;
'veness" at 9 a.m. in the&#13;
1_aitb Room of Wyllie Library&#13;
.... rning Center' a talk on&#13;
:ng and organiting in highlY&#13;
cal teams at 11:30 a.m. m&#13;
Room 113; an Honors'&#13;
rarn Seminar titled&#13;
. lion" at 12:30 p.m. in&#13;
lIJlication Arts Room 132;&#13;
a &amp;eminar with psychology&#13;
Ranger Needs&#13;
Writers!!!&#13;
dustries.&#13;
Other Wisconsin cities to be&#13;
hard hit include Madison, losing&#13;
an average of $2,600 per family'&#13;
Milwaukee, $3,100; La Crosse:&#13;
$2,400; Green Bay, $2,600; Appleton,&#13;
$2,400; and. Eau Claire,&#13;
$1,900.&#13;
Wisconsin voters, he noted do&#13;
not want defense industries in this&#13;
state. "Last September, more&#13;
than 75 percent of Wisconsin's&#13;
voters Supported a referendum&#13;
calling for a nuclear weapons&#13;
freeze," he said .&#13;
"Studies show that tbe $221&#13;
billion military .budget for 1983&#13;
will cost American Workers over 2&#13;
million jobs," he added.&#13;
Parkside English professor&#13;
Andrew McLean is in Weimar,&#13;
West Germany this week to ad •&#13;
dress the German Shakespeare&#13;
Society on the topic of "Reformation&#13;
Themes in Shakespeare."&#13;
The general theme of the meeting,&#13;
which marks both the 500lh anniversary&#13;
year of Martin Luther's&#13;
birth and Shakespeare's birthdate&#13;
on Apr. 23, is "Luther and&#13;
Shakespeare. "&#13;
McLean's invitation to address&#13;
the group resulted from bis&#13;
scholarship in early 16th century&#13;
literature as well as his studies of&#13;
Shakespeare. He has edited the&#13;
first account 01 the continental&#13;
Reformation published in 1531and&#13;
is currently editing the first&#13;
English lives of Marlin Luther,&#13;
Huldrich Zwingli and Johannes&#13;
Oecolampadius, three early&#13;
Reformatioo leaders, published in&#13;
1561.&#13;
Last week, McClean chaired&#13;
two seminars at the annual&#13;
meeling of the Shakespeare&#13;
RANGER n.u ..... y •• 11.191:1 3&#13;
ANDREW McLEAN has been appe_1ng al many She&#13;
and Reformation seminars_&#13;
Association 01 Amenca. lic:ll&#13;
met is Aslland, Ore. n.. ....&#13;
a\\ended by Shakespeare oc:IIoIan&#13;
from througbout the U . &amp;Dd&#13;
Canada, examined the Reformation&#13;
OODtext01 Shakespeare'&#13;
"lIIlill!E~H~P~f Bezhad Samlmlattracted the attenllon A CONTRACT RENEWAL HE.A~I.NG for I ~o:C~~on by the Science Division Executive&#13;
of faculty and sludents. Samlrnl IS appe~I~~ Chancellor Ratner said he would announce his Committee denying renewal of his contrac _ Ice •&#13;
H;~;':;w;t~dentsaysthe classes are habit.,: ~onmng&#13;
got work for honors beca.- the some indication ri what you dif she does oIfers'her a weat deal&#13;
from the class. Perhaps the - Proesel feels she his gotleD ao&#13;
ference between you and your uch that if she didn'l take lbe&#13;
entrance into the course, and y~ ~ again sbr wouJd 1ft&#13;
and your exit from the co.urse. herself d m .&#13;
Proesel went on to explaon that "" .&#13;
the paper was difficult for some ri S· . a rs leatu re&#13;
the sludents, beca~ .it puts the pring semln II burden ri responsIbility on the&#13;
student to he aware 01 the boo&#13;
changes. It ceptioos 01 howis the StudeDts he or she ~.per- computers ,&#13;
rare&#13;
Sometimes that's nol easy to pick&#13;
OO'~Explainlng Things lets the&#13;
studenls have control aver the&#13;
class. They decide whal .will be.&#13;
lt's fun to be able to take 'I where&#13;
you want. That gives the c1a&#13;
re&#13;
SS&#13;
. g Because the classes a&#13;
:ea;;::'ari, the st~ts an get&#13;
actively involved. he&#13;
Proese) also said that 1&#13;
seminars allowed students to feel&#13;
that what they have to offer IS&#13;
worthwhile. Students can express&#13;
nl "1bere's no themselves ope y. have&#13;
right and wrong. It's o.k. to&#13;
an ~inion." run&#13;
The classes make yoo .&#13;
h gh a certain creative&#13;
t rou "A class like&#13;
process.. " 'd Proesel,&#13;
Imagination, Sthinka&#13;
.&#13;
1&#13;
eatively&#13;
"makes a student cr&#13;
and pull oot what ~ ::.x~&#13;
from the matenal. think "&#13;
hard but it makes you. n' ex&#13;
ak'. the classes 15 a -&#13;
T encon:ProeseI wouldn'l ha,'O&#13;
per.:.oo She currently has the&#13;
rru· to graduate edits necessary&#13;
cr . ti "bul ProeseI "with distinc on, taking&#13;
'd that she wouldn't stop&#13;
sal Seminars and wurse the Honors&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Edilor&#13;
To have taken 18 credits within&#13;
the Honors Program, and still&#13;
want to take more course w?rk&#13;
"for hooors" says a good thing&#13;
about the hooors program onks~&#13;
campus. Students at Par I.&#13;
have the option of takmg thel~&#13;
course work for honors, a~.ts&#13;
they so choose to take 15 c I&#13;
"for honors," they can graduate&#13;
''with distinction."&#13;
• Jayne Proesel has taken 18&#13;
edits inhonors course work, and&#13;
~e plans on taking ~ore. class~&#13;
nd the same directIon this&#13;
u er g fall "When I first started&#13;
camm. . ,. said in the Honors 8emmars, .&#13;
P I "1 didn't know anything&#13;
a=f'them. I guess that's why I&#13;
k them The classes sounded&#13;
~:eresting' and for me it was well&#13;
worth the gamble."&#13;
The Honors seminars C?l"re.nt?;&#13;
being dfered are "I~ag~~tio:x_&#13;
nd "Explaining Thilll!s.. '"&#13;
a .. an ll1Slde u. plaining Thmgs I~ tha t lets&#13;
Parkside survey t ":': of what&#13;
students get a th'::' differenl&#13;
happe!1s ID ·nation explores&#13;
disciplines. Imagl ts of creative&#13;
the different face mester Ex.&#13;
thinking. NextII s:nd Technique&#13;
plaonmg Thlngsedunder the Honors will he offer&#13;
Program. both&#13;
Proesel has experienced. .&#13;
. d Explammg Imaginahon ani' . g Things Things "I n Exp allUn&#13;
. de is based on your&#13;
your gra nd a paper In the&#13;
participation, a. the ~truetor paper you must give&#13;
Adull education cla at&#13;
Par ... ide this spring I~':for&#13;
computer d....&#13;
business .-Is,&amp;Dd a short "" ....&#13;
on book collecting. 01&#13;
Andy McLeall, a profEnglish&#13;
here, wiD be teec:IllDl •&#13;
cJass on collecting rare, &amp;Dd DOl..&#13;
rare booIls. McIan his :.lea;..&#13;
eltJlOI:ieoce coIiel:tiDIdaims lbIt pr8JSIng books, &amp;Dd .~ __&#13;
'ng books older ~ -&#13;
='''is beller thaD _oillll&#13;
stoe.... ~......... botll&#13;
The dass wiD be .. -&#13;
Ii... at Parkside &amp;Dd __ the&#13;
SEE &lt;SLItewide EsteulDO&#13;
Educatim Networ!tl oetwarl&lt; DO&#13;
Mmdays and WecI.-da)'S.&#13;
begiming May 9, The ... IS '::&#13;
CooLlcl the UW - Es\eDllall&#13;
further details IS aIIo oIferiDI a&#13;
The ~m... 01 perIIlDII&#13;
class 10 . busioeu apcomputers&#13;
10 level elMs.&#13;
p1ications. An entry hat ooftware&#13;
the """"'" "" ...... w &amp;Dd&#13;
and hardware are avau.: that&#13;
how to - the eqwpmThe ~&#13;
best meets your .-Is&#13;
Thursday. April 28. 1983 RANGER&#13;
Job Hunting&#13;
explored in workshop&#13;
A senes 01 free worUllopo 00&#13;
lOb - hunl1~ ISbei~ IDitiated at&#13;
Parkslde by !be Officer of Career&#13;
PlallDi~ and Placement and !be&#13;
Alum.. Associatioo.&#13;
"., two • hour w_ps. to be&#13;
held 011 !be second Tuesday 01&#13;
ch month begilUUngMay 10at 7&#13;
p m. III U .. on 106. ,,;11 stress jobkIng&#13;
tips and potential&#13;
strategies&#13;
Donald Cashen. actl~ director&#13;
01 UW • Parkslde's Placement&#13;
olfice said speakers at !be first&#13;
011 WIll be MIChael Elliot.&#13;
manager of corporate salary&#13;
administration for Tenneco·s&#13;
Automotive Divisioo in Deerfield,&#13;
m.; Susan Katehadorian, senior&#13;
employment counselor in tbe&#13;
personnel Office at !be First&#13;
Wisconsin ~ ational Bank in&#13;
Iilwaukee ; and Gregg Pfarr,&#13;
loan olficer and assislant cashier&#13;
at !be Pleasant Prairie Branch of&#13;
the First National Bank of&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Cashen. who also will speak at&#13;
!be first sessioe, said !be initial&#13;
workshop will be loosely structured&#13;
and !be agenda will be set by&#13;
participants. Subsequent&#13;
workshops will focus on jobs in&#13;
sales. education. high technology&#13;
and business&#13;
Shrub and tree care topic&#13;
of discussion at the Rondelle&#13;
Properl) maintaining the trees&#13;
nd shrubs around your home is&#13;
an rmportant, though often bafRing&#13;
Iaak&#13;
Kart hroeder, U.W - ExI&#13;
nolon Horticulture and 'alural&#13;
He ource gent for Racine&#13;
County and tar 01 WRJ 's "The&#13;
Garden how:' will discu&#13;
proper tree and shrub care al the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater on&#13;
Wednesday, May 4 "., program&#13;
will beolfered at I p.m. and 7 p.m.&#13;
Included "ill be informalioo&#13;
about tree and shrub .. lecnce,&#13;
placement 00 property, proper&#13;
planting, trimming and pruning&#13;
techniques. ferlilizatioo and pest&#13;
control. Schroeder will also answer&#13;
questicns from the audience.&#13;
Reservatioos for this program&#13;
are requested and can be made by&#13;
calling the Rondelle at 631-2154&#13;
Monday through Friday, beginning&#13;
Apr 20. There is no admission&#13;
charge. The Golden&#13;
Rondelle is located 00 the corner&#13;
ol 14th and Franklin Streets in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Ttis program is a cooperative&#13;
effort with radio station WRJN.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
$100.00 REWARD •&#13;
Information on subslance when waler Is added ils' size&#13;
1ncr_l5lo20ll .... andlumslorock. -&#13;
(.11 In., 652.2173&#13;
---~.zq&#13;
PROFESSOR LEE THAYER'S "Communication and the Modern World" class has _&#13;
sludylng the effecl of graffiti on civilization, and decided 10 have a T-shirt show. The resuliis&#13;
shown above. Thayer Is fifth from Ihe rlghl.&#13;
Disability Council gets award 1&#13;
The Wisconsin Council on presented for the Wisconsin residential facilities and the&#13;
Developmental Disabilities was Council's ability to work ef- Council's efforts to track 8mIIIr&#13;
given the "Outslanding Council fectively on legislation and in legislation in other stats. Also&#13;
Awar~". by the National b~ild.iJ.1g coalitions a~ong menU.oned was the COUllCD"&#13;
ASSOCiation of Developmental disability groups. The Council was establishment, with more thu.&#13;
Disabilities Councils at their also recognized for its efforts in other disability grouPB of till&#13;
annual meeting in Washingtoo, D. documenting the multiplyling Wisconsin Survival GrOOp wbidI&#13;
C. on Mar. 19. effect of Federal developmental works on slate budget iaoueI.&#13;
The Wisconsin Council is a slate disabilities funds. L. J. Ganser, M. D. Caa:O&#13;
and federally mandated body The award noted the Council's Chairperson, and J~y. Wit.&#13;
which represents people. WIth work on development of tenmyer, Council Executl"&#13;
developmental dtsabrltttes. legislation to prohibit Director, accepted !be awardato&#13;
Members are appomted .by the discrimination in zoning for reception in Washingtm Governor and are responsible for .&#13;
overseeing how services are&#13;
provided to people with such&#13;
disabilities as mental retardation,&#13;
cerebral palsy, chronic mental&#13;
illness and o!hers.&#13;
The Outstanding Council&#13;
Award, giyen annually, was 'PAB&#13;
MORE ADVENTU&#13;
A BUMD&#13;
~&#13;
••&#13;
THAN&#13;
•&#13;
. Can you picture yourself&#13;
~ down a cliff? Or&#13;
shooting the rapids? Or&#13;
crossing a river using only&#13;
rope and your own two&#13;
.,...,,,,::&gt;J1lan ds?&#13;
You'll have a chance&#13;
to do all this and more in&#13;
ArmyRarc.&#13;
Adventure training like&#13;
this helps you develop&#13;
many of the qualities you'll&#13;
need as an Army officer.&#13;
Qualities like selfconfidence.&#13;
Stamina. And&#13;
the ability to perfonn&#13;
under pressure.&#13;
lf you'd like to find out&#13;
more, make a date to see&#13;
your Army Rare Professor&#13;
of Military Science.&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BEALL lOU CAN BE.&#13;
Cont,l(:t Address:&#13;
Enrollment Officer&#13;
MarqMfte, Uni't.&#13;
.rmy ROTC&#13;
ClllI COned (414) n"7lfS/712'&#13;
Communications&#13;
P AB rocks with "High Rise"&#13;
Friday, Apr. 29 in the Union&#13;
Square. The doors open at9 p. m.&#13;
and !he band is scheduled to begin&#13;
after the Student Awards&#13;
Banquet. Admission is free .&#13;
Parkside and Age lD are&#13;
required. Come ou,t and see&#13;
Kenosha's own High Rise.&#13;
Geology&#13;
. Dr. Peter H. Schultz of the&#13;
Lunar and Planetary Institute in&#13;
Houston, Texas will be giving two&#13;
talks next week which will be co -&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Geology and Physics Clubs and&#13;
!he Racine Geological Society.&#13;
The first talk will be held Thursday,&#13;
May 5 at 7:30 p. m. in Grq&#13;
103. The talk is titled "Target&#13;
Ear!h Effects of Large - Body&#13;
Impacts". The second talk&#13;
"Planetery Catastrophes," will ~&#13;
held Friday, May 6 at 1 p. m. in&#13;
Grq 103.&#13;
Chess&#13;
Sign up now for \he Chess CluQ'S&#13;
SprIng Tournament in the Union&#13;
Rec Center. The tournament will&#13;
be held May 3 and 4, and has a $1&#13;
entry fee for Parkside students.&#13;
For more info, \he Chess Club&#13;
meets Tuesday nights from 6 - 10&#13;
p. m. in Union 207 and Wednesdays&#13;
from 1 to 4 p. m. in Moln&#13;
D - 133.Who says you have to slay&#13;
for four hours? Just pop in for a&#13;
few qUick ones,,0O1&#13;
Our Psychotherapy for Chess&#13;
DIsorders Committee will be&#13;
addressing the topics, "Postal&#13;
~hess:. What are the Costs?" and&#13;
Caslting Queenside: A Freudian&#13;
Interpretation." Be there.&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
Peer Support will he sponsoring&#13;
a lecture titled, "Herpes. 8eUeIt&#13;
It Or Not," on May 3 at 12_11&#13;
Grq 10.1.Speakers will be 0-&#13;
'Jenkins, a counsel... at FIIIIIlJ&#13;
Planning of Racine; Dr. Jolmas.&#13;
midt, a Kenosha physlclaD; ...&#13;
Dan Geshrick, an epldemloll(lsl&#13;
in Racine. There will be a fIiII&#13;
during \he talk.&#13;
All Communications ModIIIt&#13;
students are invited to a 1'Sbll'&#13;
and Tell I Munch and Mi.....&#13;
. night on Mooday, May 2 illMOUI&#13;
D-l01 from 5: 15to 6:05.'I1lere wII&#13;
be a three minute oral pr-:&#13;
tation by the students who'-&#13;
up on Apr. 4, and free JXlII"'I'lL&#13;
Come early to set up yourJrOje&lt;l&#13;
Contact Janet Wells at 553-2SSI.&#13;
further information.&#13;
UWPDT&#13;
The Parkside Dart ream. II&#13;
going to hold the first ParbidI&#13;
Open Dart Tournam ....1OIlFridI1,&#13;
April 29 at I p.m. III !be III&lt; ~&#13;
Center.&#13;
There will be two '"""":&#13;
competitions inVOlved'.~lI\&#13;
the event will be indiVliDdivt..-i&#13;
The other part will be will&#13;
cricket matches. Eacb pori&#13;
require a ooe dollar ...:.: ill&#13;
All entry fees will be flrtI&#13;
the form of prize ~ afdIO&#13;
place will receive 50....,;,;;:;. ....&#13;
entry fees. seeood .-- IIU1&#13;
receive 25 percent.af !be.", 15&#13;
fees. Third place wlU ......fDII1l'&#13;
percent of the ... try f~&#13;
place will receive !be . e/fGl1I10&#13;
percent for her ~r hi':"; .&#13;
All other places wlU t dIO&#13;
hearty hand clasp and a po&#13;
back. IriD be&#13;
The top two 301p1ayerJ ....&#13;
eligible for entry in !be PCridIl&#13;
Challenge. The ~ !0Uf f~ ttl&#13;
players will be e1ig1: r.,Jl!l&#13;
Parkside Challenge a .to .-&#13;
memhers are welcome&#13;
also.&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
... Thurlday. Aj&gt;rll 21,1913&#13;
Performances excellent in 'Balance'&#13;
by DickOberbruner&#13;
'I!Ie parkside Dramatic Arts&#13;
I*dpiiDe has done it again. Their&#13;
;,.,diDOIl of Edward Albee's "A&#13;
peUcate Balance" is expertly&#13;
aer/armed. Directed by Lee Van&#13;
ilI'e. tbis absurd play need not be&#13;
~ understood - all loose&#13;
j,eads do not tie up at tbe end.&#13;
pIis important is realistic&#13;
...... t... portrayal, made diflIlIIlbythe&#13;
fact that all of Albee's&#13;
.. Dons are mad, and a com- ilrflbie setting from which tbe&#13;
.. clneSs projects itself. The&#13;
... without a doubt, meet these&#13;
..-es .&#13;
.... the iead roles of Agnes and&#13;
ftIiIS are Lee Law 1er and An-&#13;
.. Brbel. These two work well&#13;
...... as the husband and wife&#13;
~y close in feeling but far&#13;
.,art spiritually. Lawler&#13;
dllDands quite a bit from her&#13;
ACJlI"l. ThoUgha few monologues&#13;
.Mmded memorized, her strong&#13;
pge presence is just what the&#13;
iii! . alleged "fulcrum" of the&#13;
lIIIlily needs.&#13;
Brheltakes Tobias to the limits&#13;
If steadfastness. Tobias is the&#13;
ieVe through which the bruising&#13;
pISt and the oppressive present&#13;
are strained. In portraying this&#13;
paeid stoic, Brhel releases the&#13;
lIIloti0ll81 side gradually as the&#13;
play progresses - until tbe end&#13;
wbeIl Tobias' much needed out1IIInt&#13;
is subdued by his abnormal&#13;
pty.&#13;
1beir "best friends H who barge&#13;
iIIIO their home for no apparent&#13;
.... n are Ednat and Harry,&#13;
played by Liz Schoenoff and Scott&#13;
Illicheisdorf. A good first time&#13;
perfll1Ilanceis turned in by Miss&#13;
SCboenoff. Despite some&#13;
mechanisticmovement, her dry,&#13;
I1118ttachedapproach is appropriate&#13;
for the hollow Agnes.&#13;
IIer husband, Harry, is equally as&#13;
Ilzarre. Reichelsdorf's on - stage&#13;
Ouidity brings an eeriness to a&#13;
!Iceless character.&#13;
wlUJ Lire.&#13;
PiCTURED, left to right. is Andrew Brhel, Pat Casclaro. and&#13;
Lee Lawler. in a scene from the Parks Ide produdlon of Edward&#13;
Albee's play "A Delicate Balance."&#13;
Pat Casciaro plays Agnes'&#13;
sister, Claire. Aided by ber&#13;
alcoholism, Claire is both boastful&#13;
and sassy. At times, Miss&#13;
Casciaro's voice is louder than&#13;
circumstances deem. However. in&#13;
portraying Claire's flagrant&#13;
demeanor I her abilities come to&#13;
the forefront.&#13;
Rebecca Julich plays Julia, tbe&#13;
emotionally displaced daughter of&#13;
Agnes and Tobias. A four time&#13;
divorcee, Julia seeks identity, but&#13;
her needs are low in priority. Miss&#13;
Julich excels in energy and&#13;
crispness as she fights back&#13;
against impinging forces.&#13;
The living room set is beautiful.&#13;
Crafted by Charles Erven, it's&#13;
strong visual lines and colorful&#13;
interior strikes a fragility in&#13;
combination with Jon SChoenofI's&#13;
lighting. The comfortable setting&#13;
is rounded out by Barbara&#13;
Thompson's costumes. Behind the&#13;
guise of conservative apparel&#13;
hides not so conservative&#13;
characters,&#13;
Delicately handled by Van&#13;
Dyke, "Balance" is fun and&#13;
provacative. Exposing internal&#13;
madness through the creation of&#13;
tension is the drive of this play,&#13;
and the Players do a terrific job in&#13;
doing just this. All involved with&#13;
this production deserve a round of&#13;
applause,&#13;
Write Ranger&#13;
a letter&#13;
Acl\lAll.Y, I ST,LJ.&#13;
Il1IIC PRlOL&lt;N ....llll&#13;
F/.AIOE' Bl'D,uox,. lJ&lt;tSOS&#13;
F~YI&gt;.iT&#13;
15 L.IF~ .,J"usr A NlEf2.(HiPr!'J&#13;
S~vr.&lt;.&lt;E FoR ~ €R. ?&#13;
o~ IS T'lt611t6"50/"'1(" Ft~,&#13;
UL-Tll''O'lAT'E'",RO\l,.IT'l' iltAT&#13;
WE'" F\~ SENTIeNT" 8ENlrS.&#13;
M\Xr SEf'lRc.1-lFoR?&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bll!!k&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24HOURTELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.O.I.C.&#13;
c ~~ VJe llEt..IE'\.lIi JJ.J&#13;
A- suP£~~ BEINe:,.&#13;
w 1fll&lt;&gt;Jf f~ ~s"'"&#13;
~IEflt(£(;AAfU&gt; 70R 00&#13;
we Sr/ll\f\..&lt;{ t:::l€l'J'l' 1*£.&#13;
EXISfe-r.Jc.£ Or GOO&#13;
A-S E~IL" AS ~E"ot&gt;&#13;
PIP?&#13;
/+--&#13;
7Je{i~6tE&#13;
:8tt.kt ItCf&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Fun with Dick&#13;
Wortd news-with a twist&#13;
Am .... oa.nr&#13;
• • •&#13;
• • •&#13;
American commercialism&#13;
touches everything E 0ppression.&#13;
For example. are&#13;
familiar wlth the Peter ~.lanibaJ&#13;
Law' "You have the ngbl&#13;
remain silent You bal lbe&#13;
to figure ou if the actul£ ...&#13;
ment is gi\1Dg you a correct answer&#13;
or mak~ .... up '!bill.&#13;
ho" you pick out the squares 1be&#13;
first O\-erthrow c:ont1'Olled by&#13;
that ruling 00 I umu a&#13;
OOIllingenl I.U over, In ch&#13;
casea rUlber o~ ill&#13;
played until there IS a d r&#13;
",oner Once a day e play a&#13;
secret coup tn hich you,&#13;
oppressed naln •&#13;
rev·011 against the l'U1i,.;&#13;
tingenl. Your sut.... jUCl.1&#13;
leaves your II\:&#13;
disarray, which is PIl"""",,le for&#13;
the . ibJation Once you are&#13;
and killed you can no er play&#13;
The wourded and the&#13;
play on .. The P. L&#13;
in revoJutionar)" count.n&#13;
terrorist • owned teJn&#13;
stations are ho III&#13;
• • •&#13;
the san&#13;
TAP BEER )0( MON. THRUTHURS&#13;
RAIL DRINKS 75&lt; ,. P 'TIL 12 •&#13;
GAME ROOM PITCHER U"&#13;
Hwy. 32 between ladne • Kenoslta&#13;
.'&#13;
, .'. EVERY DAY ..&#13;
L;-,&#13;
.. /.~ ....I .1~U!!C&#13;
~ ..&#13;
J Sheet Music &amp; Books&#13;
J Instruments &amp; Supplies&#13;
J Soles &amp; Service&#13;
SPfCIAL DISCOUNT&#13;
WITH PAlICSIDf J.D.&#13;
2425 Genevo St., Racine&#13;
Ph. 681·3261&#13;
NORTHSIDE&#13;
MUSIC&#13;
6 Thursday, April 28, 1983 RANGER&#13;
Pythons retain irreverent humor in life'&#13;
I&#13;
b, Rkk Ladlr&#13;
"Mool)' P, than's Meeni'1l of&#13;
W .. IS one of the moot perverse.&#13;
repulsl'1l, aDd cisgusting films I&#13;
have ever In OCherwords I&#13;
loved .. err mll,"te of it,&#13;
'"The I IlIng of Life" ill about&#13;
you mlght the ~n1ng&#13;
of lif But you might also&#13;
poel II b presented U&gt; the&#13;
bWlrte yle the p,1hoos IEric&#13;
Idl, John CI e, Graham&#13;
pman, T rry Jones, M,chael&#13;
Palin, aDd T rry Gilliam have&#13;
perf ed '" er the yea... The&#13;
movie ID the lorm of 3 shcrt&#13;
lr ,ach 01 which provide a&#13;
loot al a difl retII P8rt of hie'&#13;
birtb, ar deall1 etc 1bese&#13;
ete ranlle from the&#13;
ewhat aIJJy (a huge Catholic&#13;
t mily nalng 'Every perm is&#13;
cred') 10 the ridiculous fa&#13;
.. lauranl f.. turing 'authentlc&#13;
fbwaJjan cuaine an a medieval&#13;
du.n,_ atmosphere). to the&#13;
iIdJy llrotesque Can IInmellOe&#13;
ctiner vomlling incetaanlly aDd&#13;
.. Ung until he explodes), The&#13;
Pylbcns have Illven ll1is fiho the&#13;
me wOlldoriuUy weird quality&#13;
which made tbelr T.V. show so&#13;
popular One thing I have always&#13;
admired about the Pythons is&#13;
their ability to alter traditional&#13;
slyles of comedY; cbaracters&#13;
move from sketch to sketch with&#13;
seemingly no 10000c.sketches are&#13;
ended will1 no resolutioo of the&#13;
story, etc. Were someone else to&#13;
try 10 do these, the viewer would&#13;
eDdupfM1Slraled. But the Pythons&#13;
do it with such slyle tbat it all&#13;
seems ahoGSt normal.&#13;
When I reviewed 'Mooty Python&#13;
Task Force on Unemployment&#13;
talk- HEating Well for Less"&#13;
ary Bnnlllall Peterson, a&#13;
Home Economi I lor the&#13;
UNverslty of W_n - ExlonIIon,&#13;
willlalk 011 "Ealing Well&#13;
fer t-" al the """t ..-Iing of&#13;
the Roane In the 801 Task Force&#13;
00 Unemployment Peterson will&#13;
delmbe wa to mainlJlin proper&#13;
nulrilloo at low C06I, and will&#13;
explaan how to save money while&#13;
mop",nll'or aroeeries.&#13;
Peteroon' presentation ",ill last&#13;
bout_. ball hour Inlormalinn&#13;
bout her topc aDd bstings of&#13;
1ofGrma_ about food aardenlng&#13;
will he available.&#13;
The meeting will be held&#13;
Thursday, April 28 at 1:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Crystal Room of the Memorial&#13;
Hall Auditorium, 72-7th Street in&#13;
Racine. The meeting is free and&#13;
open to the ",bhc.&#13;
The Task Force on Unemployment&#13;
is made up of concerned&#13;
agencies and unemployed&#13;
volunteers. Its ""pose is to help&#13;
jobless people tbrough the phase&#13;
c:X unemployment. For more inlormation&#13;
caD the Task Force&#13;
office at 636-3237.&#13;
Student internships available&#13;
College tudents interested in&#13;
warkt"ll III 5UJIlmer jobs in their&#13;
chooen professional fields should&#13;
apply n"", lor the thousands of&#13;
corporate and governmental&#13;
InlemshiP8 and work • study&#13;
opportunili .. available.&#13;
ccordmg to The Scholarship&#13;
Bank. most Internships are&#13;
_nrcI by major corporations&#13;
aDd P8Y 10 the range 01 two to&#13;
lhr lhousa nd lor the summer.&#13;
ny wW pay students N!localioo elq:........ These intemshiP8 are&#13;
good .... rte:a of lrainlJlll aDd may&#13;
d to pennanelll employment as&#13;
well as invaluable contacts in the&#13;
student's chosen field. In addition&#13;
internees can qualify fo;&#13;
scholarships and other financfal&#13;
aid from many of these employers.&#13;
Many deadlines are near for&#13;
these programs. Students interested&#13;
in receiving more in.&#13;
formatiOll aboutlhese internships&#13;
aDd scholarships should send a&#13;
business size stamped sell - addressed&#13;
envelope to The&#13;
Scbolarship Bank, 10100 Santa&#13;
tonica Blvd. Suite 750, Los&#13;
Angeles, CA. 90067.&#13;
In Th. ParbJd. Union&#13;
FEATURING YOUR&#13;
FAVORITE CANOY,&#13;
NUTS AND SNACKS&#13;
SOLO THE OlD&#13;
FASHIONED WAY&#13;
SpecIa17&#13;
California Mix&#13;
Carrlbean Delicacy&#13;
25% OFF&#13;
Wcrtch for BIg&#13;
End 01 Y.ar Sal.&#13;
lAIalW11l1lle UooIen "IN,&#13;
DI..-ctly Aaou from IIle Info. Or.&#13;
Live at the Hollywood Bowl' a few&#13;
months ago, I expressed the hope&#13;
thai "The Meaning of Life" would&#13;
he better. My hopes could not have&#13;
been fullilled any better. II you&#13;
bave a weak stomach, it may be&#13;
better for yoo to avoid this film.&#13;
But if yoo're looking for a wildly&#13;
funny, irreverent, somtimes&#13;
gross. motion picture experie~e,&#13;
go see "Monty Python's Meamng&#13;
of Life".&#13;
Parkside student&#13;
spends semester&#13;
on Golden Pond&#13;
A uw Parkside student is&#13;
spending this semester working&#13;
on Golden Pond.&#13;
But it has nothing to do with the&#13;
movie.&#13;
Andrew Parenteau, of Racine,&#13;
who is a junior majoring in&#13;
communica tion, is working as an&#13;
intern wi th the Tennessee Valley&#13;
Authority (TVA) at the Golden&#13;
Pond Visitors Center of the 170,000&#13;
. acre "Land Between the Lakes"&#13;
wildlife and recreation area in&#13;
western Kentucky.&#13;
Parenteau is working in the&#13;
center's computer - based&#13;
thea ter and planetarium and is&#13;
performing a variety of communication&#13;
- related tasks including&#13;
production of multi -&#13;
media programs geared toward&#13;
enhancing the public's UDderst.anding&#13;
aDd appreciation of&#13;
the environment.&#13;
Parenteau's internship will&#13;
Prizes have been awarded in&#13;
Parkside's Student Art Show, on&#13;
display in the Comm. Arts Gallery&#13;
lhrongh May 6. Sponsored by the&#13;
Art Addicts and the Parkside Art&#13;
Discipline, the show includes over&#13;
50works selected from 180entries.&#13;
First prize of$4ll was awarded&#13;
to William Joseph Greider of&#13;
Racine, for his work "Cracker&#13;
Jacks," an offbeat creation that&#13;
features a cardboard box&#13;
eqUipped with a peephole throngh&#13;
which viewers can see a jungle.&#13;
like environment populated by&#13;
dragons, people, and a toad. A&#13;
mirror placed a t the rear of the&#13;
box creates an illusion of&#13;
spaciousness. Greider fashioned&#13;
the work from paper, clear glass&#13;
marbles, plexiglass aDd watercolor.&#13;
So it goes ..&#13;
Closing cuts, spot qUizzes&#13;
and juicy gossip&#13;
Wustum Art Institute tour&#13;
by John Kovalic&#13;
Well it's that time of the year&#13;
again. 'A few short week~ 'til the&#13;
end of it all. Yep, that s r-ight.&#13;
Summer's just 'round the corner&#13;
and them thar birds is coming&#13;
north again. As the school year&#13;
grinds to a close, I'd like to leave&#13;
you with a few thoughts for the&#13;
future.&#13;
But I won't. Instead, I'll just try&#13;
to insult a few more ci you out&#13;
there. I know there aren't many&#13;
people left whom I haven't insulted&#13;
but heck, what's lire&#13;
without a challenge? So far my list&#13;
of insultees includes wargamers,&#13;
physicists, politicians, preachers,&#13;
feminists, accountants, PSGA,&#13;
dart players, Ranger staffers,&#13;
YMCA residents, and Santa Claus.&#13;
IIthat list isn 't darned impressive&#13;
I don't know what is.&#13;
So let's see ... who really gets&#13;
on my nerves whom I haven't&#13;
already verbally abused?&#13;
How about hard - rock fanatics?&#13;
No, too easy. Anyway, I don't like&#13;
taking advantage of the mentally&#13;
ilL Word has it that there are still&#13;
a few around the place. Why else&#13;
, would AC/DC and Black Sabbath&#13;
hother churning out record after&#13;
monotonous record? But then, I&#13;
suppose some people get off on&#13;
miDdless vocals and bubble gum&#13;
guitar riffs.&#13;
I guess I've a ttacked sports&#13;
writers and basketball players&#13;
enough already. Spot quiz: Why&#13;
did the hasketball player cross the&#13;
road? Answer: To get three&#13;
extra credits. &lt;Only kidding&#13;
guys, you really are pretty brighf&#13;
as well as being horribly&#13;
hemuscled to boot!)&#13;
Speaking of mindless apes,&#13;
continue through May 13. Upon&#13;
complelion of his work at Golden&#13;
Pond, Parenteau will be required&#13;
to prepare a paper relating his&#13;
technically - ociented experience&#13;
to academic aspects of communication&#13;
for Prof. David&#13;
Habhel who is Parenteau's UW _P&#13;
internship supervisor.&#13;
Parenteau is the first uw - P&#13;
student to enter an internship with&#13;
the TVA.&#13;
Cash awards of $25 were&#13;
awarded to Steven E. Pfarr of&#13;
Racine} for "Brothers in Song,"&#13;
an oil painting, to Theresa&#13;
Schiffer, of Wilmot, for "Nudes,"&#13;
an itaglio, and to Susan Schimian&#13;
of Racine, for "Sign of the&#13;
The Racine Art Association of&#13;
the Cbarles A. Wustum Museum&#13;
of Fin~ Arts announces a special&#13;
bus triP 10 the Art Institute of&#13;
Chicago and the Terra Museum of&#13;
American Art in Evanston&#13;
lllinois. '&#13;
The tour will take 'place&#13;
Saturday, May 7, and will begin&#13;
with a tour of the present exhibit&#13;
at the Terra Museum _ "Early&#13;
anybody watch the '&#13;
protestors at "Ernma VinOUS&#13;
O.K., quick hand count. H::.,e1I."?&#13;
people were hored ofllheir ~&#13;
the whole episode? !'robabl '"&#13;
many as who were bored Y ..&#13;
watching the movie. y~&#13;
Rumor has it that YOUCOU1d 1lOdI.&#13;
more skin in "Leave .eatdl&#13;
B t&#13;
ea ver , ot "Bh .,groups'to&#13;
protestors should have llpentu:&#13;
time protesting more obvi&#13;
VIceS. Like r~cism in "8unlIII~&#13;
Whoops. Think I just 0I108ded&#13;
the feminists again.&#13;
PSGA- The Emplr.8lrIkooOat&#13;
I suppose ODe thing thai '*&#13;
become palnlully obvious&#13;
wri ting lhis column over tho ~&#13;
is the total apathy Ii tho a.;:an&#13;
Parkside student I mean, It'l-:&#13;
hard to be sensational hero&#13;
anymore. I'd have to write&#13;
something like "Malturbati,.&#13;
isn't just sex with 1Om_ ,..&#13;
love" to even raise any "YebrOwa.&#13;
Then the mly comp1alnt I'd ..&#13;
would be from a one _ ......&#13;
Afghan .m~ who would k&#13;
as sacrlligaous.&#13;
Hell's teeth! In LondOIl ...&#13;
the~ raised tuition coati we oeCUpled&#13;
the adminiltrati,.&#13;
building for three daya! WbIt&#13;
happened to the campuslil-blIaf&#13;
the sixties? Granted, tho lure af&#13;
free beer aDd an excuse not to ...&#13;
any. work for three daya w. Ille&#13;
maIO reason most of US atteDded&#13;
the occupa tion in the fin! place,&#13;
but that's quite heside tho palalt&#13;
Speaking of professional ....&#13;
radicals, anyone notice wbat 1&#13;
fine job Phil Pogreba is daiIlI.&#13;
head honcho of PSGA? NO,I..... ,&#13;
think so.&#13;
Well, Philip "I'm nat II8I'111111d,&#13;
they are out to get me" ""Cr*&#13;
seems to he into surveys at ...&#13;
moment, and tbe rift ~&#13;
himseir and the Senate is aboIi ..&#13;
wide as the gaps in the ReIpu&#13;
defense strategy. Talk at a paIaao&#13;
coup is rampant, and CIadt&#13;
"String 'em up" Betz aDd "BJa"&#13;
Jim Kreuser could not be readlld&#13;
for comment.&#13;
But somebody has baen buyiJw&#13;
up a lot of small arms 1'llCOIIlIJ.&#13;
Times," a watercolor.&#13;
A lithogr aph by ChriIt&lt;lpIIlr&#13;
Dorf of Racine has been purchased&#13;
by the Parkslde library III&#13;
represent this year's show. Darf'I&#13;
work will be on permanent dlapIJ1&#13;
in the library.&#13;
Prizes awarded in Parkside's Student Art Show.&#13;
Rebels in American Art". nil&#13;
exhibition ref ... s 10the tum .0/.&#13;
the - century American artiaD&#13;
known as "The Eight" who&#13;
protested academic art. At ....&#13;
same time visitors will be ableta&#13;
view the painting Gallery" IIIf&#13;
Louvre by Samuel F. B. ~&#13;
which has received IDterna~'"&#13;
recognition since being ~&#13;
by the Terra recently. . ta&#13;
The tour will then conl\llllO&#13;
the Art Institute 01 ChiClla ta&#13;
view the exhibilion "M~UrJ;&#13;
shuis: 17th Century U&#13;
Painting" which features 4O-or:&#13;
from the Royal Picture Ga11tI1ted Holland. Artisls repros.a aDd&#13;
include Rembrandl, vl!lIIeer&#13;
Frans Hals. ....&#13;
. Tbe tour departs f_ retuJlI&#13;
Wustum at 8 a.m. and : lor tbe&#13;
by 6 p.m. Tickets are ........&#13;
general publiC, $22 for beJ'I 0/&#13;
citizens and $20' for ~l!lIIlI! ""&#13;
the Racine Arl _aU ~&#13;
ticket price includ&lt;:"del~ ..&#13;
coach transportatiOll&#13;
Det&#13;
a",_&#13;
to both museums a. .....,dI iI&#13;
ments on the return lrtp.&#13;
not included. till! or 1/1&#13;
For more inl~nna call tilt&#13;
make reservations&#13;
Wustum at 636-9177.&#13;
-&#13;
7&#13;
Wisconsin's record fishing&#13;
The Lb. -, Oz .• Place and Year way. 1952.&#13;
follow: Perch (yellow),&#13;
Largemouth Bass, 11-3, Lake Winnehago, 1954.&#13;
Ripley, 1940. Sauger, 4-5, Mississippi&#13;
Smallmouth Bass, 9-1, Indian 1971.&#13;
Lake, 1950. Atlantic Salmon, 12,;), Lake I&#13;
Rock Bass, 1-12, Big Green Michigan, 1975.&#13;
Lake, 1971. Coho Salmon, 24-6, Lake&#13;
White Bass, 3-12, Pelican Lake, Michigan, 1975.&#13;
1963. Chinook Salmon,&#13;
YellowBass, 2-2, Lake Monona, Menominee River, 1973.&#13;
1972. Sturgeon, 94-3, Menominee&#13;
Bluegill, 2-4, Squash Lake, 1971. River, 1968.&#13;
Bullhead (black), 2-9, Trappe Sturgeon (lake), 180,;), Lake&#13;
Lake, 1967; Winnehago, 1953.&#13;
Bullhead (brown), 3-12, Nelson Brown Lake Trout, &lt;Great&#13;
Lake, 1972; Lakes - run), 29-9, Lake Superior,&#13;
Bullbead (yellow), 3-3, Nelson 1971.&#13;
Lake, 1972. Brown Lake Trout, (inland), 14-&#13;
Channel catfish, 44,;),Wisconsin 8, Rush River, 1974.&#13;
River, 1962. Rainbow Trout, 24-4, Lake&#13;
Flathead Catfish, 61-0, Fox Michigan, 1973.&#13;
River, 1968. Splake (hybrid), 14-4,Ada Lake,&#13;
White Crappie, 4-8, Gile 1967.&#13;
Flowage, 1967. Tiger Trout, 17*, Lake&#13;
Muskellunge, 69-11, Lake Michigan, 1977.&#13;
Qlippewa Flowage, 1949. Walleye, 18,;), High Lake, 1933.&#13;
Muskellunge (hybrid) 50-4, Lac 'World's Record&#13;
VleIIXDesert, 1951. - Taken from The Bantam&#13;
NorthernPike, 38-0,Lake Puck- Great Outdoors Guide.&#13;
~ ...............&#13;
Fishing in Kenosha&#13;
the winner to airline tickets and&#13;
accomodations for two, 3 . days&#13;
and 2 - nights in Las Vegas. The&#13;
purpose of the contest is to draw&#13;
attention to Sport Fishing 10&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
RANGER Thursday. April 21, 19«1&#13;
Will Preischel and Mark&#13;
, Sporting event result wrapups: looking good!&#13;
Women s Softball pools of four.Parkside will he In the second game ho..... -er, .anI~_Ulledlor, • ana In&#13;
The Womens Softball team playmg agatnst PlatteVille, things went better for the team a the I k,lomeler .Ik I. I&#13;
finished third in the Circle Oshkosh and Northeaslern they "011 &amp;-3. The mIll,. plldler turday.t. m t held In&#13;
Tournament this past weekend. Illinois ..The women have heaten ...as Jack Ruhach ho came In .t .1... 011&#13;
-y defeated: PlattevtlleandOsbkosh,although 'theendolthetlurdllllU,."ith!be ra ee In 48 .nd nnl,.&#13;
,,~ 4-3 the game against Oshkosh was bases loaded and no outs a third 48 39 II...-&#13;
~:~~C~~gne 9-1 close. "Northeastern illinois is a was leadl,. 3-1 at un poinl Ume the .. AI d raced. 1&#13;
UI-Champagne 10.;) eight teams competing. real up and down team. They ...ill Ruhach rettred !be next this&#13;
The game against Chicago was The team played every day last prohably he our toughest eom- batters ...ithout any tits .nd the&#13;
a 10 inning ball game while the week, which resulted in their petition:" said-Draft. team went on to WUl &amp;-3' It,..&#13;
The first weekend in May the just a super job," OherbrunDer second game against Champagne being very tired and worn out. team will have a conference said.&#13;
wascalled in the sixth inning due "We're called to have the days playoff against Superior. Draft On Wednesday. April 27. the&#13;
tothe 10run rule. The team's only off," said Draft. feels they Will he the Iugher seed team traveled to Warner Par to&#13;
I~ was to SI. Xavier (6.;). Coach The team played against SI. team wi.th their 22~ record. The play a doubleheader .. ,tb&#13;
Linda Draft was very disap- Xavier Wednesday, which hoped game Will probably he played at Madison Coach Oberbrunner&#13;
pointed with the organization of to get hack the loss they suffered Petrifying Springs Park. feels the team should take one&#13;
the tournament The tournament at the Circle tournament.&#13;
. game. "Whenever you play a was originally an eight team This weekend the team will M ' Ba doubleheader a.... )· from home.&#13;
tournament but Draft received a compete in the. 8 - team en s seball you look for a split," he &lt;.'0 •&#13;
callwhen the season had already Whitewater tournament. The merited.&#13;
th Id he t· divi dod . by Maureen Burke begunsaying ere WOll not tournamen IS VI mto two The Men's Baseball team split a 'Ibis Saturday, the Rate v.-nJ&#13;
doubleheader with Ill-Chicago on he at home to face Lewis in a&#13;
April 22. In the first game, the doubleheader. Oberbrunner ts&#13;
Rangers lost 10-4. "We had loolti,. to "'ID that one&#13;
several opportunities to win it,"&#13;
3-4, Lake commented Coach Ken Oher- Men's Track&#13;
brunner, "but we just didn't have&#13;
River, out hitting shoes on."&#13;
The Kenosha Charter Fishing&#13;
Association, Michelob and&#13;
LaMacchia Travel Agency are&#13;
p,eased. to announce Kenosha's&#13;
Firsl Annual Michelob Lake&#13;
Michigan Fish - Off. Beginning&#13;
May 1 and continuing through&#13;
Sept. 15, area fishermen will be For information and reserable&#13;
to register all fish caught valions contact (414) 652-9400,or&#13;
1rbileparticipating on a Kenosha write Kenosha Sport Fishing at&#13;
Sport Fishing Charter. The 4927 -. 7th Avenue, Kenosha,&#13;
largest fish by weight will entitle Wisconsm 53140.&#13;
--.................................&#13;
&lt;::::::::;w;it;:::::::R~~:9:;;::::::~::;::;';:tt;;:::::.:.:.;.:.&#13;
~~~;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:::::::::::::::;:::::::;:::;::::::::::;::::::::;:::::::::;::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::=:::=::::;::::::::;:::::&#13;
$50 FIRST&#13;
PRIZE&#13;
CHESS CLUB&#13;
SPRING TOURNAMENT&#13;
May 3-4 - 12:00-6:00 pm&#13;
ENTRY FEE $1.00&#13;
Location • Union Rec Center&#13;
SIGN UP IN REC CENTER&#13;
NOW!&#13;
Last day for registration • May 2nd&#13;
( Other cash prizes determined by&#13;
number of entrants)&#13;
....&#13;
Phy-ed experiences break-ins&#13;
by Tori Murray&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
A large numher of locker break -&#13;
ins have been reported this month&#13;
at the Physical Education&#13;
Building. The first was April 11by&#13;
two tennis players, who among&#13;
other things had their racquets&#13;
stolen prior to a match. Recently,&#13;
a hasehall player had $5 stolen&#13;
while he was at practice. "He&#13;
dented the locker in and took the&#13;
lock. He did leave my wallet. I&#13;
was pretty happy ahout that,"&#13;
added the player.&#13;
Ron Brinkman, Director of&#13;
Security commented that most&#13;
break - ins ...ere reported near the&#13;
da te 0( the first one. Brinkman&#13;
also said the thief used boll cuue-s&#13;
to cut the locks. The broken locks&#13;
were found !ales" in a field near the&#13;
physical buildi,.&#13;
According to Dr. Wayne Dannebl,&#13;
Athletic Director, break -IllS&#13;
are ooe 0( the biggest problems in&#13;
the buildl,.. Because oIlhis, signs&#13;
were placed in both the Men's and&#13;
Women's locker rooms cautiooirc&#13;
people to keep lockers locked even&#13;
while taking a shower and not to&#13;
leave anythi,. si~ out. "It ISa&#13;
recurring problem. We'll go&#13;
through a dry spell for a lime.&#13;
ORCHARD&#13;
COURTS&#13;
STUDENT SPECIALS&#13;
SEPT. 1983APARTMENT RENTALS&#13;
FROM $110 PER MONTH •&#13;
• Appliances&#13;
• Carpeting&#13;
• Drapes&#13;
• Furniture&#13;
MODERN "LOFT" APARTMENTS&#13;
• Heat &amp; Water&#13;
• Electricity&#13;
• Parking&#13;
• Laundry Facilities&#13;
RENTAL OFFICE OPEN&#13;
April 21st - May 21st&#13;
969 wood Rood&#13;
MODEL APARTMENT AND&#13;
RENTAt OFFICE HOURS&#13;
Daily 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.&#13;
PHONE 553-9009&#13;
Professionally leased &amp; managed by&#13;
CERTIFIED PROPERTY&#13;
MANAGEMENT, INC.&#13;
then 11 ha a ,. 01 br&#13;
IllS," comrnenllld 0&#13;
Security t the bu1IcIl"Il not&#13;
been Incrased ...., to • lack DI&#13;
manpower But m r&#13;
bel,. taken to PIJI'- the&#13;
thief Bnokman and (ba,&#13;
a pect iD mind The. ar ,..l&#13;
ceraJn !bal tM lI1lfl not&#13;
scm"""" (rom all the&#13;
"Weha,e. in mind. but&#13;
" lust can't accuse 10m &lt;l&#13;
lI1l",ery We m catctJ them red&#13;
• handed,'· commented Dalme1\1.&#13;
A&gt; 01 Apr" :!IIi. no one bad&#13;
apprehended&#13;
'AI.&#13;
IEIIIALS&#13;
.2 NNl TENTS&#13;
•• NNlTENTS&#13;
• SLEEPING BAGS&#13;
• GROUND PADS&#13;
• GAS HEATERS&#13;
• GAS LANTERNS&#13;
• CXX)KSTOVES&#13;
• CXX)KINGKITS&#13;
• ICE CHESTS&#13;
• WATER JUGS&#13;
• CANTEE&#13;
• VITTlE KITS&#13;
• CJWi&gt; SHOYElS&#13;
• BELT AXES .H ING I&#13;
• POCKET KNI&#13;
• CQW&gt;ASSES • FIRST AID ITS&#13;
• FLASHLIGHTS&#13;
• CJWi&gt; STOOLS&#13;
• FISHING RODS&#13;
• FISHING NETS&#13;
• FISH BAS ETS&#13;
DY_~&#13;
I YA.. n&#13;
... ESSAIY&#13;
CA L:&#13;
553-&#13;
•&#13;
Thursday, April 28, 1983 RANGER&#13;
Letters to Editor Coalinued From Page Two&#13;
Issue of movie embarrasses student&#13;
lhe highest atlendance of Ibis&#13;
semester Maybe if \he people who&#13;
were oojecting would have kept&#13;
their 0..... '11 personal opinions to&#13;
\hemsel ves \he uccess 01 \he film&#13;
wouldnt have been as great,&#13;
maybe. I am astounded at \heir&#13;
achms and reactions to the&#13;
shoVting of Lbis film We're all&#13;
adults and we can each use our&#13;
right to choose whether or not we&#13;
"ant to see a pornographic lilm or&#13;
not. What about \he students who&#13;
"ant to see a pornographic film,&#13;
sbouldn't PAB he able to pick&#13;
films with a wide enough variety&#13;
to salisty aU 01 \he students inchxbng&#13;
those that want to see a&#13;
pornographic movie.&#13;
As for carol Franks' letter&#13;
accursing \he Ranger 01 vicious&#13;
journalism. She was astowxled&#13;
that a university paper would&#13;
..Tite in sum a manner, instead o(&#13;
dealing with it as a valid issue .. l&#13;
agree with \he way \hey handled It&#13;
because itwasn't a valid issue, but&#13;
It was a ridiculous situation. Come&#13;
on let's not embarrass Parkside&#13;
any more and give Parkside a bad&#13;
image that makes us look so&#13;
naive. The group that protested&#13;
behaved naively towards pornography&#13;
and ~ constitution.&#13;
First \hey acted like \he students&#13;
at Parkside had never seen an x .&#13;
rated lilm and thought they were&#13;
protecting us from the evils of it.&#13;
Secondly they suggested censorship&#13;
by asking that the movie&#13;
not be shown. Come on American&#13;
educated adults suggesting such&#13;
an Un- American and unconstitutional&#13;
proposal as censorship,&#13;
it's ridiculous and embarrassing&#13;
to the rest of the&#13;
students here at Parkside.&#13;
Todd Bernhardt&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
I am embarrassed for Parkside&#13;
and its' students because of \he&#13;
acllons of a mUlOril)- 0/ \he&#13;
udenls This group 01 ludenls&#13;
an prolesbng ... eeks before&#13;
the shoWIng of an x • rated film&#13;
they wore suggesbng that It&#13;
sbouldn't shown on campus&#13;
The him became a very cont""&#13;
r I bject and thaI' what&#13;
I think .. completely ndlcu10us&#13;
and embarra ing to our&#13;
umver Ity Why hould the&#13;
Ihowtng 01 an x • rated film at a&#13;
Uri. ity "hieh expr andtea&#13;
" studftlta to have an&#13;
open mind cause ueh an uproar!&#13;
The whol ,dea 01 .1 becomIng&#13;
controv rslal i abaurd ,'obody&#13;
w gOing to he forced to ga see it&#13;
and PAD had a chance to make&#13;
money oil 01 the film. only if&#13;
people paid to it. The film had&#13;
Melvin Calvin gives energy lecture&#13;
He earned his PhD degree at the&#13;
University of Minnesota and did&#13;
post - doctoral work at the&#13;
University of Manchester,&#13;
England, before joining the&#13;
Berkeley faculty.&#13;
Men's tennis team wins over Beloit&#13;
a home meet, 2-7. The two single&#13;
matches the Rangers did win were&#13;
Tony Nielsen defeated Frank&#13;
Niehols (6-3) (1-6) (6-4) and Art&#13;
Shannon defeated Don Klumb (6-&#13;
4) (3-6) (6-4&gt;'&#13;
On Saturday, April 23, the&#13;
Rangers took on Moraine Valley_&#13;
Parkside came out victoriously&#13;
wilb a /inal score of 9.(). Whieh&#13;
brings the Rangers seasonal&#13;
record up to 8-2_ All single and&#13;
double matches were won,&#13;
On Monday, Ibe Rangers took on&#13;
Carthage College in an away&#13;
Frid.y.Apr." meet. Wednesday, they took on&#13;
MOv,. Apoc:~ypw~' (R) .....ill be shown III 1p_m. lind ,,11:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema. Carroll College in an away meet.&#13;
Admh&amp;ton., ft'lltdoor ,,, "tor P.rk:$ioe $fudwtlsand 51 for II gun!. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
UIrIOU.'" Stvolr&gt;lAWi!rds.' Spft'l.1n Main PI.ce. Admwion is $8. Tickets are a....ailable at the Friday, the 29, the Rangers will&#13;
unkIn tnform.'G"l (~I... take C di C II -&#13;
...... 'Y • Delk.'. "~nU"al'p m. in the- Communication Arts Thutre. Tickets are availabte en oncor a 0 ege In an&#13;
et,.. \.Wol"l tntormelocn C....t ... end at I'M FiM Arts Division Office. away meet, and then on Saturday,&#13;
~~~a al t »p." Unklt'l SQuere tNluring "Hi Rise" Admission is free. Sponsored bV the Rangers will take on the&#13;
Alumni in a home meet, which&#13;
starts at 1 p.m_&#13;
abel Prue . wirvung chemist&#13;
MelVInCalVInof \he University 0/&#13;
California Berkeley, will&#13;
I hi ...... rch on artifiCial&#13;
photooynlhesl , a process wilb&#13;
potentill for providing a&#13;
r....... abl tnergy resouree, in a&#13;
f public talk at ParllS,de at 11&#13;
a m on TUesday, Apr 26 in Grnq_&#13;
101&#13;
QlIVln IIuai .. knowledge o/\he&#13;
natural process of photooynthesis&#13;
In areen plants to develop arby&#13;
Cam CarrleUo&#13;
On Monday, April 18 the&#13;
ParllSide Rangers won over Beloit&#13;
College III an away meet 6-3. The&#13;
WInner of \he sillllles matehes&#13;
\liere cal i~leton over Ward&#13;
Krull 1&amp;-2) (6-2&gt;' Tony ielsen&#13;
del_led Clrll80llDer (6-4) (6-Il.&#13;
Art Shannon defeated Gregg&#13;
tilicial photosynthesis systems&#13;
which mimic plant mechanisms of&#13;
converting water into hydrogen -&#13;
a potential replacement for olber&#13;
fuels - and oxygen. Calvin is also&#13;
poneering the concept of uo;ing&#13;
green plants to produce&#13;
hydrocarbon. like materials of&#13;
SUItable molecular weight and&#13;
structure for fuels and materials,&#13;
including the use of genetic&#13;
engineering to impl'ove yield and&#13;
quality.&#13;
Mason (6-3) (6-0. Jim Wynstra&#13;
defeated Mark Gianelto (2-6) (6-4)&#13;
(6-4&gt;' In doubles Iram Cruz -&#13;
Nielsen defeated Bonner - Mason&#13;
(6-3) (6-2). Singletoo - Wynstra&#13;
defeated Krull - Gianetto (6-3) (6-&#13;
3).&#13;
On Wednesday, April 20, the&#13;
Rangers lost to UW-Milwaukee in&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
ThursdllY, Apr. 2.&#13;
CMt.aN'ATIONa' 4p.m for students starting In fall. call ext. 2OOOfOl'more information,&#13;
s.t\lnUiy. Apt'. JO&#13;
COM~T •• "AI. ~ n Pl.a ft'Oft'l t a.m. 104 p.m. Admission is Sl. Call ext. 2231 tor more&#13;
INorftWtkln&#13;
P\..AY A o.IKa'_ "I~' ...., 11MrepNled at Ip,m. onthe Communicallon Arts Theatre.&#13;
Su....,.y.~yl&#13;
K=SHIM ....IIIM ...... rcled at 'lp.1Tt at Main Piece. Students.llKUlty. staff and guests are&#13;
COMCa., at 1]0 p rot In I,. Comm\,WOiQlo(lt'l.NIs Theatl"e with Otto L~ing conductlf'lg. Ad.&#13;
~ SI.Jl) tor 'ltuOln'S""" Mnoor C,liDn$ lind S3for othen&#13;
-::~. ~lfllM ~ w II be r~t.u al 1:30 p.m, In the Union Cinema. Sponsored by&#13;
~y.Mayl&#13;
.OUHOrA.LE 'An ~l4'Wof the N.CiIrll9 ....n RewlUfion" by Father- Dan cabal (Capuchin&#13;
~ lat 11 Up m Ur'toon m Tlw propr.", b fnoeoJOdopen to the public.&#13;
_.ltJHO,. ~ SOlv.,.· a11 p.m. in lJntl:n107 Aflarewelc:ome&#13;
.. ICTURI( Me_,,. T",. R: .. ,KI', ..... c.on",er-wtiOnSW,fh Matef';als" by Dr. Donald SChon of&#13;
MIl' al 1p 1ft Mel.N 105 The pr'OQI""" \.sfr .. endopen lorn_PUblic&#13;
.. ECTURIl 'ECllIc.'1(Jl"land T.dll'lJal ChlI~" by 0l:JN,1dSchon at " 'S p.m. In MOLN 161. The&#13;
""... '" oc-n '0 Itloe puollc a1 no d'large&#13;
.. ICTURI( "TtdlnOlOOy and CNng4" by DcINIICl sctton of MIT .t 3;30 p.m. in CA 132. All are&#13;
"'corne to a",""&#13;
T....... Y.MlyJ&#13;
l.aCTU ••• ' .'J'I\ lI'l"" Galbra"l'1 COnt.~.Room, WLl.C Dr. OooiIld Sd'Ion of MIT will&#13;
I. on na.., "IiJ Prof .. oanal Effecl'......u .. Th_ program is frH anclopen to the public.&#13;
TAl.1t p no and ~ I,ng Sf! HigI'Ily TKhnical Tums··.t 11:30 a.m. in MOLN 113 by&#13;
Olw\eld SCIlOft The lalll. osoptn to .... publ,c al no dwlrg,e&#13;
MMINA. ' ..... 'netlOn· by DonaICl~ at 11 30 P m.n CA tn..11'IeMmlnar Is open to the&#13;
WIllie .., f'IO ,,.&#13;
HMINAR ."1« IW PnJInsoONls' al 2'30 pm. ,n MeLN 110 by Donald Schon. The pt'Clgram&#13;
for .. .-.d ... to !he .,...Ic&#13;
CONCa RT"t I P m Itlie tommlM'ltCalocn Arts 'fhNIlTe f"'uring the Parkslde Jan Ensemble&#13;
....,..1aIorl ,the 000r ,1 for S',*"tS.,.;JM\ior ci',zensancl S2forothen. .&#13;
W~y.MIIy4&#13;
CO'''IIHOUSI from 11 10 1 P m and' to 10 p m. In ~ uniOn &amp;.tzNr .....u featuring Gtoorge&#13;
• All ....... etcon\e ~td by PAS&#13;
" MINA. 'TlW'1l:ote~ 00 una Fa ", Hul •• "tI'Ie Mlntal 1'4 .. '''' ProfessiOn" by Prof Mary&#13;
ROI"Mroatl211GOft" m Tht Pf"09l'''''' 1$ frH erldopen 10tI'Ie PUblic .&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
IARN •• Of' ....,... eolI(j\ 101OO '1''''&#13;
F IbIII I'tOun Motoftly NY"'fll'lI tor&#13;
otac:lng pollen 01'1 (lI&lt;1'ICIUI Bonut bilWCl1 on&#13;
,",,"~ PI' e~ .. -.1 100114-&#13;
..,&#13;
f'f~ING se.VICEl Ca_ aarb654 Ul6alter&#13;
. - ..... "''''NO "L. ...y •• WAHTIE:D 101'rocll. b"'it!o&#13;
INI'ld C. 654 '"-56 or t60I )62'*&#13;
.0000NlA,a WANTI:D ) bl'droom '-'W&#13;
... 'h f~.-.c_ ren' ihartct tltO Pft" "*'th.&#13;
M(I'I Incl,*" '" I .. arodfvm,lu'" 011&#13;
OW tM et uum lOil...,,1 Of Ql91S1&#13;
Caft ... '* Din J&#13;
.... 50"' • ..,&#13;
..... V ....!'IMs.,., Pl. ,. COl"M DKIlIOOn&#13;
.., ""- l1uc'II&#13;
"un GIVI MI al..... • bit ,,*"t C...,.. I&#13;
.... u eDl.&#13;
KOOy.1 Only S....... Oa'n unr • ~y I'",&#13;
r..or' XO. He&#13;
t&#13;
1(.. M. Good luCIt! We',e rtlOting tor you I II&#13;
GOMeR It"$ ~prlng. cheef" up U,C&#13;
KEN ~ you get the ecMorship. O.J.&#13;
GAtL .• cleaMd out YOU' doset5. Brrhl'l9&#13;
&amp;n',ng&#13;
MOLl. y, 8rukfast on May 2'2. 5 pm .• aftH"&#13;
f~ il"fl't'19 C1lfTImeocemenl- Blanche and&#13;
POlly&#13;
EMMANUEl.' It \IIlIlI5lun. O,OA&#13;
HENSlAI( Wondertul lob on the Ranger thiS&#13;
.,... , We II m;u you l'Ib.t year&#13;
WANDERING You're trapped in a world I&#13;
nl'\'tr be~ed in, The Dock&#13;
GOO 0 LUCK 1'0.111 ecMar"!. candidates. You'l .... ,.&#13;
IRUCE Wh., one&lt;~ loot ,s big~ WIsiz •&#13;
IhlI" one'!. mouth, maybe it 's good 10 put it&#13;
n your ~tn. so you c.n't be hUrd&#13;
MOLl. Y: Tl'le cap and 1l0W'l'lIooIU. grUI Pat&#13;
lLANCHE It itloukl be iOme party. And&#13;
iIOI'I1_ post pany, see you lhere I Ed&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKINGI&#13;
5%% In...... t H Yo. Dally Ifs'¥j~e&#13;
Balance II 5500.00 or Mo... 1 --_.-.&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue 4235 • 52nd Street 410 Broad Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin Kenosha, Wisconsin Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414·658-4861 414-658.0120 414-241-9141&#13;
~5:~o~~~:c Blv~. 8035 - 22nd Avenue 24726. 75th Street -Rt.:.&#13;
414 _694_1~nSln Kenosha, Wisconsin (Paddock Lake) Salem, .&#13;
414-657-1340 414-843.2388------=-&#13;
WE'RE HERE 10 HELP YOO '-ROWI&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
Calvin is University Professor&#13;
of Chemistry at Berkeley and&#13;
former Director of the Laboratory&#13;
of Chemical Biodynamics and&#13;
former Associate Director of&#13;
Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory.&#13;
1&#13;
16 17 18 19&#13;
56&#13;
59&#13;
C&gt; Edward Julius&#13;
ACROSS 43 Angered&#13;
44 Prefix or suffix&#13;
John Wayne movie, meaning skin&#13;
"In --'s Way" 45 Elegance&#13;
5 Bakery employees 46 Mrs. Kramden&#13;
10 Prefix. meaning 47 Moslem title&#13;
vessel 48 Upper House (Fr.)&#13;
14 Eye part 49 Initials on a&#13;
15 Painter Claude - coin&#13;
16 Fusses 50 Type of firework&#13;
17 Vim (2wds.)&#13;
19 Walk like Amos 53 "_- corny as ... "&#13;
McCoy 55 Knocking sounds&#13;
20 Idol, a la Genesis 56 Apprehends&#13;
(2 wds.) 57 Show scorn&#13;
22 Part of m,p.h. 58 Dill herb&#13;
23 Was human 59 Smal' fly&#13;
24 Army officer (abbr.)60 More peculiar&#13;
25 -- Jane; ro 61 Actor Sparks. et&#13;
27 Ohio team&#13;
28 Part of a diamond&#13;
29 Try&#13;
30 Former campus&#13;
organization&#13;
31 Big name in&#13;
cartoons (2 wds.)&#13;
33 Car feature. for&#13;
short&#13;
34 Asian New Year&#13;
35 Harvey the cocktail&#13;
40 Pre---&#13;
10 Hi ss Harper. for&#13;
short&#13;
11 Fatty&#13;
12 "_- my prince&#13;
.111. .. "&#13;
13 Fish hawk&#13;
18 Prefix meaning foot&#13;
21 Classroom supply&#13;
26 Relative of ain't&#13;
28 Pointed remark&#13;
31 Author of "Our&#13;
Town"&#13;
32 Unit&#13;
33 Pianist Templeton&#13;
35 Side show attrllctfon&#13;
36 Nemesis of I&#13;
certain 40 (2 wds.)&#13;
37 - Eye&#13;
al.38 Invalidated&#13;
39 C&lt;!rtatn recipient&#13;
40 Ordinary&#13;
41 lionized&#13;
1 Affectionate ones 42 Abhors&#13;
2 Stated firmly 43 Word with maniac&#13;
3 Slows down or beauty&#13;
4 Purple shades 45 -- ear (listened)&#13;
5 "- old cowhand." "48 Posed&#13;
6 Tepee-shaped 51 Approximately&#13;
7 last in line (2 wds,)&#13;
8 Feted 52 Actress Darleen _&#13;
9 Stall in mud 54 High-speed plane&#13;
(Answers on JII8I S)&#13;
DOWN&#13;
WANTED&#13;
SIOO.OO REWARD&#13;
Information on substance when water is added its' size&#13;
increases 15 to 20 times and turns to rock.&#13;
C.II Daw., 652·2171</text>
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              <text>^University of Wisconsin - P arkside Student Life faces&#13;
reorganization&#13;
Injunction prevents full&#13;
enforcement of "Act"&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
Students applying for Federal&#13;
financial aid for college will not be&#13;
required to provide information&#13;
anymore as to their compliance&#13;
with Selective Service&#13;
registration requirements, according&#13;
to Jan Ocker, Director of&#13;
the Financial Aids office. Ocker&#13;
received word last week in a letter&#13;
from the U.S. Department of&#13;
Education, stating that students&#13;
would not be required to provide&#13;
information concerning Selective&#13;
Service registration status.&#13;
The letter came after the U.S.&#13;
District Court for the District of&#13;
Minnesota has issued a&#13;
pre lim inar y injunctio n&#13;
prohibiting the Department of&#13;
Education and the Selective&#13;
Service System from enforcing&#13;
section 1113 of the Department of&#13;
Defense Authorization Act for&#13;
1983.&#13;
The Act states that with the&#13;
1983-84 award year, any student&#13;
who is required to register for the&#13;
draft and who fails to do so is&#13;
ineligible for student financial aid&#13;
under Title IV of the Higher&#13;
Education Act of 1965.&#13;
If you are applying for Federal&#13;
financial aid (Pell Grant, Supplemental&#13;
Educational Opportunity&#13;
Grant, College Work -&#13;
Study, National Direct Student&#13;
Loan, Guaranteed Student / PLUS&#13;
Loan, and State Student Incentive&#13;
Grant Programs), until further&#13;
notice you are not required, as a&#13;
condition for receipt of such aid, to&#13;
provide information as to your&#13;
compliance with Selective Service&#13;
registration requirements.&#13;
This means that you need not&#13;
complete the portion of the&#13;
"Statement of Educational&#13;
Purpose / Registration Compliance"&#13;
in the "1983-84 Student&#13;
Aid Report" which inquires as to&#13;
your Selective Service&#13;
••••••&#13;
registration status. In addition,&#13;
you need not provide such information&#13;
(Mi any other form&#13;
which asks about your Selective&#13;
Service registration status as a&#13;
condition for receipt of Federal&#13;
aid.&#13;
Depending on the outcome of a&#13;
court case, however, you may be&#13;
required to provide information&#13;
concerning your Selective Service&#13;
registration status at a later date.&#13;
Should such a requirement take&#13;
effect, your receipt of Federal&#13;
financial aid could be delayed if&#13;
you have not, by that time,&#13;
provided information as to your&#13;
registration status. For this&#13;
reason, you are encouraged to&#13;
provide this information voluntarily&#13;
now.&#13;
Depending on the outcome of the&#13;
court case, however, students&#13;
may be required to provide information&#13;
concerning their&#13;
Selective Service status in what is&#13;
called a "Statement of&#13;
Educational Purpose /&#13;
Registration Compliance" at a&#13;
later date.&#13;
Should the injunction be&#13;
revoked, however, possible delay&#13;
later of a student's receipt of Title&#13;
IV financial aid could occur, so.the&#13;
student can voluntarily supply the&#13;
Statement of Registration&#13;
Compliance this year.&#13;
The injunction prevents the Act&#13;
from being enforced, so students&#13;
are not required to provide any&#13;
information which asks for&#13;
Selective Service status as a&#13;
condition for receipt of financial&#13;
aid.&#13;
Financial aid under Title IV&#13;
includes the Pell Grant, Supplemental&#13;
Educational Opportunity&#13;
Grant, College Work -&#13;
Study, National Direct Student&#13;
Loan, Guaranteed Student / PLUS&#13;
Loan, and State Student Incentive&#13;
Grant Programs. Counting that&#13;
pniiRTH ANNUAL Students Awards Banquet had about&#13;
* M!«+c in attendance. Student Organizations selected two&#13;
tefs frl wmn their organizations for Distinguished&#13;
ic A „«h Q and Luis Vallde uli was given the campus - ®. Awar^, and LUIS AWARD OTHER AWARD WJN.&#13;
RANGER - Andy Buchanan and Pat Hensiak; PSGA -&#13;
are: RANGER Anay ^ Va||dejulj/ PAB . Chrjs&#13;
ne&#13;
,&#13;
BuenM u Npkon and Jim Reeves, PEER SUPPORT -&#13;
imelev, Neil ana and SOC - Carla Thomas,&#13;
Mulligan and chroeder. The Presidents Award was&#13;
rie Olson and Dave S Advlsor 0f the Year was given to&#13;
i to Terry Tunks, andthe^Adv.s ^ rjght/ rQW one# Terry&#13;
ilyn Bugenhagen. Pitfurea ^ paf Hensjak/ Rat&#13;
:ker, Dave "Schroeder.&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Office of Student Life is&#13;
being reorganized to bring it in&#13;
line with other UW-System&#13;
campuses and to make the accountability&#13;
of some organizations&#13;
normally a part of Student Life&#13;
clearer, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Carla Stoffle said.&#13;
The reorganization will make&#13;
the Union administration directly&#13;
responsible to Stoffle, and move&#13;
services like the Child Care&#13;
Center and the Student Health&#13;
Office to Community Student&#13;
Services.&#13;
The position of dean of student&#13;
life will be frozen after the contract&#13;
of the current dean, Dave&#13;
Pedersen, expires. The freeze and&#13;
the Union reorganization will be in&#13;
effect for a one - year "interim&#13;
period," Stoffle said.&#13;
The move of the Child Care&#13;
Center and the Student Health&#13;
Office are expected to be permanent&#13;
changes. They will continue&#13;
to be funded by SUFAC,&#13;
however.&#13;
Stoffle said the Student Activities&#13;
Coordinator, Buddy&#13;
Couvion, and the Director of the&#13;
Union, Bill Heibuhr, will be taking&#13;
on additional duties.&#13;
"They're going to have to play&#13;
more of a campus role," she said.&#13;
"There are committees that the&#13;
dean of student life has served on&#13;
representing both and one or the&#13;
other will have to take over that&#13;
role."&#13;
The Bookstore and Food Service&#13;
will report to the Union during the&#13;
interim period.&#13;
and other state grants, loans and&#13;
scholarships, about one in three&#13;
Parkside students receive aid,&#13;
which totals more than 1.7 million&#13;
dollars.&#13;
DAVE PEDERSEN&#13;
Planning for next year is&#13;
proceeding along the new lines of&#13;
organization. "I've talked to some&#13;
people (in the Union) and I've&#13;
talked to some students and I'm&#13;
waiting for student government to&#13;
get a chance to think about it and&#13;
give me some input," she said.&#13;
"If they have some real&#13;
problems with it, I'll have to stop&#13;
and think about it and work it&#13;
through."&#13;
One of Pedersen's duties,&#13;
student discipline, will be taken&#13;
over by Jenny Price, Stoffle's&#13;
administrative assistant. Price&#13;
has a degree in law and held the&#13;
position of judicial officer on a&#13;
larger campus before coming to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"The responsibility is one which&#13;
is appropriate with Jenny's&#13;
background," Stoffle said.&#13;
Pedersen will be taking a&#13;
position as Dean of Student Affairs&#13;
at Southern Connecticut&#13;
University, a school with a&#13;
population of 11,000 to 12,000&#13;
students, located in New Haven,&#13;
CT.&#13;
UTIC teaching fellowship granted&#13;
Two Parkside assistant&#13;
professors, Laura Gellott, history,&#13;
and Michael Gurtman,&#13;
psychology, have been named&#13;
Lilly Post Doctoral Teaching&#13;
Fellows through a grant received&#13;
by the UW System Undergraduate&#13;
Teaching Improvement Council&#13;
(UTIC) from the Lilly Endowment,&#13;
Inc., of Indianapolis.&#13;
The fellowships, which were&#13;
granted to 10 UW System faculty,&#13;
are designed to provide professors&#13;
early in their teaching careers&#13;
released time from teaching&#13;
assignments to explore and&#13;
develop more effective teaching&#13;
methods.&#13;
Parkside Prof. Peter S. Hoff,&#13;
English and humanities, will&#13;
serve as project director for&#13;
Lilly's UW System fellowship&#13;
program. Hoff also is executive&#13;
director of UTIC.&#13;
The UW System is the second&#13;
state university system nationwide&#13;
to be awarded fellowships&#13;
from the Lilly endowment&#13;
program (Pennsylvania was the&#13;
first).&#13;
Gellott, who received her&#13;
master's degree from Marquette&#13;
University and her PhD from UWMadison,&#13;
and Gurtman, who&#13;
earned his master's and PhD&#13;
degrees at the University of&#13;
Connecticut at Storrs, joined&#13;
Parkside last fall.&#13;
Their fellowships total $7,440; a&#13;
total of nearly $50,000 has been&#13;
awarded to the UW System&#13;
through the program.&#13;
Both Gellott and Gurtman will&#13;
work on projects this summer that&#13;
will be the basis of new courses&#13;
here next fall.&#13;
Gellott, whose area of&#13;
specialization is the study of&#13;
authoritarian society in central&#13;
Europe in the 1930's, will develop&#13;
a multi - disciplinary approach to&#13;
that topic through application of,&#13;
among others, theories of&#13;
psychology and economics.&#13;
Gurtman will develop a&#13;
"building blocks" approach to&#13;
teaching theories of statistics to&#13;
psychology majors by implementing&#13;
innovative teaching&#13;
methods such as computer -&#13;
assisted instruction using bar&#13;
graphs and by focusing on small&#13;
group problem - solving.&#13;
Gellott and Gurtman will attend&#13;
UTIC's Faculty College in&#13;
Marinette, Wis. this June and a&#13;
two - week institute for teaching&#13;
improvement in Madison this&#13;
August as well as a number of&#13;
seminars.&#13;
Parkside Prof. Beecham&#13;
Robinson, education, will be an&#13;
instructor at the Madison institute.&#13;
History professor Thomas&#13;
C. Reeves and psychology&#13;
professor Donald A. Walter will&#13;
serve as summer project advisers&#13;
to Gellott and Gurtman. When&#13;
Gellott and Gurtman complete&#13;
their projects, an additional $600&#13;
will be awarded to Parkside for&#13;
teach ing impr ovem ent&#13;
workshops.&#13;
Scholarship day honors many&#13;
Nearly 70 students received&#13;
awards and honors during this&#13;
year's Scholarship Day, held last&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Sponsored by the Campus&#13;
Awards and Ceremonies Committee,&#13;
the program included an&#13;
address by professor of e ducation&#13;
Teresa Peck, and music by the&#13;
university's Chamber Singers,&#13;
directed by music professor&#13;
William Weinert.&#13;
The event also included&#13;
remarks by Parkside alumnus&#13;
Rodger DeRose, marketing&#13;
manager of over - the - counter&#13;
products for Rondelle&#13;
Laboratories, Inc., a subsidiary of&#13;
S.C. Johnson &amp; Son, Inc.&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin&#13;
presented the awards.&#13;
SCHOLARSHIPS&#13;
« C. Tallent Scholarships&#13;
of $400 each, which memorialize&#13;
the former dean of the university's&#13;
Kenosha campus, went to&#13;
Todd Laszewski (Mathematics /&#13;
Applied Science), Caledonia;&#13;
Joanne M. Myers (Business&#13;
Management / Communication),&#13;
Racine; and Kenneth Wilhelm&#13;
(Psychology / Labor and Industrial&#13;
Relations), Racine.&#13;
The Joanne M. Esser&#13;
Scholarship of $400, fo r a student&#13;
interested in ecology, went to&#13;
Thomas Siewert (Music / Earth&#13;
Science), Racine.&#13;
Kenneth L. Greenquist&#13;
Scholarships of $300 e ach, which&#13;
are named for the former&#13;
University regent and Racine&#13;
attorney and civic leader, were&#13;
awarded to Marijean Merrick&#13;
(Engineering Technology),&#13;
Kenosha; and Diane Vaccareilo&#13;
(Medical Technology / English),&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie scholarships of&#13;
$250 each, named for UWParkside's&#13;
founding chancellor,&#13;
went to Mary Barranco (Communication&#13;
/ Labor and Industrial&#13;
Relations), Racine; and Joseph&#13;
Shea (Life Science), Racine.&#13;
William W. Petrie Labor and&#13;
Industrial Relations Scholarships&#13;
of $250 went to Bonnie McDonnell,&#13;
South Milwaukee; and Maria&#13;
Veronico, Burlington.&#13;
The Robert Bauer Scholarship&#13;
of $200, to memorialize the UWParkside&#13;
life science graduate&#13;
who drowned last year in&#13;
Hayward, Wis., went to Edward&#13;
Randle, Kenosha.&#13;
The Johnson Wax Award of $100&#13;
Continued On Page Eight &#13;
2 Thursday, May 5,1983 RANGER&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
Custodians receive support&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
I am writing this letter for my&#13;
friends in the janitorial department&#13;
who work for us, the&#13;
students. I am concerned for our&#13;
school and their jobs here. We are&#13;
about to lose our janitors to the&#13;
night shift. I know that most of the&#13;
students here could care less&#13;
about that, but I am concerned&#13;
because this will affect us, the&#13;
students who attend Parkside.&#13;
There have been many comments,&#13;
some of them published in the&#13;
Ranger in the past, about how&#13;
dirty our school is. This is doomed&#13;
to be worse if the janitors go to&#13;
night shift. It isn't just that the&#13;
janitors won't do their jobs on&#13;
nights, but is instead, that there&#13;
won't be anyone here to do the job&#13;
during the day.&#13;
Many people don't realize how&#13;
much the janitors do during the&#13;
day. They are the ones that clean&#13;
up the messes in the halls, empty&#13;
the full trash cans during the day&#13;
and try to keep our school as clean&#13;
as possible. They are the ones that&#13;
you go to when there is no soap in&#13;
the restrooms or the paper towels&#13;
run out. They are also the ones&#13;
that you contact when you don't&#13;
know who else to see about no&#13;
lights in a classroom or when&#13;
someone has spilt something and&#13;
you want to have the mess cleaned&#13;
up before it makes a bigger mess.&#13;
I know that I have gone to the&#13;
janitors several times each&#13;
semester for minor things that&#13;
needed to be done. I don't feel that&#13;
it is fair for us, the students, to&#13;
have to put up with full trash cans&#13;
in the middle of the day, or&#13;
ashtrays that are running over, no&#13;
toilet paper in the bathrooms, or&#13;
no resource person who can help&#13;
us in a myriad of small problems.&#13;
I believe that this proposed&#13;
change should have been looked&#13;
into more thoroughly before being&#13;
done for the sake of the&#13;
cleanliness of Parkside.&#13;
The point of this letter is that we&#13;
students deserve a clean school.&#13;
This won't be possible if the&#13;
janitors are on night shift. There&#13;
won't be anyone here to keep it&#13;
clean. The only people who will be&#13;
able to seethe buildings clean will&#13;
be those who have classes early in&#13;
the mornings. The rest of the&#13;
students will have to deal with&#13;
mounting trash and accumulated&#13;
dirt. We need to become concerned&#13;
with the janitor's plight as&#13;
it does effect us as students.&#13;
Barbara Johnson&#13;
Threat to overthrow&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Through your newspaper I wish&#13;
to inform the students of this&#13;
University of a very active group&#13;
that is planning to overthrow part&#13;
of our bureaucracy. Following is&#13;
an explanation of the&#13;
revolutionary ideas of our group.&#13;
This group is adopting the name&#13;
"N.P.S.G.A." (the Not Parkside&#13;
Stu den t G o ver n m ent&#13;
Association). Anyone may join&#13;
our organization which is headed&#13;
by both members and ex -&#13;
members of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
which are discontent with the&#13;
current leadership of the Senate.&#13;
The President of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. has forbid us from airing our&#13;
differences in public so we, the&#13;
N.P.S.G.A. members are&#13;
revolting against bureaucratic&#13;
censorship.&#13;
Here's to you Mr. President —&#13;
"Arriba, arriba the Revolution!"&#13;
In the past P.S.G.A., Inc. has&#13;
been known for "bending" the&#13;
rules in the Constitution. For&#13;
example, on the meeting of April&#13;
27, 1983, the Senate illegally appointed&#13;
a new Assistant President&#13;
Pro - Tempore. This decision was&#13;
mostly due to the ignorance of the&#13;
Senate about their own rules&#13;
which their Vice - President&#13;
neglected to clarify. While we're&#13;
discussing fishy issues within the&#13;
Senate, let's review Tammy&#13;
Millager's termination from&#13;
employment, or as the Senate&#13;
called it "temporary suspension."&#13;
Lack of communication at its best.&#13;
But the Vice - President says it's&#13;
all been legal. A likely story, Mr.&#13;
Spoon, have you read your Constitution&#13;
lately!&#13;
Some reporters in Ranger and&#13;
other sources of information&#13;
claim that the students don't know&#13;
who the President and Vice -&#13;
President of their P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
are. Well, those of us who belong&#13;
to the N.P.S.G.A. are reminded&#13;
every day who the people "in&#13;
power" are. We are the oppressed&#13;
!!&#13;
Soon will come the time for a&#13;
new era to begin. Fellow&#13;
revolutionaries of Parkside, the&#13;
coup d'etat will happen very soon.&#13;
Be ready to march down to the&#13;
Union Square (aka Red Square)&#13;
and justice at once will soon&#13;
return to this University.&#13;
Remember that the coup d'etat is&#13;
near and that you have been&#13;
warned. So, when you least expect&#13;
it . . . expect it. If you wish more&#13;
information, our source of contact&#13;
will be the Ranger. If you can't&#13;
find us, one of our soldiers of&#13;
revolution will find you.&#13;
Just one more point, to the&#13;
Executive Board of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc.: We can do this two ways —&#13;
either you surrender peacefully or&#13;
we will be forced to do it for you.&#13;
The Angry Oppressed!&#13;
More letters&#13;
Reader argues&#13;
To the Editors,&#13;
The Ranger seems to have a&#13;
double standard when it comes to&#13;
an individual's freedom. The&#13;
editor is appalled by government&#13;
restriction of sexual freedom, but&#13;
on the same page advocates&#13;
restrictions of e conomic freedom.&#13;
Apparently, in the Ranger's eyes,&#13;
it is alright for the government to&#13;
peer into one's bankbook, but not&#13;
into one's bedroom. My letter's&#13;
main issue of freedom in general&#13;
is clearly related to Senator&#13;
Hasten's important victory.&#13;
Freedoms must come together&#13;
as an inseparable group to have&#13;
any real long lasting value. As a&#13;
natural right they can't be doled&#13;
out here and there by government.&#13;
If freedoms can be denied singly&#13;
by government we risk losing&#13;
them all one by one. In the words&#13;
of David Hume, "It is seldom that&#13;
liberty of any kind is lost all at&#13;
once." The Ranger is wrong in&#13;
believing that we have the luxury&#13;
of selecting which freedoms are&#13;
important. The truth is that they&#13;
all are important. It is an all or&#13;
nothing situation in the long run.&#13;
On the specific issue of the&#13;
editorial I really can't understand&#13;
the Ranger's reasons or logic in&#13;
attacking Senator Hasten for&#13;
opposing the withholding tax. The&#13;
editorial's argument is full of&#13;
holes and hard to believe in&#13;
places. The tax is not new, but the&#13;
method of collecting is. There is&#13;
no evidence to suggest widespread&#13;
"cheating" on paying what the&#13;
government decides is owed.&#13;
There is no reason to believe,&#13;
either, that any more money will&#13;
be taken in with this new law.&#13;
Besides the government already&#13;
gets the same information from&#13;
the financial institutions. All they&#13;
have to do is match this information&#13;
with the tax return to&#13;
determine compliance. Finally,&#13;
the cost of this new law would be&#13;
borne, as always, by the consumer&#13;
in the form of higher loan interest&#13;
rates, less service, and tighter&#13;
restrictions on issuing loans. The&#13;
costs far outweigh any benefits.&#13;
The withholding issue concerns&#13;
everyone's freedom. Attacking a&#13;
minority makes it so much easier&#13;
to eventually rob us all of our&#13;
freedom. Whenever someone&#13;
wants to make an issue popular all&#13;
he has to do is say that it is against&#13;
the "rich". I wish somebody&#13;
would define "rich" for me and&#13;
please tell me why it is so terrible.&#13;
A premise of the Ranger's&#13;
argument is that one's income is&#13;
the government's first and the&#13;
individual's second. Shouldn't it&#13;
be the other way around?&#13;
Shouldn't people be "rewarded"&#13;
by keeping what they've earned?&#13;
It is a radical idea, but it just may&#13;
prove to be popular.&#13;
The term "unearned income" is&#13;
misleading and even derogatory&#13;
to those who have interest and&#13;
dividend income. (Incidently, only&#13;
an insignificant amount of my&#13;
almost nonexistent income is from&#13;
this source.) The government has&#13;
a lot of gall to say that an individual&#13;
did nothing to earn interest&#13;
and dividends. One has to&#13;
pay taxes over and over on the&#13;
same money. Government&#13;
taxation does nothing to encourage&#13;
working, saving, and&#13;
investing. Many of our problems&#13;
are linked to our economy. These&#13;
problems are too great to be&#13;
solved by government. It's best to&#13;
leave them to a more powerful&#13;
and effective force, the free&#13;
market. We will find that when&#13;
our economic ills are cured in this&#13;
manner we shall have relatively&#13;
few problems. More important,&#13;
we will still be free.&#13;
I really don't believe the Ranger&#13;
when they chide Senator Hasten&#13;
for his "unheard of behavior" in&#13;
the Senate. I'm sure that if a&#13;
freshman senator spoke strongly&#13;
against, say, U. S. intervention in&#13;
Latin America, you would have&#13;
praised him for his valiant stand&#13;
against the established tradition. I&#13;
also really doubt the statement&#13;
about the Senate never being quite&#13;
the same. I'm sure that it will&#13;
recover. As for your allusion to&#13;
Senator Joseph McCarthy, the two&#13;
are quite the opposite. McCarthy's&#13;
actions harmed the innocent and&#13;
attempted to control people.&#13;
Hasten's action helped people by&#13;
letting them hold on to some&#13;
economic freedom and stemming&#13;
the tide of government control&#13;
over more aspects of our lives. His&#13;
stand does fit in with the larger&#13;
scheme of things. When we have&#13;
kept this one freedom we have&#13;
helped to insure the rest. We&#13;
should thank Senator Hasten for&#13;
his uphill struggle.&#13;
My specific feelings on the&#13;
editorial bring me back to my&#13;
issue of freedom in general and&#13;
what we can do to preserve it. This&#13;
nation was founded on the ideal of&#13;
freedom for the individual. Our&#13;
Founding Fathers recognized that&#13;
any style of government oppresses&#13;
the individual. Thomas&#13;
Paine remarked, "Government,&#13;
even its best state, is but a&#13;
necessary evil; in its worst state&#13;
an intolerable one." Any government&#13;
act infringes on the freedom&#13;
of the individual. (Perhaps the&#13;
advantage of democracy is that&#13;
we get to choose our own oppressors.)&#13;
A minimalist view of&#13;
government was advocated and&#13;
accepted to best protect the individual.&#13;
&#13;
We seem to be slipping away&#13;
from our original ideals. It is not&#13;
due to some outside force. By&#13;
demanding more and more from&#13;
government we are slowly losing&#13;
control over our lives. By&#13;
believing that government makes&#13;
the best decisions for us and can&#13;
solve all of our problems robs us of&#13;
our individuality. In the process&#13;
we shall surrender all our personal&#13;
freedom and have it&#13;
replaced by the dictates of some&#13;
Big Brother. (Plato felt that of all&#13;
forms of government democracy&#13;
was the most prone to dictatorship.)&#13;
We just can't continue&#13;
to expect to receive government&#13;
benefits and say that they are&#13;
"free". In the long run the price is&#13;
just too high to pay. The only&#13;
limits to the oppression of&#13;
government is the power with&#13;
which the people show themselves&#13;
capable of opposing it. Think&#13;
about it.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Arnold S. Parise&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene Torkilsen&#13;
Herbert Kubly&#13;
ganger&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Assistant Business Manager&#13;
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STAFF&#13;
Buenktr0" ^hrm Ter&#13;
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' Maureen Burke, Jeanne&#13;
Patriril r, mhP£;&#13;
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KortenHirL ^h&#13;
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' Michael Kailas, Carol&#13;
Reuhnrn M ,&#13;
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Robb Luehr&#13;
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Tunkiec"' P ean Scarbr&lt;&gt;ugh, Dave Schroeder, Jennie&#13;
uw&#13;
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rksidc« «—»•&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER WlSCOnSi&#13;
°'&#13;
SEI KMIW Ranger!University of Wisconsin&#13;
s i ' r a r&#13;
s , a n d a r d s i z e&#13;
eluded for verification. signed and a telephone number inNames&#13;
will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
reserves a°l SiXr'a? pT^S^'n refusing fo^nt^lett" Thursday&#13;
" The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content. print letters which contain false or &#13;
Thursday, May 5,1983&#13;
Kreuser talks about&#13;
his term as president&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
One of the most frequently used&#13;
comments people make about&#13;
student government is that they&#13;
don't know what goes on in PSGA.&#13;
Indeed, some people don't even&#13;
know who the current PSGA&#13;
president is. But the past&#13;
president knows what it's like, and&#13;
he was in office for two years, the&#13;
most anyone can be president. His&#13;
name is Jim Kreuser.&#13;
Kreuser, a junior majoring in&#13;
Political Science, was in PSGA his&#13;
freshman year, and ran for&#13;
president in 1981. He won over&#13;
three other candidates by a 281&#13;
vote margin. Last year he was re -&#13;
elected in a tight election, winning&#13;
by only 25 votes.&#13;
Kreuser had many priorities&#13;
when he took office. One was more&#13;
student involvement in government.&#13;
&#13;
"One of my biggest emphases&#13;
when I came in was to have&#13;
students sit on faculty committees,&#13;
because under the shared&#13;
governance concept, under law we&#13;
have rights as voting members on&#13;
faculty committees, and it wasn't&#13;
being done before I came into&#13;
office," Kreuser said. During his&#13;
administration, Jim states that all&#13;
committee seats available to&#13;
students were full, some of which&#13;
he sat on himself.&#13;
"There is an enormous amount&#13;
of committees that exist that&#13;
students can participate on, and&#13;
probably more students should be&#13;
made aware of it. But as long as&#13;
they were full, I really didn't&#13;
worry about it too much, just to&#13;
make sure that people were&#13;
reporting and the right things&#13;
were being done," he said.&#13;
While Kreuser was in office, two&#13;
seats were made available to&#13;
students on the Environmental&#13;
Concerns committee, two on the&#13;
Graduate Programming committee,&#13;
one on Campus planning&#13;
and in August, the president of&#13;
PSGA will sit on the Faculty&#13;
Senate as a non - voting member,&#13;
but a member nontheless. "This is&#13;
a big advance for the students&#13;
because they can now have more&#13;
input in matters that concern&#13;
them," says Jim. "That's the crux&#13;
of student government, to play an&#13;
active role in all the institutional&#13;
decision - making process that&#13;
goes on in an institution."&#13;
Kreuser also felt that he had to&#13;
play a role outside of Parkside. He&#13;
says that decisions in state and&#13;
local government affect students&#13;
more than many realize.&#13;
"I think state issues are important&#13;
because state legislators&#13;
are more accessible and we have&#13;
more influence," he said. "On the&#13;
national level, we have one vote.&#13;
In the state legislature, we have&#13;
two senate votes and six&#13;
representative votes that we can&#13;
affect, just in this area."&#13;
Kreuser sums up how he feels&#13;
student government should work&#13;
in three words: educate, agitate,&#13;
and legislate. "This is how student&#13;
government should work," he&#13;
says. Educate by letting senators&#13;
know who he has been talking to,&#13;
and what's going on with administration&#13;
and faculty. Agitate&#13;
on campus and outside the&#13;
campus when student issues arise.&#13;
Legislate by passing resolutions&#13;
against things that infringe on&#13;
student rights.&#13;
Some "tangible things" Kreuser&#13;
points to as accomplishments&#13;
while he was president is his work&#13;
with the Union Pad, infant care,&#13;
putting shelves in the bathrooms,&#13;
and a great deal of time and effort&#13;
in establishing the shared&#13;
governance concept with Walter&#13;
Feldt, Secretary of the Faculty. A&#13;
special task force was set up of&#13;
administrators, students and&#13;
faculty to work out a way to get&#13;
students involved with some of the&#13;
decision - making under shared&#13;
governance, signed into law under&#13;
Governor Lucey.&#13;
Also, Parkside played host to&#13;
two United Council meetings for&#13;
the first time.&#13;
Kreuser credits much of what&#13;
he has done this last year to his&#13;
vice - president, Chuck Betz. Betz&#13;
was the first V. P. to finish his&#13;
term in five years, Kreuser said,&#13;
"He's 10 times better than either&#13;
V. P.'s I had last year. He did a lot&#13;
of follow - up for me in the&#13;
senate."&#13;
When asked about criticism he&#13;
received that he was inaccessible,&#13;
he replied, "Why should I be&#13;
sitting in the PSGA office waiting&#13;
for students to come in - killing&#13;
time - when I could be at a faculty&#13;
meeting or studying?"&#13;
"I don't think there was a note&#13;
on my door or desk that I didn't&#13;
answer. I seemed like I always&#13;
had somewhere to go."&#13;
Kreuser pointed out that if&#13;
anything goes wrong with PSGA,&#13;
the president seems to always get&#13;
the blame. "Does the president&#13;
have to answer to all the problems&#13;
with PSGA? I think the Senators&#13;
can answer many questions that&#13;
come the president's way."&#13;
What does he think about the&#13;
future of PSGA? Get out of the&#13;
book business (book exchange),&#13;
and possibly hand it over to a&#13;
student organization for a money -&#13;
maker. Also, always keep student&#13;
seats in committees full, keep&#13;
fully aware of SUFAC reserves at&#13;
u *&#13;
A!"&#13;
ES&#13;
Rf&#13;
P&#13;
*&#13;
ES&#13;
,&#13;
ENJ&#13;
AT'YE demonstrates an Epson personal computer at the Computer Fair,&#13;
held last Saturday in Main Place. On the corner of the table is an Epson 8K desktop computer,&#13;
sitting on its carrying case.&#13;
all times, and get to know faculty&#13;
on committees better.&#13;
And what about the current&#13;
PSGA president and what advice&#13;
does he give to him? "Phil is&#13;
concerned, and I am glad&#13;
someone from PSGA won. He has&#13;
to develop his own style. If he can&#13;
mobilize the Senators to work on&#13;
issues and follow through, he'll&#13;
have a great deal less to do and&#13;
more time for the students."&#13;
If you could run again and did in&#13;
this last election, would you have&#13;
won?&#13;
"By 100 votes," Kreuser said.&#13;
Political science internships&#13;
The Public Service Internship&#13;
Program (PSIP) at Parkside has&#13;
summer and fall openings for&#13;
students who wish to earn political&#13;
science credits as interns in local,&#13;
state or national government&#13;
agencies.&#13;
PSIP students get practical&#13;
experience in working in political&#13;
campaigns, helping with legal&#13;
services for the poor, solving&#13;
constituent problems for&#13;
legislators, assisting local administrators&#13;
in providing comMadison&#13;
students reach dorm settlement&#13;
The owners of a private dormitory&#13;
have settled out - of - court&#13;
with a group of Madison students,&#13;
agreeing to reimburse, the&#13;
students $50,000 in security&#13;
deposits and to repay or replace&#13;
meal tickets.&#13;
The settlement ends one portion&#13;
of the students' suit against former&#13;
and current owners of&#13;
Wisconsin Hall, a private facility.&#13;
Students had been caught between&#13;
a former manager who declared&#13;
bankruptcy, former owners who&#13;
refused to honor dorm contracts,&#13;
but not their pre - paid meal&#13;
tickets. Under terms of the settlement,&#13;
Germantown Trust will&#13;
compensate students with new&#13;
meal tickets or pay for money&#13;
spent on food, says attorney Tom&#13;
Glowacki.&#13;
The bank, and Wisconsin Hall's&#13;
current manager, A1 Beauchaine,&#13;
aren't admitting legal responsibility,&#13;
says Glowacki, but don't&#13;
want to victimize innocent&#13;
students. The bank's action should&#13;
help restore Wisconsin Hall's&#13;
reputation, he says. (NOCR)&#13;
munity services, working with&#13;
planning agencies and assisting&#13;
local court agencies.&#13;
Students can earn from three to&#13;
six academic credits as interns.&#13;
In the past, PSIP interns have&#13;
worked for Congressman Les&#13;
Aspin, the city of Kenosha, the&#13;
Racine Jail Alternatives&#13;
Program, the Kenosha Police&#13;
Department, the Racine Police&#13;
Department, the Racine County&#13;
Public Defender's Office, the&#13;
Kenosha District Attorney's&#13;
Office, the Wisconsin Department&#13;
of Local Affairs and Development,&#13;
the Racine County Juvenile Court,&#13;
the Racine Clerk of Courts, the&#13;
Kenosha County Juvenile Court&#13;
and numerous other public and&#13;
private agencies.&#13;
Persons interested in enrolling&#13;
in the PSIP program can pick up&#13;
application forms in WLLC 344 or&#13;
phone the university's office of&#13;
Community Outreach at 553-2032.&#13;
Extension workshops:&#13;
cameras § edible plants&#13;
The University Extension at&#13;
Parkside is offering two&#13;
workshops this month, one on&#13;
gathering edible wild plants, and&#13;
the other on vacation&#13;
photography.&#13;
The photography class, taught&#13;
by Paul Flagg, will cover what&#13;
equipment to consider taking,&#13;
what films to take and how to care&#13;
for them, camera technique,&#13;
composition, and some measures&#13;
to take if and when photographic&#13;
disaster strikes.&#13;
The class will be taught on&#13;
Monday, May 16 and Monday,&#13;
May 23 in Tallent Hall. Fee for the&#13;
class is $7.&#13;
The course on edible plants will&#13;
show you how to use plants grown&#13;
in the wild in hundreds of dishes.&#13;
Easily recognized plants will be&#13;
identified by Eugene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, a Parkside&#13;
professor of earth science.&#13;
The course will meet on&#13;
Thursday, May 12 and Thursday,&#13;
May 19, and includes two Saturday&#13;
field trips, on May 14 and 21.&#13;
Correction&#13;
Materials needed for the class&#13;
include a field notebook, pocket&#13;
knife, rucksack or plastic bags&#13;
and a sauce pan for cooking. Fee&#13;
for the class is $22.&#13;
Registrations for both classes&#13;
are being taken by the UW - Extension,&#13;
phone 553-2312.&#13;
^•attention^H&#13;
INTERESTED STUDENTS&#13;
PSGA IS LOOKING FOR STUDENTS&#13;
FOR SUFAC AND FACULTY COMMITTEES&#13;
ALSO FOR THE POSITION OF&#13;
PSGACHIEF JUSTICE&#13;
Contact - Phil Pogreba in PSGA Office&#13;
***•*•••****•••********************&#13;
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PROFESSIONAL&#13;
WORD PROCESSING&#13;
• Ideal for Cover Letters&#13;
and Resumes.&#13;
# Call — BETTER LETTERS&#13;
(312) 6620148&#13;
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•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••A HAY 21&amp;22 &#13;
4 Thursday, May 5,1983 RANGER&#13;
THE ARMY ROTC 2-YEAR&#13;
PROGRAM. UP TO $1,000 A YEAR&#13;
PUIS A COMMISSION.&#13;
If you passed up Army&#13;
ROTC during your first two&#13;
years of college, you can&#13;
enroll in our 2-year proS&#13;
am before you start your&#13;
st two.&#13;
Your training will start&#13;
the summer after your&#13;
sophomore year at a six-week&#13;
Army ROTC Basic Camp.&#13;
It'll pay off, too. You'll&#13;
earn over $400 for attending&#13;
Basic Camp and up to&#13;
$1,000 a year for your last&#13;
two years of college.&#13;
But, more important,&#13;
you'll be on your way to earning&#13;
a commission in today's&#13;
Army—which includes the&#13;
Army Reserve and Army&#13;
National Guard—while you're&#13;
earning a college degree.&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BEALLYOUCANBE.&#13;
Contact address&#13;
ENROLLMENT OFFICER&#13;
MARQUETTE UNIV.&#13;
ARMY ROTC&#13;
CALL COLLECT&#13;
(414) 224-7195/7229&#13;
Astronomer to speak&#13;
on planetary geology&#13;
Dr. Peter H. Schultz of the&#13;
Lunar and Planetary Institute in&#13;
Houston, Texas will be speaking&#13;
at Parkside on Thursday at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in GRNQ. 103 and Friday at 1&#13;
p.m. in Grq. 103. Dr. Schultz&#13;
focuses his research on planetary&#13;
surface processes, especially&#13;
impact cratering. Schultz who&#13;
took his doctorate from the&#13;
University of Texas in astronomy&#13;
with a strong background in&#13;
geology is also a member of the&#13;
Planetary Geology Speakers&#13;
Bureau. The Planetary Geology&#13;
Speakers Bureau is a national&#13;
lecturer program sponsored by&#13;
the National Aeronautics and&#13;
Space Administration and&#13;
coordinated by Arizona State&#13;
University.&#13;
Planetary geology is an interdisciplinary&#13;
science which has&#13;
been grown from infancy in less&#13;
than two decades. Unlike&#13;
traditional geologists who are&#13;
concerned with the development&#13;
of planet Earth, planetary&#13;
geologists address questions&#13;
about the origin and evolution of&#13;
the solid surfaces of planets and&#13;
their natural satellites and seek to&#13;
place terrestrial and extraterrestrial&#13;
geologic processes&#13;
into a unified framework of&#13;
knowledge. Planetary geologists&#13;
view extraterrestrial environments&#13;
as great geologic&#13;
experiments running under&#13;
conditions differing from those on&#13;
Earth which must inevitably&#13;
result in improvements to our&#13;
understanding of natural&#13;
terrestrial processes.&#13;
The talks Thursday, entitled&#13;
"Target Earth — Effects of Large&#13;
Body Impacts", and Friday,&#13;
entitl ed ''P lan eta ry&#13;
Catastrophes", are co - sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Geology and&#13;
Physics Programs and the Racine&#13;
Geological Society. Everyone is&#13;
welcome to attend either or both&#13;
of the talks.&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
UWPDT&#13;
The Parkside Challenge has&#13;
been postponed one week, because&#13;
none of the other schools in the&#13;
UW system have had enough&#13;
nerve to register yet. As a result,&#13;
we have begun a systematic&#13;
assault on the other schools good&#13;
names. We expect some sort of a&#13;
response very shortly. The&#13;
Parkside Challenge will take&#13;
place, in the Union Recreation&#13;
Center, on May 14. «&#13;
The Dart Team is also having a&#13;
fund raising drive. The let's buy a&#13;
real Dart Board fund has $8 so far.&#13;
Come on, folks. We have over 60&#13;
members. If you can't afford the&#13;
price of a large beverage from the&#13;
Union, you can't afford your&#13;
tuition. Go up to the Student Life&#13;
Office, Union 209, and give Marcy&#13;
75 cents. Help us save a sport that&#13;
has been around over 400 years. In&#13;
other words, cough up some&#13;
change you bunch of cheap college&#13;
- educated slime.&#13;
The UWPDT is planning a trip&#13;
to the Brewers game on May 27.&#13;
CLUB EVENTS^*********&#13;
Any interested members, or non&#13;
members, are encouraged to&#13;
attend the next Dart Team&#13;
meeting Monday at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Molinaro 126. We will be cooking&#13;
Johns on ville Brats before the&#13;
game. Good luck on your finals.&#13;
DST&#13;
Delta Sigma Theta, Inc. will be&#13;
holding a rush party on Thursday,&#13;
May 5 in Union 104, to open its&#13;
membership to women at&#13;
Parkside. Delta Sigma Theta is a&#13;
national public service sorority,&#13;
dedicated to the principles of&#13;
community service and academic&#13;
excellence.&#13;
Chess&#13;
The Chess Club would like to&#13;
thank everyone who entered our&#13;
Spring Tournament, and everyone&#13;
who helped make it happen. If you&#13;
didn't participate, you can show&#13;
up at our meetings next week and&#13;
we'll forgive you. The Chess Club&#13;
is also looking for groupies, so just&#13;
report to Union 207 fro m 6 to 10&#13;
p.m. on Tuesday or Moln D-133&#13;
between 1 and 4 p.m. on Wednesday.&#13;
You won't have to stay&#13;
four hours (it doesn't take long).&#13;
Our next meeting's agenda: The&#13;
Psychotherapy for Chess&#13;
Disorders Committees will report&#13;
on a new phobia — fear of entering&#13;
chess tournaments; 4-D chess&#13;
notation; and Applied Intimidation&#13;
Theory.&#13;
ET&#13;
All persons in Applied science&#13;
and engineering technology are&#13;
encouraged to join "the" club.&#13;
This will be an organizational&#13;
meeting to review and revise the&#13;
constitution, discuss a club name&#13;
and finalize plans for a picnic that&#13;
will be held May 21. The final&#13;
meeting of this semester will be&#13;
held on Wednesday, May 11 at l&#13;
p.m. in Moln D-139.&#13;
ISO&#13;
The International Students&#13;
Organization held their annual&#13;
election last Friday, April 29. The&#13;
following officers were elected:&#13;
Ziad Musaitif was elected&#13;
president, Depak as senior vice&#13;
president, Riz Yray as junior vice&#13;
president, Ed Francisco as&#13;
secretary, Beejan Beheshti as&#13;
treasurer and Patty as ISO's&#13;
advertising officer.&#13;
PSE&#13;
PSE, the Marketing Club, would&#13;
like to thank everyone that participated&#13;
and helped with the&#13;
Third Annual Loop 500. We wo uld&#13;
also like to congratulate the&#13;
winning teams: First place, Mike&#13;
Vania, Sue Meyer, Don&#13;
Matownski, Donna Driscoll;&#13;
Second place, Riz Yray, Jose&#13;
Yamat, Brenda, "Minge"; Third&#13;
place, Ron Jake, Ted Miller, Chris&#13;
Kunz.&#13;
Geology&#13;
Dr. Peter H. Schultz of the&#13;
Lunar and Planetary Institute in&#13;
Houston, Texas will be giving two&#13;
talks next week which will be co -&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Geology and Physics Clubs and&#13;
the Racine Geological Society.&#13;
The first talk will be held Thursday,&#13;
May 5 at 7:30 p. m. in Grq&#13;
103. The talk is titled "Target&#13;
Earth Effects of Large - Body&#13;
Impacts". The second talk,&#13;
"Planetery Catastrophes," will be&#13;
held Friday, May 6 at 1 p. m. in&#13;
Grq 103.&#13;
Write Ranger&#13;
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RANGER Thursday, May 5,1983 5&#13;
Sound Diggings&#13;
'Hollywood Henry' brings back the blues&#13;
'Something Wicked' brings Bradbury novel to life&#13;
by Napoleon Scarbrough&#13;
If the names T-Bone Walker,&#13;
Lead Belly, Lightning Hopkins&#13;
and the recently - late Muddy&#13;
Waters mean anything to you,&#13;
then you are undoubtedly aware of&#13;
an original American art form&#13;
called the blues. I happened to&#13;
catch a great veteran blues act&#13;
last evening at the Racine&#13;
Sheraton. Chester Henry Scarborough&#13;
and company (The Good&#13;
Bags) showed their American&#13;
blues heritage by performing&#13;
songs made famous by the immortals&#13;
mentioned above. Chester&#13;
Henry's blues guitar gave me a&#13;
feeling of joy, sadness, despair&#13;
and happiness, while his cousin&#13;
Lonnie Williams' blues bass lines&#13;
literally walked me across the&#13;
dance floor. L.G. Gill's drum work&#13;
was smooth and laid back, while&#13;
keyboardist Jo Jo Hayes ran the&#13;
gamut of riffs from Booker T. to&#13;
Jimmy Smith. Roy Williams, the&#13;
brother of Lonnie, crooned one&#13;
blues standard after another. At&#13;
times the silkiness of Sam Cooke&#13;
floated across the room on tunes&#13;
like "Love Me" and "What It Is,"&#13;
by Z.Z. Hill and Little Milton&#13;
respectively, while at other times&#13;
he displayed a raspyness in his&#13;
voice on "Things I Used To Do"&#13;
and "Blind, Cripple and Crazy,"&#13;
as well as other blues standards.&#13;
All in all, the band showed their&#13;
twenty year versatility of being&#13;
together in the blue.&#13;
Henry, as well as the other&#13;
members of the band, migrated to&#13;
Wind Ensemble&#13;
to perform&#13;
The Parkside Wind Ensemble,&#13;
conducted by assistant professor&#13;
of music Mark Eichner, will&#13;
present its spring concert&#13;
featuring a guest performance by&#13;
adjunct dance professor&#13;
Katherine Zavada at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday, May 10 in the Comm&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission to the concert,&#13;
sponsored by the Fine Arts&#13;
Division, is $1 for all students,&#13;
Parkside staff and senior citizens&#13;
and $2 for others.&#13;
Proceeds will go to the&#13;
university's Music Scholarship&#13;
Fund.&#13;
Zavada, who will perform in&#13;
contemporary dance style to&#13;
Warren Benson's "Solitary&#13;
Dancer," has danced&#13;
professionally as a member of&#13;
several Milwaukee - based touring&#13;
companies, including "Dancecircus,"&#13;
with which she performed&#13;
for five years.&#13;
In addition to teaching several&#13;
dance forms at Parkside since&#13;
1977, Zavada teaches dance at&#13;
UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
The concert also will feature&#13;
Ingolf Dahl's "Sinfonietta," a&#13;
musical fabric of ban d sounds — a&#13;
parade, a concert in the park and&#13;
a serenade — woven into a&#13;
symphonic context; "Symphony&#13;
No. 3" by Vittorio Giannini,&#13;
America's popular neo - romantic&#13;
composer; and "Armenian&#13;
Dances," by Alfred Reed, who&#13;
draws heavily from the work of&#13;
Gomidas Vartabed, the founder of&#13;
Armenian classical music who&#13;
collected over 4,000 Armenian folk&#13;
songs.&#13;
Eichner, who joined the&#13;
Parkside music faculty last fall,&#13;
conducts wind and brass ensembles&#13;
in addition to teaching&#13;
applied trumpet. He received his&#13;
masters degree in music from the&#13;
University of T exas - Austin and&#13;
was director of instrumental&#13;
music at the University of Science&#13;
and Arts of Oklahoma before&#13;
coming to UW-P. He has studied&#13;
trumpet with Dr. J. Frank Elsass,&#13;
Terry Cravens and Wayne&#13;
Barrington at UW-Austin.&#13;
Racine from their native&#13;
Mississippi, bringing their&#13;
musical heritage with them.&#13;
Although they have never&#13;
released a record, they have been&#13;
successfully filling clubs in and&#13;
around the Racine area as well as&#13;
Chicago and Indiana.&#13;
When asked about his views on&#13;
the future of the blues, Henry&#13;
replied, "If the young musicians&#13;
don't reclaim their natural&#13;
heritage and stop chasing after&#13;
fads, the blues will slowly die out.&#13;
We are at present a dying breed."&#13;
Hollywood Henry and the Blues&#13;
Bags will continue to play clubs,&#13;
private engagements and hotels&#13;
such as the Racine Sheraton&#13;
mentioned above. They would also&#13;
like to play a few college campuses&#13;
to "enlighten the young&#13;
people to a basic, original&#13;
American art form."&#13;
I, as well as the other guests at&#13;
the hotel, certainly enjoyed this&#13;
rare act of au thenticity and, even&#13;
after the show was over, the&#13;
chandeliers dimmed, and the&#13;
amplifiers went hush, I could still&#13;
see and hear blues as it dawned on&#13;
me that I had uncovered yet&#13;
another clue to the real music that&#13;
I am looking for in my quest for&#13;
sound digging.&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Ever since the Disney Studios&#13;
started making PG films I have&#13;
been waiting for a film of theirs&#13;
that I would enjoy. I was disappointed&#13;
by "The Black Hole," and&#13;
bored by "Tron." So I was pleased&#13;
to find that Disney's latest&#13;
release, "Something Wicked This&#13;
Way Comes," was, in fact, a&#13;
pleasant surprise.&#13;
Based on the 1962 novel by Ray&#13;
Bradbury, the film takes place in&#13;
the tiny Greentown, Illinois, in the&#13;
early part of this century —&#13;
supposedly, the time and place of&#13;
Bradbury's childhood. The film&#13;
stars Vidal Peterson and Shawn&#13;
Carson as Will Halloway and Jim&#13;
Nightshade, two boys that inhabit&#13;
Greentown and first discover&#13;
"Dark's Pandemonium Carnival,'&#13;
as it roars into town one night on&#13;
the carnival train. The boys are so&#13;
eager to see the carnival, in fact,&#13;
that they sneak into it the night&#13;
before it opens, and find, to their&#13;
horror, a mystereious myriad of&#13;
fiendish beings, hellish rides and&#13;
other oddities. They find, for&#13;
example, a merry - go - round that&#13;
goes backwards, and, as it does it&#13;
turns back time for its riders,&#13;
turning adults into children.&#13;
By day the carnival is&#13;
seemingly 'normal', bringing to&#13;
LTO R: Vidal Peterson, Jason&#13;
Robards and Shawn Carson in&#13;
a scene from "Something&#13;
Wicked This Way Comes."&#13;
life the dreams of the inhabitants&#13;
of Greentown. But Will and Jim&#13;
know the truth, and when Mr.&#13;
Dark discovers that they know he&#13;
searches the town for them, using&#13;
whatever evil, supernatural&#13;
powers he has at his disposal.&#13;
One of the most striking things&#13;
about this film is its&#13;
cinematography. Greentown is a&#13;
Rockwellesque little place, from&#13;
the revolving barber pole to the&#13;
town saloon. The whole 'look' of&#13;
the film is pure Americana, as are&#13;
the film's characters.&#13;
Vidal Peterson and Shawn&#13;
Carson are two of the best child&#13;
actors I've seen in some time. Sort&#13;
of a Tom Sawyer - Huckleberry&#13;
Finn pair, there is simply nothing&#13;
put - on or exaggerated about their&#13;
performances. Jason Robards is&#13;
excellent as Charles Halloway,&#13;
Will's father, an aging librarian&#13;
who, in the course of the film,&#13;
discovers how to be young again.&#13;
Jonathan Pryce exudes a cool,&#13;
suave sort of evil as the sinister&#13;
Mr. Dark.&#13;
Surprisingly, the one problem&#13;
with the film is its screenplay,&#13;
which was done by Bradbury&#13;
himself. The early part of the film&#13;
is often disjointed and hard to&#13;
follow, a series of events only&#13;
loosely strung together in any&#13;
coherent way. The plot tightens up&#13;
later in the film, but the early part&#13;
is definitely weak. For the most&#13;
part though, "Something Wicked&#13;
This Way Comes" is a lively film&#13;
adaptation of Bradbury's novel —&#13;
Disney material yes, but good&#13;
Disney material, not corny. The&#13;
film's special effects are very&#13;
good, and several sequences in the&#13;
film are actually (believe or not!)&#13;
scary without being bloody or&#13;
violent. This is one of those films&#13;
that Disney used to be so well&#13;
known for, the film that most&#13;
anybody, of any age, could enjoy.&#13;
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Thursday, May 5,1983&#13;
Skylight Opera&#13;
to hold auditions&#13;
Skylight Comic Opera, Ltd. will&#13;
hold auditions for its 1983-84&#13;
season May 10,12 and 17 from 3 p.&#13;
m. to 7 p. m. Call 271-8815 to&#13;
arrange an appointment.&#13;
Auditioners should prepare two&#13;
selections (in English) either&#13;
from the productions slated for&#13;
the 83-84 season, or from a work&#13;
by the same composers. Bring&#13;
along a picture and resume if&#13;
available.&#13;
1983-84 Skylight Season:&#13;
Sept. 21 - Oct. 9 - TRIAL BY&#13;
JURY — Gilbert &amp; Sullivan;&#13;
JUMPING FROG OF&#13;
CALAVARAS COUNTY — L ukas&#13;
Foss&#13;
Oct. 26 - Nov. 13 - THE TURN&#13;
OF THE SCREW — Benjamin&#13;
Britten&#13;
Nov. 30 - Dec. 31 — H.M.S.&#13;
PINAFORE — Gilbert &amp; Sullivan&#13;
Jan. 25 - Feb. 12 - LA CALISTO&#13;
— F rancesco Cavalli&#13;
March 7 -11 — THE STUDENT&#13;
PRINCE — Sigmund Romberg&#13;
March 28 - April 22 — TINTYPES&#13;
— Revue of American&#13;
popular music&#13;
Oriana Trio to&#13;
present concert&#13;
The Oriana Trio, the Parkside's&#13;
resident chamber ensemble, will&#13;
present a free program for junior&#13;
and senior high school students in&#13;
Racine and Kenosha at 10 a.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, May 11 in the Comm&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
The trio will perform works by&#13;
Mozart and Brahms and will&#13;
discuss those composers and their&#13;
work as well as demonstrate individual&#13;
instruments.&#13;
Music teachers desiring more&#13;
information and reservations can&#13;
call the UW-P Fine Arts Division,&#13;
which is sponsoring the program&#13;
at 553-2581. Deadline for making&#13;
reservations is May 6.&#13;
A critic's critique of the Oscars&#13;
by Dave Schroeder&#13;
Nowthat a couple of weeks have&#13;
passed since the night of the&#13;
Academy Awards, I would like to&#13;
reflect upon Oscar night.&#13;
Overlooking the inferior entertainment&#13;
(I mean, who was the&#13;
sadist that inflicted that opening&#13;
number on the public?), the unprepared&#13;
presenters (Matt Dillon&#13;
and Kristi McNichol, for example,&#13;
who never bothered to try to&#13;
pronounce their nominees names,&#13;
let alone learn how to pronounce&#13;
them) and some heartrending&#13;
acceptance speeches (Mickey&#13;
Rooney and Richard Attenburough,&#13;
namely), I want to&#13;
focus on who deserved to win, and&#13;
who did not deserve to win. So&#13;
much for overlooking these&#13;
things.&#13;
Let's talk about those who richly&#13;
deserved their awards. Jessica&#13;
Lange, you may have received the&#13;
award for Frances rather than&#13;
Tootsie. Even though I picked&#13;
Kim Stanley as my choice, I still&#13;
predicted that the Academy would&#13;
pick you, and I say that you were a&#13;
good choice.&#13;
Lou Gosset, Jr. Congrats. You&#13;
deserved it, along with James&#13;
Mason. You both had superb&#13;
performances and I found that it&#13;
was hard to pick between the two.&#13;
Ben Kingsley, you made Gandhi&#13;
worth the ticket price. Single -&#13;
handedly you gave the movie life,&#13;
and made this sterile view of a&#13;
great man's life interesting.&#13;
John Williams once again&#13;
proved that he is the man to go to&#13;
for a fantastic musical score. He&#13;
earned his fourth Oscar for E.T.,&#13;
leaving the rest of the contenders&#13;
in the dust.&#13;
Probably the most deserved&#13;
award of the night went to Meryl&#13;
Street for Sophie's Choice. This is&#13;
probably the most flawless performance&#13;
ever brought to the&#13;
screen, by anybody. Frankly, I&#13;
think she deserves the award for&#13;
the next four years.&#13;
I really thought I was going out&#13;
cm a limb predicting that the&#13;
Academy would pick Missing for&#13;
Best Adapted Screenplay. It only&#13;
proves that there is justice hiding&#13;
somewhere in that Academy.&#13;
Now for those flicks that won for&#13;
political reasons rather than the&#13;
quality of work that was done for&#13;
that certain award. What I think&#13;
happened is that the Academy&#13;
decided that since it was going to&#13;
give Gandhi a lot of the awards&#13;
that E.T. deserved, that it would&#13;
give E.T. a lot of smaller awards&#13;
that it did not deserve.&#13;
Now I loved E.T., but the only&#13;
thing spectacular about the visual&#13;
effects was the little creature&#13;
itself. This is one of the many&#13;
technical awards that&#13;
Bladerunner deserved.&#13;
Best Art Direction and Costume&#13;
both to who? Gandhi!?!?! What&#13;
happened to awarding people with&#13;
vision who had to come up with&#13;
something from nowhere, who had&#13;
to translate that nothing into&#13;
something physical and tangible&#13;
and yet complimenting of the&#13;
story? My gripe is that most of the&#13;
sets from Gandhi were probably&#13;
taken right out of a book, same&#13;
with the costumes. And many of&#13;
the sets were already there. In&#13;
Bladerunner, a new vision of our&#13;
planet was created, unlike any&#13;
other brought to the screen, and&#13;
the imagination and the vision&#13;
that took is four times worth the&#13;
time it took to drape the cloth and&#13;
make the mud houses for the&#13;
thousands of people in Gandhi.&#13;
Fran Liebowitz says of Gandhi,&#13;
"Since when do they give Costume&#13;
Awards for diapers?" My&#13;
thoughts exactly, Fran.&#13;
Best Screenplay (Original),&#13;
Best Picture, Best Director. Why&#13;
did Gandhi win all these awards&#13;
when almost every nominee in&#13;
each category was superior in&#13;
their products? Here are some&#13;
answers given by critics and&#13;
Academy members alike:&#13;
"Gandhi has a great message;"&#13;
"E.T. has enough recognition&#13;
from the box office;" "E.T. was&#13;
too simple a movie;" "Anyone&#13;
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who can put that many people on a&#13;
screen deserves an award;" on&#13;
and on and on go the reasons. In&#13;
very few instances is it mentioned&#13;
that Gandhi is the best directed or&#13;
best written, or even the best&#13;
overall film.&#13;
My replies to these answers:&#13;
Gandhi had a message of peace,&#13;
love, and understanding. Doesn't&#13;
that sound an awful lot like E.T.'s&#13;
message? Box office receipts&#13;
don't mean diddly - squat when&#13;
your peers do not give you the&#13;
recognition you deserve. Isn't&#13;
taking something very complicated&#13;
and molding it into&#13;
something simple so it can reach&#13;
out to all people and touch their&#13;
lives one of the grandest parts of&#13;
filmmaking? Isn't the award&#13;
given for the quality of the work&#13;
and not the amount of p eople in it?&#13;
Here are some of the reasons&#13;
that I think Gandhi cleaned up in&#13;
so many categories (many critics&#13;
concur in these opinions). There is&#13;
a resentment in the Academy for&#13;
Steven Speilberg due to his&#13;
phenomenal success along with&#13;
his young age. Academy members&#13;
don't think that movies should be&#13;
commercialized as E.T. was.&#13;
"Serious" movies are the only&#13;
movies that should get the award.&#13;
Voting for Gandhi would make the&#13;
Academy look good. As one critic&#13;
from Hollywood put it, "Gandhi&#13;
stands for what every Academy&#13;
member would like to be. Moral,&#13;
tan, and thin."&#13;
You know something is fishy&#13;
when the man who wins the&#13;
directing honors, namely Richard&#13;
Attenburough, states in more than&#13;
one TV appearance that Steven&#13;
Spielberg is a more talented&#13;
director than he is, and&#13;
Speilberg's film is more finely&#13;
directed than his own. Some&#13;
critics even believe that Gandhi is&#13;
not even directed particularly&#13;
well in the first place.&#13;
My problem with Gandhi was&#13;
that the film was so totally&#13;
sterilized that it tended to bore&#13;
me. Attenburough could have&#13;
taken a good lesson from Franco&#13;
Zefferelli when he dealt with the&#13;
same message and a similar&#13;
character, Francis of Assisi, in&#13;
Brother Sun, Sister Moon. The&#13;
film was better written, directed,&#13;
and acted all around, and most&#13;
people have not even heard of it.&#13;
The top honor in the Academy&#13;
Awards, at least the last time I&#13;
had a look, was Best Picture, not&#13;
Best Message, nor Choice That&#13;
Would Make The Academy Look&#13;
Best. Must fine films be excluded&#13;
because they piss - off the&#13;
government (Missing), or they&#13;
are in a foreign language (Das&#13;
Boot), or they are lighthearted&#13;
and popular (Tootsie, E.T.)?&#13;
These were many of the reasons&#13;
given as to why these pictures did&#13;
not get certain awards. Now I'm&#13;
not saying Gandhi is a bad film,&#13;
but I can name at least a dozen&#13;
pictures from 1982 that are far&#13;
more worth the money.&#13;
If you want to see the "Must&#13;
See" pictures of 1983, they were,&#13;
in order of quality:&#13;
1. Sophie's Choice&#13;
2. E.T.&#13;
3. Moonlighting&#13;
4. Missing&#13;
5. The Verdict&#13;
6. Diner&#13;
7. The World According to Garp&#13;
8. The Four Friends&#13;
9. An Officer and a Gentleman&#13;
10. Bladerunner&#13;
11. Tootsie&#13;
12. Tex&#13;
13. Poltergeist&#13;
14. Das Boot&#13;
15. Frances&#13;
If I were to go on, Gandhi would&#13;
come in around 25th. Many of&#13;
these movies you may not have&#13;
seen, or even heard of, but all&#13;
have something very important to&#13;
say and are highly entertaining,&#13;
much more than Gandhi. I'm not&#13;
saying that these were the only&#13;
movies worth seeing, but they are&#13;
the cream of the crop.&#13;
Write Ranger a l etter&#13;
Taste the difference Kraeusening makes.&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE &#13;
Whaf Time.,&#13;
Wh e n a n d&#13;
W h e r e ?&#13;
MAY 16-19&#13;
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900 cm to 7&#13;
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Co ilea e Book Store&#13;
t&#13;
RANGER Thursday, May 5,1983&#13;
Men's Baseball&#13;
by Maureen Burke&#13;
On Wed., April 27, the men's&#13;
baseball team lost a doubleheader&#13;
to Madison. The first game was a&#13;
very good game, according to&#13;
Coach Oberbrunner, even though&#13;
the Rangers lost in the last inning&#13;
7-6. The losing pitcher was Mark&#13;
Schmitz. In that game the hitters&#13;
were Joe Krisik (2 for 3) with 1 urn&#13;
and John Hyatt (2-2-1) with 2 runs.&#13;
In the second game, the losing&#13;
pitcher was Scott Hartnell&#13;
Parkside lost 4-2, but received&#13;
some good hitting from Scott&#13;
Gerhartz, Scott Breznk and Tom&#13;
Tatge. The Rangers lost this game&#13;
on a controversial call where the&#13;
Madison leftfielder trapped the&#13;
ball. Coach Oberbrunner said,&#13;
"The umpire just didn't have a&#13;
good look at it, but we all knew it&#13;
was trapped. Even the player&#13;
himself said he trapped it."&#13;
On Thursday, April 28, the team&#13;
faired much better, beating&#13;
Carroll College 14-1. The winning&#13;
pitcher was Jack Rubach. "He&#13;
should get all the credit," said&#13;
Oberbrunner. Rubach had hit and&#13;
no runs through 9 innings. This is&#13;
the second time in Parkside&#13;
history that this has been done.&#13;
The last time was in 1974. There&#13;
were 3 home runs for the Rangers.&#13;
They were by Krisik, Rich&#13;
Salisbury and Hyatt.&#13;
On Sat., the team lost a&#13;
doubleheader to Lewis (2-1) and&#13;
(5-1).&#13;
Women's Track&#13;
This past weekend, the&#13;
Women's Track team was suppose&#13;
to travel to Eau Claire for a meet.&#13;
Because of transportation&#13;
problems (the team wasn't&#13;
supplied with a van), many team&#13;
members ran the Bonne Bell 10k&#13;
race in Milwaukee on May 1 instead.&#13;
&#13;
Men's Track&#13;
Sue Meyer was the top finisher&#13;
for Parkside, placing fifth out of a&#13;
field of 800. Donna Driscoll was&#13;
not far behind finishing eighth.&#13;
Official times could not be obtained.&#13;
"The first part of the race&#13;
was against the wind and uphill.&#13;
The second part was downhill and&#13;
with the wind," commented&#13;
Driscoll.&#13;
Linda Pfilestifer ran the 10k&#13;
course in 49 minutes flat and was&#13;
closely followed by teammates&#13;
Carol Romano (49:44) and Sandy&#13;
Pellegrino (49:49). Pellegrino,&#13;
who is a 300 meter sprinter&#13;
commented, "I just wanted to&#13;
finish under 50 minutes, which I&#13;
did."&#13;
Women's Softball&#13;
The Women's Softball team&#13;
finished second in the Whitewater&#13;
Tournament losing only to the host&#13;
school, 1 - 0. The team defeated:&#13;
NE Illinois 4-1&#13;
Platteville 6-3&#13;
Oshkosh 1-0&#13;
The Warhawks didn' t score the&#13;
winning run until the seventh&#13;
inning. "It was a very disappointing&#13;
loss. We played extremely&#13;
well against Oshkosh and&#13;
Whitewater. We seem to play&#13;
better against the tougher&#13;
teams," commented Coach Linda&#13;
Draft. Their overall record is 27-7.&#13;
Today, at Petrifying Springs&#13;
Park the team plays against UI -&#13;
Chicago (3 p. m.). Tomorrow, the&#13;
first round playoffs for the&#13;
District 14 championship begins.&#13;
Parkside will host Superior. The&#13;
playoffs are a best two out of&#13;
three. Game times are 12 noon and&#13;
2 p. m. If the team splits the&#13;
doubleheader, they will also play&#13;
Saturday at 11 a. m.&#13;
These games are very important&#13;
for the Women's team,&#13;
because if they lose their season is&#13;
finished. But if they win they go on&#13;
to play the Minnesota champions.&#13;
National Qualifiers&#13;
With only three weeks&#13;
remaining of the season, the track&#13;
team members are trying to get&#13;
qualifying throws, heights and&#13;
times for Nationals.&#13;
Walkers Will Preischel and&#13;
Mark Manning have qualified in&#13;
the 10k walk. Rod Condon this&#13;
weekend walked a 10k in 50:41,&#13;
which is only about 11 seconds off&#13;
the qualifying time.&#13;
Manning and Tim McMillian&#13;
tied for first place in a 20k race&#13;
this weekend, both qualifying for&#13;
the TAC Nationals to be held this&#13;
summer. Their time was 1:36.56.&#13;
Both Manning and McMillian&#13;
bettered their personal bests (by 5&#13;
minutes and 1-1/2 minutes&#13;
respectively). "It was a good race&#13;
— a real confidence builder,&#13;
because we didn't kill ourselves,&#13;
yet we both qualified," commented&#13;
Manning.&#13;
Thus far, Coach Lucian Rosa is&#13;
considering taking pole vaulter&#13;
John Anderson to Kansas City if&#13;
he can vault 15-6. "If John can&#13;
jump 15-6 then I feel he has a good&#13;
chance of becoming an NAIA All&#13;
American, stated Rosa.&#13;
Rosa is also considering taking&#13;
marathon runner Ted Miller.&#13;
Miller recently competed in the&#13;
Boston Marathon but Rosa doesn't&#13;
feel this will hinder Miller. "Ted's&#13;
a very gutsy runner. Last week at&#13;
a meet against Whitewater, he&#13;
was having blister problems and I&#13;
told him to drop out if he was&#13;
feeling bad, but he wouldn't. He&#13;
should do well at Nationals."&#13;
For the women's track team,&#13;
Deb Spino qualified for the 10,000&#13;
meter run two weeks ago in a&#13;
meet at Carthage. Although the&#13;
wind was very strong, she led for&#13;
much of the race. Then her knee&#13;
began to bother her and she was&#13;
forced to relinquish her lead.&#13;
Spino finished second in 37:45.&#13;
Anderson vaults to new heights&#13;
by Tori Murray&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
There is always an exception to&#13;
every rule. Most people's image of&#13;
a college athlete includes the word&#13;
young — a recent high school&#13;
graduate. John Anderson is the&#13;
exception to that rule.&#13;
Anderson, a 30 - year - old&#13;
Communication major has been a&#13;
pole vaulter on Parkside's track&#13;
team for three and a half years.&#13;
Before Anderson came to&#13;
Parkside, he attended Milwaukee&#13;
Area Technical College (MATC)&#13;
where he received a degree in&#13;
Barbery. He then spent 4 years in&#13;
the Marines. In '77 he enrolled at&#13;
MATC to obtain a degree in&#13;
Cosmotology. He worked in a&#13;
salon for 2 years before enrolling&#13;
at Parkside in the fall of '79. He&#13;
took two classes — a philosophy&#13;
and a business class.&#13;
"I was a pole vaulter in high&#13;
school and I always had the desire&#13;
to vault in college but I didn't&#13;
think I was eligible. One day&#13;
before semester break, I was in&#13;
the gym and I asked Bob Lawson&#13;
(the track coach at the time) how&#13;
do you join the track team? He&#13;
said to take 12 credits next&#13;
semester and asked what I did. I&#13;
told him I vaulted and he said&#13;
okay, come on out," said Anderson.&#13;
&#13;
His first season at Parkside,&#13;
Anderson found tremendous&#13;
improvement in himself. In high&#13;
school, the highest he ever vaulted&#13;
was 11 - 6, but after a few months&#13;
of getting back into shape, he&#13;
vaulted 13 - 0. He now has a personal&#13;
best of 15 - 0 indoors and 14 -&#13;
6 outdoors. He is only one inch&#13;
from beating the school record in&#13;
the pole vault. "I progressed a lot&#13;
that first year, I learned a lot from&#13;
Lawson, plus I had someone to&#13;
work with. Bob Meekma really&#13;
pushed me. Now it's like I'm MI a&#13;
plateau," commented Anderson.&#13;
Although Anderson has been&#13;
jumping higher than his first&#13;
season, he feels he hasn't improved&#13;
at the same rate. "I was&#13;
very consistent about a year and a&#13;
half ago. I would place at every&#13;
meet. This year I wasn't very&#13;
consistent. I feel this is due to the&#13;
lack of practice. During indoors,&#13;
we would only get the gym once a&#13;
week. Outdoors, the weather&#13;
hasn't been that great for&#13;
vaulting," he said.&#13;
Coach Rosa admits Parkside&#13;
does not have the best facilities for&#13;
vaulting but acknowledged that&#13;
Anderson will go to high school&#13;
gyms in the Racine - Kenosha&#13;
area to practice.&#13;
Anderson feels he works as hard&#13;
as someone who vaults at 17 or 18&#13;
feet. His workouts certainly&#13;
reflect this. Monday is overdistance&#13;
running (300's) and&#13;
weights. Tuesday is sprints (165,&#13;
100, 50 yards) and vaulting.&#13;
Wednesday is a pace workout&#13;
(200's) and again vaulting.&#13;
Thursday is basically the same&#13;
workout as Tuesday, but includes&#13;
rope climbs also. Friday, Anderson&#13;
does 15 - 20 sprints. He also&#13;
tries to get in the pool, so that he&#13;
can vault in the pool. This is&#13;
something he has been doing&#13;
recently and he feels it has helped&#13;
him greatly in mental preparation&#13;
for the meets. Anderson also does&#13;
30 minutes quick walking at least&#13;
every other day.&#13;
"John is very hardworking - one&#13;
of the most hardworking men I've&#13;
ever seen. He tries to help the&#13;
whole team and me by recruiting.&#13;
We've gotten a couple from the&#13;
Basketball team because of him,"&#13;
commented Rosa.&#13;
After this season, Anderson has&#13;
one more outdoor season left. (A&#13;
Bone spur made him redshirt a&#13;
season). He feels that it is very&#13;
feasible that he will be jumping&#13;
close to 17 feet. &#13;
8 Thursday, May 5,1983 RANGER&#13;
*"0 BOTTLED UNDER U S BMW"*&#13;
1,1&#13;
B* JOSEPH [ S EAGRAM &amp; SONS !U«C IN O BALTIMORE MO SO S»" t&#13;
JSO ML • SO PROOf&#13;
Scholarships&#13;
Continued From Page 1&#13;
for science went to Janet Rohde,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The Sam Poerio Award of $100,&#13;
named for the late Kenosha&#13;
educator and athletic coach, went&#13;
to Terry Ann Ferraro, a&#13;
Psychology major, Kenosha.&#13;
Three "Big Eight" Milwaukee&#13;
accounting firms sponsored&#13;
scholarships for three UWParkside&#13;
business management&#13;
students in accounting. (The&#13;
awards were funded by the firms&#13;
and their employees who are&#13;
Parkside graduates): The Ernst&#13;
and Whinney Scholarship of $500&#13;
went to Donella Elsen, Kenosha;&#13;
the Deloitte, Haskins and Sells&#13;
Scholarship of $250 went to Barbara&#13;
West, Kenosha; and the&#13;
Peate, Marwick, Mitchell&#13;
Scholarship of $125 went to Henry&#13;
Gondeck, Kenosha.&#13;
Earlier, the Milwaukee Chapter&#13;
of the Financial Executives Institute&#13;
scholarship in accounting&#13;
and finance of $200 w as awarded&#13;
to Ms. Elsen.&#13;
CERTIFICATE AWARDS&#13;
Certificates of recognition citing&#13;
students for academic excellence&#13;
and creative achievement and&#13;
awarded by the academic&#13;
disciplines went to:&#13;
Kim Bowen, Kenosha&#13;
(Education); Natalie Bredek,&#13;
Kenosha (Applied Computer&#13;
Science); Dino A. Druding,&#13;
Kenosha (Mathematics); Brian&#13;
Ebener, Kenosha (Political&#13;
Science); Donella F. Elsen,&#13;
Kenosha (Business Management -&#13;
Accounting); Gary Jonker,&#13;
Kenosha (Eng inee ring&#13;
Technology); Susan Marcinkus,&#13;
Kenosha (Psychology); Sandra A.&#13;
Milligan, Kenosha (Geography);&#13;
Ronald Parker, Kenosha&#13;
(English); Dan Rock, Kenosha&#13;
(Philosophy); Sharon L. Shaver,&#13;
Kenosha (Earth Science); Brian&#13;
Todd, Kenosha (Medical&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
EARN $500 OR MORE each school year.&#13;
Flexible hours. Monthly payments for&#13;
placing posters on campus. Bonus based on&#13;
results. Prizes awarded as well.• 600-526-&#13;
0883.&#13;
PIANO PLAYER WANTED for rock / blues&#13;
band. Call 654-4456 or 654-3624.&#13;
TYPING: For professional and speedy&#13;
service, call Debbie, 681-3522.&#13;
WANTED: Editor for lengthy, complex&#13;
novel. Work needed on grammer, spelling&#13;
and re-typing. Paper, etc. supplied. Pay&#13;
negotiable. Call Pam, 553-9819 or 552-9435.&#13;
WANTED: Motorcycle helmet, used and in&#13;
good condition. Call Karen in the Ranger&#13;
office, ext. 2295.&#13;
RUMMAGE SALE: Books, plants, rummage.&#13;
Unitarian Church, 625 College Ave., Racine,&#13;
Saturday, May 7, 8-4 p.m. Wide selection.&#13;
Cheap!&#13;
ANYONE INTERESTED in becoming an&#13;
R.A. for 83-84 please call the housing office&#13;
at 553-2320.&#13;
FOR SUMMER SUBLET: Professor's 5 room&#13;
apartment in Racine, 2 bedrooms and&#13;
baths, well furnished, indoor swimming&#13;
pool, tennis courts, air conditioned. June,&#13;
July, August, $400 a month. Call 553-2320.&#13;
SUMMER ROOMMATE NEEDED: Wood&#13;
Creek, non - sm oker. Dick O., 552-9175.&#13;
SITTER NEEDED, Fall semester, a.m. only,&#13;
my home, West Racine. Schwaabs, 637-1921.&#13;
NOW OPEN&#13;
FOR THE&#13;
SUMMER&#13;
SEASON&#13;
PARKSIOE ONION&#13;
CAMPING&#13;
RENTALS&#13;
• 2 MAN TENTS&#13;
• 4 MAN TENTS&#13;
• SLEEPING BAGS&#13;
• GROUND PADS&#13;
• GAS HEATERS&#13;
• GAS LANTERNS&#13;
• COOK STOVES&#13;
• COOKING KITS&#13;
• ICE CHESTS&#13;
• WATER JUGS&#13;
• CANTEENS&#13;
• VITTLE KITS&#13;
• CAMP SHOVELS&#13;
• BELT AXES&#13;
• HUNTING KNIVES&#13;
• POCKET KNIVES .&#13;
• COMPASSES&#13;
• FIRST AID KITS&#13;
• FLASHLIGHTS&#13;
• CAMP STOOLS&#13;
• FISHING RODS&#13;
• FISHING NETS&#13;
• FISH BASKETS&#13;
ADVANCE&#13;
RESERVATIONS&#13;
NECESSARY&#13;
CALL: SS3-2409&#13;
PART TIME HELP WANTED - Kenosha&#13;
professional woman needs someone to do&#13;
light housekeeping in home, $5 per hour,&#13;
flexible schedule. Call 658-4746 evenings for&#13;
details.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
IS EVERYBODY IN? The ceremony is about&#13;
to begin, the Mindless voice&#13;
LEAVE THE TREES ALONE Barking Duck •&#13;
The Termites&#13;
TO ALL CLOSET CHESS PLAYERS: Stay&#13;
there.&#13;
BARKING DUCKS wear combat boots - Sole&#13;
Surviving Termite&#13;
BARKING DUCKS are warm, considerate,&#13;
loving and kind - If you remember the soap.&#13;
BDL&#13;
MAUREEN &amp; CARA: We've never seen a&#13;
better highway pickup technique than what&#13;
we saw Tuesday. Had much practice&#13;
before?&#13;
Technology); Kristine S. Wendt,&#13;
Kenosha (Business Management -&#13;
Marketing); Barbara West,&#13;
Kenosha (Business Management -&#13;
A c cou nti ng) ; M a ril yn&#13;
Weschenefski, Kenosha (Art);&#13;
Wendy Westphal, Kenosha (Earth&#13;
Science).&#13;
Gary Albright, Racine&#13;
(Business Management / Applied&#13;
Computer Science); Ray Anderson,&#13;
Racine (Applied Computer&#13;
Science); Rosalind&#13;
Auberry, Racine (Economics);&#13;
Karen Bolander, Racine (Art);&#13;
Judith L. Braun, Racine&#13;
(Business Management&#13;
Produ ction Opera tions&#13;
Management); Carol Burns,&#13;
Racine (English); David Carls,&#13;
Racine, (Industrial and Environmental&#13;
Hygiene); Michael&#13;
Curtis, Racine (Chemistry);&#13;
Joanne F. Drewek, Racine&#13;
(Business Management&#13;
Finance); Eugene Dunk, Racine&#13;
(Political Science); Paul&#13;
F r e d e r i c k s o n , R a c i ne&#13;
(Engineering Technology); Mary&#13;
Ginther, Racine (Communication);&#13;
Anne Gontek,&#13;
Racine (Communication); Giam&#13;
Xuan Hoang, Racine (Applied&#13;
Science); Rachel King, Racine&#13;
(Communication); Suzanne&#13;
Landis, Racine (Music); Robert&#13;
Ludwig, Racine (Art); Jennifer&#13;
Meisner, Racine (Political&#13;
Science); Patricia Mulligan,&#13;
Racine (Economics); Sandra&#13;
Pishney, Racine (Psychology);&#13;
Kathleen Pomaville, Racine&#13;
(Communication); Linda Randelzhofer,&#13;
Racine (Music); John&#13;
Reese, Racine (Industrial and&#13;
Environmental Hygiene).&#13;
Marie Baronowski, Oak Creek&#13;
(Medical Technology); Julian&#13;
Brown, Milwaukee (Dramatic&#13;
Arts); Jon Corson, Elkhorn&#13;
(Mathematics); Joy Hegemann,&#13;
Waterford (Psychology); Greg&#13;
Irwin, Lindenhurst, 111.&#13;
(Engineering Technology);&#13;
Judith A. Larsen, Gurnee, 111.&#13;
(Business Management - Administrative&#13;
Management); Todd&#13;
L. Laszewski, Caledonia&#13;
(Mathematics); Bonnie L. McDonnell,&#13;
South Milwaukee&#13;
(Business Management - Personnel&#13;
Administration / Labor &amp;&#13;
Industrial Relations); Regina&#13;
Montgomer y, Caledonia&#13;
(English); Irene Vilona, Fontana&#13;
(Industrial and Environmental&#13;
Hygiene).&#13;
THFE IRESIDE&#13;
RESTAURANT &amp; L OUNGE&#13;
OPEN DAILY 11:00 A.M.&#13;
Complete American • Italian Menu&#13;
Fri. Fish Dinner $250&#13;
Sun. Special Turkey Dinner *3&#13;
95&#13;
Featuring Deep Pan or Thin Crust Pizza&#13;
NEW SPECIALS COMING:&#13;
• Deep Fried Breaded Rabbit&#13;
• Bar - B - Q Ribs&#13;
Complete Carry Out Service&#13;
Food • Beer • Wine • Liquor&#13;
2801 30th Ave., Kenosha&#13;
Ph. 551-0600&#13;
th the exciting taste of&#13;
uiith Rock n roll stirs mm&#13;
Seven &amp; Seven&#13;
' 1982 SEAGRAM MUSK CO., NYC A MERICAN WHSKEV. A BLEND 80 PROOF "Sa*HJp" and "7UP" are trademafc of t he Se^Up Company&#13;
Seagrams </text>
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              <text>1&#13;
 tjf University of Wisconsin - Parkside anger Thursday, September 23, 1982 Vol. 11 - No. 3 United Council held at Parkside by Bob Kiesling News Editor The United Council's Legislative Affairs Committee is UW students' contact in the state legislature. Legislative Affairs not only makes UC's position known to state politicians, it also keeps students informed of laws affecting them. Curt Pawlisch, Director of Legis­lative Affairs, is UC's lob­byist in the state government. At the United Council meeting held at Parkside last Friday, Pawlisch urged campus representatives there to get students in the UW System out to vote. He added that this was the most effective way to catch the government's attention. "Students aren't taken seriously in the legislature," he told campus delegates. "They're a joke. We're an annoyance. I would like to be much more than a joke or an annoyance . . . There's an old saying: legislators don't see the light until they feel the heat. And we have to apply that heat in November." Pawlisch said he would try to get as much information to campuses concerning candidates running in the area. Even though Pawlisch has been at his job for a little over a month, already he has seen results, he says, in the part students played in the passing of the Nuclear Freeze Referendum. He added that Legislative Af­fairs is using several methods  to measure the student vote, like measuring turnout in wards with a high student population. There would be problems with schools like Parkside, though, because the students are not confined to one geographic area. Pawlisch said the only solution there would be to take an informal survey of the student population. Another area UC is currently active in is rule -  making. The' United Council plans on sub­mitting a report of policy recommendations to the Joint Committee for the Review of Academic Rules (JCRAR)   for their consideration. JCRAR is exploring for the Board of Regents modifications in UW System policy in the area of shared governance, or joint university rule by students and ad­ministration. Pawlisch has requested campus student governments to submit reports to UC for incorporation in a report to the JCRAR. "I think we're making really good progress on that," he said. "We're in the process of evaluating existing policies on shared governance," he added. "Right now, the student govern­ments are supposed  to be giving me a three to five page report on the status of those policies at their institutions and then we're going to follow through with compiling these reports and issuing a report UNITED COUNCIL BOARD Photos by Masood Shafiq CROWDED U.C. MEETING to the Board of Regents, recommending any changes." "I don't know if ru le - making is really going to be the answer for student concerns. I think the biggest point is that students have to understand if th ey like existing policies or not. If they think they're fine, then we should just tell that to the Board of Regents and say, 'don't change them.' And the Board of Regents would be happy to hear it." One issue of importance to Parkside students, many of w hom rent their own apartments, is United Council's association with the Coalition On Landlord - Tenant Reforms (COLTR). COLTR is the only statewide tenant lobbying group. Some of their efforts in­clude: laws to prohibit landlords from collecting interest on security deposits, winterization standards for apartment units, and the repeal of cohabitation laws (cohabitation is illegal in Wisconsin). Last year COLTR had legislation passed authorizing the state government to regulate condominium conversions, a bill the housing lobby had defeated the year before, according to Pawlisch. Curt Pawlisch is a graduate Political Science student in Madison. He served as a legislative aid in the state assembly before coming to UC. Although he describes his own policies as "very liberal," he said, "The only thing I lobby on are the positions of the United Council." New legal service coming to Parkside by Pat Hensiak Editor A new legal service is being designed here on campus to in­form students of their rights and responsibilities under the law, and to aid them in the resolution of individual legal problems which may arise while attending school. A p rimary concern of th is service will be to advise students of t heir legal rights under the law, and at the same time function as an educational service for students. The educational development of the program will be carried out through seminars, workshops and publications about frequented legal problems encountered by students. PSGA will fund the service and it will  be under the direction of PSGA. An attorney will be available to render legal and referral services. If the complexity of a particular problem excedes the capabilities of the program, additional  ser­vices can be arranged for at the clients expense. It would be difficult to an­ticipate all of the specific legal problems that may be en­countered. What follows is a general list of guidelines of the way in which specific problems could be handled by this service. — Prosperity matters; in­cluding tenants problems, relocation, housing and urban development rights and purchase or sale of non - income producing property. — Contract and consumer matters; including review and enforcement of consumer, em­ployment, and insurance con­tracts; matters pertaining to warranties and defective products or services, creditors' and deb­tors' rights, garnishment and other collection matters. — Domestic relations and family law matters; including separation and marriage dissolution actions, child custody and support disputes, adoption proceedings, name changes, and civil commitments*. — Tort defense; including debt and loan payment counseling services that will be available in conjunction with other University student service offices. — Administrative Agency matters; including unem­ployment compensation rights, veterans' and civil service benefits, and Social Security Administration and welfare department hearings at municipal, state, and federal levels. — Employment grievances; when the client has exhausted all appropriate administrative or agency remedies designed to handle such grievances. — Small claims and traffic court matters; including representation proceedings at the discretion of the lawyer assigned to the case. A lawyer will generally not accompany you to small claims or traffic court, since formal representation is discouraged by such courts. — Criminal legal matters; including petty misdemeanors, moving traffic violations and misdemeanors, revocation of parole or probation, and ex-pungent of criminal records in appropriate cases. It may also be determined that a students' particular problem falls outside the schedule of b enefits. If this is the case, the staff will try to help students obtain counsel elsewhere, at the students ex­pense. Those matters excluded from the list of possible services are as follows: — Su its against the University of Wisconsin Parkside, its regents, employees or agents in their representative capacity. — Anti - Trust proceedings. — Income - generated, cor­porate or commercial enterprises, including proceedings relating to the organization to termination of a corporation, partnership, or other forms of business entity, as well as patent, copyrights, trademark, and securities mat­ters; or income generating real -estate matters. — Felony and most gross misdemeanor cases; which will be referred to outside counsel or the public defender's office. — Probate; including proceedings relating to the division of property and money, and the administration of e states, which will be referred to outside counsel. — T ax matters relating to in­come, gift, estate, property, and similar taxes will  be services by advice and referral* only. — Service to University Student Organizations will  be limited to advice and referral and legal education workshops or seminars. — Pre - existing legal problems defined as these situations in which actual legal causes of ac­tion have accrued and are not of a continuing nature prior to eligibility for services. Because of the difficulty of defining a pre -existing problem, the final determination on accepting a case in which the action may have originated prior to eligibility for service will be left to the professional judgement of the directing attorney. By advising and educating students about legal problems, it is the goal of the Student Legal Service to create a more congenial learning environment on the Parkside campus. "Hopefully by midsemester the legal service will be in full operation," commented Phil Pogreba, President pro tempore of the PSGA senate. "We're shooting for six hours a week; Monday and Wednesday during the day, and Tuesday in tire evening. The reason for that would be to cover the whole spectrum of day and night students." There will be a committee that will aid in the administration of the service. The committee will consist of three senators and two students - at - large. If there are interested students, they may inquire within PSGA. • Insurance program Inside •   •   • ^ Health Center • Security: Protect your valuables * • Reviews • Women take Ranger Invitational &#13;
2 Thursday, September 23,1982 RANGER Editorials Save the animals On October 1, 1982, Congress will make an important decision: whether or not to reauthorize and fund the Endangered Species Act. The ESA was designed to help protect endangered species of fish and wildlife from extinction. Imporation of endangered species into the United States and its protectorates is also forbidden: The ESA is an essential element in the survival of such animals as grizzly bears, whooping cranes, and timber wolves. Unfortunately, any effectiveness it has is dependent upon the funds allocated by Congress. Should reauthorization of the Endangered Species Act fail or should it pass reauthorization without proper funding, it may, in effect, become useless. The lives of innocent animals are at stake in this situation. Mankind has done enough to destroy wild creatures. Support of the Endangered Species Act and adequate funding for it may be one of the only ways in which humans can help them. * "APPARENTLY, JAMES WATT WANTS TO CHANGE OUR STATUS FROM 'ENDANGERED SPECIES' TO 'SERVE ONLY WITH BROCCOLI'". Political affairs forum by Stephen Kalmar II The statewide elections brought few surprises, yet each loser — Republican, Democrat or media -unnoticed "also ran" — found one thing in common. A lack of financial support. Once again, the contemporary political policy: money was praised for victories and blamed in defeat. As the papers reported: "Earl outspends his opponent two to one;" "Lowell Jackson said he suffered from a lack of television exposure in the campaign's closing week, as he was unable to buy enough com­mercial  time to counteract Terry Kohler's name recognition;" "Walsh attributed much of his defeat to the relative financial strengths of the two campaigns." What happened to the real issues? Personal image building through media control has become the main concern of contemporary politicians. They are not sensitive to the real problems and opinions of the bulk of the people who can't support them financially. How much of our elected represen­tative's time in office and public money is spent readying for re­election? Democrat or Republican, this is falsely presented as our only choice. The lack of media coverage for independent can­didates is biased support for a prejudiced elections system. The economic system makes people feel that one vote won't make a difference. Big Business is alienating workers from their products, and taking the control of industry away from the individual Bookstore plans to return books to publisher Oct. 5 ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS: The bookstore will return all unsold books to the publisher beginning Oct. 5. Please purchase all necessary books prior to this date. and away from his human needs. The individual's education becomes the catalyst, for any significant change. The extent of the individual's influence is determined by the form and organization of society. To un­derstand how to work successfully within the social framework takes the study of many individuals in constant communication. We have a choice, to educate or conform to inactive alienation. Three out of four Wisconsin voters showed the governments of the world that the "people" want nuclear rationality and control. Yet, our own government seems not to trust the voters' opinion. James Rooney called the referendum advisory in nature and not binding. Is that what our vote reflects under the two - party system? A Soviet plan to cut U.S.S.R. missile and bomber force by 25% and U.S. arms by 10% was met with government mistrust and political scorn. Is this the representative opinion of the people or a reflection of an inadequate system of govern­ment? It seems that com­munication is a problem on every level of government. Maybe by taking the time to cast an educated vote November 2, each vote can rule the government instead of the government ruling each vote. Library book sale The Library / Learning Center will hold a book sale on October 5, 6 and 7 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. outside the entrance of the Library on Level 1. Approximately 1,300 books covering a variety of s ubjects will be included. Most hardcover books will sell for $1.00 and paperbacks for $.25. There also will be a silent auction for several special sets of books. These books have accumulated over a period of time and  consist of duplicates, discards and gift items which are not needed for the Library collection, according to Hannelore B. Rader, director of the Library / Learning Center. HOW PRESIDENT REAGAN'S "QUIET DIPLOMACY" FOR DEALING WITH HUMAN RIGHTS OFFENDERS WORKS Financial aid regulations by Edward M. Elmendorf Newspaper, radio, and television reports of substantial cuts in Federal financial aid to college students have triggered a barrage of phone calls to the U.S. Department of Edication in Washington, D.C. Callers, both students and parents, are often confused by misleading or incomplete in­formation. Many have expressed fear that the government has let them down; that college is no longer affordable. It is true that student financial assistance programs have un­dergone considerable change in the past two years. There have been some reductions. Most of the changes, however, reflect an effort to return the aid programs to their original purpose, which was to help students cover the cost of a college education — not to carry the whole burden. A suc­cessful return to original intent will help ensure the survival of these aid programs for future students. Federal financial assistance is divided into three categories: grants, which are awards of money that do not have to be paid back; loans, which are borrowed money which a student must repay with interest; and work -study, which provides the chance to work and earn money to offset college costs while attending classes. The Pell Grant Program is one of the best known erf th e Federal student aid programs. Formerly called the Basic Educational Opportunity Grant, Pell is often the first source of aid in a package which may be composed of other Federal and non - Federal sour­ces. In the 1982-83 school year, 2.55 million students share $2,279,040,000 in Pell Grants. The U.S. Department of Education uses a standard for­mula to determine who qualifies for Pell Grants. Students should contact the college financial aid administrator to apply on the free "Application for Federal Student Aid." This is the form used for all Federal student aid programs. The Department guarantees that each participating school will receive the money it needs to pay* Pell Grants to eligible students. The Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant provides another mechanism for making awards to students. SEOG is different from the Pell Grant in that it is managed by the financial aid administrator of each   par­ticipating college. Each school receives a set amount of money from the Department and when that money is gone, there are no more SEOG funds for the year. In 1982-83 the Department of Education will provide 440,000 students with $278,400,000 in Supplemental Educational Op­portunity Grants. Students will get up to $2,000 a year under this program. Grant programs are designed to help the most needy students get a college education. The Pell Grant, in particular, is targeted to help those students whose families earn less than $12,000 per year. Grant aid is not meant to cover all college costs but is expected to be combined with a reasonable contribution from the student's family and individual self - help, generally in the form of loans, private scholarships, and work. Another type of student financial assistance is the College Work - Study Program. Designed to provide on- or off - campus jobs for undergraduate and graduate students who need financial assistance, Work - Study is usually managed by the college financial aid administrator. Some 950,000 students will receive $528 m illion under this program in 1982-83. A great deal of publicity has been generated lately on Federal student loans, particularly the National Direct Student Loan Program. Although all colleges do not participate in the NDSL program, 3,340 of them do. This program makes available low interest (5 percent) loans that students must begin repaying six months after completing school (either by graduating, leaving, or dropping below half - time status). Up to 10 years is allowed to repay the loan. Application is made to a school's financial aid ad­ministrator, who manages the loan fund. The fund is a revolving account, designed to allow a school to continually make new loans as existing loans are repaid. About 800,000 students will receive NDSLs in 1982-83; 10,000 more than in 1981-82. Recently, Secretary of Education T.H. Bell signed a regulation which provides in­centives for an institution to reduce the default rate of its NDSL program fund. A college which has a default rate over 25 percent is asked to turn respon­sibility for collecting the debt over to the Federal government. If an institution is not prepared to do this, and the default rate remains at 25 percent or more, the Federal government will cut off NDSL funding. The Guaranteed Student Loan Program, much in the news lately, makes available low in­terest loans to students, with the Federal government paying the interest while a student is in school. These loans are made by a lender (such as a bank, credit union, or savings and loan association) and insured by either the Federal government or a State Guarantee Agency. This, the largest student aid program, will make available over $9.5 billion in loans during the 1982-83 school year. Undergraduate students can borrow up to $2,500 a year and graduate students can borrow up to $5,000 under GSL. The total debt an undergraduate can carry is $12,500. For graduate or professional study this figure is Continued On Page Three ganger Pat Hensiak Bob Kiesling Tony Rogers Tammy Shuemate Masood Shafiq Juli Janovicz Andy Buchanan Mike Farrell Jeff Wicks Jolene Torkilsen Maureen     Burke, Dowhower, Stephen Kovalic, Rick Luehr Tunkieicz uwparksMa -,hw ara so,"y All corresoondpnre CH« IH"L ,0r repr,nt of a°y portion of RANGER. . Parteide box Nn addressed *o: Parkside Ranger, University of Wisconsin Letters to ?! PHV. 2000' ,K«osha. Wisconsin, 53141. paper with one i'nrh ac^?,pted if typewritten, doublespaced on standard size eluded for verification ' ,et,ers mus* be signed and a telephone number in-Names will be withheld for valid reasons. reserved Ull editorVi5 Mondav at 3 pm- f°r Publication on Thursday. The RANGER defamatory content pr,v,leBes m refusinp *&gt; print letters which contain false or Editor News Editor Feature Editor Sports Editor Photo Editor Copy Editor Business Manager Ad Manager Distribution Manager Assistant Business Manager STAFF Carol Burns, Kari Dixon, Dave Kalmar II, Carol Kortendick, John , Robb Luehr, Debra A. Pfaff, Jennie &#13;
MORE INFORMATION&#13;
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              <text>tThe End'&#13;
by Kevin McKay&#13;
Tbi. is the beginning of "The&#13;
tJd" at Parkside. Classes con-&#13;
&lt;lid" Friday the 13th on an&#13;
........ s1yfitting date. Then after&#13;
Iii more days of final&#13;
... mioatlon, intellectual con1&lt;t!i0D5,&#13;
midnight OIl burning,&#13;
1IJrl&lt; terror, and untold misery&#13;
1beEod," Parkside's traditionai&#13;
¢ng "stress clinic" will get&#13;
IxIe" way. .&#13;
Withmime, magic, five bands&#13;
1M&gt; Bach), a volleyball and soft-&#13;
.n tournament, food at all hours&#13;
~ the day and night, liquid&#13;
refreshments, more liquid&#13;
ll!reshmenl&gt;l,and a mini - bus&#13;
lIIJttJe service to haul over -&#13;
fUliedrevelers to safety, May 21'&#13;
D will be a gala celebration all&#13;
tIer the campus.&#13;
spoosored by the P AB, "The&#13;
!DI" starts at 10 a.m. Saturday&#13;
fiIh a v&lt;ileyball tournament and&#13;
IlIIs late Sunday night at 3:30&#13;
LID. when either the last dng is&#13;
.,.ed or the last celebrator&#13;
,,"wls out to the last bus home.&#13;
Admissionwill be charged for&#13;
... Is scheduled after 5 p,m. in&#13;
III! tent opening off the Union&#13;
~tio.The bands Wally Cleaver&#13;
Illil.eoKane, The Booze Brother~&#13;
leYUe,and Java are scheduled to&#13;
,..rorm for those inclined to ...&#13;
.. boogie. Chris Hammelev&#13;
President of the PAB said'&#13;
~melhing new is there will be n~&#13;
t tickets sold at the door. We&#13;
IIInywant to stress that."&#13;
Also scheduled to he shown is&#13;
III! film "Caddyshack" at 1 a.m.&#13;
Ilh Saturday and Sunday nights.&#13;
Salllniay Buck Stove and the&#13;
laoge, a Milwaukee based&#13;
lIifgrass band will start their&#13;
I:ts oul&gt;lide at noon. Marilyn&#13;
Bugeohagen, Assistant Coorblllr&#13;
of Student Activity said,&#13;
"lie hope the people will bring&#13;
. lood outside. We'll have sack&#13;
and ga mes for the kids a&#13;
Dieatmosphere." '&#13;
She added a family bowling&#13;
ment is aJSo scheduled in&#13;
lie Rec Center with ill ages&#13;
tlgible to enter, three games for a&#13;
lick. Prizes for the bowling will&#13;
free games and a T-shirt. Also&#13;
~h.led in Salllrday afternoon's&#13;
10&lt; Center agenda will be free&#13;
. ,Ioosball, table tennis&#13;
IO,centpopcorn and two for on~&#13;
pn"", onsoftdrinks, "plus a whole&#13;
tweh mere."&#13;
Faculty and staff will be&#13;
•&#13;
IS near&#13;
donating their time f&#13;
festivities which will incll~r the&#13;
servrca until 1 a.m. in the t~&#13;
Square. Also free coffee will he&#13;
served to those who need . ~::~f like a bunch of ale~&#13;
The volleyball tournament .&#13;
open to a IS s many teams as want t&#13;
ent~r by May 18 (details ar~&#13;
available In the Student Life offlees)&#13;
but the softball games, a&#13;
~ou~ - robin tournament will be&#13;
limited to four teams 'faculty&#13;
staff, students, and a1~mni Th~&#13;
playoff game starts at 3 p.~.&#13;
I~case of rain other alternatIves&#13;
have been planned&#13;
although Hammelev said "It'&#13;
not going .to rain. I promi~." s&#13;
The muu - bus shuttle will leave&#13;
every hour starting at 11 p m&#13;
alterna ting hetween Kenosba ~nd&#13;
Racine following the standard&#13;
ev~rung bus route. Bugenhagen&#13;
sa~d ~e bus is free and "If you're&#13;
drinking a lot it's best you ride&#13;
rather than risk it." She added&#13;
"Caddyshack" is scheduled for&#13;
the 1 a.m. time sIot with the hopes&#13;
people will take a breather before&#13;
hitting the road.&#13;
The stage inside the tent has&#13;
been moved this year to the far&#13;
west side to allow more room for&#13;
more fun. The sponsors are hoping&#13;
to get the entire campus community&#13;
involved.&#13;
"The End" T-shirts with a new&#13;
logo are on sale in Union Square.&#13;
J:lar:nrnelev said quantities are&#13;
liI~llted at the "amazirgly low&#13;
price cl $4." #it&#13;
The End schedule is as follows:&#13;
saturday&#13;
10 a.m. - Volleyball&#13;
nament&#13;
11 a.m. - Food service starts &amp;&#13;
Buck Stove and the Range&#13;
1 p.m. - Softball tournament&#13;
and bowling&#13;
5 p.m. - Doors to the tent open&#13;
6 p.m. - Wally Cleaver &amp;&#13;
Citizen Kane&#13;
11 p".m. - Mini.bus: dmttlo&#13;
bl!glns&#13;
1 a.m. - Film "Caddyshack" &amp;&#13;
food service&#13;
3:30 a.m. - Last mini - bus&#13;
leaves&#13;
Sunday&#13;
5 p.m. - Tent opens&#13;
6 p.m. - Java and&#13;
Brothers Rewe&#13;
Aid Available·: 1983 1984&#13;
Work - SllIdY&#13;
GSL (&amp; PLUS)&#13;
NDSL&#13;
Pell (Self - help)&#13;
SEOG&#13;
SSIG&#13;
TOTAL&#13;
*Dollars are in millions.&#13;
5lI7&#13;
6,593&#13;
684&#13;
2,419&#13;
355&#13;
.-m&#13;
10,758&#13;
924&#13;
7,198&#13;
550&#13;
2,714&#13;
,J'lIG was established in 1972 in&#13;
e:r to provide states an in-&#13;
"ntive to establish their own&#13;
taot and scholarship programs.&#13;
~ this time all states have met&#13;
challenge and offer very&#13;
attractive scholarship and grant&#13;
programs. Known under a variety&#13;
of different names, these state&#13;
programs awarded over 1 billion&#13;
dollars last year. Thus, after 11&#13;
years, the incentive provided by&#13;
41' University of Wisconsin - Pal'kslde&#13;
Vol. II .&#13;
er&#13;
Thursday, May 12, 1983 o. 30&#13;
by Catherine Chan ..&#13;
Results 01 a recent survey taken&#13;
by the University Committee&#13;
. showed that the Parkside laculty&#13;
is opposed to collective bargaining&#13;
by a margin of 2 to 1.&#13;
A collective bargaining bill ~ to&#13;
be considered by the state&#13;
legislalllre this year. Although the&#13;
bill is under stroll! opposition by&#13;
UW - Madison, Milwaukee, Green&#13;
Bay and Parkside, it bas a. good&#13;
chaneeof being passed and SIgoed&#13;
by the Governor, according to&#13;
James Shea, dIairman of the&#13;
University Committee.&#13;
Although the bill would permit&#13;
faculty representatives to&#13;
negotiate with state representatives&#13;
over salaries and workmg&#13;
cooditions, Shea said, the ov"':aD&#13;
sentiment among Panslde&#13;
faculty is that the bill would "do&#13;
more harm than good."&#13;
The collective bargaining bill&#13;
Samimi appeal denied&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Upholding a decision by the&#13;
facu1t~ Personnel Review&#13;
Committee, Vice Chancellor&#13;
Lorman Ratner denied an appeal&#13;
for the contract renewal of IEH&#13;
Professor Bezhad Samimi.&#13;
Samimi was to have been&#13;
granted tenure.&#13;
ill the a ppeal proceedings the&#13;
PRC voted 6 to 5 with one abstention,&#13;
not to ~new Samimi's&#13;
cootract. The Committee cited&#13;
poor teaching evaluations and&#13;
lack of research as the cause.&#13;
tour- In ~e initial vote to renew, the&#13;
commttteehad voted7to 3 against&#13;
renewal, with one abstentim.&#13;
00 both occasions the Science&#13;
Division Executive Committee&#13;
recommended unanimously that&#13;
Samimi be granted tenure.&#13;
Rainer, in approving the PRC&#13;
decisim, said it was based 00 poor&#13;
teaching evaluations and lack of&#13;
TeSearcn.&#13;
Samimi was hired by Parkside&#13;
io 1978to implement the school's&#13;
IEH program. A tenured&#13;
professor at the University of Samimi questioned the vIce&#13;
Teheran, he was hired at the level chaocellor's decisiCll. He said, "1&#13;
of associate professor and would have become a victim of SCKT1e&#13;
have received an appointment for mysterious slraleg)'," at the&#13;
Booze tenure in five years, instead of the appeal hearing..&#13;
usual six. He later explained there Iihould&#13;
. This year he was nominated for have been no problem approving&#13;
Continued On Page FIve a teaching excellence award the SDEC's decisloo. IUIll ell at U&#13;
Financial aid still available administration says&#13;
by Edward Elmendorf plification will also dramatically the SSIG program has suc- financial mean; neeessa!)' to ha"e provide "'!;:.~~=~ 86'. now each of you has . reduce the administrative burden cessfully generated more dollars some choice in which institution to choice pre'"&#13;
IIlll bly heard on the evening which institutions now face in than the Federal gov",:nment attend. pnvll ed ..... 'm.'! read in your local or administering the six Federal aid could possibily have boped. The problem with SEOG II that B&lt;gun&#13;
IIltv~rslty newspaper about programs. Reducill! this burden SEOG was designed to sup- it is not targeted to help tbooe oldest of&#13;
~.Ident Reagan's proposed will improve the institution's plement the Pe1I Grant. Ad- studenls who reaDy need fed"':al a DC Jll"lCl1I&#13;
'll~ to the Federal student ability to deliver student aid. ministered by the financial aids assistance. IT the proposed budget pa 25 y&#13;
fi'aoclal assistance programs The DOE has asked Congress office on the campus, the program is accepted by the Congress, lhe ...... nment en&#13;
~o~ed by the Department of not to provide new funding for the was to provide students with the new Self -he1pGrant PI"lllram will C__ .... 0.. P.&#13;
-catioo (DOE). State Student Incentive Grant&#13;
..Because over 1 billion dollars Program (SSIG), the Sup- P k #d f&#13;
docli.mngInterest rates, the total portunity Grant Program&#13;
beensaved as a result of plemental Educational Op- ar 51 e p~O5 oppose I I&#13;
~~~:'da~%t~:alis r::':~~~~~l'~~n t~~~:~~~~t&#13;
:~a::e~~e~::;:~~~~tt~: fu~~:"t,~ g~'::e~~~k~~~ COIIect#1ve ba rga #1n#1ng ~~ins~x t;ro~~~~id~~~ ~~: '~:S~:d~er~~ G:;:I Uand~~~&#13;
_ D, me work _ study, and one loan volume and a higher loan&#13;
.. ot. average for the Guaranteed&#13;
The key principle hehind this Student Loan Program &lt;GSLl.&#13;
IIlllposalis that a simplified and The chart compares the total&#13;
~SOhdated student aid program amount of aid available to&#13;
".. benefit both the student and studenls through the Department&#13;
~ American taxpayer financing of Education under the 1983 and&#13;
student aid programs. Sim- proposed 1984 budgets.&#13;
Samimi has conductoo applied&#13;
researcb In lIldustriai bygiene for&#13;
area instituticcs, partiOllarly .C.&#13;
Jobnson in Racine.&#13;
He bas had seven papers&#13;
published in "top journals" in the&#13;
country, and cooducls peer review&#13;
lor several of the publications.&#13;
DR. B. S. SAMIMI&#13;
provides a potential of eiCbt&#13;
bargaining units: (J I the laculty&#13;
at UW - Madison; f21 the&#13;
academic staff at UW • Ma_;&#13;
(3) tbe laculty at UW -&#13;
Milwaukee, (4) the .... demic&#13;
stall al UW - Milwaukee, (5' tbe&#13;
faculty at the I;W - CeDI ...&#13;
system, (6) the academic laff at&#13;
the UW - ee..ter system, 171 tbe&#13;
faculty at UW - Eau Qaire. Green&#13;
Bay, LaCrosse, Oshkosb,&#13;
Parkside. Platteville. River FaIIo.&#13;
Stevens Pain~ Stout, SUporiOr aDd&#13;
Whi..,..aler; (8) tbe academic&#13;
staff at UW - Eau Claire, Greet&#13;
Bay. LaCrosse. Oshkosb.&#13;
Parkside, Platte&gt;iIle. River Falls.&#13;
Ste ..... Point, Stout. Super1ar and&#13;
'o\o'hitewaler.&#13;
AceordinlI to Shea, the propooed&#13;
eight bargaining umls IS LOIlikeI&#13;
Faculty oppooill! the bill fear&#13;
tha t if it is passed ~. ..-10 be&#13;
forced into one genera Ibargaining&#13;
a&#13;
\1181 and \cae tbeIr role&#13;
academIC deolal_&#13;
In addiUoo the&#13;
probably by 10 111_ thin \IIlI&#13;
'''arDde -.Jd be ao&#13;
merwod tho t IndivIcUaI COIIICft1.&#13;
and IDle wouldn't prn'8&#13;
sa 1d a 1 t " .... Id be In.._1ibh&#13;
to praene Incal cboI It -.Jd&#13;
he a ltalo of total au_&#13;
_ adcIed that a ...... 01&#13;
Ie -.Id mean lbat II to DO&#13;
bIDe WGlId devOled to!he ....&#13;
of ~arcll and t the tadlil,.&#13;
losd at Pa de Id p-dJably&#13;
1......... 10 boun&#13;
• I'm worried that II&#13;
1d '1f it&#13;
llrilJ VCII:e to&#13;
IIIIg,,1be f&#13;
'Ibel:&#13;
preMIIIl the&#13;
foculty al&#13;
Rea«tb m..,!lJlC&#13;
II&#13;
2 Thundllly, May 12, 1983 RANGER&#13;
letter to the editor&#13;
Response to NPSGA&#13;
To the edit ... :&#13;
Students, ha.., you )wan! 01 the&#13;
.- Ioftisl group 011 campus&#13;
called the P.5G.A, which \bey&#13;
lJa)' undo f... the '01 Parbide&#13;
Student Government Asooc:iatiClll~&#13;
Don't be mi informed readen,&#13;
d... 't let these people try to fool&#13;
you. What this program reaDy&#13;
undo lor i$ The 'ational Puerto&#13;
R1can .1Iy Gumball Association&#13;
The main goel of this group is to&#13;
provulo polo malJets, impewted&#13;
from Hollywond, to aU students,&#13;
What II the I"IrpoBe belund this&#13;
b.... re _vi .... To beat PSGA&#13;
lRlo .. bm Ion· no. to dec:orate&#13;
the SOC off.ce -no. but to .... these&#13;
IllIIrUmenla of perversion to atop&#13;
people from playinC baaketball in&#13;
the olf'ce. Wby does thia group&#13;
wantlbom to stop playing Boball •&#13;
Ihry want them to play polo ind&#13;
Theae B • ball playing students&#13;
ha.., c.... idered playing polo in&#13;
the olfice but thes-e is a major&#13;
pn1bIem wilb this idea. Wbat are&#13;
\bey gung to do wilb aU the h.....&#13;
manure that woukl accumulate? I&#13;
ha ve a auggestion for this&#13;
prcblem, \bey couJd start a lund&#13;
for former SUFAC chairs and they&#13;
could use \be manure to fertilize&#13;
their plantations in \be soulb.&#13;
The assault bas already begun.&#13;
One rl the leftist guerrilla's bas,&#13;
can you believe this, let \be air out&#13;
rl one rl \be tires of our&#13;
president's bicycle. Students how&#13;
do you feel about a president wilb&#13;
ooIy one good wheel left.&#13;
fn order to comba t this group it&#13;
has been necessary to form \be&#13;
V.SP .s.P .• which staJXIs for \be&#13;
Very Secret Parks ide Secret&#13;
Police. Students we must stop this&#13;
leftist guorri lla group, for truth,&#13;
justice and \be American way.&#13;
THE FORK&#13;
'ttFALKVINAS&#13;
....&#13;
•&#13;
,.;.;.;. ;-;-;.:.;.;.;.:,:.:.;.:.;.;.; ;.:.:.:::::.::;:::;.;:;:;:::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:::;:;: ::;:;:::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:::;:::;.::;:;.;.;.: :;:::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:::;:::;;; :::::;:::;:;:::::;:;:;:::::::;:::;:::;:::::;:;:: :::~::;:::::::::::::::::;::::::;:: :::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:.'&#13;
Editor's Notes&#13;
like everyone else, there are things to say&#13;
Ily Pa.IIe .. lak&#13;
LeI'a start w.th a cliche shall&#13;
w' Allgood things must corne&#13;
toanend (tseemslilte we just&#13;
gol starttd I wouldn't have&#13;
misaed It • and we could go on&#13;
and ... and on In some ways this&#13;
.. an IRcompiete fmal issue rlIbe&#13;
Ranger, as Ican't introduce to \be&#13;
,.,.ders \be new Editor. That's&#13;
because there ""'ere a I'IJmber of&#13;
anol'caloons this year, and accorUll&#13;
... ,uut.u \.."Ul~."eu:J· ...... .,.&#13;
\be Ranger is required to set up an&#13;
advlaory board to help make the&#13;
decision. by means of a "'COmmenda&#13;
ti... to \be board. The&#13;
adVisory board has been set up,&#13;
and 1.5 m motion, but a decision&#13;
like this, i$ one that lakes some&#13;
time, so we'll all have to be&#13;
pallent&#13;
There wlll be a different Ranger&#13;
Editor next year, as Ihave chosen&#13;
to lake on \be n!SpORSibilitiesof&#13;
\be S UF AC. chair Ranger&#13;
being \be job .t i$ and S.U.F.A.C.&#13;
ng \be job,t .. , .t didn't seem at&#13;
aD pou.ble to do botb jobs at once.&#13;
Beca .... I've had my fa.. chance&#13;
at thia position. I'.., chosen to&#13;
I1&gt;CJYe ... to something else. Like&#13;
every Ranger Editor, tbere are&#13;
lhooe dOllUl&amp;, statements wblcb I&#13;
feel moat be made, and an these&#13;
r mine&#13;
Like "'eryone else, \be'" are&#13;
certain events 011 this campus that&#13;
highlighted \be year, and can be&#13;
looktd back upon with posilove&#13;
feelings. &lt;There are also Ibose&#13;
which a'" a bucket of bad&#13;
feelings&gt;. This year Parkside set&#13;
up new Apple Computers in the D -&#13;
tlevel or \be library, and Parkside&#13;
set up new housing for some of its&#13;
students at the Racine YMCA.&#13;
(Commonly known as Ranger&#13;
HaUl The Parkside Union Adv~1&#13;
LXJQIU WClOJ uevCJ.~ gj~oJ&#13;
I"It into swing, to help wilb issues&#13;
relattd to Ibe student Union. OUr&#13;
line institution of higher education&#13;
brought Les Aspin and Peter&#13;
Jansson oot to campus for what&#13;
turned out to be a strong debate&#13;
between the candidates in the first&#13;
district Congressional Race.&#13;
(Aspin won).&#13;
The Sexual Harassment Advisory&#13;
Board set up a panel&#13;
discussion to explore some of the&#13;
aspects of sexual harassment&#13;
There was a good crowd at that.&#13;
Theatrical events at Parkside&#13;
included "Ring Round \be Moon "&#13;
lOA Delicate Balance," and. ma~y&#13;
other programs. Accent on&#13;
Enrichment brought the&#13;
'etberlands Chamber Orchestra&#13;
and Gilbert and Sullivan:&#13;
Protesters rallied for Peter&#13;
Seybold wbo bas lost his renewal&#13;
to this point, but \be students&#13;
fought a good fight for him.&#13;
On a different election nole, Phil&#13;
Pogreba and Mike Sennn were&#13;
elected Ibe new President and&#13;
Vice - President of P.S.G.A. So&#13;
far, they seem very involved in&#13;
\be processes of learning about&#13;
their new pa;itions. Of course,&#13;
they'll have to watch out for the&#13;
N.P.S.G.A. (It's groups like that&#13;
which would invoke change.) The&#13;
Very Special Arts Festival was a&#13;
n\n •.J....~Cullcarnine; ~icncc for&#13;
everyone involved, and I would&#13;
know, because Iwas there, and it&#13;
is amazing what children can&#13;
teach adults.&#13;
Meatier issues did arise on&#13;
campus this year, like the movie&#13;
Emmanuelle. Last year the issue&#13;
seemed to be G. Gordon Liddy,&#13;
and thIS year PAB came up With&#13;
Emmanuelle. Good things did&#13;
happen because of the movie&#13;
though, on an overall level, the&#13;
level of consciousness about&#13;
pornography and its effects was&#13;
brought to a lot rl people's attention,&#13;
at least it did mine. H it&#13;
did raise at least one person's&#13;
level of conscioosness, the whole&#13;
effort was worth it. Things were&#13;
learned from it. So much for&#13;
events on campus.&#13;
Like everyone else, Iwould like&#13;
to commend the students who&#13;
found time and took time to get&#13;
1HLS IS 'reuR CAml~SPBV:1Nc7....&#13;
\,JE WILl.. BE T'AICIN6-orF AS&#13;
SOON A~WE' FIND Oe1r JUsT&#13;
"'-lHfto WRONG- ••.&#13;
.,&#13;
- .&#13;
--&#13;
-&#13;
.&#13;
.-&#13;
'-&#13;
-&#13;
involved in some way on this&#13;
campus. It has made a difference,&#13;
and while that difference may not&#13;
always be tangible and applied to&#13;
a current situation, whatever&#13;
input students can give is well&#13;
received, simply because a&#13;
student is laking the time to offer&#13;
it. It all adds to the learning&#13;
process, whether it be directly to&#13;
the first curriculum, or subtly,&#13;
perhaps to one of the many hidden&#13;
curriculums.&#13;
Like everyone else, I'd like to&#13;
thank a few people who have&#13;
made my experience with Ranger&#13;
a positive one. The other student&#13;
leaders and presidents of major&#13;
organizations, who were always&#13;
quite willing to share with me&#13;
experiences they've had in&#13;
dealing with others on this&#13;
campus. It was through your&#13;
experience that Ilearned too. You&#13;
know who you are. Of course, the&#13;
administration (with a few exceptions)&#13;
is very easy to get along&#13;
with on this campus, much more&#13;
s~ than on other campuses. It was&#13;
kmd of fun to work with them.&#13;
Then Ibere's the Ranger staff ..&#13;
. here we've had everything from&#13;
a level - headed business&#13;
manager, to a real go . getter&#13;
adver~ising manager. from a&#13;
searching. for - news new editor&#13;
to a rather creative feature editor'&#13;
a running sports editor to ~&#13;
gentleman who takes his pictures&#13;
very seriously. We've had writers&#13;
of satire who have written their&#13;
thoughts and received their&#13;
• •&#13;
strikes, writers rl sports ...&#13;
really seem to enjoy it, wril8'l"&#13;
news stones who can makepeapIe&#13;
talk, (perhaps more thu ...&#13;
people would like), writen "&#13;
opinion who bave braved lhnJua\.&#13;
and writers of fealurelrn.&#13;
movies to music, (rom COltroversy&#13;
to "light". (That'. a&#13;
third less serious tban "'llIdIr&#13;
fea ture writing.&gt;&#13;
It's been a staff of goodbalala,&#13;
of good humor, and rl pi&#13;
thought. While some thougIolI&#13;
may ha ve never been seen II&#13;
print, they've been tbougbta IIiat&#13;
many of us have learned lraIII.&#13;
While there are people we loft II&#13;
work with, there are people ..&#13;
hate to work with, but wort ..-&#13;
them anyways, because wet.&#13;
learned to wnrk together, 01&#13;
matter what.&#13;
And so a door is lightly d.,q&#13;
between us, as we aU do ouron&#13;
thing for the summer. PeriIapI&#13;
rorever. There are a lot of otbB'&#13;
things to be said, but the do« i&#13;
closing more quickly now diu&#13;
ever, and what Ihave left tosayi&#13;
simple: Like everyone else, lIDO&#13;
am pleased with the ootcome"&#13;
this paper, and accomplis/uDellll&#13;
for the year. There have boll&#13;
flaws, some little, some big, lit&#13;
overall the staff of this paper tal&#13;
be proud of the work they did diI&#13;
year, because like everyoneeIoe.&#13;
we did our best to make it l!IJ'OOIlI.&#13;
and we have indeed made it So&#13;
long ...&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Sbafiq&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene Torkilsen&#13;
Herbert Kubly&#13;
(;)a nger News:: -"=' Featura EditIf&#13;
Sports Editlll'&#13;
Photo EditII'&#13;
Copy EditII'&#13;
Business Ma ......&#13;
AlIMa ......&#13;
Distribution Ma......&#13;
Assistant Business Ma......&#13;
AdVItoI'&#13;
Sh STAFF&#13;
Buenk~~on Ak&lt;:n,. Terry Byrne, Maureen Burke, .lN1lIIl&#13;
Patricia C Phl.II,ps, Carra Cariello, Catherine CIIl/ftl'&#13;
Kort - umb,e, Dan Dowhower, Michael Kllil,s, carol&#13;
Ray:nd'Ck, John Kovalic, Rick Luehr, Robb Luehr, KalllY&#13;
Tunkiurn, Napolean Scarbrough, Dave Schroeder, JeDnll eel.&#13;
RANGER is writ, 501'"&#13;
responsible for 11se;d.~nd. edit~ by stUdents 01 UW . Parkside lind ttlty Irf!&#13;
Published eVery Thu I onal p?IICY and contl!l'1t. idI....&#13;
RA.NGER is printed ~Sdty dU~tn9lhe academic yellr except during breaks andtlOl&#13;
Written permiSSion is ~ he. Union Coopet'"afive Publishing Co., Kenosha, WISCOfISIn&#13;
All correspondenc equlred tor reprint of any portion of RANGER. ~&#13;
Parkside. Bolt Noe ~Uld be addressed to: Parkslde Ranger, Unlvenityof WI&#13;
Leiters to Ihe Edj·tor '. Kenosha, Wisconsin, 53141. ....&#13;
paper With one _inc Wilt b:e accepted if typewritten, cloublespaced on st,ndlrd III'l&#13;
elUded tor verificali~ ma~gms. All lettl!l'"s must be signed and a lelep/'lOM numbel'"&#13;
Names will be withheld&#13;
Deadline for letters. far valid reasons. "HGE'&#13;
reserves aU editorialls M:ooday at. 3 p.m. for publication on Thursday. The Rl&#13;
"' fI&#13;
defamatory COntent. privileges m refusing to print lellers which con'·ln •&#13;
Government seeks to increase&#13;
financialaids efficiency&#13;
continued From Page 1&#13;
~riicipatingin the program over&#13;
ij'billiOO dollars to establish&#13;
"Iving loan funds on the&#13;
~ The loan fund is for the&#13;
~rrent and future students.&#13;
gh no new money IS :Sled for the NDSL program,&#13;
revolving funds mean that&#13;
:. $550 million will continue to&#13;
1I.vailable to students in 1984.&#13;
\'be amoont of money available&#13;
~ future years depends on&#13;
_ts meeting their repayment&#13;
jligatioos and thereby keeping&#13;
.. revolving funds healthy. If&#13;
iIrID.rstudents, now in default,&#13;
!l9'y their loans, over $640&#13;
,;Dioo ceuld be added to the&#13;
.. oIving funds.&#13;
The three remaining programs:&#13;
c.IlegeWork- Study, Peli (Grant)&#13;
.ro!be Guaranteed Student Loan&#13;
ProSJ'lIm(GSLl will ensure the&#13;
'P' of student financial&#13;
....staree hoped for, but never&#13;
ISiHzed, under the six program&#13;
urangement.&#13;
!be Guaranteed Student Loan&#13;
GSLI and AUXiliary Loan&#13;
PLUS) programs make low&#13;
... restloans available to eligible&#13;
IT'duate and undergraduate&#13;
lIIIdents(GSL) as well as parents&#13;
PLUS) by paying lenders inIftSt&#13;
while the student is in&#13;
tdmland by subsidizing interest&#13;
tIIil. the borrower is paying off&#13;
.. loon. The combined program&#13;
l !be largest of the Federal&#13;
"llCial aid programs. .&#13;
Tbe Department's budget&#13;
..... ts $2.04 billion to cover the&#13;
... of the GSL program in 1984 .&#13;
•• includes a rescission of $900&#13;
lIilIion for 1983 funding. The $2.04&#13;
• represents a decrease from&#13;
.. 111112 GSL appropriation of&#13;
_t one billion dollars.&#13;
!be proposed reduction does not&#13;
'1Ipresenta reduced commitmen&#13;
!be GSL program. Although the&#13;
lI'Iram will cost one billion&#13;
iIIIars Jess than in 1982, one&#13;
lilIion dollars more will be&#13;
hlilable to student borrowers.&#13;
!be 1984 proposal will make&#13;
.... changes to the current law&#13;
"'.rning the GSL program.&#13;
illrr.nlly, students who wish to&#13;
birr... under the GSL program do&#13;
.. haveto demonstrate financial&#13;
II!d if their family income is&#13;
-- $:Jl,OOO. The 1984 budget&#13;
IIOp&lt;mesextending the needs test&#13;
'laUincOOle levels. Factors such&#13;
.... t of tUition, expected family&#13;
llotribution,numher of children&#13;
II SChool,etc., will continue to&#13;
..... inlothe needs formula. This&#13;
IInIposed change is consistent&#13;
Ill1l OUrbelief tha t Federal aid "'/d be reserved for those&#13;
IlIdentsWhoneed the assistance&#13;
1I11d... 10 attend college.&#13;
R.agan's federai budget&#13;
~ts an additional $310 million&#13;
funds for the College Work -&#13;
~ Program (CWSl. Increases&#13;
ICWSSUpportDOE's view that a&#13;
t and his or her family e'" the primary responsibility&#13;
6118ncinga college education.&#13;
tadopted by the Congres~,&#13;
•~denl Reagan's increase will :ate jobs for an additional&#13;
.000 students. The average&#13;
ltudent's earnings would be&#13;
.00.&#13;
~ College Work - Study&#13;
....~m is administered and ;::"ged on the college campus.&#13;
",~. Fed...al government con-&#13;
•... lion to the work - study r-Ynlllis 80%. Increasing the&#13;
.. Sprogram by 60% will reduce&#13;
... btlrden many young graduates&#13;
face when they have relied&#13;
~ heavily on loans to finance&#13;
Collegecosts.&#13;
tilaThe most sweeping proposed&#13;
P,unges are those affecting the&#13;
lila Grant Program. Driving the&#13;
, nges are our interest lD&#13;
:uring equity and ensuring&#13;
• ess and choice. The proposal&#13;
.: .... Iores to the student some&#13;
.....PQlS'billtyfor securing college&#13;
QlUIIderthe proposed Self - help&#13;
ell) Grant Program, students&#13;
must meet a minimum expected&#13;
student contribution before being&#13;
eligible for a grant. The cootr'ibution&#13;
would be a minimum of&#13;
40 percent of the cost of attendance&#13;
- with an absolute&#13;
dollar minimum of $800. A student&#13;
m~y .meet his expected contflbutIon&#13;
from a variety of&#13;
sources, including the Federal&#13;
loan and work - study programs&#13;
descnbed above, state grant and&#13;
scholarship funds and private&#13;
sources.&#13;
Reagan's Proposal suggests that&#13;
cost ?f atte~dance should figure&#13;
prommently in the calculatioo of a&#13;
student's self - help grant. A&#13;
student attending a community&#13;
college and living at home ooviously&#13;
has less cost than a&#13;
student attending a $7,500 institution&#13;
in a different town 01"&#13;
state. The "cost - sensitivity" c:l&#13;
the Self - help Grant Program&#13;
should ensure that needy students&#13;
have a greater choice in the&#13;
selection of an institution to attend.&#13;
While the maximum Pell&#13;
Grant is $1,800, a student who&#13;
attends a high cost institution and&#13;
has a small expected family&#13;
contribution could receive a $3,000&#13;
Sell - help Gra nt.&#13;
The equity issue is one that has&#13;
long been wrestled with in the&#13;
delivery of Federal grant&#13;
programs. Many students are&#13;
awarded more money than they&#13;
Opinion&#13;
actually need Whilemany more do&#13;
not receive enwgh to meet their&#13;
college costs. This situation has&#13;
resulted in large part because d.&#13;
the com plexity d. the Pell Gra nt&#13;
Program eligibility criteria To&#13;
address this problem, the new Self&#13;
- help Grant Program proposes.&#13;
for example, reducing from 22 to&#13;
five the number of factors used 10&#13;
detenoine a family's ability 10&#13;
conmbute. Chaoges such as this&#13;
will go far toward re - estabUsiung&#13;
the original intent of the grant&#13;
program -. tha t of providing&#13;
access to higher educaboo for&#13;
those Who ,,"ouk! not be able to&#13;
attend college without assistance.&#13;
The new Self - help Grant IS&#13;
designed to build on lha t original&#13;
purpose by giving rl!edy students&#13;
choice in addition to access .&#13;
By consolidating the programs&#13;
to simplify management and by&#13;
requiring a student conbibutioo to&#13;
higher eduea bon costs before&#13;
grant aid is provided. this administratioo&#13;
believes that it can&#13;
maintain the integrity of Federal&#13;
student assistance programs.&#13;
Simplifying the system and&#13;
maintaining integrity are the ooIy&#13;
ways to ensure that the programs&#13;
will be available to future&#13;
generatioos of students.&#13;
Edward EJmendorf i. the&#13;
Assistant Secretory for Poat·&#13;
secondary Education at the&#13;
Department of Education4&#13;
RANGER&#13;
3&#13;
High school 51&#13;
compete in cont&#13;
Solving Parkside's participation probl&#13;
~~~~~~&#13;
by Marty Rheaume&#13;
Having recently (and unsuccessfully)&#13;
run for the office of&#13;
.nee... - resident of- Park:slde&#13;
Student Government Association,&#13;
I have become acutely aware ci&#13;
- the role of politics at UWParkside.&#13;
Having been totally&#13;
disassociated with politics prior to&#13;
my campaign, I think I can. DOW&#13;
offer a realistic and unblased&#13;
assessment of the situation. I&#13;
would like to discuss a few key&#13;
topics as they relate to students at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Political Awareness&#13;
There are a handful of students&#13;
here who are knowledgable on the&#13;
subject of Parkside politics. I do&#13;
not claim to be totally aware of&#13;
how the system works. Un·&#13;
doubtedly everyone knows what&#13;
student life is like, but few know&#13;
how to influence, change, or are&#13;
even aware of the policies,&#13;
committees and power groups&#13;
that dictate the status quo. As&#13;
students, we choose t? rema~n&#13;
ignorant of Parkside politics. This&#13;
situation could more accura~ely&#13;
he described as apathy by chOIce.&#13;
Parkside outside of the concern&#13;
for class and program&#13;
availability. Such is the plight of a&#13;
(OUI - yeiu \..VUUUUlCl ,-vnqse&#13;
Political Future&#13;
At this point it seems fair to a&#13;
if student politics, ie; PSGA as&#13;
the voice of the students. will ever&#13;
reach its power polential here at&#13;
Parkside. Considering the status&#13;
quo, ooe would logically say no.&#13;
There are hO'Never. some reasons&#13;
to be optimistic.&#13;
Tbere are an abundance of&#13;
campus clubs and activities foc&#13;
those who choose to participate.&#13;
Without them, Parkside "'ouId&#13;
truly he a ghost campus. If their&#13;
numbers continue to gro"'.&#13;
perhaps student awareness and&#13;
participation "'ill also.&#13;
The real answer to the question,&#13;
I feel, is found in the final topic.&#13;
The Pi\·ot Point&#13;
Parkside's growth rate has been&#13;
phenomenal. With this growth has&#13;
come an influx ci many high.&#13;
quality professors and programs&#13;
It is difficult to fInd a better&#13;
education for your money. Hats&#13;
off to the planners!&#13;
But now Parkside is bulging at&#13;
Political Atmosphere the seams. We need a. bigger&#13;
To understand this Union, cafeteria and parking lot.&#13;
phenomenon, one must look to the not to mention more classroom&#13;
Parkside environment. W~ are a and living space, among a lev.· d&#13;
small college, nestled 10 the our basic needs. How these&#13;
rolling hills hetween the two problems are solved will hne a&#13;
population centers from which we direct impact on the long •. term&#13;
draw our student bndy. Student future of Parkside as a pohticall&#13;
housing, and the. general educabonal institution. .&#13;
population in the immediate area, Founded as a communl.ty&#13;
is limited. The typical student college on a "local industnal&#13;
comes to Parkside, pursues mission," Parkside has ~ed .lts&#13;
knowledge (or what- have - you), function well. But local industnes&#13;
and goes home. Slmply and are coming and gOiDg.&#13;
logically put, the general student Technologies, managemenl&#13;
body has no reason to care about '.':' .. ;.:-::.;-:.~&#13;
'i"l""""""""';"';"';';';';';"';';';';';';';';.;.:-,.;,.;.;.;.;., .•.•.,.;.,.;••.•;.;.;.,.•.. ;.;.,..•:-.•;............... r:-;&#13;
lR~nger needs a new Staff for next yea ;;&#13;
::: Apply now, auaid the rush .&#13;
:i: Stop in Ranger office .&#13;
::: WLLC D/39&#13;
:::. or call 553·2287 or 553·2295&#13;
~-:::::::;:;:.:::.:;:;:.;.:.;.;.:.:-::.: •.7:::.:.:.:·:·:.;.;.:.:.:.:-:.:::-;.:.; •.•:••.:.;.;: •••;.; ....: ••;.:::.:.;.;.;.;.;.:-: ... ' .&#13;
TO MANAGE STUDENT BOOKSTORE -&#13;
APPLICATIONS AVAIlABlE PSGA&#13;
OFFICE - DO 'T DELAY. (AU TOOA Y I&#13;
techniques, and \he and&#13;
academic pf'OiRTaJDS to&#13;
UU\dUlXJ:t them demand m tllf'~~~&#13;
vircnment arM&#13;
community sbouId DO&#13;
emphasiD!d as a buff&#13;
graduates. PerlIapa It&#13;
take a good hanl J&#13;
roIUog at \he&#13;
future&#13;
U the pbmen&#13;
budge! may dIcUlte&#13;
squeezJngus&#13;
will rt!8ch sene d. art&#13;
eqUilibrium and politi&#13;
center auround;:~~~~~~ scarce " 1be&#13;
Increa edueatioaal&#13;
rna' be forced to com to a&#13;
More opttmlstkally ptrlllllpo&#13;
Par do wtII. ""'"" Uia&#13;
n&#13;
,;,poIaplizln.l!&#13;
academIc t d,&#13;
the .- of&#13;
Parks Ide can&#13;
-&#13;
• Ideal for Cover letters&#13;
and Resumes .&#13;
• Coli - BEITER lETIERS&#13;
(312) 662-0148&#13;
****•••**••**......&#13;
...&#13;
...&#13;
...&#13;
...&#13;
...&#13;
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:••*** *** . • · ·t&#13;
•&#13;
Thursday. May 12. 1983 RANGER&#13;
*lh~**ClubEvents*****&#13;
PSES&#13;
''Tho Oub"ls now _ .. tile&#13;
Parblele Society 01 EIlgIDOOriDg&#13;
Selence &lt;PSESl. All mgilW'l'\ng'&#13;
1eduloI0cy aDd applied ocience&#13;
llucleDta are iDYIled lD jaID tile&#13;
_lety lD boIp 1bem8eI_ aDd tile&#13;
ICbooI lIIrouIlI commllJlicalioD&#13;
wllb ..... buai .... nd v.rious&#13;
• ctivlli", .nd projects.&#13;
1be \ul -... WII beId May&#13;
11 summer commiltees and g.. 1s&#13;
were ~. '!'be DeJ&lt;1 planned&#13;
actiVIty will be a picnic .1 Prilclard&#13;
Part. aD tIle .... ner olllwy.&#13;
11 aDd Olllo St. &lt;22I!d Ave.) in&#13;
RadDe, an y 21 from 12:00 to&#13;
5:08p. m.1berewillbea 52 lee lor&#13;
_lety. I.culty and IlIfI memt.s&#13;
and tbolr ...... ta All inlonsted&#13;
penons sbouJd sign up al&#13;
tile Society's oIflce in Moin IH39&#13;
.. IOOIl .. pooaible. see you nal&#13;
laU and hove • 8DOd summer.&#13;
UWPDT&#13;
The Parullle Dart Team might&#13;
play the olber UW schools in tile&#13;
1,,"1 ever stal&lt;! • Wiele dart tourIIIm.,,1&#13;
t.hia weekend, il.ny of tile&#13;
cowar decIde 10show up. If tile&#13;
olber ""bool lail 10 show, the&#13;
Park Ide Darl Team will&#13;
procl.orn. 11 lbe Winner by&#13;
clef ull .nd throw a party.&#13;
ow Is the lime lor aU good dart&#13;
learn members Ie corne lD the aid&#13;
oIlbell'leam All right, you bunch&#13;
01 cheap coli. k;ds, either&#13;
donale $75 10 the Buy a Dart&#13;
B08rd Fund or ea I some canned&#13;
Imon aDd die. F.ce ii, the dart&#13;
oo.rd we have now is a piece 01&#13;
junk If Napoleon Scarbrough can&#13;
give five buckslowards \be board,&#13;
you can spare 75 measly cents.&#13;
ow, right now. go up 10 \be&#13;
studenllife oIfIce .nd give so our&#13;
. . '-&#13;
1be Dart Team BaD Slammers&#13;
VoIleybaUsquad needs you! If you&#13;
liIte lD inflicl humilia lion upon&#13;
unsuspecting college students,&#13;
sign up now! Midgets need not&#13;
apply. 1be fmal rosier will be&#13;
amouneed .1 \be last regular&#13;
meeling ollbe year aD May 16th al&#13;
1 p.m. in MolD 126. If Moin 126 is&#13;
being used, \be Dart Team Will&#13;
meel in the Reo: center .&#13;
Chess&#13;
The """,Its 01 luiweek's Spring&#13;
Tournament are: LeWis Adams,&#13;
Greg Bowen, Scotl Haubrich and&#13;
Jim Wynslra splil \be Iirs! place&#13;
prize money in a four - way tie.&#13;
Gary Adelsen and Chuck Zielesch&#13;
lied for second place.&#13;
If you're interesled in playing&#13;
Chess this summer, leave us a&#13;
message in \be Studenl Life 01-&#13;
fice.&#13;
We'd like 10 thank all \be&#13;
groupies tha Ishowed up for our&#13;
last meeting. (If you're missing&#13;
anything, we turned il inlo \be info&#13;
desk.) We'd like 10thank everyone&#13;
who participaled this semesler.&#13;
Have a 8DOd summer, eh?&#13;
Cheerleaders&#13;
On Monday, Apr. 25 \be 1983-&amp;1&#13;
cheerleading squad was chosen.&#13;
'The team members are Sharon&#13;
Kruk, Lym Brown, Heidi Caldwell.&#13;
Porlla Morgan, Sieve&#13;
Calhoun, Dave Koike, Jeff&#13;
Petersen, Kris Anderson, Judy&#13;
Speck, Scoll Peterson, Sara&#13;
Goodland, and Hope Slachowski.&#13;
Thom White is \be Ranger hear.&#13;
There Will he another tryout in&#13;
\be faU for incoming students and&#13;
interesled Parkside students. A&#13;
Ranger hear is still needed.&#13;
For information contact&#13;
Marilyn al \be Studenl Life Office,&#13;
nkroroa 1;.~'l_f)")"7Q&#13;
Have a good summer!&#13;
a&#13;
"Still Night Writings':: a new forum&#13;
for area writers and poets&#13;
by Patricia eumble&#13;
"Still Nighl Writi~" is a new&#13;
poetry journal hy a group 01&#13;
writers and poels based in Racine&#13;
and Kenosha.&#13;
One 01 \be features in this issue&#13;
is an exclusive interview with&#13;
Allen Ginsberg. He is most noted&#13;
for his poems, uHO'NI," ''''0 Aunt&#13;
Rose 11 and "Kaddish:' This interv~&#13;
is an insight into a&#13;
"radical poet" of the Beat&#13;
Gmeration.&#13;
In \be poel's own words he&#13;
describes that period, "We were&#13;
concerned with the whole&#13;
movement from linear consciousness&#13;
to more panoramic&#13;
awareness ... a movement from&#13;
linear, patterned poetry 10 open -&#13;
field poetry.&#13;
"Madman's Morning" is a short&#13;
story wrilten by Phillip Hermann.&#13;
It begins as a rather seda te&#13;
reflectioo on the writer's dreams&#13;
and accomplishments. Throogh&#13;
the use of intense sarcasm, the&#13;
story increases tempo and the&#13;
initial message is driven home -&#13;
hard.&#13;
Donald Kummings, a !X'olossor&#13;
here at Parkside, is also in this&#13;
journal. His poem "Hunter" is&#13;
about a childhood hunting experience&#13;
lha t had a profoond&#13;
effect upon him. Interspersed are&#13;
images of Autumn, expressed in&#13;
color, words, am poetic scene.&#13;
''The Club", a poem by Steven&#13;
G. Farrell is an intellectual&#13;
statement set in the scene of a&#13;
smokey lavern. In it, the cold is&#13;
overcome with ale and spirits.&#13;
Michael Gordoux is a most&#13;
lalented poet "living in the&#13;
wilderness of northern Wisconsin&#13;
survivinll:: by his own genius II&#13;
according to the journal"s&#13;
biographical notes.&#13;
Three of his poems particularly&#13;
impressed. me. "Kathleen" is of&#13;
course, about a woman, rot the&#13;
style 01 lhe poem is unique to the&#13;
poet. "Meditations (Jl Sial'S and&#13;
FDIC&#13;
Forthe&#13;
finest&#13;
tradition&#13;
inbanking:&#13;
CJleritageHanks&#13;
Hern.ve National S.nIl RKin.&#13;
5220 Washington Avenue&#13;
637-9101&#13;
HerilJlge Bank and TrUSI&#13;
4001 North Main Street&#13;
639-6010&#13;
~ Banll Mt. ..-ani&#13;
5901 Durand Avenue&#13;
5!;4-ll500&#13;
THE FIRST ISSUE of "Still Night Writings" featuresan In.&#13;
terview with poet Allen Ginsberg.&#13;
Friends" speaks from the poet's solitude ci. his life.&#13;
point 01 view on human nature.. A copy of "Still Night Wrilql"&#13;
There is an &lt;;&gt;igram by Pink can he obtained by sending $S.•&#13;
Floyd that seems to aUow the (includes postage) 10 Still NI8lII&#13;
poem to work on two different Writings, 515 Three MileRoad II,&#13;
levels. "Herm.t 01 the Woods" Racine, WI 53402. It is also ... 1IIe&#13;
appears 10 he autobiographical in the Parkside Bookstore IIlr&#13;
and tells why he prelers the $2.50.&#13;
THANK YOU&#13;
To all the people who wrote news this year:&#13;
Jennie. Sharron. Jeanne. John, Kathy. Patricia,&#13;
Masood. Catherine. Kevin and Pat.&#13;
-Bob&#13;
The&#13;
Fireside&#13;
~TAURANT&amp;LOUNGE&#13;
OPEN DAfL Y II :00 A.M.&#13;
Complete American. Holian Menu&#13;
Fri. Fish Dinner $250&#13;
Sun. Special Turkey Dinner $3'5&#13;
Featuring Deep Pan or Thin Crust Pizza&#13;
NEW SPECIALS COMI.':&#13;
• Deep Fried Breaded Rabbit&#13;
• Bar - B - Q Ribs&#13;
Complete Cony Out Service&#13;
Food • Beer • Wine • Liquor&#13;
2801 30th Ave., Kenosha&#13;
Ph. 551-0600&#13;
Financial aid plan a new tIDEA'&#13;
coogressman Tom PetTI un- are directly related t bili .&#13;
reiledanewstudentloanproposal pay, the system is °e~tlJty;O mterruptions." Petri said.&#13;
ArC· 25 in testI~~ny before the flexible. It automa:"me y . Petri noted that he was making&#13;
Slbonal Commission on Student reschedules loans in th really final changes In his proposal and&#13;
' .IA . ta e event of planned t . lrodu '. f1nllnCl8 SSJS nee. unemployment or th . 0 m ce It 10 the&#13;
Petri said his proposal, termed 0 er Income House shortly.&#13;
tilt "Income - Dependent P ksid fAlcatioo Assistance Act," or ar SI e gets IDEA, would meet a major need&#13;
fGr graduate - level student h I h&#13;
!III",",g at no cost to tbe tax- SC 0 ars ip donation&#13;
pIY~er IDEA," Petri said, S&#13;
"lIUdents borrow against their The Kenosha Foundation a of Kenosha County and must have&#13;
fItIIIJe earnings." Repayment of group of local philanthropis~ is completed no less than 30 and no&#13;
lilt loons would be based 00 the establishing several schoJarshi&#13;
J15&#13;
more than 90 credits through June&#13;
iDlllIDe d each participant after for students at UW _ Parkside to I, 1983With a grade point average&#13;
,...,tion, with payment made beg", with the fall semester of the of at least 3.50.&#13;
_ with one's income taxes. 1983 boo Applicants must also be full _&#13;
"rbose with higher incomes -84 sc I year. time students having earned at The scholarships will be I t&#13;
.. graduation will pay more awarded on the basis of academic eas 12credits in the spring, 1983 ... !bose with low incomes. At h semester.&#13;
-'" ae ievemenL Selection of A li&#13;
III same time, those who an- recipients will OCcur this summer. pp cation forms can be picked&#13;
_te high future incomes are Financial need will not be a up at the Union Information&#13;
JOt discouraged from par- criterion for selection. Center and at the Information&#13;
.... ting because the highest Kiosk in Main Place.&#13;
..... To be eligible for the scholar- D dl' f&#13;
....... ve interest rate they can be hi ea me or applications is ..... " s JI5 students must be residents J -.,ed is less tha n they would une I.&#13;
- to pay on personal loans Ch· h· be lMIJned Petri said that most borrowers from banks," he said. Inese istorv to&#13;
~ payoff their loans within 12&#13;
... school earnings would have !til years, while those with low offered next semester III I'&#13;
• to 30 years to repay, after&#13;
... any remaining balance&#13;
_ be forgiven.&#13;
Rabody would be charged more&#13;
.. 15% of his / her income in&#13;
• liven year. The higher eflIIllve&#13;
interest borne by higher&#13;
_e graduates would cover all&#13;
1IIIIdies to their less well - off&#13;
dlllmates.&#13;
"Since IDEA loan repayments&#13;
Kinship set&#13;
Ageneral information meeting&#13;
II' those persons interested in&#13;
YOIunteering in the Kinship&#13;
Pntgramwill be held Saturda&#13;
llay 21 at 10:30 a.m. at the KinIitip&#13;
office, 2001-80th Street,&#13;
'-ha.&#13;
The Kinship Program is&#13;
lsigned to befriend and help&#13;
wldren from single parent&#13;
Iamiliesby matching them with&#13;
lalure adults with good&#13;
dlIracter. Those adults interested&#13;
II becoming Kinspersons and&#13;
Ileir spouses or special friends&#13;
lit errouraged to attend this&#13;
looting.&#13;
FII: further information, call the&#13;
Continued From Page 1&#13;
~.m. - Mini - bus shuttle&#13;
t a.m. - "Caddyshack" and&#13;
IIod service&#13;
3:30 a.m. - Last bus leaves&#13;
Tickets a:dvance: Students / Alumni /&#13;
o Idren(I3·17)-I day, $4; 2 day,&#13;
1t~1Door: Students / Alumni - I&#13;
y, IS; 2 day, N/A&#13;
It~dvance: Faculty / Staff . I&#13;
Y. IS; 2 day, $9&#13;
.~tDoor: Faculty / Staff -I day,&#13;
; 2 day, N/A&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAINOFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRI E&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.l.e.&#13;
Modern Chinese History will be&#13;
the subject of a course to be offered&#13;
by Dr. Oliver Hayward&#13;
during Parkside's forthcoming&#13;
summer school session. The&#13;
course will concentrate on China&#13;
in the 20th Century, and should&#13;
prove to be of particular interest&#13;
to students contemplating participating&#13;
in Parkside's China&#13;
..,.,.,.,.,...,.. -&#13;
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•-&#13;
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;Y-e retUl'lled to tlie nect: •&#13;
rpp ~.'!1JtI !&#13;
Onct 1went to colleje-'8/- •&#13;
Wrote ~I'papers on time... •&#13;
Once lamt CD co/kJ!e. •&#13;
Aow I'm done - "'. i&#13;
Nil/her. can pu ~ a dime? •&#13;
J23&#13;
seminar trip scheduled for this&#13;
coming December and January.&#13;
Added too late for inclusion in&#13;
Parkside's summer session&#13;
timetable, the Course is&#13;
designated History 86-355, The&#13;
Evolution of Mod... n China. The&#13;
class will be held on Tuesday and&#13;
Thursday evenings from 7:25 to&#13;
10:00, from June 20 to July 30.&#13;
is nearer&#13;
'Advance: Guests - I day, $5; 2&#13;
da;At~oor: Guests -I day, N/A; 2&#13;
day, N/A&#13;
Advance: Children (ages 6-12) -&#13;
I day, $2; 2 day, $4&#13;
AtDoor: Children (ages 6-12)-I&#13;
day, $2.50; 2 day, $5&#13;
, (See this week's Ranger ad for&#13;
a more complete schedule,).&#13;
Children five and under Will be&#13;
free but those under 17 must be&#13;
accompanied by an adult for this&#13;
event. Once again please n&lt;J!.e&#13;
guest tickets must be purchased In&#13;
advance as none will be sold at the&#13;
door. They can be purcbased at&#13;
STUDENTS- Havea Great Summer!&#13;
Father's Day &amp; Graduation Cards,&#13;
Travel Books and Atlases,&#13;
Paperbacks for Rainy Days.&#13;
Union Information Desk.&#13;
No more school, no more&#13;
Ranger, this really is "The End."&#13;
Ta Ta.&#13;
lot{. Discount To Parks_&#13;
Studenls With I.D.&#13;
W~MOJiJko.M ew1(~&#13;
-Cp- B~~&#13;
312 Sbtb street . RaciDe&#13;
Telepbooe 632-1;115&#13;
.... MaslerCani and VISAWelcomed&#13;
RANGER 'Thursday, May 12 1913&#13;
Summer&#13;
enjoyment&#13;
with the Arts&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
\Il. IC ,U'PRt.(1&#13;
3credits ... audit I\Ii; -s&#13;
CA 124 June 20 tIrcugh A&#13;
Instructor; ProC..- August .......&#13;
An old C'OUru ~ht wtrh a ft. r&#13;
• gue.t flf'CturiPr. (Nt Jon (Tim IHUJ. popdo.,. mac. (Scm&#13;
Ch.1I1 and roclI (BUI Balco"'l&#13;
• optional compktiP r ended lJl"'~&#13;
PECIAL TOPI :" 4n:R( LOR t'l&#13;
3credits ... audil TR 12'30-4 pm&#13;
_'0 prerequisite June 21 • II&#13;
Instructor' ProCesscr Doualas De\ _&#13;
An inteMw tta,upcr~rU which wUl dTUI tK#vltcal G'Id -..af#-T mecfiaptuaJ :~~~::=&#13;
through a \1Qriay 01trudltion.ot Q1WJ II-( forIaf&#13;
apenence.t:.&#13;
100000DlCTIO TO \ I I 1 RT&#13;
3 credits ... audit M '0\ 8 30 12&#13;
• '0 prerequisite June 20 • A 10&#13;
Instrudor ProCessor John lurpby&#13;
A c:ou.r,fe which"",, d wlop til&#13;
thrH . dimermMal m.dlo (&#13;
blage. colia«e. cash",. ne.)&#13;
t'I·1 ,&#13;
8~1 Ot·I(.&#13;
3 credits ... audit M 8 30&#13;
PrerequIsite: Art 103 June A&#13;
Instruct... ProC J Murph)&#13;
Further exploration oj ('Oft pU I"f'Iat&#13;
dimeruional expt'ri.Iftce&#13;
3 credo .... audit&#13;
Prerequv lie Art&#13;
... -~ -" ~.&#13;
Furtltu ttudy irUo cloy OM ,.Iaz&#13;
tem~rature /iTI", t«lInfqw.&#13;
\0\ \ 0 DC&#13;
3 credits or audit '0\ 8&#13;
Prerequ' Ie Art 1 J&#13;
In. tructor' ProC John Mw~' -&#13;
Extended werll lJt day with mphG..&#13;
firing "d\luquu alch G..I Ra.ht&#13;
•-&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•-&#13;
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-•&#13;
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•-&#13;
•-&#13;
• facu1t.y "'."'..... ,...-1 coI_&#13;
i •••,.,.··'·······'••&#13;
10&#13;
3 credits or aJdit 101\\ 6 ·8 20p&#13;
•'0 prerequ' te Jure 13 . July rr&#13;
Instrudor' ProI RhodII&#13;
Tht. cour., fOC'JjMI 011 /iw JUm.. CIIId.&#13;
detectfw mystery IlOwl.I and r1"&#13;
Agatha Chrittf •.&#13;
FUm ~ ... : t'o\ __ ,&#13;
June 22 Ten Little IDdIa&#13;
June 29 \liltne:ss for I'" "'-"U&#13;
July 6 Dealb 00.... iJe&#13;
July 13 .lurder id&#13;
Juh rr •lurder CIIl Ihe 0 t Ex~.....&#13;
TIl; public U in_lD dtb f • /II'" rio, to&#13;
UW.ParJt.stdl' &amp;It th, L'tUcwtCInema r&#13;
11,.,..&#13;
I"&#13;
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6 Thursday, May 12, 1983 RANGER&#13;
-&#13;
Comingthis sum~~r to a&#13;
by TOllYRog.... Cbeecb and Chong are l~~mg s .;my listen&#13;
~~~~~~:~-;~~';1~~&#13;
to s~ many sixties Foceign Film Series and I ~~&#13;
FeatlU'&lt; Edllor out with 'StilISmokin': It ....... a~ "i'.l:es before you get tired of it, encourage students ~ buy ti ::'"&#13;
My last artIcle for the Ra~ if it contams some concer 0 I think New Wave, for the There a.re gomg to be --&#13;
thia y... r What a relief Only material, am IS probably worth ~t part, has brought change cellent films in next Yea~:'&#13;
kidding. Anyway, u's lime once three bucks. I think) of. 00 innovation to what we hear on Contact Dr. Norman Cloutier.·&#13;
aga", for thai tradlliooal Ra~ Another comedY&#13;
ood( is 'Trading ~e airwaves. Oh, there are some the Economics Division far ~&#13;
wrap' up f... ture. tbo summer fenng thai I"'*" g At d and truly bogus NW bands, of course, mfo. -.&#13;
:::;:e :;:;'";0= I~~t s~ Places,' stambyngor::.s a{(i know but Ihere is some interesting and I've. had a great time here II&#13;
Eddie Murp . I?) listenahle material as well. The Parkside, and I have _.n..&#13;
anady out, and ..iIIprobably run aboul II (hey, :dha~~ :an ~~ New Wave invasion of America en!oyed working 011 the'~&#13;
in~lSu:ey~a~e;;,ething w icked buuanlAkh,::yd":'on their~"';' and has taken less than two years. This paper has a rUle ~ ~&#13;
us y an ood 'as a humans workmg 011 it and I ...&#13;
1lU .....ay Comes' IS one d the should be alleast as g Movies have gotten much encourage anyone aIPar"'I'de~&#13;
belter films they've relea sed in team Ra the staff f ..&#13;
rent year Based on the 'P";'k 's n _ The Next Day' better. When Igtarted cn "!ler, JOlD or next y .&#13;
Bradbury novel, il stars Jason THE SEQUEL to 'The Empire will a~ be out this summer. a rash of slasher - killer flicks paper. We need writers,&#13;
Robardo 'Doclor Detroit' stars Strikes Back' . 'The Return of Gosh.&#13;
Dan Akroyd an alf - tbo - wall the Jedi' . will hit the theaters I think AI Pacino will have a&#13;
.. per hero in what looks to be I on May 25th. new 111m out this summer called&#13;
worthwhile fa"", I haven't seen 'Scarface,' although I'm nol sure.&#13;
'VaUey Girl,' but il is supposed to Vader will be res&lt;Jlved, as well as There is prohably some great,&#13;
he belter than il sounds - in any the love triangle (kinky) between big film that I'm forgetting, bul&#13;
c It ha music by Men AI Work Luke· Han· Leia. 'Jedi' has over with all the promo and hype thai&#13;
and scroms al OIher groupo. nine· rondred (count 'ern) special the studios barf oul for summer&#13;
looty p)tholl' 'Mearung al Life' effects, as compared 10 rour' Oicks, you'll know aboul them&#13;
ma) run into the summer - see it hundred for 'Empire: I've seen soon enough.&#13;
if )ou can It's very funn), trailer films ror this, and it looks Since this is my Iasl article as&#13;
allhough incon I tent 'Flash· tOlaDy bitcrun'. r can't wait. Feature Edilor for Ranger, and I&#13;
dance' WIll probably last through The oomber two summer film need to fill space, I'm going to&#13;
the summer. as il i making big ..ill be 'Superman ill,' starring shool the bull for a few&#13;
bud&lt; from the teeny - hopper Chris Reeve, Margot Kidder, and paragraphs aboul, whalever.&#13;
crowd I've heard it's trash, ""ith (believe it or not) Richard Pryor. Let's see, I've been doing this&#13;
lotsa . kin 01 'The Hunger' Sounds mteresting. job for two years. There have been&#13;
r lur David Bowie as a 'Blue Thunder,' starring Roy a 101 of changes in a 101 of things in&#13;
,amp"e, Wllh usan (Rocky SCheider as a big· cily cop wbo just this shocllime. For instance,&#13;
Horror I randon as a co • star pilots a gnarly souped • up two years ago I had not heard&#13;
SoundI pretly freaky helicopler, looks interesting, hardly any new wave music -&#13;
Enoullh 01 this old stuff. On to allhoullh I am surprised Scheider horrid bands like Jamey and REO&#13;
the now reI ..... s would sign r&lt;i- whal looks to be Speedwagon were all you heard on&#13;
'Retum or the Jedi' will un- camp. Opens soon. the radio. New Wave, in facl, was&#13;
doubtedly be the biggesl film al Jackie Gleason will star in associated with weird people who&#13;
the summer It opens May 25th, 'Smokey is the Bandit m: Gimme stick pins in their cheeks and had&#13;
and this reviewer predicts thai it a Iroak. pink mohawks. I can rememher&#13;
will grooo al least $200 millioo by 'Jaws UI' and 'Amilyville' will when LPX burned New Wave&#13;
the end 01 the summer. Wait am be oul in 3-D. Gimme another records on the air.&#13;
.... The film IS the lasl in this br ... k. Now LPX is playing New Wave&#13;
trilClg)o', and may be the last, 'Space Hunter" however. is a 3- music, not because they are a&#13;
period. Reports are thai Lucas D sci. fi. clock thai looks in· terribly progressive station, but&#13;
may not continue with the planned trlguing - the first 3-D feature to because il is popular. Everyone'&#13;
rune (count'em) films. Inthis film be olfered by a major studio. II's listens to New Wave music, and I&#13;
the confllcl between Luke and still probably trash, bul I'll wail see people all around Pa.rkside&#13;
dressed in New Wave fashIons.&#13;
nut. UJiU I tJl1nk thl~ b; tlad.&#13;
Popular music in America needed&#13;
ORCHARD&#13;
(OURTS&#13;
STUDENT SPECIALS&#13;
SEPT. 1983APARTMENT RENTALS&#13;
FROM $110 PER MONTH •&#13;
'SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES' will JlI'ObIIlI,&#13;
continue into the summer.&#13;
were entrenched in thea ters, and&#13;
good films were few and far&#13;
between. This year we seem to&#13;
have an abundance al very good&#13;
films, very good performances.&#13;
The studios' infatuation with&#13;
teeny· bopper fare has waned ...&#13;
to some extent.&#13;
Here at Parkside we have had&#13;
any good concerts, plays and&#13;
biinlls appear, and I hope this&#13;
level of entertainment will be&#13;
because if it is, we're in for a long,&#13;
long summer.&#13;
"Treasure of the Four Crowns"&#13;
begins with a long, tedious rip-off&#13;
of the opening to "Raiders of Ihe&#13;
Lost Ark", in which our hero&#13;
retrieves the key to the four&#13;
crowns of the title. Actually,&#13;
however, there are only three&#13;
crowns, . the budget apparently&#13;
haVIng been spent on throwing&#13;
anything the filmmakers could&#13;
think of al the viewer. Anyway,&#13;
back 10 the slory. One of lhe&#13;
tFour Crowns' is 3-D junk.&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
This summer. 3·D movies are&#13;
making a resurgence. There are&#13;
many 3-D films in the making or in&#13;
the planning stage, including&#13;
"Spacehunter", billed as the first&#13;
3-D outer space movie in 20 years;&#13;
"Jaws 3-D"; "Amityville 3-D";&#13;
and many more. A few weeks ago,&#13;
the first of this year's 3-D of·&#13;
ferings, "Treasure of the Four&#13;
Crowns", was released. Recently I&#13;
bad the honor (?) of seeing it, and&#13;
boy, Ihope the first isn't the best,&#13;
A row of Kenosha&#13;
hometown houses&#13;
A printed on a&#13;
sturdy 50/50&#13;
poly/cotton T·&#13;
shirt in assorted&#13;
colors and sizes.&#13;
Adult sizes $7.95,&#13;
children's size&#13;
. . ... $6.95.&#13;
·:.l~'l)RI~iS C.- -")&#13;
2·hh '\"enue at 60lh Sireel&#13;
Free Parking&#13;
MODERN "LOFT" APARTMENTS&#13;
• Appliances • Heat &amp; Water&#13;
• carpeting • Electricity&#13;
• Drapes • Parking&#13;
• Furniture .• Laundry Facilities&#13;
Exclusively at&#13;
Andrea's. , ,&#13;
RENTAL OFFICE OPEN&#13;
April 21st - May 21st&#13;
969 Wood Road&#13;
MODEL AP-ARTMENT AND&#13;
RENTAL OFFICE HOURS&#13;
Daily 1 p,m. to 6 p.m.&#13;
Sot. &amp; Sun, 1 p.m. to 5 p,m,&#13;
PHONE 553·9009&#13;
Professionally leased &amp; managed by&#13;
CERTIFIED PROPERTY&#13;
MANAGEMENT, INC.&#13;
'Based on Double Occupancy Hours:&#13;
Daily 9-5:30&#13;
Friday 9-8&#13;
Sat. 9,5&#13;
The Original&#13;
Hometown&#13;
T-Shirt&#13;
photographers, evl!l'YtliDl IIId&#13;
anylhing, and if you join yOll1lel1l&#13;
participa te in some reaDy IIcredible&#13;
parties. I want to tIIaJi&#13;
all the excellenl writera wbo_&#13;
for me - Thanks. I could III"&#13;
done il without you. (Well, ...&#13;
tually, I could have bul , .. I&#13;
Anyway, it's lime to ahul IIiI&#13;
sucker down, so rn see every_&#13;
later, maybe. May The Force Be&#13;
With You!&#13;
crowns is in the p:tSSeSSioo of tile&#13;
museum director. who hired CD'&#13;
hero to get the key. He tiel ...&#13;
our bero to get the other "'"&#13;
crowns from the most ucharismatic&#13;
cult leader I've ....&#13;
seen.&#13;
Our hero leaves, sayi,. Ill. So,&#13;
of course lhe next scene sboII&#13;
him gelting together an expeditilll&#13;
to get the crowns. Funny way III&#13;
saying no, huh? He recruill •&#13;
drunk and a father - daugbUr&#13;
cirCus team. Of course, to complicale&#13;
matters, old dad boa •&#13;
heart condition thai no one, ....&#13;
even his daughter knows obIIIl,&#13;
and only has ahoul six IIIOIIIM to&#13;
live. Of course, you know thall!Je&#13;
old guy's gonna drop dead al II&#13;
important moment. Tbis iJUlIlid&#13;
band raids the cull's castle ad ill&#13;
one of the longest, most tedi...&#13;
"suspense" sequences I've ever&#13;
seen, they attempt to get I!Je&#13;
crOWDS. .,&#13;
''Treasure of the Four CIVVIIII&#13;
is one of the most poorlywritl/!ll,&#13;
poorly acled, derivative, ':::&#13;
movies that I've ever f .j&#13;
myself to sit through. The :'sttrI&#13;
steals from films like "l\aJderS =&#13;
the Lost Ark" t "The ~&#13;
Navarone", and eveD Tbt&#13;
Exorcisl". The 3-Deffects "' ....&#13;
mainly of the same arrow ~&#13;
al you several times, tbr~&#13;
magic of slow • mOOoo. to&#13;
replay, people handiqj tbi,frocll&#13;
the viewer, and other _&#13;
straighl out of SCTV's "3-DH ted&#13;
of Beef". "Treasure" WBS.r:r~ ell&#13;
by the same gang that Inflid&#13;
"Camin' at Ya" on the AmeriCJII&#13;
public lasl year. U anyUaIC'&#13;
"Treasure" is worse, .-&#13;
If you get the urlle topi'l"&#13;
somelhing in 3-D,go watcha II""&#13;
go to a ball game, look ~~}_&#13;
Do anything, but don'totwtbe F....&#13;
money &lt;Xl "Treasure&#13;
CrowDS".&#13;
$2&#13;
RANGER Thursday, May 12, 1913 7&#13;
Parkside's Activides Board Presents:&#13;
S(;BEDULE&#13;
Saturday, May 21&#13;
l;am .... )Jolleyball Tournament&#13;
11am•••. Food Service Availa~le&#13;
Noon••••• Magic. Mime &amp; MusIc&#13;
1 pm Softball Game&#13;
1 pm Family Bowling Tourney&#13;
Rec Center&#13;
S pm..... Doors to Tent Open&#13;
6 pm Music of&#13;
to WALLY CLEAVER&#13;
12:30 am &amp;&#13;
CITIZEN KANE&#13;
11pm.... Mini.bus Shuttles&#13;
Begin&#13;
1 am••••. Film: "Caddyshack"&#13;
Union Square&#13;
3:30 am .. Last Mini-bus&#13;
Shuttle Leaves&#13;
SDDday,May 22&#13;
S pm ..... Door to Tent Open.&#13;
Union Patio&#13;
6 pm Music of&#13;
to JAVA &amp;&#13;
12:30 am BOOZE BROTHERS&#13;
REVUE&#13;
11 pm.... Mini -bus Shuttles&#13;
Begin&#13;
1 am..... Fllm: "Caddyshack"&#13;
Union Square&#13;
3: 30 am.. Last Mini- Bus&#13;
Shuttle Leaves&#13;
TIC&#13;
(For events beginning&#13;
at Spm each dIIy&#13;
in the tenU&#13;
Advance"&#13;
Students!&#13;
Alumni!&#13;
Children&#13;
(Ages 13-171•• Sot OQ. ..... $700&#13;
At Door:&#13;
Students!&#13;
Alumni!&#13;
Children •...•. .15.00..... A&#13;
Advance:&#13;
Faculty!&#13;
Stalf .s.s.00. ••••• .$9 00&#13;
Al Door"&#13;
Faculty!&#13;
St.lIft. $5.00. oN A&#13;
"Advance"&#13;
Guests $5.011 ••••• .5'900&#13;
'At Door,&#13;
Guests.. •••••• A....... A&#13;
Advance:&#13;
Children&#13;
(ages ~ 12) .... $2.()(). ..... Sot 00&#13;
At Door:&#13;
Children&#13;
(ages 6-12) ••• $2.50. ...... $5 00&#13;
Children 5 and under Ir&#13;
Chilcl ..... 17 lind Yndlr musl&#13;
be accompanied by a parent or&#13;
guardian while all ding thll&#13;
evenl •&#13;
• PlNse note new A,,"' DOlex&#13;
!luest ,'ckils must'" pur&#13;
cha.ad In advance. sInce ll2!II&#13;
.... 11b!"Icl ., II!!door. TIckets&#13;
can be purcha ad at Un on&#13;
Information Des 55).2:145&#13;
.tu......... DMil&#13;
'4•&#13;
.&#13;
University of Wisconsin • Parkside&#13;
May 21 • 22, 1983&#13;
-----q&#13;
Thursday, May 12, 1983 • RANGER&#13;
-&#13;
I Dartman doubles out I New Music&#13;
;::::f~~=~rf~'~ The 'Final Cut' is the deepest&#13;
market is filled with over viewed from the drivers seat of a "noise." Waters is still bitler bu&#13;
qualified people who can't find by Jobn Kovalie car' and the same soldier stan- he has turned his hatred to' t&#13;
work. However, there is always Pink Floyd dillli in the corner of a (foreign") structive ends. Religion war ~&#13;
room for a couple more people 'lbe Final CuI field as a child clutches a handful nationalism are all expl~ a.&#13;
down at the beach and yoo don't ''The Final Cut" may or may of poppies. These them,:" r'7lU' devastati~ restraint. ' WIth&#13;
even have tosland in line to fill oot not be Floyd'S last album throughout the album as It buIlds Yet there are no cuts about&#13;
an application to be a beach bum. together. Somehow, even and progresses, each song being Waler's old favorite, insanity.1Iaa&#13;
The pay isn't so great, but the weighi~ quotations to the conworking&#13;
conditions are fantastic. trary, Idoubt it. Gilmoor, Mason&#13;
Mter a hard afternoon on the and Waters are back, even though&#13;
beach, what lastes better than a all the tracks on the record were&#13;
JOOnsonville Brat and a glass of written by the latter. As Rolling&#13;
Old Style? Be Wisconsin, buy Slone SO astutely notes, it could&#13;
Wisconsin is what I always say. almost be a ~er Waters solo&#13;
How do yoo spend those hot albUm. Apart from the tiny fact&#13;
August evenings? I like to go to that it has the unmistakable Floyd&#13;
County Stadium and watch Robin, "edge" that defines their music so&#13;
Paul am Gorman ruin some ace well. Unfortunately, in a maudlin&#13;
pitcbers earned run avera ge, fit, Rolling Slone (that pantheon of&#13;
Yeah, it is going to be another artistic mediocrity and tripe)&#13;
roogh summer for me, but Ithink messianicaDy pronounced ''The&#13;
I can deal with it. , Final Cut" as the best Pink Floyd&#13;
As an alleged: friend of mine, album ever. I've got news for you,&#13;
Jeff Wicks. once said, on several guys. There "'as another album&#13;
occasions, "it has been real and it Floyd released in 1973. Perhaps&#13;
has been fun, but it has not been yoo'lI remember it if I teD you ...&#13;
real run." For all the returning ?&#13;
students next semester, have a But "Cut" is indeed a fine&#13;
healthy, happy, and safe summer. album. Waters has settled down&#13;
For aD those lucky graduates, since ''The Wall," and perhaps he&#13;
good luck in the job market. To the found an outlet for some or his&#13;
hard working secretaries in the frustrations in the movie. For&#13;
Student Life Office, thanks ror aD "Cut" is moving, tragic and&#13;
yoor help. Yoo make paperwork beautiful. True beauty is&#13;
enjoyable ... weU almost en- something I felt "Tbe Wall"&#13;
joyable .. well less painful. To lacked.&#13;
the PSGA, don't take the first part ''The Final Cut" contains a&#13;
of this article serious well at mixture or tracks written for tbe&#13;
least not too serious O.K. so I movie and new material focusing&#13;
meant every word, so what. see 00 the Falklands War, the new&#13;
you next faD. Til then, take care. depression and the "alcohol soft&#13;
middle age" the group finds&#13;
themselves in. Ten years have&#13;
slipped by since the release of&#13;
"Time," but Roger Waters has&#13;
finally caught up with the sun&#13;
again.&#13;
"The Post War Dream" opens&#13;
the album, and the question is&#13;
plaintively posed: "Maggie&#13;
(Thatcher) what have we done to&#13;
England?"&#13;
The album's cover has four&#13;
photographs: a soldier with a&#13;
knife in his back, standing in a&#13;
poppy field; a Japanese&#13;
steelworker; an atomic explosion&#13;
by Nick 'lbome&#13;
This, being the rina! issue of the&#13;
semester, is the best lime to write&#13;
an article for the RaJller. That&#13;
way. if any of the readers become&#13;
alUlOyed by what I write, they&#13;
can't write an,ytbing nasty ahoot&#13;
me until next semesters paper&#13;
com.. oot. Heck, by that time&#13;
they will probably forget Why they&#13;
were licked off in the first place. I&#13;
hope. Hey, if John "The Big One"&#13;
Kovalic would have realized this,&#13;
he coold have saved himseJf a lot&#13;
of problems.&#13;
Iwas going to write ahoot aD the&#13;
great things the Student Government&#13;
did Ior everyone this year,&#13;
but I just cooldn't remember&#13;
anything they did I was shocked&#13;
to find oot that the PSGA actually&#13;
held a meeti"ll ~JlI daylight&#13;
hoor on May 9th at 1:30 p.m, I&#13;
asked Terry Tunks, In disbelief,&#13;
"How can this be?" Terry informed&#13;
me that they only met to&#13;
appro"e the minutes and then call&#13;
ror adjoernment. Thanks anyway,&#13;
to aD the senators and committee&#13;
members. for the Job yoo have&#13;
dme this year. whatever it was.&#13;
Fint come the finals and then&#13;
com.. the End. But didn't yoo&#13;
ever wonder, what comes alter&#13;
the End' For some, summer&#13;
school will rill the void between&#13;
now and the raD For others, it is&#13;
hack to ye olde ramily homestead.&#13;
1m) If wdl be getling back to the&#13;
five B' : The Brew..... Bratwurst,&#13;
Bee r , Beach. and Beautiful&#13;
Women in Bikinis. I mean, really&#13;
he indeed tom down the waD to&#13;
finally show his true self? OneC8Jl&#13;
only hope, and wait ror rulure&#13;
offerings.&#13;
Even though "The Final Cut"&#13;
may not surpass "Dark Side" in&#13;
sheer artistic merit, it comes&#13;
damn close. Don't expect the&#13;
crashing guitars and primal&#13;
screams of "The WaD." Then tb&lt;&#13;
tiger broke free. Now the man&#13;
comes forth.&#13;
Tbe album is dedicated to tb&lt;&#13;
memory of Eric Fletcher Walen,&#13;
who died in Italy at the Anzi.&#13;
beachhead. It is a fitting bibute&#13;
and the underlying sadness can be&#13;
felt in every song. The imagery is&#13;
rich and at times painful, endilW&#13;
after the screaming "Not Now&#13;
John" in "Two Suns in the Sunset,"&#13;
voicing Waters' premonitioo&#13;
of the holocaust to come.&#13;
The final live lines probably&#13;
sum up the philosophy or ''The&#13;
Final Cut." Pink Floyd leaves us,&#13;
perha ps for the last time, with&#13;
these words:&#13;
•'Finally I understarxl,&#13;
the feelings of the rew&#13;
Ashes and diamonds,&#13;
foe and friend&#13;
We were all equal in the end."&#13;
Four and a half out or five.&#13;
linked.&#13;
"Possible Pasts, tt "Paranoid&#13;
Eyes" and "Not Now John" are&#13;
some of the better tracks on the&#13;
album, even if the released version&#13;
of "John" has some liberal&#13;
substitutions in the name of&#13;
censorship. (You reaDy didn't&#13;
think Waters would sing "stuff all&#13;
that," now did you?)&#13;
Arguably, the classic cuts are&#13;
"The Fletcher Memorial Home"&#13;
for incurable tyrants and kings,&#13;
and "The Final Cut, to which approaches&#13;
the majesty of "Comfortably&#13;
Numb."&#13;
Even if no single song is really&#13;
as great as "Comfortably," I&#13;
believe the album as a whole&#13;
surpasses •'The Wall." Waters has&#13;
finally set targets in his mind, and&#13;
Gilmour and Mason play as well&#13;
as ever. The result is amazing -&#13;
"The Final Cut" gets hetter with&#13;
repeated listenings .• lA warning to&#13;
anyone still in command of their&#13;
possible future to take care."&#13;
Running through the tracks are&#13;
references to "The Wall," "Wish&#13;
You Were Here" and the&#13;
superlative "Dark Side of the&#13;
Moon." As per normal Floyd&#13;
album, you need to listen very&#13;
carefully to the background&#13;
~LEADER~&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Regency Mall/Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
It &lt;01bt&#13;
~lUttt~ltnpp&#13;
.. 11M P ...&#13;
FEATURING YOUR&#13;
FAVORITE CANOY,&#13;
NUTS AND SNACKS&#13;
SOLO THE OLD&#13;
FASHIONED WAY&#13;
CLOSEOUT&#13;
SALE&#13;
50% OFF&#13;
ALL IIEMS -=- ,.-~- e-.&#13;
---..,.,., _..... ~ -"_~"!II.H~ .. • '_ ............ _.~._&#13;
--....---olIlXI5' __ ... 01'\,1,,1lf4l ... "'lU.llII'~I.""~ ~&#13;
.. - ------------- .:;:..~&#13;
OPENS filMY, MAY 13MA THEAJRE NEAR YOU. . Loc.leclln the Union &amp;'r .. r&#13;
Dir.ctly Across from Ih. Info. Ctr.&#13;
iSS 9&#13;
RANGER Thursday,~y 12, 1913&#13;
..."......~or~~, ~~~.!!~red at marathon&#13;
shattered by 10 minutes the old vironmentalists, Inc. ~Ieled his run III 3:21: 17 Marathon in l1Ils diVisim ...." Bill&#13;
,..,ocd for the Old Style Bald Another division record was t' g home the trophy and set- Lofthus of Madison ..,th • It or&#13;
Eagle Marathon last Saturday broken by Rich Purdy of mIDg,a new.cour.;e record for his 4:15:08. -&#13;
"ocning. McBride compleled the Stillwater, MN., with a time of Men s ~lSlon, ages 46 and over. The trophy winner in the 25 and&#13;
grueling~ ~lle c?urse In 2:45:08, 2:58:27 winning the trophy for the ~~ ha ran the race Inspite of a under division was Micha~1&#13;
",sily wmmng his 26 - 35 age 36-45age men's division. Second in ~arath rns:u::f.~ter lhe race, Starandl,!ilindoro with a fUlish&#13;
men's division. Second ~n this this division was David Bange ci was u: s t this ~~rse time d 3:41:24&#13;
diVisionwas Donald GIlle of La Crosse wilh a time of 3'09'40 tboo second most difficult The hilly, lotm race _ men'&#13;
Wausau,Wisconsin :with a time of . Don Marathon of Cresco, iA tied :~:n. Gnlbe has ron ac:ross the di\risio~. was. woo by AI Flesch of&#13;
2'58:26. The 26 mile and 10km the world's record of completing Carolina y one race, In North Platteville WIth a time of 36:04&#13;
~ce were sponsored by Old Style 52 marathons in 52 weeks when he Com' g , was more dlfftcult. Flesch was lIOl able to break the&#13;
;:;"======:::==:==::====.:~===~=:~==,,,,~~~:;;;:~m~=I~n~~s~e~c~on~d~~be~h~,~n:d record of 32:46 which he had set&#13;
Golden Rondelle features ~.::rMa=i;": ~a:&#13;
Winning the lOkm race •&#13;
women's divisioo . v.:as Susan&#13;
Theisen of Dubuque. lA with a&#13;
time of 49:32. Kim Schleicher of&#13;
HaIlOVef'. IL came in second With&#13;
a time of 55:47&#13;
CornellAstronomer&#13;
Is there life on other planets or&#13;
are we alone in the universe? Dr.&#13;
f'rank Drake, Cornell University&#13;
astronomerand father of S.E.T.I.&#13;
,Search for Extraterrestrial&#13;
Intelligence)will discuss his eflorts&#13;
to find evidence of exlraterrestriallife,&#13;
on Wednesday,&#13;
lIay 25, at the Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theater in Racine. The program&#13;
rin begin at 7:30 p. m.&#13;
Dr. Drake, an expert in&#13;
radioastronom ical technology,&#13;
&lt;ooduded the firsl organized&#13;
!lf3rch for extraterrestrial intelligentradio&#13;
signals, known as&#13;
PROJECTOZMA, in 1960.He has&#13;
Iinee served as Chief of the Lunar&#13;
and Planetary Sciences section of&#13;
Ibe Jet Propulsion Laboralory of&#13;
lbe California Institute of&#13;
Technology;Associale Director of&#13;
Ibe Cenler for Radiophysics and&#13;
Space Research at Cornell&#13;
University i Director of the&#13;
Arecibo Observa tory in Arecibo,&#13;
Puerto Rico; and, Director of the&#13;
National Astronomy and&#13;
Ionosphere Center. In addition,&#13;
SmaII Busi ness&#13;
Workshop&#13;
"How to Work (Successfully)&#13;
withYour Accounlanl" will be the&#13;
IIbjeclof a program at Parkside&#13;
from9 a.m. 10 noon on Tuesday,&#13;
llay 17in Union 207.&#13;
ClI6tof Ihe program, which will&#13;
address topics including understaooingthe&#13;
accountant's role&#13;
lDSmall business, how to improve&#13;
lllsiness relationships with actWntants&#13;
and how accountants&#13;
can serve as "trouble shooters,"&#13;
• 15.which includes the cost of&#13;
hand • out materials and refresh·&#13;
... nts.&#13;
hstructor will be Robert R.&#13;
DaVidson, an associate professor&#13;
Ii buSiness and area business&#13;
agentfor University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Extension.&#13;
Davidson, a financial&#13;
IIlanagemenlspecialist who holds&#13;
Dlastersdegrees in finance and&#13;
tQsiness administration, teaches&#13;
and counsels small business&#13;
PI'oprietors in Milwaukee, Racine&#13;
andKenosha.&#13;
He has six years of business&#13;
:~gement experience in small&#13;
f'IL~mess in Milwaukee and&#13;
","cago.&#13;
Cornplete registration material&#13;
&lt;an be obtained by wri ling: .&#13;
University Extension UW -&#13;
~kside, Tallent Hall,' Box No.&#13;
...... Kenosha, WI 53141, or by&#13;
&lt;:aUmgGlenn Bozan coordinator&#13;
Ii Business Outrea~h at UW -&#13;
Parkside, 553-2047or 553-2189.&#13;
The program is sponsored by&#13;
~ Small Business Development&#13;
~ter, Ihe Departmenl of&#13;
lness am Management, and&#13;
!he Cooperative Exlension Ser-&#13;
~at UW - Parkside and by the&#13;
·-.::n(~ha • Racine Extension.&#13;
Senior Art&#13;
Show&#13;
An OIJeningfor the Senior Art&#13;
~ will be held at The Parkside fromGallery on Monday, May 16&#13;
~ 7· 9 p.m. Participants in the&#13;
llet are Dorothy Bark, William&#13;
~ Ill, Frank Mandli, Bermce&#13;
~pe, and Chris Simson.&#13;
Dr. Drake has remained active in&#13;
teaching and has been the&#13;
Goldwin Smith Professor of&#13;
Astronomy at Cornell since 1976.&#13;
Dr. Drake's presentation&#13;
"Searching for Other W&lt;rlds i~&#13;
Space," is part of the Discovery&#13;
Series sponsored by the Cornell&#13;
C~ub of Wisconsin. This year's&#13;
Discovery program will also in·&#13;
c1ude a screening of uCornell," a&#13;
film highlighting Ihe Cornell&#13;
University campus, its programs&#13;
and people.&#13;
Handicapped Awareness Week&#13;
(May 15-22), Helen Keller's story&#13;
Will he retold when "The Miracle&#13;
Worker" is shown at the Golden&#13;
Rondelle Thealer on Thursday,&#13;
May 19 at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
This 1962film tells the gripping&#13;
story of Annie Sullivan's struggle&#13;
10teach the 7 - year - old Helen to&#13;
communica te with a world she&#13;
could neither see nor hear.&#13;
Together they triumphed over&#13;
incredible oods. Anne Bancroft&#13;
won the Best Actress Oscar for&#13;
her role as the dedica ted Miss&#13;
Sullivan and Patiy Duke won the&#13;
Best Supporling Aclress Oscar as&#13;
the raging and desperalely&#13;
isolated Helen.&#13;
Scholarship&#13;
available&#13;
GIll lotah", .1 200 ID&#13;
hoi a.. p fundo al 11&#13;
Park Ide were Uc.plecI It&#13;
Fndoy by !be em &amp;o.rd&#13;
of~. IS&#13;
HiJcIa G ...... &gt;quI.1.&#13;
10 K&#13;
emenal Sd~l'IhIp fund&#13;
Glf 10 Par d&#13;
Genenl SchoIarahip Fund rarne&#13;
from TomIJIl_ PIzza arp&#13;
dord. II H&#13;
LIddicoat K "00&#13;
Robert and All.,. a&#13;
DuncIee. III aDd Ih..., by \'8 _ daIMn&#13;
" ... - 01daIMn P a loW&#13;
of S1S 10 UlIo P ,~r;de;;'~;-:: DIVIS m Fa ... 1t .~ p aad&#13;
a~lof lothe nJa&#13;
SdloIarslu p 10 musI.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
MOVIE 'For Yt/AJItEyts Only PC;&#13;
Ci...,...,.&#13;
MOVIE 'For Your EYftOnl,. fOG&#13;
~,.",,-,.I.&#13;
COURSE VK4I100ftPhDtoof"aptr,- .11 0"' a&#13;
Sponsored by UW e,. ..... on&#13;
The Miracle Worker&#13;
Left blind, deaf and mute by an&#13;
early childhood illness, Helen&#13;
Keller battled 10 overcome her&#13;
handicaps and her struggle stands&#13;
as a tribute to the power of love,&#13;
patience and determination. With&#13;
the understanding guidance and&#13;
"tough" love of Annie Sullivan,&#13;
her "miracle worker," Helen&#13;
became one of this century's great&#13;
American figures and an outstanding&#13;
spokeswoman for all&#13;
handicapped people.&#13;
In recognition of National&#13;
Reservations for this program&#13;
are requested and can be made by&#13;
calling the Rondelle al 631-2154&#13;
Monday Ihrough Friday&#13;
(TTY1552-9656). This fiim will be&#13;
inlerpreled for the hearing .&#13;
impaired, There is no admission&#13;
charge. The Golden Rondelle&#13;
TheatB" is located at the corner of&#13;
14th and Franklin Streets in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
FINAL STUDENT PAYROLL CHECKS&#13;
If you would like your final check(s) mailed fo you, send a&#13;
written request to the Payroll Office:&#13;
1. In the request include your address and date of check.&#13;
2. Attach a self - addressed stamped envelope for each&#13;
check.&#13;
Optional request forms available at the Union Info Desk&#13;
and Payroll Office. Questions? Call 553-2256&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
STUDENT JOB OPENINGS&#13;
AREAS: UNION SQUARE BAR&#13;
RECREATION CENTER&#13;
SWEETSHOPPE&#13;
SPECIAL EVENTS&#13;
ALL POSITIONS ARE AVAILABLE FALL SEMESTER.&#13;
JOBS BEGIN AT $3.35/HR. APPLICATIONS ARE&#13;
AVAILABLE IN RM. 209 OF PARKSIDE UNION.&#13;
IMMEDIATE&#13;
JOB OPENING&#13;
POSITION:&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
STUDENT MANAGER&#13;
EVENINGS &amp; WEEKENDS&#13;
APP. 20 HR.lWEEK&#13;
COORDINATE EVENING&#13;
&amp; WEEKEND OPERATION&#13;
OF PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
$3.75/HR. STARTING&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY:&#13;
WAGE:&#13;
APPLICATIONSS&#13;
CALROESE ~~~~h~: ::,:.T ~F&#13;
APPLICATION&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION.&#13;
...&#13;
T.ewIa., ..... ,. 17&#13;
WORKSHOP t400Jrt 'O'WQrIl weaw\lftyW Y.." ~&#13;
'2OC 101'" de'l'a s&#13;
I.,IY ." .... CAfl • ..&#13;
WATCH FOR LIVE ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
ON WEEKENDS&#13;
f't"'" Ma.,.&#13;
'WORKSHOP Howto9QtoWOr.o;W GoWlgc: ...&#13;
tot del ... IS Spoo'aored bY UN E • ...-slon&#13;
WORKSHOP 'a'un' Pnofo9raQtly at' PAll __ T.a&#13;
tot~f on. Spclnil:lf'Wd Dr UW' Ex ........&#13;
"ALm AI&#13;
aHlSI P. IS&#13;
10 Thursday. May 12. 1983 RANGER&#13;
~Shots&#13;
SPOrts year in Review&#13;
awto spring and baseball. The&#13;
Brewers are getting off to a slow&#13;
start as are some IX the players.&#13;
G&lt;r~an Thomas has only two&#13;
home runs and is batling under&#13;
.200. But this won't last for long.&#13;
The Parkside baseball team is&#13;
having a rough year, al5!'. • I&#13;
In the obituary column IS Bear&#13;
Bryant, he died last fall, just one&#13;
month after retiring as coach of&#13;
Alabama.&#13;
Sports Shots Spots: Well, Billy&#13;
Martin did it again. He got hit With&#13;
a three - game suspension and a&#13;
fine for kicking dirt on an umpire&#13;
last week. Some things never&#13;
change ... The Chicago Cubs won&#13;
a game last week, prompting&#13;
speculation that they might begin&#13;
making a run at the N.L. East&#13;
tille; however, they lost the next&#13;
day ... Well. that's all I can think&#13;
d now. See you next year&#13;
(maybe).&#13;
Welcome to the last sports&#13;
oeclton of the 1982-83 school year;&#13;
more specifically, welcome to the&#13;
last Sports Shots 01 the year. As is&#13;
typical with us sports columnists,&#13;
we are alm .. t obligated to do a&#13;
run - down of the past year's&#13;
....,nts In the world of sports, both&#13;
nationaDy and locally. I am no&#13;
esceplion. So. without lurther&#13;
adieu, the YEAR I SPORTS!!!&#13;
A htlle dcser to home, the&#13;
Parllslde soccer team had a&#13;
lant. tic year. Their regular&#13;
aOOD record was 17-2-2, and&#13;
broke 17 school records. They&#13;
were ranked In the top 10In NCAA&#13;
DtVialCID II, the NAJA. and they&#13;
quahfied for the AlA post season&#13;
tournament. They were one game&#13;
away from goong to the National&#13;
Championship&#13;
The Women's CrOlSS Country&#13;
Team wa also successful, placing&#13;
~th In the NCAA Divisioo II&#13;
Aerobic Class&#13;
Parllslde will he oflering two&#13;
eight week modular courses this&#13;
ccrnil"li fall in Aerobic exercise.&#13;
The modulars, worth one credit&#13;
e ch. ",II be taught by Mary Jane&#13;
rreoo who is "super as far as&#13;
enlhusium. mobvabon. cariDI.&#13;
t... gIuJea. and Imowledge are&#13;
.-emod, .. according to past&#13;
students The co - ed classes will&#13;
meet n..rsdays Irom 5-6:40 p.m.&#13;
with no prerequisite&#13;
requirements.&#13;
Men's Tennis&#13;
by Carr. Cariello&#13;
Mooday, April 25, the Rangers&#13;
took on Carthage College in an&#13;
away meet. The Rangers won 7-2.&#13;
Tuesday. April 26, the Rangers&#13;
Nationals, and placing 8th of 25&#13;
teams in the NAJA Nationals beld&#13;
here at Parkside.&#13;
Winter of '82 brought us&#13;
basketbaD; the Rangers and the&#13;
Bucks. Parkside's new coach,&#13;
Rees Johnson, had begun the new&#13;
season with a bunch of unknown&#13;
players, due to the defection of&#13;
most of last year's team. The&#13;
team had a rough time for the first&#13;
half of the season, due to injuries&#13;
and ineligibility. Then, in the first&#13;
two months of '83, the Rangers&#13;
caught fire and won their last&#13;
eight regular season games and&#13;
the first two games of the District&#13;
14 tournament. Then, at Stevens&#13;
Point. the Ranger bubble burst.&#13;
They came back to Parkside&#13;
disappointed, but not as losers.&#13;
They held their heads high, and&#13;
are looking forward to next year.&#13;
SPORT NEWS&#13;
took 00 Lake County College. The&#13;
Rangers won 7·2. All single&#13;
matches were won. Mike Brinen&#13;
(who usually plays only doubles)&#13;
also defeated his opponent in a&#13;
single match.&#13;
Wednesday. April 27, the&#13;
Rangers took 00 carroll College.&#13;
The r1D81 score was 7-2, Ranger&#13;
favor. AU single matches were&#13;
woo but only one d... ble match .&#13;
was won.&#13;
TbJrsday, April 28, the Rangers&#13;
beat Lake Forest College. The&#13;
final score was 5-4.&#13;
Friday, April 29, the Rangers&#13;
look 00 Concordia College. The&#13;
final score was 12-0, Ranger favor.&#13;
AU single and double matches&#13;
were won. Mike Brien played a&#13;
single match and Reuben Montoya&#13;
also played in single and&#13;
double matcbes.&#13;
Monday. May 2, the Rangers&#13;
look on Northeastern illinois. The&#13;
final score was 7-2 giving the&#13;
Rangers another victory.&#13;
Wednesday, May 4, the Rangers&#13;
look 00 Lake County College.&#13;
Rangers lost 0-9. Thus completes&#13;
the Ranger Tennis team season.&#13;
Their seasonal record stands at&#13;
15-18.Congratulations on a fine&#13;
season,&#13;
-&#13;
Day With The Brew-crew&#13;
by Maureen Burke during batting praclice. We w....&#13;
and Carra Cariello allowed to ask questioos so long&#13;
we didn't say any of the guys w as&#13;
our fav~ite players, and we di~&#13;
hug (or Jump on) them. Also t&#13;
couldn't ask for autogr.p~e&#13;
Fortunately for lIS lawly ~&#13;
writers, we have the bravery of&#13;
bull. We approached Edgar YOl~&#13;
better known as Ned Y08t W'&#13;
asked what he liked best ~~&#13;
playing for the Brewers. Hisrepl&#13;
was tha t he likes the players ~&#13;
best. Of course, once we got OUr&#13;
bravery up to fuD force, Wew....&#13;
dragged off the field and told to&#13;
indulge our energies in eating&#13;
We had the famous "BasebaU&#13;
Buffet," which consisted of hot&#13;
dogs, brats, potato salad, bea ..&#13;
and vegetables. After filting OUr&#13;
stomachs and flirting With the&#13;
sports writers from the other&#13;
colleges, we headed onward to the&#13;
field to witness the Brewers take&#13;
on the White Sox. The Brew....&#13;
beat the Sox 4-3. Ben Oglivie hit&#13;
the winning home run,&#13;
Then we were homeward bound.&#13;
All we have to say is that the highway&#13;
is the best place to pick up&#13;
guys. Even when you aren't&#13;
allowed to open the windows due&#13;
00 exhaust smoke.&#13;
Here we are, the two lowly&#13;
outcasts who write Sports for the&#13;
Barger ready to tell you about&#13;
our adv~nbJres with the Brewers.&#13;
(Some of our adventures can't be&#13;
printed, but we'll tell what we&#13;
cant )&#13;
It'was the Annual State College&#13;
Media Day at County Stadium on&#13;
April 26. We Ranger Sportswnters&#13;
gathered along with other college&#13;
Journalists to listen t~ ~lve&#13;
speakers who gave us the insight&#13;
on Sports Media involving the&#13;
Brewers. The first speaker was&#13;
Dick Hackelt - Vice President of&#13;
Marketing. After Mr. Hackett, we&#13;
heard from Tom Skibosh&#13;
(Director of Publicity), Bill Haig&#13;
(Vice President of Baseball&#13;
Operations), Mike Hogan (Brewer&#13;
TV Announcer), Tom Flaherty&#13;
(Milwaukee Journal Baseball&#13;
Writer) ahd Mario ZHno (Asst.&#13;
Director of Publicity). Each of&#13;
them provided an interesting&#13;
presention of what their jobs involve,&#13;
what it took to get there and&#13;
wha t they enjoyed about it.&#13;
Afler the presenta lions we were&#13;
allowed to go out on the field&#13;
Women's Softball&#13;
The Womens Softball Team won&#13;
against UW·Superior in the&#13;
District 14 playoffs. The first&#13;
game's score was 4-0. The best&#13;
balling average of the day went to&#13;
Janet Broeren (2 for 4) and Cindy&#13;
Ruffert (j for 2). "J hate to single&#13;
out players because everyone&#13;
does a fine job," commented&#13;
Coach Linda Draft.&#13;
The second game of the best of&#13;
three series also went to the&#13;
Rangers, 9-4. Lea Hammen (2 for&#13;
4) had a double that drove in 2&#13;
runs. Hammen moved. into the&#13;
leading batter position because&#13;
Laura Laurenzi tore some&#13;
ligaments in her thumb in a recent&#13;
game. Laurenzi had surgery on&#13;
Monday.&#13;
The team left today to play&#13;
against Winona State University&#13;
in the Bidistriet Championships.&#13;
"If records say anything we are&#13;
the more experienced team on the&#13;
The Parkside Union&#13;
DINING ROOM:&#13;
COfFEE SHOPPE:&#13;
UNION SQ. GRill:&#13;
UNION SQ. BAR:&#13;
REC CENTER:&#13;
SWEET SHOPPE:&#13;
FINALS&#13;
WEEK&#13;
REGULAR HOURS&#13;
THRUMAY19&#13;
CLOSEDMAY20&#13;
UNT1LJUNE20&#13;
REGULAR HOURS&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
REGULAR HOURS&#13;
•&#13;
REGULAR HOURS&#13;
MON. THRU FRI.&#13;
1-5 P. M. SAT.&#13;
CLOSED SUNDAY&#13;
REGULAR HOURS&#13;
..... ~.&#13;
-&#13;
SEMESTER&#13;
BREAK&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
REGULAR HOURS&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
SUMMER&#13;
SCHOOL&#13;
7:30 a. m. - 1:30 p. m.&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
lla.m.-S:3Op.m.&#13;
MON. THRU THURS.&#13;
lla_m.-2p.m.&#13;
FRIDAYS&#13;
6p.m.-l0p.m.&#13;
MON. THRU FRI.&#13;
CLOSED SAT_&#13;
&amp;SUN.&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
field (Winona is 10-7and Parkside&#13;
is 31-8.) But whenever we get into&#13;
a tournament sitw..tion, we tno.&#13;
we are going 00 have to work to&#13;
win," said Draft.&#13;
If the team wins this weekend&#13;
they then advance to Nationals for&#13;
the third year in a row.&#13;
Varsity Classes&#13;
As many athletes discovono!&#13;
when they went to register for lao&#13;
classes varsity field eXperienceII&#13;
not heing offered. According to&#13;
Assistant Athletic Director Linda&#13;
Draft because of an NAJA rule&#13;
athletes can only get one creditfor&#13;
participation. Instead 01 offelin&amp;&#13;
the class for all four years of aD&#13;
athlete's eligibility and then&#13;
determine when they could get&#13;
credit, the department decided to&#13;
drop the classes altogether.&#13;
Women's Track&#13;
The Womens Track team&#13;
participated in an unusual meet&#13;
this past weekend. The meet was&#13;
an open meet held at Ul-Chieage&#13;
where the participants were the&#13;
womens team, the Chicago Men',&#13;
Track team, Parkside's&#13;
racewalkers and a few unattached&#13;
runners.&#13;
Sue Meyer qualified for the&#13;
NAJA Nationals in the 10,IlOO&#13;
meter run. Her time was 39:05.&#13;
Jane Roscykowski recorded •&#13;
personal best in the IlOO meter ruo.&#13;
Her time was 2:26.&#13;
Coach Mike DeWill woo the&#13;
10,000 incter in 45:03. Mark&#13;
Manning finished in 46:50.6 and&#13;
Dave Larwence followed closely&#13;
in 46:52. Ron Condon and Tim&#13;
Houden finished in 52:03and 52:06&#13;
respectively. Former Parkside&#13;
walker Mike Rumhe1hart finished&#13;
in 50:22.&#13;
Men's Baseball&#13;
by Maureen Burke&#13;
. Carroll College is probably&#13;
sorry tha t they ever had to play&#13;
the Rangers. Parkside beat them&#13;
liHl. Then on Thursday, May5,the&#13;
team played Concordia in the&#13;
WICA Playoffs. The Ra~ers andre&#13;
rated number 1 in the playoffs.&#13;
trounced Concordia 10-0 in a 7&#13;
inning game.&#13;
Thanks!&#13;
I would like 00 lhaok the&#13;
following people: Maureen Burtte,&#13;
Scott Carmalte, carra caneDo,&#13;
Carol Kortendick, Robb wehr,&#13;
Dan Dowhower and La~ra&#13;
Peterson for a fine job in cov~&#13;
Parkside sports this year. I w nd&#13;
also like to thank the coaches a&#13;
administration for answering&#13;
questions and giving quotes :&#13;
easily. A special thank Y'"' 01&#13;
Linda Draft for taking care aU&#13;
intramurals. Good luck to&#13;
teams next year.&#13;
;;a&#13;
toMY GIRLS: Mamie &amp; Kathy, I will miss&#13;
rOll this summer. CRASH&#13;
..... 11: Congratulations on a beautIful&#13;
Job! GoClclluck to all of you on 82-83 staff "I,. .&#13;
10: It'S only 698 nours until we take offl&#13;
LOVE MOLLY&#13;
I&amp;,ANCHE: Hope to see you on the Softball&#13;
FItld. POlly &amp; Molly .&#13;
fMAJfK5 TO Stlln ttle Man and Cecil B. wOld&#13;
til pllrtlers! I&#13;
Thank you to all of you&#13;
who made the news.&#13;
ANY&#13;
SCOOTIE: The racoons and I are ready for&#13;
... tltl",,! xox H.Il.&#13;
KATHY R.: Don't you know that stuff Is bad&#13;
IOl" yOU?1&#13;
TOCHRISSIE: Have a nice summerl JOEY&#13;
TOIEITH &amp; PAT H.: Have a nice summer!&#13;
JOEY .&#13;
TOJANE: Have a great summer! JOEY&#13;
TOMAROIE: Have a great summer! JOEY&#13;
TO~~o-.: see you next fall, I'll miss you!&#13;
BEWARE: It's only&#13;
3 months 'til DOJA'S&#13;
return!!&#13;
'run-hide!&#13;
II.O'EI&#13;
FORliE&#13;
S••• ER&#13;
SEASON&#13;
PUI .....&#13;
CAMP•• '&#13;
RE.IALS&#13;
.2 MAN TENTS&#13;
.4 MAN TENTS&#13;
• SLEEPING BAGS&#13;
• GROuND PADS&#13;
• GAS HEATERS&#13;
• GAS LANTERNS&#13;
• OOOKSTOIIES&#13;
• OOOKING KITS&#13;
• ICE CHESTS&#13;
eWATER JUGS&#13;
.CANTEENS&#13;
e VITTLE KITS&#13;
e CNN&gt; SHOVELS&#13;
e BELT AXES&#13;
e HUNTING KNIVES&#13;
• POCKET KNIVES .&#13;
eCQW&gt;ASSES&#13;
e FIRST AID KITS&#13;
eFLASHLIGHTS&#13;
e CNN&gt; STOOLS&#13;
• FISHING RODS&#13;
• FISHING NETS&#13;
• FISH BASKETS&#13;
AIYAICE&#13;
II.YAIIOIS&#13;
IICISSARY&#13;
CALL: 553.2401&#13;
RANGER&#13;
--Personals __&#13;
DOJA: We'.&#13;
miss youl&#13;
CHICKENS'AK- Or 5hCIu~&#13;
dresed ilkI' ";erlll WEeD you My U...&#13;
COMPUTER: CLU.: S.me heel,..., .,..r?&#13;
an INNOCENT 8ysranr:ftr&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS To All Gc'~t&#13;
ACSPeopl .. KnockemdMdIIIOlfa,':&#13;
unc:onclousl '&#13;
HERE'S TO GOOD FRIENDS Pat H. R&#13;
G.• Greg, Andy IL Pat.t. Ken M Mnood&#13;
S.,8I'"enda S, Pat . .s.tf W l.....v. R" S&#13;
Thanks fW betng !heI'e when l'O'I -..&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
TO DAR'S HUS.... ND: 5'- loves you ....&#13;
rtIough she di6n't want klput. c .... "teeI I&#13;
TO ELLA AND DAR AND MILLIE YOU'~&#13;
the world's best secret., e for encb afldi&#13;
employen. See ya ~I ,..... 1&#13;
ELLA: Keep up ft'te good work.. You .....&#13;
fantastic! !&#13;
IETH: Craw up 10 be- a$ nice Iovong.'"&#13;
consider.~ as your mom ..d Y'OU' be •&#13;
wondf!'rlul PHXln but then you .~&#13;
are. Take care of yourwtt. you rnotlCll'&#13;
you. Karen&#13;
y&#13;
"'_''''''ft&#13;
....._- .....&#13;
Il.oYe&#13;
m caes.&#13;
Pat H.&#13;
, -"'l&gt;l(,~~&#13;
~ ',-':;;j, • ~~&#13;
I PAT: k's good to&#13;
have a great friend&#13;
like youl Congratson&#13;
the graduationl&#13;
Ed&#13;
~~&#13;
"'&#13;
STEVE: How's Joa&#13;
Laurie? THE 80~' Tammy. Peggy and&#13;
BOB: How was Clnd ? H&#13;
Cindy. and What is)'Cin;W,,"pCindr? Who Is&#13;
MATT y. ald,Na! FAN&#13;
CHUCK: We're happy tnat ....._&#13;
happy and w .. '0C"f mother Is&#13;
WATCH 0 IITh~to meet yOU! "K"&#13;
UT PARKSIDE' or J&#13;
pass glls on you. 'OK'" ee Cue. will&#13;
~~~~E:, Need some Pllpet'"'? Drop 601&#13;
DICE:~o~~a;.rleb·b~llInd Shellll? BOB&#13;
$ u 'I. THE BOYS&#13;
';tIRER: Get a job! EX.PRES&#13;
OMAR:Gotorit! .&#13;
JILL: You never id ,&#13;
JEFF or you're 8 inches.&#13;
BLONDIE plu$ TAMMY ..&#13;
WINKING TIGER. sa.':'S STINKY equlIls&#13;
AL: Break some mOl'"e!!! S&amp;M&amp;K&#13;
N·;OSR~·A.: eewere of the V.S.P.S.P .• THE&#13;
JOHN: I'm madly In lovewitt\&#13;
at the END. Love, BRUCE you . .Yoeetme&#13;
J~:V::f~~s~:0~;;r;~~';U meee public YOJr&#13;
JOHN: I'm lealous! BRUCE&#13;
PAT HENSIAK: nas cllused m •&#13;
rnerest u MIKE SR. 'I son nIght.&#13;
MikE SR.; You're reet cute, 'Ill know thllt?&#13;
Real cute.&#13;
THANKS FOR helping stuff n stutters&#13;
TANKS TUNKS '.&#13;
5PEC~AL thanxs te eveev one whO pushed ('&#13;
me mto StUdent Activities. You know wh~&#13;
you lire! VALERIE&#13;
TO WHOMEVER IT CONCERNS' The&#13;
:;=~'s Track 'reem had 16memb~s thiS&#13;
DAVE D., Mike S.. Chris W., Kathy K., Mike&#13;
N., O.onna N., Jeff K., Amy B., Bill, Laurll,&#13;
Karne, and esp. Jim J.: Thanksll million to&#13;
all of you. I never would have made it home&#13;
.. v.;~~YOU',God Bless your wheels. KATHY R.&#13;
K ..HOW~ Kelly, Janet, Marcie, Jill, Laura,&#13;
Chns: Tma, (have I forgot anV'?), and&#13;
What s Her Name ... On yell, Debbie No&#13;
wonder you were never In your office&#13;
SIGNED, UNSIGNED. .&#13;
1It()()lrrMu.,.a 'IIIAlfTaD .... ---- - , ...;:;:..:=-"':':~ tnClftJtl; ,. m.&#13;
"A"nD J....-- ..&#13;
II' ..... F.&#13;
FAMILY FUN&#13;
ATTHE END&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION REC CENTER&#13;
FAMILY BOWLING - PRIZES&#13;
EVERYONE CAN WIN&#13;
ALL AGES&#13;
50¢&#13;
A Game&#13;
3 for&#13;
a Buck&#13;
••&#13;
•&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
FREE BUIAIIJ5&#13;
*&#13;
*10'&#13;
* 2 FOR 1 SOD&#13;
*&#13;
FOR&#13;
PLUS&#13;
(J&#13;
FOR LANE OR TABlE RESERVATIONS CAU.: 553-2695&#13;
OR JUST SHOW UP AND WEU WORK YOU I&#13;
12 Thursday, May 12,1983 RANGER&#13;
•&#13;
PARTICIPATION IN WOMEN'S SPORTS has risen greatly In recent years.&#13;
Women's Track (which had 16 members) and Women's softball are two&#13;
examples: upper left: Janet Broenen heads for home; middle Jeft: a 31-8&#13;
record Isn'!all fun and games; lower left: just running around; center top: the&#13;
he stays together (Spino, N'eyer and RoczykOWSkl).&#13;
team that works toget Pfrlestlfer stays tough during a track workout; u~&#13;
center baHam: Linda the Intensity of a volleyball player who runs traCk&#13;
right: laurie H~ ShoAAhaustakes the big swing. .&#13;
also; lower right. Ann&#13;
-&#13;
GRAND OPENING!&#13;
Royal&#13;
Treat&#13;
Sale!&#13;
Sunday May 15. thru Friday. May 20&#13;
Strawberry Shortcake&#13;
Banana Splits- :.r~&#13;
Double Delight "'!'&#13;
Peanut Buster Parfait· ~,... ~&#13;
Sundae Supreme ~&#13;
Hot Fudge Brownie Delight&#13;
. your choice&#13;
Under New Ownership&#13;
4301 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Op.n lOam 11 pm Ellery day&#13;
the&#13;
EVERY DAY 1-6&#13;
TAP BEER 30e MON. THRU THURS.&#13;
RAIL DRINKS 75C 10P.M. 'TIL 12:30&#13;
GAME ROOM PITCHERS2.00&#13;
Hwy. 32 between Racine &amp; Kenosha&#13;
(:::::::::::::!::::::::::C:~:;H.n~:r.rjrt.~~:I~!Mj;:l7:~:::~::::::::.:··:·:··:,::·r&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKINGI&#13;
5%% 1n....... ·HY•• Dall, IFSOCllile&#13;
Balance I. S500.00 .r M.... I --_.-&#13;
5935.7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414·658-4861&#13;
4235• 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414- 658-0120&#13;
410Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414·248·9141&#13;
7535Pershing BlVd. 8035_22nd Avenue 24726,.75th Street. Rt.50&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin Kenosha, Wisconsin (Paddock Lake) salem, Wis.&#13;
414·694·1380 414-657-1340 414.843-2388&#13;
WE'RE HERE 10 HELP YOU IRO ••&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS</text>
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              <text>PSGA fails to pass resolution</text>
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              <text>•&#13;
t#'&#13;
University  of Wisconsin  • Parkside&#13;
Thursday, September  30,1982&#13;
Vol. 11 • No.4&#13;
Budgets   requested   for  S.U.F.A.C.   approval&#13;
by Pal Reallak&#13;
govern   themselyes.   and  set  forth&#13;
shall  have  on  it  8  (eight)   voling&#13;
to&#13;
approve    the   President's&#13;
ap-&#13;
representatives    of P.S.G.A.  when&#13;
EdItor.&#13;
. policies&#13;
10&#13;
conjuncuon    WIth  the&#13;
members.s    (six) of whom shall  be&#13;
pointmenl.&#13;
in   consultation    with&#13;
the&#13;
Chan-&#13;
segregated&#13;
Umverslty.&#13;
Fees&#13;
Board  OfRegents.  the  President   of&#13;
Senators   of P.S.G.A.  Tbe&#13;
2&#13;
(two)&#13;
B.&#13;
Procedures.   Every  year&#13;
the&#13;
celIor or hislber   designee&#13;
dea1ing&#13;
Al10eatlon~&#13;
Co~mlltee&#13;
tbeU.W.-System,theChancel)or&#13;
other    seats&#13;
will   be   filled    by&#13;
committee  shall ask&#13;
the&#13;
President&#13;
with&#13;
the&#13;
S.U.F.A.C.&#13;
If&#13;
the&#13;
IS-V.F&#13;
.A.C.)  IS  a   major    sub   -&#13;
and   faculty:&#13;
The   STUDENTS&#13;
elections  of tbe  student&#13;
body.&#13;
one&#13;
of P.S.G.A.  to..ask for&#13;
the&#13;
budgets&#13;
President&#13;
Pro&#13;
Tempore&#13;
of&#13;
-auee&#13;
of&#13;
P.S.G.A .• set  ~p for&#13;
HAVE  the  prunary    responsIbIlity&#13;
member&#13;
10&#13;
the&#13;
fall  and   one  the&#13;
from   those   groups   required&#13;
to&#13;
P.S.G.A.  is  on  S.U.F.A.C.&#13;
then&#13;
a&#13;
llIt~ofstudyandrevlewof&#13;
for   ~al(lng&#13;
and    revIewIng.   of&#13;
following  spring.&#13;
The&#13;
drawing   is&#13;
submit  budgets  to S.U.F.A.C.&#13;
The&#13;
Senator&#13;
from   the   Senate    shall&#13;
•    jequl!Bt1&#13;
for  program   support&#13;
policies   conc.ermng   student    life.&#13;
committee   shall  then  review  and&#13;
assume   the   duties   of  President&#13;
aad&#13;
budget&#13;
~llocallon&#13;
of    the&#13;
student    services,    and   IOt... ests.&#13;
All budgets&#13;
recommend&#13;
to    the    P.S.G.A.&#13;
Pro  Tempore  in negotiations   with&#13;
sDoea~&#13;
portIon&#13;
of&#13;
segregated&#13;
The  STUDENTS  in  consullation&#13;
Senate    on   the    distribution&#13;
of&#13;
the  Chancellor.&#13;
__   l1&#13;
f......   S.U.F.A.C.   asks&#13;
WIth the  Chancellor   and  WIth the&#13;
Segregated   University   Fees.&#13;
If&#13;
P.S.G.A.  and  the  Chancellor&#13;
IlIr&#13;
aJlII&#13;
revt~s&#13;
all  bu~ets&#13;
that&#13;
final&#13;
approval    of  the   Board  .of&#13;
due&#13;
i&#13;
Should  the  P.S.G.A.  agree  with&#13;
don't   agree    on&#13;
the&#13;
Segregated&#13;
-&#13;
under&#13;
Its   !unsdictlon    as&#13;
Regents.   have  tbe&#13;
responsibility&#13;
are&#13;
ue&#13;
I&#13;
n&#13;
the&#13;
recommendation.&#13;
the&#13;
University   Fee  distribution.   each&#13;
......&#13;
aJlII&#13;
stated&#13;
10&#13;
the Parkside&#13;
fortbe   disposition  of student   fees&#13;
President   of P,S.G.A.&#13;
wllJ&#13;
tell  the&#13;
wllJ&#13;
then  submit   a  set  of recom-&#13;
QIlIlI~.&#13;
S.U.F.A.C.    makes&#13;
which   make   up   the   sUbstanllal&#13;
Chancellor   and  if  he/she   agrees&#13;
mendations&#13;
to   the    Board&#13;
of&#13;
..,&#13;
revisions&#13;
and&#13;
sends&#13;
the&#13;
support   for  campus&#13;
activities.&#13;
b  N&#13;
then   it   shall    he   implemented.&#13;
Regents  for final setUement  of the&#13;
.....&#13;
CII&#13;
to&#13;
the senate  who then&#13;
The&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
of&#13;
each&#13;
Y    oon&#13;
Should  the  Chancellor&#13;
not&#13;
agree.&#13;
matter,&#13;
reflews  the   rec0J!lmendatlons&#13;
campus  have&#13;
the&#13;
fight&#13;
to organize&#13;
then&#13;
the&#13;
provisions&#13;
under&#13;
D.   Duties.&#13;
The    Allocations&#13;
..&#13;
aDd  sends   It   on   to   tbe&#13;
10&#13;
any  manner   they  deem  fit.  to&#13;
negoliations   sball   be  used.   The&#13;
Cunmittee&#13;
shall   have   primary&#13;
a.ceJ1clI"&#13;
for his approval.   Upon&#13;
select&#13;
their&#13;
representatives&#13;
to&#13;
on  Nov.  ~&#13;
Senate  can't   amend  S.U.F.A.C.'s&#13;
responsibility&#13;
in   setting&#13;
the&#13;
...........   al,&#13;
implementation&#13;
is&#13;
participate&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
campus&#13;
"&#13;
recommendation.    But  it  (Senate)&#13;
allocable  portions&#13;
01.&#13;
the auxiliary&#13;
starltII.&#13;
movement.&#13;
can reject  it with  a 2/3 vole of&#13;
the&#13;
budget&#13;
and&#13;
to&#13;
insure&#13;
proper&#13;
aV.F&#13;
.A.C. is made  up  and  run&#13;
done  by&#13;
the&#13;
Judicial   Branch   of&#13;
entire   Senate.&#13;
If&#13;
rejection   lakes&#13;
monetary&#13;
disbursement&#13;
in   full&#13;
lIIIinIY&#13;
by&#13;
students  of the  Senate.&#13;
SUB - ARTICLE&#13;
1&#13;
P.S.G,A .• and the  term&#13;
of&#13;
office is&#13;
place&#13;
then&#13;
the&#13;
reasons&#13;
for&#13;
and  within  budgetary   categories.&#13;
~&#13;
fnJm&#13;
the&#13;
gener~l    student&#13;
Section&#13;
1.&#13;
The    P.S.G.A.&#13;
in&#13;
one  year.&#13;
rejection   are   to  he  a!l'"eed  upon&#13;
S.U.F.A.C.  shall  meetlhroughout&#13;
jliulatiClll.&#13;
The&#13;
follOWInggroups&#13;
consullation    with   the  Chancellor&#13;
The   committee    shall   elect   its&#13;
and   sent   to  the   Chairperson    of&#13;
the year  and  review&#13;
the&#13;
allocable&#13;
_l1Inded&#13;
by S.U.F.A.C.:   Union&#13;
and with the Board's  approval  will&#13;
own chairperson   after  each  spring&#13;
S.U.F .A.C.  The   committee    will&#13;
portion&#13;
of&#13;
the   Segregated    Fees&#13;
o,erattons,&#13;
Union    Debt&#13;
Ser-&#13;
he  responsible   for  the  deposition&#13;
election.  Tbe following  may  sit on&#13;
then make  its revision&#13;
and&#13;
send  it&#13;
Budget&#13;
according&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
..    ,&#13;
Athletics.&#13;
Intra-&#13;
of   student&#13;
fees   for   substantial&#13;
the   committee    as   non   -  voting&#13;
hack  to tbe  Senate.&#13;
procedures   set  up  in&#13;
the&#13;
Senate&#13;
...&#13;
Ia  /&#13;
Recreation.&#13;
Health.&#13;
support   for  campus   activities.&#13;
members;&#13;
Assistant&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
C. Negotiations.   The  President&#13;
Rules.&#13;
"wide&#13;
Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
Section&#13;
2.&#13;
A committee   shall  he&#13;
for&#13;
Educational&#13;
Services.&#13;
and   President    Pro   Tempore    of&#13;
A  reminder    to   all   clubs   and&#13;
i'e'IlIrming&#13;
Arts   and    Lecture.&#13;
established    for   allocations    as   a&#13;
Assistant&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
for    Ad-&#13;
P.S,G.A.  and  the  Chairperson   of&#13;
organizations   who use segregated&#13;
SlDdentOroganizations    Council.&#13;
subcommittee   of P.S.G.A.  Senate.&#13;
ministration    and   Fiscal   Mfairs.&#13;
S.U.F.A.C.    or&#13;
their&#13;
designees&#13;
fees:   Budgets&#13;
are&#13;
due  in&#13;
to&#13;
LUIs&#13;
RANGER.&#13;
Housing,&#13;
Parkside&#13;
The  committee&#13;
shall   study   and&#13;
Should   a   vacancy&#13;
occur    on&#13;
(who    must&#13;
be    members&#13;
of&#13;
Valldejuli.  S.U.F.A.C.   chairman.&#13;
OiIdC&amp;reCent ....  P.S.G.A.  Inc .•&#13;
review   all  requests   for  program&#13;
S.U.F.A.C.&#13;
the&#13;
following&#13;
P.S.G.A.)&#13;
shall&#13;
be&#13;
the&#13;
by&#13;
noon&#13;
011&#13;
Novemb..-&#13;
2nd.&#13;
llludent   Activities&#13;
Building.&#13;
support  and  budget  allocations   of&#13;
procedures   shall  be  used:&#13;
U.F.A.C.,  Business   Services,&#13;
the    allocable&#13;
portion&#13;
of   the&#13;
1.&#13;
The  President   Pro  Tempore&#13;
I~'''''''-&#13;
ClIrnival,&#13;
and&#13;
Peer   Sup-&#13;
Segregated&#13;
University&#13;
Fee.&#13;
AU&#13;
of  the   P.S.G.A.   Senate&#13;
in&#13;
con-&#13;
decisions&#13;
and    actions&#13;
of   the&#13;
sullation   with   the   Chancellor   or&#13;
committee.&#13;
(S.U.F.A.C.)&#13;
hislber&#13;
designee.&#13;
will   fill   any&#13;
(Segregated&#13;
University&#13;
Fee&#13;
unoccupied  senatorial   seat&#13;
with&#13;
Allocations   Committee);    shall  he&#13;
the   confirmation&#13;
of   P.S.G.A.&#13;
subjected    to  the  review   and&#13;
ap-&#13;
Senate.&#13;
proval  of P.S.G.A .• in conjunction&#13;
2.&#13;
The  President   of P.S.G.A.  in&#13;
with&#13;
the&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
of    the&#13;
consultation   with&#13;
the&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
University&#13;
of&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
of hislber   designee   shall  appoint&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
to any  student  seat  on S.U.F.A.C.&#13;
A. Membership.   Tbe committee&#13;
The P.S.G.A.  Senate  doesn't&#13;
need&#13;
Greenquist&#13;
Safety  first&#13;
Article&#13;
IV&#13;
of the  P.S.G.A.   Inc .•&#13;
&gt;tGuUlution.&#13;
the&#13;
following&#13;
IddeUnes&#13;
are   set   up   for   the&#13;
t.UF&#13;
.A.C. committee:&#13;
problem   is  the  heat   exchangers&#13;
used.    The   exchangers&#13;
were&#13;
retrofitted&#13;
to   the    ventilation&#13;
system  in compliance  with energy&#13;
conservation    standards&#13;
and   are&#13;
now&#13;
required&#13;
in&#13;
aU&#13;
new buildings.&#13;
The   heat    exchangers.&#13;
which&#13;
reclaim&#13;
the&#13;
building's   heat  from&#13;
the   exhausted&#13;
air,&#13;
were    not&#13;
working&#13;
properly&#13;
during&#13;
the&#13;
summer   because&#13;
of&#13;
a   low  lem~&#13;
perature   differential   between  the&#13;
inside  and  outside   air.&#13;
11le&#13;
ven-&#13;
tilating  system  in its present  state&#13;
is   not   optimized&#13;
to&#13;
work   well&#13;
during   the   summer&#13;
t&#13;
when   they&#13;
effectively  blocked  the  air  intake&#13;
to the building.  They are  expected&#13;
to work  better&#13;
this&#13;
wint ...  because&#13;
~   the   higher   temperature&#13;
dif-&#13;
ferential.&#13;
Professor   Behzad   Samimi   has&#13;
been monitoring  the airflow  at  the&#13;
hoods&#13;
in the  lahoratories   and said&#13;
thalthe   airflow  could be increased&#13;
with the proper  da mper settings  in&#13;
each  hood. He said  that,  according&#13;
to&#13;
OSHA  standards.&#13;
the   hoods&#13;
should  nol  have&#13;
to&#13;
be  operated&#13;
with   the  dampers    fully  opened.&#13;
and   thal   the   efficiency    of   the&#13;
ventilation&#13;
incieases&#13;
as   the&#13;
dampers   are  closed&#13;
Several   reports   concerning   the&#13;
ventilation  system  are  expected&#13;
to&#13;
be completed  within  the  next  two&#13;
months,  Until the problems  can  he&#13;
repaired.   the airflow  in the system&#13;
will&#13;
be   increased&#13;
to   normal&#13;
specifications.    but  the   extent   of&#13;
the&#13;
problems  are  as  yet  unknown.&#13;
by  Bob&#13;
Kiesling&#13;
News  Editor&#13;
Attempts&#13;
to&#13;
bring   Greenquist&#13;
Hall's   ventilation    system   up&#13;
to&#13;
more    stringent&#13;
building&#13;
code&#13;
slandards   revea led some complex&#13;
problems&#13;
in    the    system&#13;
and&#13;
prompted  a study&#13;
to&#13;
be conducted&#13;
by   the   Milwaukee    engineering&#13;
firm  of  Burt  Fredriksen.    Inc.&#13;
The&#13;
$25.000&#13;
study    is&#13;
to&#13;
he&#13;
completed    in&#13;
the&#13;
next   several&#13;
months.    Physical&#13;
Plant    super-&#13;
visor  Jack  Dudley  said  that  even&#13;
though  the  problem   was  noticed&#13;
during  two oystem  upgradings   in&#13;
1973&#13;
and&#13;
1977.&#13;
Greenquist&#13;
professors   only  became   worried&#13;
about   the  problem   this  summer,&#13;
when&#13;
several&#13;
potentially&#13;
dangerous&#13;
chemical&#13;
spills    oc-&#13;
curred.&#13;
IIBy&#13;
that&#13;
time    we&#13;
had&#13;
a&#13;
balancing  contractor   in,&#13;
It&#13;
he said.&#13;
The  contractor   blocked  off  rOOI~&#13;
air   exhausts&#13;
in&#13;
order   to  get  ac-&#13;
curate   airflow   measurements&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
rooms.  While&#13;
the&#13;
airflow  was&#13;
inadequate,&#13;
during&#13;
the    next&#13;
several   weeks   the  supply  of  air&#13;
wiU he  increased.&#13;
Dudley  said   that   although   the&#13;
ventilating   system   is  capable   of&#13;
supplying  the necessary&#13;
airflow&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
rooms,   it  cannot&#13;
do&#13;
so  and&#13;
remain&#13;
within&#13;
energy&#13;
con·&#13;
servation   specifications.&#13;
Although&#13;
serious&#13;
problems,&#13;
sucb   as   rusted    vents   and&#13;
im-&#13;
properly   installed   fire   dampers,&#13;
do  exist  in&#13;
the&#13;
system,&#13;
the&#13;
main&#13;
ARTICLE&#13;
IV&#13;
SectiCII&#13;
I.&#13;
The&#13;
STUDENTS   of&#13;
uw  .&#13;
P&#13;
or&#13;
any  U.  W.  -  System&#13;
sdlool&#13;
have  the- responsibility    to&#13;
I&#13;
PSGA  fails to  pass' resolution&#13;
after   the   meeting.    ''This   would&#13;
have&#13;
made&#13;
a&#13;
fifth&#13;
standing&#13;
committee,&#13;
which    would   have&#13;
dealt&#13;
directly&#13;
with&#13;
women'S&#13;
issues.  It's  definitely  a specialized&#13;
group.&#13;
Certainly&#13;
necessary;&#13;
there's    so   much   going&#13;
on&#13;
with&#13;
women's   affairs."&#13;
Mter  several  minutes  of heated&#13;
discussion&#13;
within    the   meeting,&#13;
"Question"&#13;
was&#13;
called&#13;
and&#13;
seconded.   ("Question"   authorizes&#13;
the&#13;
vice  .  president   to  go  to  an&#13;
immediate&#13;
vote   without   letting&#13;
further&#13;
discussion    go   on.)   Im-&#13;
mediately   after   "Question"    was&#13;
called.  "Roll&#13;
cau"&#13;
was also called&#13;
and seconded.  (The present  Votffig&#13;
Senators  must  yield  a  verbal  yes&#13;
or   no   vote   to   the   subject&#13;
in&#13;
review.)  The turn  of votes went as&#13;
follows:  Buenker   - Phillips,   yes;&#13;
Frederick,&#13;
yesj&#13;
SChuetta,    no;&#13;
pogreba,   yes;  Scoon, yes;  Mertz,&#13;
yes;    Slama,&#13;
nOj&#13;
Adelsen,    no;&#13;
Higgens,   yes;   and  SpaUato.  yes.&#13;
This  did nol yield the  necessary&#13;
2/3  vote.   therefor   the  resolution&#13;
failed.  Pogreba   did  note.  though,&#13;
tha t the  resolution  would  he hack&#13;
for  reconsideration.&#13;
and  interests    of  this   group   may&#13;
sometimes   vary   from&#13;
tha&#13;
t  of  the&#13;
entire   student   body;&#13;
Therefore.   Be It Resolved:  That&#13;
P,S.G.A.   immediately    implement&#13;
a slanding   committee   which  shall&#13;
he  entitled  Women's  Mfairs;    and&#13;
Be  It  Further&#13;
Resolved:   That&#13;
the   Women's   Affairs   committee&#13;
shall   abide   by  all  P.S.G.A.   Con-&#13;
stitutional   and   Sena torial   Rules;&#13;
and&#13;
Be  It   Finally    Resolved:    That&#13;
Jeanne&#13;
Phillips    shall   serve    as&#13;
temporary&#13;
chairperson&#13;
of   this&#13;
committee   until  such  time  as  one&#13;
can  he  elected:&#13;
Currently.    the  constitution   has&#13;
four&#13;
standing&#13;
committees:&#13;
Legislative&#13;
Mfairs.&#13;
S.U.F.A.C .•&#13;
Student   Services,   and  S.O.C.  By&#13;
adding&#13;
a&#13;
Women's&#13;
Affairs&#13;
Committee.&#13;
the    P.S.G.A..&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Constitution&#13;
would    have&#13;
been&#13;
directly   changed.   pogreba   slated&#13;
by Pal Rensiak&#13;
Edllor&#13;
On&#13;
Friday. Sept.&#13;
24.&#13;
a resolution&#13;
iatroduced   by   Phil    Pogreba.&#13;
Preddent  Pro   Tempore    of   the&#13;
....  te.&#13;
and&#13;
seconded  by  Jeanne&#13;
~er.&#13;
Phillips. Senator,  failed&#13;
""",use&#13;
the  resolution  lacked   an&#13;
:!...llnnative2/3 vole in the  Senate.&#13;
....   resolution&#13;
states:&#13;
Whereas:&#13;
As&#13;
stated&#13;
in    the&#13;
!:"mble   ~  the Parkside   Student&#13;
ernment   Association&#13;
Inc's&#13;
Constitution,    "The&#13;
P~rkside&#13;
~!..&#13;
Government  Association.&#13;
-w....-ated    shall  be  responsible&#13;
~~dents&#13;
of&#13;
the University  of&#13;
"""-'lDllIJI   -&#13;
Parkside'"&#13;
and&#13;
~8:&#13;
47.3%&#13;
Of&#13;
the&#13;
overall&#13;
_&#13;
t   body   is   comprised&#13;
of&#13;
en;&#13;
and&#13;
.. ~I:&#13;
This&#13;
47.3%&#13;
serves  as a&#13;
-   ...  and&#13;
viable  group  on  cam-&#13;
"';8Ild&#13;
Wbereu:&#13;
The&#13;
needs.  concerns.&#13;
~orejgn films&#13;
.&#13;
Sellout&#13;
~'!day&#13;
seatings for the 1982-a:l    553-2345).Season prices  are  $15for&#13;
~'CIID&#13;
film&#13;
series at Parksi~e  are&#13;
students   and  senior   citizens   and&#13;
~.&#13;
but a  limited  number   of&#13;
$17 for  others.&#13;
.&#13;
:n-uIda&#13;
tiotets    remain&#13;
for   the&#13;
The&#13;
series   openell  Sept.  23 WIth&#13;
10&#13;
b.....Y&#13;
screenings.   according&#13;
"King&#13;
of Hearts."   The series  also&#13;
"";tor"""&#13;
Norman  Cloutier    coor-&#13;
includes  such major  attractions   as&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
series.'&#13;
"Man   of  Iron,"   "Strosze~,&#13;
II&#13;
and&#13;
~&#13;
16 feature   films   will   be&#13;
"La&#13;
Cage  Aux Foiles."   DIreCtorS&#13;
Unionat 7.:30p.m.&#13;
in&#13;
the 400_seat&#13;
represented&#13;
include&#13;
Ingmar&#13;
.....&#13;
~Inema&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Ad-&#13;
Bergman.&#13;
Francois&#13;
Truffaut.&#13;
'.'Uabl&#13;
l8&#13;
by&#13;
seaaon  ticket   only.&#13;
Werner  Herzog.  Akiro  Kurosawa.&#13;
ll1IIciIi  ... ~&#13;
from    the    Parkside&#13;
1inda    Wurtmuller    and   FederiCO&#13;
....ormation  Cent...  (Phone&#13;
Fellini.&#13;
Inside&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
*&#13;
Anthropology    seminar&#13;
*&#13;
Record  burning&#13;
*&#13;
Men's  cross  country&#13;
*&#13;
Madison  hockey&#13;
•&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday.  September  30. 1982&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Financial aid&#13;
No strings, please&#13;
The&#13;
Solomon Amendment to the&#13;
t983 Defense Appropriations Bill,&#13;
signed  "quickly  into  law"  by&#13;
President   Reagan,   is  causing&#13;
considerable  controversy  in the&#13;
academic&#13;
community.&#13;
The&#13;
Solomon Amendment makes&#13;
draU&#13;
registration  a  prerequisite  (for&#13;
males) for financial aid eligibility.&#13;
In&#13;
addition to further burdening&#13;
a financial  aid system  already&#13;
overburdened&#13;
with   federal&#13;
regulations,   the  amendment&#13;
passes  responsibility  for  draft&#13;
registration   enforcement   to&#13;
financial aid officers, a job that&#13;
belongs, righUy or wrongly, to the&#13;
Justice Department.&#13;
This semester,  many Parkside&#13;
students did not receive their aid&#13;
in time to pay their fees. Delays&#13;
that  are  now at least  annoying&#13;
could  mushroom  into  genuine&#13;
hardships,&#13;
as&#13;
the law requires&#13;
intense  cooperation   between&#13;
desparate  government  agencies.&#13;
Anyone can pick&#13;
up&#13;
a newspaper&#13;
and  notice  that  cooperation  is&#13;
currently  a  rare  commodity&#13;
among bureaucrats.&#13;
It&#13;
also  set  a  dangerous&#13;
precedent  in "strings  attached".&#13;
financial aid. Senator Clarreborne&#13;
Pell whose name is found atop the&#13;
Pell' Grant program, has initiated&#13;
legislation to require students. to&#13;
have a&#13;
2.0&#13;
GPA before recelvmg&#13;
aid. While a&#13;
Ole"&#13;
average&#13;
is&#13;
not a&#13;
particularly  difficult standard  to&#13;
maintain,  that standard  could be&#13;
raised if financial aid funds dry up&#13;
further&#13;
as&#13;
they are likely to do.&#13;
Larg~  scale  higber  education&#13;
made  possible   by  a  strong&#13;
financial   aid  .program    is&#13;
something  that  should  not  be&#13;
IighUy discarded  by  politicians&#13;
looking for quick -fix budget cuts.&#13;
An&#13;
enlightened  population  has&#13;
always  been  this  country's&#13;
strongest  point,  and  politicians&#13;
would do well to realize the con-&#13;
nection between mass  education&#13;
and their own well being.&#13;
\&#13;
\&#13;
-fr:~,m ;&#13;
'-~&#13;
.&#13;
&lt;,&#13;
Library   /  Learning&#13;
Ceo&#13;
Chuck Bell,  Jeanne  Phillips&#13;
Pogreba,  Mike Scoon.&#13;
'&#13;
All&#13;
of these  positions a&#13;
pointed  in  the  Senate  by&#13;
Kreuser.   Student  Govern&#13;
make  a difference.  Support&#13;
concerns&#13;
by&#13;
casting  a vote&#13;
tober&#13;
21&#13;
and&#13;
22.&#13;
The&#13;
quali&#13;
your education  rests on it.&#13;
Political&#13;
Afairs&#13;
forum&#13;
by Stepben Kalmar&#13;
II&#13;
Life, liberty  and  !be right  to&#13;
acquire   property,   are  our&#13;
unalienable rights. What happens&#13;
to&#13;
these&#13;
"rights"  when the State&#13;
becomes a tool of !be ruling class,&#13;
inatead&#13;
of&#13;
a mutual judge between&#13;
COIlf\icting&#13;
interests~&#13;
It&#13;
is  the&#13;
inability to enforce&#13;
our&#13;
rights that&#13;
makOll&#13;
us&#13;
inaecUre.  Economic&#13;
trustratlon  and lOBSrl personal&#13;
liberty&#13;
both&#13;
signal wealmesa in the&#13;
enUre government. Increasing&#13;
unemployment and dying national&#13;
productivity  are  reflections  of&#13;
illegitimate  government.   Each&#13;
penon   makes   a  legitimate&#13;
government   by  constant   par-&#13;
tldplltlon. In a Democracy that is&#13;
!be educated vote. We are morally&#13;
respcllll\ble for&#13;
our&#13;
government&#13;
becauae&#13;
we&#13;
give it our alienable&#13;
right  to judgement  and  punish-&#13;
ment.&#13;
There&#13;
is&#13;
110&#13;
one&#13;
left to blame&#13;
for&#13;
unjust&#13;
government&#13;
manipulation  but ourselves.  Too&#13;
many&#13;
people are more interested&#13;
in&#13;
box&#13;
scores&#13;
than  !be voting&#13;
recorda rl elected rlflcials.&#13;
EspecIally&#13;
here&#13;
at Parkllide,&#13;
too&#13;
few  atudents  understand  what&#13;
rights  and  responsibilities  are&#13;
theirs  in University  and  State&#13;
government.  There  are students&#13;
making  kcy  decisions  in  your&#13;
academic  future.  P.S.G.A.  Inc.&#13;
sends students  to lobby for and&#13;
against  key  legislation.   Their&#13;
salaries  and travel expenses  are&#13;
paid by your tuition.&#13;
H,&#13;
(as is the&#13;
case),  the  student  government&#13;
expects   the  student   body  to&#13;
initiate all communications,  then&#13;
it becomes  tbe responsibility  of&#13;
each  student  to  reform  their&#13;
representatives.&#13;
October&#13;
21&#13;
and&#13;
22&#13;
marks  the&#13;
P.S.G.A.  Senate  elections.  Nine&#13;
senate  seats  will be  open  this&#13;
semester.&#13;
senators  are  respoo-&#13;
sible to sit on faculty committees&#13;
that  decide  the  direction  and&#13;
scope&#13;
of&#13;
education  at Parkside.&#13;
The  present   Senate   holds  a&#13;
somewhat  elitist  view  of  their&#13;
positions.   This  lack  of  com-&#13;
munication is one obvious result of&#13;
some Senators preoccupation with&#13;
self - interest.  OUr President  of&#13;
P.S.G.A. presides over tbe Senate&#13;
with a fatherly  leash,  supported&#13;
by the somewbat condenscending&#13;
attitude of some at Student Life.&#13;
It&#13;
is your right to know tbe students&#13;
that represent  your concerns. The&#13;
following  is  a  list  of  all  the&#13;
students  on Faculty  committees:&#13;
Academic    Actions&#13;
Phil&#13;
Pogreba,&#13;
Mike Scoon..&#13;
Academic&#13;
Planning&#13;
and&#13;
Program  Review  - Al Spalla to,&#13;
Earlene  Fredrick.&#13;
Academic   Policies   ~ Brian&#13;
McDonald, Mike Scoon.&#13;
.&#13;
Athletic Board .-Dave Higgens,&#13;
Gary Larson.&#13;
Awards  and ceremonies  - Jill&#13;
Nielsen.&#13;
Bookstore - Jim Kreuser.&#13;
Campus Planning  - Tim Tilton.&#13;
Course  and  Curriculum  - Jim&#13;
Kreuser.&#13;
Lectures  and Fine arts  - Dave&#13;
McPherson.&#13;
~.r.r~.rJ"'.r..r&#13;
ee-,...............................&#13;
.rJ"'.r""""'''''''''''''''''JO''''',..,...,..,.......-cr......co'"'  ......&#13;
.".......cQ&#13;
==0'-&#13;
Ranger&#13;
editorials  reflect  the  opinion  of the&#13;
majority&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
ed&#13;
staff.&#13;
Parkside&#13;
students&#13;
may submit&#13;
editorial  ideas&#13;
to the editor&#13;
consideration.&#13;
Editorial&#13;
ideas&#13;
need not be typed to&#13;
be&#13;
considered.&#13;
Editor's note&#13;
Satire, it's not easy to spot&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
not  be  returned&#13;
though,&#13;
accompanied  by a self - ad&#13;
stamped   envelope.   Alter&#13;
Ranger  uses a publication,&#13;
the rights will revert  back&#13;
to&#13;
author.  So, if you have some&#13;
interesting   or  fascinating,&#13;
you've worked on and that you&#13;
proud of, submit  it, and&#13;
we'D&#13;
our best to put it into print.&#13;
approached    me  and  inquired&#13;
about  submitting   material   that&#13;
was  not really  informative   but&#13;
more literary.  Perhaps  material&#13;
l!"'t English stu~ents do, and may&#13;
like to see&#13;
m&#13;
pnnt.  The Ranger  is&#13;
willing to print  literary  articles&#13;
and would like to set up a way ~&#13;
do so every week if space permits.&#13;
The submissions  we receive  will&#13;
For all of you who have  been&#13;
enjoying  the profound  words  of&#13;
wisdom that lurk within our&#13;
8&#13;
or&#13;
12&#13;
pages every  week.&#13;
1&#13;
am indeed&#13;
pleased .• For  those  rl  you who&#13;
haven't,&#13;
1&#13;
give you my deepest&#13;
sympathies.  Last  week's  paper&#13;
was covered with SATIRE, from&#13;
start to finish. Unfortunately,  not&#13;
all of the people who read  the&#13;
paper  saw  the  humor  in  John&#13;
Kovalic's   article   about   the&#13;
Student Recruitment  Fair.  A few&#13;
peuple found what  was  written&#13;
somewhat offensive, and for that I&#13;
will state:  Offense is not our in-&#13;
tention. We merely act as a source&#13;
of&#13;
information  and entertainment&#13;
for the peuple on this campus. We&#13;
work hard to do tbat, and no less.&#13;
Satire  is  a  literary  work  in&#13;
which irony&#13;
t&#13;
derision,  or wit in&#13;
a~y form is used to expose folly or&#13;
WIckedness (from the American&#13;
Heritage    Dictionary    of  the&#13;
English&#13;
Language).&#13;
John&#13;
Kovalic's tone is often in the line&#13;
of&#13;
satire.&#13;
As&#13;
stated above  it was&#13;
not his intention&#13;
to&#13;
offend' anyone&#13;
with his writing, his intention was&#13;
to entertain,  which&#13;
be&#13;
did do&#13;
It&#13;
must be pointed out, though, that&#13;
th~  clubs   and  organizations&#13;
Written  about   in  his  article&#13;
"Student   Recruitment    Fair'"&#13;
were all "?mewhat  made  - ';p.&#13;
Conversations&#13;
were  generally&#13;
ficllcl~s   and  meant  to  strike&#13;
curiosity as to wbat the mentioned&#13;
clubs  are  really   about.   For&#13;
exam"l~,&#13;
the&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Assoclallon&#13;
of&#13;
Wargamers  is not&#13;
really a group of "blood - thirsty"&#13;
students (ficticious conversation).&#13;
They are a soclSl ofl!l'nization set&#13;
out to help  make  this&#13;
a&#13;
better&#13;
achool&#13;
In&#13;
any  way&#13;
they can.&#13;
On to&#13;
bigger&#13;
and&#13;
bette'  tbitlgs&#13;
The&#13;
other  day  Steve  Kalma~&#13;
The Ranger needs staffers:&#13;
• photographers    • news writers   • ad reps&#13;
Call 2287&#13;
or&#13;
2295&#13;
or Stop in!&#13;
We're&#13;
in WllC  DI73&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tammy  Shuemate&#13;
Masood  Shafiq&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene  Torkilsen&#13;
Edl&#13;
NewS Edi&#13;
Feature  Edi&#13;
sports&#13;
Edl&#13;
Photo&#13;
Edl&#13;
Copy Ed&#13;
Business  Mana&#13;
Ad&#13;
Manal&#13;
Distribution   Mana&#13;
Assistant   Business  Mana&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Sharon  Aken,  Mau~een  Burke,  Carol  Burns,  Kari&#13;
DIX&#13;
Dan  Do~hower.   Cliff  Flower,   Stephen   Kalmar&#13;
II,&#13;
ca&#13;
Kortendlck,   John  Kovalic,  Rick  Luehr   Robb  Luehr,&#13;
De&#13;
A. Pfaff.  Jennie  Tunkieicz.&#13;
.'&#13;
,&#13;
~~~:Iei~o~~t~,.,&#13;
nd&#13;
,edited&#13;
by stUdents&#13;
of&#13;
UW.Parkside&#13;
and theYare&#13;
Publ!&#13;
e&#13;
•   "'"  orla   polley  and content.&#13;
ld&#13;
RANtE~&#13;
l:~~Yn;~U~sdt~Y&#13;
turing&#13;
the&#13;
academic yellr&#13;
except&#13;
during breakSand~~l&#13;
Written   permiss"on    I  V    e.   nion  COOPt!rIltlve   Publishing&#13;
Co.,  Kenosha,   WISC~n5'  .&#13;
All&#13;
corres&#13;
I&#13;
5 reqUired  for  reprln'   otany&#13;
portion&#13;
of RANGER.&#13;
Parkside ~:~ce&#13;
~Uld&#13;
be&#13;
addressed to:  Pi!lrkslde  Ranger,  university&#13;
of&#13;
WI&#13;
Letters  ~  t&#13;
o.&#13;
, KenOSha,Wisconsin,&#13;
53141.&#13;
d&#13;
paper&#13;
ith&#13;
he&#13;
Ed.itor wlll ~&#13;
accepted&#13;
if&#13;
typewritten,  doublespaced  on standa~  ..&#13;
d_W_&#13;
one,,: Inch margIns. All letters must&#13;
be&#13;
signed and a telephone nu&#13;
r1l&#13;
._  v...  Icatlon.&#13;
Na","&#13;
wUl&#13;
be&#13;
wlttmeld&#13;
tor&#13;
valid&#13;
renoM&#13;
~adliM&#13;
tor&#13;
t~en   Is llMndey ., 2 ,.m.&#13;
fo,.&#13;
publlC.,1on on Tttursday.&#13;
Tht&#13;
'"&#13;
l1=:o~~t   t:'::~:·1  privileges&#13;
tn&#13;
refusino&#13;
tel&#13;
print Urtters WI'llchc;ontah'l"&#13;
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              <text>Senate passes resolution</text>
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              <text>til'&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Porkside&#13;
Vol. 11 - No.5&#13;
5.0.C. guideline review&#13;
committee formed&#13;
by PatH ... lak&#13;
Editor&#13;
An&#13;
ad&#13;
hoc&#13;
committee&#13;
of&#13;
io-&#13;
terested  students  have come&#13;
together&#13;
10form&#13;
the&#13;
SOC&#13;
(Student&#13;
Organizations Council) GuIdeline&#13;
Review Committee. The Senate&#13;
was approached&#13;
by&#13;
a wmber&#13;
of&#13;
concerned students about the&#13;
(I)&#13;
conflicts of&#13;
SOC&#13;
guidelines ac-&#13;
cording  to the P.S.G.A.&#13;
Con-&#13;
stitution,&#13;
(2)&#13;
to make more&#13;
adequate&#13;
the&#13;
guidelines for&#13;
SOC&#13;
and  the&#13;
Budget  and  Review&#13;
Committee, and&#13;
(3)&#13;
to change&#13;
the&#13;
ambiguity of&#13;
the&#13;
present roles&#13;
within SOC.&#13;
At&#13;
the&#13;
time of development&#13;
of&#13;
the committee,&#13;
the&#13;
,.,ties&#13;
of the&#13;
Chair and the Vice - chair of&#13;
SOC&#13;
were unclear to both the Chair and&#13;
Vice -chair.&#13;
SOC&#13;
is&#13;
also&#13;
lacking a&#13;
set procedure  for biring  a&#13;
secretary.&#13;
The&#13;
guidelines for&#13;
the&#13;
~:r~~&#13;
Senate passes&#13;
resolutlon&#13;
Thursday, October 7, 1982&#13;
,&#13;
byPat Henslak&#13;
EdItor&#13;
TIle&#13;
Parbide  Student Govern-&#13;
.... tAJoocialion, Inc. (P.S.G.A.)&#13;
.-s&#13;
a resolution introduced by&#13;
Ptul&#13;
pogreba,  President  Pro&#13;
Telllpore&#13;
of&#13;
the Senate, stating&#13;
IIIIt a Wcmen's Affairs Com-&#13;
mI\IeO&#13;
become an implemented&#13;
......  mittee of the currently&#13;
IIaadiDI&#13;
p&#13;
.s.G.A. Student&#13;
Ser-&#13;
..  Ccmmittee. This resolution&#13;
..  peaed&#13;
unanimously,  and&#13;
.IeI:&#13;
""berellS:&#13;
As&#13;
stated  in the&#13;
.... mb1.&#13;
of&#13;
the Parkside Student&#13;
QcwenUDeat Association,   Inc. 's&#13;
eoutltution,  'The  Parkside&#13;
ludeat&#13;
Government Association,&#13;
JI«&lt;POI'atedshall be responsible&#13;
tolbestudents ofthe University of&#13;
WiIeoaIin • Parkside';   and&#13;
1iIIereas:&#13;
47.3%&#13;
of the overall&#13;
IIIIdlIIt&#13;
body&#13;
is&#13;
comprised  of&#13;
...   ;8Dd&#13;
1iIIereas:&#13;
This&#13;
47.3%&#13;
serves as a&#13;
•  IIIll!&#13;
viable group on cam-&#13;
p,-&#13;
.....   : The&#13;
needs, concerns,&#13;
.. IItlnsts&#13;
of&#13;
this group may&#13;
It&#13;
'I.&#13;
vary&#13;
from tha t of the&#13;
eMli'elludent&#13;
body;&#13;
""are&#13;
B.&#13;
It&#13;
Resolved: That&#13;
tlCA.&#13;
immediately implement&#13;
~ltee&#13;
of Student Ser-&#13;
1IIIIdI&#13;
shall  be entitled&#13;
.. Affairs;&#13;
and&#13;
II&#13;
Further&#13;
Resolved: That&#13;
Women's  Affairs   sub-&#13;
"'ttee&#13;
shall abide  by all&#13;
'J.G.A.  Constitutional   and&#13;
Senatorial Rules; and&#13;
Be&#13;
It&#13;
Finally Resolved: That&#13;
Jeanne  Phillips shall serve as&#13;
temporary  chairperson  of this&#13;
subcommittee until such time as&#13;
one can be elected."&#13;
Before the vote was taken, Ruth&#13;
Slama, Senator, commented:  "I&#13;
think  this  is  a  very  good&#13;
resolutioo.&#13;
It&#13;
will widen the scope&#13;
of Student Services, and what&#13;
Student Services is supposed to&#13;
be. Incorporating  this resolution&#13;
into Student Services will be a&#13;
. very positive step."&#13;
Adding a subcommittee  to the&#13;
Standing  Committee  Student&#13;
Services  will change  the con-&#13;
stitution, therefore a positive&#13;
2/3&#13;
vote  is  necessary   for  the&#13;
resolution to pass. Senators are&#13;
responsible&#13;
to&#13;
sit&#13;
on&#13;
one&#13;
of&#13;
these&#13;
standing committees, and it was&#13;
brought 10 tbe attention  of the&#13;
Senate that by sitting&#13;
00&#13;
a sub-&#13;
committee  such  as Women's&#13;
Affairs, does fulfill this respon-&#13;
sibility.&#13;
One&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
activities that is now&#13;
in the planning  through  the&#13;
Women's&#13;
Affairs&#13;
subcontmittee is&#13;
the Women's Resource Day. The&#13;
reason the day has been set aside&#13;
is&#13;
to&#13;
inform students ofthe various&#13;
organiza tions  and  services&#13;
available  to them in&#13;
the&#13;
com-&#13;
munity as well as on campus. As a&#13;
result of the day, it is the hope of&#13;
the committee that student will&#13;
know where to go, and whom to&#13;
seek out for a particular service.&#13;
Senate elections approach&#13;
hy BobKiesling&#13;
returned to&#13;
the&#13;
PSGA orfice by   What issues are to he&#13;
addresaed&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Monday,&#13;
October&#13;
11th.&#13;
if elected; how the issues will be&#13;
The PSGA fall elections will be   A questionnaire  provided by  addressed;   the  candidate's&#13;
held this year on Wednesday and  Ranger&#13;
is&#13;
included  with&#13;
the&#13;
lifi&#13;
ti&#13;
nd&#13;
if&#13;
the&#13;
Thursday, October 21st&#13;
and&#13;
22nd.&#13;
qua&#13;
rea&#13;
ons; a&#13;
can-&#13;
Half of the 18senate seats and one&#13;
didate has any specific&#13;
pi....&#13;
10&#13;
make cha'1les&#13;
in&#13;
the student&#13;
at - large SUFAC position are&#13;
VOTE"&#13;
government.&#13;
open. The other half of the seats&#13;
Completion&#13;
of&#13;
the questionnaire&#13;
and the President  and Vice'&#13;
••&#13;
is not mandatory for nomination;&#13;
President positions will be elected&#13;
it is provided by Ranger to help&#13;
next spring.&#13;
give adequate coverage to each&#13;
Any Parkside student carrying&#13;
I.&#13;
th&#13;
candidate. The questionnaires are&#13;
six credits or more is eligible for&#13;
Jor&#13;
e&#13;
also&#13;
due October 11,at the Ranger&#13;
nomination  to be elected. The&#13;
office.&#13;
eligibility criteria, which are set&#13;
All&#13;
write - in candidates must&#13;
by Student Life, also require any&#13;
candidate   of&#13;
fulfill the sam. requirem..,ts&#13;
u&#13;
student office holders to have at&#13;
those&#13;
declared candidates for the&#13;
least a 2.0 grade point average.&#13;
same position.&#13;
Wrile -&#13;
iDI&#13;
mUll&#13;
To be nominated, a candidate&#13;
h  '&#13;
declare their candido."&#13;
in&#13;
wrltiDI&#13;
must submit a&#13;
petition&#13;
with at&#13;
your   cOlee.&#13;
and&#13;
m.&#13;
with the&#13;
elections&#13;
ClIIIl-&#13;
least&#13;
25&#13;
student signatures to the&#13;
mittee&#13;
by&#13;
Friday,&#13;
OCtober&#13;
15 at&#13;
PSGA election committee. Copies&#13;
noon&#13;
to be&#13;
.ligibl•.&#13;
of&#13;
the Petition are available at this  petitioo to allow candidates  to    lembers&#13;
of&#13;
the e1ectlm ""'"&#13;
time from Vice President Chuck  detail their campaign platforms.  mitlee ioclude: Coria Thomaa,&#13;
Betz, Chairman of the Election  The questionnaire  covers  the  Jill&#13;
eilsen,&#13;
Dave HigI .. ,&#13;
Ruth&#13;
Committee. The petitions must be  following areas:&#13;
Slama and chairman&#13;
Chuclt&#13;
Ilea&#13;
~,!~.~~~~.:...:.,&#13;
The program will convene at 1&#13;
p.m. and last until&#13;
3&#13;
p.m. on Oct.&#13;
zt.&#13;
Within the two hours students&#13;
will be able to stop, ask 'questions&#13;
and gain information from the&#13;
representatives  of organizatioos&#13;
present.&#13;
SOC&#13;
budgeting are outdated and&#13;
requtre revision, therefore a firm&#13;
foundation for Budilet and Revi_&#13;
10 work from&#13;
is&#13;
sought. Several&#13;
SOC&#13;
representatives  were aloo&#13;
unaware&#13;
of&#13;
the guidelines they&#13;
are&#13;
required  to  use.  The  new&#13;
guidelines&#13;
will&#13;
clarify&#13;
procedures.&#13;
By revising  the guidelines,  a&#13;
system of checks and balaDces for&#13;
rules&#13;
will&#13;
he&#13;
developed.&#13;
By implementing&#13;
these&#13;
im-&#13;
proved  gutdelfnes , increased&#13;
communication&#13;
among&#13;
P.s.G.A.&#13;
Inc., the clubs on campus, and the&#13;
Executive&#13;
Board&#13;
or&#13;
SOC,&#13;
and a&#13;
belter u~&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
mI..&#13;
of&#13;
the dubs and the&#13;
Executlve&#13;
Board within&#13;
SOC&#13;
is&#13;
baatc goal.&#13;
So&#13;
far,&#13;
many&#13;
solutions have&#13;
been&#13;
developed, however,&#13;
they&#13;
have&#13;
not&#13;
been&#13;
presented to 10 the&#13;
total&#13;
P.s.G.A. Inc., and approval has&#13;
not&#13;
yet&#13;
been&#13;
given.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment returns with excellence&#13;
A&#13;
limited&#13;
number of reduced&#13;
..  Iludont seasoo tickets will&#13;
.. avaDabIe&#13;
for the 1982- 83 Ac-&#13;
:..oe.&#13;
Enrichment  Series at&#13;
"::'l:eth.rlands&#13;
Chamber&#13;
....    ,one  of the world's&#13;
::-0.&#13;
will&#13;
open&#13;
the AOE series on&#13;
::~,   Oct.&#13;
lB.&#13;
Other attractions&#13;
....  the Broadway  hit&#13;
;:aJ&#13;
''TIntypes'' on Sunday,&#13;
7;&#13;
The&#13;
Guthrie  Theater&#13;
.....&#13;
of&#13;
Lanford Wilson's&#13;
~~Prlze&#13;
play "Talley's&#13;
ii:t&#13;
CIITuesday, Jan.&#13;
25;&#13;
and&#13;
-...  IIId Sullivan a&#13;
Ia&#13;
Carte, a&#13;
~!"d&#13;
costumed production&#13;
ii'~.IiX&#13;
leeding&#13;
lyric artists,&#13;
...:~y,&#13;
March 8. All per-&#13;
c;".-&#13;
are at 8 p. m. in&#13;
the&#13;
....~catloos   Arts Theater.&#13;
~t&#13;
leason  tickets  are&#13;
.. ,.;;at&#13;
l17,&#13;
compared to&#13;
$28&#13;
for&#13;
".:-eral  public for four of the&#13;
AIlI:&#13;
exciting performances  in&#13;
~ory.&#13;
U&#13;
any tickets for&#13;
!IIdeatI&#13;
\lO"formances Femain,&#13;
'-Ii&#13;
will&#13;
receive a&#13;
$3&#13;
price&#13;
IIOf&#13;
event.&#13;
~   oIflclals&#13;
said that student&#13;
lIaitii&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
filled only at the&#13;
~IDformation&#13;
Center  in&#13;
-..   and 00 a first - come&#13;
...  Ticketl may be ordered&#13;
~   .can be picked up at the&#13;
~  11 ~&#13;
Cent~ any time after&#13;
ba"e '.  !'Onticket orders will&#13;
~oflty&#13;
Over individual&#13;
....  be~&#13;
orders.&#13;
I.&#13;
D. cards&#13;
1lIDii&#13;
II   WO,and there is a&#13;
IlId~&#13;
tickets per student&#13;
"1IDa&#13;
are not transferrable&#13;
..., ~ IlUdeots. Master Charge&#13;
t.st&#13;
UBed.&#13;
~ear,&#13;
the  University&#13;
lIIIi!tIet-;;&#13;
the&#13;
series because of&#13;
.... ""-lderations.&#13;
list&#13;
",ffi'-d&#13;
to meet tbe rising&#13;
~.attractions&#13;
by com-&#13;
~&#13;
the&#13;
quality  of the&#13;
Ye!&#13;
we Wanted to keep the&#13;
series affordable to subscribers,"&#13;
said Walt Shirer, UW- Parkside's&#13;
director  of public information.&#13;
4&#13;
'Weare   resuming  the series&#13;
because we feel that both quality&#13;
and affordability  have been ac-&#13;
complished ...&#13;
Shirer said the combination of&#13;
quality   and  economy   was&#13;
achieved in part by booking the&#13;
series  relatively  late,  "when&#13;
prices for quality attractions are&#13;
lowered and value increases" as&#13;
touring groups are filling out their&#13;
schedules.&#13;
The  Netherlands   Chamber&#13;
Orchestra is making its fifth&#13;
u.&#13;
S.&#13;
lour this fall, including major&#13;
engagements  at Carnegie  Hall&#13;
and the Kennedy Center for the&#13;
Performing Arts.&#13;
In&#13;
addition, the&#13;
24 - piece ensemble will present&#13;
subscription   series&#13;
in  Am-&#13;
sterdam  The Hague and Rot-&#13;
terdam. 'The  orchestra  also&#13;
is&#13;
heard  through  recordings  on&#13;
Phillips  and Nippon Columbia&#13;
labels.&#13;
Its&#13;
principal conductor&#13;
IS&#13;
Antoni Ros - Marba and priocipal&#13;
guest conductor is Kees Bakels,&#13;
who will conduct here.&#13;
Critics have lavished praise on&#13;
the ensemble: Peter Frankl calls&#13;
it "one of the best chamber or-&#13;
chestras  in the world;"  Isaac&#13;
Stern says&#13;
"a&#13;
premier  musical&#13;
organization;"   and  Malcolm&#13;
Frager arlds "one of the three or&#13;
four truly  great  chamber  or-&#13;
chestras&#13;
in&#13;
the world today."&#13;
"Tintypes,"  on&#13;
a&#13;
30  -&#13;
week&#13;
na&#13;
tional  tour,  won tw~ To~Y&#13;
Award  nominations  dunng. Its&#13;
Broadway  run.&#13;
It's a,&#13;
muslca)&#13;
revue celebrating Amenca at the&#13;
turn of the century in song and&#13;
dance and including&#13;
nearly  50&#13;
songs  by such  cornpose~s as&#13;
George M. Cohen, Scott Joplm and&#13;
John Philip Sousa. Critic Clive&#13;
Barnes said,&#13;
"see&#13;
'Tintypes' - a&#13;
winner;"  "You'll stand up&#13;
and&#13;
cheer ," echoed&#13;
ABS • TV;&#13;
"a&#13;
jewel," said the New York Times.&#13;
The Wall Street Journal summed&#13;
it up:&#13;
"It&#13;
will send you into the&#13;
night singing."&#13;
Continuing  its  tradition  of&#13;
bringing  quality  theater  to&#13;
audiences  throughout  the Mid-&#13;
west,  the Guthrie  Theater&#13;
of&#13;
Minneapolis will tour this season&#13;
with "Talley's Folley," a lively&#13;
comedy about two lovers,&#13;
set&#13;
in&#13;
an&#13;
abandoned Missouri boat&#13;
house&#13;
against a backdrop&#13;
of.&#13;
World War&#13;
II.&#13;
Winn..- ofthe 1982Award as the&#13;
best&#13;
regional&#13;
theater&#13;
in America,&#13;
the  Guthrie  returns  to the&#13;
Parkside stage for the third lime&#13;
with this performance.&#13;
The&#13;
touring company which&#13;
will&#13;
present Gilbert and Sullivan a&#13;
Ia&#13;
Carte&#13;
has&#13;
won high praise from&#13;
critics around the country with its&#13;
spirited renditions&#13;
of&#13;
songs from&#13;
such G '" S favorites as H M. S.&#13;
Pinafore  and&#13;
The&#13;
Pirates  or&#13;
Penzance.&#13;
A New York critic called it "a&#13;
troupe perfectly matched 10&#13;
the&#13;
mirad ..&#13;
of&#13;
Gilbert and Sullivan&#13;
"A veritable love feaat&#13;
01_&#13;
and&#13;
satire WIth every&#13;
word&#13;
dear and&#13;
ev..-y nole true," '''lid&#13;
the •&#13;
ash·&#13;
ville  Banner.  Th.  Columbu&#13;
IOhio) Journal  critl&lt;: called&#13;
.1&#13;
"two hours of sheer enjoyment&#13;
by&#13;
six iocredlbly talented and .x·&#13;
traordlOarily   poll hed  per·&#13;
form...s."&#13;
And&#13;
to doubters. t....&#13;
Baltimore "'ews American said.&#13;
"u&#13;
you haven't liked Gilbert and&#13;
SullJvan. it's&#13;
beca_&#13;
you&#13;
baven't&#13;
-..  Gilbert and SullJVODa&#13;
Ia&#13;
carte."&#13;
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              <text>Jansson addresses election issues for Senate</text>
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              <text>1hursday, October 14, 1982&#13;
t.If'&#13;
University  of  Wisconsin·  Porkside&#13;
Vol. II - No.6&#13;
Jansson addresses election issues for Senate&#13;
by Pat Henoiak&#13;
Edltor&#13;
Two&#13;
candidates running  in the&#13;
upcoming  fall  election   were&#13;
represented at&#13;
the&#13;
P.S.G.A.  Inc.&#13;
SeDate&#13;
meeting on Friday,  Oct. 8.&#13;
Tony&#13;
Earl, democratic  candidate&#13;
ftl' Go\'eI'IIor,was represented  by&#13;
GoDe&#13;
Well.&#13;
Weil clarified some of&#13;
tile&#13;
stands&#13;
Earl&#13;
has&#13;
taken  on&#13;
certaiD&#13;
issues. Also at the meeting&#13;
.11&#13;
Republican  Congressional&#13;
C8Dd1date,&#13;
Pete Jansson.  Jansson&#13;
Is&#13;
nmnillllllllllinst&#13;
Les&#13;
Aspin.&#13;
One&#13;
r1 the issues  Gene  Wei!&#13;
addressed&#13;
for Earl was his stand&#13;
..  seJective enrollment  and  ad-&#13;
miMlOJII&#13;
tests.  Phil  Pogreba,&#13;
PresldeIlt Pro  Tempore  of  the&#13;
SeDate&#13;
questioned whether or not&#13;
lllective enrollment  was a way&#13;
wIieb&#13;
Earl thought the&#13;
UW&#13;
budget&#13;
CllUId&#13;
be kept down.&#13;
Well&#13;
responded,&#13;
"I&#13;
don't  think&#13;
be&#13;
leeIs&#13;
you can just  set  down&#13;
.......   Ions&#13;
standards   and  say&#13;
...   people are in, these people&#13;
II1II'1.&#13;
Unless you start with basic&#13;
*Ills&#13;
pl'OBJ'8ms lower  down  in&#13;
...&#13;
bigb&#13;
and&#13;
high&#13;
school, you&#13;
lU't&#13;
just&#13;
come  up  with  some&#13;
IqINp8I'ed&#13;
place.  Once  you've&#13;
JI'IIUed&#13;
tIIese people in secon-&#13;
...,.  education, maybe  then you&#13;
..   sIMt&#13;
selling  an  admission&#13;
1DIIIIIrd.&#13;
tt&#13;
...&#13;
commented  in return,&#13;
""I'IIat's what  the  problem  is.&#13;
te're&#13;
spending  money  twice.&#13;
We're&#13;
spelll\lng money on people&#13;
III&#13;
P1blic sciiools,  to  get  an&#13;
"lion&#13;
which they don't really&#13;
Ill,&#13;
and&#13;
then&#13;
they come to college&#13;
..   !bey&#13;
have to take very  low&#13;
IInI&#13;
e:cunes&#13;
to get the knowledge&#13;
lIIey&#13;
sbouId have  gotten in high&#13;
1dIooI:'&#13;
"1  think,"  continued  WeB&#13;
"We're talking about a time whe~&#13;
the quality  of education  at least&#13;
for sure on the Madison campus&#13;
and I'm sure it's the same&#13;
way&#13;
here and within tlie system,  has&#13;
prelly much so plummetted  since&#13;
'72.&#13;
They're spending less and less&#13;
money per student and&#13;
1&#13;
think a&#13;
lot of people are looking at that as&#13;
a way to increase  quality,  and just&#13;
. save some money.  It's  certainly&#13;
not an answer  in itself.&#13;
It&#13;
(ad-&#13;
mission standards)  will have to be&#13;
started  at the high school level "&#13;
concluded   Wei!.&#13;
I&#13;
Weil also  pointed  out  that  a&#13;
large  student  voter  turnout&#13;
is&#13;
something   which  would  allow&#13;
students to tap into&#13;
the&#13;
governor's&#13;
r1fice.&#13;
"If&#13;
a  large  number  of&#13;
students turn out, we'll be able to&#13;
say 'Hey look, all of tbese students&#13;
turned  out to support  you, they&#13;
voted,  you owe&#13;
us&#13;
something.'&#13;
Tony Earl  is someone  who&#13;
will&#13;
listen. "&#13;
The other candidate  to make an&#13;
appearance  at this meeting  was&#13;
Republican   Congressional   Can-&#13;
didate,  Pete  Jansson.   Jansson&#13;
started  with an explanation  for&#13;
running   for  Congress.   "I'm&#13;
running for congress because in a&#13;
very  significant  sense&#13;
1&#13;
believe&#13;
that in&#13;
1982&#13;
we're going to make a&#13;
decision between  two directions.&#13;
One which&#13;
1&#13;
think can fairly be&#13;
described  as one of opportunity,&#13;
and  the  other  can  be  fairly&#13;
described as despair. That sounds&#13;
like  a prelly  big choice,  but&#13;
1&#13;
believe  that  fairly  characterizes&#13;
the two different  directions  this&#13;
country can take.&#13;
1&#13;
think that 1982&#13;
is a particularly  critical  election.&#13;
It's  a  critical   year  this  time&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Candidates speak out&#13;
by&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
NewsEdltor&#13;
8iI&#13;
candidates are running for&#13;
tIlIce&#13;
in&#13;
the PSGA elections next&#13;
"'*&#13;
011&#13;
the 2lat and&#13;
22nd.&#13;
Four&#13;
of&#13;
lbe&#13;
eandldates  are  Senate  in-&#13;
aunbenll&#13;
and&#13;
two&#13;
are running for&#13;
~~&#13;
time,&#13;
Ingrid Pefrikat  and&#13;
..........  Kalmar&#13;
II.&#13;
Potrll&lt;at said  that  she  had&#13;
-0,&#13;
completed a Senate  in-&#13;
tornabip  and  was  voted   in&#13;
lIIIInImouslyas a Senator.  She&#13;
_Id&#13;
sbo&#13;
"would tike&#13;
to&#13;
set up a&#13;
women's&#13;
resource   center   on&#13;
talllpus.&#13;
ThIa&#13;
would benefit  not&#13;
~~.?"'en,&#13;
but  everyone  in-&#13;
-&#13;
.........&#13;
aI&#13;
~r&#13;
Is currently  President&#13;
"the&#13;
.aoo said&#13;
he&#13;
would address&#13;
cit&#13;
of&#13;
communication&#13;
in&#13;
~~    g~emment."  He believes&#13;
the&#13;
aiding&#13;
forums in front&#13;
of&#13;
.student body with  key  ad-&#13;
IIlinistration&#13;
and student leaders"&#13;
~&#13;
be&#13;
the best way&#13;
to&#13;
address&#13;
~lem.&#13;
ta&#13;
incumbent candidates  are&#13;
~&#13;
~rederick,&#13;
Phillip&#13;
11.:...  '&#13;
Mike 8000n and Jeanne&#13;
........ er -&#13;
Phillips.&#13;
lbe"::)~~&#13;
is acting as Editor of&#13;
She -:-........&#13;
a PSGA newsletter.&#13;
Ibd&#13;
:as&#13;
a c.... munication  major&#13;
IIBlll&#13;
been .a Senator  for the&#13;
lbe&#13;
.Year.She&#13;
IS&#13;
"willing to put in&#13;
• ~_a~&#13;
work necessary  to be&#13;
~""luctive Senator"&#13;
...~&#13;
greatest""';cern   is with&#13;
-ba0ll&#13;
affairs. He is active in&#13;
bre.ld~g   and  updating   the&#13;
~te&#13;
o~  knowledge    and&#13;
skiIIs&#13;
programs.  At the&#13;
State  level  he  is  planning  on&#13;
working to increase  financial aid&#13;
for students,  and the UW System&#13;
budget.&#13;
He  is  currently    Assistant&#13;
President  Pro  Tempore  of the&#13;
senate,  and sits on five faculty&#13;
committees.  He said that he would&#13;
like to see "SOC getting on its feet&#13;
and gelling  leadership  that  will&#13;
work actively with tbe Senate and&#13;
executive  board.&#13;
II&#13;
Buenker  - Phillips  will  "con-&#13;
tinue  addressing  student  issues,&#13;
specifically   those  dealing  with&#13;
women," if she is re - elected.&#13;
She&#13;
is  Parkside's   Women's  Affairs&#13;
Director  in the  United  Council,&#13;
and  chairperson   of  Parkside's&#13;
Women's  Affairs  subcommittee.&#13;
Pogreba  is currently  President&#13;
Pro  Tempore  of the Senate.  He&#13;
said the first thing he would&#13;
do&#13;
if&#13;
. re -elected would be to try to get a&#13;
position on SUFAC. He said,&#13;
"I&#13;
feel  this  is  a  very  important&#13;
committee  which requires a great&#13;
deal of responsibility."&#13;
He feels he is "qualified  for the&#13;
seat of Senator in PSGA because&#13;
of&#13;
my knowledge and experience&#13;
in  the  overall  governance   of&#13;
Parkside.  I am also familiar  with&#13;
the procedures  and red tape one&#13;
may encounter when trying to get&#13;
something  done,"  he said.&#13;
The&#13;
same  questions  were  ad-&#13;
dressed  by each  candidate  in a&#13;
questionnaire  provided by Ranger&#13;
to give adequate coverage  to each&#13;
candidate.&#13;
All  the   candidates&#13;
urged&#13;
students to get out and v~e in the&#13;
election next&#13;
week.&#13;
Jansson also pointed out that the&#13;
other&#13;
thing&#13;
this out&#13;
pouring&#13;
of&#13;
federal involvement did was to kill&#13;
our  economy.  This  happened&#13;
because of deficit spending.&#13;
The&#13;
poople who got their cost of living&#13;
adjustments   were  the  people&#13;
wtrking. Jansson said the solution&#13;
to&#13;
this is "&#13;
a little injection ~ tax&#13;
relief.&#13;
1&#13;
think we can&#13;
do&#13;
better in&#13;
addressing  human&#13;
need&#13;
if  we&#13;
provide   the  kind  of  healthy&#13;
economic  environment&#13;
that&#13;
is&#13;
going  to  be  provided&#13;
by&#13;
a&#13;
moderated&#13;
tax rate.  People  are&#13;
quick to admit that raising taxes&#13;
isgcIng to hurt&#13;
things.&#13;
They should&#13;
also&#13;
recognize  that&#13;
if  you&#13;
modenlte  taxes  you're&#13;
going&#13;
to&#13;
help&#13;
things.&#13;
A lot r1 poople aren't&#13;
making   that  connection&#13;
this&#13;
year."&#13;
Jansson  did introduce  his new&#13;
Employment  Insentive  Program&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
Senate. To receive&#13;
unem-&#13;
ployment  compensation,  people&#13;
need&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
turned&#13;
down for work.&#13;
H&#13;
a worker&#13;
was making&#13;
$9.75,&#13;
his&#13;
take lxme pay would be&#13;
m2&#13;
per&#13;
week.&#13;
If&#13;
he gets laid off,&#13;
and&#13;
takes&#13;
unemployment&#13;
benefits,&#13;
be could&#13;
receive $t91.&#13;
If&#13;
this&#13;
same worker&#13;
is then offered a&#13;
job&#13;
at&#13;
$7&#13;
an&#13;
hour,&#13;
he has&#13;
the&#13;
right to&#13;
lunI&#13;
it&#13;
cIowD,&#13;
and&#13;
stay on the benefit. Ja_&#13;
feels that&#13;
$7&#13;
an&#13;
hour&#13;
lob&#13;
is _&#13;
turned&#13;
dawn&#13;
becauae&#13;
the&#13;
take&#13;
home pay&#13;
would&#13;
CIIIiy&#13;
be&#13;
$2Z7&#13;
a&#13;
week. That isn't that much&#13;
more&#13;
that $191.&#13;
One way to interact  the&#13;
disln-&#13;
sentive&#13;
to&#13;
a&#13;
$7&#13;
an&#13;
hour&#13;
job&#13;
would&#13;
be the elimination  from federal&#13;
withholding&#13;
tax.   For   tbe&#13;
remaining period&#13;
the&#13;
worker was&#13;
to receive  benefits,  the worker&#13;
would not have  to pay  federal&#13;
withholding tax. The&#13;
$7&#13;
an bour&#13;
job,&#13;
excluding&#13;
federal&#13;
withholdings, would increase  the&#13;
take lxme  pay to&#13;
$251.&#13;
Jansson&#13;
feels that&#13;
this&#13;
would be a sub-&#13;
stantial   additional   insentive.&#13;
While some people would still turn&#13;
jobs&#13;
down, some would take them.&#13;
"It&#13;
wouldn't  cost  the&#13;
gov&#13;
ern-&#13;
ment a lot of money if this worker&#13;
wasn't gcIng to work anyways.&#13;
So,&#13;
if be goes to work sooner, he saves&#13;
the&#13;
government   unemployment&#13;
compensation.    The  lost  tax&#13;
revenue  would  be&#13;
minor&#13;
The&#13;
savings&#13;
m&#13;
unemployment  com,&#13;
pensation   would   more   than&#13;
overwhelm   the  lost   federal&#13;
revenue."&#13;
Jansson's&#13;
closing&#13;
comments&#13;
were&#13;
this,&#13;
"I&#13;
think&#13;
it's&#13;
very&#13;
lm-&#13;
portant    that   we   have   a&#13;
congressman  in this district who's&#13;
got some&#13;
new&#13;
ideas,  who's  got&#13;
some ideas that  will help solve&#13;
unemployment.&#13;
This&#13;
is no cure for&#13;
unemployment,  but it's important&#13;
that&#13;
we&#13;
have some&#13;
new&#13;
ideas that&#13;
wiD address  the JrOblem."&#13;
Ratner finalist for new position&#13;
human  need.  In  '58, there  was&#13;
about&#13;
23&#13;
percent&#13;
of&#13;
this&#13;
country's&#13;
population   below  the  poverty&#13;
level. By&#13;
'68,&#13;
that had fallen down&#13;
to 13percent. Jansson pointed out&#13;
this was a result&#13;
of&#13;
progress&#13;
in&#13;
solving human need. People&#13;
took&#13;
jobs. People who were&#13;
once&#13;
below&#13;
the&#13;
poverty&#13;
line were now above&#13;
it.&#13;
"Real&#13;
income&#13;
was&#13;
up,"  said&#13;
Jansson.  "Productivity  was  up,&#13;
things were hopeful, things were&#13;
enlarging,&#13;
things&#13;
were  getting&#13;
better.  The Kenoedy  tax cut in&#13;
1962&#13;
fired&#13;
yea rs  of  real  solid&#13;
growth in the economy. New&#13;
jobs,&#13;
expansion,  and  all  without&#13;
In-&#13;
flation."&#13;
After&#13;
1968,&#13;
Janssoo said that the&#13;
out  pouring  of fed..-al  dollars&#13;
seems  to  have  stopped,  for  a&#13;
variety&#13;
of&#13;
programs.&#13;
The&#13;
proportion of population below the&#13;
poverty level&#13;
has  not&#13;
dropped&#13;
off&#13;
much  since  '68.  "This&#13;
is&#13;
tragic,&#13;
II&#13;
continued&#13;
Jansson. "It's&#13;
taken&#13;
a&#13;
great d.. l&#13;
of&#13;
our money to make&#13;
very  liltle  progress.&#13;
This&#13;
out&#13;
pouring  of federal  dollars  for a&#13;
variety of well meaning programs&#13;
during this period only achieved&#13;
two&#13;
things.&#13;
A&#13;
fJIty first state was&#13;
established,   one  of perpetual&#13;
poverty, where poople who&#13;
are&#13;
in&#13;
need&#13;
are&#13;
locked  into  poverty.&#13;
Furthermore,&#13;
during   this&#13;
period,&#13;
we've  fallen&#13;
back:&#13;
in&#13;
areas&#13;
of&#13;
importance.&#13;
The&#13;
gap  between&#13;
white  and  black  income  has&#13;
widened, not narrowed. One has to&#13;
wonder  if it was worth  all the&#13;
money we spent."&#13;
PETE  JANSSON  speaks  at&#13;
the&#13;
Senate&#13;
meeting .&#13;
because for the last fJIteen years&#13;
or more,  the  country  has  been&#13;
dominated   by  political  forces&#13;
whose&#13;
viEWS&#13;
and  whose  policies&#13;
have  intruded  severely  into our&#13;
economic future. I&#13;
think&#13;
in&#13;
1980&#13;
we&#13;
did make&#13;
a&#13;
decision&#13;
as a&#13;
free&#13;
people  to  move  in&#13;
a&#13;
different&#13;
direction.   I  think   there's&#13;
a&#13;
tremendous  bailie going on right&#13;
now in Washington as to whether&#13;
we&#13;
stay on a course&#13;
in&#13;
the new&#13;
direction, or whether we&#13;
will&#13;
turn&#13;
back to that which&#13;
is&#13;
old,&#13;
to&#13;
that&#13;
wliich has failed, and to tha t which&#13;
offers little  real  opportunity  for&#13;
people. "&#13;
Jansson  described  the prohlem&#13;
he sees to be that over the past&#13;
25&#13;
years,  it would&#13;
be&#13;
possible  to&#13;
divide  this  period  into  halves&#13;
roughly  around&#13;
1968.&#13;
In&#13;
1968,&#13;
according&#13;
to   Jansson,&#13;
the&#13;
dominance&#13;
of   the   federal&#13;
government in our lives&#13;
in&#13;
solving&#13;
our  social  problems  was  very&#13;
minor.  Social  problems  at  that&#13;
time were addressed  at different&#13;
levels and more successfully than&#13;
they have been since. Since&#13;
'68,&#13;
we&#13;
have  had  a  propunderance   of&#13;
federal involvement in all kinds of&#13;
programs.   His  point  being  to&#13;
compare   the  United   States'&#13;
performance  as a country and as&#13;
an  economy   during   the  two&#13;
perinds.&#13;
Jansson surfaced&#13;
the&#13;
point that&#13;
during the ten years before 1968,&#13;
this  country  had  a  tremendous&#13;
growth&#13;
in economy_ There was a&#13;
tremendous&#13;
growth   against&#13;
by&#13;
Bob&#13;
Kiesling&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
Vice Chancellor Lorman Ratner&#13;
has  been  listed  as&#13;
one&#13;
of five&#13;
finalists  for  the  Presidency   of&#13;
Western    Washington&#13;
State&#13;
University  in Bellingham.&#13;
Although  the  vice  chancellor&#13;
said there were&#13;
"Iong&#13;
odds"&#13;
on&#13;
his&#13;
being named President,  he will be&#13;
going  to  Western  Washington&#13;
sometime  next  month&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
in~&#13;
terviewed  and to more fully in-&#13;
vestigate  the  possibility&#13;
of&#13;
ap-&#13;
pointment.&#13;
Ratner  vcICed no unhappiness&#13;
with&#13;
his&#13;
six years at Parkside, but&#13;
stated  that he was int..-ested  in&#13;
the&#13;
possibility  r1 advancing  his&#13;
career.   He  said  tha t  Western&#13;
~ashington  is&#13;
the&#13;
same&#13;
type&#13;
of&#13;
high quality  public uni..... ity ..&#13;
as Parkside.&#13;
Ratner came to Parkside  in the&#13;
summer  of&#13;
1977&#13;
from  Lehman&#13;
College r1 the City University  of&#13;
New&#13;
York, where be was a Dean.&#13;
He added that several&#13;
persons&#13;
a&#13;
round&#13;
the country  had&#13;
recom-&#13;
mended    bim    to   Western&#13;
Washington.  ..,  am,  of course,&#13;
Oattered to be a finalist in their&#13;
search,"&#13;
Ratner&#13;
said.&#13;
LORMAN  RATNER&#13;
2&#13;
"Thursday,&#13;
October&#13;
1., 1982&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Shame on you&#13;
Justified  chllrges 01 "McCarthyism"  and "innuendo"  have dogged&#13;
Alabama Senator Jeremiah  Denton's footsteps since the day, severaJ&#13;
weeks ago, he confronted supporters ofa National Peace Day Rally an&#13;
accused them of "giving aid and comfort to the .",!eml"'. of&#13;
this&#13;
coon-&#13;
try."&#13;
Unfortunately, President  Reagan seems willing to&#13;
JUlDP&#13;
on that&#13;
bandwagon as well.&#13;
.&#13;
l'&#13;
t&#13;
Tragically, but perhaps&#13;
not&#13;
surpri~ly,    the Pres!deot ha.sseen It&#13;
0&#13;
indulge&#13;
in&#13;
some smear  tactics&#13;
d&#13;
his own, tellIng anti  - nuclear&#13;
demonstrators  last week lhatthe  movement was "inspired  not by the&#13;
sincere&#13;
honest&#13;
people who want peace, but  by s~e   who want the&#13;
weakening of America, and so are mampulaling  .. ncere people and&#13;
honest people."&#13;
-&#13;
.   B&#13;
it&#13;
Such remarks invariably receive a massive amount of attention.   ~&#13;
what Reagan doesn't seem to understand  is that M~rthy    and hIS&#13;
"ism"  are more 01 a blemish&#13;
(II&#13;
the history&#13;
of&#13;
Amen~  than all. l!ie&#13;
people ever accused&#13;
of&#13;
being Communists. Is that the kind of&#13;
publicity&#13;
the President  wants for himself and his party?&#13;
Shocking is the fact that the President&#13;
of&#13;
the United States is capable&#13;
01such irresponsible behavior.&#13;
The&#13;
only purpaiO&#13;
of&#13;
such low mnuendo IS&#13;
the silencing oflree speech of the American public. The president sw.ore&#13;
to "defend and uphold" the constitution when he&#13;
took&#13;
the oath&#13;
of&#13;
office.&#13;
To paraphra ... Sen. Gary Hart: Shame on you, Senator Denton. And&#13;
shame&#13;
ClIl&#13;
you too, Mr. president.&#13;
. , A~&#13;
Of&#13;
C.OJiSE.&#13;
Awl'&#13;
NOCLtAA&#13;
'RrrlE&#13;
YJ(U.D&#13;
LI¥   lIS&#13;
of'Et,J&#13;
To " SlJE'Af( ~&#13;
letter  to the editor&#13;
An open letter from a secular humanist&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
Reverend Paul A. Risley&#13;
My Dear Reverend Risley:&#13;
Enclosed for your attention&#13;
are&#13;
two media communications  (The&#13;
Journal  Times,&#13;
OCtober  5,  1982&#13;
and&#13;
~nger,&#13;
OCtober   7,  1982)&#13;
which reflect  my very real&#13;
c0n-&#13;
cern   regarding&#13;
the   more&#13;
egregious&#13;
aspects of your&#13;
conduct&#13;
ooring&#13;
your recent engagement at&#13;
Racine's Memorial&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Be ..&#13;
ured&#13;
d&#13;
my sincere wish&#13;
that&#13;
upoo&#13;
mature  reflection  you&#13;
wiD&#13;
come&#13;
forward  openly  in&#13;
genuine pl!llitence&#13;
to&#13;
repudiate&#13;
the&#13;
re\IgIouI&#13;
prejudice  Implicit  in&#13;
your recent statements relaUve to&#13;
the symbols&#13;
d&#13;
two major world&#13;
rellgiClll8,Islam and Judaism.&#13;
Satan&#13;
is&#13;
a hard  master;  one&#13;
cannot   serve   both  God  and&#13;
Mammon. In your reading&#13;
d&#13;
the&#13;
Old Testament  prophets  and the&#13;
gospels may yoo come to see that&#13;
a philOlOphy of sbartog  (even 01&#13;
socialism) -  I refer here to your&#13;
recent  remarks  concerning  the&#13;
mission of the late Jobn Lennon -&#13;
is not incompatible  with religion&#13;
or the teachings&#13;
d&#13;
Christ.&#13;
I&#13;
hope&#13;
lha&#13;
t&#13;
you will in time&#13;
ootgrow your childish intolerance,&#13;
your monstrous  pride,  and  that&#13;
you wiDyet harken to the Voice of&#13;
that  awful God which  spoke to&#13;
Job, even&#13;
out&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
Whirlwind.&#13;
Y&#13;
00&#13;
wiD&#13;
be freed&#13;
d&#13;
the&#13;
burden&#13;
d&#13;
the Monkey of Bigotry when you&#13;
conquer   your  obsession   with&#13;
Principalities  and  Powers,  with&#13;
Satanic  Agents  and  Diabolical&#13;
FCB"CeS,and come&#13;
to&#13;
realize  -  as&#13;
did Sl. Gore Vidal -  that  the&#13;
univ.... e  is  not  malign,   only&#13;
neutral, and that&#13;
all&#13;
men (within&#13;
the logic of your theology) are the&#13;
Children&#13;
of&#13;
God.&#13;
The road to salvation  is hard,&#13;
and  there  are  many  perils  and&#13;
reversals, but lake heart and be&#13;
of&#13;
good cheer that at&#13;
the&#13;
end&#13;
d&#13;
your&#13;
days you will be able&#13;
to&#13;
say in your&#13;
heart,  "Though  my errors  were&#13;
many and grievous, I have at last&#13;
overcome, I have fooghtthe  good&#13;
fight."&#13;
In my own way&#13;
I&#13;
I pray for your&#13;
recovery.&#13;
It&#13;
has been painful for&#13;
me to have known&#13;
the&#13;
necessity to&#13;
so  publicly  excoriate  a  fellow&#13;
creature.  The way of a prophet&#13;
is&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori  Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Norm Couture&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene  Torkilsen&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature  Editor&#13;
Sports  Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Business  Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution  Manager&#13;
Assistant  Business  Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
SII.aron A1cen, ca!""1 Burns,  Pat  Cumbie,  Dan  Dowhower,&#13;
Cloff FIo_rs,    MIchael  Kailas,  Stephen  Kalmar   II, carol&#13;
Kortendiek,  John  Kovalle,  Rick Luehr,  Robb Luehr  Laura&#13;
Petersen,  Jennie Tunkieicz.&#13;
'&#13;
RANGER  Is&#13;
wr}tftrl&#13;
and&#13;
edited&#13;
by sfuOents&#13;
of&#13;
UW - Parks!c1e lind they are solely&#13;
re-sponslble&#13;
fOI'&#13;
Its&#13;
edltOl'"lel potlcy&#13;
and&#13;
content&#13;
Published every Thursday during the academIc Yellr except during breaks and h I'd&#13;
RA'ofGER!sprinled,by the Union Coopet'ative Publishing&#13;
Co .•&#13;
Kenosha, W1sconSi~I llIyS,&#13;
Written permission  1$requIred&#13;
for"&#13;
reprint of any portion&#13;
of&#13;
RANGER.&#13;
.&#13;
All&#13;
cor:respondence&#13;
Vlovra&#13;
be&#13;
IIck1ressecl&#13;
to:&#13;
Parksiete  Ranger,  UnIversity&#13;
of&#13;
WisconsIn&#13;
PllrkSlde,&#13;
Bolt No&#13;
2000. Kenosha.  WIsconsin,  53141.&#13;
Leflers !o the Editor will ~ accepted If tYpc!Wrlnen. cloublespl!lced on standard size&#13;
paper&#13;
WIth one . inch margIns. All letters must be signed and a telephone numbe  .&#13;
elUded lor verification.&#13;
r In-&#13;
Names wl1l&#13;
be&#13;
withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Monday at 3 p.m. ftlr publication  on ThIKsdlIy. The RANGER&#13;
reserves all editorial  privileges  In refusing  to print tetters which contain false 0&#13;
""defamatory   motent.&#13;
r&#13;
Editor's&#13;
notes&#13;
In these busy weeks . . .&#13;
had potential,  I guess&#13;
the&#13;
j&#13;
just couldn't  find a way&#13;
to&#13;
pick&#13;
winner.  Better  luck next&#13;
lime.&#13;
For  those  of you looking&#13;
some new and interesting&#13;
nm,&#13;
Winter  Carnival  Committee&#13;
be  looking  for  any  int&#13;
students  to help with&#13;
the&#13;
co&#13;
this  year.  The  first  meellng&#13;
Friday,  Oct.&#13;
15,&#13;
in Union&#13;
?JfI&#13;
p.m.  This  could  be  just&#13;
committee  you're  looking for&#13;
fill that  empty  activities&#13;
I'm sure they could&#13;
use your&#13;
So&#13;
don't be shy.&#13;
Remember,    if  you  have&#13;
I&#13;
problem  with  something&#13;
in&#13;
tbt&#13;
paper,  or you don't agree&#13;
with&#13;
I&#13;
particular  stand a group has&#13;
tak8j,&#13;
on a current  issue, we will PNt&#13;
your letters  to the editor, as&#13;
I&#13;
as space  permits,  and as long..&#13;
they're    legal.    We  have&#13;
I&#13;
responsibility  to the entire studeDI&#13;
body,  faculty"   staff,  and  af&#13;
ministration  on this campus.&#13;
YCII&#13;
have a right to voice your&#13;
opioiOlL&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
It&#13;
certainly has been an eventful&#13;
week around  the  campus.  Can-&#13;
didates for governor and congress&#13;
made appearances,  we found&#13;
out&#13;
what people really&#13;
think&#13;
P.S.G.A .&#13;
and P&#13;
AB&#13;
stand for, and also found&#13;
out who is planning to&#13;
run&#13;
in our&#13;
own  Parkside   Senatorial   Elec-&#13;
tions.&#13;
Don't forget to go&#13;
out&#13;
and vote&#13;
next  Wednesday  and  Thursday.&#13;
These   are   the   people   who&#13;
represent  the  sludents  on  this&#13;
campus, and it is important  to find&#13;
people  who  are  qualified  and&#13;
patient to do the job. Don't think&#13;
your vote doesn't matter,  it really&#13;
is&#13;
a time to voice your opinion not&#13;
only as people, but as students.&#13;
If&#13;
we don't speak up, no one will do it&#13;
for us.&#13;
This  week   marks   the  in-&#13;
troduction of a new columnist-on&#13;
the Ranger  staff. Well, actually&#13;
he's  not  new.  He  worked  fo;&#13;
Ranger a few years ago, and now&#13;
he's back. Bruce Preston  is going&#13;
to  write  a  different   kind  of&#13;
column. He isn't going to find out&#13;
about the people we already know&#13;
about.  He's  going to go a  step&#13;
further&#13;
to&#13;
meet the student  who&#13;
isn't as well known, or heard from&#13;
as  much.  Could be a good op-&#13;
portunity  to get  to learn  about&#13;
some of the people you've  seen&#13;
around campus.&#13;
I have also been asked to point&#13;
out that P.S.G.A. does not really&#13;
stand  for People  Singing  Great&#13;
Anthems. Nor does PAB stand for&#13;
Priests  and Bishops. P.S.G.A.  is&#13;
rever easy. But be convinced that&#13;
I have done what I have done for&#13;
the good of your soul in the hope&#13;
tha&#13;
t&#13;
10&#13;
good time  -  with  the&#13;
support  and  guidance   of  the&#13;
brethren  -  you will lake counsel&#13;
with  your  better  instincts  and&#13;
proc.eed  thenceforth  along  that&#13;
straight  and n~ITow way which&#13;
is&#13;
right,  eschewmg  the antiCipa ted&#13;
dehghts  of  that  high  road  to&#13;
Vanity  Fair  (which  is  right  _&#13;
wmg).&#13;
.&#13;
Life  must  go on. Otbers  will&#13;
pray    for   your   successful&#13;
rehabilitation.  I will continue  to&#13;
work within the light of reason for&#13;
a better world.&#13;
As a secular humanist  I can do&#13;
no other.&#13;
With my very best regards,&#13;
Russ Brokaw&#13;
Welfare Action of Racine&#13;
P.S.&#13;
Generic   Wrongs   is  a&#13;
secular tentacle of Welfare Action&#13;
of&#13;
Racme.&#13;
- R.B.&#13;
the acronym for Parkside  Student&#13;
Government   Association,   Jim&#13;
Kreuser is the President,  and P&#13;
AB&#13;
is  Acronym  for  Parkside   Ac-&#13;
tivities  Board, Chris  Hamelev  is&#13;
the  President.   Jenny  Tunkieicz&#13;
found  quite  a  few  people  who&#13;
didn't  really  know  what  those&#13;
letters  stand  for.  Some&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
responses&#13;
were    somewhat&#13;
amusing.&#13;
The  Soccer  team   keeps  on&#13;
working their way to the top, and&#13;
the second set of Intramurals   is&#13;
getting  ready  to start.&#13;
If&#13;
you're&#13;
interested  in Intramurals,  go over&#13;
to Phy Ed and see how you can get&#13;
involved.&#13;
About this Caption Contest. The&#13;
last picture  we ran was the one&#13;
with John Wayne looking off into&#13;
the distance  with these two other&#13;
people standing beside him. Some&#13;
of&#13;
those captions were pretty bad.&#13;
Therefore,  we aren't  awarding  a&#13;
prize  for  tha&#13;
t&#13;
weeks  picture.&#13;
(Judges decision).  Many d. them&#13;
Responding  to violence&#13;
is essential&#13;
An Editorial Comment by&#13;
Bertrand  Simpson,&#13;
Minority Affairs Director&#13;
for United Council&#13;
Acts of violence  that  are  per-&#13;
petrated  against  any  student  in&#13;
the UW system should be deplored&#13;
by all of us.&#13;
It&#13;
is my strong feeling&#13;
that whenever  the physical safety&#13;
of  any  student   is  threatened&#13;
coordina ted  action  by  student&#13;
government  is an essential  part of&#13;
any meaningful  response.&#13;
More  to  the  point   each  in-&#13;
dividual&#13;
campus'&#13;
student&#13;
association   should  be  in  the&#13;
forefront   of  any  reaction   to&#13;
VIolence against  our students.&#13;
In recent  memory  two UW _&#13;
system campuses  have been sites&#13;
of violent  acts  against  minority  .&#13;
students.  At UW-Stout and  UW-&#13;
Stevens Point certain  individuals&#13;
struck  out  at  members   of  the&#13;
student  family.&#13;
To  put&#13;
it&#13;
plainly,   severa'!&#13;
students suffered injuries and one&#13;
was  kIlled  for,  apparently,   no&#13;
othe~,reason otber than they were&#13;
~~   wrong  color"  and  in  the&#13;
wrong place."&#13;
At Slevens  Point  the  student&#13;
government  reacted  in a positive&#13;
manner.   Because   of  the  in-&#13;
volvement   of  tbe  UW-Stevens&#13;
POInts.   student    government&#13;
com.mlt.tees  were  formed   in.&#13;
vesllgallons  were made  h  ' .&#13;
be&#13;
l&#13;
'  eaflngs&#13;
were.   d, and reports were med&#13;
This .action  did  not,  by  any&#13;
means,  erase  the effects of&#13;
tbI&#13;
harm done. However, such aclilll&#13;
does  indicate   a  willingness&#13;
Ie&#13;
respond when necessary  to eos1l1't&#13;
the&#13;
safety  of all' students.&#13;
I must  mention  that I nave ..&#13;
knowledge   of  how  UW-S&#13;
t&#13;
.&#13;
out&#13;
responded  to a similar  situatilll.&#13;
Please  note tha&#13;
t&#13;
the reason&#13;
II&#13;
this editorial  comment  is neilbll'&#13;
to overly  praise  the UW-SteveJ1l&#13;
Point    student&#13;
govermnen4&#13;
because   in  my  opinion  they&#13;
merely acted as they should haVl&#13;
Nor  am  I condemning&#13;
the&#13;
ap'&#13;
parent  inaction  of&#13;
the&#13;
UW.s&#13;
llJll&#13;
student  association.&#13;
Rather,   I  am  alerting&#13;
aU&#13;
students  to the fact that such ~&#13;
of  violence   will  unlortuna""&#13;
arise   again.   And  when&#13;
theI8&#13;
situations  do present  themsel;&#13;
student   governments   have&#13;
first responsibility  to rally&#13;
to~&#13;
defense  of  any  students  "'~&#13;
safety  or freedom  is threa~&#13;
Anyone  who  is  interested&#13;
formulating  a plan  of actiOll:&#13;
comhat  these acts should&#13;
conti&#13;
II&#13;
the  Minority  Affairs  offIce&#13;
eJ1I&#13;
United Council, or the UW.s&#13;
teV&#13;
I&#13;
Point  student  government.  ~&#13;
UW-Stevens  Point  SGA hSS,&#13;
offer is not a blue print for actidJ&#13;
but  rather   a  solid  base~&#13;
responses   that,  with  addi~:",1&#13;
work, could become a meaDl'rbi&#13;
system  . wide  approach  to&#13;
ugly problem.&#13;
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              <text>Socialists look to reassert themselves here</text>
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              <text>UnIVersity of&#13;
W&#13;
ger&#13;
Thursday, October 21,1982&#13;
0.7&#13;
~~~G.A:,&#13;
~~~~!~"p.a~es&#13;
proposals and guidelines&#13;
Editor&#13;
decision will be sent hack to !be   as~~portam&#13;
COlllJIlltteea. far&#13;
ruJea&#13;
aDd&#13;
by -&#13;
01 SOC&#13;
aDd&#13;
B.&#13;
edu ..&#13;
tiaUJ&#13;
CIPilClIIlIIIIt*   U&#13;
a&#13;
TbJ1!enew  programs   were    Dean of Student Life.&#13;
If&#13;
a conflict   made co....&#13;
t&#13;
Life ~&#13;
~  ~cy&#13;
aDd&#13;
R.C.&#13;
pr""i&#13;
10  ""&#13;
15&#13;
abaII   ....&#13;
1&#13;
iWubI_&#13;
lbra...&#13;
10&#13;
!D-&#13;
ed&#13;
by&#13;
the  PSGA,  Inc.   persists,  the issue will be sent&#13;
to&#13;
A  ro ncermng&#13;
Umon..&#13;
be&#13;
null&#13;
aDd&#13;
VOId&#13;
lerfere&#13;
IIh  a  .Iudenl·a&#13;
of·&#13;
;:::al   tbeir last meeting.  Tbe   the.  Chancellor,   or  his&#13;
I&#13;
ber   werl:"!bev~wa~   at !be. meeting&#13;
Carla&#13;
1bomas.&#13;
Vice -&#13;
Cluur&#13;
01&#13;
fecllven..&#13;
on&#13;
campu&#13;
lhe&#13;
deVtlopment of the&#13;
Parkside&#13;
designee&#13;
to mediate  the decision   guideli&#13;
':;.f'IU&gt;eS.&#13;
The&#13;
SOC.&#13;
made&#13;
tbeae&#13;
COIDl1l&lt;IIla&#13;
about&#13;
.Iudent iollal&#13;
aervlce&#13;
U&#13;
do&#13;
whal&#13;
_&#13;
Advisory&#13;
Board,&#13;
tbe New   and  decide  it. Tbe  Chancellor's    group:'&#13;
C::;:rned&#13;
=.&#13;
by a&#13;
the&#13;
new.&#13;
by -&#13;
laws:&#13;
"They&#13;
are&#13;
a&#13;
they ..&#13;
n to......&#13;
...&#13;
m1Dlml ...&#13;
SIUdlDl&#13;
organization Council by -   designee   cannot   be  the  Ad-   cl rif&#13;
.&#13;
ts to&#13;
very&#13;
solid&#13;
foundation&#13;
10&#13;
build&#13;
SOC&#13;
the&#13;
problem&#13;
..   aJll1lle new Student Legal    ministrator  of&#13;
the&#13;
Union or any of&#13;
a  y questioned  ISSUesWithin&#13;
mlo&#13;
the&#13;
organWltion it'. -&#13;
to&#13;
An&#13;
attorney&#13;
wm&#13;
be&#13;
available&#13;
to&#13;
s.rvke.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
the Union's Administrative&#13;
staff,&#13;
rend..-  ....&#13;
I&#13;
aDd&#13;
ret...,..1&#13;
aervl&#13;
".,  Parkside Union Advisory&#13;
The PUAB will he composed of&#13;
10&#13;
al!&#13;
ud&lt;n  ..&#13;
ho&#13;
pay&#13;
the&#13;
lIudelll&#13;
BaUd&#13;
shaU be so  in.&#13;
the&#13;
for-   12 members,  9 voting and&#13;
3&#13;
non _&#13;
8eI'V1c:ea&#13;
r&#13;
u&#13;
the&#13;
Iype&#13;
of&#13;
....  lion,&#13;
unplementation,   and&#13;
voting.&#13;
The voting members  will&#13;
pr&lt;Ib1em&#13;
a Ilud&lt;nl&#13;
exeteda&#13;
the&#13;
..,;ow&#13;
IX&#13;
the&#13;
Parkside  Union's&#13;
consist of 1 person  elected  from&#13;
ocope&#13;
01&#13;
the.&#13;
service.&#13;
addllional&#13;
plII:i.1l&#13;
will seek to promote the   tbe PSGA Senate, 1person elected&#13;
the ;':.::'~)&#13;
be&#13;
arra.&#13;
f.... al&#13;
I'IrUide&#13;
Union's  role  in  the   from GSOC. 1 person elected from&#13;
II&#13;
I •&#13;
ex&#13;
.lhrouI\Ithe&#13;
fIIlIIISandcommunity activities'    Ranger, 1 person elected by PAB&#13;
attorneys  ,n&#13;
the&#13;
community  that&#13;
pdservi&#13;
OOS&#13;
•&#13;
At the same time, it    1 person elected&#13;
by&#13;
Peer Support'&#13;
ilia  the&#13;
gael&#13;
of&#13;
~:::I::":=&#13;
will&#13;
seek&#13;
to&#13;
fulfiUthe educa tional    1 person elected from&#13;
the&#13;
AI.&#13;
wmdirecnat&#13;
l&#13;
deJ~~)&#13;
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I -_.&#13;
the&#13;
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.&#13;
't&#13;
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h  A   ..&#13;
y rem""   ... .-.&#13;
....   of&#13;
.mversl y    oug&#13;
ssoclatlOn,  1 seat  held  by  a&#13;
atudenl'&#13;
s&#13;
DB.&#13;
bul&#13;
wm&#13;
a'-&#13;
IIle&#13;
coope~a~lOn of  ~arlOus    faculty  me~her   selected  by the&#13;
act&#13;
as&#13;
an eduC8lional ......&#13;
1eDce&#13;
.... ents&#13;
WIthin the  Uruverslty    Chancellor&#13;
In&#13;
consultation  with&#13;
10&#13;
famWariJl,.  lIud&lt;nla&#13;
III&#13;
the&#13;
community.&#13;
the University  Committee,  and 2&#13;
....&#13;
1&#13;
righla&#13;
10&#13;
bich&#13;
they&#13;
are&#13;
".,  nsponsibilities  would  in-   student at large seats, one is to be&#13;
entilled&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
reapo.... ""&#13;
dille&#13;
reviewing policy and  ad-   elected in the Spring election and&#13;
I...&#13;
which&#13;
they&#13;
as&#13;
dllJienl&#13;
a~&#13;
_in&#13;
the&#13;
areas&#13;
01&#13;
Building use   the other to be elected in the Fall&#13;
held&#13;
account&amp;b~&#13;
•&#13;
• bo&#13;
,&#13;
when, where);  Prices;    election.&#13;
to&#13;
'eedl   to    "&#13;
com.meated&#13;
Pnsent&#13;
Service;&#13;
Food  Service;&#13;
The non - voting members  wili&#13;
Phil  Pog~ba,   P~   d nl  Pro&#13;
1Idlities;  Building  Services;&#13;
consist  of the  Dean&#13;
01&#13;
Student&#13;
P.S.G.A.  Senate  meeting.   -   .. --&#13;
......    Tempore&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
SeDale  •·..&#13;
m&#13;
very&#13;
e&#13;
Relations;&#13;
Special    Life, or his&#13;
I&#13;
her designee;&#13;
the&#13;
elalfJd thai the&#13;
SeDale&#13;
Pu-llhla&#13;
di.....&#13;
At&#13;
the&#13;
beginning  of   Director of the Union, or his&#13;
I&#13;
her   SOC.Through these new by -laws,   be. I am extremely&#13;
pleased&#13;
with&#13;
A1lhou1b I&#13;
Iulew&#13;
It&#13;
had&#13;
a&#13;
lood&#13;
eb&#13;
semester,   PUAB  shall    designee;  and  the  Student  Ac-   the   qualifications&#13;
lor   SOC   them. and I'd liIte&#13;
10&#13;
thank&#13;
aU&#13;
of&#13;
chance&#13;
of&#13;
I....&#13;
u.-oup  ".&#13;
and discuss  the  plans   tivities  Coordinator  or his&#13;
I&#13;
her    membership,  the  Chair  respon-   the&#13;
Senators,   SOC&#13;
members.&#13;
aDd&#13;
paaaInc&#13;
of&#13;
Illl18rb   the&#13;
-S&#13;
of&#13;
a&#13;
lot&#13;
ted&#13;
to  tbe&#13;
use&#13;
01&#13;
Union   designee.&#13;
sibilities,    the  Vice  -  Chair    students  who ..... ked&#13;
lJO&#13;
hard&#13;
10&#13;
of&#13;
hard .......k, bul al&#13;
the&#13;
same&#13;
·ti...  PAB functions In the&#13;
During   the   meeting,    Jim    responsibilities,  the duties&#13;
01&#13;
the   revise   and  complete   tbem    bme, il&#13;
mans&#13;
lhe&#13;
beatnniDll&#13;
of&#13;
a&#13;
, but&#13;
is&#13;
not a function&#13;
01&#13;
the   Kreuser,  President  of P.S.G.A.,    Executive Board, the duties&#13;
01&#13;
the   They've done an excellenl&#13;
job."&#13;
whole&#13;
trW&#13;
era&#13;
cf&#13;
ark  W&#13;
m-&#13;
Ine.,  said,  "This  will  give  the   Secretary,&#13;
the&#13;
composition&#13;
01&#13;
The&#13;
proposal for the PSGA, InC.   have&#13;
to&#13;
gel&#13;
.dmuu  ratlve Inpul&#13;
director&#13;
01&#13;
the Union a chance to   Budget  and  Review,  and  the   Student  Legal service  was also   and&#13;
then&#13;
we'lI&#13;
linilIb&#13;
lip&#13;
the&#13;
bld&#13;
hear student input, which I'm sure&#13;
process&#13;
of&#13;
removal&#13;
from&#13;
office   giv.... approval&#13;
by&#13;
the&#13;
SeDate.&#13;
The&#13;
ding&#13;
procou.&#13;
II'&#13;
lbroulIlI&#13;
iD-&#13;
he wants to hear. U's our money    has all been clarified.&#13;
purpose&#13;
01&#13;
this&#13;
new&#13;
service&#13;
wID&#13;
be&#13;
tervtewo,&#13;
pi&#13;
the&#13;
mltt.&#13;
going into it. I leel  it's  a good&#13;
to assist  stud ....ts in Identifying&#13;
up,&#13;
and Implan   t&#13;
the&#13;
aervl   •&#13;
committee,  it needs to he formed.&#13;
These rules will he implemented   and resolving their legal problems   hopefully&#13;
by  the&#13;
md&#13;
of&#13;
lhIa&#13;
I'm sure&#13;
it&#13;
will&#13;
turn out to&#13;
be&#13;
a   on November  15, 1982, and  all   so they can make&#13;
the most&#13;
of&#13;
their   semesler ..&#13;
cialists look to reassert themselves here&#13;
Ity&#13;
Jennie Tunieicz&#13;
aDd&#13;
Bob&#13;
Kle.ling&#13;
Despite  the  fact   that   the&#13;
~in&#13;
branch&#13;
01&#13;
the Socialist&#13;
="""alic   party  currently  has&#13;
... 'Ill&#13;
"card&#13;
carrying"  members&#13;
=-&#13;
about&#13;
2,000&#13;
lellow travelers,&#13;
Ingbretson,  head  of the&#13;
JlUty&#13;
in&#13;
Wisconsin believes  tbe&#13;
-.&#13;
rigbt lor the movement  to&#13;
.....&#13;
Itself politically.&#13;
!agbretaon&#13;
said that&#13;
the&#13;
party&#13;
~   not&#13;
i~t....d  to  have  any&#13;
ltu  dates&#13;
m&#13;
!be 1984 elections,&#13;
lIfttthat&#13;
!be&#13;
party should be able to&#13;
,~ a,stale ticket in 1986.&#13;
Sod&#13;
lis&#13;
86,&#13;
I would like to see a&#13;
Iar&#13;
a  t  Democratic  candidate&#13;
... Iov.ernor,lieutenant  governor,&#13;
..  "::,'   attcrney  general  and&#13;
as&#13;
ry&#13;
IX&#13;
slate. Meetings such&#13;
lite&#13;
wbatwe:vedone here today are&#13;
IIlI'begthaInrungs&#13;
01&#13;
building a hase&#13;
t,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
tIte~&#13;
rn&lt;;etinghere Saturday  was&#13;
ID&#13;
u.:,rat&#13;
ma&#13;
number&#13;
01&#13;
meetings&#13;
Racme  / Kenosha  area  to&#13;
reestablish  the party.  Ingbretson&#13;
said  !bat  he would  like to see&#13;
separate  local  organizations  set&#13;
up  in  the   two  towns,   but&#13;
"would   not   mind   a   joint&#13;
movement. "&#13;
Former    Milwaukee   mayor&#13;
Frank  Zeidler spoke&#13;
01&#13;
the "high&#13;
human  cost of capitalism"  when&#13;
he outlined his party's  platform.&#13;
He listed  some&#13;
01&#13;
the&#13;
socialist's&#13;
achievements  that, he said, have&#13;
since been adopted by the major&#13;
parties.&#13;
He said&#13;
the&#13;
Socialist Democrats&#13;
were  leaders   in  the  field  of&#13;
unemployment    compensation,&#13;
much  occupational   safety  and&#13;
health  legislation,  and reform&#13;
m&#13;
the areas  of social welfare,&#13;
"The  idea of socialism  is&#13;
tha&#13;
t&#13;
people&#13;
working&#13;
together&#13;
cooperatively  can prodUce more&#13;
for  the  good  of  societ~  .!ban&#13;
everyone acting&#13;
00&#13;
~n mclivu:lual&#13;
basis to promote theIr own&#13;
self -&#13;
interest,"  said Zeidler.&#13;
Fall Blood Drive&#13;
Tbe   Bl&#13;
od&#13;
Soutbeastern&#13;
Wisconsin    at&#13;
Sou&#13;
0&#13;
Center&#13;
01&#13;
t&#13;
!be&#13;
thea.tem Wisconsin will hold   adequate  levels. About&#13;
80&#13;
~3&#13;
...._~arkside  Fall  Blood  Drive&#13;
of&#13;
these units come from&#13;
e&#13;
P&#13;
·.-rn'y, Nov.2,from 9a.m.&#13;
-3:30&#13;
blood drives, such as the&#13;
one  ::&#13;
on&#13;
Uruon&#13;
104&#13;
Thi&#13;
Parkside.  The&#13;
other&#13;
20&#13;
perce&#13;
in&#13;
bh.cs&#13;
dri    .&#13;
s is a walk -   comes Irom donors who go .to~&#13;
IlOt&#13;
ve -  appointments are&#13;
ti&#13;
n&#13;
Ileceeaary.&#13;
Blood Center's Driving Sta :-   I&#13;
~&#13;
donors&#13;
are  extremely    Milwaukee,   Waukesha,&#13;
cme&#13;
:,,_t&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
Blood&#13;
ce&#13;
t&#13;
and Kenosha.&#13;
.&#13;
Aiti&gt;roli.&#13;
n er.&#13;
The Fall Blood Drive I.&#13;
spun-&#13;
...  :,"le1y&#13;
400&#13;
pints&#13;
IX&#13;
blood&#13;
d  by&#13;
the&#13;
student   Health&#13;
__&#13;
collected every  day  I.·n  sore&#13;
f&#13;
Sci-&#13;
Club&#13;
--    to&#13;
keep  the  supply&#13;
In&#13;
Center and the&#13;
Li&#13;
e   ~--&#13;
.&#13;
~~~:~~~:~~:~:~:~:~;~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~;~~~;~;~~~;~:~~~~~:~~~~~~~~t~~~~~tttttt~~~~~Ir~tt~~t~~~~~~~~~~~~~&#13;
JAMES  INGBRETSON&#13;
Currently.&#13;
tbe   Socialist&#13;
Democratic  party&#13;
is&#13;
gene~ali,Y&#13;
trying&#13;
10&#13;
redistribute&#13;
the&#13;
naUoo&#13;
s&#13;
wealth among the working class.&#13;
one&#13;
of  their  central   tenets&#13;
specifically,&#13;
the&#13;
party advocates&#13;
employm ....t by. the government&#13;
when  private&#13;
industry&#13;
lails&#13;
10&#13;
provide&#13;
jobs,&#13;
more&#13;
empbastS&#13;
00&#13;
social&#13;
servIces&#13;
spending,  rather&#13;
than&#13;
speodin!I&#13;
by the&#13;
militarY,&#13;
and&#13;
a centraUzed bealth care&#13;
system.&#13;
'The&#13;
party&#13;
a&#13;
nuclear&#13;
treeze&#13;
and envirOllffi&#13;
taI&#13;
proteetiCJll as&#13;
impcrtaDt _&#13;
as well.&#13;
speaking&#13;
of&#13;
the.&#13;
ad-&#13;
rninisb'ation'.&#13;
efforts&#13;
to sbif1 the&#13;
nati... ••&#13;
wcrkfcrce into&#13;
Ijgher&#13;
technology&#13;
fields.&#13;
Ingbretaoo&#13;
saM!-&#13;
''reeducati ...&#13;
of&#13;
the ....&#13;
an-&#13;
t&#13;
have any&#13;
effect."&#13;
He&#13;
also spdte&#13;
of&#13;
the importance&#13;
of the  party   having  specific&#13;
political   goal..   rather   than&#13;
becoming  lost&#13;
10&#13;
their  own&#13;
ideology,&#13;
as&#13;
has&#13;
happened&#13;
m&#13;
the&#13;
pasl.  At&#13;
pr.....&#13;
l.&#13;
the&#13;
allsl&#13;
Democratic party'. goal In&#13;
RaCIl1e&#13;
and Kenooha Counties&#13;
Is 10&#13;
set up&#13;
locals   .. hich  .. ould  acl   a&#13;
clearinghouses&#13;
of&#13;
Informatioo&#13;
AI.o&#13;
.t~&#13;
ed  was  th   1m·&#13;
pcrtance&#13;
01.&#13;
speaking&#13;
001&#13;
on&#13;
local&#13;
issues Ingbret_   said thaI If&#13;
the&#13;
SociallSl   DemocraUC   Party&#13;
makes Its&#13;
opinions&#13;
known&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
community. the party "";lIb-.,n&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
Vlewed a.  a nable  politi.. ,&#13;
alternative   He also  t~&#13;
lhe&#13;
Impcrlance&#13;
of&#13;
fact..&#13;
1&#13;
reporting&#13;
by lhe medIa&#13;
Ingbretson  said&#13;
the&#13;
al&#13;
Democral1c&#13;
Party&#13;
\lioas ... ry&#13;
Women s  esourc&#13;
Day&#13;
Women  Resource Day&#13;
has&#13;
been  set  asIde  to  Inform&#13;
sludenls&#13;
01&#13;
Ib    variou&#13;
organiutlo&#13;
and&#13;
ervlc&#13;
ava lab Ie  to  them  In  lhe&#13;
commwuly&#13;
as  "-ell&#13;
on&#13;
campos&#13;
The&#13;
da&#13;
(IOIl1&#13;
10&#13;
help .tudents fiDd&#13;
out who&#13;
10&#13;
II'&#13;
10&#13;
if&#13;
the)&#13;
are&#13;
10&#13;
need&#13;
of&#13;
a&#13;
sen'lce&#13;
Tbe program  wUI&#13;
com_   all&#13;
p.m&#13;
aDd&#13;
last&#13;
until&#13;
3&#13;
p.rn&#13;
011Wedneada)',&#13;
OCt.&#13;
27&#13;
Within the&#13;
two&#13;
hoon.   ud&lt;nts&#13;
wID&#13;
be&#13;
able&#13;
to&#13;
slop,&#13;
aaIr.&#13;
quostiOll5&#13;
and&#13;
gam&#13;
informa&#13;
00&#13;
from   the  representatives&#13;
of&#13;
organaalioas&#13;
ER&#13;
~'s  not~&#13;
There's a lot here&#13;
allOlher name.&#13;
A&#13;
real name&#13;
And&#13;
he d   .&#13;
Don'1&#13;
forget aboul\be  Women's&#13;
R&#13;
ree&#13;
08),&#13;
Wednesday  Oct.&#13;
27' A lot of orgaruzabons&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
present  at&#13;
UlIs&#13;
event  10 help&#13;
tudent   realize   all  that  is&#13;
a,..&#13;
Uable&#13;
to help \bern&#13;
in&#13;
a lime&#13;
of&#13;
need&#13;
From 1 until 3 p.rn. 00 \be&#13;
27th.&#13;
uden   ...&#13;
,11&#13;
have the&#13;
op-&#13;
porIWUty&#13;
1.0&#13;
learn&#13;
more about all&#13;
of&#13;
~nizalions&#13;
n    londa)·    night,    Ihe&#13;
lards&#13;
Chamber  Orcheslra&#13;
appeared&#13;
at&#13;
Parltside  for a&#13;
one&#13;
u&#13;
ooIy   formance  For lhose&#13;
who " .....&#13;
fortUlUlteenough 10&#13;
see&#13;
It&#13;
II " ..&#13;
lhe opportunit)  of a&#13;
ill&#13;
time.&#13;
The   exactness&#13;
and&#13;
perfccllOO&#13;
that \be group offered&#13;
Incredible.  TIlere was  more&#13;
to&#13;
.1 than  lust  the  perfect  sound&#13;
hough&#13;
II.......&#13;
if \be orchestra&#13;
real1)&#13;
enjo)ed what \bey had&#13;
I~&#13;
eifel' E\en&#13;
U&#13;
the audience had not&#13;
mJO.&#13;
ed  \be  performance,&#13;
the&#13;
people dolng \be performing were&#13;
haV\ll8 a good ume;  \bey really&#13;
ed&#13;
"hal  \bey were  doing.&#13;
11&#13;
made  a big dUference.   laybe&#13;
lhat   the&#13;
mee&#13;
part  about  live&#13;
performance&#13;
The&#13;
audience can&#13;
really feel tbe emotloo that goes&#13;
J.n,lo lt&#13;
To be ho   I. who ...ould have&#13;
ever  lhougbl  thai  uch an  ex-&#13;
&lt;ellent show&#13;
could&#13;
be put 00 here&#13;
atour\-erYOVin&#13;
Parkside'?~'? Wh~&#13;
'CIUId&#13;
have  thoughl  a  group&#13;
nown&#13;
mternatlenally&#13;
for&#13;
its&#13;
grand  performance  would have&#13;
mad  a SlOpO\'er for a Parkside&#13;
~rformance't&#13;
Throughout    the&#13;
erm   00 people in \be crowd&#13;
and arow&gt;d ml seal Ialked aboul&#13;
the&#13;
Ide&#13;
vartety&#13;
of  things&#13;
P&#13;
de orrer   From  sports  10&#13;
Ranger&#13;
accaJli1&#13;
stories,&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90952">
              <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Thursday, October 21, 1982&#13;
P.S.GA. Senate passes proposals and guidelines&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
Three new programs were&#13;
approved by the PSGA, Inc.&#13;
Senate at their last meeting. The&#13;
development of the Parkside&#13;
Union Advisory Board, the New&#13;
Student Organization Council by -&#13;
laws, and the new Student Legal&#13;
Service.&#13;
The Parkside Union Advisory&#13;
Board shall be so in the formulation,&#13;
implementation, and&#13;
review of the Parkside Union's&#13;
policy. It will seek to promote the&#13;
Parkside Union's role in the&#13;
campus and community activities&#13;
and services. At the same time, it&#13;
will seek to fulfill the educational&#13;
goals of the University through&#13;
the cooperation of various&#13;
elements within the University&#13;
and community.&#13;
The responsibilities would include&#13;
reviewing policy and advising&#13;
in the areas of B uilding use&#13;
(who, when, where);- Prices;&#13;
Present Service; Food Service;&#13;
Facilities; Building Services;&#13;
Public Relations; Special&#13;
Promotions. At the beginning of&#13;
each semester, PUAB shall&#13;
review and discuss the plans&#13;
related to the use of Union&#13;
Facilities. PAB functions in the&#13;
Union, but is not a function of t he&#13;
Union.&#13;
All recommendations of the&#13;
PUAB will be sent to the Dean of&#13;
Student Life for consideration. In&#13;
the case of a conflict between the&#13;
PUAB, the issue will be reconsidered&#13;
by the PUAB and upon a&#13;
2/3 vote of the entire PUAB a&#13;
decision will be sent back to the&#13;
Dean of Student Life. If a conflict&#13;
persists, the issue will be sent to&#13;
the Chancellor, or his / her&#13;
designee to mediate the decision&#13;
and decide it. The Chancellor's&#13;
designee cannot be the Administrator&#13;
of the Union or any of&#13;
the Union's Administrative staff.&#13;
The PUAB will be composed of&#13;
12 members, 9 voting and 3 non -&#13;
voting. The voting members will&#13;
consist of 1 person elected from&#13;
the PSGA Senate, 1 person elected&#13;
from GSOC, 1 person elected from&#13;
Ranger, 1 person elected by PAB,&#13;
1 person elected by Peer Support,&#13;
1 person elected from the Alumni&#13;
Association, 1 seat held by a&#13;
faculty member selected by the&#13;
Chancellor in consultation with&#13;
the University Committee, and 2&#13;
student at large seats, one is to be&#13;
elected in the Spring election and&#13;
the other to be elected in the Fall&#13;
election.&#13;
The non - voting members will&#13;
consist of the Dean of Student&#13;
Life, or his / her designee; the&#13;
Director of t he Union, or his / her&#13;
designee; and the Student Activities&#13;
Coordinator or his / her&#13;
designee.&#13;
During the meeting, Jim&#13;
Kreuser, President of P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc., said, "This will give the&#13;
director of the Union a chance to&#13;
hear student input, which I'm sure&#13;
he wants to hear. It's our money&#13;
going into it. I feel it's a good&#13;
committee, it needs to be formed.&#13;
I'm sure it will turn out to be a&#13;
very important committee as far&#13;
as Student Life goes on policy&#13;
made concerning the Union."&#13;
Approved also at the meeting&#13;
were the new SOC Guidelines. The&#13;
guidelines were developed by a&#13;
group of concerned students to.&#13;
clarify questioned issues within&#13;
rules and by - laws of SOC an d B.&#13;
and R.C. previous to Nov. 15 shall&#13;
be null and void.&#13;
Carla Thomas, Vice - Chair of&#13;
SOC, made these comments about&#13;
the new by - laws: "They are a&#13;
very solid foundation to build SOC&#13;
into the organization it's meant to&#13;
P.S.G.A. Senate meeting.&#13;
Photo by Masood Shafiq&#13;
SOC. Through these new by - laws,&#13;
the qualifications for SOC&#13;
membership, the Chair responsibilities,&#13;
the Vice - Chair&#13;
responsibilities, the duties of the&#13;
Executive Board, the duties of the&#13;
Secretary, the composition of&#13;
Budget and Review, and the&#13;
process of removal from office&#13;
has all been clarified.&#13;
These rules will be implemented&#13;
on November 15, 1982, and all&#13;
be. I am extremely pleased with&#13;
them, and I'd like to thank all of&#13;
the Senators, SOC members, and&#13;
students who worked so hard to&#13;
revise and complete them.&#13;
They've done an excellent job."&#13;
The proposal for the PSGA, Inc.&#13;
Student Legal Service was also&#13;
given approval by the Senate. The&#13;
purpose of this new service will be&#13;
to assist students in identifying&#13;
and resolving their legal problems&#13;
so they can make the most of their&#13;
educational opportunities. If a&#13;
legal problem threatens to interfere&#13;
with a student's effectiveness&#13;
on campus, the&#13;
student legal service will do what&#13;
they can to resolve or minimize&#13;
the problem.&#13;
An attorney will be available to&#13;
render legal and referral services&#13;
to all students who pay the student&#13;
services fee. If the type of&#13;
problem a student has exceeds the&#13;
scope of the service, additional&#13;
services may be arranged for, at&#13;
the student's expense, through the&#13;
attorneys in the community.&#13;
It is the goal of this service that&#13;
direct delivery of legal services&#13;
will not only remove or resolve&#13;
student's concerns, but will also&#13;
act as an educational experience&#13;
in familiarizing students with the&#13;
legal rights to which they are&#13;
entitled and the responsibilities&#13;
for which they, as citizens, are&#13;
held accountable.&#13;
"Needless to say," commented&#13;
Phil Pogreba, President Pro&#13;
Tempore of the Senate, "I'm very&#13;
elated that the Senate passed this.&#13;
Although I knew it had a good&#13;
chance of going through. The&#13;
passing of it marks the end of a lot&#13;
of hard work, but at the same&#13;
time, it marks the beginning of a&#13;
whole new era of work. We now&#13;
have to get administrative input&#13;
and then we'll finish up the bidding&#13;
process, go through interviews,&#13;
get the committee set&#13;
up, and implement the service,&#13;
hopefully by the end of this&#13;
semester."&#13;
Socialists look to reassert themselves here&#13;
by Jennie Tunieicz&#13;
and Bob Kiesling&#13;
Despite the fact that the&#13;
Wisconsin branch of the Socialist&#13;
Democratic party currently has&#13;
only 70 "card carrying" members&#13;
and about 2,000 fellow travelers,&#13;
James Ingbretson, head of the&#13;
party in Wisconsin believes the&#13;
time is right for the movement to&#13;
reassert itself politically.&#13;
Ingbretson said that the party&#13;
does not intend to have any&#13;
candidates in the 1984 e lections,&#13;
but that the party should be able to&#13;
offer a state ticket in 1986.&#13;
"In '86, I would like to see a&#13;
Socialist Democratic candidate&#13;
for governor, lieutenant governor,&#13;
treasurer, attorney general and&#13;
secretary of state. Meetings such&#13;
as what we've done here today are&#13;
the beginnings of building a base&#13;
for that," he said.&#13;
The meeting here Saturday was&#13;
the first in a number of meetings&#13;
in the Racine / Kenosha area to&#13;
reestablish the party. Ingbretson&#13;
said that he would like to see&#13;
separate local organizations set&#13;
up in the two towns, but&#13;
"would not mind a joint&#13;
movement."&#13;
Former Milwaukee mayor&#13;
Frank Zeidler spoke of the "high&#13;
human cost of capitalism" when&#13;
he outlined his party's platform.&#13;
He listed some of the socialist's&#13;
achievements that, he said, have&#13;
since been adopted by the major&#13;
parties.&#13;
He said the Socialist Democrats&#13;
were leaders in the field of&#13;
unemployment compensation,&#13;
much occupational safety and&#13;
health legislation, and reform in&#13;
the areas of social welfare.&#13;
"The idea of socialism is that&#13;
people working together&#13;
cooperatively can produce more&#13;
for the good of society than&#13;
everyone acting on an individual&#13;
basis to promote their own self -&#13;
interest," said Zeidler.&#13;
He also spoke of t he importance&#13;
of the party having specific&#13;
political goals, rather than&#13;
becoming lost in their own&#13;
ideology, as has happened in the&#13;
past. At present, the Socialist&#13;
Democratic party's goal in Racine&#13;
and Kenosha Counties is to set up&#13;
locals which would act as&#13;
clearinghouses of information.&#13;
Also stressed was the importance&#13;
of speaking out on local&#13;
issues. Ingbretson said that if the&#13;
Socialist Democratic Party&#13;
makes its opinions known to the&#13;
community, the party will begin to&#13;
be viewed as a viable political&#13;
alternative. He also stressed the&#13;
importance of factual reporting&#13;
by the media.&#13;
Ingbretson said the Socialist&#13;
Democratic Party, was very&#13;
interested in attracting new&#13;
members, but made it clear that&#13;
any socialist movement must be a&#13;
community effort.&#13;
"When you join the party," he&#13;
asid, "we expect that you will&#13;
support it, not necessarily&#13;
financially, but that you will come&#13;
to our meetings and contribute&#13;
intellectually to our movement."&#13;
"For example," he added, "if 1&#13;
was running for some statewidt&#13;
office, the people of Racine and&#13;
Kenosha locals would support mj&#13;
candidacy and circulate petitions&#13;
to get me on the ballot, or woulc&#13;
work on my behalf to build £&#13;
presence for the campaign."&#13;
"We do assume that when yoi&#13;
join the movement, you do it witl&#13;
the commitment to support it,'&#13;
Ingbretson said.&#13;
Fall Blood Drive&#13;
The Blood Center of&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin will hold&#13;
the Parkside Fall Blood Drive&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 2, from 9a.m. -3:30&#13;
p.m. in Union 104. This is a walk -&#13;
in blood drive — appointments are&#13;
not necessary.&#13;
College donors are extremely&#13;
important to the Blood Center.&#13;
Approximately 400 pints of blood&#13;
must be collected every day in&#13;
order to keep the supply in&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin at&#13;
adequate levels. About 80 percent&#13;
of these units come from mobile&#13;
blood drives, such as the one at&#13;
Parkside. The other 20 percent&#13;
comes from donors who go to The&#13;
Blood Center's Driving Stations in&#13;
Milwaukee, Waukesha, Racine&#13;
and Kenosha.&#13;
The Fall Blood Drive is sponsored&#13;
by the Student Health&#13;
Center and the Life Science Club.&#13;
Photo by Masood Shafiq&#13;
JAMES INGBRETSON&#13;
Currently, the Socialist&#13;
Democratic party is generally&#13;
trying to redistribute the nation's&#13;
wealth among the working class,&#13;
one of their central tenets.&#13;
Specifically, the party advocates&#13;
employment by the government&#13;
when private industry fails to&#13;
provide jobs, more emphasis on&#13;
social services spending, rather&#13;
than spending by the military, and&#13;
a centralized health care system.&#13;
The party sees a nuclear freeze&#13;
and environmental protection as&#13;
important issues as well.&#13;
Speaking of the administration's&#13;
efforts to shift the&#13;
nation's workforce into higher&#13;
technology fields, Ingbretson said,&#13;
"reeducation of the workers won't&#13;
have any effect."&#13;
Women's Resource Day&#13;
Women's Resource Day has&#13;
been set aside to inform&#13;
students of the various&#13;
organizations and services&#13;
available to them in the&#13;
community as well as on&#13;
campus. The day's goal is to&#13;
help students find out who to go&#13;
to if they are in need of a&#13;
service. The program will&#13;
convene at 1 p.m. and last until&#13;
3 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 27.&#13;
Within the two hours, students&#13;
will be able to stop, ask&#13;
questions and gain information&#13;
from the representatives of&#13;
organizations.&#13;
The organizations planning&#13;
to attend are: Alumni and&#13;
Placement, American Cancer&#13;
Society, Child Care Center,&#13;
Community Student Services,&#13;
Health Center, Peer Support -&#13;
Students Helping Students,&#13;
Adult Crisis Center, Alcohol&#13;
and Drug Center, Bread and&#13;
Roses, Family Planning of&#13;
Racine, Family Services of&#13;
Racine, Kenoshans Against&#13;
Sexual Assault, Life Right of&#13;
Kenosha, Manpower Temp.&#13;
Service, Planned Parenthood&#13;
of Kenosha, Women's Horizons&#13;
of Kenosha, Women's&#13;
Resource Center of Racine,&#13;
Youth and Family Services,&#13;
WIC and YWCA. Take some&#13;
time to stop and talk on the&#13;
271111 &#13;
2 Thursday, October 21,1982 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Make them pay&#13;
The United States government finally seems to be doing something&#13;
about all those people who have failed to repay their college loans. Many&#13;
students have a problem obtaining a government student loan, simply&#13;
because there is very little left in the pot to dish out due to the fact that&#13;
many people have neglected to repay their loans.&#13;
The people who have received loans in the past have an obligation to&#13;
pay back what was once given them. Many of them wouldn't be in their&#13;
present positions if they had not been given loans when they were in&#13;
school. By abusing the privilege of a college loan, it is only made more&#13;
difficult for the present college students to fight through today's loan&#13;
program.&#13;
Maybe by threatening these people with lawsuits, or reclaiming their&#13;
cars, an example can be set to make others fulfill their obligation to&#13;
repay their loans. Education Secretary Terrel Bell said his department&#13;
will start to dock the pay of employees who have failed to repay student&#13;
loans. The crackdown at hand is overdue, and certainly necessary.&#13;
When it comes time for the people presently receiving loans to pay&#13;
them back, maybe it won't be such a chore for the government to&#13;
receive what is rightly theirs to loan out again.&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On September 30,1982, Congress&#13;
renewed the Endangered Species&#13;
Act for three more years. They&#13;
appropriated $38 million dollars&#13;
for the act, which was renewed&#13;
one day earlier than expected.&#13;
The wishes of the people have&#13;
presided once again, for the&#13;
Reagan administration had only&#13;
wanted to renew the act for one&#13;
year.&#13;
Parkside students contributed&#13;
to the renewal of the Endangered&#13;
Species Act by signing petitions&#13;
supporting the legislation. Thanks&#13;
to Jim Kreuser, Phil Pogreba, and&#13;
other members of PSGA, those&#13;
petitions were printed and&#13;
distributed around Parkside and&#13;
other United Council campuses in&#13;
the University of Wisconsin&#13;
system. A special thank you&#13;
should go to Pat Hensiak, editor of&#13;
Parkside's Ranger, for handling&#13;
the mailing of the petitions. And of&#13;
course, all the people who cared&#13;
enough to sign the petition must be&#13;
included in another big THANK&#13;
YOU.&#13;
C.B. and the animals&#13;
Kovalic criticized&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Sexism has struck the Ranger in&#13;
the form of the poisonous pen of&#13;
John Kovalic. This person in his&#13;
satire on "Life at Ranger Hall"&#13;
has asked this question:&#13;
"How long does it take for the&#13;
first female to shack up on the&#13;
male floor?"&#13;
In asking this question he is&#13;
placing women in the role of sex&#13;
objects and expressing his own&#13;
egotism.&#13;
His question is not only sexist,&#13;
distasteful and insulting, it is also&#13;
anti - humanist. His remark is an&#13;
insult, not only to the women of&#13;
this campus, but to the men also.&#13;
His crass reference to personal&#13;
relationships may reflect his own&#13;
biases, but I doubt that the&#13;
majority of the students at&#13;
Parkside have such a synical&#13;
attitude toward their own&#13;
relationships.&#13;
Since sexism and racism are&#13;
usually two sides of the same coin,&#13;
I have to wonder whether or not&#13;
his next 'satire' will spew forth&#13;
this poison as well. In a time when&#13;
many people are expending a&#13;
great deal of energy trying to&#13;
work out such difficulties as&#13;
human inequality, Kovalic's&#13;
question seems totally repugnant.&#13;
His attitude is degrading to&#13;
himself as well as o thers.&#13;
I can only suggest Kovalic give&#13;
up his diet of beer and tortilla&#13;
chips, confine himself to bread&#13;
and water and then return, pen in&#13;
hand, to whatever rock he crawled&#13;
out from under.&#13;
M.E. Marten&#13;
Writer's reply&#13;
John Kovalic replies:&#13;
I am sorry that one comment of&#13;
my last article, labeled, by the&#13;
way, as SATIRE, was taken so&#13;
very seriously. However, I must&#13;
state my repugnance as being&#13;
labeled both a sexist and, for some&#13;
unknown reason, a racist. I was&#13;
extremely surprised, to say the&#13;
least, that someone could assume&#13;
so much on the basis of one&#13;
humorous comment, and then act&#13;
as judge and jury in condemning&#13;
me as an anti - humanist.&#13;
Maybe I could reply that Ms.&#13;
Martin is perhaps an anti -&#13;
humorist? But I will not sink to&#13;
her level of mud - slin ging, and I&#13;
shall assume that the above letter&#13;
was written in the heat of the&#13;
moment.&#13;
If Ms. Martin had ever lived in a&#13;
dorm, she should have been able&#13;
to have seen the humor in the&#13;
article. Incidently, both female&#13;
and male residents of the YMCA&#13;
told me they thought the article&#13;
was both well presented and very&#13;
funny.&#13;
Probably the one accurate fact&#13;
in the leter is that I am an egotist.&#13;
Anybody has to be to have work&#13;
published. However, to brand me&#13;
as sexist, anti - humanist and&#13;
racist, and then to stoop to such a&#13;
personal, immature and almost&#13;
infantile level of attack just&#13;
makes me wonder if she is&#13;
perhaps as biased as those she&#13;
purports to fight.&#13;
In conclusion, next time you&#13;
read an article of mine, Ms.&#13;
Martin, I suggest you think about&#13;
it, get your facts right, then try to&#13;
appreciate it in the light of how it&#13;
was written.&#13;
(Also try to get my name&#13;
correct, please.)&#13;
John Kovalic&#13;
r^.K WIFE, TWO KIDS TO SU PPORT _&#13;
IT CAN BE DIFFICULT WHEN YOU'RE&#13;
OUT OF A JOB.&#13;
BUT IT'S ESPECIALLY HARD WITH&#13;
POLITICIANS LIKE SENATOR PRQXMIRE[&#13;
in government..&#13;
[vote SCOnWCALUJM FOR SENATE^&#13;
I CONCERNED ABOUT UNEMPLOYMENT, fj , ftFT H15( BROTHER. A JOB. ^&#13;
kTOU SEE, JOHN'S MY BROTHER-J^ *&#13;
r«**vT&#13;
?&#13;
MCCALLUM&#13;
SENATE&#13;
PAID FOR SY WENOS AND FAMILY OF&#13;
SCOTT NA CCAU-UM&gt; HIS MOTHER, TREASURER&#13;
•WBA&#13;
Editor's notes&#13;
There's a lot here&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
The ball seems to be rolling&#13;
rather smoothly through the&#13;
semester. There hasn't been a&#13;
war, and people seem to be trying&#13;
to get along. P.S.G.A. has been&#13;
working quite diligently on&#13;
passing what is necessary, and&#13;
making the school a more functional&#13;
place for those who frequent&#13;
it. They passed two proposals, and&#13;
one new set of guidelines this past&#13;
week. Of course, that doesn't&#13;
mean that the proposals or the&#13;
guidelines are totally functional,&#13;
but at least it's a start. They seem&#13;
to be moving in a positive&#13;
direction.&#13;
People are doing new things.&#13;
Bruce Preston has just started his&#13;
new column. This week he&#13;
features a woman he just met, and&#13;
relates her personal experiences&#13;
to the labels we often put on&#13;
people. I'm sure Bruce will introduce&#13;
a lot of interesting people&#13;
through his columns. People who&#13;
have something to offer without&#13;
really knowing it.&#13;
The soccer team hasn't been&#13;
doing anything new this week,&#13;
they're still winning. They locked&#13;
out Northland this past week 9-0.&#13;
The soccer team is still nationally&#13;
ranked, in the top 10.&#13;
The Socialist Democratic Party&#13;
has been making an attempt to&#13;
start a chapter here on campus,&#13;
story on page 1. If you're interested&#13;
in the Socialist&#13;
Democratic party — get involved.&#13;
People are having a bit of a&#13;
problem with John Kovalic's&#13;
writing. He is most certainly a&#13;
satirical writer. More than not, his&#13;
articles are fiction, with the intention&#13;
of trying to find some bit of&#13;
humor in a particular subject.&#13;
John does an article this week&#13;
on the famous "Dartman." For&#13;
over a year I knew this man only&#13;
as "Dartman." It came to me in a&#13;
dream one night, that his parents&#13;
couldn't have possibly named him&#13;
that. As the editor of this paper I&#13;
realized that Dartman must have&#13;
another name. A real name. And&#13;
he does.&#13;
Don't forget about the Women's&#13;
Resource Day, Wednesday Oct.&#13;
27! A lot of organizations will be&#13;
present at this event to help&#13;
students realize all that is&#13;
available to help them in a time of&#13;
need. From 1 until 3 p.m. on the&#13;
27th, students will have the opportunity&#13;
to learn more about all&#13;
of these organizations.&#13;
On Monday night, the&#13;
Netherlands Chamber Orchestra&#13;
appeared at Parkside for a one&#13;
time only performance. For those&#13;
who were fortunate enough to see&#13;
it, it was the opportunity of a&#13;
lifetime. The exactness and&#13;
perfection that the group offered&#13;
was incredible. There was more to&#13;
it than just the perfect sound&#13;
though. It was as if the orchestra&#13;
really enjoyed what they had tr&#13;
offer. Even if he t audience had not&#13;
enjoyed the performance, the&#13;
people doing the performing were&#13;
having a good time; they really&#13;
liked what they were doing. It&#13;
made a big difference. Maybe&#13;
that's the nice part about live&#13;
performance. The audience can&#13;
really feel the emotion that goes&#13;
into it.&#13;
To be honest, who would have&#13;
ever thought that such an excellent&#13;
show could be put on here,&#13;
at our very own Parkside??? Who&#13;
would have thought a group&#13;
known internationally for its&#13;
grand performance would have&#13;
made a stopover for a Parkside&#13;
performance? Throughout the&#13;
intermission, people in the crowd&#13;
and around my seat talked about&#13;
the wide variety of things&#13;
Parkside offers. From sports to&#13;
fine arts, from on - campus&#13;
student organizations to a broad&#13;
build of community events.&#13;
The biggest problem is arousing&#13;
the interest of the people who&#13;
attend Parkside daily. They seem&#13;
to be the hardest to please. Never&#13;
quite satisfied with what this&#13;
University offers. It really does&#13;
offer a lot, but people have to look&#13;
for it. They have to discover their&#13;
interests. Finding interests is part&#13;
of the whole experience. Maybe&#13;
find a friend to share the interests&#13;
with. Go ahead — find a rief nd and&#13;
an interest, and learn all about the&#13;
things Parkside has to offer.&#13;
Ranger accepting&#13;
stories, poems&#13;
Are you a creative person? Do&#13;
you like to write? Is your life&#13;
illuminated through the reading&#13;
and writing of poetry and prose?&#13;
Can you spell your name? If so,&#13;
then bring your short stories and&#13;
poetry to the Ranger office. We&#13;
just might print what you write.&#13;
Yes, that's right. In this very&#13;
Feature Section we plan to publish&#13;
short stories and poetry by&#13;
Parkside students every couple of&#13;
weeks. All we need are the stories&#13;
and poems from you. The&#13;
guidelines for submissions follow:&#13;
1) All submissions should be&#13;
typed, double - spaced. (They&#13;
don't have to be, but it would be&#13;
nice)&#13;
2) All submissions should include&#13;
your name and phone&#13;
number. We don't have to print&#13;
your name with your story, but we&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
Regents approve tuition hike&#13;
The University of Wisconsin&#13;
Board of Regents approved a&#13;
budget proposal Oct. 8 calling for&#13;
tuition hikes of up to $95 in the next&#13;
two years for resident undergraduate&#13;
students.&#13;
The budget proposal must still&#13;
be approved by the state&#13;
Department of Administration&#13;
and the legislature.&#13;
The proposal, submitted by the&#13;
U.S. system administration, calls&#13;
for a tuition increase of $50 - 60 for&#13;
1983-84 and $30 - 35 fo r 1984-85 in&#13;
resident undergraduate tuition.&#13;
Some of the Regents expressed&#13;
concern with the traditional&#13;
student contribution of 25 perce nt&#13;
of the university budget. The&#13;
precedent was affected in 1980,&#13;
when the state's fiscal condition&#13;
prompted students to pay a surcharge.&#13;
This year students contribute&#13;
27.3 percent of the&#13;
university budget, and the 1983-85&#13;
budget request calls for a 27&#13;
percent contribution by students.&#13;
"The reduction of tuition levels&#13;
from 27.3 percent to 27 percent is&#13;
certainly a step in the right&#13;
direction," remarked Scott&#13;
Bentley, president of the United&#13;
Council of U.W. Student Governments.&#13;
"But this is a very small&#13;
step. At this rate, assuming tuition&#13;
levels were reduced by .3 percent&#13;
each biennium, the University will&#13;
have returned to the 25 pe rcent&#13;
level by 1995."&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Norm Couture&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farreli&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene Torkilsen&#13;
ganger&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Assistant Business Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Aken&#13;
' Caro1 Bwns, Pat Cumbie, Dan Dowhower,&#13;
Cliff Flowers, Michael Kailas, Stephen Kalmar II, Carol&#13;
Kortendick, John Kovalic, Rick Luehr, Robb Luehr, Laura&#13;
Petersen, Jennie Tunkieicz.&#13;
uw&#13;
-&#13;
parkside and they are&#13;
RANGERfsDHn^bv^ u&#13;
U„&#13;
r«&#13;
in9&#13;
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he academic vear except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
Written^oe mTssT^i^Inni^l°.&#13;
n Coopera,ive Polishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin, vvrnien permission is required for reprint of anv oortion nf banrfo&#13;
parskt sr&#13;
Ran9er&#13;
-&#13;
universi&#13;
* °&#13;
f wisconsin&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
reserves a°l IriitTrja'l*&#13;
3 P ?' •&#13;
f&#13;
°&#13;
r publica,ion °n Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content Pr,Vllefles in re,us&#13;
'"9 P"nt letters which contain false or &#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 21,1982 3&#13;
Clinic People on Campus treats eating disorders&#13;
by Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
Eating disorders, such as&#13;
compulsive overeating, anorexia&#13;
nervosa and bulimia are serious&#13;
dilemas for many teenagers and&#13;
young adults. The Family&#13;
Therapy and Research Institute in&#13;
Kenosha can help people overcome&#13;
these problems.&#13;
The institute is primarily&#13;
funded through a contract with&#13;
Kenosha County where area&#13;
families are referred for consultation&#13;
and therapy. Karen&#13;
Schultz, a social worker, and Ed&#13;
Jessee, a clinical psychologist,&#13;
staff the organization. Both have&#13;
had previous experience in&#13;
working with eating disorders.&#13;
Anorexia, which is the most&#13;
publicized disorder, is where a&#13;
person abstains from eating.&#13;
Often, an anorexic has a distorted&#13;
image of his or her self and&#13;
believes they need to lose weight&#13;
— even when they have reached a&#13;
very thin and emaciated state.&#13;
Most recently people are&#13;
becoming aware of bulimia. This&#13;
disorder is characterized by a&#13;
binge and purge pattern where the&#13;
person over - eats then&#13;
regurgitates or takes laxatives to&#13;
remove food from their system.&#13;
Bulimia can cause physical&#13;
complications. Continued&#13;
vomiting causes acids to come up&#13;
Security&#13;
through the asophogus which&#13;
breaks down tissues and can also&#13;
rot teeth.&#13;
"I think the reason bulimia has&#13;
taken longer to become&#13;
recognized is because it is a more&#13;
secretive problem," said Schultz,&#13;
"and it can be kept a secret even&#13;
from family members."&#13;
No single factor creates these&#13;
problems. These problems can&#13;
occur in anyone.&#13;
"We as an outfit tend to take a&#13;
contextual view of problems.&#13;
What often leads to these&#13;
problems is a feeling of n ot being&#13;
in control," Schultz said. "We try&#13;
to help the individual by looking at&#13;
their situation and helping them&#13;
gain more control over their life so&#13;
they won't have to resort to such&#13;
drastic measures," she added.&#13;
Schultz feels that culture&#13;
promotes these problems because&#13;
of the strong emphasis on food,&#13;
eating and weight control. Also,&#13;
families with many rituals involving&#13;
food can make these&#13;
problems more prevalent.&#13;
The treatment process used by&#13;
the institute is to meet with the&#13;
individual and their families.&#13;
"The family can help the person&#13;
change their situation," said&#13;
Schultz. "We look for the important&#13;
people and other factors in&#13;
their environment that might be&#13;
affecting and creating these&#13;
problems," she added.&#13;
Schultz concluded, "It may&#13;
begin to feel like it is impossible to&#13;
stop this pattern of eating, but it is&#13;
not something that can't be&#13;
changed. We believe that by&#13;
helping the person change their&#13;
situation and context of their life&#13;
the problem can be stopped."&#13;
Law school&#13;
rep to&#13;
speak here&#13;
Professor Dan Morrissey from&#13;
the University of Tulsa Law&#13;
School will be visiting UW -&#13;
Parkside on Thursday, October 28&#13;
at 10:30 in Molinaro 367. He is&#13;
interested in talking to students&#13;
interested in attending the&#13;
University of Tulsa Law School.&#13;
All interested students should&#13;
contact Prof. Sue Strickler in&#13;
Moln. 263 or at 553-2600 for further&#13;
information.&#13;
With fire, preparation is the&#13;
by Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
Fire! The mere thought of fire&#13;
may cause fear in even the&#13;
strongest of individuals. Fire is a&#13;
very traumatic experience for&#13;
anyone involved. Safety of the&#13;
individual is by far the major&#13;
concern during a fire. Property is&#13;
replaceable, people are not!&#13;
Although Parkside has never&#13;
had a major fire, that does not&#13;
mean that we are not prepared.&#13;
Fire Protection Procedure&#13;
manuals are distributed to all&#13;
faculty. The Somers Fire&#13;
Department makes regular visits&#13;
to the campus to keep their personnel&#13;
aware of bu ilding locations&#13;
and layout. Custodial personnel&#13;
are informed of their duties in&#13;
aiding people evacuate the&#13;
buildings. All faculty and staff&#13;
should be aware of the procedures&#13;
involved in case of f ire.&#13;
But what should you, the&#13;
student, know and be aware of in&#13;
case of a fire? Because of the&#13;
varied times and places students&#13;
are on campus, fire drills would be&#13;
impractical. It is the responsibility&#13;
of each student to be&#13;
aware of his or her surroundings.&#13;
As you attend classes, be conscious&#13;
of the locations of the&#13;
nearest exits, stairs, fire alarm&#13;
pull boxes and fire extinguishers.&#13;
Every student should be aware of&#13;
these, wherever they are on&#13;
campus. It only takes a minute to&#13;
locate the nearest exit if you plan&#13;
ahead. In an emergency, panic&#13;
may make finding an exit more&#13;
Ranger accepting&#13;
stories, poems&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
might have to get in touch with&#13;
you about your submission, so&#13;
include your number.&#13;
3) Short stories should be just&#13;
that — short. Preferably no more&#13;
than ten typed pages.&#13;
4) This is not a contest —&#13;
nothing will be judged. This is&#13;
simply an opportunity for students&#13;
to have their creative literary&#13;
efforts published in the Ranger.&#13;
5) Ranger reserves the right to&#13;
select submissions, but we'll&#13;
probably print anything you have&#13;
to offer.&#13;
6) There is no deadline — I pl an&#13;
to run stories and poems all year,&#13;
but to have something considered&#13;
Continued On Page Five&#13;
difficult.&#13;
If you notice a fire starting, pull&#13;
the nearest fire alarm box. If an&#13;
office is nearby, tell someone to&#13;
call Security. If you are near a&#13;
phone that is safe from the fire,&#13;
call Security. Give the location of&#13;
the fire, building and room&#13;
number, if possible. Inform&#13;
anyone you see of the fire and&#13;
evacuate the building.&#13;
If there are no phones available,&#13;
pull the fire alarm and leave.&#13;
There are people in each building&#13;
who are instructed to call Security&#13;
when they hear an alarm.&#13;
Once you hear a fire alarm,&#13;
evacuate the building immediately.&#13;
Don't stop to pick up&#13;
personal belongings. Property can&#13;
be replaced. Once outside the&#13;
building, never go back until so&#13;
instructed. People are often injured&#13;
returning to a burning&#13;
building. When you are outside,&#13;
stay away from the building until&#13;
the all - clear signal is given.&#13;
When evacuating a building use&#13;
the stairs, never an elevator. The&#13;
fire may stop the electricity to the&#13;
elevator, leaving you trapped&#13;
inside.&#13;
Orderly evacuation is much&#13;
faster than mass confusion. If&#13;
there is smoke in the hallway, stay&#13;
near the floor. If t he stairs on one&#13;
side of the building are blocked,&#13;
proceed to the other side of the&#13;
building.&#13;
If you are in a wheelchair, try to&#13;
get near the stairs. Do not place&#13;
the wheelchair in the center of th e&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
Too many people today suffer&#13;
from the all - too - easy disease of&#13;
labeling others because of their&#13;
beliefs or outside appearances.&#13;
"Handicapped", "Woman" and&#13;
"single parent" are just a few&#13;
labels stuck onto Elizabeth Perry,&#13;
yet she transcends mere&#13;
description and most definately&#13;
any of the se petty, superficial tags&#13;
many people place upon her.&#13;
Elizabeth is a junior with a&#13;
communication and psychology&#13;
double major. She'd like to work&#13;
with organizational behavior with&#13;
an emphasis on marketing.&#13;
At home, she is raising a bright,&#13;
talented 15 - year - old daughter&#13;
named Lisa. Lisa is, according to&#13;
her mother, being brought up in&#13;
a very democratic environment&#13;
which is not unlike that of her own.&#13;
As I talked with Elizabeth I&#13;
came to realize that she defies any&#13;
traditional label through her&#13;
constant state of change, which&#13;
she equates with growth. "Staying&#13;
the same frightens me more than&#13;
anything else," she commented.&#13;
"I really find life exciting," she&#13;
continued, "especially the&#13;
challenges." Not only does she&#13;
want to experience the daily&#13;
key&#13;
stairs, stay to one side. Someone&#13;
running to the stairs may knock&#13;
you down the stairs. Anyone who&#13;
comes across a disabled person&#13;
should take the time to assist them&#13;
in getting out of the building.&#13;
Be alert for the signs of a fire.&#13;
Don't become complacent! Not&#13;
every fire alarm is a false alarm.&#13;
The time you don't leave the&#13;
building could be a real fire and&#13;
you could be trapped inside.&#13;
challenges but she wants to leave&#13;
her mark. "I have to know I'll&#13;
make a difference or you couldn't&#13;
even get me out of bed in the&#13;
morning."&#13;
School is important to&#13;
Elizabeth, not only for the&#13;
academic reasons but because it&#13;
offers everyone a chance to&#13;
escape their social tag. "Your&#13;
label can really be lost here," she&#13;
remarked. "You become a new&#13;
person facing new problems."&#13;
When away from school, she&#13;
enjoys old movies, jazz, rock,&#13;
classical music, gardening and&#13;
getting zany. She likes things to be&#13;
controlled to some extent yet&#13;
welcomes surprises. "We all have&#13;
a searching need for stability,"&#13;
she stated. "Yet, we need to&#13;
change in order to grow."&#13;
It is this delicate mixture of&#13;
stability and change which&#13;
characterizes and becomes&#13;
Elizabeth. "Sometimes you find&#13;
out something you always thought&#13;
was important was just superficial,"&#13;
she said. "You constantly&#13;
have to refocus and re-evaluate&#13;
your values."&#13;
"I may stop fluctuating," she&#13;
said in reference to growing old,&#13;
"but I will always leave myself&#13;
open to change."&#13;
Sure she's just another face in&#13;
the hall, but it's her dynamic&#13;
independence, her love for life,&#13;
and her active refusal to conform&#13;
to social labels that make&#13;
Elizabeth Perry stand out in the&#13;
crowd.&#13;
PARIS-LONDON&#13;
Dec. 26,1982-Jan. 10,1983&#13;
Cost: $1335&#13;
Includes: All transportation,&#13;
meals, lodging, tours,&#13;
university credit.&#13;
Contact:&#13;
Dr. Peter DiNeglio&#13;
Dept. of History&#13;
UW - Platte ville&#13;
Platteville, WI53818&#13;
Or Call&#13;
(608) 342-1784&#13;
Computer 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 of the sessions is to make available&#13;
regular times when users can get together informally&#13;
with the Center's Operations Manager, Academic&#13;
Consultant and Systems Programmer and discuss&#13;
users' questions, suggestions and concerns.&#13;
The 2nd and 3rd sessions will be held in the MOLN -&#13;
111 faculty lounge on:&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 27, 1 -2:30 p. m.&#13;
MONDAY, NOV. 22,9 - 10:30a. m.&#13;
Students, faculty and staff are encouraged to attend&#13;
any or all of the sessions.&#13;
Capitol's low fares&#13;
"What a break!"&#13;
Whe r ever we fly we have the lowest&#13;
unrestricted fares. That means no advance&#13;
purchase, no minimum stay. We're always&#13;
Slad to see you, even at the last minute.&#13;
Make up your mind today—and by tomorrow,&#13;
you're on your way!&#13;
For reservations and information, call&#13;
your Travel Agent or Capitol Air at 212-&#13;
883-0750 in New York City, 312-347-0230 in&#13;
Chicago, 213-986-8445 in Los Angeles, 415-&#13;
956-8111 in San Francisco or 305-372-8000&#13;
in Miami. Outside these areas, please call&#13;
800-227-4865 (8-O-O-C-A-P-l-T-O-L).&#13;
SERVING THE PUBLIC FOR 36 YEARS&#13;
San Francisco*&#13;
Los Angeles*'&#13;
Chicago&#13;
•ir Boston&#13;
-• Brussels&#13;
-•Frankfurt&#13;
* Zurich&#13;
Miami *^&#13;
Puerto Plata* -&gt;SanJuan&#13;
SCHEDULED AIRLINE SERVICE&#13;
y THE LOWEST FARE&#13;
* • * * * * • • • • * • • * • * * • * &#13;
4 Thursday, October 21,1982 RANGER&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
IVCF&#13;
CSub Events&#13;
Inter Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship will hold a social&#13;
meeting Wednesday, Oct. 27, at 1&#13;
p. m. in Union 207. This is a good&#13;
time to get to know each other&#13;
better through sharing and fun.&#13;
We are also looking forward to&#13;
our special speaker Lazaro Uribe,&#13;
who will be with us Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 3, to speak on "The Sting of&#13;
Death."&#13;
Dance Ensemble&#13;
The Parkside Dance Ensemble&#13;
workouts will be Monday, Wednesday&#13;
and Friday starting at 1&#13;
p.m. The room has been changed&#13;
to Comm Arts 140. The Ensemble&#13;
is open to all students, staff and&#13;
faculty. Participants are advised&#13;
to wear dance attire.&#13;
Physics Colloquium&#13;
John Jones, a Parkside physics&#13;
student, will speak at the next&#13;
Physics Colloquium Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 27. The talk is entitled "The&#13;
Physics of F lying," and will be at&#13;
1 p. m. in Greenquist 230.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
Tickets for the Manager's&#13;
Dinner are now being sold in&#13;
Molinaro Hall. The ticket booth&#13;
will be open Monday through&#13;
Friday, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. and&#13;
Tuesday and Thursday evenings,&#13;
4 - 7 p.m. Tickets are $10. They&#13;
may also be purchased from any&#13;
Accounting Club officer. The&#13;
dinner will be Monday, Nov. 15.&#13;
The Main speaker will be&#13;
Fredrick Kraegel, a CPA partner&#13;
from Pest, Marwick, Mitchell and&#13;
Co.&#13;
The Accounting Club is also&#13;
sponsoring a workshop called&#13;
"Interviewing: the Office Visit"&#13;
Friday, Oct. 29 at 1 p.m. in Union&#13;
104. Jim Szorcsick from the Accounting&#13;
firm Deliotte, Haskins&#13;
and Sells will tell you what to&#13;
expect at the second interview.&#13;
Refreshments will be served.&#13;
Chemistry Club&#13;
On Friday, Oct. 22 at 1 p.m., the&#13;
Chemistry Club will hold a&#13;
membership drive party in Union&#13;
104. All members and prospective&#13;
members are invited. Soda and&#13;
popcorn will be served.&#13;
The club will meet Monday,&#13;
Nov. 1, at 1 p.m. in Greenquist D101.&#13;
Friday afternoon, Nov. 12 is&#13;
the Miller Brewery tour. Sign up&#13;
at the meeting on Nov. 1.&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
A bus trip to Madison has been&#13;
scheduled for Friday, Oct. 29 to&#13;
see the Edward Munch exhibition&#13;
at the Elvehjem Museum. The bus&#13;
will leave from the CART lot at&#13;
8:30 a.m. and return at 5 p.m.&#13;
Admission to the museum is free.&#13;
Bus fare is $5.50 and payable in&#13;
the Fine Arts office.&#13;
The Edible Art Bake Sale will be&#13;
Monday, Oct. 15, from 9 a.m. to 4&#13;
p.m. Proceeds will go to cash&#13;
prizes for the Student Art Show. So&#13;
come over and "eat your art out."&#13;
Geology Colloquium&#13;
'U ' /(rL. . fcTflV vvis&lt;&#13;
SPANKY'S&#13;
Bar and Grill&#13;
FEATURES:&#13;
I MP ORT BEERS AND WI NE&#13;
B EST CHARCOAL S AN DW IC HES IN T OWN&#13;
DEEP FRIED SN AC KS&#13;
17 OZ. B OT TLE OF MICH EL OB, $1.00&#13;
T UE SD AY - I MP ORT NIGHT, F EA TU RI NG A&#13;
DIFFERENT BEER EACH WE EK, O NLY $1.00&#13;
2325 - 52nd Street, Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
Women in Business will hold a&#13;
Bake Sale Wednesday, Oct. 27,&#13;
from 8 a. m. to 2 p. m. There will&#13;
be lots of good things to eat and&#13;
even some healthy snacks. The&#13;
sale will be in the Bookstore&#13;
alcove.&#13;
Scholarship help&#13;
^ Dr. M. G. Mudrey of the&#13;
cS&amp;P Wisconsin Geological and Natural&#13;
History Survey will lecture&#13;
Friday, Oct. 22, in Greenquist 113&#13;
p. m.&#13;
"I'M AN OUTLAW BABY"&#13;
G.J.R. Productions Presents:&#13;
"WAR&#13;
IN CONCERT&#13;
Appearing at: Memorial Hall, 72 Seventh St.,&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Date: Friday, October 22, 1982&#13;
Admission: $9.50 Advance - $12 At Door&#13;
Show Time: 7:30 P. M. —10:00 P. M.&#13;
Tickets Available At:&#13;
Beautiful Day Records &amp; Tapes, 422 Main St., Racine&#13;
Sound &amp; Video Warehouse, Westgate Mall, Racine&#13;
Tic Toe Club, 2719 - 60th St., Kenosha&#13;
Betty's Barber Shop, 424 Main St., Racine&#13;
Bojangle's, 1845 West Racine, Racine&#13;
WE GOT THE POWER&#13;
SLIPPING INTO DARKNESS&#13;
WHY CAN'T WE BE FRIENDS&#13;
Now is the time to plan your&#13;
financing of next year's schooling.&#13;
In addition to government and&#13;
other public aid, many supplemental&#13;
private scholarships,&#13;
grants and loans are available to&#13;
college students.&#13;
How does one find out about&#13;
these aids?&#13;
There are basically two&#13;
alternatives — research the&#13;
alternatives oneself or pay&#13;
someone else to complete the&#13;
search.&#13;
Both the UW - Parkside library&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 28, in Moln 213 at 8&#13;
p. m. Refreshments will be served&#13;
during an informal question and&#13;
answer period.&#13;
Physics Club&#13;
The Physics Club will meet&#13;
Monday, Oct. 25, at 1 p. m. in&#13;
Greenquist 230. The club is a&#13;
group of students interested in&#13;
physics, math and astronomy. We&#13;
tour government labs - bring in&#13;
speakers and do other things of&#13;
interest. This year we will be&#13;
going to the Fermi National Accelerator&#13;
Laboratory, the&#13;
Argonne National Lab, Zion&#13;
Nuclear Training Reactor and a&#13;
few other places.&#13;
Anyone can join the physics&#13;
club. If interested, come to the&#13;
meeting Monday and see Dr.&#13;
Luzader in Greenquist 235.&#13;
Data Processing Club&#13;
The Data Processing club is&#13;
sponsoring two speakers who&#13;
graduated from Parkside last&#13;
semester. Chuck McMahan and&#13;
John Schmidt were both hired by&#13;
Northwestern Mutual Life and&#13;
have had over 35 interviews&#13;
between them, both on and off&#13;
campus. Chuck and John will&#13;
discuss these interviews and give&#13;
ideas of the role and future of men&#13;
and women in the field.&#13;
The presentation will be&#13;
»&gt;:i »&gt;;«»:«»:»»&gt;&#13;
»!•!«»!*!« I5!I I5!i »!•!« »!t« •!•!« »!•!« &gt;T&gt; i"i "i »!•!«»!•%&#13;
II. W.-Parkside&#13;
Health&#13;
Seminar&#13;
scheduled&#13;
Dr. Russell J. Reiter of the&#13;
University of Texas at San Antonio's&#13;
Health Science Center will&#13;
talk on the pineal gland. There is&#13;
evidence that, in humans, the&#13;
pineal gland contributes to the&#13;
onset of puberty, and is responsible&#13;
for certain forms of mental&#13;
illness. The seminar will be&#13;
Friday, Oct. 22 i n Greenquist 103&#13;
at 1 p.m. The seminar is open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
N ill I I K M V N S&#13;
row&#13;
Style&#13;
*&#13;
/ You've&#13;
Got&#13;
Style&#13;
ON f AP AT&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
'2;' '£« 'g' 'ii' »;•;« »;•:« »;•;« »;•;&#13;
!3!i i!J!I i7!i »5!i »!•!» ISM.M »!•!» »!•!« »!•!« »!•;«&#13;
"PAB COF FEEHOUSE PRESENTS"&#13;
OPEN STAGE&#13;
and financial aids office have&#13;
copies of publications which list&#13;
private sources of financing&#13;
educational costs. One should also&#13;
check with family members and&#13;
parents, local civic organizations&#13;
and businesses.&#13;
The second alternative involves&#13;
using a firm which specializes in&#13;
compiling financial aids listings.&#13;
These firms do not have exclusive&#13;
listings, but they can offer a busy&#13;
student a legitimate shortcut to&#13;
searching by oneself. According to&#13;
a UW - Parkside financial aids&#13;
spokesperson, a search firm will&#13;
usually require a fee of about $45.&#13;
The firm will provide the&#13;
student applicant with a list of&#13;
financial aids alternatives for&#13;
which the applicant is eligible&#13;
according to major, rank in class&#13;
and other information which is&#13;
provided to the search firm. The&#13;
student must still apply to each&#13;
individual source.&#13;
One such firm is The Scholarship&#13;
Bank. According to the&#13;
director of that private search&#13;
service, more than 1,350 new&#13;
scholarships will be available to&#13;
college students — primarily&#13;
undergraduates — n ext year. For&#13;
more information about The&#13;
Scholarship Bank services, send a&#13;
self - addressed, stamped,&#13;
business - size envelope to 10100&#13;
Santa Monica Blvd., #750, Los&#13;
Angeles, CA 90067.&#13;
Learning&#13;
how to love&#13;
''E n h a n c i ng Lovi ng&#13;
Relationships" will be the theme&#13;
of a four - session, non - credit&#13;
course to be offered Tuesdays&#13;
from Oct. 26 to Nov. 16 from 6:30&#13;
to 9:30 p.m. at Parkside in&#13;
Molinaro Hall Room D-128. The&#13;
class is being offered by the&#13;
Parkside Office of Educational&#13;
Outreach.&#13;
Joe Longo, who will teach the&#13;
course, said it "is designed to&#13;
build on an already existing base&#13;
people have in their ability to&#13;
share positive feelings. Love is a&#13;
learned art and response. Like&#13;
anything else, to get better at it&#13;
you have to learn more about it. A&#13;
person cannot live whatever they&#13;
do not dedicate themselves to. In&#13;
order to dedicate yourself to love&#13;
you must forever be growing in&#13;
love."&#13;
Longo is a special education&#13;
teacher for the Racine Unified&#13;
School District. He has attended&#13;
three presentations by Leo&#13;
Buscaglia, a California teacher&#13;
and author of the best seller book,&#13;
"Living, Loving and Learning,"&#13;
and also attended a "Love in the&#13;
'80s" workshop.&#13;
Pre - registration is required for&#13;
the class and can be made by&#13;
calling the Education Office at&#13;
553-2351. The fee is $20.&#13;
NOV. 10, 1982&#13;
From 2:00 - 5 :00 pm. in the Union Square&#13;
VOCAL &amp;&#13;
INSTRUMENTAL TALENT&#13;
SIGN UPS&#13;
NOW TAKING EFFECT&#13;
Anyone wanting to take part please contact the P.A.B. office&#13;
at 553-2650&#13;
before Oct. 28th!&#13;
NOTE: Groups wanting to perform must be small. &#13;
Thursday, October 21,1982&#13;
So it goes&#13;
A bull's&#13;
by John Kovalic&#13;
All right, campers. Sit down.&#13;
Stay calm. Don't panic. Apparently,&#13;
with my last few articles,&#13;
(three to be exact) a lot of&#13;
you out there took what I said to be&#13;
kosher. The real McCoy. Totally&#13;
tubular.&#13;
You believed it.&#13;
SUCKERS.&#13;
That's right. It wasn't true.&#13;
Not a word of it.&#13;
Jeeez, don't you feel STUPID?&#13;
There was no conversation with&#13;
any Wargamers, nor Physicists.&#13;
Nor is there a Professor Stein out&#13;
there trying to discover life at the&#13;
YMCA. Sure had you fooled, huh?&#13;
Now, you say, why the heck (or&#13;
words to that effect) do I go and&#13;
reveal all this when I had you&#13;
right in the palm of my hands?&#13;
Because this week's article is&#13;
actually, one - hundred percent,&#13;
total, truth! That's it! Not one&#13;
word of falsehood. Not one&#13;
paragraph misleading, not one&#13;
syllable a dupe.&#13;
This is it, guys n' gals.&#13;
What, you ask, can be of such&#13;
national, nay, world - shattering&#13;
importance, that I halt my personal&#13;
vendetta against all that&#13;
may be called a veritie!&#13;
You may well ask.&#13;
Now, like I said, sit down, lest&#13;
the excitement becomes too much&#13;
for you.&#13;
Sitting comfortably?&#13;
Good.&#13;
Then I'll begin.&#13;
This week, as you may well&#13;
have already guessed, I shall&#13;
discuss none other than our very&#13;
own, Parkside DART TEAM.&#13;
(Stop yawning!)&#13;
* * *&#13;
The Parkside Dart Team is a&#13;
competitive sport and social (not&#13;
necessarily in that order)&#13;
-eye bull session with Parkside's 'Dartman&#13;
organization that is suffering from&#13;
an image problem.&#13;
Or, to be more specific, a lack of&#13;
an image problem.&#13;
You see, they have one&#13;
seemingly insurmountable,&#13;
enigma.&#13;
No one takes them seriously.&#13;
It was in an effort to turn this&#13;
situation around that I obtained&#13;
the following interview with the&#13;
'in de facto' head of said&#13;
organization, the one, the only,&#13;
Dartman, aka Nick Thome.&#13;
Yes, that's right. Yes, I d id say&#13;
Dartman. Yes, I did say this was&#13;
all on the level. No, don't stop&#13;
reading. I need the money.&#13;
"Why is it that you feel that you&#13;
are the focus for ridicule? Or,&#13;
should I say, the Dart Team is the&#13;
focus of?"&#13;
"Well, first of a ll, I want to just&#13;
say that the majority of those that&#13;
jest at the expense of the UWPDT&#13;
(UW - Parkside Dart Team) are in&#13;
fact, non - members."&#13;
"Could you give me an example?"&#13;
&#13;
"One such non - member is&#13;
Steve Kalmar, the current SOC&#13;
president."&#13;
"Why in particular the&#13;
illustrious Mr. Kalmar?"&#13;
"Recently, at the last SOC&#13;
banquet, Mr. Kalmar introduced&#13;
us as, and I quote, 'The newest&#13;
and most subversive group on&#13;
campus.' " (I could trace a tad of&#13;
bitterness in my host's tone.) In&#13;
my opinion, such unsubstantiated&#13;
untruths cannot do any good in the&#13;
promotion of a student&#13;
organization's image."&#13;
"Well, I could see where that&#13;
would be a problem . . . What&#13;
exactly does the UWPDT consist&#13;
of?"&#13;
"The Parkside Dart Team&#13;
consists of three separate, distinct&#13;
groups. First of all, there is the&#13;
Dart Team proper ..."&#13;
"Of course."&#13;
"Then, there is the Dart Team&#13;
cheerleading squad."&#13;
"Cheerleading squad?&#13;
"That's right. You see, we get&#13;
all these girls and ... "&#13;
"No, no, that's O.K. I know what&#13;
cheerleading is. It's just that I was&#13;
rather . . . uh . . . surprised."&#13;
"Well, actually, at the moment,&#13;
we're a bit short on that section.&#13;
Last years' squad was much more&#13;
numerous. In fact, if any of your&#13;
readers wants to become a&#13;
cheerleader, female or male, they&#13;
should contact Tony Rogers at the&#13;
Ranger office."&#13;
"Why?"&#13;
"He's the chairman of the Dart&#13;
Team Cheerleader Selection&#13;
Committee, of course."&#13;
"Of course."&#13;
"The Dart Team Support&#13;
Committees, by the way, make up&#13;
the third section of t he Dart Team&#13;
organization."&#13;
"Committees"&#13;
"Yes, but let me get on with the&#13;
team first. The team itself is a&#13;
squad of five people that play&#13;
English 301 darts against other&#13;
UW schools. At this date, you may&#13;
be interested to know, UWPDT is&#13;
undefeated in open competition."&#13;
"But you didn't actually play&#13;
anyone last year."&#13;
"True, but we feel that is only a&#13;
minor factor in our success."&#13;
"Oh."&#13;
"The cheerleading squads are&#13;
groups of five people each, one&#13;
male, one female. They are&#13;
present at all matches, and&#13;
provide moral support. The final&#13;
section of the whole team are the&#13;
seven standing committees."&#13;
WED. &amp; FRI. Bring UW-P I.D.&#13;
Playing A Variety of Music&#13;
for Your Listening and Dancing Pleasure.&#13;
3931 - 45th St. 657-3101&#13;
"Could you tell me what they&#13;
are?"&#13;
"Sure. First of all, there's the&#13;
Public Relations Committee, who&#13;
are responsible for advertising.&#13;
Or lack of same. They also handle&#13;
communication from the team to&#13;
our school."&#13;
"Vital, I'm sure."&#13;
"You'd be surprised. Then&#13;
there's the Tournament Committee,&#13;
who handles all the Dart&#13;
Team sponsored competitive&#13;
events, such as last years' First&#13;
Annual April Fool's Day Tricycle&#13;
Race. The Social Committee is&#13;
responsible for the organization&#13;
and execution of all social&#13;
events."&#13;
"Or parties."&#13;
"Exactly. You're catching on."&#13;
"The Fund - Raising Committee&#13;
is self - explanatory. The Judging&#13;
Committee, by far our most&#13;
popular, chooses the cheerleading&#13;
squads. The Activities Committee&#13;
organizes all other committees,&#13;
and finally there is the Antagonism&#13;
Committee. They are in&#13;
charge of writing provocative and&#13;
intimidating material and sending&#13;
it to any opposing teams that we&#13;
may compete against."&#13;
"Aha! Sort of dispiriting to any&#13;
team unlucky enough to find itself&#13;
playing you."&#13;
"So true. In fact, the Antagonism&#13;
Committee is sponsoring&#13;
our Nasty Letter Writing&#13;
Competition."&#13;
"I thought that would have been&#13;
up to the Tournament Committee."&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, shut up."&#13;
* * *&#13;
The Dart Team's policies are&#13;
very simple:&#13;
(1) To get as many people involved&#13;
with as little bureaucracy&#13;
as possible. (Yes, I know it doesn't&#13;
make sense either.)&#13;
(2) To have at least one party a&#13;
month to get members familiar&#13;
with each other (and to consume&#13;
fair amounts of alcohol.)&#13;
So, if you like being active in an&#13;
inactive sort of way, and want&#13;
Parkside to be less boring, then&#13;
sign up! (The UWPDT has no&#13;
membership fees and doesn't plan&#13;
on having any in the forseeable&#13;
future.)&#13;
Note: The ability to play darts is&#13;
NOT a prerequisite of membership.&#13;
Which is why I was accepted&#13;
as a member.&#13;
Boy, I can't wait 'till next week&#13;
when I get to make up this baloney&#13;
again.&#13;
Ranger accepting&#13;
stories, poems&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
for a particular Thursday issue of&#13;
Ranger, it must be submitted the&#13;
preceeding Friday.&#13;
7) You will retain all rights to&#13;
whatever you submit, whether we&#13;
print it in the Ranger or not.&#13;
8) We may have to edit your&#13;
story for punctuation, but we will&#13;
call you first. We won't change the&#13;
content of what you write.&#13;
9) It would be a good idea to&#13;
make a photocopy of yo ur story —&#13;
we may be able to return your&#13;
submission, but it will have marks&#13;
on the copy.&#13;
10) This is also open to all&#13;
Parkside faculty and staff.&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
Needs Staffers! &#13;
6 Thursday, October 21, 1982 RANGER&#13;
Burned up&#13;
Are cetaceans singing songs to Satan?&#13;
by by CCaro arol l Bur Burns ns can provide countless hours of whale noises sound remarkat&#13;
Modern - day research tries to&#13;
avoid the situation of creating&#13;
devils workshops via idle minds.&#13;
They have come up with many&#13;
very necessary items, including&#13;
padded toilet seats, inside - the -&#13;
egg scramblers, and gold - plated&#13;
toothpicks. One of the branches of&#13;
that research is not development&#13;
of new products, but the study of&#13;
existing elements of life.&#13;
Chemists, physicists, and&#13;
biologists really get off on that&#13;
sort of thing. Examination and&#13;
analysis of sewage runoff, soap -&#13;
bubble geometry, and living&#13;
organisms found in stump water&#13;
WILDLIFE&#13;
l C-ftue" s usrn&#13;
fl*J CXfENSlvje bo*&#13;
op chocolate-";&#13;
ftWD fl DOIE-KJ&#13;
Red ROSES.&#13;
can provide countless hours of&#13;
adventure for them. These people&#13;
get especially excited when their&#13;
research has a practical aspect.&#13;
The recently - ordained&#13;
Professor Grisley is an example of&#13;
such a person. He's been studying&#13;
the sounds of whales for several&#13;
years. After traveling the oceans&#13;
and making hundreds of tapes,&#13;
he's found that those mammals&#13;
have a patterned set of noises&#13;
which can be likened to a regular&#13;
language.&#13;
When played at normal speeds,&#13;
the sounds whales produce are&#13;
eerie. If the speed at which the&#13;
tapes are played is increased, the&#13;
whale noises sound remarkably&#13;
like bird songs.&#13;
Professor Grisley was enchanted&#13;
with that whole idea until&#13;
one day he happened to play a&#13;
tape backwards. It was to be the&#13;
most startling discovery of his&#13;
life. Satanic messages were encoded&#13;
in the tapes!&#13;
Now we have knowledge of the&#13;
true wickedness afoot. This could&#13;
prove to be a breakthrough for all&#13;
those wishing to purge evil from&#13;
the earth. It will give new life to&#13;
the "Nuke the Whales" campaign.&#13;
Because of their recognizable&#13;
intelligence, whales must&#13;
naturally be the commandos of&#13;
by John Kovalic&#13;
the rest of the animal kingdom.&#13;
God only knows how long it will be&#13;
before they all rise up and take&#13;
over the human race.&#13;
We have to prepare for this. The&#13;
obvious evil in the world must be&#13;
stopped. The only answer is to&#13;
completely annihilate the animal&#13;
kingdom.&#13;
We'll show 'em. There can't&#13;
possibly be any demons left to&#13;
undermine the human race once&#13;
the animals are gone. We'll all be&#13;
saved, thanks to Professor&#13;
Grisley. Who knows, someday he&#13;
might even make saint.&#13;
Reeves to speak on McCarthy&#13;
I FEE-L GIDDr losr&#13;
D+iRJKiMCr ftfiour Hec&#13;
UILBuR. I Cflu'r trPiT&#13;
SLEEP ftWD UHEW S.BES&#13;
NEB* I GO SHA^er Fwo&#13;
SRefuc our ik) r cold&#13;
Some thirty years ago the junior&#13;
Senator from the state of&#13;
Wisconsin, Joe McCarthy, burst&#13;
onto the American scene with an&#13;
anti - communist campaign that&#13;
polarized the nation and eventually&#13;
came to symbolize an entire&#13;
era.&#13;
Was Joe McCarthy an ardent&#13;
defender of all we hold dear or&#13;
was he, as most historians have&#13;
pictured, "the most wicked of&#13;
villains?"&#13;
Thomas Reeves, Professor of&#13;
History at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside, will look at&#13;
both sides of the McCarthy&#13;
question at the Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theater in Racine on Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 3, at 7 p.m.&#13;
Reeves is the author of The Life&#13;
and Times of Joe McCarthy, a&#13;
biography that has been&#13;
nationally recognized and acclaimed.&#13;
Publishers Weekly said&#13;
of the book: "Make no mistake: at&#13;
awards time, this excitingly&#13;
readable biography will be&#13;
remembered . . . This may be as&#13;
nearly definitive a biography as&#13;
THE MILLER BREWING COMPANY&#13;
PRESENTS...&#13;
A.multi-image presentation of the marketing and advertising strategies that have catamite&#13;
Ml Her Brewing Company from seventh place in the beer industry to second place todav Th&#13;
entertaining program is free and open to the public.&#13;
u P'ace today. This&#13;
Date: October 26th&#13;
Time: 2:00 p. m..&#13;
Location: Union Cinema&#13;
Presented by:&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon and The&#13;
Miller Brewing Company This presentation has&#13;
been rescheduled to 2: oo p. m.&#13;
we will ever have." Reeves has&#13;
appeared on Good Morning&#13;
America and on William&#13;
Buckley's Firing Line and&#13;
recently completed a national tour&#13;
for the book.&#13;
Reservations for this program&#13;
are requested and can be made by&#13;
calling 631-2154. There is no admission&#13;
charge. The Golden&#13;
Rondelle Theater is located in&#13;
Racine at the corner of 14th and&#13;
Franklin Streets.&#13;
"War" to&#13;
perform&#13;
The band "War" will appear in&#13;
concert at Racine's Memorial&#13;
Hall tomorrow night at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Admission is $9.50 for advance&#13;
tickets, and $12 at the door. In&#13;
Kenosha, tickets can be bought at&#13;
the Tic Toe Club, 2719 - 60th St.,&#13;
and in Racine, tickets can be&#13;
purchased at Beautiful Day&#13;
Records and Tapes, 422 M&amp;in St.,&#13;
and Sound and Video Warehouse&#13;
at the Westgate Mall.&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10:00 a m - 4.-00 pm&#13;
• Jube Jells&#13;
• Licorice Bully&#13;
• Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Milk Carmels&#13;
• Orange Slices&#13;
• Peanut Butter Chip&#13;
• Peanut Clusters&#13;
• Peppermint Kisses&#13;
• Rootbeer Barrels&#13;
• Sour Balls&#13;
• Spearment Leaves&#13;
• Starlite Mints&#13;
• Carmel Targets&#13;
• Cinnamon Discs&#13;
• Candy Pops&#13;
• Corn Nuts&#13;
• Assorted Perky&#13;
• Assorted Royal&#13;
• Assorted Toffee&#13;
• Bridge Mix&#13;
• Burndt Peanuts&#13;
• Butterscotch Discs&#13;
• Candy Coffee Discs&#13;
• Carmel Bully&#13;
• Chocolate Drops&#13;
• Chocolate Jots&#13;
• Chocolate Peanuts&#13;
• Chocolate Raisins&#13;
• Chocolate Stars&#13;
• Jelly Beans&#13;
• California Mix&#13;
• Caribbean Delicacy&#13;
• Carob Malted Milk Ball:&#13;
• Carob Raisins&#13;
• Carob Peanuts&#13;
• Natural Pistachio&#13;
• Red Pistachio&#13;
• Spanish Peanuts&#13;
• Sunflower Seeds&#13;
• Student Food Mix&#13;
• Yogurt Malted Milk Ball&#13;
• Yogurt Peanuts&#13;
• Yogurt Raisins&#13;
• Yogurt Sesame Brittle&#13;
Smoked Almonds whole&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF OCT. 3&#13;
Vi OFF&#13;
YOOURT&#13;
SESAME BRITTLI &#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 21,1982&#13;
Men's Soccer&#13;
Rangers improve record&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
Parkside's Soccer team is&#13;
holding onto this season's winning&#13;
tradition. On Wednesday, Oct. 13,&#13;
Parkside beat Lake Forest 2-o!&#13;
Andy Buchanan and Don Theisen&#13;
scored the goals and both were&#13;
assisted by Kim Jensen. This is&#13;
the first time the Rangers have&#13;
come home from Lake Forest&#13;
victorious.&#13;
"That was a good win for us,"&#13;
commented Coach Hal Henderson.&#13;
"We hadn't won there yet,&#13;
and they've played a couple of&#13;
other rank ball teams. In the long&#13;
run, this victory will improve our&#13;
rank."&#13;
Henderson said that part of the&#13;
problem the team has had in the&#13;
past at Lake Forest has been the&#13;
small field. "That's been a&#13;
psychological problem for us for&#13;
years."&#13;
On Saturday, Oct. 16, the&#13;
Rangers defeated Northland&#13;
scoring a total of 9 goals, and&#13;
locking Northland out of scoring&#13;
for the entire game. The Rangers&#13;
outshot Northland 51-1, with&#13;
Northland making 18 saves from&#13;
goal, and Parkside making only l&#13;
save from goal.&#13;
Scorers in the game were Don&#13;
Matanowski, 1 goal, Jim Banks, 3&#13;
goals, Mike Nowak, l goal, Bob&#13;
Newstrom, 1 goal, and Don&#13;
Theisen, 3 goals. Jim Banks broke&#13;
the individual scoring record for&#13;
one season with his goals in this&#13;
game.&#13;
"This was one team we had to&#13;
play," said Coach Henderson.&#13;
"They are in the NAIA. So, we&#13;
must play them in either a game&#13;
during the season or in a tournament&#13;
at the end of th e season. I&#13;
don't like the idea of playing a&#13;
tournament at the end of the&#13;
season to decide the national&#13;
tournament qualifier. We play&#13;
them in the season, so does&#13;
Platteville."&#13;
Now that the Rangers have&#13;
beaten Northland, if they beat&#13;
Platteville they will be the district&#13;
winners, and qualify for the&#13;
Nationals. Currently, the Rangers&#13;
rank 10th in the NCAA Division II&#13;
standings, and 18th in the NAIA.&#13;
IAN HAMILTON manuevers around a Northland player.&#13;
Photo by Masood Shafiq&#13;
Mejia and Henderson champions&#13;
Golf season recaptured&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
After disappointing finishes in&#13;
their first 3 matches, Parkside's&#13;
men's golf team pulled itself&#13;
together and placed high in the&#13;
final 5 meets of the season.&#13;
On Sept. 24 - 25, the team went to&#13;
the UW - Gr een Bay Invitational,&#13;
and scored 822, good fo r 3rd place&#13;
out of 1 0 teams. UW - Eau Claire&#13;
won the meet with 769. John&#13;
Schneider led the way for UW - P&#13;
with a score of 161 — (85-76).&#13;
The next 2 days, Sept. 26 - 27, the&#13;
team was in Oshkosh for the&#13;
Mascoutin Collegiate Tournament,&#13;
sponsored by UW -&#13;
Oshkosh. The golfers continued&#13;
their strong play, ending up in a&#13;
tie for third place, 27 shots behind&#13;
UW - Oshkosh's pace - setting&#13;
score of 769. L eading the way for&#13;
the Rangers was Bob Sobol,&#13;
shooting a 155 — (75 - 80).&#13;
The next match of the season&#13;
was at Whitewater, Oct. 4. The&#13;
results have not been determined&#13;
at press time, but Parkside shot&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
A. A. MEETING: Every Wednesday, Moln&#13;
211, between 1 and 2 p. m.&#13;
FOR SALE: 1966 Olds Delta 88, good runner,&#13;
best offer. 552-9014 evenings and weekends.&#13;
TYPING: Neat and accurate. No project is&#13;
too large or little. Will edit if requested.&#13;
Donna F. Call 633-1794.&#13;
ATTENTION SKIERS: Marketing coordinators&#13;
needed to promote high quality ski&#13;
and beach trips on campus. Earn commission&#13;
plus free travel. Call Summit&#13;
Tours, 800-325-0439.&#13;
TYPING SERVICES OFFERED: For&#13;
anything short essays, reports, research&#13;
papers, etc. . . . Rate Charged: $1.00 per&#13;
page, Electric typewriter. Call anytime:&#13;
639-4195.&#13;
WOULD like to share ride to Eau Claire, Wl. 3&#13;
students to share expenses, need transportation&#13;
from Fri., Nov. 5 • S un., Nov. 7.&#13;
Call 639-4195.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: Those who&#13;
criticize true love the most have experienced&#13;
love the least.&#13;
DR. DREW: Carole is really burned up. You&#13;
should know better. We have all resigned as&#13;
fans of the club. Better luck later. Have you&#13;
gotten dressed? I hope you don't miss the&#13;
boat ride again. HAHA. Your Loyal but&#13;
somewhat distressed fans.&#13;
CAROLE: Dr. Drew is certainly sorry. He&#13;
can't help himself.&#13;
GOMER: Je taime aussi, U. C.&#13;
GOMER PYLE: No Spanish, please. Uncle&#13;
Chuck&#13;
a 397 to finish in the middle of 10&#13;
teams. On top for Parkside was&#13;
John Scheider, who shot a 76.&#13;
On Oct. 5, 15 teams descended&#13;
on the Brighton Dale Country Club&#13;
course for the Parkside Invitational.&#13;
Marquette University&#13;
won with a score of 391. The&#13;
Rangers, led by a strong performance&#13;
by Bob Sobol, finished&#13;
third scoring 400. Sobol shot a 76,&#13;
good for fourth place out of a field&#13;
of o ver 90 golfers.&#13;
The final, and perhaps biggest&#13;
tournament of the season, was the&#13;
District 14 Tournament, played&#13;
Oct. 10 - 12 at the Watertown&#13;
Country Club. The field of 11&#13;
teams played 3 rounds of golf to&#13;
determine who could advance to&#13;
the national finals, to be played&#13;
later this month. Only the top&#13;
team and top individual may&#13;
move on to the finals. UW - Eau&#13;
Claire advanced by shooting a total&#13;
of 1137. Parkside led by John&#13;
Schneider's 230 — (77-77-76),&#13;
ended their season by finishing&#13;
fourth, with a score of 1201.&#13;
Coach Stephens at the beginning&#13;
of the season predicted the team&#13;
to improve throughout the season.&#13;
With most of the team being&#13;
returning underclassmen,&#13;
Parkside should have something&#13;
to be optimistic about.&#13;
Champion men's single player&#13;
in the intramural tournament was&#13;
Frank Mejia of Racine. He&#13;
defeated Matt Giovanelli for&#13;
second and third place was&#13;
captured by Brian Langenbach.&#13;
In the women's singles tournament,&#13;
champion honors went to&#13;
Jody Henderson, Casey Zahalka&#13;
took second place and in third was&#13;
Margaret Houselander.&#13;
This week's game in flag&#13;
football proved to be a neck and&#13;
neck struggle. The Vikings were&#13;
successful in their drive for an&#13;
undefeated season downing the&#13;
Panzers 20-14. Team captain Jack&#13;
Decker ran for each of the three&#13;
touchdowns scored by the Viking&#13;
team while Anita Ratsch and Cliff&#13;
McKenzie crossed the end line for&#13;
the Panzers. Standings at the end&#13;
of four weeks of play are:&#13;
Vikings 2-0&#13;
All-Stars 1-2&#13;
Panzers 1-2&#13;
In this week's contest, the AllStars&#13;
will play the Vikings at 4&#13;
p.m., Thursday, Oct. 21.&#13;
ROUND TWO OF INTRAMURALS&#13;
BEGINS THE FIRST WEEK OF NOVEMBER!&#13;
Sign up deadlines occuring this week:&#13;
Badminton: Monday, Oct. 25&#13;
2 on 2 Basketball: Tuesday, Oct. 26&#13;
Volleyball: Thursday, Oct. 28&#13;
Other deadlines coming up fast:&#13;
Men's Basketball Tournament: Nov. 9, 1982&#13;
Turkey Trot: Nov. 18, 1982&#13;
See sheets at INFO. Kiosk, Gym of Info desk for more details.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
FESTA ROMA&#13;
"AN EVENING IN OLD ITALY"&#13;
SAT., NOV. 6 — 6:00 PM&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
FEATURING: • A W INE PUNCH RECEPTION&#13;
• FIVE COURSE SERVED DINNER&#13;
AUTHENTIC ITALIAN CUISINE&#13;
• COSTUMED FOLK DANCERS&#13;
• STROLLING MUSICIANS&#13;
DANCE BAND&#13;
*17.50 PER&#13;
PERSON&#13;
COCKTAILS &amp; IMPORTED WINES AVAILABLE&#13;
RESERVATIONS: UNION INFO. CENTER - 553-2345&#13;
as&#13;
UNION SQUARE 4 PM&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
• T H E LIV E MU SIC OF UW-P ARKS IDE'S&#13;
A WA RD WINNING JAZZ B AND&#13;
• 75« , SI.00 &amp; SI.25 O FF REG ULAR PIZZA P RI CES&#13;
• S PE CI AL S1. 99 SPA G H ETTI DINNER WITH SALAD &amp; GARLIC 8 RE AD&#13;
• FREE ADMI SSION &#13;
8 Thursday, October 21,1982 RANGER&#13;
Tyree participates in 'new' sport Men's Cross Country&#13;
Runners back on their feet Renee Tyree is a person with an&#13;
exciting interest. Renee is a&#13;
Roller Cross Country skier. This is&#13;
basically the same as winter&#13;
Cross Country except the skier&#13;
has rollers on the bottom of the&#13;
skis. The skis she uses are like&#13;
regular winter Cross Country skis.&#13;
They are two and a half feet long,&#13;
with three wheels — two in back&#13;
and one in front. The bindings and&#13;
poles are the same as winter Cross&#13;
Country equipment.&#13;
Renee is a freshman here at&#13;
Parkside, studying Pre - Med. She&#13;
is an alumnus of Horlick High&#13;
School in Racine. Renee was involved&#13;
in Cross Country running&#13;
and Track. Regular winter Cross&#13;
Country skiing is one of her&#13;
favorite sports.&#13;
Renee became involved in roller&#13;
skiing through a friend. Professor&#13;
Wallen also roller skis. She h as&#13;
been involved in the sport for&#13;
about three months. Although&#13;
there is no team here at Parkside,&#13;
there are ski clinics here at&#13;
Parkside however, so those involved&#13;
can improve their skiing&#13;
skill. Renee trains for this sport&#13;
and competes in Roller Cross&#13;
Country ski races. The practices&#13;
she sets up for herself vary. It all&#13;
depends on how much time is&#13;
available and her ambition that&#13;
day. She practices on the track at&#13;
Horlick or the inner loop at&#13;
Parkside. She includes running in&#13;
her program to keep in shape.&#13;
The races can be run anytime&#13;
there isn't snow. The distance of&#13;
the races is 10 kilometers. Some&#13;
places she has been are Purdue,&#13;
Madison and Chicago to compete.&#13;
She also competes in winter&#13;
Cross Country skiing. There are&#13;
not too many girls involved in this&#13;
sport on the competitive level. She&#13;
does very well, averaging a first&#13;
or second place.&#13;
Renee will be competing in a&#13;
Roller Cross Country meet this&#13;
weekend in Madison. Good luck to&#13;
you Renee.&#13;
Men's Cross Country packed up&#13;
this last weekend at their meet in&#13;
Madison. The Tom Jones Invitational&#13;
yielded a Ninth place&#13;
for the Rangers. The Rangers&#13;
competed against eleven teams,&#13;
four of who are top ranked teams.&#13;
UW - Madison hosted the meet and&#13;
also won it. The weather was&#13;
sunny with the temperatures in&#13;
the 40s.&#13;
Rich Miller and Jim Miller were&#13;
both able to run in this meet. Dan&#13;
Stublaski is still sustaining injuries&#13;
and was not able to run. The&#13;
top three performing Rangers&#13;
were: Rich Miller placing 56,&#13;
26:04; Tom Barrett 75, 26:23; and&#13;
Jim Miller 76, 26:24.&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa commented&#13;
that the team is looking forward to&#13;
competing in the NCAA&#13;
Qualifying meet that will be here&#13;
at Parkside on October 30. They&#13;
all expect to do well. The next&#13;
meet is October 23, this Saturday.&#13;
It is being held at Carthage at&#13;
11:00 a. m.&#13;
Cross country ski clinic at Parkside&#13;
The United States Ski Team and&#13;
the United States Ski Coaches&#13;
Association together with Shaklee&#13;
Corporation will be hosting a cross&#13;
country training clinic at&#13;
Parkside on Saturday, Oct. 23 in&#13;
Greenquist Hall 101.&#13;
The clinic is open to interested&#13;
skiers, parents and coaches with&#13;
no memberships required. $4 wil l&#13;
be charged per person.&#13;
The clinic will be one full day&#13;
and utilizes films, slides and&#13;
graphics to teach the basics of&#13;
technique and training, from the&#13;
intermediate skier up through the&#13;
very advanced. Beginners can&#13;
also benefit tremendously from&#13;
the clinic by watching how the&#13;
experts ski, and learning more&#13;
about the sport in which they are&#13;
becoming involved.&#13;
Short topics will also cover&#13;
coach - athlete relationships and&#13;
how to work better together, ski&#13;
care, basic physiology and a film&#13;
on the philosophy of youth sports,&#13;
"Is Winning Everything?"&#13;
The clinic is designed to help&#13;
bring the most recent and advanced&#13;
discoveries about the&#13;
sport of cross country skiing to&#13;
various locations throughout the&#13;
United States.&#13;
Two new technique films with&#13;
instructional booklets will be used&#13;
to teach technique. Training information&#13;
will be presented as&#13;
simply as possible.&#13;
If you are interested in attending&#13;
one of the clinics with&#13;
your club or by yourself, contact&#13;
the following:&#13;
Dave Harrison, 998 Lake County&#13;
Court, Oconomowoc, WI 53066,&#13;
(414) 567-1110; o r&#13;
Jim McCarthy, 1366 N . Dearborn,&#13;
Chicago, IL 60610, (312) 782-&#13;
4567; or&#13;
Kai Hansen, President of the&#13;
Parkside Nordic Ski Club, 19022 -&#13;
58th Road, Union Grove, WI 53182,&#13;
(414) 878-2777.&#13;
For coaches wishing certification&#13;
in the United States Ski&#13;
Coaches Association, this clinic&#13;
will comprise the Level I certification&#13;
program. To become&#13;
certified, coaches will have to be&#13;
members of the Coaches&#13;
Association, do additional reading&#13;
after the clinic, and take a written&#13;
exam. Coaches working with&#13;
junior athletes might be very&#13;
interested in the additional&#13;
reading material, which is geared&#13;
towards helping them become&#13;
better coaches even if they do not&#13;
wish certification.&#13;
The clinics will be run by&#13;
Stephen Gaskill, former U.S.&#13;
Nordic Combined Coach and&#13;
New Cheerleaders&#13;
announced&#13;
On the evening of Sunday, Oct.&#13;
10, the new 1982-83 Parkside&#13;
cheerleading squad was selected.&#13;
The new squad members are:&#13;
Heidi Caldwell, Sharon Kruk,&#13;
Carmen Smith, Judy Spek, Portia&#13;
Morgan, Lynn Brown, David&#13;
Kotke, Mike Stehr. The newly&#13;
elected co - captain is Kris Anderson&#13;
and captain is Hope&#13;
Stachowski.&#13;
currently nordic technical&#13;
director for the U.S. Nordic Ski&#13;
Team and the U.S. Ski Coaches&#13;
Association.&#13;
ADDITIONAL EVENT:&#13;
Rollerski relay races beginning at&#13;
4:30.&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
USSCA CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
CLINIC SCHEDULE&#13;
8:30-9:00 a.m. — Registration&#13;
(Greenquist 101)&#13;
9:00 a.m. — Introduction (10&#13;
min.)&#13;
The Sport In General (20 min.),&#13;
film and short talk&#13;
Short break (10 min.)&#13;
Technique — diagonal stride -&#13;
film and talk (45 min.); double&#13;
pole and skating, film and talk (45&#13;
min.); downhills (5 min.);&#13;
herringbone (5 min.)&#13;
12:00-1:30 p.m. Lunch Break&#13;
($3.00 per person)&#13;
Equipment and Ski Preparation&#13;
(45 min.) demonstration and talk&#13;
Philosophy of the Sport (45&#13;
min.) a film on general sport&#13;
philosophy from American&#13;
Coaching Effectiveness Program&#13;
Short Break (10 min.)&#13;
Training for Cross Country (1&#13;
hr./15 min.) slide show, talk,&#13;
demonstrations, outside practice&#13;
by everyone&#13;
Discussion of USSCA and&#13;
coaches certification (15 min.)&#13;
Selling of books and material&#13;
from USSCA (15 min.)&#13;
5:00 p.m. — Roller Ski Relay&#13;
Races&#13;
• RISING STAR NIGHT *&#13;
Mime artists, actors, comedians,&#13;
dancers, magicians, and musicians.&#13;
OH! FLANNERY'STAVERN&#13;
is offering you the chance to perform your&#13;
Every Thursday evening, our variety show&#13;
local talent to our customers.&#13;
special act.&#13;
will feature&#13;
Auditons will be held every Saturday&#13;
morning from 8a. m. to 11 a. m.&#13;
CALL PEGGY FOR DETAILS:&#13;
886-1563&#13;
S ThiST-sniri w&#13;
I Order now!&#13;
Ps'Sra&#13;
Srs&#13;
d7C^nT-X.c)«er&#13;
iPte as® P"&#13;
n,&#13;
l&#13;
Address&#13;
State&#13;
Name&#13;
College&#13;
Adult sizes&#13;
T-shirt&#13;
bs only. Specify quantity.&#13;
$4.95 ea.,S M L XL— Amount Enclosed $_&#13;
I. ^^^esJu^30j983. No p^chase^ece^ary^New York residentsadd^25% salestax^lease allow 4 to 6 weeks for shipment. • </text>
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              <text>Aspin and Jansson debate</text>
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              <text>K¥ University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
and Jansson debate&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Parkside Political Science&#13;
Club and the League of Women&#13;
Voters sponsored a debate last&#13;
Wednesday between the two&#13;
contenders in the first district&#13;
congressional race, Les Aspin and&#13;
Peter Jansson. Associate Dean of&#13;
Faculty Michael Bassis acted as&#13;
moderator.&#13;
Each candidate was allowed&#13;
five minutes to state their opening&#13;
position. Jansson, winning the&#13;
coin toss, began the debate.&#13;
Jansson opened by stating his&#13;
vision of America today. He&#13;
recounted the tale of his father&#13;
coming here as a poor immigrant&#13;
from Sweden because "he saw&#13;
opportunity that was not available&#13;
anywhere else in the world; opportunity&#13;
to grow and develop and&#13;
earn and make for one's self what&#13;
one can make."&#13;
He said that great progress had&#13;
been made up until the late sixties,&#13;
in America's approach to&#13;
fulfilling human needs. "After this&#13;
change ... in the late sixties,&#13;
things have gotten worse. The new&#13;
approach we had at that time was&#13;
for the government to get involved&#13;
to a far greater extent than it had&#13;
in solving the problems of human&#13;
need. It was a well - meaning&#13;
PAB requests&#13;
budgeting&#13;
change&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
PAB president Chris Hammelev&#13;
appeared before the PSGA Senate&#13;
last Friday and requested that the&#13;
budget of the Performing Arts and&#13;
Lectures committee (PAL) be&#13;
combined with PAB's budget for&#13;
the 1983-84 year. "There is no&#13;
reason," Hammelev said, "that&#13;
PAL can't be a part of PAB's&#13;
budget."&#13;
Senator Mike Scoon said that&#13;
the original purpose of PAB was&#13;
entertainment programming for&#13;
the student body, and PAL for the&#13;
community at large. He requested&#13;
that a motion to combine the&#13;
budgets be tabled until the judicial&#13;
branch of the student government&#13;
can decide whether PSGA is able&#13;
to set budgeting procedures.&#13;
What the student justices must&#13;
decide is whether or not PAB can&#13;
control PAL, even though PAL is a&#13;
standing committee of PAB, as&#13;
outlined in their constitution.&#13;
Hammelev said, "There's no&#13;
reason for them to be separate.&#13;
Outdoor Rec, Tech Crew, and the&#13;
Film committee are all separate&#13;
committees." They are included&#13;
in PAB's budgeting process.&#13;
"Allegedly," Hammelev added,&#13;
"PAL was originally a faculty&#13;
committee using segregated fees.&#13;
It was doing a bad job and so PAL&#13;
became part of PAB."&#13;
It was thought that PSGA must&#13;
approve the change, as the Senate&#13;
does have a say in the SUFAC&#13;
budgeting process. It could not,&#13;
however, determine if a clause in&#13;
PAB's constitution, which named&#13;
PAL as a standing committee,&#13;
was valid.&#13;
The motion to table the ruling,&#13;
which was made by Scoon will&#13;
cause PAB to delay completion of&#13;
their budget until after the Nov. 2&#13;
deadline. Hammelev said Monday&#13;
that she would seek an extension&#13;
from SUFAC.&#13;
change, but it was a change that&#13;
failed." In the 1980's, he said, "we&#13;
face a very real choice between&#13;
despair and opportunity.While my&#13;
opponent is offering nothing but&#13;
despair, I'm offering opportunity."&#13;
"Let's hear it for despair,"&#13;
Aspin began his argument. He&#13;
stated that Reagan's three point&#13;
plan to help the economy failed&#13;
because, "You can't have a big&#13;
tax cut, a big defense increase,&#13;
and balance the budget all at the&#13;
same time.&#13;
"And that's the core of the&#13;
Reagan problem," Aspin added.&#13;
"Somehow we've got to make him&#13;
change his mind." According to&#13;
Aspin, the way to change&#13;
Reagan's mind "is to vote&#13;
Democratic in November."&#13;
The candidates then had three&#13;
minutes each to answer five&#13;
questions from the League of&#13;
Women Voters. The questions&#13;
dealt with the role of Congress in&#13;
the economy and the protection of&#13;
the environment; endorsement of&#13;
the State of Wisconsin's support of&#13;
a nuclear freeze; the candidates'&#13;
views on how to curb unemployment;&#13;
and government&#13;
funding of education.&#13;
Aspin went on record as saying&#13;
that he was not in favor of tuition&#13;
tax credits. He said that it "was&#13;
not an appropriate use of&#13;
government policy" to give tax&#13;
credits for people to send their&#13;
children to private schools.&#13;
On student loans: "That's one&#13;
we ought to increase. There's&#13;
something the federal government&#13;
should do." He said that&#13;
special funding for grants and&#13;
research is highly dependent on&#13;
what the program is, but "there is&#13;
a role for federal government" in&#13;
that area. "Funding in human&#13;
capital," he said, "is essential for&#13;
economic growth."&#13;
Jansson said, "I am in favor, in&#13;
principle, of the idea of tuition tax&#13;
credits. I think that people need a&#13;
range of choices in the education&#13;
of their children." Jansson said he&#13;
would "look very carefully" at the&#13;
tax credit proposals to ensure no&#13;
damage was done to public&#13;
education.&#13;
Jansson cautioned against&#13;
PSGA Election Results&#13;
Senate:&#13;
Al Spallato 137&#13;
Phil Pogreba 134&#13;
Mike Scoon 129&#13;
Ingrid Petrikat |Q&#13;
Jeanne Buenker-Philips J09&#13;
Mark Hagen |@g&#13;
Patrick Ramsdell |Q0&#13;
Earlene Frederick 94&#13;
Stephen Kalmar II 69&#13;
SUFAC:&#13;
Luis Valldejuli ^5&#13;
One of the most emotional&#13;
moments of the debate came when&#13;
the candidates were fielding&#13;
questions from the audience,&#13;
when this question was asked:&#13;
"What is your position on&#13;
do something about&#13;
PETER JANSSON&#13;
abuses in the student loan&#13;
program, even though he spoke&#13;
out in favor of increasing the&#13;
program. He suggested that the&#13;
student, when applying for a loan,&#13;
sign an agreement with the IRS to&#13;
have repayment made as part of&#13;
the student's taxes after&#13;
graduation.&#13;
LES ASPIN&#13;
women's rights to choice in the&#13;
matter of abortion? Do you favor&#13;
government intervention?"&#13;
Jansson answered first, saying:&#13;
"I think it's tragic that an abortion&#13;
is being performed every 24&#13;
seconds. It has cheapened our&#13;
view of life; and it si wrong and we&#13;
w—ill1 p—aJy for it in tvh.iev jyteaaiarsa aiihcecaiud uif 1 1&#13;
Panel discussion to give information&#13;
we don't&#13;
this."&#13;
He said that it would lead to&#13;
liberalized views on infanticide&#13;
and euthanasia, and that in twenty&#13;
years Americans would look at&#13;
abortion the way people look at&#13;
slavery now. He said, "The 1973&#13;
Supreme Court decision was&#13;
wrong, and we'll find a way to&#13;
change it."&#13;
Aspin got much applause by&#13;
initially stating: "I'm not sure&#13;
who he (Jansson) is enslaving;&#13;
sounds to me like he's enslaving&#13;
the women." Hesaid he "would not&#13;
support a constitutional amendment&#13;
to prohibit abortion." He&#13;
does not, however, favor the&#13;
spending of federal funds to pay&#13;
for abortions because, "You&#13;
should not spend public money for&#13;
something that a significant&#13;
portion of the population considers&#13;
murder." He was interrupted&#13;
several times during his&#13;
statement by Jansson, who&#13;
questioned his assertion that&#13;
abortion was, in fact, murder.&#13;
The debate was held in the&#13;
Union Cinema. It is estimated that&#13;
200 - 300 people were in attendance.&#13;
It was also announced&#13;
that Art Jackson, the Libertarian&#13;
candidate for congressman, will&#13;
speak before the Social Science&#13;
round table at 12:15 on Monday,&#13;
Nov. in Union 106.&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
On Wednesday, Nov. 10, from&#13;
12-2 p.m., the Sexual Harassment&#13;
Advisory Committee will sponsor&#13;
a panel discussion in the Union&#13;
Bazaar to explore some of the&#13;
aspects of sexual harassment.&#13;
JoAnne Zowicky, from the&#13;
Women's Resource Center in&#13;
Racine, will speak about sexual&#13;
harassment from an employer's&#13;
point of view, and provide new&#13;
insight about sexual harassment&#13;
particularly relevant to students.&#13;
Walter Stern, a lawyer from&#13;
Kenosha, will discuss the legal&#13;
aspects of sexual harassment.&#13;
Wayne Johnson, a professor at&#13;
Parkside, will talk about the&#13;
socialization of men. After these&#13;
presentations, the audience will&#13;
have the opportunity to ask&#13;
questions.&#13;
The Sexual Harassment Advisory&#13;
Committee was created in&#13;
April 1982 in response to a mandate&#13;
from the Board of Regents.&#13;
Its purpose is to assist the&#13;
Chancellor on all matters relating&#13;
to sexual harassment, to devise&#13;
programs intended to inform the&#13;
entire university community of&#13;
the nature of sexual harassment,&#13;
to increase public sensitivity to it,&#13;
and to publicise the procedures&#13;
and remedies available through&#13;
the committee. Members also&#13;
assist in informal mediation efforts&#13;
when so requested by the&#13;
Chancellor, serving in an "ombudsman"&#13;
role to give advice,&#13;
counsel and assistance to members&#13;
of the university community&#13;
in matters relating to sexual&#13;
harassment.&#13;
The committee identifies the&#13;
faculty, staff and students simply&#13;
as the University community. Any&#13;
members of the university&#13;
community who feel harassed&#13;
may contact any of the members&#13;
of the committee directly for a&#13;
confidential discussion. Or, a&#13;
person who feels harassed can call&#13;
ext. 2368 and request to be contacted&#13;
by a member on the&#13;
committee. Students do not&#13;
necessarily need to speak with a&#13;
student member; all of the&#13;
committee members are&#13;
available.&#13;
At the meeting, no names will be&#13;
used; the caller's name and&#13;
alleged offender's name will be&#13;
known to only one person. The&#13;
entire committee will review the&#13;
situation, and try to devise a&#13;
method to solve the problem informally.&#13;
Before any other action&#13;
is taken, the caller will be notified.&#13;
The committee will seek as&#13;
much information about the&#13;
situation as possible. The more&#13;
information that is offered, the&#13;
simpler and faster the likely&#13;
resolution of the problem. The&#13;
committee will have the opportunity&#13;
to learn from each&#13;
situation, but all of the incidents&#13;
will be handled individually and&#13;
confidentially.&#13;
The committee realizes that&#13;
most people perceive sexual&#13;
harassment as coming from a&#13;
male teacher and directed at a&#13;
female student. However, this is&#13;
only one possible circumstance of&#13;
sexual harassment, and the&#13;
committee hopes to make the&#13;
university community aware that&#13;
sexual harassment can and does&#13;
happen in other situations.&#13;
Recently the committee has&#13;
developed a series of questions&#13;
which a number of university&#13;
community members will be&#13;
asked to answer. Some professors&#13;
will use the questionnaire in class.&#13;
Anyone interested in filling out a&#13;
questionnaire may stop in the&#13;
Ranger office and pick one up.&#13;
Through the questionnaire the&#13;
committee hopes to learn more&#13;
about the degree of awareness of&#13;
sexual harassment on this&#13;
campus.&#13;
The members of the committee&#13;
are Stella Gray, ext. 2260; Wayne&#13;
Johnson, 2532; Karen Lourigan&#13;
2247; Carrie Peters, 2285; Linda&#13;
Piele, 2642; Stu Rubner, 2576;&#13;
Carla Thomas, 2351; Jackie&#13;
Willems, 2228; and Pat Hensiak,&#13;
2295. The main - line number is&#13;
2368. A message can be left there&#13;
during office hours, and a committee&#13;
member will return the&#13;
call. If there is a particular&#13;
committee member that you&#13;
would like to deal with, request&#13;
that member.&#13;
ANDREW BRHEL AND REBECCA JULICH in a romantic&#13;
scene from "Ring Round the Moon," a "charade with music"&#13;
which open the dramatic arts season at the University of&#13;
a+V Parksi&lt;^e-F&gt;erformances are Oct. 29 and 30and Nov.&#13;
Theater 31 at 2 p. m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Thursday, October 28,1982 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Still number one!&#13;
subw'tS "ri.fo8 1116 last month Milwaukee Brewer fans were&#13;
™ S tests °™er Bud Selig aPProPr'ately dubbed&#13;
sti ess tests Twice the Brewers took each playoff series to the edee •&#13;
once to win the Amerian League championship in a three game sweep&#13;
derisive t0 fu tHe St L°uis Cardi™ls l° come frorTbehM ta the dec swe seventh game to win the World Series.&#13;
World Series fever infected people from all over the state- it seemed&#13;
no one was immune. "How 'bout them Brewers" became a preferred&#13;
Sriin?, f3?h0ng ?lends&gt; Audrey Kuenn's Cesar's Inn became the&#13;
2S of Je. natl°nal media, and Wisconsin Ave. celebrations and&#13;
~mParym! Were elevated t0 fine arts- The Milwaukee media,&#13;
ww-nn?en» a ev®n ,the Pollce force joined the team in giving&#13;
Wisconsinites a party they will not soon forget.&#13;
nf tlmn thatr'the series became the focal point for a lot&#13;
fre^v nf k St 38 SUrdy as Brewer fans trenzy of long - denied championship gratification, and aesx psluordeelyd ainst oth ae&#13;
Milwaukee Brewers helped us forget dizzying unemployment and a&#13;
wprllfii? / f16t °f bfd "eYS f0r 3 while'the Milwaukee Brewer fans&#13;
themselves as 8011(1 and cohesive as the Milwaukee Brewers&#13;
, ^nd U18 a tribute to the fans, who maintained a loyal vigil even after a&#13;
decade of s econd place or worse finishes, and who turned out in mass&#13;
numbers for a parade down Wisconsin Ave. and a fan appreciation day&#13;
fthheP hhePrronefs off ^thhe? KhoeuWre,r Sa n1d? wt i5ll® r eSmeraieins- h e11r operso vfoerd a tlhoantg tthime eB rewers are&#13;
Congratulations, American League champion Milwaukee Brewers&#13;
You re still number one to us&#13;
Letters to the editor:&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
and Mr. Kovalic:&#13;
Last week I submitted an article&#13;
to the Ranger in which I criticized&#13;
Mr. Kovalic's humor. Mr. Kovalic&#13;
replied to my letter in the same&#13;
edition of the paper and seemed to&#13;
take as much umbrage at my&#13;
remarks as I had done to his. Mr.&#13;
Kovalic has, in fact, put words&#13;
into my mouth and I assure him&#13;
that I need no help in that area.&#13;
Mr. Kovalic has stated that his&#13;
article was satire and suggested&#13;
that perhaps I am anti - humorist&#13;
because I do not appreciate his&#13;
brand of humor. Mr. Kovalic has&#13;
said it all, "he" has put the label&#13;
satire on his work. This does not&#13;
necessarily make it so. It is an&#13;
absolute truth that I found no&#13;
humor in his remark. Each person&#13;
has his or her own perception of&#13;
humor I agree, however, I fail to&#13;
find humor in statements which&#13;
make fun of, or cast slurs on other&#13;
human beings in the name of&#13;
humor and can not help feeling&#13;
offended when I read it. That Mr.&#13;
Kovalic should find my attitude&#13;
surprising is not surprising to me.&#13;
Egotists can seldom relate to the&#13;
feelings of others since their main&#13;
concern is self - interest. There&#13;
has been too much prejudice&#13;
throughout history which has been&#13;
hidden behind the label of humor.&#13;
It is in books, in films, and on&#13;
television. Humor is the quality of&#13;
inciting laughter and I can laugh&#13;
at and enjoy good humor as much&#13;
as anyone else, but not at the&#13;
expense of someone else's&#13;
feelings. No humor in any form&#13;
which is harmful to others is&#13;
humorous to me. As I stated&#13;
before, I consider it a poisonous&#13;
influence on our society.&#13;
Mr. Kovalic has said that I&#13;
called him a racist. I did not say,&#13;
nor did I intend to infer, that he&#13;
was a racist. If I felt he was a&#13;
racist, I would have said it&#13;
outright. But if Mr. Kovalic's&#13;
mininterpretation of this was&#13;
unintentional and he sincerely&#13;
understood me to call him a&#13;
racist, then I apologize for failing&#13;
to make my point unmistakable. I&#13;
would not put such a label on&#13;
anyone without concrete&#13;
evidence. My observation was&#13;
that the prejudices of sexism and&#13;
racism go together in most cases&#13;
and I wondered if there was the&#13;
possibility of a 'satirical' article&#13;
on this subject also. If, in fact,&#13;
anything can be said in the name&#13;
of satire and considered humor,&#13;
why then should the subject of&#13;
race be excluded? The label satire&#13;
does not give the person writing it&#13;
carte blanche to say whatever that&#13;
person pleases under the guise of&#13;
humor. I could never agree with a&#13;
philosophy of this sort. If this&#13;
makes me anti - humorous, I plead&#13;
guilty as charged.&#13;
When Mr. Kovalic assumed that&#13;
my article was written in the heat&#13;
of the moment he assumed&#13;
correctly. However, the anger and&#13;
offense have lasted much longer&#13;
than a moment. If Mr. Kovalic&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
Kovalic catches it again I Halloween brines superstition form, O I&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
Halloween is certainly an interesting&#13;
time of th e year. People&#13;
always seem to be full of mischief.&#13;
Those who fall victim to this&#13;
mischief usually become a little&#13;
more paranoid of the people&#13;
around them. They tend to walk&#13;
down the corridors constantly&#13;
looking over their own shoulder,&#13;
only long enough to notice their&#13;
own shadow. Perhaps there is&#13;
some justification for this&#13;
paranoia. Some of us do tend to&#13;
make more trouble than usual.&#13;
Maybe it's the air at this time of&#13;
year. Maybe it's the other people&#13;
around. It's probably the moon.&#13;
Who knows. Any way you look at&#13;
it, people are easily made&#13;
paranoid. Suspicious, paranoid&#13;
people are indeed funny, but some&#13;
of the most amusing people are&#13;
those who are superstitious.&#13;
Superstition, a fear of the&#13;
unknown. Sometimes an excessive&#13;
fear, sometimes just a bit&#13;
of faith in magic. More than likely&#13;
not logically related to an event,&#13;
or that events' outcome. People&#13;
think it does though. They enjoy&#13;
believing that opening an umbrella&#13;
is bad luck. At least if you&#13;
open it in the house it is. Or is it if&#13;
you open while a black cat is&#13;
crossing your path, and you have&#13;
just passed under a ladder???&#13;
We have superstitious people&#13;
right here on this campus. I told&#13;
everyone we had a lot here. These&#13;
two particular people were&#13;
practicing my favorite superstition.&#13;
You know the one where&#13;
you step on a crack and break&#13;
anybody you want to's back. I&#13;
used to love that as a kid. If we&#13;
were mad at my mother, she was&#13;
the one whose back got broken. Or&#13;
at lease we thought it was. Well,&#13;
the other day I was walking back&#13;
to my office after one of my&#13;
classes, and saw two females&#13;
walking down the hall in quite a&#13;
peculiar manner. It took me quite&#13;
some time to figure out just what&#13;
they were doing. Soon I began to&#13;
figure it out. They were trying to&#13;
avoid stepping on the cracks.&#13;
Now, I'm not sure just how&#13;
familiar people are with the floors&#13;
in these halls, but they basically&#13;
are rather brick in style which&#13;
would render it difficult to avoid&#13;
the cracks. Brick is funny that&#13;
way.&#13;
Having been witness to that, I&#13;
thought I had seen just about&#13;
everything. Then, as I was&#13;
walking out of school that night, I&#13;
caught even myself veering away&#13;
from the underside of a large&#13;
ladder. But, it could have fallen&#13;
Madison passes MRF referendum&#13;
Socialists move in unproductive way&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I was interested to read the&#13;
Ranger's front page report of the&#13;
October 16 meeting of the&#13;
Wisconsin Socialists, both as one&#13;
of the six members of the&#13;
audience, and as one of socialist&#13;
sympathies. As a piece of purely&#13;
documentary evidence, as I am&#13;
sure it was intended, your article&#13;
was adequate. However, as is&#13;
often the case, it became subjective&#13;
simply in what it chose to&#13;
include or exclude — the most&#13;
notable case being of course the&#13;
size of the audience.&#13;
This precedent being&#13;
established, I would like to make a&#13;
few points about the meeting.&#13;
From the article that appeared in&#13;
the Ranger, one might be led to&#13;
assume that the meeting was&#13;
something of a success. This is&#13;
untrue in not just the attendance&#13;
of the meeting but in the viability&#13;
of the Wisconsin Socialists'&#13;
policies, however admirable they&#13;
may be, being presented in the&#13;
manner they were on October 16.&#13;
Socialism is a proletarian&#13;
working person's movement, and&#13;
thus if it is to succeed it must be&#13;
presented to the working person in&#13;
working man's language. This&#13;
meeting did neither. Holding the&#13;
meeting at a university campus,&#13;
however convenient for the&#13;
organizers, does nothing but&#13;
reinforce the unfortunate intellectual&#13;
stigma socialism suffers&#13;
from. Nor would the rhetoric&#13;
used have appealed to the working&#13;
person (employed or not), had he&#13;
been there.&#13;
Thus, what the meeting showed&#13;
best was the problems the&#13;
socialist movement is suffering&#13;
from, and it is these problems that&#13;
prevent any chance of the&#13;
socialists worthwhile policies&#13;
being implemented, and that&#13;
prevent men of great caliber like&#13;
Frank Zeidler having more influence&#13;
than they do.&#13;
I write this not as a critic of&#13;
socialism, but of the unproductive&#13;
direction the American socialist&#13;
movement is taking.&#13;
Douglas Rhodes&#13;
by Jeanne Buenker - Phillips&#13;
As I'm sure most of you are&#13;
aware, both UW - Madison and&#13;
UW - Stevens Point voted this&#13;
month on the mandatory refundable&#13;
fee (MRF) issue. Both&#13;
campuses voted to continue to pay&#13;
the MRF and consequently will&#13;
remain in United Council. This is&#13;
very important to the rest of the&#13;
UW - schools in U. C. both for&#13;
fiscal and political reasons. This is&#13;
the case especially for UW -&#13;
Madison. Since they have such a&#13;
large student body, their&#13;
monetary contribution is quite&#13;
substantial. Also, as true in the&#13;
House of Representatives, votes&#13;
are based on population. Obviously,&#13;
Madison has a very large&#13;
number of votes which can be&#13;
quite important to have when a&#13;
smaller campus, like UW -&#13;
Parkside, needs backing on an&#13;
issue.&#13;
In contrast to this, was the very&#13;
controversial discussion of the&#13;
1983 - 85 Biennial Budget&#13;
Projection during the Executive&#13;
(body as a whole) Meeting at the&#13;
U. C. Meeting last weekend at UW&#13;
- Milwaukee. Unfortunately, it&#13;
looks very bad for students&#13;
because it is projected that tuition&#13;
for Spring Semester will increase&#13;
$30 - $35 and that of Fall will increase&#13;
$50 - $60. Also, it should be&#13;
noted that this does not include sur&#13;
- charges. In the past the state of&#13;
Wisconsin payed 75% of tuition&#13;
costs for the resident student&#13;
while he/she payed 25%. However&#13;
this year the state changed the&#13;
funding formula and forced the&#13;
student to pay 27.3% of tuition&#13;
costs. This is supposedly a temporary&#13;
measure until the state can&#13;
return to the 25/75% funding&#13;
program. Most of the U. C.&#13;
Executive Meeting's debate&#13;
revolved around the idea of&#13;
whether U. C. should go on record&#13;
saying that we support and urge&#13;
the Board of Regents to support&#13;
going back to the 25/75% program&#13;
despite the fact we know it is&#13;
unrealistic at the present time&#13;
given the state of the economy.&#13;
After much heated debate, U. C.&#13;
did finally vote to go on record&#13;
supporting the return to the&#13;
25/75% funding program.&#13;
The Legislative Affairs Committee&#13;
began their Friday night&#13;
meeting discussing the Joint&#13;
Committee for the Review of&#13;
Administrative Rules reports that&#13;
each campus is working on. Each&#13;
report includes university policy&#13;
for; 1) classroom tape recordings,&#13;
2) use of university facilities, 3)&#13;
segregated university fees, and 4)&#13;
merger implementation. Once&#13;
these are all submitted to Curt&#13;
Pawlish, the U. C. Legislative&#13;
Affairs Director, he will compile&#13;
them into a detailed report that&#13;
will be given to the Board of&#13;
Regents. L. A. also discussed the&#13;
drinking age issue. It looks like a&#13;
bill in the State Legislature to&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Norm Couture&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene Torkilsen&#13;
ganger&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Assistant Business Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
^V-»r0^.Aken' Caro' B"*"ns, Pat Cumbie, Dan Dowhower&#13;
^ichaelKailas, Stephen Kalmar II, Carol&#13;
Kortendick, John Kovalic, Rick Luehr, Robb Luehr, Laura&#13;
Petersen, Jennie Tunkieicz.&#13;
TSL? uw •parkside and&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid reasons&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 28,1982&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
«,5?e the drinkin8 age to 19&#13;
would most definitely pass. U. C&#13;
js strongly against this issue&#13;
DecaUse it would negatively affect&#13;
college students' rights and is on&#13;
Spouses' rights&#13;
debate scheduled&#13;
Public Affairs Committee&#13;
ot The Racine Junior League Inc&#13;
is sponsoring a debate on the&#13;
subject of "Marital Property&#13;
Reforms" at the Prairie School&#13;
fining Room, 4050 Lighthouse&#13;
Drive, at 8:15 p.m., November 3,&#13;
1982.&#13;
State Representative Betty Jo&#13;
Nelson and Attorney Judy M.&#13;
Hartig will be the guest debaters.&#13;
Professor Richard Carrington&#13;
from the Communications&#13;
Continued On Page Four&#13;
Letter to the editor:&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
considers my letter immature,&#13;
infantile, and mud - slinging then&#13;
he should have some faint glimmer&#13;
of the way in which I felt&#13;
about his remark. Let me assure&#13;
him also, that I was not alone in&#13;
my evaluation of his remark,&#13;
others were equally offended by it.&#13;
Mr. Kovalic wonders if I am&#13;
biased? Yes, I certainly am! I am&#13;
biased against cruelty and&#13;
inhumanity in any form and I will&#13;
take a stand against anyone who&#13;
supports behavior which reflects&#13;
inequality in the treatment of&#13;
human beings.&#13;
A suggestion was made that the&#13;
next time I read his material 'I&#13;
think about it, get the facts&#13;
straight, and try to appreciate it in&#13;
the light of how it was written'. I&#13;
United Council record stating this.&#13;
Academic Affairs passed a&#13;
unanimous motion during the&#13;
Friday night meeting. It dealt&#13;
with the Byckear Weapons&#13;
Research and stated that U. C. is&#13;
against any research in the UW -&#13;
System for the purpose of&#13;
enhancing the U. S. nuclear or&#13;
chemical war capabilities. This&#13;
motion was also passed in the&#13;
Executive meeting on Saturday.&#13;
Women's Affairs dealt with&#13;
Affirmative Action and the&#13;
practices of it on each campus.&#13;
They also listened to the UW -&#13;
Milwaukee's Women Caucus&#13;
Director and the UW - Stevens&#13;
Point Women's center Director&#13;
speak. In the future they will be&#13;
working on implementing escort&#13;
services and women's centers on&#13;
all campuses.&#13;
One other important thing that&#13;
happened at this U. C. meeting,&#13;
was the meeting between all the&#13;
Tai Chai class to be held&#13;
suggest that the next time he&#13;
writes an article, he think about it&#13;
and consider the way in which&#13;
what he has to say, can hurt and&#13;
anger people, and that merely&#13;
placing the label humor on it&#13;
doesn't necessarily make it funny&#13;
or any less painful to those who&#13;
must bear the brunt of it. As a&#13;
published writer Mr. Kovalic&#13;
should know that good humor does&#13;
not have to play on people's biases&#13;
and I hope that in future articles&#13;
he will remember this.&#13;
(Any error in the spelling of&#13;
your name was unintentional, but&#13;
I'm sure you spelled mine incorrectly&#13;
in an uncontrollable fit&#13;
of satirical inspiration ... You see&#13;
Mr. Kovalic, that I am not entirely&#13;
without a sense of humor.)&#13;
M. E. Marten&#13;
BRC gets six new members&#13;
SOC vice chair Carla Thomas&#13;
announced at the PSGA Senate&#13;
meeting Friday that six new&#13;
members have been appointed to&#13;
the newly revised Budget and&#13;
Review Committee.&#13;
The selections were made at the&#13;
Oct. 21 informational meeting.&#13;
Three of the seats will be elected&#13;
from the SOC membership in the&#13;
Security:&#13;
spring. People now filling the&#13;
spring seats are: George Harris,&#13;
P a r k s i d e W a r g a m e r s&#13;
Association; Terry Tunks,&#13;
Political Science Club; and Dave&#13;
Schroeder, Parkside Players.&#13;
Fall seats have been filled by&#13;
Valerie Olson of SWEA; Eric&#13;
Simonsen, Student Mobilization&#13;
for Survival; and Gina Sheppard -&#13;
Wolthausen, Anthropology Club.&#13;
Seminar on rape scheduled&#13;
by Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
Campus Security&#13;
Rape! It doesn't always happen&#13;
to someone else. Every woman is&#13;
a potential victim. Age, race or&#13;
class mean nothing to a rapist.&#13;
Location and time of day also&#13;
mean little to a rapist. It could&#13;
happen any time and anywhere to&#13;
anybody.&#13;
The Campus Security office, in&#13;
its continuing effort to serve the&#13;
campus community, will present&#13;
a "Rape Prevention" seminar.&#13;
The program will be presented on&#13;
November 3, 1982 at 1:00 p.m. in&#13;
rooms 104 - 106 of the Union. All&#13;
women in the campus community&#13;
are urged to attend.&#13;
The program will deal with&#13;
ways you might avoid becoming a&#13;
victim of rape and knowing what&#13;
to do if you are a victim. Most&#13;
rapes are never reported. The not&#13;
reporting of a rape only leaves the&#13;
rapist free to rape again. Just&#13;
because one victim will survive&#13;
does not mean the next victim will&#13;
be as lucky.&#13;
Awareness of your surroundings&#13;
is one of the best means of&#13;
preventing rape. Be alert, avoid&#13;
certain high risk situations.&#13;
Although rape can happen&#13;
anywhere, you may be able to&#13;
take precautions against it by just&#13;
thinking ahead. Walk in well -&#13;
lighted areas, walk with friends,&#13;
keeping your doors locked,&#13;
checking the back seat of your car&#13;
before entering and just being&#13;
alert and aware of your environment&#13;
may keep you free&#13;
from an attack. Avoid any&#13;
situation you feel may make you a&#13;
target for a rapist.&#13;
The program will also deal with&#13;
how you should react if you are&#13;
attacked. The most important&#13;
point, and the hardest to control,&#13;
is not to panic. Get your mind and&#13;
body under control and think! You&#13;
don't have to react immediately —&#13;
wait for the right opportunity.&#13;
Opportunities for escape will&#13;
present themselves, but only if&#13;
you are alert and watching for&#13;
them. Your best defense is to stun&#13;
or surprise your assailant, and&#13;
run away. Run, don't try to defeat&#13;
your attacker.&#13;
Never carry weapons like a&#13;
knife or gun. These can be taken&#13;
away from you by the attacker&#13;
and used against you. The&#13;
program will present articles you&#13;
carry that may serve as a weapon&#13;
to stun someone so you can run&#13;
away.&#13;
The seminar is being presented&#13;
to inform you and make you&#13;
aware of rape situations. All the&#13;
seminars and programs don't help&#13;
unless you attend. The more you&#13;
know and understand, the better&#13;
prepared you will be. Attend the&#13;
seminar Wednesday, November 3,&#13;
1982, 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. in&#13;
Room 104 - 106 of the Student&#13;
Union. Rape can happen to&#13;
anyone, anywhere, at any time.&#13;
Know the scene of rape and avoid&#13;
it. Be informed!&#13;
Segregated University Fees&#13;
Allocations Committees.&#13;
Representatives from Oshkosh,&#13;
Green Bay, Whitewater, Madison,&#13;
Milwaukee, Stout, and Parkside&#13;
attended and discussed their&#13;
systems and the problems with&#13;
them. As a result of this informative&#13;
meeting, all the&#13;
SUFAC's will be exchanging ideas&#13;
and suggestions through the mail&#13;
on a regular basis. They also will&#13;
be meeting again in December.&#13;
U. C. as well as P. S. G. A.&#13;
camiot stress the importance of&#13;
voting in the November 2 election.&#13;
The way it looks now, the state of&#13;
Wisconsin will have a debt in the&#13;
next fiscal year of at least one&#13;
billion dollars. This means cuts to&#13;
agencies throughout the state and&#13;
the University system is very high&#13;
on the list. If students vote for&#13;
legislators that favor higher&#13;
education, we can minimize the&#13;
total dollar cut - backs. Voting&#13;
records of the legislators up for&#13;
election are posted on thQjf. S. G.&#13;
A. window and if you have any&#13;
questions about the election, feel&#13;
free to ask anyone in P. S. G. A.&#13;
Once again, please get out and&#13;
vote on November 2. Your vote&#13;
really does count.&#13;
In a 6 - week noncredit evening&#13;
course offered through the&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Extension,&#13;
UW-Parkside, the art of&#13;
living Taoism and the practice of&#13;
T'ai Chi Ch'uan will be introduced.&#13;
Taoism is an ancient path to&#13;
wisdom in which learning occurs&#13;
and happiness is achieved, not by&#13;
action toward a goal, but simply&#13;
through becoming aware of one's&#13;
place in the universe. 2500 years&#13;
ago the philosopher Chuang Tsu&#13;
encapsulated the essence of Taoist&#13;
thought in these words:&#13;
"From the sage's emptiness,&#13;
stillness arises:&#13;
From stillness, action:&#13;
From action, attainment."&#13;
Thomas Wilke, formerly an&#13;
associate professor of psychology&#13;
at UW - Parkside, and presently&#13;
working as a psychological&#13;
counselor in Kenosha, and the instructor&#13;
for this course, has been&#13;
quoted as saying that "We in&#13;
America move too fast.. . tend to&#13;
be unhappy people . . . hurry up&#13;
and work so hard so we can relax&#13;
and enjoy ourselves ... but have&#13;
become so psychologically conditioned&#13;
to a frantic pace that&#13;
when the time comes to relax, we&#13;
can't." Wilke says, relax while&#13;
you work. He believes it is&#13;
possible, even for those who have&#13;
been conditioned into a Western&#13;
way of thinking, to integrate&#13;
Taoist values into their daily&#13;
activities through the Taoist way&#13;
of using the mind.&#13;
T'ai Chi Ch'uan is an exercise in&#13;
which one moves in a dream - like&#13;
state, a sort of Oriental ballet in&#13;
slow motion, with the mind concentrating&#13;
upon a sequence of&#13;
natural, relaxed movements.&#13;
Wilke claims that the combination&#13;
of living the Taoist philosophy and&#13;
the regular performance of T'ai&#13;
Chi Ch'uan can improve physical&#13;
health and fitness, as well as lead&#13;
to psychological and other&#13;
benefits.&#13;
Wilke has practiced T'ai Chi&#13;
Ch'uan for four years, specializes&#13;
in the study of the psychology of&#13;
the athlete and Taoist philosophy,&#13;
and has taught courses in&#13;
biofeedback, consciousness,&#13;
Chinese medicine, and&#13;
physiology.&#13;
The class will meet on Thursdays,&#13;
beginning October 28, 7-9&#13;
p.m., in room D128, Molinaro Hall&#13;
at UW - Parkside. The fee is $22.&#13;
Register with University Extension&#13;
at UW - Parkside, phone&#13;
553-2312.&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
Feathered blond hair frames&#13;
finely chiseled features. Cool eyes&#13;
look outward from a positive,&#13;
secure self - image. Talk is from a&#13;
throaty, almost brusque voice.&#13;
And a pair of sunglasses hang&#13;
from a strap around the neck.&#13;
This is Richard Todd Sorenson,&#13;
who combines the aggressiveness&#13;
and forward motion of a rising&#13;
business executive with the&#13;
carefree, adventurous soul of a&#13;
drifter.&#13;
At just 23, Todd (as he is called)&#13;
has already lived quite a full life.&#13;
After growing up and graduating&#13;
from high school in Las Vegas&#13;
(which is where the sunglasses -&#13;
around - the - neck style came&#13;
from) Todd hit the amateur&#13;
downhill ski racing circuit.&#13;
"Skiing became a religion with&#13;
me," said Todd of t he many hours&#13;
put into the sport turned occupation.&#13;
After two years of&#13;
competition his coaches considered&#13;
him to be an Olympic&#13;
hopeful, but Todd suffered a&#13;
dislocated shoulder as a result of a&#13;
racing accident.&#13;
Because of his inability to&#13;
compete, Todd's family sent him&#13;
to Cuerna Vaca, Mexico to attend&#13;
a language school in order to&#13;
become a translator in the family&#13;
business. This, however, just&#13;
didn't mix with Todd. "I forgot&#13;
almost everything I learned&#13;
almost as soon as I got back."&#13;
UC calls for&#13;
tuition strike&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The United Council passed a&#13;
resolution calling for a Tuition&#13;
Strike at its Oct. 15 meeting in&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
The resolution, which passed&#13;
without opposition, says that the&#13;
council has gone on record in&#13;
stating its opposition to the&#13;
Solomon Amendment, which links&#13;
financial aid with draft&#13;
registration.&#13;
The resolution also states that&#13;
the amendment discriminates&#13;
against the poor and apparently&#13;
violates the concept of due process&#13;
by trying suspected draft evaders&#13;
before they have been found guilty&#13;
in a court of law.&#13;
UC is requesting that the United&#13;
States Student Association make&#13;
repeal of the "heinous amendment"&#13;
the top priority at their&#13;
next session of congress.&#13;
The United Council asked ASA&#13;
to organize a national tuition&#13;
strike and to exert pressure on the&#13;
federal government to repeal the&#13;
amendment.&#13;
People on Campus &gt;stnn TH-Jeo ftUhnenn we—n tL to worki f«u ll t..i me • ...... . .&#13;
and attended the University of Las&#13;
Vegas and the community college,&#13;
studying business management!&#13;
After one year he came to Racine,&#13;
where his father had grown up and&#13;
gone to school.&#13;
Now an Accounting and&#13;
Business major, after graduating&#13;
Todd wants to attend the&#13;
University at Boulder for Law&#13;
school and to be on the ski team&#13;
there.&#13;
Todd, who describes himself as&#13;
a "thrill seeker" who enjoys&#13;
"living on the edge," was a little&#13;
miffed at the area after moving&#13;
here. "It's more depressed (here)&#13;
. . . and the lifestyle's slower," he&#13;
described.&#13;
Yet, he found that the people of&#13;
this area also have misconceptions&#13;
of his native Las Vegas.&#13;
"Yes, there really are houses in&#13;
Vegas," he said in reference to the&#13;
myth many hold about everyone&#13;
in Las Vegas living in a hotel&#13;
suite.&#13;
"And no, not everyone is caught&#13;
up in the gambling scene," he&#13;
added, then also remarked that he&#13;
missed the slot machines of home.&#13;
One of the things in life which&#13;
Todd strives for is being the kind&#13;
of p erson people like to be around.&#13;
"I like to make others happy."&#13;
With his easy - going frame of&#13;
mind, not much bothers Todd.&#13;
"Life is too short to get to serious&#13;
about anything." He added though&#13;
that he does dislike indecision, "in&#13;
myself and others."&#13;
About his future, Todd jokes&#13;
he's "looking forward to an early&#13;
retirement." Getting more&#13;
serious he recounts how his father&#13;
started "dirt poor" in Racine and&#13;
built a law practice into a very&#13;
profitable business. "Everybody&#13;
has the chance," Todd starts,&#13;
almost as if he's reading a script.&#13;
Then, after a pause he adds,&#13;
"Yeah, I think so. You just gotta&#13;
go for it and study," and by doing&#13;
so reaffirms his philosophies and&#13;
beliefs.&#13;
He's not as active now as he has&#13;
been in the past. The emphasis&#13;
now is on the books and grades.&#13;
"Maybe I have mellowed a bit, but&#13;
there will always be a kid in me."&#13;
While so many lives are filled&#13;
with regrets and despair at&#13;
dreams that were never attempted.&#13;
Todd seems genuinely&#13;
happy. i m happy to wake up in&#13;
the morning," he commented,&#13;
then added "unless it was a rough&#13;
night before."&#13;
Todd's philosophy on life seems&#13;
to sum his character quite well. "I&#13;
look well into the future, but&#13;
everything goes day by day."&#13;
••••••••••••••••••-A VOTE&#13;
Nov. 2, State Elections&#13;
Your Education&#13;
Depends On It&#13;
It only takes 60 seconds&#13;
to register at your&#13;
local voting station.&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Student&#13;
Government&#13;
Association&#13;
This Ad Sponsored By 009&#13;
••••••••••••••A-****&#13;
Thursday, October 28, 1982&#13;
Ring Round the Moon"&#13;
premiers semester's drama series&#13;
"Ring Round The Moon," a&#13;
frothy comedy, will be performed&#13;
by the Parkside dramatic arts&#13;
discipline for two successive&#13;
weekends, Oct. 29and 30, and Nov.&#13;
5 and 6, at 8 p. m. and Oct. 31 at 2&#13;
p. m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. It has been called by its&#13;
author, Jean Anouilh, "a charade&#13;
with music." As is common in the&#13;
very best of charades, the play&#13;
contains some wonderful confusions&#13;
of identities. The play's&#13;
central plot, for example, turns&#13;
around identical twin brothers&#13;
who hold totally opposite views of&#13;
love. The heart of the play,&#13;
however, is romance and it&#13;
depends upon the interweaving of&#13;
character with plot.&#13;
Simply identifying the cast&#13;
suggests something of the play's&#13;
masterfully comic plot weavings.&#13;
Frederic (Andrew Brhel,&#13;
Kenosha) is engaged to Diana&#13;
(Lisa Beck a*, Racine) who is&#13;
secretly in love with Frederic's&#13;
twin brother Hugo, (also played&#13;
by Brhel). Hugo employs a&#13;
ballerina named Isabelle&#13;
(Rebecca Julich, Racine), "to&#13;
deflect the stars," and bring&#13;
Frederic to his senses. The&#13;
scheme goes wrong when&#13;
Isabelle's mother (Beth Wells,&#13;
Racine) ends up being recognized&#13;
by her old school chum, Capulet&#13;
(Janet Heflin, Kenosha) , who can&#13;
not help by spilling the beans to&#13;
her employer, Madame&#13;
DesMortes (Mary - Beth Kelleher,&#13;
Kenosha).&#13;
The social class in which "Ring&#13;
Round The Moon" revolves is&#13;
elegant, rich and French, and&#13;
other members of the cast include:&#13;
Rich Smith (Racine) as the&#13;
butler Joshua, Julian Brown&#13;
(Milwaukee) as Patrice, the&#13;
private secretary to J. C.&#13;
Bussard's (Kenosha) Messerchman,&#13;
who is paramour to&#13;
Patricia Casciaro's (Kenosha)&#13;
Lady India, and her ever - vigilant&#13;
Guy Charles Romainvilles, played&#13;
by Scott Reichelsdorf (Kenosha).&#13;
Lighting and setting are being&#13;
— _ Photo by John Kovallc&#13;
SINGER/GUITARIST MICHAEL GULEZIAN performed last&#13;
Friday afternoon in the Union Bazaar.&#13;
Marquette Univ.&#13;
Law School&#13;
A raprtiMlallvi will bt&#13;
•n campus Nov. 2nd, 1982.&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
CAREER PLACEMENT OFF.&#13;
FOR DETAILS&#13;
tff? STRATEGY&#13;
FOR&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
WORKSHOP&#13;
Sponsored by the&#13;
Office of Placement Services&#13;
Featuring Practical Suggestions on How To:&#13;
U Research Companies&#13;
• Prepare a Cover Letter&#13;
• Follow Up&#13;
• Use Campus Resources&#13;
FRIDAY NOVEMBER 5, 1982&#13;
1:00 - 2:00&#13;
Student Union, Room 104&#13;
Guest Leader&#13;
AAs. Judy Murray&#13;
Manager, Corporate Employee Relations&#13;
&amp; Career Development&#13;
J.I. Case Company&#13;
designed by Jon Schoenoff and&#13;
Charles Ervin, respectively, while&#13;
the costumes are being designed&#13;
by Barbara Thompson. The play's&#13;
director is Leon J. Van Dyke,&#13;
coordinator of UW - Parkside's&#13;
dramatic arts discipline.&#13;
A deft blend of colorful&#13;
characters and intricate plot&#13;
devices combine to make "Ring&#13;
Round The Moon" a comedic&#13;
classic for the whole family. The&#13;
famous American director and&#13;
critic Harold Clurman has said,&#13;
"there is no one in the theatre&#13;
more comprehensively&#13;
representative of contemporary&#13;
France than Jean Anouilh," and&#13;
certainly "Ring Round The&#13;
Moon" has been one of his most&#13;
popular plays in England as well&#13;
as New York.&#13;
Local audiences will be able to&#13;
see the play by arranging tickets&#13;
in advance at $2.50 for students,&#13;
staff and senior citizens, and $3.50&#13;
for the general public by calling&#13;
553-2345 or 553-2042. Tickets will&#13;
also be available at the door, at $3&#13;
and $4.&#13;
Festa Roma&#13;
coming to Union&#13;
"Festa Roma," an evening of&#13;
Italian dining and entertainment,&#13;
will join the roster of the popular&#13;
ethnic programs which have&#13;
become a tradition at Parkside on&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 6, i n the Parkside&#13;
Union.&#13;
The evening will include a five&#13;
course Italian dinner and entertainment&#13;
by the Italian Folk&#13;
Dancers of Milwaukee, in full&#13;
costume, and music by the&#13;
Sicilian Seranaders, who will&#13;
provide strolling musicians&#13;
during dinner and later, music by&#13;
a full band for dancing.&#13;
Previous ethnic evenings,&#13;
usually sell - out events, have&#13;
featured the culture and cuisine of&#13;
Greece, Mexico and Germany.&#13;
The German festival is an annual&#13;
spring event.&#13;
Union Director Bill Niebuhr&#13;
said the events are planned with&#13;
great attention to detail using&#13;
authentic ethnic recipes and&#13;
entertainment by ethnic groups&#13;
dedicated to broadening understanding&#13;
of their culture.&#13;
"Festa Roma" will get un-&#13;
Law Rep&#13;
An admissions counselor from&#13;
Marquette Law School will meet&#13;
with prospective law school&#13;
students Tuesday, Nov. 2 from&#13;
9:30 - 11 a.m. in MOLN 367A to&#13;
discuss the Marquette Law School&#13;
program, admission policies and&#13;
procedures. For further information,&#13;
contact Sue Strickler&#13;
MOLN 263.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
Tickets for the Manager's&#13;
Dinner will be sold in Molinaro&#13;
Hall Monday through Friday from&#13;
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. and Tuesday and&#13;
Thursday evenings from 4 - 7 p.m.&#13;
Tickets are $10, and may also be&#13;
purchased from any Accounting&#13;
Club officer. The dinner will be&#13;
Monday, Nov. 15. The main&#13;
speaker will be Frederick&#13;
Kraegel, a CPA partner from&#13;
Peat, Marwick, Mitchell and Co.&#13;
The club is also sponsoring a&#13;
workshop called "Interviewing:&#13;
the Office Visit," on Friday, Oct.&#13;
29 a t 1 p.m. in MOLN D-137. J.&#13;
Mitchell Szorcsik from the accounting&#13;
firm Deliotte, Haskins&#13;
and Sells will tell what to expect at&#13;
the second interview. Refreshments&#13;
will be served.&#13;
Mobe&#13;
Are you interested in achieving&#13;
social justice in our society? For&#13;
example, do you think it's fair that&#13;
our government thinks that&#13;
building bombs is tantamount to&#13;
providing education for students&#13;
and jobs for the jobless? Do you&#13;
think that a society dedicated to&#13;
life, liberty and the pursuit of&#13;
happiness is consistent with&#13;
supporting despotic governments&#13;
in Central America or persecuting&#13;
conscientious draft registration&#13;
resistors, especially with your&#13;
money?&#13;
If you haven't already turned to&#13;
a more pleasant article you're&#13;
probably asking yourself, "Is&#13;
there anything that can be done&#13;
about all this?" Our answer is:&#13;
absolutely!&#13;
You can do something today by&#13;
joining Parkside's chapter of&#13;
Mobilization for Survival. You&#13;
see, the people at Mobe take these&#13;
questions seriously, and through&#13;
our actions we have attempted to&#13;
take a stand collectively and as&#13;
individuals to influence some of&#13;
the political events which shape&#13;
our daily lives, e.g. draft&#13;
registration, the arms race and&#13;
funding of human needs.&#13;
To illustrate this point more&#13;
clearly, think back to June of this&#13;
year and you may recall that one&#13;
of the largest anti - nuclear&#13;
demonstrations in the world took&#13;
CLUB EVENTS&#13;
derway with a wine punch&#13;
reception at 6 p.m. Seating will&#13;
begin at 7 p.m. for the dinner,&#13;
which will be served at 7:30. That&#13;
will be followed by dancing.&#13;
The dinner menu includes&#13;
cappalletti enbrodo ("Little Hat"&#13;
soup, named for the pasta); an&#13;
antipasto tray including Genoa&#13;
salami, prosciutto e melone and&#13;
provolone cheese; a pasta course&#13;
of spaghettini a la carbonara; and&#13;
a combination entree including&#13;
chicken cacciatora, scaloppine a&#13;
la vitella al Marsala, Italian&#13;
sausage with peppers and onions&#13;
and mixed vegetables. Dessert&#13;
will be gelato (ice cream) and&#13;
biscotti al 'anici (anice cookies),&#13;
accompanied by caffe (coffee)!&#13;
Imported Italian wines will be&#13;
available during dinner.&#13;
The price is $17.50 per person&#13;
and admission is by reservation&#13;
only. Reservations can be made in&#13;
person or by mail with the&#13;
Parkside Union Information&#13;
Center, UW-Parkside, Box No.&#13;
2000, Kenosha, 53141, (Phone 553-&#13;
2345). Master Charge is available.&#13;
place in New York City. This rally&#13;
was partially sponsored by the&#13;
efforts of the local and national&#13;
chapters of Mobe, and by other&#13;
groups with similar interests.&#13;
We feel quite sure that the&#13;
freeze referendum held in&#13;
Wisconsin was passed as a direct&#13;
result of the New York rally and&#13;
from a demand by the people of&#13;
this country to have a voice in&#13;
their own future by calling for an&#13;
end to the insanity of the arms&#13;
race. The point here is that you are&#13;
not powerless unless you choose to&#13;
be powerless.&#13;
In the past, other events&#13;
sponsored by Mobe include:&#13;
Teach - ins on nuclear power and&#13;
its connection to the arms race,&#13;
speakers who have critically&#13;
discussed civil disobedience, films&#13;
on the effects of nuclear wastes&#13;
and much more.&#13;
Right now, the next event on&#13;
campus sponsored by Mobe will&#13;
be a forum given by a local draft&#13;
resistor on campus to tell about&#13;
his experience of being persecuted&#13;
by the U.S. Government. The talk&#13;
will be co - sponsored by Mobe, the&#13;
Political Science Club, the Pre -&#13;
Law Club and the Parkside&#13;
Philosophical Society.&#13;
If you've decided not to decide,&#13;
or if you simply don't agree with&#13;
what's been said, then read no&#13;
further. However, if you want to&#13;
take control of your life, or if you&#13;
have any comments, questions or&#13;
criticisms, then by all means feel&#13;
free to attend the weekly meetings&#13;
of Parkside's Mobilization for&#13;
Survival every Thursday at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in Moln D-128.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
All members and interested&#13;
persons are invited to attend the&#13;
monthly membership meeting on&#13;
Monday, Nov. 1 at 1:00 p.m. in&#13;
Union 207.&#13;
Data Processing&#13;
The Data Processing Club is&#13;
sponsoring two speakers who&#13;
graduated from Parkside last&#13;
semester. Chuck McMahon and&#13;
John Schmidt were both hired by&#13;
Northwestern Mutual Life and&#13;
have had over 35 interviews&#13;
between them, both on and off&#13;
campus. Chuck and John will&#13;
discuss these interviews and give&#13;
ideas of the role and future of men&#13;
and women in the field.&#13;
The presentation will be&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 28 in Molinaro 213&#13;
at 8 p.m. Refreshments will be&#13;
served during an informal&#13;
question and answer period.&#13;
Cheerleaders&#13;
On Wednesday, Nov. 3 and&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 17, the&#13;
cheerleaders will be sponsoring a&#13;
bake sale. Many delicious items&#13;
will be on sale, so don't miss it.&#13;
Also, we are still looking for&#13;
men who are interested in joining&#13;
the team. Call 553-2320 and ask for&#13;
Shirley if you are interested.&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
Bruce Pepich, the director of&#13;
Wustum Museum in Racine will&#13;
lecture Wednesday, Nov. 3 in&#13;
CART 129. The subject of the talk&#13;
is Artist's Presentations." There&#13;
will be a question and answer&#13;
period afterward.&#13;
SWEA&#13;
The Student Wisconsin&#13;
Educational Association's next&#13;
meeting is on Monday, Nov. l at&#13;
1:00 p.m. in Molinaro D-128 We&#13;
will discuss the teacher's convention&#13;
and coming events.&#13;
Meeting dates for the rest of the&#13;
semester are Nov. 15 and 29 an d&#13;
Dec. 13.&#13;
IVCF&#13;
The inter Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship presents Lazaro Uribe&#13;
as our special guest speaker, who&#13;
will be speaking to us on "The&#13;
SUng of Death: Is it Real?" on&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 3 at 1:00 p.m in&#13;
Moln 107. Everyone is welcome to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Spouses' rights&#13;
debate scheduled&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
Se5artment wil1 be Moderator. the&#13;
During this session, the&#13;
Wisconsin legislature will again&#13;
consider what has been termed&#13;
the single most important&#13;
legislation to be before it in 50&#13;
years. That is, it will consider&#13;
whether to make sweeping&#13;
reforms in the laws governing&#13;
ownership of property by married&#13;
people. What it does will potentially&#13;
or passively affect every&#13;
Wisconsin citizen and directly&#13;
affect those contemplating&#13;
divorce, women seeking their own&#13;
fu jt rating, or the survivors of&#13;
the death of a married person.&#13;
Historically, Wisconsin has&#13;
been a separate ownership state&#13;
with legal title to property&#13;
determining ownership. Recent&#13;
divorce statutes have made some&#13;
modification of this situation,&#13;
ohould Wisconsin now become a&#13;
community property state such as&#13;
California?&#13;
We urge you to come hear our&#13;
speakers discuss the alternatives&#13;
so you can judge for yourself and&#13;
become an active participant in&#13;
the legislative process.&#13;
Rats, Vangelis, Plasmatics;&#13;
the good, the good and the uglv&#13;
bbyy JJoohhnn KKoovvaalliicc shame that nonp nf fKom i — ^ *&#13;
Well, after a gap of a week, it's&#13;
back to the grind. First of a ll, let&#13;
me correct a (gulp) mistake from&#13;
the last article. Joe Jackson's&#13;
'Night and Day' should only have&#13;
been rated a seven out of ten. Got&#13;
that down? Good. Remember,&#13;
you'll be tested on Monday.&#13;
Now, you may be wondering&#13;
why my reviews have given such&#13;
high ratings to albums so far.&#13;
Well, that's easy. The only records&#13;
I normally buy are by artists&#13;
whom I know I like. I mean, I'm&#13;
not going to blow hard - earned&#13;
dollars on the Plasmatics' next&#13;
release.&#13;
But, as I always say, variety is&#13;
the spice of life. So if you get bored&#13;
with favorable reviews, I'll throw&#13;
in a bummer every now and then.&#13;
In fact, if you have an album&#13;
which you loathe, just send the&#13;
name of it to me and I'll try to&#13;
gratuitously shred it to pieces.&#13;
Heck, if the band is bad enough, I&#13;
won't even have to listen to any of&#13;
it. I mean, using the Plasmatics as&#13;
an example, it goes without saying&#13;
that anything they put out is going&#13;
shame that none of them were in&#13;
n « r n r a t t i m e ) b u t w h e n We n d y&#13;
O. Williams begins her nauseating&#13;
gyrations and hopeless caterwauling,&#13;
it is enough to drive one&#13;
elvxhh iKb iftiimon •' sWm,h itimf an- I mean, you have the&#13;
bod for it is one thing, but when&#13;
you are built like a paraplegic&#13;
elephant, well, gross city, as you&#13;
imght say. Know what I'm getting&#13;
I can hardly say too little about&#13;
tins vomit - inducing album. Avoid&#13;
it at all costs. It probably causes&#13;
leprosy and should be condemned.&#13;
So should the Plasmatics. Zero out&#13;
of ten.&#13;
And now for something completely&#13;
different:&#13;
The Boomtown Rats&#13;
V Deep (Columbia)&#13;
Since it's only been about eight&#13;
weeks (Not even, Ed.) since I did&#13;
a review of "The Fine Art of&#13;
Surfacing," my mind was all set&#13;
up to make comparisons. "V&#13;
Deep" is, of course, the 'Rats'&#13;
latest release. In many ways it is&#13;
a very strange album, completely&#13;
different from their previous&#13;
Opening with 'Never in a Million&#13;
Years,' the first thought that&#13;
sprang to mind was David Bowie.&#13;
This is one of the more powerful&#13;
songs, and evokes memories of&#13;
Diamond Smiles." The&#13;
production of the whole album is&#13;
very proficient, and nowhere does&#13;
Halloween" is disappointing&#13;
the third time around&#13;
THE BOOMTOWN RATS&#13;
to be pretty awful. Their latest&#13;
album is no exception, so I'll start&#13;
out with them. Be warned though,&#13;
their new effort is fit only to be&#13;
burned by the Reverend Risley.&#13;
So, here we go.&#13;
The Plasmatics&#13;
"Coup d'etat"&#13;
What can I say? It stinks. Full of&#13;
catatonic waitings and ear -&#13;
splitting noises which probably&#13;
sterilize any rabbits under three&#13;
hundred yards away, the best&#13;
thing that can be said about the&#13;
Plasmatics is that they are consistent&#13;
in their abysmal pursuit of&#13;
the fast buck.&#13;
I mean, this really sucks, you&#13;
know what I'm saying? I wouldn't&#13;
give this album to my worst&#13;
enemy on a bad day. Not onl y are&#13;
the Spasmatics, excuse me,&#13;
Plasmatics willing to jump on the&#13;
new wave bandwagon even though&#13;
the nearest any of them get to&#13;
musical proficiency is blowing up&#13;
a car on stage. (It is a great&#13;
offerings. When I first listened to&#13;
it, I was disappointed, to say the&#13;
least, expecting something more&#13;
biting. While it's true that their&#13;
style has mellowed somewhat,&#13;
successive listenings have substantially&#13;
raised my opinion of "V&#13;
Deep," and I quite like this album&#13;
now. (Note that 'mellow' for the&#13;
Boomtown Rats is still pretty&#13;
damn powerful.)&#13;
The album itself has plastered&#13;
over it the logo: "Featuring Bob&#13;
Geldof, star of P ink Floyd's "The&#13;
Wall." (Groan.) In some ways the&#13;
album does contain "Floydisms,"&#13;
but anyone expecting "In the&#13;
Flesh" et. al, will be in for a&#13;
shock.&#13;
JON AND VANGELIS&#13;
it show better than here.&#13;
"To The Bitter End" and&#13;
"Talking in Code" follow, leading&#13;
to "He Watches it All." It is hard&#13;
to block memories of "The Wall"&#13;
here, as many of the same subjects&#13;
are covered. I think,&#13;
however, that "To The Bitter&#13;
End" is fast becoming one of my&#13;
favorite Rats tracks. ("To the&#13;
bitter end / We go all the way / It&#13;
isn't too far / To the bitter end /&#13;
With our wills of iron / Souls of&#13;
coal / Hearts of gold.")&#13;
One thing to keep in mind is that&#13;
the lyric sheet often varies substantially&#13;
from what is sung.&#13;
Geldof was never the most subtle&#13;
songwriter in the world.&#13;
Side two contains the first&#13;
British single from the album,&#13;
"House on Fire." This is the Rats&#13;
at their commercial best. Longer&#13;
than the single version due to a&#13;
rather controversial (to some)&#13;
last third, "House on Fire" is&#13;
excellent. Not dissimilar to the&#13;
pace of "Mondo Bongo," the&#13;
bongos are back, and with&#13;
vengeance.&#13;
"Whitehall 1212," one of the two&#13;
instrumental tracks, is good fun,&#13;
bringing back the fifties spy&#13;
thrillers, and "Skin on Skin" is&#13;
definitely not to be listened to by&#13;
anyone under the age of 18. (If&#13;
that doesn't sell the album,&#13;
nothing will.) I really do like this&#13;
album. It grows on you. (Six out of&#13;
ten.)&#13;
Jon and Vangelis&#13;
The Friends of&#13;
Mr. Cairo (Polydor)&#13;
Did I say and now for something&#13;
completely different? Jon and&#13;
Vangelis can hardly be called new&#13;
wave, but I believe this album&#13;
definitely rates a mention.&#13;
We all know that Jon is Jon&#13;
Anderson of "Yes" and solo fame,&#13;
don't we? And of course, we've all&#13;
heard the theme from 'Chariots of&#13;
Fire' by Vangelis, haven't we?&#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;
GOING TO&#13;
MEDICAL S CHOOL?&#13;
NOT E NOUGH CASH&#13;
TO PAY FOR If?&#13;
IT'S YOUR JOB TO GET THROUGH MEDICAL SCHOOL.&#13;
IT'S OUR JOB TO PAY FOR IT!&#13;
The U.S. Navy Health Profession Scholarship pays for&#13;
tuition, books, and all clinical fees. Plus $530.00 a month&#13;
stipend. Call for an appointment with our medical program&#13;
office. Call: Toll Free&#13;
271-6559&#13;
YOU WORRY ABOUT THE GRADES&#13;
AND LET US WORRY ABOUT THE MONEY&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
Despite the title, "Halloween&#13;
III: The Season of the Witch" is&#13;
not a sequel to the previous two&#13;
Halloween films. Producers John&#13;
Carpenter and Debra Hill have&#13;
explained that they want to make&#13;
a series of films, all grouped&#13;
under the "Halloween" title, not&#13;
unlike "The Twilight Zone." If&#13;
this film is any indication of the&#13;
type of movies they are going to be&#13;
making, they should abandon this&#13;
idea and move on to better things.&#13;
The story begins with a store&#13;
owner being pursued by several&#13;
mysterious men in three - piece&#13;
suits. After killing one of his&#13;
pursuers, the injured store owner&#13;
is taken to a hospital, where he is&#13;
soon given a very inventive nose&#13;
job by another guy in a suit who&#13;
then blows himself up in a car.&#13;
Before dying, however, the&#13;
merchant has told a doctor that&#13;
"they are going to kill us all." The&#13;
doctor then teams up with the&#13;
store owner's daughter, and&#13;
together they try to find out who&#13;
killed her father, and who's going&#13;
to "kill us all."&#13;
If t his plot sounds stupid, that's&#13;
because it is. But wait — it gets&#13;
worse. It seems that there's this&#13;
mask manufacturer who's actually&#13;
3,000 - years - old who is&#13;
trying to bring back the original&#13;
meaning of Halloween —&#13;
whatever the hell THAT is. He is&#13;
attempting to achieve this purpose&#13;
by using his masks, with a&#13;
trademark that's got a wierd&#13;
beam, or something like that, in it,&#13;
and a rock from Stonehenge.&#13;
Needless to say, our hero saves&#13;
the day. Or does he? Who cares?&#13;
"Halloween III: The Season of&#13;
the Witch" has got to be one of the&#13;
dumbest films I've ever seen.&#13;
First, I don't know why it's called&#13;
"The Season of the Witch."&#13;
Nothing in the movie has anything&#13;
to do with witches. Second, the&#13;
screenplay is very derivative and&#13;
predictable. When, near the&#13;
beginning of the film, a TV news&#13;
report describes the strange&#13;
disappearance of a rock from&#13;
Stonehenge, all that's missing is a&#13;
neon sign blinking "IMPORTANT&#13;
PLOT POINT; REMEMBER&#13;
THIS." The ending doesn't contain&#13;
a single original idea, and it&#13;
seems to me that the writer,&#13;
Tommy Lee Wallace, who also&#13;
directed it, wrote himself into a&#13;
corner and just borrowed ideas&#13;
from other films in a vain attempt&#13;
to bail himself out.&#13;
The acting is adequate. The&#13;
female lead, Stacy Nelkin, is one&#13;
of th e few good things in the film.&#13;
I must say that the directing is&#13;
quite good, utilizing light and&#13;
shadow to create a somewhat&#13;
creepy mood. Also on the plus side&#13;
is the restraint used in the gore&#13;
department. There are some&#13;
rather bizarre deaths, but they&#13;
are handled in a way that&#13;
minimizes the blood.&#13;
Overall, "Halloween III: The&#13;
Season of the Witch" is poorly&#13;
written, not scary and leaves you&#13;
with a bad taste in your mouth. If&#13;
you want a good scare this&#13;
Halloween, spend the night in a&#13;
haunted house, walk through a&#13;
graveyard at midnight, check&#13;
your midterm grades, anything,&#13;
but avoid "Halloween III."&#13;
Good. I need say little more about&#13;
the duo themselves then.&#13;
Side one opens with the single&#13;
"I'll Find My Way Home," This&#13;
track is surely one of the most&#13;
moving songs ever recorded. If&#13;
only space permitted printing all&#13;
of the lyrics. But on their own they&#13;
cannot have the impact as when&#13;
they are combined with Vangelis'&#13;
faultless orchestration. A must for&#13;
headphone freaks, this song alone&#13;
justified the price.&#13;
In fact, the production of the&#13;
whole album is amazing. I can't&#13;
really find words to define it:&#13;
Electronic, yes, but not surgical;&#13;
Visionary, but not banal. This is&#13;
much better than anything "Yes"&#13;
ever did, and it is a pleasure&#13;
hearing Jon Anderson's&#13;
remarkable vocals put to such&#13;
good material.&#13;
Don't, however, expect all the&#13;
songs to be "spacey" or&#13;
"futuristic." The title track is a&#13;
good exception. More on that&#13;
later.&#13;
Side one continues with 'State of&#13;
Independence,' which runs almost&#13;
eight minutes long. A fast tempo,&#13;
this is another example where&#13;
lyrics and music mesh masterfully.&#13;
"State of life / May I live /&#13;
May I love / Coming out the sky /1&#13;
name me a name."&#13;
"Beside" slows the pace but is&#13;
still superb, though one of the&#13;
album's weaker tracks. The finale&#13;
of the side, "Mayflower" returns&#13;
to the familiar space themes.&#13;
One of the most remarkable&#13;
songs, if not the most remarkable,&#13;
is "The Friends of Mr. Cairo"&#13;
itself, which opens side two and&#13;
lasts just over 12 minutes.&#13;
Combining drama and music, it&#13;
portrays Hollywood's glamorous&#13;
gangster lands of Sam Spade,&#13;
Cagney, and such. The ominous&#13;
bass provides a great 'mood'&#13;
setting to the whole collage and&#13;
the three different tunes are&#13;
woven into its tapestry with three&#13;
Continued On Page Six&#13;
Thursday, October 28,1982&#13;
Wayne Johnson opens dialogue on death and dying&#13;
bbyy PPaattH Heennssiiaakk that if neonle Hn nnt&#13;
Editor&#13;
Each day is a gift. A statement&#13;
few people would argue, but a&#13;
statement few people live by&#13;
Perhaps the tragedy of the&#13;
statement is that few people&#13;
realize and understand the gift&#13;
until it is too late. Some learn&#13;
young that death has a dramatic&#13;
sting. Others learn later, but&#13;
eventually everyone suffers the&#13;
grief over the death of a loved one.&#13;
And we discover that we also die&#13;
People learn the pain of death and&#13;
dying. It's never easy to talk&#13;
about, but people learn that too.&#13;
Professor Wayne Johnson, who&#13;
teaches a class on death and dying&#13;
here at Parkside, said, "Grief is&#13;
like a wound that needs to be&#13;
healed. For the vast majority of&#13;
persons, the wound heals more&#13;
quickly if t hey can be open, public&#13;
and vocal with their grief. Yet&#13;
persons differ a great deal, and&#13;
some find it very hard to express&#13;
their grief openly. They work it&#13;
out in other ways. Crying is a&#13;
painful experience in its own&#13;
right; but hurting is part of the&#13;
way out, part of the healing. Pain&#13;
is the way in, but it is also the way&#13;
out." Johnson also pointed out&#13;
that if people do not work their&#13;
grief through, that repressed grief&#13;
can produce other consequences&#13;
in their life.&#13;
He became involved in the study&#13;
of death and dying for a number of&#13;
reasons. "I think it came from two&#13;
sources, academically," said&#13;
Johnson. "In the Phaedo Plato&#13;
says, 'Other men seem not to have&#13;
noticed that those who truly&#13;
embrace philosophy concern&#13;
themselves with nothing else but&#13;
death and dying.' That has many&#13;
levels of meaning, but part of the&#13;
meaning is that death is one of t he&#13;
major philosophical issues that&#13;
any person or any culture has to&#13;
face."&#13;
Johnson also has quite a bit of&#13;
training in religious traditions. "If&#13;
you look at any of the world&#13;
religions, it's quite clear that one&#13;
of the universal dilemas they&#13;
struggle with is the dilema of&#13;
death. Every world religion has&#13;
some way of trying to deal with&#13;
that. If it didn't, it wouldn't function&#13;
as a world religion. It is one of&#13;
the basic human needs, to try to&#13;
come to terms with that particular&#13;
problem." Through his academic&#13;
work, Religion and Philosophy,&#13;
Wayne Johnson was a natural.&#13;
Having grown up on an Iowa&#13;
farm, Johnson saw things die with&#13;
some sense of regularity. "It&#13;
probably came to me through&#13;
personal experience too. I grew up&#13;
on a farm, and we slaughtered&#13;
pigs for food, and chopped the&#13;
heads off chickens, and so on.&#13;
"I was personally piched by&#13;
death," continued Johnson, "for&#13;
the first time when I was 13 and&#13;
my father died. Later on, when I&#13;
was finishing my engineering&#13;
undergraduate work, I ended up in&#13;
a tuberculosis hospital. Never&#13;
very sick, but it took a long time&#13;
then, before they let you out.&#13;
While I was there, there were four&#13;
or five people who died around me&#13;
of tuberculosis and related&#13;
diseases."&#13;
Students of all kinds gained&#13;
interest in his class. Some people&#13;
take it out of curiosity. Some are&#13;
there because they recognize&#13;
death is a problem, and although&#13;
they've never been hurt by death,&#13;
they know they will be. Of course&#13;
there are always a number of&#13;
people who have been hurt&#13;
recently by death or anticipate&#13;
being so.&#13;
For the most part, Johnson is&#13;
cautious of the way things are&#13;
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handled in class. "I try fairly hard&#13;
to stay away from inappropriate&#13;
humor. I can laugh even about&#13;
things which I take with deep&#13;
seriousness. I'd be concerned if I&#13;
couldn't laugh about things I take&#13;
seriously. Yet, there are times&#13;
when certain types of humor are&#13;
inappropriate around people who&#13;
are hurting."&#13;
Recently Johnson's new book&#13;
came out. "Each Day a Gift" is&#13;
the story of a little boy who was&#13;
diagnosed as having cancer when&#13;
he was nine. He died when he was&#13;
ten years old, about eleven&#13;
months later. Johnson came to&#13;
write the book in part because the&#13;
boy whom the book is written&#13;
about was the best friend of&#13;
Johnson's youngest son.&#13;
"During the eleven months&#13;
when the boy was sick," said&#13;
Johnson, "when I was in touch&#13;
with the situation, I saw a lot of&#13;
things happening that I thought&#13;
were very wise and appropriate;&#13;
and that there was a book there."&#13;
Because of the nature of the&#13;
child, and the family situation,&#13;
and the context of the community&#13;
when Shaun died, the Associated&#13;
Press picked up on the story, and&#13;
eventually a publishing company&#13;
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did too. That company approached&#13;
the parents with the idea&#13;
of the book. Johnson and the&#13;
family pastor at that time offered&#13;
to write the story.&#13;
"I hope one thing the book will&#13;
do," said Johnson, "is that it can&#13;
be the kind of encounter that helps&#13;
people get in touch with their&#13;
grief. I hope it also functions as a&#13;
teaching tool, enabling people to&#13;
learn about loss and grief."&#13;
Johnson said that there are a lot&#13;
of difficulties that go along with&#13;
death, and part of that difficulty is&#13;
just realizing that we are individually&#13;
mortal. "Frued said&#13;
that in our subconscious mind we&#13;
are unable even to conceive of the&#13;
fact that we will die, we deny that&#13;
we will ever die," said Johnson.&#13;
"It takes a while, but usually as&#13;
you get older, you have to face&#13;
your mortality. Part of mid - life&#13;
crisis is just sheerly this kind of&#13;
consciousness raising, where you&#13;
really know now, not just in your&#13;
mind, but in your guts that you are&#13;
mortal."&#13;
Johnson also commented that&#13;
the generation just ahead of us is&#13;
in some sense always a barrier&#13;
against death. "After all, they're&#13;
going to die first. And as long as&#13;
they are there, you're kind of&#13;
shielded. When they drop away,&#13;
you fall in line. There's something&#13;
about that experience that makes&#13;
you conscious of your mortality."&#13;
"There are a lot of hopes tied up&#13;
in kids. After all, they are our&#13;
future. Our parents are our past,&#13;
but it's hard to lose our children&#13;
because then we lose our future.&#13;
Without that sense of continuity,&#13;
without our future, we really are&#13;
at sea."&#13;
Rats, Vangelis,&#13;
Plasmatics-&#13;
Continued From Page Five&#13;
very different tempos. The&#13;
disjointed, often spasmodic lyrics&#13;
just add to the atmosphere, and&#13;
vocal impersonations of Stewart,&#13;
Lawry, and Bogart provide the&#13;
final touch, setting the whole work&#13;
off.&#13;
"Back to School" is a rock - n -&#13;
roll bash challenging the romantic&#13;
end of 'Cairo,' and the album&#13;
closes with "Outside of This&#13;
(Inside of That)," which returns&#13;
to the quiet, sublime excellence&#13;
that marks much of this pair's&#13;
compositions.&#13;
The album works, and works&#13;
well. It may not be for everyone&#13;
but you should try to give it a&#13;
listen Well produced and performed,&#13;
it makes a nice change of&#13;
pace for those who wish it. (Eieht&#13;
out of Ten.)&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
FESTA ROMA&#13;
"AN EVENING IN OLD ITALY'&#13;
SAT., NOV. 6 — 6:00 PM&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
FEATURING: • A WINE PUNCH RECEPTION&#13;
! ™S?URSE SERVED dinner&#13;
AUTHENTIC ITALIAN CUISTNF&#13;
• COSTUMED FOLK ONCERS&#13;
• STROLUNG MUSICIANS RS&#13;
DANCE BAND&#13;
•17.50 PER&#13;
PERSON&#13;
COCKTAILS &amp; IMPORTED WINES AVATI ART IT&#13;
RESERVATIONS: UNION IN FO.&#13;
Open Daily 2 p.m.&#13;
Mondays 7 p.m.&#13;
Tasty Sandwiches&#13;
Cooked to order&#13;
D J Dancing Wed,&#13;
Fri, Sat, 9:30-Close&#13;
Mon, Wed-Pitchers $1.50&#13;
Tues, Wed-75C9-Il&#13;
Mixed drinks &amp; Beers&#13;
Fri, Sat, Sun 2-6,754&#13;
Domestic beer &amp; liquor&#13;
Have a 1/2 barrel party&#13;
Intramural RpcuIk&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 28, 1982&#13;
Fall IINNTTRR AAM1WUIsTRD AAeLI ason almost o^ v• e^r-r1&#13;
ARCHERY TOURNAMENT&#13;
U.W. Parkside's annual Intramural&#13;
Archery Tournament&#13;
was held on Wednesday, October&#13;
20,1982. Awards were given to the&#13;
top Parkside archers in five&#13;
divisions. Winning the most&#13;
prestigious division was Mick&#13;
Heberling in the Men's Open with&#13;
sight shooting at distances of 25, 30&#13;
and 35 yards. Mick hit 81 out of 90&#13;
bullseyes for a score of 792 out of a&#13;
possible 810. Following him&#13;
closely in the same division was&#13;
Ross Thompson with 782 points.&#13;
The champion of the Men's Open&#13;
Instinctive Division was Mike&#13;
Vanchena with a score of 684. The&#13;
Women's Open Champion was&#13;
Anita Ratsch with a score of 530.&#13;
In the Men's Handicap Division&#13;
with a Compound Bow, Tom&#13;
Kilsdonk was the champion with a&#13;
score of 698, 48 point s above his&#13;
average. In the Men's Handicap&#13;
Division with a Conventional Bow,&#13;
Dave McPherson took top honors&#13;
by shooting a 555 which was 45&#13;
points over his average.&#13;
In the Women's Handicap&#13;
Division with a Conventional Bow,&#13;
Renee Netrefa was the champion&#13;
with a 491, 36 points above her&#13;
average score.&#13;
MIXED DOUBLES TENNIS&#13;
First place was captured in the&#13;
IM doubles tennis tournament on&#13;
10/15/82 by Brian Langenbach and&#13;
Linda Lasko. Second place went to&#13;
Dan Duval and Andrea Larson&#13;
while third place was held by Matt&#13;
Giovanelli&#13;
Reisenauer.&#13;
and Sherry&#13;
I M ROAD RACE&#13;
The IM Road Race on Sunday,&#13;
October 17 featured Jon Goetz&#13;
coming in 12th overall, and in 1st&#13;
place for the Intramural run. He&#13;
was the first student to cross the&#13;
finish line with a time of 11:07.&#13;
Second f or the students and 43rd&#13;
and two by Jack Decker. Running&#13;
for the extra points were Gene&#13;
Decker and Jack Decker.&#13;
For the All Stars, Bob Klofenstine&#13;
scored three TD's, with Andi&#13;
Larson adding two and Paul&#13;
Charapatta, one. Captain Kathy&#13;
Tobin ran the only extra points&#13;
scored by the All Stars.&#13;
Season standings find the All&#13;
Stars and Vikings tied with two&#13;
Men's Soccer&#13;
Record breaking weekend&#13;
by Tori Murray&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside soccer team had a&#13;
record - breaking weekend in their&#13;
game against the University of&#13;
Minnesota on Friday. On Friday&#13;
the team won 2-1 on goa ls scored&#13;
by A1 Gibson, and assisted by Kim&#13;
Jensen, who tied the single -&#13;
season assist record.&#13;
The team defeated Augsburg on&#13;
Sunday by a 3-1 margin, with&#13;
goals by Bob Newstrom (assisted&#13;
by Mike Novak and Jimmy&#13;
Banks), and Jimmy Banks&#13;
assisted by Brad Faust, and by&#13;
Mike Neary assisted by Brad&#13;
Faust. Newstrom moves into&#13;
second place on the all - time&#13;
scoring list.&#13;
The team's record is now 14-1-3,&#13;
which beats the old record of 12&#13;
wins for a season set i n 1981.&#13;
The next game is Oct. 30 against&#13;
the Illinois Institute of Technology&#13;
at IIT.&#13;
Men's cross country:&#13;
Back on their feet&#13;
PLAYER&#13;
j Photo by Masood Shafiq&#13;
intramural football throws a&#13;
overall was Jeff Wambolt with a&#13;
time of 13:52.&#13;
I M FOOTBALL&#13;
The Vikings succumbed to the&#13;
All Star team in the highest&#13;
scoring flag football game played&#13;
so far this fall. The All Stars&#13;
succeeded in scoring the first&#13;
touchdown, and never trailed the&#13;
Vikings, but it was a see - saw&#13;
battle between the two teams.&#13;
Touchdowns for the Vikings were&#13;
scored by Jeff Gentz, Steve Gentz&#13;
Women's tennis ends season&#13;
by Patricia Cumbie&#13;
The Women's Tennis Team&#13;
competed in their conference&#13;
tournament on Friday, October&#13;
22. The meet was held at the&#13;
Moorland Racquet Club in&#13;
Milwaukee. This was an important&#13;
meet for the team. The&#13;
other teams present were&#13;
Marquette University, UW -&#13;
Milwaukee, and UW - Green Bay.&#13;
Marquette won the meet with 54&#13;
points. The Parkside women came&#13;
in third.&#13;
Individually, a few women on the&#13;
team performed well. Nancy Kivi&#13;
was in the number one singles&#13;
position and she placed 2nd. She&#13;
defeated a UW - Milwaukee girl&#13;
with scores of 1-6, 7-5, and 7-6.&#13;
However, a Marquette player beat&#13;
her in the subsequent match 6-1&#13;
and 6-4. Another singles player,&#13;
Lori Bleashka, also placed 2nd.&#13;
She defeated a Green Bay woman&#13;
6-0 and 6-1.&#13;
The doubles team also raked in&#13;
two second places. Jackie Rittmer&#13;
and Linda Masters won over&#13;
Green Bay, but lost to Marquette&#13;
6-0 and 6-1. The 2nd doubles team,&#13;
Char Hall and Ann Althaus participated&#13;
in a crucial match for&#13;
the team. They defeated UW -&#13;
Green Bay. The girls tried hard to&#13;
win it, but they were defeated by&#13;
UW - Milwaukee players.&#13;
Coach Goggin said they could&#13;
have placed second if they would&#13;
have won a couple more matches.&#13;
The women tried hard, and&#13;
became more improved as the&#13;
season progressed. Goggin is not&#13;
displeased with anyone's performance.&#13;
The Women's Tennis&#13;
Team has closed out the season on&#13;
a positive note.&#13;
Volleyball team wins&#13;
The Women's Volleyball Team&#13;
had an outstanding weekend this&#13;
past weekend. Playing a total of 15&#13;
matches, the team won the&#13;
Carthage Invitational. The team's&#13;
record is now 18 wins and 10&#13;
losses. Individual matches in the&#13;
tournament were:&#13;
Saint Xavier 15-4, 15-1 1&#13;
UW - Oshkosh 15 - 8, 1 2 -15, 15 -&#13;
13&#13;
Lake Forest 15 -13,12 -15,15 -10&#13;
Elmhurst 15 - 12, 15 - 2&#13;
Semi-finals:&#13;
Stevens Point 7 -15,15 - 4,15 - 5&#13;
UW-Oshkosh 15-6,15-12&#13;
Two members of Parkside's&#13;
team made the All - Tournament&#13;
Team: Shirley Gunther and Callie&#13;
Lee. Coach Terry Paulson was&#13;
pleased with this weekend results.&#13;
"I feel we're a lot better off than&#13;
we were three weeks ago," he&#13;
commented.&#13;
On Sunday, October 31st, the&#13;
Women's Volleyball team will&#13;
host the NAIA District 14&#13;
Volleyball Championship. Play&#13;
will begin at 1:00 p. m. with the 4th&#13;
seed, UW - Eau Claire matched&#13;
against the 5th seed, Lakeland&#13;
College. At 3:00 p. m., number one&#13;
seed UW - Milwaukee will play the&#13;
winner of the 1:00 p. m. match.&#13;
Also playing at 3:00 p. m. will be&#13;
our own Ranger team versus the&#13;
Marquette Warriors. Parkside&#13;
hopes to again triumph over&#13;
Marquette as they did on October&#13;
19th.&#13;
The winner of this tournament&#13;
will be one ste p away from participation&#13;
in the National Tournament.&#13;
By defeating the winner&#13;
of District 13 (State of Minnesota)&#13;
on Friday, November 12th, the&#13;
District 14 champion will earn the&#13;
right to participate in the NAIA&#13;
National Volleyball Tournament&#13;
November 18th - 20 in Denver,&#13;
Colorado.&#13;
Admission prices are: Adults&#13;
$2.00; Students w/I.D. $1.00;&#13;
Children $1.00.&#13;
COME OUT AND SUPPORT&#13;
THE RANGER TEAM!&#13;
pass&#13;
wins apiece, while the Panzers&#13;
trail with only one win. The last&#13;
game of the season will be played&#13;
Thursday evening, 10/28 at 4:00&#13;
p.m. Should the Vikings lose to&#13;
the Panzer's there will be a three -&#13;
way tie, with all teams having a 2-&#13;
2 record. If a play - off game for&#13;
the league championship is&#13;
necessary, it will be played&#13;
November 4 at 4:00 p.m.&#13;
INTRAMURAL RACQUETBALL&#13;
The Intramural Racquetball&#13;
league concluded this week. In the&#13;
Open Division, Jeff Ursu topped&#13;
all participants by completing&#13;
league play without a defeat,&#13;
finishing 6-0. Second in the league&#13;
was Gary Goetz with a 3-1 record&#13;
followed by Jim Eils with a 2-2&#13;
record.&#13;
In the Beginners Division,&#13;
Howard Kroll took champion&#13;
honors by finishing 4-0, while&#13;
Mark Schall followed with a 3-0&#13;
record. Third place was captured&#13;
by Derek Cook at 2-1.&#13;
by Patricia Cumbie&#13;
Men's Cross Country ran the&#13;
Tenth Annual Carthage Invitational&#13;
October 23 at Petrifying&#13;
Springs Park. Twenty - two&#13;
schools participated in this meet.&#13;
Parkside placed eleventh.&#13;
The next meet is the NCAA&#13;
Regionals that will be held at&#13;
Parkside at 2:00 on Saturday the&#13;
30th. The meet will be hosted by&#13;
the Men's and Women's Cross&#13;
Country teams. This is an important&#13;
meet because this will&#13;
decide which teams go to the&#13;
NCAA Nationals. The Cross&#13;
Country teams that place third or&#13;
above are eligible to participate.&#13;
There are sixteen teams that are&#13;
going to be competing this&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
The team is anxious to participate&#13;
and they hope to do well.&#13;
So far this season has been going&#13;
well despite injuries, and Coach&#13;
Lucian Rosa is not displeased with&#13;
anyone's performance thus far.&#13;
Rich Miller and Jim Miller are&#13;
performing better now that they&#13;
are recovering from their injuries.&#13;
The men are expected to&#13;
run a very good meet this&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
The team ran well this past&#13;
Capitol's low fares&#13;
"What a break!"&#13;
Whe rever we fly, we have the lowest&#13;
unrestricted fares. That means no advance&#13;
purchase, no minimum stay We're always&#13;
glad to see you, even at the last minute.&#13;
Make up your mind today—and by tomorrow,&#13;
you're on your way!&#13;
For reservations and information, call&#13;
your Travel Agent or Capitol Air at 212-&#13;
883-0750 in New York City, 312-347-0230 in&#13;
Chicago, 213-986-8445 in Los Angeles, 415-&#13;
956-8111 in San Francisco or 305-372-8000&#13;
in Miami. Outside these areas, please call&#13;
800-227-4865 (8-O-O-C-A-P-l-T-O-L).&#13;
SERVING THE PUBLIC FOR 36 YEARS&#13;
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SCHEDULED AIRLINE SERVICE&#13;
THE LOWEST FARE&#13;
weekend, with Bob Covelli placing&#13;
35th at 25:50, which is shaving&#13;
time off the last meet he ran. Tom&#13;
Barrett also performed well,&#13;
placing 45th with a time of 26:02.&#13;
The other team members did as&#13;
follows:&#13;
64 Ji m Miller — 26:21&#13;
72 Ric h Miller — 26:34&#13;
79 And y Serrano — 26:47&#13;
92 Glenn Schultz — 27:07&#13;
93 A1 Correa — 27.0 7.7&#13;
• * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10:00 am - 4.00 pm&#13;
• Jube Jells&#13;
• Licorice Bully&#13;
• Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Milk Carmels&#13;
• Orange Slices&#13;
• Peanut Butter Chip&#13;
• Peanut Clusters&#13;
• Peppermint Kisses&#13;
• Rootbeer Barrels&#13;
• Sour Balls&#13;
• Spearment Leaves&#13;
• Starlite Mints&#13;
• Carmel Targets&#13;
• Cinnamon Discs&#13;
• Candy Pops&#13;
+ Corn Nuts&#13;
• Assorted Perky&#13;
• Assorted Royal&#13;
Assorted Toffee&#13;
Bridge Mix&#13;
Burndt Peanuts&#13;
Butterscotch Discs&#13;
Candy Coffee Discs&#13;
Carmel Bully&#13;
Chocolate Drops&#13;
Chocolate Jots&#13;
Chocolate Peanuts&#13;
Chocolate Raisins&#13;
Chocolate Stars&#13;
Jelly Beans&#13;
California Mix&#13;
Caribbean Delicacy&#13;
Carob Malted Milk Balls&#13;
Carob Raisins&#13;
Carob Peanuts&#13;
Natural Pistachio&#13;
Red Pistachio&#13;
• Spanish Peanuts&#13;
• Sunflower Seeds&#13;
• Student Food Mix&#13;
• Yogurt Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Yogurt Peanuts&#13;
• Yogurt Raisins&#13;
• Yogurt Sesame Brittle&#13;
• Smoked Almonds whole&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF NOV.&#13;
V3 OFF&#13;
SMOKED&#13;
ALMONDS&#13;
lit&#13;
Thursday, October 28, 1982 RANGER&#13;
Greg Eschmann&#13;
Student runs first marathon by Tori Murray&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Recently, Greg Eschmann, a 22&#13;
year - old economics and&#13;
marketing major at Parkside,&#13;
completed his first marathon in 3&#13;
hours, 4 minutes and 57 seconds.&#13;
Talking about running with&#13;
Eschmann, one gets the impression&#13;
that he has been running&#13;
for quite some time, but actually&#13;
he started running on Easter&#13;
Sunday, about eight months ago.&#13;
Before running, he swam a&#13;
great deal. Then to lose weight, he&#13;
supplemented running to his&#13;
swimming program. During the&#13;
summer he trained twice daily. "I&#13;
kinda caught the bug. I thought if I&#13;
could lose 5 pounds training once a&#13;
day, then I could lose 10 pounds&#13;
training twice a day," he commented.&#13;
After 8 months of running,&#13;
Eschmann's weekly mileage&#13;
reached 135 -140 miles. He entered&#13;
many short distance races such as&#13;
the Lighthouse Run and Flatiron&#13;
Run. "I went to Merritt's Running&#13;
Center (a running store in Racine)&#13;
one day to buy a pair of shoes and&#13;
I asked Jeff DeMatthew&#13;
(salesperson and runner) if there&#13;
were any races coming up. He&#13;
said something about the&#13;
Lakefront Marathon in Milwaukee&#13;
that he was running in and he gave&#13;
me an application blank. I took it&#13;
home and every so often I would&#13;
look at it. Four weeks before the&#13;
race, I sent it in."&#13;
Eschmann's training consisted&#13;
Photo by Masood Shafiq&#13;
GREG ESCHMANN&#13;
of distance running; in the&#13;
morning, he would run 10 miles&#13;
and at night, 5 more miles. The&#13;
weekend would include one long&#13;
over - distance run such as running&#13;
to Parkside and back home,&#13;
about 28 mile s.&#13;
Harriers share views&#13;
by Tori Murray&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Cross country has often been&#13;
recognized as a weaker cousin to&#13;
Track and Field, but in the recent&#13;
past it has developed into a major&#13;
sport. The women's race distance&#13;
is usually 5 kilometers. The races&#13;
take place in parks, on golf&#13;
courses or on courses designed&#13;
specifically for cross country.&#13;
Parkside's course is rated&#13;
nationally as a tough course to&#13;
run. This week the Ranger asked&#13;
members of the women's cross&#13;
country team to share their&#13;
feelings of their sport.&#13;
Cross country is a sport that&#13;
requires tremendous discipline&#13;
and dedication. Although some&#13;
team members use cross country&#13;
to build a strong base for track in&#13;
the spring, for most runners it is&#13;
not only a physical challenge as&#13;
well as mental challenge. "Cross&#13;
country isn't a competition&#13;
against another person as much&#13;
as it is a competition against&#13;
yourself. Bettering your time&#13;
every race is the only way I judge&#13;
my performance, not how I place.&#13;
Sometimes I feel like I've won&#13;
when the course is very hard and&#13;
hilly and I don't let it conquer&#13;
me," explained one member.&#13;
"Cross country builds a&#13;
'toughness' that carries over into&#13;
many areas of my life," noted&#13;
Debbie Spino.&#13;
This year's team is Parkside's&#13;
largest and all members agree&#13;
that that is a definite plus. "I think&#13;
that we have a great team this&#13;
year, not only in numbers but in a&#13;
variety of personalities and talent.&#13;
Everyone gets along well and&#13;
supports each other," Lynda&#13;
Pfeilstifter enthusiastically&#13;
replied.&#13;
Karen Jacobson feels that the&#13;
friendships and concern for each&#13;
other that has developed will be a&#13;
prime motivator for the team's&#13;
future success.&#13;
Unanimously, all team members&#13;
agreed that cross country&#13;
training is difficult and tiring, but&#13;
also acknowledge that it pays off&#13;
in the races. "Coach DeWitt runs&#13;
with us everyday and encourages&#13;
everyone. His coaching&#13;
philosophy / training has continued&#13;
to lower my times each&#13;
season," commented Spino.&#13;
With six weeks remaining in the&#13;
season, the team is at midpoint.&#13;
After spending the first part of the&#13;
season building strength, many&#13;
team members are optimistic&#13;
about the second half of the&#13;
season. "I think we can achieve&#13;
our team goals," stated Michelle&#13;
Gross.&#13;
"I'm feeling good. I understand&#13;
the race and the sport better this&#13;
year. I think I've matured as a&#13;
runner," commented Dona&#13;
Driscoll.&#13;
Although the training is difficult,&#13;
the season definitely has&#13;
had some good times. The&#13;
friendships and the road trip to&#13;
Kalamazoo, MI. stand out in most&#13;
of the members minds. "Seeing&#13;
Coach DeWitt covered with mud&#13;
after going out to run a time trial&#13;
in pouring rain and falling three&#13;
times," was a memorable&#13;
moment for Carol Romano.&#13;
Sports Calendar&#13;
MEN'S CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
Oct. 30, Saturday - NCAA&#13;
Regionals, Here, 11 a.m.&#13;
Nov. 6, Saturday - TFA/USA&#13;
Mid America Open, Here, 2:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Nov. 13, Saturday - NCAA&#13;
Nationals, (St. Cloud, MN), 11:00&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Nov. 20, Saturday - NAIA&#13;
Nationals, Here, 11:00 a.m.&#13;
WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
Oct. 30, Saturday - NCAA&#13;
Regionals, Here, 11 a.m.&#13;
Nov. 6, Saturday - TFA/USA&#13;
Open, Here, 11 a.m.&#13;
Nov. 13, Saturday - NCAA&#13;
Nationals, (St. Cloud, MN), TBA&#13;
Nov. 20, Saturday - NAIA&#13;
Nationals, Here, 9:45 a.m.&#13;
MEN'S SOCCER&#13;
Oct. 30, Saturday - 111. Ins titute&#13;
of Technology, Away, 1:00 p.m.&#13;
Nov. 6, Saturday - UWPlatteville,&#13;
Here, 2:00 p.m.&#13;
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL&#13;
Oct. 29-30, Fri., Sat. - Grand&#13;
Valley St. College Tourn., TBA&#13;
Nov. 5-6, Fri., Sat. - Valparaiso&#13;
University Tournament, 5:00 p.m.&#13;
Nov. 12-13, Fri., Sat. - Conference&#13;
Tournament, TBA&#13;
Nov. 18-20, T hurs., Fri., Sat. -&#13;
NAIA Nationals, TBA&#13;
The weather was not the best for&#13;
running a marathon on the day of&#13;
the Lakefront Marathon. There&#13;
was a strong wind — about 24 mph&#13;
off the lake. The temperature was&#13;
52-55 degrees. "At the 23 mile&#13;
mark, there was a 90 - foot drop&#13;
and it got cold and windy, but I&#13;
didn't really notice," commented&#13;
Eschmann.&#13;
At the Lakefront Marathon, the&#13;
starting shoot had subsections&#13;
that were divided by mile splits (6&#13;
minute pace, 7 minute pace and so&#13;
on) Eschmann started in the 8&#13;
minute section. From the start&#13;
and until the 20 mile mark, he ran&#13;
with another runner who introduced&#13;
himself at the starting&#13;
line. Then feeling a little stronger&#13;
than the other runner, he continued&#13;
at a strong pace. "At the&#13;
starting line, I was tense. I was so&#13;
afraid I wouldn't finish and I&#13;
wanted to be able to say that I&#13;
finished a marathon."&#13;
The day after the marathon&#13;
Eschmann did his usual workout.&#13;
"I figured I had to or I would&#13;
stiffen up," he stated.&#13;
Eschmann's future running&#13;
plans include another marathon&#13;
and to improve his time.&#13;
—Classifieds— AA MEETING: Every Wednesday, Moln 211,&#13;
between 1 and 2 p.m.&#13;
TYPING: Neat and accurate. No project is&#13;
too large or little. Will edit if requested&#13;
Donna F. call 633-1794.&#13;
MARKETING COORDINATORS NEEDED:&#13;
Position involves marketing and promoting&#13;
high quality ski and beach trips on campus.&#13;
Earn commission plus FREE TRAVEL.&#13;
Call Summit Tours, 800-325-0439.&#13;
FOR SALE: Downhill skis, Fischer 165cm,&#13;
Munari boots, mens 9-9-1/2. Call ext. 2311.&#13;
TYPING: Professional, speedy service.&#13;
Student rates. Call Debbie at 681-3522&#13;
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: Serious&#13;
student to share upper flat. $65 per month&#13;
plus utilities, 1/2 garage, 1/2 basement.&#13;
Contact Al at 654-3324 or Deb at 657-0142&#13;
PROFESSIONAL TYPING: Term papers,&#13;
resumes, letters. Spelling and grammar&#13;
included. Call Lynn Holtze and leave a&#13;
message on my tape. 552-7512.&#13;
WANTED: Female to share apartment. Call&#13;
Sue afternoons, 553-2245.&#13;
THE OLD BOOK CORNER, upstairs at&#13;
Martha Merrell's Book Store, 312-6th Street&#13;
(Racine), has 2000 used books for sale.&#13;
Come browse and find a treasure!&#13;
FOR SALE: 1978 Le Car, 34 mpg, am/fm&#13;
stereo. 414-843-3055.&#13;
TYPING: $1.25 per page, efficient and accurate&#13;
typist. Papers, resumes,&#13;
manuscripts, etc. Phone. 657-6068,&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
U.C. — Who are you?? G.P.&#13;
GOMER PYLE: Who are you?? U.C.&#13;
WHAT happened to chess club? Rooked&#13;
LUIS - So i t's a date then???&#13;
DR. DREWW Meeting cancelled this week&#13;
for lack of interest. Sorry Doc.&#13;
JULI What did you have to do — kill the&#13;
cow?? HAHAHA&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
Wins Invitational&#13;
by Patricia Cumbie&#13;
The Women's Cross Country&#13;
team competed in the Carthage&#13;
Invitational this past Saturday at&#13;
Petrifying Springs Park. They&#13;
won the meet in a tie with UW -&#13;
Milwaukee. Parkside and&#13;
Milwaukee both had 62 points.&#13;
Parkside's Debbie Spino placed&#13;
first in the meet. Her time was&#13;
16:49. The other outstanding&#13;
runners on the team were Sue&#13;
Mayer placing 3rd at 17:00, Dona&#13;
Driscoll 9th, 17:21; Jane&#13;
Roszkowski finished 19th, 17:55;&#13;
and Karen Jacobsen 36th at 18:17&#13;
Sue Meyer did very well, she ran&#13;
her best race in two years, according&#13;
to Coach Mike DeWitt,&#13;
The women are expecting to run&#13;
well in the NCAA Regionals that&#13;
are going to take place Saturday&#13;
Oct. 30. Coach DeWitt feels Spino&#13;
should be running even faster this&#13;
meet coming up. There are five&#13;
teams entered in the Regionals.&#13;
The coach feels their main&#13;
competition will be Ashland&#13;
College. DeWitt feels the girls will&#13;
perform well and be participating&#13;
in the Nationals.&#13;
Coach profile: Golf&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
Most people from this area have&#13;
heard the name Steve Stephens.&#13;
Up until this past winter, he was&#13;
the head basketball coach for&#13;
Parkside. He is still the head&#13;
coach of the men's golf team, and&#13;
STEVE STEPHENS&#13;
very much a part of the athletic&#13;
scene here, not only as a coach,&#13;
but as an instructor.&#13;
Steve Stephens, 46, lives in&#13;
Kenosha with Connie, his wife&#13;
of 28 years.&#13;
Stephens grew up in Platteville,&#13;
Wisconsin, and graduated from&#13;
Platteville High School. From&#13;
there, he went to the University of&#13;
Wisconsin, receiving both his&#13;
Bachelor's and Master's degrees&#13;
in Physical Education. His&#13;
coaching career began 24 years&#13;
ago at Beaver Dam High School.&#13;
In his five years there, he was the&#13;
assistant football coach, and the&#13;
head coach of both golf and&#13;
basketball. He then joined the&#13;
college coaching ranks, working&#13;
in the UW - Center System for five&#13;
years, against as head coach of&#13;
basketball and golf. Then, in 1969,&#13;
when UW - Parkside opened its&#13;
doors, Steve Stephens was chosen&#13;
as its first head basketball coach;&#13;
and as they say, the rest is history.&#13;
Stephens' coaching philosophy&#13;
may be the major reason why his&#13;
basketball teams were so successful.&#13;
It is the total team concept.&#13;
His teams were taught to&#13;
play a strong, full - court, man - to&#13;
- man defense. He used multiple&#13;
offensive set - ups, and put his best&#13;
players in the positions where&#13;
they played their best.&#13;
On the other side of the coin, this&#13;
coaching of golf is based on the&#13;
individual. Unlike other team&#13;
sports, the team members are on&#13;
their own, rather than relying on&#13;
each other for support. This calls&#13;
for a specialized type of coaching;&#13;
the players are helped separately&#13;
with their golf skills, then are put&#13;
together as a team.&#13;
Stephens is very happy to be a&#13;
part of Parkside. He has high&#13;
praise for the campus and its&#13;
people. He believes that ours is&#13;
one of the best and most beautiful&#13;
campuses in the state, and that it&#13;
holds its own against larger&#13;
schools, in athletics as well as&#13;
academic programs.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING S'/«% Interest K Year Daily ggg gj&#13;
Balance is *500.00 or Morel ^&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-694-1380&#13;
fl&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
IE HI ERE&#13;
CALL OR&#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;
JO HELP YOU CROW!</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 11, issue 8, October 28, 1982</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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                <text>1982-10-28</text>
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 W University of Wisconsin - Parkside Panel discussion soc New guidelines clarify issues by Bob Kiesling News Editor New guidelines for SOC were passed by the PSGA Senate at their Oct. 22 meeting. The new guidelines are considered a significant improvement over the old rules because they include a revised budgeting procedure for organizations on campus, job descriptions for the chair and vice - chair, and removal from office procedures. The main problem with the old guidelines was that there was inadequate documentation; new rules were being added as needed and not being kept track of. It was felt that SOC required more specific guidelines in view of the fact that they did not seem to be accomplishing their objectives. "The main reason was that the guidelines were ambiguous," said PSGA vice - president Chuck Betz. Betz also cited a lack of job descriptions for the chairman and vice - chairman of SOC. It is a Student Life policy that all paid student organization positions have duties described in the organization's constitution. The Budget and Review Committee also got a revised set of procedures. The Committee, which allocates SOC funds to individual clubs, now has a specific set of rules and membership criteria. The BRC rules were revised because it "just wasn't working," according to Betz. The new guidelines state: "The Student Organization Council is a standing committee of PSGA, Inc. The purpose of the standing Budgets were due committee is to promote communication and support for all clubs on campus. Through discussions on fund - raising, program co - sponsorship^ organizational workshops and inter - group communication, the Student Organizations Council helps to create an opportunity to enhance the learning experience for the students at the University of Wisconsin - Parkside." The guidelines require SOC to meet at least four times during the semester and at least once a month during the summer. It gives guidelines for membership in SOC, and calls for the president erf each club, or a designated representative, to attend all meetings, and that each club representative has three "ex­cused" absences allowed them On Wednesday, November 10, from 12-2 p.m., the Sexual Harassment Advisory Committee will sponsor a panel discussion in the Union Bazaar to explore some of the aspects of sexual harassment. Joanne Zywicki, an alumna of Parkside, from Racine, will talk about sexual harassment from an employees' view, and about the identification of sexual harassment. "I will address the what, who, when, how and why," said Zywicki. "What it is, who does it, when it's done, how it's done, and why it's done. There is very little understanding about why it is done," commented Zywicki. Wayne Johnson, a professor here at Parkside will speak about the socialization of men — why men do the things they do, and how they have grown into their habits. The committee also expects to have a lawyer present to discuss the legal ramifications of sexual harassment. After the speakers have given their presentations, the audience will be given the opportunity to ask questions relating to sexual harassment. The committee urges everyone to attend and learn about this "difficult to talk about" subject. Both before and after the panel discussion, any interested persons can view the movie WORKPLACE HUSTLE. The movie will be shown before the discussion at 11 and 11:30 a.m., and again after the discussion, at 2 and 2:30 p.m. each semester. An absence is considered ex­cused when the chairman of SOC has been notified at least 48 hours prior to the meeting, in writing. Each unexcused absence by a club results in a five percent decrease in that club's budget. Also, the guidelines state that a quorum consists of a simple majority of members, rather than two thirds of the SOC body being present. The removal from office procedures state that impeachment of either chair or vice chair requires a two thirds vote by the SOC membership before the PSGA Senate can initiate im­peachment proceedings. The trial is held one week from the date the motion is passed. Since SOC is a standing committee of PSGA, the guidelines state that: "The Student Organizations Council shall create rules and guidelines for its governance in accordance with the PSGA, Inc. Constitution and PSGA, Inc. Senate Rules. The PSGA, Inc. Senate shall have final approval of any guidelines and rules proposed by the Student Organizations Council." by Bob Kiesling News Editor With the budgets due last Tuesday, Nov. 2, both PSGA and SOC held several emergency meetings to complete their proposals in time. PAB, on the other hand, was granted a favorable ruling by the judicial branch to change their budgeting format to include the Performing Arts and Lectures committee budget in their own. Even so, PAB had two separate budget proposals ready in the event that PAL was to be budgeted separately. The Justices ruled that it was not within the PSGA Senate's authority to determine PAB's budgeting procedures. The PSGA Senate came into conflict with the Executive branch over their budget proposal. The initial proposal, drafted by president Jim Kreuser, called for a 30 percent increase in both the president's and vice president's salaries, and a 518 percent in­crease in the PSGA secretary's salary. In addition, $275 has been requested to fund the Dialogue, the PSGA newsletter. Both the initial and alternate budgets in­clude $5,000 to fund the new Public Employee Day set Monday, Nov. 8, has been proclaimed Public Employee Day in Wisconsin, thanks to efforts by the Wisconsin State Employees Union. The union, part of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AF-SCME), approached Gov. Lee Sherman Dreyfus with the idea and he initiated the proclamation designating the day to recognize the efforts of public employees in Wisconsin. The AFSCME Council 24 Local 2180 at UW - Parkside met with Chancellor Alan E. Guskin who then issued a similar proclamation designating Nov. 8 as Public Employee Day at UW-P. The proclamation reads: WHEREAS, at the University of Wisconsin - Parkside, public employees with a wide variety of Continued On Page Three Student Legal Service. The alternative budget, passed unanimously in an emergency meeting Monday morning and approved by Kreuser that af­ternoon, limits both the president's and vice president's salaries to a 20 percent increase. The PSGA secretary will receive a 50 percent salary increase. The PSGA approved 1983-84 budget for PSGA is triple this year's budget, an increase from $6,863 to $19,492 for next year's request. The largest single item on the 1982-83 request is funding for the student Legal Service, for which the Senate is asking $5,000 in new allocations. PSGA's rationale for the legal service budget reads: "Since the service is currently going through the bidding process, it would be very difficult to Continued On Page Four Pulitzer winner to speak here Douglas Hofstadter, whose book "Godel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid" won a Pulitzer prize in 1980, will be the first Honors Program Distinguished Visiting Scholar at Parkside. Students involved in the honors program are participating this semester in a series titled "Ex­plaining Things" which has featured a series of guest lec­turers. The Honors Program is directed by Prof. Lee Thayer, who is coordinating arrangements for Hofstadter's visit. Hofstadter, 36, a professor of computer science at Indiana University - Bloomington, will be on the UW-Parkside campus Nov. 15 - 17 for a series of programs both for students and the general public. Hofstadter's "formal" fields are mathematics, artificial in­telligence and computer sciences, but his interests are much broader, including linguistics, psychology, art, music, philosophy, biology, physics and the human sciences in general. His most recent book is "The Mind's I,' which brings together a number of writings on mind and brain, self and soul, identity and Business students Advising offered by Pat Hensiak Editor Peer Support, in conjunction with the Business Clubs, including PSE, Women in Business, and Accounting Club will again sponsor Student to Student Ad­vising during the regular advising period. This is the third year that this type of advising is being of­fered. Close to 1000 students have declared Business as their area of interest. Ilene Levin is the Coordinator of Business and Administrative Science here at Parkside and she advises all the Business Area of Interest Students. In the time set aside before registration, it is an ex­tensive task to give all of those students the time they may require for advising about their schedule. For that reason, student to student advising has been made available for the Business students. Before a business student declares a major, they must first complete the pre - business core courses and by the time students are juniors they should have completed all the general requirements, the Breadth of Knowledge, Collegiate Skills, and then they can declare the major and a specialty. After declaring the major they are assigned a different faculty advisor than Levin. Student to Student advising allows Juniors and Seniors to help Freshmen and Sophomores make some decisions about their scheduling. Levin commented, "What we're hoping for, with this student to student advising is that freshmen and sophomores can talk with juniors and seniors and realize some of the particular problems that I may not be able to respond to. Juniors and Seniors have recently been through the program, and they'll be a great help." Levin also pointed out that sometimes the people who need the most help are the ones who don't seek it. If the students doing the advising know someone is having trouble, they can direct that student to Levin. "I hope the student to student advising is a success," concluded Levin. "I've often felt that the grapevine is the most helpful way of finding things out." DOUGLAS HOFSTADTER consciousness, free will and determinism, along with a commentary by Hofstadter and philosopher Daniel Dennett. Hofstadter also writes a monthly column called "Metamagical Themas" for Scientific American. Hofstadter's major public address will be an Honors Program Lecture on "Imagining Mind" at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 17 in Molinaro Hall, Room 105. All of Hofstadter's campuses appearances are open to the public. Reservations are required only for a reception, dinner and informal discussion sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical Society at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 16, and can be made by contacting Prof. Aaron Snyder (Phone 553-2319). The remainder of Hofstadter's schedule is: Monday, Nov. 15: A talk on communication theory and research at 10 a.m. (location to be announced); a Social Science Roundtable session on "Sexism and Language" at 11:45 a.m. in Union Room 104; and a Mathematics / Computer Science reception at 3 p.m. in Molinaro Hall, Room 111 and colloquium at 3:30 p.m. in Molinaro 107. Tuesday, Nov. 16: A session with the Parkside Computer Club at 8:30 a.m. in Molinaro Room 113; an Honors Seminar on "Imagination" at 11 a.m. in Communication Arts Building Room 128; an informal Art Faculty / Student Roundtable at 1:30 p.m. in Communication Arts 233; and an Honors Seminar on "Explaining Things" at 3:30 p.m. in Communication Arts 132. Wednesday, Nov. 17: A break­fast session with music faculty and students from 7:45 to 9:45 a.m. in the Union cafeteria; a Psychology Colloquium at 9 a.m. (location to be announced); and a Women's Studies Seminar on "Sexism and Language" at 3 p.m. in Molinaro Room 111. A bit of nostalgia A limited number of tickets still remain for Tintypes, the hit musical which will appear at Parkside Sunday, Nov. 7, as the second event in the 1982-83 Accent on Enrichment Series. Ticket information about the musical review which celebrates America at the turn of the century is available at the Union In­formation Center (553-2345) from 8 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday, until 4:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. All seats are reserved. Tintypes audiences relive the gentle days of a bygone era through nearly 50 songs and dances. The Broadway hit features the music of such favorite American composers as George M. Cohen, Scott Joplin and John Philip Sousa. Conceived by Mary Kyte, Mel Marvin and Gary Pearle, Tin­types has been described as a scrapbook of nostalgia which recreates images of historical figures such as Teddy Roosevelt and Emma Goldman, as well as mythical characters. Their stories, coupled with the music of the period, evoke a period of time that is often referred to as the last gasp of America's innocence — the years that bridge the 19th and 20th centuries. Nominated for two Tony Awards including best musical, Tintypes has been a major success in New York, Chicago and Los Angeles. The company which will appear at Parkside is currently on a 30 - week national tour and has just concluded a two -week engagement in Kansas City. &#13;
Thursday, November 4,1982 RANGER Editorial Orphan Drug Bill must pass Elections are over. The congressmen are in. Lately it seems that everyone has felt the economic squeeze at some level. Everyone is ready to get back on their feet. Raising the standard of living is something we all strive for in some way. In a time when we are spending billions on a defense system, for the good of this country, perhaps it is time we spend a solid amount of money for the good of the people within this country. On November 29, the Orphan Drug Bill will be coming before Congress. The purpose of the bill is to supplement drug companies in the research and develop­ment of drugs for unpopular, unprofitable sickness and disease. It's easy to see someone stricken with a disease like Tourette Syndrome and feel sorry for them. These people search for a touch of what many of us consider normal everyday living. The drug needed to bring Tourette Syndrome to a sense of control is an orphan drug. Without this bill, these people may never find that control. It's easy to stand and feel sorry for someone. Instead of doing that, take ten or fifteen minutes and write a letter to your congressman urging the acceptance of this Orphan Drug Bill. You will probably feel better after you've done it, and maybe some of the emotional and physical pain that the people in need of these medications feel, would be eliminated. MMMMM Letters to the editor To Life To the Editor: I have been in the position for some time now to watch a family handle the real life situation of their father whom has the muscle disorder ALS, commonly referred to as Lou Gehrig's disease. The muscle deterioration of this afflicted person is to the point now where swallowing and breathing are becoming increasingly dif­ficult, even life - threatening. The family is, for all practical pur­poses, this man's life support system! One possible course of action for this family could have been to shy away from the situation, acting as if it did not exist, declining to accept the responsibility which accompanies an unexpected event such as this. In doing that, however, the family members would have been proving that they cared more about how this situation would affecf them, possibly 'cramping their lifestyle,' than about the person who was literally afflicted. This would seem to be the easiest way to handle the situation, and it is the way that most people do choose to handle it. That is sad, for in sending flowers and cards we forget the most important ingredient — ourselves. In not wishing to face the bare edge of life and death, people choose to pass up what could prove to be the most extraordinary growing experience of a lifetime. It is a perception enricher and value changer. It breathes new insight and vitality into weary eyes and minds. Still, most will choose to pass on the opportunity, as any hospice or nursing home volunteer or worker could tell you. But for those fortunate few, however, who choose to meet the challenge of these sometimes disspiriting situations, and who do not want anything more than to give, the rewards are a fresh and powerful appreciation of life! Much of the determination as to how we react in situations similar to the one that I described depends on how we prioritize. That is, what in life we rate most important, and what we are afraid to place importance on. A1 Einstein once said that he never did belong to anything with his whole heart. What I believe he meant was that once you surrender your heart to any one thing, you lose sight and perspective about the total picture of life. Our actions are a direct consequence of our attitudes, that is, we act out our thoughts. How we see the world is reflected in how we act towards the world and in it. Herein lies the importance and ramifications of prioritizing. Once we examine the world, especially living things, and see beyond the initial 'noise' en­countered, we no longer are overwhelmed by the complexity of the intricate games we whole­heartedly participate in. We begin to perceive, beyond the superficial images we have of different cultures, environments, and the like, and see that all peoples are all basically alike. Our perceptive capabilities become more sen­sitive. We begin to cast aside the nonsense that we make too real and take too seriously, things such as hero - worship, putting up of 'fronts,' and all other kinds of selfish needs and deeds. With this new type of self - examination it becomes clear that how we use, define, and view ourselves is the exact model by which we deal with the world around us. One must always use this self -examination if one wishes to see the world through honest, open eyes rather than having a clouded vision. But only if you wish. If you disagree with this, then you basically believe that people do things, all things, because they do not want to do them. Bringing this all back to the family and the man with ALS, we can see them living and growing with this real situation, to pinnacles of appreciation and reverence for life that too few ever attain. A person gains new perspective on what does and does not belong to you, on what, as human beings, we have rights or no rights to meddle with, on love, Continued On Page Six Poor, Poor John To the Editors: Sirs: It is with great interest that I have read the current debate in your letter column concerning the works of your Mr. John Kovalic, but is only now that I have decided to become an active participant. I refer to last week's "New Music" article. I must take ex­ception to one statement therein. And I quote: "But when (Wendy 0. Williams is) built like a paraplegic elephant ..." I am a paraplegic elephant. I can find no so - called "Humor" in his remark and consider it an insult not only to paraplegic elephants in general, but to the animal kingdom as a whole. Does Mr. Kovalic think it is funny being a paraplegic elephant? I have been one for twenty - six years now and, frankly, I find his "humor" to be in very bad taste as well as being callous, cruel, and very, very nasty. To poke humor at unfortunates such as us only in order to get a cheap laugh is unbelievable enough, but it is particularly ill -timed when so many people and species are making strides to create equal opportunities for disabled pachyderms. What will his next article be on? Clubbing baby seals? Sincerely, Jacob Alek Active participation To the Editor: Have you ever had a professor at Parkside who you felt was "WELL, SCOTT, IT WASN'T ALL FOR NOTHING. SENATOR PROXMIRE HAS GIVEN ME A JOB ON HIS OFFICE STAFF." Editor's notes November brings more than chill by Pat Hensiak Editor The month of October was a lot of fun. Halloween this past weekend was an interesting one. During the trick or treat time, the children were sparse, but still cleverly dressed. Very easy to enjoy. Halloween also marks the end of October, which means most of us who haven't yet experienced mid - terms will soon do so. Mid -terms can be a traumatic ex­perience, but at the same rate they can lend a sense of relief. We've made it halfway through the semester. Before we know it we'll be looking for Christmas gifts in crowds of many. November brings with it more than a chill in the air. Activities on campus are moving right along. On November 10, the Sexual Harassment Advisory Committee will sponsor a panel discussion offering insight into aspects of sexual harassment. Many people have misconceptions about sexual harassment, its forms, its causes and its cures. It wouldn't hurt to attend the discussion and ask some questions. You may learn something that will help you throughout the rest of your life. The discussion will be held in the Union Bazaar area from 12-2 p.m. There's also another Accent on Enrichment performance this weekend. Sunday, November 7 marks the appearance of the Broadway Musical "Tintypes." If you think you would like to attend, find a friend to go along and do it. It will probably be a lot of fun for both you and your friend. The editorial this week speaks out on the passing of the Orphan Drug Bill. The vote will be made on November 29. To some the bill would serve no purpose, but for many it will serve the purpose of control. Some people have no idea what it's like to live the way "normal" people do. It doesn't seem fair that because the medication they need to gain control won't make a profit, the drug is very rarely explored. Take fifteen minutes of your time to help make someone elses life a little more bearable. Maybe the result won't affect you directly today, but that's not saying it never will. Coming up this month for all of the Business Area of Interest students, is Student to Student Advising. The advising program was set up the way it is, to make registration easier and less time consuming for the freshman and junior Business Majors. Take advantage of the opportunity to save time and trouble, find out when and where student advising will be available if you are a business major. It will be easier in the long run. It's nice to report that people have been submitting a lot of excellent creative writing pieces. We haven't had a lot of room these past few weeks, but don't give up hope. We haven't stopped printing yet. Keep them coming in. Hopefully the necessary space will turn up very soon. Above aU, don't lose heart in your semester activities and classes yet. If you've been doing poorly, you have half a semester to make it up. If you're sick of school, there's only half a semester left. exceptional and was denied renewal or tenure?? Were you angry when this happened??? If so, and if you felt it was unfair for students to lose a professor who was an excellent instructor, then you will be interested in helping us in trying to insure the renewal of Professor Seybold. Professor Seybold will appear before members of the Behavioral Science Division in an open renewal hearing. We strongly encourage students to show their support for Peter by taking part in this hearing. We, as students of Parkside, have the right and obligation of making our own preferences known. The hearing will be held Saturday, November 13 at 10 a.m in Moln. 324. Please place this event as a top priority on your calendar for November 13, and show your support for student participation in this open hearing procedure. Students for Active Par­ticipation of Renewal and Tenure, Marie Marten and Maria Veronico Positive response Dear Editor: The Racine YWCA participated in the Women's Resource Day at UW - Parkside yesterday, October 27, and we were impressed with the efficiency and friendliness of the people involved in putting such an event together. Jeanne Phillips, Student Council Senator, and Chuck Betz should be commended on their courtesy and helpfulness. They carried materials for us and made us feel welcome and comfortable with our surroundings. The day was a very positive experience for us, and we want to thank Student Council, the Ranger, and all the other organizations who sponsored the event. Sincerely, Barbara R. Kroupa Membership Director Gloria Gonzales Women s Services Director Thank you The Parkside Activities Board would like to thank all those who attended the dance we held this past Friday night featuring "Tomboy." Unfortunately, the drummer became ill with the flu and that is why the dance ended early. We hope you enjoy our next dance on Thursday, Nov. 11 featuring Wally Cleaver. Maria Tenuta Chairman of Contemporary Entertainment Pat Hensiak Bob Kiesling Tony Rogers Tori Murray Masood Shafiq Norm Couture Andy Buchanan Mike Farrell Jeff Wicks Jolene Torkilsen ganger Editor News Editor Feature Editor Sports Editor Photo Editor Copy Editor Business Manager Ad Manager Distribution Manager Assistant Business Manager STAFF Kailas rar«T^ ?urns' Patricia Cumbie, Michael Luehr S Kp°r end,ck' John Kovalic, Rick Luehr, Robb Laura Petersen, Jennie Tunkieicz. uw •parkside ^ are s°,e,y RANCgr (sprinted by the Union toS'"1nVear excepf durin9 breaks and h&lt; Written permission is required for r^nrlnf T Publishin9 Co., Kenosha, Wisconsir ParSSP»ndence should be addressed tn V T-U°n of RANGER. Kxt z ENx^„KrshaRano"-Un,ver!i,v Wi Clurt^^ 006 ' inch margins ^t~VVP&lt;T',,en' "oublespaced on stand, aiVer'"catiOn. " ,e,,ers must be Signed and a telephone nur defamat a" edl,oria' Privileges^in reu,J°r publicat'on on Thursday. The R be'amatory content. e0es in re,usi"9 to print letters which contain Sharron Aken, Carol &#13;
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            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="70381">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="70382">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="70383">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="70384">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="70386">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="234">
        <name>parkside activities board (PAB)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="222">
        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1614">
        <name>performing arts and lectures committee</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1697">
        <name>student organization council (SOC)</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
