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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Students' junk mail&#13;
Page 3&#13;
Dane- VanDyke&#13;
keeps "posted&#13;
Page 7&#13;
99 Sports features:&#13;
Dannehl and Oberbruner&#13;
Page 12&#13;
Chancellor to leave for Ohio position&#13;
Alan E. Guskin, Parkside Chancellor,&#13;
has accepted the presidency&#13;
of Antioch University in Yellow&#13;
Springs, Ohio, a national university&#13;
with a distinctive niche in American&#13;
higher education. He will assume&#13;
his new duties on Sept. 1, exactly&#13;
ten years after assuming the&#13;
~ Parkside chancellorship.&#13;
Guskin, 48, will become the 17th&#13;
president of Antioch, whose founding&#13;
president in 1852 was noted&#13;
educator and social reformer Horace&#13;
Mann.&#13;
The announcement of Guskin's&#13;
appointment was made Wednesday&#13;
morning in Yellow Springs by Robert&#13;
Aller, Antioch's Board of Trustees&#13;
chairman, who co-chaired a national&#13;
search involving 250 nominations&#13;
to replace William M. Birenbaum,&#13;
who resigned last year after&#13;
eight years as Antioch president.&#13;
Antioch University consists of innovative&#13;
Antioch College in Yellow&#13;
Springs, a law school in Washington,&#13;
D.C., adult degree centers in&#13;
Philadelphia, Keene, N.H., San&#13;
Francisco, Los Angeles, Santa Barbara&#13;
and Seattle, and overseas programs&#13;
with learning centers in London&#13;
and Tubingen, West Germany.&#13;
Current enrollment on all campuses&#13;
is about 3,000.&#13;
Guskin's salary at Antioch will be&#13;
$82,000. His current Parkside salary&#13;
is $69,000.&#13;
Aller said the 15-member search&#13;
committee included Antioch trustees,&#13;
faculty and students as well as&#13;
four prominent educators who are&#13;
Antioch alumni: the dean of the&#13;
Ohio State School of Engineering,&#13;
the vice chancellor and graduate&#13;
school head at the University of&#13;
Kansas, the Kirstein Professor of&#13;
Human Relations at Harvard and&#13;
the dean of the Johns Hopkins&#13;
School of International Studies.&#13;
Antioch's unique reputation in&#13;
higher education rests on its pioneering&#13;
efforts in areas such as&#13;
cooperative education, in which&#13;
students alternate school with work&#13;
experience; use of diverse settings&#13;
for learning; individualized education;&#13;
study abroad programs; and&#13;
opportunity for disadvantaged,&#13;
women and minority students.&#13;
Antioch was the first private college&#13;
to institute cooperative education,&#13;
and still has the most extensive&#13;
program, with six co-op quarters&#13;
of work experience required&#13;
for graduation.&#13;
In 1852 Antioch was the first college&#13;
to admit women as equals to&#13;
men and the first to have a female&#13;
faculty member hold an equal position&#13;
with men. In 1863 it was one of&#13;
the first colleges in America to formally&#13;
prohibit race discrimination&#13;
in admissions.&#13;
"Alan Guskin's coming to Antioch&#13;
is a cause for rejoicing," Aller&#13;
said in announcing the appointment.&#13;
"His extensive experience as&#13;
a senior academic administrator,&#13;
teacher and scholar has had an unmistakable&#13;
Antioehian flavor, with&#13;
focus on innovation with quality,&#13;
development of values central to&#13;
the educational experience, service&#13;
to the disadvantaged and a strong&#13;
collaborative leadership style,''&#13;
Aller said.&#13;
"It is extremely difficult to leave&#13;
such a special place as Parkside,"&#13;
said Guskin. "This university is a&#13;
jewel within the UW System. It has&#13;
come so far in such a short period&#13;
of time, and still has so much potential.&#13;
We have an outstanding faculty&#13;
and staff.&#13;
"The future of this university&#13;
and this corner of Wisconsin are inseparably&#13;
linked," Guskin continued.&#13;
"With effort and cooperation,&#13;
that future can be brighter than&#13;
most of us have yet dreamed.&#13;
"This has been our life for a decade,&#13;
and there will be much pain in&#13;
leaving our many friends and colleagues,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
"But it is a rare opportunity and&#13;
grear honor for me to become&#13;
president of an insititution which I&#13;
have respected and admired for so&#13;
long as one of the most distinctive&#13;
and worthwhile in the country.&#13;
Antioch has always stood for important&#13;
social and educational&#13;
values which Judy and I hold dear&#13;
and which have influenced our&#13;
lives. Those values were important&#13;
in the decision to accept the presidency&#13;
of Antioch," he said.&#13;
Guskin's wife, Judy, an adjunct&#13;
associate professor of anthropology&#13;
at Parkside who has enjoyed success&#13;
as an independent producer of&#13;
educational television programs,&#13;
has accepted a position as television&#13;
producer in residence at Antioch&#13;
and will work closely with public&#13;
television stations in the Dayton-&#13;
Cincinnati area.&#13;
Robert O'Neil, UW System president,&#13;
said he was "delighted for&#13;
Alan and Judy since Antioch is the&#13;
perfect match for them." He cited&#13;
the "many natural affinities between&#13;
Parkside and Antioch"&#13;
under Guskin, saying "For the very&#13;
reasons that he has been an outstanding&#13;
chancellor at Parkside, he&#13;
will be an absolutely superb president&#13;
of Antioch."&#13;
Under Guskin, Parkside has significantly&#13;
upgraded the quality of&#13;
its faculty, academic programs and&#13;
research commitment, increased&#13;
the number of majors and focused&#13;
on those which relate to area&#13;
needs, begun master's degree programs,&#13;
implemented a comprehensive&#13;
outreach program of involvement&#13;
with the communities, and&#13;
achieved positions of national leadership&#13;
for its 'teaching' library, its&#13;
academic skills competency requirements&#13;
and its high school motivational&#13;
program for minority&#13;
youth.&#13;
Guskin's achievements at Parkside&#13;
have earned him recognition as&#13;
a national leader in higher education.&#13;
He has served on the national&#13;
board of directors of the American&#13;
Association of State Colleges and&#13;
Universities and has written and&#13;
consulted widely on university leadership&#13;
and directions for the future&#13;
of higher education.&#13;
He came to Parkside in 1975&#13;
from Clark University in Worchester,&#13;
Mass., where he was provost&#13;
and acting president. He was a faculty&#13;
member there and at the University&#13;
of Michigan, where he was&#13;
assistant director of the Center for&#13;
Research on the Utilization of Scientific&#13;
Knowledge.&#13;
As graduate students, Guskin and&#13;
his wife Judy, also a Michigan&#13;
Ph.D., organized the student movement&#13;
at Michigan which was widely&#13;
credited with inspiring John F.&#13;
Kennedy to found the Peace Corps.&#13;
The Guskins later went on to become&#13;
among the first Peace Corps&#13;
volunteers to Thailand. Guskin&#13;
later helped establish VISTA as a&#13;
member of the President's Task&#13;
Force on the War Against Poverty&#13;
and served as director of VISTA's&#13;
selection division.&#13;
The Guskins have two daughters,&#13;
Sharon 19, a sophomore at Yale,&#13;
and Andrea, 14 a freshman at Prairie&#13;
School in Racine.&#13;
A search and screen committee&#13;
will be appointed to conduct a national&#13;
search for a successor to&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Hearing held today on requirement changes&#13;
The Academic Policies Committee&#13;
will hold a hearing on proposed&#13;
changes in graduation requirements&#13;
today, March 28, at 3 p.m. in Moln.&#13;
105.&#13;
The following is a discription of&#13;
the proposed requirements:&#13;
1. Students must obtain a passing&#13;
grade in English 102. (Note: English&#13;
102 is the second semester of a&#13;
year-long freshman English course.&#13;
Students may place into, but not&#13;
beyond, English 102 by achieving a&#13;
satisfactory score on the English&#13;
Placement Exam. The student's&#13;
score on the placement exam will&#13;
determine whether he/she places&#13;
into English 99, pre-college English,&#13;
English 101 first-semester&#13;
English or English 102.)&#13;
2. Students must obtain satisfactory&#13;
grades (as determined by an&#13;
English Proficiency Committee) on&#13;
both of the following proficiency&#13;
examinations: A. An objective English&#13;
composition proficiency examination&#13;
(normally taken before the&#13;
student enrolls in English 102). B.&#13;
A writing sample examination.&#13;
(Note: The student must successfully&#13;
complete Examination A before&#13;
taking Examination B. Both&#13;
» examinations must be retaken until&#13;
performance is satisfactory. Course&#13;
work does not satisfy the proficiency&#13;
requirement).&#13;
The proposal is recommended to&#13;
replace the current reading-writinglibrary&#13;
skills requirement. In addition,&#13;
APC plans to incorporate library&#13;
skills into English 99,101 and&#13;
102.&#13;
James Shea, Chair of APC, said&#13;
the committee has been working on&#13;
the proposal since the fall.&#13;
"The general feeling is that students&#13;
need more time in class and&#13;
they also need all the help they can&#13;
get in writing skills. Many students&#13;
who enter college are sadly deficient&#13;
in their writing skills. We&#13;
tried to deal with that problem&#13;
with the skills tests route but that&#13;
hasn't been altogether satisfactory.&#13;
I personally think the proposal&#13;
makes a lot of sense. Students who&#13;
need more help will get it and&#13;
those who have ability will not be&#13;
held up," said Shea.&#13;
If the proposal is sent to and&#13;
adopted by the Faculty Senate, it&#13;
would apply to students who begin&#13;
taking courses at Parkside in the&#13;
fall of 1988 or later.&#13;
Shea urges anyone who would&#13;
like to comment on the proposal to&#13;
attend the hearing today.&#13;
2 Thursday, March 28,1985 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Shared governance&#13;
is essential&#13;
Shared governance — tw o words that are very important and very&#13;
necessary in the operation of this university. Ask any administrator if&#13;
shared governance is important or if they believe in it. They would&#13;
answer with a resounding "YES!" But of course, shared governance&#13;
is mandated by law (Wisconsin State Merger Statute, article 36.9 (5)).&#13;
It guarantees students' rights to have a voice in the policy making of&#13;
educational institutions.&#13;
Administrators would be foolish to outwardly deny the importance&#13;
of such a law. But how many administrators, or students for that&#13;
matter, realize the full implications of those two words, shared governance?&#13;
It is more than just an impressive article to quote at cocktail&#13;
parties, it is the thread that links students to the heart of the university&#13;
—. these two words evoke the powerful realization that students&#13;
do have a voice in the intricate policy making of their university.&#13;
Recently, on several occasions, the necessity of shared governance&#13;
has been overlooked.&#13;
• The amount of campus reserve monies and the projections for its&#13;
use for campus organizations were withheld from the Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocation Committee, the student committee in charge&#13;
of campus funding, but the projections appeared in a Racine Journal&#13;
Times newspaper article.&#13;
• The Student Organizations Council was not informed about an&#13;
administrative decision to provide office space for the Black Student&#13;
Organization until after the club had already moved into the space.&#13;
BSO is a recognized club through SOC.&#13;
• The Parkside Union Advisory Board was not consulted with, or&#13;
informed of the Union management's decision to limit the Union&#13;
Square Grill's operating hours.&#13;
It is not that we feel the Parkside administration is purposely withholding&#13;
important information from students, like the above examples,&#13;
but it appears shared governance is becoming an afterthought&#13;
rather than a forethought.&#13;
We urge the administration, as well as students, to work harder toward&#13;
the goal of total shared governance. Students must have the opportunity&#13;
to participate in policy making on this campus.&#13;
Campaign finance&#13;
laws bite back&#13;
Senate Majority Leader Tim Cullen&#13;
(D-Janesville) has introduced&#13;
legislation which he says will "put&#13;
teeth into" Wisconsin's campaign&#13;
finance laws.&#13;
"It's time we made a serious effort&#13;
in Wisconsin to bring the cost&#13;
of campaigns back in line," Cullen&#13;
said, adding that many candidates&#13;
are funded privately.&#13;
"The key to controlling the influence&#13;
of special interest money in&#13;
elections is to limit the total spending&#13;
on legislative races," he said.&#13;
Under the proposal, a candidate&#13;
for legislative office will be eligible&#13;
to receive double the amount of&#13;
public funding if his or her opponent&#13;
chooses not to accept a grant&#13;
from the Wisconsin Election Campaign&#13;
Fund.&#13;
Under Wisconsin law, candidates&#13;
for public office who receive a campaign&#13;
finance grant are subject to&#13;
spending limits. "However, if one&#13;
candidate refuses the grant, all limits&#13;
are off," Cullen explained.&#13;
Cullen pointed out that the limits&#13;
for the November 1984 elections&#13;
were $32,225 for a candidate for the&#13;
State Senate and $16,100 for a candidate&#13;
for the State Assembly. Of&#13;
this amount, a Senate candidate&#13;
was eligible for a $14,501 grant&#13;
from the Wisconsin Election Campaign&#13;
Fund and an Assembly candidate&#13;
was eligible for a $7,245 grant&#13;
from the fund.&#13;
But in one race last fall where no&#13;
limits were in place, nearly $95,000&#13;
was spent by one candidate.&#13;
Cullen has also proposed to allow&#13;
tax filers who have no tax liability&#13;
to designate $1 to the Wisconsin&#13;
Election Campaign Fund. This&#13;
provision will generate approximately&#13;
$100,000 in additional&#13;
money to the fund.&#13;
"I am convinced that the adoption&#13;
of these two proposals will&#13;
make the public financing of campaigns&#13;
for legislative offices so appealing&#13;
that very few candidates&#13;
will choose not to accept the&#13;
grant," Cullen said.&#13;
IF YOU IN THE CONGRESS&#13;
DONT GIVE US THIS AID&#13;
FOR THE CONTRAS, WE'LL&#13;
JUST HAVE TO COMMIT&#13;
OUR OWN TROOPS TO A&#13;
WAR WITH NICARAGUA&#13;
LATER ON.&#13;
AND IF YOU DON'T&#13;
LET US GO TO WAR WITH&#13;
NICARAGUA, WE'LL HAVE&#13;
TO FIGHT BOTH THEM&#13;
AND THE CUBANS.'&#13;
AND IF WAT'S NOT&#13;
ENOUGH, WE'LL&#13;
HAVE TO DROP&#13;
150 THOUSAND ,&#13;
icmpMhtl-&#13;
PA0M OM&#13;
AND YOU WON'T&#13;
LET US FIGHT CUBA&#13;
AND NICARAGUA, WE'LL&#13;
HAVE TO DECLARE WAR&#13;
ON CUB A, NICARAGUA, „&#13;
AND THE WHOLE \ frSTER^roitfM&#13;
SO YOU MIGHT&#13;
AS WELL GIVE IN TO&#13;
ADMINISTRATION&#13;
REQUESTS NOW...&#13;
WHILE WE'RE STILL&#13;
BEING NZASOA/ABLE.&#13;
Nobody asked me, but...&#13;
Women are exploited by men&#13;
by Joan Mattox&#13;
Women are the hearts, souls and&#13;
victims in society. A woman is the&#13;
reliable backbone when her man&#13;
faces hardships, disappointments&#13;
and failures. Her sturdy limbs support&#13;
his ambitions as his jellied&#13;
shanks falter under the unexpected&#13;
difficulties. She rises at 5 a.m. to&#13;
fix his breakfast and is beaten at 6&#13;
p.m. that night for not having his&#13;
dinner on the table, but the breakfast&#13;
is on the table at 5 a.m. the&#13;
next morning, as usual.&#13;
What is it about a woman that&#13;
makes her a victim in so many&#13;
ways? Where do women get the resilience&#13;
to bounce back day after&#13;
day after being exploited so severely&#13;
by the male population? Is it&#13;
a woman's dependence on a man, is&#13;
it a kind heart, or is it just plain ignorance?&#13;
Let's examine 'the subject of&#13;
prostitution. A 13-year-old girl on&#13;
the streets is hustling for chump&#13;
change that tailors and Cadillacs&#13;
her pimp. He feeds off his little&#13;
prodigy until she reaches the ripe&#13;
old age of 16, then tells her that her&#13;
services are no longer needed. He&#13;
leaves her with nothing — no&#13;
home, no security, no money and&#13;
no self-esteem. She has been exploited&#13;
to the point that she probably&#13;
identified with this low-life as a&#13;
father figure. The other girls he exploited&#13;
were her sisters and her&#13;
home was the streets. She is a girl&#13;
who only feels self-worth when others&#13;
use and feed off of her because&#13;
this gives her that feeling of being&#13;
needed.&#13;
Sexual exploitation usually ties in&#13;
with mental exploitation. Many&#13;
men have this uncanny ability to&#13;
make a woman feel less than she&#13;
really is. The constant reminder of&#13;
who brings the money in and who&#13;
belongs in the kitchen is an example&#13;
of this ability. "Stick to what you&#13;
do best, scrubbing and shopping."&#13;
It is as if some men want women to&#13;
live in a vacuum and just let men&#13;
run the world. Many goals and ambitions&#13;
that women have are quickly&#13;
shot down by just one sour note&#13;
from a man. It's nothing but a&#13;
mind game. If women were more&#13;
confident about what they want&#13;
and how they can go about getting&#13;
it, things that men say wouldn't&#13;
take such a high priority. Confidence&#13;
in ourselves is all it takes.&#13;
Economic exploitation seems to&#13;
be the "now" thing to do to&#13;
women. While a man may have the&#13;
same job as a woman, the man's&#13;
salary may be considerably higher.&#13;
This is the case in many jobs, but&#13;
more and more women are taking a&#13;
stance against this exploitation.&#13;
They claim and demand that their&#13;
salaries match those of their male&#13;
co-workers. A woman's promotion&#13;
may take a back seat to a man's,&#13;
even if she is more qualified.&#13;
It seems as if men want all the&#13;
high positions in this world to be&#13;
run by men; men want to be the&#13;
dominant force. That says male supremacy&#13;
to me. It seems as if men&#13;
want the female to be dependent&#13;
upon the male for everything. I&#13;
think they feel that if a woman has&#13;
a comparable job and income, the&#13;
female won't need males anymore.&#13;
That sounds like insecurity. Men&#13;
need someone to depend on them&#13;
so they can feel self-worth, so they&#13;
try to exploit the woman and keep&#13;
her down. They do not want her to&#13;
advance herself socially or economically,&#13;
so they oppress her.&#13;
They oppress her physically as well&#13;
as mentally.&#13;
I feel for the woman who has&#13;
gone through life and not found&#13;
herself, a woman who jumps to fulfill&#13;
a man's every want and need&#13;
while forsaking her own, a woman&#13;
who has never discovered her likes&#13;
and dislikes, abilities and inabilities.&#13;
I feel for the woman who is a&#13;
man's "doormat."&#13;
«O0&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz....&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Jim Neibaur&#13;
Rick Luehr&#13;
Carol Kortendick.&#13;
Dave McEvoy&#13;
Jill Whitney Nielsen.&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Pat Zirkelbach&#13;
Brenda Buchanan..&#13;
Editor&#13;
Campus News Editor&#13;
Community News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
.... Advertising Manager&#13;
... Distribution Manager&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Kan Dixon, Natal ie Haberman, Darryl&#13;
Hahn, Kimberlie Kranich, Steve&#13;
Kratochvil, Jeff Leisgang, Robb Luehr,&#13;
Joan Mattox, Julie Pendleton, Kevin&#13;
Zirkelbach.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
Jay Crapser, Scott Curty, Darryl Hahn,&#13;
Kris tine Odegaard, Ann Rupert.&#13;
Ranger is written end edited by students at UW-Parkside end they are solely responsible&#13;
for its editorial policy end content. Published every Thursday during the&#13;
academic year except during breaks and holidays.&#13;
Renger is printed by the Racine Journal Times.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger. University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Box No. 2000. Kenosha. Wl 53141. Telephone (414) 553-&#13;
2295 or (414) 553-2287.&#13;
Letters to the editor will be accepted if typewritten, double-spaced on standard&#13;
size paper. Letters should be less than 350 words and must be signed, with a telephone&#13;
number included for verification pu rposes. Names will be withheld upon request.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 10 aun. for publicatio n Thursday. Ranger&#13;
reserves the right to edit letters and refuse letters containing false and defamatory&#13;
content.&#13;
RANGER 3 Thursday, March 28,1985&#13;
Direct mail aims at students here&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
Community News Editor&#13;
Parkside students, especially juniors&#13;
and seniors, have a lot in common&#13;
with other students around the&#13;
country.&#13;
They get lots of junk mail.&#13;
Since college students are a big&#13;
market — they are estimated to&#13;
spend $50 bill ion yearly — th ey are&#13;
of particular interest to mass marketers,&#13;
and direct mail is perhaps&#13;
the quickest, easiest and most effective&#13;
way to tap that market.&#13;
College students, espcially upperclassmen,&#13;
are believed to be good&#13;
credit risks, and companies like&#13;
American Express or oil companies&#13;
who have their own credit systems&#13;
believe that catching their customers&#13;
early helps to develop brand&#13;
loyalty.&#13;
Phil Blackburn, spokesman for&#13;
Texaco, said his company has traditionally&#13;
targeted upperclassmen. In&#13;
fact, Parkside juniors and seniors&#13;
were recently the target of a direct&#13;
mail campaign for the company's&#13;
credit cards.&#13;
Texaco has had a marketing program&#13;
for several years designed to&#13;
get students to trust the man who&#13;
wears the star and to bring in a&#13;
''good portion" of their disposable&#13;
income earmarked for petroleum&#13;
products, he said.&#13;
In a recent mailing the company&#13;
made to this area, the words "UWParkside"&#13;
were printed under the&#13;
addressee's name.&#13;
What is not known, though, is&#13;
how mass merchandisers get the&#13;
students' names. Registrar Sue&#13;
Johnson said the school does not&#13;
release information about students,&#13;
except to verify attendance dates&#13;
for prospective employers.&#13;
She said, however, that campus&#13;
directories are freely available, and&#13;
all someone interested in getting a&#13;
list of students' names and addresses&#13;
has to do is come here and buy&#13;
one for a dollar.&#13;
Bill Robbins, coordinator of&#13;
news and information, said Parkside&#13;
does not honor requests for directories,&#13;
but they are available on&#13;
campus. "If people really want to&#13;
get a directory, they can get one,"&#13;
he said. "It's a public document."&#13;
Johnson said students are not required&#13;
to be listed in the directory.&#13;
She said it is necessary that a request&#13;
to withhold a student's name&#13;
from the directory be filed at the&#13;
registrar's office.&#13;
A large portion of the mail students&#13;
receive is from the military.&#13;
The armed forces, said Marine&#13;
Staff Sgt. Ted Skierkiewicz of Racine,&#13;
are interested in students in&#13;
both high school and college. College&#13;
students, who usually receive&#13;
mail for officers' programs, receive&#13;
their mail from the recruiting district's&#13;
offices in Milwaukee.&#13;
"What we're selling is jobs," he&#13;
said, "and where better to find&#13;
people without jobs than in high&#13;
school and college?"&#13;
Most companies are more secretive&#13;
about their direct mailing efforts,&#13;
however, and none of those&#13;
asked would comment on specific&#13;
programs.&#13;
Parkside's official position is that&#13;
the university does not release information&#13;
for direct mail campaigns.&#13;
Even so, if a student buys a&#13;
product from another company and&#13;
is identified as a student, they may&#13;
get mail from other companies.&#13;
PSGA officers talk to legislators&#13;
Three members of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government (PSGA) went&#13;
to Madison over spring break to&#13;
talk to state representatives about&#13;
the Student Regent Bill, Stop 21&#13;
and veterans' financial aid. The&#13;
representatives seen were assemblymen&#13;
Peter Barca and John Antaramian&#13;
(Kenosha), Cloyd Porter&#13;
(Burlington) and Jeff Neubauer,&#13;
Scott Fergus and James Ladwig,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
"All the legislators were supportive&#13;
of the Student Regent Bill,"&#13;
stated Chris Baierl, vice-chair of&#13;
the PSGA Legislative Affairs Committee.&#13;
"Porter suggested a clause&#13;
be put into the bill requiring that a&#13;
different UW-System school be&#13;
represented each year."&#13;
The legislators were not as supportive&#13;
of Stop 21. Baierl stated&#13;
that most of them would follow&#13;
their constituents who are "screaming&#13;
for something to be done about&#13;
the drunk driving problem real&#13;
soon."&#13;
The legislators also seemed very&#13;
interested in helping Parkside veterans&#13;
who aren't receiving their&#13;
Federal financial aid on time. Antaramian&#13;
told members of PSGA that&#13;
if enough veterans contacted him,&#13;
he would see what he could do to&#13;
help. Porter said he would help&#13;
with applications.&#13;
Baierl stated "They were very receptive&#13;
and supportive of our efforts."&#13;
Sue Walborn stated that&#13;
they all expressed an interest in&#13;
students' views and "all wanted to&#13;
visit the campus directly."&#13;
I'm driving" hits dead end&#13;
by Jill Whitney Nielsen&#13;
The Parkside Union has no plans&#13;
to implement the "I'm Driving"&#13;
club on campus but does support&#13;
the program. This decision was&#13;
made by the Parkside Union Advisory&#13;
Board (PUAB) at last Friday's&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Bill Niebuhr stated in a report&#13;
that only Marquette had implemented&#13;
the program. "The intial reaction&#13;
to it has been that it isn't being&#13;
utilized much." Jennie Tunkieicz,&#13;
Ranger editor, stated "It's a nice&#13;
concept, but if you are that concerned&#13;
about your friends, you're&#13;
going to drink soda anyway."&#13;
PUAB also discussed the food&#13;
service in the Union Square being&#13;
closed daily from 2 p.m. to 4:30&#13;
p.m. Jack Kemper, Student Organization&#13;
Council (SOC) representative,&#13;
wondered why PUAB wasn't&#13;
notified of the change ahead of&#13;
time. "By having it closed, we're&#13;
limiting the food service on this&#13;
campus to only the coffee shop.&#13;
PUAB is concerned with falling&#13;
sales and ways to make the Union&#13;
more attractive, and then we turn&#13;
around and limit services. How is&#13;
this helping the Union?"&#13;
Niebuhr explained that according&#13;
to statistics, it's just not profitable&#13;
to keep the Union food service&#13;
open between those hours.&#13;
Keith Harmann, Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) representative,&#13;
didn't like the idea of cutting services&#13;
either, and suggested trying&#13;
something like the specials to help&#13;
draw people. Tunkieicz suggested&#13;
more activities like bands to help&#13;
draw people. Niebuhr told PUAB&#13;
that generally with activities, sales&#13;
drop instead of increase.&#13;
Michael Farrell, the newest&#13;
member of PUAB, wondered how&#13;
closing the food service would affect&#13;
sales for the rest of the evening.&#13;
Farrell, who bartends in the&#13;
Square Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
nights, told PUAB that since the&#13;
food service started closing, sales&#13;
for the night have been down. "A&#13;
lot of people might think it's closed&#13;
for the rest of the night and leave,"&#13;
he said. Niebuhr said it would be a&#13;
few weeks until they know how the&#13;
food service's closing has affected&#13;
sales.&#13;
Kemper asked Niebuhr if the&#13;
real reason the food service was&#13;
being closed was to make the bidding&#13;
for a new food service company&#13;
more attractive. Niebuhr admitted&#13;
that had something to do with&#13;
it. "The Union is presenting a contract&#13;
(to potential bidders) that has&#13;
a lot of negatives in it, especially&#13;
with the loss of Gen Con. We have&#13;
to try and make it as attractive as&#13;
possible."&#13;
By law the Union has to re-bid&#13;
for a new food service every five&#13;
years. Niebuhr explained that between&#13;
six and ten companies will&#13;
come to a bidders' meeting at Parkside.&#13;
They will be shown the campus&#13;
and the food service facilities&#13;
and given an opportunity to ask&#13;
questions. The companies then&#13;
have three weeks to send a bid. The&#13;
final decision is made by University&#13;
Purchasing Office in Madison, but&#13;
the campuses do have input.&#13;
UNITARIAN&#13;
UNIVERSALISTS&#13;
have always&#13;
been known to&#13;
question&#13;
hand-me-down&#13;
religious doctrines.&#13;
Have you ever felt disenchanted&#13;
with an orthodox religion&#13;
because it hands you a&#13;
predigested faith? If so, our&#13;
church may be for you. For&#13;
hundreds of years this vital denomination&#13;
has been encouraging&#13;
individuals to question and to&#13;
grow.&#13;
The new name of our congregation&#13;
is:&#13;
BRADFORD COMMUNITY CHURCH&#13;
(Unitarian Unlvarsaltet)&#13;
Woman's Club • 6028 8tti Ave.&#13;
Rov. Tony Larson, Minister&#13;
9:30 am. Sorvlcos A Sun day School&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
Students protest aid cuts&#13;
"Education Cuts Never Heal."&#13;
"Minds, Not Missiles."&#13;
These were two of the signs carried by several hundred students&#13;
who marched in Washington, D.C. several weeks ago and capped a&#13;
day of protest at the Department of Education, the Associated Press&#13;
reported.&#13;
They called on Secretary of Education William Bennett to apologize&#13;
for his comments that students give up their cars, stereos and&#13;
beach vacations to offset proposed cuts in student aid.&#13;
The rally was staged by the United States Student Association, a&#13;
national coalition of student government leaders.&#13;
Edward Elmendorf, an aide for post-secondary education, met privately&#13;
with 21 of the protesters at the department and said he&#13;
"learned that there's a great deal more misinformation about our&#13;
proposals out there than I suspected."&#13;
He did say, however, that the cuts, including elimination of guaranteed&#13;
student loans for students whose families earn more than $32,-&#13;
500 and a $4,000 c ap on other forms of aid, would deny aid to one&#13;
million students.&#13;
Profs to get $8,000 raise&#13;
The average salary of a full professor at Parkside will rise $8,067 to&#13;
$44,138 by January 1987 under Gov. Anthony S. Earl's budget proposals,&#13;
the Associated Press reported.&#13;
That compares to a $12,596 pay increase at Madison, increasing salaries&#13;
there to an average of $52,000, and includes a "catch up" pay increase&#13;
as well as regular state employee pay increases and inflation&#13;
adjustments.&#13;
The increase at Parkside is the fifth largest in the UW-System in&#13;
dollars, and total estimated salaries here rank fourth.&#13;
Travanti helps police effort&#13;
In the wake of the shooting of two Milwaukee police officers, efforts&#13;
to get private funds for bulletproof vests are continuing, the&#13;
Milwaukee Sentinel reported.&#13;
Even Daniel J. Travanti, who plays Capt. Frank Furillo on "Hill&#13;
Street Blues," has supported the fundraising efforts.&#13;
The Kenosha native is appearing in a public service announcement&#13;
asking for donations.&#13;
WTMJ-TV and WKTI radio started the fund raising effort with the&#13;
cooperation of the Milwaukee Police Association and Milwaukee&#13;
Police Chief Robert Ziarnik.&#13;
Ziarnik estimated the cost of the vests to be about $600,000 for the&#13;
department's 2,100 of ficers.&#13;
A rxt i reek, look for the Stranger...&#13;
Believe it or not.&#13;
A/so i n the Ranger next week:&#13;
• Housing Survey Results&#13;
• Rape - . and how t o avoid i t&#13;
• Pink people&#13;
• And more!&#13;
COLLEGE COSTS ARE GOING UP.&#13;
BUT SO IS THE&#13;
ARMY COLLEGE FUND.&#13;
Tuition, books, lab fees, college living expenses—all seem&#13;
to be climbing relentlessly. Well, here's some good news from the&#13;
Army. Today's Army College Fund is climbing too. You can now&#13;
accumulate over $25,000 for college, if you qualify.&#13;
What's more, you'll study, learn and become proficient in&#13;
a useful skill. It could be a skill with so wide an application in both&#13;
military and civilian life that it might help you decide what to take&#13;
in college.&#13;
If you're determined to go on to college, but you don't know&#13;
where the money is coming from, pick up an Army College Fund&#13;
booklet from your local recruiter. It offers several options you'll want&#13;
to investigate. Stop by or call:&#13;
SFC David Hutson&#13;
3315 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha 697-0520&#13;
ARMY. BE ALL YOU CAN BE.&#13;
A &lt; T hursday, March'28,1985 ? 5 , . &lt; . •RANGER&#13;
Scholarships for women Excellence sought at UW-P&#13;
The Phi Chi Theta Foundation&#13;
offers three $1,000 scholarship&#13;
awards for the academic year beginning&#13;
Sept. 1985 to women students&#13;
pursuing degrees (bachelors&#13;
or masters) in approved courses of&#13;
study in the fields of business&#13;
and/or economics.&#13;
To qualify for consideration, applicants&#13;
must:&#13;
Be full-time women students in&#13;
approved courses in colleges and&#13;
universities in the United States&#13;
leading to bachelors or masters degrees&#13;
in the field of business and/or&#13;
economics; and&#13;
Have completed at least one&#13;
semester or two quarters of college&#13;
level study in the United States.&#13;
High school seniors and entering&#13;
freshmen are not eligible.&#13;
Scholarships will be awarded on&#13;
a competitive basis. The criteria for&#13;
evaluating applicants are scholastic&#13;
achievement, leadership potential,&#13;
motivation and financial need.&#13;
Application forms are available&#13;
from Mineva Reichenstein, Moln&#13;
344. The application deadline is&#13;
May 1.&#13;
International studies&#13;
sponsors advising&#13;
An academic advising session for any students interested in a&#13;
major or minor in International Studies will be held at 3 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
March 29, in Union 207. On hand will be a number of faculty&#13;
who teach in the International Studies Program, including political&#13;
science professor John Harbeson, program coordinator.&#13;
After the session, the group will go to a local restaurant for pizza&#13;
for a fee, Harbeson said.&#13;
"If you have built castles in the air, now put the&#13;
foundations under them.'' Henry D avid Tho™&#13;
Study in London for $2775 per semester. Includes air fare,&#13;
resident tuition, field trips, family stay with meals.&#13;
Study in Seville, Spain, for $2100 per semester. Includes resident&#13;
tuition, field trips, family stay with meals. No foreign language&#13;
profiency required.&#13;
Summer programs in&#13;
London and Seville&#13;
Semester programs also&#13;
in France, Mexico, and&#13;
Sweden&#13;
For further information, write or call:&#13;
Institute for Study Abroad Programs&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Platteville&#13;
308 Warner Hall&#13;
Platteville, Wisconsin 53818&#13;
608-342-1726&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Campus News Editor&#13;
In their book, "In Search of Excellence,"&#13;
Thomas Peters and Robert&#13;
Waterman talk about the shared&#13;
basic principles of management —&#13;
action stimulating, people oriented&#13;
and profit maximizing — all practices&#13;
which are readily transferable.&#13;
In attempting to increase the&#13;
quality of an institution, whether a&#13;
big business, a small business or an&#13;
educational institution, the investigation&#13;
involved will be a complicated&#13;
and time-consuming task.&#13;
Parkside has recently developed&#13;
the Freshman/Sophomore Taskforce&#13;
to address some problems that&#13;
relate to increasing Parkside's quality.&#13;
"It's a fairly broad charge," commented&#13;
Dr. Robert Canary, Committee&#13;
chair. "We're trying to investigate&#13;
ways in which the university&#13;
can move forward, especially&#13;
during the freshman and sophomore&#13;
years when so many of our&#13;
students transfer."&#13;
One of the main problems the&#13;
task force deals with is retention.&#13;
"Retention is a problem, not so&#13;
much as a problem itself, but as a&#13;
symptom to realize there are things&#13;
we could be doing better," stated&#13;
Canary. "We have a lot of people&#13;
entering who have a good potential&#13;
to make it through, but they drop&#13;
out. For some reason they get sidetracked.&#13;
It's not necessarily a lack&#13;
of academic skill, it may be a failure&#13;
on the part of the university to&#13;
make clear what it takes to get&#13;
through early enough in the game."&#13;
Canary explained that Parkside's&#13;
problems don't exist just because&#13;
it's an urban public college. "We do&#13;
have a better program to offer. We&#13;
have a good curriculum and we&#13;
have very high standards for our&#13;
faculty. It's really a matter of taking&#13;
advantage of that."&#13;
The committee is looking at&#13;
questions of more active preparation&#13;
in regard to the local high&#13;
schools and Gateway Technical Institute.&#13;
"We want to expand the&#13;
ways we deal with people when&#13;
they first arrive. We have to let&#13;
them know what it takes to survive&#13;
in the Skills Program, in the Breadth&#13;
of Knowledge program. Factors&#13;
that will help students develop are&#13;
part of a good feedback to involvement."&#13;
Canary talked about involvement&#13;
as central in general to the success&#13;
of the university and the students&#13;
within it and he talked of involvement&#13;
as central to retention. "We&#13;
have to ask ourselves if there are&#13;
ways we can build an environment&#13;
that makes students more involved.&#13;
CROSSWORD PUZZLER&#13;
Puzzler answers on Page 10&#13;
ACROSS 39 Channels&#13;
42 Organs of&#13;
hearing&#13;
43 River Islands&#13;
44 Fruit&#13;
46 Middle East&#13;
peninsula&#13;
48 Flying Insect&#13;
51 Sum up&#13;
52 Small bottles&#13;
54 Born&#13;
55 Dance step&#13;
56 Roman official&#13;
57 Female: colloq.&#13;
1 Opening&#13;
4 Slumber&#13;
9 Solemn promise&#13;
12 Ventilate&#13;
13 Kind of beer&#13;
14 Retirement-plan&#13;
inits.&#13;
15 Delaying&#13;
17 Spanish pots&#13;
19 Doom&#13;
20 Bad&#13;
21 Twirl&#13;
23 Russian tea&#13;
urns&#13;
27 Liquid measure&#13;
29 Same as&#13;
30 Italy: abbr.&#13;
31 Abstract being&#13;
32 Choice part&#13;
34 Resort&#13;
35 Latin&#13;
conjunction&#13;
36 Danish measure&#13;
37 Guide&#13;
DOWN&#13;
1 Aeriform fluid&#13;
2 Be ill&#13;
3 Gains&#13;
4 Narrow opening&#13;
5 Paths&#13;
6 Urge on&#13;
7 College degree:&#13;
abbr.&#13;
8 Incites to anger&#13;
9 Pretentious&#13;
rural residence&#13;
10 Anglo-Saxon&#13;
money&#13;
11 Existed&#13;
16 Diminish&#13;
18 Animated&#13;
20 Send forth&#13;
21 Slumber&#13;
22 One of&#13;
Columbus's&#13;
ships&#13;
24 Place in line&#13;
25 More mature&#13;
26 Asterisks&#13;
28 Pertinent&#13;
33 Limbs&#13;
34 Scorching&#13;
36 A continent&#13;
38 Athletic group&#13;
40 Smoothes&#13;
41 Short period&#13;
45 Gaelic&#13;
46 Weaken&#13;
47 Mountain on&#13;
Crete&#13;
48 Siamese native&#13;
49 Beverage&#13;
50 Lamprey&#13;
53 Cyprinoid fish&#13;
© 1985 United Feature Syndicate&#13;
Involvement isn't like teaching in&#13;
the classroom. It's a teaching, a&#13;
learning within the university, it's&#13;
what the student takes out, it's&#13;
what the student learns that is our&#13;
real measure of success."&#13;
Getting students directly involved&#13;
in the learning process is on&#13;
the agenda for the task force. "We&#13;
should take advantage of our current&#13;
and advanced students in dealing&#13;
with those students coming in.&#13;
At a residential campus people&#13;
learn a lot about how to cope with&#13;
college. If we could set up some&#13;
thing here to encourage that, it&#13;
would be great. A l ot of times students&#13;
are a lot more willing to listen&#13;
to other students. You tend to&#13;
understand something better when&#13;
you teach it. You tend to become&#13;
more involved in it and more interested&#13;
in it when you can pass it&#13;
along."&#13;
The development of Parkside's&#13;
excellence in education will depend&#13;
a great deal on the students themselves.&#13;
"It depends on the students'&#13;
intellectual and personal development.&#13;
It's part of what the traditional-&#13;
age students are going&#13;
through. What is it that they want&#13;
to be? College can help them figure&#13;
that out. We don't want to choose&#13;
between preparing people for a job&#13;
or giving them a liberal education.&#13;
All the evidence suggests that there&#13;
will be 4 or 5 shifts in what we will&#13;
do with our lives. Career Preparation&#13;
is important, but a general skill&#13;
and knowledge to adapt to the&#13;
changes will be vital."&#13;
Conscience&#13;
Crises&#13;
"Crises of Conscience: Present&#13;
Moral Problems" will be the topic&#13;
of a non-credit course offered by&#13;
Parkside's Continuing Education&#13;
Office from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. on&#13;
five consecutive Thursdays beginning&#13;
April 18.&#13;
Cost of the course, to be taught&#13;
by Rabbi Marc Gruber of Kenosha's&#13;
Beth Hillel Temple, is $19.&#13;
To register, call 553-2312.&#13;
The course will include an introduction&#13;
to different types of ethical&#13;
thinking, systems for making value&#13;
judgments and the various procedures&#13;
for deciding ethical conflicts.&#13;
Crises of conscience in the areas&#13;
of war and peace, economic justice,&#13;
environmental concerns and decisions&#13;
about life and death will be&#13;
explored. The course will focus on&#13;
how advancing technology affects&#13;
ethical questions.&#13;
Brown bag&#13;
health luncheon&#13;
"Non-Traditional Sources of&#13;
Health Care" will be the topic of a&#13;
free public Wellness Brown Bag&#13;
Luncheon, sponsored by Parkside's&#13;
Office of Continuing Education&#13;
from 11:50 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, April 17, in Union&#13;
Room 104.&#13;
Speaker will be John Burkhardt,&#13;
of the Kenosha Youth Foundation.&#13;
Persons are encourage to bring&#13;
their own lunches or purchase food&#13;
at the Parkside Union Dining facility.&#13;
Preregistration is requested by&#13;
calling 553-2312.&#13;
See Castles in the Air&#13;
And learn your way around the world&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Platteville&#13;
RANGER 5&#13;
BSE Graduate grants open&#13;
for studies abroad&#13;
Nationally known scholar visits&#13;
The United States Information&#13;
Agency (USIA) and the Institute of&#13;
International Education (HE) announced&#13;
that the official opening of&#13;
the 1986-87 competition for grants&#13;
for graduate study or research&#13;
abroad in academic fields and for&#13;
professional training in the creative&#13;
and performing arts is scheduled&#13;
for May 1, 1985. It is expected that&#13;
approximately 700 awards to over&#13;
70 countries will be available for&#13;
the 1986-87 a cademic year.&#13;
The purpose of these grants is to&#13;
increase mutual understanding between&#13;
the people of the United&#13;
States and other countries through&#13;
the exchange of persons, knowledge&#13;
and skills. The grants are provided&#13;
under the terms of the Mutual Educational&#13;
and Cultural Exchange Act&#13;
of 1961 (Fulbri ght-Hays Act) and by&#13;
foreign governments, universities,&#13;
corporations and private donors.&#13;
Applicants must be U.S. c itizens&#13;
at the time of ap plication, who will&#13;
generally hold a bachelor's degree&#13;
or its equivalent before the beginning&#13;
date of the grant and, in most&#13;
cases, will be proficient in the language&#13;
of the host country. Except&#13;
for certain specific awards, candidates&#13;
may not hold the PhD at the&#13;
time of application. Candidates for&#13;
1986-87 are ineligible for a grant to&#13;
a country if they have been doing&#13;
graduate work or conducting research&#13;
in that country for six&#13;
months or more during the academic&#13;
year 1985-86.&#13;
Creative and performing artists&#13;
are not required to have a bachelor's&#13;
degree, but they must have&#13;
four years of professional study or&#13;
equivalent experience. Candidates&#13;
in medicine must have an M.D. or&#13;
equivalent degree (e.g., D.D.S,&#13;
O.D.) at the time of application.&#13;
Application forms and further information&#13;
for students currently enrolled&#13;
at Parkside may be obtained&#13;
from the Fulbright Program Adviser&#13;
John Campbell, WLLC 346 (552 -&#13;
2006). The deadline for filing applications&#13;
is September 16, 1985.&#13;
Professor Ralph K. White is the&#13;
visiting scholar on campus this&#13;
week, sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Honors Program.&#13;
Dr. White, whose specialties include&#13;
international conflict and war&#13;
propoganda, is currently Professor&#13;
Emeritus in Social Psychology at&#13;
George Washington University.&#13;
White earned his Ph.D in Psychology&#13;
at Stanford University. He&#13;
has taught Psychology at several&#13;
universities, has worked for the&#13;
CIA i n the analysis of Communist&#13;
propaganda, has done research on&#13;
public opinion overseas — especially&#13;
in the USSR, has worked with&#13;
Kurt Kewin and Ronald Lippitt on&#13;
autocratic and democratic atmospheres&#13;
in children's groups, and has&#13;
first-hand experience in Moscow,&#13;
Berlin and Saigon. His numerous&#13;
articles and publications vary in&#13;
subject from the nature of war&#13;
propaganda, the Cold War autocracy&#13;
and democracy, the Vietnam&#13;
War and the Arab-Isaeli conflict, to&#13;
US-Soviet relations and the prevention&#13;
of nuclear war. His extensive&#13;
experience and knowledge in these&#13;
areas have proved to generate&#13;
much interest on the part of fa culty&#13;
and students.&#13;
White, whose stay extended from&#13;
Tuesday, March 26 to Thursday&#13;
March 28, enjoy ed a busy schedule&#13;
of class lectures, lunches with faculty&#13;
members, dinners with faculty&#13;
and students and a public presentation,&#13;
"Teaching Peace at the College&#13;
Level." His lectures in the political&#13;
science and history classes dealt&#13;
with US-Soviet relations and efforts&#13;
to keep peace.&#13;
Author Antler reads poems Friday&#13;
The poet who calls himself "Antler"&#13;
and is the author of the nationally-&#13;
acclaimed poem "Factory" will&#13;
give a free public reading of his&#13;
work at 1 p.m. Friday, March 29 in&#13;
the Overlook Lounge of the Library.&#13;
Antler is a native of Milwaukee&#13;
who, according to prominent poet&#13;
Lawrence Ferlinghetti, publisher of&#13;
City Lights in San Franciso, is "the&#13;
next Great Lakes poet to be discovered."&#13;
"Factory" is a long poem that recalls&#13;
the months Antler was employed&#13;
at Milwaukee's American&#13;
Can Co. The monotonous routine&#13;
and noisy machinery "released&#13;
Harbeson spoke at Harvard&#13;
Parkside political science professor&#13;
John Harbeson spoke recently&#13;
at a major symposium at Harvard&#13;
University on the subject of pluralism&#13;
and democracy in Africa.&#13;
Harbeson, a recognized authority&#13;
on African politics, presented a&#13;
paper titled "Constitutions and&#13;
Constitutionalism in Africa: A&#13;
Tentative Theoretical Exploration."&#13;
The symposium was attended&#13;
by internationally-known&#13;
scholars from throughout the&#13;
world.&#13;
Harbeson is author of the book&#13;
Sample ballot for election&#13;
RACINE&#13;
Mayor&#13;
Dale C. Zierten&#13;
Stephen F. Olsen&#13;
Circuit Court Branch i&#13;
John C. Ahlgrimm&#13;
Circuit Court Branch VI&#13;
Wayne J. Marik&#13;
William R. Binetti&#13;
Justice of Supreme&#13;
Court&#13;
Nathan S. Heffernan&#13;
State Superintendent&#13;
of Public Instruction&#13;
I.W. Poehlman&#13;
Herbert J. Grover&#13;
Racine Unified School&#13;
District No. 1&#13;
Members at Large&#13;
(3 seats)&#13;
E. John Graham, Jr.&#13;
Margaret Smedegaard&#13;
Marilyn L. Langdon&#13;
Bernice M. Thomson&#13;
Diane B, Tetrault&#13;
Eileen R. Boutan&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Supreme Court Justice&#13;
Nathan S. Heffernan&#13;
State Superintendent of&#13;
Public Instruction&#13;
I.W. Poehlman&#13;
Herbert J. Grover&#13;
Circuit Court Branch I&#13;
David M. Bastian&#13;
Circuit Court Branch II&#13;
William U. Zievers&#13;
Circuit Court Branch VI&#13;
Jerold W. Breitenbach&#13;
Mario J. Ventura, Jr.&#13;
Kenosha Unified School&#13;
District No. 1&#13;
Members at Large&#13;
(3 seats)&#13;
Jeffrey L. Leisner&#13;
Joan Haubrich&#13;
Renee C. Leisner&#13;
Irwin Stengert&#13;
Carl W. Podella&#13;
APPLICATIONS&#13;
Now Being Accepted for&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
AMBASSADORS&#13;
A New Student Orientation Program&#13;
The campus ambassador at Parkside is responsible for&#13;
assisting faculty and administration with the introduction&#13;
of the total university experience to incoming students.&#13;
Applications are due&#13;
Thursday, April 4, at noon&#13;
and are available at:&#13;
Student Activities Office (Union 209)&#13;
Student Development (WLLC D 175)&#13;
Union Info Desk&#13;
flights of speculation and anger&#13;
which Antler captured in long-lined&#13;
verses that sing with driving rhythms...'&#13;
Factory' makes clear the feeling&#13;
of restraint common to people&#13;
trapped in the urban routines of the&#13;
Great Lakes' states industrial setting,"&#13;
said a Milwaukee Sentinel reviewer.&#13;
Antler also writes about nature,&#13;
calling himself t he "Ambassador of&#13;
the Wilderness." He spent years&#13;
traveling through the rural wilderness&#13;
of the West Coast.&#13;
Antler, who holds a bachelor's&#13;
degree in anthropology and a master&#13;
of fine arts degree in English&#13;
from UW-Milwaukee, has written&#13;
poems that have appeared in many&#13;
publications, including American&#13;
Poetry Review, Total Abandon,&#13;
Earth First!, New Directions Anthology,&#13;
Minnesota Review and The&#13;
World.&#13;
"Nation Building in Kenya: The&#13;
Role of Land Reform," and is currently&#13;
working on two other books.&#13;
He served as research fellow and&#13;
lecturer at the University of Nairobi&#13;
from 1965 to 1967 and as visiting&#13;
professor of political science at&#13;
Addis Ababa University in Ethiopia&#13;
from 1973 to 1975.&#13;
He recently helped draft, for the&#13;
Agency for International Development,&#13;
development and management&#13;
policies for the African nations&#13;
of Botswana, Lesotho, Liberia,&#13;
Uganda and Kenya.&#13;
RA applications available&#13;
Applications are now being accepted&#13;
for Resident Assistants at&#13;
Ranger Hall in the Racine YMCA&#13;
for the 1985-86 year. Applications&#13;
are available in the Student Housing&#13;
Office, Union 209. They a re due&#13;
immediately.&#13;
A Resident Assistant earns a free&#13;
room at Ranger Hall for performing&#13;
required duties. To qualify a&#13;
student must have at least a 2.0&#13;
grade point average.&#13;
The job of an RA is one of responsibility.&#13;
It is definite plus on a&#13;
student's resume when they look&#13;
for positions in the future.&#13;
Direct any questions concerning&#13;
the available RA positions to Shirley&#13;
Schmerling, Housing Coordinator,&#13;
553-2320, or stop in at Union&#13;
209.&#13;
Logo contest announced&#13;
The Parkside Orientation Program,&#13;
POP, is sponsoring a logo&#13;
contest for all interested artists. All&#13;
entries should be centered around&#13;
the Parkside campus and the development&#13;
of a solid student life here.&#13;
All des igns should be submitted to&#13;
Alice Johnson in WLLC D-175 by&#13;
April 12. T he Parkside Orientation&#13;
Program Committee is a newly&#13;
formed organization on campus&#13;
with the goal of creating a dynamic&#13;
orientation program for new and&#13;
incoming students.&#13;
How to break into&#13;
management with&#13;
no prior experience&#13;
Become an officer in the Army National Guard.&#13;
Take our College Student Officer Program part-time&#13;
while you go to school full-time. Get management&#13;
experience and a good paycheck every month. And&#13;
be a Second Lieutenant by the time you graduate.&#13;
Then you serve just one weekend a&#13;
month and two weeks each summer.&#13;
For more information call: &gt; | | ,&#13;
6 5 4 - 5 1 7 9 Americans at their best.&#13;
6 Thursday, March 28, 1985 RANGER&#13;
Week at the Park&#13;
Of lampoons, libels and lies Club Events&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Thursday, March 28&#13;
MOVIE: "The Terminator" (R)&#13;
will be shown at 3:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission at the&#13;
door is $1 for a Parkside student&#13;
and $1 for a guest. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Problem Solving&#13;
and Decision Making" by Ruth Huitema&#13;
at 6:30 p.m. in Union 106. Call&#13;
ext. 2047 for more information.&#13;
SLIDE/LECTURE: "The Faces of&#13;
Southern India: People, Places and&#13;
Precambrian Rocks" by Prof. Richard&#13;
Ojakangas of the University of&#13;
Minnesota-Duluth at 8 p.m. in Moln&#13;
105. The program is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
Friday, March 29&#13;
WORKSHOP: "How to Survive&#13;
From 9 to 5" starts at 9 a.m. in&#13;
Union 104-106. Call ext. 2312 for&#13;
more details.&#13;
POETRY READING: "Factory"&#13;
by Antler of Milwaukee at 1 p.m. in&#13;
the WLLC Overlook Lounge. The&#13;
event is free and open to the public.&#13;
TALK: "Recognition of Proterozoic&#13;
Glacial Deposits: North American,&#13;
Finland and South Africa," by&#13;
Dr. Richard Ojakangas, Department&#13;
of Geology, University of&#13;
Minnesota-Duluth, 1 p.m., Greenquist&#13;
113. The lecture is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
MOVIE: "The Terminator" will be&#13;
repeated at 1:30 p.m. and at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Sunday, March 31&#13;
MOVIE: "The Terminator" will be&#13;
repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
Monday, April 1&#13;
ROUNDTABLE: "Of Lampoons,&#13;
Libels and Lies," by cartoonist&#13;
Gary Huck at 12:15 p.m. in Union&#13;
104-106. The event is open to the&#13;
public at no charge.&#13;
COURSE: "What to Look for in&#13;
Art" starts at 6:30 p.m. in CA 129.&#13;
Excellence award sought&#13;
The Teaching Excellence Awards&#13;
Committee is accepting nominations&#13;
for the 1985-86 T eaching Excellence&#13;
Awards. The awards are&#13;
given to up to two faculty members&#13;
who have shown outstanding teaching&#13;
ability during the past year.&#13;
Nomination forms will be available&#13;
in the PSGA Office (WLLC&#13;
D137), Ranger Office (WLLC D139),&#13;
SOC Office (Union 203), Library&#13;
Learning Center, all division offices&#13;
and at the Union Information Desk.&#13;
The nomination forms may be deposited&#13;
at the pickup locations.&#13;
Forms will be accepted from&#13;
March 21 to March 29.&#13;
Students may nominate one faculty&#13;
member and give their reason&#13;
for the nomination. Students are&#13;
limited to one nomination each. All&#13;
continuing full-time members of&#13;
the faculty and academic staff are&#13;
eligible to receive the award. The&#13;
winners of the award in the last&#13;
two years will not be considered eligible&#13;
to win the award this year.&#13;
In addition to the student nominations,&#13;
division heads will be&#13;
asked to nominate the top ten percent&#13;
of the faculty in their divisions.&#13;
The Awards Committee,&#13;
composed of four students and four&#13;
faculty members, will then weigh&#13;
the divisions chairs' recommendations,&#13;
along with the student nominations,&#13;
to determine the award&#13;
winners.&#13;
Particularly important to the&#13;
nominations, the committee said,&#13;
are the rationales behind the nomination.&#13;
These will be weighed with&#13;
the divisional chair's nomination&#13;
rationales.&#13;
Past winners of this award include:&#13;
Don Kummings (1977), Teresa&#13;
Peck (1978), Chong-maw Chen&#13;
(1978), Tim Bell (1979), Robert&#13;
Esser (1980), Oliver Hayward&#13;
(1981), Wayne Johnson (1982),&#13;
Keith Ward (1982), William Rieber&#13;
(1983), Douglas DeVinny (1984) and&#13;
Ken Hoover (1984).&#13;
Call ext. 2312 for more details.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
Tuesday, April 2&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Stress Management"&#13;
by Jane Frederick at 2 p.m.&#13;
in Union 207 and at 5 p.m. in Moln&#13;
D128. The event is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Advertising in a&#13;
Small Business," starts at 6:30 p.m.&#13;
in Union 106. Call ext. 2047 for&#13;
more information.&#13;
OPEN HOUSE: for prospective&#13;
students and their families at 7&#13;
p.m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
Wednesday, April 3&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE: Featuring an&#13;
open stage from 12 noon to 3 p.m.&#13;
and 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Bazaar Area. Applications are available&#13;
at the Union Information Center.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Physics talk&#13;
scheduled&#13;
On Wednesday, April 3, Dr.&#13;
James Jorgensen of the Argonne&#13;
National Laboratory will talk on&#13;
the use of neutrons in studying the&#13;
structure of matter.&#13;
As is well known, atoms consist&#13;
of protons, neutrons and electrons.&#13;
The protons and neutrons together&#13;
form the atomic nucleus which is in&#13;
turn surrounded by a swarm of&#13;
electrons.&#13;
Dr. Jorgensen, a pioneer in the&#13;
field of neutron scattering, will give&#13;
a general talk surveying the current&#13;
application of this technique in&#13;
solid state physics.&#13;
The talk is scheduled for Wednesday,&#13;
April 3, from 1 to 2 p.m. in&#13;
Room 230 of Greenquist Hall. All&#13;
are welcome.&#13;
Editor's note: This week the&#13;
Ranger encountered an unfortunate&#13;
mishap — all of the notices of club&#13;
events turned in. this week were&#13;
stolen by unknown individuals. We&#13;
attempted to reach as many clubs&#13;
as possible to get the information&#13;
they originally wanted printed this&#13;
week, but unfortunately we were&#13;
unable to reach all of them. Wre sincerely&#13;
apologize for any problems&#13;
this may have caused any clubs.&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
Same time, same place, Monday&#13;
April 1, at 1 p.m. in CA D141. All&#13;
you missing members please attend.&#13;
We need you for our elections&#13;
and we need volunteers to accept&#13;
work for our student art show. If&#13;
you can not attend, see the sign up&#13;
sheet on the bulletin board in the&#13;
Art Addicts Hall Way. See you&#13;
there!!!&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
The next Pi Sigma Epsilon meeting&#13;
is Monday, April 1 in Moln 109&#13;
at 1 p.m. Things to be discussed include&#13;
the Easter Egg Hunt, April 3,&#13;
Initiation on April 13 and Loop 500&#13;
on April 24. Group pictures will be&#13;
taken for the PSE scrap book.&#13;
Please wear your sweatshirts.&#13;
IVCF&#13;
On Wednesday, April 3, Inter-&#13;
Varsity Christian Fellowship will&#13;
have a social in place of the usual&#13;
topical meeting. Join us for some&#13;
singing, worship, games and an uplifting&#13;
experience. This will take&#13;
place at 1 p.m. in Moln 107.&#13;
Geology Colloquium&#13;
Internationally recognized geologist&#13;
Richard W. Ojakangas, professor&#13;
at the University of Minnesota-&#13;
Duluth, will give a free public slideillustrated&#13;
lecture titled "The&#13;
Faces of Southern India: People,&#13;
Places and Precambrian Rocks," at&#13;
8 p.m. Thursday, March 28 in Moln&#13;
105 and again on Friday, March 29&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Grnqst 113. All are welcome&#13;
to attend.&#13;
Hispanic Club&#13;
The next Hispanic club meeting&#13;
will be on Wednesday, April 3, at 1&#13;
p.m. in Union 104. The club is presently&#13;
working on increasing student&#13;
participation, membership and activities&#13;
to celebrate the upcoming&#13;
Cinco de Mayo (May 5) holiday.&#13;
Your input to both groups is&#13;
needed if the activities are to be&#13;
successful. Last year's committee&#13;
had a panel discussion of topics related&#13;
to Hispanic Americans and a&#13;
dance with a band playing both&#13;
American and Latin Music. Elections&#13;
for next year's officers will be&#13;
held sometime during this semester&#13;
so begin thinking about them.&#13;
La proxima reuion del Club Miecoles,&#13;
el 3 de abril, a la una de la&#13;
tarde, en el cuarta 104 de la Union.&#13;
Presentemente, el Club esta trabajando&#13;
para aumentar participacion&#13;
y miembros en el Club. Ademas, estamos&#13;
planiando actividades par&#13;
celebrar la fiesta del Cinco de&#13;
Mayo. Un comite uriiversitario, separado&#13;
del Club, esta encargada del&#13;
planiar actividades para el Cinco de&#13;
Mayo. El ano pasado hubo una discusion&#13;
de temas de interes para hispanoamericanos&#13;
y un baile con&#13;
musica Americana y latina. El Club&#13;
y el comite niversitario necesan su&#13;
contibucion de ideas para que el&#13;
prorama tenga exsito este ano.&#13;
Open house scheduled&#13;
An open house for prospective&#13;
Parkside students and their families&#13;
will be held beginning at 7 p.m.&#13;
on Tuesday, April 2 in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre.&#13;
The program, which lasts until&#13;
Post Nasal Strip by Paul Berge&#13;
MY GUEST TONIGHT IS&#13;
JOHN HINCKLEY JR., WHO&#13;
STANDS TO TAKE 25%&#13;
OF THE PROFITS FROM&#13;
THE FORTHCOMING BOOK:&#13;
? THE DAY I SHOT THE&#13;
PRESIDENT: THE JOHN&#13;
NOW, JOHN, 1 THOUGHT V&#13;
FEDERAL LAW PROHIBITED&#13;
CONVICTED CRIMINALS&#13;
FROM PROFITING FROM&#13;
THEIR CRIMES.&#13;
J WELL, YOU SEE, 1~--&#13;
VAUGHN, I WAS NEVER&#13;
CONVICTED: I WAS FOUND&#13;
NOT GUILTY BY REASON&#13;
FIRST&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
Of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN WAIN&#13;
OFFICE&#13;
ALTO BANK&#13;
24-HOlR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOWERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER FDIC&#13;
AND I'D BE CRAZY&#13;
NOT TO TAKE ADVANTAGE&#13;
OF THAT.&#13;
about 9 a.m., will include facultyled&#13;
informational sessions on academic&#13;
programs at Parkside, a financial&#13;
aids session, information on&#13;
housing and student services and a&#13;
tour of the campus.&#13;
Participants will have a chance&#13;
to meet informally with faculty,&#13;
staff and students and will be given&#13;
general information on admissions&#13;
and academic placement.&#13;
A number of faculty and students&#13;
will set up displays to illustrate various&#13;
academic majors.&#13;
Representatives of Peer Support,&#13;
a student organization that assists&#13;
the university's older students (age&#13;
23 and over) will be available to answer&#13;
questions.&#13;
Open House parking will be&#13;
available in both the Communication&#13;
Arts and Union lots on the&#13;
campus Outer Loop Road. For&#13;
more information, call the Student&#13;
Services Office at 553-2000.&#13;
NOTICE!&#13;
STUDENT JOB OPENING&#13;
IN THE PA RKSIDE U NION&#13;
BUILDING SUPERVISOR&#13;
Responsible for evening and weekend building operation and internal&#13;
security: involves coordination of special events, cash receipt handling and&#13;
student payroll audit; must be personable and have the ability to work with&#13;
others.&#13;
Applications accepted in Union Room 209 through Wednesday, April 10.&#13;
mtip And hey,&#13;
be careful out there.&#13;
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Poster artist Dane-VanDvke an&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
I'm sure you've noticed the wonderful&#13;
posters that announce upcoming&#13;
theater productions at&#13;
Parkside. The woman behind these&#13;
posters is freelance artist Laurel&#13;
Dane-VanDyke.&#13;
Dane-VanDyke has been designing&#13;
graphics for the theater department&#13;
since her husband, Dramatic&#13;
Arts Professor Leon VanDyke,&#13;
began teaching here. "It seems like&#13;
I've done the graphics for every&#13;
show he's done since I met him.&#13;
When he taught at Northwestern, it&#13;
got so that I was doing graphics for&#13;
all the shows. When we came here,&#13;
there was no one doing that job.&#13;
The graphics people at Parkside&#13;
wouldn't handle the theater department,&#13;
for some reason. So I decided&#13;
to do it."&#13;
Dane-VanDyke said the ideas for&#13;
her graphics come from many sources.&#13;
"I think it's really essential&#13;
that, if you're doing a job for someone,&#13;
make sure your design fits the&#13;
weekend designing this thing with&#13;
heavy rock music on the radio,&#13;
which is something I normally&#13;
don't work to. It got me in the&#13;
mood, and the designs worked out&#13;
quite well."&#13;
Dane-VanDyke's main concentration&#13;
is as a sculptor. She attended&#13;
Albion College in Michigan, where&#13;
she concentrated more on painting.&#13;
"I was doing these very large, serious&#13;
paintings. Then, in my senior&#13;
year, I began making these little&#13;
paper sculptures. I made them&#13;
small so I could hide them in a&#13;
drawer in my studio. Meanwhile, I&#13;
was still doing these big, serious,&#13;
ten or twenty foot paintings.&#13;
"I heard, years later, a wonderful&#13;
term by the art critic Lucy Lippard,&#13;
who referred to things like I&#13;
was doing as 'closet art.' And, in&#13;
many cases, that is, in fact, real art.&#13;
You're in transition at that point;&#13;
you won't admit it to yourself, you&#13;
hide it in a drawer, but you still&#13;
want to make that stuff. So I began&#13;
to jettison the paintings pretty&#13;
quickly and started making sculptures.&#13;
Then I went to Rhode Island&#13;
School of Design for two years as a&#13;
.graduate student and that was terrific."&#13;
At the moment Dane-VanDyke is&#13;
working on two Parkside related&#13;
projects. One is creating a smaller&#13;
version of the display for the Wellness&#13;
Program. "The women who&#13;
run the program want a small version&#13;
of the display that will fit in a&#13;
briefcase so they can take it to&#13;
other schools and show them how&#13;
the program looks and how the display&#13;
looks." The other project is&#13;
designing a cover for a new socioiyKSKYW&#13;
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But that's no problem.&#13;
They're the worst police force&#13;
- - -in the* Jlnirrcrco&#13;
THE FUN BEGINS MARCH 29th AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU!&#13;
RANGER&#13;
7 Thursday, March 28,1985&#13;
Intern sought&#13;
for position&#13;
Applications for Student Life&#13;
Post Bachelorette Internship will&#13;
be available beginning April 1 in&#13;
the Career Planning and Placement&#13;
Office and at the Union Information&#13;
Desk. This will be a one-year&#13;
working and learning experience in&#13;
the campus' student life. The position&#13;
will begin July 1 and run for&#13;
one year for a Parkside Graduate.&#13;
asset&#13;
logical periodical. "I'm doing that&#13;
for Michael Bassis. It's a new national&#13;
magazine, so we want to kick&#13;
it off with a dynamite cover design."&#13;
Dane-VanDyke feels her life in&#13;
art is very satisfying. "I never&#13;
thought to get rich quick. I decided&#13;
somewhere that I wasn't going to&#13;
do that in my life. So what? It beats&#13;
being a stockbroker. They make&#13;
money, but I'd be bored to death.&#13;
You can't thwart people's natural&#13;
urges. You can try, but you get real&#13;
unhappiness."&#13;
Theater&#13;
specifics of the job. The first thing&#13;
in the theater is: read the play.&#13;
That gives you your own impression&#13;
of i t. Sometimes the period the&#13;
play is set in, the plot or the title&#13;
will give you an idea. I also talk to&#13;
the director and scene designer.&#13;
"Sometimes," she continued,&#13;
"even music can help. I once had a&#13;
job doing a series of posters for a&#13;
health department in Evanston&#13;
geared toward teenagers. They&#13;
were starting a clinic for teens,&#13;
mostly girls. I had to gear the&#13;
graphics around where the teenagers&#13;
were at. I spent the entire&#13;
Book review&#13;
Maltin discusses "The Disney Films 99&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Leonard Maltin's book "The Disney&#13;
Films," published by Crown, is&#13;
a very accurate, affectionate and&#13;
sincere look at the work of one of&#13;
film's greatest and most innovative&#13;
filmmakers. The book has complete&#13;
credit listings and critical evaluations&#13;
of the Disney feature films, as&#13;
well as several other chapters listing&#13;
Disney's achievements with cartoons,&#13;
nature films and television,&#13;
as well as productions released by&#13;
the studio after Disney's death in&#13;
1966.&#13;
"A lot of Walt Disney's live action&#13;
work was overlooked and&#13;
underappreciated," said Maltin&#13;
during a recent interview. " 'Darby&#13;
O'Gill and the Little People' is to&#13;
me one of the great fantasy and&#13;
special effects films of all time, and&#13;
it bothers me that more people&#13;
don't know that. Another of his&#13;
best pictures, 'So Dear To My&#13;
Heart,' is a flim that just never&#13;
found an audience and probably&#13;
never will."&#13;
Maltin originally wrote "The Disney&#13;
Films" for publication by&#13;
Crown in 1973. This new version,&#13;
released in January of this year,&#13;
adds information on subsequent&#13;
film releases (up to and including&#13;
the recent "Splash") as well as information&#13;
on cable TV's Disney&#13;
Channel and the release of Disney&#13;
films on video tape.&#13;
"I originally decided to do a&#13;
book on Disney because nobody&#13;
had ever done a book on all the&#13;
films. I was interested in them, I&#13;
Leonard Maltin&#13;
had grown up watching them, so I&#13;
thought it would make an interesting&#13;
book," said Maltin.&#13;
With Walt Disney's career responsible&#13;
for such a vast amount of&#13;
work, Maltin had to come to a decision&#13;
regarding just what aspect he&#13;
was to elaborate on. "Well, I&#13;
started with the feature films," said&#13;
Maltin, "and saw that it was going Carmen releases new LP&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
During the early and middle&#13;
seventies, Eric Carmen's group The&#13;
Raspberries turned out first-rate&#13;
adolescent pop rock. Picking up a&#13;
copy of their greatest hits is still a&#13;
decent idea, as the songs have withstood&#13;
the test of time rather well.&#13;
Since then Carmen has done solo&#13;
work with "Never Gonna Fall in&#13;
Love Again" and "All By Myself"&#13;
being among the most notorious&#13;
hits. Carmen traded rock for second&#13;
generation schlock as far back&#13;
as 1977, so his latest self-styled LP&#13;
on Geffen isn't too surprising.&#13;
The only astonishment this record&#13;
offers is that Carmen is&#13;
searching so hard for a musical&#13;
niche, he has reworked not only&#13;
Eric Carmen&#13;
formulas, but others of his songs.&#13;
"I Wanna Hear It From Your Lips"&#13;
has too many uncomfortable similarities&#13;
to Springsteen's "Fire."&#13;
"I'm Through With Love" is even&#13;
more similar to Carmen's own "All&#13;
By Myself," while "You Took Me&#13;
All th e Way" is a blatant remake of&#13;
the old Raspberries' hit "Go All the&#13;
Way," the original remaining the&#13;
quintessential bubblegum statement&#13;
of teenage sexual angst.&#13;
"American as Apple Pie" has&#13;
him attempting to be Springsteen&#13;
without the Boss' anger or passion,&#13;
while "The Way We Used to Be" is&#13;
just mewly crap in the tradition of&#13;
Barry Manilow or Lionel Richie.&#13;
In his search for his musical&#13;
"self," it is unfortunate that Carmen&#13;
didn't discover that The Raspberries&#13;
WAS that necessary poprock&#13;
niche. When he passionately&#13;
sang "Want a hit record, yeah..."&#13;
with that group, I don't know that&#13;
any of us realised his want was so&#13;
desperate he'd sell out his creativity&#13;
completely to banal mush acceptable&#13;
only to adult contemporary&#13;
radio.&#13;
*********************************************&#13;
*5&#13;
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to be such a big project on its own&#13;
it wouldn't leave me much room to&#13;
do other things, so it was as simple&#13;
as that."&#13;
In regard to the recent cable and&#13;
video releases of Disney's work,&#13;
Maltin stated, "I think it's great. I&#13;
think it has acquainted and re-acquainted&#13;
people with the many&#13;
really good films that he did, some&#13;
of the nice work that was done on&#13;
the TV show, and other things that&#13;
had been sitting on the shelf or only&#13;
available in 16mm for school presentations&#13;
and such."&#13;
As far as recent Disney releases&#13;
are concerned, Maltin stated, "I&#13;
think the talented people there can&#13;
do something new that is quite&#13;
wonderful. There is no longer a&#13;
Walt Disney to inspire and prod the&#13;
Disney Studios team to greater&#13;
heights, but I think it's a mistake to&#13;
compare what today's people do to&#13;
what was done at that studio in the&#13;
past. They're new people and these&#13;
are different times."&#13;
Walt Disney is definitely one of&#13;
the most innovative and talented&#13;
individuals in the history of motion&#13;
pictures, feels Maltin.&#13;
Terminator&#13;
Walt Disney&#13;
"Walt Disney is really a unique&#13;
figure in the history of entertainment,"&#13;
said Maltin. "I can think of&#13;
no one who wasn't a performer&#13;
who left such an indelible stamp on&#13;
everything he did. He had a belief&#13;
about what entertainment should&#13;
be and a vision about taking this&#13;
medium forward that really set him&#13;
apart from everyone else."&#13;
Awful PAB presentation&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
In my review of "The Terminator"&#13;
at the time of its initial release,&#13;
I stated in The Ranger that it&#13;
was the worst film of 1984. Watching&#13;
"The Terminator" is tantamount&#13;
to watching the Vietnam&#13;
war: a lot of blood and guts with no&#13;
point or reason.&#13;
Arnold Schwarzenegger is cast as&#13;
a machine (oh irony!) that travels&#13;
back in time to kill the mother of&#13;
his enemy so his enemy will never&#13;
exist. Another of his enemies goes&#13;
back to the same time to prevent&#13;
Schwarzenegger from killing the&#13;
mother of his future comrade. But&#13;
this guy screws the mother, so he&#13;
turns out to be his future comrade's&#13;
father. Confused? Me, too!&#13;
Schwarzenegger has almost no&#13;
dialogue at all, which is a blessing&#13;
of sorts, and his performance is&#13;
every bit as stilted as ever. There&#13;
apparently were no plans to give&#13;
any depth to the character (or&#13;
thing) that Schwarzenegger portrays&#13;
in "The Terminator," so he is&#13;
once again just a lumbering slab of&#13;
dumb, destructive strength.&#13;
The violence is very graphic,&#13;
with the camera lingering long and&#13;
lovingly on dying, bleeding victims&#13;
crawling away in slow motion.&#13;
Linda Hamilton, who plays the future&#13;
mother, is utilized for her&#13;
beauty (her bed scene with co-star&#13;
Michael Biehn is the picture's attempt&#13;
at eroticism for patrons who&#13;
enter the show with rolled-up newspapers)&#13;
and is given little to do in&#13;
the acting department other than to&#13;
look terrified.&#13;
The plot is hopelessly far-fetched&#13;
and silly, the gunplay unmotivated&#13;
and especially grisly. While there is&#13;
a great deal of action (sometimes a&#13;
nice word for violence), "The Terminator"&#13;
is no more than a bluntly&#13;
visceral experience in the same&#13;
league as the monster "Dirty&#13;
Harry." There is literally nothing&#13;
here that will please anyone with&#13;
the ability to read.&#13;
Camp for artists set&#13;
********************************************&#13;
A one-week "Great North Woods&#13;
Art Camp" for persons interested&#13;
in studying nature from a first-hand&#13;
aesthetic perspective will be offered&#13;
by Parkside's Continuing&#13;
Education Office from Sunday,&#13;
June 2 through Saturday, June 8 at&#13;
beautiful Red Cedar Lake, near&#13;
Rice Lake in Barron County.&#13;
Cost of the camp is $160 per participant.&#13;
The fee covers food, instruction&#13;
and lodging in the Knollwood&#13;
Lodge overlooking the lake.&#13;
To register and obtain more information,&#13;
call 533-2312. Registration&#13;
deadline is Monday, April 15.&#13;
There are openings for 22 participants.&#13;
Car-pooling will be arranged&#13;
for the six-hour drive.&#13;
The camp will be led by Parkside&#13;
art professors David Holmes and&#13;
Doug DeVinny, both of whom have&#13;
exhibited their work regionally and&#13;
nationally.&#13;
"Drawing, watercolor, acrylic&#13;
painting and maybe a little whittling&#13;
are among the activities&#13;
planned," said Holmes.&#13;
A preliminary meeting to discuss&#13;
logistics and principles of the art&#13;
camp will be held at 7 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday, May 18 in C.A. Room 111.&#13;
Persons interested in the camp are&#13;
urged to attend.&#13;
RANGER 9 Thursday, March 28, 1985&#13;
A pause in&#13;
the disaster&#13;
Behind the Sun&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Every year around Oscar time,&#13;
newspapers, magazines and television&#13;
are filled with interviews with&#13;
Oscar nominees. I didn't feel that I&#13;
had to stoop to that to get readers,&#13;
so I decided not to interview these&#13;
so-called "stars." (Besides, none of&#13;
them would return my calls.) I decided&#13;
instead that I would talk to&#13;
one of the leading figures in the&#13;
field of low budget films, Mr. Leon&#13;
"One Take" Lipschitz.&#13;
Q: Mr. Lipschitz, you claim that&#13;
your movies have the lowest&#13;
budgets in history. Could you clarify&#13;
this?&#13;
A: Well, the last film I made had&#13;
a budget of $19.38.&#13;
Q: How can you make films&#13;
these days for so little money?&#13;
A: Theft.&#13;
Q: Theft?&#13;
A: Yep. I steal damned near&#13;
everything. Cameras, film, lights.&#13;
You name it, we steal it.&#13;
Q: Should you be admitting this?&#13;
A: Oh, hey. Everybody knows it.&#13;
Q: I'm surprised you haven't&#13;
been arrested.&#13;
A: Well, you see, no one has&#13;
charged me with anything.&#13;
Q: But you just said...&#13;
A: I know. But what I didn't&#13;
mention is that some of my best&#13;
films have been shot through motel&#13;
windows, in the back seats of cars,&#13;
etc.&#13;
Q: In other words, your whole&#13;
operation is based on...&#13;
A: Blackmail.&#13;
Q: All right. Now, is it true you&#13;
invented the so-called "slasher"&#13;
film?&#13;
A: Yes, that's very true. It was&#13;
back in 1953. I made a film called&#13;
"Kiss the Blood Off My Sister." It&#13;
was the tender story of a girl, her&#13;
somewhat enfeebled brother and&#13;
the family dog.&#13;
Q: A dog?&#13;
A: Yes. I always like to put&#13;
Workshop&#13;
A "Dream Workshop" will be offered&#13;
by Parkside through the Office&#13;
of Continuing Education beginning&#13;
Monday, April 15, 7-9 p.m. in&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
This two-session workshop will&#13;
include basic instruction, discussion&#13;
and the sharing of dreams as well&#13;
as practical methods to remember,&#13;
record and interpret dreams and&#13;
the symbols within them. A handout&#13;
containing theories of dreaming,&#13;
interpretation techniques and a&#13;
reading list will be given each participant.&#13;
Instructor John Andreozzi, of the&#13;
Resource Center for Ethnic Studies&#13;
and Neighborhood Organizing, has&#13;
been instructed in the Jungian&#13;
method of dream interpretation&#13;
and has been teaching dream workshops&#13;
in the Milwaukee area.&#13;
The fee for this class is $10. For&#13;
registration or additional information,&#13;
caU 553-2312.&#13;
Clapton LP hits the mark&#13;
something in my films that appeals&#13;
to families. In this case it was a&#13;
cute, cuddly doggy.&#13;
Q: And I suppose that in the end,&#13;
the dog saves the heroine's life.&#13;
A: No, not quite. Actually, he&#13;
turns out to be a ruthless axe murderer&#13;
and he chops her into little&#13;
bits. This, of course, led to the sequel&#13;
"A Hatful of Shirley," in&#13;
which all of her pieces come to life&#13;
and kill the cuddly little doggy in&#13;
slow motion. It was a charming little&#13;
film.&#13;
Q: Sounds lovely. I recently saw&#13;
one of your films "The Easter&#13;
Bunny Massacre," and I was amazed&#13;
at how good the special effects&#13;
were, considering the low budget.&#13;
A: What special effects are&#13;
those?&#13;
Q: The special make up in the&#13;
death scenes.&#13;
A: Oh, we don't use make up.&#13;
Q: Then how do you achieve&#13;
such realism?&#13;
A: How else? We offed the actors.&#13;
At the budgets we work with,&#13;
I can't afford a make-up guy. Of&#13;
course, we are running out of actors.&#13;
Say, do you act?&#13;
Q: Well I, I mean, I've done a little...&#13;
A: How'd you like to be in my&#13;
next film? I can see it now. You'd&#13;
have a great death scene. We tie&#13;
-you up and push you down a flight&#13;
of stairs. Just like in "Kiss of&#13;
Death." Ony in this one we'd put&#13;
some sharp spikes and alligators at&#13;
the bottom and...&#13;
by J im Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Some of the greatest guitar work&#13;
on any rock and roll record has&#13;
been performed by Eric Clapton.&#13;
Clapton has shown capabilities in&#13;
rock (Cream, Derek and the Dominoes),&#13;
straight blues ("Nobody&#13;
Knows You" on the Dominoes' LP&#13;
"Layla"), even reggae (his cover of&#13;
Bob Marley's "I Shot the Sheriff").&#13;
He is perhaps best known as the&#13;
master of a quintessential bluesrock&#13;
fusion, emerging at a time&#13;
when this musical combination was&#13;
the rage among British rockers&#13;
(The Rolling Stones and The Who&#13;
in particular).&#13;
Somehow Clapton manages to do&#13;
effortlessly what others are struggling&#13;
to accomplish. He has been&#13;
capable of consistent high quality,&#13;
"Behind the Sun," his latest on&#13;
Warner's, yet another excellent&#13;
showcase for his still impressive&#13;
guitar riffs and gutsy blues-rock vo-&#13;
Diamond Lif e&#13;
Eric Clapton&#13;
cals.&#13;
"Forever Man," a danceable&#13;
rocker, is the one chosen for top 40&#13;
radio, but perhaps the best cut on&#13;
the album is "Something's Happening,"&#13;
a sixties-esque protest tune&#13;
that makes a much stronger statement&#13;
than any recent attempts by&#13;
wimply new-wavers. The heartfelt&#13;
camaraderie of the sixties experience&#13;
(both musical and personal) is&#13;
recalled perfectly by Clapton and,&#13;
unlike recent attempts by John Fogerty&#13;
or Mick Jagger, is successful&#13;
in presenting itself during the eighties&#13;
not sounding dated or out of&#13;
place.&#13;
Clapton's guitar work is especially&#13;
impressive on the obligatory&#13;
blues cut "Same Old Blues," while&#13;
his performance of Eddie Floyd's&#13;
R&amp;B classic "Knock on Wood"&#13;
puts the recent discofied Amii&#13;
Stewart creeper to deserved shame.&#13;
Production by Phil Collins comes&#13;
to the forefront especially on the&#13;
very meaningful and passionate&#13;
title cut.&#13;
Eric Clapton is one of the greatest&#13;
rock musicians of all time.&#13;
While others from his era (at a time&#13;
when music really mattered) have&#13;
either mellowed severely or thrown&#13;
up their hands in frustration at&#13;
their inability to adapt to musical&#13;
and cultural changes, Clapton has&#13;
maintained a firm handle on styles,&#13;
statements and how to present&#13;
them for maximum effect. "Behind&#13;
the Sun" is definitely an LP that&#13;
journeys deeper than the disc's surface&#13;
grooves.&#13;
Sade debuts with style&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
"Diamond Life" is the new LP&#13;
by Sade (pronounced SHAR-day),&#13;
featuring the passionate and intimate&#13;
vocals and songwriting of Nigerian-&#13;
bom Sade Adu.&#13;
Jazz and blues stem from African&#13;
rhythms, Sade exemplifying the&#13;
early development of this sound&#13;
into its present day status as an art&#13;
form. Her singing quality ranges&#13;
from Billie Holliday to Rickie Lee&#13;
Jones: moody, eloquent and powerful.&#13;
The jazz-influenced tracks are&#13;
similar to last year's LP by Everything&#13;
But The Girl, another impressive&#13;
group to emerge from England's&#13;
new musical renaissance.&#13;
"Diamond Life" is presently among&#13;
the top selling LP's in Great Britain.&#13;
Sade's vocals are backed by the&#13;
Sade Adu&#13;
saxophone and guitar of co-songwriter&#13;
Stuart Matthewman, who exhibits&#13;
a strong understanding for&#13;
this musical style with expressive&#13;
playing. The mood of the tracks is&#13;
further set by pianist Andrew Hale&#13;
and bassist Paul Denman.&#13;
Often music becomes very standardized&#13;
and thus less appealing,&#13;
due to its lack of depth and substance.&#13;
"Diamond Life" is a very&#13;
offbeat, unusual record that displays&#13;
great feeling and quiet passion&#13;
utilizing its jazz and blues influences,&#13;
combining them with contemporary&#13;
production (sans the&#13;
limitations of studio electronics),&#13;
making a strong and effective statement.&#13;
Mellow, but not dull; sophisticated,&#13;
but not pretentious; "Diamond&#13;
Life" is a very effective record&#13;
that is well worth seeking out.&#13;
It calls attention to a new musical&#13;
talent that will bear some listening&#13;
with ensuing projects.&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
GRILL&#13;
DAILY SPECIALS AFTER 4:30 P.M.&#13;
HOURS: 11 am-2 pm 4:30 pm-7:00 pm&#13;
MON. Turkey Nuggets w/sauce&#13;
(BBQ, sweet-sour, hot mustard or horseradish)&#13;
TUES. Pizza-By-The-Slice&#13;
(Cheese &amp; Sausage, Pepperoni or Veggies)&#13;
WED. Stuffed Potato Skins&#13;
(Mexican, Greek, Italian or Chili)&#13;
THURS. Hot Subs&#13;
6 for 51.25&#13;
9 for 51.85&#13;
12 for 52.35&#13;
.50&#13;
2 for 1.79&#13;
1.49&#13;
f 10 Thursday, March 28, 1985&#13;
Men's basketball&#13;
RANGER&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
"There were only about 30 teams&#13;
in the country that had a better record&#13;
than we did."&#13;
This, in the words of men's head&#13;
basketball coach Rees Johnson,&#13;
sums up Parkside's past season.&#13;
The team had the best regular season&#13;
record in school history with a&#13;
22-6 mark.&#13;
Despite the record, however,&#13;
Johnson had his share of difficulties&#13;
with this team. "I didn't enjoy&#13;
coaching this team as much as I've&#13;
enjoyed coaching some of the other&#13;
teams I've had," said Johnson.&#13;
"The type of team we had was a&#13;
group of individuals either searching&#13;
for identity, for their position&#13;
on the team or worth as a player.&#13;
"At times in the year, I was really&#13;
frustrated with the team because&#13;
they weren't easy to coach. There&#13;
were a lot of different egos, a lot of&#13;
people going in different directions.&#13;
It wasn't a team effort."&#13;
Mark Zukley, a sophomore forward,&#13;
said in regard to Johnson's&#13;
comments, "I think he didn't like&#13;
the attitudes on the team. There&#13;
were many different and conflicting&#13;
attitudes. People didn't always&#13;
agree. Everybody had their own&#13;
personality and it was hard to relate.&#13;
"Everybody was trying to make&#13;
a good impression early, because&#13;
most of the people were new, and&#13;
everybody was looking out for&#13;
themselves instead of the team."&#13;
Robert Jones, a center, didn't&#13;
feel there was a problem, however.&#13;
"The coach felt there was one so&#13;
there had to be changes," said&#13;
Jones.&#13;
Junior forward Arthur "Jay"&#13;
Rundles agreed with Jones and&#13;
added, "Everybody got along pretty&#13;
good."&#13;
Jones said, "Coach's comments&#13;
brought us together as a team and&#13;
Two Great Places&#13;
All Rolled Into&#13;
One Package&#13;
A look back at a winning team made us do things more efficiently.&#13;
"When coach came down on us,&#13;
it gave us an incentive to play harder,"&#13;
added junior forward Cornell&#13;
Saddler.&#13;
In spite of the team attitude,&#13;
Johnson said, "The biggest disappointment&#13;
was how long it took the&#13;
team to get together.&#13;
"At Christmas time, we were&#13;
really close, then we got set back&#13;
by the southern trip and then coming&#13;
home and getting beat by Stevens&#13;
Point."&#13;
Another disappointment was the&#13;
lack of a team goal during the&#13;
middle months of the season.&#13;
"Not being in a conference race,&#13;
you really don't have a hell of a lot&#13;
to shoot for. All you can do is wait&#13;
for tournament time," said Johnson.&#13;
There were two turning points&#13;
last season, according to Johnson.&#13;
One was the Dec. 22 game against&#13;
Green Bay.&#13;
"We beat a team that's (NCAA)&#13;
Division I — even though they're&#13;
not a great one — by eig ht points at&#13;
their place. That was a heck of a&#13;
victory for us. It was our biggest&#13;
test of the season at that point. It&#13;
let our guys know they really were&#13;
a good team."&#13;
The other turning point was a&#13;
three-game winning streak when&#13;
the Rangers beat Oshkosh, Purdue-&#13;
Calumet and Northeastern Illinois.&#13;
"That stretch was important for us,&#13;
to get our momentum going again,"&#13;
said Johnson.&#13;
For the most part, however,&#13;
Johnson praised his team's play&#13;
and steady improvement throughout&#13;
the season.&#13;
"By the end of the year, culminating&#13;
with the Eau Claire game, I&#13;
was really quite pleased and proud&#13;
of how much progress was made as&#13;
far as team play was concerned. I&#13;
think they made a lot of progress.&#13;
t vo&#13;
\Cen°s&#13;
2°d st"&#13;
INSIDE MM&#13;
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Snacks, Pizza &amp; Sandwiches&#13;
Monday - All You Can Eat&#13;
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The teams we had before, with&#13;
(Erik) Womeldorf and Rundles&#13;
were pretty solid, but they were&#13;
.500 teams. Now, all of a sudden&#13;
they know they are a 22-7 team.&#13;
They learned that they can really&#13;
win."&#13;
The Rangers' play late in the season&#13;
has left Johnson with great anticipation&#13;
for next season. "I wish&#13;
the season started tomorrow.&#13;
"We're going to be a very good&#13;
team next year. Not only do we&#13;
have talent and maturity, we have&#13;
that experience. Now, they know&#13;
what they have to do, what kind of&#13;
togetherness they have to have.&#13;
"They (team members) know the&#13;
demands that are put on them and&#13;
what's expected of them. They will&#13;
be much more willing to do them&#13;
next year, because they've been on&#13;
the firing line this year."&#13;
The players also are looking forward&#13;
to next season. "We've got all&#13;
the players coming back (except for&#13;
seniors Womeldorf, Stan Cameron&#13;
and Dave Sergeant), and I know&#13;
we're going to win this district&#13;
(NAIA District 14)," said Zukley.&#13;
"Next year we'll be more united. I&#13;
think we'll be killing teams instead&#13;
of just beating them."&#13;
Jones added, "I feel pretty confident&#13;
about this team. We have a&#13;
great chance of making it to the national&#13;
tournament, because of returnees&#13;
like Dennis Davis, Rundles,&#13;
Vince Hall and Saddler. I'm sure&#13;
they will be hungry enough to go&#13;
after the title."&#13;
Johnson feels the team's nucleus&#13;
will be intact, though it'll lose three&#13;
members. "This will be Rundles'&#13;
fourth year, and Davis will be a&#13;
senior. Saddler has matured extremely&#13;
well. We have other young&#13;
men, like Zukley, Jones and Mike&#13;
Henderson, who have an awful lot&#13;
of potential.&#13;
"How much they mature in six&#13;
months from now we'll know when&#13;
we open up our season. We also&#13;
have a couple of guys who have&#13;
been delayed, like Dan Carrera and&#13;
Jeff Rhodes.&#13;
"When I was at the National&#13;
tournament in Kansas City, people&#13;
were asking the Stevens Point&#13;
people who was going to be tough&#13;
in their district. They said Parkside.&#13;
That's a pretty good compliment,&#13;
coming from Point,"&#13;
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Call 6944572.&#13;
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PROFESSIONAL GUITAR amp, Peavey&#13;
"Reknown." 450 watts, excellent condition!&#13;
$600/best offer. Call 0004)000.&#13;
MOVING SALE: 4-piece bedroom set. Full&#13;
size bed, excellent condition, $150/best offer.&#13;
Refrig and dryer, prices negotiable. Call 694-&#13;
8955.&#13;
COMPLETE SONY component Stereo, 50&#13;
watts, $500. 634-5864.&#13;
Personals&#13;
THERE ONCE was a man named JEFF&#13;
SLATER&#13;
Who owed me ten bucks, that cheapskater.&#13;
But he has paid off this debt&#13;
And I sadly regret&#13;
That a retraction will follow soon.&#13;
Later.&#13;
THE JEFF Slater smear campaign ends.&#13;
Chapter 3: "The things I could have said&#13;
about JEFF SLATER but didn't:" JEFF&#13;
SLATER'S so cheap he can't afford to pay attention;&#13;
JEFF SLATER may wear the pants&#13;
in his relationship but Dawn buys them;&#13;
Debit-Allowance for Bad Debts, Credit-JEFF&#13;
SLATER; What do you get when you cross&#13;
JEFF SLATER and a pair of roller skates?&#13;
Answer: a cheap skate. JEFF SLATER wears&#13;
a dress on ladies nite so he can drink for free.&#13;
I retract. THE WOZ.&#13;
WHO IS the NPSGA? Pass information to&#13;
PLO (Parkside Liberation Organization.)&#13;
ARE COMMUNICATIONSSSSSSS Majors&#13;
really that picky?&#13;
MIKE F: If you don't start making a tear&#13;
sheet list for me, it may be the end for you.&#13;
A.B.M.&#13;
TO PLO: NPSGA are $%•*$. that's what!&#13;
NPLO&#13;
CHURCH OF Fun meeting Friday night. BE&#13;
there or be neg fun.&#13;
ISN'T KEITH Harmann a devoted Communicationsssss&#13;
Major? Bus. Mgr.&#13;
HAVE YOU joined the Church of Fun yet?&#13;
SEH: YOU are so terrific in so many ways!&#13;
Lov, Lor.&#13;
DO YOU like to have fun? Join the Church of&#13;
Fun. Friday night, Union. Be there.&#13;
FUNSHINE: LOOKING forward to dancing&#13;
WITH YOU Saturday night. LOVE-A-LOT.&#13;
PAM WOODBURY broke her arm fighting in&#13;
the Union again.&#13;
HEY DEBBY Scherrer, guess what? You're&#13;
FAT!&#13;
DEBBIE GRIFFITHS, SORRY for all the&#13;
R.M.S.! PHGMI&#13;
KEITH HARMANN, having toga problems?&#13;
JIM KREUSER, change your name so I can&#13;
spell it! Signed, a poor speller.&#13;
JIM KRETSER, How do you spell your last&#13;
name again??&#13;
SGT. CAN I lean on you just a little longer?&#13;
Freddie&#13;
SERGEANT: YOU'LL be sorry you ever&#13;
asked for a classified!&#13;
SARGE: FLASH those dimples! Freddie&#13;
SARGE: WHO said anything about anyone&#13;
being cute?&#13;
SGT.-THANKS for giving me and my rug a&#13;
place to hang out. Max.&#13;
DEBBIE GRIFFITHS: Sorry for all the&#13;
R.M.'s PHGMI&#13;
TO TOM, the Hamburglar: We saw that and&#13;
atching&#13;
SPECIAL THANKS to all members of the&#13;
we're going to be watching you. J&amp;T&#13;
church of f un, under the direction of Rev. JK,&#13;
for a great job of brightening up the TOGA&#13;
bash! The prez (an assoc. member)&#13;
WHO DO you know wants to buy a TOGA?&#13;
Slightly used. Call 553-2211 for more info.&#13;
WANTED: INFO leading to the capture of&#13;
the masked toga person who feels underwear&#13;
is not a necessary part of social behavior.&#13;
DAN L.: Sorry about the stupid things I said&#13;
Tuesday. I didn't mean them-Tami.&#13;
COACH PISSBALL: How's Hofen Ruefer,&#13;
Lobo Ladies, Permanent Spring Break?&#13;
T.A. SWEETPIE: You are my strength when&#13;
I'm lost. Love, Linda.&#13;
MORT: DO you want to get lucky tonight?&#13;
Every night? Looper wants your body!&#13;
TILY!!!!! Thank you infinitely much for all&#13;
your support and love over break and always!&#13;
You are truly an inspiration! Love, JR&#13;
RYDELL, OSHGOSH will never be the same.&#13;
The Orida Dragon.&#13;
BUFFY:-19 weeks (I'm overwhelmed). Biff.&#13;
U* (SMlie&#13;
l^ureet&#13;
Puzzler&#13;
Answer&#13;
% » 20 OFF&#13;
All Nuts Week of April 1&#13;
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selection of&#13;
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i&#13;
Located in the Union Bazaar&#13;
Directly Across from the Info. Ctr.&#13;
ANDERSON TRANSCRIPTION&#13;
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RANGER&#13;
11 Thursday, March 28, 1985&#13;
Tennis&#13;
Team is stronger&#13;
than last year's&#13;
by Kimberlie Kranich&#13;
"This team has a competitive attitude.&#13;
They love to play for a&#13;
point. They play that point out. I&#13;
like that," said Dick Frecka, coach&#13;
of this year's men's tennis team.&#13;
After over three weeks of practice,&#13;
Frecka has a good idea of&#13;
what his team looks like. "I would&#13;
say that ability-wise, we should be&#13;
stronger than we were last year.&#13;
This year we've got good balance.&#13;
The top six players are going to be&#13;
pretty close. Number one probably&#13;
won't beat number six more than 6-&#13;
2 or 6-3."&#13;
The top six players are third-year&#13;
man Art Shannon, first-year men&#13;
Chris Schuleit, Tom Hermes, Dan&#13;
Hyatt, Dave Hyatt and Tom Pacetti,&#13;
and second-year man Frank&#13;
Mejia.&#13;
Second-year men Alan Elsmo,&#13;
Brian Langenbach and Mike Roszkowski&#13;
and first-year men Dan Kitzmann&#13;
and Keith Strand complete&#13;
the twelve-man squad.&#13;
With the exception of a few&#13;
warm days, the majority of practices&#13;
have been indoors, squeezing&#13;
twelve players onto three courts.&#13;
Securing gym time is a problem because&#13;
tennis has to share the gym&#13;
with baseball, softball and track.&#13;
"It's hard sometimes to get the&#13;
players to come at the times the&#13;
gym is available. We're not alone;&#13;
the other sports have had the same&#13;
problem," said Frecka.&#13;
Practicing inside can also present&#13;
adjustment problems. Frecka said&#13;
the biggest adjustment problem is&#13;
lighting. "Outdoors you see the ball&#13;
so much better. The disadvantages&#13;
of outside courts are temperature,&#13;
wind and surface factor. The outdoor&#13;
courts are also much slower&#13;
than the indoor courts."&#13;
Whether inside or out, the men&#13;
will be tough. "This year we have&#13;
experience. If everybody stays&#13;
healthy, we'll be all right."&#13;
Meet famous athletes•&#13;
and more — join the&#13;
Ranger Staff.&#13;
WLLC-D139A.&#13;
Although the team is twelve players&#13;
strong and only six can play at&#13;
any given time, Frecka said he likes&#13;
big teams. "I don't like to cut. I've&#13;
had players who didn't make the&#13;
top six in their freshman year and&#13;
in their senior year they were playing&#13;
one, two and three. They had&#13;
the ability; they just didn't have&#13;
the experience."&#13;
In addition to the team's ability,&#13;
their attitude will affect their success.&#13;
"The attitude of the team&#13;
seems to be pretty positive. Everybody's&#13;
pumped up about the drills&#13;
and there is no negative chatter.&#13;
Mejia and Shannon decided not to&#13;
take full-time jobs, and their presence&#13;
on the team will add some&#13;
depth," said Hermes.&#13;
Frecka looks for a positive team&#13;
attitude, also. "My main concern is&#13;
not whether we win each match,&#13;
but that individuals become a team&#13;
and show consideration for one another."&#13;
A tennis player himself, Frecka&#13;
knows what it takes to become a&#13;
winner and gives advice and encouragement&#13;
to his players. "I tell&#13;
them, win if you can, get beat if&#13;
you must, but don't lose.&#13;
"There's a difference. If you go&#13;
out there and you're hitting good&#13;
shots and your opponent is hitting&#13;
better shots and winning points,&#13;
you're not losing to him. But, if you&#13;
go out there and the person on the&#13;
other side of the net isn't as good&#13;
as you are, and you're hitting the&#13;
ball into the net, then you're losing&#13;
to your opponent — h e's not beating&#13;
you."&#13;
The men have their first meet&#13;
Tuesday, April 2 against Carroll&#13;
College at 3 p.m. on the Parkside&#13;
courts.&#13;
Wrestlers are&#13;
disappointed in NAIA&#13;
National Tournament&#13;
The wrestling team, seeded seventh&#13;
in the nation, placed 24th in&#13;
the NAIA National Tournament&#13;
held in Jamestown, North Dakota&#13;
March 7-9.&#13;
Six wrestlers competed in the&#13;
tournament, but only two left with&#13;
Ail-American honors.&#13;
"I thought we wrestled much&#13;
poorer than what we were capable&#13;
of," said Coach Jim Koch. "If these&#13;
boys would have wrestled close to&#13;
their seeds, probably we would&#13;
have placed seventh."&#13;
Individual seedings were Jack&#13;
Danner-134 lbs.-ninth; Mark Dubey-&#13;
142 lbs.-ninth; Mike Muckerheide-&#13;
158 lbs.-fourth; Todd Yde-167 lbs.-&#13;
fourth. Ted Keyes, 177 lbs., and&#13;
Craig Patz, 190 lbs., were seeded&#13;
third in their weight classes.&#13;
Yde wrestled all the way to the&#13;
semi-finals before losing to Howard&#13;
Seay from Central State University,&#13;
Oklahoma, 2-1. Seay went on to win&#13;
second place honors in his weight&#13;
class. Yde wrestled to fifth place in&#13;
his weight class, which earned him&#13;
Ail-American honors.&#13;
Muckerheide, who also won All-&#13;
American honors, wrestled to the&#13;
quarter-finals and lost to Eric&#13;
Lujan from the University of Southern&#13;
Colorado, 16-6. In this match,&#13;
Muckerheide hurt his shoulder,&#13;
prompting Koch to default him out&#13;
of the tournament. Muckerheide&#13;
also won Academic All-American&#13;
with a 3.6 GPA.&#13;
"He could possibly have wrestled&#13;
back for as high as third place. That&#13;
hurt us, but his health is obviously&#13;
more important than our placement,"&#13;
said Koch.&#13;
Keyes, who missed All-American&#13;
status, also won Academic All-&#13;
American, with a 3.0 GPA.&#13;
Koch said the team's finish was a&#13;
personal disappointment because&#13;
his team has in the past finished&#13;
among the top ten.&#13;
UW-P player Tennis schedule Tuesday, April 2 vs. Carroll,&#13;
at home, 3 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, April 13, vs. Moraine&#13;
Valley, at home,&#13;
noon.&#13;
Monday, April 22, at Carthage,&#13;
3 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, April 3 vs.&#13;
Lake County, at home, 3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Monday, April 15, vs. Concordia,&#13;
at home, 3 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, April 24, at&#13;
Carroll, 2 p.m.&#13;
Friday, April 5, vs. Beloit,&#13;
at home, 3 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, April 17, vs.&#13;
UWM, at home, 3 p.m.&#13;
Friday, April 26, at Lake&#13;
County, 3 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, April 6, vs.&#13;
Green Bay, at home, 1 p.m.&#13;
Friday, April 19, at Beloit,&#13;
2 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, April 27, at&#13;
Concordia, 1 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, April 10, vs.&#13;
Carthage, at home, 3 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, April 20, at Moraine&#13;
Valley, 1 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, May 4, vs.&#13;
Alumni, at home, 1 p.m.&#13;
NOTICE!&#13;
STUDENT JOB OPENING&#13;
IN THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
CASH-HANDLING&#13;
ATTENDANT&#13;
All positions available Fall semester. Applications&#13;
now being accepted in Room 209 of the Parkside&#13;
Union through Monday, April 15.&#13;
CASHIERS/BARTENDERS&#13;
UNION SQUARE BAR&#13;
RECREATION CENTER&#13;
• CINEMA THEATER&#13;
• SWEET SHOPPE&#13;
All positions are available 2nd semester. Applications now being accepted in Room 209 of&#13;
the Parkside Union through Friday, Dec. 14.&#13;
-S -&#13;
12 Thursday, March 28, 1985 HANGER&#13;
Wayne Dannehl&#13;
The man behind the Phy-Ed administrator&#13;
Athletic Director Wayne Dannehl&#13;
came to Parkside in September,&#13;
1972, ready for home-town sports.&#13;
After coaching and teaching for&#13;
five years at a Big 10 School (University&#13;
of Illinois), Dannehl wanted&#13;
to move away from "things associated&#13;
with big time athletics."&#13;
Dannehl said, of "big time"&#13;
schools: "They (student athletes)&#13;
get a false sense of how important&#13;
they are and I don't like that.&#13;
That's part of our culture.&#13;
"When kids get to think they're&#13;
more important than the program,&#13;
they're missing the whole point.&#13;
That's why I never get too concerned&#13;
about spectators."&#13;
Dannehl settled into the small&#13;
school atmosphere the same day&#13;
the physical education building&#13;
opened its doors. With this move&#13;
came some changes.&#13;
"The first year we spent a lot of&#13;
time just getting the heat and water&#13;
on."&#13;
But another major change which&#13;
occurred under Dannehl's direction&#13;
was the inclusion of women's athletics&#13;
on the college level.&#13;
"We felt fairly proud that we&#13;
were one of the first schools in the&#13;
state, as well as in the nation, to&#13;
have those opportunities for&#13;
women."&#13;
The only obstacle faced, said&#13;
Dannehl, dealt with money. "That's&#13;
by Steve Kratochvil&#13;
Ken "Red" Oberbruner, the&#13;
head coach of the Parkside baseball&#13;
team, has done it all, from getting&#13;
inducted into the NAIA Hall of&#13;
Fame to playing professional basketball&#13;
and baseball.&#13;
Oberbruner was born in Ashland,&#13;
Wisconsin, where he excelled in&#13;
several sports at DePadua High&#13;
School. But baseball was his specialty.&#13;
Toward the end of his high&#13;
school career, Oberbruner had to&#13;
choose between playing pro baseball&#13;
and going to college; he opted&#13;
for the latter.&#13;
Oberbruner graduated from&#13;
Notre Dame in 1940. "While I was&#13;
at Notre Dame, I played professional&#13;
basketball for the Pistons. You&#13;
could do that back in those days."&#13;
After graduation, Oberbruner&#13;
played pro baseball for Fort&#13;
Wayne, a team affiliated with the&#13;
Cleveland Indians. He went on to&#13;
play with the Boston Braves as&#13;
shortstop and center fielder.&#13;
His basketball career ended after&#13;
the attack on Pearl Harbor, when&#13;
he was drafted into the army.&#13;
"I was really coming into my&#13;
own at that point," said Oberbrunner.&#13;
"When I got back I realized&#13;
that I didn't have it any more." Unable&#13;
to play competitively, Oberbruner&#13;
got into the coaching field.&#13;
He returned to Wisconsin in 1946&#13;
to help manage the Beloit team of&#13;
the Central Wisconsin League. A&#13;
"In addition to&#13;
being the chief administrator&#13;
of this&#13;
unit. I put up with&#13;
what they call the&#13;
human side of the&#13;
enterprise. All the&#13;
nitty gritty problems&#13;
that occur between&#13;
persons end&#13;
up here. "&#13;
-Wayne Dannehl&#13;
not to say we haven't had money&#13;
for the programs, but when you&#13;
add eight or nine women's sports, it&#13;
involves a lot of money.&#13;
"We really operate on a terribly&#13;
low budget. If I had to do it over&#13;
again, I would probably go for a lot&#13;
more money to support the programs."&#13;
Besides creating new programs,&#13;
however, Dannehl is involved with&#13;
administration.'&#13;
"I'm responsible for the operation&#13;
of the building, the phy ed, inyear&#13;
later he was hired at Milton&#13;
College, where he would spend the&#13;
next 23 years in charge of the&#13;
coaching duties for football, basketball&#13;
and baseball.&#13;
Oberbruner became the baseball&#13;
coach at Parkside in 1970. " I came&#13;
here primarily due to A1 Dearborn.&#13;
He was dean of students at Milton&#13;
before he took a similar position&#13;
here. It was his influence that caused&#13;
me to consider Parkside."&#13;
Oberbruner signed 21 players to&#13;
professional baseball contracts. His&#13;
son, Jamey, a former Ranger, is&#13;
one of them. "Speaking as a coach&#13;
and not as a father, Jamey was&#13;
probably the best player I ever&#13;
coached," he said.&#13;
"Jamey had all the tools to be in&#13;
the big leagues. But he got caught&#13;
in a numbers game and was released&#13;
by Pittsburgh. It's really a&#13;
shame he never got a good shot at&#13;
it.&#13;
"If Jamey had made it, I would&#13;
have been the happiest guy in the&#13;
world. That would have made&#13;
everything complete, darn it."&#13;
Oberbruner was recently elected&#13;
into the Wisconsin High School&#13;
Coaches Hall of Fame though he&#13;
never coached a high school team.&#13;
"Making the Hall of Fame is really&#13;
something special to me. When I&#13;
look back on all that has happened,&#13;
it makes reaching the Hall of Fame&#13;
something very special.&#13;
"I'm directly connected with&#13;
high schools. I recruit the boys for&#13;
tramural and athletic programs,&#13;
fund raising and making sure people&#13;
stay within their budgets." The&#13;
budgets have been met in all of&#13;
Dannehl's 13 years.&#13;
Included in the regular administrative&#13;
affairs is Dannehl's duty to&#13;
the community. He is presently involved&#13;
in the Rotary Club and Kenosha&#13;
Night at the Brewers.&#13;
"As a member of Parkside's&#13;
community, I also work in the local&#13;
communities. That's kind of an&#13;
obligation of the job, although I&#13;
Ken "Red" Oberbruner&#13;
college and help them get their degrees.&#13;
Then I try to develop their&#13;
skills for a professional contract.&#13;
"I'm here at Parkside because I&#13;
like people, college students in particular.&#13;
I like to watch them grow&#13;
academically and athletically. They&#13;
should realize, however, that getting&#13;
their degree is the most important&#13;
thing."&#13;
Oberbruner's name is in the&#13;
Hank Aaron display at Milwaukee&#13;
County Stadium, he has played&#13;
against the Globetrotters and the&#13;
list just goes on for Oberbruner,&#13;
now 67 a nd a semi-retired teacher&#13;
and coach.&#13;
"I guess you could say I'm kind&#13;
of a bird dog for the Pittsburgh Pirates,&#13;
too," he said, referring to his&#13;
casual scouting duties for the major&#13;
league club.&#13;
"I got a call the other day. The&#13;
Brewers are looking for a pitching&#13;
coach. Jamey would make a heck&#13;
of a coach."&#13;
don't mind doing it.&#13;
"It also helps us, because when&#13;
we need help, people are willing to&#13;
come to us and help because we've&#13;
been helping the community."&#13;
Though Dannehl spends part of&#13;
his time dealing with outside&#13;
groups, most of his hours are spent&#13;
dealing with inside problems.&#13;
Just a few of the difficulties encountered&#13;
range from recruiting&#13;
new athletes to finding funding for&#13;
post-season play.&#13;
"Recruiting is a 'great chore' as&#13;
a commuter campus. It's much&#13;
more difficult from an administrative&#13;
point of view than it is on a&#13;
resident campus."&#13;
Despite the difficulties, Parkside&#13;
manages to produce athletes good&#13;
enough to go to Nationals. Traveling&#13;
and playing at Nationals, however,&#13;
costs money, money which is&#13;
not funded. Through the years,&#13;
Dannehl has had to find ways to&#13;
raise that money.&#13;
"Our kids do quite well athletically,&#13;
considering everything. It's a&#13;
tribute to our kids and to the coaching.&#13;
I got to figure out how the&#13;
heck we're going to pay for all this&#13;
stuff."&#13;
"In addition to being the chief&#13;
administrator of this unit, I put up&#13;
with what they call the human side&#13;
of the enterprise. All t he nitty gritty&#13;
problems that occur between&#13;
The seventh annual Whitewater&#13;
Half-Marathon and simultaneous&#13;
Four Mile Run will be held Sunday,&#13;
May 5.&#13;
Sponsored by Whitewater's Army&#13;
ROTC Detachment and supported&#13;
by Company 'E,' 2nd Battalion&#13;
(TLAT), Wisconsin Army National&#13;
Guard, the races will begin at 10&#13;
a.m. at the intersection of Prairie&#13;
Street and Starin Road on Whitewater's&#13;
campus.&#13;
For the certified 13.1 mile Half-&#13;
Marathon, trophies will go to the&#13;
male and female winners. Medals&#13;
will be awarded to the first three&#13;
persons end up here."&#13;
Dannehl welcomes each day with&#13;
the knowledge it will be filled with&#13;
challenge. He accepts the challenge&#13;
thrown at him daily. One goal he&#13;
has for the future of Parkside is an&#13;
aerobic program with weight training.&#13;
With this program. Dannehl&#13;
hopes to bring more people out to&#13;
the physical education building to&#13;
use it.&#13;
"We're (Dannehl and coach.&#13;
Steve Stephens) chasing around trying&#13;
to convince the people who&#13;
have the money that we should expend&#13;
this kind of money trying to&#13;
involve more people in the program."&#13;
All this effort coincides with&#13;
Dannehl's hope to open the facilities&#13;
to more people (students and&#13;
faculty, as well as student-athletes).&#13;
Dannehl is also working on making&#13;
the gym a "street shoe" gymnasium,&#13;
in which students have easy&#13;
access to the gym.&#13;
"Intramurals don't fly in a commuter&#13;
school," said Dannehl. Instead,&#13;
Dannehl sees the "street&#13;
shoe" gymnasium replacing or supplmenting&#13;
intramurals for those&#13;
students who come and go.&#13;
Dannehl is content with his position,&#13;
saying he's in an ideal place.&#13;
Dannehl can see through the murkiness&#13;
of the daily dilemmas with a&#13;
positive outlook.&#13;
finishers in each of the following&#13;
classes: male age 18 and under, 19-&#13;
24, 25-34, 35-39, 40-49 and age 50&#13;
and over; female, same as male,&#13;
except the last class is 40 and over.&#13;
Advance registration fee is $5, $6&#13;
on the day of the race. Registration&#13;
must be completed between 7:30&#13;
and 9:30 a.m. Entry forms can be&#13;
obtained by phoning the ROTC Detachment&#13;
at (414) 472-1563, extensions&#13;
1747 or 1541, or by writing&#13;
Army ROTC Detachment (RUN),&#13;
UW-Whitewater, Whitewater WI&#13;
53190-1790.&#13;
MILLER HIGH LIFE&#13;
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK&#13;
Jackie Rittmer&#13;
On the Florida softball trip, Jackie saved the first&#13;
win over I.U.P.U.I. with a defensive play. She first&#13;
caught a sinking fly ball to center field, and then&#13;
picked the runner off th ird base, who thought the&#13;
ball was going through.&#13;
Jackie is a junior elementary education major.&#13;
She is also a two-time NAIA All-American.&#13;
Oberbruner inducted into&#13;
High School Coaches&#13;
Hall of Fame&#13;
Whitewater Half-Marathon Set</text>
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