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              <text>Greenquist - Preliminary studies indicate extensive modification needed</text>
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              <text>W_ Universily of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, February 10, 1903&#13;
Greenquist&#13;
Preliminary studies indicate extensive modification needed&#13;
by V Bob Rnh Kieclinx Kiesling ml l l • . .1 1 1 !K . . . ..&#13;
News Editor&#13;
A p reliminary report published&#13;
by the Milwaukee engineering&#13;
firm Bert Fredricksen Inc., has&#13;
indicated that extensive&#13;
renovations will be needed to&#13;
bring Greenquist Hall's ventilation&#13;
system to state health and&#13;
safety standards.&#13;
According to the report,&#13;
deficiencies were discovered last&#13;
July when making energy conservation&#13;
modifications on the&#13;
system, as required by the state's&#13;
1982 energy conservation project.&#13;
The modifications, however, were&#13;
based on the original ventialtion&#13;
plans and failed to account for a&#13;
1975 modification when the animal&#13;
facility was added.&#13;
The project inspector, visiting&#13;
while work was in progress,&#13;
noticed an immediate safety&#13;
hazard. He noted that in addition&#13;
to air control devices and heat&#13;
exchangers being the wrong size,&#13;
large portions of the existing&#13;
ductwork are severely corroded.&#13;
The heat exchangers and the air&#13;
control devices, known as VAVs&#13;
(for Variable Air Volume), caused&#13;
an added resistance to airflow&#13;
within the existing system.&#13;
Estimated airflow velocities are&#13;
between 25 and 30 per cent of&#13;
minimum levels.&#13;
Also, ventilation fans in&#13;
Greenquist had been slowed to&#13;
lessen noise within the&#13;
labratories. The energy&#13;
modifications did not reflect this&#13;
knowledge, and the firm made&#13;
immediate recommendations to&#13;
bring the ventilation in Greenquist&#13;
to minimum safety levels, at the&#13;
expense of the energy&#13;
modifications.&#13;
The balancing subcontractor,&#13;
Bal - Air, was instructed to speed&#13;
up the airflow by increasing the&#13;
speed of the ventilation fans and&#13;
running them continuously. In&#13;
addition, they recommended that&#13;
the VAVs be disconnected. The&#13;
balancing firm was then asked to&#13;
balance the ventilation system at&#13;
the correct levels.&#13;
The system rebalancing has&#13;
recently been completed, and the&#13;
engineering firm is preparing a&#13;
final report, due out sometime in&#13;
the next month, to make specific&#13;
recommendations and cost&#13;
estimates for the system&#13;
overhaul. Jack Dudley, Director&#13;
of the Physical plant, said the&#13;
costs would be "easily $1 million."&#13;
The known problems to be&#13;
rectified include a correction of&#13;
the positive air pressure within&#13;
the laboratories. If the air&#13;
pressure is positive, or greater&#13;
than the pressure in surrounding&#13;
spaces, fumes from a toxic spill&#13;
could be transmitted from one lab&#13;
to other areas of the building. In&#13;
addition, exhausts from the fume&#13;
hoods are combined with the&#13;
general room exhausts, which&#13;
creates the possibility of hazardous&#13;
chemical mixtures within the&#13;
system. Intermittent operation of&#13;
the exhaust fans also means that&#13;
fumes settle in the horizontal&#13;
sections of the ducting, increasing&#13;
duct deterioration.&#13;
The fume hoods in many labs&#13;
are being used as storage&#13;
cabinets, restricting airflow even&#13;
further. The firm also said the fire&#13;
dampers in the fume hoods create&#13;
more of a fire and health hazard&#13;
than they are supposed to&#13;
alleviate.&#13;
The engineering firm listed&#13;
Sexual harassment&#13;
survey results&#13;
The Sexual Harassment&#13;
Committee drew 551 responses&#13;
from its questionnaire distributed&#13;
among students, faculty, and&#13;
staff. Of the respondents, 234&#13;
females and 212 males were&#13;
identified as full time students,&#13;
staff or faculty. The others — of&#13;
equal importance for our purposes&#13;
— were part time or did not&#13;
identify their category.&#13;
In response to the question&#13;
asking if the respondent believed&#13;
there was sexual harassment on&#13;
this campus, more men then&#13;
women checked "not all all";&#13;
more women checked "rarely."&#13;
At least 40 more women than men&#13;
checked "with some frequency"&#13;
to this question. Only 7 women and&#13;
3 men believed that sexual&#13;
harassment occurs "extensively"&#13;
on this campus.&#13;
The second question dealt with 5&#13;
forms of uninvited sexual attention&#13;
and the respondents were&#13;
asked to check any that applied.&#13;
Women checked one or more&#13;
kinds of unwanted attention 3&#13;
times more often than men did; 5&#13;
full time students (3 women and 2&#13;
men) checked the final response,&#13;
indicating they had received a&#13;
threat implying that if the demand&#13;
for sexual favors was not met&#13;
their grade (s) or employment&#13;
situation could be affected. So did&#13;
2 m ale faculty members.&#13;
The third question listed five&#13;
possible means for eliminating&#13;
unwanted sexual attention and&#13;
asked respondents to mark as&#13;
many as they felt would be effective.&#13;
Some respondents pointed&#13;
out that effectiveness would be&#13;
determined by such a variety of&#13;
factors and situations that it was&#13;
difficult to make a judgment.&#13;
However, almost twice as many&#13;
women felt that "ignoring the&#13;
behavior and doing nothing" was&#13;
a possible solution. Well over 300&#13;
respondents, both male and&#13;
female, felt that "asking the&#13;
person to stop and / or avoiding&#13;
the person" was a useful action.&#13;
Noticeably fewer, especially&#13;
among female staff members, felt&#13;
that "reporting the person to a&#13;
counselor / superior" was appropriate.&#13;
"Filing a formal&#13;
complaint" was checked&#13;
proportionately by about the same&#13;
number of men and women. Few&#13;
respondents checked "there is&#13;
little that people can do to make&#13;
others stop harassing them&#13;
sexually."&#13;
The questionnaire provides the&#13;
committee with some information&#13;
concerning current attitudes&#13;
among UWP clientele towards&#13;
sexual harassment. It also served&#13;
as another means to attract public&#13;
attention to the issue of sexual&#13;
harassment and to the existence&#13;
of the committee, whose members&#13;
wish to be helpful to anyone&#13;
feeling harassed. Anyone interested&#13;
in a detailed analysis of&#13;
the questionnaire and its results is&#13;
invited to consult with the committee.&#13;
&#13;
some specific recommendations&#13;
to correct the problems. They&#13;
include maintaining proper&#13;
pressure relationships between&#13;
spaces, running air supply and&#13;
exhaust systems constantly,&#13;
removing the VAVs, removing&#13;
inlet vanes from exhaust and&#13;
central supply fans, and revising&#13;
the automtic control system.&#13;
They also said that the hood&#13;
exhausts need to be separated&#13;
from the general room exhausts,&#13;
and that horizontal hood ducting&#13;
be replaced with PVC ducting to&#13;
prevent future corrosion. Additional&#13;
collection and ejection&#13;
systems will need to be added.&#13;
Dudley said that larger ducting&#13;
will need to be installed in the labs&#13;
to decrease the noise level by&#13;
decreasing the airflow velocities.&#13;
"Some of them are terrible," he&#13;
said.&#13;
He also said that there was no&#13;
estimate for the time needed to&#13;
get the project approved so work&#13;
can begin. He did say, however,&#13;
that most of the work would have&#13;
to be done during the summer, so&#13;
that classes are not disrupted.&#13;
Dudley estimated that work could&#13;
begin as early as the summer of&#13;
1984.&#13;
Dudley added that he will be&#13;
working closely with the science&#13;
department on the modifications&#13;
so the ventilation more closely&#13;
conforms with the department's&#13;
needs. "We'll be redesigning the&#13;
whole thing," he said.&#13;
He said the administration will&#13;
push for the work to be completed&#13;
in the shortest time possible, and&#13;
that the work be done properly.&#13;
There have been problems with&#13;
the Greenquist ventilation since it&#13;
was built and the University will&#13;
seek to correct the problems now.&#13;
"It is our position that we don't&#13;
care how much it costs," he said.&#13;
New SOC chair elected&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
Valerie Olson was recently&#13;
elected the new chair of Student&#13;
Organizations Council (SOC).&#13;
Olson was very pleased to be&#13;
elected Chair, and looks forward&#13;
to a year of growth for SOC. "In&#13;
the past year, the level of&#13;
awareness within SOC has been&#13;
raised greatly," commented&#13;
Olson. "That is certainly a good&#13;
sign. All of the organizations need&#13;
to be aware of consequences. At&#13;
this point, I don't see things as&#13;
needing to be changed within our&#13;
organization. Things just need to&#13;
be refocused." Olson pointed out&#13;
that the new guidelines clearly&#13;
state what SOC should be.&#13;
Currently, Olson feels that a&#13;
main goal for SOC is simply to get&#13;
people to come. Meetings are&#13;
attended by people who "probably&#13;
feel obligated to come to make&#13;
sure that what has happened in&#13;
the past doesn't happen again." It&#13;
is a priority for Olson to make the&#13;
advantages of SOC known. She&#13;
feels that people question the&#13;
advantages of t he organization as&#13;
a whole, perhaps because not all&#13;
VALERIE O L SO N&#13;
of the advantages are tangible,&#13;
but the advantages are there, and&#13;
available for use. "People have to&#13;
make good use of them," stated&#13;
Olson.&#13;
"A lot of the organizations face&#13;
the same problems. Lack of&#13;
participation, lack of funds, lack&#13;
of positive interaction between the&#13;
clubs. For these groups, SOC can&#13;
be used as a sounding board in&#13;
finding resolutions to problems,&#13;
and can be a process of l earning&#13;
how to market that club to that&#13;
clubs best interest."&#13;
Olson would like to make SOC a&#13;
learning process for all involved,&#13;
and she would like to make people&#13;
more aware of what's happening.&#13;
"Instead of the same five or six&#13;
people being involved, and well&#13;
informed, everyone who is a&#13;
member should be at a certain&#13;
level of awareness," said Olson.&#13;
"Right now," continued Olson,&#13;
"I think we should focus in on&#13;
finding the solutions for the&#13;
problems we have. New problems&#13;
will always develop, but we have&#13;
to tackle the current, timely&#13;
problems now."&#13;
SUFAC summary charting&#13;
Unit&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Intramurals&#13;
Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
Health Office&#13;
Housing&#13;
Union&#13;
Auxiliary Accounting System&#13;
Union Debt Service&#13;
Child Care Center&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Performing Arts &amp; L ecture&#13;
Student Organization Council&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Winter Carnival&#13;
Student Activities Office&#13;
S.U.F.A.C.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
TOTAL&#13;
The Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocations Committee&#13;
(SUFAC), a subcommittee of&#13;
PSGA, has finished final&#13;
budgeting for the 1983-84&#13;
1982-83&#13;
$53,585.00&#13;
$40,483.00&#13;
$2,400.00&#13;
$66,248.00&#13;
$22,851.00&#13;
$194,857.00&#13;
$6,000.00&#13;
$90,500.00&#13;
$16,823.00&#13;
$35,542.00&#13;
$9,267.00&#13;
$24,660.00&#13;
$7,503.00&#13;
$4,000.00&#13;
$13,556.00&#13;
$160.00&#13;
$17,057.10&#13;
$4,733.00&#13;
$610,225.10&#13;
83/84 Final&#13;
$55,582.90&#13;
$42,507.00&#13;
$2,500.00&#13;
$69,239.00&#13;
$33,750.00&#13;
$204,945.00&#13;
$6,300.00&#13;
$90,500.00&#13;
$19,957.00&#13;
$58,549.00&#13;
$0&#13;
$22,125.00&#13;
$11,674.00&#13;
$4,000.00&#13;
$20,896.00&#13;
$140.00&#13;
$17,057.10&#13;
$4,861.00&#13;
$664,582.10&#13;
Dollar Change&#13;
$1,997.00&#13;
$2,824.00&#13;
$100.00&#13;
$3,182.00&#13;
$10,899.00&#13;
$10,088.00'&#13;
$300.00&#13;
$ -0-&#13;
$3,134.00&#13;
$26,187.00&#13;
$9,267.00&#13;
$24,660.00&#13;
$11,989.01&#13;
$ -0-&#13;
$7,340.00&#13;
$20.00&#13;
$ -0-&#13;
$ -0-&#13;
$43,293.01&#13;
% Change&#13;
3.7&#13;
5.0&#13;
4.2&#13;
4.8&#13;
47.7&#13;
5.2&#13;
5&#13;
0&#13;
18.6&#13;
73.7&#13;
-100&#13;
-100&#13;
159.8&#13;
0&#13;
54.1&#13;
-12.5&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
7.1&#13;
academic year. SUFAC&#13;
annually allocates a portion&#13;
of the students' total tuition&#13;
fees called segregated fees.&#13;
This tabel shows the final&#13;
amount to be allocated by&#13;
SUFAC for the various&#13;
campus groups and&#13;
organizations.&#13;
INSIDE Winter Carnival kicks off&#13;
Sophie's Choice Wrestling Profile &#13;
Thursday, February 10,1983&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Open primary: RIP&#13;
J he Democrats have done it. They have achieved their goal in&#13;
abolishing Wisconsin's open primary. We feel that this is a gross&#13;
restriction of the Wisconsin voters' rights. The open primary law, first&#13;
created by Governor LaFollette in the 30's, guaranteed that the electorate&#13;
of this state would be freed of the restrictions that the two partv&#13;
system imposes on the voters.&#13;
Voters would first have to register as a Democrat to vote in the&#13;
Democratic primary. These party affiliations would go on record on&#13;
state voter roles. Declaration of a party, whether Republican' or&#13;
baltotC ' '&#13;
S 3 Seri0US breach of the Principal of elections by secret&#13;
As mentioned above, the open primary is a state law. It is a sad state&#13;
of affairs when a political interest group (which is what the Democratic&#13;
party actually is) can overturn state laws, and be supported by the&#13;
courts.&#13;
Democrats argue that an open primary would allow Republicans to&#13;
vote for a weak Democratic candidate, thereby weakening the party On&#13;
the surface, the argument is reasonable, but it is a fact that crossover&#13;
votes are frequently deciding factors in elections. What the Democrats&#13;
actually seek is a stratification of party followings.&#13;
In the "free market of political ideas," as the United States purports&#13;
to have the two. party system seriously limits debate between opposing&#13;
political viewpoints. With the dominance of the two virtually indistinguishable,&#13;
shifting coalitions predominant in government the&#13;
closed party systems represent a serious, perhaps insurmountable&#13;
barrier to entry to that market.&#13;
I Letters to the editor: "&#13;
Sanctuaries supported&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I have been following, with&#13;
great interest, the development of&#13;
the sanctuarys here at Christo&#13;
Rey and in Milwaukee. I'm glad to&#13;
see so many people taking an&#13;
active interest in this important&#13;
issue.&#13;
Many of the Catholic churches&#13;
in Racine, and the Milwaukee&#13;
Archdiocese, are participating in&#13;
"Renew," Renewal of our faith.&#13;
During this next season we'll be&#13;
studying "Empowerment of the&#13;
Spirit." It is designed to help us&#13;
lead lives of r especting and caring&#13;
for other people.&#13;
The fifth week focuses on social&#13;
justice. The mission outreach, to&#13;
which the Spirit moves us, calls&#13;
for direct assistance to meet&#13;
immediate needs, and also for the&#13;
change of unfair systems. It&#13;
becomes then, the duty of every&#13;
Christian to be concerned about the&#13;
quality of everyone's life in this&#13;
world. It is our duty to defend&#13;
human beings against anything&#13;
that would degrade or lessen their&#13;
worth. We must become a part of&#13;
those movements that try to&#13;
reverse such inequalities. The&#13;
quality of our lives will be&#13;
measured by our desire to serve&#13;
and share.&#13;
To create a better world, Jesus&#13;
looks to us to perform daily acts of&#13;
kindness; and also to move&#13;
beyond, by working to change any&#13;
systems or network of actions that&#13;
is hurting His people. We must be&#13;
conscious that it is the duty of all&#13;
of us to help with these refugees.&#13;
We must be open, not just to their&#13;
needs, but to learning from them.&#13;
Life, then*to us as Christians,&#13;
can never be a cheap commodity.&#13;
Jesus is concerned about the&#13;
quality of life and takes special&#13;
care with those whose lives seem&#13;
worthless.&#13;
Our responsibility is to transform&#13;
the face of the earth and to&#13;
change that which stifles the&#13;
human spirit.&#13;
Bobbi Abler&#13;
639-9122&#13;
Responds to Think Piece'&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am responding to the 'Think&#13;
Piece' of 3 February by Bruce&#13;
Preston entitled "Someone Must&#13;
Be Responsible!" In particular, I&#13;
am responding to his last&#13;
paragraph which read: One article&#13;
can't change a lot. One feeble&#13;
attempt at an awareness committee&#13;
can't change a lot. Tougher&#13;
drunk driving laws can't change a&#13;
lot. The death of a loved one can.&#13;
Is that what it's going to take until&#13;
you think before you drive?&#13;
I have no quarrel with the basic&#13;
idea Bruce has presented here,&#13;
that if you change the cosmetics of&#13;
a situation but not the mind behind&#13;
the situation, then you really&#13;
haven't changed anything. This&#13;
theory is played out daily in the&#13;
world around us. Bruce made lite&#13;
of this concept in what he termed&#13;
the 'out - of - sight - out - of - mind'&#13;
mentality. People have a tendancy&#13;
to think that by changing a&#13;
few external cosmetic qualities, in&#13;
this case, raising the drinking age,&#13;
you have somehow alleviated a&#13;
problem, here, drunken driving,&#13;
and how we think about the&#13;
consumption of alcohol. I have a&#13;
few thoughts of my own to relate.&#13;
Does anyone believe that by&#13;
gaining knowledge we will&#13;
overcome our undesireable&#13;
behaviors? We have understood&#13;
the destructability of war for&#13;
thousands of years; still we arm&#13;
ourselves. We realize that&#13;
cigarette smoking leads to lung&#13;
cancer; still we smoke. We know&#13;
that by drinking we are dulling&#13;
our senses; still we drink and&#13;
drive. We know that biologically&#13;
people are the same; still we&#13;
seperate races and cultures as if&#13;
we are different. Can we change&#13;
any of the above examples of&#13;
human behavior without changing&#13;
our mode of thinking? Does a&#13;
change in behavior indicate a&#13;
change in mind?&#13;
What is it that leads human&#13;
beings to act in manners, which&#13;
upon reflection, seem so very&#13;
inhuman? If we 'see' certain&#13;
behaviors as inhuman or as undesireable,&#13;
how come we cannot&#13;
change them? If we know causes,&#13;
reasons, consequences and the&#13;
results of certain human&#13;
behaviors, what keeps us from&#13;
moving down the better path?&#13;
I do not believe that 'awareness'&#13;
is a key. We are 'aware' of many&#13;
decadent and debilitating human&#13;
behaviors, and the consequences&#13;
of these behaviors, yet we continue&#13;
in these ways. We have&#13;
knowledge of and acknowledge&#13;
the existence of many inhuman&#13;
activities and behaviors, yet we do&#13;
not cease from performing *these&#13;
acts. The whole process of acting&#13;
different in the world and towards&#13;
it's inhabitants depends on&#13;
'seeing' the world differently. We&#13;
will always act as we think, and if&#13;
we think without wisdom or love of&#13;
God, we will act accordingly. And&#13;
no cosmetic change in the appearance&#13;
of how we live will ever&#13;
change how we think.&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
Christopher Dorf&#13;
RON, WE'RE G0ING\/BUT PLEASE, NO jup ^cript^ x&#13;
TO HAVE TO LET YOUVOFF-THE CUFF C OMMENTS j . pJHc JHF THitoiowr^ OUT ON SPEAKING I O N ELIMINATINGiCpRPOR-l'WD L EAVETHE THINKING&#13;
.ENGAGEMENTS AGAIN.JUTE T AXES OR WHATNOTA to ub&#13;
-&#13;
Editor's notes&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Ranger Editor&#13;
And February is an interesting&#13;
month. It puts people into very&#13;
interesting moods. In the past few&#13;
months, it was very possible to&#13;
even go golfing, though it was a bit&#13;
cold, it was possible to go, because&#13;
there wasn't a great deal of snow&#13;
to be found. Suddenly February&#13;
comes, and we get show, we get&#13;
cold, and an entirely different&#13;
mood and tone has been created.&#13;
It's crisp, precise, looking for only&#13;
those who seek the good from it. If&#13;
there are none to be found,&#13;
February can linger on for much&#13;
longer than any of u s care to have&#13;
it.&#13;
Perhaps that's the really funny&#13;
thing about February, it is the&#13;
shortest month, and yet, for the&#13;
people of the clockwatching&#13;
mentality, it drags on forever,&#13;
never seeming to find an end, to&#13;
February stays forever&#13;
air TL 1 . i. . TT--.&#13;
Think Piece&#13;
find rest. There never seems to be&#13;
much visible life in the midst of&#13;
February. All of the animals are&#13;
asleep. Even my cats are much&#13;
more groggy during this month.&#13;
As if they know. Maybe if we could&#13;
see things moving in a lifelike&#13;
sense, we would feel as if the&#13;
month would come to an end that&#13;
much more quickly. Maybe not.&#13;
When the month brings snow,&#13;
everything looks new, and yet&#13;
everything looks preserved,&#13;
rather old, as if it has to be&#13;
preserved. The trees are all&#13;
covered in white, and everyone&#13;
goes out to get a picture or two,&#13;
before the snow melts off of the&#13;
trees, and some of us will end up&#13;
waiting again for a different&#13;
chance. Perhaps a chance that&#13;
will never come. Maybe if we had&#13;
those two extra days added onto&#13;
the month, like every other&#13;
month, it would seem regular.&#13;
How can anything seem regular&#13;
when it sets so many things into a&#13;
different mode of operation?&#13;
Runners can't run outside, it&#13;
would seem a bit dangerous. Cars&#13;
shouln't even be out in this&#13;
weather. (Some cars shouldn't be&#13;
out in any weather, but that's a&#13;
different subject.)&#13;
Basically, people pay less attention&#13;
to what takes place around&#13;
them. Most are either interested&#13;
in going out of doors, into the&#13;
snow, or they simply dream,&#13;
daydream that is, to time when&#13;
things are warmer, and they feel&#13;
better about venturing outdoors.&#13;
So while these people are busy&#13;
trying to determine where they&#13;
would like to be, we sit around, go&#13;
to classes, do some occasional&#13;
studying. (Heaven forbid that&#13;
we'd do too much of that), and we&#13;
plug through the month. Most of&#13;
us trying to find an end or a&#13;
resting place too.&#13;
Defining the 'Final Frontier'&#13;
V? UfAP 4/\n T • « « . - by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
This week's column is going to&#13;
take an interesting side - step. A&#13;
lot of things have happened these&#13;
past couple of weeks which have&#13;
made me stop and think. They&#13;
weren't especially extraordinary&#13;
but compiled they tell an interesting&#13;
story.&#13;
The theme for this week's Think&#13;
Piece comes from a recent lecture&#13;
given by Dr. Lee Thayer. While&#13;
discussing technology and our&#13;
desire to conquer he said, "Space&#13;
is not our final frontier, finding out&#13;
how to get along with each other&#13;
is." This planted a seed of inquiry&#13;
which blossomed as the week&#13;
grew.&#13;
When you think about it, he's&#13;
right. We can travel by land, sea&#13;
and air. We have forged the&#13;
forests, oceans and galaxies. We&#13;
have even pondered developing&#13;
communities under water and on&#13;
the Moon but what good will they&#13;
be if we can't live together? Who&#13;
cares if you can travel to Mars at&#13;
the speed of sound or light if when&#13;
you get there you face the same&#13;
problems in getting along that you&#13;
thought you had escaped?&#13;
A couple of weeks ago some&#13;
friends and I were watching Sweet&#13;
Cheeks in the Union. My friend&#13;
accidently knocked into a girl and&#13;
started up a conversation with&#13;
her. We introduced ourselves and&#13;
as she was leaving she remarked&#13;
that she had just moved here from&#13;
New Hampshire three weeks&#13;
earlier and that this was the&#13;
longest conversation she had had&#13;
with anyone. We had only talked&#13;
for ten minutes.&#13;
I am involved with the Rotary&#13;
youth exchange for high school&#13;
students. I have met and had&#13;
extensive talks and wonderful&#13;
relationships with people from all&#13;
over the world but I can't even&#13;
name the people who live on my&#13;
block. Or in my first (or last) class&#13;
of the day for that matter.&#13;
We go through each day looking&#13;
the other way when a stranger&#13;
passes us in the hallway rather&#13;
than taking the God - awful first&#13;
step and smiling. We spend more&#13;
time and energy condemning&#13;
someone for their race, beliefs or&#13;
sexual preferences than we do&#13;
trying to understand them We&#13;
spend more time ignoring that&#13;
person next to us or in front of us&#13;
than we could saying "Hi" to&#13;
them. Or (horror of horrors)&#13;
actually trying to get a little&#13;
conversation going.&#13;
All is not lost, we just need a&#13;
first step. We just need to try. If&#13;
three total strangers (a security&#13;
guard, a groundskeeper, and a&#13;
student) can take the time to push&#13;
my car out from a snow bank in&#13;
the dreaded mini car lot then we&#13;
can all take the time to smile.&#13;
After all, a stranger is just a&#13;
friend you haven't met. I know&#13;
that was a worn out cliche, but it is&#13;
something to think about.&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene Torkilsen&#13;
&lt;Ranger Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
STAR=S&#13;
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Stant Business Mana&#13;
9&#13;
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enker " P hillips, Patricia tumble,&#13;
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Kovalic&#13;
' Rick Luehr&lt; Robb Luehr,&#13;
RANGER is WR^MEN AND Napo,eon Scarb™U9b&#13;
/ Jennie Tunkiecz.&#13;
e^S'LeTy' 'tSSSfi T&#13;
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*UW ParkSide and theV are S0,elV&#13;
Writ»PnER iS Prin,ed by the UrTloi?Cooperative'p dUrin9 breaks and holidaVs&#13;
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eluded for verification. A" le,ters must be and a telephone number inreserves&#13;
all editorial privileges3 in ref?,'«inn bubllca,ion Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
^defamatory content. refusing to print letters which contain false or &#13;
Faculty evaluation system is&#13;
effective, Chancellor says&#13;
by Jeanne Buenker-Phillips Parksirf* r» r •&#13;
The ongoing debates over the Handh b- les and P&#13;
rocedures&#13;
relative merits of teaching and priori?0 ^ 7?e aforementioned&#13;
scholarly activity as criteria for ls&#13;
,&#13;
defined as follows:&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 10,1983&#13;
scholarly activity as criteria for&#13;
evaluating faculty members&#13;
frequently seem to revolve around&#13;
two opposing views.&#13;
One, popular among many&#13;
students, is that college faculty&#13;
are so concerned with research&#13;
that they reward those who ignore&#13;
or merely tolerate undergraduate&#13;
students and punish those who are&#13;
perceived as "good teachers"&#13;
The other stereotype, more like a&#13;
faculty nightmare, is that institutions&#13;
which don't stress&#13;
research and publication have a&#13;
faculty full of "deadwood" or&#13;
professors who "die" or "retire"&#13;
intellectually once they achieve&#13;
tenure.&#13;
The criteria used to evaluate&#13;
professors is divided into three&#13;
areas: teaching, creative activity&#13;
and service. According to the UW0&#13;
.?®achin8 includes any&#13;
tivity related to course&#13;
evelopment, course&#13;
prpentation, course related&#13;
interaction with students,&#13;
evaluation of s tudent progress,&#13;
tutoring, advising, and to other&#13;
learning services required by&#13;
students. Creative activity&#13;
consists of c ontributions by an&#13;
individual in the forms or&#13;
media typical of his discipline,&#13;
art, or profession, and which&#13;
are available for critical&#13;
evaluation by his/her peers&#13;
within his/her discipline, art,&#13;
or profession. Contributions&#13;
include, but are not limited to,&#13;
books, monographs, articles,&#13;
reviews, and conference&#13;
papers; works of art, concert&#13;
performances, dramatic&#13;
performances, and literary&#13;
Caldwell named&#13;
minority affairs director&#13;
The appointment of Franzcine&#13;
A. Caldwell as Coordinator of&#13;
Minority Student Programs at&#13;
Parkside was announced last&#13;
week.&#13;
Caldwell comes to Parkside&#13;
from Northern Illinois University&#13;
where she has been an&#13;
educational, vocational and&#13;
personal counselor since 1975.&#13;
Before that she worked as a&#13;
YMCA youth counselor and a&#13;
community outreach college&#13;
counselor in Chicago, and headed&#13;
Educational Opportunity Center,&#13;
a community organization, in St.&#13;
Louis. She has a B.A. degree in&#13;
English and Physical Education&#13;
from Graceland College and an&#13;
M.A. in Educational Counseling&#13;
from Washington University.&#13;
At Parkside, Caldwell will&#13;
coordinate an expanded minority&#13;
student program effort made&#13;
possible by a special grant from&#13;
the UW System which will total&#13;
$400,000 over a minimum of four&#13;
years. Under the grant, five additional&#13;
staff will be hired in the&#13;
counseling and academic skills&#13;
FRANZCINE CALDWELL&#13;
cording to Carla Stoffle, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Educational&#13;
Services, to whom Caldwell will&#13;
report. The intensive learning and&#13;
counseling experience which&#13;
characterizes the CHAMP&#13;
program for junior and senior&#13;
works; and research reports&#13;
and design proposals. Contributions&#13;
in the process of&#13;
preparation may be considered&#13;
as evidence of creative activity.&#13;
Service consists of&#13;
contributions to the affairs of&#13;
the University, community,&#13;
and profession. University&#13;
service includes contributions&#13;
to the governance, administration,&#13;
and operation&#13;
(but excluding teaching) of&#13;
UW-Parkside of the UW&#13;
System; community service&#13;
includes contributions beyond&#13;
mere membership to the&#13;
organization, administration,&#13;
governance and operation of&#13;
professional organizations."&#13;
This format is not unique to&#13;
Parkside. In fact, it is the norm in&#13;
any college or university which&#13;
purports to be serious. Faculty&#13;
should be practitioners of a&#13;
scholarly discipline, more than&#13;
just "teachers", as in elementary&#13;
and high schools. This belief is&#13;
referred to as the "teacher -&#13;
scholar" ideal. Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin believes that the ideal&#13;
"teacher / scholar" model is that&#13;
of, "an alive, intellectual person."&#13;
This person is, "one who is always&#13;
active and always inquiring." He&#13;
added, "This individual is an&#13;
active, alert, intellectual in his&#13;
field who on the one hand&#13;
publishes and on the other is a&#13;
good teacher."&#13;
Frequently individuals see a&#13;
conflict between teaching and&#13;
creative activity. Chancellor&#13;
Guskin, however, sees "no conflict&#13;
at all," and believes the two&#13;
are "totally integrated." At one&#13;
point the Policies and Procedures&#13;
Handbook states that, "special&#13;
consideration shall be given to&#13;
contributions in the area of&#13;
teaching." When evaluating&#13;
professors, a bit more emphasis is&#13;
put on the teaching evaluation of&#13;
the professor than is put on the&#13;
creative activity and service&#13;
evaluations. According to Guskin,&#13;
"when you look at teaching, you&#13;
need someone with an active mind&#13;
which you judge through&#13;
scholarship." He also said that&#13;
one must ask, "Does this person&#13;
have a kind of intelligent mind&#13;
that will carry over a long period&#13;
of time, keep up - to - date, and not rl«.. . — on m i •&#13;
Racine Public Library&#13;
hosts Berge exhibition&#13;
Topical cartoons by Paul Berge&#13;
are on display in the Racine&#13;
Public Library meeting room.&#13;
Berge, a Racine resident, is a 1981&#13;
graduate of St. Olaf's College,&#13;
Northfield, Minnesota. During his&#13;
college years he was an editorial&#13;
cartoonist for the school&#13;
publication, Manitou Messenger.&#13;
His work has also appeared in the&#13;
UW - Parkside Ranger, Madison&#13;
Independent, Mathematics&#13;
Magazine, area newspapers and&#13;
other publications. Berge's&#13;
cartoons show his great talent for&#13;
caricature as well as a keen insight&#13;
into local and national issues&#13;
of c urrent interest.&#13;
The exhibit will be on display&#13;
through February, and may be&#13;
viewed during library open hours.&#13;
Seybold demonstration&#13;
set for Wednesday&#13;
A demonstration protesting the&#13;
Behavioral Science Division&#13;
Executive Committee's decision&#13;
to deny sociology professor Peter&#13;
Seybold a one - year contract&#13;
extension will be held on Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 16 at 1 p. m. The&#13;
demonstration will begin at the&#13;
Union cafeteria and proceed to&#13;
Main Place.&#13;
All Parkside students, staff and&#13;
faculty as well as concerned&#13;
community members are urged to&#13;
attend.&#13;
What did the Vikings&#13;
find in America&#13;
Scandinavian legend contends&#13;
that Vikings visited North&#13;
America three centuries before&#13;
Christopher Columbus made his&#13;
voyage to the West Indies. There&#13;
is archeological evidence to&#13;
support the legends, but it is&#13;
unknown just how much of the&#13;
legend is true, and which parts are&#13;
truer than others.&#13;
Dr. Jay Ruud, an English instructor&#13;
at Parkside, will present&#13;
his slide lecture, "Leif Erikson,"&#13;
IRS offers free&#13;
Income Tax service&#13;
at the Kenosha Public Museum on&#13;
Feb. 13 at 1:30 p. m. The&#13;
presentation is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
During the presentation, Ruud&#13;
will examine the aspects of Viking&#13;
life and culture which enable them&#13;
to make the voyage, and passages&#13;
from Norse sagas describing the&#13;
discovery of "Viniand," as the&#13;
Vikings named North America.&#13;
The program is sponsored by the&#13;
Kenosha County Archeological&#13;
Society and the Anthropology Club&#13;
areas to expand minority student school students will be ap- of time, keep up - to - date fa nd not&#13;
services. 'P1,ed to students during their first dry up?" Teaching carries more&#13;
The promise shown hv WAJS*™- a&#13;
f, uw"&#13;
Park&#13;
side. weight, but a teacher must be a&#13;
Parkside^s Creatine Hi^hPr h £&#13;
18 aiTd at&#13;
,&#13;
students wha scholar because a faculty member&#13;
*npp£iennw c" ob&#13;
taimng the do so. Caldwell also will direct the&#13;
special UW System grant, ac- CHAMP program.&#13;
Guskin believes that "teaching&#13;
Continued On Page Nine&#13;
The Volunteer Income Tax&#13;
Assistance Program (VITA) will&#13;
offer free income tax assistance&#13;
and preparation for the poor,&#13;
elderly and handicapped at three&#13;
area locations beginning Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 9, and continuing to&#13;
the filing deadline, April 15.&#13;
The program is sponsored by the&#13;
IRS, which trains VITA personnel.&#13;
Assistance will be offered at:&#13;
Library / Learning Center,&#13;
Wednesdays and Thursdays, from&#13;
1 to 3 p. m., and Saturdays from 10&#13;
a. m. to 2 p. m. in the second floor&#13;
Overlook Lounge. (Directions are&#13;
Human relations for&#13;
available from the circulation&#13;
desk.)&#13;
Kenosha Public Library Southwest,&#13;
7979 - 38th Ave., Tuesdays&#13;
from 6:30 to 8:30 p. m.&#13;
Racine Public Library, 75 - 7th&#13;
St., Tuesdays from 6:30 to 8:30 p&#13;
m.&#13;
Reproducible copies of all 1982&#13;
federal income tax forms are&#13;
available at all three locations for&#13;
a nominal copying charge.&#13;
Additional information on the&#13;
Parkside program is available by&#13;
calling 553-2345 or 553-2386.&#13;
LIC s Lobby Day to be held on Wednesday housing managers&#13;
On Feb. 16, students students from all hike. u .. „ , . . . &amp;&#13;
over the UW System will be&#13;
driving enmasse to the state&#13;
capitol to meet with their&#13;
representatives and Senators to&#13;
speak out on the issues that&#13;
directly affect them.&#13;
At 12:15 p.m. there will be a&#13;
press conference in room 415, the&#13;
Northwest committee room,&#13;
where several state reps, will talk&#13;
to the students.&#13;
Among the issues that will be&#13;
discussed are, the raising of the&#13;
drinking age, The Solomon&#13;
Amendment, and the tuition fee&#13;
hike.&#13;
A bill (SB-l) will raise the&#13;
drinking age in the state of&#13;
Wisconsin to 19. At this time the&#13;
bill is predicted to pass easily in&#13;
both houses.&#13;
The Solomon Amendment is an&#13;
amendment that makes any&#13;
student who has not filled out his&#13;
Selective Service Documents&#13;
ineligible to receive any form of&#13;
financial aid.&#13;
As of next Fall, tuition for in -&#13;
state students will be raised from&#13;
25 percent of the cost of instruction&#13;
to 27 percent. Also, a&#13;
group of highly conservative&#13;
lobbyists have put together the&#13;
Blaney Report which suggests&#13;
that tuition should cover 33 percent&#13;
of the total cost for instruction.&#13;
&#13;
Anyone interested in going up to&#13;
Madison for the Lobby Day should&#13;
contact Dave Schroeder, or Dave&#13;
Higgens at the PSGA office before&#13;
noon on Monday, Feb. 14. The cars&#13;
will be leaving at approximately 9&#13;
a.m. Wednesday. If you are not&#13;
able to attend the rally in&#13;
Madison, call the Legislative&#13;
Hotline in Madison toll free at 1-&#13;
800-362-9696. The Students' Voice&#13;
needs to be heard.&#13;
Human relations for low income&#13;
housing managers is the subject of&#13;
a four - week short course (noncredit)&#13;
offered through the&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Extension&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
William Berggren, with Human&#13;
Resource Associates, Racine, an&#13;
administrative systems&#13;
suiting firm, will instruct&#13;
Berggren has taught for -&#13;
Parkside, GTI Racine, and MATC&#13;
Milwaukee, and has experience in&#13;
management and planning&#13;
industry.&#13;
conMr.&#13;
&#13;
UW&#13;
for&#13;
He will cover interpersonal&#13;
relationships, solving disputes,&#13;
assigning responsibilities, high&#13;
turn over and racial problems.&#13;
The elderly - the poor and those&#13;
who become poor; age groups —&#13;
will also be considered, as well as&#13;
how to get tenants to assume&#13;
responsibilities. New managerial&#13;
styles and skills will be explored.&#13;
The class will meet on 4 Mondays,&#13;
beginning February 21 7 - 9&#13;
P- m ., at Tallent Hall. The fee is&#13;
$20. Registrations will be taken at&#13;
the University Extension office in&#13;
Tallent Hall, phone 553-2312.&#13;
BSO sets schedule for February&#13;
The Black Student's&#13;
Organization is sponsoring an&#13;
exhibit of new library books in&#13;
black studies in the Library /&#13;
Learning Center during the month&#13;
of February. Also in the Library&#13;
this month is a display on the life&#13;
of Dr. Martin Luther King.&#13;
Other BSO events scheduled for&#13;
the month of February include: A&#13;
lecture by Dr. Stephanie&#13;
Williams, on Feb. 14, titled&#13;
"Medical School: Do You Have&#13;
What It Takes?" On Feb. 15, a&#13;
lecture by musician Larry Bandy:&#13;
"Black Music: Past, Present and&#13;
Future." On Feb. 17, political&#13;
science professor Frank Gilliam&#13;
will talk about the civil rights&#13;
movement.&#13;
A concert featuring area gospel&#13;
choirs will be held Feb. 18, and on&#13;
Feb. 22, professor Marvin&#13;
Dawkins will speak on "Blacks in&#13;
Education." Marva Dawkins, a&#13;
clinical psychologist, will speak&#13;
on "Mental Health in the Black&#13;
Community," on Feb. 23.&#13;
On Feb. 24 a panel discussion&#13;
will be held with Charles Wallace,&#13;
the corporate treasurer of Pabst&#13;
Brewing, Milton Lewis, a labor&#13;
relations attorney for Allis -&#13;
Chalmers, on "Black Development&#13;
in Business." BSO will be&#13;
hosting a "College Night" dance&#13;
in Union Square on Feb. 25. T he&#13;
band will be announced.&#13;
Further information on these&#13;
events is available from Esrold&#13;
Nurse or Margarita Hargrove,&#13;
phone 553-2575, or by stopping at&#13;
their office in WLLC D-175.&#13;
On Friday, February 18, 1983 at&#13;
8:00 p.m., the Milwaukee Section&#13;
of th e American Chemical Society&#13;
will sponsor a lecture entitled,&#13;
"Drug Abuse: Research, Medical&#13;
and Social Aspects". The lecture&#13;
will be presented by Joseph M.&#13;
Benforado, M.D., at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Milwaukee. All section members&#13;
and their guests are welcome&#13;
Dinner will be available at 7:00&#13;
p.m.; reservations are required&#13;
only for the dinner.&#13;
The use of drugs precedes&#13;
recorded history. The earliest&#13;
drugs were derived from plantsDrug&#13;
abuse lecture&#13;
today, many reach us from&#13;
chemical laboratories.&#13;
Laboratory discoveries have&#13;
brought tremendous benefits to&#13;
society but many drugs are now&#13;
subject to abuse. Because both the&#13;
use and abuse of drugs is&#13;
widespread, citizens should be&#13;
aware of the social and medical&#13;
implications of continuing&#13;
research.&#13;
Dr. Benforado is Professor of&#13;
Medicine at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Madison. He&#13;
specialized in the treatment of&#13;
patients with drug abuse&#13;
problems. &#13;
Thursday, February 10,1983&#13;
Winter Carnival hits&#13;
Parkside with a&#13;
blizzard of activity&#13;
PARKSIDE'S DART TEAM placed third out of 16 entries in the window painting contest Monday.&#13;
THE SALEM CENTRAL High School's Falcon&#13;
Drum Majorettes put on a show in Main Place&#13;
Monday after the parade. &#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 10,1983 5&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER, of course, led off the show.&#13;
"RANGER" EDITOR Pat Hensiak gets a hug from her companion,&#13;
Darth.&#13;
DESPITE THE COLD weather, some enjoyed the parade, to the&#13;
amusement of spectators.&#13;
Photos by&#13;
M asood Shafiq&#13;
and Robb Luehr&#13;
THE COMPUTER CLUB'S winning float got an effective guard. &#13;
AIR FORCE EXPERIENCE&#13;
IT'S&#13;
SECOND&#13;
VW*&#13;
by Patrick Luchak&#13;
Medical anthropology is the sub&#13;
- discipline of anthropology that&#13;
focuses on investigating areas of&#13;
study related to man's health. The&#13;
scope of the studies performed by&#13;
Medical Anthropologists is as&#13;
broad as the subject of health&#13;
itself. Studies include topics such&#13;
as aging, communicable diseases,&#13;
comparative medical systems,&#13;
nutrition and anthropological&#13;
genetics, to name only a few of t he&#13;
areas now being researched by&#13;
medical anthropologists.&#13;
arena of medical research is&#13;
becoming more apparent. The&#13;
studying of human diseases and&#13;
how people perceive and treat&#13;
these diseases as members of a&#13;
particular culture is giving us a&#13;
far different outlook towards&#13;
health and illness than we get by&#13;
strictly studying a virus beneath a&#13;
microscope or trying different&#13;
drugs on a bacteria culture until&#13;
one affects it.&#13;
Man's attitude towards health&#13;
and disease varies from culture to&#13;
culture, in areas of diagnosis,&#13;
treatment, and general concepts.&#13;
The reason for these differences&#13;
are often due to the environment&#13;
in which each society must survive&#13;
in. Both the existence of&#13;
Inter Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship will have Pastor Jerry&#13;
Worshim of Grace Baptist Church&#13;
speak on "Stewardship: Time and&#13;
Money," on Wednesday, Feb. 16 at&#13;
1 p.m. in Union 207. Everyone is&#13;
welcome to attend.&#13;
As a discipline, medical anthropology&#13;
is quite young;&#13;
however, its usefulness in the&#13;
John Deigh, a moral&#13;
philosopher from Northwestern&#13;
University, will be the guest of th e&#13;
Parkside Philosophical Society on&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 10. Dr. Deigh will&#13;
discuss theories of punishment.&#13;
The talk begins at 2p.m. in CA 233,&#13;
with a question and answer period&#13;
to follow. Feel free to bring a&#13;
friend or two.&#13;
The Student Nurse Association&#13;
of Parkside will present a&#13;
program "Dealing With a Patient&#13;
in a Hospice Program," in MOLN&#13;
107 at 7 p.m. on Mar. 1 by Barbara&#13;
Hammes, R.N. The program will&#13;
be followed by an open discussion.&#13;
Pi Mu Epsilon is back and&#13;
coming on strong for Spring '83&#13;
Because PME is a national&#13;
honorary mathematics society, it&#13;
has a certain prestige that is&#13;
unequalled by any other club.&#13;
Students interested in the wonders&#13;
of math and its applications are&#13;
invited to attend the social&#13;
reorganization meeting on&#13;
* FIGHT&#13;
AGAINST&#13;
W BIRTH&#13;
* DEFECTS&#13;
MARCH OF DIMES&#13;
THIS SPACE: CONTRIBUTED BY T H t: PUBLISHER&#13;
• Jube Jells&#13;
• Licorice Bully&#13;
• Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Milk Carmels&#13;
• Orange Slices&#13;
• Peanut Butter Chip&#13;
• Peanut Clusters&#13;
• Peppermint Kisses&#13;
• Rootbeer Barrels&#13;
• Sour Balls&#13;
• Spearment Leaves&#13;
• Starlite Mints&#13;
• Carmel Targets&#13;
• Cinnamon Discs&#13;
• Candy Pops&#13;
• Corn Nuts&#13;
• Assorted Perky&#13;
• Assorted Royal&#13;
• Assorted Toffee&#13;
• Bridge Mix&#13;
• Burndt Peanuts&#13;
• Butterscotch Discs&#13;
• Candy Coffee Discs&#13;
• Carmel Bully&#13;
• Chocolate Drops&#13;
• Chocolate Jots&#13;
• Chocolate Peanuts&#13;
• Chocolate Raisins&#13;
• Chocolate Stars&#13;
• Jelly Beans&#13;
• California Mix&#13;
® Caribbean Delicacy&#13;
• Carob Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Carob Raisins&#13;
• Carob Peanuts&#13;
• Natural Pistachio&#13;
• Red Pistachio&#13;
• Spanish Peanuts&#13;
• Sunflower Seeds&#13;
• Student Food Mix&#13;
• Yogurt Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Yogurt Peanuts&#13;
• Yogurt Raisins&#13;
© Yogurt Sesame Brittle&#13;
• Smoked Almonds whole&#13;
X29 - U .S. Air Force&#13;
experimental prototype&#13;
developed by&#13;
Grumman Aerospace&#13;
Ca//&#13;
co//*&#13;
uut not ,' CenSe&#13;
fourse/f fLgu,&#13;
'&#13;
r&#13;
ecI.&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF FEB. 140i&#13;
CORN N UTS&#13;
25% OFF &#13;
RANGER&#13;
by David Schroeder&#13;
What really makes movie&#13;
reviewing difficult is when one sits&#13;
in the theater, pad and pencil in&#13;
hand, ready to take notes, and&#13;
then one is so totally blown away&#13;
by the picture that when its over,&#13;
you realize you haven't taken one&#13;
note passed the opening credits.&#13;
Sophie's Choice is such a movie.&#13;
The movie takes place in "a&#13;
strange a place as Brooklyn." It&#13;
follows the path of a young writer&#13;
named Stingo (Peter MacNicol)&#13;
once he moves into a boarding&#13;
house. He is soon befriended by a&#13;
couple from the upstairs room.&#13;
Sophie, (Meryl Streep) a Polish&#13;
Streep gives choice performance in 'Sophie'&#13;
hrnoHor immigrant immigrant and and a a victim victim of nf Au sch­ Ansch. ar«ri , .&#13;
witz, and her hot tempered&#13;
boyfriend, Nathan (Kevin Kline)&#13;
offer Stingo a strange welcome,&#13;
Wustum opens new exhibits&#13;
The Racine Art Association&#13;
announces its exhibitions for&#13;
February and March, 1983 at the&#13;
Wustum Museum in Racine. The&#13;
exhibits open with a reception&#13;
which is open to the public from&#13;
2:00 - 4:00 p. m., Sunday afternoon,&#13;
Feb. 13, 1983.&#13;
The main exhibition will be&#13;
Wisconsin Photography '83. This&#13;
is the third time the Racine Art&#13;
Association has organized this&#13;
biennial, state - wide, fine art&#13;
photography competition.&#13;
Wisconsin Photography '83 was&#13;
juried by V erna Curtis, Associate&#13;
Curator of the Milwaukee Art&#13;
Museum who selected 136&#13;
photographs created by 46 artists&#13;
from a group of 937 photographs&#13;
entered by 100 Wisconsin&#13;
photographers.&#13;
Each artist was asked to submit&#13;
a portfolio of 10 p hotographs for&#13;
consideration and those selected&#13;
for the exhibition will display&#13;
from two to six pieces per artist to&#13;
give Museum visitors better ideas&#13;
of the photographer's body of&#13;
work.&#13;
The exhibit will travel to Nicolet&#13;
College in Rhinelander for&#13;
exhibition in April 1983.&#13;
This exhibition is supported by a&#13;
grant from the Wisconsin Arts&#13;
Board with funds from the State of&#13;
Wisconsin and the National Endowment&#13;
for the Arts. Additional&#13;
support of t he exhibition has been&#13;
provided by Boston Store, Gold&#13;
Medal, Inc., Heritage Bank, The&#13;
Journal Times, Marine First&#13;
National Bank and Twin Disc.&#13;
The second exhibit is titled&#13;
Ghita Hardimon: Graphic Constructions.&#13;
Hardimon is a&#13;
Highland Park, Illinois artist who&#13;
creates three - dimensional relief&#13;
constructions out of cut - up&#13;
sections of her own multi - colored&#13;
intaglio prints. Hardimon&#13;
received her M.F.A. degree at&#13;
Northwestern University and her&#13;
B.F.A. degree at the School of t he&#13;
Art Institute of Chicago. She has&#13;
exhibited extensively in Wisconsin&#13;
and Illinois and is in a number of&#13;
corporate and private art&#13;
collections.&#13;
Both exhibitions continue&#13;
through March 20 at the Wustum.&#13;
Viewing hours at the Wustum&#13;
are: 1 - 5 p. m. seven days a week,&#13;
and 1 - 9 p. m. Monday and&#13;
Thursday. The Wustum is located&#13;
at 2519 Northwestern Avenue&#13;
(Highway 38) in Northwestern&#13;
Racine. Admission is free.&#13;
Milwaukee Rep. opens Chekhov play&#13;
For the first time in ten years,&#13;
the intricate characters and&#13;
subtle plots of Anton Chekhov will&#13;
be presented by the Milwaukee&#13;
Repertory Theater. Uncle Vanya&#13;
will run February 25 tl.rough April&#13;
3 in the Performing Arts Center's&#13;
Todd Wehr Theater.&#13;
In Uncle Vanya, all is not well&#13;
on the Serebryakov estate. The&#13;
usual tranquility of aristocratic&#13;
country life has been totally&#13;
disrupted by the arrival of the old&#13;
professor and his lovely young&#13;
wife. Russia's master playwright&#13;
creates a fascinating 19th - century&#13;
portrait of his country's ill -&#13;
fated upperclass in this intriguing&#13;
world classic.&#13;
Uncle Vanya will be performed&#13;
Tuesdays through Fridays at 8:00&#13;
p. m., Saturdays at 5:00 p. m. and&#13;
9:15 p. m., and Sundays at 7:30 p.&#13;
m. Matinees are at 2:00 p. m.,&#13;
Feb. 27, March 2, 9, 20, 23, an d 30.&#13;
The Rep is well - equipped to&#13;
accommodate patrons who are&#13;
blind or in wheelchairs. A si gned&#13;
performance of Uncle Vanya will&#13;
be presented at 2:00 p. m on&#13;
Sunday, March 20. Deaf and&#13;
hearing impaired patrons should&#13;
contact the Performing Arts&#13;
Center box office at 273-7206.&#13;
Skylight presents The Secret Marriage'&#13;
The Skylight Comic Opera will&#13;
present its third production of the&#13;
1982-83 season, Domenico&#13;
Cimarosa's "The Secret&#13;
Marriage", in English, through&#13;
Feb. 20 a t the Skylight Theatre,&#13;
813 North Jefferson Street.&#13;
Though frequently performed and&#13;
considered part of the standard&#13;
repertoire in Europe, it is seldom&#13;
performed in the United States.&#13;
18th century Italian comic opera&#13;
has long been a specialty at the&#13;
Skylight. This delightful piece is&#13;
based on an English play, "The&#13;
Clandestine Marriage" by George&#13;
Colman, the elder and David&#13;
Garrick who took their inspiration&#13;
from the famous series of satirical&#13;
pictures by Hogarth entitled&#13;
"Marriage A' La Mode."&#13;
The story concerns a wealthy&#13;
merchant, Geronimo, who hopes&#13;
Ranger N eeds&#13;
Writers!!!&#13;
to secure a place in society by&#13;
marrying off his elder daughter,&#13;
Elisetta, to a member of the&#13;
English aristocracy, Count&#13;
Robinson. When the Count&#13;
arrives, however, he is very taken&#13;
with the younger daughter,&#13;
Carolina, who just happens to be&#13;
secret y married to Paulino, her&#13;
father s clerk. The girls' widowed&#13;
aunt, Fidalma, enters this comic&#13;
web when she tries to maneuver&#13;
her family so she will be able to&#13;
marry Paulino herself. The&#13;
complicated turns of plot finally&#13;
resolve themselves to provide a&#13;
happy ending in time for the&#13;
finale.&#13;
Tickets are available at the&#13;
Skylight Theatre Box Office, 271-&#13;
8815, 813 N. Jefferson St. between&#13;
12 and 6 Monday thru Friday. Call&#13;
the Skylight for information&#13;
concerning group rates, student&#13;
and senior discounts, reservations,&#13;
curtain times and phone&#13;
charges.&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 16,7:30- $8 25*&#13;
Fridays, Feb. 11, is, 8:3Q - $9 75&#13;
Saturdays, Feb. 12, 19, 8:30 -&#13;
$9.75&#13;
Sundays, Feb. 13, 20, 2 30 -&#13;
$8.25*&#13;
* - Student/senior discount $1 00&#13;
off with I.D.&#13;
We fSSL \wlr&#13;
friendshiP blooms. We follow this wonderful trio from&#13;
Island? e x ploi ts in Coney&#13;
darkest c&#13;
t0 deepest *nd SffSJF*8 entrapped within&#13;
oMtefHm tu ?&#13;
ny&#13;
°&#13;
ne 3Spect&#13;
cess it hf • t CFedlt for its SUCbe&#13;
sad tf is w acting&#13;
-&#13;
11 wiU&#13;
oe sad if, as i fear, Peter MacNicol&#13;
is overlooked for an Oscar&#13;
Nomination for Best Actor He is&#13;
wonderfidly innocent as the young&#13;
this?rtquepa™StlyimpreSSedby&#13;
th^e&#13;
snmi?ine ise(&#13;
J&#13;
ually ^eat as&#13;
but ofEn insanely Jealous,&#13;
H?s tlZeTy gentle eccentric. His shifting moods, unpredictability&#13;
and charm added&#13;
wonderful dimension to a&#13;
character that I wish the script&#13;
mo^ deaUh WHh 3 little b*&#13;
1&#13;
* Ah yes, and there is the flawless&#13;
performance of Meryl Streep. The&#13;
woman commands all scenes. Her&#13;
foreign accent with the broken&#13;
English, and her seemingly&#13;
flawless German were only the&#13;
smallest parts of the wonderful&#13;
performance she gave. I was&#13;
spellbound as the camera focused&#13;
on her face. It was fascinating to&#13;
watch her search for the right&#13;
English word to fit her meaning,&#13;
to tell her story of how she was&#13;
saved by Nathan, and to reveal&#13;
her terrible secret.&#13;
This is a long movie, (2 hours, 45&#13;
minutes) but who noticed. Never&#13;
have I seen a movie with such a&#13;
variety of subtle emotions brought&#13;
out in such an artful way. Each&#13;
moment of the film is filled with&#13;
art, from the poetic nature of the&#13;
narration, to the wonderful use of&#13;
the camera, to the costumes and&#13;
set, to the subtle music, to the&#13;
exquisite acting.&#13;
I was also very impressed with&#13;
the handling of the love scenes.&#13;
For the first time in recent years,&#13;
I have seen true love scenes, not&#13;
just sex scenes. That is really&#13;
what a love scene should be like.&#13;
This is one of the finest, if not&#13;
the finest, picture of the year, and&#13;
must be experienced by anyone&#13;
who wants to see the true art of the&#13;
motion picture. Four stars for&#13;
Sophie's Choice. ****&#13;
Miles Davis highlights PAC performances&#13;
Several performances have&#13;
recently been added to the Performing&#13;
Arts Center's February&#13;
schedule of events, according to&#13;
Archie A. Sarazin, managing&#13;
director. 6&#13;
On Thursday, Feb. 17, Stardate&#13;
Productions presents jazz artist&#13;
Miles Davis in Uihlein Hall at 8:00&#13;
p. m. Tickets to the concert are&#13;
$15.00 and $12.50.&#13;
Popular singer Bobby Vinton&#13;
performs on Friday, Feb. 18 at&#13;
7:00 p. m. in Uihlein Hall. Tickets&#13;
are $12.50, $11.00 and $8.50.&#13;
A concert by Kenny Loggins&#13;
originally scheduled for January&#13;
27 has been rescheduled for&#13;
Tuesday, Feb. 22 at 8:30 p. m. in&#13;
Uihlein Hall. Loggins was unable&#13;
to appear in January due to an&#13;
injury. Tickets already purchased&#13;
for the January concert, which&#13;
was sold - out, will be honored for&#13;
the Feb. 22 p erformance.&#13;
Comedian Rodney Dangerfield&#13;
appears in Uihlein Hall on Friday,&#13;
Feb. 25 fo r two performances at&#13;
7:00 and 10:00 p. m. Tickets are&#13;
$15.00 and $12.50. All PAC tickets&#13;
are sold at the PAC Box Office or&#13;
through PHONECHARGE, (414)&#13;
273-7206.&#13;
UIlDlife.&#13;
Winter Carnival 1983&#13;
'Joky] KdjtLl&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
6:00 p.m.&#13;
6:30- p.m.&#13;
7:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
8:30 p.m.&#13;
9:00 p.m.&#13;
Beach Party&#13;
Doors Open&#13;
Open Swim&#13;
Air Mattress Relay&#13;
Inner Tube Relay&#13;
"Dog" Paddle Race&#13;
Biggest Splash Contest&#13;
Pool Closes&#13;
Dance Featuring "Datillo"&#13;
$1.50admission with UWP I.D. $2.00guests&#13;
50&lt;t discount if you wear beach attire&#13;
Food &amp; beverages will be available for purchase&#13;
All E vents in Physical E ducation Building &#13;
Thursday, February 10,1983 RANGER&#13;
Fun with Dirt?&#13;
Garbage Fund Raiser!&#13;
New Music-Pop&#13;
ABBA's 'First Ten Years' is perky pop collectioi&#13;
bv Terrv Rvmp four an(j platinum singles percussion and soaring melodii&#13;
in the U.S. These figures are Benny Anderson and Bjorn Ulvc&#13;
by Dick Oberbruner&#13;
The response has been overwhelming.&#13;
Bottles, cans and&#13;
paper have been coming in from&#13;
all over. The Parkside Garbage&#13;
Fund Raiser is on! And this&#13;
campus is already answering the&#13;
call.&#13;
Revolving around the theme,&#13;
"At Parkside, Garbage is King,"&#13;
people from every corner of the&#13;
university are pledging their&#13;
support. Remember, we must live&#13;
up to our nickname: PU.&#13;
What snow there is leaves&#13;
the ground wide open for more&#13;
than just leaves. It's up to you to&#13;
clean out your pockets and your&#13;
cars. Many have already contributed.&#13;
Just walk around&#13;
campus and see for yourselves.&#13;
What place could be more appropriate&#13;
to hold such an event?&#13;
Right here, near the armpit of&#13;
Lake Michigan, we see the best in&#13;
small college filth. We can meet,&#13;
and beat, any school of our size in&#13;
pounds per acre and total weekly&#13;
tonnage.&#13;
Trash is as natural as all outdoors.&#13;
A clean campus assures us&#13;
of being called "tidy." We can't&#13;
have this. Parkside is full of&#13;
sloppy, unintelligent people who&#13;
want to give their fair share.&#13;
Some garbage blends in&#13;
naturally, like a Mickey's bottle.&#13;
Unnoticed garbage is the best&#13;
garbage, I always say. Other&#13;
rubbish, like aluminum cans, is&#13;
actually saved and recycled.&#13;
C'mon, if it's garbage throw it out.&#13;
What are we, pack rats?&#13;
Windy days are excellent for&#13;
watching paper fly around.&#13;
Wrappers wave as patriotically as&#13;
the flags.&#13;
And don't let the litter - bugs on&#13;
the parking lot containers intimidate&#13;
you. We the people pay&#13;
for this institution and have the&#13;
right to throw our garbage&#13;
wherever we please. Certain&#13;
places are allowed to make a&#13;
mess, anyway, like the Union and&#13;
Phy Ed buildings. They're always&#13;
hold trash conventions.&#13;
Along with the fund raiser, a&#13;
petition is circulating to change&#13;
the school colors to Doublement&#13;
Green, McDonaldland white and&#13;
comb black.&#13;
Also, some creative things, not&#13;
considered to be garbage, are on&#13;
display. In the parking lots are&#13;
cigarette butt mounds, built to&#13;
worship the tobacco gods. Indoors,&#13;
there are wall posters and&#13;
graffiti.&#13;
Advertisments for coming attractions&#13;
stick to the bricks all&#13;
along the hallways. This gives the&#13;
impression of walking by one&#13;
continuous billboard.&#13;
The wealth of graffiti is&#13;
astounding. Bathroom art is a&#13;
national treasure, be it informative&#13;
poetry on what to do&#13;
with such - and - such, or elaborate&#13;
diagrams. Originating in the&#13;
minds of future leaders, expression&#13;
is preserved on tile for&#13;
even the least constipated to&#13;
witness. Low mentality art is so&#13;
refreshing. (Better visit your local&#13;
stall before the janitors get at&#13;
them).&#13;
Once again I urge you to donate&#13;
to the Parkside Garbage Fund&#13;
Raiser. We want everybody's&#13;
contribution to be seen. Let's&#13;
show our pride by living up to&#13;
the name UW - Dumpster.&#13;
L/L Center grant&#13;
The Library / Learning Center&#13;
has received a grant of $13,550 for&#13;
continued conversion of its card&#13;
catalog to a machine - readable&#13;
format through the Online&#13;
Computer Library Catalog&#13;
(OCLC). 8&#13;
The grant is federally funded&#13;
under the Library Services and&#13;
Construction Act Title I and&#13;
awarded through the Wisconsin&#13;
Department of Public Instruction.&#13;
The grant runs through Sept. 30,&#13;
1983, and will be used to hire a&#13;
team of students to complete the&#13;
initial phase of the conversion.&#13;
« HEY PARKSIDE...&#13;
• Wednesday is Ladies Night at 4&#13;
• the Legion Bar, with Mixed Drinks 250•&#13;
LIVE MUSIC IS BACK! *&#13;
/' V GRABB FEB 11 8,12 •&#13;
• EXCALIBER r E B H &amp; „ •&#13;
1 I Vi P Don and Mike's •&#13;
1 Legion Ban •&#13;
t&#13;
tllPntSI THEATRE GUIDE&#13;
MATINKL^TIMS|3^^QN FAMILY NITE All SEAT*;&#13;
LAKE 1 • 2 514 - 5 6TH STREET&#13;
654-0633&#13;
• i i&#13;
i i&#13;
n&#13;
n&#13;
STARTS FRI., FEB. 11 n&#13;
by Terry Byrne&#13;
"ABBA —The Singles&#13;
The First Ten Years"&#13;
Anyone who listens to this&#13;
album anti doesn't find himself&#13;
haiTJ3i£g&#13;
°&#13;
r whistling to at least&#13;
nait of the songs on this album has&#13;
to be an android!&#13;
is *5? ePitome of pristine&#13;
perky pop The album is a standing&#13;
ovation to 21 previously&#13;
tracks £&#13;
lngles and the two new&#13;
J Every°ne likes ABBA&#13;
whether they admit it or not (even&#13;
fclMPUnkerS)&#13;
'&#13;
and it's not difficult to see why. ABBA's&#13;
Their *&#13;
SVerywe&#13;
" calculated fun&#13;
internTf ? 3 f&#13;
ort of congenial international language unbfna&#13;
by 311 nations and all&#13;
languages as being downright&#13;
enjoyable Their gfft of m2&#13;
woHMorr8™^ ta ^&#13;
For some reason, ABBA's&#13;
hnv[^S wr eluded the American buying public. Domestically they&#13;
have released many catchy&#13;
-Sol ,&#13;
S,&#13;
U&lt;&#13;
* 38 "Waterloo,"&#13;
XT A' Fernando," "The&#13;
Name Of The Game," ''Knowing&#13;
Me, Knowing You," "Take A&#13;
v » Rn Me&#13;
'" and "Voulez -&#13;
nnmko ' WH° C3n f&#13;
°&#13;
rg&#13;
e&#13;
t the&#13;
number one singles "Dancing&#13;
Am-?" an ''The Winner Takes It&#13;
AIV-I °f these cuts are included&#13;
on this album. If I didn't&#13;
mention your favorite song, it's&#13;
probably on "The Singles."&#13;
ABBA has had three or four gold&#13;
albums, two platinum albums,&#13;
in the U.S. These figures are&#13;
something American artists&#13;
would like to have, and there&#13;
aren't many who do. But compared&#13;
to their success in other&#13;
countries, it's nothing.&#13;
This album could well be the&#13;
missing ingredient of success&#13;
America has been hungry for&#13;
since 1974. That year, ABBA won&#13;
the Eurovision Song Contest, and&#13;
"Waterloo" was a hit in the U.S.&#13;
The soon - to - be - released&#13;
single "Under Attack" could be&#13;
the catalyst ABBA needs to create&#13;
public awareness of this album. It&#13;
is the best single release since&#13;
"The Winner Takes It All," and&#13;
could possibly top the charts.&#13;
"I Have A Dream," with its&#13;
straight - to - the - heart lyrics,&#13;
folk melody and back - up on the&#13;
last verses by the International&#13;
School of Stockholm Choir, is as&#13;
seductive as the old Coke theme&#13;
song, "I'd Like To Teach The&#13;
World To Sing." The Coke theme&#13;
song sold lots of Coke. "I Have A&#13;
Dream" sold lots of ABBA with&#13;
such optimistic lyrics as: "I have&#13;
a dream, a song to sing, to help me&#13;
through reality, and my&#13;
destination, makes it worth the&#13;
while, pushing through the&#13;
darkness, still another mile "&#13;
This is just one reason why ABBA&#13;
has sold more records than&#13;
anyone, any group, ever. Thev&#13;
sing about life.&#13;
With their top - notch production,&#13;
catchy hooks, punched - up&#13;
not only shine, they gliste&#13;
'Agneta and Frida, wheth&#13;
together or solo, provii&#13;
refreshing, rich singing. The&#13;
four Swedes provide some of tl&#13;
best entertainment one could evi&#13;
receive from one a lbum.&#13;
Four songs from their last tv&#13;
albums ("Super Trouper" ar&#13;
"The Visitors"), which shou&#13;
definitely have been included ar&lt;&#13;
"When All Is Said And Done&#13;
"The Visitors," subtitle&#13;
"Crackin - Up," "On &amp; On &amp; On&#13;
and "Lay All Your Love On Me&#13;
All of these songs were released:&#13;
the U.S. except "Lay All Yoi&#13;
Love On Me." America dance&#13;
these songs to the top of the danc&#13;
charts; these cuts remained o&#13;
"Billboard's" dance charts for u&#13;
to 30 weeks. Didn't "Gloria,&#13;
"Don't You Want Me?,&#13;
"Mickey," "I Ran," "Maneater,&#13;
and so on, also top these sam&#13;
charts before crossing over t&#13;
"Top Forty" charts? The point i&#13;
that ABBA was ahead of the danc&#13;
- oriented rock groups of today&#13;
The genius of Quincy Jones,&#13;
mass appeal of "Don't You W,&#13;
Me" and "Gloria" are dir&#13;
influences of ABBA's catc&#13;
hooks, danceable beat, hi&#13;
harmonies and synthesization.&#13;
Despite my criticism, I he&#13;
American buyers will positive&#13;
respond to the quality a&#13;
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TFRIda &#13;
Student fights to&#13;
save open primary&#13;
Thursday, February 10,1983&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Last Saturday the Democratic&#13;
National Committee announced&#13;
that Wisconsin may no longer&#13;
continue to have its traditional&#13;
open primary for selection of&#13;
convention delegates. Instead, the&#13;
state must conform to party rules&#13;
and choose its delegates in&#13;
REGINA RADEMACHER&#13;
caucuses where only declared&#13;
Democrats would be allowed to&#13;
attend. As a political science&#13;
major and President of the Pre -&#13;
Law Club here at Parkside,&#13;
Regine Rademacher campaigned&#13;
against the change. It an interview&#13;
conducted last week,&#13;
before the announcement was&#13;
made, Rademacher explained the&#13;
pros and cons of the open primary,&#13;
and why she supported it.'&#13;
"Ever since they (the&#13;
Democratic National Committee)&#13;
formed the Hunt Commission,&#13;
which was a commission designed&#13;
to change and verify party rules,&#13;
they have decided they don't want&#13;
open primaries," stated&#13;
Rademacher. "The reasoning is&#13;
that with an open primary,&#13;
"Republican voters could conceivably&#13;
cross party lines and&#13;
vote for a weak Democratic&#13;
candidate, thereby helping&#13;
Republican candidates. Their&#13;
reasoning here is valid, but there&#13;
is so much to this issue that should&#13;
be taken into account. First of all,&#13;
Kidera exhibits&#13;
paintings&#13;
Betty Kidera, Spanish instructor&#13;
here at Parkside&#13;
currently has an exhibition of her&#13;
paintings on display in the audio -&#13;
visual section of th e D -1 level of&#13;
the library. Kidera is also an art&#13;
student at Parkside, and says her&#13;
paintings are interpretative&#13;
landscapes of her home The&#13;
display should continue for about&#13;
two more weeks.&#13;
the open primary is part of&#13;
Wisconsin's progressive, liberal&#13;
tradition. That may not seem&#13;
important, but we are the only&#13;
open primary left. The alternative&#13;
to an open primary is to hold&#13;
caucuses. The problem with&#13;
caucuses is that you get a much&#13;
smaller percentage of voters&#13;
contributing and participating in&#13;
the nomination of delegates.&#13;
We re talking about maybe a one -&#13;
percent participation rate.&#13;
Another alternative would be to&#13;
hold a closed primary, in which&#13;
case you would have to declare&#13;
your party, either Democrat or&#13;
Republican."&#13;
Rademacher believes that&#13;
support for the open primary is&#13;
quite strong. "Channel twelve&#13;
conducted a poll where viewers&#13;
could phone in whether they were&#13;
for or against the primary. The&#13;
response was overwhelmingly in&#13;
favor of the primary. I don't think&#13;
they (the Democratic National&#13;
Committee) realize how important&#13;
the primary is to us and&#13;
how Wisconsin will fight to save it.&#13;
It was relatively easy for the&#13;
party to get the other states to&#13;
give up the open primary," she&#13;
stated.&#13;
Though quite enthusiastic about&#13;
the campaign to save the primary,&#13;
Rademacher saw that it was a last&#13;
- ditch effort. "When we started&#13;
organizing, our first approach was&#13;
to put a referendum on the April&#13;
ballot that would address the&#13;
question of the primary.&#13;
Hopefully, a positive response&#13;
would show support for an open&#13;
primary. But, if it does not go well&#13;
in Washington Saturday, it may&#13;
not be worth it to have a&#13;
referendum, because it may be&#13;
too late already," she stated.&#13;
'Yarns of Yesteryear' contest to be held&#13;
Wisconsin residents who&#13;
remember the hard work, happy&#13;
times, and challenging experiences&#13;
of th e "olden days" are&#13;
invited to enter their&#13;
reminiscences in the tenth annual&#13;
YARNS OF YESTERYEAR&#13;
Contest.&#13;
Sponsored by the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Extension Arts&#13;
Development Unit and the&#13;
Wisconsin Regional Writers&#13;
Association, the contest is open to&#13;
all Wisconsin residents, age 60 and&#13;
oyer. Entries may tell of family,&#13;
friends, or activities of bygone&#13;
days or they may be historical&#13;
stories with a personal slant.&#13;
Entries must be postmarked no&#13;
later than March 1, 1983. Only one&#13;
manuscript, original and unpublished,&#13;
may be submitted. It&#13;
may be typed or neatly handwritten;&#13;
the word limits are 500 to&#13;
1500 words. Since manuscripts&#13;
will not be returned, contestants&#13;
are advised to make and keep a&#13;
Faculty evaluations&#13;
personal copy.&#13;
Entrants are also asked to&#13;
prepare a separate cover page&#13;
with the title of their manuscript,&#13;
their name, address (including&#13;
county), telephone number, age&#13;
(optional), the name and address&#13;
of t heir local newspaper, and the&#13;
number of words in their entry.&#13;
Prizes ranging from $25 to $5&#13;
will be awarded the top ten winners&#13;
at the Wisconsin Regional&#13;
Writers Association Spring&#13;
conference in May. Ten memberships&#13;
in the association and&#13;
twenty honorable mention certificates&#13;
will also be awarded.&#13;
Additional cash awards will be&#13;
given by Stanton and Lee&#13;
Publishers for the best entries in&#13;
the "Winners' Circle," a special&#13;
competition for those who have&#13;
previously won contest prizes. A&#13;
new prize, The Alice Converse&#13;
Award of $10, will be given to the&#13;
oldest contestant submitting an&#13;
entry this year.&#13;
Judges for the contest will be:&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
and research are intertwined" on&#13;
this campus, and that "most&#13;
faculty take teaching very&#13;
seriously." It is very important&#13;
that in the future they remain&#13;
intertwined so that we will be able&#13;
to avoid the stereotype of the&#13;
research oriented professor who&#13;
can't communicate to students&#13;
and who ignores them will not be&#13;
matched by the stereotype of the&#13;
person who "retires" intellectually&#13;
upon gaining tenure&#13;
and "dies."&#13;
Creative Activity, or research&#13;
as it is often referred to, encompasses&#13;
a lot. It is measured by&#13;
the Executive Committee and by&#13;
Personnel Review Committee&#13;
(PRC) into five categories. First&#13;
of these is the measurement of&#13;
publication. The quality of&#13;
publisher or journal as well as the&#13;
circulation must pass peer&#13;
review. Secondly, the citation of&#13;
the published information in indexes&#13;
and works of others is&#13;
looked for. The third and probably&#13;
most important measurement is&#13;
that of the outside evaluations that&#13;
are necessary in all reviews of&#13;
faculty. These committees will&#13;
fourtlily look to see if the faculty&#13;
member's books, etc. have been&#13;
adopted in other universities.&#13;
Lastly, it will be checked to see if&#13;
the faculty member has been a&#13;
winner of fellowships, scholarships,&#13;
honors or rewards.&#13;
In addition to teaching and&#13;
creative activity, some emphasis&#13;
is put on service. Service, as&#13;
defined in Policies and&#13;
Procedures, means more than&#13;
being a teacher. A faculty&#13;
member must be involved with&#13;
both the University and the&#13;
community. Guskin believes that&#13;
m order for a faculty member to&#13;
be "a University citizen, he must&#13;
contribute to the life of the&#13;
University by sitting on committees,&#13;
etc."&#13;
After the evaluation of al l three&#13;
areas is complete, the peer review&#13;
is done. This means that the&#13;
faculty member up for tenure is&#13;
evaluated by his colleagues who&#13;
choose his destiny. When asked if&#13;
there was a better system Guskin&#13;
replied, "I don't know of a better&#13;
one." He continued by saying that&#13;
students only can base their&#13;
evaluations on the perspective of&#13;
one course in one point of time&#13;
"Student rating could be a&#13;
popularity contest, and God only&#13;
knows what would happen if&#13;
administration evaluated them "&#13;
Colleagues have the advantage of&#13;
working together on a day - to -&#13;
day basis and can look at things in&#13;
long term. Actually this process of&#13;
evaluation should be "terribly&#13;
encouraging for students because&#13;
their own faculty members, not&#13;
administrators, are making the&#13;
decisions," according to Chancellor&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
"Tenure is enormously difficult,"&#13;
Guskin said. "The most&#13;
painful decisions are personnel&#13;
decisions." He believes that the&#13;
tenured faculty should make these&#13;
judgements and is glad that this is&#13;
happening at Parkside. "Our&#13;
faculty makes tough decisions.&#13;
This indicates that faculty really&#13;
feel a sense of ownership in this&#13;
university. I'm proud — overwhelmed."&#13;
&#13;
Howard Kanetzke, School&#13;
Publications Editor, Wisconsin&#13;
State Historical Society; Frank&#13;
Custer, local history buff and&#13;
feature writer for several&#13;
Madison publications; Elizabeth&#13;
Durbin, former editor of the&#13;
Ocooch Mountain News and&#13;
Wisconsin Academy Review;&#13;
Clarice Dunn, free lance writer&#13;
and first YARNS OF&#13;
YESTERYEAR Contest Director;&#13;
and Mark Lefebrvre, Editor - in -&#13;
Chief, and Doug Bradley, Editor,&#13;
of Stanton and Lee Publishers,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Entries, or requests for further&#13;
information about the contest may&#13;
be sent to Gen Lewis, Director,&#13;
YARNS OF YESTERYEAR&#13;
CONTEST, 610 Langdon, Room&#13;
722, Ma dison, WI 5370 6.&#13;
For ideas and suggestions as to&#13;
the types of stories to write,&#13;
contestants may wish to read&#13;
selections in WE WERE&#13;
CHILDREN THEN, volumes I&#13;
and II, the anologies of previous&#13;
YARNS OF YESTERYEAR&#13;
Contest entries, available at&#13;
bookstores and libraries&#13;
throughout the state.&#13;
Women's studies&#13;
spring program&#13;
The Women's Studies Program&#13;
Faculty cordially invites interested&#13;
faculty and students to a&#13;
series of noon - time seminars.&#13;
The seminars cover a wide range&#13;
of topics which examine and&#13;
illustrate the diversity of wo men's&#13;
experience in contemporary&#13;
society. The seminars are offered&#13;
on the following Wednesdays in&#13;
Union 106 at 12:00:&#13;
• February 16, The Plight of&#13;
the Woman Playwright, by Rhoda&#13;
- Gale Pollack, Associate&#13;
Professor, Dramatic Arts.&#13;
• February 23, Readings from&#13;
a Novel - in - Progress, by Carole&#13;
Vopat, Associate Professor,&#13;
English.&#13;
• March 2, Explaining&#13;
Women's Adulthood Experience,&#13;
by Teresa Peck, Associate&#13;
Professor, Educational&#13;
Psychology.&#13;
• March 23, Women and&#13;
Migration in the Philippines, by&#13;
Lillian Trager, Assistant&#13;
Professor, Anthropology.&#13;
• March 30, I mages of Women&#13;
in Films of the Forties, by&#13;
Frances Kavenik, Lecturer,&#13;
Humanities.&#13;
Please plan on attending and&#13;
participating.&#13;
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10 HELP YOU CROW!&#13;
CALL O R S TOP IN FOR D ETAILS &#13;
Thursday, February 10,1983&#13;
by Maureen Burke&#13;
Mike Vania is a 21 year old&#13;
Junior at Parkside, majoring in&#13;
marketing. He is also an outstanding&#13;
UW-P wrestler with a&#13;
season record of 34-5. He has a&#13;
career record of 114-15 , is a two -&#13;
time All - American, and has been&#13;
named "Outstanding Wrestler" at&#13;
five different tournaments.&#13;
Mike hails from Anchorage,&#13;
Alaska, coming from what he&#13;
calls a "good Catholic family" of&#13;
five kids. He has been wrestling&#13;
since he was in third grade, when&#13;
he participated in a city program&#13;
sponsored by the Kiwanis in&#13;
Anchorage. He became interested&#13;
m wrestling because his brother&#13;
had a friend who's brother&#13;
wrestled in high school. Also,&#13;
Mike says, "I was small all&#13;
through junior high and high&#13;
school and wrestling was the only&#13;
sport that I participated in. That&#13;
and baseball."&#13;
He was an outstanding wrestler&#13;
back in high school, going to the&#13;
btate Championships three years&#13;
in a row. In his sophomore year he&#13;
took third place and was second&#13;
his junior and senior seasons.&#13;
After high school, Mike attended&#13;
Pacific University in&#13;
Forest Grove, Oregon for two&#13;
years where he was a two - time&#13;
All - American at 118 po unds. He&#13;
took second his freshman year&#13;
and fourth his sophomore year&#13;
Leaving Pacific U., he transfered&#13;
to Parkside last year. Mike&#13;
chose Parkside because he had&#13;
been here before and also had a&#13;
brother whom attended UW-P. His&#13;
father then retired and his parents&#13;
also moved to Algoma, Wisconsin.&#13;
One of the biggest drawbacks&#13;
about wrestling for Mike is the&#13;
dieting that he has to do to make&#13;
weight. He has to lose close to 22&#13;
pounds going from his normal&#13;
weight of 152 to his wrestling&#13;
weight of 126. He says, "dieting&#13;
Wrestler Mike Vania: a professional amateur&#13;
a 21 year old make wJpht ^oHege it's worse. If I didn't win, it loses. "He's got a lot of class," fishes back in An takes a toll on your mind." To&#13;
make weight Vania tries not to eat&#13;
or drink too much when matches&#13;
are coming up. He also tries to&#13;
lose 3-4 lbs. at every practice&#13;
although after weigh-ins, he&#13;
usually gains 8-9 lbs. back again.&#13;
Even though he is doing very&#13;
VANIA outstanding&#13;
wrestler.&#13;
well at 126, Mike says he'd like to&#13;
go even lower to wrestle at 118 lb.&#13;
"I'll see if I can get to 118 for the&#13;
Wheaton Invitational (Feb. 11, 12)&#13;
and see how my body feels. Then&#13;
I'll see how I feel for Nationals."&#13;
One of the things that Mike&#13;
enjoys most about wrestling is the&#13;
competition.. "When you go out&#13;
there on the mat and you wrestle&#13;
it's just you and the guy," he said!&#13;
"When you go one - on - one like&#13;
that, everything is up to you and if&#13;
you win, you know that you did it&#13;
all and it was you from the very&#13;
beginning . . . from the dieting to&#13;
the end."&#13;
"In high school most guys&#13;
wrestle just for the sport and if&#13;
they lose, it isn't that bad. But in&#13;
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Come and enjoy the most current jukebox in town!&#13;
college it's worse. If I didn't win, it&#13;
(the dieting) wouldn't be worth&#13;
it, ' Mike said.&#13;
Mike feels that Dr. Mike Clock,&#13;
his coach at Pacific, has been the&#13;
most influential person in his&#13;
wrestling career. "He's probably&#13;
the best coach that I could have&#13;
had as a freshman. He had me&#13;
start from scratch and learn the&#13;
basics again, so when I came here&#13;
to Parkside with coach Koch, I&#13;
had already been taught the&#13;
basics. So they didn't have to&#13;
teach me a lot."&#13;
"He and asst. Coach Winters&#13;
just helped me polish my moves&#13;
and my style of wrestling. When&#13;
guys come out of high s chool, they&#13;
have a lot of fancy moves that&#13;
they used. But when they get to&#13;
college the competition is a lot&#13;
tougher, especially if they are&#13;
wrestling juniors and seniors. You&#13;
win with basics, and I'm best as a&#13;
mat wrestler," Mike added.&#13;
Head Coach Jim Koch agrees.&#13;
'Mike has a lot of good moves&#13;
down on the mat. He has improved&#13;
himself working really hard. He is&#13;
an exceptional wrestler and gets&#13;
more points faster than most&#13;
wrestlers. That's why when he&#13;
doesn't win by a pin he wins by a&#13;
lot of points." Mike averages 20&#13;
points a match.&#13;
"I enjoy watching Mike&#13;
wrestle," says Koch. "He never&#13;
slows down and never gives up. He&#13;
keeps moving and that's how he&#13;
scores so many points. He's a very&#13;
exciting wrestler to watch," he&#13;
added. Koch has nothing but&#13;
praise for Vania's attitude&#13;
towards wrestling describing him&#13;
as "fiery, popular, influential, and&#13;
probably the best leader we've&#13;
ever had."&#13;
"It's been several years since&#13;
we've had a guy who can pick up&#13;
the team like Mike," coach Koch&#13;
said. He is impressed by Mike's&#13;
dedication to the sport. "He just&#13;
loves to wrestle."&#13;
Vania, the co - captain of the&#13;
team is modest, conducts himself&#13;
well, and is gracious even when he&#13;
Sport Shots&#13;
Wisconsin:&#13;
loses.&#13;
says Koch.&#13;
And Koch isn't the only one who&#13;
is impressed by M ike's hard work&#13;
and dedication. Last year, even&#13;
though he was out most of the&#13;
season after knee surgery, Mike&#13;
was voted 'Most Inspirational&#13;
Wrestler'.&#13;
In the off season Mike enjoys&#13;
waterskiing. He is also a commercial&#13;
fisherman. He usually&#13;
fishes back in Anchorage where&#13;
he plans to make his residence&#13;
after he graduates. He also does&#13;
some amateur boxing at a local&#13;
bar there.&#13;
Mike's goal is to become a&#13;
National Champion. He hopes to&#13;
reach that goal this season, and&#13;
with the way things look so far, he&#13;
may just do that. As Coach Koch&#13;
put it, "Pacific's loss is our gain."&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
The mere mention of t hat name&#13;
conjures up visions of tons of snow&#13;
and bitter cold in winter, and heat&#13;
and humidity in summer; but that&#13;
could be changing. Our state is all&#13;
of a sudden becoming known as&#13;
one of the sports capitals of the&#13;
U.S.A. At least I think so. Let's&#13;
take a look at the last two years in&#13;
the Wisconsin sports scene.&#13;
Starting back in 1981, the attention&#13;
given to our state started&#13;
to rise as the Milwaukee Bucks&#13;
were blowing away every other&#13;
team in its division. They eventually&#13;
lost in the playoffs in one of&#13;
the best playoff series ever seen.&#13;
Attention wasn't drawn again&#13;
until the end of t he summer, with&#13;
one of the biggest wins in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin's history.&#13;
That, of c ourse, was the Badger's&#13;
victory over Michigan in their 1981&#13;
season opener. The Badgers&#13;
finished the season 7-4, and gained&#13;
a berth in the now - defunct&#13;
Garden State Bowl, where they&#13;
lost to Tennessee. But the football&#13;
program at Wisconsin received a&#13;
boost that carried into the next&#13;
year.&#13;
In the winter of 1981-82, the&#13;
Bucks again got attention. Once&#13;
again they won their division by a&#13;
large margin only to lose in the&#13;
playoffs. Another attention&#13;
grabber was the Wisconsin&#13;
Badger basketball team — but for&#13;
a different reason. They couldn't&#13;
win to save their lives, and the&#13;
coach of that team, Bill Cofield&#13;
was gone at the end of the year'&#13;
Then the Badgers hired the coach&#13;
of Eau Claire (his name escapes&#13;
me); but he resigned just a few&#13;
days after he was hired for personal&#13;
reasons.&#13;
Spring of 1982 brought us&#13;
baseball season. The Brewers had&#13;
CINDY RUFFERT gets the rebound in last Saturday's game.&#13;
a sports capital?&#13;
a&#13;
A.L.&#13;
This&#13;
to&#13;
high hopes and little did they know&#13;
that those hopes would be&#13;
realized. As we all know our&#13;
Brewers made it all the way to the&#13;
World Series after a thriller of a&#13;
finish against Baltimore and&#13;
great comeback in the&#13;
championship series,&#13;
brought the most attention io&#13;
Wisconsin since the Packer glory&#13;
years of the mid - 60's; but the&#13;
attention didn't stop there.&#13;
In the fall of '82, the Wisconsin&#13;
football team had its second&#13;
winning season in a row, and its&#13;
second berth in two years They&#13;
had better luck this time, as they&#13;
beat Kansas State in the&#13;
dependence Bowl for their&#13;
bowl victory in many moons&#13;
* f^rise team (at least for&#13;
me) this winter is the Milwaukee&#13;
H^pv i °&#13;
f the Interna&#13;
tional&#13;
f League&#13;
- They have the&#13;
fourth best record in the IHL, and&#13;
are leading their division.&#13;
pI?lmos&#13;
J f&#13;
°&#13;
rgot The Green Bav&#13;
Packers had a good season too&#13;
wattfTh ^&#13;
astrikeg&#13;
°t?nthe&#13;
way of a better one. Still the&#13;
P&#13;
!f°ffs&#13;
everyone.') and made it through&#13;
the first round against St. Louis&#13;
Infirst&#13;
&#13;
r%^Tr&#13;
;&#13;
d&#13;
P&#13;
G^&#13;
had ZX *^2 |and&#13;
We've won " Rejoice!&#13;
and fell dead. C0&#13;
"&#13;
apsed&#13;
SPORTS TRIVIA&#13;
(revenge, perhaps?). Then the&#13;
had to take on America's teaix&#13;
the Dallas Cowboys. They did&#13;
pretty good job handling Ton&#13;
Dorsett and Company, but in th&#13;
end the Packers were out&#13;
tricked on trick plays. Next yea&#13;
should be their best since '72&#13;
Back to the Bucks. They'r&#13;
leading their division agair&#13;
despite injuries to key people.&#13;
Wisconsin sports have com&#13;
quite a ways in the last two year&#13;
and we can look forward to goo&#13;
seasons from the Bucks, Brewer*&#13;
and Packers m the coming yeai&#13;
Its about time we got som&#13;
sU^n?1 a sports' mind*&#13;
state, and not just be known fo&#13;
snow and cows. On Wisconsin!&#13;
Spots: Bil&#13;
'y Marti]&#13;
seconds left The NFr 1&#13;
that tte Npr I* tte first&#13;
once LaIf n&lt;7' 3nd ^member&#13;
tr«5 1116 mara&#13;
thor ^uced into the moderr&#13;
games in Athens and it&#13;
ran Same course that th&#13;
In 1908, during the&#13;
Olympics, the race dist,&#13;
vanisfS ? 26 mUes&#13;
vtt avor t 0&#13;
VII and Queen Alexandi&#13;
— Taken from Mai &#13;
RANGER&#13;
Womens track circles competition I Coach Profile: Mike DeWitt&#13;
Incredible as it may seem, the&#13;
Women's Track season is well&#13;
under way and the team has been&#13;
faring well in the early season&#13;
meets (see sport news).&#13;
Last Saturday, the team was in&#13;
Oshkosh. Coach Mike DeWitt felt&#13;
that Oshkosh and Stevens Point&#13;
were good teams and if Deb Spino&#13;
would've run and if there would&#13;
have been a distance medley relay&#13;
event, the team may have finished&#13;
with more points. "They may&#13;
have still beat us, but we would&#13;
have been right up with them,"&#13;
commented DeWitt.&#13;
Spino is recovering from a knee&#13;
flare up and although she is&#13;
feeling better, DeWitt decided to&#13;
not let her compete.&#13;
This Saturday the team will&#13;
travel to LaCrosse. DeWitt expects&#13;
to face some tough competition&#13;
as Marquette and&#13;
LaCrosse are two of the best&#13;
distance teams in the state. "Stout&#13;
has some fairly good distance&#13;
runners too. It should be a good&#13;
meet," he said.&#13;
Sue M eyer, Parkside's top 2 -&#13;
miler, will be challenged by Tori&#13;
Neaubauer of LaCrosse and Katie&#13;
Womens Basketball&#13;
Webb of Marquette, both National&#13;
champions. "If Sue runs tough&#13;
against these girls, she should be&#13;
under ll minutes," stated DeWitt.&#13;
Meyer, who set a personal&#13;
record in the 2 - mile last week of&#13;
11:11.8 as well as qualifying for&#13;
nationals, did so with some difficulty.&#13;
An Oshkosh opponent&#13;
followed too closely on Meyer's&#13;
heels and stepped on the backs of&#13;
Meyer's shoes five times during&#13;
the course of the race. "The first&#13;
two times I didn't say anything.&#13;
After that, I turned around and&#13;
told her to knock it off. I'm happy&#13;
with my race though. It's a good&#13;
time for this early in the season&#13;
and I'm really glad to have&#13;
qualified for the nationals. I really&#13;
wanted that," Meyer said.&#13;
Spino will be competing in the&#13;
mile and DeWitt feels she will be&#13;
challenged by Hottinger from&#13;
Marquette.&#13;
Another top Parkside runner,&#13;
Dona Driscoll is looking forward&#13;
to the upcoming meet. "I wasn't&#13;
all that pleased with my race last&#13;
Saturday. I'm happy that I won,&#13;
but I know I can run faster. I'm&#13;
looking forward to the meet&#13;
of my&#13;
comes&#13;
stiffest&#13;
from&#13;
because some&#13;
competition&#13;
LaCrosse."&#13;
Driscoll feels at this point of the&#13;
season, she is right on schedule&#13;
training wise. "I'm 2-3 seconds&#13;
faster than last year, but it's to be&#13;
expected -1 wouldn't want to be at&#13;
the same level as I was last year,"&#13;
she stated.&#13;
Sprinter Carling Thurman is&#13;
competing after a few years&#13;
layoff. DeWitt expects her to be&#13;
one of the top sprinters in the state&#13;
as well as do well nationally.&#13;
Indoor Nationals are coming up&#13;
at the end of the month. Comparing&#13;
times from last year&#13;
DeWitt noted that Spino, who won&#13;
the mile last year in 5:11 has&#13;
already run a 5:02. Meyer's time&#13;
of 11:11 would be good for a sixth&#13;
place finish last year. DeWitt&#13;
expects her to lower her time in&#13;
the next few weeks. Driscoll&#13;
finished fifth in the 600 yard run&#13;
last year and is improving. The&#13;
time that the Distance medley&#13;
team ran in an exhibition race on&#13;
Saturday without any competition&#13;
should have been good for a third&#13;
place finish.&#13;
Pope scores 1000 points&#13;
by Patricia Cumbie&#13;
Laurie Pope is one of Parkside's&#13;
best women athletes. She plays on&#13;
the basketball and volleyball&#13;
teams. Her hometown is Omro, a&#13;
small town west of Oskhosh. She is&#13;
a senior majoring in Psychology&#13;
and will be graduating next&#13;
semester. She is also working on&#13;
getting a basic coaching certificate.&#13;
&#13;
Pope really likes Parkside a lot&#13;
and commented, "I like the small&#13;
town atmosphere, because of my&#13;
own hometown, you don't lose&#13;
your identity and the people here&#13;
are friendly."&#13;
She began her athletic career in&#13;
seventh grade, and has always&#13;
performed well. Her high school&#13;
basketball team went to the state&#13;
tournament three years in a row.&#13;
Her team only lost 10 game s in&#13;
that time span. "It was really&#13;
exciting when you go to state, or&#13;
do well, it gets more publicity for&#13;
the team, our games had many&#13;
spectators."&#13;
Pope is having an outstanding&#13;
basketball season thus far. She&#13;
has scored over a thousand points,&#13;
the first woman in Parkside to&#13;
manage that feat. Now one of her&#13;
goals is 1000 rebound points. The&#13;
women practice for two and one -&#13;
half hours every day. They do a lot&#13;
of running and their level of&#13;
conditioning is high.&#13;
According to Pope, the women&#13;
Sports Calendar&#13;
Men's Basketball&#13;
Feb. 12, Saturday. St.&#13;
Scholastic. Away&#13;
Feb. 15, Tuesday. UW -&#13;
Milwaukee. Away&#13;
Feb. 17, Thursday, Lewis&#13;
University. HERE, 7:30 p. m.&#13;
Women's Basketball&#13;
Feb. 10, T hursday. Marquette.&#13;
Away&#13;
Feb. 12, Sa turday, Silver Lake&#13;
College. HERE 3:30 p. m.&#13;
Men's Wrestling&#13;
Feb. 11 -12, Fri. - Sat. Wheaton&#13;
Invitational. Away&#13;
Feb. 15, Tuesday. Marquette.&#13;
Away&#13;
Fencing&#13;
Feb. 12, Saturday. Wisconsin,&#13;
Michigan State. HERE.&#13;
Women's Track&#13;
Feb. 12, Saturday. LaCrosse.&#13;
Away&#13;
Men's Track&#13;
Feb. 12, Saturday. Illinois&#13;
Benedictine. Away&#13;
get along well and they function&#13;
well as a team. They play on a 30&#13;
second clock and being in good&#13;
POPE is first woman to score&#13;
1000 points.&#13;
shape is very important. Her&#13;
ultimate goal for the season is to&#13;
go to the National tournaments.&#13;
Laurie finds the basketball&#13;
competition to be much more&#13;
stringent than volleyball. They&#13;
play some out of state division I&#13;
teams, and Marquette, Milwaukee&#13;
and Green Bay are very competitive&#13;
teams within Wisconsin&#13;
In volleyball, Pope has had the&#13;
opportunity to travel to Europe.&#13;
She spent two weeks in Sweden&#13;
and when she was in Stockholm,&#13;
she got to see the Stockholm&#13;
Castle. She traveled by train and&#13;
was in six different cities. "The&#13;
opportunity to travel is one of the&#13;
greatest things about participating&#13;
in sports. It was great."&#13;
Coach Goggin commented on&#13;
Laurie's performance, "She's a&#13;
good player, and has much ability.&#13;
She's a good person to have&#13;
around and it will be hard&#13;
replacing her next year. Laurie&#13;
has matured into a good player."&#13;
Getting ready for a game or&#13;
match is something everyone&#13;
prepares in their own way,&#13;
mentally and physically. Laurie&#13;
said, "I just try to relax, taking&#13;
deep breaths. Getting nervous just&#13;
inhibits what you're trying to do.&#13;
Just going in there and playing is&#13;
'what takes the nervousness away.&#13;
I just think back to about eight or&#13;
nine years ago, and if it wasn't for&#13;
that stupid round ball I never&#13;
would have done the things I've&#13;
been able to do."&#13;
THIS THURSDAY&#13;
following the&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
vs&#13;
Cardinal Stritch&#13;
basketball game&#13;
THE&#13;
MILLER&#13;
BROTHERS&#13;
9:00 p.m. - Union Square&#13;
Free with exchange of&#13;
basketball ticket at halftime&#13;
— OR —&#13;
$3.00 at the door&#13;
by Carol Kortendick&#13;
The name Mike DeWitt spurs&#13;
one thought, which is sports. A&#13;
former Parkside student himself,&#13;
DeWitt now coaches the women's&#13;
cross country and track teams. He&#13;
graduated from Parkside in 1972&#13;
with a B.A. in geography, and then&#13;
went to attain his M.A. in&#13;
elementary education from&#13;
Arizona State.&#13;
Besides Parkside, DeWitt has&#13;
also coached the teams from&#13;
Gateway Technical School and&#13;
Horlick High School (Racine).&#13;
Although many assume a&#13;
coach's sole job is coaching,&#13;
DeWitt's principle occupation is&#13;
teaching fourth graders at Jefferson&#13;
Lighthouse School in&#13;
Racine. DeWitt enjoys working&#13;
with all kids in general, and&#13;
reveals it by his fine coaching&#13;
ability.&#13;
DeWitt's philosophy of coaching&#13;
doesn't strive on winning but&#13;
stresses hard work for team&#13;
members to reach their fullest&#13;
potential. DeWitt also firmly&#13;
believes that track and cross&#13;
country demands discipline to&#13;
organize between school and&#13;
sports.&#13;
In all his years here at&#13;
Parkside, both as a student and&#13;
coach, Mike DeWitt has found the&#13;
people friendly and the school an&#13;
excellent opportunity to obtain an&#13;
education. Parkside is also well -&#13;
established in the field of sports,&#13;
and DeWitt hopes it continues in&#13;
that direction.&#13;
Teaching and coaching consumes&#13;
most of his time yet Mike&#13;
enjoys playing with his four young&#13;
children, and sometimes "just&#13;
spending time watching other&#13;
sports," as he is an avid baseball&#13;
watcher.&#13;
When he's not coaching,&#13;
teaching, playing or watching,&#13;
DeWitt race walks, and hopes to&#13;
place in next year's Olympic time&#13;
trials.&#13;
Other future plans? Not at the&#13;
present moment with his full&#13;
schedule. He, however, said of his&#13;
future, "I do plan to race walk for&#13;
another 50 years!" So DeWitt will&#13;
be coming on strong for a long&#13;
time.&#13;
Ranger needs writers,&#13;
photographers, e tc. . .&#13;
"/^University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
IYTONA BEACH&#13;
SPRING BREAK&#13;
'83&#13;
J / \J MARCH / y i 11-20&#13;
FiOR&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• TRANSPORTATION VIA AIR CONDITIONED&#13;
BATHROOM EQUIPPED MOTORCOACH&#13;
• 7 NIGHTS LODGING AT THE OCEANSIDE&#13;
TEXAN HOTEL&#13;
• FREE PARTIES &amp; EXTRAS&#13;
• FULLY ESCORTED THROUGHOUT&#13;
• ALL HOTEL TIPS &amp; TAXES&#13;
ONLY&#13;
JOIN THE FOLLOWING&#13;
SCHOOLS PARTICIPATING IN&#13;
THISTRIP:&#13;
• NOTRE DAME • WESTERN ILLINOIS&#13;
• CENTRAL MICHIGAN • INDIANA UNIV.&#13;
• DRAKE • SOUTHERN ILLINOIS&#13;
• MIAMI OF OHIO • NORTHERN ILLINOIS&#13;
SIGNUP DEADLINE THIS FRIDAY, FEB. 11&#13;
FOR APPLICATION AND FURTHER INFORMATION&#13;
CONTACT:&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION, ROOM209 — 553-2200 &#13;
Thursday, February 10,1983 RANGER&#13;
MEN'S TRACK&#13;
by Patricia Cumbie&#13;
The Men's track season is&#13;
coming along fairly well, and&#13;
Coach Rosa has three men, in&#13;
three events, signed up for the&#13;
National competition. "The team&#13;
is small this season but we have&#13;
been doing good," Rosa added.&#13;
The last meet the team competed&#13;
in was the St. Norbert Invitational.&#13;
It was a triangular&#13;
meet, against Marquette and St.&#13;
Norbert. Parkside scored 34&#13;
points. John Anderson took first in&#13;
the pole vault. In the shot put, Rod&#13;
Hebrindon took third. Glenn&#13;
Schultz placed second in the mile.&#13;
The 600 yard run yielded a first for&#13;
A1 Correa. The 1000 yard run was&#13;
won by Rich Miller and in second&#13;
place was Glenn Schultz. The two&#13;
mile run also had Parkside taking&#13;
the first two places. Andy Serrano&#13;
in first and John Brewer taking&#13;
second. The Parkside men also&#13;
took first in the mile relay. The&#13;
relay team consists of Short,&#13;
Correa, Miller and Brewer.&#13;
WOMEN'S TRACK&#13;
On Saturday, the Women's&#13;
Track team competed in Oshkosh.&#13;
The team finished third with 57&#13;
points. Oshkosh won the meet with&#13;
130 points. Stevens Point was&#13;
second with 122 points. St. Norbert's&#13;
was fourth with 46 points.&#13;
Ripon finished fifth with 13 points.&#13;
Carling Thurman won the 60&#13;
yard dash in 7.9 seconds. She also&#13;
finished third in the 300 yard dash&#13;
with a time of 40.7 seconds.&#13;
Thurman was also a member of&#13;
the 800 yard relay team which&#13;
finished third. The relay team&#13;
composed of Lynda Pfeilstiffer,&#13;
Judvida Hopkins and Sanday&#13;
Pelegrino finished in 1:58.7.&#13;
Sue M eyer had a PR in the 2&#13;
mile run. She won in 11:11.8.&#13;
Dona Driscoll is back in top&#13;
form after a short bout with the&#13;
flu. She w on the 600 yard run in&#13;
1:29.6. Teammate Jane&#13;
Roszykowski finished fifth in 1:33.&#13;
Freshman Michelle Gross&#13;
showed potential for a good first&#13;
collegiate track season. She&#13;
finished sixth in the mile with&#13;
5:46.0. H er time of 3:06.0 i n the&#13;
1000 yard run was good for a&#13;
fourth place finish.&#13;
The mile relay team of&#13;
Pfeilstiffer, Karen Jacobsen,&#13;
Carol Romano, and Hopkins&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST CHURCH, 11&#13;
a.m., Sunday, 625 College Ave., "Musical&#13;
Panorama."&#13;
RHONDA BRAOLY is 152 with RRC (190).&#13;
P.S. BWMIS&#13;
ROSES ARE RED, violets are blue, sugar is&#13;
sweet, JAM is too! P.S. Be my valentine.&#13;
WANTED: Sexy blond heterofemale tor&#13;
cheap, meaningless relationship. Contact&#13;
'Desperate'.&#13;
OOH-AH, OOH-AH HEY MARLENE! Tell us&#13;
'bout the boy from Racine!&#13;
NORM: We will miss you, even if you are&#13;
disgustingly perverted. The girl with the&#13;
red panties.&#13;
BETH CALLAHAN: Congratulations on your&#13;
engagement to Mr. Marshall Piatt, Oct. 29,&#13;
1983. (152) Love, Rhonda BMWIS&#13;
CAROL &amp; WILLY: When's the blessed&#13;
event??? Good luck women's track team in&#13;
La Crosse!! Stay tuff!!!&#13;
PAT: Thanks for the warning. The new kid on&#13;
the block.&#13;
MOLLY: Keep up the thumb exercises!&#13;
Valerie&#13;
ROD: I had a wonderful time Saturday&#13;
Night!! Toni&#13;
TON I: The movie was alright, but the company&#13;
was better!! Rod&#13;
ED: Just because your name is at the very&#13;
top and mine is at the very bottom, doesn't&#13;
mean thafl must take this constant abuse!!&#13;
IE not Y.&#13;
IT IS SO WONDERFUL to have a Winter&#13;
Carnival that promotes cooperation between&#13;
student organizations.&#13;
THANK YOU to all of the Ranger Staff who&#13;
participated in the Winter Carnival.&#13;
MOLLY: If only you knew. Ed&#13;
ED: Someday we'll be married, and the other&#13;
two P's will have to start a different "P"&#13;
club. Love and Kisses, RED.&#13;
RED: I'll be waiting. Ed (Love and Kisses).&#13;
MOLLY: AAaybe you do know. I hope you do.&#13;
Ed&#13;
LOU: Don't be so jealous. And don't be mad&#13;
atnobody showing up at your meetings. It's&#13;
nothing personal. At least I don't think it is.&#13;
VALERIE: Congratulations!! I'm glad&#13;
you're one of us. I've always known you are&#13;
Pat&#13;
STACEY: Hope you're having fun. I'm trying&#13;
my best. See you soon!!!&#13;
PAT: If some people's door swings both ways,&#13;
your's is revolving!!! That's O.K. though&#13;
Pat&#13;
WANTED&#13;
PIANO ACCOMPANIST for young aspiring&#13;
singer wishing to enter competition Sat,&#13;
March 5, 1983 at Bradford H.S. At least 4&#13;
rehearsals previous to competition date.&#13;
Have own sheet music. Fees negotiable.&#13;
Call 652-5820 after 3 p.m., M-F.&#13;
SPORT NEWS&#13;
finished third in 4:31.8.&#13;
In the field events, Vicki Stacy&#13;
finished fifth in the high jump with&#13;
4-8 and Shirley Gunther finished&#13;
sixth in the shot put with a throw&#13;
of 9.44 meters.&#13;
FENCING&#13;
Last Saturday, the Parkside&#13;
men and women's fencing teams&#13;
hosted the invitational against&#13;
Notre Dame, Purdue, Tri - State,&#13;
and St. Mary's. Unfortunately&#13;
though, the teams lost with the&#13;
exception of a woman's tie with&#13;
Tri - State. Overall results for the&#13;
teams were:&#13;
MEN'S&#13;
Parkside 10 — Purdue 17&#13;
Parkside 8—Tri-State 19&#13;
Parkside 1 — Notre Dame 7&#13;
WOMEN'S&#13;
Parkside 3 — Purdue 4&#13;
Parkside 6—Tri-State 6&#13;
Parkside 1 — Notre Dame 15&#13;
Parkside 4 — St. Mary's 12&#13;
Next week's Ranger will feature&#13;
an in-depth report on the fencing&#13;
team.&#13;
MEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
by Carra Cariello&#13;
The Parkside Basketball team&#13;
was very busy this last week. On&#13;
Tuesday, they took on the Chicago&#13;
State Cougars. The Rangers lost&#13;
this game with a final score of 65-&#13;
64. T his occured when a 25 foot&#13;
jump shot by Brian Diggins&#13;
bounced off the back of the rim.&#13;
Diggins made the most points this&#13;
game, totaling 17. Bob Hallberg,&#13;
coach for the Cougars, was quoted&#13;
saying "There was no pressure on&#13;
Parkside tonight. All the pressure&#13;
was on us." But there is always&#13;
pressure because of the dreams of&#13;
every player.&#13;
On Thursday, the Rangers&#13;
played against MSOE. The&#13;
Rangers won with a 23 point&#13;
spread. The ending score was 89-&#13;
66. Erik Womeldorf, a sophomore&#13;
at Parkside, made the most points&#13;
with 21 points.&#13;
Saturday, the Rangers took on&#13;
NE Illinois. The Rangers lost 67-&#13;
68. The Rangers gave this game&#13;
away. At first the Rangers were&#13;
leading by 18 points. Then it came&#13;
down to 6:28 left in the game and&#13;
the Rangers had an opportunity at&#13;
the free throw line, but unfortunately&#13;
the outcome wasn't&#13;
positive. Then the Rangers were&#13;
only leading by 14 points. This is&#13;
when the tables turned and Illinois&#13;
went on to win this game.&#13;
On Saturday, February 12, t he&#13;
Rangers will take on St.&#13;
Scholastica. Darrell Jackson&#13;
sustained an ankle injury, but&#13;
hopefully he will be ready to play&#13;
in this next game. Tim Opps is still&#13;
out with a dislocated shoulder.&#13;
According to Coach Johnson, the&#13;
Rangers still have a chance at&#13;
state, if everyone can finish out&#13;
the season injury free.&#13;
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
This past week the women's&#13;
basketball team competed in&#13;
three games. Tuesday against&#13;
Chicago State the women were&#13;
victorious, the score being 74-58.&#13;
The Whitewater game was cancelled&#13;
due to snow, and Friday&#13;
against UW-Green Bay they were&#13;
defeated 72-62.&#13;
The team will be playing&#13;
Marquette Thursday, and they&#13;
will have to win to be seeded in the&#13;
NAIA. The other two games are&#13;
against Silver Lake and Carthage&#13;
College. "We should be able to&#13;
bqat them both," Coach Goggin&#13;
commented.&#13;
EVE MARATHON&#13;
EVE's Third Annual Old Style&#13;
Bald Eagle Marathon will be held&#13;
at Eagle Valley Nature Preserve,&#13;
just two miles south of this&#13;
Mississippi river town at 8:00&#13;
a.m., April 30. Both the start and&#13;
finish of the. marathon will be&#13;
located at the nature center.&#13;
This annual event is sponsored&#13;
by EVE and Heileman's, Int.&#13;
Proceeds generated from&#13;
registration fees of $10 per runner&#13;
($8 in advance) will be used to&#13;
help preserve bald eagle habitat&#13;
along the Mississippi River.&#13;
The marathon route passes&#13;
through spectacular scenery&#13;
along the Mississippi River north&#13;
of Glen Haven, Wisconsin, and&#13;
then swings out over rolling hills&#13;
and wooded valleys. This&#13;
marathon is one of the most scenic&#13;
and rugged of any marathon in the&#13;
nation. The 26 mile route is approximately&#13;
60 percent paved and&#13;
40 percent gravel.&#13;
The marathon starts at 8 a.m.&#13;
and a 10 km run will start at 9 a.m.&#13;
Trophies will be awarded to&#13;
winners in both the men and&#13;
women's divisions. All marathon&#13;
finishers will receive a T-shirt and&#13;
all 10 km finishers will receive an&#13;
EVE arm patch.&#13;
Anyone wishing to observe the&#13;
marathon is welcome to the&#13;
nature preserve. Limited overnight&#13;
accommodations (room and&#13;
board) are available by advance&#13;
registration.&#13;
Reservation forms and more&#13;
information may be obtained by&#13;
writing to: EVE, Box 155, Apple&#13;
River, IL 61001 or phone (815) 594-&#13;
2259.&#13;
MEN'S WRESTLING&#13;
by Maureen Burke&#13;
On Feb. 2, the Men's Wrestling&#13;
team was to have wrestled&#13;
Oshkosh, but due to the heavy&#13;
snows it was cancelled. The team&#13;
did, however, compete against&#13;
Northern Michigan University&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Parkside won 29 - 20, wi nning 6&#13;
out of the 10 matches. Mike Winter&#13;
(142) and Mike Muckerheide&#13;
(150), both pinned their opponents.&#13;
Winter's pin was in 1:51,&#13;
while Muckerheide's came in 4:29.&#13;
On Tuesday Parkside hosted the&#13;
Carthage and Carroll Double&#13;
Dual. According to Heach Coach&#13;
Jim Kosh, "It looks really good for&#13;
us. None of the other three teams&#13;
we will be competing against will&#13;
have full teams, because they all&#13;
have had a lot of injuries. They&#13;
will each be forfeiting at least 2 - 3&#13;
matches apiece."&#13;
Then, on Feb. 11 and 12, the&#13;
team will travel to Wheaton, IL&#13;
for the Wheaton Invitational.&#13;
There will be 29 teams competing&#13;
including Marquette University,&#13;
Notre Dame, and Drake.&#13;
Good times offer:&#13;
ctuR'am&#13;
• • • •&#13;
F&#13;
°&#13;
ur&#13;
t&#13;
te®n oz. glass mug for sale. It's the two-fisted&#13;
way to drink to good times and salute vour oreat taste&#13;
in drinks. Why not start a collection? Please send this&#13;
coupon, along with a check or money order for $4.95&#13;
ffpnS C a L&#13;
h o&#13;
P '&#13;
e&#13;
f ? e&#13;
)&#13;
t0: S e a 9ram's 7 Crown Mug Offer, P.O. Box 1622, New York, N.Y. 10152&#13;
Name&#13;
Specify quantity. -Amount enclosed $_&#13;
Offer expires January 31,1984. No purchase necessary&#13;
New York residents add 8.25% sales tax.&#13;
Please allow 4 to 6 weeks for shipment.&#13;
WPKC14&#13;
Seaarams&#13;
© 1982 SEAGRAM DETOURS CO.. N.Y.C. AMERICAN WHSKEY-A BLEND. 80 PROOF "SewvUp" and "7(JP" are trademarks of the Sewn Up Compar,. </text>
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              <text>^IT University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Parkside budget to be cut&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, February 26, 1981 Vol. 9 - No. 20&#13;
additional 1.4% by July&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
By July 1 of this year, UWParkside&#13;
will have to cut another&#13;
$51,800 from its current operating&#13;
budget as its share of the additional&#13;
1.4 percent cutback ordered&#13;
by Governor Lee Dreyfus.&#13;
The 1.4 percent reduction,&#13;
applied to all state agencies, is&#13;
expected to total about $10 million,&#13;
$5.6 million of it from the UW&#13;
System. It comes on top of a 4.4&#13;
percent cut from current budgets&#13;
ordered by Gov. Dreyfus late last&#13;
summer. The 4.4 percent cut cost&#13;
UW-Parkside about $360,000.&#13;
According to the Feb. 19&#13;
Wisconsin State Journal, the $2&#13;
million state - wide budget cut was&#13;
originally projected to cost the&#13;
System $5.6 million. However, top&#13;
UW officials asknowledged on&#13;
Feb. 16 that "the university would&#13;
be able to use $3.6 million in unspent&#13;
money to offset the impact&#13;
of Drey fus' cut," according to the&#13;
Journal.&#13;
The breakdown of the unspent&#13;
funds being used: $2 million in&#13;
unspent fringe benefits for&#13;
university employees that would&#13;
have lapsed into the state's&#13;
general fund as of July 1, a&#13;
$900,000 year - end balance that&#13;
will not be carried over to next&#13;
year and $700,000 in unallocated&#13;
money, accrued because of higher&#13;
- than - anticipated second&#13;
semester student fee income.&#13;
UW-Parkside Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin was informed of the latest&#13;
cutback figure of $51 ,800 on Feb.&#13;
18 by UW System officials. Guskin&#13;
said, "The figure is about half t he&#13;
cut we originally feared. It still&#13;
will mean belt - tightening for the&#13;
remainder of the fiscal year&#13;
(ending June 30), but we can meet&#13;
it by implementing the three&#13;
measures I outlined Tuesday to&#13;
the Faculty Senate."&#13;
At that Senate meeting Guskin&#13;
imposed (1) an immediate freeze&#13;
on all unfilled state - funded&#13;
campus positions; (2) deferment&#13;
of all capital expenditures not&#13;
deemed essential for the balance&#13;
of the fiscal year; and (3) possible&#13;
reduction of some supply and&#13;
expense budgets for the balance of&#13;
the fiscal year.&#13;
"I am convinced that through a&#13;
combination of these measures we&#13;
will be able to meet this new cut&#13;
without layoffs, reduced work&#13;
weeks or a shortened school&#13;
year," Guskin told the Senate.&#13;
"Most important, we will&#13;
preserve the academic quality of&#13;
UW-Parkside."&#13;
In a Ranger interview, Guskin&#13;
said that these measures are&#13;
based on "people's good will. We&#13;
have a first - class bunch of people&#13;
here. They are very cooperative,&#13;
careful with how they ask for&#13;
money and careful how they spend&#13;
money. A lot of trust has been&#13;
built up here because of t hat."&#13;
The freeze on unfilled state -&#13;
funded capital expenditures,&#13;
Guskin said, "does not affect any&#13;
position presently being recruited&#13;
for. If anyone leaves in the next&#13;
few months, however, the position&#13;
won't be filled until July 1."&#13;
Guskin called the deferment of&#13;
non - essential capital expenditures&#13;
measure a "judgement&#13;
call" and indicated that it' meant&#13;
that "we are asking people not to&#13;
request non - essentials costing&#13;
Continued On Page Two&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
Parkside Parkside's library flasher strikes again I Our photographer&#13;
3 caught this perverted individual in action on Level 3 last Mon- Flasher day.&#13;
Petitions available&#13;
by Dan Galbraith&#13;
Nomination petitions are&#13;
available for the positions of&#13;
President, Vice - President, and&#13;
nine Senate seats of PSGA, two&#13;
student SUFAC committee seats&#13;
and the Union Operation Board,&#13;
which has no limit on t he number&#13;
of s eats.&#13;
The requirements for candidacy&#13;
for the positions are: must be a&#13;
Parkside student carrying at least&#13;
six credits, have a GPA of at least&#13;
2.0, and not on final academic&#13;
probation.&#13;
To have your name on the&#13;
ballot, your nomination petition&#13;
must be filed with the elections&#13;
committee with at least 25&#13;
Parkside student signatures.&#13;
Presidential nominees must have&#13;
at least 50 s ignatures. Petitions&#13;
must be filed with an elections&#13;
committee member by Friday,&#13;
Feb. 27 at noon.&#13;
All wr ite - in candidates must&#13;
fulfill the same requirements and&#13;
file your written declaration to an&#13;
elections committee member by&#13;
Friday, March 6 at noon. A list of&#13;
all write - in candidates will be&#13;
available at the polling place.&#13;
A random drawing will determine&#13;
the ballot positions 'of the&#13;
candidates, Monday, March 2 at 1&#13;
p. m. in the PSGA office, WLLC&#13;
D137.&#13;
The elections will be held on&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday, March&#13;
11 and 12 from 9 a. m. t o 8 p. m. on&#13;
the concourse level of Molinaro&#13;
Hall. For persons who will be gone&#13;
those two days, absentee ballots&#13;
will be available one week prior to&#13;
the elections. They must be picked&#13;
up in person and be returned or&#13;
.postmarked by Tuesday, March 10&#13;
at noon.&#13;
For more information and&#13;
nominating petitions see Tracy&#13;
Gruber, chairperson, or a&#13;
member of the elections committee&#13;
in the PSGA office.&#13;
Tony Brown speaks on&#13;
Black History Month&#13;
by Patty DeLuisa&#13;
Broadcast journalist Tony&#13;
Brown, host erf "Tony Brown's&#13;
Journal," spoke on Black History&#13;
Month Wednesday, Feb. 18 in a&#13;
speech sponsored by Minority&#13;
Student Union.&#13;
Brown referred to MSU's theme&#13;
"The Unity of Our Past is the Key&#13;
to Our Future." He stated that it is&#13;
important for black Americans to&#13;
remember their history. He&#13;
asserted that the first black&#13;
Americans came to this country in&#13;
1619 a s indentured servants and&#13;
lived in relative racial peace with&#13;
the European settlers. About&#13;
thirty years later, white&#13;
businessmen decided that they&#13;
needed a free labor base - - -&#13;
blacks were the suppliers of this&#13;
work. Brown said that white&#13;
businessmen justified slavery by&#13;
telling other whites that blacks&#13;
were inferior to themselves. After&#13;
some time, whites were convinced&#13;
of t his belief. "Racism is a lie,"&#13;
Brown said, explaining that it was&#13;
perpetuated by white men who&#13;
wanted to improve the economy.&#13;
Racism was a matter of&#13;
economics, not race, he said.&#13;
Slavery was the social policy of&#13;
the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries&#13;
but desegregation is today's social&#13;
strategy, Brown said. About&#13;
desegregation Brown remarked,&#13;
"America is a pluralistic society&#13;
so social order won't work." He&#13;
also said that blacks come from&#13;
similar, yet diverse backgrounds.&#13;
He founded his belief in the instrument&#13;
of lan guage. Enroute to&#13;
America, slaves from different&#13;
geographical regions were&#13;
grouped together on ships,&#13;
preventing them from communicating&#13;
with one another. Of&#13;
all the dialects that were spoken in&#13;
the past three centuries, eleven of&#13;
them are presently recognized as&#13;
legitimate in America. Brown&#13;
said that blacks should retain&#13;
their dialects despite what the&#13;
rest of society says, despite the&#13;
fact that America expects blacks&#13;
to be white in their language and&#13;
their actions. Brown §aid, "Blacks&#13;
shouldn't consider what whites&#13;
think. If Black society is going to&#13;
be saved, new integrity and new&#13;
values must be established." He&#13;
thinks that if black Americans&#13;
follow these ideals by maintaining&#13;
their character, they can change&#13;
mainstream society's misconception&#13;
of themselves.&#13;
Politically speaking, Brown&#13;
encouraged blacks to vote for both&#13;
parties. Over the years, they have&#13;
voted for Democrats. He said that&#13;
94% of Jimmy Carter's 1976&#13;
election supporters were blacks.&#13;
He also talked about Republican&#13;
President Ronald Reagan. Brown&#13;
criticized the president by saying&#13;
"Reagan is in love with power and&#13;
the wily thing blacks will get out of&#13;
Reagan is what they fight for."&#13;
Brown cited many examples of&#13;
little known contributions of black&#13;
Americans and said that contemporary&#13;
blacks should strive to&#13;
do the best job they know how t o&#13;
do in their daily work because&#13;
legacy obligates them to do so.&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
TONY BROWN&#13;
Thursday, February 26, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Winter Carnival results&#13;
Lawyer Has A by Dan Galbraith&#13;
This year's Winter Carnival did&#13;
have a "snowball effect." The&#13;
laughter snowballed because of&#13;
the various events that occured.&#13;
The carnival was started by the&#13;
clangs, crashes, and booms of the&#13;
instruments played by the&#13;
children of th e Child Care Center&#13;
leading the way for the parade.&#13;
Five floats were entered this year.&#13;
First place went to Marketing&#13;
Club; tied for second [dace were&#13;
Ranger and PSGA.&#13;
Tuesdays blood drive was a&#13;
success — the Health office and&#13;
the Blood Center of So utheastern&#13;
Wisconsin collected 145 pints of&#13;
blood. A competition was held to&#13;
see which club could collect the&#13;
most donors. Pre Med club took&#13;
first, while Vets club took second,&#13;
and Accounting club, Student&#13;
Mobilization for Survival, and&#13;
Data Processing took third, fourth&#13;
and fifth respectively.&#13;
Tuesday night's event, "Old&#13;
Style Night," featuring "Sierra,"&#13;
has been rescheduled for&#13;
Tuesday, March 3 due to the&#13;
blizzard conditions that&#13;
developed.&#13;
The window painting was won&#13;
by the Ranger/second place went&#13;
to Cheerleaders, and third place&#13;
went to PSGA. The "Snow Beast"&#13;
competition went to Ranger,&#13;
second to Earth Science, third to&#13;
the Cheerleaders, and fourth to&#13;
Marketing club.&#13;
The Most Original Cheer contest&#13;
was won by SWEA. The pie eating&#13;
contest was won by Marketing&#13;
Club. The video games tournament&#13;
was won by the Union&#13;
Lifers. The ski race was won by&#13;
the Cheerleaders, while second&#13;
and third went to the Union Lifers.&#13;
Thursday night's events included&#13;
a Tug - a - war, just for fun,&#13;
between Earth Science, the&#13;
Cheerleaders and Union Lifers&#13;
(Earth Science won); a Beer&#13;
drinking relay, won by the&#13;
Cheerleaders; and the Nerf&#13;
basketball game in roller office&#13;
chairs, won by Ranger.&#13;
The overall competition was&#13;
won by Ranger, for a free party in&#13;
the Rec Center, second went to the&#13;
Cheerleaders, third to the Union&#13;
Lifers, and fourth to Marketing&#13;
Club.&#13;
The Bad Boy concert that was&#13;
Winter&#13;
Ccvnfvol8l&#13;
Febi9-I3 %&#13;
i&#13;
held in the Union Square Friday&#13;
night to finish the carnival attracted&#13;
418 people.&#13;
"The carnival went really&#13;
well," said Chris Hammelev,&#13;
Winter Carnival chairperson.&#13;
"Everyone had a good time in the&#13;
Square Thursday night with the&#13;
beer drinking relays and Family&#13;
Feud."&#13;
Hammelev commented that the&#13;
volleyball tournament went well.&#13;
"The biggest problem was the&#13;
snow storm cancelled Old Style&#13;
Night. It broke my heart," she&#13;
said.&#13;
Military influence in schools&#13;
is growing at epidemic rates&#13;
The Central Committee for&#13;
Conscientious Objectors (CCCO),&#13;
the nation's largest draft and&#13;
military counseling agency,&#13;
warns that the influence of the&#13;
military in our schools is growing&#13;
Larry Spears, Director of&#13;
CCCO's Pre-Enlistment Counseling&#13;
Program, says, "The last&#13;
few years have seen a tremendous&#13;
growth of militarism in this&#13;
country, and much of it has been&#13;
centered in the high schools and&#13;
colleges."&#13;
According to Spears, the&#13;
military now lures students&#13;
through many different&#13;
programs, including:&#13;
-The Armed Services&#13;
Vocational Aptitude Battery&#13;
(ASVAB). This is a military aptitute&#13;
test administered in 15,000&#13;
high schools by military personnel.&#13;
The ASVAB test has been&#13;
criticized in Congress as being of&#13;
little help to a counselor and a&#13;
student exploring civilian occupations.&#13;
However, the information&#13;
obtained from the test&#13;
goes to many offices around the&#13;
country, and it is used by&#13;
recruiters for years. Many schools&#13;
never tell their students that this&#13;
is an optional test.&#13;
-The Reserve Officers Training&#13;
Corps (ROTC) and Junior ROTC.&#13;
The college ROTC and high school&#13;
JROTC programs now exist in&#13;
nearly 2,000 schools . The courses&#13;
are taught by military personnel&#13;
and are often of questionable&#13;
academic value. They also encourage&#13;
values which are at odds&#13;
with the goals of academic&#13;
learning. And the programs cost&#13;
the American public millions of&#13;
dollars each year.&#13;
-The Delayed Entry Program.&#13;
The DEP encourages students to&#13;
sign the enlistment contract up to&#13;
one year before starting basic&#13;
training. Once student enlistees&#13;
sign the contract, they are bound&#13;
by it, and discharges under the&#13;
DEP are rarely granted. Each&#13;
year, hundreds of thousands of&#13;
young people who are uncertain&#13;
about what to do sign up under the -&#13;
DEP. Once students enlist in DEP&#13;
they are given bonuses for&#13;
recruiting other students, thus&#13;
becoming a sort of undercover&#13;
recruiting force. However, if a&#13;
student changes his or her mind a&#13;
few months later because of a job&#13;
offer, school or vocational&#13;
training possibilities, or marriage&#13;
plans, it is usually too late to get&#13;
out of the military unless counseling&#13;
is sought through groups&#13;
such as CCCO.&#13;
"One of th e biggest problems,"&#13;
says Spears, "results from&#13;
counselors and school administrators&#13;
who become active&#13;
helpers of military recruiters. The&#13;
military often seems to be an easy&#13;
way for a counselor to offer&#13;
direction to a student. But the&#13;
counselor or teacher is often&#13;
unaware of the potential problems&#13;
and disappointments facing many,&#13;
enlistees."&#13;
"Military recruiters are&#13;
salesmen," commented Spears.&#13;
"They have a quota to meet,&#13;
superiors to please, and they&#13;
certainly will not take the time to&#13;
explain the possible problems to a&#13;
potential recruit. Students who&#13;
are considering joining the armed&#13;
forces should have the benefit of&#13;
seeing both sides of the story&#13;
before enlisting."&#13;
"Counselors and teachers who&#13;
are in a position to give advice on&#13;
enlistment should be aware of the&#13;
loopholes in the enlistment contract&#13;
which put the enlistee at a&#13;
distinct disadvantage, and in fact,&#13;
offer very few guarantees," says&#13;
Spears. "They should be aware of&#13;
the problems many enlistees face.&#13;
For example, verbal promises are&#13;
often made by recruiters. If the&#13;
military should not come through&#13;
with what the recruiter promised,&#13;
the enlistee has no legal recourse."&#13;
"Another problem encountered&#13;
by enlistees is the fact that many&#13;
important sounding job titles&#13;
(such as combat engineer) turn&#13;
out to be dull, meaningless jobs&#13;
with no application to civilian&#13;
positions. Many military jobs&#13;
have no civilian counterpart, and&#13;
thus the training is often useless&#13;
after you get out of t he military."&#13;
Additional information on&#13;
ASVAB, JROTC, ROTC, DEP,&#13;
military recruitment, and other&#13;
aspects of militarism in education&#13;
may be obtained by writing to:&#13;
The Pre-Enlistment Counseling&#13;
Program, CCCO, 2208 South St.,&#13;
Phila., PA 19146.&#13;
CCCO was founded in 1948 as the&#13;
Central Committee for Conscientious&#13;
Objectors, and is a&#13;
national, non-profit agency&#13;
counseling young Americans&#13;
facing the prospect of military&#13;
service, or those already in the&#13;
military.&#13;
$51,800 more to be cut from budget&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
more than $100. We would rep lace&#13;
equipment currently being used in&#13;
instruction, however, as it would&#13;
be viewed as essential to continue&#13;
instruction."&#13;
Guskin defined the reduction of&#13;
supply and expense budgets&#13;
measure as "usually less than&#13;
$100 expenditures. We'll be&#13;
looking at budgets very carefully.&#13;
Studies are being done on past&#13;
buying practices to see if money&#13;
has gone unused."&#13;
Despite the cutbacks, Guskin&#13;
said some supplies "are&#13;
sacrosanct. Library books are&#13;
never frozen and computer&#13;
equipment tends not to be."&#13;
At the Senate meeting, Guskin&#13;
reminded Parkside faculty that&#13;
the latest cut has resulted from&#13;
failure of the State Senate and&#13;
Gov. Dreyfus to agree on alternative&#13;
solutions to balance the&#13;
state budget by J une 30.&#13;
"This latest cut is unfair to the&#13;
UW System because other&#13;
government activities are being&#13;
assessed smaller reductions,"&#13;
Guskin said. "Regardless of the&#13;
intentions of the Governor or the&#13;
Senate, it seems higher education&#13;
has been assigned a lower priority&#13;
than some other government&#13;
activities."&#13;
"I am very proud of what UWParkside&#13;
has been able to accomplish&#13;
these past few years&#13;
under most difficult fiscal conditions,"&#13;
Guskin said. He cited the&#13;
increase in quality of facu lty and&#13;
programs at Parkside, the addition&#13;
of new mission - related&#13;
undergraduate and graduate&#13;
programs and Parkside's&#13;
leadership in the UW Sys tem in&#13;
innovative academic skills, the&#13;
library and minority programs as&#13;
examples of Parkside's accomplishments.&#13;
All of this, Guskin said, "would&#13;
have been next to impossible&#13;
without a high degree of&#13;
cooperation and commitment&#13;
among all units of this university."&#13;
"Like the economy itself,"&#13;
Guskin said, "times may well get&#13;
worse for the UW System before&#13;
they get better. We will, as we&#13;
have in the past, face the prospect&#13;
of additional belt - tightening&#13;
calmly, systematically and with&#13;
restraint. We will not trade the&#13;
future quality of UW-Pa rkside for&#13;
an expedient solution to today's&#13;
crisis."&#13;
Viewpoint RANGER Photos&#13;
"V Dan Mccorm,• ck&#13;
Do you think the Parkside Rangers will make it to Kansas City?&#13;
Cindy Johnson, senior&#13;
"I believe that Parkside has the&#13;
advantage and the qualifications&#13;
to go again. We have good starters&#13;
and a strong back up going for the&#13;
team. But most important of all&#13;
our team has pride in their game&#13;
and that's how I know we will and&#13;
can make it to K. C. again."&#13;
Rory Spears, junior&#13;
"I hope they make it but I think&#13;
they will come up one game short&#13;
like last year."&#13;
John Gould, sophomore&#13;
"Having worked most of the&#13;
games, I've seen their ups and&#13;
downs. Lately, I feel they're doing&#13;
much better than the competition."&#13;
Charles Perry, freshman&#13;
"We are definitely going to K. C.&#13;
There's no doubt about it. We (the&#13;
team) need your support."&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Brian Felland Ed,tor&#13;
Sue Michetti. . Business Manager&#13;
Wendy Westphal*. •• 'N®ws Ed!|or&#13;
Doug Edenhauser.. Feature Editor&#13;
Brian Passino... Et,!tor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Carol KteeseDarTMrrFarrel'u Dan Ga|Braith, Mike Holmdohl,&#13;
Schlatert Janet Wells L°ri *"•" PreS,0n' Kim&#13;
uwp'rksk,c ma ,b« ^&#13;
wAit.GER is printed by the Union CoonSS?mlo Y5ar except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
Written permission is required tor Publishin3 Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
All correspondence sh^id be »ri^J. °J a.ny P0"'0" of RANGER.&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wl 53141 atWressed »o: Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UWLetters&#13;
to the Editor wilt kJ'.&#13;
",inch margins A^Nettel'.fype*"['t,en' doublespaced on standard size&#13;
duded for verification letters must be signed and a telephone number ina"&#13;
ec,i*orial privileges in JU*" &gt;f0r pub''catlon on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content. n refusing to print letters which contain false or&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 26,1981&#13;
Students present 'Matchmaker' THC treats cancer victims&#13;
She s best known to audiences&#13;
as the Dolly of "Hello, Dolly," but&#13;
Dolly Gallagher Levi began her&#13;
stage life in Thornton Wilder's&#13;
tender comedy "The Matchmaker,"&#13;
the spring mainstage&#13;
production by Parkside's&#13;
dramatic arts students.&#13;
Performances are March 5&#13;
through 7 at 8 p.m. and at 2 p.m.&#13;
on March 8 in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. Admission is $2.50&#13;
for students, staff and senior&#13;
citizens; $3.50 for others.&#13;
Reservations can be made by&#13;
calling 553-2345 or 553-2042.&#13;
Dolly makes us see the fun in a&#13;
life lived with generosity, while&#13;
the play seems to point out the&#13;
inevitability of a little folly, according&#13;
to Professor Leon Van&#13;
Dyke, director of the production.&#13;
Dolly, played by Mary Beth&#13;
Kelleher of Kenosha, finds life&#13;
"never quite interesting enough —&#13;
so I put my hand in here and there&#13;
— and often I'm very much&#13;
amused."&#13;
Andrew Brhel of Cudahy plays&#13;
Horace Vandergelder, the tightfisted&#13;
hardware merchant from&#13;
Yonkers who makes a trip to New&#13;
York to find a new wife and&#13;
eventually wins Dolly's big heart.&#13;
Jim Cisney and John Miskulin,&#13;
both of Racine, are cast as the&#13;
docile clerks in Vandergelder's&#13;
hardware store, who decide on a&#13;
rebellious trip of their own to New&#13;
York while the merchant is away.&#13;
All four wind up in Harmonia&#13;
Gardens, a Battery restaurant&#13;
where their dinner erupts into an&#13;
employer-employee chase scene&#13;
straight out of pure classical&#13;
farce.&#13;
Other members of the cast are&#13;
Scott Lucareli, James Walker,&#13;
Vicky Knapp and Colleen Quiggle,&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
The U. S. Food and Drug Administration&#13;
reports that&#13;
marijuana is receiving a&#13;
comeback from the 19th century&#13;
by again being used as medicine&#13;
in the U. S. Synthetic THC pills&#13;
(the active agent in marijuana)&#13;
are being used to treat victims of&#13;
cancer and glaucoma in research&#13;
projects across twenty states.&#13;
The National Institute mi Drug&#13;
Abuse is distributing the THC pills&#13;
free to cancer patients in hopes&#13;
that the pills will help al leviate the&#13;
nauseous side effects of&#13;
chemotherapy.&#13;
In states where marijuana has&#13;
been approved by state legislation&#13;
for clinical research, prescriptions&#13;
from authorized cancer&#13;
specialists enable patients to&#13;
obtain the THC pills from hospital&#13;
and cancer center pharmacies.&#13;
Specialist authorization to participate&#13;
in research programs is&#13;
approved through the National&#13;
Cancer Institute.&#13;
Marijuana is being used in&#13;
research projects in the following&#13;
states: Washington, Oregon,&#13;
California, Nevada, Colorado,&#13;
New Mexico, Kansas, Texas,&#13;
Minnesota, Louisiana, Illinois,&#13;
Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania,&#13;
New York, Massachusetts,&#13;
Washington, D. C., North&#13;
Carolina, Georgia, and Florida.&#13;
Marijuana decriminalized&#13;
MARY BETH KELLEHER (as Dolly Gallagher Levi) and&#13;
Andrew Brhel (as Horace Vandergelder) rehearse a scene from&#13;
"The Matchmaker."&#13;
all of Racine; Tina M. Greenfeldt,&#13;
Patricia Casciaro and Kristie&#13;
Hauch of Kenosha; Robin Clark of&#13;
Bristol; and Mark Badtke of&#13;
Wilmot.&#13;
The Parkside production&#13;
features four completely different&#13;
sets, designed by Professor&#13;
Charles Erven, a Racine native&#13;
who designed in California and&#13;
Colorado before joining the&#13;
faculty last fall. The production&#13;
also features lavish turn-of-thecentury&#13;
costumes.&#13;
Director Van Dyke notes that&#13;
the visual style of the production&#13;
is based one one of the strengths of&#13;
the proscenium stage, a painting&#13;
wing and drop technique.&#13;
Van Dyke also points out that&#13;
the play's author has strong ties to&#13;
Wisconsin. Wilder was born in&#13;
Madison in 1897. Wilder has&#13;
written that as he grew up he&#13;
passed through "Nine Ambitions:&#13;
saint, anthropologist, archaeologist,&#13;
detective, actor,&#13;
magician, lover, rascal and free&#13;
man." In "Matchmaker," Van&#13;
Dyke comments, "We can see&#13;
that, incredibly, Wilder manages&#13;
to do them all."&#13;
'"The Matchmaker' is family&#13;
entertainment," says Van Dyke.&#13;
"It has a clear morality, is filled&#13;
with mysterious twists and gives&#13;
us voices overflowing with love&#13;
and impishness."&#13;
The National Organization for&#13;
the Reform of Marijuana Laws&#13;
reports that marijuana laws have&#13;
been decriminalized in Oregon,&#13;
California, Alaska, Colorado,&#13;
Nevada, Minnesota, Ohio,&#13;
Mississippi, North Carolina, New&#13;
York and Maine.&#13;
Although the amount and type of&#13;
civil offense varies among these&#13;
states, possession of marijuana is&#13;
still a civil offense for private use.&#13;
Gold investment discussed&#13;
Free thought essay scholarship offered&#13;
Opportunities and risks in investing&#13;
in gold will be the subject&#13;
of a public seminar on Tuesday,&#13;
March 3 in Union 106. (The&#13;
seminar was originally slated for&#13;
Feb. 10, but was cancelled&#13;
because of a snowstorm on that&#13;
date.)&#13;
Seminar panelists will be Terry&#13;
Zastrow of the Midwest Gold and&#13;
Diamond Exchange, Milwaukee;&#13;
Marsha Stewart of E. F. Hutton&#13;
Co., Inc.; Ayse Somersan,&#13;
University Extension economics&#13;
professor; and Richard Keehn,&#13;
UW - Parkside economics&#13;
professor and director of the UW -&#13;
P Economic Education and&#13;
Research Center, which is&#13;
sponsoring the program.&#13;
The seminar will explain and&#13;
compare the various means of&#13;
investing in gold, including coins&#13;
and bullion, gold futures and gold&#13;
stocks.&#13;
The panelists' presentation will&#13;
be followed by a question and&#13;
answer session.&#13;
A $5 will be collected at the door.&#13;
The 1981 Freedom From&#13;
Religion Foundation, Inc.&#13;
scholarship competition is geared&#13;
to law and journalism students.&#13;
Two $500 cas h awards will be&#13;
given — one each for the best&#13;
essays by a law student and&#13;
journalism student.&#13;
Law students are being asked to&#13;
write their papers on a United&#13;
States states - church separation&#13;
case. Journalism students will&#13;
write on the freethought activity&#13;
and philosophy of one of these four&#13;
historic figures: Thomas Paine,&#13;
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Robert&#13;
Ingersoll or Margaret Sanger.&#13;
The competition is open to&#13;
students who attend public&#13;
colleges or universities. The&#13;
contest is also open to Foundation&#13;
members and their families, with&#13;
the exception of Executive&#13;
Financial aids advice given&#13;
The Financial Aids office will&#13;
have an information table set up&#13;
from 10:00 - 3:00 on Tuesday,&#13;
March 3rd, outside the&#13;
Library/Learning Center entrance&#13;
on the Concourse level.&#13;
Financial Aids office staff will&#13;
answer questions and provide&#13;
information on what types of&#13;
financial aid are available and&#13;
how to apply.&#13;
Jan Ocker, Director of the&#13;
Financial Aids Office, said that&#13;
students interested in applying for&#13;
financial aid should make it a&#13;
point to stop by this table for information&#13;
about deadlines.&#13;
Students unable to stop by may&#13;
obtain financial aids information&#13;
by calling 553-2291 or by visiting&#13;
the Financial Aids Office in&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
Council members. Papers should&#13;
be not more than 10 double -&#13;
spaced pages in length and must&#13;
be received at P. O. Box 750,&#13;
Madison, Wis. 53701 b y June 1,&#13;
1981. Winners will be announced&#13;
during the summer. Essays will&#13;
be judged by a committee of five&#13;
appointed by Council Chair&#13;
Rodger Buck.&#13;
The Foundation's first contest in&#13;
1979 was directed at high school&#13;
seniors, and a $1,000 scholarship&#13;
was awarded for the best critical&#13;
essay about the bible. The contest&#13;
was won by Dennis Hillin, now a&#13;
student at UCLA, who will use his&#13;
award this summer, attending&#13;
summer school at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin.&#13;
"A genuine masterpiece. . . .a cinematic work of art that must be&#13;
seen, savored, &amp; seen again."&#13;
Rex Reed&#13;
THE TIN DRUM&#13;
Directed by Volker Schlondorff&#13;
Bassed on the novel by Gunter Grass&#13;
SUNDAY, MARCH 1st - 5 P.M.&#13;
MARKET SQUARE -8600 Sheridan Road, Kenosha&#13;
$3.50 Donation&#13;
Sponsored by Friends of the Kenosha Public Library&#13;
Patronize Ranger&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
** ATTENTION: ?&#13;
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ALL STUDENTS INTERESTED IN&#13;
FINANCIAL AID FOR 1981-82&#13;
Financial aid forms are now available in&#13;
the Financial Aids Office. These forms&#13;
should be filed by March 15,1981. Late&#13;
applications may not be processed in time&#13;
for fall registration. Late Fees will be&#13;
added if you file after June 15,1981 i&#13;
Please Stop in Financial Aids Office 284&#13;
Tallent Hall for Forms and Information&#13;
*&#13;
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^ *&#13;
presents COFFEE HOUSE&#13;
MUSIC&#13;
Featuring:&#13;
SUNDAY&#13;
•WINE! •MUSIC!&#13;
Wednesday afternoon&#13;
noon to 2:00 p.m.&#13;
UNION 104/106&#13;
AFTERNOON&#13;
4 Thursday, February 26, 1981 RANGER I&#13;
Here is your chance!&#13;
Rumor has it that this year's&#13;
limerick competition is tough, so&#13;
you better start scribbling now.&#13;
You have until March 1 at noon to&#13;
submit your own lucky lascivious&#13;
limericks to Ranger's Second&#13;
Annual Parking Lot Limerick&#13;
Contest.&#13;
Remember, limericks must be&#13;
original creations and will be&#13;
judged on the following basis: Wit,&#13;
originality, crudeness and&#13;
neatness.&#13;
This year's prizes are:&#13;
First Prized) $15.00&#13;
Second Prized) $10.00&#13;
Third (3) - A Pitcher&#13;
of Union Beer&#13;
Special Award&#13;
for Most Gross (1)&#13;
Another Pitcher&#13;
Winners will be announced in&#13;
Ranger's first post - St. Patrick's&#13;
Day issue on March 19. All&#13;
limericks submitted will become&#13;
sole property of Ranger.&#13;
RANGER'S SECOND ANNUAL ST. PATRICK'S DAY&#13;
PARKING LOT LIMERICK CONTEST&#13;
- Official Entry Blank&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
Who deserves&#13;
Ronald Reagan?&#13;
Name&#13;
Phone Soc. Sec. No.&#13;
Artwork wanted for Racine Museum&#13;
The Racine Art Association&#13;
announces the organization of an&#13;
exhibition titled WISCONSIN&#13;
FIBER 1981 which will open at the&#13;
Charles A. Wustum Museum of&#13;
Fine Arts in Racine, Wisconsin on&#13;
July 19,1981. To be considered for&#13;
the exhibit interested artists must&#13;
submit 5 color slides of their work&#13;
and a current resume to the&#13;
Exhibition Curator, Ms. Cathy&#13;
Meader, c/o of the Museum, 2519&#13;
Northwestern Avenue, Racine,&#13;
Wisconsin, 53404. There is no entry&#13;
fee but artists are requested to&#13;
include a self - addressed stamped&#13;
envelope for the return of their&#13;
slides. Deadline for receipt of&#13;
slides is March 15, 1981.&#13;
It is hoped that the exhibit will&#13;
include work in techniques such as&#13;
weaving, crocheting, knitting,&#13;
knotting, trapunto, soft sculpture,&#13;
basketry, felting and hardmade&#13;
paper.&#13;
For more information contact&#13;
the Musuem at (414) 636 -9177.&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Sometimes its hard to figure&#13;
out, when you reflect on it, which&#13;
Hollywood star of a class Z 40's&#13;
flick got into the White House,&#13;
Bonzo or his co-star. Which one&#13;
has a "mommy" with more interior&#13;
decorating compulsions?&#13;
Which one has more fleas? Which&#13;
one has more masculine insecurities?&#13;
Which one is readier to&#13;
jump up and down ferosciously&#13;
and grunt and squeal funny noises&#13;
across the boundaries of his&#13;
territory?&#13;
While it is fairly obvious that&#13;
Bonzo (who is a chimp, by the&#13;
way) is the one with the fleas, and&#13;
Ronald Reagan is the one with the&#13;
wife with the passion for prints&#13;
and paintings, the last questions&#13;
would stump a trivia pro. It seems&#13;
that either Reagan or Bonzo would&#13;
fit the criteria.&#13;
As a United States citizen, a&#13;
member of that unusually&#13;
presumptuous tribe of barbarians&#13;
that practiced enslavement of one&#13;
competing tribe well past the peak&#13;
of the trend, that drove another&#13;
competing tribe off the face of the&#13;
continent when it proved too&#13;
susceptible to barbarian diseases&#13;
and habits to be fit for slavery (all&#13;
the while promising its members&#13;
a half acre and a mortgage in the&#13;
suburbs), that had the nerve to&#13;
invoke God in very official&#13;
documents to prove that all men&#13;
are created equal so that it could&#13;
sneer at the women who didn't&#13;
distrust them enough to question&#13;
(until it was just about too late),&#13;
that still views the garbage&#13;
disposal and trash compactor as&#13;
the answer to spiritual doubts and&#13;
positively craves a nuclear war&#13;
because then, finally, we'd all&#13;
know who were God's chosen.&#13;
All right. I've sinned and so&#13;
have my foreparents. Bring on the&#13;
thumbscrews. Reagan should be&#13;
allowed to cut the taxes of the&#13;
wealthy and simultaneously cut&#13;
the throats of the less - than -&#13;
wealthy. He should have the&#13;
power to make public higher&#13;
education exclusively the domain&#13;
of the already gifted. He should&#13;
probably even have some say in&#13;
whether or not we Americans&#13;
should have children or not. In a&#13;
lot of ways, we deserve it all.&#13;
But really, does the rest of the&#13;
world deserve Ronald Reagan?&#13;
AART opens award-winning American drama&#13;
The Milwaukee Repertory&#13;
Theater's (MRT) fifth mainstage&#13;
production of the season, A&#13;
STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE,&#13;
opens February 27 for a six-week&#13;
run through April 5. This Tennessee&#13;
Williams masterpiece will&#13;
be performed nightly, except&#13;
Mondays, at the Todd Wehr&#13;
Theater in Milwaukee's Performing&#13;
Arts Center (PAC).&#13;
Matinees are scheduled on&#13;
selected Wednesdays and Sundays.&#13;
Written in 1947, STREETCAR is&#13;
the story of Blanche DuBois, a&#13;
gent ly- reared Southern&#13;
schoolteacher whose marriage&#13;
has ended tragically. Unable to&#13;
cope with her shattered life,&#13;
Blance retreats into an elaborate&#13;
dream world filled with gaudy&#13;
delusions of grandeur. She comes&#13;
to New Orleans to visit her sister&#13;
Stella and Stella's brutish&#13;
husband, Stanley. Driven by&#13;
fantasies and desire, Blanche&#13;
slips further from reality and&#13;
deeper into a tortured state of&#13;
madness.&#13;
STREETCAR is universally&#13;
considered Williams' most&#13;
powerful drama. Originally&#13;
produced on Broadway in 1947, it&#13;
became the first American play to&#13;
/win all three major awards for&#13;
theater: The Pulitzer Prize, the&#13;
New York Drama Critics' Circle&#13;
Award and the Donaldson Award.&#13;
This spring, the MRT production&#13;
of STREETCAR will make a&#13;
historic four-week tour of Japan&#13;
as part of an unprecedented&#13;
cultural exchange program&#13;
sponsored by the Japan-United&#13;
States Friendship Commission&#13;
and Tokyo's Institute of Dramatic&#13;
Arts.&#13;
MRT Resident Director Sharon&#13;
Ott will stage the production.&#13;
Earlier this season, Ms. Ott&#13;
directed the Rep's MOTHER&#13;
COURAGE, and recently she&#13;
staged a production of HAPPY&#13;
END for Milwaukee's Skylight&#13;
Comic Opera.&#13;
Featured in STREETCAR will&#13;
be Peggy Cowles as Blanche, Tom&#13;
Berenger as Stanley Kowalski,&#13;
Janni Brenn as Stella and Henry&#13;
Strozier as Stanley's friend,&#13;
Mitch.&#13;
Most recently, Milwaukee&#13;
audiences have seen Peggy&#13;
Cowles as Calphurnia in the Rep's&#13;
production of JULIUS CAESAR.&#13;
Appearances on "Marcus Welby,&#13;
M.D." and "The Bold Ones" are&#13;
among her television credits. Ms.&#13;
Cowles also co-starred with Jon&#13;
Voight in the Warner Bros, film,&#13;
THE ALL-AMERICAN BOY. She&#13;
is widely known for her onewoman&#13;
show, AN INDEPENDENT&#13;
WOMAN, which&#13;
was written for her by her&#13;
husband, Daniel A. Stein.&#13;
Tom Berenger has appeared&#13;
extensively in film and on stage.&#13;
His screen credits include leads in&#13;
IN PRAISE OF OLDER WOMAN&#13;
and BUTCH &amp; SUNDANCE: THE&#13;
EARLY DAYS. Mr. Berenger's&#13;
stage roles include Orestes in&#13;
ELECTRA, Nick on WHO'S&#13;
AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF?&#13;
and Jack Hunter in THE ROSE&#13;
TATTOO. On television he portrayed&#13;
Irish Bobby Fallon in the&#13;
C.B.S. adaptation of Pete Hamill's&#13;
novel, FLESH AND BLOOD.&#13;
Janni Brenn has played the&#13;
Goodwoman of Setzuan, Lady&#13;
Macbeth, Anne Frank, Blanche&#13;
DuBois, and Neil Simon leading&#13;
ladies at such regional theaters as&#13;
the Hartford Stage Company, the&#13;
McCarter Theatre, the Folger&#13;
Shakespeare Theatre and the&#13;
Lexington Conservatory Theatre.&#13;
Her television credits include&#13;
roles in JAMES JOYCE: BIRTH&#13;
TO DEATH, JOHNNY WE&#13;
HARDLY KNEW YOU and THE&#13;
GUIDING LIGHT.&#13;
A four-season veteran with the&#13;
MRT, Henry Strozier has appeared&#13;
in such roles in Brutus in&#13;
JULIUS CAESAR, Scrooge in A&#13;
CHRISTMAS CAROL and Candy&#13;
in OF MICE AND MEN. He appeared&#13;
as L.D. Alexander in the&#13;
Jef ferson Award-winning&#13;
production of THE LAST&#13;
MEETING OF THE KNIGHTS&#13;
OF THE WHITE MAGNOLIA at&#13;
the Marriott Lincolnshire. During&#13;
his career, Mr. Strozier has appeared&#13;
with many other regional&#13;
theaters.&#13;
The MRT is well-equipped to&#13;
accommodate handicapped&#13;
patrons. For further information&#13;
on facilities and services, call the&#13;
MRT at 273-7121. A signed performance&#13;
of STREETCAR for the&#13;
deaf and hearing impaired will be&#13;
presented on Sunday, March 22, at&#13;
2:00 p.m.&#13;
Tickets prices range from $3.50&#13;
to $9.00, with a $1.00 discou nt for&#13;
students and senior citizens.&#13;
Tickets are on sale at the PAC box&#13;
office, 929 North Water Street.&#13;
MasterCard or Visa accepted by&#13;
calling (414) 273- 7206.&#13;
Complete a three-year nursing diploma program&#13;
in two years and one summer session.&#13;
An alternative to the first year nursing course&#13;
is now offered in a seven-week summer program at&#13;
St. Luke's Hospital School of&#13;
1301 College Avenue&#13;
Racine, Wl 53403&#13;
414/636-2372&#13;
Prerequisites:&#13;
1. Meet admission criteria&#13;
2. Complete university/college&#13;
courses in anatomy and physiology,&#13;
chemistry, English, nutrition,&#13;
psychology and sociology.&#13;
Nursing&#13;
StLukefe&#13;
Hospital&#13;
Call or write now for admission information.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 26, 1981&#13;
"Altered States" could alter senses by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
"Altered States" combines&#13;
fantasy, reality, suspense and&#13;
some of the most fascinating&#13;
special effects in current film&#13;
offierings to produce a film which&#13;
takes hold of your senses and&#13;
gives them the ride of their life.&#13;
The film explores the theory&#13;
that in the two - thirds of the brain&#13;
for which humans have (to date)&#13;
found no purpos e, there lies other&#13;
states of consciousness which may&#13;
date back as far as the primal&#13;
self; possibly even further back&#13;
into the life forms from which&#13;
humans evolved before the dawn&#13;
of tim e.&#13;
William Hurt is Dr. Eddie&#13;
Jessup, a Harvard professor of&#13;
psychology who is experimenting&#13;
with altered states of consciousness&#13;
via sensory&#13;
deprivation tanks and&#13;
psychotropic mushrooms. Many&#13;
of the experiments Jessup performs&#13;
are patterned after those of&#13;
John Lilly. Hurt gives a&#13;
memorable performance of this&#13;
obsessed man; he crawls inside of&#13;
Jessup and gives great insight as&#13;
to why the doctor does what he&#13;
does.&#13;
The film's best work occurs&#13;
when Jessup has hallucinations&#13;
and regresses. As his experiments&#13;
daringly delve a little further each&#13;
.time, the intensity grows from&#13;
captivating to totally spellbinding.&#13;
A large component of these scenes&#13;
is their religious symbolism (such&#13;
as the Adam and Eve&#13;
hallucination or the earlier one of&#13;
his father). Religion enjoys&#13;
quite a battle against the theory of&#13;
evolution throughout the film.&#13;
Dr. Emily Jessup, Eddie's wife,&#13;
» portrayed by Blair Brown.&#13;
Emily is a physical anthropologist&#13;
and because of her work with&#13;
baboons and other simeons, she&#13;
starts to believe that Eddie could&#13;
possibly be regressing to the&#13;
primal self while everyone else&#13;
feels he is suffering a mental&#13;
breakdown. Their relationship is a&#13;
very unstable and confusing one.&#13;
Emily even exclaims that making&#13;
love to Eddie becomes a mystical&#13;
experience rather than a sexual&#13;
one. They find themselves on the&#13;
verge of a permanent separation&#13;
because, as Eddie puts it, the pain&#13;
they would feel apart would be&#13;
easier to handle than the pain they&#13;
experience while together.&#13;
Brown does a wonderful job as a&#13;
supporting character to Eddie;&#13;
she asks many questions that the&#13;
audience is wondering and is told&#13;
what the audience needs to know.&#13;
As the film and Eddie's experiments&#13;
progress he starts to&#13;
undergo physiological changes to&#13;
the extent that he becomes the&#13;
primal self. Although this&#13;
provides for some interesting&#13;
scenes it stretches the film to the&#13;
point of unbelievability. If,&#13;
however, the film is viewed as&#13;
fantasy from the start it loses&#13;
some credibility but becomes&#13;
much more enjoyable.&#13;
The final tank scene and the&#13;
final scene are very intriguing; a&#13;
total, sensual spectacular. They&#13;
take you on a trip of symb olism&#13;
and suspense that you've probably&#13;
never been on before. The closing&#13;
shot is a beautiful one of love.&#13;
"Altered States" is a needed&#13;
escape which really makes you&#13;
think. It is a trip which should be&#13;
taken by a ll.&#13;
Engelhardt talks on diagnosis&#13;
The Rosemary Kennedy&#13;
Professor of Medicine at&#13;
Georgetown University's Kennedy&#13;
Institute of Ethics will&#13;
present a public lecture on&#13;
"Medical Diagnosis as a Creative&#13;
Process" at UW-Parkside at 7:30&#13;
p.m. on Thursday, March 5, in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
He is Prof. H. Tristram&#13;
Engelhardt, Jr., who holds an&#13;
M.D. degree with honors as well&#13;
as the Ph. D. degree.&#13;
Prof. David Levin said that&#13;
Engelhardt's talk will focus on the&#13;
impact of technology on the&#13;
creative process in- medical&#13;
diagnosis and the nature of&#13;
clinical diagnostic judgement.&#13;
The success of re cent computer&#13;
diagnosis has been so profound&#13;
that we are beginning to see much&#13;
erf prim ary medical care moving&#13;
out of the general practitioner's&#13;
office toward the computer terminal,&#13;
said Levin, a member of&#13;
the philosophy faculty and a&#13;
specialist in biomedical ethics.&#13;
This raises a number of&#13;
theoretical, social and ethical&#13;
issues, he added. One of those&#13;
questions, he said, is whether the&#13;
practice of computer diagnosis&#13;
will weaken an already unstable&#13;
physician-patient relationship.&#13;
Engelhardt is regarded as one&#13;
of the foremost authorities on such&#13;
bioethical quandries. He is an&#13;
editor of five volumes of the&#13;
Philosophy and Medicine Series&#13;
and of "Morality, Science and&#13;
Society," a textbook&#13;
biomedical ethics. He&#13;
authored "Mind-Body:&#13;
Categorical Relation."&#13;
He has served as trustee &lt;rf the&#13;
Masters and Johnson Institute as&#13;
a Fulbright Fellow in 1969-70 and&#13;
is a member of the bioethics&#13;
committee of the National&#13;
Foundation of the March of Dimes&#13;
and a fellow of the Institute for&#13;
Social Ethics and Life Science.&#13;
Before joining the Kennedy&#13;
Institute, Engelhardt was&#13;
associated with the Institute for&#13;
Medical Humanities and&#13;
Department of Preventive&#13;
on&#13;
also&#13;
A&#13;
Medicine and Community Health&#13;
of the University of Texas Medical&#13;
Branch in Galveston.&#13;
Preceding his evening lecture,&#13;
he will talk on biomedical ethics&#13;
before a joint meeting of the&#13;
Parkside Philosophical Society&#13;
and the UW-Parkside Pre-Med&#13;
Club. That session, at 3 p.m. in&#13;
Molinaro Hall, Room D-105, also is&#13;
open to t he public. Both lectures&#13;
are free.&#13;
The two student groups are&#13;
sponsoring his campus appearance&#13;
in c onjunction with the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee&#13;
and the Center for Teaching&#13;
Excellence.&#13;
s~&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Elmwood Plaza Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear /&#13;
Contact&#13;
Senate elections are soon&#13;
by Todd Laszewski&#13;
Have you ever wondered who&#13;
works behind the scenes to resolve&#13;
problems students may have, or&#13;
who strives to change school rules&#13;
and policies for the benefit of th e&#13;
students, or who budgets money&#13;
for student activities? All of the&#13;
these activities and much, much&#13;
more are the responsibility of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA). PSGA is&#13;
comprised of th Senate, which&#13;
votes on matters that affect&#13;
student life at Parkside. The&#13;
Senate meets every Monday.&#13;
If you want to help get things&#13;
done at Parkside, then being a&#13;
senator is just the right thing for&#13;
you. Running for senator is very&#13;
easy! All you have to do to get&#13;
your name on the ballot is pick up&#13;
a petition at the PSGA office,&#13;
located right next to the Coffee&#13;
Shop. Hurry, elections are next&#13;
month! So don't be shy! Don't put&#13;
it off! Don't just sit there and&#13;
complain about how t hings aren't&#13;
getting done at this school! Get up&#13;
and DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT!&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
-Records—Sheet ;V\uslc~&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654 2932&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Bud is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does make a difference.)&#13;
When you say Budweiser,, you've said it all!&#13;
I ANUr iKFD-PI ICr u I MO . CT I r \ i i i c&#13;
6 Thursday, February 26,1981 RANGER&#13;
Applications due Sat.&#13;
Miss Kenosha scholarship offered&#13;
The Miss Kenosha Scholarship&#13;
Pageant, Inc. will again sponsor&#13;
the Miss Kenosha Pageant on May&#13;
2, announced pageant General&#13;
Chairman, Lou Cristiano.&#13;
"We believe it serves the&#13;
community well because it&#13;
focuses attention on the high&#13;
caliber of y oung ladies who reside&#13;
in our area, and we believe it&#13;
serves the youth well because it&#13;
provides the opportunity for&#13;
young ladies to compete to gain&#13;
added poise through public appearances&#13;
and to gain added&#13;
maturity through participation in&#13;
a community program such as the&#13;
Miss Kenosha Pageant,"&#13;
Cristiano said.&#13;
"Most important, it will provide&#13;
the opportunity for girls in&#13;
Kenosha to seek scholarship&#13;
awards amounting to approximately&#13;
$1,200.00 lo cally."&#13;
Gail Ann Martin, the reigning&#13;
Miss Kenosha, achieved a $500.00&#13;
scholarship from the local&#13;
pageant and a $400.00 modeling&#13;
scholarship from John Robert&#13;
Powers Modeling School in&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
To qualify, a young woman&#13;
must be between the ages of 1 7-26&#13;
on the Labor Day Holiday, must&#13;
be a high school graduate by next&#13;
Labor Day, and must never have&#13;
been married.&#13;
Since talent will be considered&#13;
in the judging, each contestant&#13;
should possess some quality of&#13;
talent, either trained or potential.&#13;
In discussing the talent&#13;
qualification, Phil Bruno, pageant&#13;
co-chairperson stressed that the&#13;
range is varied and that no young&#13;
woman must necessarily be&#13;
trained in any specific field.&#13;
Bruno pointed out that many&#13;
entrants in previous pageants did&#13;
not really realize that they&#13;
possessed a quality of t alent until&#13;
they considered entry into the&#13;
pageant.&#13;
Patricia Cristiano, also a cochairperson,&#13;
commented, "Any&#13;
potential entrant may also have a&#13;
talent unrealized." She added, "A&#13;
young woman might be a&#13;
delightful singer, for example,&#13;
without ever having exhibited her&#13;
singing ability before an&#13;
audience."&#13;
Cristiano urges young women to&#13;
enter this scholarship program&#13;
now. "Our program and our&#13;
production has been hailed as the&#13;
best in the state." Entries will&#13;
close on February 28th.&#13;
Judging of the candidates will&#13;
be based on the same criteria used&#13;
at the National Miss America&#13;
Pageant. Each contestant will be&#13;
judged in private interview, in&#13;
evening gown, in swinsuit, and in&#13;
the presentation of her talent.&#13;
Biomedical Research Institute created&#13;
Formation of a Biomedical&#13;
Research Institute at Parkside&#13;
has been approved by the Faculty&#13;
Senate, the chief faculty governance&#13;
body on campus.&#13;
Professor Eugene Goodman,&#13;
life science, who will serve as the&#13;
Institute's-first director, said its&#13;
objectives include promoting&#13;
research at UW-P in the&#13;
biomedical sciences, furthering a&#13;
research environment that fosters&#13;
interdisciplinary inquiry into&#13;
biomedical problems and&#13;
providing a focal point for&#13;
dissemination of r esearch data to&#13;
both the local and national&#13;
biomedical communities.&#13;
Goodman said biomedical&#13;
research programs already in&#13;
progress at UW-P include work on&#13;
development of anti-cancer drugs,&#13;
studies of blood diseases,&#13;
molecular control of growth and&#13;
development, biochemistry and&#13;
physiology of reproductive&#13;
processes, research on environmental&#13;
health hazards, and&#13;
study of the aging process.&#13;
Membership in the Institute will&#13;
be open to faculty members whose&#13;
current research is related to the&#13;
Institute's objectives, Goodman&#13;
said. The Institute will be&#13;
governed by a steering committee&#13;
made up of a director and two&#13;
members elected by the membership.&#13;
The initial directors are&#13;
Professor C-M Chen , life science,&#13;
and Professor Fred Clough,&#13;
chemistry.&#13;
Goodman said the institute will&#13;
conduct a series of lectures and&#13;
Swedes develop alternative energy&#13;
seminars to increase the exchange&#13;
of information between&#13;
the research community on&#13;
campus and the biomedical&#13;
research community in the area.&#13;
He also said formation of the&#13;
Institute is seen as a mechanism&#13;
for demonstrating that substantial&#13;
research is being carried out at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
He said the idea for the Institute&#13;
grew out of informal meetings&#13;
held over the last four years by&#13;
members of the chemistry and life&#13;
science faculties to discuss and&#13;
review experiments in progress&#13;
and discuss research proposals.&#13;
By functioning as a collective&#13;
group, the research strength of&#13;
the institution and the faculty can&#13;
be emphasized, he added.&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
Vattenfall, a Swedish quasi -&#13;
governmental agency, has&#13;
followed the German example by&#13;
switching city transportation to&#13;
electric battery - powered&#13;
vehicles. Vattenfall believes that&#13;
the world's energy crisis warrants&#13;
the gradual elimination of internal&#13;
combustion engines.&#13;
Vattenfall, Volvo, and Saab -&#13;
Scania have joined forces to&#13;
create an electric automobile&#13;
industry which is focused on&#13;
reducing Sweden's dependency on&#13;
imported oil. The Vattenfall&#13;
report states that besides being&#13;
more energy efficient, the battery&#13;
- powered buses are cheaper,&#13;
cleaner and quieter than diesel&#13;
buses.&#13;
Bjorn Ortenheim, a Swedish&#13;
engineer, developed a&#13;
regenerative braking system&#13;
which permits about 70% of the&#13;
energy used during deceleration&#13;
to be redirected back into the&#13;
storage battery. This experimental&#13;
system is currently&#13;
being used on Sweden's electric&#13;
mining rail cars which travel 55&#13;
miles on one charge.&#13;
AGA Company of Sweden,&#13;
Edison Storage Batteries, and&#13;
Birmingham research' labs in&#13;
Great Britain (all controlled by&#13;
International Nickel Company of&#13;
Canada) will soon begin&#13;
production of a rugged reliable&#13;
iron - nickel storage battery with a&#13;
fantastic lifespan of 5000 deep&#13;
discharge cycles with aij, energy&#13;
density of 80 watt - hours per&#13;
kilogram.&#13;
This cassette storage battery&#13;
has about 90% e nergy efficiency.&#13;
It will travel about 250 miles on&#13;
one charge. Employing the&#13;
regenerative braking system,&#13;
vehicle performance using these&#13;
batteries is expected to be just as&#13;
good as that of conventional internal&#13;
combustion vehicles.&#13;
UW archives reviewed&#13;
Seven university system archives&#13;
are scheduled for an extensive&#13;
review of materials on&#13;
hand during what is billed as a&#13;
"search save or destroy mission."&#13;
Financial, personnel and&#13;
student aids records are to be&#13;
inventoried at Parkside, Stout,&#13;
Whitewater, Stevens Point,&#13;
Milwaukee, Eau Claire and&#13;
Madison.&#13;
The project is intended to&#13;
identify significant records for&#13;
preservation and to produce&#13;
administrative savings by setting&#13;
destruction schedules for the rest.&#13;
It is also intended to serve as a&#13;
pilot for similar efforts at other&#13;
university systems composed of a&#13;
number Of institutions.&#13;
To that end it is being supported&#13;
by a grant from the National&#13;
Historical Publications Commission.&#13;
The project will be&#13;
directed by an Archives Council&#13;
Grant Coordinating Committee&#13;
including Project Director J.&#13;
Frank Cook from Madison,&#13;
William Paul from Stevens Point&#13;
and Nicholas C. Burckel from&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Abbott trip planned&#13;
Life Science Club is planning a&#13;
trip to Abbott Labs on Friday,&#13;
April 3. The group will leave&#13;
Parkside at noon and are expected&#13;
to return about 5 p.m.&#13;
The tour will include a trip&#13;
through the pharmaceutical&#13;
division and the research&#13;
department.&#13;
Details will be discussed at the&#13;
next Life Science Club meeting on&#13;
March 4at 1 p.m. in Greenquist D-&#13;
127. A sign-up sheet will be posted&#13;
on the door of Greenquist 359. Any&#13;
interested people are welcome.&#13;
Reality trip Sunday&#13;
There will be a "reality trip" at&#13;
1 p. m. Sunday, March 1 at Alford&#13;
Park, between 7th Ave. and&#13;
Carthage College. The meeting&#13;
site is the bath house parking lot.&#13;
Everyone is welcome to the free&#13;
trip, which will involve looking at&#13;
and enjoying the environment.&#13;
People are invited to bring a&#13;
friend, camera and binoculars.&#13;
Bayuzick exhibits paintings&#13;
"Visions from a Dream Journal,"&#13;
a one-man retrospective&#13;
show of paintings from the last&#13;
eight years by Dennis Bayuzick,&#13;
will open Sunday, March 1, with a&#13;
public reception from 1 to 5 p.m.&#13;
at the Upstairs-Downstairs&#13;
Galleries at Kemper Center, 124 -&#13;
66th St., Kenosha. The show&#13;
continues through March 29.&#13;
Bayuzick, an art professor at&#13;
Parkside, currently is&#13;
represented in the Rockford International&#13;
Print and Drawing&#13;
Show, through March 15 at Rockford&#13;
College, and the Alternative&#13;
Chicago and Vicinity Juried Show,&#13;
through March 7 at the Paul&#13;
Wagonner Gallery, Chicago.&#13;
• -r&#13;
c&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
S""~ ^&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
Patronize Ranger Advertisers&#13;
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ADS&#13;
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JUDY, I'm number 59, and number 60 is on&#13;
the deck.&#13;
$20 if your britches have a lump — Monty&#13;
Hall.&#13;
STEVE BALL — "Love Song", "The King",&#13;
equals like "wow". Cindy&#13;
PAULA, Please — signed.&#13;
DECADENT Student Militant inoclasts&#13;
synthesize non sequiturs. Vindication is&#13;
nonexigency. Voltar&#13;
RANGER — how do you know about MOLN,&#13;
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RON: Sing a song.&#13;
TERESA! We want our beer. JM — Joker&#13;
FOR SALE: Cough and/or cold $1.13 for&#13;
both or takeover payments. Contact: Willie&#13;
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BRIAN AND ANDREA: What's next, strip&#13;
YDATE?ZEDOSOBU&#13;
DOC — Happy (Belated) 19th! We gotta&#13;
"Celebrate" ... on Tuesday? — Bad Girls&#13;
FREE Friday Flowers fall freely for Freddy.&#13;
Ten times fast.&#13;
MIKEY Brat Brat I love you! Baby Cakes&#13;
MY BOYS: I'm drowning in muddy waters&#13;
without you — Casa&#13;
D.S.: Please quit trying to be Miss&#13;
Congeniality and try being REAL. C.D.&#13;
SKIP OUT and make love all day long.&#13;
Reagan haters&#13;
THE FOX chases the vixen, but no one Is&#13;
chasing me.&#13;
ME AND YOU and a dog named . . . Howdy&#13;
Dowdy ... Ml IB&#13;
JANE I hear you have a hot stethoscope.&#13;
Mind if I try it? Miqual&#13;
LOOKING for Mr. Goodbar? Call me (414)&#13;
962-8081 ask for Brendan!&#13;
J.M., JOKER, R.B.: Can't let a dead joke lie.&#13;
lOP's&#13;
TIM, you're the best. Kim K. and Lori F.&#13;
I DEPRECATE travesty by ignoble, paltry,&#13;
defunct cheerleaders. Voltar&#13;
JOKER — Can't you read!? I don't want it.&#13;
Quit dreaming!&#13;
KEN MEYER should be forced to eat wheat&#13;
bread. lOP's&#13;
RODNEY: Does Andy wear Black Silk?&#13;
ZEDOSOBU&#13;
RON: Liberace is sueing!! Start humming&#13;
TINFOIL — I c ome in a cage not with leash.&#13;
— Housepet&#13;
WISK around the bonkers beats ring around&#13;
the bonkers everytime.&#13;
OILERS 80 Packers 0 Jon and Rob are guilty&#13;
— JOKER.&#13;
RINGaround the bonkers! You try scrubbing&#13;
and soaking. Still . . .&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
GIRLS: Rooms. Racine, near bus stop route&#13;
634-8562 weekdays, 862-2883 weekends&#13;
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE. Kenosha&#13;
country setting. 634-8562 weekdays, 862-2883&#13;
weekends.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
77 POLARIS TX340. $700 neg. 681-0094 before&#13;
9:00 a. m.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
EARN while you learn. Assist retired college&#13;
teacher with correspondence reading, and&#13;
organization of his library. Hours can be&#13;
arranged to suit your schedule. Call 694-2251&#13;
for appointment.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30$ will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words&#13;
or less.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE&#13;
Any registered UW-P student or student organization is qualified&#13;
to insert a classified line ad in the Ranger at no cost if under or&#13;
equivalent to 10 words. (Phone numbers equal 1 word.)&#13;
i&#13;
i Classification:&#13;
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Coming Events&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 26&#13;
RtoC{i!eApumif ^ "1 P'm'10 'he Uni°° Ctaema'The °PC°&#13;
Friday, Feb. 27&#13;
VIDEOTAPES at 1 p.m. in Union Square with Pat Benatar, Jethro Tull, Ian Hunter&#13;
and The Babies. Admission is free for Parkside students.&#13;
F1^ ;;,Ma!C°™ X ~.Strug®le *or Freedom" will be shown at 1 p.m. in Union 207&#13;
The film is free and open to the public. Sponsored by the Minority Student tininn&#13;
MOVIE "10" will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema Steffi?aUhe tab&#13;
$1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 28&#13;
FsS"^rbys"d*em "lu?-""- "" Unl0° Bullding- M Mats have bee" "*»•&#13;
Sunday, Mar. 1&#13;
MOVIE "10" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Mar. 2&#13;
COURSE ''Managing Stress and Time" at 8:30 a.m. Call ext. 2312 for more details.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. Jud ge Dennis Flynn will talk on "Sentencing&#13;
Options for Juveniles &amp; Adults." The program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
COURSE "Where is My Business At Right Now?" starts at 7:15 p.m. Call ext 2312&#13;
for more details. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
Tuesday, Mar. 3&#13;
BASKETBALL Women vs. St. Norbert's at 7 p. . The event is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
COURSE "Goal Setting and Planning" starts at 7:15 p.m. Call ext. 2312 for more&#13;
information. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
COURSE "The Post Office and You" at 7:30 p.m. in Tallent Hall. Sponsored by UWExtension.&#13;
SEMINAR "Gold: Opportunity and Risk" at 7:30 p.m. in Union 104. A $5 fee will be&#13;
collected at the door. Call ext. 2312 for more details. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
Wednesday, Mar. 4&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE at 12 no on in Union 104-106 featuring "Sunday Afternoon." Admission&#13;
is free for Parkside students. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
MOVIE "The Homecoming" will be shown at 7 p. m. at the Golden Rondelle. Admission&#13;
is free. The American Film Series is sponsored by UW-Extension. Call&#13;
ext. 2312 for information.&#13;
Track&#13;
Women take third in country&#13;
by Dan McCormack&#13;
The Parkside wrestling team&#13;
squeezed three men through last&#13;
Friday's regional tournament&#13;
held here. Winning a trip to the&#13;
NCAA Division II national&#13;
Championships to he held in&#13;
Davis, Caliiornia Feb. 28 - March&#13;
1 were freshman Brian Irek,&#13;
senior Bob Pekarske and junior&#13;
Dan Winter.&#13;
Irek placed third in the 190-&#13;
pound category with a season&#13;
record of 12-13-1 and might have a&#13;
tough time in California.&#13;
Pekarske didn't finish in the&#13;
qualifying top three here but due&#13;
to his past performance and&#13;
season record of 18-5 drew a&#13;
wildcard berth. Bob has been&#13;
plagued by injuries and lack of&#13;
conditioning. Coach Jim Koch&#13;
commented, "Bob is capable of&#13;
placing in the top four (in&#13;
California)."&#13;
Dan Winter won the 134-pound&#13;
class with two pins. Winter has&#13;
been unable to compete for the&#13;
past month due to a torn cartilage&#13;
in his right knee. Only eight days&#13;
prior to the regionals, Winter&#13;
underwent orthoscopis surgery&#13;
for the knee, which coach Koch&#13;
called "a miracle of modern&#13;
medical science." Stitches were&#13;
Three wrestlers to nationals by Steve Brunner&#13;
Startling their opponents,&#13;
rattling the crowd and battling&#13;
their way through the national&#13;
meet last weekend in Kansas City,&#13;
the women's track team took&#13;
home a surprising third place&#13;
trophy in the first running of the&#13;
NAIA national track meet for&#13;
women.&#13;
In what Coach Barb Lawson&#13;
termed an "exceptionally good&#13;
meet," the Ranger women's&#13;
team, which fielded only six&#13;
runners, took two individual titles&#13;
while adding place finishers in&#13;
other events. Leading the way for&#13;
Parkside was Fond du Lac&#13;
sophomore Wendy Burman who&#13;
won the two mile in stylish fashion&#13;
with a time of 10:47.1. Complimenting&#13;
Burman was freshman&#13;
Kellie Benzow, who edged out&#13;
Lasha Wood of Emporia St. by .5&#13;
seconds, winning the mile in an&#13;
impressive 5:11.6. In what turned&#13;
out to be the key event for&#13;
Parkside, sprinter Dona Driscoll&#13;
came from 20 y ards back to nip&#13;
Edie Heseman of Midland&#13;
Lutheran at the tape in the 600&#13;
yard dash. The fourth place effort&#13;
by Driscoll proved to be very&#13;
valuable in the final team scores&#13;
as Parkside squeezed by fourth&#13;
place Emporia St. by one point.&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson said, "The&#13;
effort by Dona was super. It&#13;
typifies die way the team ran as a&#13;
whole." In other finishes for the&#13;
Ranger women, the two mile relay&#13;
team of Benzow, Sandy Venne,&#13;
Driscoll and Burman took fourth.&#13;
And Joanne Carey placed sixth in&#13;
the long jump with a leap of 17 - 8-&#13;
1/4.&#13;
Men's track Coach Bob Lawson&#13;
pointed out that, "The girls did a&#13;
great job mentally. Many times&#13;
you will see individuals break&#13;
down at nationals and run a bad&#13;
race, but these girls did not." The&#13;
womens' meet, which was comprised&#13;
of 31 teams, was won by&#13;
perennial powerhouse Jackson St.&#13;
with 149 points. Second place&#13;
BOB PEKARSKE&#13;
honors went to Adams St. with 53.&#13;
In the men's division, the two&#13;
mile walk, which meet officials&#13;
labeled "the best race of the&#13;
meet", was won by Parkside's&#13;
Ray Sharp. Sharp, who is one of&#13;
the premier walkers in the U. S.,&#13;
broke the national meet record by&#13;
walking 13:46 in the&#13;
preliminaries. Two nights later&#13;
Sharp shattered his previous&#13;
record by an astonishing 50&#13;
seconds, lapping the field on the&#13;
way to a meet and arena record of&#13;
12:56.9. Coach Bob Lawson said,&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN association&#13;
Tomakeyour&#13;
futuie look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
One Of Wisconsin's Finest Furriers&#13;
Lefij) ati/f CMtfrnj&#13;
SINCE 1 912 FURS SINCE 1912"&#13;
COMPLETE STOCK OF FURS&#13;
COATS • JACKETS • LEATHERS&#13;
CLEANING GLAZING REMODELING&#13;
STORAGE&#13;
6542138 5601 6th Ave.&#13;
removed last Thursday and with&#13;
the doctor affirming that the knee&#13;
was structurally sound, Winter&#13;
was wrestling Friday.&#13;
Dan comes from Franklin&#13;
where as a junior in high school he&#13;
placed fourth in the Wisconsin&#13;
state tournament. As a senior he&#13;
won state in the 132-pound&#13;
category with an impressive 31-0&#13;
record. As a college wrestler, he&#13;
has placed in three national&#13;
tournaments. He will probably be&#13;
rated 2nd or 3rd in California with&#13;
his 20-1 record. Dan placed 7th last&#13;
year in this tournament.&#13;
Showing modesty in making any&#13;
predictions as to how well he will&#13;
do this weekend, Dan says he is&#13;
"not in good shape," and that&#13;
"whatever happens, happens,"&#13;
meaning that he will do his best&#13;
even though he can't quite be at&#13;
his peak ability following his injury.&#13;
Parkside has a sort of legacy&#13;
built around the 134 pound weight&#13;
class, where nationals have been&#13;
won 4 of the last 9 years. Now we&#13;
have another shot at it.&#13;
Dan has an over-all record of 70-&#13;
14, which is only 28 wins behind&#13;
Bob Grunners' Parkside record of&#13;
98 career wins. With yet another&#13;
year of wrestling here, that record&#13;
is well within reach.&#13;
After the tournament in&#13;
California, Irek, Pekarske and&#13;
Winter will meet the rest of the&#13;
team in Edmond, Oklahoma for&#13;
the NAIA tournament held March&#13;
5-7.&#13;
All-state soccer announced&#13;
Thirteen players have been&#13;
named to the 1980 Collegiate All -&#13;
State team in a poll conducted&#13;
among coaches on the four - year&#13;
level, who are members of the&#13;
Wisconsin Soccer Coaches&#13;
Association.&#13;
Because of ties in voting, 13&#13;
players were selected to the first&#13;
team rather than the normal 11.&#13;
The 1980 Wisconsin All - Star&#13;
Team for Colleges and Universities&#13;
is as follows:&#13;
Goalkeeper - P. J. Johns, UWMilwaukee&#13;
Fullbacks - John Amuzu, UW -&#13;
Green Bay; Ian Favill, UW -&#13;
Milwaukee; Rick Hanson, UW -&#13;
Green Bay; Mike Kiefer, UW -&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Mid - fielders - Ivan Delvecchi,&#13;
UW - Green Bay; Pete Knezic, UW&#13;
- Milwaukee; Rick Voightlander,&#13;
UW - Green Bay; Craig Webb, UW&#13;
- Milwaukee&#13;
Forwards - Jeff Dennehy, UW -&#13;
Parkside; Mike Leeker, UW -&#13;
Green Bay; Eric Senn, UW -&#13;
Madison; Chuck Stark, UW -&#13;
Green Bay&#13;
Honorable mention includes:&#13;
Goalkeeper: John Boas&#13;
(Lawrence), Mark LaPorte (UWMadison),&#13;
Joe Niemeyer (UW -&#13;
Green Bay), Dan Opferman (UW -&#13;
Parkside); Fullbacks: Mark&#13;
Ambrosius (UW - Milwaukee),&#13;
Bill Atkinson (St. Norbert), John&#13;
Carlson (UW - Madison), Dave&#13;
Dray (UW - Milwaukee), Kirk&#13;
Ryan (Lawrence), Peter Mcintosh&#13;
(Marquette; Midfield: Rade&#13;
Latinovich (Marquette); Forwards:&#13;
Ron Boucher (UW -&#13;
Platteville), Fabio Marras (UW -&#13;
Milwaukee).&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
"Ray ran a very determined race&#13;
and put out great mental effort,"&#13;
but added, "Ray felt like he didn't&#13;
do as good as he wanted to do."&#13;
Adding to Parkside's point&#13;
production was Steve Ball, a&#13;
junior from Colorado, who captured&#13;
fourth place in the two mile&#13;
walk with his season's best time.&#13;
Parkside finished as the highest&#13;
state school by placing fourteenth&#13;
with 14 points. The meet, which&#13;
attracted over 100 teams, was won&#13;
by Texas Southern with 80 points,&#13;
and Jackson St. followed with 51.&#13;
^REDKENP&#13;
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and women&#13;
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MEMBERSHIPS:&#13;
ONE MONTH (Introduction) - $20.00&#13;
FOUR MONTH MEMBERSHIP - $95.00&#13;
ONE YEAR MEMBERSHIP - $195.00&#13;
COLLEGE ATHLETES - $150.00&#13;
FITNESS CENTER&#13;
2105 - 91st Street&#13;
Kenosha. Wise. 53140&#13;
(414) 694-2221&#13;
NAUTILUS machines are&#13;
designed to Increase&#13;
strength, flexibility and&#13;
cardiovascular condition.&#13;
Thursday, February 26,1981 RANGER&#13;
Rangers lose two&#13;
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
RANGER head basketball coach Steve Stephens&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
A better headline would read&#13;
"Rangers lose one and have one&#13;
stolen." The Rangers closed off&#13;
the regular season by losing to&#13;
Northern Michigan 66-64 and&#13;
Green Bay 55-50, both on the road&#13;
last week.&#13;
Parkside beat both teams here&#13;
earlier in the season so revenge&#13;
had a big part to play in each&#13;
game.&#13;
Last Thursday the Rangers lost&#13;
in three overtimes to a team that&#13;
they easily handled by 15 points&#13;
earlier. Northern Michigan, 17-8&#13;
going in to the game and rated as&#13;
one of the top small college teams&#13;
going into the season, were down&#13;
by seven, 33-26 at halftime.&#13;
The Wildcats were able to get&#13;
the ball inside at will on the&#13;
Rangers and force Parkside into&#13;
some foul trouble. NMU definitely&#13;
won the game from the foul line as&#13;
they converted 18 of 30 attempts&#13;
compared to only fpur of ten shots&#13;
for the Rangers.&#13;
Parkside outshot the Wildcats&#13;
from the field 47 to 42 percent but&#13;
they were outrebounded 42 to 33.&#13;
Parkside was led by senior&#13;
forward Reggie Anderson with 15&#13;
points followed by guard Walter&#13;
Greene with 14. Northern&#13;
Michigan was led by Ail-&#13;
American Mark Mindeman and&#13;
forward Matt Johnson with 20&#13;
points a piece.&#13;
The Green Bay game seemed to&#13;
be another one of those games that&#13;
there was no chance of winning&#13;
even before the game began. The&#13;
five point Phoenix margin was&#13;
scored from the free throw line,&#13;
but that wasn't the whole story.&#13;
All those years, all those dreams, all those sons...&#13;
one of them is going to be a star.&#13;
The State of the Art in Living Animation.&#13;
COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENTS&#13;
A MARTIN RANSOHOFF PRODUCTION&#13;
A RALPH BAKSHI FILM&#13;
"AMERICAN POP"&#13;
Written by RONNI KERN Executive Producer RICHARD ST. JOHNS&#13;
Produced by MARTIN RANSOHOFF &amp; RALPH BAKSHI Directed by RALPH BAKSHI DEll oomysTERSH&#13;
Rj RESTRICTED^]&#13;
if POTHt or MH Gwrtfun|&#13;
Opening at Selected Theatres Near You. &lt;N SElt'CTED THEATRE^ Columbia&#13;
return&#13;
The score was tied at 27 at halftime&#13;
but quickly in the second half&#13;
playmaking Ranger guard&#13;
Chuckie Perry was ejected for&#13;
throwing a pinch at his Green Bay&#13;
counterpart, guard Tom Deiner.&#13;
After the game Perry said that he&#13;
was being pushed around the&#13;
whole time he was in the game.&#13;
Parkside is also to blame for&#13;
their demise by shooting a mere 33&#13;
percent from the field, converting&#13;
on only 19 of 58 shots. Green Bay&#13;
also shot very poorly at 36 percent,&#13;
showing the type of defensive&#13;
battle this game was.&#13;
Parkside was again badly&#13;
rebounded in this game by a 51 to&#13;
33 margin. Parkside did lead in&#13;
one category, possibly the most&#13;
important in this game, the foul&#13;
category. The Rangers were&#13;
called for 27 f ouls compared to&#13;
only 18 for Green Bay.&#13;
The Rangers were led again by&#13;
Anderson with 17 points while&#13;
Wilbert Webb added 13.&#13;
Parkside finished the regular&#13;
season with an unenviable 14-13&#13;
record to take into the playoffs for&#13;
the right to a trip to the national&#13;
tournament in Kansas City March&#13;
9-14.&#13;
"We played OK on the trip, but&#13;
not our best basketball," said&#13;
coach Steve Stephens. "In fact, I&#13;
don't think we've played our best&#13;
basketball yet. Our test games&#13;
could be ahead of u s and I think&#13;
that's a good sign."&#13;
The playoff picture for the&#13;
Rangers right now is not quite set.&#13;
Tonight the Rangers will host the.&#13;
winner of Tuesday night's&#13;
Lakeland-Milton game. If and&#13;
when th e Rangers win that game,&#13;
they will host the runner-up in the&#13;
Wisconsin State University&#13;
Conference, which could be either&#13;
LaCrosse or Stevens Point.&#13;
Tickets for tonight's game are&#13;
available in advance at the PE&#13;
building and at both Information&#13;
centers on campus at $2.00 for&#13;
students and $2.50 for the general&#13;
public. At the door, tickets will be&#13;
$3.00 for the general public, $2.00&#13;
for children 12 and under and $1.00&#13;
for Junior Ranger Club members.&#13;
Fencers&#13;
foiled&#13;
Parkside's men's and women's&#13;
fencing teams took it on the chin&#13;
again last week. The men's team&#13;
lost to all four of its opponents&#13;
Northwestern 20-7, Case Western&#13;
Reserve University 22-5, the&#13;
University of Illin ois 25-2 and the&#13;
University of D etroit 18-9.&#13;
The Ranger men, who are now&#13;
1-13 on the season, were led by&#13;
former Illinois state epee&#13;
champion Mark Speiss with an 84&#13;
record.&#13;
On the disstaff side, the&#13;
women's team won one of its three&#13;
matches on the day. The Rangers&#13;
teat Case Western Reserve 6-3 but&#13;
lost to Northwestern 9-0 a nd to&#13;
Detroit 6-3.&#13;
The Rangers will host the Great&#13;
Lakes, Fencing championships on&#13;
March 14th and the AIAW regional&#13;
meet March 15th before hosting&#13;
the NCAA forcing championships&#13;
March 19 th rough 21.&#13;
C&amp;R AUTO SERVICE&#13;
Quality Auto Work&#13;
Done At&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
10% OFF FOR&#13;
UW-P STUDENTS&#13;
Call 553-9092or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 9, Issue 20, February 26, 1981</text>
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