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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 9, issue 19</text>
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            <text>Weaver loses renewal decision 7-6</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Thursday, February 19, 1981&#13;
^IT University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 19&#13;
Weaver loses renewal decision 7-6&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
The Executive Committee of the&#13;
Humanities Division reconsidered&#13;
on Feb. 13. the non - renewal&#13;
decision made in the case of&#13;
Communication Assistant&#13;
Professor Bruce Weaver.&#13;
Earlier the Humanities Subcommittee&#13;
found that Weaver's&#13;
teaching falls within the division&#13;
average, indicating strength; that&#13;
his service record is strong,&#13;
especially in terms of the communication&#13;
discipline and the&#13;
area of c urriculum planning; and&#13;
that while Weaver has published&#13;
some articles appearing in&#13;
journals of na tional reputation, on&#13;
balance the quantity and quality&#13;
of his research was judged insufficient&#13;
for recommendation for&#13;
renewal and tenure. The subcommittee&#13;
found that neither his&#13;
teaching nor service were sufficiently&#13;
outstanding to compensate&#13;
for the less strong&#13;
category of creative activity.&#13;
The Committee voted 7-6 to&#13;
affirm the opinion of the&#13;
Humanities Sub - committee.&#13;
James Dean, Lee Thayer, Andrew&#13;
McLean, Emmett Bedford,&#13;
Richard Carrington, Wayne&#13;
Johnson, and Eugene Norwood&#13;
voted in favor of re - affirmation,&#13;
while Carole Vopat. Carl Lindner,&#13;
Dennis Dean, Donald Kummings,&#13;
Robert Canary, and 0. L. Johnson&#13;
voted against affirming the sub -&#13;
committee's denial.&#13;
Weaver asserted that his service&#13;
was "very strong on the&#13;
divisional, university, community,&#13;
state, and national&#13;
levels."&#13;
As communication coordinator&#13;
working on curriculum changes&#13;
demanded by APPR, Weaver and&#13;
others developed a program with&#13;
a strong theoretical base, making&#13;
65 curricular changes.&#13;
Dr. Redding, professor at&#13;
Purdue, evaluated that program&#13;
on March 3, 1979: "I agree in&#13;
substance with the 14 page . . .&#13;
document submitted by Professor&#13;
Weaver. More specifically, the&#13;
statement of basic philosophies&#13;
and goals ... is one of the best of&#13;
any I have come across in the&#13;
nation, particularly, that is, in the&#13;
context of an undergraduate&#13;
program." Redding stated that&#13;
these goals were congruent with&#13;
current opinions in the field&#13;
nationally, and appropriate to the&#13;
industrial community mission of&#13;
UW - P, while being feasible,&#13;
considering available physical&#13;
and human resouces.&#13;
Weaver stated that he has been&#13;
active serving on many university&#13;
committees, coaching debate and&#13;
forensics at UW - P, lecturing,&#13;
conducting debate workshops, and&#13;
judging tournaments in Racine,&#13;
Whitewater, Kenosha and&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
ASST. PROF.&#13;
BRUCE WEAVER&#13;
"On the state level, I've served&#13;
as Chairman of the Rhetorical&#13;
Theory and Criticism Interest&#13;
Group for the Wisconsin Communication&#13;
Association. In this&#13;
capacity, I've coordinated three&#13;
programs for the state convention.&#13;
On the national level, I&#13;
was elected to membership in the&#13;
steering committee, the alternative&#13;
communication caucus for&#13;
the Speech and Communication&#13;
Association of American,"&#13;
Weaver said. "I would assert from&#13;
the evidence presented to you that&#13;
my service record is not just&#13;
strong, but exceptional."&#13;
In the teaching area, Weaver&#13;
has received consistently high&#13;
student evaluations (.2 to .5 points&#13;
above divisional average on a 5&#13;
point scale), even when teaching&#13;
out of his formal training in&#13;
rhetorical theory and criticism.&#13;
Judy Pugh, Communication 101&#13;
co - teacher, said, "Dr. Weaver's&#13;
goal is not just to introduce new&#13;
material to the students. Additionally,&#13;
he challenges the&#13;
student to make him think for&#13;
perhaps the first ume about&#13;
himself, his judgments, ethics,&#13;
beliefs, and the kind of communication&#13;
messages he sends&#13;
and receives."&#13;
Rebbecca Rubin, Communication&#13;
Coordinator, said that&#13;
Weaver's teaching has positively&#13;
and significantly affected both&#13;
students' education and communication&#13;
enrollments.&#13;
"I would like to point out,"&#13;
Weaver stated, "three new pieces&#13;
of information... Number one, an&#13;
article has recently appeared in&#13;
print which was not mentioned at&#13;
all in my original file: an article&#13;
dealing with heterosexual&#13;
presumption in communication&#13;
research which appeared in&#13;
Alternative Communications,&#13;
January 19, 1981."&#13;
"Second, I have received an&#13;
acceptance from the editor of t he&#13;
Journal of the American&#13;
Forensics Association for my&#13;
article entitled, "Arguments for&#13;
Circumstance and Definition: the&#13;
Substance of Parliamentary&#13;
Polarization." Weaver said, "The&#13;
revised article was sent out 2-1/2&#13;
weeks ago."&#13;
"The third piece of new information&#13;
was the letter from&#13;
.Professor Jerry Frye, who was&#13;
one of the three persons asked by&#13;
the subcommittee to respond to&#13;
my research," Weaver stated.&#13;
"Currently, I have eight articles&#13;
in print, with another definitely&#13;
accepted. I've given 11 papers at&#13;
professional meetings. I've held a&#13;
National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities Summer Seminar on&#13;
Aristotle's rhetoric at the&#13;
University of Nebraska in Lincoln.&#13;
I believe if o ne were to look&#13;
at the quantity of my creative&#13;
activity in research, one would&#13;
conclude that I certainly have a&#13;
strong commitment to scholarship&#13;
and that I would probably continue&#13;
to produce in years ahead,"&#13;
Weaver stated.&#13;
"I believe my research is of&#13;
high quality," Weaver said.&#13;
"First, I will present to you&#13;
statements made by respected&#13;
communication scholars outside&#13;
UW-P who have read and&#13;
evaluated my work. Second, I will&#13;
Continued On Page Two&#13;
Local businesses compared to Twin Cities&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
On Feb. 2 at the Social Science&#13;
Roundtable, David Beal, Business&#13;
Editor of the Milwaukee Journal,&#13;
compared entrepreneurship and&#13;
innovation in Minnesota's Twin&#13;
Cities area with southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
Beal stated that a survey taken&#13;
last June in Wisconsin underscored&#13;
the lack of new companies&#13;
selling stock to the public&#13;
for the first time. Yet, at the same&#13;
time, many acquisitions and&#13;
mergers of Wisconsin - based&#13;
companies into other companies,&#13;
have occured.&#13;
Despite the rugged market&#13;
climate, the Twin Cities area has&#13;
had many more successful&#13;
companies than Wisconsin, according&#13;
to Beal. He also said that&#13;
many of these companies went&#13;
public.&#13;
Beal noted that although&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin tends to&#13;
have smaller service businesses,&#13;
such as florists, this type does not&#13;
tend to grow and create jobs.&#13;
During the current recession,&#13;
Beal found that the Minneapolis&#13;
and St. Paul area's summer&#13;
unemployment rate was about&#13;
4.5% while the Milwaukee area&#13;
rate was between 6% - 7%. The&#13;
Twin Cities area also had quite a&#13;
lot of construction. Beal&#13;
remarked, "It did seem to have a&#13;
lot of th e earmarks of the kind of&#13;
growth that you see in the Sun&#13;
Belt."&#13;
Beal reported that a comparison&#13;
between the 10 largest companies&#13;
in Milwaukee and in the St. Paul&#13;
area found that those in the St.&#13;
Paul area had three times the&#13;
sales. He added, "But more important.&#13;
.. was the fact that these&#13;
companies were, in terms of&#13;
dollars that they made from sales,&#13;
twice as profitable."&#13;
"Southeastern Wisconsin and&#13;
the band of industrial regions&#13;
along the lakefront, stretching&#13;
from Kenosha right up through&#13;
Milwaukee to north of M ilwaukee&#13;
... is an area where ... a lot of&#13;
the talk about the word 're - industrialization'&#13;
and the concern&#13;
about that applies," Beal said.&#13;
Although Detroit, Ohio, and&#13;
Pennsylvania have seen more of&#13;
the problem, Beal explained that&#13;
the maturing industries in&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin are no&#13;
longer the job centers that they&#13;
(Mice were. However, he believes,&#13;
"If you have other growing&#13;
companies coming along to&#13;
replace them, then you're in&#13;
pretty good shape."&#13;
However, there aren't as many&#13;
growing companies who are&#13;
willing to take risks in Southeast&#13;
Wisconsin as there are around the&#13;
Twin Cities, according to Beal.&#13;
One difference that Beal noted:&#13;
"They have proposed a series of&#13;
changes in stock laws which would&#13;
make it easier for small companies&#13;
to issue their first public&#13;
stock. They are concerned that&#13;
they aren't building enough; that&#13;
they are going over too far to the&#13;
side of protecting the investor, on&#13;
the one hand, as opposed to encouraging&#13;
business risk, on the&#13;
other."&#13;
Beal continued, "Another thing&#13;
was the effort of big business to&#13;
help small business, and, maybe,&#13;
more of a recognition that small&#13;
business is an innovator and has&#13;
bet i, (certainly that is the&#13;
record) in the seventies."&#13;
"The company that is particularly&#13;
interesting to look at,"&#13;
Beal said, "around Minneapolis&#13;
and St. Paul is Control Data which&#13;
has set up a small business and&#13;
technology center and brought in&#13;
about 40-50 small businesses to try&#13;
to help them in their formative&#13;
stages," Beal said.&#13;
Mature business and industry in&#13;
the Twin Cities has supported the&#13;
creation of The Minnesota&#13;
Cooperation Office which, according&#13;
to Beal, "seeks to identify&#13;
— t he entrepreneurs and the inventors&#13;
who have not very many&#13;
places to go. They need to talk to&#13;
somebody about it."&#13;
"Some of these people are&#13;
straight off the wall and some of&#13;
the others might have great ideas.&#13;
They just need to get a little help&#13;
in the formative stages," explained&#13;
Beal. "They might have&#13;
the kind of idea that would lead to&#13;
a company that might be a substantial&#13;
job center to replace other&#13;
companies that are moving down&#13;
toward the mature stage of their&#13;
product cycles."&#13;
According to Beal, this effort&#13;
provides the link between entrepreneurs&#13;
with seed capital and&#13;
inventors with promising ideas.&#13;
Here, big business is helping&#13;
small business because big&#13;
business recognizes that it is too&#13;
bureaucratic and does not have&#13;
the structure to bring about innovations&#13;
that would be desirable&#13;
from the community standpoint,&#13;
he said.&#13;
Innovation centers are being&#13;
talked about in Wisconsin, Beal&#13;
noted. In fact UW-Whitewater has&#13;
recently set up an invention&#13;
center. Possibilities are being&#13;
discussed by the Milwaukee&#13;
School of Engineering. A Madison&#13;
group, Wisconsin for Research,&#13;
has studied the Princeton, New&#13;
Jersey area, the Silicon Valley&#13;
area south of Sa n Francisco, and&#13;
Nbrth Carolina's research&#13;
triangle where cooperative efforts&#13;
between industries and universities&#13;
have led to major job centers;&#13;
Wisconsin for Research is&#13;
currently trying to assemble land&#13;
for a research park in the Madison&#13;
area.&#13;
Governor Dreyfus relates the&#13;
comeback of the Massachusetts'&#13;
milltowns and Boston area to the&#13;
number of high technology&#13;
companies recently spawned&#13;
there, according to Beal. As a&#13;
result, Dreyfus is trying to encourage&#13;
more high technology&#13;
industries in Wisconsin by holding&#13;
small business forums around the&#13;
state; having the State Security&#13;
Commission look at easing&#13;
s e c u r i t i e s' r e g is t r a t i on&#13;
requirements of new companies;&#13;
and focusing attention on efforts&#13;
to ease the capital gains tax, he&#13;
said.&#13;
Beal referred to the book,&#13;
Wealth and Poverty, which argues&#13;
that rugged treatment of capital&#13;
gains has a side effect of being a&#13;
big business protection act&#13;
because the capital gains treatment&#13;
is crucial to the formation&#13;
and early growth of small companies.&#13;
Yet, small high technology&#13;
companies generated most of the&#13;
employment growth in America&#13;
during 1969 -1976 at a rate thirteen&#13;
times faster than mature firms.&#13;
UW-P political science&#13;
professor Ken Hoover, remarked,&#13;
"It seems like these heavily&#13;
durable goods manufacturers are&#13;
being taken over by outside&#13;
corporations, and that we are&#13;
losing local control on the&#13;
manufacturing end and on the&#13;
consumption end because the&#13;
malls take the money that is spent&#13;
on consumer goods out of the&#13;
community. So it doesn't recycle&#13;
here. So it is becoming&#13;
recolonization where they get the&#13;
cheap labor and raw materials out&#13;
of here and take it some place else&#13;
or send the money someplace&#13;
else."&#13;
"It is going on, and it is a big&#13;
concern," Beal agreed. Then he&#13;
sadly commented on the fact that&#13;
many companies based away&#13;
from the local area, for example&#13;
in New York, don't care about the&#13;
plant town.&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Dirty limerick entry form&#13;
• Review: 'Something's&#13;
Afoot' live show&#13;
• Chuckie Perry kills&#13;
'em dead &#13;
2 Thursday, February 19,1981 RANGER&#13;
Parking tickets&#13;
create problems&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Parking has always been, and&#13;
probably always will be, a thorn in&#13;
many Parkside students' sides.&#13;
The 1.55 oversell factor of white&#13;
parking stickers is the main&#13;
cause. After all, how can 2000&#13;
white permit holders find parking&#13;
places when there's only 1500&#13;
white permit spaces?&#13;
This has caused problems for&#13;
some Parkside students, one of&#13;
whom telephoned me after&#13;
complaining to Security about&#13;
receiving a ticket.&#13;
The student argued that she had&#13;
read in Ranger that two warning&#13;
tickets would first be given. The&#13;
student was then told that Ranger&#13;
made a mistake concerning the&#13;
ticket policy.&#13;
Ranger wasn't wrong, but the&#13;
student made a mistake because,&#13;
in her case, two warning tickets&#13;
were previously issued.&#13;
The policy that Ranger earlier&#13;
reported was that a minimum of&#13;
two warning tickets will be issued&#13;
to any vehicle violating any of the&#13;
following parking violations&#13;
before a parking violation ticket is&#13;
issued: A. parking prohibited&#13;
(posted), B. parking in non -&#13;
designated area, C. no permit, D.&#13;
parking with improper permit for&#13;
area, E. improper parking in&#13;
designated area, F. parked in&#13;
physically disabled stall, G.&#13;
restricted parking (specific time).&#13;
The only change in the above&#13;
procedure is letter F., because&#13;
state statutes concerning&#13;
physically disabled parking were&#13;
recently changed. "Anybody&#13;
parking in a handcap zone without&#13;
the (handicap) plate or the plaque&#13;
(distributed by the Department of&#13;
Transportation)... is going to get&#13;
a ticket," said Ron Brinkmann,&#13;
Director of Security.&#13;
But there are exceptions to the&#13;
"two - warnings - first" policy,&#13;
according to Brinkmann. "These&#13;
are at the discretion of the officer.&#13;
If he feels that somebody is&#13;
blocking traffic or impeding the&#13;
flow of traffic, no warning is going&#13;
to be given out," said Brinkmann.&#13;
"It's asinine to even think a&#13;
warning should be given to&#13;
someone that blocks traffic."&#13;
But a warning need not always&#13;
be given. "If the officer feels he&#13;
wants to issue one, he can. He does&#13;
not have to ticket it if he doesn't&#13;
feel that it's warranted or he can if&#13;
he feels the condition warrants a&#13;
warning ticket for some reason,"&#13;
Brinkmann said.&#13;
Brinkmann feels that many&#13;
students have a misconception&#13;
about the warning ticket policy.&#13;
The policy is that two warning&#13;
tickets will be given for any&#13;
violation, not two warnings per&#13;
violation.&#13;
"It's two warnings mainly to get&#13;
them aware of 'Hey, you better&#13;
start reading the rules and&#13;
regulations'," said Brinkmann.&#13;
Bruce Weaver loses&#13;
renewal decision&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
discuss specifically the journals in&#13;
which I have been published, and&#13;
will conclude from that, that all of&#13;
these journals are of high&#13;
quality."&#13;
Donovan Ochs, professor at&#13;
University of Iowa, wrote to&#13;
Weaver about an article which&#13;
appeared in Communication&#13;
Quarterly. Ochs felt the article&#13;
was provocative and enabled him&#13;
to understand cultural association.&#13;
&#13;
Howard Martin, professor at&#13;
University of Michigan, found&#13;
Weaver's research appealing in&#13;
broad humanistic interest. Martin&#13;
stated that Weaver's careful&#13;
analysis of the "Peace Debate and&#13;
the Destruction of Friendhip"&#13;
which appeared in the Quarterly&#13;
Journal of Speech "attests to its&#13;
substance, interest, and quality of&#13;
presentation."&#13;
Keith Erickson, professor at&#13;
Texas Technical University,&#13;
writes: "Weaver is articulate,&#13;
original, and thought provoking.&#13;
Ranger wants&#13;
to hear from&#13;
YOU I&#13;
Got a gripe, a question, a startling revelation,&#13;
a compliment, a rebuttal, or something on&#13;
your mind that you want to share?&#13;
Write a letter to the editor!&#13;
Just follow the guidelines printed in&#13;
the masthead (to the right).&#13;
Photos by Brian Passino&#13;
Outdoor fun&#13;
Physics Club shows its winning form in the outdoor volleyball&#13;
tournament held during Winter Carnival last week. More Winter&#13;
Carnival pictures are on page 5.&#13;
Offer financial aid to go abroad&#13;
He is, in my estimation, a&#13;
disciplined scholar who will have&#13;
a long productive academic life.&#13;
His articles published in highly&#13;
respected journals in the field of&#13;
speech communication are excellent."&#13;
&#13;
Jerry Frye, professor at the&#13;
University of Minnesota, said, "It&#13;
is interesting to me that he has&#13;
been successful at the state,&#13;
regional, and national levels . . .&#13;
Overall, in my opinion, Communication&#13;
Quarterly and&#13;
Quarterly Journal of Speech&#13;
articles are sound and represent&#13;
useful contributions to the a rea of&#13;
rhetorical theory."&#13;
Weaver said, "I believe it is&#13;
reasonable to conclude from these&#13;
statements that scholars . . .&#13;
believe my research is of good&#13;
quality."&#13;
Weaver said that he has&#13;
published in the Quarterly Journal&#13;
of Speech which was the first&#13;
American journal to be devoted&#13;
exclusively to rhetoric and speech&#13;
A special King Cola Fund, to&#13;
assist men and women college&#13;
students who may need some&#13;
Financial aid to go abroad this&#13;
summer as "YMCA World Ambassadors,"&#13;
to promote peace&#13;
through friendship and understanding&#13;
among the peoples of&#13;
the world, has been announced by&#13;
Walter S. Mack, Chairman of the&#13;
Board of King Cola World Corporation,&#13;
the new national cola&#13;
company.&#13;
Mr. Mack further stated that&#13;
while all needful, qualifying&#13;
and is the major journal of the&#13;
Spe ech Communication&#13;
Association. This journal has&#13;
printed more articles which have&#13;
become classics of the field than&#13;
any other journal.&#13;
Weaver discussed the Journal of&#13;
Communication Quarterly, the&#13;
Journal of the American&#13;
Forensics Association, and&#13;
Alternative Communications.&#13;
Weaver named numerous well -&#13;
known scholars who have&#13;
published in these journals.&#13;
Weaver said that the Journal of&#13;
Wisconsin Communication&#13;
Association is a state journal with&#13;
various Wisconsin researchers'&#13;
work published in it.&#13;
"In all the journals in which my&#13;
research has appeared, it has&#13;
been in excellent company. I&#13;
believe this argument combined&#13;
with the statements of prominent&#13;
persons in my field allows me to&#13;
conclude that the quality of my&#13;
research is satisfactory," Weaver&#13;
said.&#13;
Turning to research plans,&#13;
Weaver said, "I'm interested in&#13;
the polarization of rhetorical&#13;
positions which occur in particularly&#13;
emotional times, such as&#13;
those experienced in Greece ... in&#13;
18th centur y England during the&#13;
French Revolution, and in&#13;
America during Viet Nam, and so&#13;
forth. I'm concerned in all of these&#13;
investigations with looking at&#13;
what happens to persons who&#13;
attempt to publicly present a&#13;
moderate position when the&#13;
rhetoric has become polarized and&#13;
fixed, and when rhetors are no&#13;
longer talking constructively, but&#13;
are merely restating their&#13;
positions in ever more emotional&#13;
and strident ways." Weaver said,&#13;
Little work has been done to find&#13;
the genre of rhetoric of&#13;
polarization or the genre of the&#13;
frustrated moderate rhetoric. I&#13;
hope to eventually draw some&#13;
generalized conclusions from&#13;
these and other studies."&#13;
college students will be eligible for&#13;
such assistance without regard to&#13;
race, creed, or color, special&#13;
consideration for financial aid will&#13;
be given to Black and Hispanic&#13;
students who wish to become&#13;
YMCA World Ambassadors.&#13;
An impartial Judging Committee,&#13;
headed by officers and&#13;
directors of the King Cola&#13;
Foundation, will judge applicants&#13;
for this assistance.&#13;
Mr. Mack is Honorary Chairman&#13;
of the YMCA World Ambassadors&#13;
project, by which&#13;
young American college students&#13;
are recruited to go in small groups&#13;
as volunteers to various parts of&#13;
the world to help develop the&#13;
peace objective among the&#13;
peoples of the world, including&#13;
Africa, Asia, Europe, and the&#13;
Americas. In those localities, the&#13;
"Ambassadors" work as volunteers&#13;
in various service projects,&#13;
including camp counseling,&#13;
conversational English teaching,&#13;
rural development work camps,&#13;
YMCA intern training, day-care&#13;
center activity and missionary&#13;
hospital service.&#13;
For the summer experience of&#13;
five to seven weeks — and since&#13;
the projects usually take place in&#13;
developing nations — participants&#13;
ordinarily pay their own travel&#13;
and living expenses, so as not to be&#13;
a burden on the host country or the&#13;
local community. These expenses,&#13;
which are about $1500 to $2000&#13;
(depending on location and&#13;
duration) cover round trip air&#13;
fare, and modest, but adequate&#13;
room and board. Each team stays&#13;
at some time at a private home&#13;
abroad, to enhance intercultural&#13;
understanding.&#13;
The King Cola Fund has been&#13;
designed to relieve selected&#13;
college students of some of this&#13;
expense.&#13;
The World Ambassadors project&#13;
has been described as a "mini&#13;
Peace Corps." Over 300 young&#13;
Americans have been past participants&#13;
of the program, assisted&#13;
by hundreds of indigenous&#13;
"Ambassadors" in over 45&#13;
countries that have hosted&#13;
American "Ambassador" teams.&#13;
Thousands of international&#13;
youths, in camps, villages, and&#13;
cities have been touched by the&#13;
World Ambassadors, and the&#13;
World Ambassadors have met&#13;
with Prime Ministers, peasants,&#13;
and others in various stations of&#13;
life.&#13;
The proposed summer of 1981&#13;
YMCA World Ambassadors&#13;
Project includes the following&#13;
areas: Japan, Hokkaido,&#13;
Thailand, Hong Kong, Philippines,&#13;
Taiwan, India, Egypt,&#13;
Israel, Portugal, Italy, Greece,&#13;
Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico,&#13;
Panama, Columbia, Costa Rica,&#13;
Ecuador, Ghana, Nigeria and&#13;
Senegal.&#13;
Application should be made on&#13;
the form which is available in the&#13;
Ranger office, WLLC D-139 .&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
SSl-W ..'.'...'...'.Business Manager&#13;
Edltor S»&#13;
hal Feature Edjtor&#13;
Edenhauser Editor&#13;
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lno Editor Ginger Helgeson Edjtor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
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taroi K lees, D an McCormack, Lor i M eyer, Br uc e P re ston, K im&#13;
Schlater, Janet Wells&#13;
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RANGER fs'printpd'hu'thV ?"r&#13;
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he academic year except during breaks and holidays, Written DermiV^^L - j^ Co°Perative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin. All rnrr^nnoni rf^'red for reprint of any portion of R ANGER.&#13;
Parkside Kenos"" MM?** addreSSecI ,0; Parkside Ranger&#13;
' WLLC D13&#13;
'&lt; UWpaoe^&#13;
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on °n T hursday. The R ANGER defamatory c^fmt pr,v,leges in refusing to pri nt lett ers w hich con tain fal se or &#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 19,1981&#13;
lnternational scholar Thayer teaches here&#13;
by Janet Wells&#13;
Communication Professor Lee&#13;
Thayer will address two forthcoming&#13;
conferences on communication&#13;
and culture His&#13;
lecture on "Culture and Communicability"&#13;
will open the&#13;
Fourth Conference on Culture and&#13;
Communication, which will be&#13;
held at Temple University in&#13;
Philadelphia on April 9 - 10&#13;
On February 20 - 22, Thayer will&#13;
be a featured speaker at the San&#13;
Diego Conference on Communication&#13;
and Culture His&#13;
paper, "The Media, Morality, and&#13;
American Culture," is related to&#13;
his recently published book,&#13;
Ethics, Morality, and the Media:&#13;
Reflections on American Culture.&#13;
Last November, the First International&#13;
Conference on&#13;
Communicology drew Thayer and&#13;
eight other international scholars&#13;
to Cortez' palace in Cocoyoc,&#13;
Mexico, to discuss communication's&#13;
potential for&#13;
restoring humanity to civilization.&#13;
The paper he presented at that&#13;
conference "Communication and&#13;
the Dilemma of Modern Man:&#13;
Reach vs. Grasp," has since been&#13;
widely discussed. It is probable&#13;
that the topic will be further explored&#13;
in book form.&#13;
Thayer has published nine&#13;
books and authored nearly 100&#13;
major articles and presentations.&#13;
A member of Parkside's faculty&#13;
since fall of 1978, T hayer teaches&#13;
courses in organizational communication&#13;
and in communication&#13;
and culture, and coordinates the&#13;
university's Honors Program.&#13;
Immediately prior to his arrival&#13;
at Parkside, he was&#13;
simultaneously a Fulbright&#13;
Scholar at the University of&#13;
Helsinki (Finland) and a&#13;
Distinguished Visiting Professor&#13;
at the University of Houston.&#13;
COMMUNICATION PROFESSOR&#13;
Recruited to Parkside's faculty&#13;
by a university search team,&#13;
Thayer was attracted by the&#13;
administration's "commitment to&#13;
quality," and by the Wisconsin&#13;
University system. "Wisconsin,&#13;
by and large, is a very intelligent&#13;
system, and a good one to work in&#13;
Community services offered&#13;
Parkside an education equal to&#13;
what is available at any school in&#13;
the country. Thayer's familiarity&#13;
with other institutions of higher&#13;
learning includes lecturing and&#13;
teaching at most of the major&#13;
universities in the United States,&#13;
including all of the Big Ten.&#13;
Parkside's pastoral campus&#13;
also appealed to the professor,&#13;
who was tired of urban settings. In&#13;
Houston, he says, they planted&#13;
fourteen trees, all sycamores, and&#13;
none of them was doing well."&#13;
Parkside's abundant trees and&#13;
rolling hills — described to him in&#13;
a telephone conversation with a&#13;
member of the search team —&#13;
were persuasive.&#13;
The University's location in&#13;
what he calls "a cultural&#13;
corridor" was another important&#13;
element in Thayer's decision to&#13;
move here. "From south of&#13;
Chicago up to Milwaukee is&#13;
culturally the most active area in&#13;
the country," he said.&#13;
A fervent student of and participant&#13;
in culture in all of its&#13;
forms, Thayer's background&#13;
spans widely diverse experiences.&#13;
His poetry has been published in a&#13;
college collection. He withheld his&#13;
first novel from publication rather&#13;
then submit it to the publisher's&#13;
proposed changes. Earlier, as a&#13;
brass player and arranger,&#13;
Thayer dropped out of hi gh school&#13;
and left his Grenola, Kansas, farm&#13;
home to travel with a band. He&#13;
_ played jazz for three years with&#13;
LEE THAYER 11118 "territory dance band."&#13;
A chance gig near the&#13;
.... Mr. Guskin sold me on the University of Wichita led to a B.A.&#13;
place," he said. in English and Psychology, and&#13;
Two years after his arrival then a position with a&#13;
Thayer's enthusiasm for Parkside technological marketing firm,&#13;
is undiminished, though he notes He earned a second degree —&#13;
that "the students and the faculty this one in Civil Engineering —&#13;
here underrate themselves." It is while serving on a naval escort&#13;
possible, he believes, to secure at vessel in the South Pacific.&#13;
Returning to the University of&#13;
Wichita, he completed a Masters&#13;
Degree in English in eight months.&#13;
&#13;
A new directory of " University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside Services&#13;
for the Community" is available&#13;
from the UW-P Public Information&#13;
Office and at libraries&#13;
in Racine and Kenosha Counties.&#13;
Faculty - staff services include&#13;
a speakers' bureau for civic,&#13;
professional, service and cultural&#13;
organizations; the Parkside&#13;
Resource Enrichment Professor&#13;
(PREP) program which provides&#13;
speakers for high schools; performing&#13;
arts programs in music&#13;
and dramatic arts; business -&#13;
industry - governmental resource&#13;
professors; media resource&#13;
professors; and a foreign&#13;
language translation service.&#13;
Other community services are&#13;
offered by UW - Parkside's Center&#13;
for Economic Education and&#13;
Research, Institute of Local&#13;
Government and Human Services,&#13;
Business Outreach Office,&#13;
the Office of Community&#13;
Educational Programs which&#13;
coordinates educational outreach&#13;
activities including credit courses&#13;
and the Office of Community&#13;
Student Services which provides&#13;
information and counseling to&#13;
current and prospective adult&#13;
students.&#13;
The Library - Learning Center&#13;
has a variety of community&#13;
services available. Free community&#13;
borrower cards give access&#13;
to most library materials&#13;
including bound volumes,&#13;
periodicals, films and videotapes&#13;
and phonograph records and&#13;
educational borrowers cards are&#13;
available to many institutions,&#13;
organizations and businesses. The&#13;
University Archives and Area&#13;
Research Center, located in the&#13;
library, has additional research&#13;
sources available to the community,&#13;
especially those interested&#13;
in genealogical and&#13;
governmental research and state&#13;
and local history.&#13;
Physical facilities of the&#13;
university are available to civic,&#13;
cultural, service, educational and&#13;
similar organizations on a space&#13;
available basis and individual and&#13;
group tours of the campus are&#13;
available.&#13;
Information about campus&#13;
events such as concerts, plays,&#13;
lectures and films is available on&#13;
a 24 - hour basis by calling the&#13;
Parkside Information Center at&#13;
553-2345.&#13;
It was while he was teaching at&#13;
the University of Oklahoma that&#13;
Thayer began to consult in&#13;
communication and management&#13;
with business and government.&#13;
Since then, he has served as a&#13;
c o n s u l t a n t t o B o e i n g , A T &amp; T ,&#13;
Bendix, IBM, Curtiss - Wright,&#13;
Hallmark, Sealtest Foods, and the&#13;
USAF, among scores of others. He&#13;
has been a consultant to every&#13;
major segment of the government&#13;
at both national and local levels,&#13;
and has done funded and grant&#13;
research for both government and&#13;
business. Thayer devoted the next&#13;
few years full - time to business,&#13;
serving as Vice President of&#13;
Planning for a national firm.&#13;
Thayer returned to teaching&#13;
because he says, "I thought it was&#13;
a higher challenge." Becoming an&#13;
Associate Professor at the&#13;
University of Wichita, he was&#13;
favorably impressed with the&#13;
university's innovative teaching&#13;
methods. Mostly case and&#13;
simulation teaching were used.&#13;
A Danforth Foundation teaching&#13;
award helped him to complete his&#13;
Ph.D. in Social and Clinical&#13;
Psychology at the University of&#13;
Oklahoma.&#13;
Since then, he has held eminent&#13;
positions at the Universities of&#13;
Missouri, Massachusetts, Simon&#13;
Fraser, and Iowa, where he was&#13;
selected as the second Gallup&#13;
Professor of Communication.&#13;
Nearly every major communication&#13;
program in the&#13;
country has taken advantage of&#13;
his consulting services.&#13;
Standing invitations to teach at&#13;
the Universities of Strasbourg,&#13;
Bordeaux III, and Bergen (in&#13;
Norway), and an invitation from&#13;
the Hungarian Minister of Cu lture&#13;
to be a Visiting Scholar at&#13;
Budapest's Institute for Culture&#13;
provide Thayer with an international&#13;
lecture platform.&#13;
ACADEMY OF BATON &amp; DANCE&#13;
FIRST&#13;
'National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
| Headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits, 1&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — T ap Shoes —&#13;
|; All Dancing Supplies&#13;
16204; 22nd Avenue, Kenosha 658-2498$&#13;
DECISIONS RECENT&#13;
COLLEGE GRADS MAKE ALLDAY&#13;
"I'm a cavalry platoon leader,&#13;
in charge of 43 men," says Hal. "I'm&#13;
responsible for their education, their&#13;
training, their well-being. So you can&#13;
bet I'm making rapid-fire decisions&#13;
all day. Decisions that have an impact&#13;
on people's lives."&#13;
Army ROTC is a great way&#13;
to prepare for being an Army officer.&#13;
ROTC helps you develop discipline&#13;
of mind and spirit. As well as your&#13;
ability to make decisions under&#13;
pressure.&#13;
Taking Army ROTC pays off&#13;
in other ways. Like financial assistance&#13;
—up to $1,000 a year for your last&#13;
two years of ROTC. You could also&#13;
win an ROTC scholarship, as Hal&#13;
did. Each scholarship covers tuition,&#13;
books, and more.&#13;
If you d like to step out of college&#13;
and into a job with responsibility,&#13;
do what Hal Davis did. Step into&#13;
Army ROTC now.&#13;
And begin your future as an&#13;
officer.&#13;
ARMY ROTC AT&#13;
UW-P ARKSIDE&#13;
CALL CAPTAIN FRED&#13;
2nd Lt Hal Davis was an industrial management&#13;
major at the University of Tennessee and a&#13;
member of Army ROTC. ARMY ROK.&#13;
BEAU YOU CAN &#13;
Thursday, February 19,1981 RANGER&#13;
Coming Events Submit your entry soon&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 19 g g&#13;
"MHS 'if Blble study ,rom 12:30&#13;
-&#13;
1:30&#13;
MUSICAL TRIBUTE to Cole Porter by Theatre Three of Dallas in "Porter Please"&#13;
5»&#13;
p&#13;
- Comm. Arts Theatre. Admission is *3 for Parkside students and 15for&#13;
others. Tickets are available at Union Information Center. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Friday, Feb. 20&#13;
pJSit??S?&#13;
S&#13;
it&#13;
I0N&#13;
"&#13;
Ai°°&#13;
k at&#13;
,&#13;
Af&#13;
r&#13;
i&#13;
?" at 1P- m. In Union 207 featuring a panel of&#13;
aad studcn,s&#13;
'&#13;
1,10 progr&#13;
"&#13;
m'»«•" •» «•»&#13;
Mby&#13;
rp&#13;
EABHeaVeD Ca&#13;
° WaU WUlbe 8h0Wn at 8P&#13;
'&#13;
m' ta 0,0 Uni0n Cinema&#13;
' Sponsored&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 21&#13;
FASCHINGFEST starts at 6 p. m. in the Union building. Sponsored by Student Life.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 22&#13;
DINNE R THE ATE R "Plaza Suite" at 6 p. m. in the Union Dining Room. Tickets are&#13;
available at the Union Information Center. Admission is $6.50 fo r Parkside&#13;
students and $8 for others. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Monday, Feb. 23&#13;
VIDEOTAPES Pat Benetar, Jethro Tull, Ian Hunter and The Babies at 1 p. m in&#13;
Union Square. Free admission.&#13;
FILM AND SPEAKERS "Tribute to Martin Luther King, Jr." in Union 207 at 1 p m&#13;
Free admission and open to the public.&#13;
MEETING Inter - Varsity Corinthians small group in Moln D128 from 1 - 2 p. m&#13;
Open to aU in terested.&#13;
ROUNDTABLE "The 1980 Census: The Undercount and What's Left" at 12 noon in&#13;
Union 106. Free and open to the public.&#13;
Correction&#13;
"The Woodhull," Elizabeth&#13;
Garry's one-person drama based&#13;
on the life of 19th century feminist,&#13;
stockbroker, publisher and the&#13;
first woman to run for the&#13;
Presidency of the United States,&#13;
Victoria Woodhull, will be&#13;
presented on March 14 in the&#13;
Union Cinema, not the Comm.&#13;
Arts Theatre, at 8 p.m.&#13;
Tickets are available at the&#13;
Union Information Desk. They are&#13;
priced at $1 for students and $1.50&#13;
for the public. "The Woodhull" is&#13;
being sponsored by Parkside&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
One Of Wisconsin's Finest Furriers&#13;
ati/l'(hftfiwl&#13;
FURS SINCE 191 2 SINCE 19 12&#13;
COMPLETE STOCK OF FURS&#13;
COATS • JACKETS • LEATHERS&#13;
CLEANING GLAZING REMODELING&#13;
STORAGE&#13;
'54-2138 5601 6th Ave.&#13;
Rumor has it that this year's&#13;
limerick competition is tough, so&#13;
you better start scribbling now.&#13;
You have until March 1 at noon to&#13;
submit your own lucky lascivious&#13;
limericks to Ranger's Second&#13;
Annual Parking Lot Limerick&#13;
Contest.&#13;
Remember, limericks must be&#13;
original creations and will be&#13;
judged on the following basis: Wit,&#13;
originality, crudeness and&#13;
neatness.&#13;
This year's prizes are:&#13;
First Prized) $15.00&#13;
Second Prize (1) $10.00&#13;
Third (3)-A Pitcher&#13;
of Union Beer&#13;
Special Award&#13;
for Most Gross (1)&#13;
Another Pitcher&#13;
Winners will be announced in&#13;
Ranger's first post - St. Patrick's&#13;
Day issue on March 19. All&#13;
limericks submitted will become&#13;
sole property of R anger.&#13;
RANGER'S SECOND ANNUAL ST. PATRICK'S DAY&#13;
PARKING LOT LIMERICK CONTEST&#13;
Official Entry Blank&#13;
Name&#13;
Phone Soc. Sec. No.&#13;
Duo presents free program&#13;
The Parkside Piano Duo of&#13;
Carol Bell and August Wegner will&#13;
present a free public program&#13;
ranging from J. S. Bach's&#13;
sonorous 18th century Wachet auf&#13;
to works by two 20th century&#13;
American composers at 3:30 p. m.&#13;
on Sunday, Feb. 22 in the UW -&#13;
Parkside's Communication Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
The featured work will be&#13;
Debussy's En blanc et noir,&#13;
written during World War I.&#13;
Wegner notes the music contains&#13;
war motifs including marching&#13;
and bugle calls with echoes of&#13;
Martin Luther's "A Mighty&#13;
Fortress" (is our God).&#13;
American works on the&#13;
program include Paul Bowies'.&#13;
1949 Sonata, a work full of&#13;
Americana including jazz,&#13;
ragtime, tone clusters and, in the&#13;
last movement, a sort of machine -&#13;
parody which Wegner calls "a non&#13;
- stop mechanistic thing." The&#13;
multi - talented Bowles, a native&#13;
New Yorker who studied with&#13;
Aaron Copland, Nadia Bourlanger&#13;
and Virgil Thompson, also is&#13;
known as a novelist.&#13;
The other American composer&#13;
represented is Henry Gilbert,&#13;
whose interest in Black and Indian&#13;
culture is incorporated into many&#13;
of his works. The duo will play&#13;
PIANO DUO of Carol Bell and August Wegner.&#13;
Three American Dances — Uncle&#13;
Remus, Delphine and B'rer&#13;
Rabbit — which he wrote for&#13;
orchestra in 1911. Wegner has&#13;
received permission from the&#13;
publisher for the arrangement for&#13;
two pianos which he has made for&#13;
the duo.&#13;
The program also includes&#13;
Mozart's Fugue in C Minor, K. 426.&#13;
Ensemble participates in joint concert&#13;
The Wind Ensembles of UWParkside&#13;
and Tremper High&#13;
School will present a joint concert&#13;
at Reuther High School&#13;
Auditorium in Kenosha with Dr.&#13;
James Neilson, director of the&#13;
Educational Department of the G.&#13;
Leblanc Corp., as guest conductor&#13;
at 8 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 19.&#13;
Admission is $1.50.&#13;
Neilson will conduct a triple&#13;
brass choir in the opening number,&#13;
Gabrieli's Canon a 12, and&#13;
will direct the combined ensembles&#13;
in the finale, Fisher&#13;
Tull's Sketches on a Tudor Psalm.&#13;
Neilson is a Leblanc staff&#13;
conductor for chorus, band and&#13;
orchestra and has directed a&#13;
number of famous bands including&#13;
the United States Navy&#13;
Band and the Air Force Band. For&#13;
25 ye ars, he was a professor of&#13;
music education at Oklahoma City&#13;
University as well as being its&#13;
Director of Musical Organizations&#13;
conducting the Symphonic Band,&#13;
Symphony Orchestra and Opera&#13;
Workshop productions.&#13;
,,, * W. »».ocSott uii lviauier, Mather, in his secondnd&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
h 626 56,&#13;
b St. 654 2932&#13;
season at UW-Parkside, will&#13;
conduct the university ensemble&#13;
in works by Tull, Nagel,&#13;
Boismortier and Rogers. The&#13;
Rogers work, three Japanese&#13;
Dances, will feature two guest&#13;
artists, Nancy Ohnstad, Racine,&#13;
harp, and Susanne Swenson,&#13;
Racine, English horn.&#13;
Mather, who also is assistant&#13;
conductor and principal trumpet&#13;
with the Kenosha Symphony&#13;
Orchestra, was associate principal&#13;
trumpet with the Spokane&#13;
Symphony Orchestra for five&#13;
years before coming to the&#13;
Kenosha area. His free - lance&#13;
playing experience has included&#13;
performances with the Modern&#13;
Jazz Quartet, Ella Fitzgerald,&#13;
Helen Reddy, Bob Hope, Carol&#13;
Lawrence and the Joffrey Ballet.&#13;
C&amp;R AUTO SERVICE&#13;
Quality Auto Work&#13;
Done At&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
10% OFF FOR&#13;
UW-P STUDENTS&#13;
Call 553-9092or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00 • &#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 19,1981 5&#13;
vV-i&#13;
Winter&#13;
Carnival&#13;
Review&#13;
P^fdl&#13;
h&#13;
piZer!&#13;
r&#13;
:^&#13;
r&#13;
^&#13;
al COmpeti,ion and winners were the&#13;
of Marketina Ouh W'&#13;
nners of charades&#13;
' aad a member&#13;
-•wswa m trasss "*"»-&#13;
"Something's Afoot" at late show&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
Petretti Productions has done it&#13;
again (only this time to music)&#13;
with their second Late Live Show&#13;
"Something's Afoot," a murder -&#13;
mystery - musical - whodunit.&#13;
Book, music and lyrics by James&#13;
McDonald, David Vos and Robert&#13;
Gerlach, with additional music by&#13;
Ed Linderman.&#13;
The cast includes everyone who&#13;
was in "When You Comin Back,&#13;
Red Ryder?" with three new&#13;
members added. One might get&#13;
the impression that this is just&#13;
going to be the same people in&#13;
different roles acting the same as&#13;
they did in "Red Ryder". The&#13;
truth is that the troupe demonstrates&#13;
its versatility; characters&#13;
played are exact opposites of&#13;
those played previously (one went&#13;
so far as to shave part of his head&#13;
to give the appearance that he was&#13;
balding).&#13;
The play opens in an interesting&#13;
way and the cast breaks immediately&#13;
into song, which is well&#13;
done and accompanied by cute&#13;
choreography. The set, which&#13;
remains as background&#13;
throughout the play, is quite an&#13;
accomplishment and a marvel to&#13;
look at.&#13;
Average student&#13;
bill up 4.4%&#13;
The median student bill for a&#13;
year's attendance at one of the&#13;
nation's major public universities&#13;
jumped 4.4% for the current&#13;
academic year, from $795 in 1979-&#13;
80 to $830 in 1980-81.&#13;
The median total charge for&#13;
tuition and fees, room and board&#13;
for in-state residents attending&#13;
state and land-grant universities&#13;
is $2,542, up 9.3% since 1979-80,&#13;
says the National Association of&#13;
State Universities and LandGrant&#13;
Colleges.&#13;
The action takes place on the&#13;
country estate of Lord Dudley&#13;
Rancor. He has invited various&#13;
guests to spend the weekend (for&#13;
reasons unknown) and one by one,&#13;
each guest is fiendishly done in.&#13;
The story has been done time and&#13;
again but never in such a fresh&#13;
and funny way.&#13;
Anyone who has ever watched a&#13;
BBC production will find Michael&#13;
Skewes' portrayal of Miss Tweed&#13;
(an amateur inspector) hilarious&#13;
and convincing and very much in&#13;
the tradition of "Benny Hill" and&#13;
"Monty Python" characters. His&#13;
singing and dancing are just as&#13;
good as his acting; he is a gem.&#13;
Jim Iaquinta, as Col.&#13;
Gillweather, Lord Rancor's&#13;
hunting partner, displays total&#13;
devotion to his character. Joya&#13;
Del Conte Zamora is equally good&#13;
as a Grande - dame who finds&#13;
herself slightly lacking in funds.&#13;
She is commanding in every&#13;
respect.&#13;
Cynthia Paplaczyk's character&#13;
is very confusing. Paplaczyk&#13;
never decides how to play her, and&#13;
leaves us totally in the dark as to&#13;
how her character will react in&#13;
any situation.&#13;
Newcomer to the troupe Nick&#13;
Sturino makes his entrance on the&#13;
wrong foot. He overacts to the&#13;
extent that he becomes irritating.&#13;
Many times actors who can't sing&#13;
can appear in musicals because of&#13;
their ability to dance (they can&#13;
usually be found in a chorus line)&#13;
and Sturino's solo proves he&#13;
should have been in a chorus&#13;
somewhere. His off - key yelling,&#13;
is extremely unpleasant; it's&#13;
obvious he has never had any&#13;
form of vocal training.&#13;
Kevin Johnson (also new to the&#13;
troupe) also seems a little shaky&#13;
in the vocal department, but his&#13;
acting is well received. His&#13;
dancing, however, leaves much to&#13;
be desired. He is often on the&#13;
wrong foot and never loosens up.&#13;
It's very hard to enjoy a dance&#13;
number when one of the members&#13;
is as tense and uncomfortable as&#13;
Johnson.&#13;
As this is an English comedy,&#13;
the play is performed with the&#13;
characters using accents. The&#13;
men all use convincing forms of&#13;
dialect, but the women's accents&#13;
(except the maid) fade in and out&#13;
throughout the play.&#13;
Linda Martin, pianist, deserves&#13;
credit for being the sole accompianist.&#13;
She played very well,&#13;
but a piano does not create the&#13;
atmosphere that an orchestra&#13;
does.&#13;
"Something's Afoot" will be&#13;
playing weekends thru March 8, at&#13;
the Roosevelt Theater in Kenosha.&#13;
It is a very entertaining, very&#13;
humorous adult comedy and&#13;
should be the perfect end to a&#13;
perfect evening.&#13;
Member Parkside 2 00&#13;
Mention this ad! Joseph.&#13;
4433 22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
COLLEGE NIGHT&#13;
EVERY FR IDAY NIGHT&#13;
25*&#13;
Beer&#13;
after&#13;
9:00P.m&#13;
75*&#13;
Bowling&#13;
after&#13;
10:30 p.m.&#13;
GUTTORMSEN LANES WEST&#13;
5411-GREENBAY ROAD 658-8191&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter. &#13;
Thursday, February 19,1981 RANGER&#13;
UW enrollments climb&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
enrollments are at record levels&#13;
and still climbing, the system's&#13;
board of regents was told Friday.&#13;
The upswing has received little&#13;
public attention, President Robert&#13;
M. O'Neil said, because it runs&#13;
contrary to long - standing and&#13;
well - publicized predictions of&#13;
enrollment downturns in the 1980s.&#13;
An all-time high of 155,499&#13;
students attended the system's 13&#13;
universities and 14 two-year&#13;
centers last semester. The total&#13;
was 3,831 more than expected and&#13;
4,870 more than the previous high&#13;
of 150,629 in the fall of 1979.&#13;
Preliminary reports indicate&#13;
the current semester will continue&#13;
the record - setting trend despite a&#13;
1980 dip in Wisconsin high school&#13;
graduates and predictions of a&#13;
corresponding decline in&#13;
university and college&#13;
enrollments.&#13;
Applications for the fall&#13;
semester of 1981 a re 18 percent&#13;
ahead of a year ago and estimates&#13;
set the fall enrollment increase at&#13;
1,849. An increase of 674 s tudents&#13;
is predicted for the fall of 1982.&#13;
Estimates being developed for&#13;
regent review in March indicate&#13;
that by 1982-83 the UW System will&#13;
be teaching 6,507 more students&#13;
than funded in the 1979-81 biennial&#13;
budget. That figure is higher than&#13;
the enrollment at any of the&#13;
system's five smaller universities.&#13;
&#13;
Though the decline in high&#13;
school graduates will continue in&#13;
the 1980s, university officials now&#13;
say the percentage that will go on&#13;
to higher education will be heavily&#13;
influenced by the state of the&#13;
economy and prospects for future&#13;
employment. When jobs are&#13;
scarce, more graduates apparently&#13;
seek additional&#13;
schooling.&#13;
About half the unanticipated&#13;
enrollment growth last fall was in&#13;
the freshman class. It included a&#13;
larger than expected percentage&#13;
of 1980 high school graduates as&#13;
well as older students choosing to&#13;
enroll in college after years of&#13;
being out of school.&#13;
The other half of th e enrollment&#13;
increase was due to larger&#13;
numbers of students staying in&#13;
school rather than interrupting&#13;
their studies or dropping out.&#13;
In addition to more new&#13;
students and more continuing&#13;
students, the UW System is attracting&#13;
an increasing number of&#13;
job holders who want to upgrade&#13;
their skills or retrain for new&#13;
occupations.&#13;
Here are the 1980 fall enrollment&#13;
totals by campus: Eau Claire,&#13;
11,054; Green Bay, 4,164; La&#13;
Crosse, 9,016; Madison, 41,242;&#13;
Milwaukee, 25,933; Oshkosh,&#13;
10,200; Parkside, 5,368; Platteville,&#13;
4,955; River Falls, 5,339;&#13;
Stevens Point, 9,183; Stout, 7,411;&#13;
Superior, 2,323; Whitewater,&#13;
10,006; Center System, 9,305.&#13;
I Student activities funded&#13;
Concerts and student government&#13;
led the student fee funding&#13;
parade in 1979-80, says a National&#13;
Entertainment and Campus&#13;
Activities Association survey.&#13;
Almost 93% of campuses&#13;
responding used activity fees to&#13;
fund concerts, while 91.5% funded&#13;
student government.&#13;
Movies were funded by 78.1%,&#13;
followed by student publications,&#13;
75%; lectures, 67.9%; choral or&#13;
band music, 57.1%; intramurals,&#13;
56.7%, and drama or performing&#13;
arts, 56.3%.&#13;
Almost three-fourths of s chools&#13;
responding financed student&#13;
activities through a mandatory&#13;
fee. About 18% used a direct&#13;
appropriation from the college or&#13;
university.&#13;
Christoph teaches here&#13;
GERMAN PROFESSOR&#13;
S.RICHARD CHRISTOPH&#13;
Last semester, Dr. S. Richard&#13;
Christoph, a German professor,&#13;
was hired on tenure track at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Christoph teaches courses in&#13;
German Conversation and&#13;
Composition, Civilization and&#13;
Culture, and Masterpieces in&#13;
German Literature.&#13;
Christoph, who was born in West&#13;
Berlin,' was a Graduate Student&#13;
and taught at University of Illinois&#13;
in Champaign - Urbana before&#13;
coming to Parkside. He received&#13;
his BS in International Relations&#13;
from Parkland Community&#13;
College and taught in Austria for 6&#13;
years before receiving his MA and&#13;
Ph. D. at University of Illinois in&#13;
January of 1980.&#13;
Although Christoph has no&#13;
current research projects planned&#13;
as yet, he does have a new book,&#13;
which was published in Amsterdam,&#13;
Wolfram von Eschenbach's&#13;
Couples that will be out&#13;
sometime this month.&#13;
Physics Club plans trip to Argonne&#13;
The Physics Club has set&#13;
Saturday, April 4 for their trip to&#13;
Argonne National Laboratory.&#13;
They will leave Parkside at 11 a.m.&#13;
and return at 7 p.m. They will tour&#13;
Argonne from 1-5 p. m. The tour is&#13;
open to all interested students and&#13;
faculty.&#13;
Argonne is one of the U. S.&#13;
Department of Energy's major&#13;
research and development centers.&#13;
Argonne's major mission is&#13;
energy related research and&#13;
development. Originally devoted&#13;
almost exclusively to nuclear&#13;
reactor research, Argonne's efforts&#13;
have expanded to include a&#13;
wide range of research programs&#13;
relating to fossil energy, solar&#13;
energy and environmental impact.&#13;
&#13;
There will be a Physics Club&#13;
meeting on Monday, Feb. 23 at&#13;
12:45 in Greenquist 230 to answer&#13;
any questions and to give people a&#13;
chance to sign up for the trip. The&#13;
short meeting will be followed by&#13;
a talk on "Laser - driven quantum&#13;
beat spectroscopy" by guest&#13;
speaker Professor John R.&#13;
Brandenberger of Lawrence&#13;
University.&#13;
Anyone interested in the&#13;
Argonne trip must sign up at the&#13;
meeting Monday or in Dr.&#13;
Behroozi's office GRNQ 331 by&#13;
Feb. 25.&#13;
1981-82 student loan money is tight&#13;
Students receiving guaranteed&#13;
loans can relax now since the lopn&#13;
money has come in. Students in&#13;
need of financial support can&#13;
apply for loans.&#13;
On January 15 final approval&#13;
was given to the $10 million&#13;
repurchase agreement between&#13;
the Wisconsin Higher Education&#13;
Aids Board (HEAB) and the&#13;
Student Loan Marketing&#13;
Association. The $10 million in&#13;
promised loans for second&#13;
semester will be sold to the&#13;
Student Loan Marketing&#13;
Association, and then brought&#13;
back at the end of March by&#13;
HEAB.&#13;
The proceeds of the sale of $100&#13;
million in student loan revenue&#13;
bonds should reach HEAB by&#13;
February 15. This money will be&#13;
used to fund student loans in&#13;
Wisconsin for the next three&#13;
years.&#13;
Students who are first time&#13;
borrowers as of January 1, 1981&#13;
will pay 9 per cent interest rate&#13;
rather than the previous 7 per cent&#13;
rate.&#13;
However, money for financial&#13;
aid is tight due to the increases in&#13;
the number of eligible students&#13;
applying for financial aid.&#13;
Students, seeking aid for the 1981-&#13;
82 academic year, are strongly&#13;
encouraged to meet the March 1&#13;
deadline for financial aid applications.&#13;
&#13;
Contact Julie Fleming-Huck,&#13;
Academic Director United&#13;
Council for further information at&#13;
(608) 263-5362.&#13;
Bible study offered&#13;
"Women Work on Paper" exhibited here&#13;
'Women Work on Paper," an&#13;
exhibit by nine women artists&#13;
working with various imagery on&#13;
paper media, will be displayed&#13;
through March 8 in Parkside's&#13;
Communication Arts Gallery.&#13;
Gallery hours are 12:30 to 5:30&#13;
p.m. Monday through Thursday.&#13;
The artists are: Jane Abrams, a&#13;
graduate of UW-Stout, who lives in&#13;
Albuquerque, New Mexico and&#13;
teaches at the University of New&#13;
Mexico; Wendy Walman of&#13;
Bloomington, Ind., who teaches at&#13;
Indiana University; Hope Cook,&#13;
Mankato, Minn., a teacher at&#13;
Mankato State University; Susan&#13;
Hamilton Bolt of Allen, Texas,&#13;
whose work is in the permanent&#13;
collections of the Library of&#13;
Congress, Minnesota Museum of&#13;
Art at U.S. Information Agency;&#13;
Cima Katz of Baldwin City,&#13;
Kansas, who teaches at the&#13;
University of Kansas; Colleen&#13;
Kenyon, Shady, N.Y., a&#13;
photographer and exhibition&#13;
coordinator of t he Catskill Center&#13;
for Photography; Kathleen&#13;
Kenyon, Shady, N.Y., a&#13;
photographer who teaches at Bard&#13;
College; Catherine Peckham,&#13;
Grand Junction, Colo.; and&#13;
Marilyn Torre - Whitesell, of&#13;
Bloomington, Ind., a teacher at&#13;
Indiana University.&#13;
Inter-Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship is offering a Bible&#13;
Study second semester on&#13;
"Prayer — A Christian Answer to&#13;
Stress." This study is designed in&#13;
particular for U.W. Parkside&#13;
faculty, staff and classified em&lt;&#13;
ployees and older students.&#13;
An informal format will enable&#13;
members to participate in the&#13;
discussion based on their own&#13;
experiences, their own reading&#13;
from the Bible, from one of the&#13;
two recommended supplementary&#13;
books, or from other books on&#13;
prayer of their choice.&#13;
The study will be every Friday&#13;
in Molinaro Hall, room 236, from&#13;
1-1:50 p.m. If you have questions&#13;
call the Bible Study Leader, June&#13;
Pomatto at 552-8650 or the faculty&#13;
advisor to Inter - Varsity&#13;
Christian Fellowship, Barbara&#13;
Larson at 553-2122.&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
CLASSIFIED A DS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
ANIMAL BAND MEMBERS are blatant,&#13;
autonomously acrimonious, anamalous&#13;
cacophoners. Voltar&#13;
PROFESSORA ROBINSON — Aquella es a&#13;
muy romantico hombre, verdad? Raquel&#13;
lOP'S total I.Q. is a negative number — J.M.,&#13;
Joker, R.B.&#13;
SUE — how much did you pay for Dino's&#13;
floppy disk?&#13;
WANTED: American Gigolo — must be wild,&#13;
willing, innocent. Sue. MOLN 118&#13;
WANTED: Housepet ferret training manual;&#13;
running out of Rangers. Jeffy&#13;
BLACK SILK takes a licking and keeps on&#13;
tickina. Sabre&#13;
HOUSEPET: Who holds your leash? Tinfoil&#13;
WANTED: Six men to lay Virginia Pipeline.&#13;
Contact Ms. V. Pipeline.&#13;
BIOCHEMISTRY 215 lecture — It's "amino"&#13;
world without Dr. Clough.&#13;
204 &amp; 210 we want our trophies — and soon I A&#13;
&amp; K&#13;
KEVIN — Happy Birthdayl You're not&#13;
getting older, you're getting BETTER! —&#13;
Love, Linda&#13;
RANGER BEAR: How would you know about&#13;
MOLN 118???&#13;
WANTED: Photographer. Inquire at&#13;
Bluebird Motel. (Tinfoil sees all)&#13;
GINGER probably researched "Playboys"&#13;
for Limerick Contest. Chain Groupies&#13;
Q: What do the Parkside Players do when no&#13;
one will play with them? A: They play with&#13;
themselves!&#13;
FOR SALE: Body paint. 32 edible flavors, 40&#13;
colors some dayglow cleans up with water.&#13;
See Sue MOLN 118.&#13;
MR. &amp; MRS. — Smile when you're happy.&#13;
Rodney&#13;
RABBI — We wanta kiss, kiss, kiss your&#13;
yellow submarine. Wild things&#13;
BRIAN — We've discovered your lingo.&#13;
Watch out! Wild things&#13;
RODNEY — Strip ping - p ong In Rec Center&#13;
Fri. 20. Love, Andy&#13;
WHOEVER won the beer drinking contest&#13;
really knows how to suck.&#13;
R.B. OF P.v. Anytime you want it, call me —&#13;
Joker&#13;
BRIAN &amp; ANDREA of lOP's: Everyone&#13;
knows about you two in Moln. 111.&#13;
BONES wanted for iumping—MOLN 118 Sue&#13;
please - signed.&#13;
EPHEMERAL altercations are caused by&#13;
harangues from debauched neophytes.&#13;
Voltar&#13;
DOC — BONJOUR! Don't punk out on your&#13;
birthday. Wild things.&#13;
RABBI — We wanta hold your hand in&#13;
Strawberry fields. Wild things&#13;
ZORRO; "Walking", Love song", and the&#13;
king equals dyno!! Raquel&#13;
AN INTREPID, bellicose equestrian even&#13;
tually metamorphotizes into a misanthrope.&#13;
Voltar&#13;
THE JOKER lost his poker.&#13;
BLACK SILK, thanks for the ride last&#13;
Thursday — The Joker&#13;
PARKSIDE — Watch out for the Danger&#13;
Brothers — They're coming soon.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
ALTOS AND TENORSfor new chorale group.&#13;
Contact John, 652-5512.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1980 SUZUKI 550L black call 553-9262 after 4 p.&#13;
m.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
GIRLS: Rooms. Racine, near bus route. 634-&#13;
8562 weekdays, 862-2883 weekends.&#13;
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE. Kenosha&#13;
country setting. 634-8562 weekdays, 862-2883&#13;
weekends.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
EARN WHILE YOU LEARN. Assist retired&#13;
college teacher with correspondence&#13;
reading, and organization of his library.&#13;
Hours can be arranged to suit your&#13;
schedule. Call 694-2251 for appointment.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads —&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30$ will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words&#13;
or less.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE&#13;
Any registered UW-P student or student organization is aualifiec&#13;
to insert a classified line ad in the Ranger at no cost if under 01&#13;
equivalent to 10 words. (Phone numbers equal 1 word.)&#13;
I Classification:&#13;
Name&#13;
SS No. Ranger&#13;
WLLCD139 &#13;
Cross-country events announced&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 19,1981&#13;
UW - Parkside will sponsor road&#13;
races on its campus from April&#13;
through October.&#13;
Dates for the 10 - kilometer and&#13;
two - mile races are Sunday April&#13;
26; Sunday, May 10; Satirday&#13;
June 20; Saturday, Aug 15-'&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 20; and Sunday'&#13;
Oct. 18. y&#13;
'&#13;
The June and August dates will&#13;
have the 10 kilometer run at 8:30&#13;
a. m. and the two mile at 9:30&#13;
while the other four dates show&#13;
the 10 kilometer at 1:30 p. m. and&#13;
the two - mile at 2:30.&#13;
ton h&#13;
l&#13;
e&#13;
i&#13;
ltry fee for aU six races is&#13;
$20 before April 1. Individual&#13;
entry wui be $5 in advance&#13;
and $6 on race day.&#13;
There will be nine age group&#13;
categories for both men and&#13;
women in the 10 kilometer run and&#13;
a similar number plus a joggers'&#13;
division in the two - mile. Men&#13;
may select either an age group or&#13;
a weight group of 175 lbs. and over&#13;
or 200 l bs. and over.&#13;
Awards will be given to the top&#13;
15 runners in the 10 kilo race and to&#13;
the first three in each age group.&#13;
Medals will go to the top three&#13;
finishers in each age group in the&#13;
two - mile with jogger medals to&#13;
the top three over 16 minutes.&#13;
Pre - registered runners will&#13;
receive a T-shirt or other comparable&#13;
item; late entries will get&#13;
similar items while they last.&#13;
All runners may dress, shower&#13;
and swim at the Physical&#13;
Education Budding and may also&#13;
bring families and friends to&#13;
swim. Free soda and beer will be&#13;
available after the awards&#13;
presentation.&#13;
For more information, or to&#13;
receive a registration form, call&#13;
(414) 553-2245.&#13;
Sharp breaks fieldhouse record&#13;
by Steve Brunner&#13;
Propelling himself around the&#13;
track in a record time of 13:07,&#13;
Parkside's Ray Sharp broke a UW&#13;
- Oshkosh fieldhouse record by&#13;
winning the two mile walk in a&#13;
triangular meet last Friday&#13;
against UW - Oshkosh and UW -&#13;
Stevens Point.&#13;
The record, set in 1978 by ex -&#13;
Parkside walker Jim Heiring,&#13;
almost seemed like a disappointment&#13;
for Sharp, who said, "I&#13;
need to perform a lot better the&#13;
next two weekends if I intend to&#13;
win." Sharp was referring to this&#13;
weekend's NAIA national indoor&#13;
championships and the following&#13;
weekend meet in Madision Square&#13;
Garden, where he will compete in&#13;
the Athletics Congress (AAU)&#13;
national meet. Sharp added, "The&#13;
main competition for next&#13;
weekend was felt today walking&#13;
against Jeff Ellis." Ellis, who&#13;
walks for UW - Stevens Point, was&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Playoffs&#13;
UW - Parkside has again been&#13;
seeded first in the Wisconsin&#13;
Independent College Assn.&#13;
(WICA) playoffs.&#13;
The Rangers, 13 -11, were rated&#13;
first by the group's coaches for the&#13;
seventh straight year and thus&#13;
will draw a bye in first round&#13;
games Tuesday, Feb. 24.&#13;
Parkside will host the winner of&#13;
the fourth - seeded Lakeland vs.&#13;
fifth - seeded Milton game on&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 26. The Muskies&#13;
and Wildcats will play in&#13;
Sheboygan Feb. 24.&#13;
St. Norbert, seeded second, also&#13;
drew a bye in the first round.&#13;
Carroll, rated third, will host sixth&#13;
- rated Milwaukee School of&#13;
Engineering Monday, Feb. 23, for&#13;
the right to play St. Norbert at&#13;
DePere on Feb. 26.&#13;
The survivors of the WICA&#13;
playoffs will advance to the NAIA&#13;
District 14 tournament the&#13;
following week against the top two&#13;
finishers in the Wisconsin State&#13;
University Conference.&#13;
UW - Eau Claire is already&#13;
assured of a tie for the conference&#13;
title and the top berth in the&#13;
playoffs and will host the winner&#13;
of the game at St. Norbert on&#13;
March 2. The winner at UW -&#13;
Parkside will host the WSUC&#13;
runner - up, either UW - La Crosse&#13;
or UW - Stevens Point, also on&#13;
March 2.&#13;
The championship game is&#13;
slated for Wednesday, March 4, at&#13;
the WSUC site or on the higher -&#13;
seeded WICA team's court if two&#13;
independents remain.&#13;
UW - Eau Claire won district&#13;
titles in 1979 and 1980, breaking a&#13;
four - year UW - Parkside&#13;
stranglehold on the tournament.&#13;
last years national champ. The&#13;
rest of the field was dominated by&#13;
Parkside, who placed the next two&#13;
finishers, Will Preischel, and&#13;
Steve Ball.&#13;
In other events, Paul Cannestra&#13;
blew out a field of nine runners in&#13;
the 1000 yard run beating his&#13;
closest opponent by 20 yards,&#13;
posting a time of 2:17.0. Other first'&#13;
place finishers were John Anderson&#13;
and Bill Rothmier who tied&#13;
in the Pole Vault by jumping 14&#13;
feet. In addition, Rothmier placed&#13;
fourth in the High Jump.&#13;
In the three mile run, freshman&#13;
Dan Stublaski ran an impressive&#13;
time of 15:02 to take fourth.&#13;
Another freshman, Bruce Schmierer,&#13;
took fourth in the mile and&#13;
880, posting times of 4: 30 and 2:00&#13;
respectively. Greg Sanders took&#13;
second in the triple jump with a&#13;
leap of 41' - 6-3/4".&#13;
Sharp, Preischel, and Ball will&#13;
compete in the NAIA national&#13;
championships in Kansas City,&#13;
Missouri this weekend.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
PARKSIDE'S Laurie Pope (left) and Jeanne Jacobs scrap for&#13;
arclel^t^^k 64&#13;
'°&#13;
SS f&#13;
° Universlty of »&gt;inois - Chicago&#13;
Green Bay trip planned&#13;
After the lack of success of the&#13;
last basketball trip, all you fans&#13;
out there have another chance to&#13;
redeem yourself. Another trip is&#13;
being planned for the Rangers'&#13;
final game of the regular season&#13;
this Saturday. The game is in&#13;
Green Bay and the bus will leave&#13;
the P. E. parking lot at 2:15 p. m.&#13;
The price of this trip is $15.00, and&#13;
includes a ticket to the game. All&#13;
interested persons should sign up&#13;
early in the Ranger office today or&#13;
tomorrow between 11:30 a.m. and&#13;
1:00 p.m.&#13;
Remember that this is the last&#13;
game before playoffs and Green&#13;
Bay always gives Parkside a good&#13;
game up there.&#13;
Ken Netland&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, 1979&#13;
BBA Accounting &amp; Finance&#13;
Investment Accounting Supervisor&#13;
Sharon Abel&#13;
UW, Madison, 1978&#13;
MBA&#13;
Staff Assistant&#13;
Catherine Hoffman&#13;
UW-Whitewater, 1980&#13;
BBA&#13;
Staff Accountant&#13;
Nancy L. Nelson&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, 1977&#13;
BBA Accounting&#13;
Corporate Accounting Supervisor&#13;
Mary Kaltinger&#13;
UW- Eau Claire, 1980&#13;
BBA Accounting&#13;
Staff Accountant&#13;
)im Burke&#13;
UW-Parkside, 1980&#13;
BS Business Administration&#13;
Assistant Programmer&#13;
Grow With Us&#13;
If you ar e a management information systems major and are interested&#13;
in a position as a Programmer Trainee or Assistant Programmer, contact&#13;
Verna Zimmermann, Alumni Placement Office, WLLC, D-173&#13;
for an interview with the Northwestern National Insurance Company.&#13;
Interviewing February 25,1981.&#13;
Northwestern National Insurance Company&#13;
property, casualty and life insurance &#13;
Thursday, February 19,1981 RANGER&#13;
Rangers extend&#13;
winning streak&#13;
RANGER photo by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
PARKSIDE'S freshman guard Greg Carlson scores his first&#13;
point of the season as Bobby Burns (35 in white) watches.&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Parkside's men's basketball&#13;
team continued its drive down the&#13;
homestretch last week with two&#13;
wins to run their winning streak to&#13;
nine games and improve their&#13;
season record to 14-11.&#13;
Last Saturday night the team&#13;
travelled up to De Pere to take on&#13;
an unexpectedly tough St. Norbert&#13;
team. In past seasons the Rangers&#13;
have been able to handle St.&#13;
Norbert rather easily, but it appeared&#13;
as though Parkside was&#13;
playing against seven players&#13;
throughout the first half as the&#13;
refs didn't seem to be watching&#13;
the ball game.&#13;
St. Norbert jumped off to a&#13;
quick 7-2. lead in the first couple&#13;
minutes of the game before&#13;
Parkside went on a scoring spurt&#13;
to go ahead 14-7 with 8-1/2 minutes&#13;
left in the half. St. Norbert came&#13;
back to close the gap to one for an&#13;
18-17 P arkside halftime lead.&#13;
In the second half St. Norbert&#13;
tried unsuccessfully to run a stall&#13;
against the Rangers and tough&#13;
defense caused some costly&#13;
turnovers, while Parkside went on&#13;
to win 44-36.&#13;
Parkside was led by all -&#13;
American senior Reggie Anderson&#13;
with 12 points and eight rebounds;&#13;
Chuckie Perry added 12 points.&#13;
Monday night against Lewis&#13;
University, a team that Parkside&#13;
has never faced, the Rangers had&#13;
a much easier time. Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens utilized his entire team&#13;
in this 81-55 blowout. Freshman&#13;
guard Greg Carlson sank two free&#13;
throws to score his first two points&#13;
of the season.&#13;
During the first six minutes of&#13;
the game the two teams traded&#13;
baskets before the Rangers,&#13;
behind 16 first half points from&#13;
center John Herndon and 11 from&#13;
Perry, pulled out to a commanding&#13;
39-25 ha lftime lead.&#13;
Herndon, who has done well&#13;
lately in his starting assignments,&#13;
was praised by Stephens: "When&#13;
he's on his game he gets off the&#13;
mark quick and scores early. He&#13;
also puts a lot of pressure on&#13;
defense."&#13;
Once again the Rangers were&#13;
outmuscled as Lewis easily&#13;
worked the ball inside to their big&#13;
men for layups. But in the end the&#13;
Rangers were much too quick for&#13;
Lewis. "It was strength against&#13;
quickness in this one, and we had&#13;
a little too much quickness," said&#13;
Stephens. "We went to a matchup&#13;
zone and it got us some quick&#13;
breaks." •&#13;
Stephens again had nothing but&#13;
good words for guard Chuckie&#13;
Perry, who scored 16 points,&#13;
grabbed six rebounds and dished&#13;
out six assists. "Chuckie gives us&#13;
a dimension that we haven't had&#13;
since Stevie King," he said. "He&#13;
sure puts pressure on the defense.&#13;
He's one of the best freshman&#13;
point guards in the country."&#13;
Parkside is on the road this&#13;
week for the last two games of t he&#13;
regular season as they travel to&#13;
Northern Michigan on Thursday&#13;
and to Green Bay on Saturday.&#13;
Stephens looks at these as very&#13;
tough games: "They're just like&#13;
tournament games and we would&#13;
like to win them both, but they&#13;
could go either way."&#13;
Chuckie" Perry kills 'em dead&#13;
Edenhauser maintains high goals, both for the all-star whn hoc by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
and&#13;
Dave Cramer&#13;
Charles Dee Perry, Jr., or&#13;
"Chuckie" as his teammates and&#13;
friends know him, is the new star&#13;
on the horizon of the Parkside&#13;
men's basketball team. He is a&#13;
freshman from Gordon Tech High&#13;
School in Chicago. He has started&#13;
in all but three of Parkside's&#13;
games this year and is proving to&#13;
everyone that he is a star.&#13;
In high school he averaged 20&#13;
points and 5.4 assists a game and&#13;
was named second team AilAmerican&#13;
as a senior. This year,&#13;
his first at what will probably be a&#13;
very successful college career&#13;
here at Parkside, he is averaging&#13;
around 10 points and four assists a&#13;
game and is coach Steve&#13;
Stephens' floor leader.&#13;
He has a positive attitude and&#13;
maintains high goals, both for the&#13;
team and himself, that if not&#13;
reached this year, will more likely&#13;
than not be achieved during his&#13;
next three years, here. "I said to&#13;
myself that I want to win the&#13;
national tournament my first&#13;
year. I would like to get my&#13;
average up to 15 points a game&#13;
this year, but the team comes&#13;
first," Perry said.&#13;
His positive attitude came from&#13;
home. "When I was younger, all&#13;
my mom taught me were positive&#13;
things, so I go out and think&#13;
positive each game. If you kill a&#13;
roach you kill it dead, and I think&#13;
of the opponents as roaches," he&#13;
said. A unique thought, and one&#13;
which seems to be doing the iob&#13;
for Chuckie.&#13;
The transition for Perry from&#13;
high school ball to college ball was&#13;
not an easy one, especially for an&#13;
FLORIDA&#13;
Don't be left in the cold! Sign up now for&#13;
7 days &amp; nights of sunshine &amp; goodtimes&#13;
excellent accomodations at a gulf-side&#13;
hotel. Many extra activities available&#13;
such as tennis, golf deep sea fishing,&#13;
jet skiing and much more!&#13;
Price includes cost of hotel and&#13;
transportation on charter bus&#13;
For More Information Contact:&#13;
Lori Haapala or Patty Mish&#13;
at 654-2168&#13;
or Cheryl Rannick at&#13;
652-3476&#13;
Before Feb. 20th&#13;
all-star who has to start new and&#13;
prove himself all over again. A&#13;
change of roles was involved for&#13;
Perry, who was primarily a&#13;
shooting guard in high school.&#13;
'It's hard to adjust from wing&#13;
guard, or shooting guard, to point&#13;
guard. I didn't know how to go&#13;
about being the team's floor&#13;
leader" he said, but he seems to&#13;
be handling the change very well.&#13;
Coach made me floor leader on&#13;
court, and that's important. If&#13;
Reggie Anderson isn't hitting his&#13;
shot, I tell him to work on his&#13;
defense, and I'll go to somebody&#13;
else." Chuckie adds, "To be point&#13;
guard, my relationship with the&#13;
coaches has to be very close."&#13;
Head coach Stephens sees Perry&#13;
as an additional plus to the team.&#13;
He said: "For a freshman, he&#13;
really took charge and became&#13;
competive. He's allowing us to do&#13;
some things that we didn't think&#13;
we could do. We are looking for&#13;
the break as a team more now&#13;
than in the last two or three years.&#13;
We're getting more scoring from&#13;
the point guard than expected."&#13;
Stephens doesn't hesitate to&#13;
mention that Perry will improve.&#13;
"He's not as good yet as he will&#13;
be!"&#13;
Chuckie also realizes that he has&#13;
much to learn, and also has his&#13;
own theories about running the&#13;
team: "When I came here, I&#13;
learned that turnovers are very&#13;
critical. We have to capitalize&#13;
when the other team turns the ball&#13;
over. I also learned that the game&#13;
is more physical. I ran into tough&#13;
guards that are bigger and&#13;
stronger than me." He wants to be&#13;
scoring more, and like all players,&#13;
wants to be an All - American, like&#13;
teammate Reggie Anderson. He&#13;
said, "I just try to play consistent.&#13;
I've got to concentrate more to&#13;
make my shots fall, trying to get&#13;
my jump shot back like it was in&#13;
high school. I haven't been&#13;
working on my shots as much as I&#13;
should. Mostly I'm concerned with&#13;
running the team and playing&#13;
defense."&#13;
The team's early losing streak&#13;
is believed to have been caused by&#13;
the inexperience of the team&#13;
along with a tough schedule. The&#13;
players were still trying to get to&#13;
know each other on the court. This&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
FRESHMAN GUARD CHARLES PERRY&#13;
involves some talking on the&#13;
court, but only to a certain extent&#13;
Communication on the court can&#13;
little&#13;
," said Perry,&#13;
laik on defense is okav, but we&#13;
Wouldn't have to talk on'offense&#13;
We should have our offense&#13;
perfected. In the early part of the&#13;
season we were bickering on the&#13;
court I didn't really know how to&#13;
talk to guys on the court."&#13;
Perry s decision to come to&#13;
Parkside was one that was not&#13;
looked upon favorably by his&#13;
family and friends in Chicago.&#13;
l m a blue chipper Peoole&#13;
stopped recruiting me when an&#13;
article came out in the Chicago&#13;
SU"iT,meLa^&#13;
0Ut my S^des. They&#13;
said I couldn t get up to 2.0 GPA. I&#13;
finished with a 2.3. After colleges&#13;
started backing off of me, my&#13;
mom said that I should go to a&#13;
junior college and prove myself. I&#13;
didn't want to go. I put in all that&#13;
hard work, I thought I proved&#13;
myself already. Parkside was the&#13;
last place they wanted me to go.&#13;
My coach, my mom and my&#13;
friends were all Upset."&#13;
The way things are going during&#13;
the second half of the season&#13;
Perry's goals of going to the&#13;
national tournament, as well as&#13;
winning the championship are not&#13;
totally out of the question. Good&#13;
luck to Chuckie and his teammates.&#13;
</text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 9, issue 19, February 19, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
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        <element elementId="41">
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            <elementText elementTextId="69710">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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            <elementText elementTextId="69711">
              <text>1981-02-19</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="49">
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            <elementText elementTextId="69714">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="69715">
              <text> Student publications</text>
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              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="38">
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            <elementText elementTextId="69719">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
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