<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3037" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/exhibits/show/rangernews/item/3037?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T20:21:31+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="3524">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/9dbcb55892dfd73c329cae0f63dbe3cc.pdf</src>
      <authentication>eb5ea12d63930cddb649795932a55f50</authentication>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="8">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="97">
        <name>Issue</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="69832">
            <text>Volume 10, issue 3</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="96">
        <name>Headline</name>
        <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="69833">
            <text>Guskin discusses $$$$ cuts</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="69843">
            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="1">
        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="90288">
            <text>Thursday, September 24, 1981&#13;
41" University of Wisconsin • Parkside&#13;
Vol. 10· 0.3&#13;
age&#13;
Nora becomes manager&#13;
r.y Ken Meyer&#13;
NewaEdJlor&#13;
'ftiIty. year· old Pat Nora took&#13;
as foad .-vice manager at&#13;
da AIIlIU8t 3 after Steve&#13;
, tile previous manager,&#13;
pramoted to tile general&#13;
"Ier of Heritage Food&#13;
Herltale took over as&#13;
da', foad service June I,&#13;
....... tIIey oulbid SAGA&#13;
CIltlle amount of reba te the&#13;
ty would receive from the&#13;
oervt ... The Heritage conIlIpuJated&#13;
a one year span&#13;
four pouIble me year exten-&#13;
. The emtraet was renewed&#13;
lIIo1IIIIIlIIler.&#13;
~ lD Nora, this year's&#13;
IOI'VI ..... ill be similar to last&#13;
's, it will be run according to&#13;
ral Heritale policy. One&#13;
lIIotla expected. This year&#13;
10 increaoe in prices, but an&#13;
per_tageof increase is dif10&#13;
deternilDe because prices&#13;
~lICI'eaoed equally across&#13;
IIeuoaa for the increase in&#13;
I aid Nora, are increases in&#13;
Ind raw materials. The&#13;
of prices involves "a&#13;
l&#13;
lllnpl\OiJycated,ystem, not aroetting&#13;
prices," he said.&#13;
are lDdexed according to&#13;
t it CllIla I student to eat at&#13;
UW campuses and in the&#13;
r COIDDumity.&#13;
ClOd PI'kea at Parkside are "on&#13;
par With other universities"&#13;
Bill Niebuhr, director of the&#13;
de Unim. "Some, I'm sure&#13;
Iotier than us," he said. uI'm&#13;
sure we fit somewhere in the&#13;
mainstream. Overall, some items&#13;
are lower and some are higher."&#13;
Compared to other UW campuses,&#13;
said Niebuhr, Parkside's&#13;
prices are close to the middle,&#13;
perha IJl a bit on the higher side.&#13;
Other universities are lower than&#13;
Parkside, he explained, because&#13;
they have dormitories which bring&#13;
guaranteed cash inflow. Now that&#13;
Green Bay has some housing,&#13;
Parkside is the only "no - housing&#13;
campus" in the UW system.&#13;
Heritage's financial condition&#13;
during their first year, said&#13;
Niebuhr. are "around break&#13;
even." SAGA Foods operated at a&#13;
loss during the first two years of&#13;
their five year tenure. Special&#13;
catering, not day - to - day&#13;
operations, contributed to SAGA&#13;
not operating at a loss their last&#13;
three years.&#13;
1bere aren't any major changes&#13;
in the food offered this year, according&#13;
to Nora. The ethnic food&#13;
lunches will continue, featuring&#13;
Greek and Italian foods. Nora said&#13;
tha t they are open to suggestions&#13;
concerning ethnic lunches. The&#13;
Union Square will also festure&#13;
"The Beast'', a 1/2 . pound&#13;
hamburger.&#13;
Nora has lived in Green Bay for&#13;
the past 13 years and his family&#13;
has heen in the food business,&#13;
mainly restaurants, for all of his&#13;
life. He has operated a pi.... chain&#13;
restaurant, owned an Italian&#13;
family - style restaurant and has&#13;
been in the food brokerage&#13;
business for the last two years.&#13;
INSIDE •••&#13;
* NO letters ? ! ? ! ?&#13;
*&#13;
Graduate interviewing' tips&#13;
* Strollin' Boner f *&#13;
Rangers win, lose and forfeit&#13;
Guskin discusses $$$$ cuts&#13;
by G. Helgeson matter of just meeting the budget dollar amount, then nobody wouJd&#13;
. Editor cuts; it was really taking a serious want to cut their area. Then&#13;
This year Parkside, along with look at our priorities. everybody protects. When we&#13;
the other UW-system schools, Ranger: What did that mean? started wilb priorities, everybody&#13;
faced a mandated state budget cut Guskin: Each senior ad- said "That's what we believe we&#13;
totalling 4.4%. At Parkside, the ministrator was then asked to hav~ to cut that way." The&#13;
cut was implemented this fall work outa plan for their area - no computer center and academic&#13;
according to decisions' made by dollar amounts specified at the sI&lt;ills were clearly critical &amp;reaS.&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin and the lime. The key issue was to see how Cuts for them were never even&#13;
University administrative deeply we could go without hur- discussed. To cut would mean&#13;
executive committee. The ling any major service, with the violaling a key priority.&#13;
following is an interview with understanding that all major Haager: WhY did you deal&#13;
Guskin. areas of the university would have specifically with athlelics?&#13;
Ranger: How did you go about to contribute to the whole. Guskln: Everybody knew that&#13;
cutting Parkside's budget? Theo we came hack. In almost that was one that would be cut, On&#13;
Guskin: We decided to try to every case, we talked to people in any campus across the country,&#13;
search out what the consensus their areas. We knew early on when there are cuts, athletics are&#13;
was on the campus, We talked a there would be some cuts, so we the first to go. It's necessary and&#13;
good deal about it and there was hinted at them. We talked in very it's important to the institutim,&#13;
no disagreement. When the cuts abstract terms. Next meeting, we but it's not as important as other&#13;
came down (in late July) we met. looked for some kind of plan for things. It's not an academic unit&#13;
We decided that if we were serious cuts. or suppcrt area. So it wasn't very&#13;
about the priorities of our in- Next, we looked for more difficult for me to deal with the&#13;
stitution, we would have to fund concentrated meetings, with cuts. It was a cmsensus.&#13;
them. It was very clear that just chairs of divisions, the directors of Haaler: How much discussion&#13;
cutting back across the board units. It became clear some things was going m during this period?&#13;
would violate our priorities. We would be cut deeply. We all agreed GuskiD: These proposals also&#13;
then decided that just to cut that the plan for the ceoters, went through a number of&#13;
enough to meet the mandated cuts which was arrived at in the reviews, a lot of back and forth.&#13;
would leave us hurling in the spring, would bold. That con- Some of us had second tholI&amp;hts&#13;
areas we cut, even through !bey tributed about $75,000 esch year. about each other's areas, There&#13;
were low priority. Butwe wouldn't Albletics reports to me. I was a lot of diIeuIoioo going on&#13;
be helping the high priority areas combined physical education aod between the senior officers and&#13;
which were in great difficulty athletics, I agreed to deal with myself. Very ioformal - 10 you&#13;
because of the strain of inflation them as one unit, and lied off With could check things out, test run an&#13;
and other things. my recommendation. At Iirst, it idea without being embarTuoed.&#13;
Therefore, we chose to go fairly was considerably beyood what it Once we settled m !be ktDda of&#13;
deep in the budget cutting in order ended up at. Wayne Danneh\ and I cuts to be made, intenae&#13;
to reallocate to areas which were talked many times. discusaions began between adhigh&#13;
prinrity. The best example RaDger: How did other minlstraton. The wbaIe _&#13;
would be !be library. We were university adminiatralors react to came out. obody _ it ....&#13;
worried ahout !be library. The your request? being dooe 8cnJIa !be board&#13;
problem was we wanted to Gaskin: The primary concern of People were actinl very&#13;
maintain the periodical list. With each person was the university as professionally. There ... no&#13;
a $28,000 increase, same list, a whole. There was representation nuDor· mongering. 1bat helped&#13;
you've lost thal much in a $60,000 of their area, but no defending of us tremendously.&#13;
budget for books. Inflation's territory. The clear interest of Wetried to hold oH as long as we&#13;
bringing the cost of books up, so every representative was to could on the Iinal dec, ion until&#13;
you're really buying half the maximize the priorities of the people came back (from summer&#13;
number of hooks. It wasn't a institution. IT we'd started with a absences). We were very womed&#13;
about this being done over the&#13;
summer because you ha ve to talk&#13;
to people. We decided then on a&#13;
very formal process of open&#13;
oonsultatioo I think we touched&#13;
every base.&#13;
Haage.: Are the results of your&#13;
work now flnal!&#13;
Guskln: Of cou rse , there is&#13;
room for revision, if anyone can&#13;
convince the rest of us that one is&#13;
needed. But we're very happy&#13;
with the way things are going. It's&#13;
es rly in the semester, though If&#13;
there are problems, for iDltanee&#13;
in safety on campus, we can k)ok&#13;
again at our decision.&#13;
Haager: If you bad to do .t&#13;
again, you'd do it the same way'&#13;
Guskln: IT we had to do .t over,&#13;
CODtlnuedOn Page Ten&#13;
Student directories face funding problems&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
EdItor&#13;
The sale of student directories&#13;
to Parkside students is me service&#13;
that may be cut hack this year,&#13;
according to Carla Stoffle,&#13;
assistant chancellor for&#13;
educational ~ervices. The&#13;
problem is that nobody wants to&#13;
buy or sell them so far.&#13;
Last yesr, the adminiatration&#13;
complied and printed 5000&#13;
directories, offertng 4000 to&#13;
P.S.G.A. to sell. The initial 1000&#13;
were distributed to faculty and&#13;
staff. P.S.G.A. agreed to sell the&#13;
bulk to students and groulJl at a&#13;
cost of $1 per copy. With the sales&#13;
revenue, P.S.G.A. was to pay the&#13;
$2000 printing cost and set up a&#13;
student loan fund with the olber&#13;
$2000. rdi to What happened? Acco ng&#13;
Stolfie, "They tried to sell them,&#13;
but every on-campus phone got a&#13;
copy already. Also, we can't get&#13;
them wt before November tst, so&#13;
they couldn't catch new students&#13;
at registration. Returning&#13;
students often figure they have all&#13;
the pbune numbers they will need&#13;
from the old directory."&#13;
Stoffie also noted that other&#13;
campuses that have better luck&#13;
selling their directories via&#13;
student groulJl have dorms, and&#13;
students need the intra campus&#13;
phone numbers. At Parkside,&#13;
students think they can find their&#13;
friends' phooe numbers in local&#13;
city directories.&#13;
P.S.G.A. ended up selling only&#13;
enough copies to pay a frsclion oJ.&#13;
the !rinling bill. The rest of the&#13;
bill was paid by the adminiatration&#13;
out of New Program&#13;
Development monies, according&#13;
to Stoffle. And no student loan&#13;
fund was set up.&#13;
As a result, directories may not&#13;
he available for all students this&#13;
year, Sloffie said. "We're asking&#13;
if we should spend $2000, wilb the&#13;
way we've cut our budgets, on&#13;
directories," she said. "Is that I&#13;
reaoonable way to spend our&#13;
money or are there other services&#13;
students should have instesd? Is it&#13;
worthwhile to try to get a loan&#13;
fund set! Do we need (directories)&#13;
at am" Sloffie asked.&#13;
Dave Pedersen, dean of .11Ident&#13;
life, is now trying to find an&#13;
alternative method of marketing&#13;
the directories. While he asks !be&#13;
same questions as StofOe, be it&#13;
also "trying to find out if any c1ubll&#13;
want to sell them. We would be&#13;
willing to work with a group or&#13;
groups on marketing them."&#13;
Pedersen indicated that student&#13;
groulJl interested in selling lhIa&#13;
year's student directories sbnIIld&#13;
contact him at ext 2367.&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday. September 24. 1981&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorials&#13;
Ion of the majority of the editorial&#13;
Ran,er editorial. reflect the °ttnit editorial ideas to the editor for&#13;
ola/f. Par.aide student. may .udmol be typed to be con. ide red.&#13;
con.eideraUon. Editorial idea. nee " th t&#13;
. . k's Ranger a . . di ales m this wee Parkside Chancellor Alan Guskin m IC sibility of future (so far&#13;
students will begin to shoulder. the. res&amp;~feels he has cut as much as&#13;
"possible") budget cuts to the UOlNv~sltbimany of the programs he a~d&#13;
from Parkside's budget o. ou areas met cuts that m&#13;
::-=planned for did not surface this ~ea.:;.S:M:~onal funding in light of&#13;
belter limes would have, perhaps, rece~~se they provided a much&#13;
the progress they were making, or . roduct&#13;
wanted student, staff or faculty drv~e or ~ of the administrative&#13;
P maps this time Guskin an e. res e in cutting not Just&#13;
ex~lives should be applauded for their cou;::,s services, products&#13;
dollars from this university's dbuhadget,bU~P:g easily claimed as their&#13;
nd 'lions that they coul ve JU&#13;
~te:~" and kept at the cost of other areas.&#13;
But about this surcharge Idea.&#13;
lt is absolutely the pits. and $100 each semester at the&#13;
Most students hereinglpsy~t:;n&#13;
=&#13;
They find it diffi~lt to PSYdbookstore.&#13;
Not.Wln y, ha been ~educed and loans WIllbe har er&#13;
now that financIal aid funds ve .&#13;
to afford in tbe future. t a mandated budget cut is asking&#13;
Asking students to POl' extra 0 cor; be asked whether they prefer to&#13;
for trouble ..Perhaps stoo;-rs ~=."unlimited" access to a computer&#13;
attend a university rt;:'t 0 ~ble to afford to attend at all. ;~:~:~~:;~;~~~i::~::~:;:~;~:Z:::;~~~~~~;;:~:~~:t~(:~;~:~:~:~:~:::::::;:::::~:~:::))))i(t:&#13;
week taff editorial tilled "A white elephant? stated that&#13;
Last a s hi hi traeted by UW • Parkside to provide Heritage Food Service, w C IS con. s beer and wine&#13;
food and heveragesdeont&#13;
ca.mpu&#13;
con&#13;
s&#13;
,':~~rotb~:".:::,i~':liroUgh local beer service. The stu n union&#13;
distributors. . _ .&#13;
~::::;::~:~;)~(;~())t:tt:::::;:~:}t~;~~~~::::::::~:~:;t;~:~:~t:;tt::tti))))~t:):::t::::::::::ttt::::::;&#13;
(1t\&#13;
Deregulate the parking lots&#13;
. . 1 ded They mention Come on now, Parkside ' hy Carol Burns - IS me u. f us don't don't need all these litlle&#13;
Much has been said lately aboudt pakrkmg. P:~~:n rel";'~sOnotto park Let's get something I&#13;
all the unnecessary. rules an now exis , money. Let's forget all !be&#13;
regulations put upon indUSttryBb~ t""Ieiy&#13;
attempt at humor is made parking regulations ~nd&#13;
the federal governmen. us. . f ed them with Just one major&#13;
frequently it is not only industry when whit~ permIts. ar,~ re e:;rall PARK IN THE RIGHT&#13;
that has to deal with ridiculous to as ':huntm~ permits, f~:::lthe OR YOU'LL NEVER SEE&#13;
restrictions the prime white lots are I'VE AGAIN'&#13;
Unlikely' as it may seem, student has just paid extra for the CAR ALI uld he so m~ch&#13;
Parkside has such a situation. privilege of parking at Tallent Life wo OTE' F&#13;
lik the weather everybody But the real corker IS the white FOOTN . or&#13;
Just I e about it hut nobody sheet entitled "Tips on Avoiding slddenls unable 10 contrel&#13;
~~Pa~';':'hing aboui deregulating Parking Tickets at Parkside." parking hahils, a new,&#13;
the king lots I What this really means IS: "WE formmg- Parkers Anony&#13;
A!;~ne who r";'ently purchased ARE OUT TO GET YOU!" first names only.&#13;
a parking permit was handed a&#13;
fair amount of literature concerning&#13;
said lots. Those students&#13;
who actually took the time to read&#13;
them were surely appalled by the&#13;
myriad of regulations contained&#13;
within.&#13;
Everything - from where to&#13;
display permits, on down through&#13;
the alphabet to parking penalties&#13;
From t'he Files&#13;
10 years ago -&#13;
"To or To Not a Student Govern·&#13;
ment," by Ken Konkol&#13;
Thursday ... Parkslde wit·&#13;
nessed the first meeting of the&#13;
Student senate In foor months.&#13;
Problems were encountered ...&#13;
because (notice) did not reach&#13;
senators till the day of the&#13;
meeling. By some marvelous&#13;
coincidence 8 quorum was&#13;
established . . . and the meeting&#13;
came to dlaorder.&#13;
The firsl official order of&#13;
bualneas was the resignation of&#13;
Walter Ulbrights who slated the&#13;
convenlion was illegal according&#13;
to the senate conatitution which&#13;
called for a meeling during the&#13;
summer.&#13;
IIwas decided more or less by&#13;
..-nt among the rest of the&#13;
sena tOri, no vote taken, to&#13;
suspend the constitution&#13;
retroactively since the last&#13;
meeting.&#13;
A report from the Student Union&#13;
Committee was '" aboul enforced&#13;
subservience to the ad·&#13;
minlBtration ...&#13;
Gary Davies spoke eloquently&#13;
for aboul 45 minutes on the plana&#13;
of Academic Policies to get a hold&#13;
on power for control of student&#13;
affairs ... proposals for the ex.&#13;
panalon of the inlIepen4ent studies&#13;
program '" and the establlahment&#13;
of a proposed day care&#13;
center. In cClllClualonhe gave his&#13;
oral resignation to the remainder&#13;
of the senate ...&#13;
Along about the lime tbe&#13;
eleclion committee reported it&#13;
was discovered that the senate&#13;
bad resigned itself out of quorum&#13;
and 'the _log broke up.&#13;
So, after only five mimths of&#13;
operation the senate has reduced&#13;
its memhership from 21 to 15, but&#13;
those 15 are putting up a valiant&#13;
struggle to give students a voice at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
- UW-Parkside Newscope, vol. 5,&#13;
no. 3, Sept 3), 19'11 _&#13;
gone on to other schools because&#13;
they were offered better jobs, Th!s&#13;
continuing loss of faculty will&#13;
become more and more critical&#13;
unless we, the students, do&#13;
something ahout it '&#13;
We've seen one major (communication)&#13;
sent down the road of&#13;
oblivion. Let's become involved&#13;
and stop this senseless firing of&#13;
faculty who are excellent teachers&#13;
but who haven't published enough&#13;
in the eyes of· other faculty&#13;
members.&#13;
IT we don't create more of a&#13;
sense of community than we have&#13;
now, the spirit of Parkside will&#13;
die ...&#13;
- Ranger, vol. 5, no. 3, Sept 22,&#13;
19'16&#13;
5 years ago-&#13;
"Sense of community gained" by&#13;
Bruce Wagner&#13;
The students of Parkaide seem&#13;
to be gaining a sense of com.&#13;
munity. This is beginning to come&#13;
true through two steps: the&#13;
building of the Union and the&#13;
subsidy for the Belle Urban&#13;
System bus from Parkside to&#13;
Ra:,.,neUnion must pay for itself. 1 year ago -&#13;
This may mean tight prices for' "Case of the vacant PSGA veep"&#13;
awhile, but once paid for, the by Ken Meyer&#13;
Union will become busier because Nobody's absolutely sure what&#13;
, an increase In the number of the requirements are to fill the&#13;
activities programmed will lower position (of vice • president of&#13;
costs to the student 'PSGA) unless the vote of the&#13;
You may complain that the' senate is unanimous, as it was last&#13;
arrival and departure times (of spring when Dave Hale became&#13;
the bus) are poor and that they vice president. But these cirdon't&#13;
provide night service; thus cumstances are different because&#13;
you may he unable to lake some of the senate is not unanimous in its&#13;
the evening courses you need to vote.&#13;
graduate. The procedure to install officers&#13;
But you can do something ahout of the executive branch is for the&#13;
it. Ride the BUS ... IT enough President to nominate somebody&#13;
ride, yoo can change the system. for a 2/3 senate approval. (In this&#13;
A sense of commlllll,ty is needed case) the 2/3 goal has not heen&#13;
... We don't want Parkaide to he achieved.&#13;
regarded as an enlarged local The reason the nomination&#13;
high school. hasn't been apProved by the&#13;
Nothing is going to improve Senate is because the senators are&#13;
lIIll,esswe get off our butts and do divided OVer who should become&#13;
something. 'We've seen a year in vice· president.&#13;
wlac:b _al PNf-a bave -Ranger,SepI. 18.Illl1O,vol.9,no. 3&#13;
"Criminal ilJstice Process"&#13;
oHered at Gateway&#13;
Police officers, teachers of law&#13;
related courses in high and middle&#13;
schools, pre-law students, and&#13;
persons Interested in the criminal&#13;
justice system are encouraged to&#13;
sign·up for "Criminal Justice&#13;
Process," a Parkside course&#13;
offered in room 322 of the&#13;
Technical Building of the Racine&#13;
Campus of Gateway Technical&#13;
Institute. The course, which&#13;
started Septemher 8, will meet on&#13;
Tuesday evenings from 6:00· 8:45.&#13;
The course is designed to meet&#13;
several goals: provide an understanding&#13;
of the operation of the&#13;
criminal justice system; provide&#13;
an understanding of the criminal&#13;
law / defendants' rights d"!'trines&#13;
of the Supreme Court; teach&#13;
stuMnts to find, briel, and digest&#13;
decisions of the Supreme Court;&#13;
and prepare students to engage in&#13;
more extensive legal research.&#13;
Amoog the major topics to be&#13;
treated in this course&#13;
criminal justice courts,&#13;
procedure in crirnin;Bl.&#13;
of police in the cnminsl&#13;
system, problems of"&#13;
crime, search and&#13;
dards, interrogations&#13;
fessions, the death pens&#13;
trapment, the bail .&#13;
juvenile justice, trial by&#13;
the right to counsel.&#13;
Professor John F. Kozl&#13;
the instructor for this&#13;
Besides teaching criminll&#13;
and public law co~'.&#13;
has been achve ID&#13;
educa tion and training .&#13;
research on crime and VI&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin,&#13;
research techniques. \&#13;
For further information&#13;
course, contact Dr. .&#13;
Pernacciaro, CoordlD8ti&#13;
Community Educs&#13;
Programs, at 553-3)32.&#13;
tR!,nger,&#13;
Ginger Helgeson E&#13;
Ken Meyer NewS E&#13;
Tony Rogers Feature E&#13;
Karen Norwood Sports Ed&#13;
Dan McCormack Photo Ed&#13;
Andy Buchanan Business Man'&#13;
Mike Farrell Ad Man'&#13;
Jul; Janovicz Distributinn Ma~&#13;
Frank Fa Iduto Advi&#13;
STAFF '&#13;
Greg Bnnofiglio, Carol Burns, Doug Edenhauser. Earl.&#13;
Frederick. Pat Hensiak, Jim Kreuser. Jim Me&#13;
Charles Perce. Sue Stevens, Dan Werbie, Jeff WickS,&#13;
"RANGER is written and edited by stUdents of UW-Parkslde and they art&#13;
res~sible for its editorial policy and content. . dnoll Published every Thursclay during the academ Ie year except during breaks an sin&#13;
RA.NGER Is P!I~ted by the Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, WISCon .&#13;
Written permISSionis required '01'" reprint of any portion of RANGER. 0139, U&#13;
All correspondence shOUld be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, WL.L.C&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, WI 53141 . I'd&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be 'acceptecl It typewritten doublespaced on stand"I)8l"&#13;
paper with one . inch margins. All letters must be signed and a telephone nulTl dUded fOr verification.&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid reasons. ,AN&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 9 a.m. for publication on Thursday. The R&#13;
tllilf reserves all editorial privileges In r~uslng'to print letters which contain defamatory content.&#13;
"rt II ew communication professors&#13;
ring new ideas to Parkside&#13;
by sua. Stevens&#13;
eel! you were introduced&#13;
~w Dew communication&#13;
and to one of the new&#13;
memberS, David Habbel.&#13;
lYdlld_tiOll of that story,&#13;
a tbe ft6\Ilts ri interviews a:, remaining three new&#13;
ben of Parkside's comID&#13;
tiCII department. They are&#13;
ea LeVY _ Habbel, Debra&#13;
• and Martin Paskov,&#13;
LeVY • Rabbel comes to&#13;
~. from the State&#13;
A_ ... a&#13;
p'lYrjNewYork at Buffalo&#13;
sbe received her MA in&#13;
~"",nonal Communication.&#13;
. aurently working on her&#13;
~ djasertaliOll, a study of&#13;
communication between&#13;
lmelllblrl ria dance company, for&#13;
.aIDe university: She&#13;
__ 1IoP'" an interest in this&#13;
bject during here un-&#13;
[ji,P~·le studies at the New&#13;
'" Stale University College -&#13;
port wbere she received her&#13;
" in Interdisciplinary Com-&#13;
. tioIl with a dual major in&#13;
Ier.&#13;
_ HablJel worked as a&#13;
1==~"'=istant involved with b communication and&#13;
apeaking during her&#13;
Ie studies. She also helped&#13;
a communication skills&#13;
'" during this lime. As a&#13;
duat. fellow, she studied&#13;
c:o-qualitalive methodolgy&#13;
two yean.&#13;
" believe that communication&#13;
Ibe nexus of human develop-&#13;
, where sociology,&#13;
bology, anthropology, and&#13;
onmental design come&#13;
," Levy - Habbel said. She&#13;
lIIatthe communication field&#13;
a very dynamic one and that it&#13;
't be a dichotomy of&#13;
versus twmanity as it is&#13;
to be at times. lilt's a meta&#13;
tIIclpline," she said.&#13;
TIle Partside communication&#13;
a..... ls to her because,&#13;
-iI, "It seems to be on the&#13;
eI becoming representative&#13;
.. attitude of interdisciplinary&#13;
-".,..,__ tion." The size of the&#13;
ent is also important.&#13;
IIItbandand Iare two people&#13;
iIlputIn a department of five&#13;
... That gives us the op-&#13;
.1llIn1tj to help the program&#13;
ill the directions we feel are&#13;
"Wl"&#13;
, like her husband David&#13;
, believe that this is the&#13;
Iooallon in the midwestern&#13;
'11'a a beautiful blend of&#13;
and rural settings," she&#13;
:&#13;
~*=Sbe:. enjoys working with and likes Parkside's&#13;
a 011 teaching also.&#13;
is a dynamic departblftwithideas&#13;
and plans for&#13;
s.:1;~~nl which I find easy to&#13;
iI to," Levy - Rabbel conDebra&#13;
Paschke, another new&#13;
faculty member, is teaching the&#13;
radio a nd television production&#13;
course here. As a member of the&#13;
staff of WITI Channel 6 in&#13;
Milwaukee, Paschke hopes to give&#13;
students some "hands on" experience&#13;
in the production studios&#13;
of Parkside.&#13;
Paschke received a B. A. in&#13;
broadcast journalism from the&#13;
University of Nebraska. She is&#13;
originally from Lincoln,&#13;
Nebraska.&#13;
After receiving here degree, she&#13;
and her husband travelled to&#13;
different positions across the&#13;
country.' She started a broadcasting&#13;
department at Souix City,&#13;
Iowa. This experience motivated&#13;
her to emphasize to ber students&#13;
the importance of starting careers&#13;
with small firms.&#13;
Before joining the Channel 6&#13;
team, Paschke worked as a news&#13;
reporter and weekend producer&#13;
for WNTV of Madison. She has&#13;
worked for Contact 6, a news&#13;
feature for the Milwaukee station,&#13;
and she has done additional&#13;
production work at TV 6.&#13;
When asked why she chose to&#13;
teach, Paschke said; "I never&#13;
taught before, and whenever new&#13;
people would start at one of the&#13;
stations I've worked for I'd help&#13;
them out." She enjoys the&#13;
business she's in and she hopes to&#13;
transmit some of her enthusiasm&#13;
to ber students.&#13;
"The program here is very&#13;
different from other places. The&#13;
school I went to trained people to&#13;
go out and get jobs in the business.&#13;
The emphasis was en mechanics&#13;
there, whereas here it's more on&#13;
an application from the business&#13;
angle. It has a broader scope, and&#13;
it gets into the ideas more," she&#13;
says.&#13;
Why did she choose to come to&#13;
Parkside in particular? "Well, it's&#13;
a beautiful campus; the facilities&#13;
are nice. I haven't been her-e&#13;
enough, but I'm impressed by the&#13;
quality of the students. The kids&#13;
that come here seem to have some&#13;
good smarts. The competence&#13;
tests show that. It's a major&#13;
problem (the low quality of&#13;
reading and writing in many&#13;
schools) and people may not think&#13;
that it's important in TV, but it&#13;
is. "&#13;
Her experiences so far at&#13;
Parks ide have been good.&#13;
"Everybody in the class seems to&#13;
like it" she said. "College&#13;
student~ don't see limitations.&#13;
That's good. Imagination is important&#13;
in my area, and I look&#13;
forward to working in this setting."&#13;
Martin Paskov also brings some&#13;
unique experiences to Parkside,&#13;
along with his out~tandlOg&#13;
credentials. After receIvmg hISB.&#13;
A. from Southwest Mi~ouri State&#13;
Dance to the music of&#13;
Amusement"&#13;
Park&#13;
Friday, Sept. 25&#13;
9 p.m. Union Square $2.50 Guests&#13;
$2.00 UW-P students&#13;
A contemporary entertainmen! t;l~e."t .&#13;
-. • •. ~""~".J',... '.~ .... _".,,_ ... - • - .. ~&#13;
Springfield. Paskov earned an M.&#13;
A. and a Ph. D. in organizational&#13;
communication at the University&#13;
of l1linois - Champaigne. He&#13;
taught at the University of Tennessee&#13;
- Knoxville for two years&#13;
and then moved to Western&#13;
Illinois University for an additional&#13;
two - year teaching ex.&#13;
perrence.&#13;
Paskov resigned his post tion at&#13;
Western Illinois after a motorcycle&#13;
accident severely injured&#13;
me d his arms. He spent more&#13;
than three months in a hospital,&#13;
and then used his own brand of&#13;
therapy to regain the use of an&#13;
arm his doctors told him would&#13;
remain incapacitated. He joined a&#13;
cement contractor and struggled&#13;
with shovels and other tools until&#13;
he could use both arms equally&#13;
well.&#13;
Although he worked as a consultant&#13;
and professional speaker&#13;
on the side, he missed students.&#13;
He applied for the Parkside&#13;
position this summer and accepted&#13;
the one - year appointment&#13;
when it was c:ifered.&#13;
"I was almost bere in 1976 wben&#13;
I applied at Parkside, but I chose&#13;
Western Illinois at that lime,"&#13;
said Paskov. "Now that I'm here,&#13;
I'll be thinking about staying ...&#13;
I'll be playing it as though I'll be&#13;
here 15 years, not just one. It&#13;
Paskov hopes to give students a&#13;
perspective that will help them in&#13;
the real world. "Learning goes&#13;
well beyond the classroom," be&#13;
said. "Many students get out of&#13;
school, get a job with a big&#13;
company, and expect someone to&#13;
hand them a syllabus. I hope to&#13;
give them a strategy to work with&#13;
that will be realislic to use in&#13;
business. "&#13;
He is very enthusiastic about&#13;
teaching and working within the&#13;
communication program here.&#13;
"Everyone in the communication&#13;
department communicates.&#13;
I like that. You won't&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 2., 1981 3&#13;
FALLFEST, a "welcome" from Student Life to Parks/de&#13;
students, featured a christening of tile new union pad by&#13;
Chancellor Allan Guskin along with the music of Hans and Dr.&#13;
Becker.&#13;
find that in many univerai- ::_&#13;
ties," he said.&#13;
He hopes to see more contact&#13;
with industry. &lt;lAn intern&#13;
program (which is now being&#13;
w&lt;rked out) will be good for&#13;
Parkside communication&#13;
majors," he said.&#13;
About Parkside and its students,&#13;
Paskov coocluded, "1 like the fact&#13;
that most of the people work. On a&#13;
traditional campus many students&#13;
come in with ideas that aren't as&#13;
realistic."&#13;
Patronize&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Adverllsers&#13;
How a&#13;
sophomore&#13;
at U.W. PARKSIDE&#13;
can graduate&#13;
an Army officer.&#13;
During the ne I 2 y ar ,&#13;
you're ... rning your cho -n •&#13;
you can also pr par for an of he r·&#13;
commi ion in t he nlred tal&#13;
Army.&#13;
You tart ril'(ht now. By applymg&#13;
for 6 week of RO umm... boo1&#13;
at Fort Knox, Ky. With pay (0' r&#13;
55001.&#13;
Your averag .. ummer hoot· n't&#13;
exactly what" e have in mmd. ho&#13;
ev .... Because wen bP parking 'our&#13;
mind and body with th 2)' of&#13;
ROT leadership training you',e&#13;
missed.&#13;
Do well and 'Ou can qualif)' f r ad·&#13;
vanced Arm~ ROTC cour and&#13;
nearly 2000 worth of financial aid&#13;
during your junior and enior~' rs&#13;
And graduate a an orricer m the ac·&#13;
tive Anny Or Reserv .&#13;
Apply by April 1.&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
LEARN WlOO' IT 1MES 1'0 L.EAD.&#13;
For an inten.1ew, contact·&#13;
EROLUIE:-TOFFICER&#13;
~lilllanSnvic. o.p&lt;.&#13;
~t.~rqu~ttel".&#13;
l-n~lI"&#13;
• Thundlly, september 2-4, 1981&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Minority students' confer~~e ~~ne~m~:~~n,.ac:&#13;
'!'be r-tb .-t CGIIfertDCe muter's and docllIt'81 lev. counting and economics,&#13;
... Graduale EducaU ... for aeaaI_ provide=-=e:: psychology and so.cial work:&#13;
~lJ StudlIIts, III be be1d al the reasons why their education education and the SOCialscienCe8the,&#13;
-'I of II"---s al shou1d pursue, h anities and the fine arts; the UDi... .- '1 IllRN beyond the bacbe1... s degree, on um ical sciences mathematics&#13;
~?e:'I~::"::-~:n'= planning ndunde:gl~::;af:: ~~ engineeringi an~ the .n..m thai iDc1udes a pre' proIl1"am&amp;, a 00n: .I aid biological and medical SCiences,&#13;
coDlereace workshop on lbe admission and for ~Ia ~ including nursing and technical =':t Record EDmiDatioo The free cooference IS open. 'd ee program.&#13;
by a ltaff member ai all undergradua~~ ..~,ino .. ~ ~~,::,,ses'::fonal graduale&#13;
TstiIII Servi students and to ............. s medicine dentistry ~:ference, the oDiyce.-of iludents. Sessi_ are -:t'edu!ed ~0Il1";"'"will mt be b.cJuded at&#13;
tts ktnd In the 1IIdw000, la IPOI1' froI!'l III6 p. m., with registration the co~;ence.&#13;
---' .... the ~-'ttee 00 In· begiooing at 12 noon. F dditional information call -- v,........... A special pre • conference or a (312) IlItu1ioDa1 &lt;:ooperatioo (C1C), the worksh 00 the Graduate Record the C1Coffice in Evanstoo at&#13;
coaaortlum of the Big Ten Exa.m:tiOO will be held at 10:30 866-6630.&#13;
lIIIi-alioa and the UnivenilJ of a. m. It is designed fJll" college ;::~;:.;..---:----,&#13;
ChIcago. All will be held counselors and advisors, but Nat1 teacher&#13;
In the DlIDois Room of UlCC's students are also wel~me to&#13;
C1acago CIrcle Center, 750 S. attend, It is also free. e,vams offered Ha1aled Street, Chicago. scheduled f A&#13;
'!'be .;,- _I_a confereoce w...dIIopo are ., or&#13;
.. - ~ -. and sludents who are consldeflng&#13;
is eJ-I""" III better inform -aduate sludy in any of six pl'eIlare rm-IlJ students for ...&#13;
graduale sludy at both the general aress:&#13;
Roundtable&#13;
Neubauer d1scusses budget cuts&#13;
I&gt;yJeffWk ..&#13;
"BudIIol Wa... Pari n: Wben&#13;
the Empire Strlkea back" was the&#13;
lIUe of the Social Science Round·&#13;
table .. ssion Monday. The&#13;
apeaker was Rep. Jeff Neubauer,&#13;
(D·Racine) of the Wisconsin&#13;
Assembly Dlalrict 62.&#13;
Neubauer discussed budget cuts&#13;
by Governor Lee Dreyfus and cuts&#13;
that will be made in the future. He&#13;
ssid that DOl enough revenue is&#13;
coming inlo the stste, despite s&#13;
somewhat "rosy scenario"&#13;
psinted by some economists in the&#13;
Dreyfus administralloo. In other&#13;
w... ds, revenue projectioos are&#13;
higher than the actusl money that&#13;
comes into the state.&#13;
Neubauer stated that of all the&#13;
state agencies, the UW System&#13;
was hit the least. Although&#13;
Dreyfus wanted sepsrste 6% cuts&#13;
f... the 1981-83 fiscal yesrs, only&#13;
2% and 1% respectively, has been&#13;
cut for this bi-ennlum. Neubauer&#13;
feels the UW System as a whoie&#13;
can expecl to see more money cut&#13;
from their budget in the future.&#13;
WIN&#13;
YOUR&#13;
OWN&#13;
PINBALL&#13;
MACHINE&#13;
""I11III .......... High Score To Date:&#13;
152,930&#13;
Prasert Rungcharassaeng&#13;
High Score Takes This Machine Home - The contest ends&#13;
Friday. October 2, so stop down to the Rec Center for your&#13;
chance fo wlnlll&#13;
1&gt;ACK 1)CW10l&#13;
WELCOME BACK!&#13;
Duringyou, leh"l Y"', th, hli,&#13;
lIyIim ,t RuFFolo $ will '" hippy&#13;
to IBN' yoU' hli, fJlf6 n"dl.&#13;
Preetaton Haircuti' and&#13;
Hafralyflng for Guy. '"&#13;
Gfrla.&#13;
For lppOintm.nt&#13;
Ph. 654-6154&#13;
i&lt;~; fsau Studio&#13;
3519 52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha. Wis.&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
Student author pays his tuition&#13;
through an informal, but crucial&#13;
"Working Y:l:'en w?n a new other students. "Take a~ hau&#13;
school" has . ber of knock on 60 doors - ask s&#13;
meaning for a growmg ~~ their if they'll buy the product. U&#13;
students. ::es~oi::erything of them say no, you've&#13;
own bu81nll. ' T shirts and yourself a lot of money and from se tng - he&#13;
h late chip cookies to ~ys. .&#13;
~::etin.g sophistica ted com- su~~:~~:'J:.::.an -:'~t~~&#13;
puter eqwpment. / optics firm with two Ja&#13;
Now one studenl entrepreneur students from Harvard sa&#13;
has made it easier for o~ers:: move by students to ;tart&#13;
start their own comparues E Y own companies reflee&#13;
wri ting "The Student n- changing altitude - s&#13;
trepreneur's Guide," a Ten S~ dislike for big business&#13;
Press book; The book reach menl and a growing&#13;
bookstores m late July. private business. "Students&#13;
Its author, Brett Kingstone, ran want to work for the&#13;
his own bedding compsny for one profit from their own crea .&#13;
quarter while at Slan;ford U. and he says.&#13;
relies heavily on his own ex- Planning ahead is !be&#13;
perience and that of other .student important, and most f&#13;
business people nallo,",:,de m overlooked aspect of s&#13;
writing the book. It profiles en- student business, he st&#13;
trepreneurs ranging from Slan- encourages those who want&#13;
ford students who opened their it on their own, but also&#13;
own late night deli delivery ser- them to start small,&#13;
vice to Harvard undergraduates overhead low and use&#13;
who invented and are now labor at iower cost.&#13;
marketing a com.puter link that Kingstone himself didn't&#13;
monitors production ~wpm~nt. ahead when he came to bis&#13;
And, Kingstone says,. It outli!'es His firm, Kingstone BeddiD&amp;&#13;
the various steps m. gettmg set up to earn him five s&#13;
started, from acqumng ap- credits based on a pi&#13;
propriate licenses to test promi';'d to write. "The&#13;
marketing to filing tax forms. liked the psper, but i .&#13;
Most student businesses operate expand it into a book - 00&#13;
on campus, Kingstone says, no gra~, he said/'. .&#13;
finding a natural, easy - to • reach recalls. I had to do It, I&#13;
market. "All you need is a the five credits to graduate.&#13;
creative idea - usually something I'm glad I did. The advance&#13;
you'd like yourself to have on book more than covered the&#13;
campus," he says. The next step is my tuition."&#13;
Nationai Teacher&#13;
Examinations, for stude~ts&#13;
completing teacher preparation&#13;
programs and ad,:,~n&lt;&gt;:d deg'7"&#13;
candidates in specIfiC fields, Will&#13;
be offered at Parkside on three&#13;
different test dates during the&#13;
1981-82 academic yesr.&#13;
Reglstrationdesdllnes are: OCt.&#13;
12 for the Nov. 14 test; Jan. 18 for&#13;
the Feb. 20 test; and March 15 for&#13;
ihe April 17 test. Registration·&#13;
forms and additional information&#13;
aboilt the tests, which are administered&#13;
nationally by&#13;
Educational Testing Service, are&#13;
available fi-om Olivia Lui·Hayne&#13;
at Parkside's Testing Office&#13;
(phone 553-26(5).&#13;
Results of the NTE tests are&#13;
considered by a numher of large&#13;
school districts, including the&#13;
Racine Unified School District, as&#13;
ooe of the factors in selection ci&#13;
new teachers.&#13;
Women &amp; degrees&#13;
Women are esrning a growing&#13;
proportion of all college degrees,&#13;
says the Nation Center of&#13;
Education statistics. Nearly half&#13;
of all bachelor's and master's&#13;
. degrees awarded in 1979 went to&#13;
women, who comprised more than&#13;
half of the 11.7 million college&#13;
.students enrolled in the fall of&#13;
1980.&#13;
'\egal" speed&#13;
The sale of "legal" speed is&#13;
being challenged by Illinois state&#13;
officials. The so - called amphetamine&#13;
look - alike pills, which&#13;
are made from caffiene and over -&#13;
the - counter medicines, have·&#13;
generated. controversy at several&#13;
campuses after being advertised&#13;
in student newspapers. State&#13;
heslth cificials in Illinois say the&#13;
pills are potentially dangerous,.&#13;
and they are taking action against&#13;
the R-S-L Corporation, a&#13;
Maryland - based firm that&#13;
manufactures the pills.&#13;
Award reJected&#13;
A Presidential Scholar Award&#13;
was rejected recently by a 17 _&#13;
year - old Texas high school&#13;
student, who said the prestigious&#13;
program is a flagrant waste of&#13;
taxpayers' money. Kyle Khron _&#13;
the first student in the program's&#13;
17 - year history to refuse an&#13;
award - took issue with the use of&#13;
. federal funds for a three - day&#13;
expense - paid trip to Washington&#13;
for the 141 scholarship winneI'!!.&#13;
Use Ranger&#13;
Contact&#13;
Sheets'&#13;
Booking network formed&#13;
Population class to be·offe&#13;
Inexperience, lack of staff and&#13;
yearly turnover often leave&#13;
college entertainment&#13;
programmers at the mercy of&#13;
booking agencies and promoters.&#13;
But a new statewide entertainment&#13;
network could help&#13;
correct that imbalance of power&#13;
for schools in New York.&#13;
Working throngh the Student&#13;
Association of the State U. of New&#13;
York, (SASU) independent&#13;
promoter Rudy Scott recently&#13;
established a block booking format&#13;
that he claims will provide 70&#13;
participating schools with dance&#13;
bands, films and concerts at lower&#13;
prices. Working through campus&#13;
representatives, Scott provides&#13;
each campus with a roster of&#13;
available artists, along with dates&#13;
open. Program chairs can then&#13;
sign up for those acts in which&#13;
they're interested, Scott says.&#13;
The program helps booking&#13;
agencies and promoters by&#13;
eliminating the hassles of dealing&#13;
with each campus individually, he&#13;
says, and by booking more open&#13;
dates in one area. Negotiations&#13;
are underway with two major&#13;
booking agencies, and favorable&#13;
talks ha ve been held with two&#13;
others, Scott says.&#13;
He is expanding the semester _&#13;
old program to New Jersey and&#13;
Connecticut this fall and is&#13;
working with the Uniled States&#13;
Are there to many people on the&#13;
Earth today~ asks Richard&#13;
Walasek, Assistant Professor of&#13;
Geography at UW-Parksi.de.&#13;
Walasek, through the UWExtension,&#13;
is the instructor for a&#13;
noncredit short course on Current&#13;
Population Issues. Under consideration&#13;
will be the slatus of&#13;
global population issues pstterns&#13;
of pop~lation growth, i';'pscts of&#13;
expanding populations on supplies&#13;
of food, energy, and other&#13;
resourco:s, the growing gap between&#13;
nch. and poor nations and&#13;
prospects for slowing population&#13;
growth.&#13;
The class will meet on four&#13;
Wednesdays, beginning October 7&#13;
7:30 p.m. in Molinaro Hall at trW:&#13;
Student Association on s&#13;
national block booking&#13;
"We know the program's g .&#13;
work because the response&#13;
the colleges, at all levels, has&#13;
very good," Scott says. II .&#13;
have ,been gelling ripped&#13;
because promoters know&#13;
have the money and because.&#13;
personnel are often&#13;
perienced. We think this will&#13;
them a break."&#13;
The National Entertai&#13;
and Campus Acli&#13;
Association already ru&#13;
national cooperative&#13;
program through which s&#13;
schools nationwide hire&#13;
formers, said NECAA&#13;
director Steve Flagle. M05t&#13;
activities focuses on the&#13;
na tional and 11 regional&#13;
ferenees at which available&#13;
is showcased and proll1"8&#13;
techniques are discussed.&#13;
is also moving into COO&#13;
buying plans for lectUres&#13;
arts programs, but doeS not&#13;
films or' major touring&#13;
tractions, says Flagle. "A&#13;
sharing, in terms of major&#13;
goes on informally on a 5&#13;
wide level," he says. "Ce&#13;
a network were put loI.&#13;
handle that type of thing,l!&#13;
not conflict with, and&#13;
possibly eompliment what&#13;
already doing."&#13;
Parkside. A fee will 8&#13;
Preregister with Uni&#13;
Extension at Parkside,&#13;
1i0M1l'$:tMKlWlt'ii!JIiM#Wt'l1%!l&#13;
U. pres. to deci&#13;
student electioflS&#13;
I&#13;
Student election results ~~&#13;
of Oklahoma will be deC'&#13;
the university president, d&#13;
both the original election 8~eJl&#13;
ron - off elections were chal&#13;
by students .. The unive&#13;
Tribunal, a student _faculty C&#13;
upheld the results of the&#13;
run - off election but its&#13;
could be overtur~ed by univ&#13;
president William BlanoW&#13;
RANGER Thursdlly. september 24.1982 5&#13;
"""COunting Club&#13;
cterviewers oHer seniors tips&#13;
Emphasis should be placed on firm, is short because. exp1alDl&#13;
things tha t show leadership Kraegle "It's not our lime to sell&#13;
qualities. One should also know our f";"." Any questions !be&#13;
every point on hislber resume. interviewee has about !be firm&#13;
"It's amazing how many people should be asked at this lime. It is&#13;
don't know !be points on their beneficial to know something&#13;
resumes," said Kraegle. HAsk a about the firm before the in-&#13;
... terview; there are campus&#13;
brochures available that !be firms&#13;
provide.&#13;
The fourth and final phase is a&#13;
3O-second 01" one - minute eonelusion.&#13;
At tbis point in tbe interview&#13;
it will be said how !be&#13;
process of communication will be&#13;
oonducted - wbo calls whom&#13;
within what lime spsn. ("Thank&#13;
you. we'lI get in touch with you&#13;
within two weeks.")&#13;
O!ber pointers mentioned:&#13;
• if you know someone who was&#13;
interviewed earlier, get feedbsck&#13;
on how that certain firm conducts&#13;
interviews;&#13;
• be yourself; don't put on a&#13;
facade because !be interviewer&#13;
will probsbly see through it;&#13;
• don't bring up !be matter of&#13;
salary in !be first interview; !be&#13;
goal of !be first interview is to get&#13;
a second interview at the firm's&#13;
home ollice; and&#13;
• it's your interview I so if you&#13;
have some informatim you want&#13;
communicated, SAY IT!&#13;
Recruiting interviews have&#13;
often been termed "30 minutes to&#13;
a career /' said Kraegle, Uso think&#13;
about what you want to accomplish&#13;
in !be 30 minutes wben&#13;
you go into that interview."&#13;
A second workshop on Sept. 30&#13;
will feature several mock interviews&#13;
between. students and&#13;
representatives of four "Big 8"&#13;
finns.&#13;
* Club Events&#13;
Bowling&#13;
The Parkslde Bowling Club is&#13;
looking for new members. Men&#13;
and women are welcome; there is&#13;
no minimum average to join.&#13;
Members participate in a Wednesday&#13;
afternoon league in the&#13;
Rec Center. The league begins&#13;
Sept. so, and runs from 1-2 p.m. In&#13;
addition. the elub will participate&#13;
in the Walt Peabody Classic in Las&#13;
Vegas. The schedule for this year&#13;
is:&#13;
October 25: Sbeboygan (Northeast&#13;
Coliegiate)&#13;
November 7-8: Milwaukee&#13;
(lnvilational)&#13;
December H: Oshkosh (Invilational)&#13;
December 3ll-31: Las Vegas&#13;
(Walt Peabody Invilational)&#13;
February 20-21: Milwaukee&#13;
(Midwest Collegiate)&#13;
No dates yet: DeKalb (Huskie&#13;
Invila tiona l)&#13;
No dates yet: Chicago (National&#13;
Collegiate Individual Match&#13;
Game)&#13;
For more information on joining&#13;
this Bowling Club. conlact Mike&#13;
Menzbuber in the Rec. center.&#13;
Anfhro. club&#13;
The AnthropolOllY Club I.&#13;
planning a trip to the Field&#13;
Museums' fourth annUlI aDthropoIogy&#13;
film f.. Uval. The club&#13;
will meet at !be Tallent Hall&#13;
parking lot at 8: 15 a.m. on SUDday.&#13;
Sept. rI. to take a UDiveralty&#13;
van to Chicago, and will return&#13;
about 9 p.m. The trip fee is N.&#13;
A wide variety d: fllma will be&#13;
shown at !be muaewn, including&#13;
short subJecta on ancient&#13;
astronauts, native American life&#13;
and customs. and oevera! oounter&#13;
- culture fibn spoofs.&#13;
The club will eat in Chicago;&#13;
members are requated to brinlI&#13;
their own beverages. Interested&#13;
students should sign up in MOLN&#13;
321.&#13;
by KenM.y.r&#13;
N.... Edllor&#13;
The Parkside Accounting Club&#13;
red a w&lt;rkshop Sept. 17&#13;
tided "Interviewing Strategy"&#13;
belp students prepare for the&#13;
I uiting interviews for "Big 8"&#13;
unting firms later this year ..&#13;
Tbis is !be first time in&#13;
'de's history that "Big 8"&#13;
I counting firms will be&#13;
, ting bore.&#13;
The workshop, first of two. was&#13;
cted by the "Big 8" firm&#13;
t Marwick, Mitcbell and Co.&#13;
give busineI8 majors an opty&#13;
to develop interviewing&#13;
and strategies.&#13;
Fred KraegJe. an audit partner&#13;
the firm, spoke briefly about&#13;
students should know about&#13;
recruiting interviews; Kent&#13;
Iiar'lI'W'dt and Mark Miller, also&#13;
tile firm, oonducted a mock&#13;
Interview - a type of&#13;
tervlew students may enAccounting&#13;
club&#13;
The Parkside Accounting Club&#13;
will sponsor a w&lt;rkshop fIr seni&lt;r&#13;
accounting students on Sept. 30 at&#13;
7 p.m. in rooms 104 and 106 of !be&#13;
Student Union. The purpose of !be&#13;
w&lt;rkshop is to give students actusl&#13;
interview experiences with&#13;
regional public accounting and&#13;
local business firms. The&#13;
simulated interviews will last IS&#13;
minutes. and will be followed by a&#13;
5-minute critique of !be student·.&#13;
performance ,&#13;
Sign-up f&lt;r !be w&lt;rkshop will&#13;
take place in MOLN DI39 on&#13;
Friday. Sept. 25 between 8 a.m.&#13;
and noon. Sign-up will be on a fll"llt&#13;
come, first served basis; resumes&#13;
should be presented at sign-up.&#13;
''TbiI' il our approach," em-&#13;
"lsizlld Kraegle. "Each firm you&#13;
'ew is l\Oing to take a clift&#13;
approach. This is just one&#13;
mpie."&#13;
KraegJe d:1ered pointers contile&#13;
pre - interview time:&#13;
't be late and dress contively&#13;
("Firms are usually&#13;
• foliowers, not trend -&#13;
..... ) O!ber negative things&#13;
t may stand out in !be in-&#13;
) ewer's mind are smoking,&#13;
ewing gum. and appearing&#13;
ean (c1otbes, shoes, items&#13;
ing carried, etc,). "These&#13;
ngs may seem simple or&#13;
etNng everyone thinks of,"&#13;
Kraegle. "but from exonce.&#13;
we see these things&#13;
ppeulng."&#13;
'I1Je Interview. wbich usually&#13;
:ll mlnulel. cnnaisls of four&#13;
- tile opening, evaluation,&#13;
the firm and the oonUIlCII.&#13;
I "Fint Impressions are very&#13;
~:::~t." said Miller. "A firm&#13;
~ e when you greet !be&#13;
ewer is very important.&#13;
-,",'w"", that you are agreasive&#13;
self· oonfldent." be said. The&#13;
being Interviewed should&#13;
e the interviewer's lead nn&#13;
r to addnBs !be otber by&#13;
!be&lt; first name &lt;r proper&#13;
me, be added.&#13;
'I1Je opening phase. or tbe put-&#13;
-ease phase. gives the inrviewer&#13;
an opportunity to&#13;
• Usb a repoIre with !be person&#13;
Interviewed, This stage&#13;
y tak.. three to five minutes&#13;
lIlpics are usually hobbies or&#13;
t.rest. mentioned on the&#13;
Women in business&#13;
Wornen in Business will hold a&#13;
bake sale next Monday between 8&#13;
a.m. and 2 p.m. on !be main&#13;
concourse near !be library.&#13;
New d:ficers ofWIB for !be 1981-&#13;
82 scbool year are: Barb Kingery.&#13;
president; Wendy Gease. vice -&#13;
president; Carla Thomas,&#13;
secretary; Ellen Breitbach.&#13;
recording secrelary; Jude McFarland.&#13;
treasurer. Advisor for&#13;
WIB is Irene Heiviemans,&#13;
Tbe next WIB meeting is&#13;
scbeduled for Oct. 5 at I p.m. in&#13;
Union 104. Interested students are&#13;
welcome to attend.&#13;
friend to proofread your resume&#13;
(for mistakes)."&#13;
"You're selling yourseU," said&#13;
Kraegle. so tslking a Int is not as&#13;
much of a problem as not saying&#13;
enough. "I don't think you're&#13;
going to go wrong in telling tbe&#13;
interviewer too much about&#13;
yourself or your skills and&#13;
capabilities," he said.&#13;
Tbe interviewer will give signs&#13;
wbetber or not to keep talking.&#13;
said Kraegle. such as nodding&#13;
hislber head or saying things to&#13;
encourage you to keep talking. "If&#13;
!bey're nodding !beir bead and&#13;
tbeir eyes are closed, that's a&#13;
different sign." be said.&#13;
Tbe third phase, selling !be&#13;
Art addicts&#13;
Art Addicts Club will bold its&#13;
first meeting Monday. Sept. 28 at I&#13;
p.m. in CA DI41 to elect officers&#13;
and to d!8CUII activitlel spcaored&#13;
by !be Art Addlcla. including !be&#13;
Student Art smw. All inUre.ted&#13;
students are invited II&gt; attend.&#13;
Cheerleaders&#13;
Parkside's cheerleaders will&#13;
hold clinics for tbe 1981-82&#13;
cheerleading squad on Sept. 28&#13;
and 30 at 6 p.m. in the Phy Ed.&#13;
building. Try-outs for !be squad&#13;
.will be on Oct. 4 at 5:30 p.m. in !be&#13;
Phy. Ed. building.&#13;
Both men and wornen may try&#13;
out. Women will be judged on !beir&#13;
performance of one Parkside I I&#13;
=~.:nro~~~::~:.ra: I SaUESOet on a rep.::,I:;!~~~ ch....'" I&#13;
with Parkside's fight song and I or 2Set nn a small with I&#13;
optional gymnastic stunts. Men I meal and chec"" I&#13;
will be judged bslance and coordination. on physical ability. I CHEF SALADS I&#13;
Judges fIr this year's try-outs I I&#13;
will be Dick Cummings. personnel h • I&#13;
I Hungry Head ~ Chef Salad .. arl' madE' &lt;&gt;1cn~)' l('lIlKe" Ityoo, Ir,mJih ,Jnu&#13;
manager; Ginger Helgeson, onion .. topped with little ('hunk~ ollur\..ey .,"d holm plu S",,, ,md &lt;t-iJ.u I&#13;
Ranger editor; Jim Kreuse.t'! I chet&gt;&lt;oe."then sprinl..led "'llh Y~lurtavonle .... Iad dr In~ ~hCH J and I,~hr'&#13;
PSGA president; and two alunuu I Hungry Head Sandwich Shops I&#13;
members. I I&#13;
Througbout tbe basketball I ~ Tw. " ••,. ARE",,".,···. I&#13;
season the cheerleaders travel •• HEADWEST 3112R_h ROAd 694 1212&#13;
with the team to various college I --:.-.:...-- HEAD EAST S06 $6lh SUM' 6521212 I&#13;
cam ses This year, possible " I~.I 10,tw laolo. TJw,al,..) I&#13;
" PJ·gh·ters" include UW-La I. - \\1 I l ....~'.iI.... )OIJMU.. Jt~ I&#13;
overm n..i_ I Expires 10'4 81 . ' •. to.)O,am' ,no.",&#13;
Crosse, Lakeland UDiv., ,",~.1 PR Q 24 TP" , lOMII')..om I&#13;
Univ. and hopefully •. a triP!beto I _'"'COUPONl. _&#13;
Kansas City for the fmals m _&#13;
spring.&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
Adult students are invited to&#13;
share their impressions of !be Oral&#13;
few weeks of school when !be Peer&#13;
Support meets Tuesday. Sept. 29&#13;
at 7 p.m. in Moln 111.&#13;
Career Hungry Head's money saver&#13;
Workshop&#13;
to be held&#13;
Community Student Services&#13;
and Student Development are&#13;
sponsoring a &amp;-session Career&#13;
Exploration Workshop for&#13;
students undecided about tbe ..&#13;
major or career goals, The&#13;
workshop is free to current&#13;
Parkside students. but bas a&#13;
limited enrollment. WorkshOp&#13;
participants will be offered an&#13;
opp&lt;rtuntty to assess !be.. values.&#13;
personal characteristics. interests&#13;
and skills and relate ~m to&#13;
career decisions. Information. ~ill&#13;
. a1&amp;o be presented on decISIon&#13;
styles' how to conduct career&#13;
resea.:et.· goal setting and how to&#13;
develop. uwell as put into effect,&#13;
an action plan. !be&#13;
call 553-2000 to enroll before&#13;
October I deadline. The sessions&#13;
will take place Mondays and&#13;
Wednesday from 1:00 • 1:50 on&#13;
october 5, 7, 12, 1~, 19 and 21.&#13;
Please do not register for !be&#13;
workshop unless you can attend&#13;
all 6 sessions. If you bave&#13;
questions call Wendi Schneider at&#13;
553-2496 or Barbsra Larson 553-&#13;
2122.&#13;
During your fint interview. said&#13;
egIe. "You're going to be&#13;
... so the interviewer is&#13;
bly going to take a IitUe&#13;
in that phase. But as you go&#13;
...uyou get used to going in&#13;
Inlervi..... it's going to take&#13;
time."&#13;
The evaluation phase, the&#13;
, COIIIumeshalf of the 30-&#13;
. te interview. In this phase.&#13;
~ plains Kraegle. "The in-&#13;
... Will ask open • ended&#13;
estion. looking for you to&#13;
becauae, to a certain&#13;
t. it's your interview _ you&#13;
take it in !be direction that&#13;
want to go. It would be very&#13;
• ended statements and&#13;
CIII. lCllking for you to ex·&#13;
• Upoo some of !be things&#13;
ve done. things that you've&#13;
t CI:I your resume."&#13;
NEW" ,&#13;
AT UNION&#13;
SQUARE GRIll&#13;
L ..J INTRODUCING&#13;
THE&#13;
BEAST&#13;
14&#13;
'SPECW~&#13;
-&#13;
...&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
One half pound of hand . patted pure&#13;
ground beef served on a Marth baked&#13;
Italian bun,&#13;
$1.89&#13;
OR ... THE BEAST FEAST BASKET&#13;
$2.19&#13;
3 mos. membership&#13;
or&#13;
6 mos. membership&#13;
6 Thursday. 5eptember 24. 1981 RANGE R •&#13;
Recent Parkside graduates now teaching her&#13;
. malt 'bute to higher education, possible to acqwre tn any other teaching at the unl .&#13;
by Pal Heallak purpose of the program:: ~ . e con~y by offering time to give way during undergraduate study. and feels that t~t&#13;
There isn't a better way f~ a students more aware ti im- ~inars on their profession. It would also give students a Parkside is a gOOd~ ....&#13;
college to show tbat they believe portance of ~o~mw.ucaon:'.;r the The 'cation oUtreach chance to question the him to find out if this ~!tq&#13;
in tbetr studeo18 than to hire two "Commumca on IS commum the professional on what courses they area appeals to hi&#13;
of their undergraduates as in- only things that ~p!? d~'t have progra~ would extend to • took as students and what courses plans on gdng an 111.&#13;
structcn. Janet WtiI1s and Bob a choice about dOUlll, said wtiI1s. people in the SlllTounding com the wish they had taken receive a Ph D . EtJJ&#13;
Hoffman graduated from "Everything you d~ ~entua~y munities and would ~lso. offer Y , . • .. m&#13;
ParUide earlier this year and are looks into commumcation. It s workshops on commumcation. Bob Hoffman, also ~ UW .. p When asked if it felt&#13;
oow instructcn here. importa!'t that ~e learn to The development of an in- underg~aduate, . majored ,.n he teaching at the col1e&amp;t&#13;
Janet WtiI1s majored in Com. comm~cate well. ternship program for studentsEcon~m,cs and Philosophy and IS tended, Hoffman said,'&#13;
municatiOllll and Engltsh. She Wells IS working on ~ program majoring in communication would teaching as an ad . hoc. Hoffman ~n,ges. When 1 was a&#13;
teaches at Parkside on a tem- that would accomplish t~ree 'enable students to broaden their teaches AmerIcan Economy. He didn t see how illl&#13;
porary 1ICI11ester• to . semester things: ~ motivate profesSIOnal educational backgrounds and give plans on instructing at Parkside , tendance was, now 1 do&#13;
contrsct Imown aa an ad . hoc. com~umcato~ to make ~ con- them real world problems and for one year.. care now about what 111.&#13;
Wells commented tbatone of the tribution to higb!r &lt;;ducation, to experiences that would be im- Hoffman plans a career used and how it is&#13;
advantages to graduating offer a commumcation outreach .&#13;
recently is being able to em- program for citlrens of the&#13;
psthize with the students. community and to develop an&#13;
The newly created position of interns~ip program for comthe&#13;
Profesaional Development munication majors.&#13;
Coordinator of. Communication Wells wants to motivate&#13;
has also been filled by Wells. The professional communicators to&#13;
{t&#13;
*************** ~S Film Presents&#13;
~ Ifthey've really got what ittakes.&#13;
{t it's going to take everything&#13;
{t they've got&#13;
{(&#13;
{t&#13;
{t&#13;
{t&#13;
{t&#13;
{t&#13;
{t&#13;
{t&#13;
{t&#13;
{t&#13;
{(&#13;
{(&#13;
{t $1.50 Union Cinema ~~~~~~~~~~~~*~~&#13;
*****&#13;
NEXT ~&#13;
WEEK'S&#13;
*&#13;
MOVIE&#13;
*&#13;
FEATURE ~&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
1}&#13;
~~~~~&#13;
M(lM1!tt.&#13;
1.11, ~ ......... fiil~hu"&#13;
o&#13;
R P&#13;
o E&#13;
10&#13;
N P&#13;
A L&#13;
R E&#13;
Y&#13;
s~:7:30 p.m.&#13;
Bedford Duo to perform&#13;
regions in the U. S. She is known to area&#13;
Miss Dougherty's career as a fans as a former Affiliate&#13;
performing artist has taken her Carthage College and&#13;
throughout the U. S. alld Europe Wingspread Artist affOia&#13;
for recitals, orchestral dates and the Johnson F'oundat&#13;
opera and oratorio appearances in Racine, and a member&#13;
such diverse settings as Carnegie Wisconsin Conservatory rI&#13;
Hall, Alice Tully Hall and the faculty.&#13;
Broadway stage in New York, the The concert is co .&#13;
White House and Kennedy, Center The Goethe House of&#13;
in Washington, D. C. and concert and will precede a receptiGll&#13;
halls in Germany, Austria and Library Room adjoini&#13;
most major U. S. cities. church.&#13;
The Bedford Duo - oboist&#13;
Monte Bedford and harpsichordist&#13;
Frances Bedford - will present a&#13;
free public concert at St. Luke's&#13;
Church, 614Main st., Racine, at 8&#13;
p. m. on Saturday, Oct. 3.&#13;
Soprano Lee Dougherty will he&#13;
guest artist with the duo for a&#13;
group of Bach arias and "Blake&#13;
songs."&#13;
The program will include the&#13;
world premiere of Will Gay&#13;
Bottje's Sonata II as well as the&#13;
composer's Sonata I, which the&#13;
duo premiered last January at&#13;
Southern Illinois University where&#13;
Bottje Is a'faculty memher. Also&#13;
programmed are Bach's Sonata,&#13;
G Minor, BMV 1030B, Ralph&#13;
Vaughn Wiliams' Songs for&#13;
Soprano and Oboe based on poetry&#13;
by William Blake and featuring&#13;
Miss Dougherty, and Domencio&#13;
Cimarosa's Concerto for Oboe.&#13;
Members of the duo - Monte&#13;
Bedford is oboist with the Capstone&#13;
Woodwind Quartet and&#13;
music faculty memher at the&#13;
University of Alabama and&#13;
Frances Bedford is a music&#13;
faculty member at UW • Parkside&#13;
- have performed in concert in&#13;
the East, Midwest and Southern&#13;
NOW&#13;
Wustum to ofter art das&#13;
The Racine Art Association, disabled adults will be&#13;
Inc. announces its new session of Saturdays. All other adult&#13;
Fall Art Classes at the Charles A. will be held on Weekday&#13;
Wustum Museum of Fine Arts In ings, afternoons and ev&#13;
Racine. Classes for adults begin Tuition hegins at $22.00f~&#13;
September 28 and will continue week Sesssioo.&#13;
through December 10. New art Fall Art· Class&#13;
classes for Fall 1981 include available and may be oil&#13;
C,:,a~ve Stitcher~, Silk Screen calling the Museum at&#13;
Printmg on Fabnc, Calligraphy by stopping in to pick&#13;
and Photography ~th 35mm color Museum hours are J.6 p.m.&#13;
slIdes .. A speCIal course In days a week and from 1&#13;
CeramIcs for developmentally Mondays and Thuradaya.&#13;
Patronize Ranger 'I Adverils&#13;
50%&#13;
FOR STUDENTS ONL&#13;
OFF&#13;
VIC TANNY HEALTH CL&#13;
\ (STUDENT MUST PRESENT 10 CARD)&#13;
CALL NOW 552·9513 ,&#13;
I&#13;
OFFER EXPIRES OCT. 16, 1'981&#13;
OFFER VALID ONLY AT&#13;
VIC TANNY HEALTH CLUB&#13;
HY. 32 &amp; K.R.&#13;
'\&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 24,1981 7&#13;
tinental Divide"&#13;
A clean break for John Belushi&#13;
by Carol Bums ~ystenous" Nell Porter, the ship develops between Souchak&#13;
or most of. us" the. term eagle lady. and Nell which somehow might be&#13;
t!nenlal Dlvl(!e brlllgs to just a little bit better with Che&#13;
grade - school geography Next we find Souchak huffmg Chase as the leading vy&#13;
. . It refers to the great Rocky and puffing his way up the man. S ntains, which split our con- mountains. It's the last place he Also, the film tries to make a&#13;
t into "fruited plains" and wants to he. Hardly fit for such point about the small number of&#13;
_ rple mountain majesties." Not exertion, he is more concerned. bald eagles left in North America,&#13;
more. with his cigarettes than anything the senseless killing of these great&#13;
John Delushi's new movie, else. He is led to Nell Porter's birds for "sport" and the&#13;
t!nental Divide" may well he small cabin and left there at the ironically fragile chance they&#13;
'ng point in his career. As mercy of the wilds. have for survival on their own,let&#13;
'eSouchak, the slightly rotund Blair Brown, as game warden alone with human's interference.&#13;
ege d!"p-out who ma,naged to and ornithologist Dr. Nell Porter When Ernie returns to Chicago&#13;
a job at Chicago s S~n. - fits well in her role as the plain i and his column with the Suno&#13;
es newspaper, Be.1ushl ~s pretty recluse. Anyone more Times, his heart isn't in his work,&#13;
evable. However, this mOVIe glamorous could not have handled but eventually he forgets about&#13;
t be a.p~oached With an open it. When Porter finds Souchak Porter and goes back to his old&#13;
,font,snottheraunchyt~ there, she is a little less than ways. But tben Dr. Nell Porter,&#13;
lapst,ck for which Belushi IS pleased. She does not take kindly main speaker at a seminar about&#13;
ousi&#13;
. tal D' ide" • t nl to company, especially that of a eagles, comes to town. Souchak&#13;
Con men . IVI e no 0 y writer. But he persuades her to let attends, and Nell's answer to his&#13;
a . plot, It actually says him stay till his guide comes back, eagle question is loaded with&#13;
ething a~ well. At .the on the condition that he will not double entendre.&#13;
'nmng, Errue Souchak, writer write about her.&#13;
a controversial personal The ending to "Continental&#13;
.on column, is hot on the trail But Souchak does write __ Divide" is not what might be&#13;
a dishonest councilman. secretly, and mostly about this expected from a Belushi movie.&#13;
' ......_L·_.'S editor, fearing for his female hermit. These are some of But then this isn't a real&#13;
ly, warns him to back off, but the cuter scenes of the movie. "Belushi" movie. He acts in this&#13;
chak won't. To protect Trusting him, Porter finally one. By all means, see it. The film&#13;
chak from himself, the editor allows him to accompany her on is now playing at Cinema I in&#13;
him on assignment to the the daily jaunts she takes to check Racine. :O~i;Wh:~'"IM'~~;;h: liO-=-.-::"'H=-e-. r-v-o--:I~u-n-te-e-r -w-o-r-k-s-h""":'o=p=\&#13;
. d I . Orgamzatio~ USlOg v?lunteers the participants (presidents; recruitment, training, and&#13;
15tra· It·lona Slmon hav~foundathmesa major cause board memhers and other of- development of voluntary citizen&#13;
of meffechveness in many fleers) identify problems and leadership.&#13;
volunteer programs is the lack of strategies in building effective&#13;
staff support and acceptance. working relations among paid Tbe workshop will be held Oct. 6&#13;
Volunteers are adversely affected staff and ~ol~teers. Instructor and 7 (Tuesday and Wednesday)&#13;
by negative attitudes of staff Frank Martmelli, of the Cent",: for from 9 a.m. to 4 p.rn. in Tallent&#13;
toward them, and can work ef- Public Ski lls Trammg, Hall. It is offered through the UWfeclively&#13;
only if they feel they are Milwaukee, has .had over 12 years Extension. Fee is $32 (not inpart&#13;
of a team. of work experieace With com- cIuding lunch). Registration is&#13;
. . munity organizations and public requested by September 28 at&#13;
This 2-day workshop will help agencies, and specializes in University Extension, 553-2312.&#13;
by Pal Henslak&#13;
eil Simon's newest movie is&#13;
ya work of art. "Only When I&#13;
gh" has many of the familiar&#13;
on trademarks, the most&#13;
nt heing his ability to&#13;
ch out and let the audience feel&#13;
t the characters are going&#13;
ther Simon trademark is&#13;
Mason, Mason. who is&#13;
t in the role of Georgia, is&#13;
ensely touching as an&#13;
olic actress. As the film&#13;
.Masonis in the midst of her&#13;
session with per counselor at&#13;
alcoholism rehabilitation&#13;
ital. Georgia then prepares to&#13;
en home by her dear friend&#13;
ie (Joan Hackett).&#13;
hen Georgia gets home, the&#13;
.11' 'ence is introduced to Jimmy&#13;
,. mes Coco). It is established&#13;
te early in the film that Jimmy&#13;
sy. The general consensus is&#13;
t this is to prevent a love story&#13;
iniscent of "Goodbye Girl"&#13;
een Jimmy and Georgia.&#13;
lnally Kristy McNichol comes&#13;
the picture. Polly (Kristy&#13;
ichol) is Georgia's mature&#13;
ght.... In fact, Polly is often&#13;
more mature than her mother.&#13;
After all those years of living&#13;
with her father, Polly wants to get&#13;
to know her mother by moving in&#13;
with her.&#13;
The last major character is&#13;
David (David Dukes), Georgia's&#13;
ex - lover. David writes a play&#13;
entitled Only When I Laugh and it&#13;
centers on his life and relationship&#13;
with Georgia. He wants her to&#13;
play the leading lady in the play&#13;
and after she accepts, vivid&#13;
memories of her past are&#13;
resurrected.&#13;
As Georgia and David begin to&#13;
work together on the play, some of&#13;
the old feelings they had for each&#13;
other begin to show. As Georgia&#13;
shares her life with Jimmy and&#13;
Tobie, the sincere dedication of&#13;
true friendship begins to show. As&#13;
Georgia and Polly begin to&#13;
discover each other, the undyiog&#13;
love that only a mother and&#13;
daughter can feel also begins to&#13;
show.&#13;
The end result is a dramatic but&#13;
lightbearted film that will touch&#13;
many people in a wonderful way.&#13;
"Only When I Laugh" starts&#13;
tomorrow at Cinema II in Racine.&#13;
amily heritage explored&#13;
complete and easy system for genealogical systems and forms,&#13;
ating, recording and un- as well as texts and archives. One&#13;
standing family history will be of the meetings of his class will be&#13;
ght by Kim Baugrud, UW- a direct learning experience in&#13;
te ns ion , UW-Parkside, how to use local resources. - the&#13;
inning October 6. UW-Parkside Archives.&#13;
L&#13;
augrud has traced all of his The class will meet on five&#13;
n Norwegian grandparents Tuesdays, 7-9 p.m., in Tallent&#13;
to 1591,and one of the family Hall. The fee is $10 per person, or&#13;
bers - from the Sauer $15 for family. Register with UWtre&#13;
farm area - back to 1398. Extension at Parkside, phone 553-&#13;
is conversant with 2312.&#13;
(IL Y I SE&#13;
OYER Sf00 A MONT&#13;
IN A CASH&#13;
SCHOLARSHIP&#13;
FOR YOIR LAST TWO&#13;
YEARSOF COLLEGE?&#13;
If you are a junior or senior&#13;
with good grades in math, physics,&#13;
Visit Kenosha's chemistry or engineering you might qualify.&#13;
LARGEST&#13;
Record Department&#13;
,Sl ~ -Records-&#13;
-Sheet Muslc-&#13;
-Instructional Music - \&#13;
JS'~&#13;
"TM Plac« To Buy RecortU'&#13;
DOWNTOWNKENOSHA&#13;
626 56th St.&#13;
Phone 654-2932&#13;
CALL' TOLL FREE&#13;
1·800·242·1569&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION&#13;
8&#13;
Thursday, September 24, 1981&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Strollin' Boners awarded&#13;
"swmner fix the holes in the Rec&#13;
center ';'aDs, hut they still get&#13;
another Strollin' Boner Award for&#13;
failinll to order enough wood for&#13;
the outdoor fence.&#13;
Strollin' presents his next award&#13;
to Jan Becker, manager of&#13;
Follett's "Folly" Book Store, for&#13;
creating a legend in her own mind.&#13;
Yes folks, as far as this cowboy&#13;
knows the hook store has turned a&#13;
profit 'for the first time in five&#13;
years. Fortunately, we students&#13;
have an alternative. A Student&#13;
Senate book exchange is now, and&#13;
will be, operational for buying and&#13;
selling hooks.&#13;
Look for Strollin' next week&#13;
when he presents his next awards.&#13;
This is the fint week of the&#13;
Strollin' Boner. Strol1in' (his&#13;
nickname) will travel around the&#13;
campus findiJ~ titillating facts&#13;
about your own mUe Parkside. A&#13;
"StroI1in' Boner Award" will be&#13;
given to varioll! deserV!nll people,&#13;
places, and things for odditi"'! of&#13;
the norm.&#13;
The first Strollin' Boner Award&#13;
goes to the bureaucracy of administration.&#13;
This university has&#13;
been here for twelve years. Most&#13;
students have hooks, right? Where&#13;
do you put the damn things when&#13;
you go to the washroom? The&#13;
Assistant ChanceIloc responded&#13;
upon a Student Senator's inquiry,&#13;
lale in 1980.It is now in the hands&#13;
d the bureaucracy ... red tape&#13;
and no resulta.&#13;
The next Strollin' Boner Award&#13;
goes to Physical Plant foc their&#13;
construction d things 011 campus.&#13;
It must be noted that they cannot&#13;
measure accurately after two&#13;
pitchers.&#13;
The oldest Strol1in' Boner&#13;
Award must go to the Physical&#13;
Education Department. After&#13;
about five yesrs, the sauna in the&#13;
gym lltill wOll't be operational,&#13;
thanks to sev... al oversights in the&#13;
crtglna1 pia~ and the fact that&#13;
the manufactur ... of the broken&#13;
unit is now out d business.&#13;
Strol1in' recngnizes that&#13;
Physical Plant did, over the&#13;
Behavior _mod.&#13;
help offered&#13;
Are you a perent - or do you&#13;
know a perent - who is having&#13;
dljficu1ty in getling a child (or&#13;
children) to act in desired ways?&#13;
(For example: to do chores, pick&#13;
up and put away playthings, play&#13;
coop..-atively with others, be on&#13;
time, talk politely, toilet train, do&#13;
schoolwork, overcome fears,&#13;
learn new skills, or other behavior&#13;
goals'&gt;&#13;
This semester students in&#13;
psychology Prof. William&#13;
Morrow's class in Behavior&#13;
Modification are doing projects in&#13;
which, under his supervision, they&#13;
advise parents (and sometimes&#13;
teachers) on how to&#13;
systematically modify children's&#13;
behaviors in desired ways. A&#13;
major emphasis is on systematic&#13;
use of rewards; other procedures&#13;
will also be suggested. Parents&#13;
will he guided in keeping simple&#13;
daily recorda of target behaviors,&#13;
to tell if the behavior is changing.&#13;
IT not, adjustments in procedures&#13;
will he suggested.&#13;
Interested parents may contact&#13;
Prof. Morrow by phoning 553-2476&#13;
or 633-1724, or leaving a message&#13;
(name and phone number) at 553-&#13;
2658.&#13;
THE m 6&#13;
9&#13;
...-.-&#13;
BEERlO R&#13;
IPHXlOSOJP Vol 1 No 1&#13;
--../&#13;
Distributed by E. F. MADRIGRANO 1831 • 55th&#13;
Stroh' .' . St. Kenosha, Wise. 658-3553&#13;
S - NEW ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
----....... -...... ----... -.&#13;
UW-system&#13;
the record&#13;
Enrollments are&#13;
tainly at record high&#13;
again this faIl at uw&#13;
universities. While it is '&#13;
early to have solid dall&#13;
indica lions are that the&#13;
wide total by headcount&#13;
in the neighborhood ~&#13;
Last fall's was 155,499.&#13;
Furthermore, it a&#13;
the increase is distributed&#13;
the state, and that&#13;
perhaps most - universl&#13;
UW system have&#13;
additional enrollment&#13;
again this year.&#13;
UW-Stout is an es&#13;
teresling case. Efforts&#13;
made over the last few&#13;
reduce the overall&#13;
200. To that end the&#13;
estimates it turned&#13;
something on the order&#13;
applicants. And, indeed,&#13;
student admissions are d&#13;
planned. But continuing&#13;
stayed on in much&#13;
numbers than had been&#13;
experienced.&#13;
As a result, instead of the&#13;
for enrollment of 7200 it now&#13;
as if the final figure couldbe&#13;
7500.&#13;
Commenting on the si&#13;
UW-Stout Chancellor&#13;
Swanson said, "Our staff&#13;
working hard to keep us wi&#13;
planned enrollment. H&#13;
doing this we were fsced&#13;
certain human factors&#13;
cannot control .. , T&#13;
element that no one ell&#13;
control is student choice."&#13;
SKIP&#13;
NO~&#13;
19th.&#13;
On November 19,&#13;
we'd like you to stoP&#13;
smoking cigarettes for&#13;
24 hours. It's worth a&#13;
try. Because if yoU&#13;
can skip cigarettes lor&#13;
a day, yOUmight&#13;
discover you can skip&#13;
'em forever.&#13;
THEGREATAMERI~&#13;
SMOKEOUT \&#13;
American Career 5&lt;JCIeIl' •&#13;
r&#13;
t. Joseph's plans fund drive&#13;
A _,000 campaign to create&#13;
....... ent and improvement&#13;
far st. Joesph's High School&#13;
K.... bs Is beillll planned for&#13;
I fall with the theme,&#13;
preserving Choice Through&#13;
.... Spea1''''"''ld&lt;bea.. din~· ~ the drive are&#13;
tbsD a dooen of Ken08bs's&#13;
Dnancial, business, media,&#13;
, and religious leaders, who&#13;
.... arganlzed the campaign in llanolllll meetillllll over the past&#13;
lIlllIItbs.&#13;
Ricbsrd Arneson, vice -&#13;
dent of Arneson Foundry in&#13;
.... osbI Is cbsirillll the camp&#13;
which will begin later this&#13;
onu. and continue through&#13;
ber. Honorary celebrity&#13;
en will be announced at a&#13;
ter dote, Arneson said.&#13;
ArDeIOD said the jIIblic appeal,&#13;
lint such in 10 years, is aimed&#13;
creating a foundation to insure&#13;
ncla1 stability, keep tuition&#13;
fordlble, and to improve&#13;
salaries of teacbers, as well as to&#13;
provide for Immediate physical&#13;
upgrading of the high school.&#13;
Particular emphasis will be&#13;
placed on providing greater&#13;
energy efficiency for the buildings&#13;
and renovating the boys' locker&#13;
room.&#13;
About $350,000 of the $500,000&#13;
goal will be earmarked for the&#13;
endowment fund, $150,000 for&#13;
physical improvements. AU funds&#13;
will be managed by a board of&#13;
KenOllbs residents with expeJ:lise&#13;
in various financial areas. Arneson&#13;
said that board will be&#13;
separate and distinct from the&#13;
School Sisters of St. Frsncis,&#13;
which owns the high school.&#13;
"This campaign is the fruit of&#13;
more than two years of analysis to&#13;
provide educational opportunity&#13;
for youllll people of KenOllha&#13;
County and northern Illinois who&#13;
seek a balanced education of faith&#13;
and reason" Arneson said "It is&#13;
a realisti~ plan to meet SI.&#13;
Joseph's future with a program of&#13;
action that will help ensure sound&#13;
management, fmanclal stability&#13;
and flexibility in the instruetlonai&#13;
program.&#13;
"Our !berne, 'Preserving Choice&#13;
Through Independence' really&#13;
says it all," Arneson said.' uClxi.ce&#13;
among schools is the most natural&#13;
and efficient way to make schools&#13;
accountable to students and&#13;
provides a dynamic force for the&#13;
improvement of education. But to&#13;
preserve that choice, there must&#13;
be financial independence."&#13;
Arneson pointed out that St.&#13;
Joseph'S saves taxpayers nearly&#13;
$1 million annually because it&#13;
receives no local tax support.&#13;
''That adds up to millions of&#13;
dollars of savings since the school&#13;
was founded in 1957. Tuition, fees,&#13;
and voluntary gifts are the only&#13;
sources of operating funds&#13;
available to the school." St.&#13;
JOlleph's currently enrolls about&#13;
670 students.&#13;
t. Joe's&#13;
linaro and Ameche· will launch drive&#13;
I Televisionstar AI Molinaro and&#13;
.football great Alan Ameche&#13;
ve accepted the honorary coirmanShip&#13;
of the $500,000 st.&#13;
ooeph's High School endowment&#13;
improvement fund drive.&#13;
Campaign chairman Richard&#13;
eson said both Kenosha&#13;
I lives "accepted with ensiasm&#13;
and will return to&#13;
to aid the campaign."&#13;
Molinaro will visit Kenosha to&#13;
JaUDch the campaign at St.&#13;
's on Saturday, October 3.&#13;
campaign "kickoff' was&#13;
nally scheduled to be beld&#13;
• . 19, but bsd to be rescheduled&#13;
round Molinaro's TV taping&#13;
Ie for his popular series,&#13;
ppy Days."&#13;
Ameche, the only player from&#13;
Unl.... slty 01 Wisconsin ever&#13;
win the Helsman Trophy,&#13;
warded to college football's&#13;
ed cI&#13;
I/tf.teti°lng becomes celebration&#13;
I by PaUy DeLulsa&#13;
• Dr. ZSezUllll Kim, a Racine&#13;
"'1ial., wu the guest speaker at&#13;
celebration/meeting sponsored&#13;
Parblde's Pre-Med Club last&#13;
y.&#13;
Dr. Kim spoke about his busy&#13;
actlce and gave a basic exnation&#13;
01 how immunities and&#13;
es are formed and treated.&#13;
irtormal question and answer&#13;
CII followed his talk.&#13;
The highlight 01 the meetillll&#13;
the surprise celebration for&#13;
CI' pre-med student SUIlllHyok&#13;
, who became an American&#13;
tIzen earlier tbst day.&#13;
Soq wu presented with a cake&#13;
ongratulatlng him on his&#13;
tura1lzatlon. He admitted that&#13;
party wu a pleasant surprise&#13;
that he felt very honored by it.&#13;
outstanding player, will visit&#13;
Kenosha in November, the concluding&#13;
month of the campaign.&#13;
Both Molinaro and Ameche&#13;
retain close ties with Kenosha and&#13;
have given freely of their time and&#13;
resources in support of community&#13;
projects.&#13;
On "Happy Days," Molinaro is&#13;
widely known as "AI," the owner&#13;
of the soda shop which is the&#13;
favorite hangout of "Fonz"&#13;
(Henry Winkler) and his buddies.&#13;
He 'first came to TV prominence&#13;
as Murray the cop on "The Odd&#13;
Couple," in which he starred with&#13;
Jack Klugman and Tony Randall.&#13;
Ameche, a two-time All -&#13;
American at Wisconsin, went on to&#13;
professional football stardom with&#13;
the Baltimore Colta (1955-llO). He&#13;
Is still the Badgers' second&#13;
leading rusher of all time (3,212&#13;
yards) and led the College AUSUIIllis&#13;
an exceptional student;&#13;
he has learned a new and difficult&#13;
language (English) in addition to&#13;
his native Korean, and he studies&#13;
at every available opportunity.&#13;
SUIIlland his family arrived in&#13;
the United Stales in May 01 1975,&#13;
when he was twelve years old. In&#13;
September of that year, SUIIllwas&#13;
placed in ninth grade at Kenosha's&#13;
Lincoln Junior High School and&#13;
later attended Tremper High&#13;
School, from which he graduated&#13;
in 1979.&#13;
In addition to carrying a full&#13;
load, SUIlll is preliarlllll for his&#13;
Medical College Admissions Test&#13;
(MCAT). He would like to attend&#13;
the Medical College of Wisconsin&#13;
in Milwaukee and has expressed&#13;
an interest in the field of dermatology&#13;
as a specialty.&#13;
• Patronize RANGER Adverlisers&#13;
Stars to a 30-27 upaet of the&#13;
Cleveland Browns in the 1955 AUStar&#13;
game. His Heisman trophy is&#13;
on permanent display at&#13;
Kenosha's Pub " Grub.&#13;
The St. Joseph's fund drive is&#13;
aimed at creating a foundation to&#13;
insure financial stability, keep&#13;
tuition affordable, and to improve&#13;
salaries of teachers, as well as to&#13;
provide for immediate physical&#13;
upgrading 01 the high school.&#13;
Cbsirman Arneson said initial&#13;
response to the campaign's major&#13;
gifts division, which is seeking&#13;
"substantial pacesetting contributions,"&#13;
has been encouraging.&#13;
"I'm very optimistic&#13;
that our first public appeal for St.&#13;
Joseph'S In 10 years is going to be&#13;
a complete succeas," he said.&#13;
Arneson said the first campaign&#13;
report will be issued at the october&#13;
3 kickoff at the high school.&#13;
Caffeine pUislegal&#13;
Legal caffeine pills are being&#13;
advertised on a number of college&#13;
campuses, including American&#13;
U., the U. of Maryland and the U.&#13;
of Michigan.&#13;
A variety of stimulants, sold in&#13;
lots of 1000, are featured in ads&#13;
placed in student newspapers by a&#13;
variety of entrepreneurs. One&#13;
such firm, Akers Pharmaceutical&#13;
of Lewistown, Penn., sells similar&#13;
over &gt; the . counter medicines to&#13;
truck drivers and reportedly just&#13;
entered the student market.&#13;
RANGER Thundlly. September U. 1981 9&#13;
_:...&#13;
Women leaders network&#13;
Faced with the Moral Majority&#13;
backlash, growing hopelessness&#13;
over passage of the Equal Rights&#13;
Amendment and the Reagan&#13;
administration's plan to relax&#13;
Title IX standards, the National&#13;
Women's Student Coalition isn't&#13;
beating a hasty retreat.&#13;
Instead, the NWSC is trying to&#13;
organize a women's leadership&#13;
network on campuses across the&#13;
country that will help female&#13;
students develop leadership and&#13;
organizational skills. The&#13;
program is funded through a two -&#13;
year women's Education Equity&#13;
Act grant. The first year d. the&#13;
grant period was spent evaluating&#13;
needs and defining the technical&#13;
assistance that should he provided&#13;
on campuses, according to Donna&#13;
Brownsey, director 01 NWSC. It&#13;
culminated in a national CODference&#13;
last spri ng.&#13;
nus year. "we're trying to&#13;
activate the network itself," says&#13;
Brownsey. Field organizers at&#13;
individual campuses will be&#13;
setting up workshops, conferences&#13;
and organizing efforts, all aimed&#13;
at getting women to become more&#13;
active leaders. The workshops&#13;
will focus on how to get campus,&#13;
regional and even natiooaJ aetloD&#13;
(Xl women's issues.&#13;
U successful, the network will&#13;
draw in enough women to keep the&#13;
program gcing after grsnt fw&gt;.&#13;
ding expires and to provide&#13;
enough leaders to act as mentors&#13;
(or c:tber women on campus, Mys&#13;
Lana Ott, the program's _istAnt&#13;
director. Brownsey and Otl&#13;
believe current attacks on&#13;
women's rights will galvanize&#13;
campus movements.&#13;
The main focus this year will be&#13;
on trying to maintain Tille IX,&#13;
says Brownsey. The school year&#13;
opens with National Tille IX&#13;
Awareness Week (OCt. 5 - 9)&#13;
during which NWSC field&#13;
representatives will he organizing&#13;
campus support for cOnlinllecl&#13;
educational equality for womeD.&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC. ATtUTlC fOOTWLUl&#13;
_AU_Ta&#13;
TEAM ....... - AU. .cIIIT.&#13;
~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~/;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~&#13;
I&#13;
or&#13;
il'&#13;
f)Illetvwn&#13;
"':== allQUarteR&#13;
3700 MEACHEM ROAD&#13;
Men-Womens Full Styling Shop&#13;
Cutting, Shaping, Styling&#13;
Coloring, Blow Drying, Perms&#13;
Hair Relaxing, Manicures, Shaving&#13;
Beard &amp; Mustache Trimming&#13;
HOURS BY APPOINTMENT&#13;
Tue. &amp; Wed. '-6; Thurs. &amp; Fri. '-7; Sat. 8-\&#13;
Donna Arnott - Owner 554-0777&#13;
Debbie Holtman&#13;
,&#13;
VISIT OUR NEW&#13;
HEALTH SNACK&#13;
CORNER&#13;
IN&#13;
It Ql)lbt&#13;
~wttt ~~nppt&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION BAZAAR&#13;
10:00 am • 4:00 pm&#13;
featuring a variety of&#13;
• SEEDS AND NUTS&#13;
• FRUIT AND NUT MIXES&#13;
• YOGURT COVERED CANDIES&#13;
• CAROB COVERED CANDIES&#13;
10 ThursdaY, September 24, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Guskin talks about budget cuts.&#13;
ositions open on the facull¥ -&#13;
pbout 16. We're going to contmue&#13;
a I don't know if we'll do as well&#13;
:~t year as we did this year, but&#13;
we damn well better do a good Job.&#13;
There's going to be a lot of up~t&#13;
people, me being one, If we d",! t.&#13;
. The commitment of the se~or&#13;
administrators here is .to social&#13;
justrce, which is aff1~m.all~e&#13;
action on one level, to bnngmg 10&#13;
the kinds ci people who will have&#13;
the expertise as faculty to create&#13;
models for students. So f~r m~ ~e&#13;
issue of affirmative action IS 10&#13;
social justice and educatIOnal&#13;
issues, not in terms of some legal&#13;
mandate. I see no reason we&#13;
should change our commitments&#13;
at all.&#13;
We do have a formal goal; I&#13;
think we're in good shape in terms&#13;
of legality. In terms of availability&#13;
of women and minorities in&#13;
specific areas, the market is very&#13;
good for faculty positions. But it's&#13;
difficult to get people away from&#13;
business anyway. The pay is a&#13;
whole lot.better. Also, women and&#13;
minorities are only a small percentage&#13;
of the graduating classes&#13;
in science and business majors.&#13;
You have to be careful: you can't&#13;
demand more than what is&#13;
produced. But in areas like history&#13;
and women's studies, where there&#13;
are relatively more candidates&#13;
available, the likelihood of filling&#13;
a vacant position with a woman or&#13;
a minority is pretty high.&#13;
Ranger: If you could restore&#13;
some of the dollars lost in the&#13;
budget cuts, where would you put&#13;
them1&#13;
Guskin: The library budget;&#13;
that would be the first area to get&#13;
additional funding, even though it&#13;
wasn't cut. Also, the computer&#13;
center and capital purchasing&#13;
would get support above our&#13;
usual.&#13;
We all live in fear . . . these&#13;
buildings are all 10to 12 years old.&#13;
All supplies were purchased at the&#13;
beginning. We would also try to&#13;
restore student help, and review&#13;
spring course offerings in light of&#13;
enrollment, to make sure we offer&#13;
enough courses.&#13;
We would not restore other&#13;
position cuts. We think they were&#13;
appropriate to make. If you&#13;
believe in the decisions you make,&#13;
you have to stick with them. And,&#13;
you can't restore a person's job&#13;
only to find it not fundable the next&#13;
year. Otherwise, there's a good&#13;
deal that could be done. But we&#13;
.wouldn't restore the things we cut&#13;
because we believe we can live&#13;
without them.&#13;
ConUnued From Page One&#13;
it would be the same way. In the&#13;
future I don't know what's going&#13;
to happen at the state level. I'm&#13;
hopeful. I just can't tell - is the&#13;
state going to force us into another&#13;
cut? If,and I stress if, they do, we&#13;
won't have any choice. .&#13;
My hope is that if there IS&#13;
soother cut there'd be a surcharge&#13;
to ofiset it. Ithink that it's&#13;
in the student's interest not to&#13;
have us suffer, not to have to cut&#13;
things that are going to hurt them.&#13;
Ihate to be terribly cold - hearted&#13;
about it but $30 is not a lot of&#13;
mooey these days. Really, with&#13;
the 4.5%tuition increase ... that's&#13;
about the lowest in the country.&#13;
I think the cuts will come (if&#13;
they come) because of the Reagan&#13;
cuts. We're not through with that;&#13;
he's going to cut again. It won't&#13;
affect the university directly this&#13;
time, except in financial aids -&#13;
and we doo't know what the scope&#13;
ci that will be yet. The real effects&#13;
will be on health and human&#13;
services. I doo't know how the&#13;
govern... 's going to come out on&#13;
that yel. Ifhe tries to cut any more&#13;
in the univenities, we're going to&#13;
be lurt. If he cuts a few bucks, no&#13;
Il"Oblem, but if he wants to cut&#13;
from 2 to 5%, we're talking about&#13;
a deep cut. Then we can't sustain&#13;
that without some hurts of&#13;
significance. I mean, hurting&#13;
athletics is one thing. But we're&#13;
talking about hurting major areas&#13;
Iithe university at that point.&#13;
I think all chancellors will fight&#13;
very hard for a surcharge. I would&#13;
Ie8d that fight. I think the cost per&#13;
student here is relatively small.&#13;
I'm not cruel and cold about it, but&#13;
$30 a year is $1 a week. We'd get&#13;
about $4-5 million, and that's&#13;
equal to a percentage point in a&#13;
budget cut. A 3% cut would mean&#13;
about $100 per student in the&#13;
system.&#13;
SIrmgly supporting a surcharge&#13;
for any increase that's passed .on&#13;
doesn't make me popular With&#13;
students, but I think we've taken&#13;
pretty much what we can. And&#13;
alter that if the Reagan cuts or&#13;
state problems mean more cuts,&#13;
we should assess the students.&#13;
What are the choices? If you want&#13;
a good library, access t~ the&#13;
computer enough resources m the&#13;
laboratories. there aren't many.&#13;
We were yelling like crazy to&#13;
raise taxes for everybody at one&#13;
time. What they're doing is forcing&#13;
the taxes on a limited number&#13;
of people who are directly affected&#13;
by the service. They don't do that&#13;
for any other area besides&#13;
educa tion. In every other area, we&#13;
tax everybody. At tbe university&#13;
level, the only way we can handle&#13;
it is through surcharge.&#13;
To give the legislators their due,&#13;
they did bite the bullet. Other&#13;
state agencies got cut 8%. They're&#13;
going to have to bite the bullet.&#13;
again and support the universities,&#13;
though.&#13;
Ranger: Don't you think a&#13;
surcharge would affect&#13;
enrollment by raising the cost of&#13;
education beyond some students'&#13;
ability to afford it?&#13;
Guskln: Right now, total&#13;
enrollment is way up beyond our&#13;
expectations. It's up 7%; we&#13;
projected 4-5%. We have the&#13;
largest freshman class in our&#13;
history.&#13;
It's a great irony for us - as the&#13;
economy gets bad, and people&#13;
can't afford to send their children&#13;
... themselves away to school,&#13;
they stay home to go to school. As&#13;
long as you offer quality education&#13;
nearby, people will make the&#13;
sacrifice. But that's what an&#13;
urhan school is all about; serving&#13;
the people of the area.&#13;
Ranger: Do you think future&#13;
cuts would affect affirmative&#13;
action?&#13;
GUlkin: We still have a lot of&#13;
PAIKSIMI""&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
. -o-:.... C;; .-;.&#13;
...,-~ .&#13;
-~~~&#13;
.~~\)~&#13;
~V~~&#13;
~S: • ~\\'" C~~&#13;
1~~Oooo;l~ite'~. ~~~~ ~&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. .";J~. ~.&#13;
10:ooa.m.- ~&#13;
7:00p.m. • 1&#13;
Fridays&#13;
.. \&#13;
"Meet and old friend in the Square&#13;
... or make a new one"&#13;
Tennis forfeits&#13;
hy Greg Bonoliglio&#13;
The' Parkside Women's Tennis&#13;
Team forfeited its match last&#13;
Satu~day at U. W. Oshkosh. Ac-&#13;
~ordlDg to Coach Goggin, an inJUry,&#13;
a schedule conflict, and a&#13;
s~al~er than usual team were the&#13;
prmclpal re~sons for the forfeit.&#13;
This year s team has only 7&#13;
players, of which. 4 are returnees&#13;
The 2 plarers who couldn't play i~&#13;
Saturday s game left. Parkside&#13;
WIth.Just 5 players; that's one&#13;
pos.llon short of the 6 pos'r&#13;
deplOYed in te . 1 Ions oms.&#13;
Parksi~e's record now stands at&#13;
0-2follow109 Saturday'S game d&#13;
a seaSon an&#13;
M·l k opener loss to&#13;
t wau ee.&#13;
BEGINNER OR ADVANCED - Cost is about the same as a&#13;
semeste~~..: a U.S. college: $2.889. Price includes jet round year tlrne spanl YOur Spamsh stUd'&#13;
trlp to ~Ue from New York, rOOm. board, and tuition opponunltles not available In a U ~es Will be enhanced by&#13;
complete. Government grants and loana available for ef'lllbi IZed tests show our students' I classroom Standard_&#13;
students. e students completmg two anguage skills supenor to&#13;
. year programs tn U S&#13;
lIve WIth a SpanIsh family. attend classes fOur haul'S a da Hurry, It takes a lot of time t&#13;
four days a week, four months. Eam 16 hrs. of credit {equ~: depart Jan 31, and retum JU~ make alt arrangements We&#13;
valent to 4 semestet'$-taught in U.S. colleges over a two ITED-A program of Tnnltv Ch~ 1, 1982. FUllY ACCRED.&#13;
SEMg'§I~!t!.N, SPAIN (A Program of Trinity Chri.lI~n C~II~::) 49506&#13;
CALL TOLL FREE forfullinf .-&#13;
(In Mich., or " loll free line inoperallve call 1-6 ormation 1-800-253-9008&#13;
16-942·2541COllect.)&#13;
Cross countty..&#13;
Rangers host In&#13;
by Pally DeLuisa ,&#13;
According to Parkslde s two&#13;
cross country coaches,. Lucian&#13;
Rosa and Mike DeWItt, the&#13;
Ranger harriers are young but&#13;
gaining valuable experience as&#13;
the season progresses. .&#13;
Rosa the men's coach, claims&#13;
that uris year's team is "unhalanced,"&#13;
possessing a gamut of&#13;
running talent. HIS strongest&#13;
runner yet is sophomore Dan&#13;
Stublaski from Racine . (Park)&#13;
who paced the Rangers 10 their&#13;
first two outings, as expected. In a&#13;
four school meet hosted by&#13;
Parkside on September 19,&#13;
Stublaski placed seventh overall&#13;
with a time of 27:52 covering 8,000&#13;
meters,&#13;
In that same meet, other entries'&#13;
for Parkside were sophomores Al&#13;
Correa 10th, clocked at 28:15, jmd&#13;
Tom B~lTett, 14th, with a time of&#13;
28:28. Freshman Robert Mayfield&#13;
was close behind with a time of&#13;
28:37 for 15th place.&#13;
Junior Rich Sowlles ran a time&#13;
of 29: 23 for the 18th position. Steve&#13;
Brunner, a sophomore, was the&#13;
next finisher (19th), with a time of&#13;
29:47.&#13;
Freshman Austin Booker and&#13;
John Cogan ran 22nd and 26th,&#13;
respectively.&#13;
At this time, Rosa&#13;
that his team is as s&#13;
could be. He did admit&#13;
"tickled pink" if a&#13;
ners qualified for ~ ~&#13;
are scheduled for five&#13;
now.&#13;
Coach DeWitt, CIt&#13;
hand, seemed more&#13;
stating that the womea's&#13;
a good first meet&#13;
Saturday at Ma&#13;
competed against Ii&#13;
teams, placing third&#13;
85 points.&#13;
Junior Debbie Spin.&#13;
excellent time of 19:18&#13;
eighth individually.&#13;
Also scoring for Pa&#13;
senior Barb Osborne .&#13;
of 20:14 for 13th '&#13;
Driscoll, clocked at :Ill:&#13;
place; and freshman&#13;
coming in at 21:47 for&#13;
Three other Ranger&#13;
covered the 5,000 m&#13;
They were senior&#13;
sophomore Sandy V&#13;
sophomore Linda Pf&#13;
Marquette's Katie&#13;
the race in 18:25. The&#13;
team was first overall&#13;
by UW - Steven's Pollll,&#13;
Parkside, UW - Oshkosh,&#13;
University and Carroll&#13;
Sports&#13;
Calendar&#13;
Friday, Sept. 18: Golf vs. UW - Oshkosh Invitational, Cbasb&#13;
Appleton. Volleyball vs. Ranger invitational (3 p. m.)&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 19: Volleyball vs. Ranger Invitational (8:30&#13;
Cross - Country vs, Marquette, Mitchell Park, Milw. Tennis YS.&#13;
Oshkosh Tournament (8 a. m.)&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 20: Soccer vs. Western Michigan, Kalazamoo,&#13;
p. m.) .&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 22: Tennis vs. Carthage College (3 p. m.)&#13;
Aurora, Ill., College (3:30 p. rn.) Golf vs. Marquette &amp; UWTumblebrook&#13;
C. C.&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 24: Tennis vs. De Paul University (2:30)&#13;
BOWLING TEAM SCHEDULE - 1st Semester&#13;
October 3 or 4 - Whitewater&#13;
October 10 - Milwaukee&#13;
October 17 - Platteville&#13;
October 25 - Sheboygan (Northeast Collegiate)&#13;
November 7-8 - Milwaukee (Invitational)&#13;
November 14 - Parkside&#13;
November 27-28-SI. Louis (National Team Match Games)&#13;
December 4-6 - Oshkosh (Invitational)&#13;
December 30-31 - Las Vegas (Walt Peabudy Invitational)&#13;
2nd Semester&#13;
February 6 - Oshkosh&#13;
February 11-13 - Parkside (ACU-I Regional Tournament)&#13;
February 20-21 -:- Milwaukee (Mia west Collegiate)&#13;
March 6 - Madison (Conference Roll-olfJ&#13;
No dates yet -:- DeKalh (Huskie Invitational); Chicago IN&#13;
Collegiate IndIvidual Match Game)&#13;
a&#13;
MEN'S CROSS - COUNTRY SCHEDULE&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa&#13;
Sept. 5 (11:4Oa. m.) UW - Stevens Point UW _Whitewater,&#13;
Stevens Point (4 miles) ,&#13;
Sept. 11 (3 p. m.) Northwestern; Parkside (8,000 meters)&#13;
(8soooept.19 (11 a. m.) Northwestern Illinois _ Chicago Circle; , meters) ,&#13;
Sept. 26 (12 noon) TFA/USA Midwest Collegiates' parkSide&#13;
meters) ,&#13;
g~:.; (311'm.) Notre Dame Invitational; Notre Dame, Ind. 15&#13;
te· (3 p. m.) Purdue invitational' West Lafayette, Ind. me rs) ,&#13;
gc:. 24.(11:30 a. m.l Carthage Invitational' Kenosha (smiles)&#13;
me~~~1 (11 a. m.) NCAA-II Regional; Big Rapids, Mich.&#13;
~~~. 71~2;~~p. m. TFA/USA Midwest Open; Parkside (8,000&#13;
meter~) a. m.) NCAA-II Championship; Lowell, Mass·&#13;
Nov. 21 (11 a. m.) NAJA Championship; Parkside (8,000meterS)&#13;
~LEADER'&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Elmwood PlazalRacine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's weor&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's Vi&#13;
RANGER Thursday, Septem~ 2~, 1981 11&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Women show improvements&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
The Parkside women's&#13;
volleyball team kept its record&#13;
even at 4 ~ 4 last weekend with two&#13;
wins Friday and two losses&#13;
Saturday in the sixth annual&#13;
Ranger Invitational. The College&#13;
of St. Francis won the ten - team&#13;
tournament with UW - LaCrosse&#13;
taking second.&#13;
The Rangers started oif the&#13;
event by deleating Chicago State&#13;
in two games, 15 - 8, and 15 • 8.&#13;
They then beat Loras College 15-12&#13;
and 15 - 6, but that was where the&#13;
Rangers luck ended, as they lost&#13;
to a tough Northern Illinois team 9&#13;
- 15, 12 - 15. The next match&#13;
against LaCrosse could have&#13;
gotten the Rangers into the&#13;
semifinals, oot again Parkside&#13;
came out on the short end of the 9 -&#13;
15, 10 - 15 scores.&#13;
"The play was real weU matched,&#13;
as far as the level oi the&#13;
GO&#13;
RANGERS&#13;
teams," said coach Linda Henderson.&#13;
"We played betler, there&#13;
is improvemenl 1be girls are&#13;
improving every ...-eek to&#13;
The Rangers ",II try to move&#13;
above the 500 level Monday as&#13;
they host. 'orth Park and Carroll&#13;
College at 6 p. m ID the gym&#13;
F ........&#13;
........&#13;
...&#13;
...... 1et.2&#13;
"Fall bowling leagues," exclaims Strollin' Bowlin', "What&#13;
a great way to spend an afternoon or an evening. Why the&#13;
Rec Center eve~ supplies trophies and holds an end of the&#13;
year piua party for each league. What a deal for ONLY&#13;
$2.75 per person." For information on how you can loin a&#13;
Fall bowling league call 553-2695 or stop by the control desk&#13;
in the Rec Cenfer. Fall leagues begin the week of October 2.&#13;
whng conference&#13;
new oHicers&#13;
At its alDlual meeting in late&#13;
the Big G Bowling Con-&#13;
, elected Jerry Zigner of&#13;
'de conference president.&#13;
officera elected were Steve&#13;
th of UW-Platteville as vice&#13;
'dent and Dionne Schulist of&#13;
·Milwaukee as secretary /&#13;
urer.&#13;
1981-82Big G Cooference&#13;
1IItcbe&lt;1uIe is: Oct. 3 at Whitewater,&#13;
. 10a1 Milwaukee, Oct. 17 a1&#13;
ltevilIe, Nov. 14 at Parkside,&#13;
. &amp;at Oshkosh and March 6 at&#13;
(roll-off).&#13;
Students interested in joining&#13;
club should contact Mike&#13;
uber in the Union Roo.&#13;
Ier before Sept. 28.&#13;
CLASSIFIeD&#13;
ADS'&#13;
'!be deadline for classified ads&#13;
the Ranger is noon no Friday&#13;
or pUblicalion the following&#13;
rsday. Cost: ~ per ten&#13;
WANTED&#13;
ItISTUDY !.twents for issue room.&#13;
EMI'f mornings or )·6 p.m. Contact Lorlln&#13;
"lflii, Aftllellcs. In person.&#13;
ide&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
USIO lOOKS III ~rtna Merrell's "old book :Ilfr_" 30" off all books II you bring this&#13;
w.th YOU. Hardcover books at paperback&#13;
lIfiCIS J1~Sixrtl St .. Racine.&#13;
'_ON Wnoculer microscope lor lO.40.100x&#13;
~~l"" . .can, accessories. Excellent&#13;
, 1llI'I, 16OlI. 639.6825.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
-:~USINESS LOOKINGfor working&#13;
",!lUon IQ CIPel"lIte extension of muttt.&#13;
GOllar cemPen.,. Phone 658.4618.&#13;
fYl"N WORK WANTE 0&#13;
(5 ~ returns, lermpapers, tneses ,&#13;
"...,;IPf1. etc. 14 years exeeeteoce. d. ble rlltes. 694·1825 or 652.&amp;599.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAINOFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658.2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.l.C.&#13;
A REVEALING COMEDY ABOUT REACHING THE TOP&#13;
BY WAY OF THE BOTTOM&#13;
RYAN O'NEAL&#13;
JACK WARDEN MARIANGELA MELATO RICHARD KIEL&#13;
"SO FINE"&#13;
A LOBELL/BERGMAN PRODUCTION&#13;
MUSIC BY ENNIO MORRICONE PRODUCED BY MIKE LOBELL&#13;
WRITI'EN AND DIREarED BY ANDREW BERGMAN&#13;
~&#13;
,....... IffOl"lw...-BtosO ...~Cot - e-.,. R.='7'·;;;'1~- .•'-- .... -&#13;
..........,-&#13;
OPDS SIPTIMBD 88th III A '!BBA!BB IIIA1l YOU!&#13;
12 Thursday, September 24, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Soccer splits pair&#13;
by Cbarles Perce&#13;
In a very close game 00 Sunday,&#13;
Parkside came out 00 the short&#13;
end of a 1 - 0 decision against&#13;
Western Michigan. It was a very&#13;
close game until the Western&#13;
Michigan goal.&#13;
''Their goal - keeper was fantastic!&#13;
He kept them in the&#13;
game," commented Coach&#13;
Henderson. Western Michigan&#13;
used two goal - keepers in the&#13;
effort. Parkside had a .chance to&#13;
score, but their goal - keeper&#13;
made a fantastic deflected save.&#13;
TIle shot was missed from 2.5&#13;
feet.&#13;
Parkside defender Alan Gibson&#13;
miss - hit a head shot, which&#13;
deflected into the Partslde goal,&#13;
resulting in Western Michigan's&#13;
mly score.&#13;
Parkside outshot W. Michigan&#13;
22-17, but noae Iithe shots were&#13;
lucky to squeak into the net for a&#13;
score.&#13;
Parkside was in much heller&#13;
physical shape than Western&#13;
Michigan. However the Rangers&#13;
played without the aid of Roger&#13;
Menk. Menk sprained his ankle&#13;
attempting to steal the ball in the&#13;
Beloit game two weeks ago.&#13;
The depth rif the bench was&#13;
superb. Freshman Rich Blay&#13;
came elf the bench for some excellent&#13;
shots. Don Tyson, a new&#13;
player from Minnesota, also&#13;
played well. John McNulty, a&#13;
former starter from last season,&#13;
has been making his presence&#13;
known by playing an excellent&#13;
defense.&#13;
After the game, Coach Henderson&#13;
said tha t the key to better&#13;
play will be "to put together the&#13;
offense and play more productively."&#13;
• • •&#13;
NOWTHE&#13;
GOOD NEWS! !!&#13;
Earlier in the week, Parkside&#13;
devastated Trinity. The final&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Wanltowin two free pitchers of beer? All you have to do is fill out this&#13;
form and pick the correct winners. Put a check mark by your picks and&#13;
bn~ the form down to the Ranger office, WLLC0139.&#13;
-- Baltimore at Buffalo --&#13;
-- Chicago at Minnesota --&#13;
-- Cincirmati at Houstoo --&#13;
-- Cleveland at Los Angeles --&#13;
-- Dallas at St. Louis --&#13;
-- Denver at 0....1and --&#13;
-- Detroit at TamPB Bay --&#13;
-- Green Bay at N. Y. Giants--&#13;
-- Kamas CitJ at New England --&#13;
-- N. Y. Jeta at New Orleans --&#13;
-- San Francisce at Washington --&#13;
-- Seattle at san Diego --&#13;
Tie • break.: will be the total&#13;
...... bIned poiDtsSCCll'ell in the Green Bay - N. Y. Giants game.&#13;
Last WIDDer was TOIIllverson, 7 correct, 41points.&#13;
Kales:&#13;
S.S. No. Name ;-==================~&#13;
I. One entry per person.&#13;
2. Entrants must be Parkside students&#13;
:: :~er=f~ppedal mf,:::"rs and ~ir families are ineligible.&#13;
5 Enlri us! be . Ranger ISSue. pr«eedJ';:::" gam~ In to the Ranger office by noon of the Friday&#13;
6. WilUlerswill be chosen by the Sports Edlto&#13;
7. Winners will be allllOUncedthe followi r. k . .&#13;
8 Entries must be .... ibl t be ng wee In Pro PICks.&#13;
. .~ e 0 considered.&#13;
score was 5 ~ 1.&#13;
Last week's "Player of the&#13;
Week", Jeff Dennehy, scored one&#13;
goal to move him to within two&#13;
goals of the school record for the&#13;
most goals in one season, and it's&#13;
only the fifth game of the season.&#13;
He is also within five of taking&#13;
over third place on the all - time&#13;
scoring list, and Dennehy's only a&#13;
sophomore.&#13;
This week's Player of the Week,&#13;
Bob Newstrom, scored two goals&#13;
in the triumph over Trinity.&#13;
Newstrom is also moving up on&#13;
some scoring lists.&#13;
Senior John "MoMo" Onyiego,&#13;
who has been ill all week, also&#13;
scored a goal to help in the defeat.&#13;
Parkside's over - all record thus&#13;
far in the season is 2 - 3. They will&#13;
be traveling to UW - Whitewater,&#13;
an inner - state rival, in hopes of&#13;
raising their record to 3 - 3 on&#13;
saturday, September 26, at 3:30.&#13;
They win then be traveling to&#13;
Marquette on Monday, September&#13;
28 at 4 p. m. to boost them above&#13;
.500. The next home game is October&#13;
2 and 3 for the Chancellor's&#13;
Cup Tournament at 3:00 p. m. in&#13;
the bowl behind the Phy Ed&#13;
Building.&#13;
Children lead Cheers&#13;
Parkside's cpeerleaders and&#13;
advisor Shirley Schmerling are&#13;
organizing a junior squad to get&#13;
faculty, staff and students&#13;
children involved in Parkside&#13;
athletics.&#13;
Six positions on the 12 - girl&#13;
squad are still open. The girls&#13;
~ust be 4 - 10 years old to PBrticipate,&#13;
Parents are responsible&#13;
for having a Parkside cheerleader&#13;
uniform made over to fit their&#13;
child. Parents must also supply&#13;
white tennies and socks for tbeir&#13;
child To sign ull your child call&#13;
Schmerling, ext. 2320 by ac't. 20.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Tbursday,Sept.Z4&#13;
BUS TOUR to Chicago led by Rita Tallent Picken (formerly of UW - Pa&#13;
ext. 2312 for reservations. Sponsored by UW - Extension.&#13;
Friday, sept. 25&#13;
MOVIE "Fame" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema. A&#13;
door is $1.50for a Parkside student and $1.50lor a guest. Sponsored byP&#13;
DANCE/CONCERT at 9 p. m. in Union Square featuring "Amuzemenl&#13;
Admission at the door is $2.00 for a Parkside student and .$2.50 for a&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 26&#13;
WORKSHOP "Professionalism: Pathways and Pitfalls" at 8:30 a. m.1D&#13;
Hall. Call ext. 2312 for more details. Sponsored by UW"- E&#13;
Professional Secretaries International.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. Z7&#13;
MOVIE "Fame" will be repeated at 7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday. Sept. Z8&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12:15 p. m. in Union 106. George Hagglund, Dlredor(i&#13;
School for Workers, will talk on 'IAn Invisible Dimension in Univeralty&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Tharsday, Oet. 1&#13;
COURSE "Investing Those DoUara After You've Earned Them" at 7 p.&#13;
Tallent Hall.,Call ext. 2312for reservations. Sponsored by UW - ExteIlIioD.&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING I&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5%% In'.r •• , • Y•• Dall,&#13;
Balance J. 5500.00 .r M.nl&#13;
WE'RE HERE 10 HELP YOU 1.0&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing BlVd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 694.1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin ..&#13;
414 - 658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 657-1340&#13;
410 .Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisco&#13;
&#13;
</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69829">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 10, issue 3, September 24, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69830">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69831">
              <text>1981-09-24</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69834">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="69835">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="69836">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69837">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69838">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69839">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69840">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69841">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69842">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1364">
      <name>budget cuts</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1375">
      <name>university administrative executive committee</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
