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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 10, issue 8</text>
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            <text>UW-P honors to be offered</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text> " University of Wisconsin - Parkside er&#13;
hUr8day~()ctober 29, 1981 Vol. 10 . No.8&#13;
W·p honors to be offered already existing course work.&#13;
Each agreement must be approved&#13;
by the Honors Program&#13;
Steering Comll'ittee. To qualify&#13;
for this initial work, students must&#13;
have a GPA of 3.2 or higher. Each&#13;
course in honors will be&#13;
designated as such on the&#13;
student's transcripts if the&#13;
student's grade in the course is a&#13;
B-plus or better. To remain in the&#13;
program, students must maintain,&#13;
their 3.2 or better gradepoint&#13;
while doing the additional work&#13;
that will be required by honors&#13;
instructors.&#13;
After a student has completed 15&#13;
credits of honors course work&#13;
(with at least half of those credits&#13;
earned outside of the student's&#13;
primary major), she or he is&#13;
eligible for graduation "with&#13;
distinction" noted on transcripts.&#13;
At this point, the student is also&#13;
eligible to enroll in the Senior&#13;
Honors Seminar, a two semester&#13;
course in which students develop&#13;
and present a Senior Honors&#13;
Thesis. Enrollment is the seminar&#13;
is basically for seniors, since&#13;
students must have completed at&#13;
least 116credits before enrolling.&#13;
Each thesis will be evaluated by a&#13;
three member faculty committee&#13;
appointed by the Seminar&#13;
Director.&#13;
Students who qualify to&#13;
graduate "with distinction" and&#13;
students on redesigning the&#13;
program.&#13;
The Honors Program was&#13;
referred from the Faculty Senate&#13;
back to the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee last spring for&#13;
clarification and was passed at&#13;
the early fall Faculty Senate&#13;
meeting. "Essentially, the&#13;
program as it now stands was&#13;
designed by students, with minor&#13;
changes as suggested by the&#13;
steering committee" 'Thayer&#13;
said. '&#13;
Thayer said the program. was&#13;
also unusual because it "assumes&#13;
realistically a level of maturity on&#13;
the part of academic achievers&#13;
that regular academic programs&#13;
don't assume."&#13;
Thayer said the program&#13;
"relies on student initiative and is&#13;
determined by the achievement of&#13;
students as they work with the&#13;
advising of individual faculty&#13;
members." A Student Advisory&#13;
Committee will also administer&#13;
the program in conjunction with&#13;
the Director and the Faculty&#13;
Steering Committee, composed of&#13;
elected representatives from each&#13;
division.&#13;
The basic components of the&#13;
program are honors course work&#13;
and a senior honors seminar.&#13;
Course work is arranged through&#13;
agreements between individual&#13;
students and instructors of&#13;
proposal for an unusual&#13;
rsity wide Honors&#13;
ram, developed by comatim&#13;
professor Lee Thayer&#13;
task force of students, was&#13;
Uy passed by Parkside's&#13;
ty Senate. Tbe program will&#13;
plemented next semester&#13;
students will be able to&#13;
r for courses that will&#13;
them for honors credits&#13;
ntrance to the program.&#13;
program will not replace&#13;
traditional departmental&#13;
system, hased on GPA&#13;
• but it will replace the&#13;
emically Talented and&#13;
ly Skilled Program, which&#13;
cing dwindling enrollment&#13;
major course, a seminar.&#13;
year, Thayer worked with&#13;
Happy Halloween ••••••••••••• He also sees a record of&#13;
association with the program as&#13;
"a clear indication of advantage"&#13;
to both future employers and&#13;
graduate schools.&#13;
Tbe thesis completed at undergraduate&#13;
level is itself&#13;
"significant recognition of many&#13;
accomplishments not implied by&#13;
GPA alone," Thayer said, "like&#13;
the ability to write and communicate&#13;
across disciplines, the&#13;
ability to handle sophisticated&#13;
ideas and a high level of scholarly&#13;
dedication. "&#13;
Last this fall, all continuing&#13;
qualified Parkside students will&#13;
receive an Honors Program&#13;
brochure and an invitation to a&#13;
who complete the Senior Honors&#13;
Seminar will graduate with&#13;
"Distinction." "High' Distinction,"&#13;
or "Highest Distinction,"&#13;
depending upon the recommendation&#13;
of his or her faculty&#13;
thesis committee.&#13;
Thayer said students will be&#13;
able to use the program "to their&#13;
(JW'nadvantage" because there&#13;
are several pay-offs for students.&#13;
"If they fulfill the requirements,&#13;
they will graduate with some sort&#13;
of uni.versity - wide distinction,"&#13;
be said.&#13;
"Another real advantage to&#13;
students is that they will gain&#13;
additional intellectual interaction&#13;
with not only each other, but with&#13;
faculty members," Thayer said. Continued On Page Five&#13;
GA Senators look forward to an active term on campus&#13;
bNyeKwesnEMdeityoerr Earlene Frederick 1.i'k~,to be a p~;t of what IS gom. g comp!is~ment of student goals." maioly because of its commuter&#13;
e are profiles of the mem- on.. sbe said, I like to ~?w when While 10 office, Mertz hopes to status, and I wanted to do&#13;
f the PSGA Senate who were Earlene Frederick, a freshman thing~ happe~ and why. make changes that will help anything to destroy this image.&#13;
ed in the October 14-15 still deciding on a major, ran for . While 10 office, she hopes to get students. "This should be tbe "When I received my ap-&#13;
.ODS. They will officially take the Senate because she wanted to involved 10 a Senate sub- primary objective of every person plication (to run for the Senate),"&#13;
on November 4. be involved at Parkside. "I would cpoamrti~cIip1aItntete. and be an active who believes in student gover- be said, "I was not aware of what I~ meetmgs.. nance," he said. needed to be accomplished, but 1&#13;
She doesn t know what ISSUes The major issues be plans to will address any matter that Wll:! come up dunng'loor. term in address ~re "those which direcUy comes up-with the utmost equality&#13;
office, she said, but I WIll try to affect or influence students on this and fairness of a just human&#13;
be mformed on each as It arises." campus," he said. beTinhge.r"e are several issues Pfafn&#13;
plans to address as a Senator, tbe&#13;
first being student apathy. "I&#13;
believe the parking system also&#13;
must have some revamping," he&#13;
said, "such as the costs of permits&#13;
and the giving of tickets." He also&#13;
thinks that tbe library should&#13;
receive all the material that is&#13;
needed to further students'&#13;
educations. "A closer look at the&#13;
bookstore's activities will also be&#13;
a good idea," he said.&#13;
"Students could be a very large&#13;
political force in America," he&#13;
said, "if they wanted to exert their&#13;
force in a positive way. such as&#13;
rebuttals on the school, state and&#13;
national levels of administration.&#13;
I believe the time is coming when&#13;
students must join together to&#13;
exert their voice in America, and&#13;
this can't be done with apathy."&#13;
n forum scheduled&#13;
rkside Chancellor Alan&#13;
kin has scheduled an&#13;
en Forum II for Wedy,&#13;
Nov. 4 between 11:30&#13;
1 p.m. in Union 104 - 106.&#13;
purpose of the forum is to&#13;
rate discussion between&#13;
ents and the adlstration.&#13;
The forum will be&#13;
ucted informally, Guskin&#13;
, so that students may ask&#13;
questions they have ahout&#13;
University.&#13;
ivities nights scheduled&#13;
eluding shoes) and pro football TV&#13;
viewing. In addition, the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board will sponsor&#13;
movies on the last 3 Sundays -&#13;
"Tribute" on Nov. 8, "Death&#13;
Hunt" on Nov. 15, and "Starting&#13;
Over" on Nov. 22. Tickets for the&#13;
movies are $1.50for adults, 7~ for&#13;
children.&#13;
Tbe Parkside Child care Center&#13;
will be open from 4 to 8 p. m. each&#13;
Sunday for infants and pre - school&#13;
children. There will be no charge&#13;
for the use of the Center, but&#13;
children must be pre - registered&#13;
since space is limited. To pre -&#13;
register call 553-2227.There will&#13;
be no food service available on&#13;
campus except for snack items.&#13;
"Sundays at Parkside" marks&#13;
the first majot cooperative&#13;
planning venture between Student&#13;
Life and Physical Education.&#13;
More such events are in the&#13;
planning stages, according to&#13;
Student Life sources. All students,&#13;
faculty and staff are invited to&#13;
take part.&#13;
dfices of Student Life and&#13;
.cal Educa tion ha ve comefforts&#13;
to sponsor II aces&#13;
nights" on the first four&#13;
ays in Novernber. A variety •&#13;
nned activities, in addition to&#13;
recreation, will be available&#13;
ch of these Sundays between&#13;
and 9:30 p.m. All Parkside&#13;
ts will receive a complete&#13;
scbeduleof events in tbe mail&#13;
Randy Klees John Peterson&#13;
Randy Klees, a freshman&#13;
majoring in communication, was&#13;
first elected to tbe Senate last fall.&#13;
He became a Senator "because I&#13;
wanted to represent the students&#13;
of Parkside in relation to administrative&#13;
decisions that concern&#13;
Parkside," he said. HI also&#13;
wanted to learn about how policies&#13;
aOddecisions are made tha t cover&#13;
the whole UW System as far as&#13;
budgeting and funding are concerned."&#13;
Klees has been involved with&#13;
SUFAC since last year. "One of&#13;
our major goals is to finish tbe&#13;
budget process for the 1982-33&#13;
school year," he said. "I also hope&#13;
to broaden student awareness to&#13;
SUFAC in terms of how part of&#13;
tbeir tuition, segregated fees, will&#13;
be used."&#13;
Klees is also serving on the&#13;
Athletic Board and Bookstore&#13;
Committee. "While I'm on these&#13;
committees" he said "I will&#13;
continue to Jserve as a' representative&#13;
expressing the attitudes&#13;
and concerns of other Parkside&#13;
students. "&#13;
John Peterson, a junior&#13;
majoring in political science and&#13;
history, was appointed to tbe&#13;
Senate in late September and was&#13;
required to run in the fall election.&#13;
Peterson sees being a Senator&#13;
"as an opportunity to serve the&#13;
students of Parkside in a way 1&#13;
f",:l I am qualified. 1 also hope to&#13;
gam experience m an area which I&#13;
plan to follow as a career."&#13;
His goal as a Senator is to&#13;
represent and inform students. "I&#13;
would like to see students more&#13;
informed ahout Parkside and its&#13;
inner workings, tI he said. "I would&#13;
also like to promote more student&#13;
participation in campus activities.&#13;
"Students haye input in \be&#13;
policies set forth by the faculty&#13;
and student committees," he said.&#13;
"But do the students know this?&#13;
This issue will be one of my major&#13;
priorities thatI will be concerned&#13;
with. Others are the parking&#13;
regulations and segregated fees."&#13;
the phy. ed. building, events&#13;
uled are: open swim, open&#13;
etball, open volleyball, open&#13;
uetball (maximum of 32&#13;
ers must pre·register at the&#13;
n Info Desk), and aerobic&#13;
. Also, tbe weight room will&#13;
vailable for use. special acies&#13;
planned include a "fitness&#13;
" and children's activities&#13;
games for 4-11 year olds.&#13;
ers and showers will be open&#13;
. One family member must&#13;
a valid Parkside ID at the&#13;
. ed. building door to register.&#13;
Union Rec. Center will offer&#13;
ling (at ~ per game in-&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez, a&#13;
sophomore majoring in business&#13;
sees being a PSGA Senator as a~&#13;
opportunity to serve Parkside&#13;
students. Sbe hopes to gain experience&#13;
and knowledge about&#13;
student government in the uw&#13;
System.&#13;
"I hope to be a representative of&#13;
the students at Parkside," said&#13;
Rodriguez, "aiding each otber in&#13;
discussing policies or problems&#13;
we may encounter as st\ldents."&#13;
Student participation is the&#13;
major issue she plans to address&#13;
while in office. "Students being&#13;
allowed to become involved and&#13;
Continued On Page Five&#13;
Mike Pfaffl&#13;
Mike Pfaff!, a sophomore&#13;
majoring in political science, ran&#13;
for tbe Senate for many reasons.&#13;
First, he feels it will furtber his&#13;
education in political science.&#13;
"Second," he said, "I consider&#13;
myself a political activist and also&#13;
belong to Students Mobilization&#13;
for Survival, so I believe in action&#13;
and getting problems solved wben&#13;
they appear. Third, I believe our&#13;
school suffers from apathy,&#13;
INSIDE • • •&#13;
Viewpoint: Learning to live with a handicap Steve Mertz&#13;
Steve Mertz, a sophomore&#13;
majoring in engineering, ran for&#13;
the Senate because "PSGA does&#13;
have power (and) that power&#13;
affects tbe student body. I feel&#13;
that it is of tbe utmost importance&#13;
that the supply of different&#13;
viewpoints result in the ac-&#13;
David Kherdian interview&#13;
Student bowls 300. club wins toumament&#13;
t,r Universify of Wisconsin - Parkside er&#13;
hursday ~ Qctober 29, 1981 Vol. 10 - No. 8&#13;
W -P honors to be offered&#13;
proposal for an unusual&#13;
rsity wide Honors&#13;
ram , developed by comcation&#13;
professor Lee Thayer&#13;
task force of students, was&#13;
tJy passed by Parkside's&#13;
llty Senate. The program will&#13;
plemented next semester&#13;
t students will be able to&#13;
, r for courses that will&#13;
ify them for honors credits&#13;
entrance to the program.&#13;
program will not replace&#13;
traditional departmental&#13;
system, based on GPA&#13;
e, but it will replace the&#13;
:lemically Talented and&#13;
ially Skilled Program, which&#13;
facing ct.vindling enrollment&#13;
major course, a seminar.&#13;
year, Tilayer worked with&#13;
n forum scheduled&#13;
&gt;arkside Chancellor Alan&#13;
kin has scheduled an&#13;
1 en Forum" for WedY,&#13;
Nov. 4 between 11 :30&#13;
I 1 p.m. in Union 104 - 106.&#13;
e purpose of the forum is to&#13;
rate discussion between&#13;
ents and the ad-&#13;
. tration. The forum will be&#13;
ucted informally, Gusk.in&#13;
d, so that students may ask&#13;
questions they have about&#13;
niversity.&#13;
students on redesigning the&#13;
program.&#13;
The Honors Program was&#13;
referred from the Faculty Senate&#13;
back to the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee last spring for&#13;
clarification and was passed at&#13;
the t;arlY fall Faculty Senate&#13;
meeting. "Essentially, the&#13;
program as it now stands was&#13;
designed by students, with minor&#13;
changes as suggested by the&#13;
steering committee " Thayer&#13;
said. '&#13;
Thayer said the program was&#13;
also unusual because it "assumes&#13;
realistically a level of maturity on&#13;
the part of academic achievers&#13;
that regular academic programs&#13;
don't assume."&#13;
Thayer said the program&#13;
"relies on student initiative and is&#13;
determined by the achievement of&#13;
students as they work with the&#13;
advising of individual faculty&#13;
members." A Student Advisory&#13;
Committee will also administer&#13;
the program in conjunction with&#13;
the Director and the Faculty&#13;
Steering Committee, composed of&#13;
elected representatives from each&#13;
division.&#13;
The basic components of the&#13;
program are honors course work&#13;
and a senior honors seminar.&#13;
Course work is arranged through&#13;
agreements between individual&#13;
students and instructors of&#13;
already existing course work.&#13;
Each agreement must be approved&#13;
by the Honors Program&#13;
Steering Comi}ittee. To qualify&#13;
for this initial work, students must&#13;
have a GPA of 3.2 or higher. Each&#13;
course in honors will be&#13;
designated as such on the&#13;
student's transcripts if the&#13;
student's grade in the course is a&#13;
B-plus or better. To remain in the&#13;
program, students must maintain&#13;
their 3.2 or better gradepoint&#13;
while doing the additional work&#13;
that will be required by honors&#13;
instructors.&#13;
After a student bas completed 15&#13;
credits of honors course work&#13;
(with at least haH of those credits&#13;
earned outside of the student's&#13;
primary major), she or he is&#13;
eligible for graduation "with&#13;
distinction" noted on transcripts.&#13;
At this point, the student is also&#13;
eligible to enroll in the Senior&#13;
Honors Seminar, a two semester&#13;
crurse in which students develop&#13;
and present a Senior Honors&#13;
Thesis. Enrollment is the seminar&#13;
is basically for seniors, since&#13;
students must have completed at&#13;
least 86 credits before enrolling.&#13;
Each thesis will be evaluated by a&#13;
three member faculty committee&#13;
appointed by the Seminar&#13;
Director.&#13;
Students who qualify to&#13;
graduate " ith distinction" and&#13;
Happy Halloween&#13;
••••eeeeeeeee&#13;
who complete the Senior Honors&#13;
Seminar will graduate with&#13;
"Distinction," "High Distinction,"&#13;
or " Highest Distinction,"&#13;
depending upon the recommendation&#13;
of his or her faculty&#13;
thesis committee.&#13;
Thayer said students will be&#13;
able to use the program "to their&#13;
own advantage" because there&#13;
are several pay-offs for students.&#13;
"II they fulfill the requirements,&#13;
they will graduate with some sort&#13;
of university - wide- distinction "&#13;
he said. '&#13;
"Another real advantage to&#13;
students is that they will gain&#13;
additional intellectual interaction&#13;
with not only each other, but with&#13;
He also sees a record of&#13;
association with the program a&#13;
"a clear indication of advantage"&#13;
to both future employers and&#13;
graduate schools.&#13;
The thesis completed at underg&#13;
ra dua te level is itself&#13;
"significant recognitioo of many&#13;
accompli hments not implied by&#13;
GPA alone," Thayer said, "like&#13;
the ability to write and comm~~&#13;
cate aero disciplines, the&#13;
ability to handle sophisticated&#13;
ideas and a high level of scholarly&#13;
dedication."&#13;
La this fall, all continuing&#13;
qualified Parkside students will&#13;
receive an Honor Program&#13;
brochure and an invitation to a&#13;
faculty members," Thayer said. ontinued On Page Five&#13;
GA Senators look f 01Ward to an active term on campus&#13;
by Ken Meyer . . .&#13;
ews Editor Earlene Frederick lik~, to be ~ ~rt ~f what 1s gomg comp_lis~ment_ of student goals." mainly becau e of its commuter&#13;
e are profiles of the mem- on., she said. I like to know when While m office, Mertz hopes to status, and I wanted to do&#13;
of the PSGA Senate who were Earlene Frederick, a freshman thing~ ~ppe~ and why." make changes that will help anything to d troy !hi image.&#13;
ted in the October 14-15 still deciding on a major, ran for . While m o_fflce, she hopes to get t~dents. "This should be the "Wh n I rec ived my aplions.&#13;
They will officially take the Senate because she wanted to rnvol":ed m a Senate ~b- primary objective of every person plication ( to run for the enate),"&#13;
on November 4. be involved at Parkside. 'I would com~ttee . and ~ an active who believes in student gover- he said, "I was not aware or what&#13;
part1c1pant 1f1 meetmgs. . nance," h~ said. needed to be accompli hed, but I&#13;
tivities nights scheduled&#13;
offices of Student Life and&#13;
ical Education have comefforts&#13;
to sponsor "ac&#13;
·es nights" on the first four&#13;
ays in November. A variety •&#13;
nned activities, in addition to&#13;
n recreation, will be available&#13;
• ch of these Sundays between&#13;
~ n and 9:30 p. m. All Parkside&#13;
n ts will receive a complete&#13;
schedule of events in the mail&#13;
n.&#13;
the phy. ed. building, events&#13;
uled are: open swim, open&#13;
etball, open volleyball, open&#13;
quetball (maximum of 32&#13;
yers must pre-register at the&#13;
.on Info Desk) , and aerobic&#13;
1 . Also, the weight room will&#13;
vailable for use. Special acties&#13;
planned include a "fitness&#13;
11'" and children's activities&#13;
I games for 4-11 year olds .&#13;
: ers and showers will be open&#13;
use. One family member must&#13;
a valid Parkside ID at the&#13;
y. ed. building door to register.&#13;
Union Rec. Center will offer&#13;
ling (at 50f per game ineluding&#13;
shoes) and pro football TV&#13;
viewing. In addition, the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board will sponsor&#13;
movies on the last 3 Sundays -&#13;
"Tribute" on Nov. 8, "Death&#13;
Hunt" on Nov. 15, and "Starting&#13;
Over" on Nov. 22. Tickets for the&#13;
movies are $1.50 for adults, 7~ for&#13;
children.&#13;
The Parkside Child Care Center&#13;
will be open from 4 to 8 p.m. each&#13;
Sunday for infants and pre - school&#13;
children. There will be no charge&#13;
for the use of the Center, but&#13;
children must be pre - registered&#13;
since space is limited. 'l'o pre -&#13;
register call 553-2227 . There will&#13;
be no food service available on&#13;
campus except for snack items.&#13;
"Sundays at Parkside" marks&#13;
the first major cooperative&#13;
planning venture between Student&#13;
Life and Physical Education.&#13;
More such events are in the&#13;
planning stages, according to&#13;
Student Life sources. All students,&#13;
faculty and staff are invited to&#13;
take part.&#13;
• • •&#13;
Vi poi : Lea ing to live with a handicap&#13;
Da rid herdian interview&#13;
uden bowl 300. c b wins tournament&#13;
She doesn t know what J.SSues The maJor issues he plans to will addr any matter that&#13;
wi1:) come up_ chlring .. her. term in addres &lt;!-re "those which directly comes u~with the utm t equality&#13;
off~ce, she sa1d, but I ~ll !ry to affect or mfluence students on this and fairne of a just human&#13;
be informed on each as 1l anses." campus," he said. being."&#13;
Randy Klees&#13;
Randy Klees a freshman&#13;
majoring in communication, was&#13;
first elected to the Senate last fall.&#13;
He became a Senator "because I&#13;
wanted to represent the tudents&#13;
of Parkside in relation to administrative&#13;
decisions that concern&#13;
Parkside," he said. "I also&#13;
wanted to learn about how policies&#13;
and decisions are made that cover&#13;
the whole UW System as far as&#13;
budgeting and funding are concerned."&#13;
Klees bas been involved with&#13;
SUFAC since last year. "One of&#13;
our major goals is to finish the&#13;
budget process for the 1982-83&#13;
school year," he said. "I also hope&#13;
to broaden student awareness to&#13;
SUF AC in terms of how part of&#13;
their tuition, segregated fees, will&#13;
be used."&#13;
Klees is also serving on the&#13;
Athletic Board and Bookstore&#13;
Committee. "While I'm on these&#13;
committees," he said, ' I will&#13;
continue to serve as a representative&#13;
expressing the attitudes&#13;
and concerns of other Parkside&#13;
students."&#13;
Steve Mertz&#13;
Steve Mertz, a sophomore&#13;
majoring in engineering, ran for&#13;
the Senate because "PSGA does&#13;
have power (and) that power&#13;
affects the student body. I feel&#13;
that it is of the utmost importance&#13;
that the supply of different&#13;
viewpoints result in the ac-&#13;
John Peterson&#13;
John Peterson , a junior&#13;
majoring in political science and&#13;
history, was appointed to the&#13;
Senate in late September and was&#13;
required to run in the fall election.&#13;
Peterson sees being a Senator&#13;
"as an opportunity to serve the&#13;
students of Parkside in a way I&#13;
feel I am quaWied. I also hope to&#13;
gain experience in an area which I&#13;
plan to follow as a career."&#13;
His goal as a Senator is to&#13;
represent and inform students. "I&#13;
would like to see students more&#13;
informed about Parkside and its&#13;
inner workings ," he said. "I would&#13;
also like to promote more student&#13;
participation in campus activities.&#13;
"Students have input in \he&#13;
policies set forth by the faculty&#13;
and student committees,•' he said.&#13;
"But do the students know this?&#13;
This issue will be one of my major&#13;
priorities thal"I will be concerned&#13;
with. Others are the parking&#13;
regulations and segregated fees."&#13;
Mike Pfaffl&#13;
Mike Pfaff!, a sophomore&#13;
majoring in political science, ran&#13;
for the Senate for many reasons.&#13;
First, he feel it will further his&#13;
education in poli(ical science.&#13;
"Second," he said, "I consider&#13;
myself a political activist and also&#13;
belong to Students Mobilization&#13;
for Survival, so I believe in action&#13;
and getting problems solved when&#13;
they appear. Third, I believe our&#13;
school suffers from apathy,&#13;
There are everal i u Pfaff}&#13;
plans to addr a a Sena tor, the&#13;
first being tud nt apathy. "I&#13;
believe the parking ystem also&#13;
must have ome r vamping," he&#13;
said, " uch a the co ls of permits&#13;
and the giving of tickets." He al&#13;
thinks that the library hould&#13;
receive all the material that ls&#13;
needed to further tudent •&#13;
educations. "A closer look al the&#13;
bookstore' activiti will also be&#13;
a good idea," he aid.&#13;
"Students could be a very large&#13;
poJitical force in America," he&#13;
said, "if they wanted to exert their&#13;
force in a positive way, uch a&#13;
rebuttal on lhe chool, tat and&#13;
national level of admini tration.&#13;
I believe the time is coming when&#13;
students must join together to&#13;
exert their voice in America, and&#13;
this can't be done with apathy."&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez, a&#13;
sophomore majoring in bushle •&#13;
sees being a PSGA Senator as an&#13;
opportunity lo serve Parkside&#13;
tudents. She hopes to gain experience&#13;
and knowledge about&#13;
student government in the UW&#13;
System.&#13;
" I hope to be a representative of&#13;
the students at Parkside," said&#13;
Rodriguez, ''aiding each other in&#13;
discussing policies or problems&#13;
we may encounter as tudents."&#13;
Student participation i the&#13;
major issue she plans to address&#13;
while in office. "Students being&#13;
allowed to become involved and&#13;
Conlinued On Page ive&#13;
2 I'VE PEOPLE I INA", _&#13;
TO GET 1ilE NEC~&#13;
TRAINING TO GET A ~y&#13;
DE.CENT JOB.&#13;
.&#13;
Thursday. October 29.1981 'Editorial&#13;
Thank you! .'&#13;
The Ranger's open hearing during last Friday's a~tlVlty&#13;
period was both a failure and a success. A failure becagse only a&#13;
f of our readers attended, a success because the ISCUSdlOn&#13;
::s interesting and we learned mor~ about what our rea ers&#13;
like and dislike about the Ranger this year. . .&#13;
We learned that some students are interested m attendmg&#13;
n meetings on campus, but feel they are prevented from&#13;
~ending because no announcement Is posted on campus&#13;
detailing the locations and times of meetings, Br next week, we&#13;
hope to be able to publish schedules of open meetings on campus.&#13;
We also learned that students do not know how to submit&#13;
editorials editorial ideas and letters to the Ranger. So once&#13;
a in au'will see our policies on these pages next week.&#13;
~e ~ISO learned that students are still thinking about, and&#13;
talking about this year's Teaching Excellence Award problems.&#13;
We're pleased about that. It's great that people who are members&#13;
of an institution of higher education are applyin~ what they&#13;
are learning in their courses - are not only learning how to&#13;
but trying out their equipment - to a problem that affects&#13;
them and their teachers. . ,&#13;
Last but not least - we got some compliments on this rea~ s&#13;
Ranger. Some of you like our news coverage, some o'!r editorial&#13;
page. Thank you. We'll schedule another open hearmg. for the&#13;
end of this semester. Watch for an announcement on this page.&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
Reply to Guskin&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The purpose of this letter is twofold:&#13;
to clear up a slight misunderstanding&#13;
with PSGA and to&#13;
take issue with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin's letter in the October ~&#13;
issue 11 the Ranger.&#13;
The motion passed by the&#13;
student Senate which reads, In&#13;
part. " ... actions taken by the&#13;
teaching excellence award&#13;
committee in conjunction with the.&#13;
Chancellor as being ... " is&#13;
misleading and wrong. Le me&#13;
state tha t the teaching excellence&#13;
award committee is not in conjunction&#13;
with the Chancellor&#13;
concerning his latest decision not&#13;
to give Dr. Shirley Kersey her&#13;
award.&#13;
It was common knowledge on&#13;
campus that Dr. Kersey was&#13;
denied tenure would be gone&#13;
after the end of the school year.&#13;
Instead of sitting back and&#13;
relaxing or doing very little, Dr.&#13;
Kersey still taught with the same&#13;
endless enthusiasm and excellence&#13;
sbe always had. I think it&#13;
is to ber credit that sbe could&#13;
accomplish this and still win the&#13;
teaching award considering the&#13;
circumstances.&#13;
The idea of not awarding this&#13;
honor to someone not returning to&#13;
the university is absurd. Consider&#13;
the following "ifs" if this line of&#13;
logic is carried a step further.&#13;
Suppose one of the recipients&#13;
would happen to die over the&#13;
summer? Or suppose the recipient&#13;
was offered a job at a prestigious&#13;
university someplace else and&#13;
could not turn it down?&#13;
In both of these cases&#13;
reputations would be tarnished by&#13;
administrative insensitivity.&#13;
Carry this logic even further and&#13;
it becomes ridiculous. Here would&#13;
be three ,ases to ponder. Prof.&#13;
, Gar MGfHER5 WHO CAN'T&#13;
LISTEN, PAL.~(:~R.Y ~~ORD NOT TO WORK BUT&#13;
PEOPLE IN MI _ CAN'T TO HIRE A&#13;
WITH PRPBLEMS. _-\.. IlA&amp;YSlTTER. EITHER..&#13;
1&#13;
Bonnie Smith won this award' a&#13;
few years ago. She was granted a&#13;
leave of absence for one year to do&#13;
research in Europe. She returned,&#13;
taught for two years and then left&#13;
to teach in Rochester, New York.&#13;
Prof. Barbara Maris won this&#13;
award a year ago with Prof.&#13;
Robert Esser and both are no&#13;
longer at Parkside. Maris was&#13;
denied tenure at division level and&#13;
Mr. Esser retired.&#13;
Now, by the above line of&#13;
thought, all three should be&#13;
required to return a portion of&#13;
their award. Of course this is&#13;
absurd but it proves my point -&#13;
that the teaching excellence&#13;
award should not be concerned&#13;
with an instructor's job security&#13;
and should stay with the idea of&#13;
presenting it to excellent&#13;
teachers. Unlike a research grant&#13;
which is concerned with work yet&#13;
to be done, the teaching excellence&#13;
award is for .work&#13;
already accomplished.&#13;
In May of 1970,Prof. Salimans&#13;
Cacs won a teaching excellence I10 !IUS II}) "Editorial" by Jobn Koloen&#13;
The record or the Student&#13;
Government Association&#13;
speaks for itself: roe out of the&#13;
past six meetings came I1f. Not&#13;
much to say, is it?&#13;
The elected representatives&#13;
of the student body promised to&#13;
serve their cooslituents when&#13;
they were elected last spring&#13;
but have faUed mi_ably. The&#13;
blame for this Ii.. on the.&#13;
shoulders 11 thooe senators&#13;
who have reneged their&#13;
obligations to the students by&#13;
faDing to attend government&#13;
meetings. The same general&#13;
apathy that infects the student&#13;
body at - large, i.e. poor&#13;
election turn - outs is exemplified&#13;
by the attendance&#13;
records at meetings.&#13;
Nothing can be more&#13;
damaging to tbe prospects 11a&#13;
strong student voice in the&#13;
university than an Irrespon_&#13;
sible and apparently dish"&#13;
terested porlim or the senate.&#13;
It is not even possible to impeach&#13;
those senators guilty 11&#13;
absenteeism unless they attend&#13;
the meetings. It is not possible&#13;
to change quorum ruling unless&#13;
there is first a quorum&#13;
reached. It is not possible for&#13;
the PSGA toadhpt an operating&#13;
budget without a full senate to&#13;
vu.e m it.&#13;
At the very least these&#13;
senators who do not want the&#13;
responsibUity or serving the&#13;
students sbouId attend one&#13;
meetfng in order to give those&#13;
who would like the opportunity&#13;
to serve the opportunity to do so.&#13;
- Newse_, vol. 5, DO. 8. O&lt;:t.&#13;
25, 1971&#13;
From the Files&#13;
years ago -&#13;
"Guskin meets students" by-&#13;
Mona Maillet&#13;
On Thursday, Oct. 21,&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin held&#13;
his first open meeting of the&#13;
year with students. He was&#13;
pleased with the turnout of&#13;
ahoot IS people, saying that a&#13;
similar meeting during the&#13;
summer attracted only one&#13;
person ...&#13;
Guskin was asked (about)&#13;
his feelings on student involvement&#13;
in their education.&#13;
He replied that he strongly&#13;
feels that students should get&#13;
involved. in the university.&#13;
Every student - oriented&#13;
cOO)mittee has at least one&#13;
student III it. He stated that&#13;
student government assists&#13;
him in making decisions on&#13;
student matters.&#13;
Regarding having students&#13;
visit him, Guskin said, tiff a&#13;
student wants to see me I&#13;
won't say no to a student.':&#13;
He also expressed regrets at&#13;
lack of interest in student&#13;
government.&#13;
A student asked Guskin&#13;
ahoot the ability to govern&#13;
through increasing committees.&#13;
Guskin answered that&#13;
he consults committees, not&#13;
governs through them.&#13;
He said, "People assume&#13;
that people in authority are&#13;
SOB's trying to manipulate the&#13;
hell out of everybody." He feels&#13;
that ... by proper interaction&#13;
between administration and&#13;
students this feeling can be&#13;
reduced.&#13;
R~rding future meetings&#13;
of this type, he said that he&#13;
would like to have them on a&#13;
regular basis, poasibly every&#13;
As as forbidden,"&#13;
of the '&#13;
held, elections in in&#13;
Tbe 11the of tbe&#13;
- Ranger. vol. 5, DO. 8. Wed.•&#13;
27. 1976&#13;
/&#13;
Iyear ago -&#13;
"Parkside accepts grants"&#13;
Gifts and grants totalling&#13;
more than $320,000 were accepted&#13;
for Parkside by the UW&#13;
system's Board of Regents&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Tha t sum included $316670&#13;
from the federal office' of&#13;
Education for the Basic&#13;
Educational Opporhmily'&#13;
Grants Program.&#13;
Gifts accepted included&#13;
$6,437 for athletics or other&#13;
scholarships from multiple&#13;
droors; $100for the George and&#13;
Madeline Molinaro Scholarship&#13;
fund from Elsie D. Mosca; and&#13;
$50 for the Kenneth L&#13;
Greenqutst fund from Mark&#13;
Madsen.&#13;
The. regents also accepted&#13;
$250 . m support of synthetic&#13;
peptide substrate reserves at&#13;
UW-P and $100 Support of the&#13;
life science seminar series.&#13;
- Ranger. Oct. 23. 1980 vol 9&#13;
no. 8 • '.&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Greg Bonofiglio, Carol Burns. Doug Edenhauser, ~&#13;
Fran~, Pat Hensiak, Jim Kreuser, Pat McDonald, J!nt&#13;
,Mertons. Steve Myers. Laurie Painter. Charles Perce, KIIII&#13;
Schlater. Sue Stevens. Dan Werbie, Jeff Wicks.&#13;
RANGER is written and ed·ted b . so'fIY&#13;
responsible for its editor" I I I' V students of ~W·Pllrkslde and they are&#13;
Published every Thursda'~ p? ICV and content. olldJ)'St&#13;
RA,NGER is printed b thV ur.lng the I'Icademic year except during breaks and h&#13;
Written permission Is~eqe.u~on Coop~ratlve Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
correspondence stI0~1~ ~or ~':fnnt portion of ,39 UW'&#13;
Parksi1e, Kenostla, WI 53141 a ressect to: Parkslde Ranger. WLLC 0 "&#13;
Letters to the Editor will b . d site&#13;
paper With one . inch m ~ accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on standar In'&#13;
cluded for verification. a~g,"s. All letters must be signed and a telephone nurnbel"&#13;
~~~n:~~ ~et~~h~el~ for valid reasons. NO!!!&#13;
reserves aU edltor~~~ pr~~~y at. a.m .. for pUblication on ,Thursdav. Th~ R~alsedefamatory&#13;
content. es In refuslI'log to print letters which contaIn&#13;
J!r-..... I'VE. GOT STUDENT:&gt; WHO&#13;
CAN'T AfFORD TO~TTEND&#13;
THE.COLLEGE. OF THEIR.&#13;
CHOICe., AND ON _&#13;
AND Of'l AND DN...&#13;
award even though he would not&#13;
be returning the following year.&#13;
Criteria and procedures aside,&#13;
just this one case is more than&#13;
enough justification for the school&#13;
adrrrinistratlon to reverse its&#13;
decision and present Dr. Shirley&#13;
Kersey with the teaching excellence&#13;
award sbe so richly&#13;
deserves.&#13;
Gustave R. Sorenson&#13;
Awards not resoloed&#13;
I&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Unfortunately, putting the&#13;
matter of the teaching award&#13;
simply "behind us" will not&#13;
rectify the injustice done. Some&#13;
issues denoted in a letter to the&#13;
editor, in last week's Ranger need&#13;
clarification.&#13;
1. Ironically, last spring the&#13;
budget allowed for two $500&#13;
awards. The committee was instructed&#13;
to pick two recipients for&#13;
the awards. If the budget allows&#13;
for one $500 award, what happened&#13;
to the other $500? Where did&#13;
the money go?&#13;
2, "Proposed" changes are just&#13;
that, proposed, not retroactive. I&#13;
agree that the criteria must he&#13;
more strict and clear, but to deny&#13;
Dr. Shirley Kersey her award is&#13;
unfair. The criteria was not set up&#13;
by Dr. Kersey and she should not&#13;
be penalized for the oversight.&#13;
3. The delay of the other awards&#13;
being presented would not have&#13;
occured if the administration&#13;
would have presented the awards&#13;
to all the recipients the committee&#13;
had chosen. The delay was&#13;
brought about by the ad-·.&#13;
ministration, not the committee&#13;
as the letter to the editor implied.&#13;
4. If this situation is put "behind&#13;
us".' the administration may use&#13;
their power and authority to&#13;
overrule other student committee&#13;
decisions. In a democratic institution,&#13;
which the University&#13;
Ginger Helgeson&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Tony Rogeh&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Dan McCormack&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
Frank Fa Iduto&#13;
professes, this is not&#13;
problems are solved. The&#13;
is not that simple.&#13;
Perhaps it is time for&#13;
students to seriously review&#13;
policies and solutions to&#13;
the administration has.&#13;
Mary Jo Dagenhach&#13;
Editor's note:&#13;
In the Oct. 8. 198118...&#13;
RANG ER, the p. 1 story&#13;
that this year's unawarde4&#13;
Teaching Excellence stipend&#13;
remain in a system •&#13;
Parkside account cortS'&#13;
private donations to the&#13;
sity. .&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
Write Letter to&#13;
RangerlW&#13;
EdllGl&#13;
News Editlll&#13;
Feature EdllGl&#13;
sports Edi&#13;
Photo EdllGl&#13;
Business Mana ...&#13;
Mana ...&#13;
Distribution Manal&#13;
Adv&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thursday, 29, 1981&#13;
\!fOUI . , ..&#13;
Th Rang r' Friday s act1V1ty&#13;
riod wa becau_se onlr r f ur attended. d1scuss1on&#13;
;; ~n~eresting readers&#13;
lik we campus nding a~ouncement _is d tailing meetings. Br to meetmgs campu~.&#13;
we itorials, again you will We al O plea ed ~ho member&#13;
f applym~ re Jearrung think, La t rea: Rang r ome our pag . hearing_ sem ter to Editor .&#13;
twofold&#13;
: a misunderstanding&#13;
lake 1s ue Gu kin's in 22&#13;
j_ ue d tudent reads, part , " . . in the&#13;
Chancellor a being . . . " is&#13;
late that a ard conjunction&#13;
con rning hi lat t to giv Dr Shirley Kersey her&#13;
wa mpu d nied t nure and be aft r [nstead excellence&#13;
she her she still caITied to the be three &lt;:.:3ses to ponder. Prof.&#13;
EN DAL \'VE GOT&#13;
LIST ' r"' ',.WI.I COUNTR.Y&#13;
l'VE c,ar MOfHER.5 WHO CAN~&#13;
1'FFORD AFFORD BA&amp;YSITTER. EITHER.&#13;
l'VE GOT PEOPLE. !-!NAB&#13;
THE NEc~lc:&#13;
TrlA!NING 'jENJ'.&#13;
PEOPLE IN M1 ~ PROBLEMS.&#13;
award · he be administration excellence&#13;
she Gust.ave resolued&#13;
Unfortunately, putting the&#13;
simply "behind us" will not&#13;
be an job $500&#13;
be ex- incellence&#13;
award is for work structed 1970, $500 hapCacs&#13;
pened $500? k .&#13;
zij&#13;
•:;;_ . f\t:":':f~:~:f.\~ ..&#13;
The sol&#13;
is prob&#13;
Dagenbach&#13;
Editor's note:&#13;
In the Oct. 8, 1981 issue of&#13;
RANGER, the p. l story e.x ·&#13;
unawarded&#13;
Teaching Excellence remain -&#13;
Parkside account co11sisting 111&#13;
private donations the uni&#13;
sity.&#13;
r-------------------------------------- the money go? Fl':om the F·11es I 2. "Proposed" changes are just&#13;
10 ymrs ~ -&#13;
., dilorial" John ord of tudenl&#13;
Gov rnm nt As ociation&#13;
peak for it lf: one out p t. 'x m ting off. ot&#13;
y, The I cted repre ntatives&#13;
th ·tud nl rv constituents th y w lected but have f iled miserably. blam thi Ii the ,&#13;
houJd of th senators&#13;
who hav reneged their&#13;
obligatim th failing to att nd me tin . apathy that infects the tudent&#13;
1 ction turn - outs is exemplified&#13;
r ord at m tings.&#13;
othing dam ging to the pro peels of a&#13;
trong tu nt voice in univ ity an irTesponbl&#13;
disinted&#13;
pcrtion of the senate.&#13;
It i even possible to impeach&#13;
cl.&#13;
absenteeism unless attend&#13;
m tings. It is not possible&#13;
lo change quorum unless&#13;
there is first a quorum&#13;
reached. It i not possible for&#13;
th PSGA to adopt an operating&#13;
budget without a full senate vote on il&#13;
Al very least these&#13;
nators who not want the&#13;
r ponsibility of serving the&#13;
students should attend one&#13;
meetfng in order to give those&#13;
to serve opportunity to do&#13;
so.&#13;
- ew cope, vol. 5, no. 8. Oct.&#13;
25, 1971&#13;
I I that, proposed, not retroactive. agree that the criteria must be&#13;
5 years ago _ other week. As long 85 students&#13;
more strict and clear, but to deny&#13;
are interested and attend,&#13;
Dr. Shirley Kersey her award is&#13;
"Guskin meets students" by- "nobody and no topic is for- unfair. The criteria was not set up&#13;
Mona Maillet bidden," said Guskin.&#13;
by Dr. Kersey and she should not&#13;
21, be penalized for the oversight.&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin held "Turnout one of the poorest:&#13;
3. The delay of the other awards&#13;
his first open meeting of the elections seat six" by Bruce&#13;
being presented would not have&#13;
Wagner · if the administration&#13;
pleased with the turnout of The Parkside Student&#13;
would have presented the awards&#13;
about 15 people, saying that a Government held . their fall&#13;
to all the recipients the committee&#13;
similar meeting during the electi?ns this week, with six&#13;
had chosen. The delay was&#13;
summer attracted only one seats 10 the senate and seats in brought about by the ad- ·&#13;
person . - . the segregated fees allocation&#13;
ministration, not the committee&#13;
Guskin was asked (about) committee being filled.&#13;
as the letter to the editor implied.&#13;
his feelings on student in- The election turnout was one&#13;
4. If this situation is put "behind&#13;
volvement in their education. cl. the poorest ever at Parkside&#13;
us", the administration may use&#13;
He replied that he strongly with approximately 2% of the their power and autherity to&#13;
feels that students should get student body voting.&#13;
overrule other student committee&#13;
involved in the university. _ Ranger, vol. s, no. s, Wed., decisions. In a democratic in-&#13;
Every student - oriented Oct. 27, 1976 stitution, a&#13;
Letter Ranger11ll&#13;
committee m I year "Parkside accepts grants"&#13;
&lt;R!,nger&#13;
visit rum, Guskin said, "If a&#13;
student wants see me I&#13;
won't say no to a student.':&#13;
He also ~xpressed regrets at&#13;
lack interest in student&#13;
about the . ability to govern&#13;
through mcreasing committees.&#13;
answered that&#13;
he consults committees, not&#13;
governs through them.&#13;
He said, "People assume&#13;
that, ~le in authority are&#13;
SOB s trymg to manipulate the&#13;
ootof that · · · by proper interaction&#13;
between administration and&#13;
be&#13;
reduced.&#13;
R~rding future meetings&#13;
of this type, he said that be&#13;
would like to have them on a&#13;
regular basis, possibly every&#13;
Gifts and gran~ accepted&#13;
for Parkside the uw&#13;
Friday.&#13;
That $316 670&#13;
from the federal office ' Education for the Basic&#13;
Educational Opporkmity ·&#13;
Grants Program.&#13;
Gifts aceepted included&#13;
$6,437 for athletics or other&#13;
scholarships from multiple&#13;
dmors; $100 for George and&#13;
Madeline Molinaro Scholarship&#13;
fund from Elsie D. Mosca; and&#13;
$50 for the Kenneth L&#13;
Greenquist fund from Mark&#13;
Madsen.&#13;
The_ regents also accepted&#13;
$250. 10 peptide substrate reserves at&#13;
{!W-P _and $100 support of the&#13;
life science seminar series.&#13;
- Ranger, Oct. 23, 1980 vol 9&#13;
no. 8 ' • •&#13;
Rogel's&#13;
Falduto&#13;
Editor&#13;
Editor&#13;
Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Editor&#13;
Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Manager&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Bonofiglio,. Burns, J~~&#13;
~F~ra7n1~n,s ,P at Hens1ak, Jim Kreuser, Pat McDonald, J!"' Myers, Laurie Painter, Charles Perce, K•"'&#13;
c ater, Stevens, is written edit ,olell&#13;
resp0nsible for its editorial l":'l by students of .iw-Parkslde and they are&#13;
Thursd PO ,cy . id•~&#13;
RA_NGER is printed by 1~~ tur_lng te acad!m le year except during breai&lt;S and hol&#13;
Written permission is requ·r;',;o/' oop~rat,ve Publishing co., Kenosha, w1scoos1n.&#13;
All ccrresp0n&lt;1ence sh I or reprint of any POrtlon cf RANGER. iJ'//·&#13;
Kenosha, wi°~~41be addressed Parkside Ranger, 0139,&#13;
be· paper with one . Inch marginsacl~1Ple;' if typewritten, doublespaced on stand•~ 111·&#13;
eluded for verification · e lers must be Signe(! telephone num&#13;
~~~n:'\'c:, ~e11.::~~:1~J~:alid reasons. . NGE~&#13;
reserves all editori;,I prlvile,g~satl 9 a.m. _for publication on .Thursday. The R~lst rl&#13;
defamatory n refusing cootain&#13;
. . .&#13;
E~o ~ ~ ~----;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; RANG_E_R ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Thursda~y, _O_ctobe;;r;;;;;;;2i9,1981 __ J&#13;
. ters cont. * * * * * -Club Events- * * * n n From boners to haircuts&#13;
Boner's boners&#13;
Editor:&#13;
IIin' Boner Jim Kreuser, in&#13;
article on late book orders,&#13;
a crucial assumption In&#13;
luding that many faculty&#13;
bers "failed to meet the&#13;
k ordering deadline." He&#13;
med that his sources of !nation&#13;
and consequent .tnetation&#13;
were accurate. I find&#13;
assumption to be unanted&#13;
and, in at Jeast one&#13;
to be patently false. But&#13;
, I suppose, Strollin' Boner&#13;
'occasionally pull some of his&#13;
"ne Johnson&#13;
Prof., Humanities Division&#13;
the Editor: .&#13;
· is in response to the Ingative&#13;
report by Mr. Kreuser&#13;
ming the absence of text&#13;
for the (aU semester.&#13;
am an adjunct instructor. I&#13;
on July 15 that f would be&#13;
ing a course in the fall, well&#13;
the deadline for ordering the&#13;
book. This resulted in&#13;
· g a text that is not of my&#13;
choosing. Someone else must&#13;
been lale with the book Offeel&#13;
that investigative&#13;
ing should have included a&#13;
10 the teacher to find out if&#13;
was a reason for the late&#13;
teachers I have met at&#13;
·de are dedicated to fine&#13;
"01 and really do "care"&#13;
their students.&#13;
nda Mossman&#13;
y tests 'arbitrary'&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
letter is addressed to you&#13;
the Ranger staff for&#13;
tication, with my hope that it&#13;
find an appropriate audience.&#13;
am angry about some of the&#13;
lIleph Szafraniec, an employee&#13;
aUons representative at&#13;
conda . American Brass&#13;
alion, and Deloras Fergus,&#13;
personnel coordinator for&#13;
et retail stores, will present a&#13;
kshop entitled "Effective Job&#13;
erviewing" on Wednesday,&#13;
en..4 from I to 2 p.m. in Moln.&#13;
two member panel will&#13;
e short presentations and will&#13;
answer questions.&#13;
Tech program&#13;
applications&#13;
t Mary's Medical Center of&#13;
cine ~ now taking applications&#13;
their 12-month medical&#13;
hnology program from&#13;
ts who will possess bac-&#13;
Ureate degrees in suitable&#13;
ce majors by next summer.&#13;
~ program of clinical exence&#13;
leads to a na tional&#13;
rt.ification examination in&#13;
cal technology.&#13;
eligible to apply for the&#13;
. ~ram must have had a&#13;
D1~um of 16 credits in&#13;
e;lISl?, i~cluding organic&#13;
or biological chemistry; a&#13;
I mum of 16 credits In bIOlogy,&#13;
Udlng micro . biology and&#13;
~ rnunology; and a minimum of&#13;
• COursein mathematics.&#13;
The deadline foi: applications&#13;
~ next summer's program is&#13;
ve~ber 15. For more inaHon,&#13;
oonlact Educational&#13;
1 ~nator Pat Landenberger,&#13;
J&gt;rlI1g SI., Racine WI 534M&#13;
lIle 636-4212). '&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Does anyone want a free&#13;
haircut? Ireceived a call the other&#13;
day from Ruffolo's Hair Studio,&#13;
3519 52nd SI. in Kenosha offering&#13;
free shampoo, cut and styliog to&#13;
UW-Parkside students (I'm not&#13;
sure about faculty and staff)&#13;
during the evenings of Nov. 8,9, 10&#13;
and 11. There are no catches to&#13;
this offer; it is being done in&#13;
connection with Ruffolo's opening&#13;
a new studio in Racine. Those&#13;
To the Editor: interested should call Ruffolo's at&#13;
Recently I ha ve been wondering 654-6154 during the day to make an&#13;
about the nature of the institution appointment for one of tbose Student Mobe.&#13;
called upper level education. I November evenings. Ruffolo _ , .. .&#13;
b d· b t hose services both men and women. ParkSlde s Student Mobl1LZ.atlon&#13;
ihnatveerest een twheon aecratndgemiaC ?U wworld Wa It Shi rer. . for dSurvival '30is meetin. g 101on&#13;
d bo t h h takes Director of Pubhc InformatIOn Toes ays at 3. p.m. In. n&#13;
serves an ". u w 0 as sMAURICE BUCHANAN TURNED&#13;
DOWN A BASKETBALL SCHOLARSHIP&#13;
. FOR AN ARMY ROTC SCHOLARSHIR&#13;
d t" n&#13;
11 II rc&#13;
LPI I&#13;
"cad "our la rs fR(&#13;
l(&lt;&gt;Udl,ea) "ltng r&#13;
\ u altcr CI.~I do" hal un&#13;
Buchanan d,d&#13;
Appl k&gt;r an Army R&#13;
hola"lup Toda,&#13;
And begm y{lUf luturc a an&#13;
oftlcer&#13;
tests that I ha ve taken in some of&#13;
my classes thus far this semester,&#13;
of the particular kind, essay tests&#13;
in whole or part. It seems to me&#13;
that if professors want essays&#13;
from their students then the time&#13;
to have them written is not while a&#13;
student is, or ought to be, an.&#13;
swering definitive questions about&#13;
course material. I expect that if&#13;
an essay is rightly assigned by a&#13;
professor to be written by a&#13;
student it will never have to be&#13;
done on SUrprise notice within the&#13;
duration of one class session, and&#13;
if so, certainly not for credit, but&#13;
rather for some other more immediate&#13;
satisfaction known most&#13;
usually only to the professor&#13;
himself. I do not understand Why&#13;
tests in class cannot be, or simply&#13;
Willfully are not, confined to&#13;
definitive questions that a student&#13;
may be reasonably certain of&#13;
answering correctly if he has&#13;
attended the course lectures and&#13;
studied the accompanying texts&#13;
according to the direction of the&#13;
professor who conducts the use of&#13;
them both. I can tell you, for instance,&#13;
that the lectures in my&#13;
advanced composition class have&#13;
been so pathetically mismanaged,&#13;
to the point of becoming&#13;
pecuJarily offensive, that if ever a&#13;
test were derived from them, it&#13;
would most fairly have to he.&#13;
wholly incomprehensible, or at&#13;
the very least inaccessibly biased&#13;
as to mock an answering to by&#13;
anyone except its author. I believe&#13;
that careful testing involves an&#13;
explicit affirmation between&#13;
students and their professor as to&#13;
what their collected matter of&#13;
inquiry brings to issue, and&#13;
SUbsequently what may be said to&#13;
have resolved between them in&#13;
reference to their cooperative&#13;
studies. A test that incorporates&#13;
inconclusive questions that solicit&#13;
arbitrary responses is not a test of&#13;
any detenninable worth. Alter.&#13;
natively, tests that are designed to&#13;
elicit a specific response from&#13;
their audience would be of&#13;
calculable service to students and&#13;
professors alike. Thank you.&#13;
Kevin L. Zuehlsdorf&#13;
Maintain perspective&#13;
in the performance of this very&#13;
integral part of the 'Real World.'&#13;
Does everybody inVOlved, administrators&#13;
to janitors, realize&#13;
what the whole of society is put.&#13;
tiog out to provide the opportunity&#13;
for educational advancement? Do&#13;
we all acknowledge the fact that&#13;
the reason we are provided this&#13;
educational opportunity is so that&#13;
we may give an the more back to&#13;
those whom we represent? Or are&#13;
we only desirous of self - serving&#13;
benefits?&#13;
Sometimes I wonder whether&#13;
the academic world thinks that&#13;
they hold something above and&#13;
beyond the government and&#13;
business sectors. If anybody does&#13;
feel this way I hope that they&#13;
realize that one cannot stand&#13;
without the support of the other. U&#13;
anyone has a way for the&#13;
academics to exist without&#13;
business or government being&#13;
involved, let me know.&#13;
Do not take this letter as a&#13;
person being down on the&#13;
academic world. Nothing could he&#13;
farther from the truth. AU I wish&#13;
to say is that I believe that the&#13;
goals, reasons, and objectives for&#13;
the existence of academics be&#13;
constantly evaluated from within&#13;
so that the proper perspectives&#13;
may be maintained. An academic&#13;
world that understands and&#13;
performs its functions is very,&#13;
very good while an academic&#13;
world that leans toward seU _&#13;
serving goals is of use to no one.&#13;
Let us all hope that the academics&#13;
continue to be introspective and&#13;
very, very good.&#13;
Christopher P. Dorf&#13;
634-8463&#13;
Free hair cuts!&#13;
"1knew I needed to go to&#13;
college. Ineeded to get chac ticket&#13;
punched to be successful:' says&#13;
Maurice. "Why did I select an Army&#13;
RarC scholarship over a basket-' .&#13;
ball scholarship' Beeause I knew I d&#13;
have a job after graduation. And [hat s&#13;
more than a lot of my peers could say.&#13;
"I may stay in the military.&#13;
But if I decide to ge[ out, I've got the&#13;
best job reference in the world-a&#13;
commission in che United Scares&#13;
Army." ....&#13;
Army ROTC can do the same&#13;
~foryou. .&#13;
Qualify, and you can wm.&#13;
an ROTC scholarship, as Maur.lCe&#13;
did. Each scholarslup covers tUttion,&#13;
books, and more.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
Women in Business will hold a&#13;
general business meeting on&#13;
Monday, [ov, 2 at 1 p.m. in Union&#13;
104 Anyone interested in&#13;
becoming a part of this growing&#13;
network of women concerned with&#13;
working toward entrance and&#13;
active participation in the&#13;
professional world is welcome to&#13;
attend. •&#13;
Congratulations to ;'\'argarel&#13;
Rodriguez, an active member of&#13;
WID. on her election to the PSGA&#13;
Senate. We're sure she'U be an&#13;
invaluable asset to the senate.&#13;
eed an invigorating mid-week&#13;
pick - me • up? Join us every&#13;
Wednesday from I to 2 p.m. in the&#13;
wrestling room oCthe gym for an&#13;
aerobic dance session. An hour of&#13;
fun and fitness is just what you&#13;
need.&#13;
Geology&#13;
The Geology Club will oCfer a&#13;
Colloquium on Friday, OcL 30 at I&#13;
p.m. in Grnq. 113on "The Glomar&#13;
Explorer: Deep Sea Drilling for&#13;
Oil, fntelligience and Science."&#13;
The colloquium will he presented&#13;
by William N. Orr from the&#13;
University of Oregon's Department&#13;
of Geology.&#13;
Nurse:s Org.&#13;
A student nurse's meeting will&#13;
be held on Monday, Nov. 2 at noon&#13;
in Union 'lJ11 to get students in.&#13;
valved in the consortiaJ bac.&#13;
calaureatte nursing program at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Volunteers are still needed for&#13;
the Smoke Out on Thursday, Nov.&#13;
19. To volunteer, C&lt;lltact Peggy&#13;
Rather.&#13;
Computer Oub&#13;
The Parkside Compute- Club&#13;
will be holding its monthly&#13;
meeting on Monday, Nov. 2 at&#13;
noon in Grnq. 103 to discuss the&#13;
programming contest, field trips&#13;
and the Computer User's Forum.&#13;
The User's Forum will be held in&#13;
Grnq. 103 immediately followi"8&#13;
the Computer Club meeting&#13;
The Computer Club urges all&#13;
students concerned with the&#13;
utilization of computer facilit,es&#13;
at Parkside to attend and voice&#13;
their opinions. Both meetings are&#13;
open to all students and faculty&#13;
DI28. Mobe IS oppcoed to nuclear&#13;
IlO" er • wea p&lt;lni a nd the a no.&#13;
race We support ba!iic human&#13;
rights and lhe fUndl"8 of human&#13;
needs. The Parkstde chapl ... ha&#13;
sponsored peekers, flims and&#13;
workshops directly and ir"hrectly&#13;
related to the ab&lt;/l;e Anyone In.&#13;
terested '5 InVtted to attend the&#13;
meetings&#13;
Bowling Club&#13;
The B""'hng Club meets every&#13;
week in the Roc. Center At&#13;
present the oCftce tnclude. John&#13;
Peterson. president Ellen&#13;
Becwar. Vice president, Bob&#13;
N~'berg, secretary. Jay Podella.&#13;
treasurer; and .Itite ~Ienzhuber.&#13;
advisor&#13;
The Bowling Club has t"O big&#13;
tournaments coming up, one In t&#13;
Louis C. aucnal Team . falch&#13;
Games) and one In Las Vegas&#13;
(Walt Peabody Invttational' The&#13;
Club placed third in t LouIs Ia I&#13;
year&#13;
The club needs women bowl rs&#13;
for next semester. Anyone 10'&#13;
terested in joining BowIl"8 Club&#13;
should contact Mike .Ienzhuber In&#13;
the Rec. Center&#13;
Women' 5 Concourse&#13;
Parkside Women's Concoune&#13;
will hold an organiz.ational&#13;
meeting on Monday, ,·ov. 2 at I&#13;
p.m. tn ~Ioln. 165. The purpose d&#13;
concourse IS to faclhtate&#13;
awareness of women's concerns&#13;
at Parkslde All tudent&gt; and&#13;
faculty and staff are "elcome to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Health&#13;
screemng&#13;
offered&#13;
The UWMIlwauk Consort I&#13;
•'ursingPtogrBm at Par df"U1&#13;
offer a FREE blood re&#13;
height and \\ tIght ere nlng&#13;
program on Thursda , Oct 211&#13;
from 8:30 am. unlll 12'30 pm In&#13;
the alcove ,d the book t&#13;
The ser\"lce ts avallabl to&#13;
ludents, facultY,taff and oth." Interested The nursmg tudl-n&#13;
who "til take the blood pr ur •&#13;
heights and " ,gh'" are fl t&#13;
semf' ter JUDlor. enrolled In&#13;
. 'ursing Practice III&#13;
C,lPl M.luncc Buchanan wa~ a m.llh ~'t .1{&#13;
(hI:' Unl\crSl(~' tlfec,'tl,'13&lt;lnJ a mcmhefl.j '\rmy&#13;
ROTC ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.&#13;
For details contact: ENROLLMENT OFFICER&#13;
MILITARY SERVICE DEPT. MARQUETTE U.&#13;
1-224-7195&#13;
~ ~&#13;
~ •tters, cont.&#13;
RA GER hursday, 0d r 29, 1 81&#13;
-From boners to haircuts **&#13;
.p teachers 'care '&#13;
the Editor: .&#13;
i in response to the m-&#13;
. Jbgalive report b Mr. Kreuser&#13;
1s noc ming the absence of text&#13;
. The (or the fall semester .&#13;
am an adjunct instructor. I&#13;
ed on July 15 that I would be&#13;
hing a course in the fall, well&#13;
th deadline for ordering the&#13;
s 11 book . This resulted in&#13;
· u:hmg a text that is not of my .&#13;
choosing. Someone else must&#13;
1 i41111r&#13;
tory&#13;
e n late with the book orreel&#13;
that investigative&#13;
mg should have included a&#13;
to the teacher to find out if&#13;
was a reason for the late&#13;
teachers I have met at&#13;
· de are dedicated to fine&#13;
hing and really do "care"&#13;
t their students.&#13;
enda Mossman&#13;
say tests 'arbitrary'&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
rhi letter is addressed to you&#13;
the Ranger staff for&#13;
lication, with my hope that it&#13;
find an appropriate audience.&#13;
am angry about some of the&#13;
a terviewing&#13;
orkshop offered&#13;
to eph zafraniec , an employee&#13;
allons representative at&#13;
onda - American Brass&#13;
ation, and Deloras Fergus,&#13;
onnel coordinator for&#13;
rget retail tores, will present a&#13;
rkshop entitled ''Effective Job&#13;
t r\'iewing" on Wednesday,&#13;
• 4 from 1 to 2 p.m. in Moln.&#13;
Oi,&#13;
The two member panel will&#13;
Ii hort presentations and will&#13;
an wer questions .&#13;
. Tech pr~ram&#13;
l&lt;lng applications&#13;
I Mary' Medical Center of&#13;
cine is now taking applications&#13;
their 12-month medical&#13;
hnology program from&#13;
ent who will possess baclaureate&#13;
degrees in suitable&#13;
•ence majors by next summer.&#13;
e program of clinical ex,&#13;
1ence leads to a national&#13;
rtificalion examination in&#13;
1cal technology.&#13;
Those eligible to apply for the&#13;
O~ram must have had a&#13;
inimum of 16 credits in&#13;
emistry, including organic&#13;
~or biological chemistry; a&#13;
1~m_um of ~6 credits in biology,&#13;
udmg micro - biology and&#13;
munology; and a minimum of&#13;
course in mathematics.&#13;
The deadline for applications&#13;
r next summer's program is&#13;
ove~ber 15. For more inma?&#13;
on, contact Educational&#13;
rd1 nator Pat Landenberger&#13;
I prirlg St., Racine , WI 53404&#13;
&lt;Xie 636-4212&gt;.&#13;
test that I have taken in some of&#13;
my cla es thus far this semester,&#13;
of the particular kind, essay test&#13;
in whole or part. It seem to me&#13;
that if profe sors want essays&#13;
from their tudents then the time&#13;
to have them written is not while a&#13;
tudent i , or ought to be, answering&#13;
definitive questions about&#13;
course material. I expect that if&#13;
an ay is rightly assigned by a&#13;
professor to be written by a&#13;
student it will never have to be&#13;
done on surpri e notice within the&#13;
duration of one class session , and&#13;
if o , certainly not for credit, but&#13;
rather for some other more immediate&#13;
sati faction known most&#13;
usually only to the profes or&#13;
himself. I do not under land why&#13;
tests in cla cannot be, or simply&#13;
willfully are not , confined to&#13;
definitive questions that a tudent&#13;
may be reasonably certain of&#13;
answering correctly if he has&#13;
attended the course lectures and&#13;
studied the accompanying texts&#13;
according to the directjon of the&#13;
professor who conducts the use of&#13;
them both. I can tell you, for instance,&#13;
that the lectures in my&#13;
advanced composition cla have&#13;
been so pathetically mismanaged,&#13;
to the point of becoming&#13;
pecularily offensive, that if ever a&#13;
test were derived from them, it&#13;
would most fairly have to be&#13;
wholly incomprehensible, or at&#13;
the very least inaccessibly biased&#13;
as to mock an answering to by&#13;
anyone except its author. I believe&#13;
that careful testing involves an&#13;
explicit affirmation between&#13;
students and their professor as to&#13;
what their collected matter of&#13;
inquiry brings to issue, and&#13;
subsequently what may be said to&#13;
have resolved between them in&#13;
reference to their cooperative&#13;
tudies . A test that incorporates&#13;
inconclusive questions that solicit&#13;
arbitrary responses is not a test of&#13;
any determinable worth. Alternatively&#13;
, tests that are designed to&#13;
elicit a pecific respon e from&#13;
their audience would be of&#13;
calculable service to students and&#13;
professors alike. Thank you .&#13;
Kevin L . Zuehl dorf&#13;
in the performance or this very&#13;
integral part of the 'Real W rid .·&#13;
D everybody involved, administrators&#13;
to janitor , realize&#13;
what lh whole of society is putting&#13;
out to provide the opportunity&#13;
for educational ad\•ancement? Do&#13;
we all acknowledge the fact that&#13;
the reason we are provided this&#13;
educational opportunity is so that&#13;
we ma give all the more ba to&#13;
th e whom w represent'? Or are&#13;
we only desirou of self • rving&#13;
benefits?&#13;
ometimes I wonder wheth&#13;
the academic world think that&#13;
they hold something above and&#13;
beyond the government and&#13;
business sectors. If anybody d&#13;
feel th. way I hope that they&#13;
realize that one cannot stand&#13;
without the upport of the other. If&#13;
anyone has a way for the&#13;
academic to exist ithout&#13;
busines or government being&#13;
in olved, let me know .&#13;
Do not take this letter as a&#13;
person being down on the&#13;
academic world. othing could be&#13;
farther from the truth. All I wish&#13;
to say i that I believe that the&#13;
goals. reasons, and objectives for&#13;
the existence of academics be&#13;
constanUy evaluated from within&#13;
so that the proper perspectives&#13;
may be maintained. An academic&#13;
world that understands and&#13;
performs its functions is very,&#13;
very good while an academic&#13;
world that leans toward self •&#13;
rving goals is of use to no one.&#13;
Let us all hope that the academics&#13;
continue to be introspective and&#13;
very, very good.&#13;
Christopher P . Dorf&#13;
634-8463&#13;
Free hair cuts[&#13;
To the Editor :&#13;
Doe anyone want a free&#13;
haircut? I received a call the other&#13;
day from Ruifolo's Hair tu&lt;lio ,&#13;
3519 52nd St. in Kenosha offering&#13;
free shampoo, cut and tyling to&#13;
~-Parkside stud nts (I'm not&#13;
sure about faculty and staff)&#13;
during the evenings of ov . 8, 9, 10&#13;
and 11. There are no catches to&#13;
thi offer ; it is being done in Ma .lntain perspective conneclion with Ruifolo's opening&#13;
a new tudio in Racine. Tho&#13;
To the Editor : inter led hould call Ruffolo' at&#13;
urse:s Org.&#13;
A student nurse'&#13;
be held on onday ,&#13;
in nion 2fl1 to e&#13;
volved in the co&#13;
calaureatte nursin&#13;
Par ·de .&#13;
Volunt are still n for&#13;
the moke Out oo Thursday, ' o ·•&#13;
19. To volunteer, cootact P&#13;
Rather.&#13;
Computer Club&#13;
Recently I have been wondering 654-6154 during the day to make an&#13;
about the nature of the institution appointment for _ on of tho e&#13;
called upper level education. I ov~mber evening .. Ruffolo tud nt&#13;
Health&#13;
have been wondering ab?ut whose erv,ces_ both men and women . fo r ur i ·al ' m t i n&#13;
::;~~'!.~":oo~~~~.m~, ~~'~i\il~J&amp;i&amp; I&#13;
D£':'1e LM, ROTC SCHOLARS R&#13;
"! knC\\ I needed tn go to&#13;
college I needed m get ha ti ket&#13;
punched ro be su c ful:' :.ay&#13;
tau rice. "Why did I :,elect an Army&#13;
ROTC sc h la hi O\'er a ba ket· .&#13;
ba ll holarsh ip? Because I knew Id,&#13;
haveaj b aftergraduation Andthat&#13;
more than a lotof my rs c uld say.&#13;
·•1 may cay m che m.ihta ry.&#13;
Bue if I dee id to get ut. I ve got th&#13;
be t job refe rence m the wo rld -a&#13;
co mmi io n in rh e United ta t&#13;
Army."&#13;
Army ROTC ca n d the sa me&#13;
'for y u. .&#13;
Quali fy, and ou ca n win_&#13;
an R0fC hola r hip, a. faunc&#13;
d id _ Each scholarship c v rs ui ti&#13;
o n , books, and m re.&#13;
I&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.&#13;
For details contact: ENROLLMENT OFFICER&#13;
MILITARY SERVICE DEPT. MARQUETTE U.&#13;
1-224-719S&#13;
3&#13;
The University Committee had&#13;
some heated discussion in its Sept.&#13;
24 meeting concerning the&#13;
proposed title change of Coordina&#13;
tor of Communi ty&#13;
Educational Programs to&#13;
Associate Dean for Outreach and&#13;
Summer Session.&#13;
Thursday. October 29. 1981 RANGER&#13;
lighting of handicap&#13;
lot is inadequate&#13;
by J lm Kreuser&#13;
Due to the fact that people in&#13;
certain positions are unhappy&#13;
with the borrowing d the title&#13;
"Stroltin'," I have changed the&#13;
format of this column insignificantly.&#13;
Truisms about&#13;
Parkside cannot (and will not) be&#13;
censored.&#13;
The intent of this column is not&#13;
to bad - mouth Parkside, ,but&#13;
rather to make information&#13;
available to Parkside students.&#13;
So, this roving report er will be&#13;
toolin' around the school scooping&#13;
out the oddities althe norm. Wen,&#13;
here's "Kreuser's Cozy Corner."&#13;
This week, Parkside interacts&#13;
with the State. What does the Slate&#13;
have to do with Parkside? Well,&#13;
there's a little problem in back of&#13;
Molinaro HaU. You know the&#13;
place. That's where all the bigwigs&#13;
(the Chancellor, the&#13;
Assistant Chancellor) park tbeir&#13;
cars. Not only do they park their&#13;
cars there, but so do handicapped&#13;
people.&#13;
These are the people I am&#13;
concerned about. They must deal&#13;
with the added handicap of&#13;
darkness. Ever since handicapped&#13;
parking was made available on&#13;
this spot, there have been no&#13;
outside lights. Of course, the&#13;
university wants the best possible&#13;
lighting system for this area.&#13;
Although funds are short, they&#13;
found it feasible to look elsewhere&#13;
for the money. Enter a State&#13;
agency.&#13;
Because the Building Commission&#13;
meets once a month (or&#13;
once every other month), it might&#13;
be awhile before Parkside gets on&#13;
the agenda. If by chance Parkside&#13;
is allocated money, we'll be in&#13;
good shape. If not, we're going to&#13;
have to spend money out of the&#13;
university's pocket, which will&#13;
probably mean another Physical&#13;
Plant disaster.&#13;
Until we find out the result of&#13;
whether or not the money is&#13;
coming from elsewhere, the lights&#13;
will be on in the classrooms adjacent&#13;
to this area. This does&#13;
provide some light, even if it is&#13;
only a temporary solution to the&#13;
problem.&#13;
Committees discuss Faculty Senate issues&#13;
result from requiring "hands on" after a short di~cussion.&#13;
artistic experience of all students. In o~her bus~ness, Uni&#13;
The committee then agreed With CommIttee chair Gene N&#13;
her suggestion to make ~p- reported to the committee&#13;
predation courses, along With Par~slde .has faced a&#13;
studio and performance courses, declIne In purchasing&#13;
eligible to complete the breadth between 1972 and the&#13;
area. Parkside's purchasing&#13;
Committee member Walter fallen about 28%, NorwOOd&#13;
Feldt then noted that other areas "It is beyond dispute that&#13;
of the proposal need work, to has been a substantial d&#13;
which committee members Norwood said. "I'm&#13;
agreed. It was unanimously suggesting that we're&#13;
established that a committee stricken, but this decline&#13;
would acton the proposal If It IS continue .wlthout real Pro&#13;
passed by the Faculty Senate this With quahty developing."&#13;
fall. Norwood said that a&#13;
The University Committee surcharge implemented&#13;
decided not to take a stand on the semester could generate&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge proposal $200,000 for Parkside.&#13;
\&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Both the AcademiC policies&#13;
Committee (APCl and the&#13;
University Committee met last&#13;
Thursday to .discuss two matters&#13;
to be presented to the Faculty&#13;
Senate at their late fall meeting&#13;
next month, the Honors Program&#13;
and the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
proposal.&#13;
The APC indicated that the&#13;
Honors program policy needed&#13;
"some language straighte~ed&#13;
up." They then unanimously&#13;
passed a motion to indicate that&#13;
the program's director would be&#13;
chosen from a slate of candidates&#13;
submitted to the Dean of Faculty.&#13;
The director's term is for 1 year.&#13;
The University Committee agreed&#13;
with the APC.&#13;
APC chair Beecham Robinson&#13;
said he hoped the Sena te would&#13;
pass the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
proposal "pretty much the way&#13;
we've put it forward," while other&#13;
members noted that "even this&#13;
group is not united on it."&#13;
Alter Rhoda-Gail Pollack of tbe&#13;
Fine Arts Division presented a&#13;
suggestion to the committee on&#13;
the fine arts requirement, they&#13;
supported her suggestion. She&#13;
noted that while it is important to&#13;
"train people to appreciate artistic&#13;
work," the faculties in the&#13;
fine arts departments are not&#13;
large enough to cope with the&#13;
higher enrollment that would&#13;
Title change discussed&#13;
Present at tbe meeting were&#13;
Eugene Norwood, chairperson;&#13;
Richard Keehn, William Moy,&#13;
Beecham Robinson, Carole Vopat,&#13;
members; Vice Chancellor&#13;
Lorman Ratner; and Walter&#13;
Feldt, Secretary of the F&#13;
The committee pe&#13;
Ratner that a search I&#13;
position should - be cond&#13;
rather than only changi&#13;
position's title. Ratner&#13;
search would have to be .&#13;
because the funds and&#13;
count do not exist to ena&#13;
outside search.&#13;
Ratner explained that&#13;
there are positions wherea&#13;
would be clearly appropria&#13;
others where it would not,&#13;
also an intermediate&#13;
positions where one c&#13;
either. Ratner told the co&#13;
that although there w&#13;
written policies which&#13;
a search for any positioo&#13;
Vice - Chancellor, he oow&#13;
that a search should inva .&#13;
conducted for academ&#13;
ministrative positions.&#13;
The process to select&#13;
members for the search&#13;
mittee was the matter&#13;
created disagreement.&#13;
told the committee whichf&#13;
members he proposed to a&#13;
to the search committee&#13;
asked the committee for ad&#13;
the proposed appointments.&#13;
committee members st&#13;
advocated that the co&#13;
itself should provide a&#13;
nominees.&#13;
In response, Ratner m&#13;
clear that he was not pr&#13;
follow that procedure in .&#13;
As the direct supervisor&#13;
Associated Dean, Ratner f&#13;
is in a better position to&#13;
members whose judgm&#13;
trusts, who will underst&#13;
role of the Associate Dea&#13;
who, collectively, will&#13;
balanced committee repr&#13;
different campus groups,&#13;
eluding minorities and&#13;
Several committee m&#13;
vigorously protested Ra&#13;
decision to proceed that&#13;
After at times heated ex&#13;
Ratner suggested that the&#13;
mittee state its position in&#13;
to Chancellor Alan GUskiD'&#13;
invite a discussion of the i&#13;
general sense - who should&#13;
the faculty membership&#13;
search committee at pa&#13;
The discussion having&#13;
an impasse, Chairperson N&#13;
asked whether the commi .&#13;
willing to leave the quest&#13;
procedures to enter In&#13;
discussion concerl1:ingof&#13;
proposed membersbtt'&#13;
search committee. By a 3-1&#13;
the committee agreed to&#13;
Ratner stated that all three&#13;
choices were senior facultY&#13;
experience in previous&#13;
who had worked with, or&#13;
strong interest in, outreacb&#13;
tivities, and that his&#13;
represented a balance of&#13;
constituencies.&#13;
Members of the com&#13;
objected to some of Ra I&#13;
choices and suggested lila&#13;
dilional campus constlj,old•&#13;
involved in outreach s~er&#13;
represented, but did not Ra&#13;
alterna tive. choices.&#13;
agreed to drop one .\&#13;
member at the campti&#13;
suggestion, and to CO&#13;
enlarging the search .com&#13;
so tha t other groups VI&#13;
represented.&#13;
TUE STROU9~&#13;
BEERlO R&#13;
]PUXlOSOJP&#13;
Distributed by E. F. MADRIGRANO 1831 . 55th St. Kenosha. Wi.se. 658.3553&#13;
Stroh's - .NEW ON TAP \A' T UNION SQUARE&#13;
Vall No 6&#13;
Thursday, October '19, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Lighting of handicap&#13;
lot is inadequate&#13;
b Jim Kreu r&#13;
Due to the fact that people in&#13;
c rt in it1on are unhappy&#13;
with th borrowing ci the tiUe&#13;
" trollin '," l have changed the&#13;
format of this column ini&#13;
nificanUy. Trui ms about&#13;
P rkside cannot (and will not ) be&#13;
ored .&#13;
The intent of this column is not&#13;
to bad • mouth Parkside, ,but&#13;
rather to make information&#13;
vailabl to Par ide tudents.&#13;
with the added handicap of&#13;
darkness . Ever since handicapped&#13;
parking was made available on&#13;
this pot, there have been no&#13;
out ide lights. Of course, the&#13;
university wants the best poosible&#13;
lighting system for this area.&#13;
Although funds are short, they&#13;
found it feasible to look elsewhere&#13;
for the money . Enter a State&#13;
agency .&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Both the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee (APC) and the&#13;
University Committee met last&#13;
Thursday to .discuss two matters&#13;
to be presented to the Facu_lty&#13;
Senate at their late fall meetmg&#13;
next month, the Honors Program&#13;
and the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
proposal.&#13;
result from requiring "hands on"&#13;
artistic experience of all studen_ts.&#13;
The committee then agreed with&#13;
her suggestion to make 8:Ppreciation&#13;
courses, along with&#13;
studio and performance courses,&#13;
eligible to complete the breadth&#13;
area.&#13;
Committee member Walter&#13;
Feldt then noted that other areas&#13;
of the proposal need work, to&#13;
which committee members&#13;
agreed. It was unanimously&#13;
established that a committee&#13;
would act on the proposal if it is&#13;
passed by the Faculty Senate this&#13;
fall.&#13;
The University Committee&#13;
decided not to take a stand on the&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge proposal&#13;
. thi roving reporter will be&#13;
t Im ' around th school cooping&#13;
out th odditie of the norm . Well,&#13;
her ' " Kreu r' CO'ly Corner."&#13;
Because the Building Commission&#13;
meets once a month (or&#13;
once every other month) , it might&#13;
be awhile before Parkside gets on&#13;
the agenda . If by chance Parkside&#13;
is allocated money, we'll be in&#13;
good shape. If not, we're going to&#13;
have to spend money out of the&#13;
university's pocket, which will&#13;
probably mean another Physical&#13;
Plant disaster.&#13;
The APC indicated that the&#13;
Honors program policy needed&#13;
"some language straightened&#13;
up." They then unanimously&#13;
passed a motion to indicate that&#13;
the program's director would be&#13;
chosen from a slate of candidates&#13;
submitted to the Dean of Faculty.&#13;
The director's term is for 1 year.&#13;
The University Committee agreed&#13;
with the APC .&#13;
APC chair Beecham Robinson&#13;
said he hoped the Senate would&#13;
pass the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
proposal "pretty much the way&#13;
we've put it forward," while other&#13;
members noted that "even this&#13;
group is not united on it."&#13;
Title change discussed&#13;
Thi week. Parkside interacts&#13;
v.1th the tate. What does the tale&#13;
ha\' to do with Parkside? Well,&#13;
th re' a litUe problem in back of&#13;
r-. olinaro Hall . You know the&#13;
place. That's here all the bigv.&#13;
,g ( the hancellor, the&#13;
i tant Chancellor&gt; park their&#13;
cars. 'ot only do they park their&#13;
cars th re, but so do handicapped&#13;
pie.&#13;
These are the people l am&#13;
c cerned about. They must deal&#13;
Until we find out the result of&#13;
whether or not the money is&#13;
coming from elsewhere, the lights&#13;
wiJI be on in the classrooms adjacent&#13;
to this area. This does&#13;
provide some light, even if it is&#13;
only a temporary solution to the&#13;
problem.&#13;
After Rhoda-Gail Pollack of the&#13;
Fine Arts Division presented a&#13;
suggestion to the committee on&#13;
the fine arts requirement, they&#13;
supported her suggestion. She&#13;
noted that while it is important to&#13;
"train people to appreciate artistic&#13;
work," the faculties in the&#13;
fine arts departments are not&#13;
large enough to cope with the&#13;
higher enrollment that would&#13;
The University Committee had&#13;
some heated discussion in its Sept.&#13;
24 meeting concerning the&#13;
proposed title change of Coordinator&#13;
of Community&#13;
Educational Programs to&#13;
Associate Dean for Outreach and&#13;
Summer Session.&#13;
Present at the meeting were&#13;
Eugene Norwood, chairperson;&#13;
Richard Keehn, William Moy,&#13;
Beecham Robinson, Carole Vopat,&#13;
members; Vice Chancellor&#13;
Lorman Ratner; and Walter&#13;
IlHilE SIROlHI 9&#13;
~&#13;
BlElER lO ~R&#13;
IPlHII[lOSOIP Vol 1 No 6&#13;
--.. ✓&#13;
Distributed by E. F. MADRIGRANO 1831 . 55th S .&#13;
t. Kenosha, Wisc.&#13;
Stroh's NEW ' - ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
658-3553&#13;
Feldt, Secretary of the Fa&#13;
The committee persu&#13;
Ratner that a search for&#13;
position should- be cond&#13;
rather than only changi~&#13;
position's title. Ratner said&#13;
search would have to be i&#13;
because the funds and&#13;
count do not exist to enable&#13;
outside search.&#13;
Ratner explained that&#13;
there are positions whe re a&#13;
would be clearly appropriate&#13;
others where it would not,&#13;
also an intermediate class&#13;
positions where one could&#13;
either. Ratner told the co ·&#13;
that although there were&#13;
written policies which de:111111•••&#13;
a search for any positioo&#13;
Vice • Chancellor, he now&#13;
that a search should invaria&#13;
conducted for academic&#13;
ministrative positions.&#13;
The process to select f&#13;
members for the search&#13;
mittee was the matter&#13;
created disagreement. Ra&#13;
told the committee whi ch f&#13;
members he proposed to a&#13;
to the search committee&#13;
asked the committee for advi&#13;
the proposed appointments.&#13;
committee members st&#13;
advocated that the co ·&#13;
itself should provide a slate&#13;
nominees.&#13;
In response, Ratner made&#13;
clear that he was not pr&#13;
follow that procedure in this&#13;
As the direct supervisor Ii&#13;
Associated Dean, Ratner feels&#13;
is in a better position to&#13;
members whose judgment&#13;
trusts, who will understand&#13;
role of the Associate Dean.&#13;
who, collectively, will bt&#13;
balanced committee repr&#13;
different campus groups,&#13;
eluding minorities and w&#13;
Several committee mern&#13;
vigorously protested Rat&#13;
decision to proceed that&#13;
After at times heated excha&#13;
Ratner suggested that the .&#13;
mittee sfate its position in w&#13;
to Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
invite a discussion of the issue&#13;
general sense - who should&#13;
the faculty membership f!I '&#13;
search committee at Pa&#13;
The discussion having r&#13;
an impasse, Chairperson No&#13;
asked whether the committee&#13;
willing to leave the questi~&#13;
procedures to enter into&#13;
discussion concerning&#13;
proposea membership ol&#13;
search committee. By a 3-2&#13;
the committee agreed to P&#13;
Ratner stated that all threed&#13;
choices were senior faculty&#13;
experience in previous sea lJld&#13;
who had worked with, or&#13;
strong interest in, outreach&#13;
tivities, and that his&#13;
represented a balance of ca&#13;
constituencies. i&#13;
Members of the conun&#13;
objected to some of Rat&#13;
choices and suggested _tllll&#13;
~tional campus constit uld:&#13;
mvolved in. outreach sho&#13;
represented, but did not of~t&#13;
alternative choices . t&#13;
agreed to drop one ~ti&#13;
member at the comJ11 1&#13;
5·&#13;
suggestion, and to con·&#13;
enlarging the search _coJlluJd&#13;
so that other groups wo&#13;
represented.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 29, 1911&#13;
rate dofllWte deIIp The fillli&#13;
~gna .... thrn prtIIl!ftltd for&#13;
approval&#13;
At tho same urne tho dirtetor II&#13;
audltlonln« tud nLa. 'MHo&#13;
.udJUona 1" tho dlra-tor a&#13;
chance 10wrlte clown un ....&#13;
bod}' charactensti&lt;s,and all othPr&#13;
Ibough~ .boul IJIe penon&#13;
Aft.... I parta hav e&#13;
the rehea .... 1process .. ThI&#13;
IncJudt5 a first .... em. tm&#13;
prOVI5IUonabout tho cbaraC'l&#13;
and blo&lt; '1l out m poIt&lt;ms&#13;
The actors put In a da&#13;
rehea I'5l '1llor an sve", 0I1hr&#13;
hours a da) Ou de 01.rme!,~"&#13;
time lh&lt;-y mu I m&#13;
ark _Ith other .CIOT&#13;
usually ha, e prI,"&amp;te sesslou&#13;
thodJl't'Ctor&#13;
While all 01 Iii&#13;
t and costam&#13;
dered This 1 prlmaril&#13;
luden ,th IJIe ..... ,,--&#13;
pE"n 1501) Uon \hi&#13;
lini hed the) are ready lor&#13;
l«hrucal rtbea .... Is.1n tho&#13;
des,gners and dirtetor 'Itch lor&#13;
small deta, thai nm:I adj&#13;
The) are now after I Ihort&#13;
• read for log nI I&#13;
Tb,. RunJW'r Slurnbl titt&#13;
11"1 pia) It • p1.y t rlluIl&#13;
dedlC:auon .nd b1mallllm lJJIn&#13;
tile C Iholoc ",10 Ion&#13;
Fragile Magic Theatre group&#13;
holds auditions today&#13;
life easier for the UW~Pstudent in&#13;
any way possible. It&#13;
The Fragile Magic Theatre&#13;
Group. a locally based traYellin&amp;&#13;
acting tr ... pe baa opened&#13;
auditions lor "And Other Sl&lt;lrits:'&#13;
written by Woody Allen and David&#13;
Mamel of Chicago Audilinns will&#13;
he held today belween S and 7; 4S&#13;
p.m. in Moin. 109 OIl a walk·m&#13;
basis. There .... 11male ports.nd&#13;
8 female parts open. ,'0 acti'1l&#13;
experience is necessary.&#13;
"And Otller Stories" consiSts 01&#13;
four one-act comedies, mcluding&#13;
"Death Knocks" and "Mr Big"&#13;
's weekend&#13;
'Runner Stumbles' opens dramatic season "1'''' Runner Stumbles," a play&#13;
..... b~%,=::;:~sw:~ Th ki f h I ~~ti:.~·rar:;~atic arts e rna Ing 0 t e p ay ..-.... • change from previous&#13;
. the I '11 b} Jeff Frau&#13;
~ practice, pay WI The creative process 01 run two consecutiv~ weekends produci'1l a play encompasses&#13;
wIIb performances at 8 p.rn. on weeks of hard work and&#13;
friday and Saturday, Oct. 30 and dedication on tho part of many&#13;
D·2pm.ooSunday,Nov.l;and8 people. It aU begins "';th the&#13;
,.;. ;,. Friday and Saturday, selection of the play which is&#13;
,I /IIf. 6.nd 7 in the Communication made from a groop collecttd by&#13;
Arl8 The.ter. informal poll. This process lD- 'It Reserved seating can be \,01\..,. the readi'1l of plays. by tho&#13;
~ed in advance by calling director, in an attempt to find tho&#13;
163-2345 or 553-2042. Admission is proper piece for the Partside&#13;
",50 foraenlor citizens and UW-P Theatre.&#13;
....... 15 and staff; $3.50 for the The Ronner Stu9'bl by Milan&#13;
...... 1 public. suu, to be performed al&#13;
1beplay, set in a small northern Parkside's Com. Arts Theatre&#13;
IlidUgan community in 1911, is Oct. 30-31, j ~ov 1 and • .ov 6.7.&#13;
bued on a real case in which a was selected for rnanv reasons&#13;
.... 1parish priest was accused 01 Director Lee Van o..1&lt;e first&#13;
~ • nun. . considered the number Of actors,&#13;
1beplaydoes not seek to m,rror budget. and work loree. Also \e&lt;)'&#13;
die contemporary church, but an important in the choos,ng of lhe&#13;
torlier more rigid institution, play was the educational goal of&#13;
.....,nng to director Leon Van e.xpos'ng students to a ".de range&#13;
o,ke, associate professor of of dramatic literature and&#13;
.nmatic arts. Rather, Van Dyke themes.&#13;
e .,s, it portrays the priest's Mter the play has been selected&#13;
.... tioo and the nun's human there is a preliminary meeting&#13;
dmllioo to her calling providing a between the director, the costume dram. tic metaphor for in- PATRICIA CASCIARO and Scott Reichelsdorf star in "The designerandsetdesignerlOVoluch&#13;
ftIIiPting love of Gnd, of fellow Runner Stumbles". the director talks about Ius con.&#13;
- and of one's calling or DC- cepl of the play and ""'" he would&#13;
apolioo. are Greg Flesher of Zion (Ill.); Broadway opening, critic Brendon like to see it. The designers.&#13;
1be Milan Stitt drama, wluch Andrew Francis Brhel of CUdahy; Gill of The New Yorker said: faculty or student. then go off 10&#13;
.,.ed 00 Broadway in 19'76, Bob Cash and Mary Beth Kelleher "'The Runner Stumbles' is a new, work on sketches. In the next&#13;
a cinematic style. It of Kenosha; and Vicki Knapp, serious, well-made and con- meetings the sketches are "orked&#13;
... in a courtroom with flash- Colleen Quiggle and John tinuously interesting American&#13;
(beginning with the nun's Miskulin, all of Racine. play, all the more worthy of our&#13;
III'tvalin the parish) illuminating Barbara Thompson is costume attention because it comes at a&#13;
action. designer and Charles Erven is time when most of what is new on&#13;
Scott Reichelsdorf of Kenosha scene and lighting designer. Both Broadway isn't serious, most of&#13;
JIIyI Father Rivard and Patricia are members of the dramatic arts what is well-made isn't interesting&#13;
'oro of Kenosha is Sister staff. and most of what is interesting is&#13;
. Other members of the cast Reviewing the play on its not American."&#13;
-'-"ndfnavian Seminar accepts applications .&#13;
students, graduates, and other Denmark, is also oow available.&#13;
adults who want to study in a Mter orientation in Denmark&#13;
Scandinavian country, becoming and a 3~week intensive language&#13;
part of another culture and courSe, generally followed by a&#13;
learning its language. A new one - family stay, studen~ an: placed&#13;
semester program only in individually at SCandlllav,an Folk&#13;
, Schools or other specialized in~&#13;
stitutions, where they live and&#13;
study with Scandinavians of&#13;
diverse backgrounds.&#13;
Because the Scandinavian&#13;
countries are small, opeD, and&#13;
accessible, the year provides an&#13;
unusual opportunity for the&#13;
student to explore his or her&#13;
particular field of interest by&#13;
doing an independent stud)\,&#13;
project. On the hasis 01 a detailed&#13;
written evaluation of their work,&#13;
most college students receive full&#13;
or partial academic credit for&#13;
their year .&#13;
The fee, covering tuition, room,'&#13;
board, and all course - connected&#13;
travels in Scandinavia, is $5,900.&#13;
Interest - free loans are granted&#13;
on the hasis of need, as are a few&#13;
partial scholarships.&#13;
For further information, please&#13;
write to: SCANDINAVIAN&#13;
SEMINAR, 100 East 85th Street,&#13;
New York, N.Y. 10028.&#13;
Scandinavian seminar is now&#13;
ilatlCllPlit· 'R.pplicalions for its 1982-&#13;
• academic year abroad in&#13;
Deamart, Finland, Norway, or&#13;
........ This unique learning&#13;
"pri'encE is designed for college&#13;
PSGASenators to begin term&#13;
CoatiDaed From Page One •&#13;
.... involved is important," she&#13;
lIld. "My major concern will he&#13;
..... with new policies the&#13;
llherlily system may pass, and&#13;
.... they will affect students."&#13;
AI Spallato&#13;
.~SpoU.to, a junior majoring in&#13;
... Science, ran for Senate&#13;
"Iaetauae I was interested in&#13;
f!aditlg wt exactly what PSGA is&#13;
~ or can do lor the studenfs at ';;(P - and help if possible," he&#13;
Ills ."'omplishment he hopes to&#13;
Idllevewbilein office is "to make&#13;
Honors program&#13;
CODtiauedFrom Page One&#13;
:OPtion at which the program&#13;
... ~ further explained and, any&#13;
~lIIs answered, Thayer said.&#13;
l-O0iII1ha SPring, qualilied students ve their first chance to get&#13;
by Vedin the Honors Program&#13;
~Iling in the two credit&#13;
lIIerect Colloquium (OS.3Sll) to be&#13;
.... by the program. The&#13;
Ibe .... coll"9wum will bring to&#13;
&lt;0 UIllV~.ty and surrounding&#13;
a-:RlU01~le~:'ao outstanding&#13;
lri . disCIplinary humanist -&#13;
~ed scholar who will spend a&#13;
... on campus and be very&#13;
fa esa.bletostudents," according&#13;
&lt;o~Yer. Students enrolled in the&#13;
.ellles~,um will spend next&#13;
~~ developing the&#13;
&lt;boOs' s themes and criteria,&#13;
I&lt;hoI11lg next semester's visting&#13;
'lid :.. and studying the ethics&#13;
~ -Ill IS of the scholar's work,&#13;
by Allen nothPr AIJec&#13;
"The Whore 01 ME~,,"&#13;
.... "pled for lite&#13;
Teny and rt .~Carthr&#13;
K..... ba '7be Duct hria Is by Onld _&#13;
The play .. II direded&#13;
M.rt )lcC.rtb), a&#13;
veIl-ran of comm r&#13;
sumrDf'f _tao&#13;
of IJIe eru,' ly 01 T &lt;do Tbc&#13;
play .. Ube prosenttd .t wr uu.....&#13;
Clnfma on Jan&#13;
eop me-n II"f'&#13;
Dave White·&#13;
David Wlute, a freshman still&#13;
deciding on a major, ran for the&#13;
Senate mainly to keep the&#13;
students informed. "There are&#13;
many students not in tune with the&#13;
activities around campus," he&#13;
said. "With student government, I&#13;
hope to represent and inform the&#13;
student bndy of the goings-on at&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
White hopes to improve student&#13;
involvement and relations with&#13;
student government because, he&#13;
said, the reason student govern·&#13;
ment exists is the students.&#13;
"I plan to address the question&#13;
of parking regulations and the&#13;
issue of Breadth of Knowledge,&#13;
which have, in the past .. caused&#13;
great discussion," he said.&#13;
"Patbide&#13;
mu&#13;
Has Style"&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
"Gee this Rec Center Is a fun place to go." exclaims&#13;
Sfrollin' Bowlin'. '" wonder what other lun things there are&#13;
fo do'" StroWn' Bowlin' doesn·t have to wonder very long&#13;
as he'soon discovers the Rec Center offers table tennis tor&#13;
only:JOe per hour and free M-W·F affernoons from 1 2 p.m.&#13;
Stop down and learn what Stollln' Bowlin' has already&#13;
found out - how much fun table tennis can be in the Rec&#13;
Center.&#13;
•&#13;
IlALLO_ COSa.&#13;
CaON•$ PAmI OCTOIER3ht&#13;
HOUILYOAMIS a I'IlZlSI&#13;
AmAllNO UVI ON STAGeOCT.3ht&#13;
BLACK SLAX &amp; THE CADILLACS&#13;
(9.1 A.M.)&#13;
HOUIS:&#13;
MON.-SAT. l1AM· MIDNIGHT&#13;
SUN. 9 AM • MIDNIGHT&#13;
RICSON'S RESTAURANT &amp; PUB INC.&#13;
7940_DANIO.I(_A, WIS. 53140&#13;
652-1220&#13;
*perllovr&#13;
TABLE TENNIS I'&#13;
RA GER&#13;
This weekend&#13;
;-Runner- Stumbles' opens dramatic seaso&#13;
•1'he Runner Stumbles," a play&#13;
n binin&amp; courtroom drama with&#13;
com1 or repressed emotion, is the Th k• f h I ~ main Stage '":amatic arts --,~''°"·'..._ e ma 1ng O t e p ay rodlJclion at Parkside.&#13;
P In 8 change. from previo~ ·&#13;
h ulill8 practice, the play will u=~~•"' ·&#13;
run two consecutiv~ weekends DN'-.N11ttt1&#13;
~th performances at 8 p.m. on&#13;
fndaY nd Saturday, Oct. 30 and&#13;
31• 2p.monSunday, ov.l;and8&#13;
' oo Friday and Saturday,&#13;
1 p_.m_&amp;and7intheCommunication&#13;
Theater.&#13;
R erved seating can _be&#13;
rranged in advance by_ ~llu~g&#13;
2345 or 5.53-2042. Admission 1s&#13;
• for senior citizens and UW-P&#13;
udent and staff; $3.50 for the&#13;
ral public .&#13;
The play, set in a small northern&#13;
lidugan community in 1911, is&#13;
on a real ca e in which a&#13;
rural parish priest was accused of&#13;
ilh~ a nun&#13;
The play does not seek to mirror&#13;
contemporary church, but an&#13;
rher more rigid institution,&#13;
arcording to director Leon Van&#13;
D e, a sociate professor of&#13;
dram lie arts. Rather, Van Dyke&#13;
v it portrays the priest's&#13;
dedi~tion and the nun's human&#13;
devotion to her calling providing a&#13;
dramatic metaphor for inligating&#13;
love of God, of fellow&#13;
o and of one's calling or oclion.&#13;
The 1ilan Stitt drama, which&#13;
~ned on Broadway in 1976,&#13;
employ a cinematic style. It&#13;
in a courtroom with flash&lt;&#13;
beginning with the nun's&#13;
amval in the parish) illuminating&#13;
action.&#13;
It Reichelsdorf of Kenosha&#13;
play Father Rivard and Patricia&#13;
· aro of Kenosha is Sister&#13;
Rita. Other members of the cast&#13;
PATRICIA CASCIARO and Scott Reichelsdorf star in " The&#13;
Runner Stumbles" .&#13;
are Greg Flesher of Zion (Ill.);&#13;
Andrew Francis Brhel of CUdahy;&#13;
Bob Cash and Mary Beth Kelleher&#13;
of Kenosha; and Vicki Knapp,&#13;
Colleen Quiggle and John&#13;
Miskulin, all of Racine.&#13;
Barbara Thompson is costume&#13;
designer and Charles Erven is&#13;
scene and lighting designer. Both&#13;
are members of the dramatic arts&#13;
staff.&#13;
Reviewing the play on its&#13;
Broadway opening, critic Brendon&#13;
Gill of The ew Yorker aid:&#13;
'"The Runner tumbles' i a new,&#13;
erious , well-made and continuously&#13;
interesting American&#13;
play, all the more worth of our&#13;
attention becau it com at a&#13;
time when most or what i new on&#13;
Broadway isn 't serious, mo t of&#13;
what is well-made i n't interesti!lI&#13;
and most of what is inter ting i&#13;
not American."&#13;
Scandinavian Seminar accepts applications&#13;
Scandmavian Seminar is now&#13;
ptmgapplications for its 1982·&#13;
&amp;1 academic year abroad in&#13;
Denmark, Finland, or way , or&#13;
ed n. This unique learning&#13;
a ience i designed for college&#13;
students, graduates, and other&#13;
adults who want to study in a&#13;
Scandinavian country, becoming&#13;
part of another culture and&#13;
learning its language. A new one -&#13;
semester program , only in&#13;
Denmark. i also now available.&#13;
PSGA Senators to begin term&#13;
After orientation in Denmar&#13;
and a 3-week intensive language&#13;
course, generally followed by a&#13;
family stay , tudents are placed&#13;
individually at Scandinavian Fo&#13;
Schools or other specialized in·&#13;
stitutions, where they live and&#13;
study with candinavian or&#13;
onlinued From Page One&#13;
1~ involved is important," she&#13;
1d. " 1y major concern will be&#13;
dealing with new policies the&#13;
uruver ity system may pass, and&#13;
how they will affect students."&#13;
Al Spallato&#13;
Al pallato, a junior majoring in&#13;
Ute Science, ran for Senate&#13;
ause I was interested in&#13;
linding oot exactly what PSGA is&#13;
~ng or can do for the students at&#13;
.,"',\.p _ and help if possible," he&#13;
1d.&#13;
H accomplishment he hopes to&#13;
achieve while in office is "to make&#13;
Honors program&#13;
· ntinued From Page One&#13;
ill g:on at which the program&#13;
. further explained and any&#13;
qu ltCllS ~wered, Thayer said.&#13;
~ pnng, qualified students&#13;
hl\'ol ve _their first chance to get&#13;
by Ved 1_n t~ Honors Program&#13;
H nrolhng m the two credit&#13;
"~ Colloquium (05-350) to be&#13;
~red by the program. The&#13;
the~ _col1°9uium will bring to&#13;
com ruv~1ty and surrounding&#13;
er mun1tie~ "an outstanding&#13;
on · disciplinary humanist -&#13;
ented scholar who will spend a&#13;
cc on campus and be very&#13;
lo 'Ina Ible to students," according&#13;
con Yl:I' · Students enrolled in the&#13;
oquium will spend next&#13;
em est Pl't&gt;gr e~ developing the&#13;
t ~m s themes and criteria,&#13;
ho! ing next semester' s visting&#13;
_ar and studying the ethics&#13;
1 id ues of the scholar's work,&#13;
life easier for the UW-P student in diverse backgrounds.&#13;
any way possible." Because the candinavian&#13;
Dave White&#13;
David White, a freshman still&#13;
deciding on a major, ran for the&#13;
Senate mainly to keep the&#13;
students informed. "There are&#13;
many students not in tune with the&#13;
activities around campus," he&#13;
said. "With student government, I&#13;
hope to represent and inform the&#13;
student body of the goings-on at&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
White hopes to improve student&#13;
involvement and relations with&#13;
student government because, he&#13;
said, the reason student government&#13;
exists is the students.&#13;
"I pfan to address the question&#13;
of parking regulations and the&#13;
issue of Breadth of Knowledge ,&#13;
which have , in the past , caused&#13;
great discussion ," he said.&#13;
countries are small, open, and&#13;
acces ible, the year pro ides an&#13;
unu ual opportunity for th&#13;
student to explore hi or her&#13;
particular field or interest b&#13;
doing an independent tud&#13;
project. On th basis of a detailed&#13;
written evaluation of their work,&#13;
most college stud nts rec ive full&#13;
or partial academic credit r r&#13;
their year.&#13;
The fee , covering tuition , room.•&#13;
board, and all courSe - connected&#13;
travels in Scandinavia, i , .&#13;
Interest - free loans are granted&#13;
on the ba i of need, as are a few&#13;
partial cholarships.&#13;
For further information, pl e&#13;
write to : CA DI A IA&#13;
SEMINAR, 100 East 85th treet,&#13;
ew York, Y 10028&#13;
HALLO- COSTUIII&#13;
" PAITYI&#13;
C$0NS OCTOBER 31 .,&#13;
HOUILY OAMIS&#13;
~ &amp;NIDSI&#13;
APNAIING UVE ON STAGI OCT. 31 tt&#13;
BLACK SLAX &amp; THE CADILLACS&#13;
(9 -1 A.M.)&#13;
HOUIS:&#13;
MON.-SAT. 11AM • MIDNIGHT&#13;
SUN. 9 AM - MIDNIGHT&#13;
RICSON'S RESTAURANT &amp; PUB l &lt;.:.&#13;
7940 SHEIIDAN ID. KINOSHA. WIS. 53140&#13;
652-1220&#13;
Fragile Magic&#13;
holds auditions t&#13;
''Parksi&#13;
S1:ILL&#13;
Has Styl "&#13;
r u&#13;
ON TAP A UNION SQUARE&#13;
T LET&#13;
6 Thursday. October 29,1981 RANGER&#13;
Handicapped Awareness Day to be held .&#13;
A "Handicapped Awareness available for informal discussion effort to foster awareness .~~&#13;
Da ." marki the United Nations from 2 to 3 p.m. A problems faced by persons WI&#13;
.~ goated ~ternational Year of neurophysiologist research diaabi lit.ies , eight student~&#13;
Dlsa~led Persons will he held at surgeon, he has headed his own faculty members and a.-&#13;
Parkside on Wednesday, Nov. 4. firm, Clinical Convenience mlnistrators Will spend the day in&#13;
Products, Inc., of Madison for ten wheeleham,.&#13;
The han~i~pped awareness years. All of the events are free ~nd&#13;
program will include a talk by . . . . open to the public. A bus provided&#13;
Don Warren, . rehabilitation An exhibit featuring adaptive by the Kenosha Department of&#13;
engineer and director of the e9U1pment, literature a,nd Transportation Will provide free&#13;
Wisconsin Foundation for Applied displays by. area ag.encles shuttle service from 'the Tallent&#13;
Technology. on "Innovative p~ovldmg serV1ce~to th~ disabled Hall parking lot between 11:30&#13;
EQu~pme,nt0' and Jo~ S,ite Will be on the Uruon Bridge from a.rn. and 2:15 p.m.&#13;
Modification at 1 p.m, ID Urnon 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The program is sponsored by&#13;
t04 The Sign Singers of Mitchell the Campus Health and Student&#13;
Warren is an authority on Junior High School will perforrri'in Activities Offices in cooperation&#13;
development of devices to assist the cafeteria from noon to 1 p.m. with Society's Assets .of Racine,&#13;
people with haodlcaps to adjust to The group is directed by school Abolish Barriers for Lifetime&#13;
various work and home life principal Richard Anderson, who Efficiency (ABLE) of Kenosha&#13;
situations. He will demonstrate will provide guitar ac- and the State Department of&#13;
some of the devices and be companiment. As a part of the Vocational Rehabilitation.&#13;
lynda Martha Dance Company to perform at .tlW-P&#13;
The Lynda Martha Dance&#13;
Company will present a program&#13;
01 modem dance flavored with the&#13;
jazz idiom at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside Communication&#13;
Arts Theater on&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 11, at 8 p.m.&#13;
under sponsorship of the student&#13;
Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
Admission is $2.50for students;&#13;
$3 for the public and tickets will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Martha's seven - member troupe&#13;
is in residence at the Giordano&#13;
Dance Center, where Martha is&#13;
director of the modern dance&#13;
department. She also is a member&#13;
of the dance faculty at the&#13;
University of Illinois Circle&#13;
Campus.&#13;
A dancer, choreographer and&#13;
teacher, Martha's own work, as&#13;
well as that of her troupe, has won&#13;
critical praise throughout the&#13;
Midwest and the South for energy&#13;
and originality.&#13;
Once a championship baton&#13;
twirler, Martha was encouraged&#13;
as a child to study dance to improve&#13;
her twirling performance.&#13;
As a choreographer. her works&#13;
are included in the repertoires of a&#13;
number of regional companies&#13;
including the Mississippi Coast&#13;
Ballet, Darwin Dance Theater,&#13;
Southern Ballet Theater the&#13;
Minnesota Jazz Dance Co~pany&#13;
and the Gos Giodano Jazz Dance&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Its \'\01 like. 'lOlA drive. \..\o;.e.0. f1\o.n\o.c \10,'0\&#13;
b~tIthinK \ jus-t Sl..Ilo,\\owed. ffij tee1\(.&#13;
Irked by independent area dri&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
Parkside's location leaves&#13;
students with several choices&#13;
when mode of transportation is&#13;
considered. Some walk. Others&#13;
run', There is public bus service&#13;
available. Students may come by&#13;
bike, moped, and motorcycle. The&#13;
rest come by private car,&#13;
Therefore, the following guide&#13;
has been provided for the student&#13;
who would .like to know the unwritten&#13;
rules of the IRKD,.&#13;
What do all tbese students have&#13;
in common besides their general&#13;
destination? They have confronted&#13;
tbe IRKD (Independent&#13;
Racine I Kenosha Drivers) of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin, These&#13;
people drive by their own rules.&#13;
For anyone who has not grown up&#13;
in this area, traveling through&#13;
Racine or Kenosha can be like&#13;
learning to drive all over again.&#13;
SPEED LIMIT: Although most&#13;
roads in both counlies have speed&#13;
limit signs, their presence is&#13;
generally ignored. The IRKD will&#13;
travel at a rate which is 15 mph&#13;
• faster or slower than that posted&#13;
depending on whether or not th~&#13;
student is late for class.&#13;
BLINKERS: An IRKD&#13;
surprised to learn that&#13;
cars come equipped wilb&#13;
important safety feature.&#13;
traveling behind an IRKD&#13;
for brake lights as an indi";'&#13;
an impending him.&#13;
ENTERING J'RAFFIC&#13;
IRKD is always anxious to •&#13;
the road. Helshe will nev'&#13;
the opportunity to pull out&#13;
of someone. Watch for&#13;
especially if the speed .&#13;
grea ter than 45 mph.&#13;
LEAVING TRAFFIC:&#13;
done by the IRKD witliJi&#13;
blocks of cutting someone&#13;
ENTERING TRAFFIC) TIle&#13;
D slows to approximately&#13;
for several hundred yards&#13;
the corner in order to naviga&#13;
turn.&#13;
U-TURNS at CONT&#13;
INTERSECTIONS: For&#13;
reason, this is not consi&#13;
traffic viola lion by an&#13;
However, this practice is&#13;
recommended for the&#13;
driver.&#13;
Good luck to all students&#13;
encounter tbe IRKD.&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING I&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR -D.TAILS&#13;
5%% Interest HY•• Dall,&#13;
Balance Is s500.00 .r M.re.&#13;
WE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU IRO"I&#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, Wisconsin&#13;
414·248-9141&#13;
24726 _75th Street· RI. 50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wi&#13;
414 - 843·2388&#13;
6 Thursday, October 29, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Handicapped Awareness Day to be held&#13;
" H ndicapp d v. arene s available for informal discussion effort to foster awareness -ri&#13;
D ... m r in the ruted ations from 2 to 3 p.m. A p~oblt:~s. faced ~y persons w1&#13;
• ) i n t lntcrnatronal Year of neurophysiologist res_earch d1sab1hties, eight student~&#13;
o· bled will be held at urgeon, he has headed hi~ own fa_c~lty me~bers and a. -&#13;
Par I n Wedn •day , ov . 4. firm, Clinical Convenience muustrat~rs will spend the day m&#13;
Products, Inc., of Madison for ten wheelchairs.&#13;
Th h nd1capp d awarene s year . All of the events are free and&#13;
~r m ·ill include a talk by open to the public. A bus provided&#13;
Don Warr n , rehabilitation An exhibit featuring adaptive by the Kenosha Department of&#13;
, r and dir tor of ~he equipment, literature and Transportation will provide free&#13;
w· o ·in F undation for pphed displays by area agencies shuttle service from 'the Tallent&#13;
T chnol gy. on "Innovative providing services to the disabled Hall parking lot between 11:30&#13;
Equipm •_nt .. and Jo~ _ite will be on the Union Bridge from a.m. and 2 :IS p.m.&#13;
1 1ftcat1on at I p.m . m Uruon 10 a .m. to 3 p.m. The program is sponsored by&#13;
1 • The ign Singers of Mitchell the Campus Health and Student&#13;
Junior High School will perforntin Activities Offices in cooperation&#13;
the cafeteria from noon to 1 p.m. with Society's Assets . of Racine,&#13;
The group is directed by school Abolish Barriers for Lifetime&#13;
principal Richard Anderson, who Efficiency (ABLE) of Kenosha&#13;
will provide guitar ac- and the State Department of&#13;
companiment. As a part of the Vocational Rehabilitation. Irked by independent area driv·&#13;
Lynda Martha Dance Company to perform at .tJW-P by Carol Burns&#13;
Parkside's location leaves&#13;
students with several choices&#13;
when mode of transportation is·&#13;
considered. Some walk. Others&#13;
run. There is public bus service&#13;
available. Students may come by&#13;
bike, moped, and motorcycle. The&#13;
rest come by private car.&#13;
student is late for class.&#13;
BLINKERS: An ffiKD&#13;
surprised to learn that&#13;
cars come equipped With&#13;
important safety feature&#13;
traveling behind an IRKD.&#13;
for brake lights as an indi~ ·&#13;
an impending turn.&#13;
Th Lynda 1artha Dance&#13;
Company will pr enl a program&#13;
ol m m dance flavored with the&#13;
jazz icliom at the University oC&#13;
Wi ·con m - Park ide Communication&#13;
Arts Theater on&#13;
Wednesday, ov . 11, at 8 p.m.&#13;
under sponsorship of the student&#13;
Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
Admission is $2 .50 for students;&#13;
$3 for the public and tickets will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Martha's seven - member troupe&#13;
is in residence at the Giordano&#13;
Dance Center, where Martha is&#13;
director of the modern dance&#13;
department. She also is a member&#13;
of the dance faculty at the&#13;
University of Illinois Circle&#13;
campus.&#13;
A dancer, choreographer and&#13;
teacher, Martha's own work, as&#13;
well as that of her troupe, has won&#13;
critical praise throughout the&#13;
Midwest and the South for energy&#13;
and originality.&#13;
. Once a championship baton&#13;
twirler, Martha was encouraged&#13;
as a child to study dance to improve&#13;
her twirling performance.&#13;
As a choreographer, her works&#13;
are included in the repertoires of a&#13;
!1um~r of regional companies&#13;
mcludmg the Mississippi Coast&#13;
Ballet, Darwin Dance Theater&#13;
Southern Ballet Theater th~&#13;
Minnesota Jazz Dance Co~pany&#13;
and the Gos Giodano Jazz Dance&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Therefore, the following guide&#13;
has been provided for the student&#13;
who would like to know the unwritten&#13;
rules of the IRKD.&#13;
What do all these students have&#13;
in common besides their general&#13;
destination? They have confronted&#13;
the IRKD (Independent&#13;
Racine / Kenosha Drivers) of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin. These&#13;
people drive by their own rules.&#13;
For anyone who has not grown up&#13;
in this area, traveling through&#13;
Racine or Kenosha can be like&#13;
learning to drive all over again.&#13;
SPEED LIMIT: Although most&#13;
roads in both counties have speed&#13;
limit signs, their presence is&#13;
generally ignored. The IRKD will&#13;
travel at a rate which is 15 mph&#13;
• faster or slower than that posted&#13;
depending on whether or not th~&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE .&#13;
ENTERING l'RAFFIC·&#13;
IRKD is always anxious to ·&#13;
the road. He/she will never&#13;
the opportunity to pull out in&#13;
of someone. Watch for&#13;
especially if the speed ·&#13;
greater than 45 mph.&#13;
LEA YING TRAFFIC:&#13;
done by the IRKD witlan&#13;
blocks of cutting someone~ENTERING&#13;
TRAFFIC) The&#13;
D slows to approximately 5&#13;
for several hundred yards&#13;
the corner in order to navigate&#13;
turn.&#13;
U-TURNS at CONTRO&#13;
INTERSECTIONS: For&#13;
reason, this is not consi&#13;
traffic violation by an&#13;
However, this practice is&#13;
recommended for the&#13;
driver.&#13;
Good luck to all students&#13;
• encounter the IRKD.&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
5935·_ 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin -&#13;
414 - 658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
l&lt;enosha, 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, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 248-9141&#13;
24726 - 75th Street - Rt. 50&#13;
&lt; Paddock Lake) Salem, Wis.&#13;
414 - 843-2388&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR l~TAILS&#13;
5¼% Interest I Yo• Dally&#13;
Balance Is ssoo.oo or Morel&#13;
WE'RE HERE 10 HELP YOU &amp;RO.I&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 29,1981 7&#13;
Learning to live with what you have&#13;
.. week, "Viewpoint" rncuses severed spinal cord, and they will The night before, we had been some d. them never will be. We readY to go but by Thunclay or&#13;
"Awareness Day" and some tell you that person will never diving into the water and it was are certainly aware d. the fact Friday, 1 "!as very dragged out&#13;
bers or Ihe Parkslde com- walk again. I always tell myself over six feet deep. The level had that there are problems, and we Because d. thai, I not only leomed&#13;
y who are handicapped. that betw~n now and the Ii'!'e changed from sixfeetto a foot and work with them.". . to aUow time for myael!, J I med&#13;
here's a way around that I die, I m gomg to walk again. a hal! overnight. It has something The Dean was m a wheelchair to take It easy 0 that by the end of&#13;
thing, there are ways to deal I really chng to that, but then to do with locks. for about eight months and he did the week. I still had some _raY&#13;
everything, my waysusually agam, nght now I have things I When I dove in, I broke my have problems at times. "At left"&#13;
more time," said Gus wanttodoandpenplelneedtosee neck. My friend realized right times, I would have to be 00 the The people at Parb.de alwaya&#13;
e n. Gus is disabled and has and places I 'Yant to go to." away what had happened, and be other end of the campus and it was showed a great dee I of concern for&#13;
in a wheelchair for twelve Dave Schneider is a junior at knew that I shouldn't be moved. I difficult to give myself enough Pedersen. "One d. the thl/lll I&#13;
Parkside majoring m Psychology. yelled up to him and told him that time to get there. When I was late, noticed w'hen I was first injured,&#13;
r:' are very different now He has been in a wheelchair for I couldn't move. The people that it was very frustrating. A lew and even now, IS the greel deol d.&#13;
:: his attitude and ways &lt;i. four years. He thinks that the were with us took a board and years ago, I was one &lt;i.the people concern. Irom the people on&#13;
• ~ng'with things have both Parkside facilities are some of the submerged it under the water and thai spent a day in a wheelchair on campus, It'S never' ending. RIghi&#13;
ed "A lot of the way I deal best. "The Parkside lacilities are letitfloatup underneath me. Then Awareness Day, and I never after my accident,1 would tend to&#13;
. Ie where at other times great. It's better than most of the they packed my head in said so cheated and got out of thai chair, get frustrated WIth aU of the&#13;
~v;' just gotten up and schools I've. been to. The good that it wouldn't move Irom side to but then too, I noticed that my people trying to help me out. Ilelt&#13;
edaway, or argued further or thing about tt IS that the whole side. A lot of limes, it's the arms and hands got exceptionally like I was helpless at tim Then.&#13;
somebody in the head, I uruverstty IS contamed in one movement after the initial injury tired, and that It ~as a problem to l~getseaSler to~d on people a&#13;
seldom do that anymore. I that makes it worse. 1 was lucky get to places on time. When I was little more for a bUJe help. Il&#13;
djust rather do it diflerently. ,i that the penplewith me knew what in my wheelchair for a long period wasn't an easy thing for me&#13;
no! very big on spur of the tr'~ "to do." &lt;i.time, I noticed that on Moodays though I adjusted. I think m (&#13;
ent type things, I always try Jf ~ Dave does his best to keep his I would usually be very strong and people can."&#13;
things through before I do spirits up. "I have a pretty&#13;
Before il I got mad and ~ ~ positive attitude towards people. ' / »&gt; Re.ervetlona Apprecleted ;n out df the room, no big ~ A lot of penple told me that people 4 II t ~ or I could just go hack and ~ were going to stare at me, and an~lei e fPAAI.t tUtJ 654-6933&#13;
ize tater. ~ that little kids are going to ask a a rrr&gt;:&#13;
be best way to put it is that ~ bl; lot of questions. I have never ~ 4814 Sherlden Rd. Keno.he&#13;
seem to burn easier now, really experienced that at all.&#13;
that's something I don't want Everybody is curious. Whether&#13;
go ci. I need people more you're in a wheelchair or on&#13;
than 1 ever have. A lot of it is crutches, everyone wants to know ®l a need to be around people. what happened. U you face it with&#13;
are a lot of things'1 won't a posilive outlook and tell them&#13;
... do to oflend them. This is Internat'lonal Year straight out what happened, it's a-..;.-----:;=~m~'M'-:;:::;------1 way I do things now and It'S the best way to go througb It. The TUE DAY, :'iOV.3rd&#13;
a an act where hefore, twelve of important thing is that you have to An Evening In Pam IU5&#13;
rs ago: it would have been an realize the ~ro~lem and realize&#13;
" explained Gus. Disabled Persons h?wtodealwlthlt.lnman~cases,&#13;
also finds it very important It s a matter of leanung different&#13;
thought 01 as a person before building. If you want to use the .ways of doing things."&#13;
thing else. "First and pool, there is a lift in the pool for Dave Pedersen, Dean of Student&#13;
most I. am a person, ~nd ~ot the people that need it. Life, has also experienced getting&#13;
eone In a wheelchair. 1 m "The one problem we used to around in a wheelchair at&#13;
n, and frieridly and honest. have was going to registration on Parkside. Pedersen sustained an&#13;
of the things I probably value that middle level. Wegot around it ankle injury a little over a year&#13;
tis Iriendship. I've got a lot of by moving registration for lbe ago. "The Parkside facilities are&#13;
, but some are friends disabled to the student records probably some of the best I've&#13;
so than others. As far as I'm office. Before we started ever seen. When this school was&#13;
moo, if t~ere's •anyth:in~ I registration there, we had to have built, everything was put in. When&#13;
do for a fnend, I 11do It. people run our schedules through a new school is built it doesn't&#13;
here are times that Gus finds for us. If there was any kind of seem to cost as much to have&#13;
1£ questioning the opinions problem, we would have to start equipment put in as it does to&#13;
people around him and how all over again, and the person remodel in order to put in proper&#13;
leel about him. "I guess I've doing the running for us had to aceomndalions. When I was in a&#13;
ays wondered what people bring everything back." wheelchair, I experienced the&#13;
. I wonder what some of Dave's aceident happened while accessability of this school, and il&#13;
people say inside. At times on a trip, and he leels fortunate to is extraordinary. If there seems to&#13;
bad the feeling that people have come out of it the way he did. be a big inconvenience, a problem&#13;
astonished that I can talk, it's "I was very fortunate that with a student's mobility, we do&#13;
t like their faces are saying, someone was with me when my our best to take care of it. A prime&#13;
can talk.' II accident occurred. My church example would be the lecture&#13;
facilities at Parkside for the group had a houseboat on the rooms. Students in wheelchairs&#13;
bled are very adequate to Mississippi River, and on the last wouldn't be able to wheel up to the&#13;
, although there have been day of our trip, a friend and I were countertop areas because the&#13;
when he's had a problem going to wash our hair. Instead of chairs are underneath the counter&#13;
winler's ice. "I can't be more walking to the edge and going into tops. The problem was solved by&#13;
n a few feet away from the the water, I dove in. The water simply removing a chair. Not all&#13;
, but the lact that I'm on an was only a foot and a half deep. of the problems are solved, and&#13;
line makes it difficult to move. • ••••&#13;
there is ice or snow on the&#13;
nd.l'm sure that as kids most&#13;
Ie have tried to ride a bike on&#13;
and they've laUen all over, the&#13;
spins and there's no control.&#13;
now and then I'll run into&#13;
t problem, but like I said, there&#13;
a way around everything. So&#13;
t I dm'l get caugbt in the cold,&#13;
U the health office and tell&#13;
that I'll he there at a certain&#13;
e~and someone comes to my&#13;
g spot and gives me a&#13;
nd."&#13;
re are also certain things&#13;
I keep Gus going. "1 refuse to&#13;
pi the idea that I will never&#13;
lk. again. You can ask -any&#13;
cal doctor to descrihe a&#13;
ew int&#13;
People&#13;
Power&#13;
helps&#13;
event&#13;
birth&#13;
S defects uppon&#13;
March of Dimes&#13;
HAI.1.0IlEES. I., Oct. 31&#13;
U yoo're wearing a Halloween C06wme (we&#13;
will bel, your meal will be discounted 15'l;&#13;
s&#13;
lR@rE&#13;
Jack Lemmon&#13;
Robby Benson&#13;
Lee Remick&#13;
sJSo&#13;
7:30 Friday &amp; Sunday,&#13;
Nov. 6 &amp; 8&#13;
1100lnlr " lot ~&#13;
to~"fatNr&#13;
thIIn juJt 1m"""son.&#13;
NEXT WEEICS MOVlE&#13;
DEATH HUNT&#13;
* JOB OPENING * Position: STUDENT SUPERVISOR· PARKSIDE UNION BULDING * responsible for coordination of activities and supervision&#13;
of building during weekends and evenings,&#13;
* 15-20 hours weekly * '3,75 per hour starting rate&#13;
Qualifications: PARKSIDE STUDENT - MINIMUM OF 6 CREDITS&#13;
Business. Management. or Supervisory Elcpe"enC8 preferred&#13;
Application Deadline: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2&#13;
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN ROOM 209 IN UNION BUILDING--&#13;
-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Learning to live with what you have&#13;
I ~ttk, "Viewpoint" focu evered pinal cord, and they will The night before, we had been om ci them · r ill W to bu b • ""'··~•"&#13;
., orene Day" and ome tell you ~at person will never diving into the water and it was are rtainl a ·are ci fact ri ), I 1&#13;
rn r of the Parkside com- walk again. I alway tell myself over six feet deep. The level had that th re are prob\ • and&#13;
ii who ar handicapped. that ~tween now and the time changed from ix feet to a foot and wock with th m ."&#13;
There' a way around that I die, I'.m going to walk again. a half overnight. It has omething The D n wa in a w I ir&#13;
-thing, there are ways to deal I r-E:3llY. chng to that, but then to do with lock . for about eight month; and h did&#13;
. ne erything, my ways usually again, nght now I have things I hen I dove in, I broke my have problems at tun . " t&#13;
e more time," said Gus wantto do and people I need to see neck. My friend realized right tim , I would have to be m the&#13;
on Gu is disabled and has and place I ~ant to go to." away what had happened, and he other end of the campu and it ·&#13;
r in a wheelchair for twelve Dav~ &amp;hn~1~er !5 a junior at knew that I houldn't be moved. I difficult to give my If enou h&#13;
~ Parkside maJonng m Psychology. yelled up to him and told him that time to get there. \ 'hen I ·a late,&#13;
·n are very different now He has been in a wheelc~ir for I couldn't move. The people that it was v rru rating. fe&#13;
, Gu , hi attit~de and ways of four years. He thinks that the were with us took a board and ears ago. I ·a e of the I&#13;
Jing with things have both Parkside facilities are some of the ubrrierged it under the water and that pent a day in aw )chair n&#13;
ed "A lot of the way I deal best. "The Parkside facilities are letitfioatupunderneathme. Then wareness Day, and t never&#13;
n people, where at other times great. It's better than most of the they packed my head in said so cheated and got out of that chair,&#13;
ay have just gotten up and sc~ools I've been lo. The good that it wouldn't move from ide to but th n too, I n iced that m&#13;
lked away, or argued further or thmg about it is that the whole side . A lot of limes it's the arms and han got cep 1onally&#13;
ted omebody in the head, I university is contained in one movement after the initial injury tired, and that i wa a problem to&#13;
, ldom do that anymore. I ------------ that makes it worse. I was lucky get to place on time. n I wa&#13;
d ju t rather do it differently. that the people with me knew what · in my wh lchair for a long penod&#13;
not very big on spur of the to do." ci time, I noticed that on tonda_&#13;
ent type things, I always try Dave does his best to keep hi I would usuall be · tro and&#13;
ink things through before I do spirits up. "I have a pretty -------------------------,&#13;
em. Before, if I got mad a~d ,.jllllll.ID][IJJ\f positive attitude to ards people. d&#13;
lked out of the room, no big ~ A lot of people told me that people&#13;
I or I could just go back and -..-...-re were going to stare at me, and&#13;
. ~ize later. that little kids are going to a&#13;
'The best way to lX,lt i~ is that lot of questions. I have never&#13;
dg seem to burn easier now, really experienced that at all .&#13;
II that' something I don't want Everybody is curious . Whether&#13;
let go d.. I need people more ...:=:.;...-~"""'--~ you 're in a wheelchair or on&#13;
than r ever have. A lot of it is crutches, everyone wants lo know&#13;
a need to be around people. what happened. If you face it with&#13;
re are a lot of things I won't a positive outlook and tell them&#13;
. r,- do to orfend them. This is I straight out what happened, it'&#13;
way I do things now and it's lnternationa Year the best way to go through it. The&#13;
1 an act, where before, twelve of important thing is that you have to&#13;
rs ago, it would have been an realize the problem and realize&#13;
"explained Gus. Disabled Persons how lo deal with it. ln many case ,&#13;
Gus also finds it very important ____________ it's a matter of learning different&#13;
thought of as a person before building. II you want to use the .ways ci doing things."&#13;
tri ·thing else. "First and pool , there is a lift in the pool for Dave Pedersen, Dean of Student&#13;
remost I am a person, and not the people that need it. Life, has also experienced getting&#13;
eone in a wheelchair. I'm "The one problem we used to around in a wheelchair at&#13;
an, and frieridly and honest. have was going to registration on Parkside. Pedersen sustained an&#13;
of the things I probably value that middle level. We got around it ankle injury a little over a ear&#13;
tis rriendship. I've got a lot of by moving registration for the ago . " The Parkside facilities are&#13;
nds, but some are friends disabled to the student records probabl ome of the best I' e&#13;
e o than others. As far as I'm office. Before we started ever seen. When this school was&#13;
cerned, if there's anything I registration there, we had to have built, everything was put in. When&#13;
do for a friend, I'll do it." people run our schedules through a new school i built it doe n t&#13;
here are times that Gus finds for us. U there was any kind of seem to cost as much to have&#13;
self questioning the opinions problem, we would have to start equipment put in as it does to&#13;
people around him and how all over again, and the person remodel in order to lX,lt in proper&#13;
Jack Lemmon&#13;
Robby Benson&#13;
Lee Remick&#13;
S JSO y feel about him. "I guess I've doing the running for us had to accomodations. When I wa in a&#13;
ays wondered what people bring everything back." wheelchair, I experienced the&#13;
nk . I wonder what some of Dave's accident happened while acces ability of this school, and it&#13;
e people say inside. At times on a trip, and he feels fortunate to is extraordinary. If there seems to&#13;
had the feeling that people have come out of it the way he did be a big inconvenience, a problem&#13;
astonished that l can talk, it's "I was very fortunate that with a tudent's mobility, we do&#13;
ost like their faces are saying, someone was with me when my our best to take care of it. prime&#13;
7:30 Friday &amp; Sunday,&#13;
Nov. 6 &amp; 8&#13;
can talk.' " accident occurred. My church example would be the lecture&#13;
he facilities at Parkside for the group had a houseboat on the room . Student in wheelchair&#13;
bled are very adequate to Mississippi River, and on the last wouldn't be able to wheel up to the&#13;
, although there have been day of our trip, a friend and I were countertop areas because the&#13;
NEXT WEEK'S MOVIE&#13;
when he's had a problem going to wash our hair. Instead of chairs are underneath the counter&#13;
th winter's ice. "I can't be more walking to the edge and going into tops . The problem a solved by&#13;
n a few feet away from the the water, I dove in . The water simply removing a chair. ot all&#13;
r, but the fact that I'm on an was only a foot and a half deep. of the problems are solved, and&#13;
DEATH HU&#13;
line makes it difficult to move&#13;
there is ice or snow on the&#13;
nd . I'm ure that as kids most&#13;
le have tried to ride a bike on&#13;
and they've fallen all over, the&#13;
pins and there's no control.&#13;
ry now and then I'll run into&#13;
t problem, but like I said, there&#13;
a way around everything. So&#13;
l I doo't get caught in the cold,&#13;
call the health office and tell&#13;
m that I'll be there at a certain&#13;
e'. and someone comes lo my&#13;
arking spot and gives me a&#13;
and"&#13;
t There are also certain things&#13;
t keep Gus going. "I refuse to&#13;
pt the idea that I will never&#13;
1k again. You can ask .any&#13;
cal doctor to describe a&#13;
helps&#13;
prevent&#13;
birth&#13;
S defects uppon&#13;
March of Dimes&#13;
* JOB OPENING * Position: STUDENT SUPERVISOR· PARKS DE UNION B ID G&#13;
* respons·ble for coordination of activities and supervision&#13;
of building during weekends and evenings.&#13;
* 15-20 hours weekly * 53.75 per hour starfng rote&#13;
Qualifications: PARKSIDE snJDENT ·MN OF 6 DITS&#13;
Business, Management, or Supervisory &amp;perien p&#13;
Application Deadline: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2&#13;
APPLICATIONS AVAllABLE IN ROOM 209 IN UNIO BUILDI G&#13;
rred&#13;
8 Thursday. October29.1981 RANGER •&#13;
Author Kherdian talks about a life of writing&#13;
was certainly no American mU~lc, .&#13;
there was no idea of art. The first&#13;
real art I saw was when I was&#13;
twenty-four; the first time I went&#13;
to New York after the army I&#13;
remember seeing a Vincent Van&#13;
Gogh from way across the&#13;
corridor. I was just shocked to my&#13;
core because I'd seen somethng&#13;
that'I was totally unpr~red for&#13;
and I knew I was wltnessmg&#13;
something miraculous ..&#13;
It was in my twenl1es that I&#13;
began to pursue things. I was&#13;
twenty when I first read Theodore&#13;
Drieser, which was the first real&#13;
book of literature I'd read. I knew&#13;
instantly that there was a ~?rld&#13;
within the world that J was living.&#13;
There was another stream of life&#13;
that my life had never touched&#13;
before one that was unknown to&#13;
me. I think I was very fortunate in&#13;
this because I had all the raw&#13;
. materials of life, and experience&#13;
is simply raw material ....&#13;
A large part of that was a deep&#13;
resentment toward all schools,&#13;
toward all forms of formal&#13;
learning, because I c;.ouldsee that&#13;
they were hankrupt. I didn't&#13;
respect the teachers; I didn't&#13;
respect the schools ·or the&#13;
curriculum or any of it. None of it&#13;
made sense to me, and it still&#13;
doesn't. You can't represent life in&#13;
books, especially 'for a child. Life&#13;
is life; it's represented&#13;
everywhere for them but in the&#13;
schoolroom. I .&#13;
Ranger: What trends do you&#13;
see, what do you think of current&#13;
media and fine arts?&#13;
Kherdian: You almost can't&#13;
even call it that anymore it's so'&#13;
poor. I think that one. of the big&#13;
mistakes made is the belief that, if&#13;
you turn up the volume you improve&#13;
the perfonnance - whether&#13;
the volume is nudity, profanity or&#13;
actual volume itself as in music,&#13;
'you know. People become so&#13;
desperate to be noticed that they'll&#13;
do almost anything, and all' of&#13;
those things take one further and&#13;
further away from the reality of&#13;
art. And of course, I'm as far as&#13;
you can go on the otber extreme&#13;
because my work is so quiet, so&#13;
unobtrusive and so easy to miss.&#13;
And that's okay. That's what's&#13;
true for me. But as a potential&#13;
audience for other people's work,&#13;
I can't really get very interested&#13;
in it because I don't think it's&#13;
honest.&#13;
Ranger: Sort of to spectacular,&#13;
too exhibitionist?&#13;
Kherdlan: All of those things ..&#13;
Also, the need for everything to&#13;
pay, to payoff, that everything&#13;
must bring a big return.&#13;
Ranger: Do you see money as&#13;
being the prime motivator in what&#13;
is done in the arts?&#13;
Kherdian: It is in cinema, for&#13;
example. It's impossible for&#13;
anyone who makes movies to call&#13;
themselves artists. It isn't&#13;
possible because of the conditions&#13;
of the work. You can't do it unless'&#13;
it brings in money .... For some&#13;
reason, today's artists can't. give&#13;
by Toay Ragen&#13;
Feature EdIlor&#13;
Racine-b«n poet and author&#13;
David Kherdian was In Ra~ne&#13;
this past weekend for the Racine&#13;
Public Library's Emily A. Lee&#13;
celebration. Kberdian has had 18&#13;
books and anthologies of poetry&#13;
published. In t979 his first novel,&#13;
11Ie Road From Home, was&#13;
published and since then has won&#13;
.. unerous awards. The book is the&#13;
st«y of Kherdian's mother, who&#13;
.. rvived the Turkish massacres&#13;
of the Annenian people. A sequel&#13;
to the book, FiDdIng Home, was&#13;
published this year. I interviewed&#13;
Kherdian last Saturday about life&#13;
in depression-era Racin~'s Armenian&#13;
community and his work.&#13;
Kberdlan: I think it was distinct&#13;
for us, but at the same time the&#13;
same distinctions existed for other&#13;
minorities, I think tbe city was&#13;
lormed of little sub-cultural&#13;
pockets, and the Armenian was&#13;
me, and there were others as well.&#13;
Of course. at that time the whole&#13;
toner city. which now seems to be&#13;
in rather bad shape, was active&#13;
and alive. All the stores were&#13;
used, everything was used. It had&#13;
a qualily 01 newness about it, as&#13;
compared to what it is now. And&#13;
although one might look back&#13;
upon it. perhaps as an adult, and&#13;
think that you were living in the&#13;
slums - this would have been&#13;
called a ghetto perhaps - but one&#13;
had no sense of this at the lime.&#13;
And of course we were very poor,&#13;
and one had no sense of poverty&#13;
because everyone was living the&#13;
same life. I grew up in the&#13;
depression and everyone was&#13;
poor, so in a sense nobody was&#13;
poor. Everyone was just living the&#13;
life they were living.&#13;
Ranger: Was there much more&#13;
of an ethnic feeling about the city&#13;
then?&#13;
Kherdian: Oh it was very&#13;
strong. There were two cultures&#13;
going at once. Tbere was the&#13;
culture of the home and the&#13;
culture of the. streets. The culture&#13;
of the home being Annenian in our&#13;
case, and of course the same&#13;
culture of the streets for ev~one&#13;
was American. The neighhorhoods&#13;
were alive, because the&#13;
immigrants had come, they we~&#13;
re-lounding their race 1R this&#13;
"You can't represent&#13;
life in books,&#13;
especially for&#13;
a child. - - "&#13;
country and having children - the&#13;
neighborhoods were full of&#13;
children. One had a sense of the&#13;
schools being new, everything&#13;
being - well, I keep saying alive.&#13;
When I look back on it, that was&#13;
the feelinll-&#13;
Ranger: I've read that, as a&#13;
child, you had no real interest in&#13;
books. One might think tha t would&#13;
be contrary to being a writer.&#13;
Kherdian: Well, a writer doesn't&#13;
come out of books. A writer makes&#13;
books, but I think reading is just&#13;
one stage in a long, long apprenticeship&#13;
in a writer's service.&#13;
It occurs much further along than&#13;
childhood - childhood is meant&#13;
for otber things. Of course, you&#13;
can grow up in a home where&#13;
books are used and cherished and&#13;
so on, but there was no such infiuence&#13;
in our homes. . . There&#13;
were no books in our homes, there&#13;
'UM'KIN&#13;
-.iitiA~CAIYIN. CONTEST&#13;
Sign Up in Union&#13;
Rea8CJIion Center&#13;
at Control Desk&#13;
Fri., Oct. 3', 1·2 •••.&#13;
.1 ••1 PAl AIEA&#13;
• 51.00 Entry Fee&#13;
• Pumpkin provided&#13;
(bring your own knife)&#13;
• Prizes Awarded on&#13;
Originality &amp;&#13;
Creativity&#13;
• Entrys limited to 1st 20&#13;
people to sign up&#13;
No Cover&#13;
Variety of Music Every Night For&#13;
Your Listening &amp; Dancing Pleasure&#13;
• ii&#13;
&amp;.111&#13;
3931 45th St~eet&#13;
~~ ,~' ,&#13;
"You didnt -: ~..&#13;
gQtp&#13;
cOll~&#13;
. toseU&#13;
msurance9 .;..&#13;
,h" . .....&#13;
right?" f;&#13;
DAVID KHERDIAN&#13;
up the idea that they must be&#13;
successful. And as long as you&#13;
operate on that premise, you are&#13;
doomed to a deep spiritual failure&#13;
because you're working for the&#13;
wrong reasons. Art serves&#13;
something else, it must serve&#13;
something else and it can't serve&#13;
both. It can't serve commerce ...&#13;
Ranger: Your motber asked you&#13;
to write her story. Are all your&#13;
works based on your life experiences&#13;
or the experiences of&#13;
those close to you?&#13;
Kherdian: All my work is&#13;
autobiographical. I've always&#13;
only been interested in telling my&#13;
"I don't think anyone&#13;
is an artist out of&#13;
any real choke."&#13;
own story because it's the only&#13;
story I'm really qualified to tell&#13;
and there's no end to it. My story:&#13;
if I can really tell it, if I can really&#13;
understand it, is .everybody's&#13;
story. I would hope that&#13;
everything I've published would&#13;
speak, not to everybody because&#13;
that's impossible, but to&#13;
everybody who wants to examine&#13;
SIX REASONS WHY YOU CAN&#13;
BE MORE SUCCESSFUL WITH&#13;
THE MUTUAL OF OMAHA&#13;
COMPANIES&#13;
Full Producl Line With health, lite, auto&#13;
• and home Insurance to otter your clients as&#13;
well as mutual funds, nearly everyone you&#13;
call on IS a prospect.&#13;
UnUmited Income How much you earn is&#13;
entIrely; up to you.&#13;
Advenced Tratnlng Our comprehensive&#13;
program ISamong the tines.t in the industry.&#13;
Flrll'Ye:e, Bonu. You can Qualify tor up to&#13;
$2,200 In additional income&#13;
Advencement Opportunl~ We need people&#13;
.~'th management potential to till key&#13;
POSItions.&#13;
Nelton" Adverttllng SUpport Our pro-&#13;
~~~I~n~rOduces thousands ot leads to&#13;
.see if yoU .can Qualify, Contact:&#13;
Placement Office tor an interview time&#13;
before Nov, 12, 1981.&#13;
their own life. I told my&#13;
story because it hadn't&#13;
A whole generation went&#13;
the massacres, came lilt&#13;
no spokesman, I was a&#13;
took up the burden.&#13;
Ranger: Is art life for&#13;
life art?&#13;
Kherdian: In the&#13;
when I'm writing the&#13;
the book, the story, it's II&#13;
anything to me. It's&#13;
the same time, I don't&#13;
substitute writing for&#13;
Living is another thing.&#13;
writing itself is a part of&#13;
me, but it doesn't take&#13;
of, or excuse, one's&#13;
Ranger: Is there any a&#13;
could give to a college s&#13;
hopes to become a writ&#13;
Kherdian: Find a way&#13;
in yourself. Don't be .&#13;
or influenced by the OIl&#13;
others. Work very hard at&#13;
a full apprenticeshipt&#13;
in many things - reading,&#13;
trying many, many ways&#13;
You don't really knoww&#13;
is going to be yours in&#13;
Know tha t it may never&#13;
that you may be a total&#13;
failure, and ask yourseH,&#13;
still want to do it?" If&#13;
have the means, don't&#13;
guts, don't do it. Do&#13;
else. I don't think any&#13;
artist 'out of any real&#13;
There's just no other way.&#13;
Sports caIelrtdll&#13;
."_IIII__IIlIlI_llI1IIIlIIIIIIIIlUDImn"lmllllllllllllllallllllllllllllllllllllllnl~&#13;
Rathskeller I&#13;
Lounge;&#13;
SUN. 3 Shorlles for S 1.25 I&#13;
Stroh's or Stroh Ute i&#13;
TUES. 75' Coclctal's I&#13;
THURS.Ladles Nlte ;&#13;
!h Price Drinks ~=&#13;
;:&#13;
2;:&#13;
;:i=&#13;
~=§&#13;
§&#13;
§&#13;
;:&#13;
;:&#13;
;:&#13;
;:&#13;
Ii&#13;
INTERVIEWING&#13;
ON CAMPUS&#13;
. NOVEMBER 12, 1981&#13;
MutuillC\&#13;
&lt;if{)milhil,Q.1&#13;
PM,Ip ... -- ••..&#13;
Friday, Oct. 30 ,&#13;
Volleyball vs. Valpar&#13;
vitational&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 31 .&#13;
Volleyhall vs. Valpar&#13;
vitational&#13;
Soccer vs. Illinois InS&#13;
Teclmology (l p.m.)&#13;
Cross-Country (M) vs. N&#13;
Great Lakes Regional&#13;
Cross-Country (W) vs.&#13;
,Championship (11 a.m.)&#13;
Thursday, NOv.S.&#13;
Volleyhall vs. Lewis U&#13;
(7 p.m.)&#13;
Affilialed Comp~ni~: Uniled 01 Om h&#13;
The Omaha Indemnity Compan a a&#13;
MUlual of .Omaha Fund Manasemefll tompany&#13;
~QuaJ Opportunity Companies M/F&#13;
8 Thursday, October 29, 1981 RANGER ,&#13;
Author Kherdian talks about a life of writing&#13;
was certainly no American mu~1c,&#13;
b Ton Rog&#13;
ture EdJtor&#13;
Ra in -b&lt;rn poet and author&#13;
vid J{herdian wa in Racine&#13;
thi pa w end for the Racine&#13;
Public Library' Emily A. Lee&#13;
I bration. Kherdian bas had 18&#13;
b and anthologies of poetry&#13;
p.ibli hed . In 1979 hi first novel ,&#13;
1b Ro d r m Home, was&#13;
p.ibli bed and ince then has won&#13;
nume u awards. The book is the&#13;
tory of Kherdian' mother, who&#13;
rvived the Turkish massacres&#13;
of I.he rm nian people. A sequel&#13;
to th k , indlng Home, was&#13;
publi ed thi year. I interviewed&#13;
Kherd ian la t aturday about life&#13;
III depr ion-era Racine's Armenia&#13;
n community and hi work.&#13;
Kh rdian : I think it was distinct&#13;
f r u , but at the same time the&#13;
· m d i tinc tion ex · ted for other&#13;
mm or iti . I think the city was&#13;
fo r med o f li ttle ub-cultural&#13;
pock , and th e Armenian wa s&#13;
on , and th r we re other as we ll.&#13;
cou e, at that time the whol e&#13;
1M r city, wruch now ms to be&#13;
in rath r bad ha pe , was a ctive&#13;
and aliv . II th tor were&#13;
u , ev rythmg wa s us ed. It ha d&#13;
a quality or n · about it, as&#13;
compa d to what it is now . And&#13;
a lthough one might l back&#13;
upon it, perha ps as a n adult, and&#13;
think that you wer living in the&#13;
Kherdian: Oh it was very&#13;
strong. There were two cultures&#13;
going at once. There was the&#13;
culture of the home and the&#13;
culture of the.streets. The culture&#13;
of the home being Armenian in our&#13;
case, and of course the same&#13;
culture of the streets for eve~one&#13;
was American. The neighborhoods&#13;
were alive, because the&#13;
immigrants had come, th~y we~&#13;
re-founding their race m this&#13;
there was no idea of art. The first&#13;
real art I saw was when I was&#13;
twenty-four; the first time I went&#13;
to New York after tl_le army I&#13;
remember seeing a Vmcent Van&#13;
Gogh from way across the&#13;
corridor. 1 was just shocked to my&#13;
core because I'd seen somethng&#13;
that '1 was totally unpre~red _for&#13;
and I knew I was w1tnessmg&#13;
sometning miraculous ..&#13;
It was in my twenties that I&#13;
~✓-&gt;""'✓✓✓-=00""'✓✓✓✓✓...0--..r✓✓.r✓..r- began to pursue things. I was&#13;
twenty when I first read Theodore&#13;
Drieser, which was the first real&#13;
book of literature I'd read. I knew&#13;
instantly that there was a world&#13;
within the world that I was living.&#13;
There was another stream of life&#13;
that my life had never touched •&#13;
before one that was unknown to&#13;
me. I think I was very fortunate in&#13;
this because I had all the raw&#13;
materials of life, and experience&#13;
"You can't represent&#13;
life in books,&#13;
especially for&#13;
a child ... "&#13;
~_,-_,.....,....,.._,.....,....,.....o"'...,......,.....,...r.r✓.r✓.r✓✓✓- is simply raw material ....&#13;
A large part of that was a deep&#13;
resentment toward all schools,&#13;
toward all forms of formal&#13;
learning, because I could see that&#13;
they were bankrupt. I didn' t&#13;
respect the teachers ; I didn't&#13;
respect the schools or the&#13;
curriculum or any of it. None of it&#13;
made sense to me, and it still&#13;
doesn' t. You can't represent life in&#13;
books, especially for a child. Life&#13;
is life ; it's represented&#13;
everywhere for them but in the&#13;
c oun t ry and having children - the&#13;
ne ighborhoods were lull of&#13;
chi ldren . One had a sense of the&#13;
schools being new , everything&#13;
be ing - well, I keep saying alive.&#13;
When I look back on it, that was&#13;
the feeling.&#13;
Ranger: I've read that, as a&#13;
child you had no real interest in&#13;
books . One might think that would&#13;
be contrary to being a writer.&#13;
schoolroom. 1 •&#13;
lums - this would have been&#13;
ca lled a ghetto perhaps - but one&#13;
bad no nse of this at the time.&#13;
nd of course we were very poor,&#13;
and one had no nse of poverty&#13;
because everyone wa living the&#13;
Kherdian: Well, a writer doesn't&#13;
come out of books. A writer makes&#13;
books , but I think reading is just&#13;
ooe stage in a long, long apprenticeship&#13;
in a writer's service.&#13;
It occurs much further along than&#13;
childhood - childhood is meant&#13;
for other things. Of course, you&#13;
can grow up in a home where&#13;
books are used and cherished and&#13;
so oo, but there was no such influence&#13;
in our homes . .. There&#13;
were no books in our homes, there&#13;
Ranger: What trends do you&#13;
see, what do you think of current&#13;
media and fine arts?&#13;
DAVID KHERDIAN&#13;
me life . I gr w up in the&#13;
d pr ion and everyone was&#13;
poor , so in a ense nobody was&#13;
poor . Everyone was ju t living the&#13;
li.fe th y were living.&#13;
Rang r : Was there much more&#13;
ol an thnic feeling about the city&#13;
then ?&#13;
PUMPKIN&#13;
CARVIN&amp; CONTEST&#13;
Fri., Oct. 30, 1-2 p.a.&#13;
1• 10• PAI AREA&#13;
• s1.00 Entry Fee&#13;
• Pumpkin provided&#13;
Sign Up in Union (bring your own knife)&#13;
• Prizes Awarded on&#13;
Reaeotion Center Originality &amp;&#13;
at Control Desk&#13;
Creativity&#13;
• Entrys limited to 1st 20&#13;
people to sign up&#13;
~ 11111111111111111111111111111111m IIIIIII Ill Ill II Ill I Ill Ill I llt 111111111111111111111 HI II IIIIIIIII Ill I IIIUIIIIII IIIH ll£&#13;
j Rathskeller I&#13;
- Lounge;:====&#13;
SUN. 3 Shorlies for s 1.25&#13;
~&#13;
; TUES. s;;h;:;;::h Ute I&#13;
;=IIIIIFWI&#13;
No Cover&#13;
Variety of Music Every Night For&#13;
Your Listening 8. Dancing Pleasure&#13;
3931 45th Street&#13;
kl a11111wra111111111WZ-•11na1• 1tt11111an 1 r••llllii&#13;
up the idea that they must be&#13;
succe!jisful. And as long as you&#13;
operate on that premise, you are&#13;
doomed to a deep spiritual failure&#13;
because yoo're working for the&#13;
wrong reasons. Art serves&#13;
something else, it must serve&#13;
something else and it can' t serve&#13;
both. It can't serve commerce .. .&#13;
Ranger: Your mother asked you&#13;
to write her story. Are all your&#13;
works based on your life experiences&#13;
or the experiences of&#13;
those close to you?&#13;
Kherdian: All my work is&#13;
autobiographical. I've always&#13;
only been interested in telling my&#13;
Kherdian: You almost can't&#13;
even call it that anymore it's so·&#13;
poor. I think that one. of the big&#13;
mistakes made is the belief that, if&#13;
you turn up the volume you improve&#13;
the performance - whether&#13;
the volume is nudity, profanity or&#13;
actual volume itself as in music,&#13;
·you know. People become so&#13;
desperate to be noticed that they'll&#13;
do almost anything, and all · of&#13;
those things take one further and&#13;
further away from the reality of&#13;
art. And of course, I'm as far as&#13;
you can go on the other extreme&#13;
because my work is so quiet, so&#13;
unobtrusive and so easy to miss.&#13;
And that's okay. That's what's&#13;
true for me. But as a potential&#13;
audience for other people's work, :r..,........-..,......,...~_,...._,._,-....o,-..r....-....-....-..,......,......,......,.....,.._,.&#13;
I can't really get very interested&#13;
in it because I don't think it's&#13;
honest.&#13;
Ranger: Sort of to spectacular,&#13;
too exhibitionist?&#13;
Kherdian: All of those things.&#13;
0 1 don't think anyone&#13;
is an artist out of&#13;
any real choice." Also , the need for everything to&#13;
pay , to pay off, that everything&#13;
must bring a big return. :;r..,.-..,.-..,....c,'".,o,-..r..,.-.r..,.-..,.....,...__,.....,......,......,.....,.....,..""'°'&#13;
Ranger: Do you see money as&#13;
being the prime motivator in what&#13;
is done in the arts?&#13;
Kherdian : It is in cinema, for&#13;
example. It's impossible for&#13;
anyone who makes movies to call&#13;
themselves artists. It isn't&#13;
possible because of the conditions&#13;
of the work. You can't do it unless·&#13;
it brings in money . ... For some&#13;
reason, today's artists can't. give&#13;
right?" . • f '&#13;
own story because it's the only&#13;
story I'm really qualified to tell&#13;
~nd there's no end to it. My story:&#13;
if I can really tell it, if I can really&#13;
understand it, is everybody's&#13;
story. I would hope that&#13;
everything I've published would&#13;
speak, not to everybody because&#13;
that's impossible, but to&#13;
everybody who wants to examine&#13;
SIX REASONS WHY YOU CAN&#13;
BE MORE SUCCESSFUL WITH&#13;
THE MUTUAL OF OMAHA&#13;
COMPANIES&#13;
Full Prod~cl Line With health. lite . auto&#13;
• and home insurance to oiler your clients as&#13;
well as .mutual funds, nearly everyone you&#13;
call on ,s a prospect&#13;
Unl,lmlted Income How much you earn Is&#13;
entore ty up to you.&#13;
AclHnced Trelnlng Our comprehensive&#13;
program 1s among the finest in the industry.&#13;
Flrat-Yeer Bo~':'• You can quali fy for up to&#13;
$2.200 ,n add1t1onal Income.&#13;
Adv~c•ment Oppo,tunlU.1 We need peo"&#13;
Esi~i~s~anagement potentoal to fill key&#13;
•Ilona! Adwertltlng Support Ou, pro~~&#13;
Ti";.nproduces thousands of leads to&#13;
See If you can qualify. Contact:&#13;
Placement Office for an Interview t ime&#13;
before Nov. 12 , 1981 .&#13;
INTERVIEWING&#13;
ON CAMPUS&#13;
. NOVEMBER 12, 1981&#13;
MuttmlC\&#13;
~milha .V ,,... ............ .&#13;
~ffiliated Comp.mies: United of Onliha&#13;
The Om•h• Indemn ity Compon&#13;
MutuilJ of Omah• fund M.anage-nt "Y · """" Company&#13;
i::qual Oppertunity Companies MI F&#13;
their own life. I told my&#13;
story because it hadn't beea&#13;
A whole generation went&#13;
the massacres, came rut&#13;
no spokesman. I was a&#13;
took up the burden.&#13;
Ranger: Is art life for&#13;
life art?&#13;
Kherdian: In the sense&#13;
when I'm writing the cha&#13;
the book, the story, it's as&#13;
anything to me. It's pal&#13;
the same time, I don't&#13;
substitute writing for ·&#13;
Living is another thing.&#13;
writing itself is a part of · ·&#13;
me, but it doesn't take the&#13;
of, or excuse, one's conduct.&#13;
Ranger: Is there any a ·&#13;
could give to a colleges&#13;
hopes to become a writer!&#13;
Kherdian: Find a way to&#13;
in yourself. Don't be di&#13;
or influenced by the op· ·&#13;
others. Work very hard al&#13;
a full apprenticeship, whidl&#13;
in many things - reading,&#13;
trying many, many ways to&#13;
You don't really know what&#13;
is going to be yours in the&#13;
Know that it may never wmt&#13;
that you may be a total&#13;
failure, and ask yourself,&#13;
still want to do it?" If yoo&#13;
have the means, don't ha1'&#13;
guts, don't do it. Do so&#13;
else. I don't think anyooe&#13;
artist ·out of any real&#13;
There's just no other way.&#13;
Sports Calendar&#13;
Friday, Oct. 30 .&#13;
Volleyball vs. Valpar~&#13;
vitational&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 31 .&#13;
Volleyball vs. ValparaiSO&#13;
vitational&#13;
Soccer vs. Illinois Jnstitult&#13;
Technology (1 p.m.) C&#13;
Cross-Country (M) vs. N&#13;
Great Lakes Regional&#13;
Cross-Country (W) vs.&#13;
, Championship (11 a .m.&gt;&#13;
Thursday, ov. 5 .&#13;
Volley ball vs. Lewis OIIIV&#13;
(7 p.m.)&#13;
RANGER , 52 --5&#13;
urity experiments&#13;
ith propane car&#13;
Wisconsin by the Security&#13;
department to learn how to install&#13;
the eqpipment needed to convert&#13;
to propane. "He is the only one&#13;
w~o works on the car," Brinkman&#13;
said. The conversion kit was&#13;
purchased from Midstates Gas&#13;
Equipment. The cost to teach the&#13;
mechanic how to install it&#13;
equipment, and installatio~&#13;
totalled about $1300. Despite a&#13;
state mandate tha t declares all&#13;
state vehicles to he sold after&#13;
55,000 miles, the propane equipment&#13;
will be taken off and used&#13;
again. Brinkman feels that the&#13;
money spent on the initial cost will&#13;
eventually be saved in less consumption&#13;
and maintenance.&#13;
"&lt;?ver a period of three years, it&#13;
Will pay for itself," Brinkman&#13;
stated.&#13;
There are some setbacks in the&#13;
experiment. For example. there is&#13;
10% less pick-up when running on&#13;
propane and less trunk space&#13;
because the propane tank is there,&#13;
but overall Brinkman is very&#13;
happy with the car.&#13;
Cruise pIannOO&#13;
World Explorer Cruises is&#13;
featuring a seven day New Year's&#13;
Cruise departing Sunday, Dec. TI&#13;
from Port Everglades, Florida.&#13;
The S. S. Universe will call at&#13;
Pla.ya Del Carmen, Cazumel, and&#13;
Ocho Rios. This cruise is open to&#13;
everyone of all ages.&#13;
For people with more time there&#13;
are two 14 day affordable Transcanal&#13;
cruises departing Jan. 31&#13;
and Feb. 14.&#13;
This is more than a cruise - it's&#13;
a learning experience.&#13;
For more information about&#13;
these or Summer 1982 cruises to&#13;
Alaska, contact Holly Beth&#13;
Hinrichs, Box 153, Germantown,&#13;
Wis. 53022, or phone (414) 255-3497&#13;
after 4 p. m.&#13;
Soviet Seminar&#13;
holds meeting&#13;
An introductory meeting for&#13;
students interested in taking&#13;
the Soviet Seminar next&#13;
semester, including a two week&#13;
trip to the U.S.S.R. in March&#13;
will he held in Union 'JffI ,.;&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 4 at 3 p. m.&#13;
Dr. Oliver Hayward&#13;
Assistant Professor Da~&#13;
McGovern and students wbo&#13;
participated in earlier trips to&#13;
the U.S.S.R. will show slides&#13;
and answer questions.&#13;
Wind Ensemble&#13;
toperfonn&#13;
The Parkside Wind Ensemble&#13;
will present a concert al2 p.m. on&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 8, in IIlain Place d.&#13;
Wyllie Library - Learning Center&#13;
under the direction of Scott&#13;
Mather.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
Hammersmith, Prelude and&#13;
Scherzo by Holst, Do Not Go&#13;
Gentle Into That Good ight by&#13;
Del Borge, Handel in the Strand&#13;
by Grainger, Psalm by Persichetti&#13;
and L'Inglesina by Delle&#13;
Cese.&#13;
Admission is free for senior&#13;
citizens; $1 Cor others.&#13;
Social Security benefits to&#13;
students 18-22 attending colleges&#13;
and other post - secondary schools&#13;
will he sharply curtailed under a&#13;
recently enacted law, Carlo R.&#13;
Ricciardi, Social security district&#13;
manager in ICellO'Sha, said&#13;
recently.&#13;
First, children who become&#13;
eligible for Social Security&#13;
benefits after July 1982 will not&#13;
receive post - secondary student&#13;
benefits.&#13;
Second, post - secondary school&#13;
students who first become eligible&#13;
for benefits in the period September&#13;
1981 - July 1982 will only&#13;
receive benefits through July 1982&#13;
Basic SkiIs&#13;
Educators to meet&#13;
About 150 educators from&#13;
colleges and universities&#13;
throughout the Midwest a~ expected&#13;
to attend the Tlurd Besic&#13;
Skills Conference at Parksule&#13;
today and tomorrow Theme of the&#13;
1981 conference is "Developmental.&#13;
Education' A Total&#13;
Campus Commitment 10&#13;
Principa I speaker "ill he Prof&#13;
John E. Roueche, dlrector of the&#13;
Community College Leadership&#13;
Program at the Uruversitv of&#13;
Texas at Austin and an authOnty&#13;
on developmental and remedial&#13;
education. He will talk on&#13;
"Holistic Literacy ill College&#13;
Teaching," the subject 0( hi most&#13;
recent book.&#13;
Roueche will 1lJ"" his keynote&#13;
address at a dinner torught and&#13;
also will talk tomorrow at a&#13;
morning workshop sessioo, one of&#13;
24 small-group sessions planned&#13;
over the two-day conference on a&#13;
variety of SUbjects Involving&#13;
developmental education&#13;
Other speakers at general&#13;
sessions will mclude Dr Joseph&#13;
Kauffman, Executive ViCE&#13;
President of the UW System "'!xl&#13;
will talk on "Working Together on&#13;
(one month for sexne stucien&#13;
Finally, students currently&#13;
receiving benefits (or child&#13;
beneficiaries who begin their&#13;
college or paM • seeonclar)&#13;
e&lt;b:ation before May 1!lll2 will&#13;
receive limited Shadrntl lIenefits&#13;
Benefit rates fer _ ..... ts who&#13;
are eligible for cootiraling benefits&#13;
will he frozen at the July l!IIl1&#13;
level, Ricciardi said. Furthermore,&#13;
these rates will be&#13;
reduced 25 percent eldl ,.r&#13;
starting with August 1981, and&#13;
benefits cannot he poid to students&#13;
during May, June, Jul) or Augusl&#13;
starting in 1982. As a result, no&#13;
further student henefits ".II be&#13;
po KI or pn I 11115&#13;
",. conIereoce&#13;
by I?'" -Parkside and the l.'VI&#13;
lern,," C ler Jor the I"'"&#13;
0( _1.--. and Disad&#13;
vantaged COIIf rene coor&#13;
dlnalcn are Carol J GI&#13;
Par ide and ow.. Pallard al&#13;
UW·, Iilw&#13;
Student Social Security benefits cut&#13;
Gain Pickin' •&#13;
Irick., I, ••• wi'"&#13;
.... &amp; Lace Friday,&#13;
Oct. 30&#13;
9:30 .11 1:30&#13;
PRIZES FOR&#13;
BEST COSTUMES&#13;
•••• ,.1 ...... 11&#13;
" •••1. &amp; L.c.&#13;
~.l ,v&#13;
COUNTRY IWESTERN SALOON&#13;
RACINE MOTOR INN&#13;
535 Main Street in Downtown Racine&#13;
Howard Butten (Buffo) graduated from the&#13;
Ringling Bros. and Barnum &amp; Bailey Clown&#13;
College, and toured 2 years with the Circus&#13;
Bartok. In 1972 Bulten wrote and co -&#13;
starred in WXYZ (ABC) television's&#13;
"Super Circus" show. Later he became&#13;
Buffo, combining his talents as a dov..n.&#13;
singer t musician, mime and artist into one&#13;
character.&#13;
Wednesday, November 4&#13;
·8 p. m,&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Tickets Available at the&#13;
UNION INFO CENTER&#13;
and at the DOOR&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
CHILDREN'S PRICES&#13;
WORKSHOPS&#13;
WITH BUFFO&#13;
will be held on&#13;
Wednesday, November 4&#13;
BUFFO&#13;
the clown&#13;
ecurity experiments&#13;
ith propane car&#13;
b\ Jeff Wick&#13;
ide' ecurity Departp&#13;
r ~ an effort to ave money&#13;
' 1oergy, i currently exnung&#13;
with a dual f~eled&#13;
d car. which runs on either&#13;
Ille or propane gas.&#13;
car. a 1981 AMC _ Concord&#13;
8 ~.cylinder engme, was&#13;
\-erted and ready to. use on&#13;
1 this year. Ron Brmk:man,&#13;
) r d ecu rity, says it will&#13;
ror I U in three years.&#13;
'" man got th e idea while&#13;
tttnding a work.shop in Lincoln,&#13;
a in Ma rch. "I was very&#13;
• .,.,m-e!;seo at one ci. the sessions&#13;
h dea lt with motor vehicle&#13;
. ca,servation. The session&#13;
t wi th the co n version of&#13;
1es to propane gas as a&#13;
tute fuel whi le s til1 al1owing&#13;
~elud e to use unleaded gas in&#13;
even t it is needed," Brinkman&#13;
When he ca me back, he&#13;
· tely ubmitted a proposal&#13;
A i ta nt Cha n cellor Gary&#13;
for approval of a conversion&#13;
m tll periment with propane in&#13;
d ca r . It was a pproved in&#13;
innkman is ve ry pleased with&#13;
ults so ra r , and he plans to&#13;
the car to the UW System&#13;
ty meeting in Madison next&#13;
moog the adva ntages of using&#13;
ne gas is tha t it increases&#13;
life, it is cleaner burning,&#13;
it is not dependent on foreign&#13;
pn . Propane gas, which is&#13;
plentiful supply at this time, is&#13;
based at Van 's Gas Service&#13;
2?nd Averrue in Kenosha for&#13;
I a gallon. The car has a&#13;
gallon propane tank mounted in&#13;
trunk in addi t ion to the 20&#13;
Don gas tank . P ropane also has&#13;
higher octane whic h reduced&#13;
tl) engi ne repa irs by reducing&#13;
I changes, park plug wear and&#13;
er ha ust emissions.&#13;
Bruce Berman was the&#13;
hanic ent to Holstein,&#13;
Wisconsin by the ecurity&#13;
department to learn how to install&#13;
the eq_uipment needed to convert&#13;
to propane. 'He is the only one&#13;
w~o works on the car," Brinkman&#13;
said. The conversion kit was&#13;
purchased from 1id tates Gas&#13;
Equipment. The cost to teach the&#13;
me~hanic how to install it,&#13;
equipment, and installation&#13;
totalled about $1300 . Despite a&#13;
state mandate that declares all&#13;
state vehicles to be sold after&#13;
55,000 miles , the propane equipment&#13;
will be taken off and used&#13;
again. Brinkman feels that the&#13;
money spent on the initial cost will&#13;
eventually be saved in less consumption&#13;
and maintenance&#13;
"Over a period of three years ii&#13;
will pay for itself," Brinkn{an&#13;
stated.&#13;
There are some setbacks in the&#13;
experimen_t. For example, there is&#13;
10% less pick-up when running on&#13;
propane and less trunk space&#13;
because the propane tank is there,&#13;
but overall Brinkman is very&#13;
happy with the car.&#13;
Cruise plannoo&#13;
World Explorer Cruises is&#13;
featuring a seven day ew Year's&#13;
Cruise departing Sunday, Dec . Zl&#13;
from Port Everglades, Florida.&#13;
The S. S. Universe will call at&#13;
Pia-ya Del Carmen, Cozumel , and&#13;
Ocho Rios . This cruise is open to&#13;
everyone of all ages.&#13;
For people with more time there&#13;
are two 14 day affordable TTanscanal&#13;
cruises departing Jan. 31&#13;
and Feb. 14.&#13;
This is more than a cruise - it's&#13;
a learning experience.&#13;
For more information about&#13;
these or Summer 1982 cruises to&#13;
Alaska, contact Holly Beth&#13;
Hinrichs, Box 153, Germantown,&#13;
Wis . 53022, or phone (414 ) 255-3497&#13;
after 4 p . m .&#13;
~oin Pickin'&#13;
lrlck er lre• t ....&#13;
h • I• &amp; Lace Friday,&#13;
Oct . 30&#13;
9:30 Ill I :30&#13;
PRIZES FOR&#13;
BEST COSTUMES&#13;
- Ret•r•l•I New . 11&#13;
De• I• &amp; L• ce&#13;
COUNTRY /WESTERN SALOON&#13;
RACINE MOTOR INN&#13;
53 5 Main Street in Downtown Racine&#13;
RA GER&#13;
Basic Skil Soviet Seminar&#13;
holds meeting&#13;
An introductory mee ing for&#13;
tudents inter ted m ing Educato s to meet&#13;
the oviet eminar next&#13;
emester, includin a tv:o w&#13;
trip to the . . .. R. in arch&#13;
will be held in nion 2fT1 ~&#13;
Wednesday, 'ov. 4 at 3 p . m .&#13;
Dr. Oliver Hay ard&#13;
A si tant Profe sor Da~&#13;
McGovern and student ho&#13;
participated in earlier trips to&#13;
the .S.S.R wil1 show sh&#13;
and answer questions .&#13;
Wind Ensemble&#13;
to perlonn&#13;
The Parkside Wind Ensembl&#13;
will present a concert at p.m . on&#13;
unday , ov. 8, in fain Place ci.&#13;
Wyllie Library - Learning Center&#13;
under the direction of cott&#13;
ather.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
Hammersmith, Prelude and&#13;
cherzo by Hol t , Do , ' ot Go&#13;
Gentle Into That Good 'igbt b&#13;
Del Borgo, Handel in the trand&#13;
by Grainger, Psalm by Perichetti&#13;
and L'logl ina by Delle&#13;
Cese.&#13;
Admission is free for senior&#13;
citizens ; $1 for others.&#13;
Student Social Security beneft&#13;
ocial Security benefit to&#13;
students 18-22 attending colleges&#13;
and other pa;;t - econdary chool&#13;
will be sharply curtailed under a&#13;
recently enacted la , Carlo R .&#13;
Ricciardi Social Security district&#13;
manager in iCeoosha , said&#13;
recently.&#13;
First, children ho become&#13;
eligible for ocial curity&#13;
benefits alter July 1982 will not&#13;
receive post - condary tud.ent&#13;
benefits.&#13;
Second, p t • ecoodary I&#13;
students who first become eligible&#13;
for benefits in the period September&#13;
1981 - July 1982 ill only&#13;
receive benefits through July 1982&#13;
BUFFO&#13;
the clown&#13;
Howard Butten &lt;Buffo) gradu ted from&#13;
Ringling Br . and Barnum Bail e.&#13;
College , and toured 2 yea \\.1th Ci&#13;
Bartek. In 1972 Butten ·ro e and co •&#13;
starred i n YZ ( B t I&#13;
" u r Circu " sho ·• L t h&#13;
Buffo, combining hi tal&#13;
inger, musician, mime and artist nto&#13;
character.&#13;
W e dnesday, o vemh r&#13;
• 8 p . m .&#13;
Union Cine ma&#13;
T icke t Availab le at t h&#13;
U IO I FO CE TE R&#13;
an d at th e DOOR&#13;
SPECIA L&#13;
CHILDRE PRICE&#13;
WORKSHOPS&#13;
WITH 8 FO&#13;
will he h e ld on&#13;
Wedne sday,&#13;
cut&#13;
10 Thursday, October 29,1981 RANGER&#13;
VoIJevbaI' losses&#13;
Coach says talent there&#13;
by Doug Ed.Db .... r&#13;
If the Parkside women's&#13;
volleyball team has any hope of&#13;
doing well in the state tournament&#13;
caning up next month, they had&#13;
belter start playing up to their&#13;
.bIIities.&#13;
The Rangers moved their&#13;
record to 16-2118stweekend with a&#13;
l-3 showing at the Carthage Invitational.&#13;
Parkside lost the first&#13;
two matches to St. Xavier, 11-15&#13;
and 11-15,and UW-LaCrosse, 3-15,&#13;
15-10 and 12-15, before heating&#13;
UW-Whitewater 16-14 and 15-9.&#13;
The Rangers then dropped their&#13;
last match to Elmhurst College,&#13;
12-15,15-5and 11-15.&#13;
Coach Linda Henderson is&#13;
disappointed at the team's present&#13;
level of play. "I reaDy don't know&#13;
what to say. We stopped improving&#13;
after the Wright Slate&#13;
tournamenl. We're not doing&#13;
things with sny greater consistency&#13;
than we were."&#13;
The Rangers have much talent,&#13;
as they showed earlier in the&#13;
season hut that talent seems to be&#13;
hidden'lately. "The talent is there,&#13;
hut it's very frustrating that I&#13;
can't bring it out," said Henderson.&#13;
"I'm disappointed that&#13;
we're not winning games that we&#13;
should win."&#13;
The Rangers hosted Bradley&#13;
University and UW-Oshkosh&#13;
Tuesday night, heating Bradley&#13;
and losing to Oshkosh. .&#13;
Parkside played well to handily&#13;
deleat Bradley in two games hy&#13;
scores of 15-7 and 15-6. Oshkosh&#13;
proved 00 be too much for the&#13;
Rangers, heating them 11-15, 11-&#13;
15.&#13;
The Rangers bave only two&#13;
more meets before the upcoming&#13;
WWIAC tournament. This year's&#13;
tourney will be held at Parkside&#13;
November 13th and 14th. This&#13;
weekend Parks ide travels to&#13;
Valparaiso, Indiana to take part in&#13;
the Va!p&lt;raiso Invitational. They&#13;
then travel to Romeoville, Illinois&#13;
next Thursday to battle a tough&#13;
Lewis University squad.&#13;
Swimming course offered&#13;
Are yoo afraid of water? Do you&#13;
bate the idea of swimming? WeDif&#13;
you answered yes to either of the&#13;
ahove _tioos you will have a&#13;
chance to learn to swim at a Basic&#13;
Water Safety and stroke class&#13;
being offere.J in November.&#13;
The best thing ahoutthe class is&#13;
that it is free. The class, open to&#13;
every level of swimmer, will be&#13;
held the first two Mondays and&#13;
• Wednesdays in November, the&#13;
2nd, 4th, 9th and 11th from I to 2&#13;
p.m. in the gym.&#13;
There will be two instructors for&#13;
the class to provide lots of individual&#13;
attention. All swimmers&#13;
who survive the class will be&#13;
issued a Red Cross Basic Water&#13;
safely Certification card.&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC. ATHLlTIC FOOTWEAll&#13;
FOR AU SPORTS&#13;
TEAM aAUS - AlL IPOfIIT8&#13;
.1flClOK1 .~&#13;
~,.,.._ • nGIJII • ..". ..... T •...,...... -..v-..-va .,.... MUCON'l'&#13;
_ .1"\JIlIM •• ~ iiI&#13;
-' ...,_ . I'ON'I' • NlWII.IlLANCl ~ n .,.&#13;
ThlActMA .... O"&amp;QP ~. 694-9206 __ •.__&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
III WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
Dates &gt; Nov. 4 &amp; 5&#13;
Time· 10·2, 4-6&#13;
Place • Alcove&#13;
Women harriers&#13;
place second&#13;
by Pally DeLuisa&#13;
In their "best race of the year,"&#13;
Mike DeWill's Ranger harriers'&#13;
scored 57points to capture second&#13;
place in the Second Annual&#13;
Carthage College Cross - Country&#13;
Invitational Saturday at&#13;
Petrifying Springs Park. Ten&#13;
teams competed. Coach DeWitt&#13;
commented that the women ran&#13;
their finest limes of the season at&#13;
the meet.&#13;
Junior Debbie Spino led her&#13;
teammates by placing third&#13;
overall with a time of 17:44.1.&#13;
Junior Dona Driscol and Senior&#13;
Barb Osborne ran closely together&#13;
again, placing 9th and 10th&#13;
respectively, with clockmgs of&#13;
18:40.9 and 18:43.8.&#13;
Freshman Sue Meyer was not&#13;
far behind as she placed 14th with&#13;
a time of 19:10.1. Senior Lowrie&#13;
Melotik was 29th at 20:10.7.&#13;
Sandy Venne, a sophomore, also&#13;
ran well for parkside. sandy's&#13;
timewas 20:33.4, good for the 32nd&#13;
scoring position. Sophomore&#13;
Linda Pfeilstifter placed srst;&#13;
Cheryl Konkol of UWMilwaukee&#13;
won the three mile&#13;
race with a time of 17:05.7. Her&#13;
team also took the invitational&#13;
crown by scoring only 41 points.&#13;
UW.()shkosh placed third with 60&#13;
points.&#13;
This coming Saturday (Oct. 31)&#13;
the Rangers will host the&#13;
Wisconsin Women's Intercollege&#13;
Athletic Conference (WWIAC)&#13;
meet. Coach DeWitt believes that&#13;
his runners will do well, hoping for&#13;
a team finish of fourth place. The&#13;
running begins at noon.&#13;
Parkside was paced by&#13;
sophomore Dan Stublaski, who&#13;
placed 18th with a 25:55.1&#13;
clocking. Sophomore Tom Barrell&#13;
ran a quick 27:04.9 to take 7lst&#13;
place. Sophomores Steve Brunner&#13;
and AI Correa strided hack - 00 -&#13;
back with times of 27:08.6 and&#13;
27:09.1 for 77th and 78th places&#13;
respectively. '&#13;
. Freshman Robert Mayfield&#13;
finished 89th with a time of&#13;
-27:23.1. Sophomore Ray Sharp&#13;
placed 94th and Junior Rich&#13;
Sowlles finished 131st.&#13;
Mike Axinn of the University of&#13;
Chicago won the race with a time&#13;
of 24:57.8. North Central College&#13;
won, the team title with 63 points.&#13;
.CLASSIFIED&#13;
ADS' HELP WANTED&#13;
EARN EXTRA CASH. Home mailing&#13;
program. Send self - addressed, stamped&#13;
env:lop: to A. B. Enterprises, 3065&#13;
cauccne. Racine, 53402.&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
FRE.NCH, GERMAN. SPANISH LESSONS,&#13;
Price open. caroline 886.4206.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
ANYONE INTERESTED in going to "Film&#13;
lndi.a".at Chicago Art Institute, Sundays&#13;
beglnnlfl~ Nov. 1. Share the ride, cost of gas&#13;
and parking. Contact Vivian 639-2602or 656-&#13;
6956.&#13;
SHERRY FESTGE spikes pumpkin as&#13;
Henschal look on.&#13;
ADULT&#13;
MASKS&#13;
_ t2fX) illhx:k&#13;
2~OFF&#13;
ADULT&#13;
COSTUMES&#13;
f1l/I6I snd ~&#13;
for_gfor.&#13;
614 56th St. Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Moonllte sOwl&#13;
RED PIN&#13;
$3.00 Nlte&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
WEEKLY SPECIALS&#13;
Nov. 2 - Nov. 7&#13;
60'/game MON. 9 a.m .. 'til Noon&#13;
TUE. Noon 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 3 p.m. 'til 6 p.m-&#13;
All you can bowl&#13;
or play pool&#13;
THUR. 7 p.m. 'til 10 p.rn-&#13;
FRI .. 10 p.m , 'til 1 a.m·&#13;
90'/game SAT. 8 p.m. 'til 1 a.m·&#13;
•&#13;
10 Thursday, October '19, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Volleyball losses&#13;
Coach says talent there&#13;
bOuEdnh r&#13;
1r the Park ide women's&#13;
v I y II team ha any hope of&#13;
doin lJ in the tale tournament&#13;
comin up n xt month, they had&#13;
b t tart playing up to their&#13;
ablliti&#13;
Th R nger moved their&#13;
ord lo 16·21 la t weekend with a&#13;
1-3 howm at the Carthage In•&#13;
·1tational. Par ide lo t the first&#13;
two matche to t. avier, 8-15&#13;
nd Il-15, and W-LaCrosse, 3-15,&#13;
1 -10 and 12-15, before beating&#13;
W-Whitew ter 11&gt;-14 and 15-9.&#13;
The Rang rs th n dropped their&#13;
la" match to Elmhurst College,&#13;
12-15, 15-5 and 11-15 .&#13;
C ch Linda Hender on is&#13;
d1 ppointed at the team's present&#13;
I v I of play. "I really don't know&#13;
hat to ay. We stopped im•&#13;
pro ing aft r the Wright State&#13;
tournament. We're not doing&#13;
thin with any greater con•&#13;
l ncy than w were."&#13;
The Rangers have much talent,&#13;
th y owed earlier in the&#13;
season but that talent seems to be&#13;
hidden°lately. ''The talent is there,&#13;
but it's very frustrating that I&#13;
can't bring it out," said Henderson.&#13;
"I'm disappointed that&#13;
we're not winning games that we&#13;
should win."&#13;
The Rangers hosted Bradley&#13;
University and UW-Oshkosh&#13;
Tuesday night, beating Bradley&#13;
and losing to Oshkosh. .&#13;
Parkside played well to handily&#13;
defeat Bradley in two games by&#13;
scores of 15-7 and 15-6. Oshkosh&#13;
proved to be too much for the&#13;
Rangers, beating them 11-15, 11-&#13;
15.&#13;
The Rangers have only two&#13;
more meets before the upcoming&#13;
WWIAC tournament. This year's&#13;
tourney will be held at Parkside&#13;
ovember 13th and 14th. This&#13;
weekend Parkside travels to&#13;
Valporaiso, Indiana to take part in&#13;
the Valparaiso Invitational. They&#13;
then travel to Romeoville, Illinois&#13;
next Thursday to battle a trugh&#13;
Lewis University squad.&#13;
Swimming course offered&#13;
re you afraid of water? Do you&#13;
hate the id or swimming? Well il&#13;
you amw red yes to either of the&#13;
abo e qu tims ou will have a&#13;
chance to learn to wim at a Basic&#13;
Wa er fely and troke class&#13;
being offered in ovember.&#13;
The t thing about the cla is&#13;
that it i fr . Th class, open to&#13;
e.,- ry le I r immer, will be&#13;
held the first two Mondays and&#13;
. Wednesdays in ovember, the&#13;
2nd, 4th, 9th and 11th from 1 to 2&#13;
p.m. in the gym.&#13;
There will be two instructors for&#13;
the class to provide lots of in·&#13;
dividual attention. All swimmers&#13;
who survive the class will be&#13;
issued a Red Cross Basic Water&#13;
Safety Certification card.&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC. ATHLETIC FOOTW£AII&#13;
FOR All SPORTS&#13;
TEAM IALII - ALL Sl'OftTS&#13;
• MDOIS • CON\llll9!&#13;
• tl""AIII ..... •PUMA _.,.. ,.=.. ....... __, ... ,, __. .... , ...&#13;
~-n•-n&#13;
• 9P01' ....... , ·-• Sl'AU&gt;lflG&#13;
•HEWL&lt;il.ANa&#13;
Thi ActNt A!Neta One Step&#13;
694-9206 --If.-.•&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
(1) WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
Date ov. 4 &amp; 5 Only.&#13;
Time - 10-2, 4-6&#13;
~6at0!1{ s Place - Alcove&#13;
Women harriers&#13;
place second&#13;
by Patty DeLuisa&#13;
In their "best race of the year,"&#13;
Mike DeWitt's Ranger harriers·&#13;
scored 57 points to capture second&#13;
place in the Second Annual&#13;
Carthage College Cross · Country&#13;
Invitational Saturday at&#13;
Petrifying Springs Park. Ten&#13;
teams competed. Coach DeWitt&#13;
commented that the women ran&#13;
their finest times of the season at&#13;
the meet.&#13;
Junior Debbie Spino led her&#13;
teammates by placing third&#13;
overall with a time of 17:44.1.&#13;
Junior Dona Driscol and Senior&#13;
Barb Osborne ran closely together&#13;
again, placing 9th and 10th&#13;
respectively, with clockings of&#13;
18:40.9 and 18:43.8.&#13;
Freshman Sue Meyer was not&#13;
far behind as she placed 14th with&#13;
a time of 19: 10.1. Senior Lowrie&#13;
Melotik was 29th at 20:10.7.&#13;
Sandy Venne, a sophomore, also&#13;
ran well for parkside. Sandy's&#13;
time was 20:33.4, good for the 32nd&#13;
scoring position. Sophomore&#13;
Linda Pfeilstifter placed 61st.&#13;
Cheryl Konkol of UWMilwaukee&#13;
won the three mile&#13;
race with a time of 17:05.7. Her&#13;
team also took the invitational&#13;
crown by scoring only 41 points.&#13;
UW-Oshkosh placed third with 60&#13;
points.&#13;
This coming Saturday (Oct. 31)&#13;
the Rangers will host the&#13;
Wisconsin Women's Intercollege&#13;
Athletic Conference (WWIAC)&#13;
meet. Coach DeWitt believes that&#13;
his runners will do well, hoping for&#13;
a team finish of fourth place. The&#13;
running begins at noon.&#13;
Parkside was paced by&#13;
sophomore Dan Stublaski, who&#13;
placed 18th with a 25:55.1&#13;
clocking. Sophomore Tom Barrett&#13;
ran a quick Z7:04.9 to take 71st&#13;
place. Sophomores Steve Brunner&#13;
and Al Correa strided back • to -&#13;
back with times of Z7 :08.6 and&#13;
Z7:09.l for 77th and 78th places&#13;
respectively. '&#13;
Freshman Robert Mayfield&#13;
finished 89th with a time of&#13;
Z7:23.l. Sophomore Ray Sharp&#13;
placed 94th and Junior Rich&#13;
Sowlles finished 131st.&#13;
~ke Axinn of the University of&#13;
Chicago won the race with a time&#13;
of 24:57.8. North Central College&#13;
won , the team title with 63 points.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
ADS·&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
EARN EXTRA CASH. Home malling&#13;
program. Send self • addressed, stamped&#13;
env~lop~ to A. B. Enterprises, 3065&#13;
Cahdorua, Racine, 53402.&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
FRENCH, GERMAN, SPANISH LESSONS.&#13;
Price open . Ca rollne 886-4206.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
ANYONE INTERESTED in going to "FIim&#13;
lnd(a" at Chicago Art Institute, Sundays&#13;
beg,nnin~ Nov. 1. Share the ride, cost of gas&#13;
:;:park,ng. Contact Vivian 639 -2602 or 656 -&#13;
RED PIN&#13;
$3.00 Nite&#13;
Moonlite Bowl&#13;
SHERRY FESTGE spikes pumpkin as&#13;
Henschal look on.&#13;
ADULT&#13;
MASKS&#13;
•IBJ111/otl&#13;
2~0FF&#13;
fflEATRICAL&#13;
MAKEUP .&#13;
Bp,t $11/sdr,n&#13;
II 11,s ,,. ADULT&#13;
OOSTUMES&#13;
614 56th St. Downtown Kenosha&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
WEEKL V, SPECIALS&#13;
Nov. 2 - Nov. 7&#13;
60'/game&#13;
All you can bowl&#13;
or play pool&#13;
90'/game&#13;
MON. 9 a.m. 'til Noon&#13;
TUE. Noon 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 3 p.m. 'tll 6 p.m.&#13;
THUR. 7 p.m. 'til 10 p.!Tl ·&#13;
FRI. 10 p.m. 'til 1 a.rn.&#13;
SAT. 8 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
RANGER Thursday. October 29.1981 11&#13;
ngers win two out of three&#13;
mday, October 20, the&#13;
Soccer team took the field&#13;
Purdue - Cahunet and&#13;
t with a s-2 linal score.&#13;
ngers shut down the two&#13;
yers of Purdue - Calumet,&#13;
re the fourth and eighth&#13;
scorers in the National&#13;
ation of Intercollegiate&#13;
C5 (NAlA).&#13;
team (Parkside) played&#13;
very well defensively and extremely&#13;
well offensively," stated&#13;
Coach Henderson.&#13;
John (MoMo) Onyiego led all&#13;
scorers with two goals. Jeff&#13;
LaForce, Ralph DeGraff and Don&#13;
Theisen all added one goal apiece&#13;
to help lead them to victory,&#13;
'giving Parkside their eighth win&#13;
of- the season.&#13;
On Friday, Octoher 23, UWParkside&#13;
shattered St. Norbert&#13;
College 5-{).&#13;
BOB NEWSTROM&#13;
Photo by Dan McCOrmack&#13;
"We totally dominated them!"&#13;
exclaimed Henderson. "We held&#13;
them to poly five shots the whole&#13;
game." Jeff Dennehy and Ralph&#13;
DeGraff each scored two goals,&#13;
while Cheidu Okemah knocked in&#13;
the fifth goal. Along with scoring&#13;
the goals, Dennhy had two assists,&#13;
as did Bob Newstrom. Brad Faust&#13;
also added one assist.&#13;
Dennehy's two goals have tied&#13;
him with the Single Season&#13;
Scoring Record of nine goals.&#13;
His two assists tied him for the&#13;
career Assist Record with sixteen&#13;
assists. Brad Faust's one assist&#13;
also tied with Dennehy for sixteen&#13;
assists. The third record he set&#13;
was the All-Time Scoring List on&#13;
- which he is third with twentyseven&#13;
points. Bob Newstrom's two&#13;
assists give him fourth place on&#13;
the same list with twenty-three.&#13;
Parkside challenged the Golden&#13;
Gophers of Minnesota which was a&#13;
type ci "homecoming" for many&#13;
Ranger players from Minnesota.&#13;
The Rangers had control of the&#13;
ball early when they had four&#13;
excellent scoring opportunities,&#13;
but they just couldn't score. The&#13;
half-time scare was CH&gt;.&#13;
Then eight minutes into the half&#13;
Parkside gave up a free kick,&#13;
boosting the score to 1-0.&#13;
Minutes later, John (MoMo)&#13;
Onyiego was removed from the&#13;
game because of lighting. Due to&#13;
the fact that the team cannot&#13;
substitute for a player kicked out&#13;
of the game, they had to play the&#13;
remainder of the second half short&#13;
one man.&#13;
"We never got back into the&#13;
game after that," said Henderson.&#13;
Minnesota scored another goal&#13;
later in the half for the final goal,&#13;
dropping Parkside's season&#13;
record to 9-8.&#13;
JOHN PETERSON&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Peterson scores 300&#13;
by Laurie Painter which set a new tournament&#13;
record. He placed first of 500&#13;
bowlers, of which the top 96&#13;
buwled the weekend &lt;i Oct. 24th.&#13;
The top t6 bowlers from the 96 will&#13;
bowl head to head on Halloween.&#13;
Willy Yee, also in the tournament,&#13;
has an 846 series and&#13;
qualified near 50th place or 560&#13;
with an average cI. 253. Peterson&#13;
and Vee are members of the&#13;
Parkside Bowling Club.&#13;
On Sunday, Octoher 18, John&#13;
Peterson topped his high buwling&#13;
score of 298 with a perfect 300&#13;
game. John is a twenty year old&#13;
sophomore who has been buwling&#13;
for 11years. During a state singles&#13;
tournament in Balero, Peterson&#13;
bowled his 300 game along with&#13;
scores of 234, 209 and 268. His&#13;
astronomical scores totaled 1011,&#13;
1981-82 RANGER BASKETBALL&#13;
HOME GAMES&#13;
(all 7:30 p. rn. unless otherwise noted)&#13;
Friday. Dec. 4 St. Xavier&#13;
Monday, Dec. 7&#13;
Tuesday. Dec. 15&#13;
Monday-Tuesday,&#13;
Dec. 28-29&#13;
Saturday. Jan. 2&#13;
Tuesday. Jan. 12&#13;
Thursday -, Jan. 14&#13;
Saturday. Jan. 16&#13;
Wednesday. Jan. 20&#13;
Saturday, Jan... 30&#13;
Wednesday. Feb. 10&#13;
Loras&#13;
Ferris State&#13;
Ranger Classic&#13;
(Carthage. UW-Oshkosh.&#13;
Saginaw Valley State)&#13;
UW-Plattevi lie&#13;
Lakeland&#13;
McNeese State&#13;
St. Norbert&#13;
Illinois Tech&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Another exciting season of UW-Parkside&#13;
Ranger basketball will soon be starting III&#13;
JOIN THE CROWD AT PARKSIDE&#13;
AND ENJOY EXCITING&#13;
COLLEGE BASKETBALL ACTION.&#13;
The 1981-82 edition of Ranger basketball will feature the&#13;
following:&#13;
• Enthusiastic cheerleaders&#13;
• The Junior Ranger Club for kids 12and under, complete with&#13;
special membership card, Junior Ranger badge and other&#13;
special "goodies" tnrcusnout the season. , .&#13;
• FREE T - shirt to every purchaser of a season ticket. , .&#13;
SEASON PASSES NOW AVAILABLE&#13;
AT THE PHYSICAL EDUCATION BLDG. OFFICES,&#13;
PRICED AT $18TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC&#13;
AND $10TO STUDENTS ...&#13;
BUY ONE NOW AND GET READY TO BE A&#13;
RANGER ROOTER IN 81-82!!!!&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 29, 1981 11&#13;
angers win two out of three&#13;
uesday, October 20, the&#13;
Soccer team look the field&#13;
t Purdue - Calumet and&#13;
out with a 5-2 final score.&#13;
ngers shut down the two&#13;
layers of Purdue - Calumet,&#13;
re the fourth and eighth&#13;
t scorers in the ational&#13;
iation of Intercollegiate&#13;
·cs ( AIA) .&#13;
team (Parkside) played&#13;
very well defen.5ively and extremely&#13;
well offen.5ively," stated&#13;
Coach Henderson.&#13;
John (MoMo) Onyiego led all&#13;
scorers with two goals. Jeff&#13;
LaForce, Ralph DeGraff and Don&#13;
Theisen all added one goal apiece&#13;
to help lead them to victory,&#13;
' giving Parkside their eighth win&#13;
of- the season.&#13;
On Friday, October 23, UWParkside&#13;
shattered St. orbert&#13;
College 5-0.&#13;
Photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
BOB NEWSTROM&#13;
"We totally dominated them."&#13;
exclaimed Henderson. "We held&#13;
them to pnly five shots the whole&#13;
game." Jeff Dennehy and Ralph&#13;
DeGraf£ each scored two goals,&#13;
while Cheidu Okomah knocked in&#13;
the fifth goal. Along with scoring&#13;
the goals, Dennhy had two assists ,&#13;
as did Bob ewstrom . Brad Faust&#13;
also added one a ist.&#13;
Dennehy's two goals have tied&#13;
him with the Single Season&#13;
Scoring Record of nine goals .&#13;
His two assists tied him for the&#13;
Career Assist Record with ixteen&#13;
assists. Brad Fau t's one assist&#13;
also tied with Dennehy for sixteen&#13;
assists. The third record be set&#13;
was the All-Time Scoring List on&#13;
· which he is third with twentyseven&#13;
points. Bob ewstrom's two&#13;
assists give him fourth place on&#13;
the same list with twenty-three.&#13;
Parkside challenged the Golden&#13;
Gophers of Minnesota which was a&#13;
type a "homecoming'' for many&#13;
Ranger players from Minnesota .&#13;
The Rangers had control of the&#13;
ball early when they had four&#13;
excellent scoring opportunities,&#13;
but they just couldn't score. The&#13;
half-time score was 0-0 .&#13;
Then eight minutes into the half&#13;
Parkside gave up a free kick,&#13;
boosting the score to 1--0.&#13;
Minutes later, John (MoMo )&#13;
Onyiego was removed from the&#13;
game because of fighting. Due to&#13;
the fact that the team cannot&#13;
substitute for a player kicked out&#13;
of the game, they had to play the&#13;
remainder of the second half short&#13;
one man.&#13;
"We never got back into the&#13;
game after that," said Henderson .&#13;
Minnesota scored another goal&#13;
later in the half for the final goal,&#13;
dropping Parkside' s season&#13;
record to 9-8.&#13;
JOH N PETE RSON&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Peterson scores 300&#13;
b Laurie Paint r&#13;
On Sunday, October 18, John&#13;
Peterson topped his high bowling&#13;
score ci 298 with a perfect&#13;
game. John is a twenty ~ear old&#13;
sophomore who has been bowling&#13;
£or 11 years . During a state singles&#13;
tournament in Balero. Peterson&#13;
bowled his 300 game along with&#13;
scores or 234, 209 and 268 . Hi&#13;
astronomical score totaled 1011,&#13;
t a new toumam nt&#13;
1981-82 RANGER BASKETBALL&#13;
HOME GAMES&#13;
(a ll 7: 30 p. m . unless otherwi se noted)&#13;
Friday, Dec . -4 St. Xavier&#13;
Monday , Dec . 7&#13;
Tuesday, Dec . 15&#13;
Monday -Tuesday,&#13;
Dec . 28-29&#13;
Saturday, Jan . 2&#13;
Tuesday, Jan . 12&#13;
Thursday, Jan . 1-4&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 16&#13;
Wednesday, J a n . 20&#13;
Saturday, Jan . 30&#13;
Wednesday , Feb. 10&#13;
Loras&#13;
Ferris State&#13;
Rang e r Cla ssic&#13;
(Cartha ge, UW-Oshkosh,&#13;
Sag inaw Valley State)&#13;
UW- P lattevi I le&#13;
Lakela nd&#13;
McNeese State&#13;
St . Nor bert&#13;
Ill ino is Tech&#13;
Nor t hern Michi gan&#13;
UW -Mil wa ukee&#13;
Another exciting seaso n of UW-Porkside&#13;
Ranger basketball will soon be starting ! I I&#13;
JOIN THE CROWD AT PARKSIDE&#13;
AND ENJOY EXCITING&#13;
COLLEGE BASKETBALL ACTION.&#13;
The 1981 -82 edi t ion of Ra nger ba s k etbal l will f eature the&#13;
fol l ow i ng:&#13;
• Enthusiasti c cheerleaders&#13;
• The Junior Ranger Cl ub for k ids 12 and under, complete with&#13;
special membership card, Juni or Ra nger b adge and ot he r&#13;
special "goodies" throughout the seaso n ...&#13;
• FREET. sh i rt to every purchaser of a season t i c ket ...&#13;
SEASON PASSES NOW AVAILABLE&#13;
AT THE PHYSICAL EDUCATION BLDG. OFFICES,&#13;
PRICED AT $18 TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC&#13;
AND $10 TO STUDENTS . •.&#13;
BUY ONE NOW AND GET READY TO BE A&#13;
RANGER ROOTER IN 81-82! ! ! !&#13;
~~~ place fourth in tournament&#13;
Over !he weekend, the Parkside 10-11 on the year; a good r-&#13;
Women s Tennis team officiall formance 10 an otherwise diS~1&#13;
~ed the season, tied for fourth ~ year for the Tenrus learn.&#13;
. JW.W.L.A.C. Tournament held f Rathngersenior Nancy Kivi took&#13;
10 .anesville. our pia,:" . in Number Three&#13;
SIX tea"'! participated in the Smgles. Kivi lost to Panther&#13;
event which lell M Jeanne Scheller (7-5&#13;
fmlshing on top with .:rqu~tte defeated Beth Aaro of Cart;;'6),&#13;
UW-Mllwaukee placed spo nlsd· (7-5, 6-2), and lost to E·I ge&#13;
With 57 . econ Roge f C 1een&#13;
was th~?~'32Carthage College 4). Id~i °linia:ed°llthCOllege(6-2, 6-&#13;
and Ca points. Parkside C s e season 9-9&#13;
with 1;'11. College tied for fourth too~r ~~ll, a Parkside jUni~r&#13;
Green points apiece, and UW- S ou place 10 Number F~&#13;
home 8 ';lntilaced fifth laking o:~~e;:.o(~~~re:~ng Kathy. Gray&#13;
Pa k.de . M· hell ,~, 6-1) losing to r 51 senior Kathy _ IC e Heller of UW M'·I uk&#13;
tSoionkglethsirbdy pta.eceeoi10 NumbrenromOanse o(6f -0Uw6--G2)' defeating Ly-nnIewCaonleeye&#13;
four matc.:mrung three of her reen Bay (6-4, 6-1) and&#13;
Ruby Ack s, Thomas defeated&#13;
erman of Gree Ba&#13;
2, 6-2), loot to Marge G ~af y (6-&#13;
EUsWte-rMTriolwaukee (6-2,6-0u)s,defesaotnedof&#13;
(6-2, 6-0)m:.::;r ': fCarroll College&#13;
Ruby Ackerm e eated Phoenix&#13;
4, 6-4), Her pea~oarmseacnocned tJiemfte h(e6r-&#13;
12 Thursday. October 29,1981&#13;
Tennis&#13;
WOW! What A selectioo&#13;
PARKS IDE UNION&#13;
10:11 • - 4:11 JIll&#13;
• SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
.JUBE JELLS&#13;
• CARAMELS&#13;
:~~~~~;L BULLIES&#13;
.TOFFEES&#13;
• JOTS&#13;
.BRIDGE MIX&#13;
.MALTED MILK&#13;
• CHOC. CREME g:LLS&#13;
• CHOC. RAISINS OPS&#13;
• CHOC. PEANUTS&#13;
• PEANUT BU&#13;
• STARS TTER CUPS&#13;
: ~~~:T PEANUTS&#13;
BALLS MALTED MILK&#13;
• CAROB PEANUTS :~~~~i~~r SEEDS&#13;
• CALIFORN~ ~ELlCACY&#13;
• STUDENT Fooi/&#13;
• GIANT CASHEWS&#13;
• NATURAL&#13;
• SPANISH PE~~TACHIOS&#13;
• BLANCHE UTS&#13;
• YOGURT ~AISI~~ANUTS&#13;
• BYROITGTULRET SESAME&#13;
: ~~~T S~~~EER~NUTS&#13;
:~OTARLIGHT MINTS&#13;
UR BALLS&#13;
• CINNAMON DISKS&#13;
• COFFEE&#13;
•• RBOUOTTTERBSCEEO;CH DISKS&#13;
• POPS BARRELS&#13;
• KPIESASNESUT BUTTER&#13;
• PEPPERMIN&#13;
• LICORICE B~ KISSES&#13;
.JELLY BEAN;L1ES&#13;
: ~~~NR~i~:;~:SKYS&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF NOV. 2&#13;
RED SKIN:&#13;
PEANUTS 40% OFF&#13;
..&#13;
RANGER&#13;
I .&#13;
C&#13;
",mg to Debbie Doughtery of&#13;
arthage (6-3,6-3).&#13;
The Rangers' Doubles team of&#13;
Nancy. Kivi and Kathy Thomas&#13;
the bnghtest spot on .this year'~·&#13;
team, placed second in the&#13;
tournament by defeating Beth&#13;
Aaro and Hope Henschel f&#13;
Carthage (6-4, 6-3), hut losing ~o&#13;
RoblD Barksdale and M&#13;
Cornell of Marquette (6-2, :.rr Their .overall record was 11-6 .&#13;
G~'fnsapp.~nted Coach Nor~en&#13;
team H sal .about this year's&#13;
, We did alright (for the&#13;
• nduivmidbuearllyof ~eIa~~s) we had. Incould&#13;
ex~ct." as well as you&#13;
~f~~e~g~~~~~~yDo1u3r9.picks and bring. the form dowwnintnoetrhs.e PRuatngaercheek&#13;
__ Atlanta at New Orleans Office,&#13;
__ Ba~timore at Miami ~&#13;
__ Chicago at Tampa Bay --&#13;
__ Cleveland at Buffalo ---&#13;
__ Dalla~ at Philadelphia --&#13;
__ DetrOIt at Los Angeles --&#13;
__ Houston at Cincinnati --&#13;
__ Kansas City at San Diego&#13;
=__=New England at Oakland --- N.Y. J~ts at N.Y. Giants == __ St. LoUIS at Washington -- ~&#13;
San Francisco at Pittsb h&#13;
__ Seattle at Green Bay urg --&#13;
NaLmaest wmn.er was Bruce Duchac ' 11correct, 46 total .&#13;
S.S. No. potnta.&#13;
R~' 'n roll.""'" ,n"~".1I" =in'" fa'Un(S"",rom.' &amp; we. And.n ""'" ,nun'" on&#13;
d&#13;
""""&#13;
nndi""', """ d_&#13;
in&#13;
(~" "mlki", ,nn"'" "'''''' W",1&amp; -,. Enin, nu' qualitY in _",n. ' Rock itroll stirs with&#13;
SneJl &amp;SneJl&#13;
St1l9rllm~&#13;
12 Thursday, October 29, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Tennis&#13;
~~~~~ place fourth in tournament&#13;
Over the week.end the p 1cs·d HH1 on the year· a good Wome ' T ' ar I e forma · ' per- losing t D b o s ennis team officiall nee m an otherwise dismal o e bie Doughtery of&#13;
~ed the season, tied for fourth fu year for the Tennis team. Carthage (6-3, 6-3).&#13;
W w .1:,.A.C. Tournament held f Ranger senior Nancy Kivi took The Rangers' Doubles team of&#13;
m ~anesville. S~urJth place in Number Three Nancy_ Kivi and Kathy Thomas&#13;
IX teams participated . th mg es . Kivi lost to p th the bnghtest spot on .this year';&#13;
;\·~~ which left Marq~ett! ~:n~ed Scheller (7-5 a~-6~r team, placed second in the ; _Jf on top with 68 points. (7-Sea ~ Beth Aaro of c'arthag~ tournament by defeating Beth&#13;
J waukee placed se d ' 2), and lost to Eil Aaro and Hope Henschel f&#13;
=~~h~f:•&#13;
32&#13;
Ca~hage Co~~:e ~~:f!i ~rus~hrredoJJthCollege (6-2e:t Cart!18ge (6-4, 6-3), oot losin fo&#13;
and c po,nts, Pa,kside c e season 9-9 Rohm Ba&lt;ksdale and Mg&#13;
with :tpo~nC,~lleagep1·ectiede, fanordfourU th too. ~!u~hallp,laaceP1·narNksumidebeJr·uni~r. Cor~ell of Marquette (6-2 6~:r G .., W F Their .overall record was 1i-6 . ho= 8 !~ntilaced fifth takio~ ~:nt!~o~r /6~3ea4~ng6-Kl)athl Y. a:; GogAg?isap~ointed Coach Nor~en p k M' , .,, os1ng to m said about this&#13;
ar ' de senior Kathy Th ichelle Heller of 'uw MiJ uk team "We d'd Ir year's took third place . omas (6--0 6-2 ) def . . wa ee number ex 11 a ight (for the&#13;
ngl by winni m umber One of UW-c'reenea:ng Lynne Conley . dividually p aydi~ds) we had. Infour&#13;
matches T~g three of her ay (6-4 , 6-1) and uJd , we as weJJ as you&#13;
Ruby Ackerm~n or°ias defeated co expect."&#13;
2, 6-2 ), lost to Marge ~een Bay (6-&#13;
- filwaukee ( 6- ustafson of&#13;
~~~r ~~m:~r t f ~lld~U~~&#13;
Ruby Ackerm e eated Phoenix&#13;
4, 6-4 &gt;. Her pe~! second time ( 6- mance left her&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selectioo&#13;
PAR~SIDE UNION&#13;
10:IIJ • - 4:111 ,.,,&#13;
e SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
eJUBE JELLS&#13;
e CARAMELS&#13;
: ~~~~~SEL BULLIES&#13;
• TOFFEES&#13;
eJOTS&#13;
e BRIDGE MIX&#13;
•MALTED MILK BALLS&#13;
•cHoc CRE&#13;
• CHoc: RA1s1:: DROPS&#13;
e CHOC . PEANUTS&#13;
e PEANUT BU&#13;
•STARS TTER CUPS : ~~i:T PEANUTS&#13;
BALLS MAL TED MILK&#13;
e CAROB PEANUTS&#13;
: ~~~i~~~~R SEEDS&#13;
• CALIFORNIA ~~ilCACY&#13;
e STUDENT FOOD&#13;
• GIANT CASHEWS&#13;
e NATURAL&#13;
oo~::~~~~~.e ,~!&lt;S your picks and bring the ci:::r winners. Put a :;e locfoi&#13;
DI39. own to the Ranger oec~ ~&#13;
- - Atla~ta at New Orleans - - ff1ce,&#13;
-- Ba}tlmore at Miami --&#13;
-- Chicago at Tampa Ba _ _&#13;
-- Cleveland at Buffalo _Y __&#13;
-- Dalla~ at Philadelphia _ _&#13;
- - Detroit at Los Angeles __&#13;
-- Houston at Cincinnati - -&#13;
-- Kansas City at San Diego&#13;
-- New England at Oakland - == N.Y. J~ts at N.Y. Giants==&#13;
St. Louis at Washington&#13;
--San Francisco at Pittsburgh&#13;
-- S~ttle at Green Bay __ -&#13;
Last wmner was Bru D ch Name . ce u ac, 11 correct, 46 total .&#13;
S.S. No. =======-----== P0ints.&#13;
e SPANISH PE:ISTACHIOS&#13;
e BLANCHED NUTS&#13;
e YOGURT RAISl:;ANUTS&#13;
e YOGURT&#13;
BR I TTLE SESAME&#13;
: :7i/~OOIN PEANUTS&#13;
Rock 'n roll really stirs with the exciting taste of Seagram:s 7 &amp; 7UR. And so Mes country and west,TII,&#13;
and jazz, and disco-in fact, everything sounds better with 7 &amp; 7. Enjoy our quality in moderation.&#13;
Rock n roll stirs with e ST LERS&#13;
• so~RRLBIGHT MINTS&#13;
ALLS&#13;
: ~6~~~~0N DISKS&#13;
e BUTTERSC&#13;
• ROOT B OTCH DISKS&#13;
e POPS EER BARRELS&#13;
e PEANUT&#13;
K I SSE S BU TT ER&#13;
e PEPPERMI e L ICORICE BNUTL KISSES&#13;
e JELLY BEANS LIES&#13;
•ASSORTED e ORANGES PERKYS&#13;
LICES&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF NOV. 2&#13;
RED SKIN·&#13;
PEANUTS&#13;
40% OFF&#13;
Se~en&amp;Snen&#13;
I•&#13;
SEAGRAM DISTILLERS CO NYC. AMERICAN&#13;
l\t!ISKEY-A BLEND 80 PROOf&#13;
~!:".E•. p, t. · ,.. .,&#13;
. ... ,lo'.~ :,G£-i:.: .... ,(•.v. c.,.,~·''T"1,r·f f•&#13;
.• • •·: ·.•..-.:.·.~ t,, ·'iie,·</text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 10, issue 8, October 29, 1981</text>
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