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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 10, issue 11</text>
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            <text>Teaching Awards - Gukin agrees to sign certificate for Kersey</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>w University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, November 19, 1981 Vol. 10 - No. 11&#13;
Teaching Awards&#13;
Guskin agrees to sign certificate for Kersey&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
After talking with students&#13;
during an "open forum" two&#13;
weeks ago, Parkside Chancellor&#13;
Alan Guskin has agreed with&#13;
student members of last year's&#13;
Teaching Excellence Awards&#13;
Selections committee to sign an&#13;
award certificate for Shirley&#13;
Kersey, one of two teachers&#13;
chosen by the committee to&#13;
receive the award. Kersey taught&#13;
last year under contract non -&#13;
renewal and Guskin vetoed&#13;
Kersey's award this fall because&#13;
she is no longer teaching at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Student committee members&#13;
said they were not given any&#13;
directive to award only teachers&#13;
who are to be employed by&#13;
Parkside following receipt of the&#13;
award. Presently, there is no&#13;
policy statement concerning&#13;
present status or future employment&#13;
by Parkside contained&#13;
in the policy (PSF 20/79-80).&#13;
Guskin indicated this fall that it&#13;
was the $500 stipend attached to&#13;
the award that he felt he could not&#13;
support giving to a person who is&#13;
no longer employed by the&#13;
university. He also said that the&#13;
award had always been "intended"&#13;
for continuing teachers.&#13;
"The idea (to give Kersey the&#13;
certificate) came up in the&#13;
forum," Guskin said. "It sounded&#13;
like a good idea. I talked to Mary&#13;
Jo Dagenbach (a student committee&#13;
member) afterward. She&#13;
persued it, and it sounded even&#13;
better. It seemed to solve many of&#13;
the student concerns."&#13;
"My committment is to write a&#13;
letter to Shirley to notify her, to&#13;
confirm to her on behalf of the&#13;
"This year's teaching&#13;
awards are probably the&#13;
most controversial issue&#13;
we've had in the last&#13;
three or four years."&#13;
— Alan Guskin&#13;
committee that they chose her and&#13;
to sign the certificate," Guskin&#13;
said. "Then my role in it is over&#13;
with. It's my understanding that&#13;
they (the committee) are more&#13;
satisfied than before. We agreed&#13;
that this would mark a resolution&#13;
of the matter."&#13;
Student committee members&#13;
Mary Jo Dagenbach and Gus&#13;
Sorenson told the Ranger on&#13;
Tuesday that they are not happy&#13;
about the resolution of Kersey's&#13;
award, but that they feel&#13;
reasonable compromises were&#13;
made by both Guskin and&#13;
themselves.&#13;
According to Dagenbach, a&#13;
reception has been scheduled for&#13;
Kersey on Wednesday, Dec. 3 at 3&#13;
p.m. in Union 207. The award will&#13;
be presented to her by students at&#13;
that time.&#13;
Guskin said he has no objections'&#13;
to what is being done by the&#13;
student members of the committee.&#13;
"I think Shirley will be&#13;
happy to know it is being&#13;
presented by the students," he&#13;
said. "The only thing that really&#13;
hurt me about this whole thing&#13;
was that some students felt&#13;
denigrated because of this one&#13;
issue. Hie fact that I continued to&#13;
enter the dialogue with them&#13;
showed my respect."&#13;
Guskin said he feels no particular&#13;
strain on his relations with&#13;
students because of the&#13;
disagreement. "There are some&#13;
students and faculty who will&#13;
always think, for whatever&#13;
reason, that whatever I do is&#13;
wrong. Most students don't know&#13;
what I do. But I think people agree&#13;
much more than the majority of&#13;
the time. I felt very good about&#13;
how (members of the committee&#13;
and myself) talked. I felt good&#13;
about people acting maturely,&#13;
coming away with mutual&#13;
respect."&#13;
"The fact is, we don't have a lot&#13;
of controversy on this campus,"&#13;
Guskin said. "This years teaching&#13;
awards are probably the most&#13;
controversial issue we've had in&#13;
the last three or four years. But&#13;
it's a narrow issue.&#13;
"We do listen to students. I think&#13;
on balance, if one analyzes the&#13;
teaching awards situation, you&#13;
can see that," Guskin said. "I&#13;
agreed to things at the end that I&#13;
did not think about at the beginning.&#13;
I did that because I respect&#13;
students and what they have to&#13;
say. Students involved were&#13;
tough, they were clear."&#13;
Currently, the Policy on&#13;
teaching excellence awards is&#13;
under revision by a subcommittee&#13;
of th e University Committee. The&#13;
revision must be passed by the&#13;
University Committee and the&#13;
Faculty Senate to become policy.&#13;
Guskin said, "It's faculty&#13;
legislation; it's a subcommittee,&#13;
so no administrator sits with&#13;
them. I might see a copy before&#13;
the revision goes to the Senate. I&#13;
probably will write a memo to try&#13;
to clarify procedures to make sure&#13;
we all agree ahead of time. But&#13;
I've already raised the issue with&#13;
the University Committee and I&#13;
have very few criteria. But it is no&#13;
longer my job to get involved. I&#13;
very rarely do get involved in&#13;
standing faculty committees&#13;
unless it involves die university as&#13;
a whole or money."&#13;
Open forum scheduled&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Alan Guskin has scheduled the second of&#13;
his "open forums" for the 1981-82 school year for Wednesday,&#13;
Dec. 2. All students, faculty and staff are invited to the forum&#13;
between 1 and 2 p.m. in Union 104.&#13;
The forums are "an opportunity for students, especially, to&#13;
meet with me and ask questions and make comments about&#13;
anything that comes up relating to Parkside," Guskin said.&#13;
Guskin said that he enjoys the forums because his university&#13;
and system duties prevent him from meeting directly with&#13;
students as often as he would like to.&#13;
P.S.G.A. fails to ratify teaching award stand&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. Nov. 11&#13;
voted down a resolution&#13;
demanding that Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin change his decision not to&#13;
give Shirley Kersey the Teaching&#13;
Excellence Award. The roll call&#13;
vote was 6-3-3; a two - thirds vote&#13;
was needed.&#13;
In order to vote on, and even&#13;
discuss, a stand on the awards, the&#13;
Senate had to rescind a motion&#13;
passed four weeks ago (see insert).&#13;
The Joe Ripp / Phil Pogreba&#13;
motion to recind the previous&#13;
stand passed on a 9-2-1 vote, with&#13;
Kathy Slama and Luis Valldejuli&#13;
voting "no" and John Peterson&#13;
abstaining.&#13;
Ripp then moved and A1&#13;
Spallato seconded to accept&#13;
Ripp's resolution which had been&#13;
re-written since the meeting the&#13;
week before.&#13;
"I think we should change the&#13;
wording if possible," said Jim&#13;
Pugh. What Pugh said he had in&#13;
mind was being more specific,&#13;
changing "Chancellor" to&#13;
"Chancellor Alan Guksin."&#13;
Most of the discussion concerning&#13;
the wording was about the&#13;
word "demand." "I ask the&#13;
Senate to be careful about this&#13;
resolution, coming out and&#13;
demanding something from the&#13;
Chancellor on something he is not&#13;
going to change," said PSGA&#13;
President Jim Kreuser. "You can&#13;
say you believe that he did wrong,&#13;
but to demand for him to change it&#13;
... you ought to just consider what&#13;
you're saying because he is not&#13;
going to change his position.&#13;
"How is the student government&#13;
going to go about demanding that&#13;
he change his decision?" asked&#13;
Mike Pfaffl.&#13;
"When we decide, it may be&#13;
published in the Ranger . . ."&#13;
answered PSGA Vice - President&#13;
Kathy Bambrough. "He'll hear it&#13;
and he'll read it, and that's about&#13;
it. We can demand (but) we can't&#13;
force him to do anything. We can&#13;
pressure (him) and that's about it.&#13;
What we have been doing (in the&#13;
past) is negotiating with him.&#13;
That's all we can do."&#13;
As a point of i nformation for the&#13;
Senators who weren't at the&#13;
Chancellor's open forum, Bambrough&#13;
told them that Guskin said&#13;
the awards committee could give&#13;
Kersey the same award that the&#13;
other recipient will receive. "I&#13;
also personally asked him if it&#13;
would have his signature on it. . .&#13;
and he said yes. So therefore, he&#13;
has given in on that point. He said&#13;
that she can have the award," she&#13;
said.&#13;
Pfaffl mentioned that at the&#13;
open forum, Guskin said he will&#13;
but does that mean we can't take a&#13;
stand that we think what he did to&#13;
begin with was wrong? The point&#13;
is that this (resolution) is the&#13;
stand (in which) the student&#13;
government and the student body&#13;
are saying that we feel it was ex&#13;
First motion, presented four weeks ago and rescinded last week:&#13;
"PSGA, Inc. considers the actions taken by the Teaching Excellence Awards&#13;
Committee in conjunction with the Chancellor as being inappropriate to the&#13;
situation at hand."&#13;
First version of resolution, presented two weeks ago and tabled:&#13;
"Be it known that the PSGA, Inc. feels that Chancellor Guskin's decision to not&#13;
give former Parkside Professor Kersey the Teaching Excellence Award when&#13;
rightfully hers, was wrong and uncalled for and that we, as the representatives of&#13;
the student body, ask that Chancellor Guskin change his decision and give&#13;
Professor Kersey her rightful award and the $500 stipend."&#13;
Current resolution, presented last week and lost 8-3*3:&#13;
"Whereas, the PSGA, Inc. sees the need for the revision of the existing Teaching&#13;
Excellence Awards guidelines.&#13;
"Be it known that the PSGA, Inc. shall be responsible to the students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside.&#13;
"Therefore the PSGA, Inc. in conjunction with the student body believes that the&#13;
Chancellor's decision to not allow former Parkside Professor Shirley Kersey the&#13;
Teaching Excellence Award which was rightfully due her, was wrong and uncalled&#13;
for, and that we, as the representatives of the student body, demand that Chancellor&#13;
Guskin change his decision and give Shirley Kersey her Teaching Excellence&#13;
Award and the $500 do llar award money.&#13;
"And be it known that the PSGA, Inc. shall continue to uphold students' rights in&#13;
the decision - making process and to prevent further ex post facto or other unjust&#13;
decisions from occurring."&#13;
INSIDE&#13;
• SUFAC revises schedule,&#13;
begins budgeting&#13;
• New TV season bested by PBS&#13;
• Inside UW-P sports:&#13;
Pick-up basketball&#13;
give Kersey the award certificate&#13;
but he won't give it to her in public&#13;
and won't give the $500 that goes&#13;
with the award.&#13;
Pogreba brought up the&#13;
possibility of changing the word&#13;
"demand" to "ask."&#13;
"I think the whole purpose of&#13;
this thing is being changed," said&#13;
Ripp. "(The resolution) is a&#13;
statement that we feel the original&#13;
decision he made hurt many&#13;
people. This has nothing to do with&#13;
if he changes his decision now . ..&#13;
this is a statement that we can get&#13;
involved. This is what the students&#13;
feel, not just us. I've talked to&#13;
plenty of students and they're&#13;
saying that we demand, instead of&#13;
just asking.&#13;
"I mean, are we afraid?" asked&#13;
Ripp. "It's like, OK, he's giving in&#13;
post facto, after the fact, and that&#13;
it was an unjust decision.&#13;
(Guskin's) not going to die&#13;
because of this — this is saying&#13;
that it was wrong. Is he going to&#13;
take retribution against us?&#13;
That's what I thought about Jim&#13;
(Kreuser's) statement about&#13;
'demanding'."&#13;
"I just want to stress Jim's&#13;
point," said Valldejuli. "It's not&#13;
that we are afraid that he's going&#13;
to bite us or anything — just make&#13;
sure that y&lt;xi know what you are&#13;
demanding from the Chancellor.&#13;
It's my opinion, (and) I've never&#13;
met (Kersey), but I would think&#13;
she would be more interested in&#13;
getting some kind of recognition&#13;
from the students instead of the&#13;
money."&#13;
Spallato moved to call the&#13;
question, with Ripp seconding.&#13;
The roll call vote was: Aye - Steve&#13;
Mertz, Pfaffl, Pogreba, Pugh,&#13;
Ripp and Spallato; Nay - Peterson,&#13;
Slama and Valldejuli; Abstentions&#13;
- Earlene Frederick,&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez and David&#13;
White.&#13;
Immediately following the&#13;
meeting, Ripp said, "I had a&#13;
personal feeling that it (the&#13;
decision) was a combination of&#13;
people who didn't want to speak&#13;
out against the Chancellor&#13;
because they were afraid of&#13;
repercussions. I think people&#13;
didn't get the gist of the whole&#13;
resolution, which was stating no&#13;
matter what Chancellor Guskin&#13;
does now, the point is that his&#13;
original decision is what we voting&#13;
on. It was ex post facto and it was&#13;
unjust because he admitted to me&#13;
at the open forum that it was his&#13;
total decision not to give her the&#13;
award — the money or the&#13;
award."&#13;
Asked about changing the word&#13;
"demand" to "ask," Ripp said, "I&#13;
wanted it the way it was. I feel&#13;
that 'asking' is putting the student&#13;
body at his feet and more or less&#13;
saying 'Pretty please, will you&#13;
give her back this award.' When&#13;
'demanding' (means) 'Hey, we&#13;
think it's wrong. You should give&#13;
her the award, you should give her&#13;
the money'."&#13;
Ripp feels the main issue was&#13;
confused. "I don't know if it was&#13;
purposely confused or not by a few&#13;
members of the Senate who are&#13;
against it. (They confused the&#13;
issue by) saying 'Now he is&#13;
changing his mind, he's going to&#13;
sign it.' But that has no bearing on&#13;
the resolution at all."&#13;
Asked whether or not he will&#13;
bring the resolution up at the next&#13;
Senate meeting (yesterday), Ripp&#13;
said, "It depends. I have to talk to&#13;
a few of the Senators and what&#13;
not." &#13;
2 Thursday, November 19,1981 RANGER&#13;
Editorials&#13;
VOOOOOMOOCCCO! &gt;SOCCOSOQOSCGGSCOOOOSOOOOO&amp;!&#13;
Ranger editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the editorial&#13;
staff. Parkside students may submit editorial ideas to the editor for&#13;
consideration. Editorial ideas need not be typed to be considered.&#13;
SCCCOOSOOSCOOCCCOCOSCCOSOCCOSOOCOOOOOCOCOOCOSO!&#13;
Why not work on it?&#13;
Those Parkside students who have been waiting for three and&#13;
a half months for their Guaranteed Student Loans no doubt wish&#13;
they had access to a short term (1 semester) loan program to&#13;
assist them with their tuition and books — at least.&#13;
In light of the recognition lately given to Peer Support, a major&#13;
student organization devoted to assisting students with other&#13;
adjustment problems, it seems ironic that Parkside gives no&#13;
similar support to students facing temporary financial difficulties&#13;
besides allowing their debts to accumulate for a very&#13;
limited time.&#13;
Last week, campus officials explained to the Ranger that a&#13;
student - initiated fund has already bombed out and that the&#13;
"books only" fund administered by the financial aids office is&#13;
also on the way to limbo because of student defaults on loans.&#13;
It is indeed a shame that students and organizations have&#13;
failed to raise funds and some students have defaulted on loans.&#13;
But those are not reasons to ignore the real need students have&#13;
for funds during times of unexpected delays. Rather than give up&#13;
on short term emergency student loan fund, why not work with&#13;
students to devise a fund that will work?&#13;
Do students have a say?&#13;
During the past few months, a great deal of concern has been&#13;
expressed, along with much debate, about 1981 Te aching Excellence&#13;
Award almost - recipient Shirley Kersey.&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin's decision to exempt Kersey from&#13;
eligibility (despite the lack of policy agreement with Guskin's&#13;
assumptions) because she was no longer employed by UW-P&#13;
after the long faculty selection process had been completed has&#13;
been called "ex post facto" and "illogical" by students, faculty&#13;
and Kersey herself.&#13;
The issue was not the $500 stipend usually allocated by Guskin&#13;
to each award winner. The issue was the nature of Guskin's&#13;
decision.&#13;
Since a recent reversal by Guskin, in which he promised to&#13;
sign an award certificate to be presented to Kersey identical to&#13;
the certificate given to past winners, it has become clear that&#13;
though it is not easy to do, students do have some say in decisions&#13;
made by their university. But maybe only when they sit on the&#13;
committee deciding the issue, and then only if some of them are&#13;
still around to witness administrative actions the next year.&#13;
Write Ranger a Letter!!!&#13;
, Say, Jfcmi-Saby'...&#13;
S&#13;
^C&#13;
^ICC™ A TOW&#13;
.CrurCKsj&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
Nobody 'gave a hoot'&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I had thought of quoting the&#13;
story from the Old Testament&#13;
which resulted in the oft asked&#13;
question "Am I my brother's&#13;
keeper?" I had thought of&#13;
referring to the lack of caring of&#13;
what happens (ed) to the "boat&#13;
people" or others fleeing from&#13;
oppression, or to the non - concern&#13;
over the environment or even&#13;
nuclear war. I had even thought of&#13;
reminding readers of the many&#13;
news - reported stories of crime&#13;
being committed on our streets&#13;
while totally unconcerned individuals&#13;
"turn their heads the&#13;
other way."&#13;
I decided, however, that these&#13;
references were not as apFrom&#13;
the Files&#13;
propriate as my simple report told&#13;
with utter chagrin and, I must&#13;
admit, some anger, of the total&#13;
disregard shown by so many&#13;
people (be they students or&#13;
passers-by) when I fell on that&#13;
terribly dangerous brick floor in&#13;
the concourse last week. Not one&#13;
"human" being bothered to&#13;
venture forth to help me up, to&#13;
inquire if I were all right (with the&#13;
exception of one young woman&#13;
who did), or if I needed help&#13;
getting somewhere. I was able to&#13;
gather myself together, even&#13;
though my knees were smarting&#13;
with pain and my pride suffering&#13;
from some embarrassment.&#13;
The result of the fall: badly&#13;
bruised, but not broken, knee cap,&#13;
some injured and torn ligaments&#13;
and tendons, bound foot and&#13;
crutches (though temporary). The&#13;
cause of the fall: none gave a&#13;
diagnosis, but I will venture an&#13;
opinion. I have never yet walked&#13;
down that extremely dangerous&#13;
brick concourse without seeing&#13;
debris, be it paper (which can be&#13;
slippery if conditions warrant it),&#13;
water, coffee, mushy food that&#13;
had dropped from non - caring&#13;
person's hand (present as I went&#13;
tumbling, I might add), cigarettes&#13;
or what have you.&#13;
I put it to You student body: Are&#13;
you coming to the university to&#13;
live in this world (which includes&#13;
giving a "hoot" about what&#13;
happens to others) or are you&#13;
coming to further your education&#13;
to learn new techniques for&#13;
stepping on and not caring a wit&#13;
about others with your added&#13;
knowledge?&#13;
Lois Lederman&#13;
10 years ago —&#13;
"Athletics: Story One" by Marc&#13;
Eisen&#13;
Two former Parkside athletes&#13;
have revealed how they were lied&#13;
to and misled by Parkside Athletic&#13;
Director Tom Rosandich when&#13;
they were recruited to come here.&#13;
A third athlete, still active in&#13;
UW-P athletics, told of similar&#13;
statements made to him, but&#13;
declined to characterize them as&#13;
being either misleading or lies.&#13;
Stories similar to these have&#13;
surfaced on campus before but&#13;
have never been substantiated.&#13;
The . . . stories, besides giving&#13;
evidence of Parkside's recruiting&#13;
methods, tell how their experience&#13;
with UW-P athletics has destroyed&#13;
their desire to compete anymore.&#13;
(John) Patten is presently a&#13;
pole vaulter on the track team,&#13;
while Mary (Libal) is a student&#13;
here and Judy (Zimmerman) is a&#13;
student at UWM.&#13;
While she readily acknowledges&#13;
that the track coaches are&#13;
talented, (Libal) says of them: "I&#13;
think the coaches are most concerned&#13;
about their own names.&#13;
Secondly, they'll try to develop the&#13;
name of Parkside. Only last are&#13;
they concerned with the athletes."&#13;
(Patten said), "In my career as&#13;
an athlete I've never seen so much&#13;
subversion in the ranks as I did at&#13;
Parkside — men and women, even&#13;
the coaches. But I think it was a&#13;
normal reaction to the situation —&#13;
with so much money being cut."&#13;
Zimmerman said, "I was&#13;
burned out at Parkside."&#13;
Between them, (Libal and&#13;
Zimmerman) held the Wisconsin&#13;
Women's AAU titles in the 100&#13;
yard dash, the 220, the 440, the 880,&#13;
the cross country mile, the mile&#13;
and a half and the ten mile runs.&#13;
Track was their lives, they say&#13;
simply. Today they don't compete.&#13;
&#13;
—Newscope, vol. 5, no. 12, Nov. | year OgO&#13;
senate.&#13;
A motion was then made by&#13;
Neilsen requesting Arnold's&#13;
resignation. The motion failed.&#13;
—Ranger, vol. 5, no. 11, Nov. 24,&#13;
1976&#13;
Kersey to be honored&#13;
5 years a go —&#13;
"Charges Dropped" by Douglas&#13;
Edenhauser&#13;
The student government&#13;
meeting last Wednesday night&#13;
provided a great amount of&#13;
confusion for those who came to&#13;
watch Senator Mary Arnold's&#13;
impeachment trial.&#13;
Though Arnold wished the trial&#13;
to take place in open session, a&#13;
motion introduced by President&#13;
Pro Tempore Dan Neilsen was&#13;
passed by the senate the close the&#13;
proceedings.&#13;
Neilsen indicated that&#13;
(parliamentary procedure)&#13;
required that such a trial be held&#13;
in executive session.&#13;
In rebuttal to arguments that&#13;
this would be in violation of&#13;
Wisconsin's open meeting law,&#13;
Neilsen replied that according to&#13;
definitions within this law, "we&#13;
(Student Government) are not a&#13;
governmental body."&#13;
. . . N e i l s e n i n t r o d u c e d a m o t i o n&#13;
to hold the trial in open session,&#13;
which was passed unanimously by&#13;
the senate.&#13;
After a few questions and a little&#13;
discussion ... the charges were&#13;
dropped in the best interests of the&#13;
"Food prices to increase 3 percent"&#13;
by Janet Wells&#13;
An overall increase of 3 percent&#13;
in the price of food at Parkside is&#13;
projected for January 1981, according&#13;
to Bill Niebuhr, director&#13;
of the Student Union... Many food&#13;
items will remain the same, while&#13;
selected items will probably be&#13;
penny increased.&#13;
In view of (the food price index&#13;
projection of a 12-15 percent increase&#13;
in food prices overall from&#13;
last January to next) and nation -&#13;
wide inflation, Niebuhr declares&#13;
that the Union and Heritage Foods&#13;
have done well in holding price&#13;
increases to a necessary&#13;
minimum, though Heritage loses&#13;
money in its day - to - day&#13;
operations.&#13;
• . Parkside facilities is&#13;
Heritage's main source of&#13;
revenue, compensating for the&#13;
loss sustained in daily operations.&#13;
Five years ago, 50 percent of the&#13;
Union's budget was derived from&#13;
segregated fees, 50 percent from&#13;
revenues. Today, . . . segregated&#13;
fee dollars are only 38 percent of&#13;
the budget, with the remaining&#13;
coming from revenue producing&#13;
operations like the food service.&#13;
—Ranger, vol. 9, no. 12, Nov. 26,&#13;
1980.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
After Gustave Sorenson, Ann&#13;
Roland, Jeff School and myself&#13;
met with Chancellor Guskin on&#13;
November 12, it is my pleasure to&#13;
announce that Chancellor Guskin&#13;
will give a certificate of Teaching&#13;
Excellence to the student committee&#13;
so that we may properly&#13;
honor Dr. Shirley Kersey.&#13;
The certificate to be presented,&#13;
identical to the one Oliver&#13;
Hayward will receive, will bear&#13;
the Chancellor's signature.&#13;
I want to thank Chancellor&#13;
Guskin for being willing to&#13;
compromise and accomodate for&#13;
what I and many have felt to be an&#13;
injustice.&#13;
I want to urge all students, that&#13;
if there is anything that they feel&#13;
needs to be revised; speak up.&#13;
You, the students, have just&#13;
witnessed what can be done.&#13;
Changes can occur. STUDENTS&#13;
DO HAVE A VOICE!&#13;
Mary Jo Dagenbach&#13;
Ginger Helgeson&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Dan McCormack&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
Frank Falduto&#13;
Greg Bonofiglio, Carol&#13;
ganger&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Advisor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Burns, Doug Edenhauser, Jeff&#13;
!!? "&#13;
ensiak&#13;
' WarV Kaddatz, Jim Kreuser, Pat&#13;
McDonald, Jim Mertins, Steve Myers, Laurie Painter,&#13;
72&#13;
r&#13;
!?r ,&#13;
Perce&#13;
' Kim Schlater. Sue Stevens, Dan Werbie,&#13;
Jeff Wicks.&#13;
UW.riartald* and they are so.efy&#13;
Written permission Is required for reprint of any portion of RA NGER&#13;
•°'^0"&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
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„llc uw.&#13;
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ig; ••«««&#13;
eluded for verific ation. sl&#13;
°&#13;
ned and " ,e|ephone number In-&#13;
.Names will be withhe ld for valid reasons&#13;
sis sr ass# ;X,K&#13;
defamatory content.&#13;
H 'eners which contain false or &#13;
UW-P reps take stand at United Council&#13;
Thursday, November 19,1981&#13;
oy Parkside's&#13;
U.C. Delegation&#13;
Student r&#13;
Cek SOme Park&#13;
side student Government Association,&#13;
tHn f?c&#13;
esentatives a road&#13;
rHL? /?Uper&#13;
.&#13;
1&#13;
,&#13;
or t0 attend the United Council of UW Student&#13;
Governments meeting. Thev were&#13;
SE^S Pr&#13;
.&#13;
ederick&gt; Kreuser,&#13;
Mlk® Pfaffl, Margaret Rodriguez&#13;
and Dave White. They took active&#13;
stands on various issues.&#13;
One of these issues was the&#13;
collective bargaining proposal.&#13;
Parkside swung all four votes&#13;
against this proposal. Their&#13;
reasoning was that the rules and&#13;
practices are not defined&#13;
specifically concerning student&#13;
participation in the collective&#13;
bargaining process.&#13;
Another issue was the tuition&#13;
surcharge. The United Council&#13;
Executive Board which is maae&#13;
up of 53 delegates from the UW&#13;
system took a stand against the&#13;
tuition surcharge.&#13;
Reasoning for this, say the&#13;
representatives, was that a&#13;
surcharge does not solve the long -&#13;
term problem for the university of&#13;
adjusting to an era of shrinking&#13;
financial resources. Now, they&#13;
feel, is the time for long - rangeplanning.&#13;
With the country in a&#13;
recession and unemployment&#13;
hitting 8 percent, families and&#13;
working students cannot afford&#13;
hation increases, they say. The&#13;
Parkside Student Senate has not&#13;
taken a stand on this issue as of&#13;
yet, but it was scheduled to be&#13;
brought up at yesterday's&#13;
meeting.&#13;
One of th e major issues brought&#13;
up at the Executive Board&#13;
meeting was a motion to begin an&#13;
impeachment hearing against the&#13;
President of the United Council,&#13;
Robert Kranz. After four hours of&#13;
intense discussion, Parkside&#13;
swung all four votes against&#13;
proceeding with the hearing. They&#13;
voted that way on the basis that it&#13;
was detrimental to the purpose of&#13;
the United Council.&#13;
There are many issues that are&#13;
coming up in U.C. that are important&#13;
to the students of Parkside&#13;
and the entire UW system.&#13;
This was one of the first times in&#13;
the United Council history that&#13;
Parkside sent five delegates to a&#13;
U.C. meeting.&#13;
Each student at Parkside pays&#13;
50 cents per semester to be&#13;
represented as an active member&#13;
of the United Council. The five&#13;
delegates hope that in the future&#13;
Parkside students will become&#13;
aware of issues that are dealt with&#13;
in the United Council and which&#13;
affect them. If a student has any&#13;
questions about the United&#13;
Council, please feel free to stop&#13;
down at the PSGA office, by the&#13;
Coffee Shop. *&#13;
SUFAC begins budgeting&#13;
ThThe e Sefircff Segregaatpd ted TTn Unive ivorrsioifir ty Fees *i j: ^ »&#13;
Allocations Committee (SUFAC)&#13;
began its budgeting process last&#13;
week approving some preliminary&#13;
budget requests from student and&#13;
campus organizations.&#13;
SUFAC, a seven - member&#13;
subcommittee of PSGA, annually&#13;
allocates the portion of each&#13;
student's total tuition fee called&#13;
segregated fees. This year's full -&#13;
time undergraduate student paid&#13;
$72 in segregated fees, the lowest&#13;
in the UW System. Last year's&#13;
total SUFAC budget was $580,441.&#13;
SUFAC allocates money to 18&#13;
different areas, one more than&#13;
last year because Peer Support&#13;
was recently granted major&#13;
organization status. The seven&#13;
SUFAC members are PSGA&#13;
Senators (chosen by random&#13;
draw) Randy Klees, John&#13;
Peterson, Phil Pogreba, Kathy&#13;
Slama and Luis Valldejuli,&#13;
chairperson; and two members&#13;
elected during student body&#13;
elections, Greg Davies and Ken&#13;
Meyer.&#13;
The first budget request to come&#13;
before SUFAC last Thursday was&#13;
the Student Activities Office with&#13;
a request of $13,556, down $4,030&#13;
from last year's $17,586. The&#13;
major reason for the decrease is&#13;
that some funding areas were&#13;
transferred to the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) budget.&#13;
Meyer moved, and Pogreba&#13;
seconded, to approve the $13,556&#13;
request. The motion passed&#13;
unanimously.&#13;
The second budget request was&#13;
Housing, with a proposed increase&#13;
of $12,082 from $13,789 to $26,771.&#13;
After much discussion Meyer&#13;
moved, and Klees seconded, to&#13;
table the discussion. The motion&#13;
was approved unanimously. The&#13;
Housing budget request was&#13;
discussed again Friday. After&#13;
more discussion Meyer moved,&#13;
and Peterson seconded, to table&#13;
the discussion again.&#13;
The major reason for the increase&#13;
lies in the salary of Shirley&#13;
Schmerling, Housing Coordinator.&#13;
In the past, segregated fees paid&#13;
50% of the salary, with the state&#13;
paying 50%. This year's request is&#13;
for 100% of the salary.&#13;
The third budget request&#13;
Thursday was for Winter Carnival&#13;
and Fall Fest. The request was for&#13;
$4000, a $1000 increase over last&#13;
year mainly because last year's&#13;
Fall Fest was funded by New&#13;
Program Development funding.&#13;
Pogreba moved, and Meyer&#13;
seconded, to approve the $4000&#13;
request. The motion passed 6-0-1,&#13;
with Davies abstaining.&#13;
The first budget deliberation&#13;
Friday was on Student&#13;
Organizations Council (SOC),&#13;
which requested $26,540, a $1970&#13;
increase over last year's $24,570.&#13;
After discussion Slama moved,&#13;
and Peterson seconded, to&#13;
allocate $24,660 to SOC. This accounts&#13;
for an increase in salaries&#13;
and supplies but the same amount&#13;
for services as last year given to&#13;
new and existing clubs. The&#13;
motion passed 4-2-0, w ith Davies&#13;
aqd Meyer voting "no" (Pogreba&#13;
absent).&#13;
The next budget request&#13;
discussed was that of the Child&#13;
Care Center, with a proposed&#13;
increase of $10,317 fr om $6506 to&#13;
$16,823. Until now, the Center has&#13;
been a non-profit corporation. The&#13;
Center is now a formal university&#13;
operation. The change in status&#13;
involves moving the director to an&#13;
academic stall position. After&#13;
almost an hour - and - a - half of&#13;
discussion Meyer moved, and&#13;
Klees seconded, to grant Child&#13;
Care its request. The motion&#13;
passed 4-0-2, with Peterson and&#13;
Valldejuli abstaining (Pogreba&#13;
absent).&#13;
The third budget deliberated&#13;
Friday was for Athletics, asking&#13;
Here is an updated SUFAC&#13;
budgeting schedule. The&#13;
previous schedule was changed&#13;
as the Ranger went to press&#13;
last week. The meetings are&#13;
open to anyone interested and&#13;
will be held in Comm Arts (CA)&#13;
132 un less otherwise noted.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 19&#13;
Intramurals, 1:00 (CA 128)&#13;
Business Services, 3:30&#13;
Union Debt Services, 4:00&#13;
Friday, Nov. 20&#13;
PAB, 1 p.m.&#13;
Performing Arts and Lectures,&#13;
1:50&#13;
Ranger, 2:30&#13;
PSGA, 3:20&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 25&#13;
Health Office, 1:00&#13;
Monday, Nov. 30&#13;
Union, 4:00 (CA 142)&#13;
for a $2000 increase from $51,585 to&#13;
$53,585. After discussion, Meyer&#13;
moved, and Peterson seconded, to&#13;
approve the request. The motion&#13;
passed 4-0-1, with Davies abstaining&#13;
(Klees and Pogreba&#13;
absent).&#13;
SUFAC met Monday and passed&#13;
two preliminary budgets. Slama&#13;
moved, and Davies seconded, to&#13;
allocate $2400 to the Student&#13;
Activities Building. The motion&#13;
was approved 6-0-0 (Klees absent).&#13;
&#13;
SUFAC also approved its own&#13;
budget Monday, allocating $160&#13;
for duplicating and wages for a&#13;
secretary. Peterson moved, and&#13;
Pogreba seconded, to pass the&#13;
SUFAC budget. The motion&#13;
passed 6-0-0 ( Klees absent).&#13;
Peer Support was scheduled to&#13;
present its budget request to&#13;
SUFAC yesterday. See schedule&#13;
for upcoming budget presentations.&#13;
See next week's Ranger&#13;
for an update on SUFAC's&#13;
preliminary budgeting.&#13;
Career Niaht&#13;
Alumni help students&#13;
prepare for careers&#13;
by Mary Kirton Kaddatz&#13;
"Only two in one hundred people&#13;
are prepared (for job interviews)&#13;
and they are the people who get&#13;
hired," said Judy Murray,&#13;
Manager of Corporate Employer&#13;
Relations and Career Development&#13;
at J.I. Case of Racine at the&#13;
second annual Alumni Career&#13;
Resource Night last week.&#13;
According to Tom Krimmel,&#13;
Director of Alumni and&#13;
Placement Services, approximately&#13;
170 Parkside&#13;
students attended the event,&#13;
which featured over 50 alumni&#13;
panel speakers and a lecture by&#13;
Murray on "Job Opportunities:&#13;
How to find them and make the&#13;
most of them."&#13;
The most popular panels were&#13;
engineering, communication,&#13;
business - marketing, personnel&#13;
and information systems. Liberal&#13;
and fine, arts panels were cancelled&#13;
due to low student interest.&#13;
Both panels have been&#13;
rescheduled for spring semester.&#13;
"Our goal was to make students&#13;
aware of information on the job&#13;
market that Alumni can share&#13;
with them, to give students experience&#13;
in terms of talking with&#13;
people in their major course area&#13;
in a safe environment where&#13;
students can freely ask questions&#13;
and be candid," Krimmel explained.&#13;
&#13;
Panel members gave students&#13;
suggestions on preparing themselves&#13;
for specific career areas,&#13;
projected employer demand in&#13;
each area, explained economic&#13;
factors affecting job areas and&#13;
discussed career advancement&#13;
from choosing an entry level&#13;
position on up.&#13;
Murray recommended that&#13;
students "investigate the job&#13;
market, conduct an organized&#13;
search, be imaginative and&#13;
determined" in conducting a job&#13;
search. Unusual job leads she&#13;
suggested students use to secure&#13;
their first job included temporary&#13;
jobs, which she called "a foot in&#13;
the door," and Chamber of&#13;
Commerce directories, among&#13;
others.&#13;
Before the interview, Murray&#13;
told students to prepare the&#13;
resume carefully. "Design the&#13;
appearance first, then create the&#13;
words to fit the format of your&#13;
resume," she said. "Focus on&#13;
training, experience, accomplishments&#13;
and personal&#13;
qualities."&#13;
The format of the resume should&#13;
be basically "one page in length,&#13;
with strong points attractively&#13;
arranged," Murray said. "Use&#13;
action words; no gimmicks."&#13;
Murray also recommended&#13;
sending a "thank you letter within&#13;
24 hours after the interview. Very&#13;
few people do, but it could be the&#13;
deciding factor for two equal&#13;
candidates. Letters should make&#13;
sense and be to the point. One&#13;
paragraph is sufficient," she said.&#13;
The next Alumni and Placement,&#13;
seminar, entitled "Cracking A&#13;
Tough Job Market in the 80's,"&#13;
will feature Roger L. DeRose. The&#13;
seminar is scheduled for Tuesday,&#13;
Dec. 1 from 8 to 10 p.m. in Union&#13;
106 and will cover camp'^?&#13;
recruiting techniques, the Interview,&#13;
the follow - up interview,&#13;
and job performance along the&#13;
career ladder.&#13;
Dance&#13;
to the&#13;
Sound of&#13;
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SATURDAY,&#13;
NOVEMBER 28th&#13;
8:00 p. m.&#13;
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DOOR PRIZES&#13;
Contact&#13;
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at&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
For Tickets&#13;
SOUTH HILLS&#13;
COUNTRY CLUB&#13;
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North at Hwy. 20&#13;
Sponsored by&#13;
RACINE&#13;
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4 Thursday, November 19,1981 RANGER&#13;
New TV season&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
In setting out to do an article on&#13;
the new television season, I&#13;
scanned the tube for signs of&#13;
anything worth watching, and&#13;
more importantly, worth writing&#13;
about. As you have probably&#13;
already surmised, I found, with&#13;
only a very few exceptions,&#13;
nothing. No witty new comedies,&#13;
no intelligent slice - of - life&#13;
dramas, nothing.&#13;
I did say that there were a few&#13;
exceptions, however. I don't want&#13;
to seem overly cynical, so I gave a&#13;
few shows chances that they&#13;
might not even deserve. But even&#13;
these shows are so few and far&#13;
between that I would be hard&#13;
pressed to fill a decent - sized&#13;
article with them. So what I am&#13;
going to do is Drum roll,&#13;
please. - - - I am going to write&#13;
about my favorite T. V. shows,&#13;
new or not. My own personal&#13;
favorites, that I think the Ranger&#13;
audience might enjoy.&#13;
Most of my personal picks are&#13;
shows broadcast on the Public&#13;
Broadcasting System; my&#13;
favorite PBS show is Carl Sagan's&#13;
"Cosmos". This stunning 13 - part&#13;
show takes audiences through&#13;
space and time on it's grandest&#13;
scale, from the birth of the&#13;
universe up to present day and far&#13;
beyond. The visual effects are&#13;
brilliant, the musical score is&#13;
stirring, and Dr. Sagan effectively&#13;
explains many scientific points in&#13;
a way anyone could understand.&#13;
Most importantly, Sagan conveys&#13;
his own wonder for the immensity&#13;
and beauty of the universe to his&#13;
audience. Watch "Cosmos"&#13;
Tuesday nights on PBS.&#13;
A la rge part of PBS airtime is&#13;
devoted to shows imported from&#13;
the British Broadcasting CorPBS&#13;
imports and reruns are better viewing&#13;
poration. "Masterpiece Theater,"&#13;
probably the most famous BBC&#13;
show in the states, is beginning it's&#13;
second decade of real - life&#13;
dramatizations. At first glance the&#13;
show seemed dry and stuffy to me,&#13;
but once I got past Allistair&#13;
Cooke's bland introduction, I&#13;
became pretty engrossed in the&#13;
various stories and characters.&#13;
Right now the show airs Sunday&#13;
nights on PBS, with reruns from&#13;
past shows shown during&#13;
weeknights.&#13;
British humor has always appealed&#13;
to me more than any other&#13;
kind, and I used to be a passionate&#13;
"Monty Python" fan until it&#13;
stopped showing in the U. S. All is&#13;
not lost, however. John Cleese,&#13;
former star of "Monty Python,"&#13;
can be seen on the PBS in "Fawlty&#13;
Towers," yet another BBC show.&#13;
Cleese stars as Basil Fawlty, a&#13;
harried hotel manager in Devon,&#13;
England. Typical English wit,&#13;
satirical, tongue - in - cheek,&#13;
sarcastic, is in abundance in this&#13;
show. PBS's Chicago affiliate,&#13;
WTTW, airs "Fawlty Towers"&#13;
Sunday nights at ten.&#13;
I have to slip in one more show&#13;
from England, this one being my&#13;
favorite. It may be of interest to&#13;
"Star Trek" and "Lost in Space"&#13;
fans to know that the world's&#13;
longest - running science fiction&#13;
T.V. show is on, and has been for&#13;
the past eighteen years, the BBC.&#13;
Yes, sci-fi fans, "Dr. Who" is&#13;
that very show. The show is about&#13;
Dr. Who, a timelord from the&#13;
planet Galifrey. Timelords, as you&#13;
might have guessed, have the&#13;
ability to travel through time with&#13;
the aid of a machine called&#13;
TARDIS (Time and relative&#13;
dimensions in space.) Each week&#13;
the Dr. travels to a different&#13;
planet and encounters a myriad of&#13;
aliens, both hostile and&#13;
benevolent. By the end of the show&#13;
the Dr. has managed to save the&#13;
planet from destruction of one&#13;
kind or another.&#13;
Over the years there have been&#13;
several actors who have played&#13;
Dr. Who, the current star being&#13;
British actor Tom Baker. The&#13;
show is more imaginative than&#13;
any other science - fiction I've&#13;
seen, and when a bit of British&#13;
humor is interjected as well, the&#13;
combination makes for a truly&#13;
delightful show. Channel 11 in&#13;
Chicago airs "Dr. Who" Sunday&#13;
nights at 11 p. m.&#13;
Now I come to my favorite&#13;
American shows. "Nova," an&#13;
excellent science show, airs on&#13;
PBS Sundays at 7 p. m. While it&#13;
lacks the exuberance of&#13;
"Cosmos," "Nova" is chock full&#13;
of the latest controversies in the&#13;
various fields of science.&#13;
"Odyssey," which shows Tuesday&#13;
nights on PBS, is a look at various&#13;
cultures around the world. But&#13;
enough of educational shows.&#13;
Let's move on to the commercial&#13;
networks.&#13;
Never has a television show&#13;
been critically acclaimed by so&#13;
many and watched by so few. This&#13;
is the case with "Hill Street&#13;
Blues," which began last year on&#13;
NBC. The show was a sensitive&#13;
dramatization of li fe in a big-city&#13;
police precinct, and virtually&#13;
swept the Emmy awards. But the&#13;
viewing audience failed to take&#13;
notice, and the show was only&#13;
saved through the grace of G rant&#13;
Tinker, Mary Tyler Moore's&#13;
former spouse and new head of&#13;
programming at NBC. The show&#13;
returned this year, and the ratings&#13;
look hopeful. I whole - heartedly&#13;
recommend this show. The plots&#13;
are realistic, slice - of - life&#13;
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dramas, that, unlike many typical&#13;
"cop" shows, seems to accurately&#13;
reflect the lives of police officers.&#13;
All the actors are superbly cast in&#13;
their roles, and are unfailingly&#13;
convincing. Don't miss this&#13;
Thursday nights at 9 p. m. on&#13;
NBC.&#13;
At the beginning of this article I&#13;
said that there were a few new&#13;
shows that weren't half bad, a few&#13;
exceptions to the rule. A very few.&#13;
In fact, only one. There is one new&#13;
show I have seen that might&#13;
possibly be promising.&#13;
"The Two of Us" stars British&#13;
comedian Peter Cook as Brentwood,&#13;
and English butler in&#13;
America. This is the show's basic&#13;
plot. Pretty cheesy, I suppose. But&#13;
the show succeeds somewhat due&#13;
to Cook's portrayal of Bren twood.&#13;
I stress that the show succeeds&#13;
somewhat - - - it is still nothing&#13;
spectacular. It also stress that it&#13;
succeeds due to Cook; the rest of&#13;
the cast is terribly lame. But Cook&#13;
makes it a bit humorous, and it&#13;
might just be worth seeing on&#13;
CBS, Tuesday nights at 7:30 p. m.&#13;
Wustum announces library opening&#13;
The Racine Art Association&#13;
Inc., announces that it will open&#13;
an Art Library at the Charles A.&#13;
Wustum Museum of F ine Arts on&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 22. The library will&#13;
contain nearly 1,000 vo lumes and&#13;
periodicals dealing with the arts&#13;
in general and the visual arts in&#13;
particular. Both art history and&#13;
"How To" books are included in&#13;
the collection of hard and soft&#13;
cover books. In addition, the RAA&#13;
maintains subscriptions to 11 art&#13;
periodicals.&#13;
The official opening of the&#13;
library will be held in conjunction&#13;
with a reception being held for two&#13;
new exhibits at the museum, the&#13;
Racine Area Arts exhibit and the&#13;
Racine Camera Club's First&#13;
Annual Juried Print Show. The&#13;
reception will be held from 2 to 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
The Racine Area Arts exhibit is&#13;
an annual all - media competition&#13;
open to all artists 18 years or older&#13;
who are residents of Racine,&#13;
Kenosha and Walworth counties.&#13;
The Racine Camera Club's&#13;
exhibit includes 35 photographs by&#13;
16 photographers over 18 from&#13;
Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
Both the exhibits and the library&#13;
opening are part of t he museum's&#13;
40th anniversary festivities. The&#13;
museum first opened on Nov. 16,&#13;
1941.&#13;
The Ranger needs staffers:&#13;
• photographers »ad reps&#13;
• news writers&#13;
Call 2287 or 2295 or Stop in!&#13;
We're in WLLC DI73&#13;
10% DISCOUNT&#13;
To Parkside students and faculty&#13;
members only, on all merchandise&#13;
in our store. Parkside I.D. required&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
JEWELERS&#13;
Kanothi'i Diamond Contar&#13;
5617 - 6th Avenue&#13;
Phona 658-2525 Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Rated&#13;
presents:&#13;
It's a comedy to cheer about. It's just excellent."&#13;
-Gene Shalit, NBC-TV (Tbday Show)&#13;
BURT REYNOLDS&#13;
JILL CLAYBUR6H&#13;
CANDICE BERGEN&#13;
This Fri., Nov. 20, Sun., Nov. 22&#13;
Admission '1.50 7:30 p.m. Union Ciner&#13;
Next Week:&#13;
Dustin Hoffman as LENNY&#13;
Rated "R" &#13;
RANGER Thursday, November 19,1981&#13;
Video game madness is invading&#13;
Viewpoint&#13;
Photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
Amazing. Among its more&#13;
beneficial advancements, modern&#13;
technology has recently derived a&#13;
method of turning human beings&#13;
into "houseplants." The biggest&#13;
rage right now, discounting&#13;
Preppies, has got to be video and&#13;
electronic games.&#13;
You'll find them everywhere —&#13;
the corner convenience store,&#13;
shopping malls, computer centers&#13;
and even at Parkside. Curiosity&#13;
prompts nearly everyone to try&#13;
their hand at such games, and&#13;
some people are all but consumed&#13;
by these electronic wizards.&#13;
1984 i s right on schedule. Why&#13;
bother leaving the warm, dry&#13;
comfort of t he great indoors for a&#13;
game of football, baseball or&#13;
soccer when a video game can do&#13;
it for you? The barbaric oofs and&#13;
grunts of real players get replaced&#13;
by cute little beeps and buzzes.&#13;
For electronic game fans, these&#13;
are the sounds of music; for the&#13;
rest of us, they join the annoying&#13;
category of "head noises."&#13;
To what can we attribute the&#13;
immense popularity of electronic&#13;
and video games? Do these&#13;
computerized masterpieces&#13;
convey some type of subliminal&#13;
suggestion which mesmerizes&#13;
players? Have the Communists&#13;
replaced rock music and drugs as&#13;
the mainstay for undermining&#13;
American youth? Are we&#13;
becoming a nation of lazy, vapid -&#13;
eyed video freaks?&#13;
Or is it simply that a two -&#13;
dimensional world is easier to&#13;
comprehend? Video games are,&#13;
after all, by far the best way to&#13;
wage wars or conquer new&#13;
peoples.&#13;
The notion that little physical&#13;
energy is expended while playing&#13;
video games is nonsense. Players&#13;
get totally engrossed in their&#13;
games. Surely constricted pupils,&#13;
sweaty palms and increased blood&#13;
pressure do something for the&#13;
participants. The question is how&#13;
long before video ulcers join the&#13;
respected ranks of shin splints,&#13;
tennis elbow and skiers knees as&#13;
medically recognized maladies.&#13;
There's no doubt about it —&#13;
video games are here to stay.&#13;
Those who despise this modern&#13;
form of entertainment may as&#13;
well make the best of i t and pray&#13;
for a power failure. Who knows,&#13;
video games might even convey&#13;
deep philosophical messages for&#13;
some of us — by the time we&#13;
finally figure out how to play, the&#13;
game is over.&#13;
Smokers ponder today's smokeout&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Tobacco is a plant of many uses.&#13;
When its leaves are dried or&#13;
cured, they can be rolled into&#13;
cigars, processed for chewing,&#13;
ground into snuff or shredded for&#13;
use in pipes or cigarettes. Tobacco&#13;
was first used principally in&#13;
connection with religious&#13;
ceremonies, but by the end of the&#13;
fifteenth century tobacco smoking&#13;
had become a common practice.&#13;
Cigarettes are the most common&#13;
way of smoking tobacco today, but&#13;
it has been determined that&#13;
cigarette smoking is hazardous to&#13;
health. The American Cancer&#13;
Society has set aside one day a&#13;
year as a push to convince people&#13;
to stop smoking for twenty-four&#13;
hours. If people can stop for&#13;
twenty-four hours, why not&#13;
longer? In honor of today's&#13;
"smoke-out" a number of&#13;
Parkside smokers were interviewed&#13;
and questioned on their&#13;
reasons for smoking.&#13;
Ron Wurzer was 18 when he&#13;
started smoking. "I've smoked for&#13;
five years. I guess I started&#13;
because I was working and going&#13;
to school at the same time. It&#13;
seemed like the thing to do, but it&#13;
wasn't peer pressure. Now I&#13;
smoke from habit. I don't really&#13;
want to quit, but I don't have any&#13;
deep desire to smoke. I don't think&#13;
I'm going to quit on the day of th e&#13;
smokeout."&#13;
Dave Schmidt started smoking&#13;
at age 15. "I started just to try it.&#13;
A lot of p eople did. Sometimes I'd&#13;
like to quit, but I enjoy smoking. I&#13;
probably won't stop on the date of&#13;
the smokeout."&#13;
Karen Sniatynskii started&#13;
smoking at age 13. "I took my first&#13;
cigarette because of curiosity.&#13;
Now, I don't think that it's a habit.&#13;
I never buy my own cigarettes.&#13;
When I'm around people that&#13;
smoke, I'll have one. During the&#13;
smokeout, I probably won't smoke&#13;
because I don't smoke all the&#13;
time."&#13;
Elizabeth Checkvala started&#13;
smoking when she was 18. "Peer&#13;
pressure is the main reason; I was&#13;
around people that smoked. I&#13;
would definitely like to quit, for&#13;
health reasons. I'm going to try to&#13;
quit on the 19th."&#13;
Saeid Rahmanpanah started&#13;
smoking at age 17. "The first time&#13;
that I had a cigarette, I got high&#13;
from it. I don't get high anymore,&#13;
but it's a habit. I would like to quit&#13;
for my health, but I don't plan on&#13;
stopping for the Great American&#13;
Smokeout."&#13;
Cindy Olson started smoking at&#13;
age 14. "It was cool to smoke, go&#13;
Bedford Duo to perform Downey composition&#13;
Music by Milwaukee composer&#13;
John Downey, including the world&#13;
premiere of his Duo for Oboe and&#13;
Harpsichord, will be presented in&#13;
the first concert of the 1981-82 New&#13;
Music at Parkside series at 3:30&#13;
p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 22, in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside Communication Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
The new work will be performed&#13;
by The Bedford Duo — oboist&#13;
Monte Bedford and harpsichordist&#13;
Frances Bedford — which commissioned&#13;
the composition with&#13;
support from a grant by the&#13;
Wisconsin Arts Board.&#13;
Downey, composer - in -&#13;
residence at UW-Milwaukee, will&#13;
be at the keyboard for two of his&#13;
piano works, Eastlake Terrace&#13;
and Edges, and the Parkside&#13;
Piano Duo — Carol Bell and&#13;
August Wegner—will perform his&#13;
Adagio Lyrico.&#13;
Frances Bedford, Bell and&#13;
Wegner are UW-Parkside music&#13;
faculty members. Monte Bedford&#13;
is on the music faculty of the&#13;
University of Alabama and oboist&#13;
with its resident Capstone&#13;
Woodwind Quintet.&#13;
Tenor Daniel Nelson and pianist&#13;
Jeffrey Peterson, of the UWM&#13;
music faculty, will present three&#13;
Downey songs based on texts by&#13;
Yeats and Shakespeare. Nelson&#13;
also will be soloist for the&#13;
chamber work, A Dolphin,&#13;
assisted by an ensemble including&#13;
Downey at the piano, Carol&#13;
Meves, flute, Mary Norquist,&#13;
viola, and Marty Shadd, percussion.&#13;
The ensemble members&#13;
are from the UWM school of music&#13;
and the Dolphin text is by Irusha&#13;
Downey, the composer's wife.&#13;
Downey's compositions have&#13;
bad major performances in the&#13;
U.S., Europe and Asia and he has&#13;
received a number of important&#13;
commissions including his Cello&#13;
Sonata for George Sopkin; Earthplace,&#13;
an electronic sound score&#13;
for the Public Broadcasting&#13;
Corporation; Symphinic Modules&#13;
Five for the Milwaukee Symphony;&#13;
and a work for the Fine&#13;
Arts String Quartet Foundation of&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
He has received a number of&#13;
awards including a Fulbright&#13;
Award and a scholarship from the&#13;
government of France, which also&#13;
honored him as a Knight a la&#13;
Chevalier.&#13;
Downey received his bachelor of&#13;
music degree from DePaul&#13;
University, which has presented&#13;
him with a Distinguished Alumni&#13;
Award, and a masters degree&#13;
from the Chicago Musical College&#13;
of Roosevelt University. He later&#13;
studied in Paris where he was&#13;
awarded both a prix de composition&#13;
from the Conservatoire&#13;
National de Musique and a PhD&#13;
(Docteur es Lettres) from the&#13;
University of Paris at the Sorbonne.&#13;
His principal teachers&#13;
have included Darius Milhaud and&#13;
Nadia Boulanger.&#13;
Admission for the concert is $1&#13;
for students and senior citizens; $2&#13;
for others. Concert - goers are&#13;
invited to attend a wine and&#13;
cheese reception after the&#13;
program.&#13;
The second concert in the New&#13;
Music series, at 8 p.m. on Feb. 26,&#13;
will feature the Oriana Trio,&#13;
resident chamber ensemble at&#13;
UW-P, and the third, at 8 p.m. on&#13;
April 2, will feature the music of&#13;
Wisconsin - born composer Otto&#13;
Leuning. Wegner and Harry&#13;
Sturm of the UW-P music staff&#13;
direct the series.&#13;
He ®lbe&#13;
£uieet $l{oppe&#13;
THANKSGIVING WEEK&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
3 DAYS ONLY — NOV. 23,24 &amp; 25&#13;
GIANT&#13;
CASHEWS&#13;
40% OFF&#13;
A Great Addition To Your Thanksgiving Day Table!&#13;
down and stand by the creek and&#13;
smoke. I like to smoke, I enjoy it. I&#13;
would like to quit for my health. I&#13;
plan on trying to stop for the&#13;
smokeout."&#13;
Margo Katerdjian began&#13;
smoking when she was 16. "I had&#13;
some problems, and having a&#13;
cigarette let me deal with it a little&#13;
easier. I smoke now because the&#13;
people around me smoke and it&#13;
calms me down. I would like to&#13;
quit because it's not good for my&#13;
health and I plan on trying to stop&#13;
for the Great American&#13;
Smokeout."&#13;
Bob Varnes started smoking at&#13;
age 19 or 20. " It was fun, and it&#13;
was the thing to do. Now, I love to&#13;
smoke. Although I would like to&#13;
quit for health reasons, I would&#13;
rather quit on the day that I&#13;
choose. So, I probably won't quit&#13;
on the smokeout."&#13;
'Welcome back students!" Have fun!&#13;
FMXLLTB BAKERY&#13;
• DANISH TORTE CAKES • KRINGU3 • WHXXNG&#13;
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FOOSBALL&#13;
25* per Game&#13;
Gee, says Strollln' Bowlin', "I can't believe all the&#13;
different fun things there are to do - why the Rec Center&#13;
even has foosball tables." Strollin' Bowlin' quickly finds&#13;
°y.t tha&#13;
J Joosball is only a quarter per game and very exciting.&#13;
Why not discover how much fun foosball is in the&#13;
Rec Center? &#13;
Thursday, November 19,1981 RANGER&#13;
Events************ • §* A Alii *»#» J A m m _ Cheerleaders&#13;
"Add a little greenery to your&#13;
world" at the Cheerleaders' Plant&#13;
Sale on Nov. 23, 24 a nd 25 f rom&#13;
noon 'til 2 p.m. on the main concourse.&#13;
&#13;
Reminder to all basketball fans:&#13;
Parkside's first home game of the&#13;
season is on Dec. 4. Buy your&#13;
season passes today from any&#13;
cheerleader. Passes cost $10 for&#13;
students; $18 for adults.&#13;
Geology Club&#13;
"Introduction to Remote Sensing:&#13;
A Tool for the Earth&#13;
Sciences" will be a lecture by&#13;
Professor Ben Richason, of the&#13;
Geography Department at Carroll&#13;
College, will be presented by the&#13;
Geology Club on Friday, Nov. 20&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Grnq. 113.&#13;
Women's Concourse&#13;
Cindy Van Vreede, chair of the&#13;
Wisconsin National Organization&#13;
For Women Task Force on Media,&#13;
will speak on "Women and Cable&#13;
TV" on Thursday, Nov. 19 at 7&#13;
p.m. in Grnq. 101. The program is&#13;
sponsored by Parkside Women's&#13;
Concourse, Kenosha NOW and the&#13;
Women's Studies Minor Committee.&#13;
Van Vreede is a production&#13;
assistant and Associate&#13;
Producer for channel 10/36 and&#13;
assistant coordinator for&#13;
Milwaukee NOW.&#13;
Anthropology Club&#13;
The Anthropology Club will&#13;
sponsor a lecture by Dr. Henry&#13;
Dobyns and a film entitled "So&#13;
That Men Are Free" on Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 25 in Molinaro D-137.&#13;
Dr. Dobyns will be speaking on his&#13;
work with Cornell University&#13;
involving the actual "rental" of&#13;
lands and peoples in Vicos, Peru&#13;
between 1952 and 1957. This work&#13;
not only led to the revolution in the&#13;
feudal system of Vicos and Peru&#13;
itself, but also to a revolution in&#13;
the field of applied anthropology&#13;
— from policies of observation to&#13;
those of intervention.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
The Accounting Club will&#13;
sponsor the 3rd annual Managers&#13;
Dinner on Monday, Nov. 30. T he&#13;
event will begin with an "attitude&#13;
adjustment" period at 6 p.m. in&#13;
the Parkside Dining Hall, followed&#13;
by dinner at 7 p.m.&#13;
After dinner, Richard Schmidtlein,&#13;
Managing Partner of the&#13;
CPA firm Ernst and Whinney of&#13;
Milwaukee, will speak on "The&#13;
Making of a Professional."&#13;
One hundred business&#13;
executives from southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin and northern Illinois,&#13;
representing all fields of business&#13;
are expected to attend the event.&#13;
Tickets for the Managers&#13;
Tlinnor oi*o now *11&#13;
be sold by Jerry Zigner, John&#13;
Peterson, Darlene Bodi and the&#13;
Union Information Center until&#13;
Nov. 20. B usiness dress attire is&#13;
required and all business students&#13;
are encouraged to come and meet&#13;
future prospective employers.&#13;
IVCF&#13;
Inte r-Varsity Christi an&#13;
Fellowship will host a social on&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 25 in Union 106..&#13;
It will be an enjoyable time of&#13;
games, singing and sharing so all&#13;
students should feel welcome.&#13;
IVCF also hosts its booktable in&#13;
the bookstore alcove to discuss&#13;
issues pertinent to Christianity.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
The Executive Board of Women&#13;
In Business will meet on Friday,&#13;
Nov. 20 at 1 p.m. in the cafeteria.&#13;
The next general business&#13;
meeting of Women In Business&#13;
will be held on Dec. 7 at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Union 104.&#13;
All business club members are&#13;
invited by WIB to a tree - trimming&#13;
party at Barb Kingery's&#13;
(2008 Kinz ie, Racine) on Friday,&#13;
Dec. 4 at 8 p.m. All guests should&#13;
bring an ornament.&#13;
All WIB club members are&#13;
urged to buy tickets for the Accounting&#13;
Club's Managers Dinner&#13;
on Nov. 30. This is an opportunity&#13;
Guskin, Ratner visit Regents&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin and Vice Chancellor&#13;
Lorman Rather were invited to&#13;
open the UW System Board of&#13;
Regents meeting in Madison last&#13;
Thursday with a presentation on&#13;
the planning and process used by&#13;
Parkside to reallocate resources&#13;
to high priority areas during its&#13;
recent budget cutbacks.&#13;
The Regents also accepted more&#13;
than $24,000 in gifts and grants for&#13;
Parkside, including a grant of&#13;
$22,048 from the Governor's&#13;
Employment and Training Office&#13;
in support of a study directed by&#13;
Prof. Barbara Shade of effectiveness&#13;
of different teaching&#13;
techniques on the learning&#13;
responses of students from&#13;
several ethnic backgrounds. The&#13;
study will involve a group of ninth&#13;
grade students from the Racine&#13;
and Kenosha Unified School&#13;
Districts.&#13;
Other items included a grant of&#13;
$1,200 from the U.S. Department&#13;
of Education College Library&#13;
Resources Program; $453 for the&#13;
Very Special Arts Festival for&#13;
handicapped children to be held&#13;
next spring on campus; $150 for&#13;
the CHAMP Program for minority&#13;
high school students; $100 for the&#13;
Life Science Seminar Series; $100&#13;
for the Kenneth L. Greenquist&#13;
Scholarship Fund; and a gift of&#13;
hospital equipment for use in&#13;
nursing training laboratories.&#13;
College Skills Council named&#13;
MADISON — A 22 - member&#13;
advisory council concerned with&#13;
such fundamental skills as&#13;
reading and arithmetic at the&#13;
college level has been appointed&#13;
by UW S ystem President Robert&#13;
,M. O'Neil. The College Skills&#13;
Council includes some members&#13;
from the state's Department of&#13;
Public Instruction, the&#13;
Vocational, Technical and Adult&#13;
•N| A&#13;
A A&#13;
Vol 1 No 9&#13;
"Uphold&#13;
your&#13;
college&#13;
traditions"&#13;
Distributed by E. F. MADRIGRANO 1831 - 55th St. Kenosha, Wise. 658-3553&#13;
Strop's NEW ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
Education System, and independent&#13;
colleges.&#13;
Vice Chancellor Lorman Ratner&#13;
of Parkside will chair the new&#13;
council.&#13;
The creation of the College&#13;
Skills Council was recommended&#13;
by the 1980-81 Basic Skills Council&#13;
which urged the continuation of its&#13;
work but suggested changing the&#13;
name to College Skills Council to&#13;
reflect the group's full range of&#13;
concerns. The council recommended&#13;
that the new group be&#13;
formed by appointing a&#13;
representative from each of the&#13;
universities in the UW System,.&#13;
Extension and the Center System,&#13;
as well as the outside&#13;
organizations.&#13;
Suzuki violin&#13;
lessons offered&#13;
The University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Extension, UW - Parkside Suzuki&#13;
violin program is offering a 45&#13;
minute group lesson to young&#13;
people who study the Suzuki violin&#13;
music by memory.&#13;
The instructor will be Nancy&#13;
Ohnstad. It will be held on&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 21 at the Parkside&#13;
Union Theater.&#13;
The schedule is: 9:45 for&#13;
beginners throu gh Twinkle and&#13;
10:30 for Lightly Row through&#13;
Book II.&#13;
More advanced students are&#13;
welcome even though material&#13;
beyond Book II may not be&#13;
covered. For more information&#13;
and to pre - register call 634-1729&#13;
or 553-2312. T here is no fee. The&#13;
registration deadline is November&#13;
16.&#13;
THE&#13;
FARCES&#13;
AN EVENING&#13;
WITH&#13;
ANTON CHEKHOV&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C. &#13;
Rangers snap Minnesota jinx&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser |"»***——• —•— f&#13;
To cap off the most successful&#13;
season ever, the Parkside men's&#13;
soccer team vanquished a six year&#13;
plague by defeating Bethel&#13;
College of St. Paul, Minnesota in&#13;
the district championship game&#13;
by a 2-0 score last Thursday.&#13;
Parkside took an 11-8 record&#13;
into the game compared to&#13;
Bethel's impressive 15-1-3 mark&#13;
The Rangers scored both of their&#13;
goals in the first half, the first one&#13;
by Chiedo Okonmah with an assist&#13;
going to John Onyiego. The second&#13;
goal was scored by Ralph DeGraff&#13;
with an assist going to Scott&#13;
Gerhartz. Coach Hal Henderson&#13;
felt that the score could have been&#13;
5-0, pointing out that his team&#13;
missed a couple of easy shots.&#13;
Henderson thought that there&#13;
were four factors which could&#13;
have affected the outcome of the&#13;
contest. The first one was the&#13;
horrible condition of the field. "It&#13;
was a hard, dirt field, and we need&#13;
a soft field to be at our best." The&#13;
second factor was Bethel's style of&#13;
play. "We tend to play like our&#13;
opponents, and they played with&#13;
the ball in the air a lot, which isn't&#13;
our style."&#13;
"The last 20 minutes of the&#13;
game every call (by the refs) went&#13;
against us," said Henderson. "It&#13;
seemed like the refs were trying to&#13;
keep them in the game."&#13;
The fourth factor was the&#13;
defense of s enior John Onyiego in&#13;
keeping Bethel's star midfielder,&#13;
Bobby Clark, in check. All Henderson's&#13;
scouting reports said that&#13;
if the Rangers were to win they&#13;
had to keep Clark in check.&#13;
"Momo kept him out of the game.&#13;
That was an extreme factor in&#13;
shutting their offense down."&#13;
Henderson also had praise for his&#13;
team as a whole. "We played very&#13;
good defense as a team. We&#13;
weren't going to be denied."&#13;
The win over Bethel had added&#13;
significance to Henderson personally.&#13;
It was not only the&#13;
twelvth win for the Rangers as a&#13;
team, the most in Parkside&#13;
history, but it was also the 100th&#13;
win for Henderson in his 17 year&#13;
college coaching career.&#13;
The win over Bethel advanced&#13;
the Rangers to the NAIA Area 5&#13;
championship against four time&#13;
national champion Quincy&#13;
College. Quincy, with an impressive&#13;
15-3-1 record coming into&#13;
the game, was rated by Henderson&#13;
as "by far the best team&#13;
we've ever played."&#13;
The Ranger hopes of moving on&#13;
to the national tournament in&#13;
Springfield, Illinois were dashed&#13;
Photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
as Quincy overpowered Parkside&#13;
and took the contest by a 5-0 ta lly&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
Quincy, the number one&#13;
nationally rated team for the past&#13;
eight weeks, took control of the&#13;
game early with their first goal&#13;
just 38 seconds into the game.&#13;
Parkside trailed 2-0 at the end of&#13;
the first half and were badly&#13;
outshot by their opponents 16-2.&#13;
"We played about as well as we&#13;
can play, but we did make&#13;
mistakes, partly because of our&#13;
inexperience against this sort of&#13;
team and partly because of our&#13;
youth." The Rangers will only lose&#13;
one senior to graduation from this&#13;
years team, Onyiego.&#13;
The Rangers finished the season&#13;
with an admireable 12-9 record.&#13;
"It was a good year for us. We lost&#13;
five games by just one goal. Our&#13;
record could have easily have&#13;
been 16-5."&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Rangers place third in state&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
The Parkside women's&#13;
volleyball team ended its season&#13;
last weekend with a third place&#13;
finish at the WWIAC state tournament&#13;
held at Parkside. UWMilwaukee&#13;
won the tournament,&#13;
earning the right to advance to&#13;
regional playoffs.&#13;
The Rangers got off on the&#13;
wrong foot, losing to Marquette in&#13;
three games in their first match of&#13;
the tourney. Parkside beat the&#13;
Warriors in the first game of that&#13;
match by a 15-6 score, but&#13;
Marquette battled back to take the&#13;
final two decisive games by scores&#13;
of 12-15 and 7-15.&#13;
Carthage was the next Parkside&#13;
opponent, and this time the&#13;
Rangers came out on the winning&#13;
end, defeating Carthage in two&#13;
| Open Meetings&#13;
Collegiate Skills Implementation Sub -&#13;
committee (APC)&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 19&#13;
1 p.m., Grnq. 344A&#13;
Agenda: Reading Placement Test,&#13;
Regional Testing, December meeting&#13;
with high school English and&#13;
mathematics teachers and counselors&#13;
on "Expectations," extended student&#13;
survey, reviewers for CSP review, L.&#13;
Comerford's memorandum.&#13;
Social Science Division Executive&#13;
Committee&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 19&#13;
3 p.m., Moln..367A&#13;
Agenda: Personnel matter — a&#13;
motion will be made to convene in&#13;
closed session under Wisconsin&#13;
statutes 19.85 (1) (b) and (c).&#13;
Academic Actions&#13;
Friday, Nov. 20&#13;
Agenda: Student requests — c losed&#13;
under Wisconsin statute 19.85 (1) (f).&#13;
Behavorlal Science Division&#13;
Faculty Meeting&#13;
Friday, Nov. 20&#13;
2:30 p.m., Moln. 324&#13;
Agenda: Meeting with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin and Vice Chancellor Ratner.&#13;
UW-P Faculty Senate&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 1&#13;
3-30 p.m., Moln. D107&#13;
Agenda items due last Tuesday.&#13;
Academic Policies Committee&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 24&#13;
1 P.m., Grnq. 318A&#13;
Agenda: Review catalogue copy for&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge, other items.&#13;
games, 15-9 and 17-15, eliminating&#13;
the lady Redmen from the tournament.&#13;
&#13;
Parkside had a little tougher&#13;
time defeating Carroll College in&#13;
their next match, being down 10-4&#13;
in the first game, but coming back&#13;
to take the game by a 18-16 score.&#13;
The second game was just the&#13;
opposite as the Rangers jumped&#13;
out to a quick 10-1 lead only to see&#13;
Carroll fight back before Parkside&#13;
eliminated Carroll, winning the&#13;
game 15-10, and the match.&#13;
A rematch with Marquette&#13;
proved to be the undoing of the&#13;
Rangers as far as any hopes of&#13;
advancing in this years tournament&#13;
were concerned.&#13;
Marquette handily defeated the&#13;
Rangers in two quick games, 15-4&#13;
and 15-7, eliminating Parkside&#13;
from the double elimination&#13;
tournament.&#13;
The Rangers finished the season&#13;
with a disappointing 17-28 record,&#13;
the worst ever at Parkside. The&#13;
Rangers have no graduating&#13;
seniors and coach Linda Henderson&#13;
is looking forward to a&#13;
more experienced team next year.&#13;
Sophomore Lauri Hess was&#13;
voted the teams Most Valuable&#13;
Player by her teammates this&#13;
year, while Lauri Pope and Sherry&#13;
Festge were voted to the all -&#13;
conference team.&#13;
GIFTS&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
JEWELRY&#13;
RAIMBOW&#13;
uptown&#13;
kenosha&#13;
6224 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
(414) 657 4384&#13;
RECORDS &amp; TAPES&#13;
Uwtst Pric* In Town&#13;
*898 List Soils lor&#13;
$73 1&#13;
pus&#13;
40~ OFP WITH TMS~ COUPON&#13;
for Hm purchasf of&#13;
ALBUM OR TARE&#13;
1 Coupon per Album or Tape Good thru Dec. 10th, 1981&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of beer? All you have to do is fill&#13;
out this form and pick the correct winners. Put a check mark by&#13;
your picks and bring the form down to the Ranger office, WLLC&#13;
D139.&#13;
Denver at Cincinnati&#13;
Detroit at Chicago&#13;
Green Bay at Tampa Bay&#13;
Miami at N.Y. Jets&#13;
New England at Buffalo -&#13;
New Orleans at Houston&#13;
N.Y. Giants at Philadelphia&#13;
Pittsburgh at Cleveland&#13;
St. Louis at Baltimore&#13;
San Diego at Oakland&#13;
San Francisco at Los Angeles&#13;
Seattle at Kansas City&#13;
Washington at Dallas&#13;
Last week's winner was Kris Schaefer with 9 correct, 38 total&#13;
combined points.&#13;
Tie Breaker: will be the total combined points in the&#13;
Green Bay - Tampa Bay game.&#13;
Name&#13;
S.S. No.&#13;
Rules:&#13;
1. One entry per person.&#13;
2. Entrants must be Parkside students.&#13;
3. Ranger staff, general members and their families are&#13;
ineligible.&#13;
4. Entry must be clipped from Ranger issue.&#13;
5. Entries must be turned in to the Ranger office by noon of the&#13;
Friday preceeding the games.&#13;
6. Winners will be chosen by the Sports Editor.&#13;
7. Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks&#13;
8. Entries must be legible to be considered.&#13;
jil&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
m&#13;
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8 Thursday, November 19,1981 RANGER&#13;
Inside UW-P Sports&#13;
Pick-up basketball becomes habit&#13;
by Greg Bonofiglio&#13;
Dennis Skrzypchak takes the&#13;
inbounds pass, fakes right and&#13;
dribbles to the left, stops and puts&#13;
up an eighteen footer from the&#13;
baseline. The shot rolls off and&#13;
there's a battle for the rebound.&#13;
Pat McDonald picks up the loose&#13;
ball and fires it down court to Jim&#13;
Allegretto cheating on the break.&#13;
Allegretto drives the lane and lays&#13;
it in for the final basket of the&#13;
game.&#13;
Now who in the hell is Skrzypchak,&#13;
McDonald or Allegretto?&#13;
Don't feel too bad if you don't&#13;
recognize these names. Few&#13;
people do. They don't play for any&#13;
professional basketball team nor&#13;
do they play for the Rangers.&#13;
These players take part in a&#13;
unique league of sorts in the P.E.&#13;
building. The name of t he game is&#13;
pick-up basketball and for a&#13;
handful of players, it's a weekly&#13;
tradition.&#13;
There is no formal set of rules&#13;
governing this "league." All that&#13;
exists is a mutual understanding&#13;
to meet in the gym every Monday,&#13;
Wednesday, and Friday around&#13;
noon. As soon as there are ten&#13;
players, a game begins. Often as&#13;
many as thirty players will show&#13;
up for these games. Last Friday,&#13;
about twenty - five players were&#13;
on hand, a good number of which&#13;
are regulars. Some of the more&#13;
hard core members of this group&#13;
include:&#13;
Walt Nassauer, Jon Cuccio,&#13;
Andy Karls, Dick Sykes, Dennis&#13;
Skrzypchak, Jim Allegretto,&#13;
Kevin Stein, Pat McDonald, Kevin&#13;
Stein, Jeff Dahl, Mike Plemon (an&#13;
assistant football coach at&#13;
Kenosha Tremper), Walt Graf fin&#13;
(Associate Professor of English at&#13;
UW-P), Ron Jalkes, and Gene&#13;
Biatto.&#13;
"Pro" nicknames are better&#13;
known than some of the player's&#13;
real names. There's "Stretch,"&#13;
"All World," "Golden Boy" and&#13;
"The Vet" just to name a few.&#13;
Briefly, here's how the games&#13;
start up. After sides are picked&#13;
and a few rules quickly agreed&#13;
upon, the game begins with one&#13;
side taking the ball out. Quickly&#13;
each player picks the player he'll&#13;
cover throughout the game.&#13;
Scoring goes by ones to fifteen.&#13;
Each game is tb eleven if there&#13;
are other teams waiting for one of&#13;
the two courts to open up. If your&#13;
team wins, you keep the court.&#13;
The ball is taken out between&#13;
mid-court and the top of the key on&#13;
a foul or an out of bounds play.&#13;
After a basket, the ball is taken&#13;
out behind the endline. With&#13;
players calling their own fouls, the&#13;
games are generally clean.&#13;
Some of the players in this&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
group play for various city league&#13;
teams in Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
Some do not. You don't have to be&#13;
a great player to get on one of&#13;
these teams. I was proof of that on&#13;
Friday. My high point came when&#13;
I set up a devastating pick which&#13;
completely wiped out a player.&#13;
Unfortunately, he was on my&#13;
team. But if basketball is your&#13;
game, I'm sure there are enough&#13;
players out there who'll be more&#13;
than happy to accomodate you.&#13;
Although the only ones who&#13;
watch these games are the&#13;
players themselves, these "pickup"&#13;
games don't go completely&#13;
unnoticed either. Parkside&#13;
basketball coach Steve Stephens&#13;
was impressed enough with what&#13;
he saw in one player, Walt&#13;
Nassauer, that he asked him to try&#13;
out for the team.&#13;
Most players say they come out&#13;
to the gym to stay in shape, take&#13;
advantage of the free gym, and&#13;
just to play ball.&#13;
In an era of player strikes,&#13;
holdouts, free agentry, and offer&#13;
sheets, it's always refreshing if&#13;
not reassuring to find a sport&#13;
whose participants still play for&#13;
the sake of simply enjoying the&#13;
game.&#13;
Photo by Steve Myers&#13;
PICKUP BASKETBALL in Parkside's gym attracts students,&#13;
staff and faculty.&#13;
SERVICES OFFERED&#13;
FORMER TEACHER with two masters&#13;
degrees will edit, critique and type term&#13;
papers for $2 per page. Will not write term&#13;
paper for you. Consultant only. 632-9798.&#13;
FRENCH, GERMAN, SPANISH LESSONS.&#13;
Price open. Caroline 886-4206.&#13;
TYPING. Resumes, termpapers, theses,&#13;
manuscripts, etc. 14 years of experience.&#13;
Reasonable rates. 694-1825 or 652-6599.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
TWO YOUNG MEN (25 and 30), with exceptional&#13;
taste and qualities looking for&#13;
female companionship with someone who&#13;
appreciates the finer things in life, and who&#13;
respects themselves, others and natural&#13;
beauty. Address correspondence to: Ron&#13;
(25) or Bob (30) P. O. Box 167, Winthrop&#13;
Harbor, II. 60096-0167.&#13;
SAY GUYS! Afraid of women? I may have&#13;
iust the alternative you're looking for.&#13;
"Beastiality and Me" (or, how to teach old&#13;
dogs new tricks) Interested? Call Jeff&#13;
Schoor.&#13;
MEN: Do you enioy wearing womens' underwear?&#13;
I have what you're looking for:&#13;
panties, garters, low cut bras . . . sorry&#13;
girls, men's sizes only. If interested call&#13;
Markie Kleine.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
PIONEER AMPLIFIER AND TUNER,&#13;
Sanyo cassette deck (Dolby), synergistics&#13;
speakers. Must sell for out - of - state&#13;
tuition. 632-5365.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
HOUSE FOR RENT. 2 bedroom, 2 story in&#13;
Kenosha area. Call Lori, 552-9372, for&#13;
details. Available Dec. 1.&#13;
t h t h e exciting taste&#13;
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and jazz, an&#13;
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SEAGRAM DISTILLERS CO.. N.Y.C. AMERICAN W HISKEY-A BLEND. 80 PR OOF SEVEN U P ANCTVUP' AR E TRADEMARKS OF THE SEVEN U P COMPANVCX </text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 10, issue 11, November 19, 1981</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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