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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 11, issue 13</text>
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            <text>PSGA budget falls short</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>IjjT University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, December 2, 1982 Vol. 11 - No. 13&#13;
PSGA budget falls short&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association is presently&#13;
looking at measures to trim its&#13;
1982-83 budget. At the end of&#13;
October, PSGA had about $1,600&#13;
left out of $5,500 b udgeted for the&#13;
entire year.&#13;
Although concern over student&#13;
government expenditures was&#13;
expressed at earlier meetings, the&#13;
full impact of the problem did not&#13;
become apparent until it was&#13;
discovered, at the Nov. 10 senate&#13;
meeting, that the funding for the&#13;
trip to the November United&#13;
Council meeting in River Falls&#13;
would consume nearly one third of&#13;
PSGA's remaining funds.&#13;
The two areas where most of the&#13;
overspending occurred were in&#13;
the travel budget and the&#13;
secretary's salary. In the&#13;
secretary's salary, several&#13;
reasons were given by PSGA&#13;
members to the causes behind the&#13;
shortfall.&#13;
First, there were two&#13;
secretaries employed over the&#13;
summer, in order to train this&#13;
year's secretary. Also, the two&#13;
secretaries were not under work&#13;
study at the time, forcing the&#13;
student government to pay them&#13;
at more than work study rates, as&#13;
had been budgeted.&#13;
At the end of October, total&#13;
spending for a PSGA secretary&#13;
was $709.45, 40 percent over the&#13;
$500 o riginally budgeted.&#13;
Travel is the second largest&#13;
area for the overspending. Out of&#13;
the $1,200 budgeted for the travel&#13;
this year to United Council&#13;
meetings, PSGA is already over&#13;
that in the meetings travelled to&#13;
between July to October, excluding&#13;
the September UC&#13;
meeting, which was held at&#13;
Parkside. The overspending in the&#13;
Travel budget also has two&#13;
causes. First, when the budget&#13;
was drawn up last year, it made a&#13;
provision for only four delegates&#13;
to be sent to each meeting, and the&#13;
student government has been&#13;
making a practice of sending a&#13;
standard six - member delegation.&#13;
Also, the June UC trip was funded&#13;
from this year's budget because of&#13;
a shortfall in the 1981-82 budget.&#13;
Katherine Brady&#13;
Speaks here to help&#13;
A nationally - known author and&#13;
lecturer on incest, child abuse and&#13;
rape, Katherine Brady, will speak&#13;
at the Union Cinema at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 8.&#13;
Before hardcover publication of&#13;
her book "Father's Days," Brady&#13;
joined the New York Women&#13;
Against Rape organization as a&#13;
victim and eventually became a&#13;
consultant and counselor for incest&#13;
victims, receiving referrals&#13;
from the St. Vincent's Hospital&#13;
Department of Social Work in&#13;
New York.&#13;
She also has been instrumental&#13;
in foudning of the Katherine&#13;
Brady Foundation, a non - profit&#13;
organization for the support of&#13;
incest victims.&#13;
A single parent of two daughters&#13;
who often accompany her on the&#13;
lecture circuit, Brady also works&#13;
as a real estate agent and is&#13;
writing a novel.&#13;
Admission for her talk is $2.50&#13;
($2 for UW-P students) and tickets&#13;
are available at the Campus&#13;
Union Information Center and at&#13;
the door.&#13;
Board of Regents&#13;
labeled "junkies"&#13;
(Madison) — The United&#13;
Council of University of Wisconsin&#13;
Student Governments announced&#13;
today that it has begun to&#13;
organized a massive lobbying&#13;
effort to reduce tuition. The&#13;
University's recently passed&#13;
biennial budget request has set&#13;
undergraduate tuition at 27% of&#13;
the cost of instruction, although&#13;
traditionally the level had been set&#13;
at 25%.&#13;
"The Regents have become&#13;
tuition junkies," Curt Pawlisch,&#13;
Legislative Affairs Director for&#13;
United Council, said recently.&#13;
"For the last two years, through&#13;
surcharges, tuition has been&#13;
substantially above the 25% level&#13;
and the University administration&#13;
and Regents have become addicted&#13;
to that money."&#13;
Tuition under the University's&#13;
budget request will be increased&#13;
about $50 f or 1983-84 with an additional&#13;
$30 increase for 1984-85.&#13;
The Board of Regents approved&#13;
the tuition fee policy earlier this&#13;
month and the entire budget&#13;
request is now under review by&#13;
Governor - elect Earl and the&#13;
Department of Administration.&#13;
"Someone has to cure the&#13;
Regents of their addiction for&#13;
ir own good and for the good of&#13;
the students in Wisconsin,"&#13;
Pawlisch continued. "We are&#13;
asking Tony Earl to put the&#13;
.University through cold turkey —&#13;
it will be rough on the junkies, but&#13;
it will be rougher still on the&#13;
students if he does not come&#13;
through for us."&#13;
The University is requesting&#13;
$65.7 million above its current&#13;
base for 1983-85. A major portion&#13;
of this request is for line - item&#13;
spending devoted to enhance the&#13;
economy of the state of Wisconsin.&#13;
"It would seem only fair that the&#13;
state use tax money at its&#13;
traditional level of 75% s ince this&#13;
request aims to improve the lives&#13;
of all our state's citizens, not just&#13;
the lives of the students,"&#13;
Pawlisch declared.&#13;
During the course of the&#13;
gubernatorial campaign, Tony&#13;
Earl had declared his opposition&#13;
to raising tuition above the 25%&#13;
level.*&#13;
The November meeting at River&#13;
Falls was privately funded by&#13;
members of the delegation.&#13;
In other areas, PSGA has not&#13;
yet depleted their budget, but will&#13;
probably do so before the year is&#13;
out. The duplicating budget was,&#13;
at the end of October, left with&#13;
$166 out of the $300 originally&#13;
budgeted.&#13;
The three areas that the student&#13;
government is looking to fill the&#13;
deficit is from the Committee,&#13;
Miscellaneous and Personal&#13;
accounts. From the Committee&#13;
and Miscellaneous accounts, this&#13;
would contribute $583 to the more&#13;
needy areas.&#13;
Even if the senate comes up&#13;
with a viable plan to transfer the&#13;
funds, SUFAC must then approve&#13;
the transfer. They have not done&#13;
so yet. At last week's senate&#13;
meeting, the proposal was passed&#13;
by the senate and sent to&#13;
President Jim Krueser for approval.&#13;
Krueser is expected to&#13;
veto the plan because of its use of&#13;
personal funds, which came from&#13;
prize money won in last year's&#13;
Winter Carnival. Krueser and&#13;
Vice President Chuck Betz are&#13;
working on an alternate proposal&#13;
in cooperation with several&#13;
senators.&#13;
The Senate does not expect the&#13;
budget transfers to pass easily in&#13;
SUFAC. Most senators are expecting&#13;
a close vote. "They want&#13;
us to know that it's not that easy to&#13;
do that," said one.&#13;
REGISTRATION LINES were long in the mornings but thinned&#13;
out quite a bit by early evening. As of 3 p. m. Tuesday 2,461&#13;
students had made it through the lines.&#13;
Craft Fair this weekend&#13;
The opinion SUFAC is taking is&#13;
that PSGA was underbudgeted for&#13;
this year. They are waiting for the&#13;
student government to get its&#13;
proposal before venturing any&#13;
opinion on the feasibility of approving&#13;
the transfers. In addition,&#13;
they have tentatively requested&#13;
additional funding from the administration.&#13;
Chancellor Guskin&#13;
reportedly had mixed feelings&#13;
about allocating additional funds.&#13;
The eighth annual Holiday Arts&#13;
and Crafts Fair at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside will be&#13;
held on Saturday, Dec. 4, from 10&#13;
a.m. to 4 p.m. when the 1,000 - foot&#13;
long concourse stretching from&#13;
the Union to Main Place will be&#13;
lined with more than 200 artists&#13;
and craftsmen and their wares.&#13;
There is no admission charge&#13;
and free parking is available.&#13;
Exhibitors from throughout&#13;
Wisconsin and the Chicago area&#13;
will display such items as jewelry,&#13;
pottery, needlework, holiday&#13;
decorations, woodworking and&#13;
painting and a wide variety of&#13;
craft items.&#13;
Live entertainment will be a&#13;
feature of the fair and movies will&#13;
be provided for children attending.&#13;
Food service will be&#13;
available in Union Square and in&#13;
the Coffee Shop in Main Place.&#13;
The event is sponsored by the&#13;
performing arts and lectures&#13;
committee of PAB.&#13;
PSGA placard discovered&#13;
during Thanksgiving move&#13;
Let this placard be representitive of the government itself.&#13;
Move it from this spot only when doing so will benifit the students.&#13;
~?c&#13;
WHEN PSGA made their move into SOC's old office last Friday they discovered this note attached&#13;
to the back of the plaque on their door. The writer, Robert Foght, was the Senate's&#13;
President Pro Tempore during the spring 1976 semester. PSGA moved from D139F to D139A over&#13;
the Thanksgiving vacation.&#13;
ivegi&#13;
theii&#13;
•Note: During the campaign,&#13;
the United Council sent Mr. Earl a&#13;
questionnaire which asked the&#13;
following:&#13;
"Currently, tuition is set at 25%&#13;
of the cost of instruction. Would&#13;
you favor raising this percentage?"&#13;
Earl: "No."&#13;
Inside . . .&#13;
• Maynard Ferguson • 48 Hours&#13;
• Sports Commentary • New Music &#13;
2 Thursday, December 2,1982 RAN GER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
To be a teacher&#13;
By this time, everyone has surely heard that Peter Seybold, a&#13;
sociology professor here at Parkside, has little chance of contract&#13;
renewal after his present contract runs out at the end of the 1983-84&#13;
school year. A great many students have stood up in support of Seybold,&#13;
pointing out that he is an outstanding teacher. However, University&#13;
policy seems to claim that Seybold hasn't done an adequate amount of&#13;
research, and therefore will lose his current position.&#13;
Faculty retainment policy depends on three elements: teaching, the&#13;
ability to do so; some sort of creative activity, considered research; and&#13;
community service. In the past, it has been pointed out that teaching is&#13;
the most important element on the list, however, it doesn't seem to&#13;
carry more weight. Even if a teacher is excellent, he can be lost.&#13;
When a professor is considered for renewal, the decision is made by a&#13;
committee of h is peers. In this case, the committee consists of tenured&#13;
faculty from Behavioral Science, which includes sociology, psychology,&#13;
and anthropology. The executive committee of Behavioral Science&#13;
found Seybold's research lacking, and denied his renewal by a 5-2-1&#13;
vote.&#13;
Is Parkside losing another good teacher just because his research&#13;
didn't seem adequate to a committee of already tenured professors?&#13;
The policy is vague. It doesn't state how much reserach is enough&#13;
research. It doesn't say how many articles or books a professor needs to&#13;
publish before he:will be granted a contract renewal. It doesn't say what&#13;
kind of research. It's all in the interpretation of the policy. It's rarely the&#13;
same.&#13;
It does indeed appear as if the Parkside students will lose another&#13;
excellent resource because someone feels that his research has not&#13;
made the grade. It can't be argued that research is unimportant. It is&#13;
important, but good teaching to the students who pay the tuition is more&#13;
important. It has to come first. As tuition payers, that is what the&#13;
students are entitled to isn't it???&#13;
I SUPPOSE WE HAVE TO GET USED&#13;
TO ^DOUBLETHINK" ONE OF THES E&#13;
BASING MODE FOR W ^S!LLK^ENT^A6ALNSTYOUKS^WOULD^&#13;
MISSILE, CORRECTJLTIND HE WANTS US A CREATE SU PER-HOT RADIOACTIVE DE BRIS&#13;
I RT^UTWEEPER;J WWCH S^PREVENT^ER MMS?&#13;
THE PRESIDENT HAS&#13;
OUT IN F AVOR O F TH E 'DE NSEPACK&#13;
BASING MODE FOR THE MX&#13;
/^ INCLUDING O UR OWN NIXs? WHAT&#13;
/GOOD IS THE N IX IF THE R USSIANS&#13;
MAINTAINING A F IELD O F DE BRIS&#13;
THE DENSEPACK, C AN K EEP&#13;
lUS FROM LAUNCHING THEM?&#13;
THAT'S W HERE OUR NEW&#13;
$100 BILLION "CHRISTIAN L OVE"&#13;
'• M ISSILE SYSTEM C OMES I N&#13;
To the ed itor:&#13;
Editor's no tes&#13;
Christmas shopping starts&#13;
A Funny Thing Happened&#13;
On My Way To Oblivion&#13;
A birdie with a yellow bill&#13;
landed on my windowsill.&#13;
He sang a song, a sad lament&#13;
of war, discord and discontent.&#13;
He sang of how a dynasty&#13;
imposed its' will on humanity.&#13;
"In the name of peace" its' banner cried&#13;
while its' bombers plied mass genocide.&#13;
"The irony of it," he'd contend,&#13;
"is no one sees we're near the end."&#13;
He fluffed his wings, and sang some more;&#13;
"When will mankind stop these wars?"&#13;
"Look at nature," the birdie cried&#13;
"no one race thrives while others die."&#13;
But now he cried, with empathy,&#13;
"All the world has apathy.&#13;
"No one sees the contradiction -&#13;
"To kill for peace should be fiction."&#13;
This bird was starting to make sense&#13;
I thought my generals must be dense.&#13;
You see, I am an Air Force boy&#13;
not paid to think - just deploy.&#13;
But if I think, my days are done.&#13;
Why make waves; I'm only one.&#13;
So I tricked him with a piece of bread&#13;
and I bashed his thinking head.&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
Thanksgiving was great fun.&#13;
Believe it or not, my brother's&#13;
room was clean, the turkey turned&#13;
out beautifully, and having fun&#13;
wasn't really a chore. The&#13;
vacation came at the right time. I&#13;
could have used about two more&#13;
days, but what was there was&#13;
nice.&#13;
Friday was the big shopping day&#13;
of the year. In Chicago they&#13;
estimated that 1000 people&#13;
covered the downtown area at one&#13;
time. That's a lot of people. That&#13;
also makes me wonder why I was&#13;
dumb enough to go shopping with&#13;
the other eight trillion. The stores&#13;
were certainly packed. Buying&#13;
gifts was like moving through a&#13;
battle zone. In one of the toy stores&#13;
I entered, numerous small fights&#13;
broke out between the customers.&#13;
It would be easy to solve the&#13;
problems if it were a clerk and a&#13;
customer. Eventually the&#13;
manager would come out and say&#13;
"the customer is always right"&#13;
right? In this case, two customers&#13;
were fighting over the last electronic&#13;
Space Invaders game. The&#13;
poor clerk tried as long as he could&#13;
to ignore them, but the arguing&#13;
got quite unruly. By the time the&#13;
clerk stepped in, what was really&#13;
needed was the United Nations.&#13;
The clerk said he'd get the&#13;
manager. When the manager&#13;
finally got there, he told the two&#13;
people that if they could not make&#13;
a decision on their own, he would&#13;
be forced to take the game away&#13;
from both of them. I couldn't&#13;
believe it. Grownups are funny&#13;
people.&#13;
The final outcome was one&#13;
customer leaving the store in a&#13;
wave of anger, and the other&#13;
customer buying a different&#13;
electronic game. Some sort of&#13;
football. After all that, the clerk&#13;
still stood with one final Space&#13;
Invaders video game. Like I said;&#13;
poor clerk.&#13;
The second most noticeable&#13;
incident took place in a large&#13;
department store. There were a&#13;
large number of people standing&#13;
in line to get gift boxes, when one&#13;
lady said to the lady right in front&#13;
of her that she had taken undeserved&#13;
cuts in the line. They&#13;
began to argue quite loudly, and I&#13;
heard one little girl ask her&#13;
mother why the principal wasn't&#13;
putting a stop to all of this&#13;
fighting. These ladies held me up&#13;
for ten minutes and then stood and&#13;
argued for another ten. I couldn't&#13;
resist watching. One woman was&#13;
about to slap the first woman,&#13;
when the husbands approached&#13;
from different directions and took&#13;
their wives hurriedly away.&#13;
Another unbelievable episode.&#13;
One of the more amusing&#13;
episodes was a young boy standing&#13;
in line to have his picture&#13;
taken with Santa Claus. Apparantly&#13;
he and his father had&#13;
been to a lot of shopping malls that&#13;
featured Santa on the day after&#13;
Thanksgiving. The young boy&#13;
looked up at his father, and back&#13;
toward Santa a number of times.&#13;
Finally, he grabbed his father's&#13;
trouser leg and shouted, "Daddy,&#13;
how did Santa get from&#13;
Milwaukee to here, almost faster&#13;
than we did???" A stumbling&#13;
father looked back at his son and&#13;
replied, "Well Jacob, why don't&#13;
you wait until you sit on Santa's&#13;
lap, and ask him how he got here&#13;
so fast." Smart Dad.&#13;
Burned up Bambi bites back&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Although I applaud last week's&#13;
well - written attempt at&#13;
discrediting Burned Up, as its&#13;
author, I feel some points must be&#13;
made:&#13;
Burned Up is a FEATURE item.&#13;
Had said essay been considered a&#13;
news article, one can bet his last&#13;
buck it would have been written as&#13;
such. There was nothing mentioned&#13;
in the rebuttal of which this&#13;
writer was not aware.&#13;
Of course the deer population&#13;
has increased! To quote&#13;
paragraph three of the "Bambi"&#13;
essay, "when faced with&#13;
elimination of natural predators,&#13;
shrinking living areas, and&#13;
limited food supplies, what do&#13;
(deer) do but propagate their&#13;
species?"&#13;
Of course hunters contribute&#13;
large amounts of money to state&#13;
wildlife management funds —&#13;
they HAVE NO CHOICE but to&#13;
contribute, since those contributions&#13;
constitute part of the&#13;
cost of the hunting license itself!&#13;
Don't make it sound as through&#13;
it's done through the goodness of&#13;
their hearts.&#13;
Of course I feel that there is&#13;
much profit to be made from&#13;
hunting. Many hotels, motels,&#13;
restaurants, bars, gun shops,&#13;
camping stores, and other stores&#13;
which sell hunting clothing or&#13;
Appreciation expressed&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Often when people go to an&#13;
event on campus, there is no&#13;
realization of how much time and&#13;
effort goes into the production.&#13;
Lots of congratulations and&#13;
appreciation should be given to&#13;
the members of the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board, who put together&#13;
the Maynard Ferguson concert on&#13;
Nov. 28. The students set up the&#13;
night before, worked the whole&#13;
day of the concert as well as tore&#13;
down the set up and had the gym&#13;
ready for classes on Monday.&#13;
Jim Reeves, who headed up the&#13;
committee, should be commended&#13;
for his efforts. There are many&#13;
others who were involved and too&#13;
numerous to mention. Their enthusiasm&#13;
and long hours are&#13;
appreciated.&#13;
Thanks Again Everyone!!!&#13;
Marilyn Bugenhagen&#13;
Assistant Coordinator&#13;
Student Activities&#13;
supplies depend heavily upon the&#13;
hunting season!&#13;
$ the author of the reply sincerely&#13;
believes that money is NOT&#13;
a controlling factor in many of&#13;
man's actions, he or she is in for a&#13;
very rude awakening.&#13;
As often happens with inexperienced&#13;
readers of satire, the&#13;
inflamed respondent completely&#13;
failed to notice several subtle&#13;
messages. Deer hunting was&#13;
merely used as a timely vehicle to&#13;
convey the following:&#13;
Hunting is but another example&#13;
of how, when faced with a&#13;
problem, man's answer is violent.&#13;
Killing is killing. Don't call it a&#13;
sport.&#13;
While many hunters receive&#13;
immediate reinforcement for&#13;
their spoils, it took the U.S. nearly&#13;
a decade to recognize and honor&#13;
Vietnam war veterans,&#13;
p. Mankind, supposedly the most&#13;
intelligent creature on earth, is&#13;
also the only one ever responsible&#13;
for the total demise of another&#13;
animal or plant species.&#13;
Sometimes it pays to read&#13;
between the lines before one gets&#13;
offended. B&#13;
. Carol Burns&#13;
Dec. 9th is the last issue of&#13;
Ranger this semester. Please&#13;
get any notices in by 9 a. m.,&#13;
Monday, Dec. 6.&#13;
Thank you, Parkside&#13;
Campus Store collected four&#13;
bushels of food and $43.00 cash in&#13;
the Thanksgiving Food Collection.&#13;
We wish to express our appreciation&#13;
to all who participated.&#13;
Nancy Schroeder&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Norm Couture&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
ganger News&#13;
Feature&#13;
Sports&#13;
Photo&#13;
Copy&#13;
Business Mi&#13;
Jolene Torkiisen Distribution M&#13;
Assistant Business M&#13;
PatHcia CumhBuenker&#13;
: Phillips, Carol&#13;
KovaNc RirT . ' ^'&#13;
CS&#13;
ael Kailas&#13;
' Caro1 Kortendici&#13;
Tunkiekz ' R°&#13;
bb Luehr&#13;
' Laura Petersen,&#13;
SiH/Ssf rf&#13;
1uw • p,rks&#13;
'&#13;
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RANGER is printed by the Union academic vear except during breaks an&lt;&#13;
Written permission is required for r?n .&#13;
Ve Publishin&#13;
9 Co., Kenosha, Wiscoi&#13;
All correspondence sh^la t^JSrtr2^\&#13;
0f any por,ion of RANGER,&#13;
i f L ' Box No&#13;
- 2000, Kenosha uf- Parkside Ranger, University of&#13;
Letters to the EditoVW 11 hf f ^'Sconsin, 53141.&#13;
°&#13;
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ceb on stai&#13;
c uded for verification le1,ers musf ba signed and a telephone n&#13;
reserves all editorial pTivMeoes^in ,or Publication on Thursday. The&#13;
defamatory content. " re&lt;u&#13;
sing to print letters which conlaii &#13;
Thursday, December 2,1982&#13;
Teamwork is the name&#13;
of the game at Ranger&#13;
by Jeanne&#13;
Buenker - Phillips&#13;
According to Ranger's News&#13;
Editor Bob Riesling, "The Ranger&#13;
is the only major organization&#13;
whose mission it is to put out a&#13;
tangible product every week,"&#13;
Pat Hensiak, Ranger editor,&#13;
believes that this ongoing consistency&#13;
is the paper's best point.&#13;
Hensiak said, "This&#13;
organization definitely works as a&#13;
whole. This is the only way that it&#13;
would function as well as it does."&#13;
Pat went on to emphasize the&#13;
team work and said that,&#13;
"Everyone seems to find a way to&#13;
fit into the team structure and it&#13;
works out quite well." Pat is&#13;
pleased with this because, "It's&#13;
not always easy to make decisions&#13;
alone, and so, it's great to have a&#13;
team to help you out. Everyone&#13;
helps."&#13;
Hensiak takes care of laying out&#13;
the first and second pages of e ach&#13;
edition of the Ranger. In addition&#13;
to this, she edits everything that&#13;
goes into each edition and consequently,&#13;
can be held solely&#13;
responsible for anything that may&#13;
be slanderous or misquoted. This&#13;
is a big responsibility and Pat said&#13;
that she "has to trust the people&#13;
who work for the Ranger in order&#13;
to do her job successfully." She&#13;
added that with the present staff,&#13;
she has no qualms about doing so.&#13;
"Without the trust present, there&#13;
wouldn't be a very good paper."&#13;
Riesling is responsible for&#13;
handling all the big news events&#13;
on campus. In his words:&#13;
"Basically I cover what's going on&#13;
with students, staff, and administration&#13;
as well as other&#13;
items directly affecting&#13;
Parkside." Bob has a few staff&#13;
writers writing for him which&#13;
helps him to fill pages three and&#13;
four in an eight page edition and&#13;
pages three, four and five in a&#13;
twelve page edition.&#13;
In addition to News, there are&#13;
three other departments on the&#13;
editorial staff: Feature, Sports,&#13;
and Photo. Tony Rogers is the&#13;
Feature Editor. His job is to edit&#13;
his writer's stories and make sure&#13;
that they are in on time. Hensiak&#13;
believes that, "he is doing a fine&#13;
job and has done an excellent job&#13;
in recruiting people for staff."&#13;
The Sports Editor, Tori Murray,&#13;
didn't join the Ranger until the&#13;
fifth week of the semester and had&#13;
no trouble fitting into the 'Ranger&#13;
team.' Pat feels that, "Ranger is&#13;
quite fortunate that Tori picked up&#13;
on us." She added, "the fine thing&#13;
about Tori is that she enjoys&#13;
sports. This makes her job a little&#13;
easier."&#13;
Masood Shafig, the Photo&#13;
Editor, takes care of editing all&#13;
the photographs that are printed&#13;
in the Ranger. Pat stated that,&#13;
"Masood does a good job as Photo&#13;
Editor. He likes things to be&#13;
perfect. His pictures usually are."&#13;
In addition to these departments&#13;
are the jobs of Copy Editor,&#13;
Business Manager, Ad Manager,&#13;
Distribution Manager, and&#13;
Assistant Business Manager.&#13;
Norm Couture, the Copy Editor,&#13;
has an eye for error. He usually&#13;
picks up the mistakes right away,&#13;
according to Hensiak. Basically&#13;
he is in charge of proof - reading&#13;
the entire paper and of correcting&#13;
grammatical errors. "His work&#13;
can be very tedious. Somehow he&#13;
pulls through every week just&#13;
fine," added Pat.&#13;
Andy Buchanan, Business&#13;
Manager, along with the Assistant&#13;
Business Manager, Jolene&#13;
Torkilsen, take care of the&#13;
business end of the paper. Pat is&#13;
very pleased and said that she,&#13;
"has never known the business -&#13;
end of th e paper to run smoother.&#13;
Both Andy and Jo seem very&#13;
business - minded. They work well&#13;
together and with the rest of the&#13;
staff."&#13;
Mike Farrell, Ad Manager, is&#13;
responsible for advertising. Jeff&#13;
Wicks takes care of distributing&#13;
the Ranger as Distribution&#13;
Manager. Pat said, "These are&#13;
the guys whose names never&#13;
really appear in a by - line.&#13;
Without them, most of us would&#13;
never see a weekly paper.&#13;
As for future Ranger plans,&#13;
Hensiak would "like to see individual&#13;
development, including&#13;
myself. That can and will happen."&#13;
She would also like to see&#13;
the size of Ranger stay constant at&#13;
12 pages. Reisling, "would like&#13;
to see more people join the paper&#13;
so that they could be assigned to&#13;
cover certain topics regularly."&#13;
He would also like to improve the&#13;
way Ranger looks: "more pictures,&#13;
things like that," he said.&#13;
Hensiak said, "We have crossed&#13;
a lot of bridges this year.&#13;
Sometimes we have lost track of&#13;
things as far as crossing these&#13;
bridges and set them aside before&#13;
coming back to them again." All&#13;
in all, Pat describes the Ranger&#13;
as, "a home feeling and comfortable&#13;
like an old pair of jeans."&#13;
VA offering nursing&#13;
scholarship programs&#13;
The Veterans Administration&#13;
has announced it is seeking applications&#13;
for its Health&#13;
Professional Scholarship&#13;
Program for the 1983 fall school&#13;
term.&#13;
The program, authorized by&#13;
Congress, provides support for&#13;
both graduate and undergraduate&#13;
nursing students on a pay - back -&#13;
in - service basis. The scholarship&#13;
provides tuition, educational&#13;
expenses and a monthly stipend&#13;
with participants agreeing to&#13;
serve a minimum of tw o years as&#13;
a full - time registered nurse in&#13;
one of VA's 172 medical centers or&#13;
226 outpatient clinics.&#13;
Six million dollars of scholarship&#13;
support were awarded during&#13;
the first year of the program to 342&#13;
students from a pool of more than&#13;
2,000 eligible applicants. Most&#13;
participants are third and fourth&#13;
year undergraduate nursing&#13;
students while a few awards were&#13;
made to master's degree candidates.&#13;
In 1983-84 school year,&#13;
master's students in Nursing&#13;
Service Administration will also&#13;
be eligible to apply for the&#13;
program.&#13;
Applications for the scholarships&#13;
and information about the&#13;
program are available from the&#13;
VA Health Professional&#13;
Scholarship Program, Office of&#13;
Academic Affairs, DM&amp;S (14N),&#13;
810 Vermont Avenue N.W.,&#13;
Washington, D.C. 20420. Requests&#13;
for applications may be made to&#13;
the scholarship program between&#13;
January 3 and May 10, 1983. The&#13;
deadline for completed applications&#13;
will be June 1, 1983.&#13;
Internships offered in political fields&#13;
The Public Service Internship&#13;
Program (PSIP) at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside has spring&#13;
semester openings for students&#13;
who wish to earn Political Science&#13;
credits as interns in local, state or&#13;
national government agencies.&#13;
PSIP students get practical&#13;
experience in working in political&#13;
campaigns, helping with legal&#13;
services for the poor, solving&#13;
constituent problems for&#13;
legislators, assisting local administrators&#13;
in providing community&#13;
services, working with&#13;
planning agencies, and assisting&#13;
local court agencies. Students can&#13;
earn from three to six credits as&#13;
interns.&#13;
In the past few years, PSIP&#13;
interns have worked for&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin, the City&#13;
of Renosha, Racine Jail Alternatives&#13;
Program, Renosha Police&#13;
Department, Racine Police&#13;
Department, Racine County&#13;
Voter registration to be held&#13;
Paul Utterbach of the Renosha&#13;
Urban League, a non - partisan&#13;
organization, will be on campus&#13;
Dec. 7 from 8:00 a.m. to noon and&#13;
1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. in the&#13;
bookstore alcove.&#13;
The League said that it was&#13;
going to be registering people at&#13;
this time in preparation for future&#13;
elections.&#13;
Watch for Ranger's&#13;
20 page Christmas issueI&#13;
During winter, care&#13;
in parking required&#13;
by Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
Winter is a beautiful time of&#13;
year for some people. But, it is&#13;
also a very dangerous time to&#13;
drive a car and can be difficult to&#13;
find a place to park it especially&#13;
during or after a heavy snowfall.&#13;
Here at Parkside, winter can be&#13;
a very hazardous time in the&#13;
parking lots. It becomes very&#13;
important that cars park only in&#13;
the designated parking spaces.&#13;
Snow does not always fall when it&#13;
would be convenient for plowing.&#13;
The lots are cleared of snow as&#13;
soon as possible, but they may not&#13;
be able to be cleared at all the&#13;
times they are needed.&#13;
During or after a heavy&#13;
snowfall, it becomes essential that&#13;
cars do not park along the curbs of&#13;
the lots and that drivers do not try&#13;
to add an extra space at the end of&#13;
the rows. It is very important that&#13;
the aisles be left open so that the&#13;
snowplows can get through. If the&#13;
lot in which you wish to park is&#13;
being plowed try one of the other&#13;
lots, the snow may have already&#13;
been removed. Parking in the&#13;
middle of an unplowed lot only&#13;
makes it more difficult for the&#13;
plow, and when you return to the&#13;
car you may find the snow plowed&#13;
around it.&#13;
Never park on Outer Loop Road&#13;
in winter. This road has to be kept&#13;
open so cars can get to the parking&#13;
lots. If cars park on the road it&#13;
becomes impossible for the&#13;
snowplows to get through.&#13;
The best means of transportation&#13;
in winter is the buses&#13;
that serve Parkside.&#13;
Parkside does have evening bus&#13;
service that leave the Union at&#13;
9:30 p.m. Monday through&#13;
Thursday. One bus has a route&#13;
into Renosha, the other bus&#13;
travels through Racine.&#13;
Brochures that show the route of&#13;
the two buses are available at the&#13;
Union Information Desk. This is&#13;
also where you can buy your ticket&#13;
for the buses. If the Information&#13;
Desk is closed, tickets may be&#13;
purchased in the Union Rec.&#13;
Center. The price of the ticket is&#13;
$1. You m ust have a ticket to ride&#13;
the buses as the drivers do not&#13;
accept cash.&#13;
Parkside is served by both&#13;
Racine and Renosha city buses&#13;
during the day. Schedules for all&#13;
the buses are available at the&#13;
Union Information Desk.&#13;
Utility reps to speak&#13;
at auditing seminar&#13;
backgrounds in computer science,&#13;
engineering and business administration.&#13;
&#13;
The discussion will be followed&#13;
by a film and materials on internal&#13;
auditing will be distributed.&#13;
There will be a reception immediately&#13;
preceeding the&#13;
presentation.&#13;
Swiss Me!&#13;
Hopfenperie&#13;
Public Defenders Office, Renosha&#13;
District Attorney's Office,&#13;
Wisconsin Department of Local&#13;
Affairs and Development, Racine&#13;
County Juvenile Court, Racine&#13;
Clerk of Courts, Renosha County&#13;
Juvenile Court, and other public&#13;
and private agencies.&#13;
Persons interested in enrolling&#13;
in the PSIP program can pick up&#13;
application forms in 344 WLLC (or&#13;
phone 553-2032).&#13;
Sports Calendar&#13;
MEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 2, Roosevelt&#13;
University. Here, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 4, UW-Oshkosh.&#13;
Here, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 7, Lewis&#13;
University. Away, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 4, North Central&#13;
College. Here, 5 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 7, Highland&#13;
College. Away, 7 p.m.&#13;
MEN'S WRESTLING&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 4, Warhawk&#13;
Open. At Whitewater.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 11, Wisconsin&#13;
Collegiate Open. Here.&#13;
Parkside's Computer Club and&#13;
DPMA are sponsoring a talk&#13;
entitled "Internal Auditing — The&#13;
Best Seat in the House," on Dec. 7&#13;
at 7 p.m. in MOLN 111. The talk is&#13;
being presented by Tom Twinem,&#13;
Dennis Duran and Chuck Kohli&#13;
from Wisconsin Electric Power&#13;
Company.&#13;
The presentation will include a&#13;
discussion covering the following&#13;
topics:&#13;
What is internal auditing? How&#13;
are internal audits conducted?&#13;
The relationship between&#13;
computers and internal auditing.&#13;
Career opportunities in internal&#13;
auditing for individuals with&#13;
Intramural&#13;
Results&#13;
In the preseason Intramural&#13;
Basketball tournament, Beer&#13;
Gardens beat the Supreme Court&#13;
70-57. The top scorers for Beer&#13;
Garden were captain Paul&#13;
Charapata with 19 p oints, Joseph&#13;
Krisik with 16 points and Daniel&#13;
Sykes with 12 points. Other contributing&#13;
players were Richard&#13;
Salisbury, Richard Sykes, Larry&#13;
Schmitt, Daniel Schmidt and Jim&#13;
Holtman.&#13;
Supreme Court captain Dave&#13;
McLiesh led with 22 po ints. Mike&#13;
Kachichian was the next leading&#13;
double figure player with 11&#13;
points. Team members seeing&#13;
action last Sunday were Mike&#13;
Carins, Rick Gramsa, Walt&#13;
Nassauer, Grant Smith, Jim&#13;
McClelland and Mike Noble.&#13;
illllllllllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIli:&#13;
5 s&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
. ARTS &amp; CRAFTS&#13;
• USED BOOKS&#13;
• RECORDS&#13;
I = UN DER N EW M AN AGEMENT WLLCC0NC0URSE =&#13;
riilliliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiillilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; &#13;
^^^Thursday^December^J98^^^^^^3ANGE^&#13;
Maynard Ferguson § Company flashy but good&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Maynard Ferguson has a&#13;
reputation for showmanship; In&#13;
fact critics frequently beat him&#13;
over the head because of his&#13;
preference for flashy stage&#13;
productions. Sunday night at the&#13;
Physical Education building&#13;
Ferguson and his band did nothing&#13;
to disprove the critic's contentions.&#13;
&#13;
After a mellow, bop - tinged set&#13;
by the Parkside Jazz Ensemble,&#13;
which, by the way, was marred&#13;
only by some overly long pauses&#13;
between songs, Ferguson's band&#13;
tore into the first set of some&#13;
thoroughly modern west coast&#13;
funk.&#13;
The first set began stiffly with&#13;
the band seeming to take their&#13;
time warming up. The most&#13;
notable exception was a spirited&#13;
rendition of Duke Ellington's&#13;
"Take the A Train," which began&#13;
by sounding like something off an&#13;
obscure fusion album and ending&#13;
as a pure big band number. It&#13;
sounded, in fact, as if it has been&#13;
played directly from the&#13;
Ellington's own charts.&#13;
About 45 minutes into the set,&#13;
after a lukewarm version of the&#13;
theme from "For Your Eyes&#13;
Only," Chicago flutist Dennis&#13;
DeBlazio launched into a solo&#13;
version of, improbably, "The&#13;
Twelve Days of Christmas."&#13;
That's what finally broke the&#13;
ice. DeBlazio's version combined&#13;
sounds from both an electronic&#13;
pickup and a separate mike to get&#13;
some sounds seldom heard&#13;
coming from a flute. Still, his&#13;
rendition was humorous, mixing&#13;
the traditional melody while&#13;
managing to sneak in some&#13;
swinging lines. It proved the band&#13;
had a sense of humor, and&#13;
established their rapport with the&#13;
audience.&#13;
The set's last number was an&#13;
offbeat rendition of "Sesame&#13;
Street" that was primarily a&#13;
showcase for about five of the&#13;
group members to solo. Again&#13;
DeBlazio appeared, this time on&#13;
baritone sax, which provided a&#13;
welcome contrast to Ferguson's&#13;
piercing trumpeting.&#13;
For the first time, also,&#13;
Ferguson himself took off. More&#13;
than anything else, Ferguson&#13;
proved he wasn't dead yet. Most of&#13;
the time his high notes seemed&#13;
gratuitous, a blatant attempt at&#13;
crowd pleasing. But he also&#13;
displayed a fair amount of improvisational&#13;
savvy, showing why&#13;
he won the Down Beat Critic's Poil&#13;
three years in a row back in the&#13;
late fifties.&#13;
After a 25 minute break and a&#13;
change of suits, Ferguson came&#13;
out swinging. On the opening&#13;
number, "Firestalker," the band&#13;
seemed much looser before, and&#13;
played with more enthusiasm.&#13;
Ferguson then showed off some&#13;
fair vocal skill on the pop standard&#13;
"As Time Goes By." The&#13;
remainder of the set was taken up&#13;
by a medley consisting of some of&#13;
Fee policy Is unfair&#13;
burden on students&#13;
The UW Board of Regents has&#13;
approved the UW system 1983-85&#13;
budget request, which will now be&#13;
sent to the state Department of&#13;
Administration for consideration.&#13;
The request calls for a $54&#13;
million dollar increase in funding&#13;
for the UW system, and a total&#13;
budget of $1.1 billion.&#13;
The academic fee policy, which&#13;
traditionally required students in&#13;
the UW system to pay one quarter,&#13;
or 25%, of their cost of instruction,&#13;
was also changed to 27%.&#13;
In testimony to the Board on&#13;
Nov. 5, Scott Bentley, president of&#13;
the United Council of UW Student&#13;
Governments, remarked that the&#13;
Regents' acceptance of t his policy&#13;
will "undo years of progress&#13;
Watch for Ranger's&#13;
20 page Christmas issue!&#13;
Attention: Art Students&#13;
*1.00 OFF&#13;
Artist Supplies&#13;
Minimum $10 Purchase&#13;
MINIATURE VILLAGE&#13;
"flu Doll Houso Storo"&#13;
ONE&#13;
iMIar&#13;
Bill&#13;
MINI-MONEY&#13;
Good for $1.00&#13;
^Toward Purchase"&#13;
1&#13;
Price of Any&#13;
MINIATURE VILLA^ ^W&#13;
IV.]&#13;
Village&#13;
• •••• Club Events • ••••&#13;
Dr. Who&#13;
toward universal educational&#13;
opportunity for all qualified&#13;
students" in the state. Bentley&#13;
pointed out that the tuition increases&#13;
called for in the budget&#13;
request are not offset by a&#13;
corresponding increase in&#13;
financial aid, and that middle and&#13;
low income students will be priced&#13;
out of a college education.&#13;
Bentley added that the Regents'&#13;
adoption of the 27% fee policy&#13;
places an unfair burden on UW&#13;
students, who are "not immune to&#13;
hard times in Wisconsin . . . with&#13;
regular increases in tuition,&#13;
cutbacks in vulnerable financial&#13;
aid programs, and the general&#13;
state of t he economy, students are&#13;
dealt a one - two - three punch&#13;
when they pay their bills."&#13;
MAYNARD FERGUSON (left) put on a dynamic performance last Sunday. At right is sideman&#13;
Dennis Del Blazio, who doubled on flute and baritone sax.&#13;
Ferguson's hits, beginning with&#13;
"McArthur Park." After the set,&#13;
and without too much prodding,&#13;
Ferguson came back for the first&#13;
and only encore of the evening.&#13;
Beginning with a medley of&#13;
Christmas songs that included a&#13;
fine classical arrangement of "O&#13;
Come All Ye Faithful," which&#13;
sounded almost like a chamber&#13;
orchestra without the strings, the&#13;
band, with Ferguson conducting,&#13;
launched into an a capella version&#13;
of "Silent Night." The voices&#13;
sounded vaguely off key, but&#13;
giving the band the benefit of the&#13;
doubt, they probably made use of&#13;
some higher jazz intervals seldom&#13;
heard in a choral arrangement.&#13;
Immediately after a swinging&#13;
version of "Jingle Bells" the band&#13;
launched into the final number of&#13;
the evening. This was, of course,&#13;
"Gonna Fly Now," the theme&#13;
from Rocky. The abbreviated&#13;
version held several twists, but as&#13;
a whole the band stayed very close&#13;
to the recording here. The&#13;
audience left satisfied.&#13;
Throughout the show Ferguson,&#13;
when not actually playing, occupied&#13;
himself with directing the&#13;
band and generally cavorting&#13;
around the stage, white - haired&#13;
and jolly, like a Santa Claus&#13;
keeping busy during the off&#13;
season. Whether directing the&#13;
band or eliciting audience&#13;
response, Ferguson indeed proved&#13;
himself a consummate showman.&#13;
There was never any indication,&#13;
though, that the flash interfered&#13;
with the music. Ferguson's show&#13;
was entertainment, certainly, but&#13;
it was also, most definitely, a&#13;
concert, in the purest sense.&#13;
1725 -50th St., Kenosha&#13;
Store Hours: 10 a. m. -5 p. m. Monday - Saturday&#13;
The first meeting of the&#13;
Parkside Dr. Who Fan Club will&#13;
meet on Wednesday, Dec. 8 at 1&#13;
p.m. in Molinaro 161. All&#13;
prospective members are&#13;
welcome and are encouraged to&#13;
come. If you watch and enjoy Dr.&#13;
Who, come to the meeting. If you&#13;
are interested in joining the club&#13;
but can't make the meeting, call&#13;
639-7537 in Racine, or 658-2656 in&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Computer Club&#13;
The Computer Club's last&#13;
regular meeting of this semester&#13;
will be Monday, Dec. 6 in MOLN&#13;
D-133, from 1 - 2 p.m. Among other&#13;
things, we will discuss the upcoming&#13;
annual Christmas Dinner&#13;
and a "just for fun" programming&#13;
contest. The club will also begin&#13;
planning "Computer Fair 7". This&#13;
meeting is open to all students and&#13;
faculty.&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
Peer Support invites all&#13;
students to attend "Test Taking&#13;
Tips," a seminar to be given by&#13;
Susan Taylor on Dec. 2 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
the WLLC Learning Lab, D-150C.&#13;
Students attending should bring&#13;
their class notes.&#13;
Peer Support is also sponsoring&#13;
two $50 scholarships for students&#13;
who will be enrolled in the Spring&#13;
83 semester at Parted&#13;
will be based on the following&#13;
criteria: The applicant must not&#13;
have been a full - time student in&#13;
the past seven years; The applicant&#13;
is not already receiving&#13;
state or federal financial aid; And&#13;
the applicant will write a&#13;
paragraph describing his / her&#13;
goals in continuing education.&#13;
Scholarship applications are&#13;
available in the Peer Support&#13;
office, WLLC D-175. The applications&#13;
must be received by&#13;
Jan. 10, 1983.&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
The Art Addicts would like to&#13;
invite all students to come and&#13;
celebrate art with us at our annual&#13;
Art Day exhibition on Wednesday,&#13;
Dec. 8 from 9:00 a?m. to 4:00 p.m.&#13;
in Main Place. Student art will be&#13;
on display and for sale, so come&#13;
and see what your fellow students&#13;
are doing. Be a part of art.&#13;
IVCF&#13;
Inter Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship will hold their last&#13;
lecture presentation for this&#13;
semester on Wednesday, Dec. 8 at&#13;
1:00 p.m. in Union 207. Forest&#13;
William, guest lecturer, will be&#13;
speaking on the topic of "Jesus:&#13;
Because He Was a Man."&#13;
On Wednesday, Dec. 15 at 1:00&#13;
p.m. in Union 207 IVCF will hold a&#13;
social to reflect over this&#13;
semester's topics and to celebrate &#13;
RANGER Thursday, December 2,1982&#13;
' not worth your ,ime I Golden Rondelle to hold free film screening&#13;
I? Atf llt«A L* ^ T\/T O »"&gt;X r VXtft 1 A .... r % • . •&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
"48 Hours" will be premiering&#13;
in Racine and Kenosha theatres in&#13;
about a week. I saw it in a sneak&#13;
preview last weekend on the&#13;
recommendation of a former&#13;
friend. I stress the word former.&#13;
The film stars Nick Nolte as a&#13;
street - hardened detective on the,&#13;
excuse me for this, streets of San&#13;
Francisco. Early in the film two of&#13;
Nolte's partners are killed in a&#13;
shootout with a band of escaped&#13;
convicts, so naturally he takes it&#13;
upon himself to get revenge,&#13;
against the wishes of the Chief of&#13;
Police. Heard that plotline&#13;
before?&#13;
At this point Eddie Murphy&#13;
enters the film. If you've seen&#13;
'Saturday Night Live' lately, you&#13;
know that Murphy provides most&#13;
of the laughs for an otherwise&#13;
lame "Not Ready For Prime&#13;
Time" cast. As Mr. Robinson,&#13;
Buckwheat, and Velvet Jones,&#13;
Murphy steals the show. As&#13;
Reggie Hamlin, a convict in "48&#13;
Hours," he steals the show as&#13;
well.&#13;
The story goes like this:&#13;
Hamlin, who is just finishing up a&#13;
three year prison term for armed&#13;
robbery, was once involved with&#13;
the escaped convicts who killed&#13;
Nolte's partners. He has information&#13;
about where to find said&#13;
convicts, so Nolte comes and&#13;
hoists him out of prison on a 48&#13;
hour pass. Thus the title of the&#13;
film.&#13;
Of c ourse, the two make for an&#13;
unlikely pair, a sort of odd couple&#13;
of law enforcement. Nolte is a&#13;
tough cop macho - man type with a&#13;
voice like a professional wrestler.&#13;
Murphy is a jive - talking street -&#13;
wise con man. As they search for&#13;
the convicts, they develop a fairly&#13;
interesting friendship which is one&#13;
of the film's few strong points. The&#13;
two play off each other, Murphy&#13;
bright and funny, Nolte a straight&#13;
man.&#13;
The problem with "48 Hours" is&#13;
that it doesn't exercise its&#13;
potential. Eddie Murphy is the&#13;
best thing about the film, yet his&#13;
comedic talents are used hardly at&#13;
all. Nick Nolte is a good actor, and&#13;
his character could have been&#13;
expanded. Instead, he appears&#13;
cardboard much of the time. The&#13;
scenes between Nolte and Murphy&#13;
are overwhelmed by scenes filled&#13;
with gratuitous violence - people&#13;
being shot in the chest, women&#13;
being slugged, men being slugged,&#13;
people being shot in the chest, etc.&#13;
The film's chase scenes aren't&#13;
well paced, and the so - called&#13;
climax to the film, which of course&#13;
is a big shootout, is more of a&#13;
letdown.&#13;
"48 Hours" could never have&#13;
been great, but it could have been&#13;
good. It is, however, only&#13;
mediocre.&#13;
Parkside Chorale to perform&#13;
A holiday concert by the&#13;
Parkside Chorale, an all -&#13;
university singing ensemble, will&#13;
be presented under the direction&#13;
of William Weinert at 4 p.m. on&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 5, in the Comm Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
The featured work will be a&#13;
short Christmas oratorio by the&#13;
French Baroque composer&#13;
Charpentier accompanied by a&#13;
chamber ensemble of instrumentalists.&#13;
&#13;
The program will also include a&#13;
setting of the Magnificat by&#13;
Mendelssohn and Renaissance&#13;
motets by Jacob Handl and&#13;
Orlando di Lasso.&#13;
A selection of holiday and&#13;
seasonal songs and carols will&#13;
complete the concert.&#13;
Weinert, who joined the&#13;
Parkside music faculty this fall,&#13;
holds degrees from the Oberlin&#13;
Conservatory of Music, UW -&#13;
Milwaukee and UW - Madison and&#13;
has conducted choral performances&#13;
at those institutions. In&#13;
addition to directing the Chorale,&#13;
he also conducts the Chamber&#13;
Singers and teaches vocal&#13;
students.&#13;
Admission for the concert is $1&#13;
for students and senior citizens&#13;
and $2 for the general public.&#13;
Ranger Needs Staffers&#13;
AGRICULTURALISTS . ..&#13;
You're Needed&#13;
All Over the&#13;
World.&#13;
Ask Peace Corps volunteers why their agriculture degrees or form&#13;
backgrounds ore needed in developing nations. Ask them how&#13;
their knowledge of crops, livestock production, form mechanics or&#13;
beekeeping methods help alleviate hunger, increase personal&#13;
income and develop technical skills. They'll tell you of the&#13;
rewords of seeing direct results of their efforts. They'll rell you&#13;
Peace Corps is the toughest job you'll ever love.&#13;
VISIT OUR BOOTH AT THE STUDENT&#13;
CENTER DEC 2. REGISTER NOW AT&#13;
THE PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR INTERVIEWS&#13;
FRIDAY, DEC 3.&#13;
PEACE CORPS&#13;
Many people are faced with&#13;
disabilities in their lives. For&#13;
some, it can be as obvious as&#13;
Muscular Dystrophy, a disease&#13;
that often confines people to life in&#13;
a wheelchair. For others, it can be&#13;
as unapparent as a fear of heights.&#13;
Find out how one extraordinary&#13;
American family, the DeBolts,&#13;
cope with disabilities when their&#13;
heartwarming and amusing saga&#13;
continues on the screen at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater in&#13;
Racine on Thursday, Dec. 9, with&#13;
the film "Stepping Out: The&#13;
DeBolts Grow Up." The program&#13;
begins at" 7 p.m.&#13;
Winner of an American Film&#13;
Festival Red Ribbon and the&#13;
Golden Eagle Certificate from the&#13;
Council of International Non&#13;
Theatrical Events (CINE), the&#13;
film follows the DeBolts through&#13;
1980, a year full of changes for the&#13;
entire family. As the eight handicapped&#13;
DeBolt teenagers living&#13;
at home prepare for adulthood&#13;
and independence, day - to - day&#13;
routines become important&#13;
stepping - stones to a life on their&#13;
own. With the support and encouragement&#13;
of their parents, the&#13;
DeBolts learn to confront obstacles,&#13;
confident that they will&#13;
become successful adults.&#13;
The program will also feature&#13;
the film "Deaf Like Me," a&#13;
touching story of a young deaf girl&#13;
and her struggle to accept her&#13;
disability. Both films will be inMilwaukee&#13;
Happenings&#13;
The Bel Canto Chorus performs&#13;
G.F. Handel's Messiah on Friday,&#13;
Dec. 10 and Saturday, Dec. 11 at 8&#13;
p.m. in Uihlein Hall. The guest&#13;
soloists are Joy Simpson,&#13;
soprano; Laura Snyder, mezzo -&#13;
soprano; Alan Crabb, tenor; and&#13;
John Ostendorf, bass. The Chorus&#13;
performs the masterpiece with&#13;
the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra.&#13;
Tickets are $8 - $15 and&#13;
may be purchased at the PAC Box&#13;
Office or through PHONECHARGE,&#13;
(414) 273-7206.&#13;
Audience members have the&#13;
chance to sing Messiah with the&#13;
Bel Canto Chorus on Sunday, Dec.&#13;
12 a t 7 p.m. in Uihlein Hall. Admission&#13;
to the "Sing it Yourself&#13;
Messiah" is free, but tickets are&#13;
required. Tickets are being&#13;
distributed through the First&#13;
Wisconsin - Milwaukee banks.&#13;
Guest conductor Rafael Kubelik&#13;
leads the Chicago Symphony&#13;
Orchestra in a concert on Monday,&#13;
Dec. 6 at 8 p.m. in Uihlein Hall.&#13;
Tickets are $10 - $21.50 and are&#13;
available at the PAC Box Office or&#13;
through PHONECHARGE, (414)&#13;
273-7206.&#13;
This week the Skylight Comic&#13;
Opera Company continues to&#13;
present Iolanthe, Gilbert and&#13;
Sullivan's delightful spoof of the&#13;
British House of Lords, with&#13;
performances on Wednesday,&#13;
Dec. 8 at 7:30 p.m., Friday, Dec.&#13;
10 and Saturday, Dec. 11 at 8:30&#13;
p.m., and Sunday, Dec. 12 at 2:30&#13;
p.m. in Vogel Hall. Tickets to the&#13;
production are $8.25 and $9.75 and&#13;
may be purchased at the PAC Box&#13;
Office or by calling PHONECHARGE,&#13;
(414) 273-7206.&#13;
The Milwaukee Repertory&#13;
Theater presents Tennessee&#13;
Williams' classic American play&#13;
The Glass Menagerie on Tuesday,&#13;
Dec. 7 through Friday, Dec. 10 at 8&#13;
p.m., with a matinee on Wednesday,&#13;
Dec. 8 at 2 p.m.; Saturday,&#13;
Dec. 11 at 5 &amp; 9:1 5 p.m.; and&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 12 at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Todd Wehr Theater. Tickets range&#13;
from $5 to $12 and are available at&#13;
the PAC Box Office or by calling&#13;
PHONECHARGE, (414) 273-7206.&#13;
terpreted for the hearing - impaired.&#13;
&#13;
Reservations for this program&#13;
are requested and can be made by&#13;
calling the Rondelle at 631-2154&#13;
Monday through Friday&#13;
(TTY/552-9656). There is no admission&#13;
charge. The Golden&#13;
Rondelle Theater is located on the&#13;
corner of 14th and Franklin&#13;
Streets in Racine.&#13;
The program is a cooperative&#13;
effort with Society's Assets, a&#13;
Disability Resource Center for&#13;
Independent Living.&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Ranger&#13;
A duertisers&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10:00 a m - 4:00 p m&#13;
• Jube Jells&#13;
• Licorice Bully&#13;
• Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Milk Carmels&#13;
• Orange Slices&#13;
• Peanut Butter Chip&#13;
• Peanut Clusters&#13;
• Peppermint Kisses&#13;
• Rootbeer Barrels&#13;
• Sour Balls&#13;
• Spearment Leaves&#13;
• Starlite Mints&#13;
• Carmel Targets&#13;
• Cinnamon Discs&#13;
• Candy Pops&#13;
• Corn Nuts&#13;
• Assorted Perky&#13;
• Assorted Royal&#13;
• Assorted Toffee&#13;
• Bridge Mix&#13;
• Burndt Peanuts&#13;
• Butterscotch Discs&#13;
• Candy Coffee Discs&#13;
• Carmel Bully&#13;
• Chocolate Drops&#13;
• Chocolate Jots&#13;
• Chocolate Peanuts&#13;
• Chocolate Raisins&#13;
• Chocolate Stars&#13;
• Jelly Beans&#13;
• California Mix&#13;
• Caribbean Delicacy&#13;
• Carob Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Carob Raisins&#13;
• Carob Peanuts&#13;
• Natural Pistachio&#13;
• Red Pistachio&#13;
• Spanish Peanuts&#13;
• Sunflower Seeds&#13;
• Student Food Mix&#13;
• Yogurt Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Yogurt Peanuts&#13;
• Yogurt Raisins&#13;
• Yogurt Sesame Brittle&#13;
• Smoked Almonds whole&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF DEC. 6H1&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
ALL NWfS A&#13;
CHOCOLATE &#13;
6 Thursday, December 2,1982 RANGER&#13;
New Music&#13;
Jimmy Cliff a nd Bob Marley ignite the Reggae revolution&#13;
P / l U n M ' n T _ i L . &lt;1 i n . . . Feature Editor's note: In the&#13;
'New Music' column this week we&#13;
take a break from the English&#13;
New Wave and move to Reggae.&#13;
With this article I introduce a new&#13;
feature writer: Napoleon Scarbrough.&#13;
Napolean, a music major&#13;
here at Parkside, will be writing&#13;
more New Music as well as other&#13;
articles. Watch for him.&#13;
by Napolean Scarbrough&#13;
Reggae: The Ska's the Limit&#13;
The sun is setting behind the&#13;
fruit laden hills just beyond&#13;
Kingston. As the darkness converges&#13;
upon the land, the music&#13;
starts to play as if by magic.&#13;
Strolling along the streets of&#13;
West Kingston, one can hear the&#13;
sweet sounds coming from every&#13;
house that is fortunate enough to&#13;
own a radio. It is 1958, years&#13;
before the real emergence of&#13;
Reggae as a musical form of&#13;
expression. What you hear now is&#13;
American Soul artists as well as&#13;
the newly formed Motown Sound&#13;
Every now and then you will hear&#13;
a strange new sound that brings a&#13;
smile to the faces of the natives.&#13;
This music is called Mento, or&#13;
Ska; the forerunner of Reggae.&#13;
One popular song of this period,&#13;
recorded by the Folk Brothers,&#13;
"Oh Carolina", drifts across the&#13;
street. The record was produced&#13;
by the legendary Jamaican artist&#13;
Prince Buster, who imitated the&#13;
sound ,of a saxaphone with his&#13;
mouth because he could not have&#13;
afforded the use of a real one, and&#13;
the drumming was immortalized&#13;
by the late Count Ossie, the man&#13;
most responsible for the&#13;
popularity of this sound. Ska, as&#13;
well as Mento, is a combination of&#13;
Calypso and musical rhythms&#13;
from the Spanish - speaking&#13;
Caribbean. The latter provides the&#13;
rhythmic ingredients which is&#13;
expressed by the local Jamaican&#13;
musicians as a fusion with&#13;
Reggae.&#13;
As we move forward to the early&#13;
sixties, we hear pioneer Reggae&#13;
artists such as Toots and the&#13;
Maytals, King Tubby, Bob Marley&#13;
and Jimmy Cliff. These were most&#13;
responsible for making Reggae a&#13;
popular sound.&#13;
Jimmy Cliff, born in rural&#13;
Somerton, 12 miles, as the crow&#13;
flies, out - side of Montego Bay, is&#13;
a descendant of the Maroons, a&#13;
band of escaped 18th century&#13;
slaves who waged guerrilla war&#13;
against the English Colonist.&#13;
After singing with a few local&#13;
bands, Jimmy, at age 15, recorded&#13;
"Hurricane Hattie" and was&#13;
suddenly pushed atop Jamaica's&#13;
Hit Parade. He was then picked up&#13;
by Toots and the Maytals and&#13;
toured Europe. Later, in England,&#13;
his heavy use of Amphetamines&#13;
inspired him to write "Many&#13;
Rivers to Cross", which brought&#13;
him to the attention of Jamaican&#13;
filmmaker Perry Henzel, then&#13;
casting for "The Harder They&#13;
Come". That film helped Jimmy&#13;
personally and Reggae as a&#13;
musical force. He then vanished&#13;
from the music world, journeying&#13;
to Africa in search of s oul.&#13;
Bob Marley, a native of&#13;
Kingston, was recording record&#13;
after record and touring Jamaica&#13;
and Europe in an effort to make&#13;
his beloved music a popular&#13;
musical form. Unlike Jimmy,&#13;
Bob's foundation was rooted&#13;
deeply in the Jamaican Religion -&#13;
Rastafari; one who worships the&#13;
God, Jah, wants freedom for all&#13;
blacks everywhere, and promotes&#13;
the use of t he sacred herb Ganji,&#13;
or cannabis indica. Finally, after&#13;
touring the world a few times, the&#13;
album "Rastaman Vibrations"&#13;
was released in the United States&#13;
in 1975, just three years after the&#13;
release and success of Jimmy&#13;
Cliff's film. With the acceptance&#13;
of America, the largest music&#13;
market in the world, Reggae was&#13;
finally a popular form of mainLockhood&#13;
SR*?1 "BLACKBIRD"&#13;
Sp«ed; In axce»» of 1800&#13;
Altitude: 85,0001mt&#13;
WE'RE LOOKING FOR&#13;
ENGINEERS WITH THEIR&#13;
HEADS IN THE CLOUDS . .&#13;
AND THEIR FEET ON THE GROUND.&#13;
An Air Force engineer must&#13;
accept a few basic principles.&#13;
Working on projects such as the&#13;
SR-71 is complex, stimulating and&#13;
never routine. A challenge like&#13;
the SR-71 calls on the best from&#13;
the electrical, mechanical,&#13;
astronautical, aeronautical and&#13;
civil engineering disciplines to&#13;
handle some of the toughest&#13;
avionic problems. Air Force&#13;
engineers experience this in their&#13;
first year of service.&#13;
An Air Force engineer can expect&#13;
a lot in return. Assignments on&#13;
state-of-the-art aircraft, duty&#13;
locations from Boston to Los&#13;
Angeles and flight opportunities to&#13;
those qualified. Plus all the&#13;
respect and prestige due an officer&#13;
in the Air Force. There is&#13;
something distinctly professional&#13;
about an Air Force Officer.&#13;
The Air Force offers a variety of&#13;
challenges for engineering, math,&#13;
computer or physical science&#13;
majors. Both technical and&#13;
managerial positions are available.&#13;
To find out more about the Air&#13;
Force, call or write:&#13;
TSgt. Ed Boettcher&#13;
3555th USAF Recruiting Squadron&#13;
419 Main Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53403&#13;
414-632-6487/1828&#13;
g n o&#13;
AIM HIGH !&#13;
stream music.&#13;
Today, Reggae is covered by a&#13;
variety of groups, such as: "The&#13;
Specials", "The Police", "The&#13;
Clash", and many others.&#13;
Stylistically, Jamaican music is&#13;
changing every day. New styles of&#13;
drum and bass (the foundation of&#13;
the music) are coming into play,&#13;
and different ways of communicating&#13;
a song have become a&#13;
characteristic of the Jamaican, or&#13;
black singer. Undoubtedly the late&#13;
Bob Marley contributed largely to&#13;
the world acceptance of Reggae&#13;
without compromising his&#13;
political vision, but the music&#13;
itself transcends Bob Marley and&#13;
expresses the deep spiritual&#13;
resources, wishes and aspirations&#13;
of the black world for eventual&#13;
freedom and justice.&#13;
As long as suffering is the norm&#13;
of the black experience, Reggae&#13;
will be revelant to the human&#13;
condition.&#13;
Take a closer listen to Reggae&#13;
and feel the powerful spiritual&#13;
presence of the music. A musical&#13;
form that took over two centuries&#13;
to develop is well worth listening&#13;
to.&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Theater&#13;
The tender, bittersweet world &lt;&#13;
America's most celebrated livir&#13;
playwright returns to the Pe&#13;
forming Arts Center's Todd Wei&#13;
Theater next month, as th&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Theatc&#13;
presents Tennessee Williams' Th&#13;
Glass Menagerie, Dec. 3 throug&#13;
Jan. 9.&#13;
Tickets range from $5 to $12.&#13;
$1 discount is offered to senic&#13;
citizens and students. Tickets ai&#13;
available at the PAC box offici&#13;
929 North Water St., or charged t&#13;
MasterCard or Visa by calling 27:&#13;
7206.&#13;
The Glass Menagerie will t&#13;
performed Tuesdays throug&#13;
Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at&#13;
p.m. and 9:15 p.m., and Sunday&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. Matinees are at&#13;
p.m., Dec. 5, 8, 15, 22, January&#13;
and 5. Please note: There will t&#13;
no performance Friday, Dec. 2•&#13;
There will be a performance o&#13;
Monday, Dec. 20.&#13;
The Rep is well - equipped t&#13;
accommodate patrons who ar&#13;
blind or in wheelchairs. A signe&#13;
performance of The Glas&#13;
Menagerie will be presented at&#13;
p.m. on Sunday, Jan. 2. Deaf an&#13;
hearing impaired patrons shoul&#13;
contact the Performing Art&#13;
Center box office at 273-7206.&#13;
A Christmas Carol, Charle&#13;
Dickens' heart - warming holida&#13;
classic, will be presented by th&#13;
Milwaukee Rep throug&#13;
December 26, in Milwaukee'&#13;
historic Pabst Theater. Sponsore&#13;
by the Metropolitan Milwauke&#13;
Association of Commerce, thi&#13;
popular production will run for 3&#13;
performances.&#13;
Now in its seventh year, th&#13;
MKT's version of the magics&#13;
misadventures of Ebeneeze&#13;
Scrooge has become one c&#13;
Milwaukee's most popular winte&#13;
events. This year's presentatior&#13;
adapted by former Artisti&#13;
Director Nagle Jackson, will b&#13;
staged by Resident Director Nic&#13;
Faust.&#13;
An interpreted performance c&#13;
this play will be presented for th&#13;
,&#13;
and hearing impaired o&#13;
Monday, Dec. 20 at 8:00 p.ir&#13;
Please note: There is no pel&#13;
formance on Friday, Dec. 21&#13;
There is a performance o&#13;
Monday, Dec. 20.&#13;
Tickets are on sale at the Pabs&#13;
w5fJ 0ffice&#13;
' 144 Eas&#13;
wells, Monday through Friday&#13;
noon to 6 p.m. Tickets may b&#13;
charged by calling 271-2600.&#13;
Special 1/2 price rates an&#13;
available for children 12 am&#13;
under. Student and senior citizei&#13;
rates are also available with ID &#13;
Sports Commentary&#13;
RANGE R Thursday, December 2,1982&#13;
Football season produces mixed&#13;
by Robb Luehr losSes incnrroH .. ..&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
The strike is over!&#13;
Football fans rejoice!&#13;
Hip, hip, hooray . . .&#13;
We're all happy, aren't we?&#13;
Aren't we?&#13;
Do we have a good reason to be&#13;
happy? Do we?&#13;
Not really.&#13;
We fans don't have a good&#13;
reason to be happy. We've lost&#13;
seven games, and we're stuck&#13;
with a watered - down half -&#13;
season and a Mickey Mouse&#13;
playoff set - up.&#13;
The T.V. networks don't have a&#13;
good reason to be happy. Granted,&#13;
they're glad to have football back,&#13;
but they can never recover their&#13;
l0Sme ^&#13;
Cr&#13;
ed&#13;
,&#13;
dUr&#13;
ing ^ strike. ine owners don't have a eoori&#13;
rSem^ h?&#13;
PPy" They also had&#13;
coSSR mo&#13;
"&#13;
etary &gt;oss, and they&#13;
couldn t spht up the union.&#13;
e players don't have a good&#13;
get^nv&#13;
10 bG happy&#13;
" They dK&#13;
orLc of the team's&#13;
gross revenue, as they had absolutely&#13;
wanted, and they didn't&#13;
k f ,&#13;
W,&#13;
age scale&#13;
' as&#13;
^ey had&#13;
absolutely wanted. Instead, thev&#13;
gave in on these and settled for an&#13;
unreasonable facsimilie of an&#13;
agreement.&#13;
.Let's look at the agreement&#13;
itself. The tentative contract&#13;
totals $1.6 billion over five years&#13;
including $300 million this year'.&#13;
Ed Garvey, the executive director&#13;
of the NFL Player's Association&#13;
said, "If we can use this&#13;
agreement as a building block for&#13;
the future, it is certainly worth the&#13;
effort."&#13;
The contract calls for rookies to&#13;
make a minimum of $30,000 this&#13;
year, $40,000 in 1983 and '84, and&#13;
$50,000 in '85 and '86. The current&#13;
minimum is $22,000. The totals&#13;
increase $10,000 for each year of&#13;
seniority up to $200,000 for 18 -&#13;
year veterans, with the maximum&#13;
figure going to 17 - year veterans&#13;
in 1983-84 and to 16 - year veterans&#13;
rff!,&#13;
985 86&#13;
' T*&#13;
ie toP Hunimum for&#13;
!.!5 " year Payers at present is&#13;
$32,000. The average pay this&#13;
Coach Profile - Wrestling&#13;
by W PPaatricia Cnmhip T I • . tricia Cumbie&#13;
Jim Koch is the Men's Wrestling&#13;
coach and a Physical Education&#13;
teacher here at Parkside. He is a&#13;
graduate of South Dakota State&#13;
University with his Bachelors&#13;
degree in Math and Physical&#13;
Education. He continued on at&#13;
South Dakota to get his Masters in&#13;
Physical Education.&#13;
Wrestling has always been a&#13;
long standing interest of his. He&#13;
wrestled in high school, and was&#13;
captain of his college wrestling&#13;
team. In 1970, his first year out of&#13;
school, h e came to Parkside. He&#13;
wasn't planning on staying&#13;
because South Dakota wanted him&#13;
back. The wrestling team here at&#13;
Parkside was young and Koch was&#13;
up to the challenge.&#13;
Jim Koch has experienced&#13;
much success with the team. He's&#13;
coached 29 All - Americans in his&#13;
career. "I've been fortunate that&#13;
when I began, I started out with a&#13;
very talented individual who&#13;
carried the team. But the team&#13;
has just kept getting better." In&#13;
the last ten years they have been&#13;
in the top 10 in the national&#13;
tournaments. "The athletic&#13;
director is very supportive, and&#13;
this helps the team. He keeps all&#13;
the programs well balanced and&#13;
doesn't financially favor one&#13;
sport."&#13;
Being in the national tournaments&#13;
gives the team a good&#13;
reputation and prestige. His&#13;
approach to coaching is to keep&#13;
the team up as well rounded individuals.&#13;
"I personally try to&#13;
keep them up academically and&#13;
athletically." With his Bachelors&#13;
degree in Math, he is able to help&#13;
his wrestlers if they run into&#13;
problems.&#13;
Koch is a perfectionist and the&#13;
team works on improving their&#13;
skills and physical conditioning by&#13;
having them lift weights. In&#13;
practice, they try to eliminate&#13;
weaknesses. The men are at&#13;
different levels and this is usually&#13;
due to the different coaching&#13;
backgrounds of the men's&#13;
respective high schools. He works&#13;
on technique during practice. He&#13;
does place emphasis on having the&#13;
men work academically on getting&#13;
their degrees.&#13;
His opinion of Parkside is high.&#13;
He commented, "I wouldn't have&#13;
stayed this long if I didn't like it.&#13;
The administration makes good&#13;
decisions and they maintain a&#13;
level of excellence." He feels&#13;
confortable around everyone&#13;
here, and has developed life long&#13;
friends. One thing he would like to&#13;
see is more of a variety of majors.&#13;
This may entice more atheletes to&#13;
the school also. There is no&#13;
Physical Education major here&#13;
and he would like to see that included.&#13;
&#13;
MMWtfi&#13;
emotions&#13;
season was $90,000. Included in the&#13;
contract is the $60 million in&#13;
seniority bonuses offered by&#13;
management for this season.&#13;
I ask you, was it worth sitting&#13;
out 57 days for this so - called&#13;
agreement? Gene Upshaw, the&#13;
player's union president said,&#13;
"The strike was worth it." But I&#13;
think he is telling a little white lie;&#13;
pardon me, a large white lie. It is&#13;
estimated that the player's&#13;
salaries lost totalled $9 million per&#13;
week.&#13;
I must admit, when the players&#13;
first went on strike, I was in total&#13;
agreement with them. Consider&#13;
that, in comparison with other&#13;
major sports, football brings in&#13;
the most revenue, but the players&#13;
themselves are paid the least in&#13;
proportion to the monies&#13;
generated. I still agree with the&#13;
players, but the hard - line stance&#13;
they took completely turned off&#13;
the owners, so they realistically&#13;
had no chance to get what they&#13;
wanted.&#13;
Eight weeks is a long time to be&#13;
without football, but after not&#13;
having it, I kind of wish that the&#13;
whole season was scrapped. It&#13;
would have been better for&#13;
everyone involved.&#13;
NFL Update: It is now the&#13;
second week since football has&#13;
been back. It is almost back to&#13;
normal in the NFL. The Chicago&#13;
Bears are playing at their peak&#13;
level (1-3), as are the L.A. Rams&#13;
(1-3), who are not to be confused&#13;
with the L.A. Raiders (3-1). Our&#13;
beloved (?) Packers lost a close&#13;
one at New York against the Jets.&#13;
Green Bay was held to just 52&#13;
yards on the ground, after being&#13;
the top rushing offense in the&#13;
National Conference. One of the&#13;
biggest surprises this season is the&#13;
1-3 start of the Super Bowl&#13;
champion San Francisco 49ers.&#13;
Another surprise is the fast start&#13;
of t he New Orleans Saints (3-1). I&#13;
feel that this is going to be a&#13;
strange year, one that hopefully&#13;
will never show its ugly head&#13;
again.&#13;
Attendance is still down since&#13;
the strike; witness only 33,985 to&#13;
see Baltimore lose (as usual) to&#13;
the home - town Buffalo Bills, and&#13;
33,411 in Atlanta to see the Falcons&#13;
drop one to the St. Louis Cardinals.&#13;
I certainly hope that&#13;
stadiums will be filled as the&#13;
season continues, but I don't think&#13;
fans will be flocking to games&#13;
after being slighted for so long.&#13;
The supreme test will be the Super&#13;
Bowl, being played as scheduled&#13;
on Jan. 30. It will surprise me if&#13;
they sell out. I'm not betting on it.&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
PROFESSIONAL TYPING term papers,&#13;
resumes, letters, spelling and grammar&#13;
included. Call Lynn Holtie and leave a&#13;
message on my tape. 552 7512.&#13;
A.A. MEETING every Wednesday, Moln 211&#13;
between 1 &amp; 2 p.m.&#13;
BOOK SALE 50% off The Old Book Corner&#13;
at Martha Merrell's - 3 12 6th St., Racine.&#13;
Nov. 24th Dec. 11th. Bring this ad for 50%&#13;
off.&#13;
WHO TICKET FOR SALE Farewell Tour.&#13;
Call Chris 639 1 255.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
TONY Don't know how to break this to you,&#13;
but you're just not my type. Sorry. John&#13;
DR. DREW: Stay merry and gay. Vour Fan&#13;
Club&#13;
WHAT PROMINENT Puerto Rican was seen&#13;
hugging the Ranger editor?&#13;
BLUE MONDAY PARTY at Louie's. Bring&#13;
your whips and bananas.&#13;
FOXY, GREEK GODDESS You're so . . .&#13;
talented, fun, cute, soft, and intriguing.&#13;
"Swiss Me" with a Hopfenperle tonight.&#13;
Secret Admirer&#13;
SECRET ADMIRER • I'm a Foxy, Greek&#13;
Goddess and I choose with whom I s hare a&#13;
Hopfenperle the "Swiss Me" beer. Foxy,&#13;
Greek Goddess&#13;
FOXY, GREEK GODDESS If I c ould "Swiss&#13;
You" with a Hopfenperle Beer, all my&#13;
dreams would be fulfilled. Secret Admirer&#13;
SECRET ADMIRER - I n all my dreams I've&#13;
never considered you as the sharer of my&#13;
Hopfenperle The Swiss Beer. No "Swiss&#13;
Me" for you. Foxy&#13;
HEY PSGA! Turn that thing down!!!! We&#13;
can't hear ourselves think over here, and&#13;
the coffee shop doesn't need you as featured&#13;
entertainment.&#13;
HAPPY 19 PATTY Hope you enjoy your stay&#13;
at PU. The Staff&#13;
PATTY Happy Birthday! Love, Tony&#13;
TONY IS A two timing toad! Hatefully&#13;
yours, John&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY to our favorite Sports&#13;
Writer / Poet!!&#13;
LUIS: Monday night Tuesday morning was&#13;
hot! Again soon?? I. 8. L. (2/3 inc.)&#13;
LUIS: Last Monday the mechanic wasn't&#13;
necessary. I. &amp;. L. (2/3 inc.)&#13;
HARRY I need you too. Ear&#13;
HARRY, GORDI, TITO AND ANONYMOUS:&#13;
Your bananas are wonderful.&#13;
FOR SALE: Used Administrative Waterbed •&#13;
cheap. Ext. 3211 for info.&#13;
DICK: I l ove your 23 gallon hat. I.J. &amp; L„ inc.&#13;
DR. BOWZER: Hang it up!! I.J. &amp; L., Inc.&#13;
CHRISSIE H: Think bones. I.J. &amp; L-, inc.&#13;
JIM: I want you!! Ear&#13;
JIMMY "K": Plus Tard, S.E.N.&#13;
GUMMS: You've got some heavy hair. Harry&#13;
PET: You're the ultimate. Harry&#13;
JILL: We all know you. UW P&#13;
CHUCK: 21 and you still don't know where to&#13;
buy a cheap lei. I.R.P.&#13;
LUIS: only 33 more days until you, us and&#13;
your penthouse can start relaxing. I. &amp; J.&#13;
(2/3 inc.)&#13;
J. (1/3 inc.): Monday night / Tuesday morning&#13;
you rose the dead, but you put the&#13;
living away. I. 8. L. (2/3 inc.)&#13;
I. (1/3 inc.): Pardon our ignorance, what's a&#13;
lei??? J. 8. L. (2/3 inc.)&#13;
CHUCK: good joke — we're freakin'. I. J. 8.&#13;
L., INC.&#13;
CHUCK: We're Trlppln' — the same&#13;
PAT: is your whip available next Monday&#13;
night / Tuesday morning?? I.J. 8. L„ inc.&#13;
MIKE S.: No more U.C. in Wood Creek's pool.&#13;
Good luck!! J. (1/3 inc.)&#13;
PSGA GROUPIES: Our lives would be&#13;
meaningless without you ... I. J. 8. L., inc.&#13;
PHIL: The hairless wonder. We still love you.&#13;
I.J. 8. L., inc.&#13;
RED: Are you red all over?????? I.J. a. L„&#13;
inc.&#13;
UW-P: Who do you know wants to buy&#13;
PSGA??? Call 2244. Ask for Ernie Von&#13;
Kreuser.&#13;
PAT MULLIGAN: Congratulations on the&#13;
AVERAGE. I s till think you're quite above&#13;
the Average.&#13;
DR. DREWW: Not to worry about the current&#13;
rumors, Mary or not, we still love you. See&#13;
you on Park Avenue this Sunday, you little&#13;
cutie.&#13;
PAT C: Have a jolly good birthday, ed.&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY PATTY. Yer not too bad&#13;
— for a Yank. John&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY PATTY Rick&#13;
PATTY have an ecstatic birthday!!! Any&#13;
PATTY I hope you have a perfect B day!&#13;
Robb&#13;
PAT (ed): Please don't leave! My stuff Is&#13;
here. I'll be back at 5 p.m. Jo&#13;
GOODBYE CRUEL WORLD! Tony&#13;
Enjoy God's Country&#13;
with Style.&#13;
'•'•/.yf.r/. raffv'L- ,&#13;
"'"•"•tea IK ncnsu '&#13;
!l On Top&#13;
at Union Square &#13;
8 Thursday, December 2,1982 RANGER&#13;
Men's Basketball&#13;
Referee's call ruins Ranger's opener&#13;
by by Scott Scott CCann annalt alte e fouls. HP. marip hnth chnfc mi.. . ,&#13;
Who would have thought that&#13;
neither the play of P arkside or St.&#13;
Xavier would not be the determining&#13;
factor in the outcome of&#13;
Saturday's game? Probably&#13;
nobody, but it ended up being an&#13;
official's call that was definitely a&#13;
big factor in aiding St. Xavier to a&#13;
69-61 victory.&#13;
Parkside was leading 49^1 and&#13;
had the momentum when disaster&#13;
struck. With just over nine&#13;
minutes remaining in the game,&#13;
St. Xavier's Mike Pomorski made&#13;
a power move towards the basket.&#13;
He made the shot and was&#13;
simultaneously fouled by&#13;
Parkside's Brian Diggins.&#13;
Before even letting Pomorski&#13;
shoot his free throw, referee Mike&#13;
Boelter called a technical foul on&#13;
Parkside Coach Rees Johnson for&#13;
kneeling in front of the Ranger's&#13;
bench instead of sitting on it. The&#13;
officials then proceeded to hand&#13;
the ball to St. Xavier's Bob&#13;
Konecki to shoot the two technical&#13;
fouls. He made both shots and was&#13;
allowed to shoot Pomopski's free&#13;
throw as well. Konecki converted&#13;
on the free throw and tied the&#13;
score at 49-49. Why Konecki was&#13;
allowed to shoot his team mate's&#13;
free throw no one knows, except of&#13;
course referee Boelter. (Does he&#13;
even know why?)&#13;
St. Xavier Mike Keasler was&#13;
content to sit back and watch the&#13;
whole ordeal. "Obviously we got a&#13;
big break from the officials," he&#13;
commented. "Konecki is a 90&#13;
percent free throw shooter and&#13;
Pomorski shoots only about 55&#13;
percent from the line. They just&#13;
handed the ball to Konecki and&#13;
naturally I wasn't going to argue.&#13;
I think it just happened out of&#13;
confusion."&#13;
Whether it was confusion or not,&#13;
Coach Johnson was still upset&#13;
about the whole incident.&#13;
"I'm disappointed because poor&#13;
judgement on the part of the official&#13;
had bearing on the game.&#13;
The referee messed up. I'm still&#13;
not clear about that technical I&#13;
was under the impression that you&#13;
can kneel in front of your bench on&#13;
a dead ball," Johnson said.&#13;
Even though Johnson was&#13;
disappointed with the final outcome&#13;
of the game, he was pleased&#13;
with his team's effort.&#13;
"We're just as good as them,"&#13;
said Johnson. "I'm pleased&#13;
overall with the team's play. We&#13;
played together as a team. We&#13;
didn't lose our intensity but our&#13;
mental toughness towards the&#13;
end. We're a young team and it's&#13;
something we will have to work on&#13;
as the season progresses."&#13;
Jay Rundles led Parkside in&#13;
scoring with 16 points.&#13;
Tonight at 7:30 Parkside plays&#13;
Roosevelt University here.&#13;
Saturday, Parkside has their last&#13;
home game until Jan. 15 which&#13;
they will play Oshkosh at 7:30.&#13;
Optimistic outlook for women's Basketball&#13;
by Carol Kortendick&#13;
Basketball has infringed its high&#13;
strung, nerve racking season upon&#13;
us once again and with it brings to&#13;
us the Parkside Women's&#13;
Basketball Team. Coaching the&#13;
team this year is Noreen Goggin.&#13;
She is optimistic about this year's&#13;
season. The first home game of&#13;
the season will be played against&#13;
North Central University, this&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 4 at 5 p.m. Coach&#13;
Goggin feels the team needs more&#13;
time to improve its skills, stating&#13;
her team will be slightly shakey&#13;
for their first few games.&#13;
Starters for the game will be,&#13;
center Laurie Pope, a 6 foot&#13;
senior, forwards Tracie Sylvester&#13;
and Jenne Jacobs, both juniors,&#13;
and guards Robin Henschel and&#13;
Cindy Ruffert, also juniors. According&#13;
to Goggin, past experience,&#13;
tight defense and ability&#13;
to run the fast break will be the&#13;
team's main forces. Coach Goggin&#13;
credits the team's strength to&#13;
Laurie Pope, Robin Henschel and&#13;
Jenne Jacobs. Other team&#13;
members, however, should be&#13;
noted for their valuable contributions&#13;
to the squad. They are:&#13;
Kim VanDerra, Patty Hesse,&#13;
Debbie Ambruso, Midge Schinderle,&#13;
Chris Kirt, Lynda Masters&#13;
and Andrea Larson, who is&#13;
presently suffering from a knee&#13;
injury.&#13;
Goggin anticipates a balance&#13;
between wins and losses and&#13;
predicts tough competition from&#13;
U.W. Milwaukee. Games will&#13;
usually be played on Tuesdays,&#13;
Thursdays and Saturdays. Conference&#13;
won't begin until after&#13;
Christmas and Goggin trusts her&#13;
team will improve to place high in&#13;
the tournament. This season holds&#13;
many hopes for the women's&#13;
team.&#13;
OPPS goes for t he shot.&#13;
. ANNOUNCING ONE OF THE BEST EN TERTAINMENT PACKAGES AROUND&#13;
RANGER BASKETBALL&#13;
&amp; LIVE POST-GAME ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
AT THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
TWO FOR THE PRICE OF ONE — GO TO THE GAME AND EXCHANGE YOUR&#13;
BASKETBALL TICKET AT HALF TIME FOR A FREE POST-GAME EVENT ADMISSION&#13;
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SOUNDS OF 50's&#13;
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9:00 P.M. —UNION SQ.&#13;
$3.00 AT THE DOOR&#13;
— OR —&#13;
FREE WITH EXCHANGE TICKET&#13;
POPULAR MADISON&#13;
BASEDGROUP&#13;
THE&#13;
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9:00 P.M. —UNION SQ.&#13;
$3.00 AT THE DOOR&#13;
— OR —&#13;
FREE WITH EXCHANGE TICKET&#13;
NOTE: FREE POST-GAME EVENT TICKETS ARE OBTAINABLE ONLY AT THE GAME. B ASKETBALL TICKFTQ VA/I. .&#13;
NOT BE HONORED AS ADMISSION A T THE UNION. </text>
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        <element elementId="50">
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          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 11, issue 13, December 2, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="41">
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          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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          </elementTextContainer>
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          <name>Date</name>
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            <elementText elementTextId="70435">
              <text>1982-12-02</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="70439">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="70440">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>English</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="70443">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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