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              <text>Teaching award - conflict to be resolved</text>
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              <text>if University of Wisconsin - Porkside&#13;
Teaching Award&#13;
Conflict to be resolved&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
This year, Teaching Excellence&#13;
Awards, given annually since 1976&#13;
to two of Parkside's most outstanding&#13;
teachers through a&#13;
selection process conducted by a&#13;
student / faculty committee, were&#13;
not announced by Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin at the fall Convocation due&#13;
to a disagreement (between the&#13;
administration and the Awards&#13;
Committee) over the eligibility of&#13;
one of the recipients.&#13;
The recipient in question,&#13;
Shirley Kersey, taught last year&#13;
under contract non - renewal and&#13;
has since left Parkside. As a result&#13;
of the problem, only one award&#13;
will be given this year and policy&#13;
changes will be made before the&#13;
next Teaching Excellence&#13;
Committee convenes next spring.&#13;
According to Guskin, "the issue&#13;
is: if the person is not employed at&#13;
the university, why give them the&#13;
award? I'm not judging whether&#13;
the person is better or worse than&#13;
other names submitted — it's just&#13;
that the person is not here. It is&#13;
inappropriate to give out an&#13;
award which is supposed to set an&#13;
example, to reinforce good&#13;
teaching, when the recipient is in&#13;
the final year," Guskin said.&#13;
Guskin also attributed the late&#13;
decision on the award to the fact&#13;
that he felt it was "inappropriate&#13;
to give the faculty a monetary&#13;
award (at Convocation) given this&#13;
year's budget cuts." Each award&#13;
traditionally carries a $500 gift to&#13;
the recipients. Legislature&#13;
covering the awards stipulates&#13;
that the recipients be chosen by a&#13;
student / faculty committee, with&#13;
the chancellor to fund it out of&#13;
private unlimited funds given to&#13;
Parkside by private donors. These&#13;
funds are kept in an account with&#13;
the UW-System.&#13;
Guskin began to act on the&#13;
committee's decision late in the&#13;
summer. At that time, he spoke to&#13;
the directors, Peter Hoff and Dave&#13;
Beecham, and to the only faculty&#13;
member of the committee still at&#13;
Parkside, Tim Bell.&#13;
Last week, he presented the&#13;
problem to the remaining student&#13;
members of the committee: Ann&#13;
Roland, Chris Sartori and Gus&#13;
Sorenson. Originally, there were&#13;
four members on the Awards&#13;
Committee from the faculty and&#13;
the student body. "One of our&#13;
problems is that so many people&#13;
are gone from the committee,"&#13;
Guskin said.&#13;
The Nominations Committee,&#13;
which initially screened 109&#13;
candidates nominated by students&#13;
consisted of students chosen by&#13;
their major departments and&#13;
divisions. The Awards Committee,&#13;
which further screened&#13;
candidates to a lisi of six, was&#13;
composed of students from the&#13;
Nominations Committee and&#13;
faculty members who were past&#13;
recipients -of the Teaching Excellence&#13;
Award. Both committees&#13;
observed candidates in the&#13;
classroom, checked and rated&#13;
SCAFES (Student evaluations)&#13;
and discussed the candidates with&#13;
committee members.&#13;
During the recent meeting with&#13;
student committee members,&#13;
Guskin said the conflict over this&#13;
year's award was the product of&#13;
"misinformation on the part of the&#13;
student committee." Sartori said&#13;
that the committee had no idea&#13;
that Kersey would not be here this&#13;
year, adding, "We didn't investigate&#13;
because we felt it had no&#13;
bearing." Sartori also said that&#13;
the guidelines they were given&#13;
initially were "very slim." He&#13;
said that students were asked to&#13;
use their own judgment in setting&#13;
up their criteria.&#13;
One of the problems the com-&#13;
•mittee faced, Guskin said, was&#13;
that the nomination forms were&#13;
not clear (See right). "The&#13;
process is as not clear as it should&#13;
be, but the forms were designed to&#13;
encourage younger students, who&#13;
don't know who is ad hoc, tenured&#13;
and so on, to nominate someone&#13;
they feel is the best teacher,"&#13;
Guskin said. In committee&#13;
deliberation, he explained,&#13;
students and faculty were expected&#13;
to"" eliminate those&#13;
ineligible because of employee&#13;
status.&#13;
"We could give it to this person&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
Proposal awaits faculty senate action&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The current proposal to revise&#13;
the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
requirements is awaiting Faculty&#13;
Senate action during its late-fall&#13;
meeting Dec. 1.&#13;
In May 1980, the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee (APC) appointed&#13;
a special subcommittee to&#13;
review the Breadth requirements&#13;
at Parkside. In March and April of&#13;
1981, the subcommittee's report&#13;
was circulated to and discussed&#13;
with academic divisions, students&#13;
and support staff. On the basis of&#13;
these discussions the APC voted&#13;
on June 25 to recommend&#13;
revisions in the requirements, to&#13;
take effect for students entering&#13;
Parkside in Fall 1983 and later.&#13;
The proposal would replace the&#13;
current 30 credit Breadth&#13;
requirement with new&#13;
requirements totalling at least 31&#13;
credits: nine in Comparative&#13;
Frames of Reference, six in&#13;
Human Science, nine in Literature&#13;
and the Arts and seven in Natural&#13;
Science. The present foreign&#13;
language requirement, where&#13;
applicable, would not be affected.&#13;
The major difference between&#13;
the current proposal and the&#13;
original revision proposed by the&#13;
APC subcommittee concerns the&#13;
absence of the-Symbolic Systems&#13;
requirement, consisting of f oreign&#13;
language, mathematics and&#13;
computer science. Those three&#13;
areas must still agree on what is&#13;
comparable in terms of d ifficulty,&#13;
hours, credits, competence and&#13;
how to test in or be placed out of&#13;
them, according to Beecham&#13;
Robinson, APC chairperson.&#13;
Once the three areas reach an&#13;
agreement, the Symbolic Systems&#13;
will probably be added to the&#13;
Breadth requirements. "I don't&#13;
expect it to be added this time,"&#13;
said Robinson. "I've heard that in&#13;
the Senate meeting there will be&#13;
an amendment to reintroduce it.&#13;
And if that amendment passes ...&#13;
the vote will be on the whole&#13;
proposal, including Symbolic&#13;
Systems. If they defeat (the&#13;
amendment), they will be voting&#13;
on the proposal minus Symbolic&#13;
Systems."&#13;
After the Faculty Senate approves&#13;
the Breadth requirements,&#13;
they become policy. "Then a lot of&#13;
work will have to begin," said&#13;
Robinson. "Disciplines and the&#13;
divisions will have to figure out&#13;
how to respond to the new&#13;
requirements."&#13;
Immediately upon adoption of&#13;
the Breadth revision by the&#13;
Faculty Senate, the APC will ask&#13;
each division to prepare lists of&#13;
courses within that division that&#13;
might meet particular&#13;
requirements. No courses will be&#13;
approved without the mutual&#13;
agreement of the division and the&#13;
APC. Future changes in the status&#13;
of individual courses will also&#13;
require their mutual agreement.&#13;
The report APC is submitting to&#13;
the Senate for approval lists the&#13;
following criteria for * implementation&#13;
of Breadth&#13;
requirements:&#13;
• No course shall receive approval&#13;
as acceptable for more&#13;
than one Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
area.&#13;
• Courses acceptable for&#13;
Breadth credit should be courses&#13;
that one would ideally like to see&#13;
all Paf-kside students take, rather&#13;
than courses dealing with special&#13;
topics of interest primarily to&#13;
majors or other special groups.&#13;
® All B readth courses should be&#13;
full - semester offerings carrying&#13;
at least three credits; laboratory&#13;
courses should carry at least four&#13;
credits.&#13;
• While a limited number of&#13;
exceptions is likely, most Breadth&#13;
courses should be lower - division&#13;
courses.&#13;
• To allow students to plan&#13;
programs and to give them a real&#13;
choice at registration time,&#13;
Breadth courses should be&#13;
regularly offered, including in the&#13;
evening.&#13;
• Breadth courses are to&#13;
comprise a distinct minority of&#13;
courses listed in the catalog.&#13;
Except in cases where a program&#13;
is expanding rapidly, future additions&#13;
should generally be&#13;
balanced by deletions from the&#13;
list.&#13;
Courses approved by the APC as&#13;
meeting Breadth requirements&#13;
will be indicated by appropriate&#13;
symbols in catalogs and course&#13;
schedules. Catalogs having to be&#13;
changed is the reason for the two&#13;
year lead time between the approval&#13;
of the revised Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge and its implementation,&#13;
explained Robinson.&#13;
&#13;
Immediately upon Faculty&#13;
Senate approval of the Breadth&#13;
proposal, the APC will establish a&#13;
faculty - staff implementation&#13;
group. This group will work out&#13;
the details of record - keeping and&#13;
course schedule information for&#13;
the new requirements. The group&#13;
will advise the APC in ways of&#13;
dealing with special problems of&#13;
transfer students, articulation&#13;
with high schools, credit for prior&#13;
learning, and credit by&#13;
examination.&#13;
NOMINATION FORM&#13;
Each academic year, the Parkside Teaching Excellence&#13;
Award Committee seeks to recognize and reward superior&#13;
teaching. Nominate any faculty member, full or part-time,&#13;
who deserves this honor. Submit your nomination to&#13;
marked boxes at the Information Kiosks, WLLC Reference&#13;
Desk, cafeteria, or concourse before 5 P.M. Friday&#13;
February 26.&#13;
I recommend because&#13;
Form distributed to Parkside students last spring.&#13;
and chalk it up to a committee&#13;
decision," Guskin said, "but that&#13;
wouldn't be a desirable decision&#13;
for the awards program."&#13;
Another alternative, to make an&#13;
award to another person from the&#13;
finalist list, was not considered a&#13;
feasible solution to the problem by&#13;
students.&#13;
At Sorenson's suggestion,&#13;
Roland and Sartori agreed that a&#13;
certificate "in recognition of her&#13;
achievement" should be sent to&#13;
Kersey from the student members&#13;
of the committee. The students&#13;
also agreed that they would rather&#13;
see only one faculty member&#13;
awarded this year. "I'd feel better&#13;
if only one was given," Roland&#13;
said. "To me, it already feels&#13;
tainted." Sartori said, "I can't say&#13;
I'm not disappointed, but&#13;
problems come up in everything&#13;
you do."&#13;
By Tuesday, Guskin reported to&#13;
the Ranger that he had contacted&#13;
the remaining committee&#13;
members with the Students'&#13;
suggestion and that it was&#13;
generally agreed to make the&#13;
single award this year.&#13;
Those who worked last year&#13;
with the Awards Committee and&#13;
are no longer on campus will be&#13;
informed of the committee's&#13;
decision, Guskin said. The&#13;
monetary award will remain in&#13;
the UW system account. And this&#13;
year's award recipient will be&#13;
formally announced by the end of&#13;
Continued On Page Seven&#13;
SUFAC to budget soon&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Allocation of the segregated&#13;
fees Parkside students pay each&#13;
semester will start soon after the&#13;
Segregated University Fees&#13;
Allocation Committee (SUFAC)&#13;
receives preliminary budget&#13;
requests from various student&#13;
services and organizations. The&#13;
deadline for submitting budgets is&#13;
Monday, Oct. 12.&#13;
SUFAC is a subcommittee of&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. (PSGA). The&#13;
committee annually allocates&#13;
segregated university fees, the&#13;
portion of the total tuition fee that&#13;
is designated for the operation of&#13;
various campus groups. This year&#13;
the segregated fee for a full-time&#13;
undergraduate student was $72,&#13;
the lowest in the UW System.&#13;
The total segregated fee budget&#13;
consists of this allocatable portion&#13;
and a non-alloca table portion for&#13;
the retirement of debt service,&#13;
capital projects, building maintenance&#13;
and other fixed costs.&#13;
Intramurals, Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB), PSGA,&#13;
Ranger, Student Organization&#13;
Council (SOC) and Winter Carnival&#13;
submit budget requests&#13;
directly to SUFAC while all other&#13;
budget requests go through&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Educational Services Carla&#13;
Stoffle.&#13;
After familiarizing themselves&#13;
with the budget requests, SUFAC&#13;
members will begin deliberating&#13;
and approving individual budgets&#13;
from Nov. 2 until semester break.&#13;
After SUFAC approves its final&#13;
total budget, it is submitted to&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin. If Guskin&#13;
concurs with the recommended&#13;
budget, he arranged for its implementation&#13;
by sending it on to&#13;
the UW System Board of Regents.&#13;
If Guskin doesn't approve the&#13;
budget, he negotiates with the&#13;
PSGA President, SUFAC&#13;
chairperson and President Pro&#13;
Tempore of the PSGA Senate. If&#13;
PSGA and the Chancellor cannot&#13;
agree on the budget allocations,&#13;
each submit a set of recommendations&#13;
to the Board of&#13;
Regents for final disposition.&#13;
All actions of SUFAC are&#13;
subject to the final approval of&#13;
PSGA in conjunction with the&#13;
Chancellor. The Senate may not&#13;
amend SUFAC's recommendation&#13;
but can reject it and return it to&#13;
the committee with a two-thirds&#13;
vote of the entire Senate.&#13;
According to the PSGA Constitution,&#13;
SUFAC consists of e ight&#13;
voting members, six PSGA&#13;
Senators and two chosen by the&#13;
student body, one elected in the&#13;
spring and one elected in the fall.&#13;
Three of the Senators are chosen&#13;
in the spring and the other three in&#13;
the fall by a blind drawing of interested&#13;
Senators. In addition,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Administration&#13;
of Fiscal Affairs&#13;
Gary Goetz and Campus&#13;
Controller David Holle may sit&#13;
with the committee as non - voting&#13;
members.&#13;
The committee elects a&#13;
chairperson after each spring&#13;
election. This year's chairperson&#13;
is Senator Luis Valldejuli.&#13;
INSIDE ...&#13;
* M ore teaching excellence: Letter and editorial&#13;
Career Comer • Strollin' Boner returns&#13;
• Soccer invitational results &#13;
2 Thursday, October 8, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Editorials&#13;
sta^farl^T^tV^01 ^ T™™ °&#13;
f thG ma&#13;
i°rity °f th e editorial&#13;
coiled&#13;
Award conflict resolved?&#13;
After a short - lived and virtually bloodless scuffle between&#13;
students and the administration, the conflict over the 1981&#13;
recipients of t he Teaching Excellence Award has been resolved&#13;
Or has it?&#13;
When looked at through the bottom of a Coke bottle, with both&#13;
eyes closed it would appear that the awards will run smoothly if&#13;
the proposed resolutions are adopted as campus procedure But&#13;
at what cost?&#13;
• The first thing that happened was that the administration&#13;
assigned faculty members to draft additions to the policy&#13;
dealing with the awards. This tells the campus that 1) students&#13;
are not to be trusted with this prestigious award anymore, even&#13;
though they are the ones who are in the most daily contact with&#13;
those who are eligible to win it and have their careers at stake if&#13;
they receive poor teaching at Parkside; 2) students, who were&#13;
asked when they sat on the committee to use their learned&#13;
powers of discretion and judgment in choosing the best teacher&#13;
at Parkside (in conjunction with faculty) are not capable of&#13;
doing so; and 3) students are considered to be rather foolish&#13;
ignorant young'uns who will react pretty clannishly when thev&#13;
have the power to, while faculty are above all that.&#13;
• Also in the planning stages is another award — the award for&#13;
scholarship among faculty. This award could signify a shift in&#13;
thinking about the award. It could say: "It's no problem if&#13;
students mess up. We'll all know that the really meaningful&#13;
award will be decided upon by the recipient's peers anyway."&#13;
Again, a subtly placed comment about students.&#13;
• Chancellor Guskin will assist students in forming concrete&#13;
criteria each year. Students will be mothered along just like thev&#13;
were in some high schools — if they can even remember those&#13;
days. Because of t his conflict, students are being reminded that&#13;
they are not ready yet to make decisions, even though many of&#13;
them have spent over a decade living adult lives.&#13;
Vote October 14 § 15!!I&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Association's senatorial&#13;
elections will be held next week, October 14 and 15. If a small&#13;
percentage of students turn out to vote, as they do every year&#13;
here and at campuses across the country, a minority will elect&#13;
those persons who are responsible for directly conveying just&#13;
about all of Parkside's student opinion to the university administration,&#13;
along with local and state government officials.&#13;
This fall, the Ranger was unable to print the candidates' views&#13;
on student life, the Book Exchange, SUFAC budgeting (where&#13;
about $72 of your tuition went), United Council (a student lobbying&#13;
council; where 50tf of your tuition went — along with&#13;
everyone else who attends UW system schools), financial aid&#13;
etc. We were unable to print candidates' views because petitions&#13;
to run for the senate came in too late for this issue and the&#13;
election will already be in progress by the time you get the&#13;
Ranger next week.&#13;
We're sorry. In the meantime, stop in at the PSGA office to&#13;
hnd out who is running for the senate and what they stand for&#13;
PSGA will be glad to see you, the Ranger will be happy to have&#13;
been of service despite the poor timing of our deadlines and the&#13;
election, and you won't be sorry.&#13;
s pOWER TO&#13;
VflW CONTROL OF FACTOmtl&#13;
J WME Poyoog£T&#13;
•&gt;«E&#13;
/tfvoLur/m&#13;
mvi&#13;
To the e ditor:&#13;
Committee member feels 'cheated'&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
What follows is my personal&#13;
opinion and does not reflect the&#13;
views of anybody else. Please&#13;
keep this in mind while reading&#13;
this letter.&#13;
Last semester I was on the&#13;
committee that determined the&#13;
winners of the annual Teaching&#13;
Excellence Awards. Two winners&#13;
were selected but unfortunately,&#13;
one will not receive it. It is this&#13;
point that I wish to focus on.&#13;
The nomination form states two&#13;
very important things:&#13;
"Nominate any faculty member,&#13;
full or part - time, who deserves&#13;
this honor." The form also states&#13;
"Some things to consider include:&#13;
Write&#13;
Ranger&#13;
a L etterI!!&#13;
From the Files&#13;
10 years ago —&#13;
"Oktoberfest Parkside Style"&#13;
Activities begin Friday morning&#13;
at the Parkside athletic area with&#13;
the start of the Parkside Invitational&#13;
Soccer Tournament,&#13;
pitting MAIA power Eastern&#13;
Illinois against a strong Ohio State&#13;
Club from the Big Ten ... the&#13;
intramural golf tournament starts&#13;
early Friday morning at the&#13;
Pershing Courts in Racine.&#13;
Highlighting the afternoon and&#13;
early evening will be the&#13;
Oktoberfest Polka Party on the&#13;
Office of Athletics parking lot and&#13;
surrounding areas.&#13;
There will be no let-up&#13;
Saturday . . . Intramural&#13;
tivities include a sailing regatta in&#13;
penguin boats ... at the Kenosha&#13;
Yacht Club . . .&#13;
The match here will pit the&#13;
Parkside Rugby Club against the&#13;
Wisconsin (Madison) Rugby Club.&#13;
And there'll be demonstrations as&#13;
well — in horse riding and gymnastics&#13;
— to follow the morning&#13;
fencing competition with the&#13;
Shorewood Club.&#13;
At 9 p.m. there will be a dance at&#13;
the Student Activities Building to&#13;
close out Parkside's first&#13;
Oktoberfest.&#13;
from Parkside Newscope, vol. 5,&#13;
no. 5, Oct. 4, 1971&#13;
5 years ago -&#13;
"Bowden Opposes by&#13;
on&#13;
acof&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
for&#13;
Rules,"&#13;
Diane Carlson&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden, President&#13;
Student Government, said she&#13;
feels very strongly against the&#13;
(disciplinary guidelines being&#13;
implemented by the UW Board of&#13;
Regents on all UW system&#13;
campuses.) The code consists&#13;
two sections: 1) Procedures&#13;
non - academic misconduct; and&#13;
2) Procedures for academic&#13;
misconduct.&#13;
Non - academic misconduct can&#13;
be broken down into two types:&#13;
serious offenses like vandalism&#13;
and assault which are considered&#13;
illegal in civil courts, and minor&#13;
offenses such as rowdiness and&#13;
breaking of dorm rules.&#13;
Bowden, who said she will be&#13;
attending the implementation&#13;
procedures "under protest"&#13;
stated, "The University should not&#13;
be allowed to try a student for&#13;
serious offenses like vandalism&#13;
and assault which are considered&#13;
illegal in civil courts because of&#13;
the possibility of double jeopardy ;&#13;
he could also have action taken&#13;
against him in a civil court for the&#13;
same act."&#13;
"The guidelines are eased&#13;
the idea of 'in loco parentis'&#13;
have more bearing on a dorm&#13;
on&#13;
and&#13;
campus ..." Bowden said. "In&#13;
loco parentis" refers to the policy&#13;
of administrators at some dorm&#13;
campuses of acting as parents to&#13;
students away from home. "At&#13;
Parkside, 23 percent of the&#13;
students are age 25 or older; we&#13;
just don't need it," Bowden said.&#13;
The disciplinary code sets up an&#13;
appeals procedure and court trial&#13;
for the accused student. The&#13;
actual methods used in implementing&#13;
. . . are determined by&#13;
each campus.&#13;
- Ranger, vol. 5, no. 5, Oct. 6,&#13;
1976.&#13;
1 year ago —&#13;
"McReynolds Visits Parkside" by&#13;
Sue Michetti&#13;
David McReynolds, the&#13;
Socialist presidential candidate,&#13;
visited Parkside on Sept. 23.&#13;
Some Parkside students who&#13;
heard McReynolds speak&#13;
responded with the following&#13;
remarks:&#13;
"He sidestepped a lot. I think in&#13;
the remarks he made he treated&#13;
us like we were far below his level&#13;
of thinking, like we couldn't understand&#13;
what he meant," said&#13;
Mike Sullivan, a senior.&#13;
Orin iv. lay lor leniarkcu,&#13;
"McReynolds has some good&#13;
ideas, but they won't work."&#13;
— Ranger, vol. 9, no. 1, Oct. 2,1980.&#13;
teaching skills, learning environment,&#13;
and rapport with&#13;
students." This is not to say that&#13;
these are the only things to look at&#13;
but it does reinforce the idea that&#13;
this award is based on teaching&#13;
excellence. Other things are&#13;
considered of course, but again,&#13;
teaching is the foundation of this&#13;
award.&#13;
The criteria used by the committee&#13;
is also indicative of the&#13;
award. It is based around five&#13;
areas of roughly equal importance:&#13;
learning environment,&#13;
technique of teaching, knowledge&#13;
of subject matter, tangible&#13;
results, and personal characteristics.&#13;
Such things as tenure,&#13;
job security or the instructor&#13;
coming back the following&#13;
semester were not considered.&#13;
Those on the committee were&#13;
more concerned with the ability to&#13;
teach as this was our purpose in&#13;
the first place — to find the best&#13;
teachers.&#13;
PSF 20/79-80, the policy on&#13;
annual teaching excellence&#13;
awards, approved by the Faculty&#13;
Senate on December 18, 1979&#13;
states the following:&#13;
"Based entirely on the&#13;
nomination forms received from&#13;
students and other materials&#13;
relevant to teaching, and specific&#13;
criteria developed by the selections&#13;
committee, the committee&#13;
shall nominate a slate of candidates&#13;
and transmit the slate to&#13;
the selections committee."&#13;
No mention whatsoever is made&#13;
concerning the return of the&#13;
person to the campus the&#13;
following school year. Chancellor&#13;
Guskin has decided to make this&#13;
the major qualification for getting&#13;
the award. This rule change,&#13;
made four and one - half months&#13;
after the game has been played is&#13;
the only reason Dr. Shirley Kersey&#13;
is being denied what is rightfully&#13;
hers.&#13;
One point must be made before I&#13;
go any further and that is that the&#13;
other recipient is fully qualified&#13;
and his award is above question.&#13;
These two are the winners that our&#13;
committee decided upon. I have&#13;
seen or heard no reasonable&#13;
justification for denying it to&#13;
Dr. Kersey.&#13;
I have contacted five of the&#13;
seven remaining members from&#13;
the selections committee and none&#13;
of them were happy with this new&#13;
development. Many of the people&#13;
from the nominations committee&#13;
that I talked to were also shocked&#13;
and dismayed. As one member&#13;
put it, "I feel as though I have&#13;
been cheated."&#13;
1 am now in a position where I&#13;
feel I have let many people down.&#13;
1 feel that the school administration&#13;
has very little regard&#13;
for student opinions, decisions, or&#13;
student recommendations. I also&#13;
feel that the only way the Chancellor&#13;
can correct this injustice is&#13;
to give Dr. Shirley Kersey her&#13;
just due: the Teaching Excellence&#13;
award. Just as an afterthought,&#13;
how does PSGA and&#13;
the other student groups on&#13;
campus feel about this?&#13;
Gustave R. Sorenson&#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;
(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;
UW Parkside and they are solely&#13;
Frederick, Pat Hensiak Jim k Edenhauser, Earlene&#13;
Myers, Charles iwL c l&lt;&#13;
reuser&#13;
' Mertins, Steve&#13;
Wicks. erce&#13;
' Sue ^vens, Dan Werbie, Jeff&#13;
fespons ible' foMts'edifortafn'or^ bV sfuden,s of&#13;
Published every Thurvlav J P V 3nd con,&#13;
ent.&#13;
va,A&gt;.GER iS P&#13;
rin,&#13;
ed by the UnVon rmno'V??.6&#13;
'&#13;
11VCar exceP&#13;
f during breaks and holidays,&#13;
Written permission is reqCireJ ,or Publishin(&gt; c&#13;
°" Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
All correspondence should be AHH/JC J ?&#13;
ny por,ion RANGER.&#13;
L^tVeS&#13;
'&#13;
d&lt;&#13;
t' Kenosha&#13;
' Wl "l-U dc,&#13;
ressed to: Parkside Ranger, WLLC DI39, UW&#13;
paper with one inch ma'rqins^Au0&#13;
^ ,ypewri,,en&lt; doublespaced on standard size&#13;
eluded for verification ers must be signed and a telephone number in&#13;
reserves all editorial privilege,?'-.? * ? -&#13;
,0r P&#13;
ubli&#13;
cation on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content, ' re,USin&#13;
9 to print letters which contain false or &#13;
El Salvador teacher,&#13;
union leader to speak Parkside hopes to resume AOE series&#13;
On Oct. 11 and 14, people in the&#13;
Racine - Kenosha area can hear&#13;
an insider's report on "What is the&#13;
Truth about El Salvador?" Rosa&#13;
Rivera, a prominent El&#13;
Salvadoran teacher and union&#13;
leader, will speak on Sunday Oct&#13;
11 at 4 p.m. at the Racine Labor&#13;
Center. She will also speak at&#13;
Parkside on Wed., Oct. 14 at 1 p m&#13;
in MOLN DlOl.&#13;
Rivera has taught middle school&#13;
in El Salvador for 30 years In&#13;
1965, she helped found the&#13;
National Association of&#13;
Salvadoran Educators (ANDES).&#13;
Subsequently she served for eight&#13;
years as secretary - general of&#13;
ANDES for her province of San&#13;
Miguel, and as a member of its&#13;
national council. ANDES, which&#13;
represents about 95% of El&#13;
Salvador's teachers, began in the&#13;
latter 1960's to defend the working&#13;
conditions of teachers at the high&#13;
school, middle - school, and pre -&#13;
school levels. In the 1970's the&#13;
organization took up the cause of&#13;
the Salvadoran children as well.&#13;
ANDES is one of the principle&#13;
organizations in the Democratic&#13;
Revolutionary Front (FDR), the&#13;
popular opposition to El&#13;
Salvador's military dictatorship.&#13;
The FDR is a broad coalition of&#13;
some 60 large organizations;&#13;
labor union federations, peasant&#13;
federations, professional and&#13;
small business organizations,&#13;
church groups, major centrist as&#13;
well as left political parties,&#13;
student groups, and others. According&#13;
to former U.S. ambassador&#13;
to El Salvador, Robert&#13;
White, the FDR is supported by&#13;
over 80% of the people in that&#13;
country.&#13;
Also speaking at the Racine&#13;
Labor Center meeting will be John&#13;
Serpe, business representative for&#13;
I.A.M.A.W. (machinist union)&#13;
Lodge 34 in Kenosha. Serpe has&#13;
led the long strike of union employees&#13;
at the G&amp;H Company in&#13;
Kenosha. He will speak on "Union&#13;
Solidarity and El Salvador."&#13;
Moderator of this meeting will be&#13;
Ralph Koenig, director, U.A.W.&#13;
Region 10.&#13;
Sponsors of the meeting at the&#13;
Racine Labor Center include the&#13;
Racine - Kenosha UAW-CAP&#13;
Council, Racine County AFL-CIO&#13;
Council, AFSCME Local 2180,&#13;
Racine N.O.W., Kenosha N.O.W.,&#13;
and Racine - Kenosha CISPES&#13;
(Committee in Solidarity with the&#13;
People of El Salvador).&#13;
The sponsor of the Parkside&#13;
event is the Student Mobilization&#13;
for Survival.&#13;
Both meetings are free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
St. Joe's&#13;
UW-Parkside hopes to resume&#13;
its Accent on Enrichment (AOE)&#13;
performing arts series next year,&#13;
according to a letter mailed Sept.&#13;
25 to persons who held season&#13;
tickets to the 1980-81 series.&#13;
The university announced&#13;
earlier that the series would be&#13;
suspended for the 1981-82 season&#13;
because of state - mandated&#13;
budget cutbacks. The series has&#13;
been virtually sold out on a subscription&#13;
basis since its inception&#13;
in 1976.&#13;
Fund drive nears goal&#13;
KENOSHA — The St. Joseph's&#13;
high school endowment and improvement&#13;
fund drive has already&#13;
reached $326,100, about two -&#13;
thirds of the campaign goal of&#13;
$500,000.&#13;
The first campaign report was&#13;
announced Saturday night at a&#13;
kickoff rally for nearly 200 persons&#13;
at St. Joseph's high school&#13;
which launched the second phase&#13;
of the campaign.&#13;
The $326,100 has been raised by&#13;
the Major Gifts division headed by&#13;
campaign chairman Richard&#13;
Arneson and George Connolly.&#13;
The total represents 56 corporate&#13;
and individual gifts secured since&#13;
the fund drive began early last&#13;
month.&#13;
The kickoff at St. Joseph's&#13;
Saturday marked the opening of&#13;
the Advance Gifts segment of the&#13;
drive, which is being co-chaired&#13;
by Frank Fuhrman and Paul&#13;
Sebastian.&#13;
The Alumni, Parents, Friends&#13;
and Parish units of the campaign&#13;
will begin later this month.&#13;
Guests at Saturday's affair&#13;
were treated to an appearance by&#13;
TV star A1 Molinaro, who is cochairman&#13;
of the campaign with&#13;
Alan Ameche. Ameche will visit&#13;
Kenosha next month on behalf of&#13;
the drive.&#13;
The St. Joseph's fund drive is&#13;
aimed at creating a foundation to&#13;
insure financial stability, keep&#13;
tuition affordable, and to improve&#13;
salaries of teachers, as well as to&#13;
provide for immediate physical&#13;
upgrading of the high school.&#13;
Spearheading the drive, whose&#13;
theme is "Preserving Choice&#13;
Through Independence," are&#13;
more than a dozen of Kenosha's&#13;
civic, financial, business, media,&#13;
labor and religious leaders, who&#13;
have organized the campaign in&#13;
planning meetings over the past&#13;
few months.&#13;
About $350,000 of the $500,000&#13;
goal will be earmarked for the&#13;
endowment fund, $150,000 for&#13;
physical improvements. All funds&#13;
will be managed by a board of&#13;
Kenosha residents with expertise&#13;
in various financial areas. Arneson&#13;
said that board will be&#13;
separate and distinct from the&#13;
School Sisters of St. Francis,&#13;
which owns the high school.&#13;
Coming&#13;
October 21st Parkside Union&#13;
free °drn&#13;
,ssio,&#13;
\&gt;oO(&#13;
do, or Pn'zes&#13;
vwe - con^s&#13;
OLD STYLE NITE&#13;
The letter to subscribers, signed&#13;
by Public Information Director&#13;
Walt Shirer, said that in the face&#13;
of the cutbacks the university's&#13;
first priority was in protecting the&#13;
quality and scope of academic&#13;
programs, resulting in cuts in non&#13;
- instructional areas including the&#13;
AOE program.&#13;
"All of us at the university are&#13;
disappointed that AOE must be&#13;
suspended for the 1981-82 season," -&#13;
the letter said. "We want you to&#13;
know, however, that we are&#13;
planning to resume the series in&#13;
1982-83.&#13;
"The cost of AOE attractions&#13;
and related expenses has increased&#13;
dramatically in recent&#13;
years. Without sacrificing the&#13;
quality of the series, it has become&#13;
increasingly difficult, if not impossible,&#13;
to operate on a break -&#13;
even basis while keeping the&#13;
series affordable to our subscribers.&#13;
&#13;
"Because we will never compromise&#13;
the standard of excellence&#13;
and entertainment value&#13;
which AOE audiences have come&#13;
to expect since the inaugural&#13;
series in 1976-77, new funding&#13;
arrangements will have to be&#13;
found. We are confident they can&#13;
be found, and we hope that you&#13;
look forward with us to the&#13;
resumption of the series — better&#13;
than ever — next season."&#13;
Among the attractions offered&#13;
during previous AOE seasons are&#13;
the Juillard String Quartet,&#13;
violinists Pinchas Zukerman and&#13;
Eugene Fodor, soprano Elly&#13;
Ameling, flamenco guitarist&#13;
Carlos Montoya, baritone Robert&#13;
Merrill, the Norman Luboff Choir,&#13;
jazz greats Earl "Fatha" Hines&#13;
and Dizzy Gillespie, soprano&#13;
Roberta Peters, the St. Paul&#13;
Chamber Orchestra, Erick&#13;
Hawkins Dance Company, the&#13;
Vienna Choir Boys, the Stan&#13;
Kenton Orchestra, Oscar winner&#13;
Estelle Parsons, the Preservation&#13;
Hall Jazz Band, the Guthrie&#13;
Theater, the New Shakespeare&#13;
Company of San Francisco, editor&#13;
Ben Bradlee, Vincent Price as&#13;
Oscar Wilde, the Moscow Pops&#13;
Orchestra and pianist Philippe&#13;
Entremont with the Orchestre du&#13;
Capitole Toulouse.&#13;
Patronize RANGER Advertisers!&#13;
RED PIN&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
AAon 9 - Noon&#13;
Tues Noon -6&#13;
Fri 3-6&#13;
"That's strange," says Strollin' Bowlin', "Red Pin&#13;
Bowling?" Strollin' Bowlin' soon learns the Red Pin&#13;
Bowling is only 60&lt;t pe r game and by throwing a strike on&#13;
the red head pin, he can win free games of bowling or&#13;
pitchers of soda and beer. Why not stop down to the Rec&#13;
Center during Red Pin Bowlin hours and try for your Red&#13;
Pin Strike?&#13;
^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiii&#13;
¥&#13;
I f e*r=m&#13;
fmiiiiiiiuiiiiiijuiiiuiuimiuiiiiuii&#13;
new waves it with&#13;
THE&#13;
ODD&#13;
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9&#13;
9 Rm., union SQUARE&#13;
PARKSIDE STUDEATS $ZOO&#13;
GUESTS $ 2.50&#13;
iiiiiiiiuiiimiiiiiiiiiriiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiii|iiiiiuiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii|iiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!isiiiitiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii^ &#13;
4 Thursday, October 8,1981 RANGER&#13;
Access program offers self-paced study toward UWP degree&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
Parkside truly has something&#13;
for everyone. For the traditional&#13;
student, it has day classes. For the&#13;
non - traditional student, it offers&#13;
night and independent classes.&#13;
And now, thanks to a grant from&#13;
the National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities, it has classes that&#13;
you can take in your home, at your&#13;
own pace, and in your own time.&#13;
It's called the Access Program.&#13;
The Access Program, which&#13;
started this year under the&#13;
direction of Alan Shucard, is a&#13;
chance to resume and complete&#13;
college work toward a B.A. degree&#13;
for the special students who must&#13;
add their college work to an&#13;
already busy schedule of employment,&#13;
family, and/or community&#13;
commitments. The Access&#13;
curriculum offers sixty credits in&#13;
the Culture of Industrial Society&#13;
courses within the Parkside&#13;
Humanities major. The courses&#13;
allow self - paced study for the&#13;
students through learning contracts&#13;
between the student and the&#13;
class instructor, Frances&#13;
Kavenik.&#13;
The Access Program will accept&#13;
area residents with two or more&#13;
years of college or college level&#13;
work (60 credits). Access students&#13;
must meet all UW-Parkside&#13;
requirements such as two years of&#13;
a foreign language, Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge and Collegiate Skills.&#13;
All students sign a one year&#13;
contract and should contact the&#13;
instructor about every two weeks.&#13;
Assignments are brought in by&#13;
person or mailed to the University.&#13;
Although the main idea&#13;
behind the program is to do course&#13;
work off - campus at your own&#13;
pace, Kavenik wants students to&#13;
keep in touch not only to Access&#13;
personnel but to other students as&#13;
well.&#13;
Angela Howard-Zophy, Project&#13;
Coordinator, stated that the&#13;
program, which has 26 students, is&#13;
unique because "it creates a one&#13;
to one situation between the non -&#13;
traditional student and the instructor."&#13;
&#13;
Students pay the same tuition&#13;
fees, except a service fee of $50 is&#13;
charged instead of the larger&#13;
Segregated fee, because of the&#13;
limited usage of P arkside student&#13;
facilities and services.&#13;
Students must attend a two-day&#13;
orientation to enter the program.&#13;
"The orientation is when we get&#13;
them together, we register them,&#13;
we sell them their books needed&#13;
for the courses, and they finish&#13;
their first course," Zophy said.&#13;
"They stay from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.&#13;
for a Saturday and Sunday." Since&#13;
examinations are taken at home,&#13;
this is the only time they are all&#13;
together.&#13;
Although the Access Program is&#13;
not an official extended degree&#13;
program as part of the UW&#13;
system, it does offer a certified&#13;
Bachelor of Arts in the&#13;
Humanities from Parkside. The&#13;
students, who range in age from&#13;
the early 20's to mid 50's come&#13;
from Racine, Kenosha and&#13;
Milwaukee. Next year they hope&#13;
to have a full capacity of 100-&#13;
people enrolled. This is a&#13;
somewhat modest figure, considering&#13;
the grant for the funding&#13;
for the program was given in April&#13;
to Thomas Reeves, the Principal&#13;
Investigator, advertising on a&#13;
limited budget started late May,&#13;
and the application deadline was&#13;
at the beginning of the school&#13;
year. Already many people are&#13;
signed up to begin next year. "For&#13;
such a short time, we've done very&#13;
well," Zophy said.&#13;
The Access Program illustrates&#13;
the changing academic attitudes&#13;
by giving a "second chance" to&#13;
people who did not get the opportunity&#13;
to finish their college&#13;
instruction for some reason. The&#13;
program also helps the university&#13;
reach a larger percentage of&#13;
students as the number of&#13;
traditional students decreases.&#13;
Outward Bound announces winter courses&#13;
DENVER, COLO — Colorado&#13;
Outward Bound School has announced&#13;
its winter schedule of 21-&#13;
day ski mountaineering and 10-&#13;
day Nordic ski courses.&#13;
Four 21-day coeducational ski&#13;
mountaineering courses designed&#13;
for both novice and experienced&#13;
skiers will be conducted between&#13;
December and late April. Four&#13;
10-day Nordic ski courses are&#13;
offered in January and February.&#13;
Courses kick off with a few days&#13;
of outdoor skills and fitness&#13;
training at the school's winter&#13;
basecamp at Leadville, Colorado.&#13;
Skills include important&#13;
mountaineering techniques such&#13;
as map reading, compass&#13;
navigation, first aid, mountain&#13;
rescue, winter camping, basic&#13;
rock climbing, and avalanche&#13;
theory and precautions.&#13;
After skills training, patrols of&#13;
nine students, each accompanied&#13;
by an instructor, undertake&#13;
several expeditions, which give&#13;
the students an opportunity to put&#13;
their newly learned skills to the&#13;
test. On expedition, students also&#13;
learn avalanche search and&#13;
rescue, snow caving and ice&#13;
climbing.&#13;
Expeditions vary with skiing&#13;
abilities. Experienced skiers (who&#13;
must be capable of performing a&#13;
good stem turn) take part in ski&#13;
mountaineering, and travel&#13;
through rugged alpine terrain.&#13;
The ski mountaineering phase,&#13;
which includes downhill skiing&#13;
and high alpine touring, is&#13;
highlighted by the ascent of a&#13;
14,000 fo ot peak.&#13;
A b road range of winter campcraft&#13;
experiences is availablenn&#13;
Vol 1 No 3&#13;
"Cramming pays off"&#13;
Distributed by E. F. MADRIGRANO 1831 - 55th St. Kenosha, Wise. 658-3553&#13;
Stroh's NEW ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
the Nordic phase and includes&#13;
environmental awareness and&#13;
snow studies.&#13;
Climaxing both courses is the&#13;
"solo" — a two or three day period&#13;
of contemplation and introspection&#13;
where participants&#13;
are left alone in the wilderness&#13;
with a minimum of supplies and&#13;
supervision.&#13;
Throughout the entire winter&#13;
adventure, participants are&#13;
confronted with surroundings that&#13;
challenge their abilities to quickly&#13;
adapt to new and changing&#13;
situations. Personal growth in&#13;
dealing with the environment and&#13;
teamwork are stressed&#13;
throughout the program.&#13;
Colorado Outward Bound ski&#13;
mountaineering and Nordic ski&#13;
program courses are open to&#13;
anyone over the age of 16-1/2. An&#13;
$850 tuition fee for the 21-day&#13;
course includes all food and&#13;
professional alpine equipment.&#13;
The cost of the 10-day Nordic&#13;
course is $500. Students are expected&#13;
to supply their own personal&#13;
clothing, hiking boots, and&#13;
transportation. All other equipment&#13;
and food will be supplied.&#13;
All Outward Bound programs&#13;
are designed to be educational&#13;
experiences of self - discovery&#13;
which use the challenges found in&#13;
natural settings as their teaching&#13;
medium. For more information&#13;
contact Colorado Outward Bound&#13;
School, Dept. WR, 945 Pennsylvania&#13;
St., Denver, CO 80203,&#13;
(303) 837-0880.&#13;
System celebrates&#13;
MADISON — T he UW System&#13;
will celebrate its 10th anniversary&#13;
Friday, Oct. 9 in Stevens Point.&#13;
A commemorative luncheon,&#13;
featuring an address by System&#13;
President Robert O'Neil, is&#13;
scheduled at the conclusion of the&#13;
monthly business meeting of the&#13;
UW System Board of Regents.&#13;
The UW System was created by&#13;
statute on Oct. 12, 1971 through&#13;
merger of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin and the Wisconsin State&#13;
Universities.&#13;
WHAT MAKES&#13;
THE&#13;
RUNNER&#13;
STUMBLE?&#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;
RANGER Thursday, October 8,1981&#13;
ww^ciub Events&#13;
Chess&#13;
The Chess Club will meet th»&#13;
third Monday of each month. This&#13;
year s organizational meeting will&#13;
beheld in the SOC room on Oct. 19&#13;
at l p.m.&#13;
If the club can get enough high&#13;
quality players to join, they plan&#13;
o compete with other schools in&#13;
the area. If you love to play chess&#13;
you are invited to attend&#13;
IVCF&#13;
Anthro.&#13;
The Anthropology Club will hold&#13;
(VI Tw, meet&#13;
'&#13;
ng 0n M&lt;|nday, Oct. 12 at 1 p.m. m Moln 324 The&#13;
purpose of the meeting is to&#13;
review the club's 1981-82 budget as&#13;
well as to discuss future events&#13;
and activities. All members and&#13;
interested students are invited to&#13;
attend.&#13;
History&#13;
The movie "A Woman Rebels"&#13;
starring Katherine Hepburn will&#13;
be shown by History Club on&#13;
Monday, Oct. 12 at 4:30 p.m. in&#13;
Moln 107. Hepburn plays a woman&#13;
who runs her own business and&#13;
fights the system that suppresses&#13;
women in the 19th century. Angela&#13;
Howard - Zophy, Parkside adjunct&#13;
assistant professor of history and&#13;
women's studies will conduct&#13;
discussion after the movie.&#13;
The History Club's first annual&#13;
"Apathy" book sale has been&#13;
postponed until Oct. 14 from 10&#13;
a.m. to 4 p.m. because the library&#13;
held its book sale on the same day&#13;
as the "Apathy" book sale was&#13;
originally scheduled.&#13;
Books will be sold on the Union&#13;
bridge, with prices ranging from&#13;
ten cents to a few dollars. A w ide&#13;
range of topics of interest to all&#13;
will be available. For further&#13;
information contact Oliver&#13;
Hay ward in Moln. 377 ( ext. 2697).&#13;
The next Inter - Varsity&#13;
Christian Fellowship meeting will&#13;
be held on Wednesday, Oct. 14 at 1&#13;
p.m. in Union 106. Everyone is&#13;
invited.&#13;
Every Monday, one-hour small&#13;
group Bible studies are offered by&#13;
IVCF at 11 a.m. in Moln 217.&#13;
IVCF is a group of Christians&#13;
that base their faith on: 1) the&#13;
unique divine inspiration, entire&#13;
trustworthiness and authority of&#13;
the Bible; 2) the diety of o ur Lord&#13;
Jesus Christ; 3) the necessity and&#13;
efficacy of the substitutionary&#13;
death of Jesus Christ for the&#13;
redemption of the world and the&#13;
historic fact of his bodily&#13;
resurrection; 4) the presence and&#13;
the power of the Holy Spirit in the&#13;
work of regeneration and; 5) the&#13;
expectation of t he personal return&#13;
of our Lord Jesus Christ.&#13;
The Inter-Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship Booktable is set up on&#13;
Thursdays from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. in&#13;
the alcove beside the Bookstore.&#13;
The Booktable is designed to&#13;
reach out to Christians and non -&#13;
Christians to create a fellowship&#13;
on campus. It also provides an&#13;
opportunity for people who are&#13;
curious about Christianity to talk&#13;
to IVCF representatives and to&#13;
ask questions. There are also&#13;
books available free and for sale.&#13;
Marketing Club works to reestablish&#13;
UW-P chapter of Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
by Kent Willits&#13;
This semester the Marketing&#13;
Club is working to reestablish an&#13;
active chapter of Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
at Parkside. Here are the&#13;
answers to some basic questions&#13;
students might have about PSE.&#13;
WHAT IS IT?&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon (PSE) is the&#13;
only national professional&#13;
fraternity in marketing, sales&#13;
management and selling. PSE is&#13;
dedicated to the promotion and&#13;
education of the marketing&#13;
profession. Its basic purpose is to&#13;
aid its collegiate membership by&#13;
acting as a "link" between&#13;
academia and the student's&#13;
professional future.&#13;
WHAT DOES MEMBERSHIP&#13;
INVOLVE?&#13;
Each PSE chapter operates as a&#13;
small business, which would&#13;
enable Parkside students to gain&#13;
practical experience in sales,&#13;
research and other business and&#13;
marketing activities. Students&#13;
would be involved in such&#13;
programs as sales and marketing&#13;
projects, research projects,&#13;
business consulting and community&#13;
service projects. This&#13;
would provide students with the&#13;
opportunity to apply their book&#13;
knowledge to the real business&#13;
world.&#13;
MBA forum&#13;
Hotels offer student rates&#13;
Accounting&#13;
Introduction of club officers,&#13;
committee sign-up and future&#13;
events will be the topics of the first&#13;
general Accounting Club meeting&#13;
on Monday, Oct 12 at 1 p.m. in&#13;
rooms 104 and 106 of the Student&#13;
Union. New and old members&#13;
should bring their ideas and expectations&#13;
of their involvement&#13;
with the club. Refreshments will&#13;
be served.&#13;
The seven graduate schools of&#13;
business in Chicago along with 88&#13;
other graduate schools of&#13;
management from across the&#13;
country will be participating in a&#13;
unique MBA Admission Forum at&#13;
the University of Illinois at&#13;
Chicago Circle, 750 South Halsted,&#13;
October 16 and 17.&#13;
Students can attend on either&#13;
day and spend the other day in&#13;
Chicago. Overnight accommodations&#13;
can be arranged at&#13;
either of two major hotels. The&#13;
American Congress Hotel (formerly&#13;
the Pick-Congress Hotel)&#13;
offers students low room rates.&#13;
The cost per day is just $24 plus&#13;
9.1% room tax. Call (312 ) 427-380 0,&#13;
ext. 275 to reserve a room. The&#13;
Palmer House's student rates&#13;
start at $40 for single occupancy&#13;
and $55 for double. Call (312) 726-&#13;
7500 to make reservations.&#13;
MBA Admission Forum hours&#13;
are from 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. October&#13;
16 and from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
October 17 on the University of&#13;
Illinois campus at 750 South&#13;
Halsted. For more information,&#13;
call (800) 257-5160.&#13;
DO I HAVE TO BE A&#13;
MARKETING MAJOR?&#13;
No. Since all business functions&#13;
are used by the chapter, student&#13;
membership can be drawn from a&#13;
variety of business and non -&#13;
business majors. PSE is open to&#13;
both men and women. Fraternity&#13;
doesn't mean in this case, "men&#13;
only."&#13;
WHAT BENEFITS ARE&#13;
AVAILABLE?&#13;
PSE provides a number of&#13;
benefits including: the development&#13;
of self - confidence and&#13;
"hands on" experience as a&#13;
problem solver; the discovery of&#13;
new abilities; organizational&#13;
experience and leadership&#13;
training; and contacts with&#13;
alumni, educator and professional&#13;
members.&#13;
If Pi Sigma Epsilon sounds like&#13;
it has something for you, or you&#13;
would like to learn more about it,&#13;
attend the next general meeting&#13;
on October 14. The time and room&#13;
will be advertised around campus.&#13;
We will be looking forward to&#13;
meeting YOU.&#13;
Philip Morris to sponsor marketing contest&#13;
Philip Morris Incorporated has&#13;
announced its Thirteenth Annual&#13;
Marketing / Communications&#13;
Competition for Students. The&#13;
competition provides an opportunity&#13;
for students nationwide&#13;
to sharpen their marketing and&#13;
communications skills.&#13;
A first place award of $2,000, a&#13;
second place award of $1,000, a nd&#13;
a third place award of $500 w ill be&#13;
presented to the winning teams in&#13;
both the graduate and undergraduate&#13;
categories. In addition,&#13;
student representatives&#13;
and faculty advisors will be invited&#13;
to corporate headquarters in&#13;
New York City to discuss their&#13;
projects with Philip Morris&#13;
executives.&#13;
Students are invited to develop&#13;
marketing / communications&#13;
projects related to Philip Morris&#13;
Incorporated or any of its non -&#13;
tobacco products and operations.&#13;
A committee of distinguished&#13;
marketing / communications&#13;
experts will judge selected entries.&#13;
&#13;
The competition is divided into&#13;
graduate and undergraduate&#13;
categories, and is open to students&#13;
currently enrolled in any accredited&#13;
college or university.&#13;
Undergraduate students must&#13;
work in groups of three or more,&#13;
and graduate students in groups of&#13;
two or more, both under the&#13;
counsel of a faculty member or a&#13;
recognized campus professional.&#13;
The deadline is January 15, 1982.&#13;
For additional information,&#13;
contact Gerry Rizzo, Competition&#13;
Coordinator, Philip Morris Incorporated,&#13;
100 Park Avenue,&#13;
New York, New York, 10017, (212)&#13;
880-3459.&#13;
Hair Styling&#13;
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MEN &amp; WOMEN&#13;
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SERVED WITH AAALT VINEGAR OR TARTER SAUCE&#13;
A BLOODY GOOD DEAL AT THE REGULAR $1.69&#13;
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OCT. 12 - 16 &#13;
6 Thursday, October 8, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Are Big Brother&#13;
and the Body Snatchers here?&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
I watched "Invasion of the Body&#13;
Snatchers" on T. V. a few weeks&#13;
ago. The film, if you haven't seen&#13;
it, is about what happens when an&#13;
exotic form of plant life from&#13;
outer space migrates to earth and&#13;
begins "taking over" people's&#13;
bodies and minds. Donald&#13;
Sutherland and Brooke Adams&#13;
star as two of the last people on&#13;
earth who have not succumbed to&#13;
the body - snatching plants.&#13;
One of the most interesting&#13;
scenes in the film is when&#13;
Sutherland and Adams encounter&#13;
several of the humans - turned -&#13;
aliens. Leonard Nimoy, back from&#13;
his role as Mr. Spock, portrays&#13;
one of the aliens. Nimoy implores&#13;
Sutherland to peacefully join their&#13;
soulful communion with the great&#13;
galactic vegetable. "You will be&#13;
born into a trouble - free world, a&#13;
world devoid of hate - and love . .&#13;
he says. Sutherland and&#13;
Adams resist, and eventually&#13;
escape.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
ADS&#13;
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STEREO Pioneer receiver, 120 watts/chan&#13;
nel, Pioneer HPM 100 speakers, JVC&#13;
metal cassette deck, micro Seiki turntable,&#13;
glass door stereo cabinet. 652-5048.&#13;
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partner to operate extension of multi&#13;
million dollar company. Phone 658 4678.&#13;
HONG KONG TAILORING for men. 1520&#13;
Washington Road, 2-7 p .m. or 633 7946.&#13;
LANDMARK RESTAURANT accepting&#13;
applications for waiters, waitresses,&#13;
bartenders, dishwashers and kitchen help.&#13;
See Mike P l at e at J ob Service, WLLC D173.&#13;
DRIVERS (hiring intermittently Nov.&#13;
Dec), driver helpers (begin Dec),&#13;
loaders'unloaders, clerks, customer service&#13;
All positions to work through&#13;
Christmas., Part time to full time tern&#13;
porary Applicants must be available for&#13;
odd hours Must apply to Mike Plate in&#13;
person i WLLC D173) no later than Oct. 16&#13;
lor initial interview&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
TYPING Resumes, termpapers,' theses,&#13;
manuscripts, etc. 14 years experience.&#13;
Reasonable rates 694 1825 or 652 6599.&#13;
But the point of the film is that&#13;
in any established civilization, non&#13;
- conformity is undesirable; that&#13;
to mindlessly follow conventional&#13;
social norms is the easiest thing to&#13;
do. This theme is prevalent in lots&#13;
of science / fiction books and&#13;
films. I wonder - are the strict&#13;
conformist societies portrayed in&#13;
science r fiction a foreshadowing&#13;
of things to come? Is big brother&#13;
watching us?&#13;
In Aldous Huxley's Brave New&#13;
World, the technocratic mentality&#13;
of an "advanced" society clashes&#13;
with the free will of a lone individualist,&#13;
and the result is the&#13;
destruction of the latter. The&#13;
book's main character, John, is a&#13;
resident of a primitive reservation&#13;
on post - holocaust earth until he is&#13;
brought to live in a technically&#13;
advanced city.&#13;
All goes well for awhile as John&#13;
marvels, with childlike awe, at the&#13;
futuristic wonders of the city. But&#13;
"Savage," as he is dubbed by the&#13;
city's inhabitants, soon finds&#13;
himself unable to fit in to the new&#13;
world. He cannot "engage" (have&#13;
sex with) a girl he doesn't know,&#13;
as is the custom of the city. He will&#13;
not subject himself to the mind -&#13;
numbing effects of Soma, the&#13;
popular drug of the city. He will&#13;
not worship the Model - T, the&#13;
resident god of the city.&#13;
John's eventual rebellion&#13;
against the city is short - lived and&#13;
quickly put down by the city's&#13;
administrators. Poor John. He&#13;
fought against a brainwashed&#13;
civilization. I wonder what he&#13;
would do in today's world.&#13;
Are we heading towards a&#13;
"1984" world? Possibly, in more&#13;
ways than one. In this George&#13;
Orwell classic, the book's main&#13;
character, Winston Smith, decides&#13;
to rebel against the mass - think&#13;
doctrine of his world, a world&#13;
where propaganda is spewed from&#13;
the airwaves continually, a world&#13;
where "doublespeak" and&#13;
"doublethink" are established&#13;
codes of conduct, a world where&#13;
deviation from the brainwashed&#13;
sameness of the world is unheard&#13;
of. Remember, big brother (and&#13;
the thought police) are watching&#13;
you. Winston is found out, and his&#13;
rebellious spirit broken.&#13;
I recall thinking after I finished&#13;
"1984" how glad I was not to live&#13;
in Winston Smith's world. That&#13;
day I went home, watched some&#13;
television (telescreen?) listened&#13;
to some music (muzak?) and read&#13;
some magazines (doublespeak?).&#13;
A million other people watched&#13;
the same T. V., listened to the&#13;
same music, read the same news.&#13;
I don't know why, but for some&#13;
reason I still feel sort of paranoid&#13;
about the whole thing. Damned if I&#13;
can figure out why.&#13;
Photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
CHRIS TRUCKEY&#13;
Viewpoint&#13;
Student doubles as officer&#13;
Carthage to hold flea fair&#13;
The eighth annual Carthage&#13;
College Women's Club Flea Fair,&#13;
will be held Saturday, Oct. 10 from&#13;
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the College&#13;
Fieldhouse.&#13;
Nearly 150 organizations and&#13;
individuals from Wisconsin and&#13;
Illinois communities will sell,&#13;
baked goods, crafts, rummage,&#13;
toys, quilts, Christmas items,&#13;
plants, books, magazines and&#13;
antiques. Area service&#13;
organizations will also be on hand&#13;
to distribute information and&#13;
answer questions about their&#13;
services.&#13;
Proceeds from the flea fair will&#13;
go to support the CCWC annual&#13;
scholarship fund, fiach year the&#13;
CCWC awards scholarships to&#13;
three full - time Carthage students&#13;
from Racine or Kenosha County.&#13;
The scholarships are based on&#13;
academic merit and community&#13;
leadership.&#13;
Admission to the flea fair is 50&#13;
cents; children 12 and under are&#13;
admitted free when accompanied&#13;
by an adult.&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Parkside Security officers play&#13;
an important role in making&#13;
Parkside a safer, more efficient&#13;
university for the Parkside&#13;
community. Chris Truckey&#13;
recently began work as a part&#13;
time security officer. After five&#13;
weeks on the job, here is Chris'&#13;
viewpoint:&#13;
"I work part time and go to&#13;
school full time. The people that&#13;
work full time as security officers&#13;
don't go to school here on a full&#13;
time basis. My hours vary from&#13;
week to week according to my&#13;
schedule," said Truckey.&#13;
Truckey's duties also vary from&#13;
week to week.&#13;
"I haven't really been working&#13;
long enough to have experienced&#13;
all of the different duties, but I&#13;
have been assigned to the Art&#13;
Gallery, the Phy-Ed. building and&#13;
Union activities. In the Art&#13;
Gallery, I have to make sure that&#13;
none of the paintings are stolen or&#13;
defaced. When I work in Phy-Ed.,&#13;
I check the I.D.'s of the students&#13;
using the facilities and make sure&#13;
that they are all currently attending&#13;
Parkside. I've also&#13;
worked a class reunion, a Union&#13;
activity. The office work that&#13;
security does requires fairly&#13;
extensive training. You learn to&#13;
record everything, and you learn&#13;
to dispatch the calls that come in&#13;
also," said Truckey.&#13;
When asked what he would do in&#13;
an emergency, Truckey said,&#13;
"I've never come across an&#13;
emergency, but depending on the&#13;
situation, the emergency would be&#13;
reported to a higher authority. If it&#13;
would be a case when there was no&#13;
time to report the situation to a&#13;
higher authority, the officer would&#13;
take the necessary action in the&#13;
officer's best judgment."&#13;
Parkside is fortunate to have&#13;
responsible people on a necessary&#13;
job. Although not all of security&#13;
officer's duties seem urgent, all of&#13;
the duties carried out by security&#13;
personnel help Parkside run more&#13;
efficiently.&#13;
Le Bistro en&#13;
Middle Main Place&#13;
Presents&#13;
Kim &amp;&#13;
Reggie Harris&#13;
"contemporary music to hear with&#13;
closed ears and an open heart."&#13;
Coming: October 14, 1981&#13;
Middle Main Place&#13;
From 12-2 p.m.&#13;
Free admission!&#13;
International Coffees and&#13;
Wine will be served.&#13;
Brought to you by the Parkside Activities Board Coffee House Committee &#13;
Reufeu?&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 8,1981&#13;
Body Heat" sizzles&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
It seems like I see William Hurt&#13;
in movies everywhere now. Since&#13;
his catapult to success in the&#13;
phenominal "Altered States,"&#13;
Hurt has had a variety of&#13;
challenging roles in several hit&#13;
films. Another person I keep&#13;
hearing about is Lawrence&#13;
Kasdan, the screenwriter. Kasdan&#13;
wrote the screenplay for "The&#13;
Empire Strikes Back," which, as&#13;
you might imagine, did nothing to&#13;
hurt his career. Since then Kasdan&#13;
has penned a variety of screenplays,&#13;
including one for "Continental&#13;
Divide." So when I found&#13;
out that William Hurt was cast in&#13;
the starring role in a new film&#13;
written by Lawrence Kasdan,&#13;
called "Body Heat," I suspected&#13;
that it would be a good film. I&#13;
suspected right.&#13;
Hurt portrays Ned Racine, a&#13;
practicing lawyer in a sort of&#13;
Anytown, U.S.A. Racine leads a&#13;
fairly secure and uneventful&#13;
existence until he meets Matty&#13;
w^ofa^l^&#13;
is&#13;
Tjrz&#13;
progresses quicklv a Ri&#13;
ft™** t0 her house ~ th&#13;
e&#13;
each nth a&#13;
,&#13;
nd meeting&#13;
husband is awIyheneVer Ma&#13;
"*'s&#13;
Eventually the two tire of&#13;
of'Sir? ar&#13;
°und&#13;
' and Ned&#13;
-&#13;
in one&#13;
.&#13;
f&#13;
'&#13;
lm s hest scenes, suggests&#13;
h at they murder her&#13;
husband. Matty agrees to the plan&#13;
Ned outlines, and from there the&#13;
story progresses somewhat&#13;
predictably. Ned kills Matty's&#13;
and Nnn' comP&#13;
lica&#13;
tions arise&#13;
andI Ned and Matty are suspected&#13;
of th e crime. The latter part of the&#13;
film may sound a bit tired and&#13;
KIWI6&#13;
' the film is actually filled with more than a few intriguing&#13;
plot twists. The film's&#13;
ending, for me at least, was a&#13;
complete suprise.&#13;
"Body Heat" is a more than&#13;
"Preppies" invade Parkside&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
Parkside is being infiltrated. It&#13;
is a quiet, low - key invasion that&#13;
manifests itself in a strange new&#13;
way of life. It hasn't gotten into all&#13;
the classes yet, but it's out there,&#13;
waiting. It must be prevented&#13;
from affecting all'the students.&#13;
Relentless tedium often&#13;
produces the affliction. A student&#13;
will suddenly have an unexplainable&#13;
urge to wear pink and&#13;
green. In a fit of incredible&#13;
dullness, he/she begins to poke&#13;
holes i n wool sweaters.&#13;
Once the infirmity has taken&#13;
hold, little reptiles appear on&#13;
students' clothing. Collars are&#13;
worn in a permanent upright&#13;
position. Males and females who&#13;
have never been near a yacht will&#13;
purchase deck shoes.&#13;
Soon the student refuses to&#13;
display any sign of human&#13;
emotion. A name change is imminent,&#13;
and the new "Skip" or&#13;
"Muffy" disavows all knowledge&#13;
of a former life. For this student,&#13;
the invasion is now complete.&#13;
Parkside is not at present on top&#13;
of a list of exciting places to be.&#13;
Should this invasion succeed, the&#13;
mere mention of its name is likely&#13;
to cause sighs of boredom.&#13;
A counterattack must be&#13;
prepared. Students have to band&#13;
together. They should avoid&#13;
anyone with a nickname. Layered&#13;
clothing is definitely out. Some&#13;
outward show of emotion is&#13;
recommended. Above all, stay&#13;
away from alligators. They leave&#13;
pink and green droppings.&#13;
it&#13;
•• &gt;&lt; *-. • &gt;uv•. . ..&#13;
'4&#13;
1HAT&#13;
Strollin' Boner&#13;
Late book orders listed&#13;
appropriate name for this film.&#13;
The entire story takes place&#13;
during the summer, and sweaty&#13;
courtrooms, diners and apartment&#13;
rooms make up much of the&#13;
setting for the film. Kathleen&#13;
lurner is smoky and sensous as&#13;
Matty Walker, Hurt is wonderfully&#13;
low-key as Ned Racine.&#13;
The cinematography and soundtrack&#13;
of the film give it a 1940-ish&#13;
feel. "Body Heat" is definitely a&#13;
hot film - catch it before it leaves&#13;
the local theatres.&#13;
by Jim Kreuser&#13;
This week Strollin' would like to&#13;
award the many faculty members&#13;
who failed to meet the textbook&#13;
ordering deadline last spring. Did&#13;
you ever hear from one of your&#13;
professors that "the bookstore&#13;
didn't order the book yet" or "it's&#13;
the publishers fault that the texts&#13;
are late?" I thought so. Here is a&#13;
list of the faculty that were too&#13;
busy last spring to care about&#13;
students this fall or else had some&#13;
good reason for their apparent&#13;
neglect.&#13;
ACADEMIC STAFF - Carol&#13;
Cashen (Director of Educational&#13;
Program Support)&#13;
BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE -&#13;
Assoc. Prof. Geula Lowenberg*;&#13;
Adjunct Asst. Prof. Edward&#13;
Conrad; Academic Consultant&#13;
Dan Gemoll; Assoc. Prof. Richard&#13;
Stoffle*; Prof. William Morrow*.&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGEMENT -&#13;
Adjunct. Inst. Ken Duller; Assoc.&#13;
Prof. Miles Livingston*; Chair of&#13;
Teaching Awards conflict&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
this semester.&#13;
Guskin said there are both&#13;
formal and informal steps being&#13;
taken to change the Teaching&#13;
Excellence Awards procedures. A&#13;
sub - committee of the University&#13;
Committee, composed of Walter&#13;
Feldt, Teresa Peck and Richard&#13;
Keehn, are currently preparing a&#13;
draft of a revised policy on the&#13;
awards.&#13;
Guskin suggested that faculty&#13;
members who sit on the committee&#13;
be elected in some way in&#13;
the future. "The selection of all&#13;
committee members should' be&#13;
more seriously taken," he said.&#13;
He plans to assist students in&#13;
preparing initial criteria at the&#13;
Nominations Committee level in&#13;
the future.&#13;
Still in the planning stages is an&#13;
award for scholarly activity to be&#13;
awarded to faculty by their peers,&#13;
Guskin said. "Most people who&#13;
win the teaching award are also&#13;
excellent scholars," he commented.&#13;
"We're trying to resolve&#13;
this for the best of the university,"&#13;
Guskin said, "but problems seem&#13;
to come with these awards." He&#13;
said that two other areas have had&#13;
similar problems with awards at&#13;
Parkside, although "this has&#13;
never happened before with the&#13;
teaching award." Both the&#13;
Distinguished Service Award for&#13;
Outreach and the Academic Staff&#13;
Award have remained unawarded&#13;
at least once in the past.&#13;
Bus. Div. Arthur Dudycha*; Asst.&#13;
Prof. Frederick Jones; Lecturer&#13;
Irene Herremans.&#13;
EDUCATION - Lecturer Mary&#13;
Johnson; Adjunct Inst. Lois&#13;
Lederman; Adjunct Inst. Jon&#13;
Bowman; Adjunct Lecturer&#13;
Marybeth VanLanduyt.&#13;
ENGINEERING TECH - Prof.&#13;
William Moy*.&#13;
FINE ART - Asst. Prof. Charles&#13;
Erven; Asst. Prof. Stephanie&#13;
Vaning; Adjunct Inst. Glenda&#13;
Mossman; Adjunct Asst. Prof.&#13;
Martha Stoner.&#13;
HUMANITIES - Assoc. Prof.&#13;
Wayne Johnson*; Asst. Prof.&#13;
David Levin.&#13;
SCIENCE - Asst. Prof. Fred&#13;
Clough; Prof. James Shea*;&#13;
Specialist Wai-Ying Leung;&#13;
Specialist Alma Renish.&#13;
SOCIAL SCIENCE - Assoc.&#13;
Prof. Chelvadurai Manogaran*;&#13;
Prof. John Buenker*; Prof. Frank&#13;
Egerton*; • Vice Chancellor Lorman&#13;
Ratner*; Adjunct Asst. Prof.&#13;
Angela Howard - Zophy; Assoc.&#13;
Prof. William Murin*; Assoc.&#13;
Prof. Jack Moran; Asst. Prof.&#13;
Dan McGovern.&#13;
The bookstore requests for&#13;
books were due last May 1. The&#13;
manager of th e bookstore gave the&#13;
faculty an extra two weeks after&#13;
the first deadline. The problem is&#13;
being worked on by the Bookstore&#13;
Committee. We can only wait until&#13;
next semester to see if that&#13;
committee can resolve this and&#13;
other bookstore concerns.&#13;
Students have the right to find&#13;
out information that affects them.&#13;
It is through a Wisconsin State&#13;
Statute, 36.09(5), that this information&#13;
can be presented to you&#13;
— the student body. Look in the&#13;
Ranger next week for the&#13;
BONERS on campus.&#13;
* - indicates tenured f acuity&#13;
piiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiii|&#13;
(Rathskeller&#13;
Lounge[&#13;
| SUN. 3 Shorties for s 1.25 |&#13;
| Stroh's or Stroh Lite |&#13;
| TUES. 75* Cocktails |&#13;
| THURS. Ladies Nite |&#13;
V2 Price Drinks&#13;
This Wed. Nite "The Desperados"&#13;
Live On Stage Oct. 14 No Cover&#13;
Variety of Music Every Night For&#13;
Your Listening &lt;S Dancing Pleasure&#13;
Coming Oct. 21 "Southern Knights"&#13;
I 3931 45th Street I&#13;
niiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiim,&#13;
''""&#13;
m,&#13;
i",,&#13;
i',&#13;
i""l|&#13;
i&#13;
|,,*&#13;
,i7&#13;
GeltingYour Degree?&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS!&#13;
(got somewhere to go?)&#13;
Career Placement Registry (CPR)&#13;
CanShmtheWay&#13;
If you're a senior, you'll be job hunting soon—and&#13;
everyone knows how much fun that is. 300 resumes...&#13;
saving forever for stamps ... that letter to Dream Corp.&#13;
you've written 12 times. You're beginning to wonder if&#13;
you'll ever attract anyone's attention.&#13;
Why not let Dream Corp. come to you?&#13;
CPR could be the answer. We're an information&#13;
service that will give over 10,000 employers in 44 countries&#13;
access to your complete records. (Any idea how much&#13;
stamps for 10,000 letters would cost?)&#13;
Here's how it works: You fill out a short form, listing&#13;
your career and geographic preferences, your special skills,&#13;
your GPA. This information is fed into the DIA LOG&#13;
Information Retrieval Service—a system used by busine ses&#13;
large and small, by research firms, accounting and insurance&#13;
companies, publishers, advertising agencies, international and&#13;
multinational corporations, most of the Fortune 1,000.&#13;
Employers search through computer terminals for a&#13;
combination of factors, such as your degree, your languages, your&#13;
extracurricular background, and so on. If you have what they&#13;
want, you won't have to get their attention.&#13;
They'll come to you.&#13;
Instant access, instant searching, instant results. All for $8.&#13;
Contact your Placement Office for details and student entry&#13;
forms, or fill in the coupon below.&#13;
' i i i i i ' i ' ' ' 1 ' » ' •&#13;
Dear CPR: Please send me a student data entry form.&#13;
Name.&#13;
University_&#13;
Current Mailing Address-Street.&#13;
State. . Zip.&#13;
CAREER PLACEMENT REGISTRY&#13;
302 Swann Avenue, Alexandria, Virginia 22301&#13;
I I I I I » l l » I i i i i i i i n &#13;
8 Thursday, October 8/1981 RANGER&#13;
Career Comer&#13;
How to break the "career code" and prepare for the future&#13;
This is the first of a series of&#13;
articles, to run monthly, on career&#13;
- related topics of interest to&#13;
Parkside students. The first article&#13;
is written by Stu Rubner,&#13;
Director of Community Student&#13;
Services, the office that assists&#13;
adult students who are entering&#13;
university studies for the first&#13;
time or are returning after an&#13;
absence.&#13;
by Stuart L. Rubner&#13;
Director,&#13;
Community Student Services&#13;
Our job in this first of a series of&#13;
articles on careers and working is&#13;
to break the code that will help us&#13;
understand the formula you'll use&#13;
to get into the career(s) you want.&#13;
Once you know the code, you'll be&#13;
able to call upon the formula&#13;
whenever you find it necessary to&#13;
carry out successful career&#13;
manuevers.&#13;
With increasing attention being&#13;
given to "career development,"&#13;
there is no end to the resources we&#13;
can draw upon in order to give you&#13;
advantages that earlier career&#13;
seekers had to do without. Too&#13;
many people in the past have been&#13;
left to discover the parts of this&#13;
career code by themselves. I&#13;
believe that your time is too&#13;
valuable and too short to leave&#13;
such discovery to chance. The&#13;
time saved in becoming aware&#13;
early on of the components of the&#13;
career formula can later be used&#13;
by you for other things you would&#13;
like to do in your life.&#13;
Here, then, are the parts of the&#13;
career formula as I've come to&#13;
know it:&#13;
INTERNAL ASSESSMENT:&#13;
You have to have an awareness of&#13;
who you are and what it is you&#13;
want to do. You need to know what&#13;
you like and dislike, what you're&#13;
capable of doing and what your&#13;
weaknesses are, and what interests&#13;
you and what doesn't.&#13;
Knowing what you don't want to&#13;
do is equally as important as&#13;
knowing what you do want to do.&#13;
You have to either expand the&#13;
number of career options you can&#13;
examine (for those who don't have&#13;
many to think about) or limit the&#13;
number to a more manageable&#13;
few (for those who are thinking&#13;
about too many). To help you with&#13;
this internal assessment there are&#13;
counselors and printed resources.&#13;
Take advantage of these in order&#13;
to describe the primary part of the&#13;
formula — you.&#13;
EXTERNAL ASSESSMENT&#13;
(INFORMATION GATHERING):&#13;
You have to have some understanding&#13;
of what kinds of&#13;
career options are available to&#13;
you. The more options you are&#13;
aware of, the more productive&#13;
your internal assessment will be.&#13;
Part of what confuses the issue is&#13;
that the career you'll be pursuing&#13;
five or ten years from now may&#13;
not even exist today! No wonder&#13;
it's difficult to get a handle on&#13;
things. Anyways, don't limit&#13;
yourself to exploring careers&#13;
you've heard or read about in the&#13;
past. Poke your nose into&#13;
magazines and books that talk&#13;
about new product developments&#13;
and the future and make some&#13;
assumptions about what types of&#13;
skills are likely to be called for&#13;
down the road. Get a feeling for&#13;
what the career market is likely to&#13;
look like when it's time for you to&#13;
enter it. Don't hide behind your&#13;
textbooks and then find out you've&#13;
geared up for an area that is no&#13;
longer in demand (or wasn't in&#13;
demand in the first place). The&#13;
best time to explore — by talking&#13;
with people, reading, and experiencing&#13;
— is while you're&#13;
taking classes, not afterwards.&#13;
TAKING THE TIME: It's going&#13;
to take time to carry out these&#13;
internal and external&#13;
assessments. There is a direct&#13;
relationship between the amount&#13;
of time you commit to these&#13;
processes and the outcome of your&#13;
efforts. And we're not simply&#13;
talking about an hour here and a&#13;
couple of hours there. We're&#13;
talking about some pretty intense&#13;
periods — over the months, of&#13;
course — of investigation, contemplation,&#13;
and personal&#13;
assessment. After all, we're only&#13;
dealing with the rest of your life;&#13;
isn't that worth the kind of effort&#13;
you put into any number of other&#13;
activities?&#13;
MAKING DECISIONS: You&#13;
have to be a good decision maker.&#13;
You not only need to do some&#13;
decisive sorting out from what you&#13;
discover in your internal and&#13;
external assessments, but you&#13;
also have to be prepared to make&#13;
some critical decisions later on&#13;
when you're faced with several&#13;
options from which to choose.&#13;
There is no time for indecisiveness&#13;
when you're called&#13;
upon to state which of several&#13;
routes you're going to take.&#13;
RESOURCE UTILIZATION:&#13;
An equally important part of the&#13;
career formula is taking advantage&#13;
of the countless resources&#13;
available to you. Again, counselors&#13;
and printed resources stand&#13;
ready to assist you in learning&#13;
more about yourself and what's&#13;
available to you now or likely to be&#13;
in the future. Resource centers&#13;
and libraries abound with information&#13;
about all aspects of&#13;
careers and job hunting, and&#13;
specialized resources such as&#13;
placement personnel can provide&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
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414-694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 -658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
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414-843-2388&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5 Vi % Interest H Your Daily&#13;
Balance Is $500.00 or More!&#13;
WE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU OROW!&#13;
reor&#13;
still additional guidance. Don't&#13;
forget to talk with people in the&#13;
careers you're considering for&#13;
yourself, since this is probably the&#13;
closest you'll come to getting a&#13;
first hand look at particular fields&#13;
aside from being in them yourself.&#13;
And don't hesitate to ask to&#13;
shadow or tag along with people to&#13;
observe them or to spend time in&#13;
an internship or cooperative&#13;
program in fields you're considering.&#13;
&#13;
BEING PATIENT: I've noticed&#13;
a tendency in many counselees to&#13;
want to rush the career&#13;
development process. It seems as&#13;
though they are in a hurry to get to&#13;
some end point even though they&#13;
may not be convinced that that^s&#13;
where they want to be. Further&#13;
probing reveals that the person&#13;
may be uncertain of their&#13;
destination or, having identified a&#13;
particular career area, is lacking&#13;
preparation that will enable him&#13;
or her to stand out from the rest in&#13;
a pool of applicants. A person&#13;
needs to weigh spending a little&#13;
more time in exploration and&#13;
preparation against arriving in&#13;
the job market prematurely. As&#13;
my grandfather put it once in&#13;
talking about table manners: "If&#13;
you're patient, you'll get meat"; if&#13;
you're impatient all you'll get is&#13;
soup." Of course your own personal&#13;
situation (financial&#13;
resources, work and family&#13;
responsibilities, educational&#13;
background) will govern the time&#13;
you have to spend on the career&#13;
process, which makes the other&#13;
parts of the formula even more&#13;
critical.&#13;
BEING FLEXIBLE: Few of us&#13;
can walk right into the exact job&#13;
we have our sights set on. Most&#13;
people start at a lower level and&#13;
work their way up the career&#13;
ladder. Holding back and waiting&#13;
for the "ideal" position is&#13;
something few can afford to do.&#13;
Getting as much information as&#13;
you can about advancement and&#13;
promotion, plus an awareness of&#13;
your qualifications, will help you&#13;
make the decision as to the best&#13;
time to reach out and grab an&#13;
opportunity. Maintaining an attitude&#13;
of flexibility will pay big&#13;
dividends later on.&#13;
BEING DIFFERENT:&#13;
Probably the one piece of advice I&#13;
give more often than any other is&#13;
that you should be different than&#13;
— stand out from — the hundreds&#13;
of others applying for the same&#13;
position you are. Whether a&#13;
younger or older student, there&#13;
are countless ways to call attention&#13;
to yourself so that it's you&#13;
who is chosen as opposed to&#13;
someone else. Your university&#13;
experience will provide many&#13;
such opportunities, including&#13;
participating in clubs and&#13;
organizations, taking on special&#13;
projects for professors, and doing&#13;
intern and externships. Outside of&#13;
school you can rely on prior work&#13;
you've done, your volunteer work,&#13;
travel experiences, hobbies, and&#13;
leadership roles you've assumed.&#13;
Be sure to spell these things out in&#13;
your resume, which, by the way,&#13;
should also stand out among the&#13;
other two - hundred and fifty&#13;
submitted for a particular&#13;
position. So be creative with your&#13;
time and energy and don't be&#13;
modest.&#13;
HAVING CONTROL: There is&#13;
one final part of the formula that&#13;
you and I will never be able to&#13;
solve for, and that is the element&#13;
of uncertainty. There are some&#13;
things in life that we cannot&#13;
predict.&#13;
While few guarantees come with&#13;
much of anything in life, it does&#13;
pay to approach something as&#13;
important as your career with as&#13;
high a degree of self - awareness&#13;
and career information as&#13;
possible. Your chances of being&#13;
successful in your career ventures&#13;
will be much improved if you&#13;
study the career code as it applies&#13;
to you and use it to fill in the parts&#13;
of the formula we've just gone&#13;
over.&#13;
Learning this formula is as&#13;
much a part of your homework as&#13;
any other class assignment you'll&#13;
ever be given.&#13;
Go in Pickin'&#13;
Brew County&#13;
Rounders&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Oct. 14&#13;
9:00 til 1:00&#13;
WATCH FOR&#13;
FUTURE DATES!&#13;
Come on down for some good ole foot&#13;
stompin' on' wailin' country tunes at&#13;
STETSONS&#13;
COUNTRY/WESTERN SALOON&#13;
RACINE MOTOR INN&#13;
535 Main Street in Downtown Racine &#13;
tue/doy, October 20&#13;
8 p.m., uw-park/ide phy. ed. building&#13;
advance odmi/zlon: S5.00 pork/ide&#13;
/tudent/ $6.00 other /tudent/,&#13;
/r. citizen/, pork/ide alumni &amp;&#13;
/toff §7.00 general public&#13;
all ticket/ $7.00 at the door&#13;
riCKETS ON SALE AT! PACETTl'S in kenosha&#13;
MUSIC CENTER in racine&#13;
UW P UNION INFO CENTER&#13;
a contemporary entertainment event&#13;
DOC seveRinsen&#13;
S XEBROO ID COIKERT &#13;
10 Thursday, October 8,1981 RANGER&#13;
Rangers host soccer cup&#13;
bv by Grpff Greg RnnnfidliA Bonofiglio ~i„^ i •&lt;&gt; .»&#13;
Parkside's game on Saturday,&#13;
Sept. 26 at UW - Whitewater was&#13;
played in the rain and the mud,&#13;
but according to Coach Henderson,&#13;
the field wasn't the only&#13;
thing sloppy about the contest. In&#13;
spite of a rather poor performance,&#13;
Parkside coasted to a 5&#13;
- 1 victory over Whitewater,&#13;
outshooting its opponent 22 - 4 in&#13;
the process.&#13;
Bob Newstrom led the Ranger&#13;
attack with three goals, while&#13;
Rich Blay and John Onyiego&#13;
added one goal apiece. Henderson&#13;
downplayed the offensive&#13;
showing, noting that Whitewater&#13;
is a relatively new and inexperienced&#13;
team.&#13;
Parkside didn't put the game&#13;
away until the latter part. This&#13;
was due in large part to what&#13;
Henderson described as "over -&#13;
confident and very individual&#13;
play."&#13;
* * *&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 22 Parkside&#13;
defeated powerhouse Aurora 3 - 2&#13;
in a tight contest. Jeff LaForce,&#13;
Roger Menk and Ralph DeGraff&#13;
provided the scoring for Parkside.&#13;
The Rangers took the lead for&#13;
good with about twenty minutes&#13;
left in the game. Jeff Dennehy&#13;
picked up a loose ball in the&#13;
Aurora defense, broke downfield&#13;
committing the only defensiveman,&#13;
and shot it off to DeGraff&#13;
who beat the Aurora goal - keeper&#13;
for the game - winning goal.&#13;
Henderson was particularly&#13;
pleased with the performance of&#13;
Roger Menk who played in his&#13;
first game since spraining an&#13;
ankle in the Beloit game three&#13;
weeks ago.&#13;
* * *&#13;
On Monday, Sept. 28 Parkside&#13;
took a three - game winning streak&#13;
into their game against the&#13;
Warriors at Marquette. Although&#13;
they thoroughly dominated play&#13;
throughout the game, Parkside&#13;
lost a heartbreaking, l - o.&#13;
The Rangers limited the&#13;
Warriors to just one shot on goal in&#13;
the second half as they outshot&#13;
Marquette 15 - 5.&#13;
Last week's Player of the Week&#13;
award went to Freshman Jim&#13;
Spielmann, the Ranger&#13;
swingman.&#13;
Parkside pulled off a major&#13;
upset over UW - Milwaukee last&#13;
Friday in the opening round of the&#13;
Chancellor's Cup Tournament at&#13;
Parkside by defeating the Panther's&#13;
2 - 1 in overtime. But the&#13;
celebration didn't last long&#13;
because in the championship&#13;
game on Saturday, UW - Green&#13;
Bay shut out the Rangers 3 - 0 to&#13;
earn their second straight Cup&#13;
Championship.&#13;
In the UW - Milwaukee game,&#13;
Ranger Chiedu Okonmah, got the&#13;
first score of the game midway&#13;
through the second period when he&#13;
drilled a 35 - yarder past the&#13;
Panther goal - keeper. The&#13;
Ranger lead held until, with just&#13;
3:37 left in regulation, Tunji&#13;
THE PARKSIDE&#13;
ACTIVITIES B OARD&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE&#13;
The P.A.B. Coffeehouse provides an opportunity for you to listen&#13;
to musical artists in a relaxing and informal setting. Presented&#13;
free of charge by the Parkside Activities Board Coffeehouse&#13;
Committee coffeehouses are held periodically during the school&#13;
session Offering a diversity of musical styles, the talent may&#13;
range from well - known professional artists to local students&#13;
performing at "Folk Festivals."&#13;
The coffeehouse program offers intimate and informal contact&#13;
between the performer and the audience. Whether folk, jazz,&#13;
bluegrass or rock, the music will be sure to entertain you In addition,&#13;
coffeehouses will provide a refreshing break during your&#13;
studies . we hope you'll take advantage of the exciting program&#13;
planned for the upcoming year.&#13;
• If y&#13;
.°" h&#13;
J?v&#13;
A&#13;
e&#13;
j*ny questions, comments or gripes, or if you want to&#13;
join the P.A.B. Coffeehouse Committee, stop in at Union 202 o r&#13;
give us a call at 553-2650.&#13;
wvwv-VW-Jy-wwwwvw&#13;
What is it that -&#13;
So many Wis. campuses have that&#13;
PARKSIDE DOE SNT HAVE?&#13;
AN ACTIVE CHAPTER OF&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
The only professional business&#13;
fraternity for sales and marketing.&#13;
You don't need to be a marketing&#13;
major to get hands-on experience&#13;
while still in school.&#13;
WANT TO KNO W MORE?&#13;
Come to: Union 104,&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 14 — 1:00 p.m.&#13;
Akiwowo tied the game at one&#13;
apiece on an eight yard chip shot&#13;
over Ranger goalkeeper Dan&#13;
Opferman.&#13;
The game - winning goal came&#13;
with just under four minutes to&#13;
play in the overtime. Jeff La&#13;
Force took an excellent centering&#13;
pass from Dan Theisen and&#13;
burned a surprised Panther goalie&#13;
for the score. It was by far the&#13;
biggest win for Coach Henderson&#13;
and the Ranger team. Earlier in&#13;
the week, UW - Milwaukee upset&#13;
the nationally ranked Akron in&#13;
Division I play.&#13;
In the Championship game on&#13;
Saturday, UW - Green Bay&#13;
dominated Parkside from the&#13;
outset. Phoenix forward Ric&#13;
Voigtlander broke a scoreless tie&#13;
with about nine minutes left in the&#13;
first period when his seven yarder&#13;
found its way into the right side of&#13;
the Ranger net. In the first half,&#13;
Parkside posed no real threat to&#13;
.the Green Bay Phoenix, a first&#13;
year Division I team.&#13;
Senior Green Bay forward&#13;
Chuck Stark gave the Phoenix a 2 -&#13;
0 lead soon after the start of the&#13;
second period. After that, Green&#13;
Bay played ball control against a&#13;
frustrated Ranger team. Parkside&#13;
had four opportunities to score in&#13;
the second period but came up&#13;
short each time.&#13;
The Phoenix scored its final&#13;
goal at the 89:46 mark. Forward&#13;
CPR offered&#13;
The Campus Health Office in&#13;
cooperation with the American&#13;
Red Cross will be offering a one&#13;
session CPR (Cardio - Pulmonary&#13;
Resuscitation) class which will&#13;
include first aid for choking,&#13;
mouth - to - mouth breathing, and&#13;
one rescuer CPR.&#13;
This one session will take three&#13;
hours and is designed to prepare&#13;
an individual to handle&#13;
emergencies until the rescue&#13;
squad arrives. A certificate will&#13;
be awarded at the successful&#13;
completion of a three hour&#13;
session.&#13;
A registration fee of $5.00&#13;
(which includes a workbook) will&#13;
be collected by the Red Cross at&#13;
the time of the class.&#13;
The classes will be offered on&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 13 from 9 a.m. to 12&#13;
noon, and from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.,&#13;
and on Wed., Oct. 14 from 6 p.m. to&#13;
9 p.m. in Union 104 and 106.&#13;
Stop at the Campus Health&#13;
Office, WLLC Dl-98, or call Ext.&#13;
2366.&#13;
Photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
FRESHMAN JIM SPIELMAN passes during recent loss to&#13;
Green Bay.&#13;
Mike Leeker, on a nice pass from&#13;
Chuck Stark, rifled a shot into the&#13;
Ranger net for the meaningless&#13;
final point. It was the second&#13;
straight year that Green Bay had&#13;
defeated Parkside in the championship&#13;
game of the Chancellor's&#13;
Cup Tournament. At Green Bay&#13;
last year, the Phoenix beat the&#13;
Rangers 6 - 0 in the annual tournament.&#13;
&#13;
Green Bay clobbered Platteville&#13;
9 - 0 in its opening round game to&#13;
earn a spot for the championship&#13;
game. Senior forward Chuck&#13;
Stark led the Phoenix blitz with a&#13;
three goal performance. Vic&#13;
Bettendorf's four assists tied a&#13;
Green Bay school record.&#13;
In the consolation game, UW -&#13;
Milwaukee breezed to a 6 - l&#13;
victory over the UW - Platteville.&#13;
The Panther record now stands at&#13;
8 - 3.&#13;
The Ranger's (5 - 5) play&#13;
Lawrence at Parkside on Wednesday&#13;
before heading out to play&#13;
in the Lewis Tournament at&#13;
Romeoville, Illinois over the&#13;
weekend.&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC. ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR&#13;
TEAM SALES — ALL SPORTS FOR *&#13;
LL SP0&#13;
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SUPER SPORTS MON.-FRI. 10.-00 A M. - I«o P.M.&#13;
-*• SAT. 10.00 AM. - tOO P.M.&#13;
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FOOTWEAR. ETC&#13;
The Active Athletes One Stop&#13;
694-9206&#13;
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Sports Calendar&#13;
mm&#13;
Visit Kenosha's&#13;
LARGEST&#13;
Record Department&#13;
— Records —&#13;
— Sheet Music —&#13;
— Instructional Music —&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
626 56th St.&#13;
Phone 654-2932&#13;
mm&#13;
Friday, Oct. 9&#13;
Golf vs. Lawrence Invitational,&#13;
Chaska C. C.&#13;
Tennis vs. Lawrence Invitational&#13;
(5 p. m.)&#13;
Volleyball vs. College of St.&#13;
Francis&#13;
Cross - Country vs. Purdue Invitational&#13;
(3 p. m.)&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 10&#13;
Tennis vs. St. Norbert (12 noon),&#13;
^ and UW - Oshkosh (3 p. m.)&#13;
Cl&#13;
jf&#13;
ss&#13;
L.- country vs. Western&#13;
Michigan Invitational&#13;
Monday, Oct. 12&#13;
Tennis vs. UW - Milwaukee (3 p.&#13;
m.)&#13;
Golf vs. NAIA District 14 tournament&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 13&#13;
Golf vs. NAIA District 14&#13;
Tournament&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 14&#13;
volleyball vs. Marquette &amp; North&#13;
Central (6 p. m.) &#13;
NOW 50% OFF&#13;
FOR STUDENTS ONLY&#13;
Cross country&#13;
Rangers run at Notre Dame&#13;
by by Patti Patti Deluisa Deluisa VII I IV&#13;
The Parkside women's cross&#13;
country team ran quite well&#13;
Saturday as they placed second in&#13;
the six - school Loyola Cross&#13;
Country Invitational held in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Junior Debbie Spino paced the&#13;
Rangers with her fantastic&#13;
n!£king of&#13;
„&#13;
17:329 for second&#13;
UWM °&#13;
Ver&#13;
?i'' Cheryl Konko1 »f&#13;
mi&#13;
'&#13;
e Wilh a&#13;
P^lS&#13;
°/Unning aggres&#13;
sively f0r&#13;
nit !I d&#13;
(&#13;
!l&#13;
Were Dona Dnscoll, who&#13;
placed 4th with a time of 18:36.6&#13;
and Barb Osborne, less than one&#13;
Second hohinrl r\ ...&#13;
_ Photo |»y Keith Olsen&#13;
Ktnm Th2 PARAS&#13;
l?E CHEERLEADERS are, from top to&#13;
bottom, Theresa Schiffer, Kathy Nielson, Melanie Garbo; Jim&#13;
Capasso, Shelly Home, Steve Schreiner, Annette Gaplnski,&#13;
Connie Betancourt; Karen Borchardt, Hope Stuchowski, Kris&#13;
Anderson. Not pictured are Mike Nelson, Steve Jacob, Greg&#13;
Eschmann. Ranger Bears are Rory Spears and Jeff Manian.&#13;
Sue Meyer finished 7th with a&#13;
time of 18:56.1, Lowrie Melotik&#13;
ran 18th at 20:21.5, and Linda&#13;
Pfeilstifter was 32nd at 23:41.0.&#13;
UWM won the meet with 28&#13;
points. Parkside was 2nd, CSU&#13;
was 3rd, Loyola 4th, Carthage&#13;
College 5th and North Park was&#13;
6th. The Ranger men finished in&#13;
22nd place at the Notre Dame&#13;
Cross Country Invitational last&#13;
Friday at South Bend, Indiana.&#13;
Sophomore Dan Stublaski was&#13;
the first Parkside harrier to cross&#13;
the finish line in 38th place with a&#13;
time of 28:35.9. Another soph, Tom&#13;
Barrett, captured 110th place with&#13;
a clocking of 26:28.1. Freshman&#13;
Robert Mayfield ran 154th with a&#13;
time of 26:59.3. Soph A1 C orrea&#13;
whose time was 27:10.4, placed&#13;
161st. Rich Sowlles, a junior&#13;
finished 190th. Freshman John&#13;
Cogan placed 218th.&#13;
Greg Beardsley of Edinboro&#13;
(Pa.) State won the five-mile race&#13;
in 24:19.7. Edinboro State took top&#13;
honors, scoring 77 points.&#13;
Defensive driving offered&#13;
Defensive driving courses will&#13;
be offered by Campus Security&#13;
during the fall and spring&#13;
semesters.&#13;
Classes are limited to 25&#13;
students and will meet in Union&#13;
207.&#13;
Campus Security requests&#13;
notification of the names of all&#13;
participants by memo or&#13;
telephone (553-2455).&#13;
The classes are scheduled for&#13;
the following Tuesdays:&#13;
Oct. 20, 8 a.m.-noon or 12:30 - 4:30&#13;
p.m.; \&#13;
Nov. 17, 5:30 - 9:30 p.m.;&#13;
Feb. 16, 8 a.m. - noon or 12:30 -&#13;
4:30 p.m.;&#13;
March 9, 5:30 - 9:30 p.m.;&#13;
May 4, 8 a.m. - noon;&#13;
June 8, 8 a.m. - noon.&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of beer? All you have to do is fill out this&#13;
hHnrf'fh f i&#13;
16 Co&#13;
r&#13;
e&#13;
.ut winners&#13;
-&#13;
Put a che&#13;
ck mark by your picks and bnng the form down to the Ranger office, WLLC D139.&#13;
Cincinnati at Baltimore&#13;
Cleveland at Pittsburgh&#13;
Dallas at San Francisco&#13;
Detroit at Denver&#13;
Los Angeles at Atlanta&#13;
Minnesota at San Diego&#13;
New England at N. Y. Jets -&#13;
Oakland at Kansas&#13;
Philadelphia at New Orleans&#13;
St. Louis at N. Y. Giants —&#13;
Seattle at Houston&#13;
Tampa Bay at Green Bay —&#13;
Washington at Chicago&#13;
Tie breaker:&#13;
combined points in the Tampa Bay - Green Bay game.&#13;
Last week's winner was Phil Fellner, 9 correct, 47 points&#13;
Name&#13;
S.S. No.&#13;
will be the total&#13;
PINBALL WINNER RICHARD ALTERGOTT won the machim&#13;
in the Rec Center's Sept. contest with a high month score o&#13;
154,390.&#13;
3 mos. membership&#13;
or&#13;
6 mos. membership&#13;
VIC TANNY HEALTH CLUB&#13;
(STUDENT MUST PRESENT ID CARD)&#13;
CALL NOW 552-9513&#13;
OFFER EXPIRES OCT. 16, 1981&#13;
OFFER VA LID ONLY AT&#13;
VIC TANNY HEALTH CLUB&#13;
•j HY. 32 &amp; K.R. &#13;
Qui,//**&#13;
AMERICAN WHISKEY&#13;
A BLEND&#13;
uAuAoy ryf 'dbanc&amp;t* CAOM •"owAA, /urA. /fd/-/AwouA "wout a t uuse of&#13;
81,1,0101 SOItlEO UNOSIt U.S . COVfRNMIHl SUPtR®0"&#13;
IKGIK,., "JOSEPHS SEAGR*H1S0*S "HM.H O. SO.S AW FRANCISCO.C A • 'SO* "&#13;
5*&#13;
R 0&#13;
12 Thursday, October 8,1981 RANGER&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Women crushed; they tried&#13;
Use Ranger&#13;
Contact Sheets&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selection&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10:00 am - 4:00 p m&#13;
• SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
• JUBE JELLS&#13;
• CARAMELS&#13;
• CARAMEL BULLIES&#13;
• ROYALS&#13;
• TOFFEES&#13;
• JOTS&#13;
• BRIDGE MIX&#13;
• MALTED MILK BALLS&#13;
• CHOC. CREME DROPS&#13;
• CHOC. RAISINS&#13;
• CHOC. PEANUTS&#13;
• PEANUT BUTTER CUPS&#13;
• STARS&#13;
• YOGURT PEANUTS&#13;
• CAROB MALTED MILK&#13;
BALLS&#13;
• CAROB PEANUTS&#13;
• SUNFLOWER SEEDS&#13;
• CARIBBEAN DELICACY&#13;
• CALIFORNIA MIX&#13;
• STUDENT FOOD&#13;
• GIANT CASHEWS&#13;
• NATURAL PISTACHIOS&#13;
• SPANISH PEANUTS&#13;
• BLANCHED PEANUTS&#13;
• YOGURT RAISINS&#13;
• YOGURT SESAME&#13;
BRITTLE&#13;
• RED SKIN PEANUTS&#13;
• MINT COOLERS&#13;
• STARLIGHT MINTS&#13;
• SOUR BALLS&#13;
• CINNAMON DISKS&#13;
• COFFEE&#13;
• BUTTERSCOTCH DISKS&#13;
• ROOT BEER BARRELS&#13;
• POPS&#13;
• PEANUT BUTTER&#13;
KISSES&#13;
• PEPPERMINT KISSES&#13;
• LICORICE BULLIES&#13;
•JELLY BEANS&#13;
• ASSORTED PERKYS&#13;
• ORANGE SLICES&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF OCT. 12&#13;
FANCY MIXED NUTS&#13;
40% OFF&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
The Parkside women's&#13;
volleyball team had a tough&#13;
weekend in East Lansing,&#13;
Michigan last Friday and&#13;
Saturday at the Michigan State&#13;
Invitational. As coach Linda&#13;
Henderson put it, "We played&#13;
really well, but we didn't win a&#13;
match." Parkside lost all of the&#13;
six matches they played, dropping&#13;
their season record to 6-12.&#13;
The Rangers started off on the&#13;
right foot by beating host&#13;
Michigan State 15-12 in the first&#13;
game of that match, but lost the&#13;
next two games 1-15 and 4-15. They&#13;
then lost to Northern Kentucky 2-&#13;
15 and 6-15, and then Michigan 6-15&#13;
and 12-15.&#13;
Parkside lost the next two&#13;
matches after winning the&#13;
opening game of each match.&#13;
Chicago Circle defeated the&#13;
Rangers 15-13, 13-15 and 4-15 and&#13;
Temple University of&#13;
Philadelphia won 15-10, 8-15 and 9-&#13;
15.&#13;
The last match for the Rangers&#13;
against Central Michigan&#13;
University, rated by Henderson as&#13;
"probably the best team in the&#13;
state of Michigan," was the one in&#13;
which the Rangers came closest to&#13;
winning. Parkside lost in two&#13;
tough games, 14-16 and 14-16.&#13;
"We really could have won all&#13;
but two of the matches," said&#13;
Henderson. "Northern Kentucky&#13;
and Michigan were the only ones&#13;
and jazz, and disco&#13;
RSeveit &amp; Seven&#13;
hingsoundsbetterwn*,-- | ,&#13;
roll stirs mth&#13;
Seagram*&#13;
SEAGRAM 0ISTILL ERS C0&#13;
-&#13;
NYC- AMERICAN WHISKEY—A BLEND. 80 PROOF S EVEN -JP A *C "UP A R| tpapeviahks Oc THE SEVEN LPCWPANVOW,&#13;
in which we were really outplayed."&#13;
&#13;
Despite the 0-6 record of&#13;
the Rangers in the tournament, it&#13;
wasn't a total loss. "We learned a&#13;
lot there, how to play defense,&#13;
especially back court defense,"&#13;
said Henderson. "But we still need&#13;
improvement on front court&#13;
defense and on offense."&#13;
The Rangers have time to&#13;
practice, as they have a week off&#13;
until they travel to Joliet, Illinois&#13;
for the College of St. Francis&#13;
Invitational, an eight team&#13;
tournament. Next Wednesday&#13;
they host Marquette University&#13;
and North Central College at 6 p.&#13;
m. in the P. E. building. </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 10, issue 5, October 8, 1981</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Aspin speaks at UW-P conference</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, October 15, 1981&#13;
Aspin speaks at UW-P conference&#13;
by Susan Stevens&#13;
"The economy won't be much&#13;
different from what it is now,"&#13;
said Representative Les Aspin&#13;
during a conference on fiscal cuts&#13;
here last Friday. According to the&#13;
first district representative, the&#13;
result of "Reaganomics" will be&#13;
nil in the long run.&#13;
"It's a wash," Aspin explained&#13;
to the group of about 50 Kenosha&#13;
County social program workers.&#13;
"There are mutually offsetting&#13;
effects built into the program," he&#13;
added.&#13;
Aspin compared the present&#13;
federal tax cut to that of the&#13;
Kennedy administration in 1963.&#13;
He also said that our nation's&#13;
proposed defense budget is&#13;
similar to that of Lyndon Johnsons&#13;
during the Vietnam War.&#13;
"With less domestic spending,&#13;
bracket creep (people moved into&#13;
higher tax brackets by inflation)&#13;
would normally bring in extra&#13;
revenue, but with more military&#13;
spending and a tax cut, we're back&#13;
where we started," he said.&#13;
The effects of the fiscal&#13;
program, he said, will be working&#13;
against the people within the&#13;
country. "There's not going to be&#13;
much improvement," Aspin&#13;
stated. "There are many who&#13;
keep telling us that the economic&#13;
growth resulting from the&#13;
program will take care of&#13;
everything. I think it would be&#13;
folly to have people think that a&#13;
big growth will take care of&#13;
anything."&#13;
There will be seven national&#13;
Campus thefts up&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
Campus thefts have increased&#13;
over last year, according&#13;
to figures in the&#13;
campus security departments'&#13;
Annual Report for 1980&#13;
and Ronald Brinkman,&#13;
Security Director.&#13;
The report, which came out&#13;
in April of this year, stated&#13;
that thefts decreased in 1980&#13;
by 5% versus the 16.5% increase&#13;
in 1979. However, the&#13;
number of offenses for this&#13;
year through August (September&#13;
statistics are&#13;
unavailable) have increased&#13;
by 12.5% over this time in 1980,&#13;
and 3.3% in 1979. Approximately&#13;
$19,900 worth of&#13;
property has been stolen&#13;
during this time, not including&#13;
a stolen vehicle and burglary&#13;
of the grounds house.&#13;
The nature of most of these&#13;
thefts are from buildings, and&#13;
items from motor vehicles.&#13;
The report also states that&#13;
the number of felonious offenses&#13;
decreased by 9.3%&#13;
versus the 21.3% increase in&#13;
1979.&#13;
Vandalism also has taken a&#13;
toll at Parkside. In 1980, 27&#13;
offenses of criminal damage&#13;
to state or personal property&#13;
occurred.&#13;
The strange thing with&#13;
thefts and vandalism on&#13;
campus is that it's usually not&#13;
done by students. "Our&#13;
problem is not with students,&#13;
it's with people not associated&#13;
with the campus," said Brinkman.&#13;
&#13;
If you want to report a theft&#13;
that has occurred or is in&#13;
progress on campus, call&#13;
Security at ext. 2455 or go to&#13;
the Security office, located in&#13;
Tallent Hall, room 188.&#13;
changes that will come after the&#13;
social program cuts are implemented&#13;
fully, according to&#13;
Aspin.&#13;
the standard of living for many,&#13;
there will be more people below&#13;
the poverty line," he said.&#13;
Related to the second effect is&#13;
LES ASPIN&#13;
The first will be "a dramatic&#13;
shift in the governmental system&#13;
from the federal to the state and&#13;
local levels," he said. "The&#13;
federal government is going to be&#13;
very much less evident than it was&#13;
before." This will pose problems&#13;
of responsibility for the state and&#13;
local governments as they throw&#13;
programs back and forth.&#13;
The second effect Aspin predicts&#13;
will be an increase in the number&#13;
erf poor in America. "Thirteen&#13;
percent of the people are now&#13;
classified as poor. After cuts to&#13;
welfare and programs that raise&#13;
Reward system set&#13;
the fact that some of the working&#13;
people will stop working, according&#13;
to Aspin. "Work incentives&#13;
are being taken out of&#13;
programs," he said. "A working&#13;
mother now receiving aid makes&#13;
$120 per month more by keeping a&#13;
job. After the changes she'll be&#13;
making $16 more per month," he&#13;
explained. "Who wants to work&#13;
for 16 dollars a month?"&#13;
Social attentions in urban areas&#13;
will change also. Although many&#13;
claim that there will be riots in the&#13;
streets, Aspin believes this change&#13;
will be less dramatic but just as&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Four UW-System campuses&#13;
(Milwaukee, Superior, Oshkosh&#13;
and Parkside) will be putting a&#13;
recently developed reward&#13;
program on a trial basis for the&#13;
next year. Parkside will offer up&#13;
to $100 for information about&#13;
crimes that occur around the&#13;
campus.&#13;
The UW schools are undergoing&#13;
far - reaching property loss from&#13;
frequent thefts. Milwaukee area&#13;
pawn shops seem to be a standard&#13;
place to get rid of stolen UW&#13;
property. Ron Brinkman, head of&#13;
Parkside Security said, "We have&#13;
thefts occur with absolutely&#13;
nothing to go on, but once we get a&#13;
lead, we have a start. It's important&#13;
to report an out of the&#13;
ordinary occurence. Maybe it's&#13;
nothing, or maybe there is nothing&#13;
we can do about it, but it's important&#13;
that we know about&#13;
things."&#13;
Another recurring problem is&#13;
false fire alarms. They seem to be&#13;
a universal problem throughout&#13;
colleges. After an alarm is&#13;
sounded too many times without&#13;
cause, people become immune to&#13;
the sound. In the case of a real&#13;
fire, the potential for lives being&#13;
disheartening. "Most research&#13;
indicates some correlation between&#13;
unemployment and crime,"&#13;
he said. The crime rate and other&#13;
rates of social problems will&#13;
probably rise, he said.&#13;
One of the more interesting&#13;
effects to note is that Aspin claims&#13;
there will be a shift in political&#13;
and economic power to the South&#13;
and West. "They'll have a&#13;
booming economy while the rest&#13;
of the economy will be bumping&#13;
along as it has been," he said.&#13;
Why will this come about? Aspin&#13;
explained that severance taxes on&#13;
energy which were very small in&#13;
the past have grown&#13;
astronomically. Each energy&#13;
producing state has a small&#13;
percentage tax on energy&#13;
resources exported. These taxes&#13;
have become a real source of&#13;
revenue for those states, thereby&#13;
reducing other taxes.&#13;
"These states will have both the&#13;
climate and the economy going&#13;
their way," he said. In order to&#13;
correct this problem Aspin said&#13;
that severance would have to&#13;
be handled on the federal level.&#13;
According to Aspin, more&#13;
corporate mergers will be seen as&#13;
a result of the tax breaks given to&#13;
business. "And what happens&#13;
when companies are bought by&#13;
corporations from out of town?&#13;
They lose a sense of responsibility,&#13;
Aspin said. "How many&#13;
companies that are owned by&#13;
larger ones in a different area&#13;
help out with the United Way&#13;
campaign each year? Not many,"&#13;
he added.&#13;
Vol. 10 - No. 6&#13;
The tensions between races and&#13;
generations will also become&#13;
more pronounced. "The waste is&#13;
always in the other guy's&#13;
program, and that builds enormous&#13;
resentment," Aspin&#13;
explained. "The American&#13;
society has become erne in which&#13;
people don't talk to others outside&#13;
their immediate groups. They&#13;
don't see the importance of other&#13;
programs. The young see waste on&#13;
social security while the old see it&#13;
in youth employment programs."&#13;
Where does this whole mood&#13;
take us? The cuts have been extremely&#13;
popular because "people&#13;
think that a lot of it is waste,"&#13;
Aspin said. "But there's no line&#13;
item that says WASTE that you&#13;
can cut!" he concluded.&#13;
With the effects known, people&#13;
within the different programs will&#13;
have to learn to deal with the cuts.&#13;
As Chancellor Guskin stated in&#13;
opening comments to the conference,&#13;
"We must learn to do&#13;
more with less." That is what this&#13;
conference proposed to do —&#13;
educate social, educational, and&#13;
health workers on how to keep&#13;
their programs up to par with less&#13;
funds.&#13;
After Aspin's talk, there was a&#13;
panel discussion, followed by&#13;
workshops throughout the afternoon.&#13;
The conference was&#13;
sponsored by Parent Education&#13;
and Childhood Enrichment&#13;
(PEACE.) of Kenosha, UWParkside&#13;
Education Outreach,&#13;
and the UW-Extension Department&#13;
of Governmental Affairs.&#13;
Watch out!&#13;
Insurance rep. pressures students&#13;
lost is greater simply because&#13;
people fail to react.&#13;
A person having information&#13;
related to a crime can call&#13;
Security, at 553-2455. The&#13;
dispatcher will route the call to an&#13;
officer who will receive the information.&#13;
The caller will remain&#13;
anonymous. The officer will then&#13;
issue the caller an identity&#13;
number or R.I.P. number&#13;
(Reward for Information&#13;
Program). Once the information&#13;
proves reliable, Security will&#13;
notify Student Life. The caller can&#13;
then claim the reward from&#13;
Student Life by revealing his/her&#13;
R.I.P. number.&#13;
The method of payment can&#13;
vary according to the caller's&#13;
preference (in person, P.O. Box,&#13;
etc.). The dollar amount of the&#13;
reward will be determined by a&#13;
small campus committee of three&#13;
people.&#13;
Security is also offering information&#13;
on How to Protect Your&#13;
Home and Apartment and What to&#13;
do if You are Sexually Assaulted.&#13;
Anyone wishing more information&#13;
on these subjects can contact&#13;
Officer Nielsen at Security, in&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
An insurance agent who has&#13;
been making appointments on the&#13;
Parkside campus with students&#13;
has been told repeatedly that her&#13;
actions are illegal but may be&#13;
back again, so students are&#13;
warned to beware.&#13;
Peggy Simmer of Union Fidelity&#13;
Life Insurance has been calling&#13;
seniors at their homes, according&#13;
to Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Educational Services Carla&#13;
Stoffle, and making appointments&#13;
with them during school hours in&#13;
the Coffee Shoppe or library. Her&#13;
actions are illegal under Board of&#13;
Regents policy 74-15: Use of&#13;
University Facilities by Non -&#13;
University Groups.&#13;
The policy states that non -&#13;
university groups may use&#13;
university facilities when they are&#13;
available, "but only upon the&#13;
invitation of a- under the sponsorship&#13;
of a University department&#13;
or organization." Stoffle&#13;
said the university had not been&#13;
contacted by Simmer or her&#13;
company with a request to use the&#13;
Parkside campus for business&#13;
purposes.&#13;
According to students, Simmer&#13;
calls them at home in the evening&#13;
and makes an appointment to&#13;
meet them between classes, when&#13;
she pressures them into signing a&#13;
contract for insurance on the spot.&#13;
"A friend of mine said (Simmer)&#13;
literally wouldn't let her leave the&#13;
table unless she signed," one&#13;
student said. "She was really&#13;
upset."&#13;
After the administration&#13;
warned Simmer that her selling&#13;
tactics were illegal, the students&#13;
said another friend was asked to&#13;
meet Simmer on the third floor of&#13;
the library, a much less visible&#13;
area.&#13;
On Tuesday, Campus Security&#13;
presented Simmer with a copy of&#13;
the Regents' policy and asked her&#13;
to leave. Stoffle also called the&#13;
university's lawyer to alert him of&#13;
the problem. "She claimed that&#13;
she had made four appointments&#13;
she just couldn't miss," Stoffle&#13;
said. "We are allowing her to keep&#13;
those appointments, but not to&#13;
make any more."&#13;
Stoffle said Simmer has been&#13;
warned two or three times about&#13;
her actions before. "Most people&#13;
don't do this type of thing," she&#13;
said. "A couple of years ago we&#13;
had a guy selling insurance in the&#13;
library. And one time McDonald's&#13;
set up shop for recruiting of&#13;
student workers on the concourse.&#13;
But most people are more&#13;
cooperative." Stoffle said that if&#13;
students are called by Simmer&#13;
and asked to meet her on campus&#13;
in the future, they should report&#13;
the matter to Dave Pedersen,&#13;
Dean of Student Life, in Union 209&#13;
(ext. 2367). .&#13;
r&#13;
INSIDE . . .&#13;
• Letters! • Soccer. Rangers win!&#13;
• Doc Severinsen interview &#13;
Thursday, October 15,1981 RANGER&#13;
Editorials&#13;
Vote for accountability!&#13;
Figuring that late coverage is better than no pre - election&#13;
coverage at all, Ranger News Editor Ken Meyer distributed&#13;
press materials to all ten of the candidates listed on the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association's current ballot last Thursday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
Since only two of those simple - to - complete forms were&#13;
returned to our office by the Monday afternoon deadline set by&#13;
Meyer, this week's planned front - page story on the senatorial&#13;
candidates was trashed. We decided that biased late coverage&#13;
was just one adjective too many. A p resentation of th e views of&#13;
two candidates out of ten would be meaningless. With what&#13;
would our readers compare these two? Each other?&#13;
There seem to be no issues as important as the single issue of&#13;
accountability involved in this election. Will candidates who do&#13;
not even present themselves to the voters before the election be&#13;
any more responsible or caring after the election?&#13;
In last week's editorial, the Ranger staff encouraged Parkside&#13;
students to vote. We still do. Despite the fact that the candidates'&#13;
petition deadlines and ours did not coincide (and thus we had no&#13;
coverage for you last week), we would like to acquaint you this&#13;
week with the only candidates on the ballot who were responsible&#13;
enough to present themselves to you for inspection before at&#13;
least some of you voted:&#13;
• Randy Klees&#13;
• John Peterson&#13;
At this point, they seem to be the best of the bunch.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Fall semester. Although I can only&#13;
comment on Science Division&#13;
orders, I can't help but wonder&#13;
about the accuracy of the rest of&#13;
the report. Kreuser has done us all&#13;
a disservice by suggesting that the&#13;
reason books are not available is&#13;
because faculty do not "care"&#13;
about students.&#13;
Michael Marron&#13;
Chairman, Division of Sc ience&#13;
Reporter's note:&#13;
Although it is true that many of&#13;
the people listed in the article did&#13;
not order their books late, it was in&#13;
the information which I received.&#13;
The bookstore manager, Jan&#13;
Becker, presented this information&#13;
to the Bookstore&#13;
Committee as a report of late fall&#13;
textbook requisitions. This is the&#13;
text of her report:&#13;
Attached are most of the book&#13;
orders received May 15, 1981 or&#13;
later. These consist of late,&#13;
revised, and orders sent to me&#13;
that weren't completed by faculty&#13;
members.&#13;
I deleted from the list all the&#13;
faculty members who were new&#13;
and those who were appointed to&#13;
their fall classes during the&#13;
summer.&#13;
I sincerely apologize to those&#13;
needs.&#13;
Although the faculty's opinion of&#13;
Guskin's actions seemed&#13;
negative, it was the general&#13;
feeling of t he group that a change&#13;
in administration would&#13;
irreperably damage Parkside.&#13;
— R anger, vol. 5, no. 6, Oct. 13,&#13;
1976&#13;
I year ago —&#13;
"Rangers whip Badgers" by Dave&#13;
Cramer&#13;
Parkside went into Green Bay&#13;
last weekend to play in the&#13;
Chancellors Cup, one of the most&#13;
prestigious soccer tournaments.&#13;
On Friday evening the Rangers&#13;
played like a team despite their&#13;
fourth place ranking in the&#13;
Mideast Division II soccer poll.&#13;
The Rangers gave coach Hal&#13;
Henderson his first victory over&#13;
the Madison team since 1977.&#13;
Any vision of winning the title&#13;
was quashed in the championship&#13;
game. The Rangers faced UWGreen&#13;
Bay, who had knocked off&#13;
highly touted UW-Milwaukee the&#13;
day before.&#13;
The Rangers' five - game&#13;
winning streak that was snapped&#13;
by Green Bay was the longest&#13;
winning streak ever recorded for&#13;
the team.&#13;
— Ranger, vol. 9, no. 6, Oct. 9,1980&#13;
faculty members who were listed&#13;
that did order their books on time.&#13;
For next week's issue, I will run&#13;
down the Bookstore's report and&#13;
see how many faculty members&#13;
were actually late.&#13;
SUFAC Budgets are late&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On September 17th, 1981, the&#13;
following student groups were&#13;
sent letters from the Segregated&#13;
University Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee (SUFAC), requesting&#13;
copies of their budget proposals&#13;
for the fiscal year 1982-83: Union&#13;
Operations, Union Debt Service,&#13;
Athletics, Intramurals, Health,&#13;
PAB, Performing Arts and&#13;
Lectures, SOC, Student Activities&#13;
Office, Ranger, Housing, Child&#13;
Care Center, PSGA, Inc., Student&#13;
Activities Building, SUFAC,&#13;
Business Services and Winter&#13;
Carnival. On a later date, an&#13;
addendum was sent requesting&#13;
twelve copies of each said&#13;
proposals.&#13;
The organizations were asked to&#13;
turn in their budget proposals by&#13;
October 12th, 1981. At this date&#13;
there were only six turned in. Ten&#13;
of the remaining proposals are&#13;
being "gone over" by the administration.&#13;
Two weeks before&#13;
the budget proposals were due,&#13;
SUFAC members were told that&#13;
the proposals that the administration&#13;
was "going over"&#13;
would be sent in late. The reason&#13;
for this was that, according to the&#13;
administration, there was no way&#13;
that they could fit their time into&#13;
our schedule. It is necessary to&#13;
say that SUFAC used the same&#13;
schedule last year as is being used&#13;
this year for budgeting. Budgeting&#13;
is a very important function&#13;
performed by many members of&#13;
various organizations and it shows&#13;
how some money that comes from&#13;
the students is spent.&#13;
SUFAC is trying its best to work&#13;
for the students but we can't&#13;
achieve as much as we wish when&#13;
the administration is holding us&#13;
back. We were counting on three&#13;
weeks for reviewing the budget&#13;
proposals but now we will have&#13;
less time to do so.&#13;
The six proposals we have&#13;
received and the ten that the&#13;
administration is holding up make&#13;
only sixteen, yet we were supposed&#13;
to receive seventeen. Which&#13;
one is missing? The only budget&#13;
proposal that is late and unaccounted&#13;
for is from PSGA, Inc.&#13;
Under the constitution of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government, it&#13;
is the duty of the President to&#13;
submit such a budget proposal,&#13;
first to the senate and then to&#13;
SUFAC.&#13;
I hope it is understood that as&#13;
chairperson of SUFAC it is my&#13;
duty to inform the student body&#13;
about some violations which have&#13;
occurred and which directly affect&#13;
the students.&#13;
Luis Valldejuli&#13;
SUFAC Chairperson&#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;
*Ranger&#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;
Fr!L^nJ&#13;
&gt;,D,&#13;
i°uCar0l&#13;
.&#13;
Bl,rns&#13;
' 001,9 Edenhauser, Earlene&#13;
Mvorc rh V H®ns,ak&#13;
' i&#13;
im&#13;
Kreuser, Jim Mertins, Steve&#13;
Wicks' erce&#13;
' Sue Stev&#13;
ens, Dan Werbie, Jeff&#13;
^^o^ible'^oMts^^i^tarponcyhand'content °' UW Parkside&#13;
- are so.e.y&#13;
SiSSS&#13;
ParSTenoTa! W?53?41be t0: ParkSide ^nger, WLLC D139, UWtSTwS.'S."®;&#13;
«,»&#13;
eluded for verificat ion. signed and a telep hone number inNames&#13;
will be wit hheld for valid reasons&#13;
reserves K Sat refusing TSV The RANGER&#13;
defamatory cont ent. refusing to print letters which contain false or&#13;
Kreuser to investigate&#13;
10 years ago — 5 years ago —&#13;
"Scholarships Made Available"&#13;
The newly formed University of&#13;
Wisconsin Scholarship Fund of&#13;
Kenosha has been accorded official&#13;
status as a tax - exempt&#13;
foundation authorized to receive&#13;
tax - deductable contributions . . .&#13;
its board of directors has announced.&#13;
&#13;
The foundation was organized&#13;
by the Wisconsin Alumni Club of&#13;
Kenosha "to expand its scholastic&#13;
program and revise existing&#13;
criteria for grants" as well as to&#13;
insure tax deductible status for&#13;
contributors.&#13;
From 1965 through the current&#13;
academic year, Kenosha Alumni&#13;
has awarded more than $10,000 in&#13;
scholarships to Kenosha county&#13;
students attending University of&#13;
Wisconsin campuses. The bulk of&#13;
the awards have gone to students&#13;
attending UW-Parkside and, prior&#13;
to the opening of the new four -&#13;
year school in 1969, to students&#13;
attending the former Kenosha&#13;
Center campus.&#13;
Awards for the 1971-72 academic&#13;
year total $2,680. The sum&#13;
represents full tuition for five&#13;
Kenosha students, three of whom&#13;
are attending UW-Parkside.&#13;
— Newscope, vol. 5, no. 6, Oct. 11,&#13;
1971.&#13;
"Faculty: Morale Low, Guskin&#13;
Unresponsive"&#13;
Faculty at the latter of two&#13;
meetings held with UW system&#13;
senior vice - presidents Donald&#13;
Smith and Donald Percy expressed&#13;
a problem with general&#13;
morale and communication with&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin.&#13;
After Smith and Percy made a&#13;
few opening statements about&#13;
Parkside's future and how pleased&#13;
they were with "the high quality&#13;
of education and the level of&#13;
achievement at Parkside,"&#13;
faculty attending the meeting&#13;
refuted this optimistic viewpoint&#13;
with pessimistic statements.&#13;
Surinder Datta . . . said that&#13;
morale at Parkside is as bad as it&#13;
was a few years ago when&#13;
Parkside's budget was cut and&#13;
wholesale lay - offs occurred.&#13;
Datta said that Guskin has&#13;
made certain decisions regarding&#13;
the university's future and if an&#13;
existing committee gives him&#13;
contrary recommendations, he&#13;
creates another committee hoping&#13;
it makes the correct decision.&#13;
Smith said he could "discern if&#13;
games are being played."&#13;
Faculty at the meeting felt that&#13;
Guskin is easily accessible, but&#13;
that he does not respond to their&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I applaud the effort of the&#13;
Ranger staff to inform the student&#13;
body of the reasons for the absence&#13;
of text books late into this&#13;
fall semester. I do fault Mr.&#13;
Kreuser, however, for the incompleteness&#13;
of his report.&#13;
As listed and presented in his&#13;
article of the October 8, 1981&#13;
Ranger, all faculty and staff&#13;
would seem to have been late in&#13;
ordering books for no particular&#13;
reason. I must address the implication&#13;
of irresponsibility and&#13;
lack of professionalism on the part&#13;
of those listed.&#13;
I cannot speak for the others,&#13;
but the reason my book order was&#13;
late rests in the fact that I was&#13;
asked to teach History 236 on June&#13;
30th, 1981. I ordered my books on&#13;
that day. Frequently ad hoes /&#13;
adjuncts receive their appointment&#13;
past the September /&#13;
March semester deadlines for&#13;
book orders.&#13;
Investigative reporting is a&#13;
crucial function of any&#13;
newspaper. It is important that all&#13;
aspects and personnel of the&#13;
university be subjected to any and&#13;
From the Files&#13;
all questions that the students&#13;
might have. However, investigative&#13;
reporting requires&#13;
investigation; the event or issue&#13;
must be covered in its context and&#13;
persons so named deserve to be&#13;
given a chance to reply to any&#13;
charges made against them,&#13;
whether implied or forthrightly&#13;
stated.&#13;
Angela Howard Zophy&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Your reporter, Jim Kreuser,&#13;
made a splash last week by listing&#13;
a number of faculty who "were too&#13;
busy last Spring to care about&#13;
students this Fall" and&#13;
"neglected" to submit book orders&#13;
for their classes. Of th e four&#13;
faculty in the Science Division&#13;
listed by Kreuser, three had their&#13;
orders in on time and the fourth&#13;
submitted orders for two classes&#13;
on May 11. One of these two orders&#13;
involved a simple statement of&#13;
"no text" for one course and the&#13;
other was an order for a&#13;
laboratory manual produced by&#13;
our own Duplicating Department.&#13;
The manuals were provided well&#13;
in advance of the beginning of the &#13;
DANCE FASHIONS&#13;
FIRE SALE&#13;
Adults - Children's&#13;
Danskins-Pranswell-Darbo&#13;
Exercise Suits-Body Suits-Leotards&#13;
Skirts-Jazz Pants-Skate Dresses&#13;
Ballet Costumes-Trunks-Dance Shoes&#13;
VALUES TO $30&#13;
$3 to $5&#13;
Some Soiled - As Is - All Sales Final&#13;
Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Kersey the Teaching Excellence&#13;
Award (Ranger, Oct. 8), I am&#13;
curious as to whether or not the&#13;
Chancellor has the common&#13;
decency and/or courage to give&#13;
Dr. Kersey her rightful award.&#13;
In the past week, the United&#13;
States Auto Club (USAC)&#13;
displayed good judgement in their&#13;
wise decision to give Bobby Unser&#13;
his rightful title as winner of this&#13;
year's prestigious Indy 500 race. If&#13;
a governing body of world - wide&#13;
recognition can correct its error,&#13;
why can't the leader of this virtually&#13;
unknown administration&#13;
correct his error?&#13;
The facts clearly show that Dr.&#13;
Kersey is in every way a teacher&#13;
of outstanding quality. For an&#13;
institution supposedly committed&#13;
to quality in teaching, a decision&#13;
such as this is unforgivable.&#13;
Jeff Schoor&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As a former student of Dr.&#13;
Shirley Kersey as well as the 1981-&#13;
82 president of the Parkside&#13;
chapter of SWEA (Student&#13;
Wisconsin Education Association -&#13;
an education organization that&#13;
was founded on the Parkside&#13;
campus in 1977 by Dr. Kersey), I&#13;
can verify that Dr. Kersey's&#13;
teaching methods as well as her&#13;
interest, involvement, and rapport&#13;
with her students were&#13;
superior.&#13;
In 1977 Dr. Kersey was a semi -&#13;
finalist for the Teaching Excellence&#13;
Award. In 1978 she was a&#13;
finalist. In 1979 she was a runner&#13;
up. And for the 1980 school year&#13;
she won the award but will not&#13;
receive it.&#13;
Denying Dr. Kersey an award&#13;
that she is most deserving of is an&#13;
appalling act that will not be&#13;
forgotten by the many students at&#13;
Parkside who have only the&#13;
deepest respect and admiration&#13;
for Dr. Shirley Kersey.&#13;
Debbie Hebior&#13;
SWEA President&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am first and foremost a&#13;
student concerned about my&#13;
education at Parkside, and as&#13;
such I feel it is necessary to&#13;
comment on the recent incident&#13;
regarding the Teaching Excellence&#13;
Award.&#13;
The situation as I see it was&#13;
handled inappropriately from the&#13;
beginning. Guidelines should have&#13;
been established prior to commencement&#13;
of any of the committees&#13;
proceedings; the administration&#13;
should have voiced&#13;
their dissatisfaction with the&#13;
award recipients much earlier;&#13;
the students on the committee&#13;
should have been given primary&#13;
responsibility of bestowing the&#13;
award, after all they are the ones&#13;
who have direct interaction with&#13;
the teaching skills of the candidates.&#13;
One could contend that&#13;
there is nothing we can do about it&#13;
now, and that is true to a certain&#13;
extent; however I say let's turn&#13;
this situation around and build&#13;
from it.&#13;
As students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin system we are&#13;
guaranteed the right to participate&#13;
in institutional governance&#13;
that directly affects us. I&#13;
suggest that the granting of the&#13;
Teaching Excellence Award does&#13;
indeed directly affect us. This&#13;
award is the only way that the&#13;
students as a whole can commend&#13;
those faculty members they see as&#13;
Continued On Page Ten&#13;
At the Oct. 5 meeting of Women&#13;
in Business, Mary Brunnelson of&#13;
Minnesota Fabrics discussed the&#13;
necessity of effectively planning a&#13;
working wardrobe for maximum&#13;
wear and comfort. Feeling&#13;
comfortable and looking your best&#13;
at work can enhance your self -&#13;
confidence on the job, she told&#13;
club members.&#13;
WIB is currently sponsoring&#13;
Aerobic Dance lessons every&#13;
Wednesday from 1 to 2 p.m. in the&#13;
south end of the gym. The lessons,&#13;
led by Irene Herremans, are open&#13;
to faculty, staff and students for&#13;
$1. Members of WIB may attend&#13;
free.&#13;
WIB will hold a bake sale on&#13;
Oct. 27 beginning at 8 a.m. on the&#13;
main concourse. Members are&#13;
asked to contribute baked goods.&#13;
The next meeting of WIB will be&#13;
held Nov. 2 at 1 p.m. in Union 104.&#13;
Everyone is welcome to attend. If&#13;
you are interested in becoming a&#13;
member, contact Carla Thomas at&#13;
ext. 2351.&#13;
Was Christ God? Wasn't Jesus&#13;
just a great moral teacher? These&#13;
questions and more will be answered&#13;
Wednesday, October 21 as&#13;
Inter - Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship sponsors a brown bag&#13;
lecture at 1 p.m. in Union 106.&#13;
Speaking on the topic of Christ's&#13;
deity and its meaning will be&#13;
Pastor William Paul of Northside&#13;
Bible Church in Kenosha, who has&#13;
worked as a missionary in India&#13;
for 25 years. Everyone is invited.&#13;
Nurse's Org.&#13;
The Parkside Nurse's&#13;
Organization will be sponsoring a&#13;
pizza luncheon on Oct. 16 in&#13;
Tallent Hall. The event is open to&#13;
all students enrolled in the nursing&#13;
program. For more information,&#13;
contact Linda (ext. 2480) or Peggy&#13;
(552-8574).&#13;
The Nurse's Organization will&#13;
also be sponsoring an open house&#13;
for all nursing students and their&#13;
parents in Tallent Hall on Oct. 20.&#13;
Hosting the open house will be&#13;
Dean Norma Lang and Associate&#13;
Dean Harriet Lazinski, both from&#13;
the UW-Milwaukee School of&#13;
Nursing Program.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This letter is in response to last&#13;
week's article concerning the&#13;
Teacher Excellence Award&#13;
conflict. The main issue at hand is&#13;
the fact that the administration of&#13;
this university fired a faculty&#13;
member who in her last year of&#13;
service won the Teacher Excellence&#13;
Award. In our opinion&#13;
this represents a rather embarassing&#13;
situation for the administration.&#13;
In response to that&#13;
faculty member winning the&#13;
award, after the administration&#13;
had seen fit to relieve her of her&#13;
responsibilities, they (the administrators)&#13;
have done&#13;
everything in their power to lessen&#13;
an already embarassing mess.&#13;
They have accomplished this by&#13;
failing to give out the award at all.&#13;
In justification of this action,&#13;
Chancellor Guskin stated, "It is&#13;
inappropriate to give out an&#13;
award which is supposed to set an&#13;
example, to reinforce good&#13;
teaching, when the recipient is in&#13;
the final year."&#13;
It seems rather ironic to us that&#13;
this would be a justifiable reason&#13;
when it was brought to our attention&#13;
that since the award's&#13;
beginning five years ago, at least&#13;
two, perhaps more, previous&#13;
recipients are no longer here at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Chancellor Guskin also states in&#13;
the article that the conflict over&#13;
this year's award was the product&#13;
of "misinformation on the part of&#13;
the student committee."&#13;
However, farther on in that same&#13;
paragraph we were informed that&#13;
the students had been asked to use&#13;
their own judgement in setting up&#13;
their criteria. This does not seem&#13;
to be misinformation on the&#13;
students' behalf, but rather on the&#13;
part of the administration who&#13;
failed to set down guidelines that&#13;
now seem important. The administration&#13;
is doing all it can to&#13;
save its face from what appears to&#13;
be a blundering mistake. If this is&#13;
not the real issue at hand then we&#13;
feel the administration should&#13;
prove it by retracting their actions,&#13;
and present the Teaching&#13;
Excellence Award to both Dr.&#13;
Oliver Hayward and Dr. Shirley&#13;
Kersey.&#13;
Connie Betancourt&#13;
Karen Borchardt&#13;
Keith Olsen&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As a student, I feel one should&#13;
have a multitude of learning&#13;
experiences from a variety of&#13;
professors. As a student of&#13;
education, I have been taught the&#13;
qualities that are required to&#13;
make a teacher outstanding.&#13;
From my experiences in two of&#13;
her classes, Dr. Shirley Kersey&#13;
clearly displays the qualities of an&#13;
outstanding professor.&#13;
After reading the article and&#13;
letter to the editor concerning the&#13;
Chancellor's decision to deny Dr.&#13;
The Chess Club will meet the&#13;
third Monday of each month. This&#13;
year's organizational meeting will&#13;
be held in the SOC room on Oct. 19&#13;
at 1 p. m.&#13;
If the club can get enough high&#13;
quality players to join, they plan&#13;
to compete with other schools in&#13;
the area. If you love to play chess,&#13;
you are invited to attend.&#13;
Use Ranger&#13;
Contact Sheets&#13;
Welcome back students!" Have fun!&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
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(South End)&#13;
Sponsored By&#13;
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LEADER: IRENE HERREMANS&#13;
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FUTURE DATES!&#13;
Come on down for some good ole foot&#13;
stompin' an' wailin' country tunes at . . .&#13;
COUNTRY/WESTERN SALOON&#13;
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535 Main Street in Down! Racine&#13;
To the Editor, cont&#13;
Teaching Aiuard decision "a mistake ft Club Events &#13;
Test anxiety workshop planned All-American scholarships available&#13;
The Offices of Educational&#13;
Support and Student Development&#13;
are offering a workshop designed&#13;
for students who »re seeking help&#13;
in coping with anxiety which is&#13;
related to taking an exam or a&#13;
test. This three session workshop&#13;
will be on October 19, 21 and 23&#13;
(Monday, Wednesday, Friday)&#13;
from 2 - 4 p. m.&#13;
Participants in the workshop&#13;
will spend time identifying the&#13;
causes of their test anxiety and&#13;
will be offered specific&#13;
suggestions for the prevention and&#13;
treatment of their anxiety. Tapes&#13;
by Richord Suinn will be used&#13;
which teach deep muscle&#13;
relaxation and the use of imagery&#13;
for test anxiety desensitization.&#13;
Students interested in attending&#13;
this workshop should call Olivia&#13;
Lui - Hayne at 553-2391 or Barbara&#13;
Larson at 553-2122 for an appointment&#13;
for an in - take interview.&#13;
&#13;
THE FACTS OF LIFE?&#13;
Specifically,&#13;
NORTHWESTERN&#13;
MUTUAL LIFE.&#13;
A Quiet Company representative will be on the Parkside&#13;
campus Tuesday, October 20th to interview men and&#13;
women interested in learning about the NML life underwriting&#13;
career.&#13;
We're BIG — world's largest company specializing in&#13;
individual life insurance, and among the nation's 40 largest1&#13;
corporations.&#13;
We're SOLID!&#13;
We're GROWING!&#13;
Arrange an interview in person at the Career Planning &amp;&#13;
Placement Office (WLLC D173). Persons interested in&#13;
individuality and compensation commensurate with&#13;
productivity are especially welcomed.&#13;
THE QUIET COMPANY&#13;
Northwestern Mutual Life&#13;
: Sunnyside Club&#13;
7517 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
0:&#13;
0&#13;
•&#13;
• Store Hours: Daily 8 A. M. to 2 P. M.&#13;
• HOME OF THE INFLATION FIGHTERS&#13;
• 3 NEW WAYS TO STRETCH YOUR DOLLAR!&#13;
: 2 FOR 1 SPECIALS!!&#13;
; Buy 1 get 2nd FREE!&#13;
• Different Special Every Hour!&#13;
; Food and Drinks&#13;
All Day Long Every Day&#13;
Come See Our 2 For 1 Board&#13;
s BEAT THE CLOCK!!&#13;
: Discounts On All Drinks&#13;
; At Different Hours&#13;
• Between 1-2 p. m. &amp; 6-7 p. m.&#13;
• 30* SPECIALS&#13;
U UU CHANGE EVER1&#13;
J BEER SHOTS H0UR&#13;
; Stretch Your Dollar!!&#13;
MON.thru&#13;
THURS.&#13;
ONLY&#13;
ALL YOU CAN&#13;
EAT!!&#13;
•&#13;
• Wed.&#13;
• Spaghetti&#13;
• w/Meat Balls&#13;
COME FILL YOURSELF UP&#13;
Sat.&#13;
Stuffed&#13;
- Shells&#13;
All Served with Soup or Salad, Bread and Butter&#13;
Thurs.&#13;
Lasagne&#13;
Fri.&#13;
Fish &amp; Fries&#13;
The Scholastic All - American&#13;
Search has begun, but nobody&#13;
seems to know about it.&#13;
According to President Mark A.&#13;
Anderson, not one single&#13;
University of Wisconsin student&#13;
has submitted an application for&#13;
the fall 1981 class.&#13;
"In fairness to each school and&#13;
to its students, it is our policy to&#13;
accept members from each of this&#13;
country's 1500 sch ools," he said.&#13;
The honor society is a small, nonprofit&#13;
organization comprised of&#13;
United Council&#13;
undergraduate and graduate&#13;
students from all fifty states and&#13;
several foreign countries.&#13;
"We started with only six&#13;
members, but our 'All - American&#13;
appeal forced us into a nationwide&#13;
organization," according to&#13;
Anderson.&#13;
The goal of the annual&#13;
Scholastic All - American Search&#13;
is to admit top students from each&#13;
community college, junior&#13;
college, undergraduate, and&#13;
graduate school in the country.&#13;
The organization has no local&#13;
chapters, instead seeks intellectually&#13;
mature students on a&#13;
national level. Students are&#13;
chosen on the basis of their&#13;
leadership abilities, physical&#13;
vigor, end intellectual prowess.&#13;
Students wishing further information&#13;
are asked to send a&#13;
stamped self - addressed envelope&#13;
to the Scholastic All - American&#13;
Honor Society, Post Office Box&#13;
237, Clinton, New York, 13323.&#13;
President addresses Regents&#13;
The following is the edited text&#13;
of remarks made by United&#13;
Council President Robert Kranz,&#13;
on behalf of 140,000 UW students at&#13;
the Board of Regents meeting in&#13;
Stevens Point, October 9, which&#13;
commemorates the 10th anniversary&#13;
of the UW System.&#13;
"United Council on behalf of the&#13;
students had one primary objective&#13;
in influencing and supporting&#13;
the creation of Chapter 36&#13;
of the Wisconsin State Statutes; to&#13;
make the Universities decision&#13;
making process more democratic&#13;
and responsive to the needs of&#13;
students. We feel this has been&#13;
partically achieved and has&#13;
allowed students to excercise&#13;
some self determination within&#13;
the academic community. The&#13;
ideal of democratization embodied&#13;
in Chapter 36 is somewhat&#13;
unique in Higher Education. It is&#13;
something the citizens of this state&#13;
can take a measure of pride in.&#13;
Since I have been President of&#13;
United Council I have received inquiries&#13;
from student leaders across&#13;
the nation who are curious&#13;
about the rights and responsibilities&#13;
Wisconsin students enjoy,&#13;
and are carved into state law.&#13;
The University has worked&#13;
toward the goal of creating a more&#13;
responsive institution by&#13;
facilitating the evolution of&#13;
student participatory rights and&#13;
responsibilities, though in the last&#13;
decade we have observed a&#13;
disturbing trend. To our dismay&#13;
since Merger became law,&#13;
students have witnessed the&#13;
decline of public education in the&#13;
fiscal priorities of the state and at&#13;
the hands of these who should&#13;
know better. Today's students are&#13;
being offered half a loaf by those&#13;
who enjoyed a full loaf when they&#13;
were in school, and the galling&#13;
thing is that they seem to feel no&#13;
guilt.&#13;
As President of United Council I&#13;
am not here today to point a&#13;
finger, name names, and access&#13;
blame. I will only state that we as&#13;
students know it to be true. In the&#13;
1972-73 bi-a nnium the University&#13;
received 25.8% of the state budget.&#13;
In 1980-81, at a time of record&#13;
enrollments, it received 18.1%.&#13;
This has led the University and its&#13;
students to a perilous crossroad as&#13;
we celebrate the decentenial.&#13;
The quality of our education is&#13;
in a state of decline, access has&#13;
been hampered as well. As&#13;
General Purpose Revenue&#13;
declines and tuition increases, this&#13;
erects an immediate barrier to&#13;
non - traditional, low income, and&#13;
minority students. It discourages&#13;
these students from enrolling or&#13;
even seeking alternative sources&#13;
of support. Unless Wisconsin is&#13;
willing to stand by and watch the&#13;
student population regress to what&#13;
it was in the past, a haven for&#13;
white male careerists, the trend in&#13;
state support must be reversed.&#13;
The scramble for funds has led&#13;
universities to adopt narrow&#13;
curriculums that stress&#13;
specialization, and preparation&#13;
for the job market. As a result, the&#13;
University is graduating students&#13;
today who have limited knowledge&#13;
of American History, much less&#13;
exposure to the classics,&#13;
philosophy, and literature. This is&#13;
evidenced by per student support&#13;
for library costs being 60% of what&#13;
it was in 1972-73. How much longer&#13;
can this go on before our degrees&#13;
are not only expensive, but&#13;
meaningless? Can the state afford&#13;
to treat its future leadership with&#13;
such disregard?&#13;
This trend in state support has&#13;
led students to reaffirm their&#13;
commitment to participation in&#13;
University decision making as&#13;
sketched out in Chapter 36, and&#13;
reaffirmed more clearly in two&#13;
court decisions. Students will not&#13;
retreat from this commitment,&#13;
and in the future you can expect&#13;
them to take steps to enhance the&#13;
role they already play. Given the&#13;
economic atmosphere in which&#13;
decisions are being made, this&#13;
must be viewed as inevitable. Well&#13;
intentioned as our faculties and&#13;
administrative officers may be,&#13;
no one can expect them to be in a&#13;
position to articulate first hand&#13;
testimony and advocacy on behalf&#13;
of the consumers of education - the&#13;
students. We will speak for ourselves,&#13;
and consequently must&#13;
explore our rights and responsibilities&#13;
to the limit granted us&#13;
by the word and intent of the&#13;
legislature.&#13;
Since Merger, United Council&#13;
has attempted to articulate the&#13;
needs and desires of the consumers&#13;
of education before this&#13;
Board and the State Legislature.&#13;
The creation of Chapter 36 has lent&#13;
legitimacy to these efforts. It&#13;
gives us a unique status few other&#13;
student organizations participating&#13;
in the community of&#13;
Higher Education enjoy. In the&#13;
future, given the reality of&#13;
declining financial aid, increased&#13;
educational costs, and the erosion&#13;
of academic quality, our success&#13;
is intimately tied to the welfare of&#13;
our clientele. Certainly we have&#13;
experienced growing pains as we&#13;
come of age. In that we are no&#13;
different than the UW System&#13;
whose decentenial we celebrate&#13;
today.&#13;
As students, we understand the&#13;
problems associated with growth&#13;
and responsibility, for this&#13;
challenge is at the core of the&#13;
student experience. To address&#13;
our challenge United Council has&#13;
created a working group to explore&#13;
our internal faults and&#13;
suggests remedies. We have no&#13;
other choice if student input as&#13;
outlined in Merger legislation is to&#13;
be meaningful. We will struggle,&#13;
but we will succeed.&#13;
On this the 10th anniversary of&#13;
one of the great educational&#13;
systems in contemporary society,&#13;
I would like to make two concluding&#13;
remarks. Many thanks to&#13;
you who contributed to the effort&#13;
that resulted in students participating&#13;
in the democratization&#13;
of a great state agency. You can&#13;
expect students to take constructive&#13;
steps to further that&#13;
ideal, and enhance the University's&#13;
role as an agency for social&#13;
change and insure that it is not&#13;
simply a gate-keeper to privilege.&#13;
And finally, on behalf of United&#13;
Council's constituents,&#13;
congratulations to you who made&#13;
this day possible."&#13;
REC CENTER TOURNEYS&#13;
VOLLEYBALL — HORSESHOES&#13;
CO-ED&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Sat. Oct. 24 10 am&#13;
• Cost — $5.00/Team&#13;
• 3 Guys &amp; 3 Girls Make Up a Team&#13;
• Trophies for Winning Team&#13;
• Games Played in Union Pad Area&#13;
SIGN UP IN REC CENTER&#13;
Entries Limited to First 8 Teams&#13;
Horseshoes&#13;
Tues. Oct. 27 12-2 pm&#13;
• Cost — $2.00/Person&#13;
• Trophies to Winning Players&#13;
• Matches Played in Union Pad Area&#13;
SIGN UP IN REC CENTER&#13;
Entries Limited to First 16 Players &#13;
WHAT COULD&#13;
THE ARMY&#13;
POSSIBLY OFFER&#13;
A BRIGHT PERSON&#13;
Drop your guard for a&#13;
minute. Even though you're&#13;
in college right now, there&#13;
are many aspects of the Army&#13;
that you might find very&#13;
attractive.&#13;
Maybe even irresistible.&#13;
See for yourself.&#13;
MED SCHOOL. ON US&#13;
You read it right.&#13;
The Army's Health Professions Scholarship&#13;
Program provides necessary tuition, books, lab&#13;
fees, even microscope rental during medical&#13;
school.&#13;
Plus a monthly stipend that works out to&#13;
about $6,000 a year.&#13;
After you're accepted into medical&#13;
school, you can be accepted into our program.&#13;
Then you're commissioned and you go&#13;
through school as a Second Lieutenant in the&#13;
Army Reserve.&#13;
The hitch? Very simple. After you graduate,&#13;
you give the Army a year as a doctor for every&#13;
year the Army gave you as a med student, with&#13;
a minimum obligation of three years' service.&#13;
INTERNSHIR RESIDENCY&#13;
&amp; CASH BONUSES&#13;
Besides scholarships to medical school, the&#13;
Army also offers AMA-approved first-year&#13;
post-graduate and residency training programs.&#13;
Such training adds no further obligation to&#13;
the scholarship participant. But any Civilian&#13;
Graduate Medical Education sponsored by the&#13;
Army gives you a one-year obligation for&#13;
every year of sponsorship, with a minimum&#13;
obligation of two years' service.&#13;
But you get a $9,000 annual bonus every&#13;
year you're paying back medical school or postgraduate&#13;
training.&#13;
So you not only get your medical education&#13;
paid for, you get extra pay while you're paying&#13;
it back. Not a bad deal.&#13;
AGREAT PLACE TO BE A NURSE&#13;
The rich tradition of Army Nursing is one&#13;
of excellence, dedication, even heroism. And&#13;
it's a challenge to live up to.&#13;
Today, an Army Nurse is the epitome of&#13;
professionalism, regarded as a critical member&#13;
of the Army Medical Team.&#13;
A BSN degree is required. And the clinical&#13;
spectrum is almost impossible to match in&#13;
civilian practice.&#13;
And, since you'll be an Army Officer, you'll&#13;
enjoy more respect and authority than most of&#13;
your civilian counterparts. You'll also enjoy&#13;
travel opportunities, officer's pay and officer's&#13;
privileges.&#13;
Army Nursing offers educational opportunities&#13;
that are second to none. As an Army&#13;
Nurse, you could be selected for graduate degree&#13;
programs at civilian universities.&#13;
UKEYOU?&#13;
ADVANCED NURSING COURSE.&#13;
TUITION-FREE&#13;
You get tuition, pay and living allowances.&#13;
You can also take Nurse Practitioner courses&#13;
and courses in many clinical specialities. All on&#13;
the Army.&#13;
. While these programs do not cost you any&#13;
money, most of them do incur an additional&#13;
service'bbligifffon 1 ^&#13;
A CHANCE TO PRACTICE LAW&#13;
If you're about to get your law degree and&#13;
be admitted to the bar, you should consider a&#13;
commission in the Judge Advocate General&#13;
Corps. Because in the Army you get to practice&#13;
law right from the start.&#13;
While your classmates are still doing other&#13;
lawyers' research and other lawyers' briefs, you&#13;
could have your own cases, your own clients,&#13;
in effect, your own practice.&#13;
Plus you 11 have the pay, prestige and privileges&#13;
of being an Officer in the United States&#13;
Army. With a chance to travel and make the&#13;
most of what you've worked so hard to&#13;
become. A real, practicing lawyer. Be an Army&#13;
Lawyer.&#13;
ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS&#13;
Though you're too late for a 4-year&#13;
scholarship, there are 3-, 2-, and even 1-year&#13;
scholarships available.&#13;
They include tuition, books, and lab fees.&#13;
Plus $100 a month living allowance. Naturally&#13;
they're very competitive. Because&#13;
besides helping you towards your&#13;
degree, an ROTC scholarship helps&#13;
you towards the gold bars of an&#13;
Army Officer.&#13;
Stop by the ROTC office on&#13;
campus and ask about details.&#13;
but not necessarily&#13;
assigned to active duty. Find&#13;
out about it.&#13;
A BONUS FOR&#13;
PART-TIME WORK&#13;
You can get a $1,500&#13;
bonus just for enlisting in some Army Reserve&#13;
units. Or up to $4,000 in educational benefits.&#13;
You also get paid for your Reserve duty. It&#13;
comes out to about $1,100 a year for one weekend&#13;
a month and two weeks annual training.&#13;
And now we have a special program to help&#13;
you fit the Army Reserve around your school&#13;
schedule.&#13;
It's worth a look.&#13;
A SECOND CHANCE AT COLLEGE&#13;
Some may find college to be the right place&#13;
at the wrong time for a variety of reasons The&#13;
Army can help them, too.&#13;
A few years in the Army can help them get&#13;
money for tuition and the maturity to use it&#13;
wisely.&#13;
The Army has a program in which money&#13;
saved for college is matched two-for-one by the&#13;
government. Then, if one qualifies, a generous&#13;
bonus is added to that.&#13;
So 2 years of service can get you up to&#13;
$15,200 for college, 3 and 4 years up to $20,100.&#13;
In addition, bonuses up to $5,000 are available&#13;
for 4-year enlistments in selected skills.&#13;
Add in the experience and maturity gained,&#13;
and the Army can send an individual back to&#13;
college a richer person in more ways than one.&#13;
We hope these Army opportunities have&#13;
intrigued you as well as surprised you. Because&#13;
there is indeed a lot the Army can offer a bright&#13;
person like you.&#13;
For more information, send the coupon.&#13;
r&#13;
UP TO $170 A MONTH&#13;
You can combine service in the&#13;
Army Reserve or National Guard&#13;
with Army ROTC and get between&#13;
$7,000 and $14,000 while you're&#13;
still in school.&#13;
It's called the Simultaneous&#13;
Membership Program. You get $100.&#13;
a month as an Advanced Army ROTC&#13;
Cadet and an additional $70 a month&#13;
(sergeant's pay) as an Army Reservist.&#13;
When you graduate, you'll be&#13;
commissioned as a Second Lieutenant,&#13;
Please tell me more about: • (AM I Medical School and Army Medicine.&#13;
• I AN) the Army Nurse Corps, • (ALt Army Law.&#13;
• iFR) ROTC Scholarships. • |SS) Army Reserve Bonuses,&#13;
• (PC) Army Education Benefits. I&#13;
NAME&#13;
appree&#13;
HATE OE IMRTH SCHOOL ATTENDING *&#13;
Send to: ARMY OPPORTUNITIES. P.O. BOX 100&#13;
NORTH HOLLYWOOD. CALIF. 91603&#13;
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.&#13;
ARMY.&#13;
Note To insure receipt ot information requested, all blanks must be completed.&#13;
42CSS00O0PC &#13;
Thursday, October 15,1981 RANGER&#13;
PARKSIDE'S ORIANA TRIO: Skorodin, Bell and Sturm.&#13;
"Double Fantasy" on exhibit&#13;
"Double Fantasy," an exhition&#13;
6f fantasy - oriented art by two&#13;
young Wisconsin artists, Robert&#13;
Sill and Jeffrey Johannes, will be&#13;
on display through October 26 at&#13;
Parkside's Communication Arts&#13;
Gallery. Gallery hours are 12:30 to&#13;
• 5:30 p.m. Monday through&#13;
Thursday and 7 to 10 p.m. Tuesday&#13;
and Wednesday and Friday by&#13;
appointment.&#13;
UW-P Art Coordinator Dennis&#13;
Bayuzick said the two - person&#13;
show will consist of symbolic -&#13;
figurative paintings and drawings&#13;
exploring the often humorous&#13;
private fantasies and personal&#13;
mythologies of the artists. Both&#13;
have been influenced by the&#13;
formal and narrative qualities of&#13;
cartoon and comic - strip art, yet&#13;
each has interpreted this influence&#13;
in his own unique way and&#13;
has evolved a highly individual&#13;
visual style.&#13;
There will be an informal&#13;
gallery talk by Sill, on Tuesday,&#13;
Oct. 20 at 4 p.m. in the Gallery, It&#13;
is free and the public is invited.&#13;
NOW 50% OFF&#13;
FOR STUDENTS ONLY&#13;
Oriana Trio presents winning piece&#13;
The Oriana Trio, resident&#13;
chamber ensemble at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside, will present the winning&#13;
work in its third International&#13;
Composers' Competition in a&#13;
concert at 8 p.m. on Friday, Oct.&#13;
16, in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Violinist Elaine Skorodin will be&#13;
making her initial appearance&#13;
with the trip along with founding&#13;
members Harry Sturm, 'cello,&#13;
and Carol Bell, piano.&#13;
They will be assisted in the&#13;
winning work, a composition for&#13;
piano trio and voice, by soprano&#13;
Peggy Smith-Skarry, winner of a&#13;
number of awards including the&#13;
Society of American Musicians'&#13;
Young Artist Competition where&#13;
,she won prizes in both piano and&#13;
voice. She has performed as&#13;
soloist with the Chicago Symphony&#13;
Orchestra and appeared on&#13;
NBC's Artists Showcase.&#13;
The winning work in this year's&#13;
competition, which carries a&#13;
privately - funded $1,500 prize, is&#13;
by William Baum, a 21-year-old&#13;
New Yorker and a&#13;
graduate student in music at&#13;
Queens College. He will be present&#13;
for the debut performance of his&#13;
composition titled "anyone live&#13;
in a pretty how town" after an e.e.&#13;
cummings poem.&#13;
Trio members, who act as&#13;
contest judges along with UWParkside&#13;
composition professor&#13;
August Wegner, said this year's&#13;
competition drew entries from all&#13;
over the world.&#13;
In addition to the Baum work,&#13;
the trio will play the Mozart Dminor&#13;
Trio and the Ravel Trio and&#13;
Smith-Skarry will sing several&#13;
Bach arias with the ensemble.&#13;
Admission is $2 for the general&#13;
public and $1 for students and&#13;
senior citizens. Tickets will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16!&#13;
OFFER VALID ONLY AT&#13;
: VIC TANNY HEALTH CLUB&#13;
# HY. 32 &amp; K.R.&#13;
Family sexual abuse topic of workshop&#13;
The dynamics and treatment of&#13;
family sexual abuse, with a&#13;
particular focus on the interrelationship&#13;
between alcohol&#13;
and incest, will be explored in a&#13;
one - day seminar offered through&#13;
the UW-Extension, UW-Parkside.&#13;
The purpose of the seminar is to&#13;
provide an indepth analysis of&#13;
the dynamics and issues&#13;
surrounding child sexual abuse to&#13;
child protection workers, alcohol&#13;
counselors, and other human&#13;
service professionals.&#13;
An examination of the criminal&#13;
justice system vis-a-vis treatment&#13;
goals for the sex offender, and a&#13;
programmatic approach for total&#13;
families, applicable in both urban&#13;
and rural areas will be included.&#13;
Miriam Ingebrittsen, MSW,&#13;
Director of the Family Renewal&#13;
Center in Minneapolis, will&#13;
present recent research findings&#13;
in the area of child abuse, sexual&#13;
abuse, and alcohol addiction, in&#13;
connection with family violence.&#13;
Specific emphasis will be given to&#13;
program development in rural&#13;
settings where resources are&#13;
limited.&#13;
The seminar is Wednesday, Oct.&#13;
21, i n room 281 Tallent Hall, 8:30&#13;
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The fee is $45,&#13;
including coffee and materials.&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
Coming&#13;
October 21st Parkside Union&#13;
OLD STYLE&#13;
Carol Holton, Center for Alcohol&#13;
and Other Drug Studies, 610&#13;
Langdon St., Madison 53706, phone&#13;
(608) 262-3068, or call University&#13;
Extension at Parkside, (414) 553-&#13;
2312. &lt; Pre-registration is&#13;
requested.&#13;
Ott discusses&#13;
Wis. weather&#13;
Jim Ott, WTMJ weather man,&#13;
will teach a two - session course on&#13;
Wisconsin's weather for the UWExtension,&#13;
UW-Parkside. Ott was&#13;
formerly a Parkside instructor in&#13;
Earth Science and Geography and&#13;
is now teaching mini - courses at&#13;
UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
He will cover: What is weather?&#13;
What causes our weather? Understanding&#13;
the weather map;&#13;
How Lake Michigan affects our&#13;
weather; Storms; Wisconsin's air&#13;
pollution problem; and Is our&#13;
climate changing?,&#13;
Classes will meet from 6:30-9&#13;
p.m. on Oct. 22 and 29 in Moln. 211.&#13;
Advance registration is requested&#13;
with University Extension at (414)&#13;
553-2312. The fee is $11.&#13;
3 mos. membership&#13;
or&#13;
6 mos. membership&#13;
CALL NOW 552-9513&#13;
FINAL DAY&#13;
VIC TANNY HEALTH CLUB&#13;
(STUDENT MUST PRESENT ID CARD) &#13;
THRU WARNER BROS&#13;
A WARNER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY&#13;
'Paternity'&#13;
predictable&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
Middle age affects different&#13;
people different ways: some dye&#13;
their hair; others buy their hair.&#13;
In "Paternity," Buddy Evans&#13;
(Burt Reynolds) just wants to&#13;
have an heir.&#13;
So we find Evans on his 44th&#13;
birthday lamenting the fact that&#13;
after he's gone, there will be&#13;
nothing left to show he existed.&#13;
How he would love a son! Children&#13;
are so much fun. Evans knows of&#13;
nothing more pleasant than a&#13;
child's laughter. If only . . .&#13;
Confirmed bachelor that he is,&#13;
parenthood seems impossible!&#13;
Evans has everything else — a&#13;
great job as top executive for&#13;
Madison Square Garden, a swank&#13;
apartment, a maid, $500 plants —&#13;
why spoil it by getting married?&#13;
All h e wants is a son.&#13;
One day Evans hears the term&#13;
"surrogate mother" used to&#13;
describe the mating habits of the&#13;
Austrialian Emu bird. All the&#13;
mother Emu does is lay the egg.&#13;
The father takes it from there. A&#13;
solution at last! Evans decides he&#13;
will simply hire someone to have&#13;
his son.&#13;
Evans plans to treat this as a&#13;
strict business venture with no&#13;
emotional involvement. That&#13;
should be no problem for Evans.&#13;
He has the kind of cold personality&#13;
that matches sterile environments.&#13;
His plants are sickly&#13;
and even his fish keep dying.&#13;
Interviews with prospective&#13;
mothers are not particularly&#13;
successful. The applicants end up&#13;
fighting with the meticulous&#13;
Evans or bolting out of his office&#13;
when he begins to discuss&#13;
"necessary equipment." Amidst a&#13;
boatload of union workers touring&#13;
the New York harbor, Buddy&#13;
finally finds the surrogate mother&#13;
for his child.&#13;
Maggie (Beverly D'Angelo) is a&#13;
brass instrument student hoping&#13;
to finance her European studies&#13;
by giving lessons. Since she&#13;
realizes the amount of money&#13;
she'll need far exceeds that&#13;
earned by these lessons, Buddy's&#13;
proposition of having a baby for&#13;
$25,000 doesn't sound all that bad.&#13;
After all, it will only take nine&#13;
months!&#13;
So, with some revisions, the&#13;
contract is signed. For $50,000,&#13;
Maggie agrees to carry Buddy's&#13;
baby. He turns into a Hitler of&#13;
sorts, dictating the way Maggie&#13;
can eat, exercise and live. She&#13;
slowly grows to love the child she&#13;
carries, as well as Evans himself,&#13;
but he remains clinically aloof.&#13;
Finally Maggie has had enough.&#13;
She leaves.&#13;
That's the basic outline of the&#13;
plot of "Paternity." You can&#13;
figure out the predictable ending&#13;
for yourself. If you still want to see&#13;
it, go ahead, but chances are good&#13;
that it will be a disappointment.&#13;
WHAT MAKES&#13;
THE&#13;
RUNNER&#13;
STUMBLE?&#13;
BURT REYNOLDS&#13;
as Buddy Evans.&#13;
Reynolds' acting leaves&#13;
something to be desired; it's as&#13;
phoney as his character, Buddy&#13;
Evans. Lauren Hutton, in a very&#13;
small part, seems there only to&#13;
dress up the movie. She should&#13;
stick to Pepsi commercials.&#13;
Beverly D'Angelo, however, is&#13;
believable. She does the best job of&#13;
acting in the movie.&#13;
Although most viewers will&#13;
probably find this movie&#13;
pleasantly amusing, it can only be&#13;
recommended for devout Burt&#13;
Reynolds fans.&#13;
Kenyan plays Parkside soccer&#13;
nh n Hninrt^ U ~ John Oniego became interested&#13;
in soccer as a young&#13;
boy, because soccer is Kenya's&#13;
most popular sport. "It is one&#13;
of those things that you grow&#13;
up with," he said. "We played&#13;
all of the time." Oniego has&#13;
been playing on the Parkside&#13;
Soccer team for four years.&#13;
Oniego is not involved in any&#13;
other sports at Parkside, as he&#13;
trains for soccer all year&#13;
round. "The hardest part of&#13;
training is the running it involves.&#13;
Running gives you&#13;
endurance and if you don't&#13;
have endurance, you can't stay&#13;
in the game. You would never&#13;
last the whole time."&#13;
Oniego feels that the team is&#13;
one big family. This feeling&#13;
stems from the way that the&#13;
team gets along. "Everyone&#13;
gets the same treatment from&#13;
the coach; if you come late to&#13;
practice, you have to run a&#13;
couple of laps. We get along&#13;
and behave as a team."&#13;
Oniego also feels that the&#13;
large number of players and&#13;
their positive attitude plays an&#13;
important role in the team's&#13;
success. "When we are on the&#13;
field, we participate as a team&#13;
and when we train, we train&#13;
mentally as well as physically.&#13;
We always have to be determined&#13;
to win and we have to be&#13;
aggressive. When you feel like&#13;
a winner, it helps you to win."&#13;
Over the past few years,&#13;
John has seen a lot of new&#13;
faces. "We have a bigger team&#13;
now, and a bigger bench. It&#13;
leads to inner team competition&#13;
so more people&#13;
compete for the same position&#13;
on the field. A few years ago, it&#13;
didn't matter if you missed&#13;
JOHN ONYIEGO&#13;
practice. Now, if you miss&#13;
practice you could lose your&#13;
position to a different player. It&#13;
has made the team players&#13;
want to improve themselves.&#13;
So, the team has improved."&#13;
There are two games that&#13;
stick out in John's mind more&#13;
than any others. Both occured&#13;
in his sophomore year. "In my&#13;
sophomore year, we were "so&#13;
confident that we were going to&#13;
win at Platteville, toward the&#13;
end of t he game, we thought we&#13;
had the game in all the way and&#13;
Platteville came up from&#13;
behind. In the last two or three&#13;
minutes of the game, Platteville&#13;
tied. We were crazy.&#13;
The score stayed tied through&#13;
the overtime, and we had to&#13;
play a second game.&#13;
"Minnesota is another game&#13;
that I remember well. We&#13;
should have scored in the first&#13;
two or three minutes of the&#13;
game, but we didn't. It was&#13;
cold, and a very tough game&#13;
and we never scored in the&#13;
entire game. We lost 1-0."&#13;
Exposure to the soccer team&#13;
still isn't what John would like&#13;
it to be, but soccer is a winning&#13;
game for Parkside and for&#13;
John Oniego.&#13;
A MICHAEL CRICHTON FILM&#13;
"LOOKERALBERT&#13;
FINNEY&#13;
JAMES COBURN SUSAN DEY LEIGH TAYLOR-YOUNG&#13;
Produced by HOWARD JEFFREY Music by BARRY DeVORZON&#13;
Written and Directed by MICHAEL CRICHTON ^7 A LADD COMPANYRELE&#13;
PG PARENTAL GUIDANCE SUGGESTED ® PANAViSION®1 HPl D OL B y STEREO&#13;
SOME MATERIAL MAY N OT BE SUITABLE FOR C HILDREN TECHNICOLOR® IN SELECTED THEATRE? * Tne LOCJO Comoony All Piqhts Peserven&#13;
OPENS OCTOBER 23rd AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU! &#13;
TICKETS ON SALE AT: PACETTl'S in kenosha&#13;
MUSIC CENTER in racine&#13;
UW-P UNION INFO CENTE&#13;
a contemporary entertainment event&#13;
DOC SEveRinsen&#13;
S X6BROO in COIKERT&#13;
tue/day, October 20&#13;
8 p.m., uw-pork/ide phy. ed. building&#13;
advance admi//ion: S5.00 park/ide&#13;
/tudent/ $6.00 other /tudent/,&#13;
/r. citizen/, pork/ide alumni &amp;&#13;
/toff $7.00 general public&#13;
all ticket/ $7.00 at the door &#13;
Ranger interview&#13;
Doc Severinsen reveals changes in style&#13;
by by Tony Tony Rogers Rogers won't be anv f„n" - . . .. " /&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Doc Severinsen and his new&#13;
band "Xebron" will be in concert&#13;
at Parkside next Tuesday night.&#13;
Severinsen does not grant personal&#13;
interviews while on the&#13;
road, but with the welcome&#13;
assistance of Buddy Couvion,&#13;
Coordinator of Student Activities,&#13;
I was able to conduct the following&#13;
interview with "Doc" over the&#13;
phone. Elaine Edwards of the&#13;
Kenosh£ News also took part in&#13;
the interview.&#13;
Ranger: Who did you get to be in&#13;
your new band "Xebron"?&#13;
Severinsen: Well, the two young&#13;
fellas who wrote a lot of the music&#13;
and helped me organize this thing&#13;
in the first place, and of course,&#13;
the new players, some from the&#13;
Eastman Conservatory of Music.&#13;
Others are friends of friends, and&#13;
then we had to find players that&#13;
were available in L. A.&#13;
Essentially, they had to really&#13;
be sympathetic to what we were&#13;
doing. They have had opportunities&#13;
to go other places and&#13;
do other things and they've chosen&#13;
to stay with me and be creative.&#13;
Everybody in the group is seeking&#13;
to write and contribute more than&#13;
just get up on stage and play. They&#13;
all have an understanding of what&#13;
the group is about. We just found&#13;
each other. We didn't hold&#13;
auditions.&#13;
Ranger: How do you feel about&#13;
today's music?&#13;
Severinsen: I really don't try to&#13;
judge the music that's out there -&#13;
some of it may not appeal to me at&#13;
the moment, but if I take a little&#13;
time and look at it I can see why&#13;
it's popular.&#13;
Ranger: You've played with a&#13;
variety of g reat bands and great&#13;
jazz artists in the past. Are there a&#13;
few really memorable events or&#13;
experiences that you can recall&#13;
while performing, anything that&#13;
comes to mind?&#13;
Severinsen: Well, not right off&#13;
hand. I mean there's just little&#13;
things that flicker through your&#13;
mind. You never know where it's&#13;
going to come. It could be in a&#13;
most unbelievable kind of a way.&#13;
You might think, "Well, that&#13;
won t be any fun," or, "Oh god,&#13;
do I really have to go to that?" But&#13;
you might have a moment there&#13;
that makes it memorable,&#13;
sometimes not for a musical&#13;
reason. I don't particularly like to&#13;
dwell on the past. Otherwise, I'd&#13;
still be out trying lead a band by&#13;
Tommy Dorsey.&#13;
Ranger: Have there been any&#13;
other major changes recently in&#13;
your life aside from the creation of&#13;
"Xebron?"&#13;
t Severinsen: No, but I think that&#13;
I'm just open to changes. I can&#13;
probably trace this back to the&#13;
time I decided to go to a pschoanalyst&#13;
as a learning process. I&#13;
mean I wasn't ready for the booby&#13;
hatch or anything, but I felt it&#13;
would be a real learning experience.&#13;
The only thing was that I&#13;
was always afraid that it would be&#13;
like opening Pandora's box. It did&#13;
upset a lot of apple carts. But I've&#13;
found that since I did that I'm&#13;
much more open to make changes&#13;
AMMMMMMWVIMWWVAMVWU&#13;
"I felt like I wa nted to&#13;
seek something new . . .&#13;
if I d on't, I'm just going&#13;
to dry up and blow&#13;
away . .&#13;
and much more stimulated to do&#13;
things with my life.&#13;
Ranger: Are you thinking of&#13;
writing a book?&#13;
Severinsen: No, if I wrote the&#13;
story of my life nobody would&#13;
believe it anyway: I think I just&#13;
communicate better with just&#13;
some music.&#13;
I don't want to try to put a stamp&#13;
on this as a man who has had an&#13;
ephinany, a profound experience,&#13;
and now, look out! I'm going to&#13;
come in here in flowing white&#13;
robes and lay you all in the aisles.&#13;
It's kind of a subtle thing. I just&#13;
got tired, you might say even&#13;
fearful, of just going along with&#13;
the same thing. I felt like I wanted&#13;
to drill a new hole, seek something&#13;
new in my music because if I&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
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CLOSED SUNDAYS Si HOOD AYS&#13;
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• SPOT-BUILT&#13;
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• SPALDING&#13;
• NEW BALANCE&#13;
The Active Athletes One Stop&#13;
694-9206 1MB ISfH It, 0NQRM, IS&#13;
"I wonder why it's so dark in the Rec Center," exclaims&#13;
Stroll in' Bowlin'. "I'll just turn on a light and . . "Hey,&#13;
what are you doing?" cries a voice trom the bowling area.&#13;
Don't you know every Saturday nite from 8 p.m. - 1 a. m. is&#13;
Moonlite Bowling where all the lights are turned off and you&#13;
can win special prizes?" Why don't YOU join the fun every&#13;
Saturday - but don't turn on the lights.&#13;
don't, I'm just going to dry up and&#13;
blow away here.&#13;
Ranger: Is is artistically stifling&#13;
to be in something like the&#13;
"Tonight Show?"&#13;
Severinsen: Well, I can't speak&#13;
on a level for anybody else, but in&#13;
personalizing it I would say that&#13;
it's a great pleasure to do it and I&#13;
have no intentions of leaving it,&#13;
but I think you have to examine&#13;
the possibility that you might be&#13;
getting stale that way.&#13;
Ranger: What does "Xebron"&#13;
mean?&#13;
Severinsen: When I started this&#13;
thing, the way it happened I was in&#13;
this psychiatrist's office and she&#13;
said that we were going to do&#13;
imagery. She told me to picture a&#13;
place that was very special to me&#13;
— it could be any place, anywhere&#13;
I wanted it, any place I saw as a&#13;
place of peace and contentment.&#13;
Well, I saw this mountain valley;&#13;
it just came to me quickly. Then&#13;
she asked if I'd like to have&#13;
someone there with me or if I'd&#13;
like to be alone. If I wanted&#13;
someone, I should picture that&#13;
person. I would have thought I'd&#13;
see my girlfriend or one of my&#13;
kids or somebody, but I saw this&#13;
figure coming down out of these&#13;
upper hills down into this valley&#13;
and it wasn't just a wispy kind of&#13;
god - like figure, it was just totally&#13;
real.&#13;
After that I would go to my little&#13;
valley, and I gave the guy a name.&#13;
I don't know where I ever got the&#13;
name Xebron; it just came to me.&#13;
So as I made frequent visits back&#13;
in my mind to this valley and&#13;
would see this person there, and&#13;
after some other experiences I&#13;
had along the same lines, I came&#13;
to the conclusion that this was&#13;
what you might call a spirit guide,&#13;
or I had begun to think of h im as&#13;
an adjutant of god. Like if I&#13;
wanted to get something done with&#13;
God he could put me in touch.&#13;
I don't know. I don't go to&#13;
church or anything like that, but I&#13;
suppose we all try to figure out&#13;
what is god, what does he look&#13;
like, is there such a thing? But it&#13;
just dawned on me one day what&#13;
this was. But that's Xebron. And&#13;
we wrote music to describe this&#13;
valley.&#13;
Ranger: How do audiences in&#13;
the midwest compare to big - city&#13;
WRRRRRRRRRRRRRRMRRRR&#13;
"I don't even care&#13;
if I'm remembered&#13;
as a musician."&#13;
VMRRRRARRRRRARRRRRRRF&#13;
audiences in say New York and&#13;
L.A.?&#13;
Severinsen: I think they're&#13;
much preferable. And that's not a&#13;
self - serving statement, you&#13;
know, just to ingratiate myself&#13;
because I'm coming there. But I&#13;
think the people in a smaller area&#13;
or a quieter area have more opportunity&#13;
to seek what they really&#13;
want out of life. They're not&#13;
inundated with things that&#13;
publicists are kind of forcing on&#13;
them. They just don't follow the&#13;
tide along.&#13;
I prefer playing in the Midwest.&#13;
I think they're more aware of&#13;
different kinds of music. I think&#13;
they're more open - minded. You&#13;
know, in the big cities everyone is&#13;
so busy being sophisticated that&#13;
they'll shut their minds instantly.&#13;
They're so eager not to be&#13;
provincial that they are.&#13;
Ranger: Is there any specific&#13;
advice you could give to a college&#13;
student majoring in music who&#13;
wanted to be successful in the&#13;
music industry?&#13;
Severinsen: Well, it all boils&#13;
down to just one word - practice.&#13;
One time they persuaded Sinclair&#13;
Lewis to give a writing class&#13;
at Yale University, and the first&#13;
day of class he walked out on&#13;
stage, and he said, "All right, I&#13;
want everyone in this room who&#13;
wants to be a writer to raise their&#13;
hand." Everybody in the audience&#13;
raised their hands. Then Sinclair&#13;
Lewis said, "Then go home and&#13;
write." And that was the end of&#13;
the semester's lecture. I think that&#13;
can be applied to almost anything.&#13;
Ranger: Do you have a&#13;
philosophy that relates your&#13;
music to your life?&#13;
Severinsen: Well, I think just&#13;
increasing the art of living for&#13;
yourself so that you don't wake up&#13;
frightened, or you don't wake up&#13;
in the middle of the night scared to&#13;
death of what is going to happen,&#13;
thinking what kind of person am&#13;
I? what's really going on? I mean&#13;
where you feel that you're being&#13;
reasonably honest with yourself&#13;
and you're making some&#13;
productive contribution in your&#13;
relationships with other people.&#13;
I don't even care if I'm not&#13;
remembered as a musician. I just&#13;
want to be remembered by my&#13;
children as a nice guy, somebody&#13;
who helped them out when they&#13;
needed help and understood them.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414-248-9141&#13;
24726-75th Street - Rt. 50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wis.&#13;
414-843-2388&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5'/«% Mmrt K Yoer Daily&#13;
Balance Is s500.00 or Moral&#13;
WE'RE HERE 10 HELP YOU CROW! &#13;
10 Thursday, October 15,1981 RANGER&#13;
Volleuball&#13;
Rangers win 3, lose 2&#13;
by Karen Norwood&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside women's&#13;
volleyball team upped it's season&#13;
record to 9-14 last Friday and&#13;
Saturday at the College of St.&#13;
Francis Invitational in Joliet, IL.&#13;
Parkside triumphed over&#13;
Wheaton College with scores of 15-&#13;
10 and 15-9, a nd over St. Xavier&#13;
College with scores of 15-13 and 15-&#13;
10. Parkside also defeated Notre&#13;
Dame with final scores of 9-15,15-9&#13;
and 15-5. Parkside's winning&#13;
streak stopped there with losses to&#13;
Concordia and the host team, St.&#13;
Francis.&#13;
"We should not have lost to&#13;
Concordia," stated Coach Linda&#13;
Henderson. "We were ahead and&#13;
we let them catch up." St.&#13;
Francis, however, was rated by&#13;
Henderson as being the top team&#13;
there, with four players over six&#13;
feet. Henderson also attributed&#13;
Parkside's loss to St. Francis due&#13;
to a lack of "mental concentration."&#13;
&#13;
The Rangers improved their&#13;
line-up last week, by switching&#13;
two players. They also are accumulating&#13;
experience in playing&#13;
together which is extremely&#13;
important in a team sport. Experience&#13;
from playing Michigan&#13;
State carried over to help the&#13;
Rangers play a better tournament&#13;
in Joliet, IL.&#13;
Henderson looks forward to the&#13;
State Tournament where the team&#13;
to beat seems to be UW-M, but she&#13;
"has no doubt in my mind that we&#13;
will beat them." Parkside will go&#13;
on the road after hosting&#13;
Marquette University on Wednesday&#13;
to Dayton, Ohio and the&#13;
Wright State Invitational on&#13;
Friday, Oct. 16.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Needs&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of beer? All you have to do is fill out this&#13;
form and pick the correct winners. Put a check mark by your picks and&#13;
bring the form down to the Ranger office, WLLC D139.&#13;
Buffalo at N. Y. Jets&#13;
- _&#13;
Denver at Kansas City —&#13;
Houston at New England&#13;
Los Angeles at Dallas&#13;
New Orleans at Cleveland —&#13;
N. Y. Giants at Seattle&#13;
Philadelphia at Minnesota —&#13;
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati&#13;
St. Louis at Altanta&#13;
San Diego at Baltimore&#13;
San Francisco at Green Bay&#13;
Tampa Bay at Oakland&#13;
Washington at Miami&#13;
Tie Breaker: will be the total combined points in the San&#13;
Francisco - Green Bay game.&#13;
Last week's winner was Mary Erbe, 8 correct, 40 total points.&#13;
Name —— —&#13;
S.S. No.&#13;
-4&#13;
4 4 \\&#13;
-U- -LL -i-L -LL Vol 1 No 4&#13;
\)pho\d&#13;
your&#13;
college&#13;
traditions&#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 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 Friday&#13;
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;
CLASSIFIED A DS&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
AREA BUSINESS LOOKING FOR&#13;
WORKING PARTNER to operate extension&#13;
of multi - million dollar company. Phone&#13;
658-4678.&#13;
EXPERIENCED BASS PLAYER. Power pop&#13;
music, vocal ability, Todd, 632-0560.&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
AH-SO TAILORING hard - to - fit men's wear,&#13;
alterations, repairs, 633-7946.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
LEARN TO JUGGLE. Strengthen your right&#13;
hemisphere. Call 553-2324, (312) 623-1288.&#13;
Sports Calendar }&#13;
Friday, Oct. 16&#13;
Tennis vs. UW-Eau Claire (3&#13;
p.m.).&#13;
Volleyball vs. Wright State&#13;
Invitational.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 17&#13;
Volleyball vs. Wright State&#13;
Invitational.&#13;
Cross - Country (M) vs. Carthage&#13;
Invitational (11:30 a.m )&#13;
Cross - Country (W) vs. Carthage&#13;
Invitational (12:30 p.m.).&#13;
Soccer vs. Lewis University&#13;
Tournament.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 18&#13;
Soccer vs. Lewis University&#13;
Tournament.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 20&#13;
Volleyball vs. Carroll College&#13;
(6:30 p.m.).&#13;
Soccer vs. Purdue - Calumet&#13;
(3:30 p.m.).&#13;
Distributed by E. F. M ADRIGRANO 1831 - 55tb St. Kenosha, Wise. 658-3553&#13;
— NEW ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
Letters&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
being outstanding educators, and&#13;
also to establish a model for&#13;
others to learn from.&#13;
We must maintain our voice in&#13;
committees such as this so as to&#13;
assert our intention that we want a&#13;
quality education. We can no&#13;
longer afford to take a back seat&#13;
on the faculty committees that we&#13;
as students have voting seats on.&#13;
These seats are our only way of&#13;
declaring our informed opinions&#13;
and hearing theirs. We must&#13;
maintain our status of participating&#13;
in the quality of our&#13;
education.&#13;
Any student can be a member of&#13;
a wide variety of faculty committees&#13;
(many seats are open, but&#13;
the number is limited). To get&#13;
what we feel is justified we must&#13;
speak up in these committees.&#13;
A list of all faculty committees&#13;
and their available student seats&#13;
is available in the Student&#13;
Government office (next to the&#13;
coffee shop.)&#13;
Let's not let a situation such as&#13;
with the Teaching Excellence&#13;
Award happen again.&#13;
Kathy Slama &#13;
Rangers start bad season&#13;
by Charles Perce&#13;
The UW-Parkside women's&#13;
tennis team's record so far this&#13;
season is 1-16. They started off hot&#13;
by winning their first meet&#13;
against College of Lake County&#13;
(CLC) 5-2. Individual winners for&#13;
Parkside were Kathy Thomas 7-5,&#13;
6-0; Lori Bleashka 4-6, 7-5, 6-3;&#13;
Nancy Kivi 6-1, 6-1; Char Hall 6-3,&#13;
6-3; and Karen Froseth 6-2, 6-0.&#13;
Parkside then forfeited the sixth&#13;
match in singles.&#13;
The number one doubles team&#13;
and the number two doubles team&#13;
consisting of Thomas and Kivi,&#13;
and Hall and Froseth respectively,&#13;
were rained out. Due to the&#13;
lack of players, the number three&#13;
team was forced to forfeit to CLC.&#13;
From there on in, it was a&#13;
downhill descent as the Rangers&#13;
lost the next 28 matches. They lost&#13;
9-0 against UW-LaCrosse, 7-0&#13;
against Purdue, 6-0 against Drake&#13;
University, 6-0 against Northern&#13;
Illinois University, then bounced&#13;
back to win two singles matches&#13;
over the tough University of&#13;
Illinois Chicago Circle, the host of&#13;
the tournament. With the terrible&#13;
downfall also came a not very&#13;
respectable season record of 1-10.&#13;
They didn't gain much respect&#13;
in their loss to College of St.&#13;
Francis. The only Parkside victory&#13;
was the doubles duo of Nancy&#13;
Kivi and Kathy Thomas, 6-2, 6-1.&#13;
The 8-1 loss dropped their record&#13;
to 1-11.&#13;
The next tennis meet is against&#13;
UW-Eau Claire at home. The&#13;
Ranger team hopes to win and&#13;
receive a little respectibility,&#13;
despite the poor record this&#13;
season.&#13;
Losses at four meets&#13;
|iiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHHiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiutiiiiiiiiiiiiii^&#13;
| Rathskeller&#13;
1 Loungel&#13;
Photo by Dan Werbie =&#13;
HYPNOTIST TOM DELUCA even had himself laughing during his exhibition Wednesday, Oc- §&#13;
tober 7th in Union Square. The event was sponsored by Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
SUN. 3 Shorties for s1.25&#13;
Stroh's or Stroh Lite&#13;
TUES. 75' Cocktails&#13;
THURS. Ladies Nite&#13;
'A Price Drinks&#13;
This Wed. Nite "Southern Knights"&#13;
Live On Stage Oct. 21 No Cover&#13;
Variety of Music Every Night For&#13;
Your Listening &amp; Dancing Pleasure&#13;
3931 45th Street&#13;
rriiiiiiimnmiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimuiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiHiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii&#13;
by Charles Perce&#13;
Like Rodney Dangerfield, the&#13;
Ranger women's tennis team is&#13;
yet to get any respect from their&#13;
friends. They lost four meets this&#13;
last weekend to UW-Green Bay,&#13;
UW-Oshkosh, St. Norberts and&#13;
UW-Milwaukee. A great deal of&#13;
the matches lost were, according&#13;
to Coach Goggin, "Due to other&#13;
commitments such as work."&#13;
When asked about all the other&#13;
losses this season, she commented&#13;
that the team had some unfortunate&#13;
injuries, and the loss of&#13;
two key players, one transfered to&#13;
UW-Madison and the other ruled&#13;
academically ineligible hurt the&#13;
Ranger team.&#13;
Against St. Norberts College,&#13;
the Rangers lost a close match 5-4&#13;
despite the fact that Kathy&#13;
Thomas won 6-3, 6-4; Nancy Kivi&#13;
won 6-1, 6-4, and Char Hall won 3-&#13;
6, 6-1, 6-4. The dynamic duo of&#13;
Kathy Thomas and Nancy Kivi&#13;
was triumphant in a 6-4, 6-2 victory.&#13;
&#13;
•The pair teamed up to absolutely&#13;
devestate UW-Green&#13;
Bay's number one doubles team 6-&#13;
4, 6-0 for a final score of 6-3.&#13;
Fri. 7:30&#13;
^&#13;
un* Union Gnema&#13;
Thomas and Kivi won all the&#13;
matches for Parkside.&#13;
Against UW-Oshkosh, Parkside&#13;
lost 6-3. Kathy Thomas won 6-2, 6-&#13;
7, 6-1. Thomas and Kivi won 6-2, 6-&#13;
4, and Char Hall and Lori&#13;
Bleashka won 6-4, 6-3.&#13;
Again the women lost 7-2&#13;
against UW-Milwaukee. Nancy&#13;
Kivi was the victor in her singles&#13;
match 6-4, 7-5. She joined Kathy&#13;
Thomas to defeat their foe in&#13;
doubles 7-6, 7-6. With that victory&#13;
. under their belts, they may have&#13;
earned a berth in the state tournament&#13;
representing UWParkside.&#13;
&#13;
Photo by Steve Myers&#13;
PARKSIDE'S KAREN FROSETH&#13;
RED PIN&#13;
$3.00 Nite&#13;
Moonlite Bowl&#13;
MON. 9 a.m. 'til Noon&#13;
TUE. Noon 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 3 p.m. 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
THUR. 7 p.m. 'til 10 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 10 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
SAT. 8 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
All you can bowl&#13;
or play pool&#13;
90Vgame&#13;
60Ygame &#13;
12 Thursday, Octobe r 15,1981 RANGER&#13;
Quii/h"&#13;
AMERICAN WHISKEY&#13;
A BLEND&#13;
u^u/Cy cyfd/j/Mc/u* rAa*t&gt;&#13;
•"nootf,, ,1/cA, faA-fevota/&#13;
"tifoa/, a faace ofktwiMH&#13;
1,8,6(01 MmiisUNDER U S. GOVERNMENT SUPW«*&#13;
MGW.. »*JMWHE.SE»GRMI IRONS '®TSIM.N O so SAN FRANCISCO.C A.- 'SOM1 IB"&#13;
1&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selection&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Rangers shut out Lawrence&#13;
Photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
x**aiS£S&amp;&amp;sg^&#13;
Zisounds better mm &lt;&gt;»••&#13;
roll stirs with&#13;
by Charles Perce&#13;
The Ranger soccer team took&#13;
the field last Wednesday and&#13;
defeated Lawrence University 4-0.&#13;
The team didn't score until 37&#13;
Job safety&#13;
course offered&#13;
Health and Safety on the job will&#13;
be the topic of a noncredit short&#13;
course offered by the UWExtension,&#13;
UW-Parkside. It will&#13;
be oriented towards workers in&#13;
the Racine - Kenosha area.&#13;
The instructor will be Peter&#13;
Seybold, of Parkside's Sociology&#13;
staff, who is interested in labor.&#13;
The class will meet on three&#13;
Wednesdays, beginning Oct. 14,&#13;
7:30 - 9 :30 p.m., in Tallent Hall.&#13;
The fee is $16. Pre-registration is&#13;
requested with University Extension,&#13;
phone (414) 553-2312.&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10.00 am - 4:00 pm&#13;
• SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
• JUBE JELLS&#13;
• CARAMELS&#13;
• CARAMEL BULLIES&#13;
• ROYALS&#13;
• TOFFEES&#13;
• JOTS&#13;
• BRIDGE MIX&#13;
• MALTED MILK BALLS&#13;
• CHOC. CREME DROPS&#13;
• CHOC. RAISINS&#13;
• CHOC. PEANUTS&#13;
• PEANUT BUTTER CUPS&#13;
• STARS&#13;
• YOGURT PEANUTS&#13;
• CAROB MALTED MILK&#13;
BALLS&#13;
• CAROB PEANUTS&#13;
• SUNFLOWER SEEDS&#13;
• CARIBBEAN DELICACY&#13;
• CALIFORNIA MIX&#13;
• STUDENT FOOD&#13;
• GIANT CASHEWS&#13;
• NATURAL PISTACHIOS&#13;
• SPANISH PEANUTS&#13;
• BLANCHED PEANUTS&#13;
• YOGURT RAISINS&#13;
• YOGURT SESAME&#13;
BRITTLE&#13;
• RED SKIN PEANUTS&#13;
• MINT COOLERS&#13;
• STARLIGHT MINTS&#13;
• SOUR BALLS&#13;
• CINNAMON DISKS&#13;
• COFFEE&#13;
• BUTTERSCOTCH DISKS&#13;
• ROOT BEER BARRELS&#13;
• POPS&#13;
•PEANUT BUTTER&#13;
KISSES&#13;
• PEPPERMINT KISSES&#13;
• LICORICE BULLIES&#13;
•JELLY BEANS&#13;
• ASSORTED PERKYS&#13;
• ORANGE SLICES&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF OCT. 19&#13;
CAROB MALTED&#13;
MILK BALLS&#13;
40% OFF&#13;
minutes into the first half. Coach&#13;
Henderson commented that this&#13;
victory was a "real letdown after&#13;
the recently played Chancellors&#13;
Cup."&#13;
Despite the fact that Parkside&#13;
outshot Lawrence 39-3, Henderson&#13;
felt that the team "didn't play&#13;
well. Lawrence is a poor team.&#13;
They are probably the worst team&#13;
that they'll play all season."&#13;
Twelve minutes into the second&#13;
half Bob Newstrom scored his&#13;
sixth goal of the season to raise&#13;
the score 2-0. Henderson free -&#13;
substituted other members of the&#13;
team throughout the second half.&#13;
Chiedu Okomah scored two goals&#13;
also.&#13;
SEAGRAM OiSTILLERS CO.. N.Y.C. AMERICAN W HISKEY-A B LEND. 80 PROOF -S EVEN ,p and 7up- apetpabema-rks (wtme-.jpcomwvc.&#13;
The Rangers were frustrated by&#13;
their play and it took a few&#13;
members of the second team to&#13;
spark them to score. Don Theisen,&#13;
a new student, was the first to&#13;
score. The score at halftime was 1-&#13;
0.&#13;
The player of the week has not&#13;
been announced but will be&#13;
available next week. The next&#13;
time the Rangers take the field&#13;
will be Saturday and Sunday,&#13;
October 17 and 18. They will be&#13;
competing in the University&#13;
Tournament in Romeoville,&#13;
Illinois. On October 20, they will&#13;
be playing Purdue - Calumet at&#13;
3:30 p. m. at home.&#13;
Seagram's </text>
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              <text>PSGA - Senate takes stand  on awards</text>
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              <text>41' University of Wisconsin - Parks ide&#13;
~~~&#13;
er&#13;
ur8day, October 22, 1981 Vol. 10 • No.7&#13;
A&#13;
Senate takes stand on awards&#13;
~ KeDMeyer Another issue discussed by the&#13;
News EdItor Senate was the PSGA budget&#13;
Parblde Student Govern- which was supposed to be sW:&#13;
,wodation, Inc. Senate met mitted to SUFAC by Oct. 12. PSGA&#13;
14 ... d11lC\18S various campus Vice-President Kathy Bambrough&#13;
ead took a stand against a stated that the budget was not&#13;
made by Chancellor Alan ready because President Jim&#13;
. ead the awards committee Kreuser has not yet finished&#13;
tIis year's Teaching Ex- writing it. Bambrough told the&#13;
AWards. Senate that she had met with&#13;
fto awards, which are usually Kreuser for three hours and&#13;
it_lied at the very beginning of nothing could be agreed upon.&#13;
oe/IOOI year, are delayed this Kathy Slama, President Pro&#13;
bee&amp;uoe Shirley Kersey, one Tempore, stated that sbe was&#13;
tilt rciplents, is no longer "appalled that the President of&#13;
here. She will not receive student government has not&#13;
award; oalyone olber teacher turned in the budget for PSGA,&#13;
IlCeive it. Two awards are Inc." She also said that this is "a&#13;
.. jtia. ~y given each year. disregard for the rules of tbe&#13;
J'8GA Senator Joe Ripp asked Senate and SUFAC" and added&#13;
Slllateto take a stand on the that this was "atrocious and&#13;
's decision about the should never have been allowed to&#13;
'l1Ie Senate unanimously happen."&#13;
the following motion, Kreuser told the Ranger&#13;
by Phil Pogreba: "The Tuesday that the budget was&#13;
de Student Government going to be submitted to the&#13;
lim, Inc. considers the Senate the next day and will&#13;
taken by the Teaching probably be passed. He explained&#13;
Award Committee in that the budget was late because&#13;
IIIwith the Chancellor as he "wanted to confer with the vice&#13;
III inappropriate to the - president and Pro Tempore on&#13;
lim at hand." the PSGA budget. They know&#13;
more than f (do) about budgets&#13;
and I thought it proper to communicate&#13;
with them before doing&#13;
the budget alone."&#13;
In other business, Slama drew&#13;
up a budget for the Campus Book&#13;
Exchange to he incorporated into&#13;
PSGA's budget. Slama moved,&#13;
and Progreba seeesded, to have&#13;
approved the budget at $1733 from&#13;
segregated fees. That figure is&#13;
derived from subtracting a $246&#13;
profit from the operating costs of&#13;
$1979 (for wages, supplies advertising,&#13;
duplicating and phone&#13;
bills). The motion was approved&#13;
unanimously.&#13;
SUF AC chair Luis VaUdejuli&#13;
reported that so far six budgets&#13;
have been received by SUFAC and&#13;
10 others are in limbo with the&#13;
administration, who is "looking&#13;
over" them. The only budget&#13;
missing is that of PSGA.&#13;
Bambrough asked the Senate if&#13;
it was going to take a stand on the&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge proposal,&#13;
which is going to the Faculty&#13;
Senate in December. Senator Jolin&#13;
Peterson volunteered to present a&#13;
proposal to the Senate during their&#13;
next meeting.&#13;
,&#13;
.4% turnout elects nine senators&#13;
IlyKenMeyer&#13;
NewlEdllor&#13;
Ranger, explained Bambrough.&#13;
Currently there are only six&#13;
members in the is-seat Senate.&#13;
After the election results are final,&#13;
it will increase to 13 Senators&#13;
because two of the nine elected&#13;
last week were already Senators.&#13;
"Hopefully over the next term we&#13;
can fill up the vacancies by appointing&#13;
people," said Bambrough,&#13;
"but f think we're going to&#13;
be tougher about thatlhan in the&#13;
past."&#13;
"All of our subcommittees kind&#13;
of faded away because of the lack&#13;
of Senate participation," said&#13;
Bambrough. "Almost all of the&#13;
Senate members that we have at&#13;
this point are on SUF AC, so our&#13;
Legislative Affairs and Student&#13;
Services kind of drifted. That's&#13;
what we want to build up again."&#13;
"What I want to do," said&#13;
Kreuser, "is sit down and just&#13;
SCoTT .&#13;
Patrlel REICHELSDORF of Kenosha plays Father ~ivar~ and -Icona Casclaro, Kenosha, is Sister Rita in the University of&#13;
S&#13;
St""'1lISl~: Parkside Dramatic Arts production of "The RUnl~er&#13;
to open in the Com. Arts theatre two consecutive&#13;
5S3- beginning Friday, October 30. For tickets call 553-2345&#13;
~ 2042. Admission Is $2.50 fo senior citizens an~ UW- p&#13;
S iInd staff; $3.50 for the general public.&#13;
blow a whole meeting (Xl setting&#13;
objectives - things tangible that&#13;
we can accomplish. Not be&#13;
radical, just things that would&#13;
help students everyday here. I&#13;
have a few ideas I want to bring up&#13;
at our goal - setting meeting If&#13;
they don't want to do them that's&#13;
fine; if they do want to do them&#13;
that's even better."&#13;
Kreuser hopes that the Senate&#13;
will become actively involved in&#13;
United Council. "I've gone to the&#13;
last three or four (meetings) alone&#13;
and I'm 'really hoping that I can&#13;
get a little help with these&#13;
meetings," he said.&#13;
Complaints can be liled with the&#13;
elections committee until Oct. 30 if&#13;
there is any dispute about the way&#13;
the election was handled or&#13;
somebody feels something was&#13;
unfair, such as a candidate not&#13;
qualifying for office. The current&#13;
Senate decides the legitimacy of&#13;
any complaints.&#13;
The newly - elected Senate will&#13;
begin their terms Nov. 4. Look for&#13;
profiles on Senators - elect in next&#13;
week's Ranger.&#13;
*&#13;
PSGA&#13;
*&#13;
Election Res&#13;
Greg D vie&#13;
S.U.F.A.C.&#13;
13&#13;
125&#13;
123&#13;
2&#13;
08&#13;
o&#13;
9&#13;
89&#13;
7&#13;
Til i&#13;
byJimKre_&#13;
This is an update on the late&#13;
book orders of this fall, Mter&#13;
goiJ1l through a number 01 tbe&#13;
faculty that Iwas iolormed wen&#13;
late with their boolt orders. J have&#13;
found that only a smaU percenlage&#13;
of them were actually&#13;
late. Obviously, tlus means that&#13;
something was misinterpreted by&#13;
some members ol the bookst"",&#13;
committee or the report by the&#13;
bookstore wasn'ttotaJly accurate&#13;
The manager 01 the bookst"'"&#13;
vacationing and could not be&#13;
reached f« comment.&#13;
This briJ1lS me hack to the&#13;
laculty. While speaking with : me&#13;
of them. a number or concerns&#13;
were voiced, A common conce-rn&#13;
was about ordering the bon SO&#13;
early. The faculty here are ked&#13;
to order books for the next&#13;
semester belore students get to&#13;
take their linals Some find It hard&#13;
to find a good. tow- prreed text to&#13;
use the next semester \llhen&#13;
they're nol finished using the text&#13;
for the current semester.&#13;
Another concern olsomelaculty&#13;
members was that of lore&#13;
organization or management&#13;
This is not to say that the mana~r&#13;
mathematics. commuOicatim.&#13;
engmeermg, education. Ole secial&#13;
sciences. the liberal arts, the&#13;
healUl professIons. music, accounting&#13;
and finance. administrative&#13;
and production&#13;
managemenl. information&#13;
svstems. marketing, personnel&#13;
a~nd labor relations and law&#13;
"We were very pleased wtth the&#13;
turnout at our ri~r uch&#13;
Career Night&#13;
Graduates offer career advice&#13;
.. or OP' AId Tom Krlmm&#13;
DJr eter of lumnl and&#13;
Placement I and ..&#13;
hope tha t rtlOCt' students iU&#13;
adv antage ol opportuni&#13;
hear ~ .. bo've ~_ I&#13;
Park de and now a~ ou1.. or&#13;
ID their lectoo tleld ..&#13;
'rbere IS no I or cba...., lor&#13;
those attendIng A I'fOCePUem&#13;
loll"" !he job ,",ntlDl em&#13;
,&#13;
• •&#13;
UW-Parkside students will have&#13;
a chance to hear alumni speak ol&#13;
their post - college work experiences&#13;
and cifee advice at the&#13;
second annual Career Night set&#13;
for Tuesday, NoV. 10. .&#13;
sponsored by the Oflice of&#13;
Alumni and Placement Services.&#13;
the first session, to ron from 5-6:15&#13;
p.m., will focus on alumni a~&#13;
others in various fields, who will&#13;
speak briefly and answer&#13;
questions.&#13;
The second session, from 6:30-&#13;
7:30 p.m .. will focus .on "Job&#13;
opportunities: How to FIOd Them&#13;
and Milke the Most of Them."&#13;
More alumni will offer hints on&#13;
interviewing. job hunt~ and&#13;
starling out on your first Job. .&#13;
Areas or majors to be covered In&#13;
the first session inclu?e the.&#13;
behavioral sciences. phYSICS and&#13;
INSIDE&#13;
*&#13;
Letters !&#13;
"*&#13;
Irked by the IRKD *&#13;
Soccer: Rangers are third&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday. october 22.1981 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
. . lly a good one from the&#13;
It is risky to steal an Idea. especla . guilty this week of&#13;
chancellor, but nevertheless the Ranger IS I&#13;
one major theft. . U. n 207 the Ranger will hold an&#13;
This Friday ~ 1.p.mi&#13;
.:hOr::;.' we hope to discuss with our&#13;
open heanng. unng • the care to bring up.&#13;
readers any issubeerelatfedptaor~~:e~:sft~re~t o!ganizations have&#13;
So far, mem rs 0 f t dents&#13;
d to be there But we realize that many types 0 s u. . :r::U as faculty: classified staff, administration and VISItors&#13;
read the Ranger. We hope to seesome of you there.. w&#13;
We'll be glad to answer your questions. W~ldyou hketo kno&#13;
more about how Ranger operates? How editorial dseisions ;re&#13;
made? What we're working on for next week or next month. If&#13;
so please joi n us. t I&#13;
We'll also be asking some questions - so that ~e can s ea.&#13;
your ideas and use them to serve our readers .better In the future.&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
TeachitfJ award update&#13;
reinforce my decision. Neither the&#13;
merits of the individual nor the&#13;
faculty tenure review process had&#13;
any bearing on my decision.&#13;
2. The vague criteria for&#13;
teaching awards, which are at the&#13;
heart ofthe problem, are currently&#13;
being reviewed by a subcommittee&#13;
of the University&#13;
Committee, the elected executive&#13;
committee of the faculty. in accordance&#13;
with required faculty&#13;
governance procedures. Any&#13;
proposed changes in the criteria&#13;
would require approval of the&#13;
Faculty Senate, which initiated&#13;
and approved the original&#13;
criteria.&#13;
3. The student committee&#13;
member-s rejected the option of&#13;
presenting the award in question&#13;
to the third - ranked finalist and 1&#13;
accepted their recommenda tion. I&#13;
think the students' decision to&#13;
present the proposed recipient a&#13;
"certificate of recognition" is not&#13;
inappropriate.&#13;
4. The recipient of the other&#13;
T.eaching ExcelIence Award&#13;
(Oliver Hayward, History) and&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In reference to an issue which&#13;
Ranger has described as "a short -&#13;
lived and virtualIy bloodless&#13;
scuffle hetween students and the&#13;
administration," here is a recap&#13;
and update on the 1981 teaching&#13;
award situation which, hopefully,&#13;
will put the matter hehind us.&#13;
I.My decision not to fund one of&#13;
the two teaching awards was&#13;
hased on the fact tha t the&#13;
proposed recipient would no&#13;
longer be employed by the&#13;
university at the time the award&#13;
would be presented, and, in fact,&#13;
had recei ved notice of nonrenewal&#13;
upon recommenda tion of&#13;
the faculty Personnel Review&#13;
Committee approximately one&#13;
year prier to the teaching award&#13;
committee's final selection&#13;
process. It seemed to me inappropriate&#13;
to give a substantial&#13;
monetary award to a former&#13;
employee under those circumstances.&#13;
The fact that the&#13;
university is facing severe budget&#13;
pressures in both public and&#13;
Tiv.ate resources served only to&#13;
I~&#13;
= CJ&#13;
] r:J&#13;
0-&#13;
~ 1:- t&#13;
the recipient of the Academic&#13;
Staff Distinguished Service&#13;
Award (Edith Isenberg, Student&#13;
Life) have been notified of their&#13;
awards. They will be publicly&#13;
honored at an appropriate occasion.&#13;
It is very unfortunate that&#13;
their awards have been delayed&#13;
pending resolution of this matter.&#13;
5. Last but certainly not least,&#13;
when students are asked to participate&#13;
in university affairs they&#13;
have a right to expect much&#13;
clearer guidelines than they&#13;
received in the teaching excellence&#13;
award selection process.&#13;
I feel badly that any student&#13;
should ever have to feel, as&#13;
someone on the selection committee&#13;
put it, "as though I've heen&#13;
cheated."&#13;
Students, of course, should&#13;
never mistake honest&#13;
10yPSl9l-&#13;
"P... e C_ Returning to&#13;
1_ .. 10"&#13;
It appears the Peace Corps&#13;
may be returning to Indonesia&#13;
after an absence of six years,&#13;
with no small thanks due to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside, athletic director&#13;
Tom Rosandich and Soeworo,&#13;
secretary of the Indonesian&#13;
Olympics committee.&#13;
Absent from the world's 5th&#13;
most populous nation since a&#13;
bloody political struggle in&#13;
April 1965forced the volunteers&#13;
to leave, the Corps is staging a&#13;
comeback because of the&#13;
persistence of the energetic&#13;
and much - travelled Soeworo&#13;
and the determination of UW-P&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie and&#13;
Rosandlch to help Indonesia&#13;
become self - sufficient in&#13;
education.&#13;
"The situation is now&#13;
favorable to bringing the&#13;
coaches hack," Soeworo said&#13;
during a recent stop at&#13;
Parkside to confer with Wyllie&#13;
and Rosandich. "We have a lot&#13;
to do in promoting sport, not&#13;
ooIy in our national programs&#13;
but also in the provinces."&#13;
Indonesia presently has 11&#13;
colleges and 65 high schools for&#13;
sport and phy. ed., but "knowhow"&#13;
is limited. Experts are&#13;
few and rar hetween arxl right&#13;
now the nation must depend on&#13;
outside help.&#13;
At the highest level of&#13;
development, Soeworo said&#13;
with a smile, Indonesians&#13;
would he able to train other&#13;
coaches and teachers with&#13;
their Peace Corps - trained&#13;
people in the future.&#13;
(According to Rosandich,) a&#13;
Peace Corps coaching and&#13;
training program in any nation&#13;
is most successful when it has&#13;
put itself out of a job. That's the&#13;
From the Files&#13;
goal in Indonesia.&#13;
- Newscope. Oct. 18. 1911, vol.&#13;
5. no. 1&#13;
5 yoors ago -&#13;
"Guskin to meet students" by&#13;
Robert Hoffman&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin will&#13;
hold his first open meeting of&#13;
this year Thursday from 2 to 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
According to Kiyoko&#13;
Bowden, president of student&#13;
government, this meeting is&#13;
open to all students and Guskin&#13;
would like to have these&#13;
meetings conducted in a very&#13;
informal manner.&#13;
Bowden feels that students&#13;
have received. an erroneous&#13;
impression of Guskin, that&#13;
students don't know what&#13;
Guskin is tryi'llto do and that&#13;
Guskin does not have a general&#13;
feeling of what the average&#13;
students' complaints are.&#13;
She also feels that Guskin&#13;
has gotten some. had press&#13;
lately. She said that he is really&#13;
eager to respond to students'&#13;
needs and this is only possible&#13;
If students become interested&#13;
eno~~h to participate in the&#13;
decision ~ making process.&#13;
"Four Resign Senate" by Doug&#13;
Edenhauser&#13;
The PSGA, Inc., will hold its&#13;
first fall elections on Oct. 20&#13;
and 21.&#13;
There were four resignations&#13;
accepted by the Senate at its&#13;
Oct. 14 meeting ... Lack of&#13;
time was given as a major /&#13;
reason for them.&#13;
A motion was also passed at&#13;
the meeting by the senate&#13;
regardi'll the naming of the&#13;
Parks ide Student Union.&#13;
Kiyoke Bowden, PSGA&#13;
president said that since&#13;
students hold rights to the&#13;
building they should have the&#13;
right to name it She also&#13;
(&#13;
mentioned that this action&#13;
could he a precedent - selling&#13;
manep,ver. .&#13;
A judicial amendment to&#13;
Article 3, Section 5 of the PSGA&#13;
constitution substituted two&#13;
student 'justices for two administrative&#13;
positions, thus&#13;
turning the court solely over to&#13;
students.&#13;
(Bowden) said that many&#13;
complaints have been received&#13;
about the Bookstore. Problems&#13;
with the Bookstore and&#13;
Financial Aids are mentioned&#13;
repea tedly as reasons for&#13;
students withdrawing from&#13;
Parkside, she said.&#13;
- Ranger, Oct. 20, 1976, vet. 5,&#13;
no. 7.&#13;
, year ago ~&#13;
"AOE offers student discount"&#13;
Parkside students will' get a&#13;
half - price break this year on&#13;
the University's Accent on&#13;
Enrichment (AOE) entertainment&#13;
series. "&#13;
"In the past most students&#13;
found the prices a bit high for&#13;
their means," according to&#13;
Walt Shirer, public information&#13;
director. "This year we are&#13;
making a limited block of&#13;
season tickets available to&#13;
students at $20 for six performances.&#13;
That's an average&#13;
of just $3.33a performance for&#13;
~me of the best entertainment&#13;
In AOE history. Everybody.&#13;
else will pay $39.50 for the&#13;
series."&#13;
Students also can save more&#13;
than $3 a ticket on individual&#13;
performances, but Shirer said&#13;
that single event availability&#13;
Will depend on how many&#13;
lickets remain. AOE season&#13;
licket sales have ranged from&#13;
80 to 100 per cent sell-outs in&#13;
recent seasons.&#13;
"- Rangel:, Oct. 16, 19801&#13;
,vol. 9,&#13;
no. 1.&#13;
HERE'S YOURCAT, K&#13;
IIK'r MN{E ME H~&#13;
TO FETCH HER,. OUT OF A&#13;
TR.EE AGAIN!&#13;
~&#13;
,._-&#13;
disagreement on a given issue for&#13;
a lack of regard for their opininns.&#13;
I think I speak for all administrators&#13;
and faculty when I&#13;
say tha t student opinions on&#13;
university matters are highly&#13;
valued and should be encouraged.&#13;
Perhaps it is'time to reinstate a&#13;
practice I initiated a few years&#13;
ago - one that Ranger editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson and I discussed&#13;
recently - of holding Open&#13;
Forums at which students and I&#13;
exchange ideas' and opinions.&#13;
Alan E. Guskin&#13;
Chancellnr&#13;
Award Htainted"&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
1 was extremely angered and&#13;
thoroughly disgusted by Chancellor&#13;
- Guskin's recent decision&#13;
regarding the Teacher Excellence&#13;
Award conflict. To me it seems&#13;
odd that this award, based on&#13;
student recognition of teaching&#13;
excellence and a few other "explicitly"&#13;
stated criteria, should be&#13;
overturned by Guskin on a rule&#13;
that was never stated in the&#13;
Faculty Senate policy Of the&#13;
aV{ard.If the criteria of the award&#13;
need to be changed, as judged by&#13;
the appropriate authority, it&#13;
seems only fair and logical that&#13;
the new rule be stated in some&#13;
policy before acting upon it. When&#13;
Dr. Shirley Kersey was voted to be&#13;
one of the two recipients of the&#13;
Teaching Excellence Award&#13;
there was no mention of th~&#13;
recipient's staff status in the&#13;
criteria.&#13;
If indeed there is a need for&#13;
revisions in the rules, let them be&#13;
made and used the next time the&#13;
award is given. However, let us&#13;
not deny a qualified recipient of&#13;
what is ri~htfully hers. Having&#13;
served on this award committee in&#13;
the past, I am aware&#13;
Kersey has been among t1l&amp;&#13;
qualified teachers to goto&#13;
com mi ttee every year&#13;
taught here. I am also ow&#13;
the committee decided&#13;
gi ving her the award .&#13;
beca use of her contro&#13;
tenure fight. Giving her the&#13;
was viewed as jeopardi'&#13;
integrity of it because&#13;
highly publicized tenure&#13;
that time. Although I dido'&#13;
with this decision, I&#13;
derstand it. In my "y&#13;
Teaching Excellence A&#13;
nnw being tainted by not&#13;
to a persnn who fully de&#13;
and, according to the&#13;
criteria acted upon at the&#13;
was fully qualified to .&#13;
would like to see the&#13;
ministration of UW-Pa&#13;
show some courage and a&#13;
mistake.&#13;
Patricia M. Marchese&#13;
PSO needs&#13;
.support&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
There is a new progr&#13;
campus which was founded&#13;
for non-traditional stud&#13;
June of 1980. The name&#13;
program is Peer Support&#13;
purpose is to help new·1M'&#13;
tinuing students with .&#13;
cessful entry or return to&#13;
A return to school&#13;
absence nf a numher of y&#13;
be accompanied with the ~&#13;
nf heing in a new and&#13;
environment. New studen&#13;
also concerned about su&#13;
in their studies and eff&#13;
maintaining responsibilit'&#13;
Continued On Page 111&#13;
CR.!,nger&#13;
. STAFF&#13;
Greg Bonoliglio. Carol Burns. Doug Edenhauser.&#13;
Frank. Pat Hensiak. Jim Kreuser Jim Mertins. 5&#13;
Myers. Laurie Painter. Charles Per~e Kim Schlater.&#13;
Stevens. Dan Werbie. Jeff Wicks. '. .&#13;
RANGER is written (II d ed't 'are&#13;
responsible for its ed"t n. I r ~ by stUdents of UW·Parkside and they&#13;
Publ ishea ever Th I ona p?llcy and content. . hOIll'&#13;
RANGER is prrntedu~Sday dur.lng the i'Jcad~mic year except during break~ and in.&#13;
Written permission i y theUOIon Coop~ratlve Publishing Co., Kenosha, WISConS&#13;
All correspondence s;~ll~e~ for reprmt Of any ~rtion of RANGER. DI39, oW&#13;
Parkside. KenOsha, WI 53141.e addreSSed to: Parkside Ranger, WLLC&#13;
Letters to the Editor will b. ~ dard sl&#13;
Paper With one inch .e accepted If typewritten. doublespaced on stan rnbe"&#13;
eluded for verification margms. All letters must be signed and a telephone nu&#13;
Names will be withheld for v I"d&#13;
Deadline lor letters is Tues a I reaSOns. RANG&#13;
reserves all €'ditorial riv.~ay at. 9 a.m .. Ior publication on Thursday. Th~ la[5tl&#13;
defamatory content, p I eges In retusmg to print letters which conta,n&#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 Fa Iduto&#13;
RANGER Thursday. October 22.1981 3&#13;
the Editor, cont.&#13;
bjection raised;call for support&#13;
eontinued From Page Two order~ past the deadline were&#13;
materials that were not yet&#13;
ir lives. ~o one knows th~ ~ears available in May and became&#13;
arnoelles of non-traditional available over the summer and&#13;
ents better than Peer Support that 1 felt were valuable for use in&#13;
bers themselves, ~Ulce they my class, but not needed ime&#13;
had the same feelings. mediately when the course&#13;
erty perce?t ?f the student started. These materials were for&#13;
at Parkslde ,IS 25 and older my income tax accounting class;&#13;
Iilty percent IS 23 and older. and if you recall, the new tax law&#13;
r Support 15 one of thE: few was not even signed by the&#13;
nizations on ca~pus de~lgned President until August 13, 1981.&#13;
assist this populatIon. It IS also Why have students buyout _ of _&#13;
live and grOWIng organization. date materials? I also sent an&#13;
tnce the or-ganization was order for supplemental optional&#13;
nded, a total of 285 ~ew materials for the same class but&#13;
ents have attended orren- waited until the class was in&#13;
'01lS sponsored by Peer Sup- session to find out how many of the&#13;
, Members have also reached students would buy the materials&#13;
. people by telephone and to save the bookstore the cost of&#13;
iled 200 hand - wntten post- over ordering and not selling them&#13;
rds.) Peer Sup~ort IS also an at all as they are ootdated after&#13;
ngered orgarnzabon. , this year.&#13;
ls year Peer Support has filed 1also sent in a book order for an&#13;
a Major Organization Status. adjunct faculty member, Don&#13;
doing SO they hope to be Dudycha, for supplemental opgnized&#13;
as a major student tional tax materials. You have&#13;
nization on campus by t~e incorrectly stated that the Chair&#13;
A Inc. The result of this of the Business Division Arthur&#13;
og~ition would be direct Dudycha, had his book 'order in&#13;
iog for Peer Suppo~t f~m late when he did not even submit&#13;
FAC (Segregated University one. His order was submitted&#13;
es Allocation Committee). under another faculty member's&#13;
thout the funding from ~UF AC, name and was in on time. Don&#13;
r Support will ultimately Dudycha's last book order is inintegrate.&#13;
correctly listed as Arthur&#13;
a represe~tative of the Dudycha's.&#13;
ent body of thi~ ca~pus I f~l In addition, you listed Ken&#13;
. ~senti~1 to maintain th~ unity Duller, an adjunct instructor, as.&#13;
integr ity of an orgaruzat!on ordering books after the deadline.&#13;
ich is dedicated to the service The books for this class were&#13;
such a large portion of the ordered only after the class was&#13;
ent body. I hope the rest of the added and made available for&#13;
te feels the same way, student registration in June when&#13;
·1Pogreba it was sure it could be staffed.&#13;
Miles Livingston's late book&#13;
order was for supplemental&#13;
materials for use in an investments&#13;
class tha t the students&#13;
did not need until October.&#13;
Frederick Jones' order is dated&#13;
bjection taken&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
I take objection to your article,&#13;
te BookOrders Listed," in the&#13;
tober gth issue of the Ranger.&#13;
y name, along with several&#13;
r Business Division faculty&#13;
embers, was listed as failing to&#13;
eet the textbook order-ing&#13;
dline last spring.&#13;
If you would have checked the&#13;
ets thoroughly, you would have&#13;
00 that they are not quite as&#13;
y appear to be.&#13;
The textbooks required in my&#13;
were ordered by the&#13;
adline. The only textbooks 1&#13;
p with major&#13;
ision offered&#13;
Students who desire help on&#13;
,It ecting a major are invited to&#13;
d a mini - workshop Monday.&#13;
. 2 in the Career ,Resource&#13;
ler, WLLC D-174 from 1-1:50&#13;
m.&#13;
Duringthis session students will&#13;
the reasons they may be&#13;
ving trouble deciding on a&#13;
ajor. They will be given&#13;
ggestions concerning where to&#13;
ceive information and&#13;
istance needed in order to&#13;
ake a decision.&#13;
For more information contact&#13;
endi Schneider, Community&#13;
tUdent Services, 553-2496 or&#13;
arbara Larson, Student&#13;
elopment, 553-2122.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAINOFFICE&#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;
;,&#13;
f'I'&#13;
,to&#13;
IVCF&#13;
Many people today have&#13;
questions concerning Christianity&#13;
aod the world arouod them. The&#13;
Inter Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship Booktable is designed&#13;
to help answer questions about&#13;
these issues. The Booktable theme&#13;
series will be devoted to such&#13;
issues as "The Credibility of&#13;
Christianity." If you're curious&#13;
about Christianity, slop at the&#13;
Booktable in the alcove beside the&#13;
Bookstore on Thursdays from 9.&#13;
a.m. to 2 p.m.&#13;
WomeninBusnss.&#13;
Need something to do on&#13;
Wednesdays from 1 to 2 p.m.?&#13;
Enjoy fun and fitness with Women&#13;
in Business Club at our aerobic&#13;
dance sessions in the south end of&#13;
the gym. Meet some new people in&#13;
a light and. lively atmosphere or&#13;
come with a group of friends -&#13;
you'll have more friends when you&#13;
leave. We hope YOU'll join us next&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
If you would like to become a&#13;
member of WIB. the next general&#13;
meeting will be on Nov. 2 from 1 to&#13;
2 p.m. in Union 104. Interested&#13;
students are invited to attend.&#13;
WIB Executive Board will meet&#13;
on Friday, Oct. 23, at 1 p.m. in the&#13;
cafeteria. Final plans will be&#13;
made for tbe Tuesday, Oct. 27&#13;
hake sale. Other club matters will&#13;
also be discussed. WIB officers&#13;
should attend.&#13;
in the Business Division office as&#13;
being submitted on May 6. Could&#13;
someone else have misplaced or&#13;
lost the order?&#13;
Please get all the facts before&#13;
you print another article placing&#13;
the blame for late textbooks on the&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
Irene M. Herremans&#13;
()l1letvwn&#13;
-:::== allQUarter§&#13;
3700 MEACHEM ROAD&#13;
Men-Womens Full Styling Shop&#13;
Cutting. Shaping. Styling&#13;
Coloring. Blow Drying. Perms&#13;
Hair Relaxing, Manicures. Shaving&#13;
Beard &amp; Mustache Trimming&#13;
HOURS BY APPOINTMENT&#13;
Tue. &amp; Wed. 9-6; Thurs. &amp; Fri. 9-7; sat. 8-1&#13;
554-0777&#13;
••&#13;
Donna Arnott - Owner !Jr"&#13;
Debbie Holtman&#13;
Acnutilg&#13;
The Accounting Club is sponsoring&#13;
a workshop on Friday. Oct.&#13;
23in rooms 1M-lOGof the Parkside&#13;
Student Union. The workshop will&#13;
feature Howard Carver. Partner.&#13;
and associates from the CPA firm&#13;
Ernst and Whinney. They will be&#13;
speaking on "The Office Visit:&#13;
Second Chance." All business&#13;
students are encouraged to attend.&#13;
Refreshments will be served.&#13;
On Saturday. Oct. 24, there will&#13;
be a party for accounting club&#13;
members at 6810 - 24th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha. at 6 p.m. For more information&#13;
call 654-6128.&#13;
On Sunday, Oct. 25, the Accounting&#13;
Club will be traveling to&#13;
Chicago to see a hockey game in&#13;
which the Chicago Black Hawks&#13;
will play host to the Saint Louis&#13;
Blues. Departure time for the&#13;
game will be 6 p.m. For additional&#13;
information please contact Dennis&#13;
Marcano.&#13;
Geology&#13;
Geology Club will offer a&#13;
colloquium on "Late Paleozoic&#13;
Paleo environments:&#13;
Canyonlands, Utah" at 1 p.m. on&#13;
Friday, Oct. 23 in Gmq. D1Z1.&#13;
Robert T Gernant from lhe&#13;
Department of Geologica!&#13;
Sciences of the Uruver suy of&#13;
Wisconsin . ~tilwaukee \Ii III&#13;
present the colloquium&#13;
~Iath Club will hold an&#13;
organizational meeting on&#13;
Wednesday .• 'ov 4, In Gmq 01Z1&#13;
at I p.m. The meeting is open to all&#13;
current members and other&#13;
students interested in math&#13;
The Art Addicts will be sponsoring&#13;
an Edible Art Bake Sale on&#13;
Monday, Oct. 26, from 7·30 am&#13;
until sold oot. Kri&lt;ple witches.&#13;
Cristo Cookie and the ever&#13;
popular Van Gogh's Ear Coojces '&#13;
Apple Cider, too!&#13;
Use Ranger&#13;
Contact&#13;
Sheets'&#13;
Thursday, Qclober 22, 1981&#13;
RANGER&#13;
4&#13;
Rubik's Cube talk planned for Oct. 23&#13;
scramble tbe colors so that each&#13;
face of the cube is again a single&#13;
color. .&#13;
The "magic cube" is much&#13;
.more than just a puzzle, says Prof.&#13;
Kenneth Weston of the Parkside&#13;
mathematics faculty. It is an&#13;
ingenious machine, a pastime, a&#13;
learning tool and a source of&#13;
metaphors.&#13;
And a good thing to give'&#13;
. someone you bate for Christmas._&#13;
Packard's 3: 30p. m. lecture will&#13;
be preceded by an informal coffee&#13;
se5!'ion at 3 p. m. in Moln. 111.&#13;
If your Rubik's Cube looks like a&#13;
patchwork quill, help is at hand.&#13;
For the benefit of the unitiated,&#13;
Rubik's Cube is the latest puzzle&#13;
fad to fascinate and frustrate the&#13;
world&#13;
The man with pointers on how to&#13;
unscramble the mess (without&#13;
having to buy the solution) is Prof.&#13;
E. Packard of the Lake Forest&#13;
College Department of&#13;
Mathematics, who will talk on&#13;
"How to Tackle Rubik's Cube with&#13;
No Special Abilities and a Little&#13;
Group Theory", at Parkside at&#13;
3:30 p. rn. on Friday, Oct. 23,&#13;
Moln. 107.&#13;
The talk is free and open to the&#13;
public and participants are invited&#13;
to bring their cubes. Prof.&#13;
Packard will supply handout&#13;
materials to help with solutions.&#13;
Rubik, a Huhgarian architecture&#13;
teacher, invented the&#13;
3x3x3 cube to sharpen his&#13;
students' abilities to visualize&#13;
three - dimensional objects. Each&#13;
face of the cube is colored&#13;
uniformly altd by repeated&#13;
rotation of the various faces the&#13;
colors are scrambled horribly.&#13;
The object of the puzzle is to unUW&#13;
System saves energy money&#13;
STEVENS POINT - Despite&#13;
increasing energy costs and increased&#13;
space in use, the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
spent less on utility bills in 1980-&#13;
81than it did the year hefore. Furthermore,&#13;
the total was $5.6&#13;
million less than budgeted.&#13;
As a result of an ongoing energy&#13;
management program, and a&#13;
warmer than usual healing&#13;
system, UW System expenditures&#13;
for utility costs during 1980-111&#13;
came to a total of $27million. The&#13;
amount budgeted was $32.6&#13;
million. In tm-so the university&#13;
system utility costs were $27.2&#13;
millim.&#13;
Over the past five years it has&#13;
been in place, the energy&#13;
management program has limited&#13;
annual utility cost increases to 7&#13;
per cent overall, much less than&#13;
the rate of increase for the fuels&#13;
required. A report to UW System&#13;
Regents contends the program&#13;
has avoided cumulative utility&#13;
expenses calculated to be as much&#13;
as $25 million. For instance, if&#13;
1972-73 consumption levels had&#13;
been experienced in 19110-111,tbe&#13;
cost would bave-been $34.5million&#13;
for tba t year alone.&#13;
Overall, there has" been a&#13;
decrease in the amount of energy&#13;
consumed. This has been achieved&#13;
even though the new Clinical&#13;
Science Center in Madison and&#13;
other major facilities throughout&#13;
the state were occupied for the&#13;
first time during this five - year&#13;
period. Total systemwide energy&#13;
consumption for 1980-81 was 20 per&#13;
cent below the level of consumption&#13;
in 1972 - 73, or 27.6 per&#13;
cent, if the impact at the Clinical&#13;
Science Center is excluded.&#13;
The 1972-73fiscalyear is used as&#13;
a base for measurement because&#13;
it was the year before the Arab oil&#13;
embargo and the onset of the&#13;
energy crisis. Prices of .energy&#13;
bad not yet started their sharp&#13;
escalation. •&#13;
Photo by kim&#13;
DOC SEVERINSEN and his new band, "Xebron" perform&#13;
crowd of about eight hundred people Tuesday nl&#13;
Parkslde's Phy. Ed. building. The material perform~&#13;
mostly jazz - fusion composed by the band and Severin&#13;
break from the music Severinsen usually plays on the ""&#13;
ShOW," The event, opened by comedian Ron Douglas&#13;
sponsored by Parkside Activities Board. "&#13;
Solar homes to be discussed&#13;
Earth sheltered passive solar&#13;
homes will he the topic of a free&#13;
public slide talk by Kenosha architect&#13;
Robert M. Kueny at 1 p.m.&#13;
on Wednesday, oct. 28 in Molinaro&#13;
Hall, Room 105.&#13;
Kueny, a member of the&#13;
American Institute of Archi tects&#13;
and a graduate of the UWMadison,&#13;
studied with Frank&#13;
Lloyd Wright and bas practiced-in&#13;
Kenosha for 22 years.&#13;
His view of architecture as art,&#13;
and of man and nature as inNo&#13;
5&#13;
Distributed by E. F. MADRIGRANO 1831 - 55th S . t. Kenosha. Wise. 658-3553&#13;
Stroh's - NEW ON TAP AT UNIO' _ '"' N SQUARE&#13;
separable, have led to his&#13;
for earth sheltered, passive&#13;
house designs, he said. T&#13;
designed as gentle but&#13;
structures growing out 01&#13;
grcund and embracing the&#13;
scape, enhancing awa&#13;
nature for the owners&#13;
providing inexpensive&#13;
fortable, elegant living. '&#13;
Six of his earth sheltered&#13;
bave been buill to dale.&#13;
His talk is sponsored by&#13;
Parkside Library - Lea&#13;
Center ILLC). In conjunclioo&#13;
the talk, LLC is exbib!'&#13;
display of Kueny's work.&#13;
Computer&#13;
scholarship&#13;
offered&#13;
Students wishing to enter&#13;
ICP (International Co&#13;
Programs, Inc.) Schol&#13;
competition must submit&#13;
applications by Novembet&#13;
1981.&#13;
ICP's fourth annual sch&#13;
offering, tbe award will be&#13;
to a computer science or&#13;
puter technology student f&#13;
1982-83 school year.&#13;
scholarship will consist&#13;
year's tuition plus ed'&#13;
expenses up to a maxim&#13;
$5,000 paid to tbe U.S. roll&#13;
university of the winner's&#13;
Selection of the award&#13;
based on: accumulative&#13;
point average in the student's&#13;
of study; overall grade&#13;
average; need for financial&#13;
participation in data pr&#13;
related activities; school&#13;
tivities and leadership roles;&#13;
overall accomplishments&#13;
awards. Finalists will be as&#13;
submit an original essay.&#13;
Applications are avai&#13;
through the financial&#13;
departments of most U.S.&#13;
and universities. Once aga~&#13;
deadline for filing applica:&#13;
November 15, 1981. Mail&#13;
plica tions to Sheila Cunni&#13;
Editor, ICP, 9000 KeY~&#13;
Crossing, Indianapolis, In&#13;
46240. Telephone (317) B4f&#13;
(800) 428-6179.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
ADS&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
PART-TIME WORK distributing ad~&#13;
materials for a nationwidefir~ ..-&#13;
own hours. 4.15 weekly. NO selll&#13;
lila&#13;
based on the amount of (Ml&#13;
distributed. Average rep eerre :t5.•&#13;
hour, successful reps earn over "res&#13;
hour. Other benefits. ReqU~nd&#13;
eeceneence, communication,&#13;
sistency. E.O.E. For informatioll,&#13;
Kathy Rossi, 500 _ 3rd Ave. W·,&#13;
Washington, 98119, (206) 28Hll1.&#13;
WORK WANTED rTl ~&#13;
HONG KONG TAILORING. custo 633'''''&#13;
wear. alteration. repairs. 3·] p. 111.&#13;
PERSONAL 3S&#13;
JERE DAHL call Phil D. et 651.61&#13;
.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS "Md'~&#13;
AMATEUR IMPRESSIONISTS- ~&#13;
Thousand Voices" available fOf'VoidJ&#13;
parties or other occasions. call&#13;
popular stars and singers.&#13;
evenings at 658-1073.&#13;
et to come home&#13;
cine . born poet. David&#13;
ian will return to his home&#13;
October 25 for a program&#13;
d by the Racine Public&#13;
Board and Friends of the&#13;
ry The author's career in&#13;
began at age 30. His main&#13;
t has been poetry .&#13;
. n has had 18books of his&#13;
works and anthologies of&#13;
by other poets published.&#13;
first novel, The Road from&#13;
• published in 1979,tells the&#13;
'of his mother Veron&#13;
ehijian, who survived the&#13;
· h massacres of the Aran&#13;
people. She came to the&#13;
States as the sixteen - year&#13;
mail-order bride ri Melkon&#13;
. n. David was been 7 years&#13;
· He grew up in the tightly -&#13;
Armenian community In&#13;
tne and his childbood is&#13;
~ in much ri his writing.&#13;
Rood from Home has been&#13;
the Lewis Carroll prize,&#13;
Hom Award from the Boston&#13;
and the honor award in the&#13;
Newberry book competition.&#13;
uel Finding Home, was&#13;
'in 1981. Copies of his&#13;
I will be available for purand&#13;
autographing by the&#13;
foDowingthe program.&#13;
flj program is a birthday&#13;
• tim in honor of Emily A.&#13;
- the library's first benefacd&#13;
'. Her bequest ri $100,000 in&#13;
bal provided income for the&#13;
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::;::::&#13;
ensemble&#13;
perform&#13;
Emily A. Lee Lecture Series,&#13;
enriched the film, art print and&#13;
book collections of the library and&#13;
has made possible many special&#13;
programs for children and adults.&#13;
The celebration will be held from 2&#13;
to 5 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Itwill&#13;
also be an opportunity for the&#13;
community to see the newly _&#13;
redecorated East Room ri the&#13;
Hall. Refreshments will be served&#13;
in the Crystal Room which also&#13;
has had a recent face - lifting.&#13;
Dr. Georges Tabet, president of&#13;
the Friends of the Library, will&#13;
introduce David Kherdian who&#13;
will read from his forthcoming&#13;
autobiography The River of ~h'&#13;
Roots. -&#13;
Ruth Gedwardt, vice president&#13;
of the Racine Public Library&#13;
Board, will give a brief history of&#13;
the Emily A. Lee Fund as well as&#13;
other bequests and trusts.&#13;
The public is cordially invited to&#13;
share in the afternoon's events.&#13;
No tickets or reservations are&#13;
~equired.&#13;
PUMPKIN&#13;
-P.~~ CARYIN. CONIESI&#13;
Fri., Ocl. 30, 1.2 ••••&#13;
•• 10. PAD AREA&#13;
Sign Up in Union&#13;
Recreation Center&#13;
at Control Desk&#13;
• $1.00 Entry Fee&#13;
• Pumpkin prOVided&#13;
lbring your own knife)&#13;
• Prizes Awa rded on&#13;
Originality &amp;&#13;
CreatiVity&#13;
• Entrys limited to 1st 20&#13;
people to sign up&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 22, 1981&#13;
Wed.. Oct. 28th&#13;
- 8 p. m. "1.50&#13;
Union Square&#13;
award· winning Parkside&#13;
Ensemble I has been invited&#13;
orm during the Wisconsin&#13;
Educators' Conference at&#13;
Oct. 28-30. DOWNTOWN KENOSHA 2O-member ensemble will&#13;
t a one - hour concert on 626 56th St.&#13;
y evening, Oct. 29, in the&#13;
~::t::::':':~.::::~:'::' L!!I".TGh'ile.PZila'ilc.'_T.O'~:'ilUIIIY;:;;;liIl1l11:C!i1j':-llIr.a.I!:';llI __ llI•• "rc7Pl1l~.:K::l1Ie•• 61l35.4.-2119111ti~..~ ••!S••JacI&#13;
j.r----------~-------------:---,&#13;
rBUFFO&#13;
\ the clown&#13;
d&#13;
•&#13;
. Artist&#13;
Singer&#13;
Musician&#13;
Magician&#13;
j Mime&#13;
Monday, November 4·&#13;
·8 p, m,&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Tickets Available at the&#13;
UNION INFO CENTER&#13;
and at the DOOR&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
CHILDREN'S PRICES&#13;
WORKSHOPS&#13;
WITH BUFFO&#13;
will be held on&#13;
MONDAY, NOV. 4th Presented by&#13;
6&#13;
ThursdaV, October 22. 1981&#13;
RANGER&#13;
parent faces challenge&#13;
, • sh until you get to think it will be the thoUgin&#13;
She s very Ythe first five or mom and dad woo'&#13;
know her tes, then look out. together; it will affect t&#13;
ten , rmnu es,', he said smiling. the questions like 'what&#13;
She s crazy, all of those times WheoVIe&#13;
a family and together&#13;
you lying to me? Wasall'~&#13;
closeness just a lie?' I&#13;
that affects a child Illore&#13;
the actual split-up,&#13;
they feel that their&#13;
ha ve lied to them."&#13;
One thing Nora k&#13;
mind for himself and for&#13;
in his situation is fairness&#13;
rna tter how much dislike'&#13;
is between tbe mother&#13;
father, that child has to~&#13;
to its mother eventually&#13;
you try to keep things ,&#13;
even level for your child&#13;
chi\d comes first, and YOU&#13;
take out your agg&#13;
against the mother ..,&#13;
child. Even though it may&#13;
seem like you are, it is an&#13;
thing to do. "I want&#13;
daughter to see me as s&#13;
who can take care Iiher&#13;
someone she can turn te l&#13;
needs help."&#13;
Viewpoint .&#13;
Single&#13;
by Pal Hensiak&#13;
"The hardest thing about it,"&#13;
said Pat Nora, "is that when&#13;
ou get your child for whatever&#13;
y riodoftimeyouhave herfor,&#13;
pe have to make sure that&#13;
~:tever you do is in the best&#13;
interest of the child. You can't&#13;
let the emotions of the two&#13;
.people gel caught up between&#13;
the child."&#13;
Pal Nora is Parkside's food&#13;
service manager. He IS a~S? a&#13;
single parent, with jnlnt&#13;
custody of an "almo~~ fo~r&#13;
year old dau~hter. HIS&#13;
daughter lives With him for a&#13;
week to ten days out of every&#13;
month. Although he doesn't see&#13;
his daughter on a regular dallr,&#13;
basis "like most parents do,&#13;
he and his daughter get along&#13;
very well. Nora enjoys taking&#13;
care of his daughter but things&#13;
aren't always easy.&#13;
"I try to give her more love,&#13;
but it's important to&#13;
distinguish between love and&#13;
spoiling the child. It's very&#13;
easy to spoil her when I only&#13;
see her for one week out of a&#13;
month. Children know that,&#13;
they can sense it," said Nora.&#13;
He does experience moments&#13;
when he has trouble dealing&#13;
with the questions and comments&#13;
his daughter has. "One&#13;
occured just the other day as a&#13;
matter of fact. She said to me,&#13;
"'Dad, you and mom are never&#13;
going to die are you?' And she&#13;
said the same thing about her&#13;
grandparents. She said that&#13;
she didn't want anyone to die,&#13;
It's hard to answer that."&#13;
Nora also shares the funny&#13;
times too: "My daughter&#13;
happens ,to be a comedian.&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING I&#13;
5935 • 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin&#13;
414 • 651-4861&#13;
4235 • 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-0120&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 248-9141&#13;
24726 -75th Street - Rt.50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem. Wis.&#13;
414·843-2388 •&#13;
CALLOR ST. IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
Bayuzick art displayed&#13;
work. Other artists in the&#13;
David Bower, DeKalb, Dl.;&#13;
King, Green Bay; Ro&#13;
daugh, Chicago; A&#13;
Stoveken, Milwaukee;&#13;
Christel - Anthony Tu&#13;
Milwaukee. .&#13;
Bayuzick also is showing&#13;
work in the "Teaching&#13;
juried exhibit at the Mil&#13;
'Art Center, through Oct.&#13;
the "Viewing Wisconsin&#13;
juried fall show at the&#13;
Gallery of Wisconsin Art&#13;
Milwaukee Art Center,&#13;
March 31, 1982.&#13;
Bayuzick received his MJ!&#13;
painting from the OhioUni&#13;
'School of Art in 1975and jo'&#13;
UW-Parkside faculty in I&#13;
Gain Pickin'&#13;
PRIZES FOR&#13;
BEST COSTUMES&#13;
L..--:-"""'Photo ev AnnetteGapinski&#13;
GINA NORA&#13;
Nora feels that one of the&#13;
things that does have an effect&#13;
on children of divorced parents&#13;
is coping with the closeness&#13;
that the family had: "My&#13;
daughter lives with the thought&#13;
that her mom and dad are still&#13;
going to get back together.&#13;
When my daughter finally does&#13;
realize what's going on, Idon't&#13;
Parkside art professor Dennis&#13;
Bayuzick is' represented in&#13;
current shows in several&#13;
Wisconsin galleries.&#13;
Bayuzick, coordinator of the&#13;
Parkside art discipline, is one of&#13;
six artists selected for an invitational&#13;
show of surrealist art&#13;
called "Other Fantasies" on .&#13;
exhibit at the uw-creen Bay&#13;
galleries from Oct. 18 through&#13;
Nov. 24 and at UW-Stevens Point&#13;
from Dec. 2 through 20.&#13;
The exhibition, selected by UWGB&#13;
art curator Karon Winzenz, &gt;&#13;
focuses on contemporary Midwest&#13;
artists working in the "tradition of&#13;
fantasy and surrealism.&#13;
Bayuzi ck is showing both&#13;
acrylic and oil paintings from his&#13;
on-going series of dream - inspired&#13;
•&#13;
Irick.r Ir•• '&#13;
wl'lI&#13;
"nl. &amp; Lac.&#13;
7535 Pershilllll Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin&#13;
414·694·1380&#13;
8035· 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414·657-1340&#13;
~~~ ~ ~NDER.&#13;
Frld.&#13;
Oct. 3&#13;
':30 'II 1:&#13;
•• '.r.i •••• ,.1&#13;
D•• I. &amp; Lice&#13;
WE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU IROWI COUNTRY IWESTERN SALOO~&#13;
, RACINE MOTOR IN..&#13;
535 Main Street in Downtown Racine&#13;
5%% .... n.' H Yow Dally&#13;
lalana I. s500.00 or Monl&#13;
•&#13;
lie ball&#13;
Women haunted by mistakes&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
I.. e Parkside women's&#13;
'" ball team dropped its record&#13;
!II 1·18 with two wins at home&#13;
L nst North Central and&#13;
uette and four losses at the&#13;
t State Invitational against&#13;
ana State, Wright State,&#13;
bern Kentucky and Morehead&#13;
'th Central beat the Rangers&#13;
first game of that match by&#13;
re of t2·15. Parkside came&#13;
towin the next two games by&#13;
'cal 15-9 scores.&#13;
was really impressed, North&#13;
1has improved a lot," said&#13;
II Linda Henderson. "They&#13;
e to play and we didn't, but&#13;
10 ~eased we came back and&#13;
.rkside defeated Marquette in&#13;
close games, 15-13and 17·15.&#13;
wOOthe close ga mes this&#13;
." commented Henderson,&#13;
ass S forfeit&#13;
by Laurie Painter&#13;
women's tennis team was&#13;
to forfeit its game to Eau&#13;
last Friday because of a&#13;
&lt;i. players, and 00 Saturday,&#13;
they played again, they&#13;
't do much better.&#13;
Saturday, tbe tennis learn&#13;
two schools, St. Norbert&#13;
UW·Whitewater. St. Norbert&#13;
the first school they played,&#13;
Kathy Thomas won one&#13;
les match 6·2, 6·3. Nancy&#13;
woothe second singles match&#13;
scores of 6-3 and 6-3. The&#13;
itself, however, had to forfeit&#13;
last singles match and one&#13;
set.&#13;
ler in the day, when the&#13;
is team played UW·&#13;
aler, the Rangers finalIy&#13;
a full squad. They won two&#13;
, thanks to the duos of&#13;
ThOOlas and Nancy Kivi,&#13;
Lori Bleashka and Charlotte&#13;
. Their scores were 6-4, 6~3&#13;
~, 6-2,6·2 respectively. The&#13;
lost all of the singles&#13;
'Pile of the tennis team's less&#13;
D·sparkling season, there are&#13;
individual players who are&#13;
worth watching. In the uping&#13;
WWLAC tournament in&#13;
. e, Nancy Kivi and Kathy&#13;
U will figure prominently.&#13;
'ogIeo, Kivi ranks 3·1 con·&#13;
nee, 7·8 overall; Thomas&#13;
2-4 conference and 7-10&#13;
. This outstanding duo is&#13;
more dynamic in doobles,&#13;
a 4-0 conference and a 10-5&#13;
aU rank. These rankings will&#13;
them second seat, where&#13;
should have an excellent&#13;
at the finals. This could be&#13;
bright spet in an otherwise&#13;
uster season.&#13;
RED PIN&#13;
$3.00 NHe&#13;
Moonlit. Bowl&#13;
"we haven't done that this year."&#13;
The Rangers were hurt during&#13;
the match against Marquette&#13;
when junior Sherry Festge injured&#13;
a hand on a play during the second&#13;
game. "At first we thought it was&#13;
fractured. The index middle and&#13;
third fingers are' very badly&#13;
sprained," said Henderson. "By&#13;
state tournament, less than a&#13;
month away, she should be back to&#13;
full strength. It's a loss to us. She's&#13;
our number one setter, and the&#13;
setter is the quarterback of a •&#13;
volleyball team."&#13;
"By her gelling hurt two of our&#13;
freshmen, Bonnie Schmelter and&#13;
Fran Busalacchi get a chance to&#13;
play," said Henderson, lithe&#13;
freshmen really did a nice job."&#13;
Schmelter, however, hurt her&#13;
back during the Wright State&#13;
Tourney, but both her and Festge&#13;
participated in practice Monday.&#13;
Parkside's ever present&#13;
problem of mistakes returned&#13;
during the Wright State tourney as&#13;
the Rangers were defeated in all&#13;
four of their matches. .&#13;
The Rangers dropped the first&#13;
match to Indiana State, 8·15 and&#13;
10-15."Indiana State wasn't very&#13;
good, but we were worse," said&#13;
Henderson. "Mental mistakes&#13;
have been haunting us all&#13;
season."&#13;
Parkside came back with some&#13;
good play to defeat Wright State in&#13;
the first ga me of tha t ma tch 15-11.&#13;
"We played excellent. f'm just&#13;
pleased overall how we played&#13;
against them," said Henderson.&#13;
Parkside lost the last two games,&#13;
however, 5·15 and 9-15. "The last&#13;
two games were not played. badly,&#13;
but we just made more errors&#13;
than they did."&#13;
For the second time this season&#13;
the Rangers were badly defeated&#13;
by Northern Kentucky. "We made&#13;
too many consecutive errors, II she&#13;
said. "We didn't play well at all,&#13;
and the scores show it." Parkside&#13;
'lost this match by identical 4-15&#13;
scores.&#13;
The last match of the clay for&#13;
Parkside was a tough one against&#13;
Morehead State. The Rangers lost&#13;
that match in two games, 6-15and&#13;
5-15. "We played well but the&#13;
score doesn't show it," said&#13;
Henderson.&#13;
Parkside will take part in the&#13;
Cartbage College Invitational this&#13;
weekend before hosting UW·&#13;
Oshkosh and Bradley University&#13;
on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m.&#13;
"We've played all the really&#13;
'tough schools this season, except&#13;
for Lewis, which is the last match&#13;
before the state tournament."&#13;
This years state tournament will&#13;
he held at Parkside November&#13;
13th.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
THURSDAY, OCT. 22&#13;
COURSE "Wisconsin Weather" starts at 6:30 p. m. in MOLN 211. Call e-xt. 2J12 for more&#13;
information. Sponsored by UW . Extension.&#13;
FRIDAY,OCT.23&#13;
MATH SEMINA:R at 3:30 p. m. in MOLN 101. Prof. E. Packard of Lake Forest Collegewill&#13;
talk on "How '0 Tackle Rubik's Cube With No Special AbiHties and Little Group&#13;
Theory". The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
MOVIE "The Stunt Man" (R) will be- shown at 1:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
at the door Is 5loSOfor a Parksidestudent and 51.SOfor a guest. Sponsored by PA6.&#13;
DANCE/CONCERT at '1 p. m. in Union Square featuring "Marvin and the Dogs". Admission&#13;
at the door is 52.00 for a Parkslde student and $2.50 for a guest. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
SUNDAY,OCT.2S&#13;
MOVIE "The Stunt Man" will be repeated at 7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
TUESDAY,OCT.'l7&#13;
WORKSHOP "Fire Safety" at 7 p. m. in the Racine Coonty Highway Buildlno. Call ext .&#13;
2312for more details. Sponsored by UW· Extension.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 21&#13;
WORKSHOP "Fire Safety" will be repeated at 9:30 a. m. at the Racine- County Highway&#13;
Building. Call ext. 2312 for more details.&#13;
SLIDE/LECTURE at 1 p. m. in MOLN lOS. Architect Robert Kueny wHI talk on "Earth&#13;
Sheltered Pesstve SOlar Homes". The pl"ogram is tree and open to the-public.&#13;
MOVIE "~rom Night" (Rl will be shown at 8 p. m. In Union Square. Admission at the&#13;
door is 51.50 for a Parkside student and 51.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
t/£LEADER~&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Elmwood PlazalRacine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
WEEKLY SPECIALS&#13;
, Oct. 26 - Oct. 31&#13;
60'/game&#13;
All you can bowl&#13;
or play pool&#13;
90'/game&#13;
MON. 9 a.m. 'til Noon&#13;
TUE. Noon 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 3 p.m. 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
THUR. 7 p.m. 'til 10 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 10 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
SAT. 8 p.m. 'till a.m.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 22, 1981 7&#13;
,.... .. ..,. Owl Mc.CW.... dl&#13;
FRESHMAN KIM TESHER spikes the ball to Marquet1e.&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Men ahead, women rebuild&#13;
The UW . Parkside Bowling&#13;
Club travelled to Platteville this&#13;
past weekend to engage in its third&#13;
conference meet of the season.&#13;
Weeks before, after getting off to a&#13;
mediocre start at Whitewater,&#13;
(winning only 21 out of 46 points),&#13;
the men roared past UW • Oshkosh&#13;
and UW • Platteville grabbing .,&#13;
points which vaulted the men into&#13;
the conference lead with a 58·34&#13;
record. For the men's team Willy&#13;
Yee, Jerry Zigner and John&#13;
Pet er son, all have turned in&#13;
strong performances, and all were&#13;
averaging 185 or better, Good&#13;
performances by Scott Hartnell&#13;
and Tndd Mollieck, both alternating&#13;
in fourth place, bave also&#13;
coolributed to the learn's flne&#13;
start.&#13;
In Platteville, the Parkside&#13;
keglers confronted UW&#13;
Milwaukee and UW . Oshkosh,&#13;
winning 26 out of 40 points.&#13;
• • •&#13;
the midst of a massive rebuilding&#13;
process, aIao went to Platteville to&#13;
attempt to improve on their 44-112&#13;
• 93-1/2 start in conference play&#13;
The only returnees from 1881&#13;
year's team are Junior Jan&#13;
Oeckler and Ellen Becwar The&#13;
women's team is still acceptinc&#13;
female bowlers, and those in..&#13;
terested should contact Mike&#13;
Menzhuber in the Rec. Center&#13;
The next meet for the UW . P&#13;
keglers will be this Sunday In&#13;
Sbeboygan. Coming up's the Sl.th&#13;
annual Northeast Collegiate Invitational,&#13;
which is the nrst&#13;
tournament of the sea n Cor the&#13;
club. The club will send threomen's&#13;
teams and one 'WorJ'le'n '.&#13;
team to the tournament. whk:h&#13;
was damUl8ted 1ut y.r by our&#13;
own John Peterson. He took a&#13;
second in Singles and All E"enla&#13;
and was also a member of tho II&#13;
Parkside men's team, which took&#13;
tJurd place in the !&lt;em event ta&#13;
The women's learn. which is in year&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC. "TIUTlC FOOTWUll&#13;
fOIl AllIPOllTS&#13;
TUM SALE. - All IPOllTS&#13;
."""".&#13;
,_, "....&#13;
..... - .- llt[-_._ ...'1 .&#13;
~ ft&#13;
1lw At-. AtNIIII ON_&#13;
694-9206&#13;
'''*-&#13;
..-ot .... ' .-.._- -&#13;
__ a.-'.&#13;
,...-- iRathskeller&#13;
i Lounge&#13;
I&#13;
SUN. 3 Shorlies for S 1.25&#13;
Sfroh's or Sfroh Uf.&#13;
TUES. 75" Cocktails&#13;
THURS. Ladles Nife&#13;
~ Price Drinks&#13;
This Wed. Nite Datillo&#13;
live On Stage Oct. 28 No Cover&#13;
Variety of Music Every Night For&#13;
Your listening &amp; Dancing Pleasure&#13;
i&#13;
3931 45th Street&#13;
RANGER&#13;
8&#13;
Thursday, OctOber 22.1981&#13;
~~ , , . .&#13;
Rangers place third In tournament·&#13;
by (barles Perce happened when he left the goalies In the other games on Sunday,&#13;
In the past week, the Ranger box to pick up a ball downfield. the team that beat Parkslde,&#13;
soccer team has taken the field Realizing that he had made a Indiana State unlversttv -&#13;
twice. They started off by playing mistake, he doubled back to try Evansville, defeated Oakland&#13;
Lake Forest last Wednesday, but and defend the goal, but it was too University, the number one team&#13;
the game was lost 2-1 in the late; the first goal was already in in the mtd-east, and ranked eIghth&#13;
pouring rain. Parkside dominated the net Henderson felt that the in the nation, t-o. Oakland had&#13;
the game by outshootlng Lake team played poorly and made a lot previously beaten Lewis 4-1. .&#13;
Forest t9-8. of mistakes. But, they were The player of the week IS JIm&#13;
"The goalkeeper from Lake kicking into heavy winds. Spielmann; the Freshman&#13;
Forest was excellent We just On Sunday, Parkside played the sweeper who was called "the best&#13;
could not score," commented host of tbe tournament, Lewis defensive player in the tourCoach&#13;
Henderson. Parkside's only University. Parkside triumphed 1- nament," by Coacb Henderson.&#13;
goal was a Don Theisen chip _shot o. Henderson also called him, "The&#13;
into the net. Ralph De Graff got Parkside outshot Lewis 26-£ in glue tha t holds the defense&#13;
the assist with a superb "through tbe game, and beld Lewis to only 2 together."&#13;
pess." . shots in the second half of play. ,UW-Parkside'S overall season&#13;
Parkslde t~en traveled to Lewis isranked second in the mid- record is 7-7, a .500 percentage.&#13;
RtwneoVllle,DlinolSto compete in west division two, while Parkside They will open a five game home&#13;
the Lewia University Tournament is second in the mid-east division stand on October 20 24 25, 27 and&#13;
in which they placed third. They two. 31.' ,&#13;
started bY plaYu. lIPiJIlt Indiana&#13;
State University - Eva .. ville on&#13;
Saturday. Parkside loot 2.0 in&#13;
what the coach called a "monBC)ODH&#13;
type rain. Dan Opferman,&#13;
Parkside's goalkeeper, kept the&#13;
Rangers in the game. The only&#13;
majer error be made in the game&#13;
'300 .&#13;
I&#13;
l NITE&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
7 P, M, -lOP,M,&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
"$3.00 Nite in the Rec Center?" asks Strollin'&#13;
"Sounds like fun - but what is it?" After ca&#13;
vestigation Strollin Bowlin' learns that $3.00 Nite7;111&#13;
Thursday evening from 7 p. m. - 10 p. m. and Frida&#13;
from 10 p. m. to 1 a. m. and anyone can bowl all tbJ&#13;
or play unlimited pool for only $3.00. If you're looking&#13;
good time -Stop down in the Rec Center for $3,00Nite.&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selectill&#13;
PAIKSIDE UllOM&#13;
18:111 • - 4:111 pm&#13;
• SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
.JUBE JELLS&#13;
• CARAMELS&#13;
• CARAMEL BULLIES&#13;
• ROYALS&#13;
.TOFFEES&#13;
• JOTS&#13;
.BRIDGE MIX&#13;
.MALTED MILK BALLS&#13;
• CHOC, CREME DROPS&#13;
• CHOC. RAISINS&#13;
• CHOC. PEANUTS&#13;
• PEANUT BUTTER CUPS&#13;
• STARS&#13;
• YOGURT PEANUTS&#13;
.CAROB MALTED MILK&#13;
BALLS&#13;
• CAROB PEANUTS&#13;
• SUNFLOWER SEEDS&#13;
• CARIBBEAN DELICACY&#13;
• CALIFORNIA MIX&#13;
• STUDENT FOOD&#13;
• GIANT CASHEWS&#13;
• NATURAL PISTACHIOS&#13;
• SPANISH PEANUTS&#13;
• BLANCHED PEANUTS&#13;
• YOGURT RAISINS&#13;
• YOGURT SESAME&#13;
BRITTLE&#13;
• RED SKIN PEANUTS&#13;
• MINT COOLERS&#13;
• STARLIGHT MINTS&#13;
• SOUR BALLS&#13;
• CINNAMON DISKS&#13;
• COFFEE&#13;
• BUTTERSCOTCH DISKS&#13;
• ROOT BEER BARRELS&#13;
• POPS&#13;
• PEANUT BUTTER&#13;
KISSES&#13;
• PEPPERMINT KISSES&#13;
• LICORICE BULLIES&#13;
• JELLY BEANS&#13;
• ASSORTED PERKYS&#13;
• ORANGE SLICES&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF OCT. 26&#13;
CARIBBEAN&#13;
DELICACY&#13;
40% OFF&#13;
. . d western,&#13;
, VR A d so does country an .&#13;
. ' . rams 7 &amp; 7 . n .' eratlon.&#13;
S~ell&amp;S~ell&#13;
SEAGRAM DISTILLERS CO .. N.Y.C. AMERICAN WHISKEY-A BLEND. 80 PROOF&#13;
'SEVEN-UP A&gt;IO·7 UP- ARE TRADEMAR'IS or rut SEVE" UPCOMPANYC'99~1</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="69899">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>UW-P honors to be offered</text>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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              <text> " University of Wisconsin - Parkside er&#13;
hUr8day~()ctober 29, 1981 Vol. 10 . No.8&#13;
W·p honors to be offered already existing course work.&#13;
Each agreement must be approved&#13;
by the Honors Program&#13;
Steering Comll'ittee. To qualify&#13;
for this initial work, students must&#13;
have a GPA of 3.2 or higher. Each&#13;
course in honors will be&#13;
designated as such on the&#13;
student's transcripts if the&#13;
student's grade in the course is a&#13;
B-plus or better. To remain in the&#13;
program, students must maintain,&#13;
their 3.2 or better gradepoint&#13;
while doing the additional work&#13;
that will be required by honors&#13;
instructors.&#13;
After a student has completed 15&#13;
credits of honors course work&#13;
(with at least half of those credits&#13;
earned outside of the student's&#13;
primary major), she or he is&#13;
eligible for graduation "with&#13;
distinction" noted on transcripts.&#13;
At this point, the student is also&#13;
eligible to enroll in the Senior&#13;
Honors Seminar, a two semester&#13;
course in which students develop&#13;
and present a Senior Honors&#13;
Thesis. Enrollment is the seminar&#13;
is basically for seniors, since&#13;
students must have completed at&#13;
least 116credits before enrolling.&#13;
Each thesis will be evaluated by a&#13;
three member faculty committee&#13;
appointed by the Seminar&#13;
Director.&#13;
Students who qualify to&#13;
graduate "with distinction" and&#13;
students on redesigning the&#13;
program.&#13;
The Honors Program was&#13;
referred from the Faculty Senate&#13;
back to the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee last spring for&#13;
clarification and was passed at&#13;
the early fall Faculty Senate&#13;
meeting. "Essentially, the&#13;
program as it now stands was&#13;
designed by students, with minor&#13;
changes as suggested by the&#13;
steering committee" 'Thayer&#13;
said. '&#13;
Thayer said the program. was&#13;
also unusual because it "assumes&#13;
realistically a level of maturity on&#13;
the part of academic achievers&#13;
that regular academic programs&#13;
don't assume."&#13;
Thayer said the program&#13;
"relies on student initiative and is&#13;
determined by the achievement of&#13;
students as they work with the&#13;
advising of individual faculty&#13;
members." A Student Advisory&#13;
Committee will also administer&#13;
the program in conjunction with&#13;
the Director and the Faculty&#13;
Steering Committee, composed of&#13;
elected representatives from each&#13;
division.&#13;
The basic components of the&#13;
program are honors course work&#13;
and a senior honors seminar.&#13;
Course work is arranged through&#13;
agreements between individual&#13;
students and instructors of&#13;
proposal for an unusual&#13;
rsity wide Honors&#13;
ram, developed by comatim&#13;
professor Lee Thayer&#13;
task force of students, was&#13;
Uy passed by Parkside's&#13;
ty Senate. Tbe program will&#13;
plemented next semester&#13;
students will be able to&#13;
r for courses that will&#13;
them for honors credits&#13;
ntrance to the program.&#13;
program will not replace&#13;
traditional departmental&#13;
system, hased on GPA&#13;
• but it will replace the&#13;
emically Talented and&#13;
ly Skilled Program, which&#13;
cing dwindling enrollment&#13;
major course, a seminar.&#13;
year, Thayer worked with&#13;
Happy Halloween ••••••••••••• He also sees a record of&#13;
association with the program as&#13;
"a clear indication of advantage"&#13;
to both future employers and&#13;
graduate schools.&#13;
Tbe thesis completed at undergraduate&#13;
level is itself&#13;
"significant recognition of many&#13;
accomplishments not implied by&#13;
GPA alone," Thayer said, "like&#13;
the ability to write and communicate&#13;
across disciplines, the&#13;
ability to handle sophisticated&#13;
ideas and a high level of scholarly&#13;
dedication. "&#13;
Last this fall, all continuing&#13;
qualified Parkside students will&#13;
receive an Honors Program&#13;
brochure and an invitation to a&#13;
who complete the Senior Honors&#13;
Seminar will graduate with&#13;
"Distinction." "High' Distinction,"&#13;
or "Highest Distinction,"&#13;
depending upon the recommendation&#13;
of his or her faculty&#13;
thesis committee.&#13;
Thayer said students will be&#13;
able to use the program "to their&#13;
(JW'nadvantage" because there&#13;
are several pay-offs for students.&#13;
"If they fulfill the requirements,&#13;
they will graduate with some sort&#13;
of uni.versity - wide distinction,"&#13;
be said.&#13;
"Another real advantage to&#13;
students is that they will gain&#13;
additional intellectual interaction&#13;
with not only each other, but with&#13;
faculty members," Thayer said. Continued On Page Five&#13;
GA Senators look forward to an active term on campus&#13;
bNyeKwesnEMdeityoerr Earlene Frederick 1.i'k~,to be a p~;t of what IS gom. g comp!is~ment of student goals." maioly because of its commuter&#13;
e are profiles of the mem- on.. sbe said, I like to ~?w when While 10 office, Mertz hopes to status, and I wanted to do&#13;
f the PSGA Senate who were Earlene Frederick, a freshman thing~ happe~ and why. make changes that will help anything to destroy this image.&#13;
ed in the October 14-15 still deciding on a major, ran for . While 10 office, she hopes to get students. "This should be tbe "When I received my ap-&#13;
.ODS. They will officially take the Senate because she wanted to involved 10 a Senate sub- primary objective of every person plication (to run for the Senate),"&#13;
on November 4. be involved at Parkside. "I would cpoamrti~cIip1aItntete. and be an active who believes in student gover- be said, "I was not aware of what I~ meetmgs.. nance," he said. needed to be accomplished, but 1&#13;
She doesn t know what ISSUes The major issues be plans to will address any matter that Wll:! come up dunng'loor. term in address ~re "those which direcUy comes up-with the utmost equality&#13;
office, she said, but I WIll try to affect or influence students on this and fairness of a just human&#13;
be mformed on each as It arises." campus," he said. beTinhge.r"e are several issues Pfafn&#13;
plans to address as a Senator, tbe&#13;
first being student apathy. "I&#13;
believe the parking system also&#13;
must have some revamping," he&#13;
said, "such as the costs of permits&#13;
and the giving of tickets." He also&#13;
thinks that tbe library should&#13;
receive all the material that is&#13;
needed to further students'&#13;
educations. "A closer look at the&#13;
bookstore's activities will also be&#13;
a good idea," he said.&#13;
"Students could be a very large&#13;
political force in America," he&#13;
said, "if they wanted to exert their&#13;
force in a positive way. such as&#13;
rebuttals on the school, state and&#13;
national levels of administration.&#13;
I believe the time is coming when&#13;
students must join together to&#13;
exert their voice in America, and&#13;
this can't be done with apathy."&#13;
n forum scheduled&#13;
rkside Chancellor Alan&#13;
kin has scheduled an&#13;
en Forum II for Wedy,&#13;
Nov. 4 between 11:30&#13;
1 p.m. in Union 104 - 106.&#13;
purpose of the forum is to&#13;
rate discussion between&#13;
ents and the adlstration.&#13;
The forum will be&#13;
ucted informally, Guskin&#13;
, so that students may ask&#13;
questions they have ahout&#13;
University.&#13;
ivities nights scheduled&#13;
eluding shoes) and pro football TV&#13;
viewing. In addition, the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board will sponsor&#13;
movies on the last 3 Sundays -&#13;
"Tribute" on Nov. 8, "Death&#13;
Hunt" on Nov. 15, and "Starting&#13;
Over" on Nov. 22. Tickets for the&#13;
movies are $1.50for adults, 7~ for&#13;
children.&#13;
Tbe Parkside Child care Center&#13;
will be open from 4 to 8 p. m. each&#13;
Sunday for infants and pre - school&#13;
children. There will be no charge&#13;
for the use of the Center, but&#13;
children must be pre - registered&#13;
since space is limited. To pre -&#13;
register call 553-2227.There will&#13;
be no food service available on&#13;
campus except for snack items.&#13;
"Sundays at Parkside" marks&#13;
the first majot cooperative&#13;
planning venture between Student&#13;
Life and Physical Education.&#13;
More such events are in the&#13;
planning stages, according to&#13;
Student Life sources. All students,&#13;
faculty and staff are invited to&#13;
take part.&#13;
dfices of Student Life and&#13;
.cal Educa tion ha ve comefforts&#13;
to sponsor II aces&#13;
nights" on the first four&#13;
ays in Novernber. A variety •&#13;
nned activities, in addition to&#13;
recreation, will be available&#13;
ch of these Sundays between&#13;
and 9:30 p.m. All Parkside&#13;
ts will receive a complete&#13;
scbeduleof events in tbe mail&#13;
Randy Klees John Peterson&#13;
Randy Klees, a freshman&#13;
majoring in communication, was&#13;
first elected to tbe Senate last fall.&#13;
He became a Senator "because I&#13;
wanted to represent the students&#13;
of Parkside in relation to administrative&#13;
decisions that concern&#13;
Parkside," he said. HI also&#13;
wanted to learn about how policies&#13;
aOddecisions are made tha t cover&#13;
the whole UW System as far as&#13;
budgeting and funding are concerned."&#13;
Klees has been involved with&#13;
SUFAC since last year. "One of&#13;
our major goals is to finish tbe&#13;
budget process for the 1982-33&#13;
school year," he said. "I also hope&#13;
to broaden student awareness to&#13;
SUFAC in terms of how part of&#13;
tbeir tuition, segregated fees, will&#13;
be used."&#13;
Klees is also serving on the&#13;
Athletic Board and Bookstore&#13;
Committee. "While I'm on these&#13;
committees" he said "I will&#13;
continue to Jserve as a' representative&#13;
expressing the attitudes&#13;
and concerns of other Parkside&#13;
students. "&#13;
John Peterson, a junior&#13;
majoring in political science and&#13;
history, was appointed to tbe&#13;
Senate in late September and was&#13;
required to run in the fall election.&#13;
Peterson sees being a Senator&#13;
"as an opportunity to serve the&#13;
students of Parkside in a way 1&#13;
f",:l I am qualified. 1 also hope to&#13;
gam experience m an area which I&#13;
plan to follow as a career."&#13;
His goal as a Senator is to&#13;
represent and inform students. "I&#13;
would like to see students more&#13;
informed ahout Parkside and its&#13;
inner workings, tI he said. "I would&#13;
also like to promote more student&#13;
participation in campus activities.&#13;
"Students haye input in \be&#13;
policies set forth by the faculty&#13;
and student committees," he said.&#13;
"But do the students know this?&#13;
This issue will be one of my major&#13;
priorities thatI will be concerned&#13;
with. Others are the parking&#13;
regulations and segregated fees."&#13;
the phy. ed. building, events&#13;
uled are: open swim, open&#13;
etball, open volleyball, open&#13;
uetball (maximum of 32&#13;
ers must pre·register at the&#13;
n Info Desk), and aerobic&#13;
. Also, tbe weight room will&#13;
vailable for use. special acies&#13;
planned include a "fitness&#13;
" and children's activities&#13;
games for 4-11 year olds.&#13;
ers and showers will be open&#13;
. One family member must&#13;
a valid Parkside ID at the&#13;
. ed. building door to register.&#13;
Union Rec. Center will offer&#13;
ling (at ~ per game in-&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez, a&#13;
sophomore majoring in business&#13;
sees being a PSGA Senator as a~&#13;
opportunity to serve Parkside&#13;
students. Sbe hopes to gain experience&#13;
and knowledge about&#13;
student government in the uw&#13;
System.&#13;
"I hope to be a representative of&#13;
the students at Parkside," said&#13;
Rodriguez, "aiding each otber in&#13;
discussing policies or problems&#13;
we may encounter as st\ldents."&#13;
Student participation is the&#13;
major issue she plans to address&#13;
while in office. "Students being&#13;
allowed to become involved and&#13;
Continued On Page Five&#13;
Mike Pfaffl&#13;
Mike Pfaff!, a sophomore&#13;
majoring in political science, ran&#13;
for tbe Senate for many reasons.&#13;
First, he feels it will furtber his&#13;
education in political science.&#13;
"Second," he said, "I consider&#13;
myself a political activist and also&#13;
belong to Students Mobilization&#13;
for Survival, so I believe in action&#13;
and getting problems solved wben&#13;
they appear. Third, I believe our&#13;
school suffers from apathy,&#13;
INSIDE • • •&#13;
Viewpoint: Learning to live with a handicap Steve Mertz&#13;
Steve Mertz, a sophomore&#13;
majoring in engineering, ran for&#13;
the Senate because "PSGA does&#13;
have power (and) that power&#13;
affects tbe student body. I feel&#13;
that it is of tbe utmost importance&#13;
that the supply of different&#13;
viewpoints result in the ac-&#13;
David Kherdian interview&#13;
Student bowls 300. club wins toumament&#13;
t,r Universify of Wisconsin - Parkside er&#13;
hursday ~ Qctober 29, 1981 Vol. 10 - No. 8&#13;
W -P honors to be offered&#13;
proposal for an unusual&#13;
rsity wide Honors&#13;
ram , developed by comcation&#13;
professor Lee Thayer&#13;
task force of students, was&#13;
tJy passed by Parkside's&#13;
llty Senate. The program will&#13;
plemented next semester&#13;
t students will be able to&#13;
, r for courses that will&#13;
ify them for honors credits&#13;
entrance to the program.&#13;
program will not replace&#13;
traditional departmental&#13;
system, based on GPA&#13;
e, but it will replace the&#13;
:lemically Talented and&#13;
ially Skilled Program, which&#13;
facing ct.vindling enrollment&#13;
major course, a seminar.&#13;
year, Tilayer worked with&#13;
n forum scheduled&#13;
&gt;arkside Chancellor Alan&#13;
kin has scheduled an&#13;
1 en Forum" for WedY,&#13;
Nov. 4 between 11 :30&#13;
I 1 p.m. in Union 104 - 106.&#13;
e purpose of the forum is to&#13;
rate discussion between&#13;
ents and the ad-&#13;
. tration. The forum will be&#13;
ucted informally, Gusk.in&#13;
d, so that students may ask&#13;
questions they have about&#13;
niversity.&#13;
students on redesigning the&#13;
program.&#13;
The Honors Program was&#13;
referred from the Faculty Senate&#13;
back to the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee last spring for&#13;
clarification and was passed at&#13;
the t;arlY fall Faculty Senate&#13;
meeting. "Essentially, the&#13;
program as it now stands was&#13;
designed by students, with minor&#13;
changes as suggested by the&#13;
steering committee " Thayer&#13;
said. '&#13;
Thayer said the program was&#13;
also unusual because it "assumes&#13;
realistically a level of maturity on&#13;
the part of academic achievers&#13;
that regular academic programs&#13;
don't assume."&#13;
Thayer said the program&#13;
"relies on student initiative and is&#13;
determined by the achievement of&#13;
students as they work with the&#13;
advising of individual faculty&#13;
members." A Student Advisory&#13;
Committee will also administer&#13;
the program in conjunction with&#13;
the Director and the Faculty&#13;
Steering Committee, composed of&#13;
elected representatives from each&#13;
division.&#13;
The basic components of the&#13;
program are honors course work&#13;
and a senior honors seminar.&#13;
Course work is arranged through&#13;
agreements between individual&#13;
students and instructors of&#13;
already existing course work.&#13;
Each agreement must be approved&#13;
by the Honors Program&#13;
Steering Comi}ittee. To qualify&#13;
for this initial work, students must&#13;
have a GPA of 3.2 or higher. Each&#13;
course in honors will be&#13;
designated as such on the&#13;
student's transcripts if the&#13;
student's grade in the course is a&#13;
B-plus or better. To remain in the&#13;
program, students must maintain&#13;
their 3.2 or better gradepoint&#13;
while doing the additional work&#13;
that will be required by honors&#13;
instructors.&#13;
After a student bas completed 15&#13;
credits of honors course work&#13;
(with at least haH of those credits&#13;
earned outside of the student's&#13;
primary major), she or he is&#13;
eligible for graduation "with&#13;
distinction" noted on transcripts.&#13;
At this point, the student is also&#13;
eligible to enroll in the Senior&#13;
Honors Seminar, a two semester&#13;
crurse in which students develop&#13;
and present a Senior Honors&#13;
Thesis. Enrollment is the seminar&#13;
is basically for seniors, since&#13;
students must have completed at&#13;
least 86 credits before enrolling.&#13;
Each thesis will be evaluated by a&#13;
three member faculty committee&#13;
appointed by the Seminar&#13;
Director.&#13;
Students who qualify to&#13;
graduate " ith distinction" and&#13;
Happy Halloween&#13;
••••eeeeeeeee&#13;
who complete the Senior Honors&#13;
Seminar will graduate with&#13;
"Distinction," "High Distinction,"&#13;
or " Highest Distinction,"&#13;
depending upon the recommendation&#13;
of his or her faculty&#13;
thesis committee.&#13;
Thayer said students will be&#13;
able to use the program "to their&#13;
own advantage" because there&#13;
are several pay-offs for students.&#13;
"II they fulfill the requirements,&#13;
they will graduate with some sort&#13;
of university - wide- distinction "&#13;
he said. '&#13;
"Another real advantage to&#13;
students is that they will gain&#13;
additional intellectual interaction&#13;
with not only each other, but with&#13;
He also sees a record of&#13;
association with the program a&#13;
"a clear indication of advantage"&#13;
to both future employers and&#13;
graduate schools.&#13;
The thesis completed at underg&#13;
ra dua te level is itself&#13;
"significant recognitioo of many&#13;
accompli hments not implied by&#13;
GPA alone," Thayer said, "like&#13;
the ability to write and comm~~&#13;
cate aero disciplines, the&#13;
ability to handle sophisticated&#13;
ideas and a high level of scholarly&#13;
dedication."&#13;
La this fall, all continuing&#13;
qualified Parkside students will&#13;
receive an Honor Program&#13;
brochure and an invitation to a&#13;
faculty members," Thayer said. ontinued On Page Five&#13;
GA Senators look f 01Ward to an active term on campus&#13;
by Ken Meyer . . .&#13;
ews Editor Earlene Frederick lik~, to be ~ ~rt ~f what 1s gomg comp_lis~ment_ of student goals." mainly becau e of its commuter&#13;
e are profiles of the mem- on., she said. I like to know when While m office, Mertz hopes to status, and I wanted to do&#13;
of the PSGA Senate who were Earlene Frederick, a freshman thing~ ~ppe~ and why." make changes that will help anything to d troy !hi image.&#13;
ted in the October 14-15 still deciding on a major, ran for . While m o_fflce, she hopes to get t~dents. "This should be the "Wh n I rec ived my aplions.&#13;
They will officially take the Senate because she wanted to rnvol":ed m a Senate ~b- primary objective of every person plication ( to run for the enate),"&#13;
on November 4. be involved at Parkside. 'I would com~ttee . and ~ an active who believes in student gover- he said, "I was not aware or what&#13;
part1c1pant 1f1 meetmgs. . nance," h~ said. needed to be accompli hed, but I&#13;
tivities nights scheduled&#13;
offices of Student Life and&#13;
ical Education have comefforts&#13;
to sponsor "ac&#13;
·es nights" on the first four&#13;
ays in November. A variety •&#13;
nned activities, in addition to&#13;
n recreation, will be available&#13;
• ch of these Sundays between&#13;
~ n and 9:30 p. m. All Parkside&#13;
n ts will receive a complete&#13;
schedule of events in the mail&#13;
n.&#13;
the phy. ed. building, events&#13;
uled are: open swim, open&#13;
etball, open volleyball, open&#13;
quetball (maximum of 32&#13;
yers must pre-register at the&#13;
.on Info Desk) , and aerobic&#13;
1 . Also, the weight room will&#13;
vailable for use. Special acties&#13;
planned include a "fitness&#13;
11'" and children's activities&#13;
I games for 4-11 year olds .&#13;
: ers and showers will be open&#13;
use. One family member must&#13;
a valid Parkside ID at the&#13;
y. ed. building door to register.&#13;
Union Rec. Center will offer&#13;
ling (at 50f per game ineluding&#13;
shoes) and pro football TV&#13;
viewing. In addition, the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board will sponsor&#13;
movies on the last 3 Sundays -&#13;
"Tribute" on Nov. 8, "Death&#13;
Hunt" on Nov. 15, and "Starting&#13;
Over" on Nov. 22. Tickets for the&#13;
movies are $1.50 for adults, 7~ for&#13;
children.&#13;
The Parkside Child Care Center&#13;
will be open from 4 to 8 p.m. each&#13;
Sunday for infants and pre - school&#13;
children. There will be no charge&#13;
for the use of the Center, but&#13;
children must be pre - registered&#13;
since space is limited. 'l'o pre -&#13;
register call 553-2227 . There will&#13;
be no food service available on&#13;
campus except for snack items.&#13;
"Sundays at Parkside" marks&#13;
the first major cooperative&#13;
planning venture between Student&#13;
Life and Physical Education.&#13;
More such events are in the&#13;
planning stages, according to&#13;
Student Life sources. All students,&#13;
faculty and staff are invited to&#13;
take part.&#13;
• • •&#13;
Vi poi : Lea ing to live with a handicap&#13;
Da rid herdian interview&#13;
uden bowl 300. c b wins tournament&#13;
She doesn t know what J.SSues The maJor issues he plans to will addr any matter that&#13;
wi1:) come up_ chlring .. her. term in addres &lt;!-re "those which directly comes u~with the utm t equality&#13;
off~ce, she sa1d, but I ~ll !ry to affect or mfluence students on this and fairne of a just human&#13;
be informed on each as 1l anses." campus," he said. being."&#13;
Randy Klees&#13;
Randy Klees a freshman&#13;
majoring in communication, was&#13;
first elected to the Senate last fall.&#13;
He became a Senator "because I&#13;
wanted to represent the tudents&#13;
of Parkside in relation to administrative&#13;
decisions that concern&#13;
Parkside," he said. "I also&#13;
wanted to learn about how policies&#13;
and decisions are made that cover&#13;
the whole UW System as far as&#13;
budgeting and funding are concerned."&#13;
Klees bas been involved with&#13;
SUFAC since last year. "One of&#13;
our major goals is to finish the&#13;
budget process for the 1982-83&#13;
school year," he said. "I also hope&#13;
to broaden student awareness to&#13;
SUF AC in terms of how part of&#13;
their tuition, segregated fees, will&#13;
be used."&#13;
Klees is also serving on the&#13;
Athletic Board and Bookstore&#13;
Committee. "While I'm on these&#13;
committees," he said, ' I will&#13;
continue to serve as a representative&#13;
expressing the attitudes&#13;
and concerns of other Parkside&#13;
students."&#13;
Steve Mertz&#13;
Steve Mertz, a sophomore&#13;
majoring in engineering, ran for&#13;
the Senate because "PSGA does&#13;
have power (and) that power&#13;
affects the student body. I feel&#13;
that it is of the utmost importance&#13;
that the supply of different&#13;
viewpoints result in the ac-&#13;
John Peterson&#13;
John Peterson , a junior&#13;
majoring in political science and&#13;
history, was appointed to the&#13;
Senate in late September and was&#13;
required to run in the fall election.&#13;
Peterson sees being a Senator&#13;
"as an opportunity to serve the&#13;
students of Parkside in a way I&#13;
feel I am quaWied. I also hope to&#13;
gain experience in an area which I&#13;
plan to follow as a career."&#13;
His goal as a Senator is to&#13;
represent and inform students. "I&#13;
would like to see students more&#13;
informed about Parkside and its&#13;
inner workings ," he said. "I would&#13;
also like to promote more student&#13;
participation in campus activities.&#13;
"Students have input in \he&#13;
policies set forth by the faculty&#13;
and student committees,•' he said.&#13;
"But do the students know this?&#13;
This issue will be one of my major&#13;
priorities thal"I will be concerned&#13;
with. Others are the parking&#13;
regulations and segregated fees."&#13;
Mike Pfaffl&#13;
Mike Pfaff!, a sophomore&#13;
majoring in political science, ran&#13;
for the Senate for many reasons.&#13;
First, he feel it will further his&#13;
education in poli(ical science.&#13;
"Second," he said, "I consider&#13;
myself a political activist and also&#13;
belong to Students Mobilization&#13;
for Survival, so I believe in action&#13;
and getting problems solved when&#13;
they appear. Third, I believe our&#13;
school suffers from apathy,&#13;
There are everal i u Pfaff}&#13;
plans to addr a a Sena tor, the&#13;
first being tud nt apathy. "I&#13;
believe the parking ystem also&#13;
must have ome r vamping," he&#13;
said, " uch a the co ls of permits&#13;
and the giving of tickets." He al&#13;
thinks that the library hould&#13;
receive all the material that ls&#13;
needed to further tudent •&#13;
educations. "A closer look al the&#13;
bookstore' activiti will also be&#13;
a good idea," he aid.&#13;
"Students could be a very large&#13;
poJitical force in America," he&#13;
said, "if they wanted to exert their&#13;
force in a positive way, uch a&#13;
rebuttal on lhe chool, tat and&#13;
national level of admini tration.&#13;
I believe the time is coming when&#13;
students must join together to&#13;
exert their voice in America, and&#13;
this can't be done with apathy."&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez, a&#13;
sophomore majoring in bushle •&#13;
sees being a PSGA Senator as an&#13;
opportunity lo serve Parkside&#13;
tudents. She hopes to gain experience&#13;
and knowledge about&#13;
student government in the UW&#13;
System.&#13;
" I hope to be a representative of&#13;
the students at Parkside," said&#13;
Rodriguez, ''aiding each other in&#13;
discussing policies or problems&#13;
we may encounter as tudents."&#13;
Student participation i the&#13;
major issue she plans to address&#13;
while in office. "Students being&#13;
allowed to become involved and&#13;
Conlinued On Page ive&#13;
2 I'VE PEOPLE I INA", _&#13;
TO GET 1ilE NEC~&#13;
TRAINING TO GET A ~y&#13;
DE.CENT JOB.&#13;
.&#13;
Thursday. October 29.1981 'Editorial&#13;
Thank you! .'&#13;
The Ranger's open hearing during last Friday's a~tlVlty&#13;
period was both a failure and a success. A failure becagse only a&#13;
f of our readers attended, a success because the ISCUSdlOn&#13;
::s interesting and we learned mor~ about what our rea ers&#13;
like and dislike about the Ranger this year. . .&#13;
We learned that some students are interested m attendmg&#13;
n meetings on campus, but feel they are prevented from&#13;
~ending because no announcement Is posted on campus&#13;
detailing the locations and times of meetings, Br next week, we&#13;
hope to be able to publish schedules of open meetings on campus.&#13;
We also learned that students do not know how to submit&#13;
editorials editorial ideas and letters to the Ranger. So once&#13;
a in au'will see our policies on these pages next week.&#13;
~e ~ISO learned that students are still thinking about, and&#13;
talking about this year's Teaching Excellence Award problems.&#13;
We're pleased about that. It's great that people who are members&#13;
of an institution of higher education are applyin~ what they&#13;
are learning in their courses - are not only learning how to&#13;
but trying out their equipment - to a problem that affects&#13;
them and their teachers. . ,&#13;
Last but not least - we got some compliments on this rea~ s&#13;
Ranger. Some of you like our news coverage, some o'!r editorial&#13;
page. Thank you. We'll schedule another open hearmg. for the&#13;
end of this semester. Watch for an announcement on this page.&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
Reply to Guskin&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The purpose of this letter is twofold:&#13;
to clear up a slight misunderstanding&#13;
with PSGA and to&#13;
take issue with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin's letter in the October ~&#13;
issue 11 the Ranger.&#13;
The motion passed by the&#13;
student Senate which reads, In&#13;
part. " ... actions taken by the&#13;
teaching excellence award&#13;
committee in conjunction with the.&#13;
Chancellor as being ... " is&#13;
misleading and wrong. Le me&#13;
state tha t the teaching excellence&#13;
award committee is not in conjunction&#13;
with the Chancellor&#13;
concerning his latest decision not&#13;
to give Dr. Shirley Kersey her&#13;
award.&#13;
It was common knowledge on&#13;
campus that Dr. Kersey was&#13;
denied tenure would be gone&#13;
after the end of the school year.&#13;
Instead of sitting back and&#13;
relaxing or doing very little, Dr.&#13;
Kersey still taught with the same&#13;
endless enthusiasm and excellence&#13;
sbe always had. I think it&#13;
is to ber credit that sbe could&#13;
accomplish this and still win the&#13;
teaching award considering the&#13;
circumstances.&#13;
The idea of not awarding this&#13;
honor to someone not returning to&#13;
the university is absurd. Consider&#13;
the following "ifs" if this line of&#13;
logic is carried a step further.&#13;
Suppose one of the recipients&#13;
would happen to die over the&#13;
summer? Or suppose the recipient&#13;
was offered a job at a prestigious&#13;
university someplace else and&#13;
could not turn it down?&#13;
In both of these cases&#13;
reputations would be tarnished by&#13;
administrative insensitivity.&#13;
Carry this logic even further and&#13;
it becomes ridiculous. Here would&#13;
be three ,ases to ponder. Prof.&#13;
, Gar MGfHER5 WHO CAN'T&#13;
LISTEN, PAL.~(:~R.Y ~~ORD NOT TO WORK BUT&#13;
PEOPLE IN MI _ CAN'T TO HIRE A&#13;
WITH PRPBLEMS. _-\.. IlA&amp;YSlTTER. EITHER..&#13;
1&#13;
Bonnie Smith won this award' a&#13;
few years ago. She was granted a&#13;
leave of absence for one year to do&#13;
research in Europe. She returned,&#13;
taught for two years and then left&#13;
to teach in Rochester, New York.&#13;
Prof. Barbara Maris won this&#13;
award a year ago with Prof.&#13;
Robert Esser and both are no&#13;
longer at Parkside. Maris was&#13;
denied tenure at division level and&#13;
Mr. Esser retired.&#13;
Now, by the above line of&#13;
thought, all three should be&#13;
required to return a portion of&#13;
their award. Of course this is&#13;
absurd but it proves my point -&#13;
that the teaching excellence&#13;
award should not be concerned&#13;
with an instructor's job security&#13;
and should stay with the idea of&#13;
presenting it to excellent&#13;
teachers. Unlike a research grant&#13;
which is concerned with work yet&#13;
to be done, the teaching excellence&#13;
award is for .work&#13;
already accomplished.&#13;
In May of 1970,Prof. Salimans&#13;
Cacs won a teaching excellence I10 !IUS II}) "Editorial" by Jobn Koloen&#13;
The record or the Student&#13;
Government Association&#13;
speaks for itself: roe out of the&#13;
past six meetings came I1f. Not&#13;
much to say, is it?&#13;
The elected representatives&#13;
of the student body promised to&#13;
serve their cooslituents when&#13;
they were elected last spring&#13;
but have faUed mi_ably. The&#13;
blame for this Ii.. on the.&#13;
shoulders 11 thooe senators&#13;
who have reneged their&#13;
obligations to the students by&#13;
faDing to attend government&#13;
meetings. The same general&#13;
apathy that infects the student&#13;
body at - large, i.e. poor&#13;
election turn - outs is exemplified&#13;
by the attendance&#13;
records at meetings.&#13;
Nothing can be more&#13;
damaging to tbe prospects 11a&#13;
strong student voice in the&#13;
university than an Irrespon_&#13;
sible and apparently dish"&#13;
terested porlim or the senate.&#13;
It is not even possible to impeach&#13;
those senators guilty 11&#13;
absenteeism unless they attend&#13;
the meetings. It is not possible&#13;
to change quorum ruling unless&#13;
there is first a quorum&#13;
reached. It is not possible for&#13;
the PSGA toadhpt an operating&#13;
budget without a full senate to&#13;
vu.e m it.&#13;
At the very least these&#13;
senators who do not want the&#13;
responsibUity or serving the&#13;
students sbouId attend one&#13;
meetfng in order to give those&#13;
who would like the opportunity&#13;
to serve the opportunity to do so.&#13;
- Newse_, vol. 5, DO. 8. O&lt;:t.&#13;
25, 1971&#13;
From the Files&#13;
years ago -&#13;
"Guskin meets students" by-&#13;
Mona Maillet&#13;
On Thursday, Oct. 21,&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin held&#13;
his first open meeting of the&#13;
year with students. He was&#13;
pleased with the turnout of&#13;
ahoot IS people, saying that a&#13;
similar meeting during the&#13;
summer attracted only one&#13;
person ...&#13;
Guskin was asked (about)&#13;
his feelings on student involvement&#13;
in their education.&#13;
He replied that he strongly&#13;
feels that students should get&#13;
involved. in the university.&#13;
Every student - oriented&#13;
cOO)mittee has at least one&#13;
student III it. He stated that&#13;
student government assists&#13;
him in making decisions on&#13;
student matters.&#13;
Regarding having students&#13;
visit him, Guskin said, tiff a&#13;
student wants to see me I&#13;
won't say no to a student.':&#13;
He also expressed regrets at&#13;
lack of interest in student&#13;
government.&#13;
A student asked Guskin&#13;
ahoot the ability to govern&#13;
through increasing committees.&#13;
Guskin answered that&#13;
he consults committees, not&#13;
governs through them.&#13;
He said, "People assume&#13;
that people in authority are&#13;
SOB's trying to manipulate the&#13;
hell out of everybody." He feels&#13;
that ... by proper interaction&#13;
between administration and&#13;
students this feeling can be&#13;
reduced.&#13;
R~rding future meetings&#13;
of this type, he said that he&#13;
would like to have them on a&#13;
regular basis, poasibly every&#13;
As as forbidden,"&#13;
of the '&#13;
held, elections in in&#13;
Tbe 11the of tbe&#13;
- Ranger. vol. 5, DO. 8. Wed.•&#13;
27. 1976&#13;
/&#13;
Iyear ago -&#13;
"Parkside accepts grants"&#13;
Gifts and grants totalling&#13;
more than $320,000 were accepted&#13;
for Parkside by the UW&#13;
system's Board of Regents&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Tha t sum included $316670&#13;
from the federal office' of&#13;
Education for the Basic&#13;
Educational Opporhmily'&#13;
Grants Program.&#13;
Gifts accepted included&#13;
$6,437 for athletics or other&#13;
scholarships from multiple&#13;
droors; $100for the George and&#13;
Madeline Molinaro Scholarship&#13;
fund from Elsie D. Mosca; and&#13;
$50 for the Kenneth L&#13;
Greenqutst fund from Mark&#13;
Madsen.&#13;
The. regents also accepted&#13;
$250 . m support of synthetic&#13;
peptide substrate reserves at&#13;
UW-P and $100 Support of the&#13;
life science seminar series.&#13;
- Ranger. Oct. 23. 1980 vol 9&#13;
no. 8 • '.&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Greg Bonofiglio, Carol Burns. Doug Edenhauser, ~&#13;
Fran~, Pat Hensiak, Jim Kreuser, Pat McDonald, J!nt&#13;
,Mertons. Steve Myers. Laurie Painter. Charles Perce, KIIII&#13;
Schlater. Sue Stevens. Dan Werbie, Jeff Wicks.&#13;
RANGER is written and ed·ted b . so'fIY&#13;
responsible for its editor" I I I' V students of ~W·Pllrkslde and they are&#13;
Published every Thursda'~ p? ICV and content. olldJ)'St&#13;
RA,NGER is printed b thV ur.lng the I'Icademic year except during breaks and h&#13;
Written permission Is~eqe.u~on Coop~ratlve Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
correspondence stI0~1~ ~or ~':fnnt portion of ,39 UW'&#13;
Parksi1e, Kenostla, WI 53141 a ressect to: Parkslde Ranger. WLLC 0 "&#13;
Letters to the Editor will b . d site&#13;
paper With one . inch m ~ accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on standar In'&#13;
cluded for verification. a~g,"s. All letters must be signed and a telephone nurnbel"&#13;
~~~n:~~ ~et~~h~el~ for valid reasons. NO!!!&#13;
reserves aU edltor~~~ pr~~~y at. a.m .. for pUblication on ,Thursdav. Th~ R~alsedefamatory&#13;
content. es In refuslI'log to print letters which contaIn&#13;
J!r-..... I'VE. GOT STUDENT:&gt; WHO&#13;
CAN'T AfFORD TO~TTEND&#13;
THE.COLLEGE. OF THEIR.&#13;
CHOICe., AND ON _&#13;
AND Of'l AND DN...&#13;
award even though he would not&#13;
be returning the following year.&#13;
Criteria and procedures aside,&#13;
just this one case is more than&#13;
enough justification for the school&#13;
adrrrinistratlon to reverse its&#13;
decision and present Dr. Shirley&#13;
Kersey with the teaching excellence&#13;
award sbe so richly&#13;
deserves.&#13;
Gustave R. Sorenson&#13;
Awards not resoloed&#13;
I&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Unfortunately, putting the&#13;
matter of the teaching award&#13;
simply "behind us" will not&#13;
rectify the injustice done. Some&#13;
issues denoted in a letter to the&#13;
editor, in last week's Ranger need&#13;
clarification.&#13;
1. Ironically, last spring the&#13;
budget allowed for two $500&#13;
awards. The committee was instructed&#13;
to pick two recipients for&#13;
the awards. If the budget allows&#13;
for one $500 award, what happened&#13;
to the other $500? Where did&#13;
the money go?&#13;
2, "Proposed" changes are just&#13;
that, proposed, not retroactive. I&#13;
agree that the criteria must he&#13;
more strict and clear, but to deny&#13;
Dr. Shirley Kersey her award is&#13;
unfair. The criteria was not set up&#13;
by Dr. Kersey and she should not&#13;
be penalized for the oversight.&#13;
3. The delay of the other awards&#13;
being presented would not have&#13;
occured if the administration&#13;
would have presented the awards&#13;
to all the recipients the committee&#13;
had chosen. The delay was&#13;
brought about by the ad-·.&#13;
ministration, not the committee&#13;
as the letter to the editor implied.&#13;
4. If this situation is put "behind&#13;
us".' the administration may use&#13;
their power and authority to&#13;
overrule other student committee&#13;
decisions. In a democratic institution,&#13;
which the University&#13;
Ginger Helgeson&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Tony Rogeh&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Dan McCormack&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
Frank Fa Iduto&#13;
professes, this is not&#13;
problems are solved. The&#13;
is not that simple.&#13;
Perhaps it is time for&#13;
students to seriously review&#13;
policies and solutions to&#13;
the administration has.&#13;
Mary Jo Dagenhach&#13;
Editor's note:&#13;
In the Oct. 8. 198118...&#13;
RANG ER, the p. 1 story&#13;
that this year's unawarde4&#13;
Teaching Excellence stipend&#13;
remain in a system •&#13;
Parkside account cortS'&#13;
private donations to the&#13;
sity. .&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
Write Letter to&#13;
RangerlW&#13;
EdllGl&#13;
News Editlll&#13;
Feature EdllGl&#13;
sports Edi&#13;
Photo EdllGl&#13;
Business Mana ...&#13;
Mana ...&#13;
Distribution Manal&#13;
Adv&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thursday, 29, 1981&#13;
\!fOUI . , ..&#13;
Th Rang r' Friday s act1V1ty&#13;
riod wa becau_se onlr r f ur attended. d1scuss1on&#13;
;; ~n~eresting readers&#13;
lik we campus nding a~ouncement _is d tailing meetings. Br to meetmgs campu~.&#13;
we itorials, again you will We al O plea ed ~ho member&#13;
f applym~ re Jearrung think, La t rea: Rang r ome our pag . hearing_ sem ter to Editor .&#13;
twofold&#13;
: a misunderstanding&#13;
lake 1s ue Gu kin's in 22&#13;
j_ ue d tudent reads, part , " . . in the&#13;
Chancellor a being . . . " is&#13;
late that a ard conjunction&#13;
con rning hi lat t to giv Dr Shirley Kersey her&#13;
wa mpu d nied t nure and be aft r [nstead excellence&#13;
she her she still caITied to the be three &lt;:.:3ses to ponder. Prof.&#13;
EN DAL \'VE GOT&#13;
LIST ' r"' ',.WI.I COUNTR.Y&#13;
l'VE c,ar MOfHER.5 WHO CAN~&#13;
1'FFORD AFFORD BA&amp;YSITTER. EITHER.&#13;
l'VE GOT PEOPLE. !-!NAB&#13;
THE NEc~lc:&#13;
TrlA!NING 'jENJ'.&#13;
PEOPLE IN M1 ~ PROBLEMS.&#13;
award · he be administration excellence&#13;
she Gust.ave resolued&#13;
Unfortunately, putting the&#13;
simply "behind us" will not&#13;
be an job $500&#13;
be ex- incellence&#13;
award is for work structed 1970, $500 hapCacs&#13;
pened $500? k .&#13;
zij&#13;
•:;;_ . f\t:":':f~:~:f.\~ ..&#13;
The sol&#13;
is prob&#13;
Dagenbach&#13;
Editor's note:&#13;
In the Oct. 8, 1981 issue of&#13;
RANGER, the p. l story e.x ·&#13;
unawarded&#13;
Teaching Excellence remain -&#13;
Parkside account co11sisting 111&#13;
private donations the uni&#13;
sity.&#13;
r-------------------------------------- the money go? Fl':om the F·11es I 2. "Proposed" changes are just&#13;
10 ymrs ~ -&#13;
., dilorial" John ord of tudenl&#13;
Gov rnm nt As ociation&#13;
peak for it lf: one out p t. 'x m ting off. ot&#13;
y, The I cted repre ntatives&#13;
th ·tud nl rv constituents th y w lected but have f iled miserably. blam thi Ii the ,&#13;
houJd of th senators&#13;
who hav reneged their&#13;
obligatim th failing to att nd me tin . apathy that infects the tudent&#13;
1 ction turn - outs is exemplified&#13;
r ord at m tings.&#13;
othing dam ging to the pro peels of a&#13;
trong tu nt voice in univ ity an irTesponbl&#13;
disinted&#13;
pcrtion of the senate.&#13;
It i even possible to impeach&#13;
cl.&#13;
absenteeism unless attend&#13;
m tings. It is not possible&#13;
lo change quorum unless&#13;
there is first a quorum&#13;
reached. It i not possible for&#13;
th PSGA to adopt an operating&#13;
budget without a full senate vote on il&#13;
Al very least these&#13;
nators who not want the&#13;
r ponsibility of serving the&#13;
students should attend one&#13;
meetfng in order to give those&#13;
to serve opportunity to do&#13;
so.&#13;
- ew cope, vol. 5, no. 8. Oct.&#13;
25, 1971&#13;
I I that, proposed, not retroactive. agree that the criteria must be&#13;
5 years ago _ other week. As long 85 students&#13;
more strict and clear, but to deny&#13;
are interested and attend,&#13;
Dr. Shirley Kersey her award is&#13;
"Guskin meets students" by- "nobody and no topic is for- unfair. The criteria was not set up&#13;
Mona Maillet bidden," said Guskin.&#13;
by Dr. Kersey and she should not&#13;
21, be penalized for the oversight.&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin held "Turnout one of the poorest:&#13;
3. The delay of the other awards&#13;
his first open meeting of the elections seat six" by Bruce&#13;
being presented would not have&#13;
Wagner · if the administration&#13;
pleased with the turnout of The Parkside Student&#13;
would have presented the awards&#13;
about 15 people, saying that a Government held . their fall&#13;
to all the recipients the committee&#13;
similar meeting during the electi?ns this week, with six&#13;
had chosen. The delay was&#13;
summer attracted only one seats 10 the senate and seats in brought about by the ad- ·&#13;
person . - . the segregated fees allocation&#13;
ministration, not the committee&#13;
Guskin was asked (about) committee being filled.&#13;
as the letter to the editor implied.&#13;
his feelings on student in- The election turnout was one&#13;
4. If this situation is put "behind&#13;
volvement in their education. cl. the poorest ever at Parkside&#13;
us", the administration may use&#13;
He replied that he strongly with approximately 2% of the their power and autherity to&#13;
feels that students should get student body voting.&#13;
overrule other student committee&#13;
involved in the university. _ Ranger, vol. s, no. s, Wed., decisions. In a democratic in-&#13;
Every student - oriented Oct. 27, 1976 stitution, a&#13;
Letter Ranger11ll&#13;
committee m I year "Parkside accepts grants"&#13;
&lt;R!,nger&#13;
visit rum, Guskin said, "If a&#13;
student wants see me I&#13;
won't say no to a student.':&#13;
He also ~xpressed regrets at&#13;
lack interest in student&#13;
about the . ability to govern&#13;
through mcreasing committees.&#13;
answered that&#13;
he consults committees, not&#13;
governs through them.&#13;
He said, "People assume&#13;
that, ~le in authority are&#13;
SOB s trymg to manipulate the&#13;
ootof that · · · by proper interaction&#13;
between administration and&#13;
be&#13;
reduced.&#13;
R~rding future meetings&#13;
of this type, he said that be&#13;
would like to have them on a&#13;
regular basis, possibly every&#13;
Gifts and gran~ accepted&#13;
for Parkside the uw&#13;
Friday.&#13;
That $316 670&#13;
from the federal office ' Education for the Basic&#13;
Educational Opporkmity ·&#13;
Grants Program.&#13;
Gifts aceepted included&#13;
$6,437 for athletics or other&#13;
scholarships from multiple&#13;
dmors; $100 for George and&#13;
Madeline Molinaro Scholarship&#13;
fund from Elsie D. Mosca; and&#13;
$50 for the Kenneth L&#13;
Greenquist fund from Mark&#13;
Madsen.&#13;
The_ regents also accepted&#13;
$250. 10 peptide substrate reserves at&#13;
{!W-P _and $100 support of the&#13;
life science seminar series.&#13;
- Ranger, Oct. 23, 1980 vol 9&#13;
no. 8 ' • •&#13;
Rogel's&#13;
Falduto&#13;
Editor&#13;
Editor&#13;
Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Editor&#13;
Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Manager&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Bonofiglio,. Burns, J~~&#13;
~F~ra7n1~n,s ,P at Hens1ak, Jim Kreuser, Pat McDonald, J!"' Myers, Laurie Painter, Charles Perce, K•"'&#13;
c ater, Stevens, is written edit ,olell&#13;
resp0nsible for its editorial l":'l by students of .iw-Parkslde and they are&#13;
Thursd PO ,cy . id•~&#13;
RA_NGER is printed by 1~~ tur_lng te acad!m le year except during breai&lt;S and hol&#13;
Written permission is requ·r;',;o/' oop~rat,ve Publishing co., Kenosha, w1scoos1n.&#13;
All ccrresp0n&lt;1ence sh I or reprint of any POrtlon cf RANGER. iJ'//·&#13;
Kenosha, wi°~~41be addressed Parkside Ranger, 0139,&#13;
be· paper with one . Inch marginsacl~1Ple;' if typewritten, doublespaced on stand•~ 111·&#13;
eluded for verification · e lers must be Signe(! telephone num&#13;
~~~n:'\'c:, ~e11.::~~:1~J~:alid reasons. . NGE~&#13;
reserves all editori;,I prlvile,g~satl 9 a.m. _for publication on .Thursday. The R~lst rl&#13;
defamatory n refusing cootain&#13;
. . .&#13;
E~o ~ ~ ~----;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; RANG_E_R ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Thursda~y, _O_ctobe;;r;;;;;;;2i9,1981 __ J&#13;
. ters cont. * * * * * -Club Events- * * * n n From boners to haircuts&#13;
Boner's boners&#13;
Editor:&#13;
IIin' Boner Jim Kreuser, in&#13;
article on late book orders,&#13;
a crucial assumption In&#13;
luding that many faculty&#13;
bers "failed to meet the&#13;
k ordering deadline." He&#13;
med that his sources of !nation&#13;
and consequent .tnetation&#13;
were accurate. I find&#13;
assumption to be unanted&#13;
and, in at Jeast one&#13;
to be patently false. But&#13;
, I suppose, Strollin' Boner&#13;
'occasionally pull some of his&#13;
"ne Johnson&#13;
Prof., Humanities Division&#13;
the Editor: .&#13;
· is in response to the Ingative&#13;
report by Mr. Kreuser&#13;
ming the absence of text&#13;
for the (aU semester.&#13;
am an adjunct instructor. I&#13;
on July 15 that f would be&#13;
ing a course in the fall, well&#13;
the deadline for ordering the&#13;
book. This resulted in&#13;
· g a text that is not of my&#13;
choosing. Someone else must&#13;
been lale with the book Offeel&#13;
that investigative&#13;
ing should have included a&#13;
10 the teacher to find out if&#13;
was a reason for the late&#13;
teachers I have met at&#13;
·de are dedicated to fine&#13;
"01 and really do "care"&#13;
their students.&#13;
nda Mossman&#13;
y tests 'arbitrary'&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
letter is addressed to you&#13;
the Ranger staff for&#13;
tication, with my hope that it&#13;
find an appropriate audience.&#13;
am angry about some of the&#13;
lIleph Szafraniec, an employee&#13;
aUons representative at&#13;
conda . American Brass&#13;
alion, and Deloras Fergus,&#13;
personnel coordinator for&#13;
et retail stores, will present a&#13;
kshop entitled "Effective Job&#13;
erviewing" on Wednesday,&#13;
en..4 from I to 2 p.m. in Moln.&#13;
two member panel will&#13;
e short presentations and will&#13;
answer questions.&#13;
Tech program&#13;
applications&#13;
t Mary's Medical Center of&#13;
cine ~ now taking applications&#13;
their 12-month medical&#13;
hnology program from&#13;
ts who will possess bac-&#13;
Ureate degrees in suitable&#13;
ce majors by next summer.&#13;
~ program of clinical exence&#13;
leads to a na tional&#13;
rt.ification examination in&#13;
cal technology.&#13;
eligible to apply for the&#13;
. ~ram must have had a&#13;
D1~um of 16 credits in&#13;
e;lISl?, i~cluding organic&#13;
or biological chemistry; a&#13;
I mum of 16 credits In bIOlogy,&#13;
Udlng micro . biology and&#13;
~ rnunology; and a minimum of&#13;
• COursein mathematics.&#13;
The deadline foi: applications&#13;
~ next summer's program is&#13;
ve~ber 15. For more inaHon,&#13;
oonlact Educational&#13;
1 ~nator Pat Landenberger,&#13;
J&gt;rlI1g SI., Racine WI 534M&#13;
lIle 636-4212). '&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Does anyone want a free&#13;
haircut? Ireceived a call the other&#13;
day from Ruffolo's Hair Studio,&#13;
3519 52nd SI. in Kenosha offering&#13;
free shampoo, cut and styliog to&#13;
UW-Parkside students (I'm not&#13;
sure about faculty and staff)&#13;
during the evenings of Nov. 8,9, 10&#13;
and 11. There are no catches to&#13;
this offer; it is being done in&#13;
connection with Ruffolo's opening&#13;
a new studio in Racine. Those&#13;
To the Editor: interested should call Ruffolo's at&#13;
Recently I ha ve been wondering 654-6154 during the day to make an&#13;
about the nature of the institution appointment for one of tbose Student Mobe.&#13;
called upper level education. I November evenings. Ruffolo _ , .. .&#13;
b d· b t hose services both men and women. ParkSlde s Student Mobl1LZ.atlon&#13;
ihnatveerest een twheon aecratndgemiaC ?U wworld Wa It Shi rer. . for dSurvival '30is meetin. g 101on&#13;
d bo t h h takes Director of Pubhc InformatIOn Toes ays at 3. p.m. In. n&#13;
serves an ". u w 0 as sMAURICE BUCHANAN TURNED&#13;
DOWN A BASKETBALL SCHOLARSHIP&#13;
. FOR AN ARMY ROTC SCHOLARSHIR&#13;
d t" n&#13;
11 II rc&#13;
LPI I&#13;
"cad "our la rs fR(&#13;
l(&lt;&gt;Udl,ea) "ltng r&#13;
\ u altcr CI.~I do" hal un&#13;
Buchanan d,d&#13;
Appl k&gt;r an Army R&#13;
hola"lup Toda,&#13;
And begm y{lUf luturc a an&#13;
oftlcer&#13;
tests that I ha ve taken in some of&#13;
my classes thus far this semester,&#13;
of the particular kind, essay tests&#13;
in whole or part. It seems to me&#13;
that if professors want essays&#13;
from their students then the time&#13;
to have them written is not while a&#13;
student is, or ought to be, an.&#13;
swering definitive questions about&#13;
course material. I expect that if&#13;
an essay is rightly assigned by a&#13;
professor to be written by a&#13;
student it will never have to be&#13;
done on SUrprise notice within the&#13;
duration of one class session, and&#13;
if so, certainly not for credit, but&#13;
rather for some other more immediate&#13;
satisfaction known most&#13;
usually only to the professor&#13;
himself. I do not understand Why&#13;
tests in class cannot be, or simply&#13;
Willfully are not, confined to&#13;
definitive questions that a student&#13;
may be reasonably certain of&#13;
answering correctly if he has&#13;
attended the course lectures and&#13;
studied the accompanying texts&#13;
according to the direction of the&#13;
professor who conducts the use of&#13;
them both. I can tell you, for instance,&#13;
that the lectures in my&#13;
advanced composition class have&#13;
been so pathetically mismanaged,&#13;
to the point of becoming&#13;
pecuJarily offensive, that if ever a&#13;
test were derived from them, it&#13;
would most fairly have to he.&#13;
wholly incomprehensible, or at&#13;
the very least inaccessibly biased&#13;
as to mock an answering to by&#13;
anyone except its author. I believe&#13;
that careful testing involves an&#13;
explicit affirmation between&#13;
students and their professor as to&#13;
what their collected matter of&#13;
inquiry brings to issue, and&#13;
SUbsequently what may be said to&#13;
have resolved between them in&#13;
reference to their cooperative&#13;
studies. A test that incorporates&#13;
inconclusive questions that solicit&#13;
arbitrary responses is not a test of&#13;
any detenninable worth. Alter.&#13;
natively, tests that are designed to&#13;
elicit a specific response from&#13;
their audience would be of&#13;
calculable service to students and&#13;
professors alike. Thank you.&#13;
Kevin L. Zuehlsdorf&#13;
Maintain perspective&#13;
in the performance of this very&#13;
integral part of the 'Real World.'&#13;
Does everybody inVOlved, administrators&#13;
to janitors, realize&#13;
what the whole of society is put.&#13;
tiog out to provide the opportunity&#13;
for educational advancement? Do&#13;
we all acknowledge the fact that&#13;
the reason we are provided this&#13;
educational opportunity is so that&#13;
we may give an the more back to&#13;
those whom we represent? Or are&#13;
we only desirous of self - serving&#13;
benefits?&#13;
Sometimes I wonder whether&#13;
the academic world thinks that&#13;
they hold something above and&#13;
beyond the government and&#13;
business sectors. If anybody does&#13;
feel this way I hope that they&#13;
realize that one cannot stand&#13;
without the support of the other. U&#13;
anyone has a way for the&#13;
academics to exist without&#13;
business or government being&#13;
involved, let me know.&#13;
Do not take this letter as a&#13;
person being down on the&#13;
academic world. Nothing could he&#13;
farther from the truth. AU I wish&#13;
to say is that I believe that the&#13;
goals, reasons, and objectives for&#13;
the existence of academics be&#13;
constantly evaluated from within&#13;
so that the proper perspectives&#13;
may be maintained. An academic&#13;
world that understands and&#13;
performs its functions is very,&#13;
very good while an academic&#13;
world that leans toward seU _&#13;
serving goals is of use to no one.&#13;
Let us all hope that the academics&#13;
continue to be introspective and&#13;
very, very good.&#13;
Christopher P. Dorf&#13;
634-8463&#13;
Free hair cuts!&#13;
"1knew I needed to go to&#13;
college. Ineeded to get chac ticket&#13;
punched to be successful:' says&#13;
Maurice. "Why did I select an Army&#13;
RarC scholarship over a basket-' .&#13;
ball scholarship' Beeause I knew I d&#13;
have a job after graduation. And [hat s&#13;
more than a lot of my peers could say.&#13;
"I may stay in the military.&#13;
But if I decide to ge[ out, I've got the&#13;
best job reference in the world-a&#13;
commission in che United Scares&#13;
Army." ....&#13;
Army ROTC can do the same&#13;
~foryou. .&#13;
Qualify, and you can wm.&#13;
an ROTC scholarship, as Maur.lCe&#13;
did. Each scholarslup covers tUttion,&#13;
books, and more.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
Women in Business will hold a&#13;
general business meeting on&#13;
Monday, [ov, 2 at 1 p.m. in Union&#13;
104 Anyone interested in&#13;
becoming a part of this growing&#13;
network of women concerned with&#13;
working toward entrance and&#13;
active participation in the&#13;
professional world is welcome to&#13;
attend. •&#13;
Congratulations to ;'\'argarel&#13;
Rodriguez, an active member of&#13;
WID. on her election to the PSGA&#13;
Senate. We're sure she'U be an&#13;
invaluable asset to the senate.&#13;
eed an invigorating mid-week&#13;
pick - me • up? Join us every&#13;
Wednesday from I to 2 p.m. in the&#13;
wrestling room oCthe gym for an&#13;
aerobic dance session. An hour of&#13;
fun and fitness is just what you&#13;
need.&#13;
Geology&#13;
The Geology Club will oCfer a&#13;
Colloquium on Friday, OcL 30 at I&#13;
p.m. in Grnq. 113on "The Glomar&#13;
Explorer: Deep Sea Drilling for&#13;
Oil, fntelligience and Science."&#13;
The colloquium will he presented&#13;
by William N. Orr from the&#13;
University of Oregon's Department&#13;
of Geology.&#13;
Nurse:s Org.&#13;
A student nurse's meeting will&#13;
be held on Monday, Nov. 2 at noon&#13;
in Union 'lJ11 to get students in.&#13;
valved in the consortiaJ bac.&#13;
calaureatte nursing program at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Volunteers are still needed for&#13;
the Smoke Out on Thursday, Nov.&#13;
19. To volunteer, C&lt;lltact Peggy&#13;
Rather.&#13;
Computer Oub&#13;
The Parkside Compute- Club&#13;
will be holding its monthly&#13;
meeting on Monday, Nov. 2 at&#13;
noon in Grnq. 103 to discuss the&#13;
programming contest, field trips&#13;
and the Computer User's Forum.&#13;
The User's Forum will be held in&#13;
Grnq. 103 immediately followi"8&#13;
the Computer Club meeting&#13;
The Computer Club urges all&#13;
students concerned with the&#13;
utilization of computer facilit,es&#13;
at Parkside to attend and voice&#13;
their opinions. Both meetings are&#13;
open to all students and faculty&#13;
DI28. Mobe IS oppcoed to nuclear&#13;
IlO" er • wea p&lt;lni a nd the a no.&#13;
race We support ba!iic human&#13;
rights and lhe fUndl"8 of human&#13;
needs. The Parkstde chapl ... ha&#13;
sponsored peekers, flims and&#13;
workshops directly and ir"hrectly&#13;
related to the ab&lt;/l;e Anyone In.&#13;
terested '5 InVtted to attend the&#13;
meetings&#13;
Bowling Club&#13;
The B""'hng Club meets every&#13;
week in the Roc. Center At&#13;
present the oCftce tnclude. John&#13;
Peterson. president Ellen&#13;
Becwar. Vice president, Bob&#13;
N~'berg, secretary. Jay Podella.&#13;
treasurer; and .Itite ~Ienzhuber.&#13;
advisor&#13;
The Bowling Club has t"O big&#13;
tournaments coming up, one In t&#13;
Louis C. aucnal Team . falch&#13;
Games) and one In Las Vegas&#13;
(Walt Peabody Invttational' The&#13;
Club placed third in t LouIs Ia I&#13;
year&#13;
The club needs women bowl rs&#13;
for next semester. Anyone 10'&#13;
terested in joining BowIl"8 Club&#13;
should contact Mike .Ienzhuber In&#13;
the Rec. Center&#13;
Women' 5 Concourse&#13;
Parkside Women's Concoune&#13;
will hold an organiz.ational&#13;
meeting on Monday, ,·ov. 2 at I&#13;
p.m. tn ~Ioln. 165. The purpose d&#13;
concourse IS to faclhtate&#13;
awareness of women's concerns&#13;
at Parkslde All tudent&gt; and&#13;
faculty and staff are "elcome to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Health&#13;
screemng&#13;
offered&#13;
The UWMIlwauk Consort I&#13;
•'ursingPtogrBm at Par df"U1&#13;
offer a FREE blood re&#13;
height and \\ tIght ere nlng&#13;
program on Thursda , Oct 211&#13;
from 8:30 am. unlll 12'30 pm In&#13;
the alcove ,d the book t&#13;
The ser\"lce ts avallabl to&#13;
ludents, facultY,taff and oth." Interested The nursmg tudl-n&#13;
who "til take the blood pr ur •&#13;
heights and " ,gh'" are fl t&#13;
semf' ter JUDlor. enrolled In&#13;
. 'ursing Practice III&#13;
C,lPl M.luncc Buchanan wa~ a m.llh ~'t .1{&#13;
(hI:' Unl\crSl(~' tlfec,'tl,'13&lt;lnJ a mcmhefl.j '\rmy&#13;
ROTC ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.&#13;
For details contact: ENROLLMENT OFFICER&#13;
MILITARY SERVICE DEPT. MARQUETTE U.&#13;
1-224-7195&#13;
~ ~&#13;
~ •tters, cont.&#13;
RA GER hursday, 0d r 29, 1 81&#13;
-From boners to haircuts **&#13;
.p teachers 'care '&#13;
the Editor: .&#13;
i in response to the m-&#13;
. Jbgalive report b Mr. Kreuser&#13;
1s noc ming the absence of text&#13;
. The (or the fall semester .&#13;
am an adjunct instructor. I&#13;
ed on July 15 that I would be&#13;
hing a course in the fall, well&#13;
th deadline for ordering the&#13;
s 11 book . This resulted in&#13;
· u:hmg a text that is not of my .&#13;
choosing. Someone else must&#13;
1 i41111r&#13;
tory&#13;
e n late with the book orreel&#13;
that investigative&#13;
mg should have included a&#13;
to the teacher to find out if&#13;
was a reason for the late&#13;
teachers I have met at&#13;
· de are dedicated to fine&#13;
hing and really do "care"&#13;
t their students.&#13;
enda Mossman&#13;
say tests 'arbitrary'&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
rhi letter is addressed to you&#13;
the Ranger staff for&#13;
lication, with my hope that it&#13;
find an appropriate audience.&#13;
am angry about some of the&#13;
a terviewing&#13;
orkshop offered&#13;
to eph zafraniec , an employee&#13;
allons representative at&#13;
onda - American Brass&#13;
ation, and Deloras Fergus,&#13;
onnel coordinator for&#13;
rget retail tores, will present a&#13;
rkshop entitled ''Effective Job&#13;
t r\'iewing" on Wednesday,&#13;
• 4 from 1 to 2 p.m. in Moln.&#13;
Oi,&#13;
The two member panel will&#13;
Ii hort presentations and will&#13;
an wer questions .&#13;
. Tech pr~ram&#13;
l&lt;lng applications&#13;
I Mary' Medical Center of&#13;
cine is now taking applications&#13;
their 12-month medical&#13;
hnology program from&#13;
ent who will possess baclaureate&#13;
degrees in suitable&#13;
•ence majors by next summer.&#13;
e program of clinical ex,&#13;
1ence leads to a national&#13;
rtificalion examination in&#13;
1cal technology.&#13;
Those eligible to apply for the&#13;
O~ram must have had a&#13;
inimum of 16 credits in&#13;
emistry, including organic&#13;
~or biological chemistry; a&#13;
1~m_um of ~6 credits in biology,&#13;
udmg micro - biology and&#13;
munology; and a minimum of&#13;
course in mathematics.&#13;
The deadline for applications&#13;
r next summer's program is&#13;
ove~ber 15. For more inma?&#13;
on, contact Educational&#13;
rd1 nator Pat Landenberger&#13;
I prirlg St., Racine , WI 53404&#13;
&lt;Xie 636-4212&gt;.&#13;
test that I have taken in some of&#13;
my cla es thus far this semester,&#13;
of the particular kind, essay test&#13;
in whole or part. It seem to me&#13;
that if profe sors want essays&#13;
from their tudents then the time&#13;
to have them written is not while a&#13;
tudent i , or ought to be, answering&#13;
definitive questions about&#13;
course material. I expect that if&#13;
an ay is rightly assigned by a&#13;
professor to be written by a&#13;
student it will never have to be&#13;
done on surpri e notice within the&#13;
duration of one class session , and&#13;
if o , certainly not for credit, but&#13;
rather for some other more immediate&#13;
sati faction known most&#13;
usually only to the profes or&#13;
himself. I do not under land why&#13;
tests in cla cannot be, or simply&#13;
willfully are not , confined to&#13;
definitive questions that a tudent&#13;
may be reasonably certain of&#13;
answering correctly if he has&#13;
attended the course lectures and&#13;
studied the accompanying texts&#13;
according to the directjon of the&#13;
professor who conducts the use of&#13;
them both. I can tell you, for instance,&#13;
that the lectures in my&#13;
advanced composition cla have&#13;
been so pathetically mismanaged,&#13;
to the point of becoming&#13;
pecularily offensive, that if ever a&#13;
test were derived from them, it&#13;
would most fairly have to be&#13;
wholly incomprehensible, or at&#13;
the very least inaccessibly biased&#13;
as to mock an answering to by&#13;
anyone except its author. I believe&#13;
that careful testing involves an&#13;
explicit affirmation between&#13;
students and their professor as to&#13;
what their collected matter of&#13;
inquiry brings to issue, and&#13;
subsequently what may be said to&#13;
have resolved between them in&#13;
reference to their cooperative&#13;
tudies . A test that incorporates&#13;
inconclusive questions that solicit&#13;
arbitrary responses is not a test of&#13;
any determinable worth. Alternatively&#13;
, tests that are designed to&#13;
elicit a pecific respon e from&#13;
their audience would be of&#13;
calculable service to students and&#13;
professors alike. Thank you .&#13;
Kevin L . Zuehl dorf&#13;
in the performance or this very&#13;
integral part of the 'Real W rid .·&#13;
D everybody involved, administrators&#13;
to janitor , realize&#13;
what lh whole of society is putting&#13;
out to provide the opportunity&#13;
for educational ad\•ancement? Do&#13;
we all acknowledge the fact that&#13;
the reason we are provided this&#13;
educational opportunity is so that&#13;
we ma give all the more ba to&#13;
th e whom w represent'? Or are&#13;
we only desirou of self • rving&#13;
benefits?&#13;
ometimes I wonder wheth&#13;
the academic world think that&#13;
they hold something above and&#13;
beyond the government and&#13;
business sectors. If anybody d&#13;
feel th. way I hope that they&#13;
realize that one cannot stand&#13;
without the upport of the other. If&#13;
anyone has a way for the&#13;
academic to exist ithout&#13;
busines or government being&#13;
in olved, let me know .&#13;
Do not take this letter as a&#13;
person being down on the&#13;
academic world. othing could be&#13;
farther from the truth. All I wish&#13;
to say i that I believe that the&#13;
goals. reasons, and objectives for&#13;
the existence of academics be&#13;
constanUy evaluated from within&#13;
so that the proper perspectives&#13;
may be maintained. An academic&#13;
world that understands and&#13;
performs its functions is very,&#13;
very good while an academic&#13;
world that leans toward self •&#13;
rving goals is of use to no one.&#13;
Let us all hope that the academics&#13;
continue to be introspective and&#13;
very, very good.&#13;
Christopher P . Dorf&#13;
634-8463&#13;
Free hair cuts[&#13;
To the Editor :&#13;
Doe anyone want a free&#13;
haircut? I received a call the other&#13;
day from Ruifolo's Hair tu&lt;lio ,&#13;
3519 52nd St. in Kenosha offering&#13;
free shampoo, cut and tyling to&#13;
~-Parkside stud nts (I'm not&#13;
sure about faculty and staff)&#13;
during the evenings of ov . 8, 9, 10&#13;
and 11. There are no catches to&#13;
thi offer ; it is being done in Ma .lntain perspective conneclion with Ruifolo's opening&#13;
a new tudio in Racine. Tho&#13;
To the Editor : inter led hould call Ruffolo' at&#13;
urse:s Org.&#13;
A student nurse'&#13;
be held on onday ,&#13;
in nion 2fl1 to e&#13;
volved in the co&#13;
calaureatte nursin&#13;
Par ·de .&#13;
Volunt are still n for&#13;
the moke Out oo Thursday, ' o ·•&#13;
19. To volunteer, cootact P&#13;
Rather.&#13;
Computer Club&#13;
Recently I have been wondering 654-6154 during the day to make an&#13;
about the nature of the institution appointment for _ on of tho e&#13;
called upper level education. I ov~mber evening .. Ruffolo tud nt&#13;
Health&#13;
have been wondering ab?ut whose erv,ces_ both men and women . fo r ur i ·al ' m t i n&#13;
::;~~'!.~":oo~~~~.m~, ~~'~i\il~J&amp;i&amp; I&#13;
D£':'1e LM, ROTC SCHOLARS R&#13;
"! knC\\ I needed tn go to&#13;
college I needed m get ha ti ket&#13;
punched ro be su c ful:' :.ay&#13;
tau rice. "Why did I :,elect an Army&#13;
ROTC sc h la hi O\'er a ba ket· .&#13;
ba ll holarsh ip? Because I knew Id,&#13;
haveaj b aftergraduation Andthat&#13;
more than a lotof my rs c uld say.&#13;
·•1 may cay m che m.ihta ry.&#13;
Bue if I dee id to get ut. I ve got th&#13;
be t job refe rence m the wo rld -a&#13;
co mmi io n in rh e United ta t&#13;
Army."&#13;
Army ROTC ca n d the sa me&#13;
'for y u. .&#13;
Quali fy, and ou ca n win_&#13;
an R0fC hola r hip, a. faunc&#13;
d id _ Each scholarship c v rs ui ti&#13;
o n , books, and m re.&#13;
I&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.&#13;
For details contact: ENROLLMENT OFFICER&#13;
MILITARY SERVICE DEPT. MARQUETTE U.&#13;
1-224-719S&#13;
3&#13;
The University Committee had&#13;
some heated discussion in its Sept.&#13;
24 meeting concerning the&#13;
proposed title change of Coordina&#13;
tor of Communi ty&#13;
Educational Programs to&#13;
Associate Dean for Outreach and&#13;
Summer Session.&#13;
Thursday. October 29. 1981 RANGER&#13;
lighting of handicap&#13;
lot is inadequate&#13;
by J lm Kreuser&#13;
Due to the fact that people in&#13;
certain positions are unhappy&#13;
with the borrowing d the title&#13;
"Stroltin'," I have changed the&#13;
format of this column insignificantly.&#13;
Truisms about&#13;
Parkside cannot (and will not) be&#13;
censored.&#13;
The intent of this column is not&#13;
to bad - mouth Parkside, ,but&#13;
rather to make information&#13;
available to Parkside students.&#13;
So, this roving report er will be&#13;
toolin' around the school scooping&#13;
out the oddities althe norm. Wen,&#13;
here's "Kreuser's Cozy Corner."&#13;
This week, Parkside interacts&#13;
with the State. What does the Slate&#13;
have to do with Parkside? Well,&#13;
there's a little problem in back of&#13;
Molinaro HaU. You know the&#13;
place. That's where all the bigwigs&#13;
(the Chancellor, the&#13;
Assistant Chancellor) park tbeir&#13;
cars. Not only do they park their&#13;
cars there, but so do handicapped&#13;
people.&#13;
These are the people I am&#13;
concerned about. They must deal&#13;
with the added handicap of&#13;
darkness. Ever since handicapped&#13;
parking was made available on&#13;
this spot, there have been no&#13;
outside lights. Of course, the&#13;
university wants the best possible&#13;
lighting system for this area.&#13;
Although funds are short, they&#13;
found it feasible to look elsewhere&#13;
for the money. Enter a State&#13;
agency.&#13;
Because the Building Commission&#13;
meets once a month (or&#13;
once every other month), it might&#13;
be awhile before Parkside gets on&#13;
the agenda. If by chance Parkside&#13;
is allocated money, we'll be in&#13;
good shape. If not, we're going to&#13;
have to spend money out of the&#13;
university's pocket, which will&#13;
probably mean another Physical&#13;
Plant disaster.&#13;
Until we find out the result of&#13;
whether or not the money is&#13;
coming from elsewhere, the lights&#13;
will be on in the classrooms adjacent&#13;
to this area. This does&#13;
provide some light, even if it is&#13;
only a temporary solution to the&#13;
problem.&#13;
Committees discuss Faculty Senate issues&#13;
result from requiring "hands on" after a short di~cussion.&#13;
artistic experience of all students. In o~her bus~ness, Uni&#13;
The committee then agreed With CommIttee chair Gene N&#13;
her suggestion to make ~p- reported to the committee&#13;
predation courses, along With Par~slde .has faced a&#13;
studio and performance courses, declIne In purchasing&#13;
eligible to complete the breadth between 1972 and the&#13;
area. Parkside's purchasing&#13;
Committee member Walter fallen about 28%, NorwOOd&#13;
Feldt then noted that other areas "It is beyond dispute that&#13;
of the proposal need work, to has been a substantial d&#13;
which committee members Norwood said. "I'm&#13;
agreed. It was unanimously suggesting that we're&#13;
established that a committee stricken, but this decline&#13;
would acton the proposal If It IS continue .wlthout real Pro&#13;
passed by the Faculty Senate this With quahty developing."&#13;
fall. Norwood said that a&#13;
The University Committee surcharge implemented&#13;
decided not to take a stand on the semester could generate&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge proposal $200,000 for Parkside.&#13;
\&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Both the AcademiC policies&#13;
Committee (APCl and the&#13;
University Committee met last&#13;
Thursday to .discuss two matters&#13;
to be presented to the Faculty&#13;
Senate at their late fall meeting&#13;
next month, the Honors Program&#13;
and the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
proposal.&#13;
The APC indicated that the&#13;
Honors program policy needed&#13;
"some language straighte~ed&#13;
up." They then unanimously&#13;
passed a motion to indicate that&#13;
the program's director would be&#13;
chosen from a slate of candidates&#13;
submitted to the Dean of Faculty.&#13;
The director's term is for 1 year.&#13;
The University Committee agreed&#13;
with the APC.&#13;
APC chair Beecham Robinson&#13;
said he hoped the Sena te would&#13;
pass the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
proposal "pretty much the way&#13;
we've put it forward," while other&#13;
members noted that "even this&#13;
group is not united on it."&#13;
Alter Rhoda-Gail Pollack of tbe&#13;
Fine Arts Division presented a&#13;
suggestion to the committee on&#13;
the fine arts requirement, they&#13;
supported her suggestion. She&#13;
noted that while it is important to&#13;
"train people to appreciate artistic&#13;
work," the faculties in the&#13;
fine arts departments are not&#13;
large enough to cope with the&#13;
higher enrollment that would&#13;
Title change discussed&#13;
Present at tbe meeting were&#13;
Eugene Norwood, chairperson;&#13;
Richard Keehn, William Moy,&#13;
Beecham Robinson, Carole Vopat,&#13;
members; Vice Chancellor&#13;
Lorman Ratner; and Walter&#13;
Feldt, Secretary of the F&#13;
The committee pe&#13;
Ratner that a search I&#13;
position should - be cond&#13;
rather than only changi&#13;
position's title. Ratner&#13;
search would have to be .&#13;
because the funds and&#13;
count do not exist to ena&#13;
outside search.&#13;
Ratner explained that&#13;
there are positions wherea&#13;
would be clearly appropria&#13;
others where it would not,&#13;
also an intermediate&#13;
positions where one c&#13;
either. Ratner told the co&#13;
that although there w&#13;
written policies which&#13;
a search for any positioo&#13;
Vice - Chancellor, he oow&#13;
that a search should inva .&#13;
conducted for academ&#13;
ministrative positions.&#13;
The process to select&#13;
members for the search&#13;
mittee was the matter&#13;
created disagreement.&#13;
told the committee whichf&#13;
members he proposed to a&#13;
to the search committee&#13;
asked the committee for ad&#13;
the proposed appointments.&#13;
committee members st&#13;
advocated that the co&#13;
itself should provide a&#13;
nominees.&#13;
In response, Ratner m&#13;
clear that he was not pr&#13;
follow that procedure in .&#13;
As the direct supervisor&#13;
Associated Dean, Ratner f&#13;
is in a better position to&#13;
members whose judgm&#13;
trusts, who will underst&#13;
role of the Associate Dea&#13;
who, collectively, will&#13;
balanced committee repr&#13;
different campus groups,&#13;
eluding minorities and&#13;
Several committee m&#13;
vigorously protested Ra&#13;
decision to proceed that&#13;
After at times heated ex&#13;
Ratner suggested that the&#13;
mittee state its position in&#13;
to Chancellor Alan GUskiD'&#13;
invite a discussion of the i&#13;
general sense - who should&#13;
the faculty membership&#13;
search committee at pa&#13;
The discussion having&#13;
an impasse, Chairperson N&#13;
asked whether the commi .&#13;
willing to leave the quest&#13;
procedures to enter In&#13;
discussion concerl1:ingof&#13;
proposed membersbtt'&#13;
search committee. By a 3-1&#13;
the committee agreed to&#13;
Ratner stated that all three&#13;
choices were senior facultY&#13;
experience in previous&#13;
who had worked with, or&#13;
strong interest in, outreacb&#13;
tivities, and that his&#13;
represented a balance of&#13;
constituencies.&#13;
Members of the com&#13;
objected to some of Ra I&#13;
choices and suggested lila&#13;
dilional campus constlj,old•&#13;
involved in outreach s~er&#13;
represented, but did not Ra&#13;
alterna tive. choices.&#13;
agreed to drop one .\&#13;
member at the campti&#13;
suggestion, and to CO&#13;
enlarging the search .com&#13;
so tha t other groups VI&#13;
represented.&#13;
TUE STROU9~&#13;
BEERlO R&#13;
]PUXlOSOJP&#13;
Distributed by E. F. MADRIGRANO 1831 . 55th St. Kenosha. Wi.se. 658.3553&#13;
Stroh's - .NEW ON TAP \A' T UNION SQUARE&#13;
Vall No 6&#13;
Thursday, October '19, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Lighting of handicap&#13;
lot is inadequate&#13;
b Jim Kreu r&#13;
Due to the fact that people in&#13;
c rt in it1on are unhappy&#13;
with th borrowing ci the tiUe&#13;
" trollin '," l have changed the&#13;
format of this column ini&#13;
nificanUy. Trui ms about&#13;
P rkside cannot (and will not ) be&#13;
ored .&#13;
The intent of this column is not&#13;
to bad • mouth Parkside, ,but&#13;
rather to make information&#13;
vailabl to Par ide tudents.&#13;
with the added handicap of&#13;
darkness . Ever since handicapped&#13;
parking was made available on&#13;
this pot, there have been no&#13;
out ide lights. Of course, the&#13;
university wants the best poosible&#13;
lighting system for this area.&#13;
Although funds are short, they&#13;
found it feasible to look elsewhere&#13;
for the money . Enter a State&#13;
agency .&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Both the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee (APC) and the&#13;
University Committee met last&#13;
Thursday to .discuss two matters&#13;
to be presented to the Facu_lty&#13;
Senate at their late fall meetmg&#13;
next month, the Honors Program&#13;
and the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
proposal.&#13;
result from requiring "hands on"&#13;
artistic experience of all studen_ts.&#13;
The committee then agreed with&#13;
her suggestion to make 8:Ppreciation&#13;
courses, along with&#13;
studio and performance courses,&#13;
eligible to complete the breadth&#13;
area.&#13;
Committee member Walter&#13;
Feldt then noted that other areas&#13;
of the proposal need work, to&#13;
which committee members&#13;
agreed. It was unanimously&#13;
established that a committee&#13;
would act on the proposal if it is&#13;
passed by the Faculty Senate this&#13;
fall.&#13;
The University Committee&#13;
decided not to take a stand on the&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge proposal&#13;
. thi roving reporter will be&#13;
t Im ' around th school cooping&#13;
out th odditie of the norm . Well,&#13;
her ' " Kreu r' CO'ly Corner."&#13;
Because the Building Commission&#13;
meets once a month (or&#13;
once every other month) , it might&#13;
be awhile before Parkside gets on&#13;
the agenda . If by chance Parkside&#13;
is allocated money, we'll be in&#13;
good shape. If not, we're going to&#13;
have to spend money out of the&#13;
university's pocket, which will&#13;
probably mean another Physical&#13;
Plant disaster.&#13;
The APC indicated that the&#13;
Honors program policy needed&#13;
"some language straightened&#13;
up." They then unanimously&#13;
passed a motion to indicate that&#13;
the program's director would be&#13;
chosen from a slate of candidates&#13;
submitted to the Dean of Faculty.&#13;
The director's term is for 1 year.&#13;
The University Committee agreed&#13;
with the APC .&#13;
APC chair Beecham Robinson&#13;
said he hoped the Senate would&#13;
pass the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
proposal "pretty much the way&#13;
we've put it forward," while other&#13;
members noted that "even this&#13;
group is not united on it."&#13;
Title change discussed&#13;
Thi week. Parkside interacts&#13;
v.1th the tate. What does the tale&#13;
ha\' to do with Parkside? Well,&#13;
th re' a litUe problem in back of&#13;
r-. olinaro Hall . You know the&#13;
place. That's here all the bigv.&#13;
,g ( the hancellor, the&#13;
i tant Chancellor&gt; park their&#13;
cars. 'ot only do they park their&#13;
cars th re, but so do handicapped&#13;
pie.&#13;
These are the people l am&#13;
c cerned about. They must deal&#13;
Until we find out the result of&#13;
whether or not the money is&#13;
coming from elsewhere, the lights&#13;
wiJI be on in the classrooms adjacent&#13;
to this area. This does&#13;
provide some light, even if it is&#13;
only a temporary solution to the&#13;
problem.&#13;
After Rhoda-Gail Pollack of the&#13;
Fine Arts Division presented a&#13;
suggestion to the committee on&#13;
the fine arts requirement, they&#13;
supported her suggestion. She&#13;
noted that while it is important to&#13;
"train people to appreciate artistic&#13;
work," the faculties in the&#13;
fine arts departments are not&#13;
large enough to cope with the&#13;
higher enrollment that would&#13;
The University Committee had&#13;
some heated discussion in its Sept.&#13;
24 meeting concerning the&#13;
proposed title change of Coordinator&#13;
of Community&#13;
Educational Programs to&#13;
Associate Dean for Outreach and&#13;
Summer Session.&#13;
Present at the meeting were&#13;
Eugene Norwood, chairperson;&#13;
Richard Keehn, William Moy,&#13;
Beecham Robinson, Carole Vopat,&#13;
members; Vice Chancellor&#13;
Lorman Ratner; and Walter&#13;
IlHilE SIROlHI 9&#13;
~&#13;
BlElER lO ~R&#13;
IPlHII[lOSOIP Vol 1 No 6&#13;
--.. ✓&#13;
Distributed by E. F. MADRIGRANO 1831 . 55th S .&#13;
t. Kenosha, Wisc.&#13;
Stroh's NEW ' - ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
658-3553&#13;
Feldt, Secretary of the Fa&#13;
The committee persu&#13;
Ratner that a search for&#13;
position should- be cond&#13;
rather than only changi~&#13;
position's title. Ratner said&#13;
search would have to be i&#13;
because the funds and&#13;
count do not exist to enable&#13;
outside search.&#13;
Ratner explained that&#13;
there are positions whe re a&#13;
would be clearly appropriate&#13;
others where it would not,&#13;
also an intermediate class&#13;
positions where one could&#13;
either. Ratner told the co ·&#13;
that although there were&#13;
written policies which de:111111•••&#13;
a search for any positioo&#13;
Vice • Chancellor, he now&#13;
that a search should invaria&#13;
conducted for academic&#13;
ministrative positions.&#13;
The process to select f&#13;
members for the search&#13;
mittee was the matter&#13;
created disagreement. Ra&#13;
told the committee whi ch f&#13;
members he proposed to a&#13;
to the search committee&#13;
asked the committee for advi&#13;
the proposed appointments.&#13;
committee members st&#13;
advocated that the co ·&#13;
itself should provide a slate&#13;
nominees.&#13;
In response, Ratner made&#13;
clear that he was not pr&#13;
follow that procedure in this&#13;
As the direct supervisor Ii&#13;
Associated Dean, Ratner feels&#13;
is in a better position to&#13;
members whose judgment&#13;
trusts, who will understand&#13;
role of the Associate Dean.&#13;
who, collectively, will bt&#13;
balanced committee repr&#13;
different campus groups,&#13;
eluding minorities and w&#13;
Several committee mern&#13;
vigorously protested Rat&#13;
decision to proceed that&#13;
After at times heated excha&#13;
Ratner suggested that the .&#13;
mittee sfate its position in w&#13;
to Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
invite a discussion of the issue&#13;
general sense - who should&#13;
the faculty membership f!I '&#13;
search committee at Pa&#13;
The discussion having r&#13;
an impasse, Chairperson No&#13;
asked whether the committee&#13;
willing to leave the questi~&#13;
procedures to enter into&#13;
discussion concerning&#13;
proposea membership ol&#13;
search committee. By a 3-2&#13;
the committee agreed to P&#13;
Ratner stated that all threed&#13;
choices were senior faculty&#13;
experience in previous sea lJld&#13;
who had worked with, or&#13;
strong interest in, outreach&#13;
tivities, and that his&#13;
represented a balance of ca&#13;
constituencies. i&#13;
Members of the conun&#13;
objected to some of Rat&#13;
choices and suggested _tllll&#13;
~tional campus constit uld:&#13;
mvolved in. outreach sho&#13;
represented, but did not of~t&#13;
alternative choices . t&#13;
agreed to drop one ~ti&#13;
member at the comJ11 1&#13;
5·&#13;
suggestion, and to con·&#13;
enlarging the search _coJlluJd&#13;
so that other groups wo&#13;
represented.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 29, 1911&#13;
rate dofllWte deIIp The fillli&#13;
~gna .... thrn prtIIl!ftltd for&#13;
approval&#13;
At tho same urne tho dirtetor II&#13;
audltlonln« tud nLa. 'MHo&#13;
.udJUona 1" tho dlra-tor a&#13;
chance 10wrlte clown un ....&#13;
bod}' charactensti&lt;s,and all othPr&#13;
Ibough~ .boul IJIe penon&#13;
Aft.... I parta hav e&#13;
the rehea .... 1process .. ThI&#13;
IncJudt5 a first .... em. tm&#13;
prOVI5IUonabout tho cbaraC'l&#13;
and blo&lt; '1l out m poIt&lt;ms&#13;
The actors put In a da&#13;
rehea I'5l '1llor an sve", 0I1hr&#13;
hours a da) Ou de 01.rme!,~"&#13;
time lh&lt;-y mu I m&#13;
ark _Ith other .CIOT&#13;
usually ha, e prI,"&amp;te sesslou&#13;
thodJl't'Ctor&#13;
While all 01 Iii&#13;
t and costam&#13;
dered This 1 prlmaril&#13;
luden ,th IJIe ..... ,,--&#13;
pE"n 1501) Uon \hi&#13;
lini hed the) are ready lor&#13;
l«hrucal rtbea .... Is.1n tho&#13;
des,gners and dirtetor 'Itch lor&#13;
small deta, thai nm:I adj&#13;
The) are now after I Ihort&#13;
• read for log nI I&#13;
Tb,. RunJW'r Slurnbl titt&#13;
11"1 pia) It • p1.y t rlluIl&#13;
dedlC:auon .nd b1mallllm lJJIn&#13;
tile C Iholoc ",10 Ion&#13;
Fragile Magic Theatre group&#13;
holds auditions today&#13;
life easier for the UW~Pstudent in&#13;
any way possible. It&#13;
The Fragile Magic Theatre&#13;
Group. a locally based traYellin&amp;&#13;
acting tr ... pe baa opened&#13;
auditions lor "And Other Sl&lt;lrits:'&#13;
written by Woody Allen and David&#13;
Mamel of Chicago Audilinns will&#13;
he held today belween S and 7; 4S&#13;
p.m. in Moin. 109 OIl a walk·m&#13;
basis. There .... 11male ports.nd&#13;
8 female parts open. ,'0 acti'1l&#13;
experience is necessary.&#13;
"And Otller Stories" consiSts 01&#13;
four one-act comedies, mcluding&#13;
"Death Knocks" and "Mr Big"&#13;
's weekend&#13;
'Runner Stumbles' opens dramatic season "1'''' Runner Stumbles," a play&#13;
..... b~%,=::;:~sw:~ Th ki f h I ~~ti:.~·rar:;~atic arts e rna Ing 0 t e p ay ..-.... • change from previous&#13;
. the I '11 b} Jeff Frau&#13;
~ practice, pay WI The creative process 01 run two consecutiv~ weekends produci'1l a play encompasses&#13;
wIIb performances at 8 p.rn. on weeks of hard work and&#13;
friday and Saturday, Oct. 30 and dedication on tho part of many&#13;
D·2pm.ooSunday,Nov.l;and8 people. It aU begins "';th the&#13;
,.;. ;,. Friday and Saturday, selection of the play which is&#13;
,I /IIf. 6.nd 7 in the Communication made from a groop collecttd by&#13;
Arl8 The.ter. informal poll. This process lD- 'It Reserved seating can be \,01\..,. the readi'1l of plays. by tho&#13;
~ed in advance by calling director, in an attempt to find tho&#13;
163-2345 or 553-2042. Admission is proper piece for the Partside&#13;
",50 foraenlor citizens and UW-P Theatre.&#13;
....... 15 and staff; $3.50 for the The Ronner Stu9'bl by Milan&#13;
...... 1 public. suu, to be performed al&#13;
1beplay, set in a small northern Parkside's Com. Arts Theatre&#13;
IlidUgan community in 1911, is Oct. 30-31, j ~ov 1 and • .ov 6.7.&#13;
bued on a real case in which a was selected for rnanv reasons&#13;
.... 1parish priest was accused 01 Director Lee Van o..1&lt;e first&#13;
~ • nun. . considered the number Of actors,&#13;
1beplaydoes not seek to m,rror budget. and work loree. Also \e&lt;)'&#13;
die contemporary church, but an important in the choos,ng of lhe&#13;
torlier more rigid institution, play was the educational goal of&#13;
.....,nng to director Leon Van e.xpos'ng students to a ".de range&#13;
o,ke, associate professor of of dramatic literature and&#13;
.nmatic arts. Rather, Van Dyke themes.&#13;
e .,s, it portrays the priest's Mter the play has been selected&#13;
.... tioo and the nun's human there is a preliminary meeting&#13;
dmllioo to her calling providing a between the director, the costume dram. tic metaphor for in- PATRICIA CASCIARO and Scott Reichelsdorf star in "The designerandsetdesignerlOVoluch&#13;
ftIIiPting love of Gnd, of fellow Runner Stumbles". the director talks about Ius con.&#13;
- and of one's calling or DC- cepl of the play and ""'" he would&#13;
apolioo. are Greg Flesher of Zion (Ill.); Broadway opening, critic Brendon like to see it. The designers.&#13;
1be Milan Stitt drama, wluch Andrew Francis Brhel of CUdahy; Gill of The New Yorker said: faculty or student. then go off 10&#13;
.,.ed 00 Broadway in 19'76, Bob Cash and Mary Beth Kelleher "'The Runner Stumbles' is a new, work on sketches. In the next&#13;
a cinematic style. It of Kenosha; and Vicki Knapp, serious, well-made and con- meetings the sketches are "orked&#13;
... in a courtroom with flash- Colleen Quiggle and John tinuously interesting American&#13;
(beginning with the nun's Miskulin, all of Racine. play, all the more worthy of our&#13;
III'tvalin the parish) illuminating Barbara Thompson is costume attention because it comes at a&#13;
action. designer and Charles Erven is time when most of what is new on&#13;
Scott Reichelsdorf of Kenosha scene and lighting designer. Both Broadway isn't serious, most of&#13;
JIIyI Father Rivard and Patricia are members of the dramatic arts what is well-made isn't interesting&#13;
'oro of Kenosha is Sister staff. and most of what is interesting is&#13;
. Other members of the cast Reviewing the play on its not American."&#13;
-'-"ndfnavian Seminar accepts applications .&#13;
students, graduates, and other Denmark, is also oow available.&#13;
adults who want to study in a Mter orientation in Denmark&#13;
Scandinavian country, becoming and a 3~week intensive language&#13;
part of another culture and courSe, generally followed by a&#13;
learning its language. A new one - family stay, studen~ an: placed&#13;
semester program only in individually at SCandlllav,an Folk&#13;
, Schools or other specialized in~&#13;
stitutions, where they live and&#13;
study with Scandinavians of&#13;
diverse backgrounds.&#13;
Because the Scandinavian&#13;
countries are small, opeD, and&#13;
accessible, the year provides an&#13;
unusual opportunity for the&#13;
student to explore his or her&#13;
particular field of interest by&#13;
doing an independent stud)\,&#13;
project. On the hasis 01 a detailed&#13;
written evaluation of their work,&#13;
most college students receive full&#13;
or partial academic credit for&#13;
their year .&#13;
The fee, covering tuition, room,'&#13;
board, and all course - connected&#13;
travels in Scandinavia, is $5,900.&#13;
Interest - free loans are granted&#13;
on the hasis of need, as are a few&#13;
partial scholarships.&#13;
For further information, please&#13;
write to: SCANDINAVIAN&#13;
SEMINAR, 100 East 85th Street,&#13;
New York, N.Y. 10028.&#13;
Scandinavian seminar is now&#13;
ilatlCllPlit· 'R.pplicalions for its 1982-&#13;
• academic year abroad in&#13;
Deamart, Finland, Norway, or&#13;
........ This unique learning&#13;
"pri'encE is designed for college&#13;
PSGASenators to begin term&#13;
CoatiDaed From Page One •&#13;
.... involved is important," she&#13;
lIld. "My major concern will he&#13;
..... with new policies the&#13;
llherlily system may pass, and&#13;
.... they will affect students."&#13;
AI Spallato&#13;
.~SpoU.to, a junior majoring in&#13;
... Science, ran for Senate&#13;
"Iaetauae I was interested in&#13;
f!aditlg wt exactly what PSGA is&#13;
~ or can do lor the studenfs at ';;(P - and help if possible," he&#13;
Ills ."'omplishment he hopes to&#13;
Idllevewbilein office is "to make&#13;
Honors program&#13;
CODtiauedFrom Page One&#13;
:OPtion at which the program&#13;
... ~ further explained and, any&#13;
~lIIs answered, Thayer said.&#13;
l-O0iII1ha SPring, qualilied students ve their first chance to get&#13;
by Vedin the Honors Program&#13;
~Iling in the two credit&#13;
lIIerect Colloquium (OS.3Sll) to be&#13;
.... by the program. The&#13;
Ibe .... coll"9wum will bring to&#13;
&lt;0 UIllV~.ty and surrounding&#13;
a-:RlU01~le~:'ao outstanding&#13;
lri . disCIplinary humanist -&#13;
~ed scholar who will spend a&#13;
... on campus and be very&#13;
fa esa.bletostudents," according&#13;
&lt;o~Yer. Students enrolled in the&#13;
.ellles~,um will spend next&#13;
~~ developing the&#13;
&lt;boOs' s themes and criteria,&#13;
I&lt;hoI11lg next semester's visting&#13;
'lid :.. and studying the ethics&#13;
~ -Ill IS of the scholar's work,&#13;
by Allen nothPr AIJec&#13;
"The Whore 01 ME~,,"&#13;
.... "pled for lite&#13;
Teny and rt .~Carthr&#13;
K..... ba '7be Duct hria Is by Onld _&#13;
The play .. II direded&#13;
M.rt )lcC.rtb), a&#13;
veIl-ran of comm r&#13;
sumrDf'f _tao&#13;
of IJIe eru,' ly 01 T &lt;do Tbc&#13;
play .. Ube prosenttd .t wr uu.....&#13;
Clnfma on Jan&#13;
eop me-n II"f'&#13;
Dave White·&#13;
David Wlute, a freshman still&#13;
deciding on a major, ran for the&#13;
Senate mainly to keep the&#13;
students informed. "There are&#13;
many students not in tune with the&#13;
activities around campus," he&#13;
said. "With student government, I&#13;
hope to represent and inform the&#13;
student bndy of the goings-on at&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
White hopes to improve student&#13;
involvement and relations with&#13;
student government because, he&#13;
said, the reason student govern·&#13;
ment exists is the students.&#13;
"I plan to address the question&#13;
of parking regulations and the&#13;
issue of Breadth of Knowledge,&#13;
which have, in the past .. caused&#13;
great discussion," he said.&#13;
"Patbide&#13;
mu&#13;
Has Style"&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
"Gee this Rec Center Is a fun place to go." exclaims&#13;
Sfrollin' Bowlin'. '" wonder what other lun things there are&#13;
fo do'" StroWn' Bowlin' doesn·t have to wonder very long&#13;
as he'soon discovers the Rec Center offers table tennis tor&#13;
only:JOe per hour and free M-W·F affernoons from 1 2 p.m.&#13;
Stop down and learn what Stollln' Bowlin' has already&#13;
found out - how much fun table tennis can be in the Rec&#13;
Center.&#13;
•&#13;
IlALLO_ COSa.&#13;
CaON•$ PAmI OCTOIER3ht&#13;
HOUILYOAMIS a I'IlZlSI&#13;
AmAllNO UVI ON STAGeOCT.3ht&#13;
BLACK SLAX &amp; THE CADILLACS&#13;
(9.1 A.M.)&#13;
HOUIS:&#13;
MON.-SAT. l1AM· MIDNIGHT&#13;
SUN. 9 AM • MIDNIGHT&#13;
RICSON'S RESTAURANT &amp; PUB INC.&#13;
7940_DANIO.I(_A, WIS. 53140&#13;
652-1220&#13;
*perllovr&#13;
TABLE TENNIS I'&#13;
RA GER&#13;
This weekend&#13;
;-Runner- Stumbles' opens dramatic seaso&#13;
•1'he Runner Stumbles," a play&#13;
n binin&amp; courtroom drama with&#13;
com1 or repressed emotion, is the Th k• f h I ~ main Stage '":amatic arts --,~''°"·'..._ e ma 1ng O t e p ay rodlJclion at Parkside.&#13;
P In 8 change. from previo~ ·&#13;
h ulill8 practice, the play will u=~~•"' ·&#13;
run two consecutiv~ weekends DN'-.N11ttt1&#13;
~th performances at 8 p.m. on&#13;
fndaY nd Saturday, Oct. 30 and&#13;
31• 2p.monSunday, ov.l;and8&#13;
' oo Friday and Saturday,&#13;
1 p_.m_&amp;and7intheCommunication&#13;
Theater.&#13;
R erved seating can _be&#13;
rranged in advance by_ ~llu~g&#13;
2345 or 5.53-2042. Admission 1s&#13;
• for senior citizens and UW-P&#13;
udent and staff; $3.50 for the&#13;
ral public .&#13;
The play, set in a small northern&#13;
lidugan community in 1911, is&#13;
on a real ca e in which a&#13;
rural parish priest was accused of&#13;
ilh~ a nun&#13;
The play does not seek to mirror&#13;
contemporary church, but an&#13;
rher more rigid institution,&#13;
arcording to director Leon Van&#13;
D e, a sociate professor of&#13;
dram lie arts. Rather, Van Dyke&#13;
v it portrays the priest's&#13;
dedi~tion and the nun's human&#13;
devotion to her calling providing a&#13;
dramatic metaphor for inligating&#13;
love of God, of fellow&#13;
o and of one's calling or oclion.&#13;
The 1ilan Stitt drama, which&#13;
~ned on Broadway in 1976,&#13;
employ a cinematic style. It&#13;
in a courtroom with flash&lt;&#13;
beginning with the nun's&#13;
amval in the parish) illuminating&#13;
action.&#13;
It Reichelsdorf of Kenosha&#13;
play Father Rivard and Patricia&#13;
· aro of Kenosha is Sister&#13;
Rita. Other members of the cast&#13;
PATRICIA CASCIARO and Scott Reichelsdorf star in " The&#13;
Runner Stumbles" .&#13;
are Greg Flesher of Zion (Ill.);&#13;
Andrew Francis Brhel of CUdahy;&#13;
Bob Cash and Mary Beth Kelleher&#13;
of Kenosha; and Vicki Knapp,&#13;
Colleen Quiggle and John&#13;
Miskulin, all of Racine.&#13;
Barbara Thompson is costume&#13;
designer and Charles Erven is&#13;
scene and lighting designer. Both&#13;
are members of the dramatic arts&#13;
staff.&#13;
Reviewing the play on its&#13;
Broadway opening, critic Brendon&#13;
Gill of The ew Yorker aid:&#13;
'"The Runner tumbles' i a new,&#13;
erious , well-made and continuously&#13;
interesting American&#13;
play, all the more worth of our&#13;
attention becau it com at a&#13;
time when most or what i new on&#13;
Broadway isn 't serious, mo t of&#13;
what is well-made i n't interesti!lI&#13;
and most of what is inter ting i&#13;
not American."&#13;
Scandinavian Seminar accepts applications&#13;
Scandmavian Seminar is now&#13;
ptmgapplications for its 1982·&#13;
&amp;1 academic year abroad in&#13;
Denmark, Finland, or way , or&#13;
ed n. This unique learning&#13;
a ience i designed for college&#13;
students, graduates, and other&#13;
adults who want to study in a&#13;
Scandinavian country, becoming&#13;
part of another culture and&#13;
learning its language. A new one -&#13;
semester program , only in&#13;
Denmark. i also now available.&#13;
PSGA Senators to begin term&#13;
After orientation in Denmar&#13;
and a 3-week intensive language&#13;
course, generally followed by a&#13;
family stay , tudents are placed&#13;
individually at Scandinavian Fo&#13;
Schools or other specialized in·&#13;
stitutions, where they live and&#13;
study with candinavian or&#13;
onlinued From Page One&#13;
1~ involved is important," she&#13;
1d. " 1y major concern will be&#13;
dealing with new policies the&#13;
uruver ity system may pass, and&#13;
how they will affect students."&#13;
Al Spallato&#13;
Al pallato, a junior majoring in&#13;
Ute Science, ran for Senate&#13;
ause I was interested in&#13;
linding oot exactly what PSGA is&#13;
~ng or can do for the students at&#13;
.,"',\.p _ and help if possible," he&#13;
1d.&#13;
H accomplishment he hopes to&#13;
achieve while in office is "to make&#13;
Honors program&#13;
· ntinued From Page One&#13;
ill g:on at which the program&#13;
. further explained and any&#13;
qu ltCllS ~wered, Thayer said.&#13;
~ pnng, qualified students&#13;
hl\'ol ve _their first chance to get&#13;
by Ved 1_n t~ Honors Program&#13;
H nrolhng m the two credit&#13;
"~ Colloquium (05-350) to be&#13;
~red by the program. The&#13;
the~ _col1°9uium will bring to&#13;
com ruv~1ty and surrounding&#13;
er mun1tie~ "an outstanding&#13;
on · disciplinary humanist -&#13;
ented scholar who will spend a&#13;
cc on campus and be very&#13;
lo 'Ina Ible to students," according&#13;
con Yl:I' · Students enrolled in the&#13;
oquium will spend next&#13;
em est Pl't&gt;gr e~ developing the&#13;
t ~m s themes and criteria,&#13;
ho! ing next semester' s visting&#13;
_ar and studying the ethics&#13;
1 id ues of the scholar's work,&#13;
life easier for the UW-P student in diverse backgrounds.&#13;
any way possible." Because the candinavian&#13;
Dave White&#13;
David White, a freshman still&#13;
deciding on a major, ran for the&#13;
Senate mainly to keep the&#13;
students informed. "There are&#13;
many students not in tune with the&#13;
activities around campus," he&#13;
said. "With student government, I&#13;
hope to represent and inform the&#13;
student body of the goings-on at&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
White hopes to improve student&#13;
involvement and relations with&#13;
student government because, he&#13;
said, the reason student government&#13;
exists is the students.&#13;
"I pfan to address the question&#13;
of parking regulations and the&#13;
issue of Breadth of Knowledge ,&#13;
which have , in the past , caused&#13;
great discussion ," he said.&#13;
countries are small, open, and&#13;
acces ible, the year pro ides an&#13;
unu ual opportunity for th&#13;
student to explore hi or her&#13;
particular field or interest b&#13;
doing an independent tud&#13;
project. On th basis of a detailed&#13;
written evaluation of their work,&#13;
most college stud nts rec ive full&#13;
or partial academic credit r r&#13;
their year.&#13;
The fee , covering tuition , room.•&#13;
board, and all courSe - connected&#13;
travels in Scandinavia, i , .&#13;
Interest - free loans are granted&#13;
on the ba i of need, as are a few&#13;
partial cholarships.&#13;
For further information, pl e&#13;
write to : CA DI A IA&#13;
SEMINAR, 100 East 85th treet,&#13;
ew York, Y 10028&#13;
HALLO- COSTUIII&#13;
" PAITYI&#13;
C$0NS OCTOBER 31 .,&#13;
HOUILY OAMIS&#13;
~ &amp;NIDSI&#13;
APNAIING UVE ON STAGI OCT. 31 tt&#13;
BLACK SLAX &amp; THE CADILLACS&#13;
(9 -1 A.M.)&#13;
HOUIS:&#13;
MON.-SAT. 11AM • MIDNIGHT&#13;
SUN. 9 AM - MIDNIGHT&#13;
RICSON'S RESTAURANT &amp; PUB l &lt;.:.&#13;
7940 SHEIIDAN ID. KINOSHA. WIS. 53140&#13;
652-1220&#13;
Fragile Magic&#13;
holds auditions t&#13;
''Parksi&#13;
S1:ILL&#13;
Has Styl "&#13;
r u&#13;
ON TAP A UNION SQUARE&#13;
T LET&#13;
6 Thursday. October 29,1981 RANGER&#13;
Handicapped Awareness Day to be held .&#13;
A "Handicapped Awareness available for informal discussion effort to foster awareness .~~&#13;
Da ." marki the United Nations from 2 to 3 p.m. A problems faced by persons WI&#13;
.~ goated ~ternational Year of neurophysiologist research diaabi lit.ies , eight student~&#13;
Dlsa~led Persons will he held at surgeon, he has headed his own faculty members and a.-&#13;
Parkside on Wednesday, Nov. 4. firm, Clinical Convenience mlnistrators Will spend the day in&#13;
Products, Inc., of Madison for ten wheeleham,.&#13;
The han~i~pped awareness years. All of the events are free ~nd&#13;
program will include a talk by . . . . open to the public. A bus provided&#13;
Don Warren, . rehabilitation An exhibit featuring adaptive by the Kenosha Department of&#13;
engineer and director of the e9U1pment, literature a,nd Transportation Will provide free&#13;
Wisconsin Foundation for Applied displays by. area ag.encles shuttle service from 'the Tallent&#13;
Technology. on "Innovative p~ovldmg serV1ce~to th~ disabled Hall parking lot between 11:30&#13;
EQu~pme,nt0' and Jo~ S,ite Will be on the Uruon Bridge from a.rn. and 2:15 p.m.&#13;
Modification at 1 p.m, ID Urnon 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The program is sponsored by&#13;
t04 The Sign Singers of Mitchell the Campus Health and Student&#13;
Warren is an authority on Junior High School will perforrri'in Activities Offices in cooperation&#13;
development of devices to assist the cafeteria from noon to 1 p.m. with Society's Assets .of Racine,&#13;
people with haodlcaps to adjust to The group is directed by school Abolish Barriers for Lifetime&#13;
various work and home life principal Richard Anderson, who Efficiency (ABLE) of Kenosha&#13;
situations. He will demonstrate will provide guitar ac- and the State Department of&#13;
some of the devices and be companiment. As a part of the Vocational Rehabilitation.&#13;
lynda Martha Dance Company to perform at .tlW-P&#13;
The Lynda Martha Dance&#13;
Company will present a program&#13;
01 modem dance flavored with the&#13;
jazz idiom at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside Communication&#13;
Arts Theater on&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 11, at 8 p.m.&#13;
under sponsorship of the student&#13;
Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
Admission is $2.50for students;&#13;
$3 for the public and tickets will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Martha's seven - member troupe&#13;
is in residence at the Giordano&#13;
Dance Center, where Martha is&#13;
director of the modern dance&#13;
department. She also is a member&#13;
of the dance faculty at the&#13;
University of Illinois Circle&#13;
Campus.&#13;
A dancer, choreographer and&#13;
teacher, Martha's own work, as&#13;
well as that of her troupe, has won&#13;
critical praise throughout the&#13;
Midwest and the South for energy&#13;
and originality.&#13;
Once a championship baton&#13;
twirler, Martha was encouraged&#13;
as a child to study dance to improve&#13;
her twirling performance.&#13;
As a choreographer. her works&#13;
are included in the repertoires of a&#13;
number of regional companies&#13;
including the Mississippi Coast&#13;
Ballet, Darwin Dance Theater,&#13;
Southern Ballet Theater the&#13;
Minnesota Jazz Dance Co~pany&#13;
and the Gos Giodano Jazz Dance&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Its \'\01 like. 'lOlA drive. \..\o;.e.0. f1\o.n\o.c \10,'0\&#13;
b~tIthinK \ jus-t Sl..Ilo,\\owed. ffij tee1\(.&#13;
Irked by independent area dri&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
Parkside's location leaves&#13;
students with several choices&#13;
when mode of transportation is&#13;
considered. Some walk. Others&#13;
run', There is public bus service&#13;
available. Students may come by&#13;
bike, moped, and motorcycle. The&#13;
rest come by private car,&#13;
Therefore, the following guide&#13;
has been provided for the student&#13;
who would .like to know the unwritten&#13;
rules of the IRKD,.&#13;
What do all tbese students have&#13;
in common besides their general&#13;
destination? They have confronted&#13;
tbe IRKD (Independent&#13;
Racine I Kenosha Drivers) of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin, These&#13;
people drive by their own rules.&#13;
For anyone who has not grown up&#13;
in this area, traveling through&#13;
Racine or Kenosha can be like&#13;
learning to drive all over again.&#13;
SPEED LIMIT: Although most&#13;
roads in both counlies have speed&#13;
limit signs, their presence is&#13;
generally ignored. The IRKD will&#13;
travel at a rate which is 15 mph&#13;
• faster or slower than that posted&#13;
depending on whether or not th~&#13;
student is late for class.&#13;
BLINKERS: An IRKD&#13;
surprised to learn that&#13;
cars come equipped wilb&#13;
important safety feature.&#13;
traveling behind an IRKD&#13;
for brake lights as an indi";'&#13;
an impending him.&#13;
ENTERING J'RAFFIC&#13;
IRKD is always anxious to •&#13;
the road. Helshe will nev'&#13;
the opportunity to pull out&#13;
of someone. Watch for&#13;
especially if the speed .&#13;
grea ter than 45 mph.&#13;
LEAVING TRAFFIC:&#13;
done by the IRKD witliJi&#13;
blocks of cutting someone&#13;
ENTERING TRAFFIC) TIle&#13;
D slows to approximately&#13;
for several hundred yards&#13;
the corner in order to naviga&#13;
turn.&#13;
U-TURNS at CONT&#13;
INTERSECTIONS: For&#13;
reason, this is not consi&#13;
traffic viola lion by an&#13;
However, this practice is&#13;
recommended for the&#13;
driver.&#13;
Good luck to all students&#13;
encounter tbe IRKD.&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING I&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR -D.TAILS&#13;
5%% Interest HY•• Dall,&#13;
Balance Is s500.00 .r M.re.&#13;
WE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU IRO"I&#13;
5935'- 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin·&#13;
414·658·4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 694-1380&#13;
4235· 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-0120&#13;
. 8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414·248-9141&#13;
24726 _75th Street· RI. 50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wi&#13;
414 - 843·2388&#13;
6 Thursday, October 29, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Handicapped Awareness Day to be held&#13;
" H ndicapp d v. arene s available for informal discussion effort to foster awareness -ri&#13;
D ... m r in the ruted ations from 2 to 3 p.m. A p~oblt:~s. faced ~y persons w1&#13;
• ) i n t lntcrnatronal Year of neurophysiologist res_earch d1sab1hties, eight student~&#13;
o· bled will be held at urgeon, he has headed hi~ own fa_c~lty me~bers and a. -&#13;
Par I n Wedn •day , ov . 4. firm, Clinical Convenience muustrat~rs will spend the day m&#13;
Products, Inc., of Madison for ten wheelchairs.&#13;
Th h nd1capp d awarene s year . All of the events are free and&#13;
~r m ·ill include a talk by open to the public. A bus provided&#13;
Don Warr n , rehabilitation An exhibit featuring adaptive by the Kenosha Department of&#13;
, r and dir tor of ~he equipment, literature and Transportation will provide free&#13;
w· o ·in F undation for pphed displays by area agencies shuttle service from 'the Tallent&#13;
T chnol gy. on "Innovative providing services to the disabled Hall parking lot between 11:30&#13;
Equipm •_nt .. and Jo~ _ite will be on the Union Bridge from a.m. and 2 :IS p.m.&#13;
1 1ftcat1on at I p.m . m Uruon 10 a .m. to 3 p.m. The program is sponsored by&#13;
1 • The ign Singers of Mitchell the Campus Health and Student&#13;
Junior High School will perforntin Activities Offices in cooperation&#13;
the cafeteria from noon to 1 p.m. with Society's Assets . of Racine,&#13;
The group is directed by school Abolish Barriers for Lifetime&#13;
principal Richard Anderson, who Efficiency (ABLE) of Kenosha&#13;
will provide guitar ac- and the State Department of&#13;
companiment. As a part of the Vocational Rehabilitation. Irked by independent area driv·&#13;
Lynda Martha Dance Company to perform at .tJW-P by Carol Burns&#13;
Parkside's location leaves&#13;
students with several choices&#13;
when mode of transportation is·&#13;
considered. Some walk. Others&#13;
run. There is public bus service&#13;
available. Students may come by&#13;
bike, moped, and motorcycle. The&#13;
rest come by private car.&#13;
student is late for class.&#13;
BLINKERS: An ffiKD&#13;
surprised to learn that&#13;
cars come equipped With&#13;
important safety feature&#13;
traveling behind an IRKD.&#13;
for brake lights as an indi~ ·&#13;
an impending turn.&#13;
Th Lynda 1artha Dance&#13;
Company will pr enl a program&#13;
ol m m dance flavored with the&#13;
jazz icliom at the University oC&#13;
Wi ·con m - Park ide Communication&#13;
Arts Theater on&#13;
Wednesday, ov . 11, at 8 p.m.&#13;
under sponsorship of the student&#13;
Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
Admission is $2 .50 for students;&#13;
$3 for the public and tickets will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Martha's seven - member troupe&#13;
is in residence at the Giordano&#13;
Dance Center, where Martha is&#13;
director of the modern dance&#13;
department. She also is a member&#13;
of the dance faculty at the&#13;
University of Illinois Circle&#13;
campus.&#13;
A dancer, choreographer and&#13;
teacher, Martha's own work, as&#13;
well as that of her troupe, has won&#13;
critical praise throughout the&#13;
Midwest and the South for energy&#13;
and originality.&#13;
. Once a championship baton&#13;
twirler, Martha was encouraged&#13;
as a child to study dance to improve&#13;
her twirling performance.&#13;
As a choreographer, her works&#13;
are included in the repertoires of a&#13;
!1um~r of regional companies&#13;
mcludmg the Mississippi Coast&#13;
Ballet, Darwin Dance Theater&#13;
Southern Ballet Theater th~&#13;
Minnesota Jazz Dance Co~pany&#13;
and the Gos Giodano Jazz Dance&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Therefore, the following guide&#13;
has been provided for the student&#13;
who would like to know the unwritten&#13;
rules of the IRKD.&#13;
What do all these students have&#13;
in common besides their general&#13;
destination? They have confronted&#13;
the IRKD (Independent&#13;
Racine / Kenosha Drivers) of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin. These&#13;
people drive by their own rules.&#13;
For anyone who has not grown up&#13;
in this area, traveling through&#13;
Racine or Kenosha can be like&#13;
learning to drive all over again.&#13;
SPEED LIMIT: Although most&#13;
roads in both counties have speed&#13;
limit signs, their presence is&#13;
generally ignored. The IRKD will&#13;
travel at a rate which is 15 mph&#13;
• faster or slower than that posted&#13;
depending on whether or not th~&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE .&#13;
ENTERING l'RAFFIC·&#13;
IRKD is always anxious to ·&#13;
the road. He/she will never&#13;
the opportunity to pull out in&#13;
of someone. Watch for&#13;
especially if the speed ·&#13;
greater than 45 mph.&#13;
LEA YING TRAFFIC:&#13;
done by the IRKD witlan&#13;
blocks of cutting someone~ENTERING&#13;
TRAFFIC) The&#13;
D slows to approximately 5&#13;
for several hundred yards&#13;
the corner in order to navigate&#13;
turn.&#13;
U-TURNS at CONTRO&#13;
INTERSECTIONS: For&#13;
reason, this is not consi&#13;
traffic violation by an&#13;
However, this practice is&#13;
recommended for the&#13;
driver.&#13;
Good luck to all students&#13;
• encounter the IRKD.&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
5935·_ 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin -&#13;
414 - 658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
l&lt;enosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 • 694-1380&#13;
4235 • 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
· 8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 248-9141&#13;
24726 - 75th Street - Rt. 50&#13;
&lt; Paddock Lake) Salem, Wis.&#13;
414 - 843-2388&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR l~TAILS&#13;
5¼% Interest I Yo• Dally&#13;
Balance Is ssoo.oo or Morel&#13;
WE'RE HERE 10 HELP YOU &amp;RO.I&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 29,1981 7&#13;
Learning to live with what you have&#13;
.. week, "Viewpoint" rncuses severed spinal cord, and they will The night before, we had been some d. them never will be. We readY to go but by Thunclay or&#13;
"Awareness Day" and some tell you that person will never diving into the water and it was are certainly aware d. the fact Friday, 1 "!as very dragged out&#13;
bers or Ihe Parkslde com- walk again. I always tell myself over six feet deep. The level had that there are problems, and we Because d. thai, I not only leomed&#13;
y who are handicapped. that betw~n now and the Ii'!'e changed from sixfeetto a foot and work with them.". . to aUow time for myael!, J I med&#13;
here's a way around that I die, I m gomg to walk again. a hal! overnight. It has something The Dean was m a wheelchair to take It easy 0 that by the end of&#13;
thing, there are ways to deal I really chng to that, but then to do with locks. for about eight months and he did the week. I still had some _raY&#13;
everything, my waysusually agam, nght now I have things I When I dove in, I broke my have problems at times. "At left"&#13;
more time," said Gus wanttodoandpenplelneedtosee neck. My friend realized right times, I would have to be 00 the The people at Parb.de alwaya&#13;
e n. Gus is disabled and has and places I 'Yant to go to." away what had happened, and be other end of the campus and it was showed a great dee I of concern for&#13;
in a wheelchair for twelve Dave Schneider is a junior at knew that I shouldn't be moved. I difficult to give myself enough Pedersen. "One d. the thl/lll I&#13;
Parkside majoring m Psychology. yelled up to him and told him that time to get there. When I was late, noticed w'hen I was first injured,&#13;
r:' are very different now He has been in a wheelchair for I couldn't move. The people that it was very frustrating. A lew and even now, IS the greel deol d.&#13;
:: his attitude and ways &lt;i. four years. He thinks that the were with us took a board and years ago, I was one &lt;i.the people concern. Irom the people on&#13;
• ~ng'with things have both Parkside facilities are some of the submerged it under the water and thai spent a day in a wheelchair on campus, It'S never' ending. RIghi&#13;
ed "A lot of the way I deal best. "The Parkside lacilities are letitfloatup underneath me. Then Awareness Day, and I never after my accident,1 would tend to&#13;
. Ie where at other times great. It's better than most of the they packed my head in said so cheated and got out of thai chair, get frustrated WIth aU of the&#13;
~v;' just gotten up and schools I've. been to. The good that it wouldn't move Irom side to but then too, I noticed that my people trying to help me out. Ilelt&#13;
edaway, or argued further or thing about tt IS that the whole side. A lot of limes, it's the arms and hands got exceptionally like I was helpless at tim Then.&#13;
somebody in the head, I uruverstty IS contamed in one movement after the initial injury tired, and that It ~as a problem to l~getseaSler to~d on people a&#13;
seldom do that anymore. I that makes it worse. 1 was lucky get to places on time. When I was little more for a bUJe help. Il&#13;
djust rather do it diflerently. ,i that the penplewith me knew what in my wheelchair for a long period wasn't an easy thing for me&#13;
no! very big on spur of the tr'~ "to do." &lt;i.time, I noticed that on Moodays though I adjusted. I think m (&#13;
ent type things, I always try Jf ~ Dave does his best to keep his I would usually be very strong and people can."&#13;
things through before I do spirits up. "I have a pretty&#13;
Before il I got mad and ~ ~ positive attitude towards people. ' / »&gt; Re.ervetlona Apprecleted ;n out df the room, no big ~ A lot of penple told me that people 4 II t ~ or I could just go hack and ~ were going to stare at me, and an~lei e fPAAI.t tUtJ 654-6933&#13;
ize tater. ~ that little kids are going to ask a a rrr&gt;:&#13;
be best way to put it is that ~ bl; lot of questions. I have never ~ 4814 Sherlden Rd. Keno.he&#13;
seem to burn easier now, really experienced that at all.&#13;
that's something I don't want Everybody is curious. Whether&#13;
go ci. I need people more you're in a wheelchair or on&#13;
than 1 ever have. A lot of it is crutches, everyone wants to know ®l a need to be around people. what happened. U you face it with&#13;
are a lot of things'1 won't a posilive outlook and tell them&#13;
... do to oflend them. This is Internat'lonal Year straight out what happened, it's a-..;.-----:;=~m~'M'-:;:::;------1 way I do things now and It'S the best way to go througb It. The TUE DAY, :'iOV.3rd&#13;
a an act where hefore, twelve of important thing is that you have to An Evening In Pam IU5&#13;
rs ago: it would have been an realize the ~ro~lem and realize&#13;
" explained Gus. Disabled Persons h?wtodealwlthlt.lnman~cases,&#13;
also finds it very important It s a matter of leanung different&#13;
thought 01 as a person before building. If you want to use the .ways of doing things."&#13;
thing else. "First and pool, there is a lift in the pool for Dave Pedersen, Dean of Student&#13;
most I. am a person, ~nd ~ot the people that need it. Life, has also experienced getting&#13;
eone In a wheelchair. 1 m "The one problem we used to around in a wheelchair at&#13;
n, and frieridly and honest. have was going to registration on Parkside. Pedersen sustained an&#13;
of the things I probably value that middle level. Wegot around it ankle injury a little over a year&#13;
tis Iriendship. I've got a lot of by moving registration for lbe ago. "The Parkside facilities are&#13;
, but some are friends disabled to the student records probably some of the best I've&#13;
so than others. As far as I'm office. Before we started ever seen. When this school was&#13;
moo, if t~ere's •anyth:in~ I registration there, we had to have built, everything was put in. When&#13;
do for a fnend, I 11do It. people run our schedules through a new school is built it doesn't&#13;
here are times that Gus finds for us. If there was any kind of seem to cost as much to have&#13;
1£ questioning the opinions problem, we would have to start equipment put in as it does to&#13;
people around him and how all over again, and the person remodel in order to put in proper&#13;
leel about him. "I guess I've doing the running for us had to aceomndalions. When I was in a&#13;
ays wondered what people bring everything back." wheelchair, I experienced the&#13;
. I wonder what some of Dave's aceident happened while accessability of this school, and il&#13;
people say inside. At times on a trip, and he leels fortunate to is extraordinary. If there seems to&#13;
bad the feeling that people have come out of it the way he did. be a big inconvenience, a problem&#13;
astonished that I can talk, it's "I was very fortunate that with a student's mobility, we do&#13;
t like their faces are saying, someone was with me when my our best to take care of it. A prime&#13;
can talk.' II accident occurred. My church example would be the lecture&#13;
facilities at Parkside for the group had a houseboat on the rooms. Students in wheelchairs&#13;
bled are very adequate to Mississippi River, and on the last wouldn't be able to wheel up to the&#13;
, although there have been day of our trip, a friend and I were countertop areas because the&#13;
when he's had a problem going to wash our hair. Instead of chairs are underneath the counter&#13;
winler's ice. "I can't be more walking to the edge and going into tops. The problem was solved by&#13;
n a few feet away from the the water, I dove in. The water simply removing a chair. Not all&#13;
, but the lact that I'm on an was only a foot and a half deep. of the problems are solved, and&#13;
line makes it difficult to move. • ••••&#13;
there is ice or snow on the&#13;
nd.l'm sure that as kids most&#13;
Ie have tried to ride a bike on&#13;
and they've laUen all over, the&#13;
spins and there's no control.&#13;
now and then I'll run into&#13;
t problem, but like I said, there&#13;
a way around everything. So&#13;
t I dm'l get caugbt in the cold,&#13;
U the health office and tell&#13;
that I'll he there at a certain&#13;
e~and someone comes to my&#13;
g spot and gives me a&#13;
nd."&#13;
re are also certain things&#13;
I keep Gus going. "1 refuse to&#13;
pi the idea that I will never&#13;
lk. again. You can ask -any&#13;
cal doctor to descrihe a&#13;
ew int&#13;
People&#13;
Power&#13;
helps&#13;
event&#13;
birth&#13;
S defects uppon&#13;
March of Dimes&#13;
HAI.1.0IlEES. I., Oct. 31&#13;
U yoo're wearing a Halloween C06wme (we&#13;
will bel, your meal will be discounted 15'l;&#13;
s&#13;
lR@rE&#13;
Jack Lemmon&#13;
Robby Benson&#13;
Lee Remick&#13;
sJSo&#13;
7:30 Friday &amp; Sunday,&#13;
Nov. 6 &amp; 8&#13;
1100lnlr " lot ~&#13;
to~"fatNr&#13;
thIIn juJt 1m"""son.&#13;
NEXT WEEICS MOVlE&#13;
DEATH HUNT&#13;
* JOB OPENING * Position: STUDENT SUPERVISOR· PARKSIDE UNION BULDING * responsible for coordination of activities and supervision&#13;
of building during weekends and evenings,&#13;
* 15-20 hours weekly * '3,75 per hour starting rate&#13;
Qualifications: PARKSIDE STUDENT - MINIMUM OF 6 CREDITS&#13;
Business. Management. or Supervisory Elcpe"enC8 preferred&#13;
Application Deadline: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2&#13;
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN ROOM 209 IN UNION BUILDING--&#13;
-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Learning to live with what you have&#13;
I ~ttk, "Viewpoint" focu evered pinal cord, and they will The night before, we had been om ci them · r ill W to bu b • ""'··~•"&#13;
., orene Day" and ome tell you ~at person will never diving into the water and it was are rtainl a ·are ci fact ri ), I 1&#13;
rn r of the Parkside com- walk again. I alway tell myself over six feet deep. The level had that th re are prob\ • and&#13;
ii who ar handicapped. that ~tween now and the time changed from ix feet to a foot and wock with th m ."&#13;
There' a way around that I die, I'.m going to walk again. a half overnight. It has omething The D n wa in a w I ir&#13;
-thing, there are ways to deal I r-E:3llY. chng to that, but then to do with lock . for about eight month; and h did&#13;
. ne erything, my ways usually again, nght now I have things I hen I dove in, I broke my have problems at tun . " t&#13;
e more time," said Gus wantto do and people I need to see neck. My friend realized right tim , I would have to be m the&#13;
on Gu is disabled and has and place I ~ant to go to." away what had happened, and he other end of the campu and it ·&#13;
r in a wheelchair for twelve Dav~ &amp;hn~1~er !5 a junior at knew that I houldn't be moved. I difficult to give my If enou h&#13;
~ Parkside maJonng m Psychology. yelled up to him and told him that time to get there. \ 'hen I ·a late,&#13;
·n are very different now He has been in a wheelc~ir for I couldn't move. The people that it was v rru rating. fe&#13;
, Gu , hi attit~de and ways of four years. He thinks that the were with us took a board and ears ago. I ·a e of the I&#13;
Jing with things have both Parkside facilities are some of the ubrrierged it under the water and that pent a day in aw )chair n&#13;
ed "A lot of the way I deal best. "The Parkside facilities are letitfioatupunderneathme. Then wareness Day, and t never&#13;
n people, where at other times great. It's better than most of the they packed my head in said so cheated and got out of that chair,&#13;
ay have just gotten up and sc~ools I've been lo. The good that it wouldn't move from ide to but th n too, I n iced that m&#13;
lked away, or argued further or thmg about it is that the whole side . A lot of limes it's the arms and han got cep 1onally&#13;
ted omebody in the head, I university is contained in one movement after the initial injury tired, and that i wa a problem to&#13;
, ldom do that anymore. I ------------ that makes it worse. I was lucky get to place on time. n I wa&#13;
d ju t rather do it differently. that the people with me knew what · in my wh lchair for a long penod&#13;
not very big on spur of the to do." ci time, I noticed that on tonda_&#13;
ent type things, I always try Dave does his best to keep hi I would usuall be · tro and&#13;
ink things through before I do spirits up. "I have a pretty -------------------------,&#13;
em. Before, if I got mad a~d ,.jllllll.ID][IJJ\f positive attitude to ards people. d&#13;
lked out of the room, no big ~ A lot of people told me that people&#13;
I or I could just go back and -..-...-re were going to stare at me, and&#13;
. ~ize later. that little kids are going to a&#13;
'The best way to lX,lt i~ is that lot of questions. I have never&#13;
dg seem to burn easier now, really experienced that at all .&#13;
II that' something I don't want Everybody is curious . Whether&#13;
let go d.. I need people more ...:=:.;...-~"""'--~ you 're in a wheelchair or on&#13;
than r ever have. A lot of it is crutches, everyone wants lo know&#13;
a need to be around people. what happened. If you face it with&#13;
re are a lot of things I won't a positive outlook and tell them&#13;
. r,- do to orfend them. This is I straight out what happened, it'&#13;
way I do things now and it's lnternationa Year the best way to go through it. The&#13;
1 an act, where before, twelve of important thing is that you have to&#13;
rs ago, it would have been an realize the problem and realize&#13;
"explained Gus. Disabled Persons how lo deal with it. ln many case ,&#13;
Gus also finds it very important ____________ it's a matter of learning different&#13;
thought of as a person before building. II you want to use the .ways ci doing things."&#13;
tri ·thing else. "First and pool , there is a lift in the pool for Dave Pedersen, Dean of Student&#13;
remost I am a person, and not the people that need it. Life, has also experienced getting&#13;
eone in a wheelchair. I'm "The one problem we used to around in a wheelchair at&#13;
an, and frieridly and honest. have was going to registration on Parkside. Pedersen sustained an&#13;
of the things I probably value that middle level. We got around it ankle injury a little over a ear&#13;
tis rriendship. I've got a lot of by moving registration for the ago . " The Parkside facilities are&#13;
nds, but some are friends disabled to the student records probabl ome of the best I' e&#13;
e o than others. As far as I'm office. Before we started ever seen. When this school was&#13;
cerned, if there's anything I registration there, we had to have built, everything was put in. When&#13;
do for a friend, I'll do it." people run our schedules through a new school i built it doe n t&#13;
here are times that Gus finds for us. U there was any kind of seem to cost as much to have&#13;
self questioning the opinions problem, we would have to start equipment put in as it does to&#13;
people around him and how all over again, and the person remodel in order to lX,lt in proper&#13;
Jack Lemmon&#13;
Robby Benson&#13;
Lee Remick&#13;
S JSO y feel about him. "I guess I've doing the running for us had to accomodations. When I wa in a&#13;
ays wondered what people bring everything back." wheelchair, I experienced the&#13;
nk . I wonder what some of Dave's accident happened while acces ability of this school, and it&#13;
e people say inside. At times on a trip, and he feels fortunate to is extraordinary. If there seems to&#13;
had the feeling that people have come out of it the way he did be a big inconvenience, a problem&#13;
astonished that l can talk, it's "I was very fortunate that with a tudent's mobility, we do&#13;
ost like their faces are saying, someone was with me when my our best to take care of it. prime&#13;
7:30 Friday &amp; Sunday,&#13;
Nov. 6 &amp; 8&#13;
can talk.' " accident occurred. My church example would be the lecture&#13;
he facilities at Parkside for the group had a houseboat on the room . Student in wheelchair&#13;
bled are very adequate to Mississippi River, and on the last wouldn't be able to wheel up to the&#13;
, although there have been day of our trip, a friend and I were countertop areas because the&#13;
NEXT WEEK'S MOVIE&#13;
when he's had a problem going to wash our hair. Instead of chairs are underneath the counter&#13;
th winter's ice. "I can't be more walking to the edge and going into tops . The problem a solved by&#13;
n a few feet away from the the water, I dove in . The water simply removing a chair. ot all&#13;
r, but the fact that I'm on an was only a foot and a half deep. of the problems are solved, and&#13;
DEATH HU&#13;
line makes it difficult to move&#13;
there is ice or snow on the&#13;
nd . I'm ure that as kids most&#13;
le have tried to ride a bike on&#13;
and they've fallen all over, the&#13;
pins and there's no control.&#13;
ry now and then I'll run into&#13;
t problem, but like I said, there&#13;
a way around everything. So&#13;
l I doo't get caught in the cold,&#13;
call the health office and tell&#13;
m that I'll be there at a certain&#13;
e'. and someone comes lo my&#13;
arking spot and gives me a&#13;
and"&#13;
t There are also certain things&#13;
t keep Gus going. "I refuse to&#13;
pt the idea that I will never&#13;
1k again. You can ask .any&#13;
cal doctor to describe a&#13;
helps&#13;
prevent&#13;
birth&#13;
S defects uppon&#13;
March of Dimes&#13;
* JOB OPENING * Position: STUDENT SUPERVISOR· PARKS DE UNION B ID G&#13;
* respons·ble for coordination of activities and supervision&#13;
of building during weekends and evenings.&#13;
* 15-20 hours weekly * 53.75 per hour starfng rote&#13;
Qualifications: PARKSIDE snJDENT ·MN OF 6 DITS&#13;
Business, Management, or Supervisory &amp;perien p&#13;
Application Deadline: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2&#13;
APPLICATIONS AVAllABLE IN ROOM 209 IN UNIO BUILDI G&#13;
rred&#13;
8 Thursday. October29.1981 RANGER •&#13;
Author Kherdian talks about a life of writing&#13;
was certainly no American mU~lc, .&#13;
there was no idea of art. The first&#13;
real art I saw was when I was&#13;
twenty-four; the first time I went&#13;
to New York after the army I&#13;
remember seeing a Vincent Van&#13;
Gogh from way across the&#13;
corridor. I was just shocked to my&#13;
core because I'd seen somethng&#13;
that'I was totally unpr~red for&#13;
and I knew I was wltnessmg&#13;
something miraculous ..&#13;
It was in my twenl1es that I&#13;
began to pursue things. I was&#13;
twenty when I first read Theodore&#13;
Drieser, which was the first real&#13;
book of literature I'd read. I knew&#13;
instantly that there was a ~?rld&#13;
within the world that J was living.&#13;
There was another stream of life&#13;
that my life had never touched&#13;
before one that was unknown to&#13;
me. I think I was very fortunate in&#13;
this because I had all the raw&#13;
. materials of life, and experience&#13;
is simply raw material ....&#13;
A large part of that was a deep&#13;
resentment toward all schools,&#13;
toward all forms of formal&#13;
learning, because I c;.ouldsee that&#13;
they were hankrupt. I didn't&#13;
respect the teachers; I didn't&#13;
respect the schools ·or the&#13;
curriculum or any of it. None of it&#13;
made sense to me, and it still&#13;
doesn't. You can't represent life in&#13;
books, especially 'for a child. Life&#13;
is life; it's represented&#13;
everywhere for them but in the&#13;
schoolroom. I .&#13;
Ranger: What trends do you&#13;
see, what do you think of current&#13;
media and fine arts?&#13;
Kherdian: You almost can't&#13;
even call it that anymore it's so'&#13;
poor. I think that one. of the big&#13;
mistakes made is the belief that, if&#13;
you turn up the volume you improve&#13;
the perfonnance - whether&#13;
the volume is nudity, profanity or&#13;
actual volume itself as in music,&#13;
'you know. People become so&#13;
desperate to be noticed that they'll&#13;
do almost anything, and all' of&#13;
those things take one further and&#13;
further away from the reality of&#13;
art. And of course, I'm as far as&#13;
you can go on the otber extreme&#13;
because my work is so quiet, so&#13;
unobtrusive and so easy to miss.&#13;
And that's okay. That's what's&#13;
true for me. But as a potential&#13;
audience for other people's work,&#13;
I can't really get very interested&#13;
in it because I don't think it's&#13;
honest.&#13;
Ranger: Sort of to spectacular,&#13;
too exhibitionist?&#13;
Kherdlan: All of those things ..&#13;
Also, the need for everything to&#13;
pay, to payoff, that everything&#13;
must bring a big return.&#13;
Ranger: Do you see money as&#13;
being the prime motivator in what&#13;
is done in the arts?&#13;
Kherdian: It is in cinema, for&#13;
example. It's impossible for&#13;
anyone who makes movies to call&#13;
themselves artists. It isn't&#13;
possible because of the conditions&#13;
of the work. You can't do it unless'&#13;
it brings in money .... For some&#13;
reason, today's artists can't. give&#13;
by Toay Ragen&#13;
Feature EdIlor&#13;
Racine-b«n poet and author&#13;
David Kherdian was In Ra~ne&#13;
this past weekend for the Racine&#13;
Public Library's Emily A. Lee&#13;
celebration. Kberdian has had 18&#13;
books and anthologies of poetry&#13;
published. In t979 his first novel,&#13;
11Ie Road From Home, was&#13;
published and since then has won&#13;
.. unerous awards. The book is the&#13;
st«y of Kherdian's mother, who&#13;
.. rvived the Turkish massacres&#13;
of the Annenian people. A sequel&#13;
to the book, FiDdIng Home, was&#13;
published this year. I interviewed&#13;
Kherdian last Saturday about life&#13;
in depression-era Racin~'s Armenian&#13;
community and his work.&#13;
Kberdlan: I think it was distinct&#13;
for us, but at the same time the&#13;
same distinctions existed for other&#13;
minorities, I think tbe city was&#13;
lormed of little sub-cultural&#13;
pockets, and the Armenian was&#13;
me, and there were others as well.&#13;
Of course. at that time the whole&#13;
toner city. which now seems to be&#13;
in rather bad shape, was active&#13;
and alive. All the stores were&#13;
used, everything was used. It had&#13;
a qualily 01 newness about it, as&#13;
compared to what it is now. And&#13;
although one might look back&#13;
upon it. perhaps as an adult, and&#13;
think that you were living in the&#13;
slums - this would have been&#13;
called a ghetto perhaps - but one&#13;
had no sense of this at the lime.&#13;
And of course we were very poor,&#13;
and one had no sense of poverty&#13;
because everyone was living the&#13;
same life. I grew up in the&#13;
depression and everyone was&#13;
poor, so in a sense nobody was&#13;
poor. Everyone was just living the&#13;
life they were living.&#13;
Ranger: Was there much more&#13;
of an ethnic feeling about the city&#13;
then?&#13;
Kherdian: Oh it was very&#13;
strong. There were two cultures&#13;
going at once. Tbere was the&#13;
culture of the home and the&#13;
culture of the. streets. The culture&#13;
of the home being Annenian in our&#13;
case, and of course the same&#13;
culture of the streets for ev~one&#13;
was American. The neighhorhoods&#13;
were alive, because the&#13;
immigrants had come, they we~&#13;
re-lounding their race 1R this&#13;
"You can't represent&#13;
life in books,&#13;
especially for&#13;
a child. - - "&#13;
country and having children - the&#13;
neighborhoods were full of&#13;
children. One had a sense of the&#13;
schools being new, everything&#13;
being - well, I keep saying alive.&#13;
When I look back on it, that was&#13;
the feelinll-&#13;
Ranger: I've read that, as a&#13;
child, you had no real interest in&#13;
books. One might think tha t would&#13;
be contrary to being a writer.&#13;
Kherdian: Well, a writer doesn't&#13;
come out of books. A writer makes&#13;
books, but I think reading is just&#13;
one stage in a long, long apprenticeship&#13;
in a writer's service.&#13;
It occurs much further along than&#13;
childhood - childhood is meant&#13;
for otber things. Of course, you&#13;
can grow up in a home where&#13;
books are used and cherished and&#13;
so on, but there was no such infiuence&#13;
in our homes. . . There&#13;
were no books in our homes, there&#13;
'UM'KIN&#13;
-.iitiA~CAIYIN. CONTEST&#13;
Sign Up in Union&#13;
Rea8CJIion Center&#13;
at Control Desk&#13;
Fri., Oct. 3', 1·2 •••.&#13;
.1 ••1 PAl AIEA&#13;
• 51.00 Entry Fee&#13;
• Pumpkin provided&#13;
(bring your own knife)&#13;
• Prizes Awarded on&#13;
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• Entrys limited to 1st 20&#13;
people to sign up&#13;
No Cover&#13;
Variety of Music Every Night For&#13;
Your Listening &amp; Dancing Pleasure&#13;
• ii&#13;
&amp;.111&#13;
3931 45th St~eet&#13;
~~ ,~' ,&#13;
"You didnt -: ~..&#13;
gQtp&#13;
cOll~&#13;
. toseU&#13;
msurance9 .;..&#13;
,h" . .....&#13;
right?" f;&#13;
DAVID KHERDIAN&#13;
up the idea that they must be&#13;
successful. And as long as you&#13;
operate on that premise, you are&#13;
doomed to a deep spiritual failure&#13;
because you're working for the&#13;
wrong reasons. Art serves&#13;
something else, it must serve&#13;
something else and it can't serve&#13;
both. It can't serve commerce ...&#13;
Ranger: Your motber asked you&#13;
to write her story. Are all your&#13;
works based on your life experiences&#13;
or the experiences of&#13;
those close to you?&#13;
Kherdian: All my work is&#13;
autobiographical. I've always&#13;
only been interested in telling my&#13;
"I don't think anyone&#13;
is an artist out of&#13;
any real choke."&#13;
own story because it's the only&#13;
story I'm really qualified to tell&#13;
and there's no end to it. My story:&#13;
if I can really tell it, if I can really&#13;
understand it, is .everybody's&#13;
story. I would hope that&#13;
everything I've published would&#13;
speak, not to everybody because&#13;
that's impossible, but to&#13;
everybody who wants to examine&#13;
SIX REASONS WHY YOU CAN&#13;
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before Nov, 12, 1981.&#13;
their own life. I told my&#13;
story because it hadn't&#13;
A whole generation went&#13;
the massacres, came lilt&#13;
no spokesman, I was a&#13;
took up the burden.&#13;
Ranger: Is art life for&#13;
life art?&#13;
Kherdian: In the&#13;
when I'm writing the&#13;
the book, the story, it's II&#13;
anything to me. It's&#13;
the same time, I don't&#13;
substitute writing for&#13;
Living is another thing.&#13;
writing itself is a part of&#13;
me, but it doesn't take&#13;
of, or excuse, one's&#13;
Ranger: Is there any a&#13;
could give to a college s&#13;
hopes to become a writ&#13;
Kherdian: Find a way&#13;
in yourself. Don't be .&#13;
or influenced by the OIl&#13;
others. Work very hard at&#13;
a full apprenticeshipt&#13;
in many things - reading,&#13;
trying many, many ways&#13;
You don't really knoww&#13;
is going to be yours in&#13;
Know tha t it may never&#13;
that you may be a total&#13;
failure, and ask yourseH,&#13;
still want to do it?" If&#13;
have the means, don't&#13;
guts, don't do it. Do&#13;
else. I don't think any&#13;
artist 'out of any real&#13;
There's just no other way.&#13;
Sports caIelrtdll&#13;
."_IIII__IIlIlI_llI1IIIlIIIIIIIIlUDImn"lmllllllllllllllallllllllllllllllllllllllnl~&#13;
Rathskeller I&#13;
Lounge;&#13;
SUN. 3 Shorlles for S 1.25 I&#13;
Stroh's or Stroh Ute i&#13;
TUES. 75' Coclctal's I&#13;
THURS.Ladles Nlte ;&#13;
!h Price Drinks ~=&#13;
;:&#13;
2;:&#13;
;:i=&#13;
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§&#13;
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;:&#13;
;:&#13;
;:&#13;
Ii&#13;
INTERVIEWING&#13;
ON CAMPUS&#13;
. NOVEMBER 12, 1981&#13;
MutuillC\&#13;
&lt;if{)milhil,Q.1&#13;
PM,Ip ... -- ••..&#13;
Friday, Oct. 30 ,&#13;
Volleyball vs. Valpar&#13;
vitational&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 31 .&#13;
Volleyhall vs. Valpar&#13;
vitational&#13;
Soccer vs. Illinois InS&#13;
Teclmology (l p.m.)&#13;
Cross-Country (M) vs. N&#13;
Great Lakes Regional&#13;
Cross-Country (W) vs.&#13;
,Championship (11 a.m.)&#13;
Thursday, NOv.S.&#13;
Volleyhall vs. Lewis U&#13;
(7 p.m.)&#13;
Affilialed Comp~ni~: Uniled 01 Om h&#13;
The Omaha Indemnity Compan a a&#13;
MUlual of .Omaha Fund Manasemefll tompany&#13;
~QuaJ Opportunity Companies M/F&#13;
8 Thursday, October 29, 1981 RANGER ,&#13;
Author Kherdian talks about a life of writing&#13;
was certainly no American mu~1c,&#13;
b Ton Rog&#13;
ture EdJtor&#13;
Ra in -b&lt;rn poet and author&#13;
vid J{herdian wa in Racine&#13;
thi pa w end for the Racine&#13;
Public Library' Emily A. Lee&#13;
I bration. Kherdian bas had 18&#13;
b and anthologies of poetry&#13;
p.ibli hed . In 1979 hi first novel ,&#13;
1b Ro d r m Home, was&#13;
p.ibli bed and ince then has won&#13;
nume u awards. The book is the&#13;
tory of Kherdian' mother, who&#13;
rvived the Turkish massacres&#13;
of I.he rm nian people. A sequel&#13;
to th k , indlng Home, was&#13;
publi ed thi year. I interviewed&#13;
Kherd ian la t aturday about life&#13;
III depr ion-era Racine's Armenia&#13;
n community and hi work.&#13;
Kh rdian : I think it was distinct&#13;
f r u , but at the same time the&#13;
· m d i tinc tion ex · ted for other&#13;
mm or iti . I think the city was&#13;
fo r med o f li ttle ub-cultural&#13;
pock , and th e Armenian wa s&#13;
on , and th r we re other as we ll.&#13;
cou e, at that time the whol e&#13;
1M r city, wruch now ms to be&#13;
in rath r bad ha pe , was a ctive&#13;
and aliv . II th tor were&#13;
u , ev rythmg wa s us ed. It ha d&#13;
a quality or n · about it, as&#13;
compa d to what it is now . And&#13;
a lthough one might l back&#13;
upon it, perha ps as a n adult, and&#13;
think that you wer living in the&#13;
Kherdian: Oh it was very&#13;
strong. There were two cultures&#13;
going at once. There was the&#13;
culture of the home and the&#13;
culture of the.streets. The culture&#13;
of the home being Armenian in our&#13;
case, and of course the same&#13;
culture of the streets for eve~one&#13;
was American. The neighborhoods&#13;
were alive, because the&#13;
immigrants had come, th~y we~&#13;
re-founding their race m this&#13;
there was no idea of art. The first&#13;
real art I saw was when I was&#13;
twenty-four; the first time I went&#13;
to New York after tl_le army I&#13;
remember seeing a Vmcent Van&#13;
Gogh from way across the&#13;
corridor. 1 was just shocked to my&#13;
core because I'd seen somethng&#13;
that '1 was totally unpre~red _for&#13;
and I knew I was w1tnessmg&#13;
sometning miraculous ..&#13;
It was in my twenties that I&#13;
~✓-&gt;""'✓✓✓-=00""'✓✓✓✓✓...0--..r✓✓.r✓..r- began to pursue things. I was&#13;
twenty when I first read Theodore&#13;
Drieser, which was the first real&#13;
book of literature I'd read. I knew&#13;
instantly that there was a world&#13;
within the world that I was living.&#13;
There was another stream of life&#13;
that my life had never touched •&#13;
before one that was unknown to&#13;
me. I think I was very fortunate in&#13;
this because I had all the raw&#13;
materials of life, and experience&#13;
"You can't represent&#13;
life in books,&#13;
especially for&#13;
a child ... "&#13;
~_,-_,.....,....,.._,.....,....,.....o"'...,......,.....,...r.r✓.r✓.r✓✓✓- is simply raw material ....&#13;
A large part of that was a deep&#13;
resentment toward all schools,&#13;
toward all forms of formal&#13;
learning, because I could see that&#13;
they were bankrupt. I didn' t&#13;
respect the teachers ; I didn't&#13;
respect the schools or the&#13;
curriculum or any of it. None of it&#13;
made sense to me, and it still&#13;
doesn' t. You can't represent life in&#13;
books, especially for a child. Life&#13;
is life ; it's represented&#13;
everywhere for them but in the&#13;
c oun t ry and having children - the&#13;
ne ighborhoods were lull of&#13;
chi ldren . One had a sense of the&#13;
schools being new , everything&#13;
be ing - well, I keep saying alive.&#13;
When I look back on it, that was&#13;
the feeling.&#13;
Ranger: I've read that, as a&#13;
child you had no real interest in&#13;
books . One might think that would&#13;
be contrary to being a writer.&#13;
schoolroom. 1 •&#13;
lums - this would have been&#13;
ca lled a ghetto perhaps - but one&#13;
bad no nse of this at the time.&#13;
nd of course we were very poor,&#13;
and one had no nse of poverty&#13;
because everyone wa living the&#13;
Kherdian: Well, a writer doesn't&#13;
come out of books. A writer makes&#13;
books , but I think reading is just&#13;
ooe stage in a long, long apprenticeship&#13;
in a writer's service.&#13;
It occurs much further along than&#13;
childhood - childhood is meant&#13;
for other things. Of course, you&#13;
can grow up in a home where&#13;
books are used and cherished and&#13;
so oo, but there was no such influence&#13;
in our homes . .. There&#13;
were no books in our homes, there&#13;
Ranger: What trends do you&#13;
see, what do you think of current&#13;
media and fine arts?&#13;
DAVID KHERDIAN&#13;
me life . I gr w up in the&#13;
d pr ion and everyone was&#13;
poor , so in a ense nobody was&#13;
poor . Everyone was ju t living the&#13;
li.fe th y were living.&#13;
Rang r : Was there much more&#13;
ol an thnic feeling about the city&#13;
then ?&#13;
PUMPKIN&#13;
CARVIN&amp; CONTEST&#13;
Fri., Oct. 30, 1-2 p.a.&#13;
1• 10• PAI AREA&#13;
• s1.00 Entry Fee&#13;
• Pumpkin provided&#13;
Sign Up in Union (bring your own knife)&#13;
• Prizes Awarded on&#13;
Reaeotion Center Originality &amp;&#13;
at Control Desk&#13;
Creativity&#13;
• Entrys limited to 1st 20&#13;
people to sign up&#13;
~ 11111111111111111111111111111111m IIIIIII Ill Ill II Ill I Ill Ill I llt 111111111111111111111 HI II IIIIIIIII Ill I IIIUIIIIII IIIH ll£&#13;
j Rathskeller I&#13;
- Lounge;:====&#13;
SUN. 3 Shorlies for s 1.25&#13;
~&#13;
; TUES. s;;h;:;;::h Ute I&#13;
;=IIIIIFWI&#13;
No Cover&#13;
Variety of Music Every Night For&#13;
Your Listening 8. Dancing Pleasure&#13;
3931 45th Street&#13;
kl a11111wra111111111WZ-•11na1• 1tt11111an 1 r••llllii&#13;
up the idea that they must be&#13;
succe!jisful. And as long as you&#13;
operate on that premise, you are&#13;
doomed to a deep spiritual failure&#13;
because yoo're working for the&#13;
wrong reasons. Art serves&#13;
something else, it must serve&#13;
something else and it can' t serve&#13;
both. It can't serve commerce .. .&#13;
Ranger: Your mother asked you&#13;
to write her story. Are all your&#13;
works based on your life experiences&#13;
or the experiences of&#13;
those close to you?&#13;
Kherdian: All my work is&#13;
autobiographical. I've always&#13;
only been interested in telling my&#13;
Kherdian: You almost can't&#13;
even call it that anymore it's so·&#13;
poor. I think that one. of the big&#13;
mistakes made is the belief that, if&#13;
you turn up the volume you improve&#13;
the performance - whether&#13;
the volume is nudity, profanity or&#13;
actual volume itself as in music,&#13;
·you know. People become so&#13;
desperate to be noticed that they'll&#13;
do almost anything, and all · of&#13;
those things take one further and&#13;
further away from the reality of&#13;
art. And of course, I'm as far as&#13;
you can go on the other extreme&#13;
because my work is so quiet, so&#13;
unobtrusive and so easy to miss.&#13;
And that's okay. That's what's&#13;
true for me. But as a potential&#13;
audience for other people's work, :r..,........-..,......,...~_,...._,._,-....o,-..r....-....-....-..,......,......,......,.....,.._,.&#13;
I can't really get very interested&#13;
in it because I don't think it's&#13;
honest.&#13;
Ranger: Sort of to spectacular,&#13;
too exhibitionist?&#13;
Kherdian: All of those things.&#13;
0 1 don't think anyone&#13;
is an artist out of&#13;
any real choice." Also , the need for everything to&#13;
pay , to pay off, that everything&#13;
must bring a big return. :;r..,.-..,.-..,....c,'".,o,-..r..,.-.r..,.-..,.....,...__,.....,......,......,.....,.....,..""'°'&#13;
Ranger: Do you see money as&#13;
being the prime motivator in what&#13;
is done in the arts?&#13;
Kherdian : It is in cinema, for&#13;
example. It's impossible for&#13;
anyone who makes movies to call&#13;
themselves artists. It isn't&#13;
possible because of the conditions&#13;
of the work. You can't do it unless·&#13;
it brings in money . ... For some&#13;
reason, today's artists can't. give&#13;
right?" . • f '&#13;
own story because it's the only&#13;
story I'm really qualified to tell&#13;
~nd there's no end to it. My story:&#13;
if I can really tell it, if I can really&#13;
understand it, is everybody's&#13;
story. I would hope that&#13;
everything I've published would&#13;
speak, not to everybody because&#13;
that's impossible, but to&#13;
everybody who wants to examine&#13;
SIX REASONS WHY YOU CAN&#13;
BE MORE SUCCESSFUL WITH&#13;
THE MUTUAL OF OMAHA&#13;
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Full Prod~cl Line With health. lite . auto&#13;
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Unl,lmlted Income How much you earn Is&#13;
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AclHnced Trelnlng Our comprehensive&#13;
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Flrat-Yeer Bo~':'• You can quali fy for up to&#13;
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before Nov. 12 , 1981 .&#13;
INTERVIEWING&#13;
ON CAMPUS&#13;
. NOVEMBER 12, 1981&#13;
MuttmlC\&#13;
~milha .V ,,... ............ .&#13;
~ffiliated Comp.mies: United of Onliha&#13;
The Om•h• Indemn ity Compon&#13;
MutuilJ of Omah• fund M.anage-nt "Y · """" Company&#13;
i::qual Oppertunity Companies MI F&#13;
their own life. I told my&#13;
story because it hadn't beea&#13;
A whole generation went&#13;
the massacres, came rut&#13;
no spokesman. I was a&#13;
took up the burden.&#13;
Ranger: Is art life for&#13;
life art?&#13;
Kherdian: In the sense&#13;
when I'm writing the cha&#13;
the book, the story, it's as&#13;
anything to me. It's pal&#13;
the same time, I don't&#13;
substitute writing for ·&#13;
Living is another thing.&#13;
writing itself is a part of · ·&#13;
me, but it doesn't take the&#13;
of, or excuse, one's conduct.&#13;
Ranger: Is there any a ·&#13;
could give to a colleges&#13;
hopes to become a writer!&#13;
Kherdian: Find a way to&#13;
in yourself. Don't be di&#13;
or influenced by the op· ·&#13;
others. Work very hard al&#13;
a full apprenticeship, whidl&#13;
in many things - reading,&#13;
trying many, many ways to&#13;
You don't really know what&#13;
is going to be yours in the&#13;
Know that it may never wmt&#13;
that you may be a total&#13;
failure, and ask yourself,&#13;
still want to do it?" If yoo&#13;
have the means, don't ha1'&#13;
guts, don't do it. Do so&#13;
else. I don't think anyooe&#13;
artist ·out of any real&#13;
There's just no other way.&#13;
Sports Calendar&#13;
Friday, Oct. 30 .&#13;
Volleyball vs. Valpar~&#13;
vitational&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 31 .&#13;
Volleyball vs. ValparaiSO&#13;
vitational&#13;
Soccer vs. Illinois Jnstitult&#13;
Technology (1 p.m.) C&#13;
Cross-Country (M) vs. N&#13;
Great Lakes Regional&#13;
Cross-Country (W) vs.&#13;
, Championship (11 a .m.&gt;&#13;
Thursday, ov. 5 .&#13;
Volley ball vs. Lewis OIIIV&#13;
(7 p.m.)&#13;
RANGER , 52 --5&#13;
urity experiments&#13;
ith propane car&#13;
Wisconsin by the Security&#13;
department to learn how to install&#13;
the eqpipment needed to convert&#13;
to propane. "He is the only one&#13;
w~o works on the car," Brinkman&#13;
said. The conversion kit was&#13;
purchased from Midstates Gas&#13;
Equipment. The cost to teach the&#13;
mechanic how to install it&#13;
equipment, and installatio~&#13;
totalled about $1300. Despite a&#13;
state mandate tha t declares all&#13;
state vehicles to he sold after&#13;
55,000 miles, the propane equipment&#13;
will be taken off and used&#13;
again. Brinkman feels that the&#13;
money spent on the initial cost will&#13;
eventually be saved in less consumption&#13;
and maintenance.&#13;
"&lt;?ver a period of three years, it&#13;
Will pay for itself," Brinkman&#13;
stated.&#13;
There are some setbacks in the&#13;
experiment. For example. there is&#13;
10% less pick-up when running on&#13;
propane and less trunk space&#13;
because the propane tank is there,&#13;
but overall Brinkman is very&#13;
happy with the car.&#13;
Cruise pIannOO&#13;
World Explorer Cruises is&#13;
featuring a seven day New Year's&#13;
Cruise departing Sunday, Dec. TI&#13;
from Port Everglades, Florida.&#13;
The S. S. Universe will call at&#13;
Pla.ya Del Carmen, Cazumel, and&#13;
Ocho Rios. This cruise is open to&#13;
everyone of all ages.&#13;
For people with more time there&#13;
are two 14 day affordable Transcanal&#13;
cruises departing Jan. 31&#13;
and Feb. 14.&#13;
This is more than a cruise - it's&#13;
a learning experience.&#13;
For more information about&#13;
these or Summer 1982 cruises to&#13;
Alaska, contact Holly Beth&#13;
Hinrichs, Box 153, Germantown,&#13;
Wis. 53022, or phone (414) 255-3497&#13;
after 4 p. m.&#13;
Soviet Seminar&#13;
holds meeting&#13;
An introductory meeting for&#13;
students interested in taking&#13;
the Soviet Seminar next&#13;
semester, including a two week&#13;
trip to the U.S.S.R. in March&#13;
will he held in Union 'JffI ,.;&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 4 at 3 p. m.&#13;
Dr. Oliver Hayward&#13;
Assistant Professor Da~&#13;
McGovern and students wbo&#13;
participated in earlier trips to&#13;
the U.S.S.R. will show slides&#13;
and answer questions.&#13;
Wind Ensemble&#13;
toperfonn&#13;
The Parkside Wind Ensemble&#13;
will present a concert al2 p.m. on&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 8, in IIlain Place d.&#13;
Wyllie Library - Learning Center&#13;
under the direction of Scott&#13;
Mather.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
Hammersmith, Prelude and&#13;
Scherzo by Holst, Do Not Go&#13;
Gentle Into That Good ight by&#13;
Del Borge, Handel in the Strand&#13;
by Grainger, Psalm by Persichetti&#13;
and L'Inglesina by Delle&#13;
Cese.&#13;
Admission is free for senior&#13;
citizens; $1 Cor others.&#13;
Social Security benefits to&#13;
students 18-22 attending colleges&#13;
and other post - secondary schools&#13;
will he sharply curtailed under a&#13;
recently enacted law, Carlo R.&#13;
Ricciardi, Social security district&#13;
manager in ICellO'Sha, said&#13;
recently.&#13;
First, children who become&#13;
eligible for Social Security&#13;
benefits after July 1982 will not&#13;
receive post - secondary student&#13;
benefits.&#13;
Second, post - secondary school&#13;
students who first become eligible&#13;
for benefits in the period September&#13;
1981 - July 1982 will only&#13;
receive benefits through July 1982&#13;
Basic SkiIs&#13;
Educators to meet&#13;
About 150 educators from&#13;
colleges and universities&#13;
throughout the Midwest a~ expected&#13;
to attend the Tlurd Besic&#13;
Skills Conference at Parksule&#13;
today and tomorrow Theme of the&#13;
1981 conference is "Developmental.&#13;
Education' A Total&#13;
Campus Commitment 10&#13;
Principa I speaker "ill he Prof&#13;
John E. Roueche, dlrector of the&#13;
Community College Leadership&#13;
Program at the Uruversitv of&#13;
Texas at Austin and an authOnty&#13;
on developmental and remedial&#13;
education. He will talk on&#13;
"Holistic Literacy ill College&#13;
Teaching," the subject 0( hi most&#13;
recent book.&#13;
Roueche will 1lJ"" his keynote&#13;
address at a dinner torught and&#13;
also will talk tomorrow at a&#13;
morning workshop sessioo, one of&#13;
24 small-group sessions planned&#13;
over the two-day conference on a&#13;
variety of SUbjects Involving&#13;
developmental education&#13;
Other speakers at general&#13;
sessions will mclude Dr Joseph&#13;
Kauffman, Executive ViCE&#13;
President of the UW System "'!xl&#13;
will talk on "Working Together on&#13;
(one month for sexne stucien&#13;
Finally, students currently&#13;
receiving benefits (or child&#13;
beneficiaries who begin their&#13;
college or paM • seeonclar)&#13;
e&lt;b:ation before May 1!lll2 will&#13;
receive limited Shadrntl lIenefits&#13;
Benefit rates fer _ ..... ts who&#13;
are eligible for cootiraling benefits&#13;
will he frozen at the July l!IIl1&#13;
level, Ricciardi said. Furthermore,&#13;
these rates will be&#13;
reduced 25 percent eldl ,.r&#13;
starting with August 1981, and&#13;
benefits cannot he poid to students&#13;
during May, June, Jul) or Augusl&#13;
starting in 1982. As a result, no&#13;
further student henefits ".II be&#13;
po KI or pn I 11115&#13;
",. conIereoce&#13;
by I?'" -Parkside and the l.'VI&#13;
lern,," C ler Jor the I"'"&#13;
0( _1.--. and Disad&#13;
vantaged COIIf rene coor&#13;
dlnalcn are Carol J GI&#13;
Par ide and ow.. Pallard al&#13;
UW·, Iilw&#13;
Student Social Security benefits cut&#13;
Gain Pickin' •&#13;
Irick., I, ••• wi'"&#13;
.... &amp; Lace Friday,&#13;
Oct. 30&#13;
9:30 .11 1:30&#13;
PRIZES FOR&#13;
BEST COSTUMES&#13;
•••• ,.1 ...... 11&#13;
" •••1. &amp; L.c.&#13;
~.l ,v&#13;
COUNTRY IWESTERN SALOON&#13;
RACINE MOTOR INN&#13;
535 Main Street in Downtown Racine&#13;
Howard Butten (Buffo) graduated from the&#13;
Ringling Bros. and Barnum &amp; Bailey Clown&#13;
College, and toured 2 years with the Circus&#13;
Bartok. In 1972 Bulten wrote and co -&#13;
starred in WXYZ (ABC) television's&#13;
"Super Circus" show. Later he became&#13;
Buffo, combining his talents as a dov..n.&#13;
singer t musician, mime and artist into one&#13;
character.&#13;
Wednesday, November 4&#13;
·8 p. m,&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Tickets Available at the&#13;
UNION INFO CENTER&#13;
and at the DOOR&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
CHILDREN'S PRICES&#13;
WORKSHOPS&#13;
WITH BUFFO&#13;
will be held on&#13;
Wednesday, November 4&#13;
BUFFO&#13;
the clown&#13;
ecurity experiments&#13;
ith propane car&#13;
b\ Jeff Wick&#13;
ide' ecurity Departp&#13;
r ~ an effort to ave money&#13;
' 1oergy, i currently exnung&#13;
with a dual f~eled&#13;
d car. which runs on either&#13;
Ille or propane gas.&#13;
car. a 1981 AMC _ Concord&#13;
8 ~.cylinder engme, was&#13;
\-erted and ready to. use on&#13;
1 this year. Ron Brmk:man,&#13;
) r d ecu rity, says it will&#13;
ror I U in three years.&#13;
'" man got th e idea while&#13;
tttnding a work.shop in Lincoln,&#13;
a in Ma rch. "I was very&#13;
• .,.,m-e!;seo at one ci. the sessions&#13;
h dea lt with motor vehicle&#13;
. ca,servation. The session&#13;
t wi th the co n version of&#13;
1es to propane gas as a&#13;
tute fuel whi le s til1 al1owing&#13;
~elud e to use unleaded gas in&#13;
even t it is needed," Brinkman&#13;
When he ca me back, he&#13;
· tely ubmitted a proposal&#13;
A i ta nt Cha n cellor Gary&#13;
for approval of a conversion&#13;
m tll periment with propane in&#13;
d ca r . It was a pproved in&#13;
innkman is ve ry pleased with&#13;
ults so ra r , and he plans to&#13;
the car to the UW System&#13;
ty meeting in Madison next&#13;
moog the adva ntages of using&#13;
ne gas is tha t it increases&#13;
life, it is cleaner burning,&#13;
it is not dependent on foreign&#13;
pn . Propane gas, which is&#13;
plentiful supply at this time, is&#13;
based at Van 's Gas Service&#13;
2?nd Averrue in Kenosha for&#13;
I a gallon. The car has a&#13;
gallon propane tank mounted in&#13;
trunk in addi t ion to the 20&#13;
Don gas tank . P ropane also has&#13;
higher octane whic h reduced&#13;
tl) engi ne repa irs by reducing&#13;
I changes, park plug wear and&#13;
er ha ust emissions.&#13;
Bruce Berman was the&#13;
hanic ent to Holstein,&#13;
Wisconsin by the ecurity&#13;
department to learn how to install&#13;
the eq_uipment needed to convert&#13;
to propane. 'He is the only one&#13;
w~o works on the car," Brinkman&#13;
said. The conversion kit was&#13;
purchased from 1id tates Gas&#13;
Equipment. The cost to teach the&#13;
me~hanic how to install it,&#13;
equipment, and installation&#13;
totalled about $1300 . Despite a&#13;
state mandate that declares all&#13;
state vehicles to be sold after&#13;
55,000 miles , the propane equipment&#13;
will be taken off and used&#13;
again. Brinkman feels that the&#13;
money spent on the initial cost will&#13;
eventually be saved in less consumption&#13;
and maintenance&#13;
"Over a period of three years ii&#13;
will pay for itself," Brinkn{an&#13;
stated.&#13;
There are some setbacks in the&#13;
experimen_t. For example, there is&#13;
10% less pick-up when running on&#13;
propane and less trunk space&#13;
because the propane tank is there,&#13;
but overall Brinkman is very&#13;
happy with the car.&#13;
Cruise plannoo&#13;
World Explorer Cruises is&#13;
featuring a seven day ew Year's&#13;
Cruise departing Sunday, Dec . Zl&#13;
from Port Everglades, Florida.&#13;
The S. S. Universe will call at&#13;
Pia-ya Del Carmen, Cozumel , and&#13;
Ocho Rios . This cruise is open to&#13;
everyone of all ages.&#13;
For people with more time there&#13;
are two 14 day affordable TTanscanal&#13;
cruises departing Jan. 31&#13;
and Feb. 14.&#13;
This is more than a cruise - it's&#13;
a learning experience.&#13;
For more information about&#13;
these or Summer 1982 cruises to&#13;
Alaska, contact Holly Beth&#13;
Hinrichs, Box 153, Germantown,&#13;
Wis . 53022, or phone (414 ) 255-3497&#13;
after 4 p . m .&#13;
~oin Pickin'&#13;
lrlck er lre• t ....&#13;
h • I• &amp; Lace Friday,&#13;
Oct . 30&#13;
9:30 Ill I :30&#13;
PRIZES FOR&#13;
BEST COSTUMES&#13;
- Ret•r•l•I New . 11&#13;
De• I• &amp; L• ce&#13;
COUNTRY /WESTERN SALOON&#13;
RACINE MOTOR INN&#13;
53 5 Main Street in Downtown Racine&#13;
RA GER&#13;
Basic Skil Soviet Seminar&#13;
holds meeting&#13;
An introductory mee ing for&#13;
tudents inter ted m ing Educato s to meet&#13;
the oviet eminar next&#13;
emester, includin a tv:o w&#13;
trip to the . . .. R. in arch&#13;
will be held in nion 2fT1 ~&#13;
Wednesday, 'ov. 4 at 3 p . m .&#13;
Dr. Oliver Hay ard&#13;
A si tant Profe sor Da~&#13;
McGovern and student ho&#13;
participated in earlier trips to&#13;
the .S.S.R wil1 show sh&#13;
and answer questions .&#13;
Wind Ensemble&#13;
to perlonn&#13;
The Parkside Wind Ensembl&#13;
will present a concert at p.m . on&#13;
unday , ov. 8, in fain Place ci.&#13;
Wyllie Library - Learning Center&#13;
under the direction of cott&#13;
ather.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
Hammersmith, Prelude and&#13;
cherzo by Hol t , Do , ' ot Go&#13;
Gentle Into That Good 'igbt b&#13;
Del Borgo, Handel in the trand&#13;
by Grainger, Psalm by Perichetti&#13;
and L'logl ina by Delle&#13;
Cese.&#13;
Admission is free for senior&#13;
citizens ; $1 for others.&#13;
Student Social Security beneft&#13;
ocial Security benefit to&#13;
students 18-22 attending colleges&#13;
and other pa;;t - econdary chool&#13;
will be sharply curtailed under a&#13;
recently enacted la , Carlo R .&#13;
Ricciardi Social Security district&#13;
manager in iCeoosha , said&#13;
recently.&#13;
First, children ho become&#13;
eligible for ocial curity&#13;
benefits alter July 1982 will not&#13;
receive post - condary tud.ent&#13;
benefits.&#13;
Second, p t • ecoodary I&#13;
students who first become eligible&#13;
for benefits in the period September&#13;
1981 - July 1982 ill only&#13;
receive benefits through July 1982&#13;
BUFFO&#13;
the clown&#13;
Howard Butten &lt;Buffo) gradu ted from&#13;
Ringling Br . and Barnum Bail e.&#13;
College , and toured 2 yea \\.1th Ci&#13;
Bartek. In 1972 Butten ·ro e and co •&#13;
starred i n YZ ( B t I&#13;
" u r Circu " sho ·• L t h&#13;
Buffo, combining hi tal&#13;
inger, musician, mime and artist nto&#13;
character.&#13;
W e dnesday, o vemh r&#13;
• 8 p . m .&#13;
Union Cine ma&#13;
T icke t Availab le at t h&#13;
U IO I FO CE TE R&#13;
an d at th e DOOR&#13;
SPECIA L&#13;
CHILDRE PRICE&#13;
WORKSHOPS&#13;
WITH 8 FO&#13;
will he h e ld on&#13;
Wedne sday,&#13;
cut&#13;
10 Thursday, October 29,1981 RANGER&#13;
VoIJevbaI' losses&#13;
Coach says talent there&#13;
by Doug Ed.Db .... r&#13;
If the Parkside women's&#13;
volleyball team has any hope of&#13;
doing well in the state tournament&#13;
caning up next month, they had&#13;
belter start playing up to their&#13;
.bIIities.&#13;
The Rangers moved their&#13;
record to 16-2118stweekend with a&#13;
l-3 showing at the Carthage Invitational.&#13;
Parkside lost the first&#13;
two matches to St. Xavier, 11-15&#13;
and 11-15,and UW-LaCrosse, 3-15,&#13;
15-10 and 12-15, before heating&#13;
UW-Whitewater 16-14 and 15-9.&#13;
The Rangers then dropped their&#13;
last match to Elmhurst College,&#13;
12-15,15-5and 11-15.&#13;
Coach Linda Henderson is&#13;
disappointed at the team's present&#13;
level of play. "I reaDy don't know&#13;
what to say. We stopped improving&#13;
after the Wright Slate&#13;
tournamenl. We're not doing&#13;
things with sny greater consistency&#13;
than we were."&#13;
The Rangers have much talent,&#13;
as they showed earlier in the&#13;
season hut that talent seems to be&#13;
hidden'lately. "The talent is there,&#13;
hut it's very frustrating that I&#13;
can't bring it out," said Henderson.&#13;
"I'm disappointed that&#13;
we're not winning games that we&#13;
should win."&#13;
The Rangers hosted Bradley&#13;
University and UW-Oshkosh&#13;
Tuesday night, heating Bradley&#13;
and losing to Oshkosh. .&#13;
Parkside played well to handily&#13;
deleat Bradley in two games hy&#13;
scores of 15-7 and 15-6. Oshkosh&#13;
proved 00 be too much for the&#13;
Rangers, heating them 11-15, 11-&#13;
15.&#13;
The Rangers bave only two&#13;
more meets before the upcoming&#13;
WWIAC tournament. This year's&#13;
tourney will be held at Parkside&#13;
November 13th and 14th. This&#13;
weekend Parks ide travels to&#13;
Valparaiso, Indiana to take part in&#13;
the Va!p&lt;raiso Invitational. They&#13;
then travel to Romeoville, Illinois&#13;
next Thursday to battle a tough&#13;
Lewis University squad.&#13;
Swimming course offered&#13;
Are yoo afraid of water? Do you&#13;
bate the idea of swimming? WeDif&#13;
you answered yes to either of the&#13;
ahove _tioos you will have a&#13;
chance to learn to swim at a Basic&#13;
Water Safety and stroke class&#13;
being offere.J in November.&#13;
The best thing ahoutthe class is&#13;
that it is free. The class, open to&#13;
every level of swimmer, will be&#13;
held the first two Mondays and&#13;
• Wednesdays in November, the&#13;
2nd, 4th, 9th and 11th from I to 2&#13;
p.m. in the gym.&#13;
There will be two instructors for&#13;
the class to provide lots of individual&#13;
attention. All swimmers&#13;
who survive the class will be&#13;
issued a Red Cross Basic Water&#13;
safely Certification card.&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC. ATHLlTIC FOOTWEAll&#13;
FOR AU SPORTS&#13;
TEAM aAUS - AlL IPOfIIT8&#13;
.1flClOK1 .~&#13;
~,.,.._ • nGIJII • ..". ..... T •...,...... -..v-..-va .,.... MUCON'l'&#13;
_ .1"\JIlIM •• ~ iiI&#13;
-' ...,_ . I'ON'I' • NlWII.IlLANCl ~ n .,.&#13;
ThlActMA .... O"&amp;QP ~. 694-9206 __ •.__&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
III WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
Dates &gt; Nov. 4 &amp; 5&#13;
Time· 10·2, 4-6&#13;
Place • Alcove&#13;
Women harriers&#13;
place second&#13;
by Pally DeLuisa&#13;
In their "best race of the year,"&#13;
Mike DeWill's Ranger harriers'&#13;
scored 57points to capture second&#13;
place in the Second Annual&#13;
Carthage College Cross - Country&#13;
Invitational Saturday at&#13;
Petrifying Springs Park. Ten&#13;
teams competed. Coach DeWitt&#13;
commented that the women ran&#13;
their finest limes of the season at&#13;
the meet.&#13;
Junior Debbie Spino led her&#13;
teammates by placing third&#13;
overall with a time of 17:44.1.&#13;
Junior Dona Driscol and Senior&#13;
Barb Osborne ran closely together&#13;
again, placing 9th and 10th&#13;
respectively, with clockmgs of&#13;
18:40.9 and 18:43.8.&#13;
Freshman Sue Meyer was not&#13;
far behind as she placed 14th with&#13;
a time of 19:10.1. Senior Lowrie&#13;
Melotik was 29th at 20:10.7.&#13;
Sandy Venne, a sophomore, also&#13;
ran well for parkside. sandy's&#13;
timewas 20:33.4, good for the 32nd&#13;
scoring position. Sophomore&#13;
Linda Pfeilstifter placed srst;&#13;
Cheryl Konkol of UWMilwaukee&#13;
won the three mile&#13;
race with a time of 17:05.7. Her&#13;
team also took the invitational&#13;
crown by scoring only 41 points.&#13;
UW.()shkosh placed third with 60&#13;
points.&#13;
This coming Saturday (Oct. 31)&#13;
the Rangers will host the&#13;
Wisconsin Women's Intercollege&#13;
Athletic Conference (WWIAC)&#13;
meet. Coach DeWitt believes that&#13;
his runners will do well, hoping for&#13;
a team finish of fourth place. The&#13;
running begins at noon.&#13;
Parkside was paced by&#13;
sophomore Dan Stublaski, who&#13;
placed 18th with a 25:55.1&#13;
clocking. Sophomore Tom Barrell&#13;
ran a quick 27:04.9 to take 7lst&#13;
place. Sophomores Steve Brunner&#13;
and AI Correa strided hack - 00 -&#13;
back with times of 27:08.6 and&#13;
27:09.1 for 77th and 78th places&#13;
respectively. '&#13;
. Freshman Robert Mayfield&#13;
finished 89th with a time of&#13;
-27:23.1. Sophomore Ray Sharp&#13;
placed 94th and Junior Rich&#13;
Sowlles finished 131st.&#13;
Mike Axinn of the University of&#13;
Chicago won the race with a time&#13;
of 24:57.8. North Central College&#13;
won, the team title with 63 points.&#13;
.CLASSIFIED&#13;
ADS' HELP WANTED&#13;
EARN EXTRA CASH. Home mailing&#13;
program. Send self - addressed, stamped&#13;
env:lop: to A. B. Enterprises, 3065&#13;
cauccne. Racine, 53402.&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
FRE.NCH, GERMAN. SPANISH LESSONS,&#13;
Price open. caroline 886.4206.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
ANYONE INTERESTED in going to "Film&#13;
lndi.a".at Chicago Art Institute, Sundays&#13;
beglnnlfl~ Nov. 1. Share the ride, cost of gas&#13;
and parking. Contact Vivian 639-2602or 656-&#13;
6956.&#13;
SHERRY FESTGE spikes pumpkin as&#13;
Henschal look on.&#13;
ADULT&#13;
MASKS&#13;
_ t2fX) illhx:k&#13;
2~OFF&#13;
ADULT&#13;
COSTUMES&#13;
f1l/I6I snd ~&#13;
for_gfor.&#13;
614 56th St. Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Moonllte sOwl&#13;
RED PIN&#13;
$3.00 Nlte&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
WEEKLY SPECIALS&#13;
Nov. 2 - Nov. 7&#13;
60'/game MON. 9 a.m .. 'til Noon&#13;
TUE. Noon 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 3 p.m. 'til 6 p.m-&#13;
All you can bowl&#13;
or play pool&#13;
THUR. 7 p.m. 'til 10 p.rn-&#13;
FRI .. 10 p.m , 'til 1 a.m·&#13;
90'/game SAT. 8 p.m. 'til 1 a.m·&#13;
•&#13;
10 Thursday, October '19, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Volleyball losses&#13;
Coach says talent there&#13;
bOuEdnh r&#13;
1r the Park ide women's&#13;
v I y II team ha any hope of&#13;
doin lJ in the tale tournament&#13;
comin up n xt month, they had&#13;
b t tart playing up to their&#13;
ablliti&#13;
Th R nger moved their&#13;
ord lo 16·21 la t weekend with a&#13;
1-3 howm at the Carthage In•&#13;
·1tational. Par ide lo t the first&#13;
two matche to t. avier, 8-15&#13;
nd Il-15, and W-LaCrosse, 3-15,&#13;
1 -10 and 12-15, before beating&#13;
W-Whitew ter 11&gt;-14 and 15-9.&#13;
The Rang rs th n dropped their&#13;
la" match to Elmhurst College,&#13;
12-15, 15-5 and 11-15 .&#13;
C ch Linda Hender on is&#13;
d1 ppointed at the team's present&#13;
I v I of play. "I really don't know&#13;
hat to ay. We stopped im•&#13;
pro ing aft r the Wright State&#13;
tournament. We're not doing&#13;
thin with any greater con•&#13;
l ncy than w were."&#13;
The Rangers have much talent,&#13;
th y owed earlier in the&#13;
season but that talent seems to be&#13;
hidden°lately. ''The talent is there,&#13;
but it's very frustrating that I&#13;
can't bring it out," said Henderson.&#13;
"I'm disappointed that&#13;
we're not winning games that we&#13;
should win."&#13;
The Rangers hosted Bradley&#13;
University and UW-Oshkosh&#13;
Tuesday night, beating Bradley&#13;
and losing to Oshkosh. .&#13;
Parkside played well to handily&#13;
defeat Bradley in two games by&#13;
scores of 15-7 and 15-6. Oshkosh&#13;
proved to be too much for the&#13;
Rangers, beating them 11-15, 11-&#13;
15.&#13;
The Rangers have only two&#13;
more meets before the upcoming&#13;
WWIAC tournament. This year's&#13;
tourney will be held at Parkside&#13;
ovember 13th and 14th. This&#13;
weekend Parkside travels to&#13;
Valporaiso, Indiana to take part in&#13;
the Valparaiso Invitational. They&#13;
then travel to Romeoville, Illinois&#13;
next Thursday to battle a trugh&#13;
Lewis University squad.&#13;
Swimming course offered&#13;
re you afraid of water? Do you&#13;
hate the id or swimming? Well il&#13;
you amw red yes to either of the&#13;
abo e qu tims ou will have a&#13;
chance to learn to wim at a Basic&#13;
Wa er fely and troke class&#13;
being offered in ovember.&#13;
The t thing about the cla is&#13;
that it i fr . Th class, open to&#13;
e.,- ry le I r immer, will be&#13;
held the first two Mondays and&#13;
. Wednesdays in ovember, the&#13;
2nd, 4th, 9th and 11th from 1 to 2&#13;
p.m. in the gym.&#13;
There will be two instructors for&#13;
the class to provide lots of in·&#13;
dividual attention. All swimmers&#13;
who survive the class will be&#13;
issued a Red Cross Basic Water&#13;
Safety Certification card.&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC. ATHLETIC FOOTW£AII&#13;
FOR All SPORTS&#13;
TEAM IALII - ALL Sl'OftTS&#13;
• MDOIS • CON\llll9!&#13;
• tl""AIII ..... •PUMA _.,.. ,.=.. ....... __, ... ,, __. .... , ...&#13;
~-n•-n&#13;
• 9P01' ....... , ·-• Sl'AU&gt;lflG&#13;
•HEWL&lt;il.ANa&#13;
Thi ActNt A!Neta One Step&#13;
694-9206 --If.-.•&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
(1) WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
Date ov. 4 &amp; 5 Only.&#13;
Time - 10-2, 4-6&#13;
~6at0!1{ s Place - Alcove&#13;
Women harriers&#13;
place second&#13;
by Patty DeLuisa&#13;
In their "best race of the year,"&#13;
Mike DeWitt's Ranger harriers·&#13;
scored 57 points to capture second&#13;
place in the Second Annual&#13;
Carthage College Cross · Country&#13;
Invitational Saturday at&#13;
Petrifying Springs Park. Ten&#13;
teams competed. Coach DeWitt&#13;
commented that the women ran&#13;
their finest times of the season at&#13;
the meet.&#13;
Junior Debbie Spino led her&#13;
teammates by placing third&#13;
overall with a time of 17:44.1.&#13;
Junior Dona Driscol and Senior&#13;
Barb Osborne ran closely together&#13;
again, placing 9th and 10th&#13;
respectively, with clockings of&#13;
18:40.9 and 18:43.8.&#13;
Freshman Sue Meyer was not&#13;
far behind as she placed 14th with&#13;
a time of 19: 10.1. Senior Lowrie&#13;
Melotik was 29th at 20:10.7.&#13;
Sandy Venne, a sophomore, also&#13;
ran well for parkside. Sandy's&#13;
time was 20:33.4, good for the 32nd&#13;
scoring position. Sophomore&#13;
Linda Pfeilstifter placed 61st.&#13;
Cheryl Konkol of UWMilwaukee&#13;
won the three mile&#13;
race with a time of 17:05.7. Her&#13;
team also took the invitational&#13;
crown by scoring only 41 points.&#13;
UW-Oshkosh placed third with 60&#13;
points.&#13;
This coming Saturday (Oct. 31)&#13;
the Rangers will host the&#13;
Wisconsin Women's Intercollege&#13;
Athletic Conference (WWIAC)&#13;
meet. Coach DeWitt believes that&#13;
his runners will do well, hoping for&#13;
a team finish of fourth place. The&#13;
running begins at noon.&#13;
Parkside was paced by&#13;
sophomore Dan Stublaski, who&#13;
placed 18th with a 25:55.1&#13;
clocking. Sophomore Tom Barrett&#13;
ran a quick Z7:04.9 to take 71st&#13;
place. Sophomores Steve Brunner&#13;
and Al Correa strided back • to -&#13;
back with times of Z7 :08.6 and&#13;
Z7:09.l for 77th and 78th places&#13;
respectively. '&#13;
Freshman Robert Mayfield&#13;
finished 89th with a time of&#13;
Z7:23.l. Sophomore Ray Sharp&#13;
placed 94th and Junior Rich&#13;
Sowlles finished 131st.&#13;
~ke Axinn of the University of&#13;
Chicago won the race with a time&#13;
of 24:57.8. North Central College&#13;
won , the team title with 63 points.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
ADS·&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
EARN EXTRA CASH. Home malling&#13;
program. Send self • addressed, stamped&#13;
env~lop~ to A. B. Enterprises, 3065&#13;
Cahdorua, Racine, 53402.&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
FRENCH, GERMAN, SPANISH LESSONS.&#13;
Price open . Ca rollne 886-4206.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
ANYONE INTERESTED in going to "FIim&#13;
lnd(a" at Chicago Art Institute, Sundays&#13;
beg,nnin~ Nov. 1. Share the ride, cost of gas&#13;
:;:park,ng. Contact Vivian 639 -2602 or 656 -&#13;
RED PIN&#13;
$3.00 Nite&#13;
Moonlite Bowl&#13;
SHERRY FESTGE spikes pumpkin as&#13;
Henschal look on.&#13;
ADULT&#13;
MASKS&#13;
•IBJ111/otl&#13;
2~0FF&#13;
fflEATRICAL&#13;
MAKEUP .&#13;
Bp,t $11/sdr,n&#13;
II 11,s ,,. ADULT&#13;
OOSTUMES&#13;
614 56th St. Downtown Kenosha&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
WEEKL V, SPECIALS&#13;
Nov. 2 - Nov. 7&#13;
60'/game&#13;
All you can bowl&#13;
or play pool&#13;
90'/game&#13;
MON. 9 a.m. 'til Noon&#13;
TUE. Noon 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 3 p.m. 'tll 6 p.m.&#13;
THUR. 7 p.m. 'til 10 p.!Tl ·&#13;
FRI. 10 p.m. 'til 1 a.rn.&#13;
SAT. 8 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
RANGER Thursday. October 29.1981 11&#13;
ngers win two out of three&#13;
mday, October 20, the&#13;
Soccer team took the field&#13;
Purdue - Cahunet and&#13;
t with a s-2 linal score.&#13;
ngers shut down the two&#13;
yers of Purdue - Calumet,&#13;
re the fourth and eighth&#13;
scorers in the National&#13;
ation of Intercollegiate&#13;
C5 (NAlA).&#13;
team (Parkside) played&#13;
very well defensively and extremely&#13;
well offensively," stated&#13;
Coach Henderson.&#13;
John (MoMo) Onyiego led all&#13;
scorers with two goals. Jeff&#13;
LaForce, Ralph DeGraff and Don&#13;
Theisen all added one goal apiece&#13;
to help lead them to victory,&#13;
'giving Parkside their eighth win&#13;
of- the season.&#13;
On Friday, Octoher 23, UWParkside&#13;
shattered St. Norbert&#13;
College 5-{).&#13;
BOB NEWSTROM&#13;
Photo by Dan McCOrmack&#13;
"We totally dominated them!"&#13;
exclaimed Henderson. "We held&#13;
them to poly five shots the whole&#13;
game." Jeff Dennehy and Ralph&#13;
DeGraff each scored two goals,&#13;
while Cheidu Okemah knocked in&#13;
the fifth goal. Along with scoring&#13;
the goals, Dennhy had two assists,&#13;
as did Bob Newstrom. Brad Faust&#13;
also added one assist.&#13;
Dennehy's two goals have tied&#13;
him with the Single Season&#13;
Scoring Record of nine goals.&#13;
His two assists tied him for the&#13;
career Assist Record with sixteen&#13;
assists. Brad Faust's one assist&#13;
also tied with Dennehy for sixteen&#13;
assists. The third record he set&#13;
was the All-Time Scoring List on&#13;
- which he is third with twentyseven&#13;
points. Bob Newstrom's two&#13;
assists give him fourth place on&#13;
the same list with twenty-three.&#13;
Parkside challenged the Golden&#13;
Gophers of Minnesota which was a&#13;
type ci "homecoming" for many&#13;
Ranger players from Minnesota.&#13;
The Rangers had control of the&#13;
ball early when they had four&#13;
excellent scoring opportunities,&#13;
but they just couldn't score. The&#13;
half-time scare was CH&gt;.&#13;
Then eight minutes into the half&#13;
Parkside gave up a free kick,&#13;
boosting the score to 1-0.&#13;
Minutes later, John (MoMo)&#13;
Onyiego was removed from the&#13;
game because of lighting. Due to&#13;
the fact that the team cannot&#13;
substitute for a player kicked out&#13;
of the game, they had to play the&#13;
remainder of the second half short&#13;
one man.&#13;
"We never got back into the&#13;
game after that," said Henderson.&#13;
Minnesota scored another goal&#13;
later in the half for the final goal,&#13;
dropping Parkside's season&#13;
record to 9-8.&#13;
JOHN PETERSON&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Peterson scores 300&#13;
by Laurie Painter which set a new tournament&#13;
record. He placed first of 500&#13;
bowlers, of which the top 96&#13;
buwled the weekend &lt;i Oct. 24th.&#13;
The top t6 bowlers from the 96 will&#13;
bowl head to head on Halloween.&#13;
Willy Yee, also in the tournament,&#13;
has an 846 series and&#13;
qualified near 50th place or 560&#13;
with an average cI. 253. Peterson&#13;
and Vee are members of the&#13;
Parkside Bowling Club.&#13;
On Sunday, Octoher 18, John&#13;
Peterson topped his high buwling&#13;
score of 298 with a perfect 300&#13;
game. John is a twenty year old&#13;
sophomore who has been buwling&#13;
for 11years. During a state singles&#13;
tournament in Balero, Peterson&#13;
bowled his 300 game along with&#13;
scores of 234, 209 and 268. His&#13;
astronomical scores totaled 1011,&#13;
1981-82 RANGER BASKETBALL&#13;
HOME GAMES&#13;
(all 7:30 p. rn. unless otherwise noted)&#13;
Friday. Dec. 4 St. Xavier&#13;
Monday, Dec. 7&#13;
Tuesday. Dec. 15&#13;
Monday-Tuesday,&#13;
Dec. 28-29&#13;
Saturday. Jan. 2&#13;
Tuesday. Jan. 12&#13;
Thursday -, Jan. 14&#13;
Saturday. Jan. 16&#13;
Wednesday. Jan. 20&#13;
Saturday, Jan... 30&#13;
Wednesday. Feb. 10&#13;
Loras&#13;
Ferris State&#13;
Ranger Classic&#13;
(Carthage. UW-Oshkosh.&#13;
Saginaw Valley State)&#13;
UW-Plattevi lie&#13;
Lakeland&#13;
McNeese State&#13;
St. Norbert&#13;
Illinois Tech&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Another exciting season of UW-Parkside&#13;
Ranger basketball will soon be starting III&#13;
JOIN THE CROWD AT PARKSIDE&#13;
AND ENJOY EXCITING&#13;
COLLEGE BASKETBALL ACTION.&#13;
The 1981-82 edition of Ranger basketball will feature the&#13;
following:&#13;
• Enthusiastic cheerleaders&#13;
• The Junior Ranger Club for kids 12and under, complete with&#13;
special membership card, Junior Ranger badge and other&#13;
special "goodies" tnrcusnout the season. , .&#13;
• FREE T - shirt to every purchaser of a season ticket. , .&#13;
SEASON PASSES NOW AVAILABLE&#13;
AT THE PHYSICAL EDUCATION BLDG. OFFICES,&#13;
PRICED AT $18TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC&#13;
AND $10TO STUDENTS ...&#13;
BUY ONE NOW AND GET READY TO BE A&#13;
RANGER ROOTER IN 81-82!!!!&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 29, 1981 11&#13;
angers win two out of three&#13;
uesday, October 20, the&#13;
Soccer team look the field&#13;
t Purdue - Calumet and&#13;
out with a 5-2 final score.&#13;
ngers shut down the two&#13;
layers of Purdue - Calumet,&#13;
re the fourth and eighth&#13;
t scorers in the ational&#13;
iation of Intercollegiate&#13;
·cs ( AIA) .&#13;
team (Parkside) played&#13;
very well defen.5ively and extremely&#13;
well offen.5ively," stated&#13;
Coach Henderson.&#13;
John (MoMo) Onyiego led all&#13;
scorers with two goals. Jeff&#13;
LaForce, Ralph DeGraff and Don&#13;
Theisen all added one goal apiece&#13;
to help lead them to victory,&#13;
' giving Parkside their eighth win&#13;
of- the season.&#13;
On Friday, October 23, UWParkside&#13;
shattered St. orbert&#13;
College 5-0.&#13;
Photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
BOB NEWSTROM&#13;
"We totally dominated them."&#13;
exclaimed Henderson. "We held&#13;
them to pnly five shots the whole&#13;
game." Jeff Dennehy and Ralph&#13;
DeGraf£ each scored two goals,&#13;
while Cheidu Okomah knocked in&#13;
the fifth goal. Along with scoring&#13;
the goals, Dennhy had two assists ,&#13;
as did Bob ewstrom . Brad Faust&#13;
also added one a ist.&#13;
Dennehy's two goals have tied&#13;
him with the Single Season&#13;
Scoring Record of nine goals .&#13;
His two assists tied him for the&#13;
Career Assist Record with ixteen&#13;
assists. Brad Fau t's one assist&#13;
also tied with Dennehy for sixteen&#13;
assists. The third record be set&#13;
was the All-Time Scoring List on&#13;
· which he is third with twentyseven&#13;
points. Bob ewstrom's two&#13;
assists give him fourth place on&#13;
the same list with twenty-three.&#13;
Parkside challenged the Golden&#13;
Gophers of Minnesota which was a&#13;
type a "homecoming'' for many&#13;
Ranger players from Minnesota .&#13;
The Rangers had control of the&#13;
ball early when they had four&#13;
excellent scoring opportunities,&#13;
but they just couldn't score. The&#13;
half-time score was 0-0 .&#13;
Then eight minutes into the half&#13;
Parkside gave up a free kick,&#13;
boosting the score to 1--0.&#13;
Minutes later, John (MoMo )&#13;
Onyiego was removed from the&#13;
game because of fighting. Due to&#13;
the fact that the team cannot&#13;
substitute for a player kicked out&#13;
of the game, they had to play the&#13;
remainder of the second half short&#13;
one man.&#13;
"We never got back into the&#13;
game after that," said Henderson .&#13;
Minnesota scored another goal&#13;
later in the half for the final goal,&#13;
dropping Parkside' s season&#13;
record to 9-8.&#13;
JOH N PETE RSON&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Peterson scores 300&#13;
b Laurie Paint r&#13;
On Sunday, October 18, John&#13;
Peterson topped his high bowling&#13;
score ci 298 with a perfect&#13;
game. John is a twenty ~ear old&#13;
sophomore who has been bowling&#13;
£or 11 years . During a state singles&#13;
tournament in Balero. Peterson&#13;
bowled his 300 game along with&#13;
scores or 234, 209 and 268 . Hi&#13;
astronomical score totaled 1011,&#13;
t a new toumam nt&#13;
1981-82 RANGER BASKETBALL&#13;
HOME GAMES&#13;
(a ll 7: 30 p. m . unless otherwi se noted)&#13;
Friday, Dec . -4 St. Xavier&#13;
Monday , Dec . 7&#13;
Tuesday, Dec . 15&#13;
Monday -Tuesday,&#13;
Dec . 28-29&#13;
Saturday, Jan . 2&#13;
Tuesday, Jan . 12&#13;
Thursday, Jan . 1-4&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 16&#13;
Wednesday, J a n . 20&#13;
Saturday, Jan . 30&#13;
Wednesday , Feb. 10&#13;
Loras&#13;
Ferris State&#13;
Rang e r Cla ssic&#13;
(Cartha ge, UW-Oshkosh,&#13;
Sag inaw Valley State)&#13;
UW- P lattevi I le&#13;
Lakela nd&#13;
McNeese State&#13;
St . Nor bert&#13;
Ill ino is Tech&#13;
Nor t hern Michi gan&#13;
UW -Mil wa ukee&#13;
Another exciting seaso n of UW-Porkside&#13;
Ranger basketball will soon be starting ! I I&#13;
JOIN THE CROWD AT PARKSIDE&#13;
AND ENJOY EXCITING&#13;
COLLEGE BASKETBALL ACTION.&#13;
The 1981 -82 edi t ion of Ra nger ba s k etbal l will f eature the&#13;
fol l ow i ng:&#13;
• Enthusiasti c cheerleaders&#13;
• The Junior Ranger Cl ub for k ids 12 and under, complete with&#13;
special membership card, Juni or Ra nger b adge and ot he r&#13;
special "goodies" throughout the seaso n ...&#13;
• FREET. sh i rt to every purchaser of a season t i c ket ...&#13;
SEASON PASSES NOW AVAILABLE&#13;
AT THE PHYSICAL EDUCATION BLDG. OFFICES,&#13;
PRICED AT $18 TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC&#13;
AND $10 TO STUDENTS . •.&#13;
BUY ONE NOW AND GET READY TO BE A&#13;
RANGER ROOTER IN 81-82! ! ! !&#13;
~~~ place fourth in tournament&#13;
Over !he weekend, the Parkside 10-11 on the year; a good r-&#13;
Women s Tennis team officiall formance 10 an otherwise diS~1&#13;
~ed the season, tied for fourth ~ year for the Tenrus learn.&#13;
. JW.W.L.A.C. Tournament held f Rathngersenior Nancy Kivi took&#13;
10 .anesville. our pia,:" . in Number Three&#13;
SIX tea"'! participated in the Smgles. Kivi lost to Panther&#13;
event which lell M Jeanne Scheller (7-5&#13;
fmlshing on top with .:rqu~tte defeated Beth Aaro of Cart;;'6),&#13;
UW-Mllwaukee placed spo nlsd· (7-5, 6-2), and lost to E·I ge&#13;
With 57 . econ Roge f C 1een&#13;
was th~?~'32Carthage College 4). Id~i °linia:ed°llthCOllege(6-2, 6-&#13;
and Ca points. Parkside C s e season 9-9&#13;
with 1;'11. College tied for fourth too~r ~~ll, a Parkside jUni~r&#13;
Green points apiece, and UW- S ou place 10 Number F~&#13;
home 8 ';lntilaced fifth laking o:~~e;:.o(~~~re:~ng Kathy. Gray&#13;
Pa k.de . M· hell ,~, 6-1) losing to r 51 senior Kathy _ IC e Heller of UW M'·I uk&#13;
tSoionkglethsirbdy pta.eceeoi10 NumbrenromOanse o(6f -0Uw6--G2)' defeating Ly-nnIewCaonleeye&#13;
four matc.:mrung three of her reen Bay (6-4, 6-1) and&#13;
Ruby Ack s, Thomas defeated&#13;
erman of Gree Ba&#13;
2, 6-2), loot to Marge G ~af y (6-&#13;
EUsWte-rMTriolwaukee (6-2,6-0u)s,defesaotnedof&#13;
(6-2, 6-0)m:.::;r ': fCarroll College&#13;
Ruby Ackerm e eated Phoenix&#13;
4, 6-4), Her pea~oarmseacnocned tJiemfte h(e6r-&#13;
12 Thursday. October 29,1981&#13;
Tennis&#13;
WOW! What A selectioo&#13;
PARKS IDE UNION&#13;
10:11 • - 4:11 JIll&#13;
• SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
.JUBE JELLS&#13;
• CARAMELS&#13;
:~~~~~;L BULLIES&#13;
.TOFFEES&#13;
• JOTS&#13;
.BRIDGE MIX&#13;
.MALTED MILK&#13;
• CHOC. CREME g:LLS&#13;
• CHOC. RAISINS OPS&#13;
• CHOC. PEANUTS&#13;
• PEANUT BU&#13;
• STARS TTER CUPS&#13;
: ~~~:T PEANUTS&#13;
BALLS MALTED MILK&#13;
• CAROB PEANUTS :~~~~i~~r SEEDS&#13;
• CALIFORN~ ~ELlCACY&#13;
• STUDENT Fooi/&#13;
• GIANT CASHEWS&#13;
• NATURAL&#13;
• SPANISH PE~~TACHIOS&#13;
• BLANCHE UTS&#13;
• YOGURT ~AISI~~ANUTS&#13;
• BYROITGTULRET SESAME&#13;
: ~~~T S~~~EER~NUTS&#13;
:~OTARLIGHT MINTS&#13;
UR BALLS&#13;
• CINNAMON DISKS&#13;
• COFFEE&#13;
•• RBOUOTTTERBSCEEO;CH DISKS&#13;
• POPS BARRELS&#13;
• KPIESASNESUT BUTTER&#13;
• PEPPERMIN&#13;
• LICORICE B~ KISSES&#13;
.JELLY BEAN;L1ES&#13;
: ~~~NR~i~:;~:SKYS&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF NOV. 2&#13;
RED SKIN:&#13;
PEANUTS 40% OFF&#13;
..&#13;
RANGER&#13;
I .&#13;
C&#13;
",mg to Debbie Doughtery of&#13;
arthage (6-3,6-3).&#13;
The Rangers' Doubles team of&#13;
Nancy. Kivi and Kathy Thomas&#13;
the bnghtest spot on .this year'~·&#13;
team, placed second in the&#13;
tournament by defeating Beth&#13;
Aaro and Hope Henschel f&#13;
Carthage (6-4, 6-3), hut losing ~o&#13;
RoblD Barksdale and M&#13;
Cornell of Marquette (6-2, :.rr Their .overall record was 11-6 .&#13;
G~'fnsapp.~nted Coach Nor~en&#13;
team H sal .about this year's&#13;
, We did alright (for the&#13;
• nduivmidbuearllyof ~eIa~~s) we had. Incould&#13;
ex~ct." as well as you&#13;
~f~~e~g~~~~~~yDo1u3r9.picks and bring. the form dowwnintnoetrhs.e PRuatngaercheek&#13;
__ Atlanta at New Orleans Office,&#13;
__ Ba~timore at Miami ~&#13;
__ Chicago at Tampa Bay --&#13;
__ Cleveland at Buffalo ---&#13;
__ Dalla~ at Philadelphia --&#13;
__ DetrOIt at Los Angeles --&#13;
__ Houston at Cincinnati --&#13;
__ Kansas City at San Diego&#13;
=__=New England at Oakland --- N.Y. J~ts at N.Y. Giants == __ St. LoUIS at Washington -- ~&#13;
San Francisco at Pittsb h&#13;
__ Seattle at Green Bay urg --&#13;
NaLmaest wmn.er was Bruce Duchac ' 11correct, 46 total .&#13;
S.S. No. potnta.&#13;
R~' 'n roll.""'" ,n"~".1I" =in'" fa'Un(S"",rom.' &amp; we. And.n ""'" ,nun'" on&#13;
d&#13;
""""&#13;
nndi""', """ d_&#13;
in&#13;
(~" "mlki", ,nn"'" "'''''' W",1&amp; -,. Enin, nu' qualitY in _",n. ' Rock itroll stirs with&#13;
SneJl &amp;SneJl&#13;
St1l9rllm~&#13;
12 Thursday, October 29, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Tennis&#13;
~~~~~ place fourth in tournament&#13;
Over the week.end the p 1cs·d HH1 on the year· a good Wome ' T ' ar I e forma · ' per- losing t D b o s ennis team officiall nee m an otherwise dismal o e bie Doughtery of&#13;
~ed the season, tied for fourth fu year for the Tennis team. Carthage (6-3, 6-3).&#13;
W w .1:,.A.C. Tournament held f Ranger senior Nancy Kivi took The Rangers' Doubles team of&#13;
m ~anesville. S~urJth place in Number Three Nancy_ Kivi and Kathy Thomas&#13;
IX teams participated . th mg es . Kivi lost to p th the bnghtest spot on .this year';&#13;
;\·~~ which left Marq~ett! ~:n~ed Scheller (7-5 a~-6~r team, placed second in the ; _Jf on top with 68 points. (7-Sea ~ Beth Aaro of c'arthag~ tournament by defeating Beth&#13;
J waukee placed se d ' 2), and lost to Eil Aaro and Hope Henschel f&#13;
=~~h~f:•&#13;
32&#13;
Ca~hage Co~~:e ~~:f!i ~rus~hrredoJJthCollege (6-2e:t Cart!18ge (6-4, 6-3), oot losin fo&#13;
and c po,nts, Pa,kside c e season 9-9 Rohm Ba&lt;ksdale and Mg&#13;
with :tpo~nC,~lleagep1·ectiede, fanordfourU th too. ~!u~hallp,laaceP1·narNksumidebeJr·uni~r. Cor~ell of Marquette (6-2 6~:r G .., W F Their .overall record was 1i-6 . ho= 8 !~ntilaced fifth takio~ ~:nt!~o~r /6~3ea4~ng6-Kl)athl Y. a:; GogAg?isap~ointed Coach Nor~en p k M' , .,, os1ng to m said about this&#13;
ar ' de senior Kathy Th ichelle Heller of 'uw MiJ uk team "We d'd Ir year's took third place . omas (6--0 6-2 ) def . . wa ee number ex 11 a ight (for the&#13;
ngl by winni m umber One of UW-c'reenea:ng Lynne Conley . dividually p aydi~ds) we had. Infour&#13;
matches T~g three of her ay (6-4 , 6-1) and uJd , we as weJJ as you&#13;
Ruby Ackerm~n or°ias defeated co expect."&#13;
2, 6-2 ), lost to Marge ~een Bay (6-&#13;
- filwaukee ( 6- ustafson of&#13;
~~~r ~~m:~r t f ~lld~U~~&#13;
Ruby Ackerm e eated Phoenix&#13;
4, 6-4 &gt;. Her pe~! second time ( 6- mance left her&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selectioo&#13;
PAR~SIDE UNION&#13;
10:IIJ • - 4:111 ,.,,&#13;
e SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
eJUBE JELLS&#13;
e CARAMELS&#13;
: ~~~~~SEL BULLIES&#13;
• TOFFEES&#13;
eJOTS&#13;
e BRIDGE MIX&#13;
•MALTED MILK BALLS&#13;
•cHoc CRE&#13;
• CHoc: RA1s1:: DROPS&#13;
e CHOC . PEANUTS&#13;
e PEANUT BU&#13;
•STARS TTER CUPS : ~~i:T PEANUTS&#13;
BALLS MAL TED MILK&#13;
e CAROB PEANUTS&#13;
: ~~~i~~~~R SEEDS&#13;
• CALIFORNIA ~~ilCACY&#13;
e STUDENT FOOD&#13;
• GIANT CASHEWS&#13;
e NATURAL&#13;
oo~::~~~~~.e ,~!&lt;S your picks and bring the ci:::r winners. Put a :;e locfoi&#13;
DI39. own to the Ranger oec~ ~&#13;
- - Atla~ta at New Orleans - - ff1ce,&#13;
-- Ba}tlmore at Miami --&#13;
-- Chicago at Tampa Ba _ _&#13;
-- Cleveland at Buffalo _Y __&#13;
-- Dalla~ at Philadelphia _ _&#13;
- - Detroit at Los Angeles __&#13;
-- Houston at Cincinnati - -&#13;
-- Kansas City at San Diego&#13;
-- New England at Oakland - == N.Y. J~ts at N.Y. Giants==&#13;
St. Louis at Washington&#13;
--San Francisco at Pittsburgh&#13;
-- S~ttle at Green Bay __ -&#13;
Last wmner was Bru D ch Name . ce u ac, 11 correct, 46 total .&#13;
S.S. No. =======-----== P0ints.&#13;
e SPANISH PE:ISTACHIOS&#13;
e BLANCHED NUTS&#13;
e YOGURT RAISl:;ANUTS&#13;
e YOGURT&#13;
BR I TTLE SESAME&#13;
: :7i/~OOIN PEANUTS&#13;
Rock 'n roll really stirs with the exciting taste of Seagram:s 7 &amp; 7UR. And so Mes country and west,TII,&#13;
and jazz, and disco-in fact, everything sounds better with 7 &amp; 7. Enjoy our quality in moderation.&#13;
Rock n roll stirs with e ST LERS&#13;
• so~RRLBIGHT MINTS&#13;
ALLS&#13;
: ~6~~~~0N DISKS&#13;
e BUTTERSC&#13;
• ROOT B OTCH DISKS&#13;
e POPS EER BARRELS&#13;
e PEANUT&#13;
K I SSE S BU TT ER&#13;
e PEPPERMI e L ICORICE BNUTL KISSES&#13;
e JELLY BEANS LIES&#13;
•ASSORTED e ORANGES PERKYS&#13;
LICES&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF NOV. 2&#13;
RED SKIN·&#13;
PEANUTS&#13;
40% OFF&#13;
Se~en&amp;Snen&#13;
I•&#13;
SEAGRAM DISTILLERS CO NYC. AMERICAN&#13;
l\t!ISKEY-A BLEND 80 PROOf&#13;
~!:".E•. p, t. · ,.. .,&#13;
. ... ,lo'.~ :,G£-i:.: .... ,(•.v. c.,.,~·''T"1,r·f f•&#13;
.• • •·: ·.•..-.:.·.~ t,, ·'iie,·</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>PSGA tables motion on teaching award conflict</text>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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              <text>One-time" tuition surcharge proposed,&#13;
will go to Regents tomorrow&#13;
UW President Robert O'Neil&#13;
has asked the Board of Regents&#13;
for a $23 and a $30 spring&#13;
semester surcharge for all&#13;
schools in the UW System.&#13;
O'Neil asked last Thursday&#13;
for a $30 tu ition surcharge for&#13;
UW-Madison and UWMilwaukee&#13;
students and a $23&#13;
tuition surcharge for other UW&#13;
System students. He said the&#13;
"one-time" surcharge would&#13;
generate about $3.1 million for&#13;
the system.&#13;
He said past budget shortages&#13;
and unexpectedly high&#13;
1981-82 enrollments have&#13;
"seriously strained teaching&#13;
resources."&#13;
The proposed $30 s urcharge&#13;
would put UW's overall 1981-82&#13;
fee and tuition increase 4%&#13;
above last year, he said. The&#13;
surcharge proposal will go to&#13;
the Regents' Business and&#13;
Finance Committee today and&#13;
the full Board tomorrow.&#13;
W University of Wisconsin - Porkside&#13;
PSGA tables motion&#13;
on teaching award conflict&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. Senate&#13;
made a few resolutions during its&#13;
Oct. 28 meeting but failed to pass a&#13;
statement on this year's Teaching&#13;
Excellence Awards due to a lack&#13;
of information available to the&#13;
Senators.&#13;
The first business was to put a&#13;
phone in WLLC to replace the one&#13;
that was stolen from the WLLC&#13;
Information Desk. Kathy Slama&#13;
moved, and Luis Valldejuli&#13;
seconded, to install a campus&#13;
phone on the first floor of the&#13;
library. The motion was approved&#13;
unanimously. The installation fee&#13;
will be $82.30 with monthly&#13;
charges of $6.98.&#13;
The Senate made a statement&#13;
supporting the current Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge proposal that was&#13;
scheduled to go before the Faculty&#13;
Senate this week. John Peterson&#13;
moved and Randy Klees seconded&#13;
to "support the general criteria&#13;
set down for Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge without Symbolic&#13;
Systems." The motion was approved&#13;
5-0-1 w ith Phil Progreba&#13;
abstaining.&#13;
Joe Ripp made a motion&#13;
strongly denouncing Chancellor&#13;
Alan Guskin's actions concerning&#13;
the Teaching Excellence Awards.&#13;
The two awards, which are&#13;
usually presented at the very&#13;
beginning of each school year,&#13;
were delayed this year because&#13;
Shirley Kersey, one of the&#13;
recipients, is no longer teaching&#13;
here. She will not receive the&#13;
award; only one other teacher will&#13;
receive it.&#13;
The Senate issued a statement&#13;
two weeks ago that they consider&#13;
"the actions taken by the&#13;
Teaching Excellence Award&#13;
Committee in conjunction with the&#13;
Chancellor as being inappropriate&#13;
to the situation at hand." A&#13;
committee member answered last&#13;
week that the committee was not&#13;
in conjunction with the Chancellor's&#13;
decision not to give&#13;
Kersey the award.&#13;
Ripp introduced the following&#13;
motion, seconded by Progreba:&#13;
"Be it known that the PSGA, Inc.&#13;
feels that Chancellor Guskin's&#13;
decision to not give former&#13;
Parkside Prof. Kersey the&#13;
Teaching Excellence Award when&#13;
rightfully hers, was wrong and&#13;
uncalled for and that we, as the&#13;
representatives of the student&#13;
body, ask that Chancellor Guskin&#13;
change his decision and give Prof.&#13;
Kersey her rightful award and the&#13;
$500."&#13;
The Senate discussed the issue&#13;
but tabled the motion until more&#13;
information is made available to&#13;
the Senators. According to Slama,&#13;
president protempore, "The&#13;
original stand went into effect, so&#13;
we have to rescind that one before&#13;
we talk about this one." The topic&#13;
was planned to be addressed at&#13;
yesterday's Senate meeting. See&#13;
next week's Ranger for details.&#13;
Roundtable&#13;
Rieber speaks on Cancun&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
"The Cancun Conference and&#13;
the New International Order" was&#13;
the topic of a Social Science&#13;
Roundtable on Nov. 2. The&#13;
speaker was William Rieber, an&#13;
economics professor whose&#13;
research interest is international&#13;
trade history.&#13;
At the Cancun Summit, which&#13;
was held on Oct. 22 and 23 in&#13;
Cancun, Mexico, President&#13;
Reagan told "have not" nations to&#13;
look to trade, not aid, as a solution&#13;
to their economic problems. Of the&#13;
20 countries that attended the&#13;
conference, 14 were considered&#13;
"developing" economies.&#13;
"What prompted the proposal of&#13;
the North - South summit/ at&#13;
Cancun was the general&#13;
dissatisfaction among developing&#13;
economies with the current international&#13;
order," Rieber said.&#13;
"Despite progress, the gap in&#13;
income between developed and&#13;
developing countries has grown&#13;
wider. As a consequence, the&#13;
developing economies have called&#13;
for a new international economic&#13;
order that would better serve their&#13;
interests."&#13;
Some major proposals of the&#13;
New International Economic&#13;
Order are:&#13;
• Developed countries should&#13;
contribute seven - tenths of 1% of&#13;
their GNP to official development&#13;
aid. Rieber stated that currently&#13;
the U.S. allocates one - fifth of 1%&#13;
of our GNP to aid.&#13;
• Establishment of int&#13;
e r n a t i o n a l c o m m o d i ty&#13;
Guaranteed loans&#13;
Changes, volume cause delays&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
The following is part one of a&#13;
three - part series on delays in&#13;
finanical aids at Parkside.&#13;
About 40 Parkside students have&#13;
not yet received their financial aid&#13;
checks for Guaranteed Student&#13;
Loans this semester, although&#13;
they have signed proposals and&#13;
Parkside's financial aid office has&#13;
sent their forms to the Higher&#13;
Educational Aids Board in&#13;
Madison to be processed.&#13;
"Anybody who filed in late&#13;
August or September of this year&#13;
doesn't have their money yet,"&#13;
according to Jan Ocker, Director&#13;
of Financial Aids. He estimated&#13;
that about 30 students filed during&#13;
that time period. Also, Ocker said&#13;
that about 10 students who filed in&#13;
July and early August haven't&#13;
received their money yet.&#13;
"During the last two or three&#13;
years," Ocker said, "there have&#13;
been some delays on different&#13;
programs. But this year's delay —&#13;
two months of waiting for loans&#13;
for some students — is in my&#13;
opinion too long." This year's&#13;
delay is in the Wisconsin&#13;
Guaranteed Student Loan&#13;
program, which is administered&#13;
by the state for those students who&#13;
are turned down by their banks.&#13;
A combination of factors have&#13;
contributed to what Ocker termed&#13;
a "backlog at Madison." First,&#13;
this year's number of applicants is&#13;
nearly triple last year's number,&#13;
Ocker said. The added volume&#13;
means more work for both the&#13;
Parkside and Madison staffs.&#13;
Ocker noted that the Higher&#13;
Educational Aids Board has&#13;
shifted lots of people into the loans&#13;
program to try to expedite the&#13;
backlog.&#13;
The federal government also&#13;
changed its rules for state administered&#13;
loans to students twice&#13;
this year. Ocker said that people&#13;
who applied at the end of September&#13;
will have to fill out new&#13;
forms — forms the state has not&#13;
supplied them with yet. He said&#13;
that the forms would be in next&#13;
week and students would be&#13;
notified if their loan cannot be&#13;
processed because they have not&#13;
filled out the correct form.&#13;
Also, there are some applications&#13;
that can not be&#13;
processed because of a combination&#13;
of the other two factors.&#13;
Ocker said, "With the volume&#13;
alone, the state was about a month&#13;
behind." Other loans, he said,&#13;
could not be processed as quickly&#13;
because of delays caused by later&#13;
applications that were not accompanied&#13;
by the correct forms.&#13;
"Unfortunately, there's nothing&#13;
that can be done through this&#13;
office," Ocker said. The office&#13;
already sent a list of students to&#13;
Madison on Sept. 25 to "try to get&#13;
them going," Ocker said, "and it&#13;
doesn't do any good to call."&#13;
Richard Johnson, HEAB's&#13;
Administrator for Student Support,&#13;
commented on the situation&#13;
at Parkside with a "no comment"&#13;
and indicated that he would have&#13;
to know each individual student's&#13;
position in order to explain delays&#13;
in the disbursement of checks.&#13;
Next Week: How do you get&#13;
through 2/3 of a semester without&#13;
a dollar to your name?&#13;
Career Resource Night to offer alumni advice&#13;
agreements on those commodities&#13;
produced by developing countries&#13;
to assure them equitable prices.&#13;
• Reducing trade restrictions&#13;
in developed countries on imports&#13;
from developing countries.&#13;
• General debt relief in the&#13;
form of forgiveness or postponement&#13;
of repayment of the&#13;
developing economies on their&#13;
external debts.&#13;
• Changing the decision -&#13;
making procedures of the IMF&#13;
and World Bank to give greater&#13;
weight to developing countries.&#13;
Traditionally, the countries .that&#13;
gave the most had the most say in&#13;
these affairs.&#13;
Rieber said that the third&#13;
proposal is probably the most&#13;
effective.&#13;
Rieber said that the most&#13;
significant accomplishment to&#13;
come out of the summit was that&#13;
the rich and poor nations agreed&#13;
to participate in global&#13;
negotiations on the proposals.&#13;
"Reagan's philosophy on international&#13;
economics is quite&#13;
consistent with his domestic&#13;
economic philosophy," said&#13;
Rieber. "He asserted at the&#13;
conference that laissez - faire&#13;
capitalism and private enterprise&#13;
principles, as opposed to government&#13;
enterprise, are the key to&#13;
solving international economic&#13;
problems. Accordingly, of the new&#13;
features of the new International&#13;
Economic Order, very few are&#13;
likely to be supported by the&#13;
United States," he said.&#13;
The second annual Alumni&#13;
Career Resource Night set for&#13;
Tuesday, November 10, will offer&#13;
students a chance to obtain career&#13;
advice from UW - Parkside&#13;
alumni. Sponsored by the Office of&#13;
Alumni and Placement Services,&#13;
the event begin at 5 p. m. with 15&#13;
panels of alumni speaking on&#13;
specific career areas. Among the&#13;
more than 60 alumni will be:&#13;
• James Greco, Sociology '74,&#13;
Executive Director, Big Brothers&#13;
of Racine. BEHAVIORAL&#13;
SCIENCE PANEL.&#13;
• Pamela Ensweiler, Business&#13;
Management '79, Tax Accountant,&#13;
Arthur Anderson &amp; Co. ACCOUNTING/FINANCE&#13;
PANEL.&#13;
• Gail Ross, Communication&#13;
'80, Account Executive, Shecker&#13;
Design Group. COMMUNICATION&#13;
PANEL.&#13;
• Keith Kramer, Business&#13;
Management '74, Production&#13;
Control Manager, Racine Steel&#13;
Castings. ADMINISTRATIVE&#13;
AND PROD UCTI ON&#13;
MANAGEMENT.&#13;
• Robin Smerchek, Applied&#13;
Science &amp; Technology and&#13;
Mathematics '74, Engineer,&#13;
Wisconsin Electric Power&#13;
Company. APPLIED SCIENCE &amp;&#13;
A P P L I E D C O M P U T ER&#13;
SCIENCE PANEL.&#13;
• Peter Pingitore, History '78,&#13;
Teacher, Roosevelt Elementary&#13;
(Ken osha ). EDUCATION&#13;
PANEL.&#13;
• John Mardoian, Engineering&#13;
Technology '79, Engineer, S C&#13;
Johnson &amp; S on. ENGINEERING&#13;
TECHNOLOGY PANEL.&#13;
• Dr. Nicolet DeRose Schissel,&#13;
Chemistry '75, Pedodontist&#13;
(Children's Dentistry), DeRose&#13;
Dental Clinic. HEALTH&#13;
PROFESSIONS PANEL.&#13;
• Cindy Grueter, Business&#13;
Managment '80, Systems&#13;
Development Specialist, JI Case&#13;
Compa ny. INFO RMA TION&#13;
SYSTEMS PANEL.&#13;
• Arthur Simpson, Business&#13;
Management '76, Attorney with&#13;
the firm of Capwell, Berthelsen,&#13;
Nolden, and Casanove, LTD. LAW&#13;
PANEL.&#13;
• Sandra Cooper, Business&#13;
Management '78, Marketing&#13;
Research Analyst, Tenneco&#13;
Automo tive MARKETI NG&#13;
PANEL.&#13;
• Jeff LeMere, Business&#13;
Management and Labor / Industrial&#13;
Relations '80, Personnel&#13;
Supervisor, Modine Manufacturing&#13;
Company. PERSONNEL /&#13;
LABOR RELATIONS PANEL.&#13;
• David Prins, Physics '75,&#13;
Quality Engineer, J I Case&#13;
Company. PHYSICS AND MATH&#13;
PANEL.&#13;
• Jack Plovanich, Music '75,&#13;
Music Director, Marriott's Great&#13;
America. MUSIC PANEL.&#13;
• Arlyn C. Frederick,&#13;
Economics '73, Corporate&#13;
Planning Analyst, Wisconsin&#13;
Electric Power Company,&#13;
SOCIAL SCIENCE PANEL.&#13;
Panel members will provide&#13;
tips for students on preparing for&#13;
specific career areas, information&#13;
on graduate schools they attended,&#13;
availability of ope nings in&#13;
their career area and career&#13;
advancement opportunities from&#13;
entry level positions.&#13;
Following these individual&#13;
panels students will hear Judy&#13;
Murray, Manager, Corporate&#13;
Employer Relations and Career&#13;
Development at JI Case Company&#13;
speak on "Job Opportunities: How&#13;
to Find Them and Make the Most&#13;
of Them". A rec eption, sponsored&#13;
by t he UW-P Alumni Association,&#13;
will follow her presentation.&#13;
Registration tables will be in the&#13;
concourse on Thursday and&#13;
Friday. Registration is also&#13;
p o s si b le in the A l u m ni and&#13;
Placement Office, WLLC D173.&#13;
Late registraion will be possible&#13;
from 4:30 - 5:00 p. m. on Tuesday&#13;
(Nov. 10) in the Union Dining&#13;
Room.&#13;
UC gains Women's Director&#13;
Madison — Sandra P. Starrett,&#13;
President of the UW-Madison&#13;
Sports Club and a Teaching&#13;
Assistant in the UW-Madison&#13;
Women's Studies Program, accepted&#13;
appointment Monday as&#13;
Women's Director of the United&#13;
Council of University of Wisconsin&#13;
Student Governments.&#13;
The position has been vacant&#13;
since September. Her appointment&#13;
was made by United&#13;
Council President Robert Kranz,&#13;
and is subject to confirmation by&#13;
the United Council Executive&#13;
Board after two months.&#13;
Kranz appointed Starrett&#13;
because of her "constructive&#13;
commitment to women's issues,&#13;
and the high degree of scholarship&#13;
and professionalism she will bring&#13;
to United Council."&#13;
INSIDE&#13;
• Mid-semester burnout&#13;
* Trophies for Bowling Club &#13;
2 Thursday, November 5,1981 RANGER&#13;
o the Editor&#13;
Computer Center problems&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The acquisition of a new computer&#13;
on campus has resulted in&#13;
an interest in computing facilities&#13;
at Parkside. However, new&#13;
problems have arisen, and some&#13;
old problems persist. The purpose&#13;
of this editorial is to enlighten&#13;
readers to some of these problems&#13;
and present possible solutions, as&#13;
noticed by students.&#13;
Applied Computer Science1 and&#13;
Business Administration are the&#13;
two programs on campus which&#13;
rely heavily on computers at&#13;
Parkside. They are also the&#13;
fastest growing courses of study&#13;
on campus. However, at the&#13;
recent Computer User's Forum&#13;
held by the Computer Center on&#13;
November 2, attendance was&#13;
sparse. We feel that in some&#13;
respects the Computer Center&#13;
contributed to this lack of attendance&#13;
by not informing&#13;
students and faculty through&#13;
announcements in the Ranger or&#13;
providing in-class announcements.&#13;
It was as though&#13;
they did not want anyone to attend.&#13;
&#13;
Before the acquisition of the&#13;
new PDP-ll/70 computer system,&#13;
there was ample , space for&#13;
program development and informal&#13;
consultation among&#13;
students. Now, with the increase&#13;
in services provided by the new&#13;
computer (and consequently the&#13;
increase in students using the&#13;
interactive system), this important&#13;
aspect of study has been&#13;
eliminated. The Computer Center&#13;
now provided practically non -&#13;
existant consulting facilities and&#13;
is not actively supportive of&#13;
student efforts to obtain such&#13;
facilities.&#13;
The performance of computer&#13;
operators, Remote Job Entry&#13;
(RJE) operators, and consultants&#13;
could stand improvement. Instances&#13;
of mishandled or&#13;
misplaced printed and punched&#13;
output occur frequently. Consultants&#13;
do not have the depth of&#13;
knowledge to deal with subjects&#13;
such as system error messages,&#13;
IBM job control language, and&#13;
PDP 11/70 editors. System efficiency&#13;
has suffered due to&#13;
inattentive monitoring of student&#13;
programs by computer operators.&#13;
We propose a number of possible&#13;
solutions to help alleviate these&#13;
problems.&#13;
1. Evaluation of student employees&#13;
each semester, similar to&#13;
the system used by the Library,&#13;
must be implemented. This would&#13;
encourage employees to improve&#13;
their performance.&#13;
2. An ongoing program should&#13;
be implemented in training&#13;
students for Computer Center&#13;
work. In our opinion a consultant&#13;
should be a student of computer&#13;
languages and software packages,&#13;
and an operator should have a&#13;
thorough understanding of how a&#13;
computer system works.&#13;
3. Members of the Parkside&#13;
Computer Club (PCC) could informally&#13;
consult students on&#13;
errors and problems. PCC&#13;
members could be willing to&#13;
provide this service given an&#13;
adequate study area as mentioned&#13;
above. A PCC consultant could be&#13;
reimbursed through increased&#13;
computer resources.&#13;
4. Applied Computer Science&#13;
majors should be required to&#13;
assist in Computer Center and&#13;
RJE operations. Students could&#13;
work for one to two hours per&#13;
week in exchange for a one credit&#13;
class. This provides students with&#13;
practical experience and it saves&#13;
the Computer Center money used&#13;
for paying student operators and&#13;
consultants.&#13;
The money saved from this new&#13;
program could be used to extend&#13;
operating hours of the computer&#13;
facilities to coincide with the&#13;
Library's hours. Additional&#13;
documentation of equipment and&#13;
software could also be obtained&#13;
for general use.&#13;
These are just some of the&#13;
problems we feel exist with the&#13;
operation of the Computer Center.&#13;
Anyone noticing other problems&#13;
with the computing facilities or&#13;
having other possible solutions to&#13;
these problems should contact the&#13;
Parkside Computer Club, or&#13;
Loren Buchanan, the student&#13;
representative to the Computer&#13;
Advisory Committee.&#13;
Loren A. Buchanan&#13;
Donald J. Sorenson&#13;
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WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
There's a lot more&#13;
to being a father&#13;
than just having a son.&#13;
Tribute&#13;
Jock Lemmon&#13;
Robby Benson&#13;
Lee Remick&#13;
$ J 5 0&#13;
7:30 Friday &amp; Sunday,&#13;
Nov. 6 &amp; 8&#13;
NEXT WEEK'S MOVIE&#13;
DEATH HUNT&#13;
. .FIRST OF ALL, I'D LIKE&#13;
TO DISPEL ONE MYTH ABOUT&#13;
OUR. POLICY. WE AR.E NOT&#13;
ENGAGING IN AN AR MS RA CE&#13;
WITH THE SOVIET UNION.&#13;
RUNNING IN A&#13;
BLIND PANIC, PERHAPS&#13;
BUT, NOT IN A RACE.&#13;
Possible precedent to teaching excellence explored&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The problem I wish to address is&#13;
one that has received a great deal&#13;
of emphasis lately in the Ranger.&#13;
It concerns the yet unresolved&#13;
issue of the 1981 Teaching Excellence&#13;
Award. Dr. Shirley&#13;
Kersey, winner of one of last&#13;
year's awards, has not yet&#13;
received her rightful recognition.&#13;
As proposed by the Chancellor,&#13;
stricter guidelines should be&#13;
enacted for future Selection&#13;
Committees. This is a good&#13;
suggestion, although as it has&#13;
been stated in a previous Letter to&#13;
the Editor (October 29, 81) these&#13;
proposed changes in guidelines&#13;
should not be retroactive to the&#13;
previous list of winners. All&#13;
winners should receive their&#13;
awards, particularly Dr. Shirley&#13;
Kersey.&#13;
The Chancellor's reasoning of&#13;
budget cuts and the requirement&#13;
of future employment at this&#13;
campus of a winner is unsupported&#13;
by the criteria used on&#13;
the nomination form. This alone&#13;
should be enough to suggest he&#13;
reverse Ms decision. If not, the&#13;
following precedent setting&#13;
situation that occurred here at&#13;
UW-Parkside should be. There are&#13;
an amazing number of&#13;
similarities between the present&#13;
problem and this past event.&#13;
In the March 23,1970 issue of the&#13;
Collegian, now known as the&#13;
Ranger it was reported that&#13;
Salimons Cacs was not reappointed&#13;
as a math professor at&#13;
UW-Parkside. Within three&#13;
months he won the Teaching&#13;
Excellence Award, then known as&#13;
"The Parkside Teacher." The&#13;
following is a list of the comparisons&#13;
between the two cases.&#13;
1) Both were highly qualified to&#13;
hold their respective positions&#13;
here at UW-P. Salimons Cacs&#13;
received high recommendations&#13;
from the math department head&#13;
at the University of Khartoum,&#13;
Sudan. Mr. Cacs was a&#13;
representative for the U.S. under&#13;
a contract with the Sudanese&#13;
government to improve the&#13;
teaching quality of the University&#13;
program there. Without&#13;
hesitation, Dr. Shirley Kersey was&#13;
offered other teaching positions at&#13;
two UW System schools. Dr.&#13;
Shirley Kersey holds her Ph.D.&#13;
from UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
2) Both were denied tenure&#13;
before any part of the Nomination&#13;
process began.&#13;
3) Both professors maintained a&#13;
high standard of quality in their&#13;
teaching practices after their&#13;
respective denial of renewal.&#13;
Other professors have done less in&#13;
similar situations and still others&#13;
who hold Ph.D.'s and are tenured&#13;
continue to do less.&#13;
4) Peers and students showed&#13;
support for both Mr. Salimons&#13;
Cacs and Dr. Shirley Kersey from&#13;
the beginning of the denial of&#13;
renewal. Continued support is&#13;
being shown for Dr. Kersey. The&#13;
students wrote letters to the&#13;
editor. And for peer support Mr.&#13;
Cacs has been quoted as being ".&#13;
. a man who strives for excellence&#13;
in teaching" by the physics and&#13;
math department chairman at&#13;
Indiana Central College. Whereas&#13;
Dr. Kersey had the support of a&#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;
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;
Greg Bonofigho, Carol Burns, Doug Edenhauser, Jeff&#13;
Frank, Pat Hensiak, Jim Kreuser, Pat McDonald, Jim&#13;
Mertins, Steve Myers, Laurie Painter, Charles Perce, Kim&#13;
Schlater, Sue Stevens, Dan Werbie, Jeff Wicks.&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of UW-Parkside and thou ,&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content. V sole,y&#13;
Published every Thursday during the academic year except durino hreak^ ann&#13;
RANGER is printed by the Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin '&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER&#13;
Park°id^,SK^noshat WI^L* addreSSed ^ ParkSide Ranqer&lt; WL&#13;
^ D139, UWeluded&#13;
for verification. *&gt;snea ana a telephone number inNames&#13;
will be withheld for valid reasons&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 9 a .m. for publication on Thursday The RiwrcD&#13;
reserves all editorial privileges in refusing to print letters which r/Jt/ Rf^&#13;
GER&#13;
defamatory content. which contain false or&#13;
UW-M Dr. of Education at her&#13;
open hearing.&#13;
5) Both garnered the highest&#13;
percentage of student nomination&#13;
at the time of selection.&#13;
6) Both ballots stated clearly&#13;
and explicitly that this award is&#13;
not a popularity contest, but&#13;
rather one of recognition of&#13;
superior teaching.&#13;
7) Both were denied renewal on&#13;
the basis of apparent status&#13;
gained by the acquisition of a Ph.-&#13;
D. and or by the publishing of&#13;
material. Neither of these&#13;
requirements indicate real&#13;
teaching excellence, only in the&#13;
classroom can this be displayed.&#13;
Here the similarities unjustifiably&#13;
STOP! Mr. Salimons&#13;
Cacs RECEIVED his award.&#13;
Shirley Kersey did NOT. I feel the&#13;
Chancellor should abide by the&#13;
precedent setting similarities of&#13;
these situations. Doing so would&#13;
cure two problems:&#13;
1) Dr. Shirley Kersey would&#13;
receive her award, and&#13;
2) it would also ". . . put the&#13;
matter behind us."&#13;
Jeff Schoor&#13;
Chancellor's&#13;
decision 'petty'&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin explains&#13;
his reasons (in the Oct. 22&#13;
Ranger) for denying Dr. Shirley&#13;
Kersey a duly accorded award for&#13;
excellence in .teaching at UWParkside.&#13;
The reasons he gives, as&#13;
pointed out by others in letters to&#13;
the editor, lack accuracy and&#13;
cogency and carry the same&#13;
disappointment as his initial&#13;
decision.&#13;
The decision of the Chancellor to&#13;
refuse a duly accorded award to&#13;
Dr. Kersey is petty and embarrasses&#13;
the entire University&#13;
community.&#13;
If I were the Chancellor, I'd&#13;
stick my head in a paper sack.&#13;
Larry Bowersox&#13;
Correction&#13;
Each week, staff member&#13;
Pat Hensiak writes an article&#13;
for the Ranger about the people&#13;
that make the Parkside&#13;
community what it is. These&#13;
articles, collectively referred&#13;
to as "Viewpoint," are and&#13;
have been the result of Hensiak's&#13;
interviews with people&#13;
you see every day but don't&#13;
know much about. Recently,&#13;
we have neglected to run&#13;
Hensiak's by-line above her&#13;
"Viewpoints." Thus, this&#13;
public apology. &#13;
Cable TV system expanded&#13;
RANGER Thursday, November 5,1981&#13;
Expansion of Parkside's "innouse&#13;
cable television system&#13;
*&#13;
nd&#13;
, .Iff external reception&#13;
IhP&#13;
?m! c&#13;
y **&#13;
en aPP&#13;
r&#13;
°ved by&#13;
the UW System Board of Regents.&#13;
nf&#13;
T«£ S™* 0K d aPP&#13;
roPriation&#13;
of $56,078 for the project, which&#13;
has been in the planning stage&#13;
since 1974.&#13;
The expansion will provide a&#13;
cable link between classrooms&#13;
arKJ laboratories in Greenquist&#13;
and Mohnaro Halls with a central&#13;
control center in Wyllie Library -&#13;
Learning Center (WLLC).&#13;
The control center, installed as&#13;
part of the original WLLC building&#13;
Teachers&#13;
needed&#13;
The Foreign &amp; Domestic&#13;
Teachers Organization needs&#13;
teacher applicants in all fields&#13;
from Kindergarten through&#13;
College to fill between five and six&#13;
hundred teaching vacancies both&#13;
at home and abroad.&#13;
Since 1968, the organization has&#13;
been finding vacancies and&#13;
locating teachers both in foreign&#13;
countries and in all fifty states.&#13;
They possess hundreds of current&#13;
openings and have all of the&#13;
pertinent information on&#13;
scholarships, grants, and&#13;
fellowships.&#13;
The principal problem with first&#13;
year teachers is where to find the&#13;
jobs!&#13;
For additional information&#13;
about the organization, write to&#13;
the Portland Oregon Better&#13;
Business Bureau or the National&#13;
Teacher's Placement Agency&#13;
UNIVERSAL TEACHERS, Box&#13;
5231, Portland, Oregon 97208.&#13;
Write" RANGER&#13;
A Letter!&#13;
project, contains terminal and&#13;
monitoring equipment that can&#13;
"store" television programs on&#13;
videotape for later viewing or&#13;
switch them directly into instructional&#13;
areas. The center also&#13;
is linked to 28 video monitors&#13;
which are available for use by&#13;
individual students in WLLC.&#13;
In addition to installation of&#13;
cable in Greenquist and Molinaro&#13;
Halls, the expansion program will&#13;
include installation of a TV&#13;
receiving antenna on the WLLC&#13;
roof. The antenna will make&#13;
available 16 regional commercial,&#13;
independent and educational TV&#13;
stations in the Milwaukee and&#13;
Chicago areas for classroom&#13;
instruction. Twenty other channels&#13;
originating in the control&#13;
center also will be available.&#13;
The Parkside cable installation&#13;
will be compatible with Racine&#13;
Cable TV and with the CATV&#13;
system planned for Kenosha.&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
Confidence building given&#13;
On Thursday, November 12,&#13;
from 5:00 - 6:30 p.m. in Union 207&#13;
Women In Business Club will&#13;
sponsor a workshop entitled,&#13;
"Confidence Building." The&#13;
workshop will be presented by&#13;
Ruby Hanson, Executive Consultant&#13;
with Hanson Seminars,&#13;
Evanston, Illinois. Hanson has a&#13;
B.A. in Psychology from the&#13;
University of Minnesota, and a&#13;
Master of Social Work degree&#13;
from the University of Denver.&#13;
Hanson has over twenty years&#13;
experience in problem - solving&#13;
with organizations, groups and&#13;
individuals. She is experienced in&#13;
developing training programs for&#13;
professional and nonprofessional&#13;
staffs. As a teacher, she has&#13;
developed and conducted&#13;
management courses for colleges&#13;
and universities. She is a lecturer&#13;
and seminar leader deeply&#13;
devoted to helping individuals and&#13;
organizations realize their full&#13;
potential. Hanson is an experienced&#13;
consultant and&#13;
executive who has guided&#13;
organizations, programs and&#13;
agencies toward greater viability&#13;
and increased productivity. Her&#13;
special strengths are her ability to&#13;
identify organizational problems&#13;
and to work effectively with&#13;
diverse groups and individuals.&#13;
This seminar is free and open to&#13;
Meeting&#13;
notices&#13;
Course and Curriculum, Friday,&#13;
Nov. 6 at 1 p.m., Grnq. 318A; to&#13;
discuss proposed curriculum&#13;
changes.&#13;
Collegiate Skills Implementation,&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 5 at&#13;
1 p.m., Grnq. 344A; to review&#13;
program and discuss self -&#13;
evaluation report for APPR&#13;
review.&#13;
Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review, Tuesday, Nov.&#13;
10 at 3 p.m., Grnq. 344A; to discuss&#13;
master's program in business&#13;
administration.&#13;
Patronize R anger&#13;
Aduertisers!!!&#13;
TSIOTI&#13;
•. .. , 5205-52ndShree}&#13;
ijclicatessett. ® I&lt;icp.ars &amp; Wines&#13;
657-9001&#13;
MILLER LITE&#13;
12 cans *3"&#13;
3203-52nd St.&#13;
everyone interested.&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
THE PARKSIDE&#13;
ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE&#13;
Brings To You&#13;
Dana Clark&#13;
Live From Chicago&#13;
For A One Afternoon Show&#13;
In Midd le Main Place&#13;
November 11 — From 12:00-2:00&#13;
International Coffee and Wine Will Be Sold&#13;
This is a Free Event&#13;
All Students Are Invited&#13;
Go/n P/ck/n'&#13;
Friday,&#13;
Nov. 11&#13;
9:30 III 1:30&#13;
Denim &amp; Lace&#13;
STETSONS&#13;
COUNTRY/WESTERN SALOON&#13;
RACINE MOTOR INN&#13;
535 Main Street in Downtown Racine&#13;
ACADEMIC&#13;
ADVISING&#13;
for&#13;
SPRING SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are seeking a degree at UWParkside)&#13;
should consult their academic adviser prior to registration for Sprinq&#13;
Semester. A Certification of Advising form, signed by the adviser, is required for&#13;
registration.&#13;
Spring Semester Course Schedules will be available on November 10. November&#13;
11 - 25 has been designated as an academic advising period, and advisers will&#13;
make every effort to meet with you then.&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
Contact Your Adviser&#13;
For An Appointment&#13;
If you have any questions, contact the Office of the Dean of Faculty.&#13;
348 Wyllie Library - Learning Center, 553-2144&#13;
£!°TE.\ N on-matriculant students (students not seeking a degree at UWParkside)&#13;
are exempt from this requiremertt. &#13;
4 Thursday, Novembe r 5,1981 RANGER&#13;
How Con You Save $ At?&#13;
CENTER OF THE WORM UQOORS&#13;
ONE SWEET MEAN RECOROS A TARES&#13;
SONNYSNME BAR A RESTABRANT&#13;
BBSNWACKER'S SALOON A CAFE&#13;
NBNORY NEAR SANBWKB SHOOS&#13;
PANTS TOWNE&#13;
OEORCTS BAR&#13;
WMBPMNT PBMP&#13;
TIMER'S UQBOR&#13;
BANBEE UQBOR MART&#13;
BUY A&#13;
"METRO-MISER" CARD&#13;
UU by M Mi ban *f PSE&#13;
'Dinner Party' and&#13;
Hopper trip offered&#13;
The Racine Art Association,&#13;
Inc. of the Charles A. Wustum&#13;
Museum of Fine Arts announces a&#13;
Bus Trip to Chicago on Saturday,&#13;
November 21, 1981. The trip is&#13;
being organized to view the&#13;
current art exhibition "Edward&#13;
Hopper: The Art and the Artist"&#13;
at the Art Institute of Chicago and&#13;
"Judy Chicago's Dinner Party."&#13;
Hopper is considered by many&#13;
to be one of the foremost, realist&#13;
painters of the 20th century. This&#13;
extensive exhibition includes 150&#13;
oil paintings, 35 watercolors and&#13;
100 drawings and was organized&#13;
by the Whitney Museum of&#13;
American Art in New York.&#13;
The Dinner Party is a&#13;
monumental work created by over&#13;
400 people who were directed and&#13;
inspired by artist Judy Chicago.&#13;
The work consists of a large&#13;
triangular table that is fifty feet&#13;
on each side, with 39 table settings,&#13;
each symbolically honoring&#13;
women from ancient times to the&#13;
present.&#13;
Buses will leave the Wustum&#13;
Museum parking lot at 8:00 a.m.,&#13;
arriving at the Art Institute at 9:30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
For ticket information, call&#13;
Wustum Museum at 636-9177.&#13;
De Vinny art exhibited&#13;
"The Rembrandt Revisited&#13;
Suite," an exhibition of recent&#13;
work by Parkside art professor&#13;
Douglas De Vinny, will be on&#13;
display in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery through Nov. 25.&#13;
The show includes a group of&#13;
prints, drawings and watercolors&#13;
that utilize themes and compositions&#13;
based on Rembrandt&#13;
paintings. De Vinny says the work&#13;
contains "a little humor, a little&#13;
biography and a lot of satire."&#13;
DeVinny joined the Parkside&#13;
faculty in 1979. He received his&#13;
MFA degree from Indiana&#13;
University and previously taught&#13;
at Mesa College and Skidmore&#13;
College.&#13;
DeVinney's work won the&#13;
Burpee Art Museum Purchase&#13;
Award in the 57th Annual Rockford&#13;
(111.) a nd Vicinity Jury Show&#13;
last spring and was included in the&#13;
Boston Printmakers 33rd National&#13;
Exhibition, also held last spring&#13;
He won an award for excellence in&#13;
the Wisconsin Watercolor '80 show&#13;
and had a solo exhibition of prints&#13;
and drawings at Colorado State&#13;
University, Fort Collins.&#13;
The Communication Arts&#13;
Gallery will be open. Mondays&#13;
through Thursdays from l to 6&#13;
p.m. and Tuesdays and Wednesdays&#13;
from 7 to 10 p.m. during&#13;
the current exhibition. Friday&#13;
hours can be arranged by appointment&#13;
with the Fine Arts&#13;
Divisional Office.&#13;
Ait competition announced&#13;
The Racine Art Association&#13;
announces its annual competitive&#13;
art exhibition, RACINE AREA&#13;
ARTS, 1981. The competition is&#13;
open to all artists living in Racine,&#13;
Kenosha and Walworth Counties&#13;
and includes work in all media.&#13;
Entries may be delivered to the&#13;
Charles A. Wustum Museum of&#13;
Fine Arts for jurying on Thursday,&#13;
November 12 from 1-9 p.m.;&#13;
Friday, November 13 from 1-5&#13;
S,,OH ^&#13;
Distributed by E. F. MADRIGRANO 1831 • 55th St. Kenosha, Wise. 658-3553&#13;
Stroh's NEW ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
p.m. and Saturday, November 14&#13;
from 9-11 a.m.&#13;
Kit Basquin, owner and director&#13;
of the Kit Basquin Gallery in&#13;
Milwaukee will be the juror. She&#13;
was formerly owner/director of&#13;
the Washington Gallery in Indianapolis,&#13;
Indiana and was on the&#13;
staff of the Indianapolis Museum&#13;
of Art. Ms. Basquin will select the&#13;
exhibition from works that have&#13;
been entered and award $450 in&#13;
prize money. There is an entry fee&#13;
of $3.00 and artists may enter up to&#13;
two pieces of their work which&#13;
may be in any medium.&#13;
For further information on the&#13;
exhibit and a copy of the entry&#13;
forms, interested artists may stop&#13;
at Wustum Museum from 1-9 p.m&#13;
on Monday and Thursday and&#13;
from 1-5 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday,&#13;
Friday, Saturday and&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
The exhibition opens Sunday,&#13;
November 22, 1981 with a&#13;
reception for the public from 2-4&#13;
p.m. Prizes will be awarded at&#13;
this time. The exhibition will&#13;
continue through Sunday&#13;
December 12.&#13;
UW-P poets to&#13;
give readings&#13;
Two Parkside faculty poets,&#13;
Chinese food and chocolate addicts&#13;
Carl Lindner and Alan&#13;
Shucard, will give a reading of&#13;
their poems in the library's&#13;
second floor Overlook Lounge on&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 11 from 1-2 p.m.&#13;
Both have published two collections&#13;
of poems, Lindner Vampire&#13;
and The Only Game, Shucard The&#13;
Gorgon Bag and The Louse on the&#13;
Head of a Yawning Lord.&#13;
FREE!&#13;
Important Sominar&#13;
Intonr lowing&#13;
MAN POWER COUNSELOR&#13;
* Carol Merrick*&#13;
a s guest speaker&#13;
Wed., Nov. 11&#13;
MOLN D113&#13;
1-2 p.m.&#13;
tPf 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;
Trials and tribulations&#13;
of mid-semester burnout&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
Have you seen students wandering&#13;
around Parkside with dark&#13;
circles under and glazed looks in&#13;
their eyes? Did their blank faces&#13;
make you think that perhaps&#13;
they're living in another world?&#13;
Have you maybe found yourself&#13;
sitting alone with a noisy group of&#13;
friends? While you quietly contemplate&#13;
the total cubic foot area&#13;
of Union Square, are they avidly&#13;
discussing their weekends?&#13;
This is something that is affecting&#13;
our regular students, not&#13;
just the eraserheads or pre-meds&#13;
for whom this condition is normal.&#13;
What is causing such inner turmoil&#13;
for students? Is it love? No,&#13;
wrong time of y ear. Irregularity?&#13;
Could be. Drugs? Of co urse not —&#13;
everybody knows there are no&#13;
drugs at Parkside!!&#13;
Such symptoms can only be&#13;
attributed to one thing: midsemester&#13;
burn-out. It happens&#13;
when youthful enthusiasm for&#13;
institutes of higher learning wears&#13;
off; when classes have become&#13;
grinding routines. It happens&#13;
anywhere between the first and&#13;
eighth week of school. It's no&#13;
wonder we're disillusioned.&#13;
One thing that can really cause&#13;
students to freak is if an instructor&#13;
should be so brash as to actually&#13;
change a mid-term exam he has&#13;
given for the last three years. Now&#13;
that takes real nerve, especially&#13;
when some students spend so&#13;
much time memorizing those past&#13;
tests!&#13;
They say it's the little things&#13;
that put you over the brink. If yo ur&#13;
favorite vending machine is out of&#13;
Pearson's Salted Nut Rolls, calm&#13;
down. It's not the end of th e world.&#13;
If you drop your hairbrush in the&#13;
toilet, try not to panic. When your&#13;
chapstick kicks off its cap and&#13;
escapes in search of its creator,&#13;
let it go.&#13;
Of course, when you're a third&#13;
semester senior with 21 credits to&#13;
go and you realize that one of the&#13;
classes you'll need to graduate&#13;
won't be offered til the Spring of&#13;
1983, burning out just might be the&#13;
answer.&#13;
Students chronically burned out&#13;
are probably beyond help, but for&#13;
the rest of us the condition should&#13;
only be temporary. We have to be&#13;
adult about the burn-out. Don't do&#13;
anything to enhance it. Stay away&#13;
from electronic games if you&#13;
always lose. Avoid Rubik's Cube&#13;
at all costs. Maybe we could even&#13;
get Security to declare a&#13;
moratorium on parking tickets for&#13;
a while.&#13;
Keep in mind that twenty years&#13;
from now n o one will ask or even&#13;
care what your grades were. It's&#13;
not worth getting messed up over&#13;
silly little numbers like grade&#13;
point averages if you can't function&#13;
in the real world. People out&#13;
there usually don't understand&#13;
about burn-out.&#13;
Just don't give up. The semester&#13;
won't last forever. Every cloud&#13;
has a silver lining. And nothing is&#13;
ever so bad that a good party can't&#13;
cure.&#13;
Hartl featured at RAA&#13;
The Racine Art Association,&#13;
Inc. (RAA) announces its featured&#13;
artist of the month in the Art Sales&#13;
and Rental Gallery it operates at&#13;
the Charles A. Wustum Museum&#13;
of Fine Arts, Racine, Wisconsin.&#13;
Featured artist for the months of&#13;
October and November is&#13;
photographer Ray Hartl of&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin. His works&#13;
will be featured in the Gallery&#13;
through November 15, 1981.&#13;
Hartl's work has been shown at&#13;
Wustum Museum in Wisconsin&#13;
Photography 1979 and 1981, the&#13;
state - wide juried biennial&#13;
photo graph y comp etiti on&#13;
organized by the RAA.&#13;
Museum visting hours are 1-5&#13;
p.m. seven days a week and from&#13;
1-9 p.m. on Mondays and Thursdays.&#13;
&#13;
'Parkside&#13;
STILL&#13;
Has Style"&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
WEEKLY SPECIALS&#13;
Nov. 9 - Nov. 14&#13;
RED PIN&#13;
$3.00 Nlte&#13;
Moonlife Bowl&#13;
60Vgame&#13;
All you can bowl&#13;
or play pool&#13;
90'/game&#13;
MON. 9 a.m. 'til Noon&#13;
TUE. Noon 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 3 p.m. 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
THUR. 7 p.m. 'til 10 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 10 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
SAT. 8 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
He (Pltie&#13;
In the Parkside Union 10:00 am - 4:00 pm&#13;
OVER 40 SELECT VA RIETIES INCLUDING&#13;
This Week's Special...&#13;
SPECIAL!&#13;
Nov. 9-13&#13;
PISTACHIO NUTS&#13;
40% OFF&#13;
You Won't Find Them Lower Priced!&#13;
LYN6A,&#13;
Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. II&#13;
3 p. m&#13;
Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater&#13;
Students -&#13;
$250&#13;
General -&#13;
s3.00&#13;
6ancc com pan y &#13;
6 Thursday, November 5,1981 RANGER&#13;
#•••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Anthropology&#13;
A slide show and lecture entitled&#13;
"Starving in the Land of Plenty —&#13;
Shanty Towns and Black&#13;
Homelands in South Africa" will&#13;
be sponsored by Anthropology&#13;
Club on Wednesday, Nov. 11 at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in Moln 105. The lecture&#13;
/ slide show will be presented by&#13;
Dr. Aidan Southall from the&#13;
Anthropology program at UWMadison&#13;
and Dr. Christine Obbo,&#13;
an African anthropologist and&#13;
author of "African Women: Their&#13;
Stuggle for Economic Independence."&#13;
&#13;
Accounting&#13;
The Accounting Club will hold a&#13;
general club meeting on Monday,&#13;
Nov. 9 at 1 p.m. in Moln D107.&#13;
Tickets will be available at this&#13;
meeting for the Manager's Dinner&#13;
to be held on Nov. 30. Tickets will&#13;
also be available at the Union&#13;
Info. Center until Nov. 20. Cost is&#13;
$10 per person. Also, nomination&#13;
materials will be available for&#13;
club offices that will be vacated in&#13;
December. All Accounting Club&#13;
members and business students&#13;
are encouraged to attend this&#13;
meeting. Refreshments will be&#13;
served.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
Mark your calendar so you&#13;
won't miss these upcoming&#13;
Women In Business events:&#13;
-Friday, Nov. 6: Members of&#13;
WIB ushering at "The Runner&#13;
Stumbles"&#13;
-Saturday, Nov. 7: Poster&#13;
Making Party at 2008 Kinzie, 7&#13;
p.m.; BYOB and munchies&#13;
-Thursday, Nov. 12: 5-6:30 p.m.&#13;
in Union 207; "Confidence&#13;
Building" workshop with Ruby&#13;
Hanson, Executive Consultant,&#13;
Hanson Seminars, Evanston, 111.&#13;
-Monday, Nov. 16: Bake Sale 8&#13;
a.m. 'til 2 p.m.&#13;
-Friday, Dec. 4: Tree Trimming&#13;
Party; open to members of&#13;
|1|&#13;
I *£ kl&#13;
i 3&#13;
£3&#13;
ii&#13;
88&#13;
• •&#13;
CI CO&#13;
Club Events&#13;
IVCF Math Qub&#13;
all UW-P business clubs; more&#13;
details to follow.&#13;
-Monday, Dec. 7: 1 p.m. in&#13;
Union 104; general business&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Remember, if you can pinch&#13;
more than an inch, join us for fun&#13;
and fitness every Wednesday&#13;
from 1 to 2 p.m. in the wrestling&#13;
room for an invigorating Aerobic&#13;
Dance lesson.&#13;
Philosophical&#13;
The Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society will hold a meeting on&#13;
Nov. 11 at 3:30 p.m. in Comm Arts&#13;
233. During the meeting, students&#13;
and faculty will meet in an informal&#13;
setting to discuss ideas&#13;
important in philosophy.&#13;
On Nov. 12 at 6:30 p.m. in Comm&#13;
Arts 125, Mark Singer will discuss&#13;
his ideas on the Philosophy of&#13;
Biology and the philosophical&#13;
ideas of reductionism.&#13;
Geology&#13;
The Geology Club will sponsor a&#13;
colloquium entitled "Regional&#13;
Metallogenic Studies: An Exploration&#13;
Guide?" tomorrow at 1&#13;
p.m. in Grnq. 113. Speaking will be&#13;
Dr. John R. Griffins from the&#13;
Department of Geology at the&#13;
University of Arkansas.&#13;
Poli. S ci. C lub&#13;
There will be a Political Science&#13;
Club organizational meeting on&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 10 at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Moln. 112. Topics to be discussed&#13;
are the election of club officers,&#13;
future events and the formulation&#13;
of a club constitution. All political&#13;
science majors are urged to attend.&#13;
Although the organization is&#13;
of particular interest to political&#13;
science majors, it is open to the&#13;
entire student body.&#13;
If you're eager to have a good&#13;
time and make new friends, come&#13;
to the Inter - Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship Brown Bag Social at 1&#13;
p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
There will be a Math Club&#13;
meeting on Wednesday, Nov. 18 at&#13;
1 p.m. in Grnq. D127. The meeting&#13;
will deal with career planning for&#13;
math majors.&#13;
FEEL LIKE COLLEGE&#13;
PREPARES YOU FOR&#13;
ONLY ONE JOB?&#13;
Take another look - at&#13;
Mutual of Omaha. Whether&#13;
you're in liberal arts, fine&#13;
arts, marketing or accounting,&#13;
we can offer you a rewarding&#13;
career in insurance&#13;
sales.&#13;
Our advanced training&#13;
program helps you develop&#13;
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As a service representative for Mutual of Omaha,&#13;
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So, if you feel like college is preparing you for just&#13;
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INTERVIEWING ON CAMPUS&#13;
NOVEMBER 12,1981&#13;
Contact: Placement Office for an interview time before&#13;
Nov. 12, 1981.&#13;
Mutual 4T\&#13;
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People (fou can count on...&#13;
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CHECKING!&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414-248-9141&#13;
24726 - 75th Street - Rt. 50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wi&lt;&#13;
414 - 843-2388&#13;
ILS&#13;
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Balance is s500.00 or Morel&#13;
Jbbl JC &amp; LENDER&#13;
WE'RE HIRE TO HELP YOU GROW! &#13;
Keglers win trophies&#13;
by Laurie Painter&#13;
On Sunday, October 25, the&#13;
Parkside bowling team took to the&#13;
alley in Sheboygan for the Northeast&#13;
Collegiate Tournament. At&#13;
the end of the tournament,&#13;
Parkside had walked away with 17&#13;
trophies. There were 48 teams&#13;
competing in this tournament,&#13;
eight of which were women's&#13;
teams.&#13;
Mike Menzhuber, the coach and&#13;
advisor of the Ranger team,&#13;
described the tournament as "one&#13;
of the most prestigous collegiate&#13;
bowling tournaments in&#13;
Wisconsin." The highlight of the&#13;
tournament was the stepladder&#13;
roll-off between the five men&#13;
finalists and the five women&#13;
finalists.&#13;
The Parkside women didn't&#13;
place into the roll-off and came&#13;
away from the tournament empty&#13;
handed. The men's team did;&#13;
however, do a little better. John&#13;
Peterson placed second in the rolloff&#13;
by beating Jeff Henry of UWM&#13;
247 to 150, and Bruce .Jorgenson,&#13;
also of UWM, 288-206. Peterson's&#13;
winning streak ended with a loss&#13;
to Brett Faulkner, 162 to 206.&#13;
Bob NyBerg, secretary of the&#13;
bowling team commented, "This&#13;
is the strongest men's team in the&#13;
three years I've been here." On&#13;
the women's team, NyBerg said,&#13;
Well, we're hurting there."&#13;
The first men's bowling team&#13;
received nine trophies. John&#13;
Peterson contributed four by&#13;
placing 6th in doubles, 3rd in all&#13;
events, 2nd in the roll-off, and in&#13;
the 3rd place team events. Jay&#13;
Podella received one trophy for&#13;
placing third in team events. Willy&#13;
Yee contributed two trophies, one&#13;
for third place in team events, and&#13;
one for placing 8th in singles.&#13;
Jerry Zigner put in the last two&#13;
trophies with third place team&#13;
events, and for bowling 6th in&#13;
doubles.&#13;
The second team got seven&#13;
trophies, three from Tom Schwartz,&#13;
two from Glen Malkmus,&#13;
and one each from Todd Mulbeck&#13;
and Scott Hartnell.&#13;
The next bowling event takes&#13;
place at Parkside on November&#13;
14. From there the Rangers look&#13;
forward to the St. Louis tournament&#13;
where last year the&#13;
Parkside men's team placed 18th&#13;
in the nation.&#13;
Aerobic&#13;
Exercise&#13;
as little as&#13;
$jj 50&#13;
a session&#13;
10 weeks,&#13;
2 times a week&#13;
Starting daily. Your ten weeks start at time of sign up.&#13;
Included in classes, use of&#13;
• Whirlpool • Sauna • Showers&#13;
• Free babysitting on weekdays&#13;
Call or stop out today!&#13;
ACqUETbAl[ &amp; FlTflESs&#13;
Club of KenosbA&#13;
7360 - 57th Avenue 694-8922&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Rangers lose t hree m atches&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
With the close of a frustrating&#13;
season rapidly approaching, the&#13;
Parkside women's volleyball&#13;
team dropped its record to 15-25&#13;
with three losses at last weekend's&#13;
Valporaiso Invitational in&#13;
Valporaiso, Indiana.&#13;
"We're playing very strong for&#13;
four or five points, and then we're&#13;
playing very weak for four or five&#13;
points," commented coach Linda&#13;
Henderson. • "I don't know why&#13;
they can't concentrate for the&#13;
sixty minutes it takes to win a&#13;
match."&#13;
Parkside lost their first match&#13;
to Ferris State in two games by&#13;
scores of 11-15 and 7-15. Loyola&#13;
University then defeated the&#13;
Rangers in three games, 6-15,15:9&#13;
and 13-15. The Rangers were hurt&#13;
in the Loyola match as sophomore&#13;
Callie Lee sprained her ankle and&#13;
was lost for the remainder of the&#13;
tournament. She is, however,&#13;
expected to recover in time for the&#13;
state tournament November 13th&#13;
and 14th. Parkside lost their last&#13;
match to Eastern Illinois by&#13;
scores of 15-9, 3-15 and 10-15.&#13;
Henderson is optimistic about&#13;
the upcoming state playoffs.&#13;
"Although we lost matches this&#13;
weekend, we are starting to see&#13;
some improvement. There's&#13;
never any problem getting&#13;
psyched up for the State tourney."&#13;
The Rangers must first travel to&#13;
Romeoville, Illinois to take on a&#13;
tough Lewis University squad that&#13;
has lost only four matches all&#13;
season, compared to Parkside's&#13;
present record of 15-25.&#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;
uioy.&#13;
Atlanta at San Francisco&#13;
Chicago at Kansas City -&#13;
Cincinnati at San Diego -&#13;
Cleveland at Denver&#13;
Detroit at Washington&#13;
Miami at New England&#13;
New Orleans at Los Angeles&#13;
N.Y. Giants at Green Bay —&#13;
N.Y. Jets at Baltimore&#13;
Oakland at Houston&#13;
Philadelphia at St. Louis&#13;
Pittsburgh at Seattle&#13;
Tampa Bay at Minnesota&#13;
Last week's winner was Tom Iversen with 11 correct.&#13;
Tie breaker: — will be the total combined points in&#13;
the N.Y. Giants - Green Bay game.&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
ALL STUDENTS!!&#13;
1. YOUR REGISTRATION PACKET FOR SPRING 1982 will be available&#13;
beginning Wednesday, November 11, 1981 at the Information Kiosk in WLLC&#13;
Main Place.&#13;
2. COURSE SCHEDULES FOR SPRING 1982 will also be availabje.&#13;
3. A DROP AND ADD DAY for students who completed registration early will be&#13;
held on January 12, 1982 so that program changes can be made prior to the&#13;
start of classes. See the SPRING Course schedule for details.&#13;
OFFICE OF INSTITUTIONAL&#13;
ANALYSIS AND REGISTRATION&#13;
BILLIARDS&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
CHESS&#13;
BACKGAMMON&#13;
TABLE TENNIS&#13;
FRISBEE *&#13;
TABLE SOCCER&#13;
.. . The Association of College Unions - International&#13;
Regional Qualifying&#13;
TOURNAMENTS&#13;
CAMPUS TROPHIES IN EACH AREA&#13;
PLUS THE RIGHT TO REPRESENT&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE IN REGIONAL AND NATIONAL COMPETITION&#13;
•2.00 ENTRY FEE IN EACH EVENT&#13;
SIGN UP DEADLINES:&#13;
• FOOSBOALL — NOV. 10 • FRISBEE — NOV. 19&#13;
• BILLIARDS — NOV. 12 • BOWLING, CHESS &amp; TABLE&#13;
• BACKGAMMON — NOV. 15 TENNIS — NOV. 30 &#13;
AMERICAN WHISKEY&#13;
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ASTEROIDS&#13;
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WIZARDS OF WAR&#13;
DEFENDERS&#13;
BLACK KNIGHT&#13;
Thursday, November 5,1981 RANGER&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
Women host state conference&#13;
by Patty DeLuisa&#13;
Junior harrier Debbie Spino ran&#13;
11th individually to pace the&#13;
Rangers to a seventh place team&#13;
finish Saturday at the Wisconsin&#13;
Women's Intercollegiate Athletic&#13;
Conference (WWIAC) Cross&#13;
Country meet, hosted by&#13;
Parkside. Debbie's time was&#13;
18:33.&#13;
Senior Barb Osborne ran well,&#13;
placing 28th with a time of 19 :35.&#13;
Junior Dona Driscoll ran a&#13;
commendable 34th with a clocking&#13;
of 19:49. Coach Mike DeWitt&#13;
commented that Dona did a good&#13;
job considering she suffered an&#13;
injury previous to the meet.&#13;
Freshman Sue Meyer ran her&#13;
best 5K time, 19:55, capturing&#13;
42nd place. Senior Lowrie Melotik&#13;
placed 63rd with a time of 21:19.&#13;
Sandy Venne, a sophomore, immediately&#13;
followed in the 64th&#13;
position with a time of 21:30.&#13;
Sophomore Linda Pfeilstifter&#13;
finished 88th.&#13;
Cheryl Konkol of UWM won the&#13;
5000 meter race with a time of&#13;
17:43. Marquette University took&#13;
top honors. Coach DeWitt commented&#13;
that the women ran well in&#13;
the meet but they were capable of&#13;
doing better.&#13;
Lucian Rosa's male harriers did&#13;
not fare as well as he had expected&#13;
this past Saturday. He said he&#13;
feels that his team could have&#13;
placed higher in the scoring at the&#13;
Great Lakes Regional NCAA-II&#13;
Cross Country meet, hosted by&#13;
Ferris State (Michigan) College.&#13;
Rosa justified his thoughts by&#13;
saying that his team lacked its&#13;
usual full - strength talent.&#13;
Parkside complemented the field&#13;
with sophomores as Dan Stublaski&#13;
led his team with a 25th place&#13;
finish for a time of 34:05. A1&#13;
Correa finished 38th with a&#13;
clocking of 34:32. Tom Barrett ran&#13;
53rd in 35:08, a good time considering&#13;
his knee injury. Steve&#13;
Brunner placed 64th with a time of&#13;
35:58. Finally, Ray Sharp, Rosa's&#13;
"fifth man" finished 82nd in&#13;
exactly 38 m inutes.&#13;
John Steinberg of Ferris State&#13;
won the 10K with a speedy time of&#13;
31:58. Ferris State captured the&#13;
team crown with only 49 points.&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Rangers shut&#13;
out IIT&#13;
by Charles Perce&#13;
Last Saturday, the Rangers,&#13;
who are presently second in the&#13;
Mid-East NCAA Division 2, took&#13;
the field on a perfect day for&#13;
soccer and devastated Illinois&#13;
Institute of Technology (IIT) 4-0.&#13;
Cheidu Okomah led all scorers&#13;
with two goals, while Jim&#13;
Spiellman and John MoMo&#13;
Onyiego each scored one goal.&#13;
"The score was no indication of&#13;
the game," said Henderson. The&#13;
Rangers held IIT to four shots all&#13;
game, two per half. The Rangers&#13;
ended up outshooting IIT 28-4.&#13;
Commenting on this, Henderson&#13;
said "We have just got to take&#13;
advantage of all of our scoring&#13;
opportunities. When you look at&#13;
our statistics for the season, we&#13;
have outshot our opponents 450-&#13;
173. John Opfermann, our&#13;
goalkeeper, has only had to make&#13;
81 saves."&#13;
Cheidu Okomah has been&#13;
named the Player of th e Week for&#13;
the last two weeks, a rare honor,&#13;
for scoring six goals.&#13;
The Rangers will travel to UWPlatteville&#13;
on Saturday,&#13;
November 7. The game is a must&#13;
win situation. If they win, they&#13;
advance to the area play-offs, and&#13;
if not, well it was a nice season.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
HELPWANTED&#13;
EARN EXTRA CASH. Home mailing&#13;
program. Send self addressed, stamped&#13;
envelope to A. B. Enterprises, 3065&#13;
Calidonia, Racine, 53402.&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
FRENCH, GERMAN, SPANISH LESSONS.&#13;
Price open. Caroline 886-4206.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
ANYONE INTERESTED in going to "Film&#13;
India" at Chicago Art Institute, Sundays&#13;
beginning Nov. 1. Share the ride, cost of gas&#13;
and parking. Contact Vivian 639-2602 or 656-&#13;
6956.&#13;
Sports Calendar&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 7&#13;
Soccer at UW - Platteville (4&#13;
p.m.)&#13;
Cross - Country: TFA / USA&#13;
Midwest Open Championship&#13;
(11:40)&#13;
Cross - Country: TFA / USA&#13;
Midwest Open Championship&#13;
(12:50)&#13;
Friday, Nov. 13&#13;
Volleyball WWIAC Tournament&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 14&#13;
Volleyball WWIAC Tournament&#13;
Cross - Country at NCAA-II&#13;
Championship SEAGRAM DISTILLERS CO.. N.Y.C. AMERICAN W HISKEY-A BLEND. 80 PROOF SEVEN S AND 7U P- abetpaoemarksoptheseven UPCOMPA.VO,^&#13;
"Wow," exclaims Strollin' Bowlin', "Pinball and Video&#13;
games in the Rec Center. This is great - and the cost is only a&#13;
quarter." As Strollin Bowlin' soon learns after a couple of&#13;
games that the Rec Center has only the latest pinball and&#13;
video games. If you are looking for some inexpensive but&#13;
exciting entertainment why not stop down in the Rec Center&#13;
for a game or two.&#13;
nnrk tt roll stirs with&#13;
RsSen&amp;Seven ~&#13;
Seagrams </text>
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              <text>Forum. Teaching award issues raised</text>
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              <text>MT University of Wisconsin - Parkside |TAU-it*tTiP WHi*IMy fiookf&#13;
OIPNT CKTUSA, TH- T«£ C-aASSCi I&#13;
-pAtir*L^*isiCu,s£auT&lt;;U '&#13;
Trl-THE*j AJO RhAuchl.&#13;
Ami/ o oc'uhatis rr!f! yo»$orrA&#13;
••• w.«(w&lt;r&#13;
Teaching Award issues raised...&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
An "open forum" held by&#13;
chancellor Alan Guskin drew a&#13;
group of about 25 students last&#13;
Wednesday to "ask any questions,&#13;
listen to any comments you have&#13;
to make," Guskin said.&#13;
Guskin opened the forum with a&#13;
statement about the new Breadth&#13;
of Knowledge proposal. "One of&#13;
the most significant pieces of&#13;
legislation has just been passed by&#13;
the Faculty Senate — t he Breadth&#13;
of Knowledge proposal, the new&#13;
general education requirement.&#13;
That'll go into effect in September&#13;
of '83. It will serve to give our&#13;
general education requirements&#13;
an academic sense, rather than&#13;
the cafeteria style requirement&#13;
we presently have."&#13;
Guskin emphasized the "critical&#13;
role" students played in revisions&#13;
of the proposal over the past year.&#13;
Guskin said student in-put&#13;
resulted in the final credit&#13;
requirement being reduced and&#13;
"the result was that the committee&#13;
didn't agree with&#13;
everything students said, but&#13;
students were taken into account,"&#13;
Guskin said.&#13;
The meeting was then divided&#13;
between student concerns about&#13;
the Teaching Excellence Award&#13;
program and other issues. (See&#13;
other story).&#13;
Next year's convocation,&#13;
Guskin said, would be the time for&#13;
the public award to Oliver&#13;
Hayward, the sole recipient of this&#13;
year's award. Also, the staff&#13;
winner this year, Edith Eisenberg&#13;
and the academic staff winner will&#13;
be awarded at that time, along&#13;
with next year's winners, Guskin&#13;
said.&#13;
Peer Support becomes&#13;
major organization&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. Senate&#13;
went on record during its Nov. 4&#13;
meeting to support giving Peer&#13;
Support major organization&#13;
status.&#13;
What that means is that Peer&#13;
Support, a program which&#13;
originated 2 1/2 years ago by and&#13;
for non - traditional students age&#13;
25 an d over, will go directly to&#13;
SUFAC for future funding. The&#13;
program currently receives funds&#13;
from Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Educational Services Carla&#13;
Stoffle; the funds are designed for&#13;
new programs to test their ability&#13;
to become viable organizations.&#13;
The resolution to grant Peer&#13;
Support major organization status&#13;
met with much discussion but the&#13;
roll call vote was 10-1-1 with John&#13;
Peterson voting "no" and Luis&#13;
Valldejuli abstaining. PSGA&#13;
President Jim Kreuser signed the&#13;
resolution within hours after the&#13;
Senate meeting.&#13;
Irene Vilona of Peer Support&#13;
addressed the Senate and answered&#13;
questions. "One of the&#13;
most important reasons for&#13;
requesting major organization&#13;
status is that we want our identity&#13;
enhanced," she said. "We want&#13;
definite funding. We wish to be&#13;
independent, subject only to the&#13;
rules that govern the other major&#13;
organizations."&#13;
Vilona replied to specific concerns&#13;
that some Senators have&#13;
voiced since the proposal was first&#13;
brought up two weeks ago. "The&#13;
problem that seems to face Peer&#13;
Support is not whether it is a&#13;
viable organization," she said,&#13;
"but how we receive our funding.&#13;
Peer Support wishes the Senate to&#13;
understand that the volunteers&#13;
who make up Peer Support feel&#13;
that we are a service organization&#13;
— we are not a club.&#13;
"It has been said that the services&#13;
we provide are already&#13;
provided by the school itself," she&#13;
said. "This is partly true. We do&#13;
have Community Student Services&#13;
which staffs five people to service,&#13;
over 2000 students. Campus&#13;
statistics show that the enrollment&#13;
this year has increased over&#13;
projection and the increase lies in&#13;
the over 25 age grou p. This trend&#13;
(is expected) to continue. It is not&#13;
possible for Community Student&#13;
Services to do what we are trying&#13;
to do. It is not possible for (them)&#13;
to help each student,&#13;
"Also," she continued, "we do&#13;
not wish to 'belong' to the administration.&#13;
We are a network of&#13;
students helping students. We do&#13;
not wish to be dependent on the&#13;
administra tion's receptiveness.''&#13;
Vilona responded to the concern&#13;
that Peer Support's base of non -&#13;
traditional students is not strong&#13;
enough to warrant major&#13;
organization status. "Peer Support&#13;
says to you that we are&#13;
concrete," she told the Senate,&#13;
"that we started 2 1/2 years ago&#13;
with an idea and we now have a&#13;
solid corps of 25 vo lunteers. We&#13;
have solid programs and directions&#13;
in which to follow."&#13;
Vilona then answered questions&#13;
from the Senators. "Every time&#13;
that you're referring to students in&#13;
this proposal," said Valldejuli, "it&#13;
is referred to as a non - traditional&#13;
Continued On page Seven&#13;
INSIDE&#13;
• Career Corner&#13;
• Interview with&#13;
student impressionists&#13;
• Basketball preview&#13;
"I think everything's settled&#13;
until everything is behind us in&#13;
terms of time. The issue is not&#13;
Ollie (Hayward), so why should he&#13;
suffer? I'm just waiting for an&#13;
opportune moment to present the&#13;
award," Guskin said.&#13;
However, students did not agree&#13;
that the award issue was settled&#13;
and continued to ask questions&#13;
about the process and Guskin's&#13;
decision.&#13;
Joe Ripp asked Guskin what he&#13;
meant when he said the&#13;
"nomination forms for the awards&#13;
are not clear," referring to an Oct.&#13;
8 Ranger article on the subject.&#13;
"They're not consistent with what&#13;
I always assumed was our&#13;
policy," Guskin replied. "The&#13;
purpose of the award is to say 'We&#13;
like your work' and to give the rest&#13;
of the faculty a role model. To give&#13;
it to part - time faculty makes no&#13;
sense."&#13;
Guskin said that he felt that his&#13;
assumption was understood by the&#13;
committee and said he did not&#13;
make specific directives known&#13;
because "it was a faculty committee&#13;
and I try not to get too&#13;
involved in their work. I should&#13;
have known, but the Intent of the&#13;
award has always been clear in&#13;
my mind."&#13;
"I have no problem giving the&#13;
award to faculty members who&#13;
Continued On Page Five&#13;
Financial aid, pt. 1&#13;
among other issues.&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
Although discussion of this&#13;
year's Teaching Excellence&#13;
Awards dominated last week's&#13;
"open forum," students also&#13;
had other issues on their&#13;
minds.&#13;
Students who objected to the&#13;
time the forum was held as&#13;
"discouraging to attendance"&#13;
were told by Guskin and&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Carla&#13;
Stoffle that the availability of&#13;
the room (Union 207) and their&#13;
schedules as well as student&#13;
group meeting times contributed&#13;
to the decision.&#13;
Carol Campbell raised the&#13;
issue of equivalency tables,&#13;
remarking, "I've been told&#13;
they exist, but they're in some&#13;
corner hiding. Students don't&#13;
have access to information&#13;
about courses offered at&#13;
nearby schools that they could&#13;
access if they knew about&#13;
them," Campbell said. Stoffle&#13;
replied, "The registrar's office&#13;
has them."&#13;
Guskin said that he thought&#13;
that one of the reasons for&#13;
departments not offering the&#13;
tables was because the&#13;
Parkside faculty was not large&#13;
enough or stable enough in&#13;
members or curriculum to&#13;
create them. He said he would&#13;
"look into it and try to do&#13;
something about it."&#13;
Campbell also raised the&#13;
issue of collegiate skills&#13;
tests currently required of all&#13;
Parkside students. Guskin&#13;
replied: "Our requirement&#13;
here is test based, not course&#13;
based. For some students it is a&#13;
matter of a couple of hours of&#13;
tests and it's easy for them, but&#13;
it keeps the principle going."&#13;
Superior students, Guskin said,&#13;
"should not be exempted from&#13;
the program. It's not a basic&#13;
skills program like you have in&#13;
high school. This says you must&#13;
be able to function in the&#13;
academic world. Those&#13;
students who are very bright&#13;
won't have any trouble. But all&#13;
students must have ail skills."&#13;
When asked about the budget&#13;
cuts in athletics, specifically&#13;
the Parkside basketball&#13;
program, Guskin said: "We'll&#13;
still be very competitive in&#13;
district II schools. We'll be&#13;
playing teams weVe riot sure&#13;
we can beat. Last year, we&#13;
Continued On Page Five&#13;
Students find options limited&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
The following,is part two of a&#13;
three - part series on fall semester&#13;
financial aids at Parkside. Last&#13;
week, the RANGER discovered&#13;
through Jan Ocker, Director of&#13;
Finaicial Aids, that about 40&#13;
students have not yet received&#13;
their Guaranteed Student Loans&#13;
because of problems at the state&#13;
level. Madison's Higher&#13;
Educational Aids Board refused to&#13;
comment.&#13;
This year more Parkside&#13;
students than usual are facing&#13;
financial problems because new&#13;
federal financial aid regulations&#13;
exclude some previously eligible&#13;
students from the grant and loan&#13;
programs and delay others' loan&#13;
monies because of corresponding&#13;
paperwork changes. Also, a high&#13;
volume of applicants (three times&#13;
Parkside's previous number)&#13;
have increased the staff loads at&#13;
both Parkside and Madison.&#13;
How do some of these students&#13;
get through 2/3 of a semester&#13;
without a dollar to their names?&#13;
Some students, according to&#13;
various sources, who counted on&#13;
financial aid that was either&#13;
denied or is late will find that they&#13;
cannot make it. Their options on&#13;
this campus are few — they must&#13;
either quit school or find a job.&#13;
So far, "there have been student&#13;
withdrawals from the University,&#13;
but no more than usual," according&#13;
to Ocker. "Although that&#13;
just means students haven't been&#13;
approaching me in greater&#13;
numbers."&#13;
Tuition payment deadlines have&#13;
just been reached at this time and&#13;
Ocker indicated that unless&#13;
students applied for financial aid&#13;
before Oct. 3 and have paid&#13;
tuition, they will soon have to be&#13;
cancelled. But if they've paid their&#13;
fees, and have other costs to meet&#13;
(rent, food, books, etc.), there are&#13;
currently no campus programs to&#13;
assist them, Ocker said.&#13;
Ocker added, "We can delay&#13;
cancellation of those students who&#13;
are undergoing validation&#13;
problems (at the state level).&#13;
Dean of Student Life, Dave&#13;
Pedersen said, "Financial Aids is&#13;
about it other than jobs on this&#13;
campus." In special circumstances,&#13;
jobs have been found&#13;
for needy students, he said, and&#13;
collections have been taken up&#13;
among the student life staff.&#13;
Pedersen said that temporary&#13;
loan funds for students have not&#13;
worked out at Parkside. "We&#13;
attempted at one time to set up a&#13;
loan fund (to be initiated by PSGA&#13;
with the selling of campus&#13;
telephone directories last year.) It&#13;
never materialized." He also&#13;
mentioned the loan fund at&#13;
Financial Aid.&#13;
According to Ocker, "The funds&#13;
dried up. The student default rate&#13;
has been high. It's supposed to be&#13;
a revolving fund, but it doesn't&#13;
revolve too well. It's now limited&#13;
to book fees at the beginning of the&#13;
semester if the student's money is&#13;
delayed for three or four weeks."&#13;
Mike Plate, Parkside's oncampus&#13;
Job Service representative,&#13;
said that he has had two&#13;
students contact him about employment&#13;
who were in very bad&#13;
financial shape. "One of them&#13;
called today and asked me if I'd&#13;
seen anything yet. He said 'Hey,&#13;
my financial status is very poor. It&#13;
looks like I'm going to have to quit&#13;
school and apply for welfare.'&#13;
Maureen Budowle, director of&#13;
the Child Care Center, represents&#13;
one of the few Parkside programs&#13;
that services students on a running&#13;
tab basis because other&#13;
student maintenance costs like&#13;
rent and food are met in the&#13;
surrounding communities.&#13;
Budowle said that some of the&#13;
parents that use the Child Care&#13;
Center this year are "literally&#13;
sneaking past my office during&#13;
pay weeks. If I see them about&#13;
meeting their payments, they say&#13;
'My financial aid isn't in but its&#13;
coming soon. There's nothing I&#13;
can do about it.' It's really hard on&#13;
them.&#13;
When asked if the end of this&#13;
semester means the end of the&#13;
problems with financial aid,&#13;
Ocker said, "I can't say that. The&#13;
loan program is probably targeted&#13;
for more cuts.&#13;
Next week: What are the&#13;
changes in financial aid&#13;
regulations? </text>
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              <text>Teaching Awards - Gukin agrees to sign certificate for Kersey</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;
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eluded for verific ation. sl&#13;
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.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;
THE BABIG ND'&#13;
SATURDAY,&#13;
NOVEMBER 28th&#13;
8:00 p. m.&#13;
$3.00 PER PERSON&#13;
DOOR PRIZES&#13;
Contact&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
at&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
For Tickets&#13;
SOUTH HILLS&#13;
COUNTRY CLUB&#13;
FRONTAGE ROAD&#13;
North at Hwy. 20&#13;
Sponsored by&#13;
RACINE&#13;
SOCCER CLUB&#13;
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• Pumpkin Pie • Complimentary Glass of Wine or Cider&#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;
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3 DAYS ONLY — NOV. 23,24 &amp; 25&#13;
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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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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;
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RECORDS &amp; TAPES&#13;
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$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;
/?ZfwUh 7&amp; 7. Enjoy&#13;
**:» r°U Sec" ftS^unds&#13;
and jazz, an&#13;
7 nnuntry and western,&#13;
^^UjAndsodoes^ moderation.&#13;
Zg'sounds better with •&#13;
roll stirs wrth&#13;
Seagrams&#13;
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>jy University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Have a nice Thanksgiving!&#13;
— the Ranger staff&#13;
PSGA Senate&#13;
Meeting r esults in stands&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Nov. 18 Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, Inc.&#13;
Senate meeting was the most&#13;
event - filled Senate meeting of&#13;
this year. It contained the&#13;
resignation of the PSGA Vice -&#13;
President; stands against three&#13;
issues: the proposed tuition&#13;
surcharge, raising the state&#13;
drinking age from 18 to 19, and&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin's actions&#13;
concerning the Teaching Excellence&#13;
Awards; and adoption of&#13;
Student Life eligibility criteria.&#13;
Kathy Bambrough PSGA Vice -&#13;
President, offered her resignation&#13;
the day of the meeting and was not&#13;
present. Kathy Slama, President&#13;
Pro Tempore and now acting Vice&#13;
- President began the meeting by&#13;
reading Bambrough's letter of&#13;
resignation. (See other story for&#13;
details.)&#13;
Mike Pfaffl moved and&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez seconded, to&#13;
take a stand against the proposed&#13;
tuition surcharge which the UW&#13;
Board of Regents approved. The&#13;
surcharge must also be approved&#13;
by the Department of Administration&#13;
and the Joint&#13;
Finance Committee.&#13;
The Pfaffl / Rodriguez&#13;
resolution states, "While it is&#13;
almost certain the DOA will approve&#13;
the Regents' request for the&#13;
surcharge, Joint Finnce might be&#13;
persuaded to deny the request. We&#13;
must urge all members of the&#13;
Joint Finance Committee to oppose&#13;
the surcharge."&#13;
The resolution gives five reasons&#13;
why Joint Finance members may&#13;
oppose the surcharge: the UW&#13;
system received a much smaller&#13;
reduction in state appropriations&#13;
than most other state agencies,&#13;
making the need for a surcharge&#13;
questionable; enrollments are&#13;
higher than projected so the UW&#13;
system will receive $4 million&#13;
more than expected; a surcharge&#13;
does not solve the long term&#13;
problem for the university of&#13;
adjusting to an era of shrinking&#13;
financial resources; although the&#13;
Chancellors have committed&#13;
themselves to using the money&#13;
generated by the surcharge for&#13;
educational purposes, the plans&#13;
are extremely vague; and with&#13;
the country in a recession and&#13;
unemployment hitting 8%,&#13;
families and working students can&#13;
not affort tuition increases.&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Educational Services Carla&#13;
Stoffle asked the Senate, "Are you&#13;
going to take a stand in&#13;
ignorance?" referring to the&#13;
Senate not knowing how Chancellor&#13;
Guskin plans to spend the&#13;
surcharge generated money at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"I don't feel it's a matter of&#13;
ignorance," answered Pfaffl. "I&#13;
just feel that we do not need this&#13;
tuition surcharge. The fact is that&#13;
the $3 million out of such a large&#13;
budget that the UW system has is&#13;
not going to solve anything. It's&#13;
just going to keep coming and&#13;
coming and they're going to want&#13;
more and more. I just feel that it's&#13;
a very dangerous precedent."&#13;
The resolutuion to approve the&#13;
surcharge passed 8-0-3, with&#13;
Randy Klees, John Peterson and&#13;
Luis Valldejuli abstaining.&#13;
After the resolution passed,&#13;
Stoffle told the Senate that $50,000&#13;
of the surcharge - generated&#13;
money is earmarked for the&#13;
library to purchase books that&#13;
couldn't previously be afforded.&#13;
Another Pfaffl / Rodriguez&#13;
resolution concerned raising&#13;
Wisconsin's drinking age from 18&#13;
to 19. The resolution offered many&#13;
reasons for not raising the age: if&#13;
the drinking age is raised, draft&#13;
and voting ages should, in principle,&#13;
also be raised; there are&#13;
many 18 year olds at Parkside and&#13;
would therefore create identification&#13;
problems in the&#13;
Parkside Union; it would increase&#13;
unnecessary bureaucratization of&#13;
our government; the $3 million&#13;
produced by the tuition surcharge&#13;
could instead come from the&#13;
savings of not raising the age; and&#13;
young people, no matter what age,&#13;
whether it is prohibited or not, will&#13;
drink liquor.&#13;
The motion to oppose raising the&#13;
drinking age passed 9-0-2.&#13;
Valldejuli moved and Rodriguez&#13;
seconded, to approve an addition&#13;
to the Senate rules concerning&#13;
criteria for some students in&#13;
student organizations. "To hold&#13;
office in student government or&#13;
any campus club or&#13;
organization," reads the addition,&#13;
"a student must carry a minimum&#13;
of six non - audit credits. Students&#13;
must also have and maintain a 2.0&#13;
cumulative grade point average&#13;
during his or her term in office.&#13;
Students who have not attended U.&#13;
W. Parkside for more than two&#13;
calendar years / and who have&#13;
enrolled again may have their&#13;
grade point eligibility computed&#13;
from the date at which they&#13;
returned to school."&#13;
The motion to approve the&#13;
criteria passed 9-1-0, with Joe&#13;
Ripp voting "no." The implementation&#13;
date for the criteria&#13;
is Jan. 1, 1982.&#13;
The final resolution of the&#13;
meeting concerned the Teaching&#13;
Excellence Award. It was the&#13;
fourth version of t he resolution ; in&#13;
the last month. The first motion&#13;
was rescinded; the fourth is a&#13;
rewritten version of the second&#13;
and third.&#13;
The major difference between&#13;
this resolution and the last two&#13;
before it is the wording. The last&#13;
one "demanded" that Chancellor&#13;
Guskin change his mind and give&#13;
Shirley Kersey the award and the&#13;
money. This resolution says that&#13;
Guskin "should change his&#13;
decision" and give Kersey the&#13;
award "publically and the $500&#13;
award money even though it is&#13;
university money, she did earn it&#13;
while employed at Parkside."&#13;
The Teaching Excellence&#13;
Awards stand was vetoed by&#13;
PSGA President Jim Kreuser. At&#13;
Monday's meeting, an unsuccessful&#13;
attempt was made to&#13;
reintroduce the issue to the&#13;
senate. See next week's Ranger&#13;
for details.&#13;
PSGA vice president resigns&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. Vice President&#13;
Kathy Bambrough resigned her&#13;
position along with all appointments&#13;
to faculty committees&#13;
as of November 18 in an open&#13;
letter to PSGA President Jim&#13;
Kreuser and all Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
Kreuser's response to Bambrough's&#13;
resignation was: "I was&#13;
a little disinheartened. You gotta&#13;
keep your studies up. If it interferes&#13;
too much, I gotta accept it&#13;
on those grounds."&#13;
The open position must be filled&#13;
by Kreuser's appointment, with&#13;
the approval of the senate. Kathy&#13;
Slama, presently pro tempore, is&#13;
currently acting as vice president.&#13;
Kreuser said that he had two&#13;
senators in mind for appointment&#13;
to the position of vice president. "I&#13;
have to talk to them yet and I have&#13;
to talk to the senate. I want&#13;
someone who can work well with&#13;
the senate," he said. "The senate&#13;
can ok or reject my appointment,"&#13;
Kreuser said, "but I&#13;
can bring the same person again&#13;
the next time. It's really totally&#13;
my decision. Last year Tracy&#13;
(Gruber, then PSGA President)&#13;
appointed Kay (Mullikin to the&#13;
position) and there was&#13;
resistance, but eventually it&#13;
went."&#13;
Parkside administrators expressed&#13;
surprise and sadness at&#13;
Bambrough's resignation. "Any&#13;
time I see a student resign from a&#13;
responsible position, it's a sad&#13;
event," said Dave Pedersen, Dean&#13;
of Student Life. Pedersen called&#13;
the vice presidency "the toughest&#13;
job in the senate."&#13;
"Maybe this will make all&#13;
senators look at their role and the&#13;
Continued On Page Five&#13;
Guskin interviewing for presidency of Temple University&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Alan E.&#13;
Guskin is a finalist for the&#13;
presidency of Temple University&#13;
in Philadelphia. In the course of&#13;
Temple conducting its&#13;
presidential search process, this&#13;
fact has become generally known&#13;
in the past day or two at Parkside&#13;
and in Philadelphia. To clarify the&#13;
situation, Guskin is issuing the&#13;
following statement:&#13;
"Several months ago I was&#13;
contacted by the presidential&#13;
search group at Temple. They&#13;
said my name had been brought to&#13;
their attention and asked if I&#13;
would be a candidate for their&#13;
presidency. What happened in this&#13;
situation is what typically happens&#13;
in filling top university&#13;
positions; you are nominated by&#13;
one or more of your colleagues in&#13;
higher education and, if the institution&#13;
is interested in you, you&#13;
are then invited to become a&#13;
candidate. Given the size and&#13;
stature of Temple as one of the&#13;
leading urban universities in the&#13;
country, I was flattered to be&#13;
asked and professionally, of&#13;
course, could hardly refuse. I&#13;
have met with the search group&#13;
and others at Temple and will be&#13;
meeting with them at least once&#13;
again in the near future. Their&#13;
timetable calls for the new&#13;
president to begin duties in time&#13;
for the 1982-83 a cademic year. I&#13;
am not at liberty to discuss the&#13;
position beyond that.&#13;
"My candidacy should in no way&#13;
be interpreted as being&#13;
dissatisfied at UW-Parkside.&#13;
Although the challenge of heading&#13;
an institution like Temple is very&#13;
appealing, leaving Parkside . . .&#13;
leaving Wisconsin . . . would be a&#13;
most difficult personal and&#13;
ALAN GUSKIN&#13;
professional decision. I believe in&#13;
this university, I have the very&#13;
highest regard for the University&#13;
of Wisconsin System, and I love&#13;
my job. I'm optimistic about&#13;
Parkside's future and anxious to&#13;
continue building on our accomplishments&#13;
of the last six&#13;
years. At this point, I'm not sure&#13;
what my decision would be if I&#13;
were offered the position."&#13;
Temple University is among the&#13;
country's largest and most&#13;
comprehensive urban universities,&#13;
offering several hundred&#13;
different graduate and undergraduate&#13;
degrees, including 61&#13;
doctoral programs and&#13;
professional schools of medicine,&#13;
law, dentistry and pharmacy at&#13;
six campuses in the Philadelphia&#13;
area and in Rome, Italy.&#13;
Enrollment is about 34,000, including&#13;
12,000 graduate students.&#13;
Founded in 1884, Temple is a&#13;
combination public and private&#13;
university with a current budget&#13;
of more than $250 million.&#13;
Guskin assumed the chancellorship&#13;
of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside September&#13;
1, 1975. He came to Parkside from&#13;
Clark University in Worcester,&#13;
Mass., where he had served,&#13;
successfully, as provost and acting&#13;
president.&#13;
Guskin had been a professor of&#13;
education and sociology at Clark,&#13;
and held a professoral position at&#13;
the University of Michigan, where&#13;
he earned his Ph.D. in social&#13;
psychology. At Michigan he also&#13;
was a project director in the Institute&#13;
for Social Research and&#13;
assistant director of the Institute's&#13;
Center for Research on the&#13;
Utilization of Scientific&#13;
Knowledge.&#13;
As graduate students, Guskin&#13;
and his wife Judy, also a Michigan&#13;
Ph.D., organized the student&#13;
movement at Michigan which was&#13;
widely credited with inspiring&#13;
John F. Kennedy to found the&#13;
Peace Corps. The Guskins later&#13;
went on to become among the first&#13;
Peace Corps volunteers to&#13;
Thailand. After their return to the&#13;
U.S., Guskin helped establish&#13;
VISTA as a member of the&#13;
President's Task Force on the&#13;
War Against Poverty and as&#13;
director of VISTA's selection&#13;
division. Judy, now a university&#13;
researcher and consultant in&#13;
bilingual education, also was one&#13;
of the founders of VISTA. The&#13;
Guskins' role in the establishment&#13;
of the Peace Corps was&#13;
acknowledged in October, 1980,&#13;
when they were invited to be&#13;
featured participants in the 20th&#13;
anniversity of t he Corps' founding&#13;
in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Parkside's accomplishments&#13;
under Guskin's leadership have&#13;
been significant.&#13;
Immediately upon assuming the&#13;
Chancellorship at UW-Parkside,&#13;
Guskin initiated a broad institutional&#13;
self - study involving&#13;
scores of faculty, staff, students&#13;
and community groups and individuals.&#13;
Through this process,&#13;
Parkside quickly made significant&#13;
strides in clarifying its identity&#13;
and establishing the three&#13;
priorities which chart the&#13;
direction of the University under&#13;
Guskin: commitments to&#13;
academic excellence in programs,&#13;
faculty, and standards; extensive&#13;
community outreach; and the&#13;
strengthening and focusing of its&#13;
special education mission to serve&#13;
the needs of an urban, industrial&#13;
society.&#13;
\&#13;
Guskin's achievements at UWParkside&#13;
have earned him&#13;
recognition as a national leader in&#13;
higher education.&#13;
INSIDE&#13;
• Victor Reuther interview&#13;
• Non-smokers demand rights&#13;
• Review: Al Stewart's 'Indian Summer'&#13;
• UW-P hosts NAIA championships &#13;
Wednesday, November 25,1981&#13;
Editorials&#13;
RANGER&#13;
JOOOCO! WCOOSO! «occcooccoocooooooo&lt;&#13;
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n&#13;
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dUorials re&#13;
flect the opinion of the majority of the editorial&#13;
•j S students ma&#13;
y submit editorial ideas to the editor for&#13;
consideration. Editorial ideas need not be typed to be considered.&#13;
OF COUR SE OUR. PROGRAM&#13;
HAS HAD NO&#13;
EFFECT. IT DOESN'T&#13;
START&#13;
UNTIL ,&#13;
OCT. 1.&#13;
YOU CAN'T REVERSE /...CAN'T REVERSE AO\ t|0 YEARS OF MISMAM&#13;
46 YEARS OF MISMAN- [YEARS OF ^&#13;
,S&#13;
^AN{GE-) AGEMENT IN AO WEEfc&#13;
AGEMENT IN Kl IN ^MONTHS.&#13;
«oooooo&amp;scca&#13;
Resignation unsettling&#13;
pJr^iH^Snt r °&#13;
f Kathy ®amb&#13;
r&#13;
ouSh. former vice president of&#13;
I Government Association, inc., marks at the least the&#13;
cpiti o -^9 P0 n&#13;
^&#13;
uickl&#13;
y vacated mid - term. Un-&#13;
^ciuing, isn t it.&#13;
Usually, resignations of elected officials are interpreted by the public&#13;
as instances of personality clashes or voluntary dismissals. In this case&#13;
however, the resignation points to another issue.&#13;
Sure, there are personality clashes and other problems within PSGA.&#13;
But the role of vice president is one that is especially hard for a person&#13;
who has many good ideas and desires to remain active while in the&#13;
position. The vice president chairs all senate meetings — is in fact&#13;
president of the senate. This role, as it now exists, gives the v p little&#13;
room to voice opinions or initiate action.&#13;
Strangely enough, no one has recommended changes in the duties or&#13;
powers of the office to alleviate the pressure. Are we waiting for some&#13;
Superman or Wonder Woman to take the position or is it possible that&#13;
the job could be remade to suit human beings?&#13;
Forum scheduled&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin has scheduled the second of his "open&#13;
forums for the 1981-82 school year for Wednesday, Dec. 2. All students,&#13;
faculty and staff are invited to the forum between 1- and 2 p.m. in Union&#13;
The Ranger will be there. Will you?&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
Bookstore rally planned&#13;
'N FIVE .&#13;
IT CAN'T BE DONE&#13;
BY ONE MAN&#13;
E~D6nE\ Of Course ou r program&#13;
fet"fefTs •£»&#13;
of mismanagement in..&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
For quite some time students at&#13;
Parkside University have&#13;
tolerated a most unbearable&#13;
situation. We now feel that the&#13;
time has come to make some&#13;
drastic changes. To quote the&#13;
Declaration of Independence,&#13;
"Whenever any form of Government&#13;
(University Bookstore)&#13;
becomes destructive of these&#13;
ends, it is the right of the people&#13;
(students) to alter or to abolish it&#13;
... it is their right, it is their duty,&#13;
to throw off such Government."&#13;
Everyone agrees in principle&#13;
that the University bookstore,&#13;
which is run by Follett Corporation,&#13;
is not really serving&#13;
and/or meeting the needs of the&#13;
Parkside student body. Why?&#13;
Agreed, the fault or blame cannot&#13;
always be cast unilaterally on the&#13;
bookstore. The responsibility&#13;
must be shared by the entire&#13;
University community including&#13;
students, faculty, and administration.&#13;
&#13;
Why does Parkside seem to&#13;
have more than its share of&#13;
problems in this area? The answer&#13;
to their question is very&#13;
complex, to say the least, and any&#13;
solution will require the&#13;
cooperation of the entire campus&#13;
community. We have attempted to&#13;
solve the question by researching&#13;
the matter, but the more we dug&#13;
into the matter the more complicated&#13;
it became. The following&#13;
facts have been uncovered and&#13;
are important in helping other&#13;
students understand why we feel&#13;
that the University should&#13;
strongly consider other alternatives&#13;
to the present bookstore&#13;
situation. We believe that the&#13;
University should assume control&#13;
of the campus bookstore. Our&#13;
investigation has disclosed the&#13;
following information: l. UWParkside&#13;
is the only school, in the&#13;
UW system, which has a privately&#13;
contracted company to run the&#13;
bookstore. 2. During the ten years&#13;
which Follett has bid on this&#13;
control, they have been the sole&#13;
bidder. 3. The University can&#13;
dictate to the contractor through&#13;
the contract exactly what they&#13;
wish to have as services. 4&#13;
Because of Parkside's high book&#13;
return rate or non - purchase rate&#13;
the contract allows the company&#13;
to charge the students 5% above&#13;
the manufacturers suggested&#13;
retail price. 5. The University has&#13;
no control over the used book&#13;
system, only the contract&#13;
specifies that books will be&#13;
repurcha sable.&#13;
These factors as well as student&#13;
concern for poor service and high&#13;
prices has prompted us to call for&#13;
a rally, to be announced at a later&#13;
date, to show the administration&#13;
how we as students feel about the&#13;
situation and to put some pressure&#13;
on them to change the current&#13;
status quo. The current contract&#13;
- for the bookstore will be expiring&#13;
very shortly and the bidding&#13;
procedure will begin to take place..&#13;
However, if history repeats itself,&#13;
there will possibly be only one&#13;
bidder, and should the University&#13;
ask for more than Follett feels&#13;
they can profitably provide, there&#13;
may be no bidders. This would&#13;
leave the University with very few&#13;
alternatives, the best of which we&#13;
feel, is University control.&#13;
At present there are several&#13;
committee's studying the&#13;
situation for the University. It is&#13;
important that they know how we&#13;
as students feel. We are asking all&#13;
students to help affect a change by&#13;
doing one or all of the following:&#13;
1. Sign the petition of the&#13;
alternative to the bookstore.&#13;
2. Attend the rally in support of&#13;
University control.&#13;
3. Write to one of the following&#13;
with your experience with the&#13;
bookstore and what you feel&#13;
should be done to solve the&#13;
problem. Alan E. Guskin, Lorman&#13;
A. Ratner, Nicholas C. Burckel&#13;
From the Files&#13;
10 years ago —&#13;
"Luomos wins PSGA&#13;
Presidency," by Ken Konkol of&#13;
the Newscope staff&#13;
In an election that saw only 17&#13;
percent of the student body&#13;
casting votes, the Concerned&#13;
Students Coalition scored a solid&#13;
victory by capturing three of the&#13;
top offices from more moderate&#13;
candidates. Amid rumors of&#13;
alleged ballot box stuffing .&#13;
Dean Luomos won the presidency&#13;
over Dennis Cashion by 29 votes&#13;
while his running mate, Bruce&#13;
Volpentesta, easily defeated his&#13;
nearest challenger, Frank&#13;
Chiappetta. Rounding out the CSC&#13;
victory, Canny Trotter pulled 458&#13;
votes in winning the treasurer's&#13;
office.&#13;
Jeanette Dremel ran uncontested&#13;
for recording secretary&#13;
and received 498 v otes, tops for&#13;
any of the candidates.&#13;
—Newscope, Nov. 29, 1971, vo l. 5,&#13;
no. 13&#13;
5 years ago —&#13;
"Classical Honors Proposed"&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
There is interest in reshaping&#13;
the format of the diplomas given&#13;
to graduating seniors, according&#13;
to a report given to the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee at its brief&#13;
meeting last Tuesday.&#13;
This reshaping would include&#13;
adding honors for students surpassing&#13;
a certain gradepoint&#13;
average. According to Carol-Lee&#13;
Saffioti, assistant professor of&#13;
English, this might include what&#13;
is now known as "classical"&#13;
honors.&#13;
Classical honors is where&#13;
students getting above a certain&#13;
GPA, such as 3.25, would have&#13;
added to their diploma "cum&#13;
laude." Translated from Latin,&#13;
this means "with praise."&#13;
A person getting higher than 3.5&#13;
or 3.75 would receive a magna or a&#13;
summa cum laude . . .&#13;
Saffioti told the committee that&#13;
a proposal had come before the&#13;
Faculty Senate in 1970 but failed&#13;
because of its conflict with the&#13;
Parkside catalogue.&#13;
—Ranger, Dec. 1, 1976, vo l. v, no.&#13;
12&#13;
I year ago —&#13;
"Feminist health worker to&#13;
speak on women's health" by G.&#13;
Helgeson&#13;
Barbara Federlin, a health&#13;
worker at Milwaukee's Bread and&#13;
Roses Women's Health Center,&#13;
will speak on Women's Health this&#13;
Friday at 10 a.m. in Parkside's&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre. Federlin's&#13;
appearance is sponsored by&#13;
Parkside Concourse.&#13;
Bread and Roses, a women's&#13;
health center designed by women&#13;
for women, is "committed to&#13;
women having knowledge of their&#13;
bodies and control over their&#13;
reproductive lives."&#13;
Federlin . . . has worked at&#13;
Bread and Roses since it opened.&#13;
Currently, she is coordinator of&#13;
Bread and Roses' cervical cap&#13;
program.&#13;
The cervical cap is a thimble -&#13;
shaped diaphragm - like birth&#13;
control device that has recently&#13;
been reintroduced to the United&#13;
States. It has since been&#13;
categorized by the Food and Drug&#13;
Administration as a "significant&#13;
risk device," since it has not been&#13;
tested in the U.S. to FDA&#13;
satisfaction.&#13;
According to Federlin, "The cap&#13;
has been in use for more than a&#13;
century (mostly in European&#13;
countries) and clearly does not&#13;
threaten its user with the toxicity&#13;
of a drug or an implant in the&#13;
body.&#13;
"There's clearly a lot of interest&#13;
in the cap," according to Federlin.&#13;
"However, the cap is not available&#13;
everywhere. Bread and Roses&#13;
appears-to be the only provider of&#13;
caps in Wisconsin at this time."&#13;
—Ranger, Dec. 4, 1980, v ol. 9, no&#13;
13&#13;
David A. Pedersen, or Thomas S.&#13;
Moore.&#13;
4. Support any organization&#13;
working for a change in bookstore&#13;
policy.&#13;
If every student who has a&#13;
complaint will voice his feelings,&#13;
positive changes will have to take&#13;
place.&#13;
Ron Griffin&#13;
Marta Schaefer&#13;
Ranger missed review&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
We, the Dramatic Arts students&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside, found the last issue of&#13;
the Ranger very interesting&#13;
(November 12, 1981). It was very&#13;
comforting to knew how well&#13;
student activities are supported&#13;
by the Ranger. In case you forgot,&#13;
the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside Dramatic Arts students&#13;
did a play on campus. A good play&#13;
called The Runner Stumbles. We&#13;
were told the Ranger would be&#13;
sending someone to see and&#13;
review the show. We don't believe&#13;
you know how much that meant to&#13;
us. At last, the Ranger was taking&#13;
an interest in our efforts. An interest&#13;
other than the paid advertisements&#13;
they so cheerfully&#13;
accept. We even gave the editor&#13;
two free tickets to a performance.&#13;
The review, however, did not&#13;
appear when promised. We were&#13;
told it was because of a lack of&#13;
space. We understood and were&#13;
somewhat appeased when we&#13;
were assured that the review&#13;
would be run in the following&#13;
week's issue — the Thursday after&#13;
the show closed. This, of course,&#13;
would do nothing to bolster the&#13;
number of students who may have&#13;
come to see the show but we still&#13;
looked forward to seeing what our&#13;
fellow students thought of our&#13;
endeavor. Well, the anticipated&#13;
issue arrived with no review in&#13;
sight.&#13;
Thank you, Ranger, once again&#13;
for all the wonderful publicity,&#13;
enthusiasm, and general interest&#13;
We feel a great disservice has&#13;
been done. Although you had&#13;
given us preliminary articles we&#13;
still believe a promise was made&#13;
and trust broken. It is important&#13;
for us to let you know how we feel.&#13;
The Cast and Crew of&#13;
The Runner Stumbles&#13;
Editor's Note:&#13;
Regarding the review of The&#13;
Runner Stumbles: The Ranger&#13;
does not at this time have a&#13;
reviewer on staff who is qualified&#13;
to write on theatrical performances.&#13;
We had one at the&#13;
beginning of this semester, but he&#13;
has not been working for us as of&#13;
late. Since he was involved with&#13;
the performance at Parkside, he&#13;
told me he felt the review should&#13;
be handled by someone else. I&#13;
quite agree.&#13;
Since he was the only person on&#13;
staff I felt could be called on to do&#13;
the work, I decided to do it myself.&#13;
Once I made that decision, I was&#13;
confronted by several people who&#13;
asked me to "say good things&#13;
about the play because they&#13;
worked so hard on it."&#13;
I felt that what was really important&#13;
at this stage was to give&#13;
the play space, which we did.&#13;
Almost a full page of our feature&#13;
section was devoted to the play&#13;
that week. We also planned to use&#13;
a pictorial developed from photos&#13;
taken at dress rehearsals the&#13;
second week (thinking that this&#13;
along with a short piece of copy&#13;
would show our readers how much&#13;
time and work the cast and crew&#13;
had put in) but the person who had&#13;
taken the photos told me they had&#13;
not turned out.&#13;
If you were "promised" that the&#13;
review would appear at any time&#13;
at all, I apologize. We make it a&#13;
point never to promise that any&#13;
material will appear in the&#13;
Ranger.&#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;
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;
Advisoi&#13;
AMyn ^^mark^ Jeff^ran^™ Pat^H^ Ed&#13;
*&#13;
nt??&#13;
user&#13;
' Zachr&gt;&#13;
Jim Kreuser, Pat McDonald i- £ ' Mary Kaddatz&#13;
Mark Sanders Kim Srhhf* c™ ^&#13;
ert,ns&#13;
' steve Myers,&#13;
Jeff Wicks. ' Schlater, Sue Stevens, Dan Werbie,&#13;
UWParkside and ,hev are sole&#13;
"&#13;
Written^ * Prin,ed by the Union Co^e/al i ™ v pjbr^&#13;
6&#13;
/ during breaks and holidays&#13;
Wntten permission is required for reprint of Lv, . '"&#13;
9 Co&#13;
" Ken&#13;
°sha, Wisconsin.&#13;
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- Wl 53141. Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UW &#13;
RANGER&#13;
Public forum&#13;
Wednesday, November 25, 1981&#13;
Unions face 80's challenges&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
We will not survive the&#13;
challenges of the 80's if the labor&#13;
ri£n PaSSive and does not&#13;
to challenge the threat to its&#13;
very existence!" Such was the&#13;
^75 l.&#13;
V,&#13;
lctor Reuther, the&#13;
"We have an administration&#13;
that wants to teach those&#13;
arrogant workers a lesson."&#13;
In the 1940's the American trade&#13;
movement proved that the&#13;
revolution was not a Roosevelt&#13;
revolution, but had sunk its roots&#13;
deep in American life. In the&#13;
1950's, that American revolution,&#13;
keynote speaker at J» CnA™™* dedespspitite e ththe e fafacct t ththat at it it dedemmonon--&#13;
November 17 public forum ^ grated the fact that it was here to&#13;
iSS?™ p"&#13;
d&#13;
-2* C&#13;
^&#13;
Uenges of the&#13;
1980 s. Besides Reuther, a former&#13;
assistant to the President and&#13;
Director of International Affairs&#13;
(IIAWWh Aut0 Wooers (UAW), the other panelists of the&#13;
W^&#13;
re Jack Barbash,&#13;
Catherine Conroy and Jim Foster&#13;
The program was moderated by&#13;
Lhe Director of Public Forums,&#13;
Reuther said. "There is a growing&#13;
militancy on the part of unions&#13;
which is the source of some encouragement&#13;
that they are not&#13;
going to take this lying down," he&#13;
said.&#13;
"The awakening of the trade&#13;
union movement in the United&#13;
Kenneth Hoover States to its political respon- ' ™e&#13;
f.&#13;
t0 u&#13;
f political responabilities&#13;
is only the beginning," he&#13;
said. Reuther pointed out that&#13;
"I hope we no longer have&#13;
to solve labor relations by&#13;
the laws of the jungle ."&#13;
— Victor Reuther&#13;
Reuther spoke first, stressing&#13;
that although unions have "come&#13;
a long way" from conditions of the&#13;
20's and 30's, today's current&#13;
social and economic problems are&#13;
cause for a more active union&#13;
movement. "I would hope&#13;
American democracy has&#13;
matured to the point where we no&#13;
longer have to solve labor&#13;
relations by the laws of the jungle,&#13;
although I must say it becomes&#13;
increasingly clear each day that&#13;
the Reagan Administration intends&#13;
to leave no other alternative&#13;
for the trade union movement,"&#13;
comalthougn&#13;
there is "no clear&#13;
political philosophy" to unite&#13;
trade unions, big business and&#13;
recent economic conditions would&#13;
bring the unions together&#13;
politically.&#13;
Reuther went on to criticize the&#13;
big auto makers (GM, Ford, and&#13;
Chrysler) for shoddy business&#13;
practices concerned with the&#13;
union, which he called "a code of&#13;
ethics which can only be&#13;
pared with the Mafia."&#13;
Jack Barbash, Bascom&#13;
Professor of Economics and Industrial&#13;
Relations (Emeritus) at&#13;
UW-Madison, and recent&#13;
president of the Industrial&#13;
Relations Research Association,&#13;
said the "Polish Uprising" we are&#13;
witnessing in Poland right now is&#13;
what American labor unions got 50&#13;
years ago; the right to organize&#13;
and bargain collectively. "The&#13;
1930's .. . was a period of upsurge.&#13;
stay, experienced a stagnation in&#13;
growth. In the 1960's, we had ... a&#13;
replacation of the 1930 revolution,&#13;
but this time in the public sector.&#13;
In the 1970's and now the 80's, we&#13;
are confronted with the counter -&#13;
revolution," Barbash said.&#13;
"The fact that they (the Reagan&#13;
Administration) believe in this&#13;
counter - revolution, and in good&#13;
faith, simply goes to prove that the&#13;
road to hell is paved with good&#13;
intentions," he said.&#13;
The next speaker in the&#13;
Continued On Page Four&#13;
VICTOR REUTHER Photo by Steve Myers&#13;
Reuther discusses labor movement&#13;
Outward Bound offers courses&#13;
For students wishing a total&#13;
break from the classroom&#13;
situation, Outward Bound offers 5&#13;
to 23-day courses throughout the&#13;
winter months. Designed so that&#13;
students will meet challenging&#13;
experiences in wilderness&#13;
situations, Outward Bound winter&#13;
courses take place in ten different&#13;
U.S. locations, offering both warm&#13;
and cold weather environments.&#13;
Students travel&#13;
cheap with AYHA&#13;
Students planning to travel&#13;
anywhere in the world during&#13;
semester break can cut down on&#13;
their expenses by joining the&#13;
American Youth Hostel&#13;
Association. For a $14 annual&#13;
membership fee, hostelers get a&#13;
pass which entitles them to stay at&#13;
any of over 5,000 hostels in the&#13;
United States or abroad. More&#13;
than 250 hostels are in this&#13;
country, with eight being in&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
Bargain rates of $3 to $5 for&#13;
overnight accomodations,&#13;
discounts on ski lift tickets in the&#13;
Alps and some reduced admission&#13;
charges are available to hostelers.&#13;
In addition, local hostel groups&#13;
sponsor outdoor activities such as&#13;
skiing, bicycling and canoeing.&#13;
Hostel memberships may be&#13;
purchased at the Wisconsin&#13;
Council AYH Office, 1417&#13;
Wauwatosa Avenue, #102,&#13;
Wauwatosa, phone 257-2323. Office&#13;
hours are Tuesday, Thursday and&#13;
Saturday from 9 a.m. to 12 noon,&#13;
and Monday from 5 to 7 p.m.&#13;
Passes purchased now will expire&#13;
December 31,1982. Please enclose&#13;
a large self addressed stamped&#13;
envelope if you request written&#13;
information.&#13;
Correction&#13;
The reception planned for&#13;
Shirley Kersey, recipient of a 1980-&#13;
81 Teaching Excellence Award, is,&#13;
planned for Thursday, Dec. 3 at&#13;
8:30 p.m. in Union 207. All&#13;
Parkside students are invited to&#13;
attend.&#13;
While many come to Outward&#13;
Bound seeking a shot at high&#13;
adventure — and they'll probably&#13;
get it — most will leave with a new&#13;
understanding of themselves after&#13;
discovering they are capable of&#13;
doing things they might&#13;
previously have thought "impossible."&#13;
&#13;
Outward Bound winter courses&#13;
are part of a year - round program&#13;
which includes courses lasting&#13;
from 5 to 26 days. Semester&#13;
courses with Outward Bound are&#13;
also available for two and three -&#13;
month periods. For information,&#13;
write Outward Bound, Inc., 384&#13;
Field Point Road, Greenwich, CT.&#13;
06830, or call toll free 800-243-8520.&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
Recently, I had a chance to talk&#13;
with Victor Reuther, one of the&#13;
"Grand old men" of labor, while&#13;
he was here at Parkside. Reuther,&#13;
who retired from his positions&#13;
with the UAW in 1972, was at one&#13;
time Administrative Assistant to&#13;
the President, and Director of the&#13;
Department for International&#13;
Affairs, to name a few. Mr.&#13;
Reuther first came to the public's&#13;
attention in 1935 as a young man in&#13;
his middle twenties when he&#13;
achieved leadership and national&#13;
prominence as a strike leader&#13;
during the first general&#13;
automobile strikes in Michigan.&#13;
Since that time, he has been&#13;
closely identified with the&#13;
dynamic growth of industrial&#13;
unionism not only in the&#13;
automobile industry, but&#13;
throughout America's basic industries,&#13;
organized by the CIO.&#13;
In light of recent developments&#13;
in the labor movement, I asked&#13;
him to speculate on the role of&#13;
unions today.&#13;
RANGER: You have seen the&#13;
labor movement grow, and as you&#13;
have said yourself, it has come a&#13;
long way since 1937. But do you&#13;
see union membership as a whole&#13;
declining? If so, what must unions&#13;
do to reverse the decline in&#13;
membership?&#13;
REUTHER: Well, let's get one&#13;
thing clear: there is an actual&#13;
increase in union membership&#13;
occurring, but that increase in&#13;
membership is not keeping pace&#13;
with an increase in population.&#13;
Hence, the labor movement today&#13;
represents a smaller percentage&#13;
of t he work force than it did in past&#13;
years. Now there are several&#13;
reasons for that. The trade union&#13;
movement was organized&#13;
primarily around manual workers&#13;
we call blue collar workers. The&#13;
impact of the new technology&#13;
requires a smaller percentage of&#13;
blue collar workers and a higher&#13;
percentage of white collar&#13;
workers and technicians, so the&#13;
labor movement's structure&#13;
hasn't kept pace. Now we are&#13;
finding more white collar workers&#13;
being unionized: nurses, school&#13;
teachers, office and professional&#13;
workers, state, county and&#13;
municipal workers, etc.&#13;
The other point I want to make&#13;
is that before the merger of the&#13;
CIO and the AFL, the CIO, which&#13;
represented the industrial unions,&#13;
accepted the responsibility&#13;
nationally of launching big&#13;
organizing drives and helping the&#13;
weak unions finance them. This&#13;
was not the tradition of the AFL,&#13;
which left to each single union the&#13;
responsibility of organizing the&#13;
people in their own industry. And I&#13;
think with the merger, and with&#13;
the feeling that the central&#13;
federation has to do something to&#13;
counter this, you are going to see&#13;
an increase in union membership.&#13;
Furthermore, every time there is&#13;
a deterioration in the general&#13;
economic situation, unemployment&#13;
rising, interest rates&#13;
becoming a problem, people find&#13;
they have to struggle to make&#13;
progress and they turn to the only&#13;
institution that can help them,&#13;
which is the trade union.&#13;
RANGER: Do you see labor&#13;
forming a political party? (A third&#13;
party?)&#13;
REUTHER: No, certainly not in&#13;
the forseeable future. I see it&#13;
becoming much more actively&#13;
involved as a participant in the&#13;
political process, but while the&#13;
trade unions are strong enough to&#13;
successfully carry out their&#13;
programs on the economic front,&#13;
they can strike General Motors&#13;
and win, but when you move into&#13;
the political field, your base must&#13;
be much broader. You have to&#13;
have farm votes, you have to have&#13;
white collar votes, you have to&#13;
build a coalition much broader&#13;
than the trade union movement.&#13;
That is being done. And I think you&#13;
will see the trade unions becoming&#13;
involved much more during the&#13;
primary process, and all the way&#13;
through.&#13;
RANGER: What do you see as&#13;
labor's most effective tool now?&#13;
REUTHER: I think its most&#13;
effective weapon now must be its&#13;
ability to build a broad coalition&#13;
around specific issues and to work&#13;
for that in the legislative and&#13;
political field. The time for relying&#13;
solely upon strike action to win its&#13;
gains has served the major, initial&#13;
purpose. There will still be some&#13;
Continued On Page Five&#13;
JOHN MORRELL DIDN'T&#13;
BECOME A TRAINEE AFTER COLLEGE.&#13;
HE BECAME A MANAGER.&#13;
"As Executive Officer of the&#13;
Army's Defense Language Institute at&#13;
Monterey, California, I'm responsible&#13;
for the housing, feeding and wellbeing&#13;
of 500 students. And that's no&#13;
small task. I manage an annual food&#13;
budget of over a million and a half&#13;
dollars. And I'm accountable for five&#13;
million dollars worth of property.&#13;
"On top of managing money,&#13;
I a lso supervise a staff of 24 people.&#13;
And each one has unique problems&#13;
that I have to handle on a daily basis.&#13;
You better believe the leadership&#13;
and management training I received&#13;
in Army ROTC is paying off."&#13;
There are other good reasons&#13;
for taking ROTC, too. Like scholarship&#13;
opportunities. And financial&#13;
assistance - up to $1,000 a year for&#13;
your last two years of RCTC.&#13;
If you want a job after college&#13;
that offers real challenge and real&#13;
responsibility, do what John Morrell&#13;
did. Take Army RCTC.&#13;
And begin your future as an&#13;
officer.&#13;
Army ROTC at UW-Parkside&#13;
Call Captain Fred Herron&#13;
Marquette University&#13;
Collect - 224-7195, 7229&#13;
1st Lt. John Morrell was a business major at&#13;
the University of Iowa and a member of Army&#13;
ROTC. ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BE ALL YOU CAN &#13;
4 Wednesday, November 25,1981 RANGER&#13;
Physicist Kaku denounces nuclear power&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
When nuclear physicist Dr.&#13;
Michio Kaku was growing up in&#13;
the 1950's, he (along with most&#13;
Americans), believed nuclear&#13;
power was the way of the future.&#13;
In 1966, however, while he was at&#13;
Harvard, Kaku began to seriously&#13;
doubt the benefits of nuclear&#13;
power.&#13;
Kaku spoke to about 175 people&#13;
at Parkside last week in a lecture&#13;
/ slide presentation called&#13;
"Nuclear Power . . . The Unfin&#13;
ish e d , U n f o r g i v i ng&#13;
Technology." The event was&#13;
sponsored by Mobilization for&#13;
Survival.&#13;
Kaku, currently teaching&#13;
physics at City College, New&#13;
York, has recently been in&#13;
California taking action against&#13;
the Diablo Canyon nuclear power&#13;
plant. Diablo Canyon is a $2 billion&#13;
twin reactor plant located between&#13;
San Francisco and Los&#13;
Angeles and less than three miles&#13;
from an earthquake fault.&#13;
"The people of California have&#13;
nicknamed that reactor," Kaku&#13;
said. "They call it the Shake - n -&#13;
Bake reactor."&#13;
Kaku once debated a senior&#13;
nuclear engineer of the construction&#13;
company for Diablo&#13;
Canyon. The engineer admitted&#13;
that there were construction&#13;
problems. "The engineers accidently&#13;
reversed the blueprints of&#13;
this nuclear power plant — the&#13;
plastic overlay (between) units 1&#13;
and 2 was misplaced, so parts of&#13;
unit 2 go t placed into unit 1 and&#13;
vice-a-versa." The floor supports&#13;
which support the entire floor of&#13;
the reactor were also installed&#13;
backwards.&#13;
The same construction firm was&#13;
the first to install a nuclear&#13;
reactor vessel 180 degrees backwards,&#13;
and it took them seven&#13;
months to realize it. Their solution&#13;
was to load the fuel rods from the&#13;
other end and change all the&#13;
computer programs to read backwards.&#13;
&#13;
"Well," said Kaku, "I hin t k that&#13;
some of the nuclear engineers&#13;
have their heads screwed on backwards&#13;
... I think the priorities of&#13;
the nuclear industry also are&#13;
backwards, putting profits before&#13;
the interests of the American&#13;
people."&#13;
During the debate, the engineer&#13;
said that high School graduates&#13;
operate nuclear power plants. "In&#13;
fact," he said, "we prefer high&#13;
school graduates because (they)&#13;
don't think. We had college&#13;
graduates last year taking&#13;
training at Diablo Canyon and&#13;
they think too much — they get all&#13;
confused."&#13;
Kaku said, "I think the people&#13;
who really don't think are the ones&#13;
who build them, not the ones who&#13;
operate them. Well, if the high&#13;
school graduates operate our&#13;
nuclear power program, just&#13;
remember that high school&#13;
dropouts operate our weapons&#13;
program. Just remember that the&#13;
butterfingers in the Air Force&#13;
have accidently dropped 27&#13;
atomic and hydrogen bombs on&#13;
the United States."&#13;
A new "launch on warning"&#13;
system consists of a satellite that&#13;
will have the capability of&#13;
initiating an all-out nuclear war,&#13;
said Kaku. In such a case, he said,&#13;
nuclear war will be "unleashed by&#13;
a machine, not by man, and&#13;
machines fail quite frequently.&#13;
This is the kind of nuclear&#13;
program that we have today.&#13;
Many physicists have begun to&#13;
sour on the idea of nuclear power.&#13;
But I once believed in nuclear&#13;
power."&#13;
Kaku once thought nuclear&#13;
power was the way of the future —&#13;
safe, clean and too cheap to&#13;
meter. He believed in nuclear&#13;
power until he went to college and,&#13;
on Oct. 5, 1966,. there was a near -&#13;
core meltdown at the Fermi&#13;
reactor just outside Detroit. He&#13;
was a junior at Harvard at the&#13;
time and remembers that his&#13;
professor was so upset that he&#13;
cancelled class.&#13;
Authorities hushed up the incident&#13;
and it has only been in the&#13;
last few years that the American&#13;
people have realized the serious&#13;
implications of nuclear power.&#13;
The same type of cover-up occurred&#13;
at Three Mile Island but a&#13;
local radio station immediately&#13;
uncovered the story.&#13;
Kaku pointed out that actions&#13;
taken during the Three Mile&#13;
Island incident were poorly&#13;
conceived. The only correct&#13;
decision within the first 24 hours,&#13;
said Kaku, was to shut off the&#13;
pressurizing valve.&#13;
According to Kaku, nuclear&#13;
power is "a bloated, gigantic $200&#13;
billion beached whale ... We are&#13;
witnessing the beginning of the&#13;
end — total economic collapse of&#13;
the nuclear industry."&#13;
Unions face challenges&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
program was Catherine Conroy, a&#13;
staff representative of the&#13;
Communication Workers of&#13;
America, AFL-CIO; formerly a&#13;
member of President Carter's&#13;
Advisory Commission for Women,&#13;
and past president of the first&#13;
Milwaukee chapter of the&#13;
Coalition of Labor Union Women.&#13;
Conroy spoke mostly about the&#13;
exploitation of women in our&#13;
society and "token women" as she&#13;
described herself, rather than a&#13;
role model. But she feels women&#13;
should be more active in this&#13;
country. "My goal is to make&#13;
union women realize that they&#13;
have an important role in the&#13;
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labor movement," she said.&#13;
Conroy said that the cheapest&#13;
labor movement, females, should&#13;
unite and share the responsibility&#13;
of running the labor movement&#13;
also.&#13;
"I believe that we have an&#13;
administration that wants to teach&#13;
those arrogant, pompous workers&#13;
a lesson. And make them sweat.&#13;
And make them suffer so they are&#13;
grateful for their job, and the boss&#13;
is king again. So that they don't&#13;
have any rights that they can&#13;
demand," she said.&#13;
The last panelist to speak was&#13;
Jim Foster, the Coordinator of&#13;
Labor Studies and Associate&#13;
Professor of Labor and Industrial&#13;
Relations at Parkside and UWEX&#13;
School for Workers. Foster&#13;
outlined briefly the 100 years of&#13;
the labor movement up to today,&#13;
and he said that the time was&#13;
coming for a revival of labor. He&#13;
described labor in this country in&#13;
1881, and what came out of it.&#13;
"Nobody supported labor and&#13;
what came out of that decade?&#13;
What came out of that decade was&#13;
a lot of men and women who&#13;
together realized there was&#13;
something called collective&#13;
bargaining. Something called&#13;
trade unionism. Something that&#13;
they could do together that could&#13;
change the world," Foster said.&#13;
Foster went on to explain the&#13;
1930's, and what came out of that&#13;
era. "But where does that put us&#13;
today?" he asked. Foster said.the&#13;
country was due for a more active&#13;
labor movement.&#13;
The near - capacity crowd was&#13;
clearly impressed by the speakers&#13;
of the evening. Perhaps this was&#13;
evidenced most by Reuthers'&#13;
speech, which was interrupted&#13;
five times by applause and&#13;
received a standing ovation. His&#13;
view of the future of the labor&#13;
movement was encouraging.&#13;
"I've been an optimist all my&#13;
life, and I remain an optimist&#13;
today because everywhere I go, in&#13;
this country and Canada, I meet&#13;
young people who have got stars&#13;
in their eyes. They are not&#13;
satisfied with the old talk&#13;
anymore. They're looking for&#13;
answers and they've got the&#13;
courage and the guts to search for&#13;
them," Reuther said.&#13;
"They are the hope of this&#13;
country. I remain an optimist&#13;
because I know," he said. "Back&#13;
in the 30's we had nothing, really.&#13;
We had no strike fund, we had a&#13;
small membership, but we took on&#13;
the world's largest corporations&#13;
and brought them to their knees.&#13;
This generation of union&#13;
leadership . . . will bring new&#13;
dedication in the political&#13;
struggles, as well. And this&#13;
country will dedicate its energies&#13;
and its resources towards a new&#13;
beginning, and a new generation&#13;
that can bring hope, and not just&#13;
words."&#13;
College Rep&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Mr. D. DeMuth&#13;
District Director&#13;
Campus Service/Time Inc.&#13;
4337 W. Indian School Rd.&#13;
"C"&#13;
Phoenix, Az. 85031 &#13;
Non-smokers demand rights&#13;
hv by fCaarnl Rut-no m... W rol Burns&#13;
Last Thursday's Great&#13;
American Smoke - Out was certainly&#13;
a relief for those of u s with&#13;
respiratory systems. One could&#13;
even breathe comfortably in the&#13;
Union cafeteria and in the coffee&#13;
shop!&#13;
Strategically located tables, set&#13;
up by Parkside's health office to&#13;
distribute anti - smoking pamphlets,&#13;
helped to intimidate&#13;
smokers. Naturally, it was too&#13;
much to expect that all smokers&#13;
would join the American Cancer&#13;
Society's one day annual campaign,&#13;
but it's safe to say their&#13;
numbers were diminished greatly&#13;
on Thursday.&#13;
Huge glass jars containing the&#13;
remains of cigarettes smoked in&#13;
one week in designated areas&#13;
were displayed. Students were&#13;
asked to guess how many butts&#13;
were in those jars. Did somebody&#13;
really count that filth?&#13;
Right now the smokers are&#13;
probably thinking about how self -&#13;
righteous the non - smokers are.&#13;
Nonsense. Non - smokers just like&#13;
to breathe. They have a thing&#13;
about fresh air.&#13;
Smoke is a funny creature. It&#13;
seems to know who despises it&#13;
most, and heads right for that&#13;
person. It has an affinity for&#13;
freshly - shampooed hair. It can&#13;
permeate clothes with such&#13;
thoroughness that extensive&#13;
fumigation is required.&#13;
Non - smokers should think of&#13;
smokers' rights, too. After all, this&#13;
is America. If someone wants&#13;
emphysema or cancer, is it really&#13;
fair to foil such ambition?&#13;
Smokers aren't all bad. Look at&#13;
how hard they work at keeping the&#13;
tobacco companies in business.&#13;
Think of all the health care&#13;
workers who have jobs because of&#13;
smokers. And where would&#13;
sanitary landfill sites be without&#13;
disposable lighters?&#13;
Besides, it's got to be hard to&#13;
maintain such an expensive habit.&#13;
Things have gotten so bad for&#13;
some smokers that they have to&#13;
share cigarettes. These shared&#13;
brands are often hand - rolled&#13;
after all join in to pick seeds from&#13;
the dried leaves. (Shoddy&#13;
processing methods?)&#13;
Reuther challenges youth&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
strikes, but having established&#13;
ourselves as the collective&#13;
bargaining agency, having won&#13;
the legal right to bargain with&#13;
employers, I would hope we could&#13;
substitute the law of the jungle&#13;
with the law of rea son, and that we&#13;
can settle them by negotiations.&#13;
RANGER: But do you think the&#13;
"strike" has lost its effectiveness?&#13;
&#13;
REUTHER: No. I don't think it&#13;
has lost its effectiveness, although&#13;
I think trade union leadership&#13;
knows that they must resort to&#13;
strike action with greater caution&#13;
than perhaps was the case in&#13;
previous years, and they must&#13;
have discipline in their own ranks&#13;
to know when to strike and when&#13;
not to.&#13;
RANGER: Do you think labor&#13;
has changed, as far as public&#13;
relations is concerned? It seems&#13;
like labor at times has a public - be&#13;
- damned attitude. Do you agree?&#13;
REUTHER: I think what you&#13;
are getting at is a very serious&#13;
problem. But you see, when the&#13;
unions began, we were the underdog.&#13;
And we got a lot of&#13;
sympathy from folks who said,&#13;
"Yeah, they're right. We're gonna&#13;
give them a chance." Now the&#13;
tendency is to look upon unions as&#13;
huge and powerful and hence&#13;
arrogant, like the corporations.&#13;
The tendency is to say, "Well,&#13;
they're not democratic anymore,&#13;
they're big shots," and so on. This&#13;
is not accurate. I know, there are&#13;
some unions that are not&#13;
democratic. There are some that&#13;
have been penetrated by&#13;
corruption. And I might add that&#13;
most of that corruption came from&#13;
the employers, because wherever&#13;
you find a corrupt union official&#13;
who will take a bribe, you've got&#13;
an employer who offers the bribe.&#13;
And I think they both ought to go&#13;
to jail. The public relations image&#13;
of the trade unions is not good&#13;
today. And I think one of the&#13;
reasons why it isn't is that when&#13;
the trade unions take strike action,&#13;
they are not mindful always&#13;
of the impact on people who are&#13;
not involved. Hence, they must&#13;
prepare the community to understand&#13;
the issues and the trade&#13;
unions should be fighting the&#13;
battle of the consumers because&#13;
workers are not only wage earners,&#13;
they are consumers. And&#13;
sometimes, while they may favor&#13;
what their own union does, they&#13;
resent what another union does&#13;
because it might cause higher&#13;
taxes for them. So you have to&#13;
constantly keep before the public&#13;
and your own members not only&#13;
their roles as union members, but&#13;
also their role as consumers and&#13;
citizens."&#13;
MOONLITE&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
Sat.&#13;
8 pm - 1 am&#13;
"I wonder why it's so dark in the Rec Center, exclaims&#13;
Stroll in' Bowlin'. "I'll just turn on a light and . . . Hey,&#13;
what are you doing?" cries a voice from the bowling area.&#13;
Don't you know every Saturday nite from 8 p. m. - 1 a. m. is&#13;
Moonlite Bowling where all the lights are turned off and you&#13;
can win special prizes?" Why don't YOU join the fun every&#13;
Saturday - but don't turn on the lights.&#13;
Smokers are not inconsiderate&#13;
slobs, they just don't understand&#13;
how difficult breathing can be for&#13;
a person with asthma. Anyone&#13;
who doubles as a chimney can't be&#13;
very sensitive to air quality levels.&#13;
Think of it this way: Burning&#13;
leaves in a yard smell great.&#13;
Cigarettes are nothing more than&#13;
burning leaves with a few&#13;
chemicals added. Therefore,&#13;
cigarettes smell great. Right?&#13;
Wrong. Dead wrong.&#13;
Vice pres. resigns&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
function of the student senate,"&#13;
said Buddy Couvion, coordinator&#13;
of Student Activities. "Everyone&#13;
should get involved instead of&#13;
relying on just a few to get things&#13;
done."&#13;
Carla Stoffle, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor of Educational Services,&#13;
said that Bambrough's&#13;
resignation came as a surprise.&#13;
In her letter, Bambrough expressed&#13;
several concerns she had&#13;
about PSGA and student&#13;
organizations at Parkside in&#13;
general. "I feel that student&#13;
leaders should follow the rules,"&#13;
the letter stated. "Unfortunately,&#13;
I have found this is not the case."&#13;
Bambrough said she was&#13;
concerned about a lack of respect&#13;
for other members of student&#13;
groups, along with "a serious lack&#13;
of professionalism."&#13;
"I disagree with some of the&#13;
means administration uses to&#13;
obtain "inside" information on&#13;
Student Government discussions,&#13;
plans and viewpoints of its'&#13;
members," the letter stated.&#13;
Bambrough said that the&#13;
position of vice president is&#13;
"overlooked" by the administration&#13;
and other members&#13;
of PSGA. "If given the chance this&#13;
position could be the mainstay of&#13;
Student Government," the letter&#13;
stated.&#13;
She also said that "the majority&#13;
of the advancements of the&#13;
organization are made by a small&#13;
core group" within PSGA.&#13;
Bambrough said that she&#13;
regards "the concept behind the&#13;
organization as being vital to the&#13;
effective functioning of&#13;
Parkside," despite her concerns.&#13;
"There's really nothing going on&#13;
that hasn't gone on before. I don't&#13;
know if she's bitter or not,"&#13;
Kreuser responded.&#13;
"As chair, the vice president&#13;
has no voice," Slama said. "There&#13;
are no definite guidelines for the&#13;
vice president's position in&#13;
relation to the administration.&#13;
And its not clear how t he senators&#13;
should relate to the vice president&#13;
instead of to the president."&#13;
"I think everyone is aware that&#13;
Kathy and Jim have been working&#13;
on establishing a working&#13;
relationship for a long time,"&#13;
Slama said. "Whether or not they&#13;
were successful, I don't know."&#13;
Photo by Z achry A llyn Ed mark&#13;
TAMMY MILLAGER received a Thanksgiving turkey last week&#13;
when she purchased her lunch at the Union dining room and the&#13;
alarm went off. She is shown here with Pat Nora, manager of&#13;
Heritage Food Service, sponsors of the free turkeys.&#13;
Dobyns to lecture at Parkside&#13;
A major authority on Indians of&#13;
the western hemisphere, Dr.&#13;
Henry Dobyns, will describe a&#13;
landmark case in applied anthropology&#13;
in a film - lecture at&#13;
Parkside at 1 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 25, in Molinaro Hall Room D137.&#13;
The free public program is&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Anthropology&#13;
Club.&#13;
Dobyns will describe the involvement&#13;
of a Columbia&#13;
University team, of whic h he was&#13;
a member, in reversing feudal -&#13;
style control of lands and people in&#13;
Vicos, Peru, in the 1950s. The&#13;
team's work has become a classic&#13;
case study in applied anthropology&#13;
because it marked the&#13;
first time that anthropologists&#13;
became directly involved in&#13;
planning and implementing a&#13;
change in a specific area rather&#13;
than acting as passive observers.&#13;
Dobyns, a Columbia PhD, is&#13;
director of the North American&#13;
History Demography Project at&#13;
the Newberry Library Center for&#13;
the History of the American Indian.&#13;
He has done extensive field&#13;
research on many Indian groups&#13;
of North and South America and is&#13;
the author if 11 books, the latest&#13;
"From Fire to Flood" published&#13;
this year. He served as scientific&#13;
editor of the 38-volume Indian&#13;
Tribal Series and has been a&#13;
consultant to the U.S. government&#13;
in a number of cases involving&#13;
Indian affairs.&#13;
In 1974-75, he was a visiting&#13;
professor of anthropology at UWParkside&#13;
and has returned&#13;
several times as a guest lecturer.&#13;
Dictionary presented to WLLC&#13;
A contemporary edition of one&#13;
of the most famous English dictionaries,&#13;
Samuel Johnson's "A&#13;
Dictionary of the English&#13;
Language," has been presented to&#13;
the Parkside library by Racine&#13;
industrialist Fred M. Young,&#13;
president of Young Radiator&#13;
Company.&#13;
The two - volume work will be&#13;
housed in the library's special&#13;
collections section in the&#13;
University Archives and Area&#13;
Research Center.&#13;
First published in 1798, Johnson's&#13;
dictionary of about 40,000&#13;
words is both scientific and&#13;
literary, and is considered the&#13;
first "general" English dictionary&#13;
designed, according to its author,&#13;
"not merely for critics, but for&#13;
popular use." It was the first to&#13;
use quotations extensively to&#13;
illustrate meanings. This edition,&#13;
the eighth, is the first to incorporate&#13;
pronunciation.&#13;
Lexicographer, he defined as&#13;
"A writer of dictionaries, a&#13;
harmless drudge . . . ."&#13;
Oats, he defined as "A grain&#13;
which in England is generally&#13;
given to horses, but in Scotland&#13;
supports the people." Later&#13;
Johnson admitted "I own that by&#13;
my definition of oats I meant to&#13;
vex (the Scots)."&#13;
Johnson, a major literary figure&#13;
of 18th century England, had at&#13;
least one of his definitions return&#13;
to haunt him. A pension, he&#13;
decreed, is "An allowance made&#13;
to anyone without an entitlement.&#13;
In England it is generally understood&#13;
to mean pay given to a&#13;
state hireling for treason to his&#13;
country." His critics had a field&#13;
day when later he accepted a&#13;
government pension of 300 pound s&#13;
a year, but he declined to alter the&#13;
original definition in subsequent&#13;
editions of the dictionary.&#13;
'CRACKING A TOUGH JOB MARKET&#13;
IN THE 80's*&#13;
A seminar by&#13;
RODGER L. DE ROSE&#13;
Manger, U. S. New Products, S C JOHNSON &amp; SON, INC.&#13;
(UW-PARKSIDE GRADUATE '72)&#13;
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION,&#13;
ROOM 106 — 8-10 P.M.&#13;
• Campus Recruiting Techniques&#13;
• The "In the Door" Interview&#13;
• Now That You've Got the Job,&#13;
"Plot a Route to the Top"&#13;
Reservations requested by Dec. 1 call&#13;
553-2452&#13;
or&#13;
Stop in the Alumni &amp; Placement Services&#13;
Office, WLLC D173 &#13;
6 Wednesday, November 25, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Indian Summer" a hot album&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
A1 Stewart is not to be confused&#13;
with Rod Stewart. They are not&#13;
brothers, cousins, or any relation&#13;
at all, and while Rod has been&#13;
spewing out trashy, disco-ish&#13;
albums as of late, A1 has turned&#13;
out an excellent new album entitled&#13;
"Indian Summer."&#13;
"Indian Summer" is unique in&#13;
its concept and design. The album&#13;
is a double - record set, the first&#13;
side consisting of all new songs by&#13;
Stewart, recorded in the studio,&#13;
and the last three sides are some&#13;
of Stewart's greatest hits,&#13;
recorded live at the Roxy theater&#13;
in Los Angeles. This was&#13;
somewhat disappointing as I had&#13;
hoped to hear more new songs&#13;
from Stewart, but the quality of&#13;
the album as a whole, both in the&#13;
studio and live recordings, more&#13;
than made up for this.&#13;
Stewart's new songs are&#13;
refreshingly light and lyrical. The&#13;
melodies are often complex,&#13;
sometimes elusive. Stewart's&#13;
lyrics, although a bit talky at&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selection&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10:00 a m - 4:00 p m&#13;
• SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
• JUBE JELLS&#13;
• CARAMELS&#13;
CARAMEL BULLIES&#13;
ROYALS&#13;
TOFFEES&#13;
JOTS&#13;
BRIDGE MIX&#13;
MALTED MILK BALLS&#13;
CHOC. CREME DROPS&#13;
CHOC. RAISINS&#13;
CHOC. PEANUTS&#13;
PEANUT BUTTER CUPS&#13;
STARS&#13;
YOGURT PEANUTS&#13;
CAROB MALTED MILK&#13;
BALLS&#13;
CAROB PEANUTS&#13;
SUNFLOWER SEEDS&#13;
CARIBBEAN DELICACY&#13;
CALIFORNIA MIX&#13;
STUDENT FOOD&#13;
GIANT CASHEWS&#13;
NATURAL PISTACHIOS&#13;
SPANISH PEANUTS&#13;
BLANCHED PEANUTS&#13;
YOGURT RAISINS&#13;
YOG URT SES AME&#13;
BRITTLE&#13;
RED SKIN PEANUTS&#13;
MINT COOLERS&#13;
STARLIGHT MINTS&#13;
SOUR BALLS&#13;
CINNAMON DISKS&#13;
COFFEE&#13;
BUTTERSCOTCH DISKS&#13;
ROOT BEER BARRELS&#13;
POPS&#13;
P E A N UT B U T T ER&#13;
KISSES&#13;
PEPPERMINT KISSES&#13;
LICORICE BULLIES&#13;
JELLY BEANS&#13;
ASSORTED PERKYS&#13;
ORANGE SLICES&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Til Dec. 4th&#13;
Spanish Burnt&#13;
PEANUTS&#13;
40% O FF&#13;
times, are intelligent and poetic.&#13;
The new tracks continue Stewart's&#13;
move towards more polished&#13;
songs, but his original style is&#13;
retained. Acoustic guitars are&#13;
intermixed well with electric,&#13;
especially in the album's title&#13;
track. But the live tracks are the&#13;
definite highlight of the album.&#13;
I must admit that I was surprised&#13;
to hear Steward doing a&#13;
live album. He isn't a hard - core&#13;
rock - and - roller, and I knew that&#13;
the complexity of his songs would&#13;
be difficult to translate accurately&#13;
into a live recording. But on&#13;
"Indian Summer," Stewart and&#13;
his back-up band "Shot in the&#13;
Dark" have faithfully performed&#13;
some of Stewart's most popular&#13;
songs, including "Time&#13;
Passages," "On The Border,"&#13;
"Nostradamus" and "Year of the&#13;
Cat." The quality of these tracks&#13;
approaches that of a studio&#13;
recording, and several of the&#13;
songs were so w ell polished that I&#13;
found it hard to believe that I was&#13;
listening to a live album. But the&#13;
album is definitely live, and&#13;
Stewart makes a few interesting&#13;
changes in some of the songs. For&#13;
instance, in the middle of&#13;
"Nostradamus" Stewart inserts&#13;
another one of his compositions,&#13;
"The World Goes To Riyadh." The&#13;
two songs mix together well, and&#13;
the end result is quite interesting.&#13;
All in all, "Indian Summer" is a&#13;
terrific album for die-hard A1&#13;
Stewart fans as well as those not&#13;
formerly acquainted with his&#13;
music. The combination of new&#13;
material as well as his best songs&#13;
from the past makes it well worthwhile.&#13;
&#13;
UW-P freshmen&#13;
win scholarships&#13;
Two Parkside freshmen have&#13;
been awarded music faculty&#13;
scholarships of $100 each. The&#13;
awards are based on auditions.&#13;
Winners are Jane Oertel of 3431&#13;
Taylor Ave., Racine, a clarinetist&#13;
and member of the Parkside Wind&#13;
Ensemble, and William Nelson,&#13;
510 14th St., Racine, who plays&#13;
tenor saxophone and is a member&#13;
of the Wind Ensemble and the&#13;
Jazz Ensemble.&#13;
Breakfast seminars to&#13;
begin next month&#13;
A series of five "Breakfast&#13;
Seminars in Public Management"&#13;
will begin next month at Parkside,&#13;
which is sponsoring the program&#13;
in cooperation with the University&#13;
Extension Department of&#13;
Governmental Affairs.&#13;
First of the monthly sessions&#13;
will feature Prof. James J.&#13;
Polczynski of the UW-P business&#13;
management faculty speaking on&#13;
"Managing Stress in the Work&#13;
Environment" Dec. 3.&#13;
Other topics are:&#13;
"Budgeting Techniques for&#13;
Human Service Agencies" by&#13;
Prof. James R. Kuperberg of&#13;
UWEX Continuing Education in&#13;
Administration and UWMilwaukee's&#13;
Program in Urban&#13;
Institutions, Feb. 18;&#13;
"Co-Determination Models in&#13;
Public Sector and Social Service&#13;
Agencies" by Prof. James C.&#13;
Foster, UW-P Labor and Industrial&#13;
Relations Program /&#13;
UWEX School for Workers, March&#13;
u;&#13;
"Contracting as a Way of&#13;
Managing Budget Cutbacks" by&#13;
Prof. William Murin, Director of&#13;
the UW-P Master of Public Service&#13;
Administration Program,&#13;
April 22;&#13;
And, "Styles of Administrative&#13;
Leadership" by Prof. A. Clarke&#13;
Hagensick, UWEX Department of&#13;
Governmental Affairs / UWMilwaukee&#13;
political science&#13;
faculty.&#13;
Topics for the seminars were&#13;
chosen in response to preferences&#13;
indicated by persons who attended&#13;
a trial program last spring, which&#13;
had an overflow registration.&#13;
Each program will begin with a&#13;
breakfast at 7:45 a.m. followed by&#13;
a seminar session from 8:15 to&#13;
9:45 in Union 104-106.&#13;
Participation in the series&#13;
counts toward the Certificate in&#13;
Public Administration offered by&#13;
the UWEX Department of&#13;
Governmental Affairs. Additional&#13;
work toward the certificate can be&#13;
taken through Parkside's Master&#13;
of Public Service Administration&#13;
program. Continuing Education&#13;
Units (CEUs) also are available.&#13;
Registration for the series is&#13;
$75. Registration for single&#13;
seminars is $20 each on a space -&#13;
available basis. Enrollment is&#13;
limited to 30 perso ns. Additional&#13;
information is available from&#13;
Prof. Kenneth Hoover at UW-P&#13;
(Phone 553-2518).&#13;
Distributed by E. F. MA DRIGRANO 1831 - 55th St. Kenosha, Wise. 658-3553&#13;
§!rohi NEW ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE &#13;
RANGER Wednesday, November 25, 1981&#13;
Cross Countru&#13;
Women host NAIA nationals&#13;
ALTHOUGH the first snowfall at Parkside may be beautiful&#13;
(above), it can also signal the start of another season of cold, wet&#13;
weather and more use of campus shuttle buses (below).&#13;
Photos by Zachry Allyn Edmark&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
Peer Support will be sponsoring&#13;
"Test Taking Tips" by Susan&#13;
Taylor just in time for semester&#13;
finals. The seminar will be held on&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 2 at 7 p.m. in the&#13;
Library Learning Lab. Bring your&#13;
class notes to organize.&#13;
IVCF&#13;
On Wednesday, Nov. 25 in Union&#13;
106, Inter - Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship will host a social. It&#13;
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;
IVCF will hold its large group&#13;
meeting on Wednesday, Dec. 2 at 1&#13;
p.m. in Union 207. Curt Foss of&#13;
Kenosha Bible Church will be&#13;
speaking on what the Bible says&#13;
about Christ's return to earth to&#13;
restore order . . . "this same&#13;
Jesus which is taken up from you&#13;
into Heaven shall so come (again)&#13;
in like manner as ye have seen&#13;
him go." (Acts 1:11) All students&#13;
are welcome. Bring your lunch&#13;
and a friend.&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
The Art Addicts will be sponsoring&#13;
Student Art Day on Wednesday,&#13;
Dec. 9 from 9 to 6 p.m. in&#13;
Mid - Main Place. The event is&#13;
free and open to the public. Any&#13;
student may enter works as long&#13;
as they have been completed in&#13;
the last two years at Parkside.&#13;
Entries may be in painting,&#13;
d r a w i n g, p r i n t m a k i n g,&#13;
photography, ceramics, sculpture,&#13;
textiles and art metals.&#13;
Entry blanks are on the Art Addicts&#13;
bulletin board on the D-l&#13;
level of Comm. Arts.&#13;
The Art Addicts will also be&#13;
sponsoring demonstrations on Art&#13;
Day in the Main Concourse,&#13;
featuring several types of media.&#13;
This will be next to the Book Store&#13;
and the Student Book Exchange.&#13;
by Patty DeLuisa&#13;
"We did a good job." That was&#13;
how Parkside cross country coach&#13;
Mike DeWitt described his team's&#13;
third place finish in the NAIA&#13;
Women's National Cross Country&#13;
Championships, held at Parkside&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
His expectations of his harriers&#13;
faring well in the 5000 meter event&#13;
were realized when "everyone&#13;
came together and combined for a&#13;
team effort," said Senior Bard&#13;
Osborne. Junior Debbie Spino&#13;
strided through the wet snow to a&#13;
fantastic fourth place finish out of&#13;
105 runners. For her super performance,&#13;
Debbie earned allAmerican&#13;
honors. Her time was&#13;
18:50.&#13;
Junior Dona Driscoll received&#13;
all-American honors in cross&#13;
country for the second time as she&#13;
placed 14th with a time of 19:29.&#13;
Sue Meyer, a freshman, also&#13;
became an all-American for her&#13;
17th place effort. Meyer was&#13;
clocked at 19:36.&#13;
Senior Barb Osborne ran 31st&#13;
with a time of 20:20. Sophomore&#13;
Sandy Venne finished 64th, senior&#13;
Lowrie Melotik ran 81st, and&#13;
sophomore Linda Pfeilstifter was&#13;
104th.&#13;
Mary Jaqua of Adams State&#13;
(Colorado) won the race with a&#13;
remarkable time of 18:34 to pace&#13;
her team to the national title. They&#13;
won with a low score of 25 points.&#13;
Berry College of Georgia placed&#13;
second with 71 points, and&#13;
Parkside was third with 100&#13;
poiiits.&#13;
Emporia State (Kansas) was&#13;
fourth, Midland Lutheran&#13;
(Nebraska) fifth, Northern State&#13;
(South Dakota) sixth, Fort Hays&#13;
State (Kansas) seventh, Doane&#13;
College (Nebraska) eighth,&#13;
Kearney State (Nebraska) ninth,&#13;
Park College (Missouri) tenth,&#13;
Hillsdale College (Michigan)&#13;
eleventh, Harding College&#13;
(Arkansas) twelfth, and Concordia&#13;
College (Nebraska)&#13;
thirteenth.&#13;
When asked how it felt to be&#13;
named an all-American, Dona&#13;
Driscoll said, "It's such a great&#13;
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!&#13;
THURSDAY, NOV. 26&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
WEEKLY SPECIALS&#13;
Nov. 30 - Dec. 5&#13;
RED PIN&#13;
$3.00 Nite&#13;
Moon life Bowl&#13;
607game&#13;
All you can bowl&#13;
or play pool&#13;
90Vgame&#13;
AAON. 9 a.m. 'til Noon&#13;
TUE. Noon 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 3 p.m. 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
THUR. 7 p.m. 'til 10 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 10 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
SAT. 8 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
PAT PORTER of Adams State finishes first for men's division.&#13;
honor. It wasn't easy to achieve&#13;
but all the work was worth it."&#13;
In the men's competition,&#13;
Adams State was also a winner&#13;
with 76 points. Pat Porter, who&#13;
won last year's five - mile event at&#13;
Salina, Kansas, captured this&#13;
year's 8000 meters with a clocking&#13;
of 24:55. His teammate, Sam&#13;
Montoya, was second with a time&#13;
of 25:09. The Parkside men did not&#13;
qualify for nationals but several&#13;
Wisconsin schools competed in the&#13;
meet.&#13;
Paul Voss of LaCrosse was the&#13;
first University of Wisconsin&#13;
runner to cross the finish line with&#13;
a good time of 25:36 for 10th place.&#13;
Teammate Nick Decola took 18th&#13;
place with a time of 25:46. Also&#13;
from the LaCrosse team was&#13;
Jerry Husz, who immediately&#13;
followed Decola with a clocking of&#13;
25:47. These three men were the&#13;
only Wisconsin harriers to receive&#13;
all-American honors. Decola&#13;
celebrated twice Saturday as he&#13;
was also given all-American&#13;
Scholastic honors in recognition of&#13;
his outstanding academic&#13;
achievements.&#13;
The meet wasn't without&#13;
mishaps. Several members of the&#13;
Saginaw Valley (Michigan) team&#13;
were spiked on their feet and legs&#13;
at the beginning of the race. One&#13;
runner, Paul Peterson, was&#13;
rushed to the hospital for treatment.&#13;
&#13;
Once again, Adams State won&#13;
the team championship. LaCrosse&#13;
was second, Saginaw Valley&#13;
(Michigan) third, Molone College&#13;
(Ohio) fourth, Simon Fraser&#13;
(British Columbia, Canada) fifth,&#13;
Indiana (Pennsylvania) sixth,&#13;
Central Washington State&#13;
seventh, New Mexico Highlands&#13;
eighth, Central State Oklahoma&#13;
ninth, UW-Eau Claire tenth, UWStevens&#13;
eleventh, and Point Loma&#13;
(California) twelfth. Thirty - six&#13;
teams competed in the national&#13;
meet.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
ADS&#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;
TYPING. Resumes, term papers, theses,&#13;
manuscripts, etc. 14 years experience.&#13;
Reasonable rates. 694-1825 or 652 6599.&#13;
TYPING in my home — term papers,&#13;
manuscripts, essays, resumes, letters,&#13;
reports, etc. Professional results. Call 639-&#13;
6023.&#13;
PERSONALS .&#13;
SINGLETARIANS: Small group discussion in&#13;
a relaxed home atmosphere. Meets every&#13;
Friday night, 8:15 p.m., 412 9th Street,&#13;
Racine. November 27 topic: Enjoying the&#13;
Single Life.&#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, III. 60096-0167.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 25&#13;
LECTURE at 1:00 p.m. in MOLN D137. The speaker is Dr. Henry Dobyns of the Newberry&#13;
Library. The program is free and open to the public. Sponsored by the Anthropology Club.&#13;
DANCE/CONCERT at9:00 p.m. in Union Square featuring "Shimmer." Admission at the door is&#13;
$1.00 for a Parkside stndent and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
SUNDAY, NOV. 29&#13;
CONCERT at 3:30 p.m. in GR 103 with Susan Gulick performing on the guitar. The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
MONDAY, NOV. 30&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12:15 in Union 106. Jim Foster of UW-P Labor and Industrial Relations will&#13;
talk on "Models of Co-Determination in the Management of Public Agencies." The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
TUESDAY, DEC. 1&#13;
BLOOD PRESSURE at 10:30 a.m. • 2:0 0 p.m. in Alcove 103. Free to UW-P students, faculty and&#13;
staff.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 2&#13;
BLOOD PRESSURE at 10:30 a.m. - 2: 00 p.m. in Alcove 103. Free to UW-P students, faculty and&#13;
staff.&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE at 12 noon in Upper Main Place featuring the music of Scott Jones. The&#13;
program is free to UW-P students, faculty and staff. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
j&amp;te&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Elm wood Plaza/Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
THE DOCTOR'S FARCES&#13;
An Evening wifh Anton Chekhov&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PARKSIDE&#13;
COMMUNICATION ARTS STUDIO THEATRE&#13;
December 3,4,5,11,12 at 8:OOp.m.&#13;
December 6 at 2:OOp.m.&#13;
$2.00 students, faculty, senior citizens&#13;
$3.00 general public&#13;
Limited seating: 553-2042 or 553-2345 &#13;
8 Wednesday, November 25, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Inside UW P S ports&#13;
Looking at Packer diehards&#13;
by Greg Bonofiglio&#13;
This week INSIDE UW-P&#13;
SPORTS takes a look outward at&#13;
pro football in Wisconsin.&#13;
There's excitement brewing in&#13;
Titletown, USA these days. Green&#13;
Bay's three game winning streak&#13;
has the Packer diehards envisioning&#13;
a possible wild card&#13;
playoff berth. And who knows?&#13;
Maybe they'll even take the&#13;
division title! Well maybe, but&#13;
don't count on it.&#13;
With five games remaining in&#13;
the regular season, the Green Bay&#13;
Packers find themselves two&#13;
games behind the Minnesota&#13;
Vikings in the NFC Central&#13;
Division and one of seven teams in&#13;
contention for the second wild&#13;
card playoff spot. Tied with Green&#13;
Bay at 5-6 are: Tampa Bay&#13;
Bucaneers, Detroit Lions, Los&#13;
Angeles Rams, Atlanta Falcons,&#13;
New York Giants, and the&#13;
Washington Redskins.&#13;
Green Bay was in a similar spot&#13;
a year ago when they were 5-6-1.&#13;
After a horrendous start, Green&#13;
Bay had fought itself back into&#13;
contention. They had just beaten&#13;
the Vikings for the second time&#13;
and were in a position to take the&#13;
division title. "The Pack was&#13;
back," proclaimed the faithful.&#13;
Their season ended with the&#13;
"Pack" dropping four consecutive&#13;
games, including that infamous&#13;
61-7 debacle to the Bears. So much&#13;
for the playoffs . . .&#13;
"O.K.," says the ever optimistic&#13;
diehard, "so Green Bay blew it.&#13;
Pro Picks&#13;
winner!&#13;
This week's winner was&#13;
Joe Sykora with 11 correct,&#13;
41 total combined points!&#13;
But this year we have the league's&#13;
easiest schedule (teams with a&#13;
combined .417 winning percentage&#13;
last year). What's more, we've got&#13;
John Jefferson. Remember, he's&#13;
an All-Pro!"&#13;
Not with Green Bay he isn't. As&#13;
of the eleventh week, Jefferson&#13;
has caught a mere 21 passes. And&#13;
the prospects don't look much&#13;
better for J.J. with David&#13;
Whitehurst at quarterback.&#13;
Whitehurst seems inept at&#13;
throwing to his wide receivers.&#13;
Especially with passes thrown&#13;
over the middle. Aside from the 41&#13;
yarder to Jefferson in the Giants&#13;
game, the pass attack under&#13;
Whitehurst consists of sideline&#13;
patterns, flip passes to a back out&#13;
in the flat, or short passes to Paul&#13;
Coffman. I don't buy that "double&#13;
coverage" excuse that Starr feeds&#13;
us for not going more to Lofton&#13;
and Jefferson. Lofton was double&#13;
covered all last year yet he&#13;
somehow managed to grab over 70&#13;
passes. I doubt J.J. has ever&#13;
known single coverage.&#13;
In response to the other point&#13;
about Green Bay having the&#13;
easiest schedule, just how far has&#13;
it gotten them this year? They're&#13;
not even a .500 team against a&#13;
schedule made up of last year's&#13;
patsies.&#13;
"Well maybe so," says the&#13;
diehard, "but we've got&#13;
momentum going now. We've won&#13;
three in a row!" Sure, except all&#13;
three were home games against&#13;
opponents with less than .500&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC. ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR&#13;
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The Active Athletes One Stop&#13;
694-9206 UM WW It, ONQBM, M&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE L&#13;
1* ^&#13;
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GIFTS&#13;
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RAINBOW&#13;
uptown&#13;
kenosha&#13;
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Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
(414) 657-4384&#13;
RECORDS &amp; TAPES&#13;
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PUIS&#13;
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1&#13;
40c OFF WITH THIS COUPON&#13;
for thi purchase of&#13;
ALBUM OR TAPE&#13;
records. In fact, of their six losses&#13;
this year, only two of them have&#13;
been to teams with above .500&#13;
records (Minnesota and San&#13;
Francisco).&#13;
"Aha," says the diehard, "but&#13;
those are first place teams! We've&#13;
still got a shot at a wild card&#13;
spot." True, but we've already&#13;
lost to four of the six other teams&#13;
still in contention for that&#13;
remaining spot.&#13;
It b quite possible that the&#13;
Packers' most formidable&#13;
opponent this year&#13;
has been themselues.&#13;
Yeah, but in each of the last&#13;
three wins the Packer defense has&#13;
come up with the big play, says&#13;
the diehard. Also, they now have&#13;
the best defense in the division,&#13;
third best in the NFC, and fifth&#13;
best in the entire N.F.L. It has&#13;
really been doing the job! Well, I&#13;
can't argue with that. Against sub&#13;
- .500 teams, the defense has been&#13;
tough. The trouble is the "sack&#13;
pack" still hasn't found a way to&#13;
stop their own offense from&#13;
scoring points for the other team.&#13;
It is quite possible that their most&#13;
formidable opponent this year has&#13;
been themselves.&#13;
"Well, look at the special teams&#13;
play," quips the diehard. "We've&#13;
1 Coupon per Album or Tape Good thru Dec. 10th, 1981&#13;
got the best defense on kick - off&#13;
coverage in football. And Jan&#13;
Stenerud has been awesome all&#13;
year!" True. The kick - off team&#13;
has been excellent all year and&#13;
Stenerud has hit an impressive 19&#13;
of 21 field goal attempts. Too bad&#13;
you can't say the same about&#13;
punter Ray Stachowicz. He hasn't&#13;
hit two solid punts in a row all&#13;
season! And remember, this isn't&#13;
a free agent here. He's the&#13;
Packer's third round draft pick&#13;
this year; we're talking about the&#13;
64th player taken in the draft! As&#13;
far as net average is concerned,&#13;
David Beverly was out - booting&#13;
him. And Beverly stunk!&#13;
This brings up another interesting&#13;
point: the Packer draft.&#13;
For brevity, let's only look at their&#13;
first four picks this year. In the&#13;
first round they took quarterback&#13;
Rich Campbell. As of this writing,&#13;
the highly touted rookie has yet to&#13;
play a single down in the regular&#13;
season. Sure, you don't want to&#13;
rush a rookie quarterback and&#13;
that it's best to bring him along&#13;
slowly and let him earn the job,&#13;
but he'll never earn the job sitting&#13;
on the bench. Is the guy that much&#13;
of a bust that they don't want to&#13;
risk playing him even one series of&#13;
downs in eleven weeks?&#13;
While on the topic of busts, let's&#13;
take a look at Green Bay's second&#13;
round pick: tight end Gary Lewis&#13;
of Texas - Arlington. In Starr's&#13;
eyes the 34th "finest player&#13;
available in the draft." In case&#13;
you don't know it, Lewis is the guy&#13;
who wears number 81 and plays on&#13;
obvious passing downs. But I've&#13;
never been quite sure why. Only&#13;
now has it occured to me what his&#13;
role on the field must be. I'll bet&#13;
he's Green Bay's "offensive&#13;
safety" (a new position).&#13;
Whenever Lynn Dickey or David&#13;
Whitehurst throws an interception,&#13;
it is Lewis' job to&#13;
tackle the player who intercepts&#13;
the pass. By making him an&#13;
eligible receiver, he can roam the&#13;
field at will and just dare someone&#13;
to intercept a pass. What's that?&#13;
There is no such thing as an offensive&#13;
safety? And that Lewis is&#13;
the second tight end when the&#13;
Pack uses their two tight end&#13;
offense? Now wait a minute,&#13;
diehard, that can't be true! The&#13;
guy has only caught two passes all&#13;
year. No, he must be in there to&#13;
make tackles. I'm "sure of it.&#13;
I've already mentioned their&#13;
third round pick, Ray Stachowicz,&#13;
so l et's go to their fourth round&#13;
selection: defensive tackle&#13;
Richard Turner. Here's another&#13;
familiar name for you. Since he&#13;
plays on the bomb squad maybe&#13;
that is wh&gt; Starr drafted him.&#13;
After all, a 5-6-1 team needs all the&#13;
special team players they can get,&#13;
right?&#13;
On Sunday, Green Bay played at&#13;
Tampa Bay in a game that was&#13;
important to both teams. The&#13;
Packer loss might start another&#13;
season ending collapse like last&#13;
year. We Packer diehards will&#13;
never give up hope.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
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AND LOAN AS SOCIATION&#13;
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CHECKING!&#13;
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414-694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414-248-9141&#13;
24726 - 75th Street - Rt. 50&#13;
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CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5Vi% Interest Iff Your Daily&#13;
Balance is $500.00 or More!&#13;
E5HC&#13;
WE'RE HERE 10 HELP YOU GROW! </text>
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              <text>Parkside students campaign against tuition surcharge</text>
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              <text>Joint Finance to decide&#13;
on surcharge next week anger&#13;
Thursday, December 3, 1981 Vol. 10 - No. 13&#13;
The Wisconsin Senate's Joint&#13;
Committee on Finance will be&#13;
discussing and deciding on the&#13;
proposed tuition surcharge on&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 8 at 2 p.m. in&#13;
room 113 - south in the Capitol in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
According to Wendy Strimling,&#13;
Legislative Affairs Director of&#13;
United Council (Wisconsin's&#13;
Parkside students campaign&#13;
against tuition surcharge&#13;
student lobbying association),&#13;
"the more students who show up&#13;
to watch the proceedings the&#13;
better. If five students came from&#13;
every United Council school, we'd&#13;
more than fill the hearing room."&#13;
Parkside's Student Government&#13;
Association will also be&#13;
represented at the meeting.&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
A $23 tuition surcharge for&#13;
Parkside students who register&#13;
for semester I 1982 classes has&#13;
resulted in a Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association&#13;
resolution against the surcharge&#13;
and a letter writing campaign&#13;
from students to state officials.&#13;
The surcharge, proposed by the&#13;
UW s ystem Board of Regents in&#13;
early November, means a $23&#13;
surcharge for students at all UW&#13;
System campuses except Madison&#13;
and Milwaukee, where students&#13;
will pay a $30 surcharge. Monies&#13;
collected by each University will&#13;
be "kicked back" to the individual&#13;
universities and they will be free&#13;
to use the funds as they wish.&#13;
The surcharge, presented by&#13;
UW System President Robert&#13;
O'Neil at the urging of system&#13;
chancellors, was passed by the&#13;
Board on November 6.&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin has indicated his support&#13;
of the surcharge. Tuition in the&#13;
UW System has been increased&#13;
very little in comparison to other&#13;
systems, he said, and in comparison&#13;
to the level of need within&#13;
the system. Guskin said the&#13;
surcharge is low enough that&#13;
students will not be seriously&#13;
inconvenienced by it; it is "the&#13;
cost of a night out for a couple," he&#13;
said. Guskin indicated that funds&#13;
collected by Parkside would be&#13;
used to maintain "high priority&#13;
areas like our library."&#13;
Two weeks ago, PSGA took a&#13;
stand against the surcharge. This&#13;
week, PSGA Legal Affairs&#13;
Director Mike Pfaffl organized&#13;
the letter writing campaign to get&#13;
Parkside students to lodge their&#13;
complaints against the surcharge.&#13;
"As Legal Affairs Director, the&#13;
point of my job is to find problems&#13;
pertinent to students and take a&#13;
stand. Our senate passed a&#13;
resolution condemning the surcharge&#13;
and so we are taking action&#13;
to support that stand," Pfaffl&#13;
said.&#13;
The letters are being sent to&#13;
state Senator John Maurer, a&#13;
member of the state's Joint&#13;
Finance Committee and a&#13;
Kenosha representative. "I wrote&#13;
a personal letter to him," Pfaffl&#13;
said, "but one letter is not very&#13;
effective. We want to show him,&#13;
with a lot of input from students,&#13;
that people here are very upset&#13;
about having to pay this."&#13;
"The letters should have a big&#13;
effect. He hasn't gotten anything&#13;
from Parkside students — he's&#13;
going to be surprised!" Pfaffl&#13;
said.&#13;
On Tuesday, Pfaffl collected&#13;
over 100 student letters by tabling&#13;
on the main concourse near the&#13;
library for a few hours. He&#13;
provides students with a form&#13;
which states "I reject the tuition&#13;
surcharge ... " and students&#13;
complete it with their views and&#13;
reasons. Although Pfaffl indicated&#13;
to the Ranger on Tuesday that&#13;
there will be no more tabling&#13;
"because I don't have time to sit&#13;
there because of classwork" the&#13;
forms will still be available&#13;
through the PSGA office. The&#13;
letters are also mailed to Maurer&#13;
by PSGA.&#13;
Photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
ON TUESDAY, students pre - registering for next semester were&#13;
met with signs asking them to "Take a stand Against the $23&#13;
Surcharge."&#13;
United Council objects&#13;
to tuition surcharge&#13;
Teaching Awards&#13;
PSGA fails to override veto&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. Senate&#13;
Nov. 23 failed to override PSGA&#13;
President Jim Kreuser's veto of&#13;
the Senate's resolution demanding,&#13;
that Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
reverse his decision not to give&#13;
Shirley Kersey the Teaching&#13;
Excellence Award and $500 award&#13;
money. An attempt to censure Joe&#13;
Ripp, the Senator responsible for&#13;
the resolution also faded.&#13;
By the time the resolution was&#13;
finally approved, four weeks after&#13;
it was first brought up, Guskin and&#13;
the award's student committee&#13;
had reached a compromise.&#13;
Kathy Slama, acting vice -&#13;
president, informed the Senate&#13;
that "the Chancellor (told&#13;
Kreuser and I) that he was not&#13;
pleased that we took this stand&#13;
after he had already made the&#13;
statement that he would give the&#13;
award. I know that there's a lot of&#13;
negativism on the part of the&#13;
Chancellor regarding the Senate&#13;
taking a stand. If the Senate takes&#13;
this stand then he, in retaliation,&#13;
will take another stand that the&#13;
Senate will not necessarily approve&#13;
of."&#13;
"The way I see it," said Mike&#13;
Pfaffl, "is that if we go against&#13;
what we said before, it's going to&#13;
become worse.&#13;
Ripp stated that he did not feel&#13;
his resolution was contradictory&#13;
to the Chancellor's actions for two&#13;
reasons. The resolution said that&#13;
Guskin should present Kersey&#13;
with the award publically, which&#13;
he is not doing — the student&#13;
committee will present it to her;&#13;
and Guskin still refuses to give&#13;
Kersey the $500 that usually accompanies&#13;
the award.&#13;
"Another point," said Ripp, "is&#13;
that the night before I brought this&#13;
resolution before the Senate I&#13;
talked with President Kreuser. He&#13;
looked over (the resolution) and&#13;
we decided to add the couple of&#13;
additional comments that were&#13;
added to the last one and he&#13;
agreed to support it. The next day&#13;
we passed it. Then Friday morning&#13;
I see him in the hallway and&#13;
he says that he was reamed out by&#13;
the administration and because of&#13;
this he's thinking about vetoing&#13;
the bill. Not that he was against it&#13;
but because (of ) pressure from&#13;
the administration."&#13;
"It was also known by the&#13;
President, Vice - President and&#13;
President Pro Tempore that the&#13;
Continued On Page Four&#13;
"Students cannot afford to&#13;
make up for the inadequate&#13;
funding provided by the&#13;
legislature," claims Robert&#13;
Kranz, United Council President.&#13;
Kranz was responding to UW&#13;
System President Robert O'Neil's&#13;
recommendation that second&#13;
semester tuition be surcharged&#13;
$23 f or University Cluster campuses,&#13;
and $30 for Doctoral&#13;
Cluster campuses in order to&#13;
support academic quality.&#13;
United Council contends that the&#13;
surcharge will not necessarily&#13;
guarantee quality, but will result&#13;
in the denial of a ccess to students&#13;
from low income families, and&#13;
minority and non-traditional&#13;
students.&#13;
According to Kranz, "United&#13;
Council recognizes that the&#13;
University needs additional funds&#13;
and we have worked to get it for&#13;
them." Sources in the legislature&#13;
credited United Council with&#13;
playing a primary role in the&#13;
restoration of $11.7 million to the&#13;
University budget this past&#13;
summer. In recent weeks United&#13;
Council has also lobbied to&#13;
overturn the Governor's capital&#13;
budget vetoes which halted vital&#13;
University building projects.&#13;
In response to state officials&#13;
who have argued that the&#13;
Legislature does not have the&#13;
revenues to cover University&#13;
budget requests, Kranz indicated&#13;
that United Council recognized the&#13;
fiscal problems facing Wisconsin.&#13;
"However," he added, "underfunding&#13;
education is a roadblock&#13;
to economic recovery. The&#13;
result will be that Wisconsin will&#13;
not be able to provide a highly&#13;
qualified workforce to attract new&#13;
industry in the future, nor will the&#13;
state be able to retain the industrial&#13;
base it already has."&#13;
Kranz addressed the Regent&#13;
Business and Finance committee&#13;
when they considered the surcharge&#13;
last Thursday afternoon in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Financial Aid, part 3&#13;
Guaranteed loans harder to get&#13;
Drawings missing from UW-P library&#13;
A set of a rchitectural drawings&#13;
has been reported missing from&#13;
the Library Learning Center.&#13;
Library officials say they suspect&#13;
the drawings were taken by accident,&#13;
but indicate that they hope&#13;
they will be returned no matter&#13;
why they were taken.&#13;
The drawings were part of a&#13;
display set up along with the visit&#13;
of Robert Kueny, a leading innovator&#13;
in home design.&#13;
Hie display, which also incorporated&#13;
pamphlets offered free&#13;
to the public, featured a sign that&#13;
instructed people to "Take one."&#13;
Although the sign referred to the&#13;
pamphlets, Library officials&#13;
suspect someone misunderstood&#13;
and thought the drawings were&#13;
being offered.&#13;
Anyone with information about&#13;
the drawing^, which have little&#13;
value except to the architect, can&#13;
call Campus Security (ext. 2455)&#13;
or the library.&#13;
INSIDE&#13;
SUFAC finishes preliminary budgeting&#13;
Local agency trains unskilled for job market&#13;
Stevens resigns coach position&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
This article concludes a series&#13;
on financial aid at Parkside.&#13;
Almost all of those students&#13;
whose Guaranteed Student Loans&#13;
were late this fall due to federal&#13;
guideline changes and backlogs at&#13;
the Madison level are now in,&#13;
according to Jan Ocker, Director&#13;
of Financial Aid at Parkside.&#13;
About 40 students have been affected.&#13;
&#13;
"Except for one or two loans&#13;
we're waiting for because of&#13;
problems relating to data or other&#13;
aid, most of them are in," Ocker&#13;
said. "The only ones we're waiting&#13;
for otherwise are a few that had to&#13;
be refiled after October 1 because&#13;
of form changes." In addition,&#13;
about ten of those students haven't&#13;
refiled, Ocker said.&#13;
Financial aid doesn't look too&#13;
sunny for next semester, though.&#13;
"Unfortunately, we don't know&#13;
what will happen yet," Ocker&#13;
said. "There may be a reduction&#13;
in the funds available. We're just&#13;
hoping for the status quo or a&#13;
small decrease."&#13;
"The Guaranteed Loan&#13;
Program has become a sore&#13;
thumb. It's the largest federal&#13;
program and its been said that it&#13;
is targeted for additional cuts,"&#13;
Ocker said.&#13;
When Congress and President&#13;
Reagan agree on these cuts,'&#13;
Ocker projected that the cuts&#13;
would be instituted by tightening&#13;
up the current "needs based"&#13;
application process. Until this fall,&#13;
the loans were available to&#13;
'anyone who met the criteria of&#13;
academic progress, citizenship&#13;
and sufficient number of credits,"&#13;
Ocker said. As of Oct. 3, students&#13;
were given the loans based on&#13;
adjusted gross income. Currently,&#13;
the needs test is not as stringent as&#13;
that for the Basic Grant Program,&#13;
Ocker said, 'but if y our income is&#13;
over about $25,000, it's very&#13;
unlikely that you'll get the loan at&#13;
UW-Parkside because tuition is&#13;
relatively low here."&#13;
Despite the decrease in aid&#13;
available, Ocker said "I don't&#13;
think Parkside will lose students&#13;
because of reductions in aid. It&#13;
would appear students will have to&#13;
go to less expensive schools (like&#13;
Parkside) and so we will probably&#13;
maintain enrollment."&#13;
Ocker said that he is trying to&#13;
urge Congress to keep the&#13;
program accessable to the&#13;
neediest students through&#13;
professional affiliations, but "it&#13;
looks like the neediest may not get&#13;
as much as they had hoped&#13;
(during the 1982-83 school year)&#13;
and the less needy may not get&#13;
anything," he said.&#13;
_ "It's hard to tell students how to&#13;
plan for the future. It isn't going to&#13;
be as rosy as it has been," Ocker&#13;
said, although he noted that there&#13;
;has been no talk of eliminating&#13;
any financial aid program.&#13;
By mid - J anuary, Ocker said,&#13;
the office will have the 1982-83&#13;
financial aid applications. The&#13;
deadline for priority consideration&#13;
is March 15. "Those who apply&#13;
later will find less funds available&#13;
for them," Ocker said. &#13;
2 Thursday, December 3,1981 RANGER&#13;
&gt;scccccco&lt;&#13;
Editorial&#13;
S^OOCOOCCCOCOOOOCCCOCOOOOSOCOOOSO:&#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;
«ccooocccococ&#13;
so®°®OOOBOCCC«OC«COOOOOaOCCCCOC&#13;
Do students want to have&#13;
their cake and eat it, too?&#13;
The second semester surcharge, a resurfacing of t he old "one&#13;
time only" surcharge threat, will not turn out to be the final&#13;
increase passed on to students during this recession era, given&#13;
state and federal non - support of higher education. Of c ourse,&#13;
what do you expect when abortions for incest victims are not&#13;
even a priority to a government? It all makes about the same&#13;
amount of sense.&#13;
The present surcharge has even dropped the catchy phrase&#13;
'one time only." Chancellor Alan Guskin has already said he&#13;
anticipates further budgetary cuts imposed on the UW System&#13;
this February. It appears these further cuts may also be passed&#13;
down to students (at least in part) in the form of surcharges or&#13;
tuition increases. These increases may be a mild inconvenience&#13;
to most students at present, but added up over a few semesters,&#13;
or even years, they may become a severe hardship to low income&#13;
students — es pecially those from schools like Parkside,&#13;
where there is a large body of students who have family committments&#13;
instead of students who are the recipient of someone&#13;
else's financial committment.&#13;
Also, students who oppose the surcharge do want to see our&#13;
fine library maintained. They do want to be taught by the highly&#13;
qualified faculty and staff Parkside has. They do want access to&#13;
computer facilities. In short, they want to maintain, even improve,&#13;
the quality of education Parkside and the UW System as a&#13;
whole now offers.&#13;
Yet most students we have talked to in the past few weeks do&#13;
not want to (and say they cannot afford to) pay a surcharge next&#13;
semester that could be repeated, at increases to match&#13;
Parkside's need, semester after semester.&#13;
It could seem like students want to have their cake and eat it,&#13;
too. It could also be that some Parkside students think state and&#13;
federal spending trends do not match their needs.&#13;
To paraphrase a poster that hangs on the office door of&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association President Jim&#13;
Kreuser, 'Wouldn't it be great if schools had all the money they&#13;
need and the army had to hold a bake sale?'' .&#13;
One way to register disagreement with the surcharge is by&#13;
writing letters — to the Ranger, to the UW System Board of&#13;
Regents or to John Maurer through PSGA. If you don't like the&#13;
sound of his name, there are plenty of other state and federal&#13;
government representatives to choose from.&#13;
Write a letter&#13;
YOU KNOW, HARLANCi M5U V E BEEN"&#13;
ABSOLUTELY INTOLERABLE SINCtl&#13;
YOU'VE STARTED LOBBYING TO&#13;
REVISE THE CLEAN AIR ACT'&#13;
From the editor's notes&#13;
Expanded Ranger planned for Dec. 10&#13;
to Ranger&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
Looking back over this&#13;
semester, it seems like the&#13;
Ranger has moved an inch or so&#13;
closer to becoming the kind of&#13;
public forum that Parkside needs&#13;
and seems to want. Our readers&#13;
have begun to talk to us — some&#13;
with complaints, some with praise&#13;
— but either way, it's a good sign.&#13;
If you think and talk about the&#13;
vehicle of news, you must be&#13;
thinking and talking about the&#13;
news itself.&#13;
And speaking of n ews, it would&#13;
be great to be able to cover more&#13;
of i t. It would be great to have a&#13;
reporter for each sector of this&#13;
campus (administration, student&#13;
life, student organizations,&#13;
academia, etc.) and we would&#13;
probably bribe good writers with&#13;
free tickets, by-lines in bold face&#13;
and much staff attention if only&#13;
they would appear at the office&#13;
some morning.&#13;
We'll even honor letter writers&#13;
(and by the way we've had the&#13;
best in this semester's Rangers).&#13;
Just think, if you had written a&#13;
letter to the Ranger, you would not&#13;
be reading this right now. Your&#13;
letter could have been right here.&#13;
Whether or not we have the staff&#13;
to do it, we are planning a special&#13;
Christmas issue of the Ranger.&#13;
Next week the Ranger will expand&#13;
to 16 pages, a feat that hasn't been&#13;
accomplished in quite a few&#13;
semesters. We'll have more news&#13;
for you, more features, more&#13;
sports. Of co urse all the regulars&#13;
will be there — Pat Hensiak's&#13;
"Viewpoint," Greg Bonofiglio's&#13;
"Inside UW-P Sports," staff&#13;
editorials and even a one - time&#13;
only momentary resurrection of&#13;
"From the Parking Lot." We've&#13;
been planning this issue for&#13;
weeks, so we hope you enjoy it.&#13;
If you have news or ideas for&#13;
next week's Ranger, don't be shy.&#13;
Stop in and let us know what you&#13;
know and what you think. We&#13;
can't let anyone know about your&#13;
club's activities, the instructor&#13;
you know who is conducting&#13;
research on ghosts in Racine, or&#13;
the scholarship your best friend&#13;
won unless you tell us. We alsc&#13;
need your help to keep us in touch&#13;
with problems you encounter in&#13;
University life — inadequate&#13;
parking, inaccessable authority&#13;
figures, and the like are some of&#13;
the problems the Ranger has&#13;
looked into in the past. But only&#13;
because someone alerted us to the&#13;
problem.&#13;
We'd like to move closer to our&#13;
goal of being the public forum al&#13;
Parkside each week. With your&#13;
input, we're making progress. Lei&#13;
us know what you think of this&#13;
issue and next week's Christmas&#13;
issue. Let us know what you would&#13;
like to see in next semester's&#13;
Rangers. We'll listen. And&#13;
besides, what have you got to&#13;
lose?&#13;
Open Meetings&#13;
10 years ago —&#13;
From the Files&#13;
"SGA holds first meeting" by&#13;
Larry A. Jones, Campus Editor&#13;
In its first meeting, Parkside's&#13;
newly elected Student Government&#13;
Association was characterized&#13;
by the enthusiasm and zeal&#13;
which is usually evident in any&#13;
new organization.&#13;
The meeting . . . saw a rather&#13;
unique occurrence — only one&#13;
senator was missing and by&#13;
meeting's end, no one had&#13;
resigned.&#13;
Following are some excerpts&#13;
from (new president Dean&#13;
Luomos') remarks to the senate:&#13;
"One of the things that last&#13;
year's student government taught&#13;
us was that people who get elected&#13;
have to do more than get elected.&#13;
"We must learn to judge success&#13;
or failure on the basis of&#13;
action — did the action help or did&#13;
it confuse students; and above all&#13;
did it involve students in the action&#13;
itself?&#13;
"We cannot sit in a meeting&#13;
room and discuss the situation&#13;
among ourselves and expect the&#13;
students to offer their assistance.&#13;
We must seek out students to help&#13;
with our projects . . .&#13;
"We all have to realize that we&#13;
are inheriting nothing .... We are&#13;
starting from scratch."&#13;
--Newscope, Dec. 6,1971, vol.&#13;
no. 14&#13;
5 years ago&#13;
"Flu vaccination today"&#13;
A swine flue vaccine clinic is&#13;
scheduled at Parkside from 10&#13;
a.m. to 6 p.m.&#13;
The free clinic is open to&#13;
Parkside students, faculty and&#13;
staff and members of their&#13;
families. The vaccine will not be&#13;
administered to anyone under 18.&#13;
The clinic will be sponsored by&#13;
the Campus Health Service in&#13;
cooperation with the Kenosha City&#13;
Health Department.&#13;
Both monovalent and bivalent&#13;
vaccine will be available.&#13;
—Ranger, Dec. 1, 1976, vol&#13;
no. 12&#13;
5,&#13;
I year ago —&#13;
"Rangers off to bad start" by&#13;
Dave Cramer, Sports Editor&#13;
It's been a long time since the&#13;
men's basketball team has&#13;
dropped two home games in one&#13;
year, and it's been even longer&#13;
singe it dropped back - to - back&#13;
home games. But that's what&#13;
happened when the Rangers&#13;
opened their season last week&#13;
against LaCrosse and St. Xavier.&#13;
On Friday, the Rangers were&#13;
upset by the St. Xavier Cougars&#13;
70-64 an d on Saturday they were&#13;
dumped by LaCrosse 63-60.&#13;
On Friday, Parkside jumped out&#13;
to a quick 13-4 lead .... However,&#13;
after the first six minutes the&#13;
Cougars settled down and started&#13;
to run their offense.&#13;
Meanwhile, the Rangers' head&#13;
coach, Steve Stephens, was forced&#13;
to bench 6'8" center Curtis Green,&#13;
who was suffering from a virus.&#13;
The second half was more of the&#13;
same. The Rangers battled back&#13;
within a basket and then either"&#13;
committed a costly turnover or&#13;
took a bad shot.&#13;
"We need a lot of help with our&#13;
defense," Stephens said following&#13;
the game. "We can't beat anyone&#13;
when we give up 70 points."&#13;
The following evening Parkside&#13;
faced LaCrosse and gave up 63&#13;
points but still found themselves&#13;
the short end of the score.&#13;
Senior Arthur Bright led Parkside&#13;
in scoring with 14 points while&#13;
Reggie Anderson had 13. Dave&#13;
McLeish was the only other player&#13;
in double figures for Parkside&#13;
with 10 points. Green was still&#13;
suffering from the virus and didn't&#13;
suit up for the game.&#13;
—Ranger, Dec. 4, 1980, vol. 9,&#13;
no. 13&#13;
Course and Curriculum Committee,&#13;
Friday, Dec. 4 at 1 p.m.,&#13;
Grnq. 318A. Agenda: Curriculum&#13;
proposal for Communication&#13;
program.&#13;
Awards and Ceremonies&#13;
Committee, Monday, Dec. 7 at&#13;
11:15 a.m., Grnq. 318A. Agenda:&#13;
Calendar of events for spring&#13;
semester.&#13;
Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review Committee,&#13;
Tuesday and Thursday, Dec. 8 an&#13;
10 at 2:30 p.m., Grnq. 3444&#13;
Agenda: Proposal for Compute&#13;
Science minor, proposal fo&#13;
catalogue copy for Allied Healt&#13;
program, proposal for Musi&#13;
minor, program self - evaluations&#13;
Review Committee for Sal&#13;
batical and Teaching Im&#13;
provement Proposals, Tuesday&#13;
1 p.m., Grnq. 344A&#13;
Consideration o&#13;
Dec. 8 at&#13;
Agenda:&#13;
proposals.&#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;
&lt;j{anger&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Greg Bonofiglio,&#13;
Advisor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Allvn Edma?k if«&#13;
r&#13;
c BUiTnL' 001,9 Ede"hauser/ Zachry&#13;
Jim KreuTpr pit M n&#13;
ank&#13;
',/&#13;
at Henslak&#13;
' Mary Kaddatz, Jim Kreuser, Pat McDonald, Jim Mertins, Steve Mvers&#13;
' Kim Sch,a,er&#13;
' Sue S,ev&#13;
'&#13;
ns&lt; £n We&#13;
y&#13;
rb£&#13;
res pons i b I e' f o M t s' ed i toria l&#13;
6&#13;
^ He y 7n d'conten t °&#13;
f UWParkside and 'hey are solely&#13;
RANGEI rs 1 r 7 n , X T e&#13;
d U U n&#13;
r K a n d h o l i d a y s ,&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of Sn J ™' •?&#13;
,&#13;
"&#13;
s ' Kenosha&lt; Wisconsin.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressM to* pILTh' RANGERParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, wi 53141. Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UWpaper&#13;
with one^lnch margins&#13;
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Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 9 a m for m.hireserves&#13;
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defamatory content erusing to print letters which contain faice nr &#13;
RANGER Thursday, December 3,1981&#13;
Racine-Kenosha Community Action assists unskilled job seekers&#13;
y&#13;
JeffWicks and Walworth) for cf.ta kv t«k ^ ;„u .. . ,&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
For the person who has never&#13;
been employed or has had to leave&#13;
a job or several jobs, finding and&#13;
getting a job can be a frustrating&#13;
experience. Too often these people&#13;
get discouraged and give up, not&#13;
knowing what help is offered to&#13;
them, like the Assessment /&#13;
Orientation Program.&#13;
This program, sponsored by the&#13;
Racine / Kenosha Community&#13;
Action Agency, Inc. offers a wide&#13;
range of tips and ideas designed to&#13;
help participants get and keep&#13;
suitable employment. "All we're&#13;
trying to do is help people get&#13;
control of their lives," said Will&#13;
Crockett, Coordinator of the&#13;
Assessment / Orientation&#13;
Program. "That's what the&#13;
program is all about."&#13;
Participants in the program are&#13;
recruited, screened, selected and&#13;
certified by the Job Service Office&#13;
in each county (Kenosha, Racine&#13;
and Walworth) for CETA&#13;
(Comprehensive Employment&#13;
Training Act) eligibility determination.&#13;
Basically, participants&#13;
in the program must be 17 years&#13;
old or over and meet CETA&#13;
requirements. Once in the&#13;
program, they can receive $3.35&#13;
per hour for attending the&#13;
Assessment / Orientation&#13;
Program for five days a week for&#13;
two weeks. Participants receiving&#13;
AFDC or SSI will receive an incentive&#13;
allowance of $30 per week.&#13;
The program, which is funded&#13;
wholly by CETA, is not a job&#13;
placement service. It helps people&#13;
establish their career by teachng&#13;
them how to get into training that&#13;
is suitable for the individual to&#13;
plan their career. "Approximately&#13;
85% of the participants&#13;
that we work with ... we&#13;
place into a training program of&#13;
some kind," Crockett said. "Five&#13;
percent are eligible to be certified&#13;
by Job Service to enter the job&#13;
market," he said. The other 10%&#13;
of the participants drop due to a&#13;
bad attitude toward a job,&#13;
Crockett said.&#13;
Participants in the program&#13;
learn basic communication skills,&#13;
self care and personal development,&#13;
and career interest exploration&#13;
as well as how to find a&#13;
job, fill out an application (which&#13;
Crockett says is a "carbon copy of&#13;
yourself"), write a resume, and&#13;
prepare for an interview. There&#13;
are no textbooks or homework.&#13;
Training sessions are conducted&#13;
Monday through Friday from 8&#13;
a.m. to 1 p.m. with individual&#13;
counseling sessions from 2 p.m. to&#13;
4:30 p.m. eight of the 10 days.&#13;
Also, presentations are made&#13;
from different organizations like&#13;
Gateway Technical Institute,&#13;
Parkside, Private Industry&#13;
Companies (PIC), Urban League,&#13;
Southeastern Training OpSUFAC&#13;
finishes preliminary budgets&#13;
The Segregated University Fees&#13;
Allocation Committee (SUFAC)&#13;
finished approving preliminary&#13;
1982-83 budgets for various&#13;
student and campus&#13;
organizations. SUFAC will soon&#13;
begin approving final budgets,&#13;
which will then be forwarded to&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin and the&#13;
UW Board of Regents.&#13;
SUFAC is a seven - member&#13;
subcommittee of PSGA that annually&#13;
allocates the portion of&#13;
each student's total tuition fee&#13;
called segregated fees.&#13;
The budget for Peer Support,&#13;
which was recently granted major&#13;
organization status, was&#13;
deliberated Nov. 18. Last year's&#13;
estimated Peer Support budget&#13;
was $3300; the money came from&#13;
a fund set aside for new program&#13;
development. The 1982-8? request&#13;
of $4733 was approved&#13;
unanimously on the motion made&#13;
by Ken Meyer and seconded by&#13;
Phil Pogreba.&#13;
The first budget request on Nov.&#13;
19 was Intra murals, requesting a&#13;
$2878 increase from $37,605 to&#13;
$40,483. Meyer moved, and&#13;
Peterson seconded, to approve the&#13;
request; the motion passed 6-0-1,&#13;
with Luis Valldejuli abstaining.&#13;
The Auxiliary Accounting&#13;
System requested a $278 increase&#13;
from $5722 to $6000. Greg Davies&#13;
moved, and Meyer seconded, to&#13;
approve the budget, with a 6-0-0&#13;
vote.&#13;
The Union Debt Service&#13;
requested a $15,000 decrease in its&#13;
budget from $105,500 to $90,500.&#13;
The Davies / Pogrebe motion to&#13;
approve the request passed 6-0-0.&#13;
Three budget requests were&#13;
approved Nov. 20 while another&#13;
was tabled. Parkside Activities&#13;
Board received a $8315 increase to&#13;
$35,542 on a Meyer / Randy Klees&#13;
motion. The vote was 4-0-1.&#13;
Performing Arts and Lectures&#13;
received a $357 increase to $9267&#13;
on a Klees / Meyer motion and a 5-&#13;
0-1 vote.&#13;
Ranger requested a $1795 increase&#13;
to $17,057. The request was&#13;
approved on a Peterson / Klees&#13;
motion and passed 6-0-0.&#13;
The PSGA budget was tabled on&#13;
Nov. 20 but brought up again Nov.&#13;
25. A $753 increase to $7503 was&#13;
approved 6-0-0 on a Pogreba /&#13;
Dave White motion.&#13;
The Health budget request of&#13;
$66,248, a $7926 increase, was&#13;
approved 6-0-0 on a White /&#13;
Pogreba motion.&#13;
The final preliminary budget&#13;
approved by SUFAC was the&#13;
Union on Nov. 30. The request was&#13;
for the same amount the Union&#13;
has received for the past five&#13;
years. Davies moved, and&#13;
Peterson seconded, to approve the&#13;
$194,857 request. The vote was 5-0-&#13;
0.&#13;
rHE DOCTOR'S FARCE&#13;
An Evening with Anton Chekhov&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PARKSIDE&#13;
COMMUNICATION ARTS STUDIO THEATRE&#13;
December 3,4,5,11,12 at 8:OOp.m.&#13;
December 6 at 2:OOp.m.&#13;
$2.00 students, faculty, senior citizens&#13;
$3.00 general public&#13;
Limited seating: 553-2042 or 553-2345&#13;
portunities Industrialization&#13;
Center, etc.&#13;
"Every Friday of the first week&#13;
we have what we call 'Local&#13;
Scene'," said Crockett. "This is&#13;
Job Service. We have a&#13;
representative come in from Job&#13;
Service and make a presentation&#13;
to the clients and let them know&#13;
what kinds of jobs and training&#13;
programs are available, since Job&#13;
Service must certify the. individual&#13;
sent from us," he said.&#13;
"In the classroom, they have a&#13;
chance to get it straight from the&#13;
horse's mouth." Crockett also&#13;
says that once in a training&#13;
program, that's where the extent&#13;
of the Assessment / Orientation&#13;
Program ends.&#13;
Crockett points out that the&#13;
program helps reduce the institutional&#13;
system of welfare. He&#13;
states that if a person's Grandmother,&#13;
for example, is on&#13;
welfare, and the person's mother&#13;
is on welfare, then they are&#13;
probably going to be on welfare&#13;
and their children, as well.&#13;
Welfare is built into their way of&#13;
life, and by entering the program,&#13;
that way of life can change.&#13;
Anyone wishing to participate in&#13;
this free program can write or call&#13;
Will Crockett, Assessment /&#13;
Orientation Coordinator, 72&#13;
Seventh Street - 2nd Floor -&#13;
Memorial Hall, Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
53403, 637-8377 or 637-9774.&#13;
"Gee, it sure is a nice day for going outside. I wonder if the&#13;
Outdoor Rental Center in the Rec Center has cross country&#13;
skis?" Strollin' Bowlin'soon learns that the Outdoor Rental&#13;
Center rents skis, boots, and poles for cross country skiing&#13;
and offers low prices for all types of cross country ski&#13;
outings. Why not join Strollin' Bowlin' in learning how&#13;
much fun cross country skiing is with equipment from the&#13;
Outdoor Rental Center in the Rec Center.&#13;
CAMPUS BOOK&#13;
EXCHANGE&#13;
December Hours&#13;
December 7,9,11 —11-1:30&#13;
December 14-11-1; 3:30-5:30&#13;
December 15 —1-4&#13;
December 16-10-3&#13;
December 17-10-12; 3:30-5:30&#13;
December 18 —10-12&#13;
December 21,22,23 —10-4&#13;
WE'LL GIVE YOU MORE $ $ $ FOR YOUR BOOKS.&#13;
STOP BY FOR DETAILS.&#13;
We're On The WLLC Concourse&#13;
&gt;»&#13;
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1 0&#13;
UNION SQUARE S7 PM&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
• THE LIVE MUSIC OF UW-PARKSIDE'S&#13;
AWARD WINNING JAZZ BAND&#13;
• 75&lt;t, $1.0 0 &amp; $1.25 OFF REGULAR PIZZA PRICES&#13;
• SPECIAL $1.99 SPAGHETTI DINNER WITH SALAD &amp; GARLIC BREAD&#13;
• FREE ADMISSION &#13;
4 Thursday, December 3,1981 RANGER&#13;
Events******&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
Members of all Parkside&#13;
business clubs are invited by&#13;
Women in Business to attend a&#13;
"tree trimming party" — Friday,&#13;
Dec. 4 at 8 p.m. at Barb Kingery's&#13;
(2008 Kinzie, Racine). All guests&#13;
are asked to bring an ornament.&#13;
The next WIB general business&#13;
meeting will b e held on Monday,&#13;
Dec. 7 from 1 to 2 p.m. in the&#13;
Business Division Conference&#13;
Room, Moln. 325.&#13;
Physics Club&#13;
The Physics Club will be touring&#13;
Fermi National Accelerator&#13;
Laboratory on Friday, Dec. 4. We&#13;
will leave Parkside at 11 a.m. and&#13;
return around 5 p.m.&#13;
On Wednesday, Dec. 9 the club&#13;
will visit Zion Nuclear Power&#13;
Plant. Note that the time has been&#13;
changed. We will leave Parkside&#13;
at 4:15 p.m. that afternoon.&#13;
Information and sign-up sheets&#13;
for both trips are located at Grnq.&#13;
231.&#13;
Computer Science&#13;
The Computer Club's monthly&#13;
meeting will be held on Monday,&#13;
Dec. 7 at 1 p.m. in Moln. D137.&#13;
Subjects for discussion are the&#13;
Parkside Computer Contest and&#13;
the preliminary planning of&#13;
Computer Fair VI. All parties&#13;
interested in competing for&#13;
Parkside in the programming&#13;
contest are urged to attend. The&#13;
meeting is open to all interested&#13;
students.&#13;
SWEA&#13;
The student committee from&#13;
this year's Teaching Excellence&#13;
•Awards in conjunction with the&#13;
Parkside chapter of the&#13;
S o u t h e a ster n Wiscon sin&#13;
Educator's Association announces&#13;
a reception to feature the&#13;
presentation of Shirley Kersey's&#13;
Teaching Excellence Award. The&#13;
reception will be held tonight at&#13;
8:30 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Nurses Organization&#13;
The next UW-Parkside Student&#13;
Nurses Organization meeting will&#13;
be held on Monday, Dec. 7 in&#13;
Union 207 at noon. All students&#13;
enrolled in the nursing program&#13;
are invited to attend.&#13;
Patronize Ranger Aduertisers!!!&#13;
PRELIMINARY JURYING&#13;
Saturday, January 16, entries due before 10 a. m.&#13;
Bring 3 pieces to:&#13;
Wustum Museum&#13;
2519 Northwestern Ave.&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
or mail 10 slides to:&#13;
223-6th Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
53403&#13;
20th ANNUAL&#13;
MONUMENT SQUARE AIR FAIR&#13;
June 12-13,1982&#13;
For more information call (414) 637-7706 or 633-3215&#13;
1 O% DISCOUNT&#13;
Parkside students and faculty&#13;
members only, on all merchandise&#13;
in our store. Parkside l.D. required&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
JEWELERS&#13;
Kvnotiu'i Diamond Cantor&#13;
5617 - 6th Avenue&#13;
Phone 658-2525 Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Shimmer&#13;
THE BAN D SHIMMER&#13;
performed at the PAB -&#13;
sponsored Thanksgiving&#13;
dance Wednesday, Nov. 25 in&#13;
the Union S quare.&#13;
Warren to discuss government spying&#13;
Can the United States government&#13;
spy on and harass any&#13;
organization in this country whose&#13;
ideas it considers "subversive"?&#13;
According to a speaker coming&#13;
to Parkside on December 9, that is&#13;
what the government claims in&#13;
the lawsuit of the Socialist&#13;
Workers Party against the FBI,&#13;
CIA, and INS.&#13;
This claim was made after the&#13;
government was forced to admit&#13;
that in over 40 yea rs of int ensive&#13;
spying it found no evidence of any&#13;
illegal acts by the SWP. The&#13;
speaker will describe how the&#13;
lawsuit pried loose secret&#13;
PSGA, cont. . ..&#13;
government files that reveal how&#13;
the government has acted on that&#13;
claim to spy on, harass and&#13;
disrupt scores of legal&#13;
organizations pursuing legal goals&#13;
with legal methods: Black,&#13;
Latino, and other civil rights&#13;
groups, women's rights groups,&#13;
peace organizations, anti -&#13;
pollution groups, student&#13;
organizations, labor unions and&#13;
others.&#13;
The speaker is Mac Warren,&#13;
engaged in a national tour&#13;
representing the Political Rights&#13;
Defense Fund (PRDF). The&#13;
PRDF is a civil liberties group&#13;
with broad national sponsorship,&#13;
established to raise funds for and&#13;
to publicize the SWP lawsuit. The&#13;
suit is nearing conclusion in New&#13;
York Federal District Court after&#13;
more than five years of litigation.&#13;
Warren will discuss the lawsuit&#13;
and related cases, and their&#13;
significance for American&#13;
freedom.&#13;
Warren's presentation is&#13;
scheduled for Wednesday, Dec. 9,&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Molinaro 213. The&#13;
meeting is sponsored by the&#13;
Political Science Club. It is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
Senate fails to override veto&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
Chancellor was in negotiations&#13;
with the committee," pointed out&#13;
Phil Pogreba. "I want to know&#13;
why the Senate wasn't informed&#13;
on that and also wasn't informed&#13;
on his decision."&#13;
Slama answered, "The chair did&#13;
make a statement last week. I&#13;
believe I spoke on the matter at&#13;
the time."&#13;
"The problem we have here is&#13;
not what the Chancellor had'&#13;
decided," said Pogreba. "I think&#13;
everyone knew that he had&#13;
decided to give her the award with&#13;
his signature. But what the Senate&#13;
didn't know was that the committee&#13;
and the Chancellor had&#13;
come to a compromise.&#13;
"I'm sure that if Shirley Kersey&#13;
doesn't receive this award she'll&#13;
understand that the students are&#13;
" i iii n i a s s |&#13;
taking a position that they feel is&#13;
correct — and that's the most&#13;
important thing," concluded&#13;
Ripp, making a motion to override&#13;
Kreuser's veto.&#13;
Pfaffl seconded the motion to&#13;
override the veto. The motion&#13;
failed 3-7 with Steve Mertz, Pffafl&#13;
and Rip p vot i n g "Aye" and&#13;
Earlene Frederick, Randy Klees,&#13;
John Peterson, Pogreba,&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez, Luis&#13;
Valldejuli and Dave White voting&#13;
"Nay".&#13;
Valldejuli then presented the&#13;
following motion to the Senate:&#13;
"Whereas Senator Joe Ripp is&#13;
responsible for the presentation of&#13;
insufficient and incorrect information&#13;
before the PSGA, Inc.&#13;
Senate. Being it the fact that&#13;
because of this misinformation&#13;
the PSGA, Inc. Senate has not&#13;
Parkside&#13;
STILL&#13;
^ V Has Style"&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
I.D. Required&#13;
presents:&#13;
LENNY&#13;
This Friday, Dec. 4&#13;
- Sunday, Dec. 6&#13;
Rated R&#13;
Admission $1.50 7:30 p.m. Union Cinema&#13;
NEXT WE EKS M OV IE&#13;
TH E GREAT S AN T I NI&#13;
Rated PG&#13;
been able to reach an agreement&#13;
on a most important issue. Be it&#13;
moved that Senator Joe Ripp is&#13;
being censured by the PSGA, Inc.&#13;
Senate."&#13;
"Censureship," explained&#13;
Slama, "is the Senate taking a&#13;
stand or telling one of its members&#13;
that something that that person&#13;
did was not in agreement with the&#13;
Senate rules or Constitution or&#13;
was objectionable to the Senate.&#13;
It's nothing more than a public&#13;
slap on the hand."&#13;
"I'd like to point out the seriousness&#13;
of censurship," said Pogreba.&#13;
"First of aD, censureship should&#13;
only be considered after an investigation.&#13;
I don't feel there was&#13;
an investigation done. If there&#13;
was, I'm sure it was a totally&#13;
biased investigation. You should&#13;
only censure somebody if they&#13;
flagrantly mislead the Senate. I&#13;
don't think Joe did that.&#13;
Pfaffl said that censureship and&#13;
i m p e a c h m e n ts d e str oy&#13;
organizations. "It brings on&#13;
factionalism. We have enough&#13;
factionalism. I just hope that you&#13;
realize that as representatives of&#13;
students at Parkside there are&#13;
many things here that the&#13;
students are upset over than the&#13;
Teaching Excellence Award. So I&#13;
feel we have our priorities all&#13;
wrong here. We have other issues&#13;
to deal with that will enhance our&#13;
political hand on this campus&#13;
rather than destroy it, which I&#13;
think we are doing right now."&#13;
The motion to censure Ripp&#13;
failed 3-7 with Klees, Peterson and&#13;
Valldejuli voting "Aye" and&#13;
Frederick, Mertz, Pfaffl,&#13;
Pogreba, Ripp, Rodriguez and&#13;
White voting "Nay."&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAINOFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
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Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C. &#13;
Dramatic Arts to open&#13;
The Doctor's Farces" tonight&#13;
"The Doctor's Farces: An&#13;
Evening with Anton Chekhov" is&#13;
the fall dramatic arts studio&#13;
production at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside. Performances&#13;
are on two consecutive&#13;
weekends, Thursday through&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 3-5, at 8 p.m.,&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 6, at 2 p.m., and&#13;
Friday and Saturday, Dec. 11-12,&#13;
at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Studio Theater.&#13;
Because of limited seating in the&#13;
studio, reservations are suggested&#13;
and can be made by calling 553-&#13;
2345 or 553-2042. Admission is $2&#13;
for UW-P students, staff and&#13;
senior citizens; $3 for others.&#13;
Norman Gano of the dramatic&#13;
arts faculty will direct the three&#13;
short farces which deal with the&#13;
ways and wiles of men and women&#13;
in Chekhov's turn - of - the -&#13;
century Russia.&#13;
In "The Bear" (also known as&#13;
"The Boar") a landowner and a&#13;
widow square off; "The Night&#13;
Before the Trial" tells of a few&#13;
moments in the lives of a traveling&#13;
man and a young wife (not his);&#13;
and "The Anniversary" deals&#13;
with the world of business, of&#13;
banks and the way best - laid plans&#13;
go awry.&#13;
Members of the acting ensemble&#13;
are Rebecca Julich,&#13;
Racine; Delina Christie,&#13;
Burlington; and Alan Ventura,&#13;
David Schroeder and Charles&#13;
Neustifter, all of Kenosha. James&#13;
Reeves of Union Grove is&#13;
technical director, John Miskulin&#13;
of Racine is stage manager and&#13;
Patricia Casciaro of Kenosha is in&#13;
charge of make - up. Costumes are&#13;
by Barbara Thompson of the&#13;
dramatic arts staff.&#13;
Viewpoint&#13;
UW-P student models for art classes&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Art is the study of drawing,&#13;
painting and sculpture. Art is also&#13;
the product of a creative&#13;
imagination. While some people&#13;
produce art, others are needed as&#13;
models of that art.&#13;
Throughout history, society has&#13;
chosen to draw, paint and sculpt&#13;
the nude figure, the ideal being to&#13;
illustrate beauty and form and to&#13;
aid in the study of structure and&#13;
anatomy. The art discipline at&#13;
UW-Parkside has also chosen to&#13;
learn about art with the benefit if&#13;
a nude figure. "The reason for&#13;
being unclothed is to reveal the&#13;
muscle structure. All of your&#13;
weight rests on your pelvic area,&#13;
and by determining where the&#13;
weight is distributed, you can tell&#13;
which muscles are relaxed or&#13;
tensed," said Jeff Frederick.&#13;
Frederick is one of Parkside's&#13;
nude models. He continued,&#13;
"Some of the differences in poses&#13;
are obvious to the way the spine is&#13;
curved. Some are more subtle,&#13;
and being unclothed makes them&#13;
more apparent."&#13;
Frederick's first experience as&#13;
a model was probably his worst,&#13;
he says. "At first I was very&#13;
nervous, I was new at this and I&#13;
didn't know anyone else who had&#13;
done it. By the time the second&#13;
session rolled around, I was so&#13;
relaxed that I was groggy. I&#13;
realized by then that the artists&#13;
are so engrossed in their work that&#13;
Arts fair to be held Saturday&#13;
Two hundred exhibitors will&#13;
display their wares at the seventh&#13;
annual Holiday Arts and Crafts&#13;
Fair at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside on Saturday,&#13;
Dec. 5, from 10 a .m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
There is no admission charge.&#13;
The addition of 40 more&#13;
exhibition spaces this year will&#13;
extend the "shopping mall" area&#13;
to 1,000 feet , stretching from the&#13;
Campus Union down the entire&#13;
length of the concourse linking the&#13;
academic buildings and into&#13;
Upper Main Place of the Library -&#13;
Learning Center. Free parking is&#13;
available in the Union and&#13;
Communication Arts parking lots.&#13;
Exhibits will include jewelry,&#13;
ceramics, needlework, batik,&#13;
macrame, woodwork, metalwork,&#13;
prints, paintings and holiday&#13;
decorations.&#13;
The Parkside Child Care Center&#13;
will provide creative craft activities&#13;
for children in the Union&#13;
Bazaar, where Santa will be&#13;
present.&#13;
The Arts and Crafts Fair is&#13;
sponsored by the student Parkside&#13;
Activities Board.&#13;
GIFTS&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
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they don't realize your unclothed&#13;
nature," Frederick said.&#13;
Frederick also feels that his&#13;
modeling work is a good experience:&#13;
"When I can stand up&#13;
and pose in front of twenty - two&#13;
people, it enriches my self confidence&#13;
and allows me to deal with&#13;
feelings of being in an odd&#13;
position."&#13;
Since I've been modeling, I've&#13;
become more conscious of my&#13;
body and my posture. I've also&#13;
learned that the human body is&#13;
always flexing or moving in some&#13;
way. Sometimes it's really hard to&#13;
hold a pose, because you feel your&#13;
body moving, but you can't,"&#13;
Frederick said.&#13;
Frederick is considering&#13;
transferring to a different school&#13;
in the future, but he feels that if he&#13;
had the opportunity to model&#13;
again, he would.&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
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EXCLUDED.&#13;
1 Coupon per Album or Tape Good thru Dec. 10th, 1981&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
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WE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU GROW! &#13;
6 Thursday, December 3,1981 RANGER&#13;
STEVE STEPHENS&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
nrroNA BEACH&#13;
SPRING BREAK&#13;
'82&#13;
7 / V MARCH&#13;
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ONLY *219&#13;
FOR APPLICATION AND FURTHER INFORMATION&#13;
CONTACT:&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION, ROOM209 — 553-2200&#13;
Inside UW-P Sports&#13;
Stephens resigns&#13;
coaching position&#13;
by Greg Bonofiglio&#13;
Citing budget cuts and a deemphasis&#13;
of sports, Steve&#13;
Stephens announced last week&#13;
that he will resign at the end of&#13;
this season as head coach of the&#13;
Parkside Rangers. The announcement&#13;
was made with less&#13;
than one week remaining until the&#13;
start of the 1981-82 basketball&#13;
season.&#13;
Stephens, 45, will remain with&#13;
the University as an associate&#13;
professor of Physical Education&#13;
and coach of the Parkside golf&#13;
team. He has been head basketball&#13;
coach at Parkside since the&#13;
school opened in 1969. Stephens&#13;
brings a fine 195-139 re cord into&#13;
the upcoming season scheduled to&#13;
open Tuesday at Illinois Institute&#13;
of Technology.&#13;
In a press release dated last&#13;
Wednesday, Stephens indicated&#13;
that the budget cutbacks in the&#13;
UW-Parkside athletic department&#13;
announced by Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin this past summer were&#13;
influential in making the decision&#13;
he said he had been considering&#13;
for the past couple of years. "It&#13;
forced me to take a hard look —&#13;
right now — at my future. With&#13;
one coach, the job not only will be&#13;
all the more difficult, but there is&#13;
no doubt that the cutback will&#13;
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Now's the time to build up your library; buy&#13;
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PERSONALS&#13;
SINGLETARIANS: small group discussion in&#13;
a relaxed home atmosphere. Meets every&#13;
Friday night, 8:15 p.m., 412 - 9th Street,&#13;
Racine. Dec. 4 topic: Recognizing Your&#13;
Accomplishments.&#13;
BIG PARTY. Everyone invited. Saturday,&#13;
Dec. 5. Parkside Village Apt. #107. 8:30 p.m.&#13;
COLLEGE REP&#13;
WANTED&#13;
To distribute "Student&#13;
Rate" subscription cards at&#13;
this campus. Good income,&#13;
no selling involved. For&#13;
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4337 W. Indian School "C",&#13;
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REC CENTER&#13;
WEEKLY SPECIALS&#13;
Dec. 7 - Dec. 12&#13;
RED PIN&#13;
$3.00 Nite&#13;
Moonlite Bowl&#13;
60Ygame&#13;
All you can bowl&#13;
or play pool&#13;
90Vgame&#13;
MON. 9 a.m. 'til Noon&#13;
TUE. Noon 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 3 p.m. 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
THUR. 7 p.m. 'til 10 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 10 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
SAT. 8 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
mean a de-emphasis of the level of&#13;
basketball Parkside has been&#13;
playing, at least for the&#13;
foreseeable future. Since I was not&#13;
enthused by the prospect of&#13;
heading such a program, the deemphasis&#13;
simply reinforced my&#13;
prior feelings about giving up&#13;
basketball," he said.&#13;
"Once I made my decision to&#13;
step down, it became a question of&#13;
whether to announce it before,&#13;
during, or after the season. I&#13;
decided it was best for me, the&#13;
team, and the program to do it&#13;
now. It will end speculation, which&#13;
would have been disruptive during&#13;
the season, and allow the&#13;
university plenty of time to select&#13;
a replacement. I don't know what&#13;
the future holds for Parkside&#13;
basketball, but I hope that&#13;
assistant coach Rudy Collum&#13;
would be seriously considered for&#13;
the head job, if he is interested in&#13;
it. Rudy has contributed immensely&#13;
to the success of the&#13;
program during the 10 years we&#13;
have been together," said&#13;
Stephens.&#13;
Included in the budget cutback&#13;
plans is the elimination of the&#13;
assistant basketball coaching&#13;
position, currently held by&#13;
Collum, effective at the end of the&#13;
season. Collum is credited with&#13;
recruiting such players as&#13;
Leartha Scott (1977), Lonnie&#13;
Lewis (1979), and Reggie Anderson&#13;
(1981) to the Parkside&#13;
basketball program. All became&#13;
first - team NAIA All - Americans&#13;
while at Parkside.&#13;
Parkside's first All - American&#13;
was Abdul Jeelani. A Racine&#13;
native, Jeelani played under the&#13;
name of Gary Cole while at&#13;
Parkside. The University Athletic&#13;
Hall of Famer went on to play in&#13;
the NBA for the Portland&#13;
Trailblazers and the Dallas&#13;
Mavericks, and is now playing&#13;
professional ball in Italy.&#13;
In Stephens' 23 years of&#13;
coaching, his teams have accumulated&#13;
an impressive 341-196&#13;
record. He began his coaching&#13;
career at Beaver Dam High&#13;
School, where his record was 70-&#13;
27. In 1964, he became basketball&#13;
coach and athletic director at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Kenosha&#13;
extension. While there, his teams&#13;
compiled a 76-30 record and took 8&#13;
of 13 conferenc e titles.&#13;
Since he was first named head&#13;
coach at Parkside in 1969,&#13;
Stephens' teams have posted five&#13;
20 or more win seasons. The&#13;
Rangers have earned a record&#13;
four straight NAIA District 14&#13;
titles (1975-78) and have appeared&#13;
in the district championship game&#13;
in each of the past three seasons.&#13;
During the last seven seasons,&#13;
the Rangers have won 85 per cent&#13;
of their games (143-69) in a&#13;
schedule which included thirty -&#13;
eight NCAA Division I opponents&#13;
from some of the major conferences&#13;
in the country. This has&#13;
earned Stephens the distinct&#13;
reputation of having the toughest&#13;
small college schedule in the&#13;
country. While their record&#13;
against Division I is only 8-30,&#13;
almost half of their losses were by&#13;
less than 10 points despite playing&#13;
on the road.&#13;
Stephens has received seven&#13;
different district NCAA, NAIA,&#13;
and WICA Coach of the Year&#13;
awards, and is the current&#13;
President of the NAIA National&#13;
Coaches Association. Last&#13;
summer, he was chosen as an&#13;
assistant coach of the U.S. team&#13;
which won the World University&#13;
Games in Romania.&#13;
In announcing his decision,&#13;
Stephens said that it has been&#13;
something that has been on his&#13;
mind for some time. "I've been&#13;
seriously considering stepping&#13;
down for the past couple of years.&#13;
It hasn't been a question of 'if' as&#13;
much as 'when.' From October to&#13;
March, for 23 years, it's been&#13;
pretty much a seven - day week.&#13;
That's a lot of basketball," he&#13;
said.&#13;
"Looking back, I had an opportunity&#13;
several years ago to&#13;
take over a good (NCAA) Division&#13;
I program, but I passed it up. I&#13;
didn't realize it at the time, but&#13;
maybe even then I was&#13;
questioning my long - term&#13;
commitment to coaching&#13;
basketball."&#13;
Stephens is a 1959 g raduate of&#13;
UW-Madison. As a player for the&#13;
Badgers, he earned three varsity&#13;
letters while leading the team in&#13;
assists and free throw accuracy as&#13;
a senior. He received a master's&#13;
degree from Madison in 1962.&#13;
In addition to his other duties at&#13;
Parkside, Stephens indicated that&#13;
he has some personal and&#13;
business interests that he plans to&#13;
explore. Among his business interests&#13;
is a successful Angus&#13;
breeding farm he owns near&#13;
Platteville. his birthplace and&#13;
home town.&#13;
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Weightlifting club gets off the ground&#13;
bv by KKarareon n Norwood V'nr,, n„j " " +J&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Move over Table Tennis Club&#13;
there s a new club on the block or&#13;
rather there soon will be 'its&#13;
name? The Weightlifting Club of&#13;
course.&#13;
Tom Lesniak, a Parkside&#13;
Sophomore, has taken the burden&#13;
upon his shoulders to form a&#13;
Weightlifting Club at Parkside. He&#13;
filled out the necessary forms and&#13;
got an advisor, Loran Hein.&#13;
Lesniak's reasons for forming&#13;
the club were few but good.&#13;
"Publicity. We (the weightlifters)&#13;
are athletes just like any other,"&#13;
he said. His second reason was to&#13;
draw attention to the maintenance&#13;
of the weightlifting room. "The&#13;
conditions in the weight room are&#13;
slowly decaying; equipment is not&#13;
being replaced; plates are&#13;
missing. We'd like to see it a little&#13;
better taken care of. It seems like&#13;
nothing is taken care of until it&#13;
breaks, and that can be very&#13;
dangerous, especially on the&#13;
heavy exercises. That's the last&#13;
thing that you want, a bar&#13;
collapsing on you while you have it&#13;
overhead," he said.&#13;
Aside from that, what will the&#13;
club provide? A competitive atmosphere,&#13;
for one thing: "I feel&#13;
that if we join together we can get&#13;
more done," he said. The club will&#13;
also open channels of communication&#13;
among the&#13;
weightlifters, according to&#13;
Lesniak. Someone with a special&#13;
technique of lifting weights will&#13;
have a chance to pass it on to other&#13;
club members.&#13;
The club will also provide a goal&#13;
for its members. "Right now there&#13;
is nothing to work for. There is&#13;
only self - gratification," Lesniak&#13;
said. "What I hope to have at the&#13;
end of the next semester is a little&#13;
power meet. We have some guys&#13;
"The conditions in the&#13;
Lveightroom are slowly&#13;
decaying; we'd like to&#13;
see it a little better&#13;
taken care of."&#13;
that are fairly strong, but they&#13;
aren't exactly ready for any&#13;
power meets. Maybe a few are&#13;
ready for some serious novice&#13;
meets, but I think that if we had a&#13;
meet of our own, it would inspire&#13;
us."&#13;
Lesniak, a former "drill&#13;
sergeant" at Vic Tanny, explains&#13;
why the Weightlifting Club is&#13;
better than a posh health club.&#13;
"It's nice, but the price is high. It&#13;
could cost you $400 for one year.&#13;
Also, they have switched over&#13;
now, and gotten more public&#13;
appeal by taking out their barbells&#13;
and dumbells and replacing them&#13;
with machines, which we&#13;
(powerlifters, bodybuilders and&#13;
weightlifters) have a very limited&#13;
use for."&#13;
The basement barbeller could&#13;
also benefit from the Weightlifting&#13;
Club. "In the basement it is hard.&#13;
At first it s i all right, but there is a&#13;
certain point at which you can go&#13;
no further," states Lesniak. "You&#13;
either lack weights or certain&#13;
equipment, or it is just inconvenient&#13;
to do certain things.&#13;
Also, there is no one down there.&#13;
That's the biggest thing. You've&#13;
got to have people around.&#13;
Otherwise it s i too boring, too easy&#13;
to quit. If you have people there it&#13;
makes it a bit more fun."&#13;
The Weightlifting Club will&#13;
basically focus on powerlifting&#13;
routines, which in essence are&#13;
three different exercises: the&#13;
squat, the bench and the deadlift.&#13;
According to Lesniak, these three&#13;
exercises, when combined, use&#13;
"practically the whole body, and&#13;
(the exercises) enable us to use&#13;
the heaviest weights possible."&#13;
The club will also do some body&#13;
building.&#13;
As of the time of this writing, the&#13;
Weightlifting Club had not yet had&#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;
Atlanta at Tampa Bay&#13;
Buffalo at San Diego&#13;
Dallas at Baltimore&#13;
Tie breaker: Total&#13;
combined points&#13;
for the Green Bay&#13;
game&#13;
Detroit at Green Bay&#13;
Kansas City at Denver&#13;
Los Angeles at N.Y. Giants&#13;
Minnesota at Chicago&#13;
New England at Miami -&#13;
New Orleans at St. Louis&#13;
N.Y. Jets at Seattle&#13;
Philadelphia at Washington&#13;
San Francisco at Cincinnati&#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;
its first organizational meeting.&#13;
Over fifty people were expected to&#13;
show up for it on Wednesday. The&#13;
club is open to everyone, both&#13;
male and female, and is especially&#13;
recommended by Lesniak for&#13;
athletes in their off - seasons.&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
Dec. Graduates in Computer&#13;
Science with Business Degrees&#13;
ARMCO invites you to become a&#13;
member of our ever growing ARMCO&#13;
family.&#13;
We are a Fortune 100 Cor poration with&#13;
over 60,000 employe es worldwide.&#13;
Northwestern National Insurance Co.&#13;
is a Milwaukeee based member of the&#13;
ARMCO Insurance Group and is&#13;
currently interviewing for programmers.&#13;
If you are interested in a career&#13;
with a stable company, with many&#13;
opportunities for advancement and&#13;
growth, we have the spot for you. Our&#13;
operating environment is as follows:&#13;
IBM 4341&#13;
VM/370/CMS&#13;
DOS/VS&#13;
COBOL&#13;
ASSEMBLER&#13;
CICS&#13;
We offer an excellent starting salary&#13;
along with a fine benefits package&#13;
including profit sharing, tuition&#13;
reimbursement, and a thrift - sav ings&#13;
plan, free parking, and a company&#13;
subsidized cafeteria.&#13;
Send Your Resume At Once To&#13;
LAVERNE BACKES&#13;
NORTHWESTERN NATIONAL INS. CO.&#13;
731 N. Jackson Milwaukee, Wi. 53201&#13;
Member Armco Ins. Group&#13;
An equal opportunity employer.&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selection&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10:00 a m - 4:00 pm&#13;
• SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
• JUBE JELLS&#13;
• CARAMELS&#13;
• CARAMEL BULLIES&#13;
• ROYALS&#13;
• TOFFEES&#13;
• JOTS&#13;
• BRIDGE MIX&#13;
• MALTED MILK BALLS&#13;
• CHOC. CREME DROPS&#13;
• CHOC. RAISINS&#13;
• CHOC. PEANUTS&#13;
• PEANUT BUTTER CUPS&#13;
• STARS&#13;
• YOGURT PEANUTS&#13;
• CAROB MALTED MILK&#13;
BALLS&#13;
• CAROB PEANUTS&#13;
• SUNFLOWER SEEDS&#13;
• CARIBBEAN DELICACY&#13;
• CALIFORNIA MIX&#13;
• STUDENT FOOD&#13;
• GIANT CASHEWS&#13;
• NATURAL PISTACHIOS&#13;
• SPANISH PEANUTS&#13;
• BLANCHED PEANUTS&#13;
• YOGURT RAISINS&#13;
• YOGU RT SESAM E&#13;
BRITTLE&#13;
• RED SKIN PEANUTS&#13;
• MINT COOLERS&#13;
• STARLIGHT MINTS&#13;
• SOUR BALLS&#13;
• CINNAMON DISKS&#13;
• COFFEE&#13;
• BUTTERSCOTCH DISKS&#13;
• ROOT BEER BARRELS&#13;
• POPS&#13;
• P E A N UT B U TTE R&#13;
KISSES&#13;
• PEPPERMINT KISSES&#13;
• LICORICE BULLIES&#13;
•JELLY BEANS&#13;
• ASSORTED PERKYS&#13;
• ORANGE SLICES&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF DEC. 7&#13;
CHRISTMAS&#13;
PEPPERMINTS&#13;
40% O FF &#13;
Ranger&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Join the Ranger Rooters ! ! !&#13;
Come on out for exciting UW-Parkside basketball in 1981-82&#13;
FRIDAY NIGHT IS BUCK NIGHT I I I&#13;
The Rangers open their home season against St. Xavier College and&#13;
all tickets, in advance or at the door, are only $1. Game time is 7:30.&#13;
ALSO FEATURED ON FRIDAY NIGHT ...&#13;
• Junior Ranger Club for kids 12 and under&#13;
• Enthusiastic cheerleaders and the new "Rangerette"&#13;
cheerleading squad with half-time entertainment&#13;
• Post-game entertainment at Union Square featuring&#13;
the Booze Brothers . . . rf e e admission for game-goers ....&#13;
7:30 P.M., MONDAY, RAN6ERS vs. LORAS COLLEGE&#13;
• Post-game entertainment, with free admission for bas ketball&#13;
fans, at Union Square featuring the R &amp; B Cadets&#13;
1981-82 UW-PARKSIDE HOME BASKETBALL SCHEDULE&#13;
(all games 7:30 p.m. at UW-P Physical Education Bldg. unless otherwise noted)&#13;
Friday, Dec. 4 — St. Xavier&#13;
Monday, Dec. 7 — Loras College&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 15 — Ferris State&#13;
Monday - Tuesday, Dec. 28-29 —&#13;
Ranger Classic (7 8.9 p.m.)&#13;
(Saginaw Valley, Carthage, Oshkosh)&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 2 — UW-Platteville&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 12 — Lakeland&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 14 — McNeese State&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 16 — St. Norbert&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 20 — Illinois Tech&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 30 — Northern&#13;
Michigan&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 10— UW-Milwaukee </text>
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              <text>Open Forum - Guskin addresses proposed tuition surcharge</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="90621">
              <text>l&#13;
IP University of Wisconsin - Porkside&#13;
Thursday, December 10, 1981&#13;
IS tbe seasop to spcpd n)ope.r:&#13;
Jfa fa fa fa fa, ra fa fa fa.&#13;
I it) &gt;3o broke, it isp't Puppy;&#13;
Ja fa fa fa fa, Za fa fa fa&#13;
HXPRESS^ hjto debt arid) £ay abandon;&#13;
4,Sy _&lt;^vja Za fa fa, Za fa fa.&#13;
^—r Credit cards are njopeyls stapdrin&#13;
j&amp;f* fa fa fa fa, Za fa fa fa!&#13;
VISA MAVER&#13;
FCCCEPTED&#13;
ASTROro&#13;
^«IST/Vt&#13;
Let) and Barbie are bionic: — |&#13;
Jfa fa la la la~Za fa fa fa?&#13;
Lnen &lt;5crabble's electronic: J?&#13;
Ja fa fa fa la; £a la fa fa! C 3&#13;
JVoay tbeybe put soiye toys witlj braips out&#13;
Za fa la, (Bob la fa, Za he ha,&#13;
T1)at get depressed uri)ei)e'er it raips out:&#13;
Jfa fa la la fa, 3Et extern. w&#13;
WE'LL M OVE O N TO C HRISTMAS&#13;
IN A MOMENT, BUT FIRST A&#13;
FEW FINAL WORDS...&#13;
- drp&amp;n mcZZd %(MU&#13;
^0%&#13;
What's going on at UW-Parkside?&#13;
Just look INSIDE . . .&#13;
* Surcharge "modest,"&#13;
Nwv Guskin tells students&#13;
^ * Milwaukee night life&#13;
/&#13;
beats the blues&#13;
• Women's basketball&#13;
gets going&#13;
• Slama ele cted PSGA&#13;
Vice President&#13;
• Reviews: "Doctor's&#13;
Farces!' and Village&#13;
Voice rock critic&#13;
• Fall sports letter&#13;
winners announced&#13;
• Book Exchange gears up&#13;
for 2nd semester sal es&#13;
* Is social drinking&#13;
a problem at UW-P?&#13;
* Rangers win 3 of 4&#13;
openers &#13;
2 Thursday, December 10,1981 RANGER&#13;
Open Forum&#13;
Guskin addresses proposed tuition surcharge&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The proposed $23 tuition surcharge&#13;
was the major topic of&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin's second&#13;
open forum with students this&#13;
semester. Only a dozen students&#13;
attended the Dec. 2 forum.&#13;
Phil Pogreba, a PSGA Senator,&#13;
asked Guskin where last year's&#13;
surcharge money was spent.&#13;
Guskin explained that the surcharge&#13;
- generated money was a&#13;
part of a pool of funds that are&#13;
usually allocated but weren't in&#13;
order to make up for budget cuts&#13;
the university system faced. "So,&#13;
in effect," said Guskin, "the&#13;
campus never saw that money. It&#13;
was sort of given with one hand&#13;
and taken with the other. (This&#13;
year) I don't think it's going to be&#13;
a very different situation."&#13;
Everything depends on what&#13;
Governor Dreyfus says in his&#13;
January revenue statement.&#13;
Guskin said, "If the Governor&#13;
says that we have enough money&#13;
in the state to fund what we said&#13;
we were going to fund in the state&#13;
and if we get the $23 per student —&#13;
which would be in the order of&#13;
$75,000 - 80,000 — my guess is that&#13;
we'll use (the money) for the&#13;
library, materials in the labs —&#13;
things of that nature that we're&#13;
really hard pressed on now.&#13;
"What will happen in January,&#13;
however, is the Governor will&#13;
come out with revenue projections&#13;
for the fourth quarter and the&#13;
experience of the second and third&#13;
quarters," said Guskin. "The&#13;
result of that will be, everybody is&#13;
estimating, not very good news for&#13;
the state."&#13;
Guskin said that a lot of the&#13;
"$23 urns a modest&#13;
amount giuen the&#13;
benefits that it would&#13;
bring about."&#13;
surcharge money will probably go&#13;
to make up for the mandated cuts.&#13;
"So we'll still be behind the eight -&#13;
ball," he said. "So the library still&#13;
will have less books than we feel is&#13;
appropriate and labs still will not&#13;
have the chemicals and other&#13;
materials that we think are&#13;
necessary," he said.&#13;
Mike Pfaffl, a PSGA Senator&#13;
who organized a letter writing&#13;
campaign to State Senator John&#13;
Maurer against the surcharge,&#13;
asked Guskin why there aren't&#13;
any long term solutions to the UW&#13;
System's financial woes. Pfaffl&#13;
also noted that the UW System&#13;
budget was only cut 2% while all&#13;
other state agencies were cut 8%,&#13;
and that the UW System is enjoying&#13;
higher enrollments than&#13;
projected.&#13;
"Students, because of the 2%&#13;
cut and because of the formula,&#13;
probably paid the lowest tuition&#13;
increase in the entire country,"&#13;
said Guskin. "The average in the&#13;
country is 13 percent; students&#13;
here paid 4.5 percent. I personally&#13;
think it was much too low and was&#13;
a mistake and we're suffering now&#13;
with the mistake because&#13;
students, not inappropriately, say&#13;
we don't want to pay any more."&#13;
Guskin suggested that the&#13;
money should have been picked up&#13;
with a larger tuition increase,&#13;
maybe 6 or 7 percent, because&#13;
then it would become part of the&#13;
base. "What's happening with this&#13;
surcharge business is that every&#13;
year we have to go back and&#13;
request again because it's not part&#13;
of the base and qilite appropriately&#13;
the students are upset.&#13;
"The problem we really have,&#13;
which is a very ticklish one, is can&#13;
the university continue to sustain&#13;
the kind of cuts that are brought&#13;
about by inflation and the lack of&#13;
"Students probably paid&#13;
the lowest tuition&#13;
increase in the entire&#13;
country&#13;
money and can we continue to&#13;
sustain that over a long period and&#13;
still maintain the kind of quality&#13;
university we want?"&#13;
Guskin said that access always&#13;
has to be balanced with quality.&#13;
"You can't just look at access&#13;
alone because you have to have&#13;
access to an institution that you&#13;
respect," he said. "Just having&#13;
access to the halls doesn't mean&#13;
very much. Having access to a&#13;
library that doesn't have the&#13;
books you want doesn't make a&#13;
whole lot of sense."&#13;
Guskin feels that we are&#13;
heading for a very difficult period&#13;
in terms of access to universities&#13;
and quality in universities. "I&#13;
think Reagan doesn't really care a&#13;
whole lot about access. I believe&#13;
the philosophy of Reagan and the&#13;
people around him is such that&#13;
universities like this are not high&#13;
on his agenda.&#13;
"(Dreyfus), as a person, is&#13;
deeply committed to access," said&#13;
Guskin. "He's also a politician,&#13;
though. Now, he's not a chancellor&#13;
of a university any longer and he's&#13;
got to worry also about running&#13;
for election in a year and that&#13;
affects a lot of things he does. But&#13;
nevertheless it doesn't make a&#13;
difference what his personal&#13;
beliefs are. I think the reality is&#13;
we're headed for a very, very&#13;
tough time in terms of universities&#13;
and students having the ability to&#13;
pay the cost.&#13;
"Nobody's figures out any&#13;
answers yet," said Guskin. "I&#13;
think until we figure out what an&#13;
answer is we have to do it this&#13;
way."&#13;
Guskin said that $23 is not a lot&#13;
of money. "But the $23, m y own&#13;
feeling was, was a modest amount&#13;
given the benefits that it would&#13;
bring about. I would expect&#13;
students to disagree. That's a&#13;
difference of perspective; that's&#13;
legitimate because my job is to&#13;
protect the future of the university.&#13;
Your job is to try to figure out&#13;
how you're going to go to school."&#13;
Photo by Jim Mertens&#13;
CHANCELLOR ALAN GUSKIN talks to students during his&#13;
second 1 " 0pen forum" of the semester Dec. 2.&#13;
Other issues discussed&#13;
Bookstore, basketball program, Temple Unberslty&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Other topics discussed at the&#13;
open forum include: problems&#13;
with the bookstore, the status of&#13;
the basketball program after&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens leaves, and&#13;
Chancellor Guskin's job interviewing&#13;
for President of&#13;
Temple University.&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
Guskin has set up a small&#13;
committee consisting of Nicholas&#13;
Burckel, Guskin's executive&#13;
assistant; Jim Kreuser, PSGA&#13;
President; Linda Henderson,&#13;
administrative intern; and Dave&#13;
Holle, campus controller.&#13;
"They're actually given carte&#13;
blanche," said Guskin. "They can&#13;
come up with a recommendation&#13;
or recommendations that will&#13;
solve the bookstore problem." The&#13;
committee will report to Guskin&#13;
Dec. 15 and again probably in mid&#13;
- January.&#13;
The committee is visiting other&#13;
campus bookstores and will talk to&#13;
people at Follett Corporation,&#13;
which currently operates&#13;
Parkside's bookstore.&#13;
Said Guskin, "(The committee's&#13;
recommendation) will enable us&#13;
to do either of two things — create&#13;
a contract language with Follett&#13;
so that we get the kind of service&#13;
we want or if that's not possible,&#13;
create our own bookstore. We're&#13;
prepared to, if we have to, run our&#13;
own bookstore."&#13;
"The goal is to reach the level of&#13;
service that is expected of the&#13;
campus bookstore," said Guskin,&#13;
"namely have between 95 - 98&#13;
percent of the books in for people&#13;
registered. Then get the quality of&#13;
materials in the bookstore so that&#13;
people can enjoy walking into a&#13;
nice bookstore. That probably will&#13;
require more space and we're a&#13;
long way from solving that."&#13;
One point brought up by a&#13;
student was that the bookstore&#13;
charges five percent over a book's&#13;
list price. "That will stop," said&#13;
Guskin. "We have to figure out a&#13;
way to do that, but that will stop.&#13;
It's the result of the rental charges&#13;
and the amount of returns. We&#13;
have the highest return rate, I&#13;
think, in the country. We can"&#13;
figure out why that is and we're&#13;
going to do a number of things to&#13;
stop it."&#13;
The bookstore operated foi&#13;
three years in a row without a&#13;
profit, enabling them to charge&#13;
five percent over list price.&#13;
"I'm not being critical of the&#13;
bookstore at Follett," said&#13;
Guskin. "They're not in business&#13;
to make all of you feel good. They&#13;
hope that by making you feel good&#13;
they make money. They probably&#13;
have done neither right now."&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Guskin said that he assumes the&#13;
basketball program will continue&#13;
after Steve Stephens leaves his&#13;
coaching position. Stephens has&#13;
said this is his last season.&#13;
"I'm not terribly involved (in&#13;
the process)," said Guskin. "What&#13;
will happen, my guess is, is that&#13;
the Athletic Director will make a&#13;
recommendation to the Vice -&#13;
Chancellor. I would assume that&#13;
we're going to have a respectable&#13;
basketball program. It may not be&#13;
the same kind of program we have&#13;
now, but it may take a while to&#13;
build it back up — I don't know."&#13;
Temple University&#13;
Guskin hopes to hear from&#13;
Temple University "soon" about&#13;
his application for the presidency&#13;
of the university. "I'll be happy&#13;
when it's all over, one way or the&#13;
other," he said. "I didn't expect to&#13;
be involved in this this year. I&#13;
expected it the next two, three,&#13;
four years."&#13;
"I believe, like a lot of&#13;
presidents of universities believe,&#13;
that you should not stay more than&#13;
10 years under any circumstances&#13;
— unless you have to. Namely&#13;
because an institution needs a&#13;
change every so often in people&#13;
who are at the top because some&#13;
styles have to be changed, things&#13;
have to be done and tried again —&#13;
things that were tried and didn't&#13;
work. New people have to come in&#13;
to try it again and see if they&#13;
work."&#13;
PSGA Senate elects Kathy Slama vice-president&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
In its Dec. 2 meeting, the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. Senate moved&#13;
one step closer to having a full&#13;
slate of officers by approving&#13;
Kathy Slama as vice - president&#13;
but, for the third week in a row,&#13;
failed to elect a President Pro&#13;
Tempore and Assistant President&#13;
Pro Tempore.&#13;
Slama, previously President&#13;
Pro Tempore, has been acting&#13;
vice - president since Kathy&#13;
Bambrough resigned the post on&#13;
Nov. 18. According to the PSGA&#13;
Constitution, the PSGA President&#13;
appoints a new vice - president&#13;
with the advice and consent of a&#13;
majority of the Senate.&#13;
PSGA President Jim Kreuser's&#13;
appointment of Slama failed to be&#13;
approved when he brought it up&#13;
during his report at the beginning&#13;
of the meeting. The vote was 5-1-2&#13;
with Earlene Frederick John&#13;
Peterson, Mike Pfaffl, Luis&#13;
Valldejuli and Dave White voting&#13;
KATHY SLAMA&#13;
"Aye," Joe Ripp voting "Nay"&#13;
and Phil Pogreba and A1 Spallato&#13;
abstaining.&#13;
But towards the end of the&#13;
meeting Pogreba moved to&#13;
remotion Slama's appointment. "I&#13;
request that this be a secret ballot&#13;
and I hope that all of you don't&#13;
leave me hanging out on a limb by&#13;
myself for too long," Kreuser told&#13;
the Senate. The request for a&#13;
written ballot has to come from a&#13;
Senator, according to the PSGA&#13;
Constitution, and Valldejuli made&#13;
the request.&#13;
The secret ballot approved&#13;
Slama as the new PSGA vice -&#13;
president with a 7-0-3 v ote.&#13;
For the third week in a row, with&#13;
two ballots taken each week, the&#13;
Senate was unable to elect a&#13;
President Pro Tempore and&#13;
Assistant President Pro Tempore.&#13;
Pogreba and Rodriguez are&#13;
nominated for Pro Tempore and&#13;
Peterson and Spallato are&#13;
nominated for the Assistant&#13;
position.&#13;
The reason for the failure to&#13;
elect someone to either position is&#13;
that a two - thirds vote is needed.&#13;
There are curreiftly 13 Senators in&#13;
the 18 seat Senate making the&#13;
necessary number of votes be&#13;
nine. The problem that has&#13;
plagued the Senate for the past&#13;
three weeks is that there were&#13;
only nine or 10 Senators in attendance,&#13;
making the vote have to&#13;
be unanimous or nine out of ten,&#13;
which seems nearly impossible!&#13;
Elections for the two positions&#13;
will continue each Senate meeting&#13;
until there is a decision.&#13;
In a somewhat related matter,&#13;
Valldejuli received a two week&#13;
leave of absence with a 8-0-1&#13;
Senate vote. Valldejuli is&#13;
currently acting President Pro&#13;
Tempore; during his leave of&#13;
absence, Randy Klees, the&#13;
Senator with the highest seniority&#13;
will fill the position until&#13;
Valldejuli returns or somebody&#13;
gets elected.&#13;
Last Ranger of semester&#13;
19M ateuw"d tI"®" marks the close ot the faH seme5te&#13;
«- -&#13;
distribute^All2RanS ?&#13;
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semester. deadlines will remain effective during&#13;
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"' semester,&#13;
semester. on n&#13;
* 19 and every Tuesday of&#13;
Classified ads - noon on Jan. 15 and every Friday of the semester.&#13;
next sem^ter.^nt^fh^^^sho^r^ *** Par&#13;
.&#13;
kside community ag&#13;
holiday season! ' readers all the best of the com &#13;
Faculty Senate&#13;
Guskin, Ratner make * update report"&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin and Vice - Chancellor&#13;
Larry Ratner gave faculty an&#13;
"update" on their recent budget&#13;
presentation to the UW - System&#13;
Board of Regents and other&#13;
campus issues at the Dec. 1 late&#13;
fall Faculty Senate meeting.&#13;
The other Faculty Senate&#13;
issues, the proposed policy on&#13;
Teaching Excellence Awards and&#13;
the Policy on Merit Portion of&#13;
Annual Compensation Adjustment&#13;
for Faculty, were also discussed.&#13;
The Teaching Excellence&#13;
Awards proposal was sent back to&#13;
the University Committee for&#13;
further study after students and&#13;
faculty members present stated&#13;
their objections to the proposal.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc., will&#13;
continue working with the&#13;
Committee on the policy.&#13;
The Merit Portion proposal was&#13;
approved without dissent on a&#13;
voice vote. The policy gives the&#13;
University Committee&#13;
authorization to advise the administration&#13;
and report to the&#13;
Senate when campus discretion is&#13;
allowed for increases not specified&#13;
as merit or across - the - board.&#13;
This summer, the University&#13;
Committee made a successful&#13;
recommendation to split an&#13;
unexpected 2% "equity" adjustment&#13;
1% across - the - board,&#13;
1% merit. The Committee also&#13;
recommended that the Senate's&#13;
relative policy (PSF 8/77-78) be&#13;
"clarified" to cover such additional&#13;
increases, although the&#13;
Committee said "the designation&#13;
of such a component in the future&#13;
is unpredictable."&#13;
Guskin said his report reflected&#13;
a "hectic time" for he and Ratner&#13;
because they not only had&#13;
discussed many issues with the&#13;
Regents and System President&#13;
Robert O'Neil, but also had other&#13;
reports to make to the Senate.&#13;
Some of the issues discussed&#13;
during the meeting ere:&#13;
• Parkside as a maturing&#13;
university. Parkside, Guskin said,&#13;
should no longer be "clustered"&#13;
with other UW System schools&#13;
according to the level of education&#13;
offered. He has suggested to the&#13;
Regents that clustering be&#13;
designated by either major or&#13;
numbers of students or by history.&#13;
• The "teacher - scholar"&#13;
model. Ratner said that since the&#13;
Parkside faculty appears on many&#13;
tables to have very light teaching&#13;
loads, they decided to let the&#13;
Regents know how strongly they&#13;
felt that Parkside's faculty, as&#13;
teacher - scholars, "add breadth&#13;
to the UW System." Guskin added,&#13;
"We ask them to support us&#13;
for what we are."&#13;
• Affirmative Action. Guskin&#13;
said that this spring and summer&#13;
he will be reporting to various&#13;
local and state agencies on&#13;
progress so far and future Affirmative&#13;
Action goals at&#13;
Parkside. "This means we will&#13;
have to finish discussion of our&#13;
goals soon," he said.&#13;
• Sexual harassment. A policy&#13;
to address sexual harassment has&#13;
been sent from the Senate to the&#13;
Regents, Guskin said, with implementation&#13;
to follow approval&#13;
and the agreement of PSGA and&#13;
the academic staff.&#13;
• The Bookstore. "We have to&#13;
resolve the bookstore problem,"&#13;
Guskin said. "If we have to, we'll&#13;
run our own bookstore,. Guskin&#13;
said he has put together a committee&#13;
to "very quickly look at&#13;
some alternatives" by visiting&#13;
other campuses that have widely&#13;
diverse methods of handling&#13;
books. The committee will be&#13;
submitting a proposal by the first&#13;
of the year, he said.&#13;
• Interdisciplinary project&#13;
plans. Guskin said that several&#13;
interdisciplinary programs will be&#13;
put together at Parkside next&#13;
semester, featuring visiting&#13;
professionals and cooperative&#13;
seminar series, with other various&#13;
interdisciplinary projects occurring.&#13;
&#13;
• Budget cuts. Guskin and&#13;
Ratner also presented to the&#13;
Senate a basic version of their&#13;
Regents presentation on budget&#13;
cuts. Guskin said his method of&#13;
"using the budget as a tool of the&#13;
institution's priorities rather than&#13;
just cutting every year" makes&#13;
budgeting "a very human&#13;
process" and eliminates&#13;
automatic decreases in institutional&#13;
quality because of key&#13;
program eliminations.&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
FORMER PARKSIDE TEACHER Shirley Kersey received a&#13;
certificate in honor of her achievement from some student&#13;
members of the Teaching Excellence Awards Committee at a&#13;
reception held on Dec. 3. Kersey was denied the usual $500&#13;
stipend by Chancellor Alan Guskin on the grounds that she was&#13;
no longer employed by UW-P. After negotiating with students&#13;
this fall, Guskin agreed to sign Kersey's certificate.&#13;
Reward system on trial basis&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
In an effort to reduce and deter&#13;
crime on campus, four UW -&#13;
System campuses (Milwaukee,&#13;
Superior, Oshkosh, and Parkside)&#13;
have been offering rewards that&#13;
will pay up to $100 for information&#13;
about crimes that occur on&#13;
campus.&#13;
Although this program has only&#13;
been in effect on a trial basis for&#13;
about a month now, its effectiveness&#13;
in reducing crime is&#13;
hard to determine so far. But the&#13;
success of this program depends&#13;
on the awareness by everyone of&#13;
the Reward for Information&#13;
Program (RIP) and how it works.&#13;
"It takes time to build up the&#13;
system," says Dave Pedersen,&#13;
Dean of Student Life.&#13;
In the four years that Pedersen&#13;
has been at Parkside, he can&#13;
recount many instances that the&#13;
reason someone has been caught&#13;
for major theft and vandalism is&#13;
because a student got involved&#13;
enough to notify the proper&#13;
authorities. "The fact that the&#13;
reward system exists is a&#13;
deterrent (to crime)," Pedersen&#13;
said. "When people get used to&#13;
using it, and seeing it more, it will&#13;
be a deterrent because other&#13;
people worry about being turned&#13;
in. It's also an encouragement to&#13;
do it," he said.&#13;
Pedersen points out that the&#13;
more visible a criminal action&#13;
becomes, the less likely people are&#13;
to do it for fear of getting caught,&#13;
not only by Security, but by&#13;
students, faculty and staff as well.&#13;
Essentially, the reward system&#13;
used here is the same as police use&#13;
in other communities. If&#13;
somebody sees someone committing&#13;
a crime on campus, they&#13;
can call Security at 553-2455 a nd&#13;
inform them of what they have&#13;
seen. The caller remains&#13;
anonymous and is immediately&#13;
issued a case number. If the information&#13;
received by Security&#13;
results in the apprehension of&#13;
somebody in the act of committing&#13;
a crime, or an investigation that&#13;
leads to the apprehension of&#13;
someone who committed the&#13;
crime, Security notifies a committee,&#13;
which has been setup, that&#13;
consists of someone in the Purchasing&#13;
office, the President of&#13;
the Student Senate, and Pedersen.&#13;
"If the information turns out to be&#13;
accurate, and that is of use to&#13;
Security, then Security informs&#13;
the committee," Pedersen said.&#13;
The caller can then call Pedersen&#13;
or Security and reveal his/her&#13;
case number. The committee&#13;
determines if a reward should be&#13;
given, and if so, how much.&#13;
The emphasis of the system is&#13;
on confidentiality of the informant,&#13;
which is the reason for&#13;
the special number and the small&#13;
size of the committee. The person&#13;
collecting the reward can tell the&#13;
committee if he / she wants the&#13;
reward, which Pedersen calls "a&#13;
Thank - you fee", in cash or check,&#13;
Holiday library schedule&#13;
The Wyllie Library Learning Center will be open the following&#13;
hours during finals week and semester break:&#13;
Dec. 16 - 22 — Regular schedule except:&#13;
Dec. 18, 7:45 a.m. - 10 p .m.&#13;
Dec. 22, 7:45 a.m. - 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Dec. 23 - Jan. 17 — Mon. - Fri., 9 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.&#13;
Closed Sat. and Sun.&#13;
Dec. 24 — 9 a.m. - noon&#13;
Dec. 25 - Closed&#13;
Dec. 31 — 9 a.m. - noon&#13;
Jan. 1 — Closed&#13;
Book Exchange gears&#13;
up for business&#13;
mailed to them or picked up&#13;
personally.&#13;
Since the reward system began,&#13;
one case has already occurred.&#13;
Pedersen said that someone&#13;
witnessed University property&#13;
being taken, called Security, and&#13;
an arrest was made while the&#13;
crime was still in progress.&#13;
Pedersen said that University&#13;
discipline action has already&#13;
taken place and the eyewitness is&#13;
getting a reward.&#13;
Pedersen said that the person&#13;
who committed the crime has his&#13;
name kept confidential, as well.&#13;
"The person who was paid in 99&#13;
chances out of 100, probably&#13;
doesn't know the name of the&#13;
person he turned in. Even when he&#13;
calls Security about a reward, it's&#13;
referred to by the case number.&#13;
He's never given the name of the&#13;
person he dealt with, never,"&#13;
Pedersen said.&#13;
"You're dealing with a small&#13;
minority of people," Pedersen&#13;
says, when referring to offenders&#13;
on campus. But 96 thefts totalling&#13;
$24,331, and 27 offenses of criminal&#13;
damage to state and personal&#13;
property occurred on campus last&#13;
year. Parkside's Security&#13;
Department, faced with budget&#13;
cuts and a limited staff, can only&#13;
patrol so much at any one time&#13;
and cannot be expected to catch&#13;
all lawbreakers and solve all&#13;
thefts. It is up to the students to&#13;
prevent crime and deter vandalism,&#13;
when possible. It is hoped&#13;
by many that RIP can help.&#13;
by Susan K. Stevens&#13;
After one semester in operation,&#13;
the Campus Book Exchange is&#13;
gearing up its efforts to help&#13;
students alleviate some of the pain&#13;
involved in buying and selling&#13;
books. Extended hours are&#13;
planned for this week and next in&#13;
order to handle the rush of&#13;
students hoping to make more&#13;
money on their used books.&#13;
Although students may have to&#13;
wait until the beginning of the&#13;
spring semester for their books to&#13;
be sold, there is one distinct advantage&#13;
to selling books through&#13;
the Exchage rather than through&#13;
the Bookstore — more money.&#13;
While book sellers will receive 50&#13;
percent of the price for which they&#13;
bought their books from the&#13;
Bookstore, they will receive 55&#13;
percent of the original price from&#13;
the Exchange when their books&#13;
are sold.&#13;
Here is an example that shows&#13;
how much money students could&#13;
be saving through the Book Exchange:&#13;
&#13;
If student A buys a book from&#13;
the Exchange for $6.50 (that would&#13;
be 65% of the original price of&#13;
$10), $5.85 (55% of the original&#13;
price) would go to the person who&#13;
brought the book to the exchange.&#13;
Then if student A brings the book&#13;
back to the Exchange at the end of&#13;
the semester and it is sold, student&#13;
A would also get $5.85 when it is&#13;
sold again for $6.50.&#13;
If student A had sold the book,&#13;
which he or she had bought for&#13;
$6.50, back to the Bookstore, he or&#13;
she would receive 50% of the price&#13;
for which it was last sold — in this&#13;
case it would be $3.25. It contrast,&#13;
the student would make $2.60&#13;
more by selling the used book&#13;
through the Exchange.&#13;
There are a few changes being&#13;
made in the Exchange that will&#13;
help serve students more efficiently&#13;
next semester. Manager&#13;
Kathy Slama is currently working&#13;
on plans to sell student artwork in&#13;
cooperation with the Parkside Art&#13;
Department.&#13;
Students who have had&#13;
problems finding the right books&#13;
for their classes will be glad to&#13;
know that the Book Exchange now&#13;
has a file of all the spring&#13;
semester courses and the books&#13;
that will be required for each. The&#13;
Exchange obtained this information&#13;
through the division&#13;
offices. "Most of the division&#13;
offices were very cooperative,"&#13;
said Tim Zimmer, Book Exchange&#13;
worker. "The faculty seems to&#13;
truly want to help us. To me, that&#13;
means that they see us as a worthwhile&#13;
organization."&#13;
The Book Exchange is run with&#13;
funding from the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
budget. Although 10 percent is&#13;
taken from each book sold, the&#13;
revenues have not come near&#13;
paying expenses. The amount&#13;
generated during this first&#13;
semester of operation totalled&#13;
$91.73. Although that figure is&#13;
expected to increase, the revenues&#13;
will not pay the bills.&#13;
As Zimmer put it, "We don't&#13;
want to become a profit - making&#13;
organization. We just want to keep&#13;
our budget requests to a minimum&#13;
while serving the students in the&#13;
best way that we can."&#13;
In order to take advantage of&#13;
the end of the semester book&#13;
selling period, the Exchange will&#13;
have extended hours ' this week&#13;
and next. The specific hours are&#13;
posted on the counter of the Exchange&#13;
located in the WLLC&#13;
concourse. If business demands&#13;
that it stay open longer, the Exchange&#13;
staff, plus a few PSGA&#13;
volunteers, will keep the doors&#13;
open longer.&#13;
If you have a few books that&#13;
you'd like to sell for more, bring&#13;
them to the Book Exchange now.&#13;
The Exchange will accept books in&#13;
any condition. The students who&#13;
buy them will judge whether or&#13;
not they will sell, not the Exchange.&#13;
&#13;
UC President Krantz&#13;
visited Parkside students&#13;
President Robert Kranz of the&#13;
United Council of University of&#13;
Wisconsin Student Governments&#13;
visited the Parkside campus on&#13;
December 9. The purpose of the&#13;
visit, according to Kranz, was to&#13;
give Parkside students an opportunity&#13;
to pose questions&#13;
relating to the purposes and effectiveness&#13;
of United Council.&#13;
Kranz held office hours in the&#13;
lobby of the Student Center to&#13;
meet and talk with Parkside&#13;
students. While on campus, Kranz&#13;
also met with leaders of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, and administrative&#13;
officers. Kranz also met with the&#13;
PSGA Senate at its regularly&#13;
scheduled meeting.&#13;
Kranz has served as United&#13;
Council President since June l!&#13;
Prior to assuming office, Kranz&#13;
served as the President of the&#13;
Oshkosh Student Association&#13;
during the 80-81 a cademic year,&#13;
and until recently was a member&#13;
of the Winnebago County Board.&#13;
As United Council President,&#13;
Kranz's responsibilities include&#13;
administering the day to day&#13;
operation of United Council, and&#13;
serving as the primary liaison&#13;
between UW students and UW&#13;
System Administration and the&#13;
UW Board of Regents.&#13;
United Council is a federation of&#13;
UW Student Governments.&#13;
Currently, all UW four year&#13;
campuses, with the exception of&#13;
Eau Claire, are participating&#13;
members of United Council.&#13;
United Council is funded by a 50c&#13;
per semester refundable fee paid&#13;
by UW students on campuses&#13;
participating in United Council. &#13;
Thursday, December 10,1981 RANGER&#13;
Editorials THERE ARE. REPORTS TODAY OF&#13;
A LIBYAN HIT SQJJAD PLANNING&#13;
TO ASSASSINATE SANTA CLAUS.&#13;
WEL T AKE Y OU T O SAM P ONALDSON&#13;
Oh, no! Nudity in class!&#13;
Last week's "Viewpoint," if you remember, featured a conversation&#13;
with one of Parkside's art department models for life&#13;
drawing classes. He explained his job, talked a little about the&#13;
rest of his life and said that if he had a chance, he would model at&#13;
another school or for other artists. Nothing earth - shattering.&#13;
But the interview did cause a stir in the art department. At&#13;
first we didn't understand it — why were the interviewee and the&#13;
course instructor so careful about wh~* they said and so eager to&#13;
see the article before it went to print9&#13;
In talking with Doug DeVinny, who teaches life drawing here,&#13;
we found the answer. He feels that there could be repercussions&#13;
from conservative individuals and groups at Parkside and in the&#13;
surrounding communities, that for some folks "nude" translates&#13;
"obscene."&#13;
For those of you that do have problems with nudity in the&#13;
classroom, the Ranger has included the above sketches in this&#13;
week's issue.&#13;
We're not saying that Parkside students create this sort of&#13;
work (but maybe they do); we're only saying that the world's&#13;
finest artists, way back to the cave days, used the unclothed&#13;
human figure to sharpen their eyes and coordinate their vision.&#13;
Action, but how affirmative?&#13;
In searching and screening for the position of Assistant&#13;
Coordinator of Student Activities, the committee appointed has&#13;
come up with some problems this fall. It seems that a firm&#13;
grounding in Parkside's Affirmative Action Policy and Implementation&#13;
Procedures would solve the problem.&#13;
The committee, first of all, is composed of individuals who are&#13;
all of Caucasian descent. While it is not always a sure bet to&#13;
implement affirmative action by putting minority individuals on&#13;
a committee, the point must be made that the reason that all the&#13;
search and screen committee members turned out to be "white"&#13;
is that there simply is no one in a position of administrative&#13;
leadership in the area of Student Life who makes direct contact&#13;
with students who is not "white."&#13;
The committee should be applauded for at least attempting to&#13;
work according to Affirmative Action guidelines with respect to&#13;
stating from the outset that "if an equally qualified man and&#13;
women are up for the job, the woman will be hired." They should&#13;
also be applauded for making an effort to locate women and&#13;
minority individuals for the job. However, since the position is&#13;
an entry level position, the level of expertise they have been&#13;
searching for has led to a stalemate of sorts. Of course, the&#13;
Caucasian men are most qualified.&#13;
At this point, the committee has tentatively decided to initiate&#13;
a new search and screen process, while hiring an intern to take&#13;
some of the workload that Coordinator Buddy Couvion has been&#13;
forced to handle in the meantime.&#13;
Let's hope the new committee will become familiar with and&#13;
o c&#13;
ONOFf v«&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
Ho, Ho, Ho . . . Merry Easter!&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
Does that headline sound a little&#13;
strange to you? It should; you've&#13;
undoubtedly grown up wishing&#13;
people either a "Merry Christmas"&#13;
or a "Happy Easter." You&#13;
may not mix your adjectives.&#13;
The point is, of course, that&#13;
Easter is not a merry time, or it's&#13;
not historically supposed to be.&#13;
And while the Christmas season is&#13;
certainly a happy time for most&#13;
people, there's something&#13;
suspicious (I've always thought)&#13;
about Christmas cards that beg to&#13;
tell your friends and relatives to&#13;
be happy. They can't help it if&#13;
they've had deaths in the immediate&#13;
family they'd rather be&#13;
left alone to mourn.&#13;
But — strangely enough, there&#13;
is nothing wrong with telling them&#13;
you want them to be merry. Merry&#13;
is "Well, at least act like you're&#13;
having fun." Merry is Santa&#13;
Claus' jolly old elf face all reddened&#13;
up from the invigorating&#13;
weather. It doesn't matter if he&#13;
has vein problems. Merry is "Put&#13;
on some kind of act for God sake&#13;
or you'll ruin Christmas for the&#13;
be ready to implement affirmative action at Parkside. After all,&#13;
the Assistant Coordinator will be responsible for working&#13;
directly with Parkside students, 6.8% of which are minority&#13;
persons. So far, these students do not see anyone in Student&#13;
Activities who represents their interests. And with so much talk&#13;
lately about "selling" activities programs to non - traditional&#13;
students and other commuters, it's time someone thought of&#13;
"selling" activities to minority students, some of whom are also&#13;
non - traditional.&#13;
rest of us." Merry doesn't seem&#13;
fair.&#13;
Besides, I've never actually felt&#13;
merry. Come to think of it, I've&#13;
never really felt completely happy&#13;
with myself and the rest of the&#13;
world all at one time either. Well,&#13;
not for very long, anyway. No,&#13;
happy is too much to ask of people.&#13;
How about "joyous?" It may&#13;
sound a mite on the transcendental&#13;
side, even too opulent&#13;
in this age. "Wonderful?" Too late&#13;
— Ronco uses that one. One last&#13;
resort: "Have a nice Christmas."&#13;
Pretty vague, huh?&#13;
Sorry, it seems the best I can&#13;
honestly do is wish you all at least&#13;
a very small time in your holiday&#13;
season when you will experience&#13;
contentment, a feeling you will&#13;
probably find tucked away with&#13;
the rest of your childhood teddy&#13;
bears and dreams. By next year,&#13;
"Have a contented Christmas"&#13;
may be on all the cards, and then&#13;
you'll be out of luck.&#13;
From the Files&#13;
10 years ago —&#13;
"Swimming Pools for Parkside?"&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
Those of you who attend classes&#13;
at Greenquist Hall probably have&#13;
noticed those two holes in the&#13;
ground, one behind the Library&#13;
Learning Center and one on the&#13;
north side of Greenquist at the end&#13;
of the old access road. Those two&#13;
mudsided swimming pools are to&#13;
become the Communication Arts&#13;
Building and Classroom Building.&#13;
The building, started last&#13;
month, will be completed&#13;
January of 1973 with&#13;
possibility of having&#13;
classroom portion done in time for&#13;
the fall semester next year. It will&#13;
be the smallest educational&#13;
facility on campus at 104,500&#13;
square feet. The cost for the Com&#13;
Arts Building is $4,220,000.&#13;
The Classroom Building will&#13;
have an area of 126,000 square feet&#13;
and will be completed at a cost of&#13;
$4,093,420.&#13;
--Newscope, Dec. 13,1971, vol. 5,&#13;
no. 15.&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
the&#13;
5 years ago —&#13;
"Senate discusses Basic Skills"&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
The Faculty Senate has just&#13;
completed its November meeting&#13;
and a lengthy discussion of the&#13;
Basic Skills Program Report from&#13;
the Academic Policies Committee.&#13;
The Senate discussed the&#13;
report in two successive Tuesday&#13;
meetings . .&#13;
The 31-page document was&#13;
issued one and one half weeks&#13;
previous to the Senate meeting to&#13;
allow all members of the faculty&#13;
to read the report and respond.&#13;
The first meeting . . . was taken&#13;
up by extensive discussion of the&#13;
goals and speaking skills sections&#13;
as they pertain to usage and style.&#13;
Specifically, the Senate felt that&#13;
"The problem of establishing&#13;
appropriate standards when&#13;
coupled with the difficulties of&#13;
evaluation (i.e. as they relate to&#13;
minority linguistic cultures), has&#13;
raised broad and deeply felt&#13;
concerns among the faculty. We&#13;
recommend at least part and&#13;
perhaps all of the speaking skills&#13;
component be postponed."&#13;
As far as overall goals the&#13;
Faculty Senate felt strongly that&#13;
they should emphasize "that the&#13;
specific skills outlined under the&#13;
goals to be met with the program&#13;
are meant to be illustrative and&#13;
that a student may demonstrate&#13;
the required level of competence&#13;
without demonstrating every skill&#13;
listed."&#13;
Testing in relation to evaluation&#13;
(of students) would be left to the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee .for&#13;
further study with any final approval&#13;
of these tests left to the&#13;
Senate.&#13;
— RANGER, Dec. 8, 1976, v ol. 5,&#13;
no. 13&#13;
I year ago —&#13;
"Tuition now $433: $30 surcharge&#13;
withdrawn" by Ken Meyer&#13;
UW System President Robert&#13;
O'Neil last week withdrew his&#13;
request for another $30 tuition&#13;
surcharge for the second&#13;
semester. A similar surcharge&#13;
was initiated last fall after&#13;
Governor Lee Dreyfus ordered a&#13;
state - wide 4.4% budget cut.&#13;
The state's worsening revenue&#13;
situation, inflation and increasing&#13;
enrollment were the reasons&#13;
O'Neil cited to the Board of&#13;
Regents for the revival of the&#13;
surcharge. In his letter to the&#13;
Regents . . . O'Neil said that the&#13;
surcharge would prevent "further&#13;
harm to educational quality and&#13;
student access."&#13;
The surcharge would have&#13;
needed the approval of the&#13;
Regents, Dreyfus and the state&#13;
legislature's Joint Finance&#13;
Committee. Dreyfus and the&#13;
chairs of the committee have&#13;
expressed opposition to the second&#13;
surcharge. The Regents approved&#13;
the first fee by only a close&#13;
margin.&#13;
O'Neil withdrew his request for&#13;
the second surcharge because he&#13;
didn't see a ny use in advocating&#13;
something that would get shot&#13;
down, according to Gary Goetz,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor of Administration&#13;
and Fiscal Affairs at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
— RANGER, Dec. 11, 1980, vol. 9,&#13;
no. 14&#13;
533 SISSX S5* *33 X53 JS&amp; WJSSJ J5SJ 55J jafc J8SS jag? J55S S5J&#13;
Wishing our readers 1&#13;
a happy holiday season. |&#13;
See you in January! I&#13;
— The Ranger Staff |&#13;
^ 1&#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;
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;
Autn F°rfnmf&#13;
i&#13;
9&#13;
i&#13;
,0/&#13;
.&#13;
CxxrJ&#13;
l Burns&#13;
' Dou9 Edenhauser, Zachry&#13;
Jim KrpiKot- D ** *« Frank, Pat Hensiak, Mary Kaddatz,&#13;
Mark Sandpit McD°nald, Jim Mertins, Steve Myers,&#13;
Jeff Wicks Schlater, Sue Stevens, Dan Werbie,&#13;
UW Parkside and th&#13;
*V are solely&#13;
RANGER is printedby the Union C^&gt;oer»r^BVM?r excepf dur&#13;
'n8 breaks and holidays,&#13;
Written permission ls required fSr r?nr1nf^Ve Publishi&#13;
"9 Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
AM correspondence shou.d bi addressM ,nV P&#13;
^'T of RANGERParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wi 53141. aaress&#13;
^&#13;
d to: Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UW-&#13;
^efamatoraycfn'tmr&#13;
t&#13;
,al privile&#13;
9« In refusing ?o print'°|etters^"wliictv^ontain"false^or &#13;
RANGER Thursday, December 10,1981&#13;
Opinion: From Kinship to hypotherm&#13;
,.^ll&#13;
?f, °/,personal ^Pinion, whether they be political, relieious or defamatory nature will be reviewed by the Editor. No articles will be&#13;
censored by any members of the Ranger staff (or anyone else)&#13;
because they disagree in content with opinions held by the staff, or&#13;
other individuals or organizations either on or off campus.&#13;
adventures with an eight - year -&#13;
old who believes that turbo -&#13;
charged shoes with 100 horsepower&#13;
can get you across the&#13;
world faster than a Corvette.&#13;
Welcome back students!" Have fun!&#13;
• DANISH TORTE CAKES • KRINGUES • WHXXNG&#13;
J&amp;PUDi CAKES • CAKES FOR A U OCCASIONS • FINE&#13;
ITAUAN BREAD • HARD ROU A BUN SPECIALISTS&#13;
I COMPLETE RES TAURANT&#13;
BAKERY SERVICE&#13;
MON.-FRI. 6AM - 9PM a-. A.A.&#13;
SAT. &amp; SUN. 6AM - 6PM (faff 654-0785&#13;
6020 39TH AVENUE&#13;
atrond&#13;
Winter chill could kill at Parkside&#13;
&gt;&lt;eadon&#13;
Rathskellar Lounge&#13;
Educational Program&#13;
Support&#13;
Hungry Head&#13;
Ruffolo's Hair Studio&#13;
Stetson's Country /&#13;
Western Saloon (Racine&#13;
Motor Inn)&#13;
FURR by Us&#13;
Georgetown Hairquarters&#13;
Ricson's Restaurant &amp; Pub&#13;
Bun &amp; Games Body Shop&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc.&#13;
Mutual of Omaha&#13;
The Bookstore&#13;
Public Information&#13;
Tenuta's Liquors&#13;
Institutional Analysis and&#13;
Registration&#13;
Physical Education&#13;
Fashion Plus (Westgate&#13;
Mall)&#13;
Career Motivators&#13;
Coastal Tours&#13;
May Beverage&#13;
Monument Square Art&#13;
Fair, Inc.&#13;
Merritt's Running Center&#13;
Village Inn Pancake House&#13;
Ken-Zon's Pantry&#13;
Vic Tanny Health Club&#13;
Super Sports Footwear, etc.&#13;
Parkside Union&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
Astrup's Warehouse Ski&#13;
Outfit&#13;
Marketing Club&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Rec Center&#13;
Army ROTC&#13;
Northwestern National&#13;
Insurance Company (The&#13;
Quiet Company)&#13;
Career Planning and&#13;
Placement&#13;
E. F. Madrigrano&#13;
Distributors&#13;
Kenosha Savings and Loan&#13;
Dramatic Arts&#13;
First National Bank of&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Rainbow Records and&#13;
Tapes&#13;
Racine Soccer Club&#13;
Bidinger Music House&#13;
Paielli's Bakery&#13;
Ventura and Sons Jewelers&#13;
Racquet ball and Fitness&#13;
Club of Kenosha&#13;
Seagram's&#13;
CASS&#13;
Village Smithy&#13;
Cobblestone, Ltd.&#13;
Sunnyside Club&#13;
The Leader Store&#13;
Cross Advertising&#13;
Wonderful World of&#13;
Weddings&#13;
Flowers by Joseph&#13;
Fashion Distributors&#13;
Warn Bam Singing&#13;
Telegram&#13;
Autry Country&#13;
Herbert's Jewelers&#13;
Sheridan Pro Shop&#13;
The Body Shop&#13;
Candlelite Supper Club&#13;
riune&#13;
Feel alive again! *&#13;
Try Cross-Country Skiing.&#13;
Doctors say cross-country skiing is the&#13;
second healthiest sport after swimming.&#13;
We're the cross-country experts, selling&#13;
top quality equipment at low, warehouse mi ~&#13;
outlet prices. ' ^&#13;
Astrup's skis, poles, and bindings packaged from: $60.90!&#13;
Astrup's ski packages including boots from: $83.95!&#13;
Stop In And See Our Wide Selection-34 Different Skis To Choose From!&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As a concerned student and a&#13;
member of P .S.G.A. Inc., I would&#13;
like to express my dismay at the&#13;
low student turnout at this week's&#13;
open forum with the Chancellor.&#13;
Once again the Chancellor gave&#13;
an hour of his time to talk to the&#13;
students on any concerns, and&#13;
once again there were only seven&#13;
students there. For any effective&#13;
form of government to work it&#13;
must have input from its constituency,&#13;
namely the students. I&#13;
feel the future is going to be hard&#13;
on the students of America, we&#13;
must stick together and help each&#13;
other out. Feel free to come to the&#13;
P.S.G.A. office anytime.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Michael A. Pfaffl&#13;
Warehouse Ski Outlet&#13;
4516 52nd St. Kenosha, Wl 53142 652-8461 or 654-3484 &#13;
6 Thursday, December 10,1981 RANGER&#13;
Small town blues? Try Milwaukee's night life&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Hey all you Parkside students!&#13;
Are you and your fellows fed up&#13;
with frequenting your familiar old&#13;
flats? Tired of cavorting and&#13;
carousing at dingy dives and&#13;
dumps? I mean, there are a few&#13;
nice bars and such in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha, but there's also some&#13;
fun to be had in the night scene to&#13;
the north. Yessirree, I speak of&#13;
none other than the beer capital of&#13;
the world, the town that made&#13;
Wisconsin, old Milwaukee.&#13;
Drinking is a large part of the&#13;
social life of students, and you&#13;
can obtain your favorite spirits&#13;
at just about any bar around. But&#13;
have you ever thought that a bar&#13;
could be more than just a place to&#13;
get blitzed? That a bar could&#13;
actually be an interesting place in&#13;
itself? If y ou haven't, think again.&#13;
Milwaukee has oodles of night&#13;
spots where you can eat, drink,&#13;
socialize and get away from the&#13;
usual teeny bopper crowd. Like I&#13;
said, there's oodles of them, but&#13;
these are a few of my favorites.&#13;
If you enjoy spy novels and&#13;
James Bond movies and have&#13;
fantasies of being an intrepid&#13;
secret agent, then the Safe House&#13;
is for you. If you can find it, that&#13;
is. There is no "Safe House" sign&#13;
on the building, just a small&#13;
plaque on the door saying "International&#13;
Exports, LTD." Once&#13;
you get inside, you must know a&#13;
secret password to get in. If you&#13;
don't know the password, you&#13;
might have to do something silly&#13;
in front of a hidden TV camera to&#13;
gain entrance. I had to do a&#13;
Russian bear dance once.&#13;
Anyway, after you get through all&#13;
this a bookcase opens into a secret&#13;
passageway which leads to the&#13;
fascinating interior of the Safe&#13;
House, which includes several&#13;
bars, a "UFO" to serve you&#13;
sandwiches, a telephone with&#13;
recorded background noises, and&#13;
the world's largest moving puzzle.&#13;
Sound interesting? The Safe&#13;
House is located at 779 North St.&#13;
If you're looking for a bar in the&#13;
tradition of olde English pubs,&#13;
then you might find John Hawks&#13;
Pub appealing. The interior is&#13;
refreshingly subdued and true to&#13;
old style pubs, with wooden plank&#13;
tables and floors, beamed&#13;
cealings, all bathed in a sort of&#13;
candlelight luminescence. What&#13;
John Hawks lacks in Safe House&#13;
type gimmickry it makes up for in&#13;
elegance. With a wide selection of&#13;
imported and domestic beer and&#13;
great food, John Hawks is a great&#13;
place to spend an evening. John&#13;
Hawks is located on 607 North&#13;
Broadway.&#13;
Last but not least on my list of&#13;
bars is Someplace Else, a nice&#13;
sort of tavern located near the&#13;
heart of the downtown area.&#13;
Someplace Else is not as fancy as&#13;
John Hawks and has no intriguing&#13;
gadgetry as does the Safe House,&#13;
isnm&#13;
_ 5205-52r.aSJree&gt; Delicatessen ® Liquors &amp; Wines&#13;
i&#13;
BUDWEISER&#13;
24 cans *6"&#13;
MICHELOB&#13;
24 NR bottles s8"&#13;
657-9001 3203-52nd St.&#13;
but is just a terrific place to stop&#13;
and get a bite to eat and&#13;
something to drink. Someplace&#13;
Else has all kinds of food (I&#13;
recommend the chili) — pr obably&#13;
more, in fact, than the Safe House&#13;
or John Hawks. It is usually jam -&#13;
packed in the early evening, but&#13;
later on, around one or two a.m.,&#13;
is the best time to go. The bartender&#13;
always plays Beatles tunes&#13;
on the stereo, which is fine with&#13;
me. In fact, Someplace Else is&#13;
really something else, and is a&#13;
particular favorite of m ine. You'll&#13;
find Someplace Else on 634 N.&#13;
Water St.&#13;
Okay, I've given you a bunch of&#13;
addresses, but if you don't&#13;
frequent Milwaukee they won't&#13;
help much, right? So I'll give&#13;
some directions. Take 1-94 north to&#13;
Milwaukee, and exit off the Civic&#13;
Center - Wells St. exit. Got that so&#13;
far? Now, go straight until you hit&#13;
Water St., then turn right. From&#13;
there it should be easy to find all&#13;
three of the bars I've listed, as&#13;
they are all located in that same&#13;
general area. You will pass the&#13;
Safe House first, which is to your&#13;
right on a little alley called North&#13;
St. If you keep going straight you&#13;
will come to Someplace Else,&#13;
which will be on your left. To get&#13;
to John Hawks is somewhat more&#13;
difficult, as this area is filled with&#13;
annoying one - way streets. I&#13;
recommend just parking on Water&#13;
St. and walking to John Hawks,&#13;
which is right around the block&#13;
from Someplace Else. Just be&#13;
sure that if it is late at night you&#13;
walk with someone. I don't want&#13;
anyone getting mugged and then&#13;
suing me because of this article.&#13;
And don't blame me if you get lost,&#13;
either.&#13;
I like going to see movies, and&#13;
I'll bet you do too. Racine and&#13;
Kenosha both have theaters that&#13;
carry the latest blockbusters&#13;
released from the major studios.&#13;
But in case you haven't noticed,&#13;
every once in a while there occurs&#13;
a plague throughout local movie&#13;
theaters, a plague that I term the&#13;
big bubonic box - office bust&#13;
plague. This is a period when the&#13;
HMH ®m r&#13;
;&#13;
-&#13;
showing classic old films thp&#13;
Oriental features the one and onlv&#13;
Rocky Horror Picture Show everv&#13;
Friday and Saturday night at&#13;
midnight. If you haven't gone \n&#13;
see RHPS, go. You'll become&#13;
addicted to it, as I am. In fact&#13;
you'll probably be doing the time&#13;
warp for the rest of your earthbound&#13;
years. Go see the Rocky&#13;
Horror Picture Show and you'll&#13;
know what I mean by that. The&#13;
Oriental Theater is at 2230 N&#13;
Farwell Ave.&#13;
final favorite Milwaukee&#13;
spot is for music lovers.&#13;
theaters are devoid of any good&#13;
movies of any size, shape or form.&#13;
So when this occurs I have taken&#13;
to going to a particular theater in&#13;
Milwaukee, namely the Oriental.&#13;
The Oriental is a revival - type&#13;
movie house that features second -&#13;
run movies from the past few&#13;
years as well as old classics. Gobs&#13;
of g ood flicks are featured, with a&#13;
double feature every night at only&#13;
three dollars for admission, the&#13;
Oriental is a real deal as well. The&#13;
theater itself is one of those&#13;
beautiful old show palaces, with&#13;
ornate decorations, elegant&#13;
chandeliers hanging from high&#13;
ceilings, and so forth. In addition to&#13;
My&#13;
night&#13;
specifically jazz lovers. The Jazz&#13;
Gallery on 932 East Center St&#13;
features live jazz every night of&#13;
the week. Usually local combos&#13;
are featured, but nationally&#13;
renowned musicians have performed&#13;
there as well. The interior&#13;
of the building is nothing fancy,&#13;
just small tables and a small stage&#13;
for the musicians. But late at&#13;
night the improv jazz heats up,&#13;
and for jazz lovers there is nothing&#13;
better than the sweat of a live&#13;
jam.&#13;
Directions are, again, pretty&#13;
easy to follow. Follow 1-94 north to&#13;
the North Ave. exit. Go straight on&#13;
North, turn right on Weil St. and&#13;
follow it to the Jazz Gallery. To&#13;
get to the Oriental follow North to&#13;
N. Farwell and turn right. You'll&#13;
see the Oriental theater staring&#13;
you in the face.&#13;
Some of these places I've&#13;
mentioned have a cover charge.&#13;
You may find that, along with the&#13;
long ride involved, a big hassle.&#13;
But I think that if you try one of&#13;
these places just once, you will&#13;
return regularly to the Milwaukee&#13;
night scene.&#13;
"Doctor's Farces" good entertainment&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
"The Doctor's Farces: An&#13;
Evening with Anton Chekhov" is&#13;
the current offering from&#13;
Parkside's Fine Arts and&#13;
Dramatic Arts Disciplines. It is&#13;
also a good college theater&#13;
production, though it had one or&#13;
two technically uneven moments&#13;
last Friday night.&#13;
The play, which consists of&#13;
three "playlets" — "The Bear," a&#13;
tale of similarly false, though&#13;
conflicting male and female&#13;
personalities; "The Night Before&#13;
the Trial," a tale of false identity&#13;
and seduction; and "The Anniversary,"&#13;
a tale which reveals&#13;
the conflict between the rigidly&#13;
divided concerns of men at work&#13;
and women usually excluded from&#13;
PRELIMINARY JURYING&#13;
Saturday, January 16, entries due before 10 a. m.&#13;
Bring 3 pieces to:&#13;
Wustum Museum&#13;
2519 Northwestern Ave.&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
or mail 10 slides to:&#13;
223-6th Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
53403&#13;
20th ANNUAL&#13;
MOHUMENI SQUARE ART FAIR&#13;
June 12-13,1982&#13;
For more information call (414) 637-7706 or 633-3215&#13;
the business world.&#13;
The three pieces as a whole&#13;
work well together — "The Bear"&#13;
opens with a view that is&#13;
somewhat superficial. Popova&#13;
(Rebecca Julich) pouts and&#13;
lingers over her husband's death&#13;
with an obviously false air, while&#13;
Smirnov (Charles Neustifter)&#13;
rages and fumes overdramatically,&#13;
alternately&#13;
demanding money and making&#13;
advances to Popova. Both&#13;
characters, by the end of th e play,&#13;
have reversed themselves.&#13;
In "The Night Before the Trial,"&#13;
Zaytsev (David Schroeder) and&#13;
Zina (Delina Christie) re-enact&#13;
the male - female attraction&#13;
theme set by "The Bear," but with&#13;
a new twist. Delina is much more&#13;
subtle in her hypocrisy, and&#13;
Zaytsev admits his attraction to&#13;
her and his plot to have a "nice&#13;
evening" with her from the start.&#13;
Continued On Page Seven&#13;
TONIGHT!&#13;
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10&#13;
UNION SQUARE 5-7 PM&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
• THE LIVE MUSIC OF UW-PARKSIDE'S&#13;
AWARD WINNING JAZZ BAND v&#13;
• 75C, $1.00 &amp; $1.25 OFF REGULAR PIZZA PRICES&#13;
• SPECIAL $1.99 SPAGHETTI DINNER WITH SALAD &amp; GARLIC BREAD&#13;
• FREE ADMISSION &#13;
Ranger staff reviews Village Voice rock critic&#13;
by Tony IV Rnpprsoge ...&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Recently the Ranger staff&#13;
received a copy of Christgau's&#13;
Record Guide - Rock Albums of&#13;
the '70s (Ticknor and Fields&#13;
$9.95). The book, by Village Voice&#13;
music critic Robert Christgau, is a&#13;
compilation of his stockpile of&#13;
record reviews from the past ten&#13;
years.&#13;
The Ranger staff, all being&#13;
consummate connoisseurs of&#13;
various types of music, had strong&#13;
opinions on some of Christgau's&#13;
reviews, and the following quotes&#13;
are a sampling of our staff's&#13;
critique of the critic.&#13;
Sue Stevens: "For some people&#13;
he reviews every album that&#13;
person makes, and for another&#13;
person or group he'll only review&#13;
one of their albums and judge&#13;
them totally from that. He also&#13;
has a bias towards loud rock.&#13;
Anyone who would give Kiss a&#13;
high grade gets a low grade from&#13;
me."&#13;
Pat Hensiak: "It's one man's&#13;
opinion. I don't agree with him — I&#13;
listen to a lot of Chuck Mangione,&#13;
and he thinks Mangione's albums&#13;
should be melted down. But like I&#13;
said, it's one man's opinion."&#13;
Andy Buchannan: "He seems&#13;
stingy with the grades that he&#13;
gives. He'll say that he really likes&#13;
the tracks on a certain album, that&#13;
they are some of the best he's ever&#13;
heard, but then he gives a B minus&#13;
to the album. Why doesn't he give&#13;
it an A if h e likes it so much? Some&#13;
of my favorite groups, like ELO's&#13;
New World Record, he said the&#13;
songs were great, but then gave&#13;
the album a B-."&#13;
Becky Odland, friend of the&#13;
staff: "I don't think he has any&#13;
nght to write this book. He's only&#13;
got one opinion, how can he write&#13;
a whole book about it? He grew up&#13;
in an atmosphere that favored&#13;
certain kinds of music, and he is&#13;
trying to rate all kinds of music.&#13;
How can you rate music on a&#13;
grade level?"&#13;
Ginger Ilelgeson: "He's&#13;
probably one of the best reviewers&#13;
there are, being a critic for the&#13;
Village Voice. But I question how&#13;
anyone could maintain their taste&#13;
when they are listening to albums&#13;
14 hours a day, as he does. He&#13;
doesn't seem to favor a whole&#13;
group. He rates their albums&#13;
RECORD&#13;
IGUIDEI&#13;
differently, so he must be judging&#13;
each album on its own merits. One&#13;
of the reasons he's written this&#13;
book is to help people build up a&#13;
good record library. But lots of&#13;
people who will read this book&#13;
weren't even listening to music&#13;
when some of these older songs&#13;
came out in the early 60's.&#13;
Younger people who have never&#13;
heard many of these songs, have&#13;
only his opinion on what is good&#13;
and bad."&#13;
The book is conveniently&#13;
organized, with listings arranged&#13;
alphabetically under the name of&#13;
the musician or band. Albums are&#13;
listed chronologically under the&#13;
group's name, and it is interesting&#13;
to see how Christgau's reviews&#13;
progress over the years. The book&#13;
has three introductions, the first&#13;
on the book itself entitled "The&#13;
Guide," the second a short survey&#13;
of the seventies entitled "The&#13;
Decade" and the third, in which&#13;
Christgau outlines his criteria for&#13;
reviewing albums is, as you have&#13;
probably surmised, entitled "The&#13;
Criteria." This is followed by over&#13;
four hundred pages of reviews,&#13;
with everything from "ABBA" to&#13;
"Zappa." The reviews are&#13;
followed by several of Christgau's&#13;
own categories for certain bands&#13;
— Y oko Ono is listed under subjects&#13;
for further research, while&#13;
Sha Na Na is listed under&#13;
"Meltdown."&#13;
Christgau concludes the book&#13;
with his own picks for a good rock&#13;
record library, with his picks&#13;
listed under the year they were&#13;
released. Albums from the fifties&#13;
and sixties are each lumped into&#13;
their respective decades, while&#13;
the seventies albums are listed by&#13;
each individual year.&#13;
Christgau's reviews are certainly&#13;
outspoken, and if nothing&#13;
else he is certainly brave.&#13;
(Anyone who admits that they like&#13;
K.C. and the Sunshine Band must&#13;
be brave.) He doesn't seem to&#13;
care what bands are in vogue with&#13;
other critics, and he readily admits&#13;
to liking bands that most&#13;
other critics wouldn't touch. (He&#13;
really likes K.C. and the Sunshine&#13;
Band?) His writing is short, terse,&#13;
almost hyperactive at times, atid&#13;
is virtually crammed with other -&#13;
worldly adjectives. This makes&#13;
for interesting reading, but&#13;
Christgau's funky wording&#13;
sometimes puts a candy - apple&#13;
gloss over whatever meat there is&#13;
in his reviews. And to the average&#13;
reader, Christgau may appear&#13;
ambiguous, as he often refers to&#13;
little - known bands as a comparison&#13;
to whatever group he is&#13;
reviewing at the moment.&#13;
Chances are that you'll disagree&#13;
with many of Christgau's album&#13;
appraisals, but for the most part&#13;
he seems to know what he is&#13;
talking about, and you will&#13;
probably respect, his opinion.&#13;
Aside from his liking for K.C. and&#13;
the Sunshine Band. But then&#13;
nobody's perfect.&#13;
Whether you agree with&#13;
Christgau or not, you probably&#13;
won't be able to stop paging&#13;
through the book to find your&#13;
favorite groups. Which makes&#13;
Rock Albums of the 70's a great&#13;
Christmas gift, a fact we're sure&#13;
Christgau and his publisher are&#13;
well aware of.&#13;
MZ&#13;
3205 60th St.&#13;
6!J7-5666&#13;
Open 7 days a week 'til 10pm&#13;
We accept food stamps&#13;
PEPSI PEPSI LIGHT&#13;
Continued From Page Six&#13;
But it is in "The Anniversary"&#13;
that the audience realizes&#13;
Chekhov's genius — and that all of&#13;
these people who relate to each&#13;
other rather superficially are&#13;
from different worlds. In "The&#13;
Anniversary," Shiputchin (Alan&#13;
Ventura) is confronted by his&#13;
wife, Tatyana Alexeyevna&#13;
(Rebecca Julich) at his place of&#13;
business, a bank. He is trying to&#13;
conduct "business" while his wife&#13;
insists on talking "family."&#13;
It is Madame Mertchutkin&#13;
(Delina Christie) who brings the&#13;
point home, though. As she&#13;
ignorantly pleads for her disabled&#13;
husband's pension from a non -&#13;
government official, and&#13;
Shiputchin reacts with confusion&#13;
and finally rage, the audience&#13;
finally sees through the elaborate&#13;
conventions and guises these&#13;
characters have worn. Men and&#13;
women, Chekhov is saying, simply&#13;
cannot understand each others'&#13;
worlds, yet are forced by circumstance&#13;
to remain dependent&#13;
on each other.&#13;
The element of this production&#13;
that saves it from becoming&#13;
overly heavy and thus incredible&#13;
is the humor inserted by Chekhov&#13;
and the presentation of the humor&#13;
maintained by the cast. When&#13;
Neustifter mimics an elderly&#13;
servant in "The Bear" and his&#13;
voice literally is that of a n elderly&#13;
man, the audience is shocked into&#13;
laughter.&#13;
Also, Rebecca Julich turns in a&#13;
fine performance in both of her&#13;
roles. Her overdramatic voice,&#13;
actions and expressions evoke a&#13;
"real" character. I suspect I&#13;
would not trust her if I met her&#13;
tomorrow in the Square to remain&#13;
calm. She also pouts very well.&#13;
One problem did mar Friday&#13;
night's performance — the fact&#13;
that "The Doctor's Farces" is a&#13;
studio production means that&#13;
audience entrances to the studio&#13;
are also characters' entrances.&#13;
However, co - p roducer Leon Van&#13;
Dyke is assured that the problem&#13;
of late audience members entering&#13;
on characters' cues has&#13;
been solved by holding the&#13;
production start - time until most&#13;
people are seated and by reserving&#13;
a few seats near the door so&#13;
that those who arrive late can be&#13;
seated unobtrusively.&#13;
"The Doctor's Farces" will be&#13;
presented again this weekend,&#13;
Dec. 11 and 12, at 8 p.m. Tickets&#13;
are $2 for students, faculty and&#13;
senior citizens, and $3 for the&#13;
general public. Since seating in&#13;
Studio B is limited it is advisable&#13;
to call (553-2042 or 553-2345)&#13;
reserve tickets.&#13;
IS&#13;
Ken Zon's offers your Holiday Needs&#13;
SODA&#13;
PEPSI, PEPSI LIGHT &amp; M OUNTAIN DEW&#13;
12 pak, 12 oz. cans&#13;
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8 pak, 16 oz. returnables •&#13;
RC, RC 100, Diet Rite 6 pack cans $1.55&#13;
RC, Nehi, Tonic 1 Lt. N.R .....69&#13;
Coke, Tab, Sprite 12 pk. Cans $3.19&#13;
Coke, Tab, Sprite 2 Lt. N.R .99&#13;
Coke 24 pk. cans $5 99&#13;
Grafs 2Lt. N.R '99&#13;
7-UP, Ale Club 10 oz. 6 pk. N.R. btls $1.45&#13;
BEER&#13;
MICKEY'S 6 pk ....$2.19 1&#13;
MICH 6pk. NR bottle ....$2.29 1&#13;
OLD STYLE 24 pk. cans .... $7.49&#13;
OLD STYLE 12pk. bottles ....$3.79&#13;
OLD STYLE 12 pk. cans ... $3.99&#13;
OLD STYLE 6 pk. bottles ....$1.99&#13;
PABST 12pk. bottles ....$3.89&#13;
... $3.89&#13;
... $7.79&#13;
MILLER 6pk. bottles ... $1.99&#13;
BUDWEISER 24pk. cans ... $7.59&#13;
BUDWEISER l2pk. bottles .... $3.79&#13;
SCHLITZ 6 pk. cans ....$1.95&#13;
MOOSEHEAD6pk. bottles ....$3.29&#13;
STROH'S 12 pk. bottles ....$3.49&#13;
PARTY ICE CUBES AVAILABLE&#13;
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5JSSC Sfis: £« -ESX 553* &gt;£SS£ &amp;X S53£ •£« £« £S£ £2$&#13;
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Good for tho&#13;
Holidays with&#13;
a Hair Stylo&#13;
from Ruffolos&#13;
3532 MEACHEM "RD.&#13;
RACINE. Wl 5 3405&#13;
PHONE (414) 554-8600&#13;
3519 52nd STREET&#13;
KENOSHA. Wl 531 42&#13;
PHONE (4 14) 654-6154&#13;
To Mik e Far roll, selling Ranger advertising&#13;
means paying tuitien.&#13;
"Thanks to the new commission plus bonus&#13;
plan, I've made my tuition and textbook&#13;
money by selling ads for the Ranger this&#13;
semester.&#13;
"The work isn't always easy. It takes lots of&#13;
initiative; it helps if you feel comfortable&#13;
talking to all kinds of people. The Ranger is&#13;
easy to sell, though.&#13;
"Also, there's no clock to punch. I'm free to&#13;
schedule my work around classes.&#13;
"I get satisfaction out of building my accounts,&#13;
acquiring new ones, getting a contract&#13;
signed with a business that said they'd&#13;
never advertise with a college newspaper.&#13;
"When I graduate, I'll be telling&#13;
prospective employers I spent my college&#13;
years working with a successful student - run&#13;
corporation. That's going to help me."&#13;
THF RANGFR m U W ~&#13;
Parkside s&#13;
E1% • independent student newspaper.&#13;
Call 553-2295 or stop in at WLLC D 139 for details &#13;
8 Thursday, December 10,1981 RANGER&#13;
by Hat Hensiak&#13;
As one of the biggest holidays of&#13;
the year approaches, we are again&#13;
faced with the problem of the&#13;
"social drinker." What is the first&#13;
question asked of you at a party —&#13;
"What would you like to drink?"&#13;
In order to outline and clarify this&#13;
issue, we traveled to the Parkside&#13;
Union and asked many students&#13;
that seem to frequent this area&#13;
their thoughts on social drinking.&#13;
A total of 50 people were interviewed,&#13;
'25 male and 25 female.&#13;
All of them said they went to the&#13;
Union to socialize more than&#13;
anything else. Drinking was the&#13;
second most common answer,&#13;
with 41 people going there to&#13;
socialize and drink. The majority&#13;
(33) did not feel that the people&#13;
that frequent the Union tend to&#13;
drink too much, and 38 felt that&#13;
social drinking is not a problem at&#13;
Parkside. Only 12 said they are&#13;
usually not intoxicated at the end&#13;
of the evening, Or when the&#13;
drinking has stopped. There was&#13;
one non - drinker in the 50 interviewed.&#13;
When asked if drinking&#13;
affects their performance, (good&#13;
or bad) 43 people said yes and 7&#13;
said no. Consumption increases&#13;
for 38 people every Christmas,&#13;
and those same 38 people said they&#13;
Social drinking at Parkside: Is it a problem?&#13;
iHllCialr f AH Iko ( n #1.^ ^1. I.__ , _ * ' « 1 • -I4 A nfill o lnnlinl t O rv felt that a drink or two seems to&#13;
promote the Christmas spirit.&#13;
Here are a few of the reasons&#13;
why these people drink:&#13;
"For social reasons more often&#13;
than anything."&#13;
"For taste with meals, like a&#13;
Margarita with dinners at&#13;
Mexican restaurants. At holiday&#13;
traditions or something unique. At&#13;
parties, at the "beginning of the&#13;
evening, there's a lot of pressure&#13;
to have a drink. There is so much&#13;
tied into it. If you meet someone&#13;
and if y ou refuse to have a drink,&#13;
they're hurt. Mostly I drink&#13;
because I'm not strong enough to&#13;
say no. I end up with a drink to be&#13;
nice."&#13;
"I like the taste of certain things&#13;
that I drink. I usually drink what I&#13;
have a taste for, soda, wine,&#13;
whatever."&#13;
"Usually if I have a sandwich, a&#13;
beer goes pretty well. I like the&#13;
taste of beer. It's fun to catch a&#13;
buzz every once in a while."&#13;
"To depress my respiration, to&#13;
decrease my reaction rate and to&#13;
raise my blood pressure."&#13;
"I drink to relax."&#13;
"I like the taste of beer."&#13;
"I drink to relax and to forget&#13;
the problems."&#13;
"I drink to get drunk. If I&#13;
wanted something that tastes&#13;
good, I would have soda."&#13;
"Because it's there. It's the way&#13;
that most people socialize."&#13;
"It relaxes me and lets me have&#13;
more fun. It eases the tension."&#13;
"To have a better time."&#13;
"Being brought up in the beer&#13;
and brandy capitol of the world,&#13;
drinking socially is a common&#13;
occurrance. My acceptance of this&#13;
along with an acquired taste for&#13;
beer and liquor is probably my&#13;
reason for drinking."&#13;
"Pleasure, enjoyment, and the&#13;
relief of the tension building up&#13;
during the day. Also, the enjoyment&#13;
of a good beverage with&#13;
friends during a certain period of&#13;
the day."&#13;
"I don't drink. I have never&#13;
acquired a taste for liquor. At&#13;
times people look down on me&#13;
because I don't drink. I don't think&#13;
that's right. I think people drink to&#13;
Unlock a social door. Going to the&#13;
bar for a drink is one of the few&#13;
things that a male and female can&#13;
do together without creating a&#13;
scene. Drinking is one of the few&#13;
socially acceptable pasttimes."&#13;
In America, the use of alcohol&#13;
receives wide support. An introduction&#13;
to alcohol is given to&#13;
most people at a family setting:&#13;
Thanksgiving, Christmas or&#13;
Sunday dinner. If someone&#13;
becomes a little tipsy, they are&#13;
received as cute and learn very&#13;
quickly that alcohol can be an&#13;
attention getter. Drinking for a&#13;
growing boy is often looked upon&#13;
as a part of growing up. When&#13;
people begin to date, a restaurant&#13;
or bar that serves alcohol is often&#13;
a good place to meet new friends.&#13;
Advertisements on TV, radio and&#13;
newspapers tell us that to be a&#13;
liberated woman, an introduction&#13;
of wine is necessary to the&#13;
relationship. A certain beer can be&#13;
used to measure friendship.&#13;
Another beer can be used to win.&#13;
In all of t his constant praising of&#13;
alcohol, there is a failure to&#13;
perceive the ruined lives and&#13;
broken homes that can result from&#13;
alcohol abuse. Alcohol is so attractive&#13;
to most people, that when&#13;
they are requested to consider the&#13;
possibility that over - drinking is&#13;
an illness, there is a general&#13;
reaction that it can't be so. If a&#13;
person can't handle alcohdl, it is a&#13;
character flaw or poor genes or&#13;
one hundred other reasons.&#13;
Alcohol has found a way to destroy&#13;
people for hundreds of years and&#13;
Your last 2 years of college&#13;
can be your first 2 years of management.&#13;
This summer, you can begin 2 years of&#13;
management education to complement your&#13;
college degree program. Then, upon graduation,&#13;
enter a position of instant management&#13;
responsibility. As an officer in the active&#13;
Army or Reserves. The Army ROTC&#13;
2-year program starts with 6 weeks of&#13;
summer training at Fort Knox, Ky. With&#13;
pay (over $500).&#13;
You'll learn what it takes to be a soldier&#13;
— to have your body toughened, your confidence&#13;
developed.&#13;
Do well and you can qualify for Army&#13;
ROTC courses in the fall. Do exceptionally&#13;
well, and you may be heading back to&#13;
college with a two-year full tuition&#13;
scholarship.&#13;
For the next 2 years, you'll learn what&#13;
it takes to be an Army officer. You'll be&#13;
challenged both mentally and physically.&#13;
You'll get the kind of management experience&#13;
that will be an asset to you in any&#13;
career, military or civilian. You'll receive&#13;
an extra $100 a month, up to 20 months.&#13;
And when you graduate, you'll have&#13;
earned your college degree along with the&#13;
gold bars of an Army officer.&#13;
If you'd like to graduate with 4 years&#13;
of college plus 2 years of management,&#13;
apply by April 1 for the Army ROTC&#13;
2-year program.&#13;
* ARMY ROTC&#13;
LEARN WHAT IT TAKES TO LEAD.&#13;
To arrange an interview appointment, contact: Capt. Fred Herron&#13;
Marquette U. ROTC&#13;
Call Collect:&#13;
1-224-7729/7195&#13;
still alcohol is enjoyed by millions&#13;
When alcohol does damage, and&#13;
the damage is recognizable, the&#13;
problem is usually minimized&#13;
denied or rationalized. There is a&#13;
failure to recognize the alcoholic&#13;
and alcoholism. Alcoholism is the&#13;
use of alcohol to the extent which&#13;
it hinders the health and well -&#13;
being of the individual, the family&#13;
and/or society.&#13;
Racine and Kenosha both have&#13;
accessible ways of helping people&#13;
get back onto their feet. Jon&#13;
Christensen is the Intervention&#13;
Coordinator at the A-Center in&#13;
Racine. "Most people think that&#13;
an alcoholic is an adult, male&#13;
drunk. For that reason, most&#13;
people never pay attention to&#13;
organizations around them until&#13;
the problem comes up," he said.&#13;
There are a number of ways to&#13;
receive help at the A-Center in&#13;
Racine. "If there is a family&#13;
member that is an alcoholic, and&#13;
someone has a concern, they can&#13;
come to us here. I can't guarantee&#13;
help for the alcoholic or other&#13;
family members, but I can help&#13;
the people seeking it. We try to&#13;
take care of those people," he&#13;
said.&#13;
"People also don't realize that&#13;
professional help is necessary. I&#13;
can't know why people resist —&#13;
when they have a problem with&#13;
their sink, they call a plumber.&#13;
They don't have any problem&#13;
phoning a plumber. When they&#13;
have to call on help for a problem&#13;
drinker, they have a big problem&#13;
calling. Alcohol and pot are&#13;
constantly used by chemically&#13;
dependent people because they&#13;
are the most accessible. A drug is&#13;
a drug is a drug. It doesn't make&#13;
any difference, because they all&#13;
have the same effect. Processes of&#13;
becoming and recovering from&#13;
chemical dependency is the&#13;
same."&#13;
Some people choose to attend&#13;
the day hospital. If they do this,&#13;
they are at the Center from 8:30&#13;
a.m. to 3:30 p.m. That still gives&#13;
the patient time with his family or&#13;
at a job at night.&#13;
The second option is becoming&#13;
an out - patient. An out - patient&#13;
goes through three different&#13;
stages of counseling. The patient&#13;
Continued On Page Nine&#13;
NEEDED:&#13;
STUDENT REP&#13;
JOB: To advertise, promote and collect&#13;
payments tor our annual Spring break&#13;
trips to Florida.&#13;
TIME: January to Spring break.&#13;
PAY: Commission of $5.00 / person ($200&#13;
per bus) and FREE TRIP TO&#13;
FLORIDA.&#13;
Contact:&#13;
Doug Watson&#13;
Coastal Tours Inc.&#13;
5461 N. East River Rd.&#13;
Chicago, IL 60656&#13;
(312) 693-4759&#13;
VDLI ARE E NTITLED&#13;
TO I TREE P LAY A T&#13;
ANY V IDEO OR&#13;
PINBALL G AME&#13;
AT BU N fi GAMES.&#13;
Present to clerk or manager lor&#13;
redemption Good at any Bun &amp; Games&#13;
location. Expires 12'31 81&#13;
I Please limit 1 coupon per customer&#13;
un&#13;
»l 4124 - 5 2nd Street (by K Mart)&#13;
Open everyday at 10:30 am&#13;
*2 8030 22nd Avenue (Sunnyside Park'&#13;
Open every day al 8 am&#13;
Hi HHI BH • PR&#13;
Viewpoint &#13;
Vansen to speak in gallery today&#13;
Paintines hv T.AdiD r .. '&#13;
RANGER Thursday, December 10,1981&#13;
Paintings by Leslie Loomis&#13;
Vansen, a member of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Milwaukee art faculty, will be on&#13;
display at the UW - Parkside&#13;
Communication Arts Gallery&#13;
Sports Trivia&#13;
1. Who is known as the "Father&#13;
of American Football"?&#13;
2 Who booted a 63 - yard field&#13;
goal with only half a foot?&#13;
3. Who threw a TD pass in 47&#13;
consecutive pro games?&#13;
svi)U[\ tuuyof £ KasduidQ uiQ1&#13;
•Z dwDj jajiVAi 7 :SV3MSMV&#13;
through Dec. 23. The artist will he&#13;
hISy"1 ^ 3 g3llery ta,k at 4 P- ma&#13;
numhH haS&#13;
f&#13;
been the reciPient of&#13;
a number of prizes including a&#13;
CnrHH ™ard in the "Mississippi&#13;
Corridor" Exhibit at the&#13;
Davenport Art Gallery last fall&#13;
and 1S represented in many&#13;
private, institutional and corK&#13;
h&#13;
C°&#13;
lleCti0nSHer&#13;
^intings&#13;
the m exhibited throughout&#13;
coast 3nd&#13;
°&#13;
n the East&#13;
She received the BFA from the&#13;
University of Iowa and the MFA&#13;
from the University of Colorado.&#13;
Regular gallery hours are&#13;
Mondays through Thursdays from&#13;
xv a 5' and Tuesdays and&#13;
Wednesdays from 7 to 10 p. m. *'• iicK.01 price&#13;
Is social drinking a problem at UW-P?&#13;
fnnHniipH Frnm .I&#13;
Racine Opera&#13;
to present&#13;
Hansel and Gretel&#13;
Racine Opera will present two&#13;
performances of Englebert&#13;
Humperdink's English opera,&#13;
Hansel and Gretel." Performances&#13;
will be held at&#13;
Washington Park High School in&#13;
Racine on Saturday, Dec. 26 at 8&#13;
p.m., and on Sunday, Dec. 27 at 3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Tickets may be obtained from&#13;
Opera Racine by calling 639-1316&#13;
Tickets are $9.75 for orchestra&#13;
seats and $6.50 for all others.&#13;
Parkside students are eligible for&#13;
a one dollar reduction on regular&#13;
ticket prices.&#13;
Continued From Page Eight&#13;
starts in an assessment group,&#13;
which helps the alcoholic better&#13;
understand the problem and&#13;
better understand how people can&#13;
work together to deal with the&#13;
problem. The second stage is the&#13;
intermediate counseling. This is a&#13;
point where the alcoholic has the&#13;
want to stop. Stage three begins&#13;
when the alcoholic is a serious&#13;
stopper. He's felt the need to stop&#13;
and he's made a decision to do&#13;
something about it.&#13;
The final option is becoming an&#13;
in - patient. About 50 percent of the&#13;
patients at the A-Center are in -&#13;
patients. "People are afraid to&#13;
become in - patients. People are&#13;
afraid of being locked up. Because&#13;
we are certain of the fear that&#13;
most people have, we are very&#13;
gentle," added Christensen.&#13;
When a patient comes into the&#13;
hospital, he or she is given and&#13;
room and a chance to get cleaned&#13;
up. Then he or she goes through a&#13;
period of detoxification, which&#13;
lasts from three to five days. It's a&#13;
chance to get physically healthy.&#13;
The patient's clothes are taken&#13;
away because sometimes people&#13;
are afraid to stick it out. If&#13;
someone makes a definite&#13;
decision to leave, they can get&#13;
their clothing back.&#13;
After the detoxification period,&#13;
the patient is put into intermediate&#13;
care. He or she begins&#13;
to see a counselor occasionally.&#13;
The patient also begins to meet&#13;
people who have the same&#13;
problem.&#13;
Some patients are let go after&#13;
those two weeks, but some need&#13;
two more weeks. If they do, the&#13;
next two weeks are filled with&#13;
lectures, films, workshops and&#13;
spiritual analysis. All of the&#13;
people are asked the question,&#13;
"Who are you?" Most of them&#13;
don't know the answer.&#13;
Christensen also stated that the&#13;
place to begin helping an alcoholic&#13;
recover is with yourself. Learn&#13;
everything that you can. Put it&#13;
into practice, not just into words.&#13;
That in itself will be far more&#13;
effective than anything you could&#13;
attempt to do directly to the&#13;
alcoholic.&#13;
Kenosha County offers help to&#13;
youth, adults, couples, families or&#13;
anyone with an alcohol or drug&#13;
abuse problem. The services&#13;
include an assessment of the&#13;
person's drinking. Alternative&#13;
methods are looked into to find a&#13;
way to help him change his&#13;
drinking lifestyle. Counseling on&#13;
an individual and on a group basis&#13;
is available for both young and&#13;
adult abusers as well as counseling&#13;
for the spouses and family&#13;
members. After - care services for&#13;
continuing support for the individual&#13;
and families and referral&#13;
treatment to other agencies for&#13;
anyone in need of more&#13;
specialized services is also&#13;
available.&#13;
The Kenosha Alcohol and Drug&#13;
Council also has a number of&#13;
special community programs:&#13;
A Community Education&#13;
Program which offers a comprehensive&#13;
range of alcohol&#13;
education for the general public&#13;
and for special groups. Women&#13;
Reaching Women is a task force of&#13;
volunteers who seek to heighten&#13;
the awareness of the general&#13;
public about the issues of the&#13;
woman alcoholic. A unique&#13;
Employee Assistant Program&#13;
called the Triad Consortium is a&#13;
cooperative arrangement between&#13;
the Council, St. Catherine's&#13;
Hospital and several local industries&#13;
and labor organizations&#13;
to aid in resolving alcohol abuse&#13;
problems in industry. The&#13;
Criminal Justice Outreach&#13;
Program deals with persons who&#13;
were known to be intoxicated at&#13;
the time their crimes were&#13;
committed, and an assessment of&#13;
the drinking drivers is also done.&#13;
The Recidivist Alcoholic&#13;
Management Program serves&#13;
people who have been in repeated&#13;
treatment for drinking and are in&#13;
the chronic phase of their&#13;
alcoholism.&#13;
Alcoholism was once thought of&#13;
as a symptom of emotional&#13;
problems, a weakness of&#13;
character and even a sin. Today,&#13;
it is recognized as an illness. Like&#13;
many illnesses, it began innocently&#13;
enough and was caused&#13;
by the person (you can't be an&#13;
alcoholic if you don't drink). But,&#13;
at some point, the illness takes&#13;
over the controls. It is not known&#13;
exactly when control is lost, but it&#13;
does occur. The same process&#13;
happens when people use other&#13;
drugs as well. The same process&#13;
of misuse, abuse, family&#13;
problems, trouble at work, school&#13;
or with the law seem to occur,&#13;
regardless of the drug. The people&#13;
who feel a need to seek help can be&#13;
sure that they aren't alone.&#13;
Presents&#13;
This Week's Movie&#13;
THE GREAT SANTINI&#13;
Fri., Dec, 11 Rated PG&#13;
Sun., Dec. 13&#13;
Admission s1.50 7:30 p.m. Union Cinema&#13;
NEXT WEEKS MOVIE&#13;
Thank you for attending&#13;
this semester's movies.&#13;
We ©ItiE&#13;
&amp;iueet ^Ijoppe&#13;
IN THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
CLOSED FROM&#13;
DEC 12&#13;
UNTIL&#13;
JAN. 8, 1982&#13;
THANKS FOR YOUR PATRONAGE AND . . .&#13;
"MAY YOUR NEW YEAR BE A SWEET ONE"&#13;
This Bud's for Wisconsin&#13;
Financial gain wasn't what&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Madison&#13;
fans had in mind when they began&#13;
their own version of the Budweiser&#13;
beer song, screaming out&#13;
at football games: "When you say&#13;
Wis-consin, you've said it all!"&#13;
But Budweiser liked the idea so&#13;
much it used the Badger fans'&#13;
rendition in two TV commercials,&#13;
and subsequently pledged&#13;
donations of more than $25,000 to&#13;
the university.&#13;
The commercials include shots&#13;
of Madison football and the&#13;
marching band, whose upbeat&#13;
version of the Budweiser song&#13;
inspired fans to chant along at&#13;
each game this season. The irony&#13;
that it was Wisconsin folks doing&#13;
the chanting — folks whose state&#13;
is noted for its breweries — was no&#13;
doubt part of the marketing appeal&#13;
to the St. Louis brewer.&#13;
While there's no formal contract&#13;
requiring Anheuser - Busch to pay&#13;
for using the Madison images, the&#13;
company has donated $10,000 to&#13;
the band, $11,000 for athletic&#13;
scholarships, and $5,000 to the&#13;
campus TV station for delayed&#13;
telecasts of Badger football. In&#13;
addition, the company will be&#13;
sending commercial residuals to&#13;
the band fund.&#13;
The university isn't officially&#13;
involved in the commercials, but&#13;
cannot bar use of the school's&#13;
image, says Arthur Hove,&#13;
assistant to the chancellor.&#13;
Michael Leckron, director of UWMadison&#13;
bands, adds that Budweiser's&#13;
actions have been in&#13;
"extraordinarily good taste —&#13;
nothing tacky. What they are&#13;
trying to do is say that Anheuser -&#13;
Busch really endorses Wisconsin."&#13;
&#13;
Holiday concert at Cinema Sunday&#13;
The Chorus, Chorale, Orchestra&#13;
and Brass Ensemble of Parkside&#13;
will join forces for a holiday carol&#13;
concert on Sunday, Dec. 13 at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theater. Admission is $1 for the&#13;
general public; 50 cents for&#13;
students and senior citizens.&#13;
The program will include Antonio&#13;
Vivaldi's Magnificat and&#13;
Carl Phillip Emanuel Bach's&#13;
Heilig 1st Gott, both works for&#13;
chorus and orchestra. Also&#13;
programmed are groups of&#13;
Spanish, Irish and English carols.&#13;
The audience will be invited to&#13;
join in singing such familiar noels&#13;
as Silent Night, Deck the Halls,&#13;
r&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
Hark the Herald Angels Sing and&#13;
Joy to the World.&#13;
Vocal soloists will be Ann Marie&#13;
Conrad, Trevor; Deborah Krause,&#13;
Bristol; James Schatzman,&#13;
Racine; Barbara Kempf,&#13;
Kenosha; Cheryl Brown,&#13;
Kenosha; Julie Harper, Somers;&#13;
Laura Potenziani, Kenosha;&#13;
Nancy Ohnstad, Racinp, will be&#13;
guest harpist for the group of Irish&#13;
carols performed by the combined&#13;
women's choruses.&#13;
The Chorale is directed by&#13;
Frank Mueller, the Chorus by&#13;
Glenda Mossman; and the Brass&#13;
Ensemble by Scott Mather.&#13;
SAVE 20%&#13;
ON YOUR TOTAL PURCHASE&#13;
FASHION DISTRIBUTORS |&#13;
1661 Douglas Av. In Flatiron Mall&#13;
(use this coupon for your early • I&#13;
g Christmas shopping) |&#13;
eXC'&#13;
UCletl °"er expires 12/31/81 J&#13;
J&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Elmwood Plaza/Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
/&#13;
THE DOCTOR'S FARCES&#13;
An Evening with Anton Chekhov&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PARKSIDE&#13;
COMMUNICATION ARTS STUDIO THEATRE&#13;
December 11,12 at 8:OOp.m.&#13;
$2.00 students, faculty, senior citizens&#13;
$3.00 general public&#13;
Limited seating: 553-2042 or 553-2345 &#13;
10 Thursday, December 10,1981 RANGER&#13;
MOM &amp; DAD&#13;
Stocking&#13;
fugge/tion&#13;
THE *50.00 DEPOSIT&#13;
I yff&#13;
'fT University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
IYTONA BEACH&#13;
SPRING BREAK&#13;
VS -'82&#13;
j / ]} MARCH&#13;
/ y r 12-22&#13;
FIOR&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• I?T.^R? P0RTATI0N VIA AIR CONDITIONED BATHROOM E QUIPPED MOTORCOACH&#13;
PLAZATHOT°EDLGING AT THE DELUXE OCEANSIDE&#13;
• FREE PARTIES 6. EX TRAS&#13;
• FULLY ESCORTED THROUGHOUT&#13;
• ALL HOTEL TIPS &amp; TAXES&#13;
ONLY *219&#13;
FOR A PP LI C A TI O N AND F UR T H ER INFORMATION&#13;
CONTACT:&#13;
PARKSIDE UN IO N , ROOM209 — 5 5 3 -2 2 0 0&#13;
Club Events^w&#13;
Parkside Players&#13;
Parkside Players will be&#13;
sponsoring a dance on Friday,&#13;
Dec. 18 featuring "Take Me" in&#13;
the Union Square. The doors will&#13;
open at 8 p.m. Admission is $2.50&#13;
for Parkside students and $3.50 for&#13;
guests.&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
Art Addicts will present a slide&#13;
lecture by Parkside professor of&#13;
art David Holmes on Monday,&#13;
Dec. 14 at 1 p.m. in Com Arts 125.&#13;
His lecture "Almost Ten Years —&#13;
Two Works: 1972-81" will discuss&#13;
the development of his two environments,&#13;
The Greater&#13;
Christian Carnival and Holmtown,&#13;
USA. The public is invited.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
The Parkside Accounting Club&#13;
will be holding their last meeting&#13;
of the 1981 fall semester on&#13;
Monday, Dec. 14 at 1 p.m. in Union&#13;
104.&#13;
Topics for discussion during this&#13;
meeting will include the&#13;
scholarship fund and Christmas&#13;
party. All members and&#13;
prospective club members are&#13;
invited to attend. Refreshments&#13;
will be served.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
Are you interested in becoming&#13;
more aware and knowledgeable&#13;
about the conditions awaiting&#13;
women as they enter the&#13;
professional world? Then you&#13;
should be interested in Women in&#13;
Business Club. Through a variety&#13;
of channels, members of WIB are&#13;
introduced and exposed to various&#13;
aspects of the professional world.&#13;
Our goal is to increase awareness&#13;
of what's facing women as they&#13;
enter the professional world. By&#13;
promoting a well - rounded&#13;
education that combines&#13;
professional development&#13;
seminars, social activi ty and&#13;
community involvement, we hope&#13;
to accomplish this.&#13;
If you have an interest in these&#13;
issues, we invite you to join this&#13;
growing organization. For more&#13;
information, call Carla Thomas at&#13;
553-2351.&#13;
Women's Concourse&#13;
Parkside Women's Concourse&#13;
will meet on Monday, Dec. 14 in&#13;
Moln. 165 at 1 p.m. to decide on&#13;
meeting times for next semester.&#13;
All students are invited.&#13;
Anthropology Club&#13;
Anthropology Club will sponsor&#13;
a bake sale in the WLLC alcove on&#13;
Monday, Dec. 14 all day. Look for&#13;
our upright posture, stereoscopic&#13;
vision, opposable thumbs and&#13;
smiling faces. We feature "Boaz&#13;
Brownies," "Levi - Strauss&#13;
Strudel," "Edward Tyler Tidbits"&#13;
and "Malinowski Muffins."&#13;
Why bake for Christmas when&#13;
we'll do the baking for you?&#13;
Phillipine arts, crafts displayed&#13;
A display of arts and crafts from&#13;
the Philippine Islands is on&#13;
display at Parkside on the concourse&#13;
level of the Library -&#13;
Learning Center through Feb. 1.&#13;
The exhibit, from the collections&#13;
of members of the local Filipino&#13;
community and recent visitors to&#13;
the islands, includes tribal artifacts,&#13;
textiles, baskets, ceramic&#13;
and bronze pots, clothing items,&#13;
jewelry and a collection of hats&#13;
from various geographical&#13;
regions. Some of the items are&#13;
antiques and some are contemporary.&#13;
&#13;
The display is sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Anthropology Club.&#13;
RESUME SERVICE&#13;
Expert Professional Career Counseling&#13;
Confidential Personal Service&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
CAREER MOTIVATORS&#13;
632 - 88 05&#13;
CELEBRATE&#13;
THE SEASON&#13;
WITH STYLE XV-or iter* s-^. ... M M ^ &#13;
RANGER Thursday, December 10,1981 11&#13;
SUFAC finishes preliminary budgets, begin finals&#13;
The Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocations Committee&#13;
(SUFAC), a subcommittee of&#13;
PSGA, has finished&#13;
preliminary budgeting for the&#13;
1982-83 academic year.&#13;
SUFAC annually allocates the&#13;
portion of a student's total&#13;
tuition fee called segregated&#13;
fees. A full - time undergraduate&#13;
student paid $72&#13;
in segregated fees this year.&#13;
This table shows the&#13;
preliminary budgets approved&#13;
by SUFAC for various campus&#13;
groups and organizations.&#13;
Final budgeting is now going&#13;
on and should be completed by&#13;
the end of December.&#13;
SUFAC Budget Summary Sheet&#13;
Unit&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Intra murals&#13;
Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
Health Office&#13;
Housing&#13;
Union&#13;
Auxiliary Accounting System&#13;
Union Debt Service&#13;
Child Care Center&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Performing Arts &amp; Lecture&#13;
Student Organization Council&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Winter Carnival / Fallfest&#13;
Student Activities Office&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
TOTAL&#13;
81/82&#13;
$51,585&#13;
37,605&#13;
3,050&#13;
58,322&#13;
13,789&#13;
194,857&#13;
5,722&#13;
105,500&#13;
6,506&#13;
27,227&#13;
8,910&#13;
24,570&#13;
6,750&#13;
3,000&#13;
17,586&#13;
200&#13;
15,262&#13;
$580,441&#13;
82/83&#13;
Proposed&#13;
$53,585&#13;
40,483&#13;
2,400&#13;
66,248&#13;
26,771&#13;
194,857&#13;
6,000&#13;
90,500&#13;
16,823&#13;
35,542&#13;
9,267&#13;
26,540&#13;
7,503&#13;
4,000&#13;
13,556&#13;
160&#13;
17,057&#13;
4,733&#13;
$616,025&#13;
Dollar&#13;
Change&#13;
$2,000&#13;
2,878&#13;
(650)&#13;
17,926&#13;
12,982&#13;
Change&#13;
3.9&#13;
7.7&#13;
278&#13;
(15,000)&#13;
10,317&#13;
8,315&#13;
357&#13;
1,970&#13;
753&#13;
1,000&#13;
(4,030)&#13;
(40)&#13;
1,795&#13;
20.4&#13;
94.1&#13;
4.9&#13;
158.6&#13;
30.5&#13;
4.0&#13;
8.0&#13;
11.2&#13;
33.3&#13;
11.8&#13;
$35,584 6.1&#13;
82/83&#13;
Preliminary&#13;
$53,585&#13;
40,483&#13;
2,400&#13;
66,248&#13;
20,153&#13;
194,857&#13;
6,000&#13;
90,500&#13;
16,823&#13;
35,542&#13;
9,267&#13;
24,660&#13;
7,503&#13;
4,000&#13;
13,556&#13;
160&#13;
17,057&#13;
4,733&#13;
$607,527&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
There is an organization at&#13;
Parkside dedicated to making&#13;
people aware of such issues as&#13;
nuclear power and waste, the&#13;
arms race and meeting human&#13;
needs amo ng others.&#13;
Some members of the group&#13;
label themselves a social change&#13;
group while others call it a&#13;
progressive, environmentally&#13;
concerned group.&#13;
But the name everyone knows it&#13;
by is Student Mobilization for&#13;
Survival.&#13;
Mobe currently has a "core" of&#13;
about a dozen members while the&#13;
"floating membership" numbers&#13;
around 20.&#13;
"In the fall of 1979 I spent much&#13;
time in frustration with Parkside&#13;
because of the lack of student&#13;
involvement in many of the&#13;
pressing issues of our time," said&#13;
Jeanna LeSuer - Mandernack, one&#13;
of Mobe's founders. "I had been in&#13;
school one semester and knew&#13;
that it was the 'politicizing' of&#13;
students that was lacking."&#13;
"In October I put a notice in the&#13;
Ranger asking anyone who was&#13;
interested in the issues of nuclear&#13;
power and weapons to please get&#13;
in touch with me in the hopes of&#13;
starting an organized group on&#13;
campus," said LeSuer - Mandernack.&#13;
But no one responded.&#13;
Distressed, LeSuer - Mandernack&#13;
and a friend went to&#13;
Student Life and filled out a form&#13;
making Mobe a recognized group&#13;
on campus. "I had been in touch&#13;
with the MFS in Milwaukee and&#13;
we decided to use their name as&#13;
the n ame of our group since we&#13;
had the same goals and the affiliation&#13;
would help us get started,"&#13;
said LeSuer - Mandernack. v&#13;
By December there were four or&#13;
five people meeting once a week in&#13;
the Union to discuss what they&#13;
could do to promote awareness,&#13;
discussion and activism, to the&#13;
nuclear issues, on the Parkside&#13;
campus.&#13;
"With the help of Milwaukee&#13;
Kenosha Unified&#13;
offers jobs to&#13;
Parkside students&#13;
Kenosha Unified School District&#13;
#1 w ill have a selected few job&#13;
openings for clerical, library, AV&#13;
aides and warehouse assistants&#13;
between Jan. 15, 1981 and May 30,&#13;
1982. Workers will earn $3.35&#13;
(federal minimum wage) and&#13;
work a ten hour week average.&#13;
To qualify for the jobs, applicants&#13;
must be Kenosha&#13;
residents between 14 and 21 years&#13;
of age and be economically&#13;
disadvantaged (by CETA&#13;
criteria). All workers must be&#13;
enrolled at Parkside as full time&#13;
students.&#13;
Pre-screening of applicants will&#13;
be done by Wisconsin Job Service.&#13;
To apply, see Mike Plate in WLLC&#13;
D173between 8:30 a.m. and 4 p.m.&#13;
Student Mobilization raises student awareness&#13;
Mobe," said LeSuer - Mandernack,&#13;
"we set up tables of&#13;
literature and sold buttons and&#13;
bumperstickers. By May we had&#13;
speakers, films and workshops&#13;
presented at Parkside; about 15&#13;
members; and about 10&#13;
representatives from Parkside&#13;
going to a Washington, D. C. rally&#13;
for a nuclear - free world. We&#13;
knew we had been successful at&#13;
starting activism on campus."&#13;
Mobe currently receives $1139&#13;
from SOC. That figure represents&#13;
the fourth highest budget in SOC.&#13;
"By becoming members of SOC,&#13;
we were able to plan farther&#13;
ahead for events," said LeSuer -&#13;
Mandernack. The year 1980-81 was&#13;
quite successful. We participated&#13;
in many events, gained a wider&#13;
recognition on campus and the&#13;
community and we gained new&#13;
membership and new interests.&#13;
We began to work on issues&#13;
beyond nuclear because we saw&#13;
the need for involvement in other&#13;
areas."&#13;
Mobe organized rallies during&#13;
the two major periods of draft&#13;
registration and worked with&#13;
Vietnam Vets Against the War&#13;
and Vietnam Vets Still Suffering&#13;
to put an Awareness Day of toxic&#13;
chemicals. Mobe also put on their&#13;
first annual No Nuke Teach - In&#13;
which included films, speakers,&#13;
and workshops.&#13;
So far this year Mobe has&#13;
sponsored films, had Rosa Rivera&#13;
speak on El Salvador and brought&#13;
Dr. Michio Kaku to talk on nuclear&#13;
technology. Plans for next spring&#13;
semester include more films,&#13;
another Teach - In, and hopefully&#13;
a solid workshop at the end of the&#13;
year on Civil Disobedience.&#13;
"We would like to increase our&#13;
membership and the attendance&#13;
at our events," said LeSuer&#13;
Mandernack. "To be successful in&#13;
awareness and activism, we need&#13;
people. The more people we have,&#13;
the better commitment and&#13;
strength we will be able to display.&#13;
People do not need to have vast&#13;
amounts of science. and&#13;
technological know - how to begin&#13;
to understand the nuclear industry.&#13;
What is required is a mind&#13;
that is willing to question and&#13;
learn, and as each person continues&#13;
to be involved, he or she&#13;
will learn and gain the knowledge&#13;
necessary to understand, question&#13;
and respond to the issues&#13;
surrounding us."&#13;
Some Mobe members were&#13;
asked why they think Mobe is&#13;
Important. "As the mother of&#13;
three daughters, I'm concerned&#13;
about their future welfare," said&#13;
Judy Tegtman. "I feel it's very&#13;
important that people become&#13;
aware of what we're doing to this&#13;
world and to our future&#13;
BUY 1 GET 1&#13;
ii} M I&#13;
•&#13;
of equal or lesser value&#13;
Sale Ends Dec. 13, 1981&#13;
Christmas Hours:&#13;
Mon., Thurs., Fri. 9:30-8 P.M.&#13;
Tues., Wed., Sat. 9:30-5, Sun. 1-4&#13;
FURR by US&#13;
generations. We must begin to&#13;
become more people - oriented if&#13;
humanity is to survive."&#13;
"Mobe is important because,&#13;
first, I've come to believe that&#13;
nuclear power is a dangerous&#13;
technology," said Deborah&#13;
Elzinga. "Second, I'm afraid of a&#13;
nuclear war. Our task is to raise&#13;
these issues to the students. Mobe&#13;
people realize these issues affect&#13;
them and that they can help to&#13;
change things. It's crucial, particularly&#13;
now with Reagan in&#13;
office, to get involved with groups&#13;
like Mobe."&#13;
One problem Mobe members&#13;
see is that people don't come to&#13;
their meetings because they think&#13;
Mobe is a clique. "But we want&#13;
everybody to come," said one&#13;
member.&#13;
Mobe meets Tuesdays at 3:30 in&#13;
Moln. D128. Anyone interested in&#13;
any of these "social" issues&#13;
should join the organization that is&#13;
speaking out on them and trying to&#13;
do something about them.&#13;
§ '&#13;
§ Member P arkside 200&#13;
Mention this ad! ^ Joseph&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
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Thursday, December 10,1981 RANGER&#13;
Cheerleading hard work&#13;
by Karen Norwood&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Often ignored, stereotyped and&#13;
overlooked are the Parkside&#13;
cheerleaders, but there is more to&#13;
them than meets the eye. Ever&#13;
striving to improve their performances,&#13;
this year's squad will&#13;
be trying to prove that Parkside&#13;
cheerleaders aren't just a group of&#13;
people that make noise during a&#13;
game.&#13;
Kathy Nielson, a member of the&#13;
cheerleading squad, feels that this&#13;
year's squad is the best ever.&#13;
"We've improved greatly in our&#13;
gymnastics," said Nielson, "and&#13;
the new girls have added new&#13;
style and variety to the squad."&#13;
Along with the "new girls" are&#13;
the new guys, or as the announcer&#13;
of Friday night's game called&#13;
them, "Parkside's macho men."&#13;
This year's squad has nine girls&#13;
and eight guys. "It's great having&#13;
the guys on the team," commented&#13;
Nielson. "This year we&#13;
have them coming out of our&#13;
ears." This is opposed to last year&#13;
when the squad had "one or two&#13;
full - time guys, and the rest&#13;
helped out when they could." This.&#13;
More trivia&#13;
1. Who wore and tested the first&#13;
football helmet?&#13;
2. Who was the first woman&#13;
golfer to win five straight pro&#13;
events?&#13;
3. Who was the first bowler to&#13;
win money in 51 consecutive pro&#13;
tournaments?&#13;
£ zado7 &lt;fouD/vr Z 'miutswH&#13;
sauivp jq j :SV3MSNV&#13;
is only the second year that&#13;
Parkside has had male&#13;
cheerleaders, and they have&#13;
added much variety to the&#13;
routines.&#13;
With the addition of the new&#13;
cheerleaders also came some new&#13;
cheers. "We got some new ideas&#13;
from one of the new girls from&#13;
Michigan. Hers and some other&#13;
new ideas have added to our&#13;
style."&#13;
One thing that is often&#13;
overlooked about the cheerleaders&#13;
is the hours of hard work that the&#13;
cheerleaders put into each&#13;
routine. Theresa Schiffer, a freshman&#13;
member of the cheerleading&#13;
squad said, "Wa,work just as hard&#13;
as any track team, or any sports&#13;
team does."&#13;
Nielson added to Schiffer's&#13;
comments by saying, "To look&#13;
good you must work hard. What&#13;
you put into it is what you'll get&#13;
out of it." All of this hard work&#13;
seems to be paying off. After&#13;
Friday night's game the squad got&#13;
many compliments on their&#13;
routines. "We've never before&#13;
gotten so many comments on our&#13;
cheers," said Nielson.&#13;
Yet even with all the hard work&#13;
that the cheerleaders have&#13;
already put in, there is still a lot of&#13;
work that must be done. "We are&#13;
basically a self - taught team,"&#13;
said Schiffer.&#13;
Added Nielson, "We are still&#13;
using old cheers that we learned in&#13;
high school. We just started to&#13;
cheer at a college level on&#13;
Friday."&#13;
The cheerleaders are sponsoring&#13;
many programs this year.&#13;
One that attracted much attention&#13;
during half - time of Friday's&#13;
game was the Rangerettes,&#13;
children between the ages of 4 and&#13;
11. "I think that it made the&#13;
show," sqid Nielson, commenting&#13;
on the little cheerleaders. AcTreat&#13;
YiwmIvm Ta A Sift&#13;
Of Total Fftnass&#13;
1st Momborship at Rag. Prict *210&#13;
2nd Momborship at Va Prlco *105&#13;
With Tho First.&#13;
Unlimited Use ef Our&#13;
Facility, 7 Days A Week&#13;
Skewers and Locker&#13;
Room Facilities Included.&#13;
COUPON&#13;
20% OFF&#13;
all Vitamins and Supplements.&#13;
Expires Dec. 19th, 1981&#13;
THE B ODY SHOP&#13;
FITNESS CENTER&#13;
FOR MEN &amp; W OMEN&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
2111 456th Street&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Mon thru Fri. 8am to 9:30pm. Sat. 8am to 6pm. Sun. 9am to 5pm&#13;
Ph.652-1459&#13;
cording to Nielson, the Rangerette&#13;
program has encouraged many&#13;
people to get involved with the&#13;
school's spirit. School spirit is the&#13;
cheerleaders prime directive.&#13;
"We want to get people more&#13;
involved with school athletics. It&#13;
(the Rangerette program) went&#13;
well on Friday, and hopefully&#13;
more people will start to attend&#13;
sports activities."&#13;
The cheerleaders are also involved&#13;
in a high school recruitment&#13;
program where they ask&#13;
senior cheerleaders from area&#13;
high schools to come in and cheer&#13;
during a Parkside game. "We let&#13;
them see us and also see what it is&#13;
like to cheer a college game,"&#13;
stated Nielson. "We have also&#13;
judged some local high school&#13;
cheerleaders in competition."&#13;
The cheerleaders are also&#13;
selling season passes to&#13;
Parkside's basketball games, and&#13;
from all accounts the sales are&#13;
going well. The cheerleaders have&#13;
also had several bake sales and&#13;
even a plant sale. In case you were&#13;
wondering where all the proceeds&#13;
are going, wonder no more. Some&#13;
of what the cheerleaders earn&#13;
goes for new uniforms and&#13;
equipment, but most of what they&#13;
earn is used to fund trips to&#13;
various away games, hopefully&#13;
including a trip to Kansas City and&#13;
the NAIA Nationals.&#13;
The biggest problem that the&#13;
cheerleaders have is overcoming&#13;
a negative stereotype. "We are&#13;
stereotyped as being airy," said&#13;
Nielson. "There is more to it than&#13;
getting out there and shaking your&#13;
butt a little," Schiffer readily&#13;
agreed.&#13;
"Friday night we worked as&#13;
hard as the basketball players,"&#13;
said Schiffer. She went on to add,&#13;
"Cheerleaders are not dizzy!"&#13;
Why are they cheerleaders? The&#13;
answer is a little surprising. "I&#13;
think that without being involved&#13;
in cheerleading in my freshman&#13;
year I wouldn't have stayed at&#13;
Parkside. There is not a lot of&#13;
social life at Parkside, just books&#13;
and classes. Cheerleading introduced&#13;
me to some great people.&#13;
I've gained friendships that I will&#13;
cherish for the rest of my life,"&#13;
said Nielson.&#13;
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GIFT CERTIFICATES&#13;
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For The Christmas Season&#13;
GIFT CERTIFICATES&#13;
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In Dedication To Our Western&#13;
Heritage Autry County Exists At:&#13;
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Photo by S. Squirrel&#13;
This, however, is not the only&#13;
reason for being a cheerleader.&#13;
"I'm sort of addicted to it. Next&#13;
year there can be an even better&#13;
squad," Nielson said. "It is a&#13;
challenge because in the past&#13;
there hasn't been much school&#13;
involvement, and now Parkside is&#13;
becoming closer together. It is a&#13;
good feeling knowing that you're&#13;
helping people get closer together&#13;
and more into the games.&#13;
This year's cheerleading squad&#13;
is doing more with a better team&#13;
than ever before. It should be&#13;
quite interesting to see how much&#13;
they improve during the&#13;
remainder of the season and over&#13;
the new few years. Indeed there is&#13;
more to cheerleading than meets&#13;
the eye.&#13;
Ad rate changes&#13;
The Parkside Ranger has&#13;
reduced its classified ad rates to&#13;
students in an effort to make&#13;
advertising more accessible to&#13;
students.&#13;
Ads to students were formerly&#13;
free, until the beginning of this&#13;
semester when a blanket fee of 50*&#13;
per ten words was attached as&#13;
part of general advertising rate&#13;
increases.&#13;
Students may now place&#13;
classified ads at a rate of 35* per&#13;
ten words. No advertising will be&#13;
accepted that is deemed by the&#13;
editor as defamatory in content.&#13;
The reduced ad rate for students&#13;
is the result of student request.&#13;
Classified A ds&#13;
TY PI kj r* |&#13;
ERV,CESOFFERED&#13;
T PING. Resumes, term papers, theses,&#13;
manuscripts, etc. 14 years experience.&#13;
Reasonable rates. 694 1825 or 652 6599&#13;
TYPING in my home — term papers,&#13;
manuscripts, essays, resumes, letters,&#13;
' e,c&#13;
' Pro,e&#13;
ssional results. Call 639-&#13;
6023.&#13;
TYPING. Professionally done. Reasonable&#13;
rates. Fast service. South Kenosha, 657-&#13;
6U68.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
ROOMATE WANTED, male to share&#13;
spacious renovated two bedroom downtown&#13;
apt. in Racine. Call 633-4143.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
LYMOU TH VOLARE station wagon 1977,&#13;
excellent, $3000. Call Amin, ext. 2547, GR&#13;
341.&#13;
CA A RJ^&#13;
M.&#13;
A.&#13;
S SALE at ,he 0ld Book corner at&#13;
Martha Merrell's Bookstore, 312 Sixth St.,&#13;
M™C'"&#13;
e&#13;
.'J10% oft a&#13;
" used b00ks wi,h ,his ad&#13;
'&#13;
NOW sthetimeto build up your library; buy&#13;
yourself a good book.&#13;
,,1L1 PERSONALS&#13;
WHO DO YA KNOW wants to look beautiful?&#13;
Avon products can help! Call 654 1953 after&#13;
6 p.m. Ask for Patty.&#13;
T&#13;
?,,T,£E RANGER STAFF: It was fun. To&#13;
UWP: Goodbye!!!!!!!!!!&#13;
W^&#13;
NI&#13;
EI&#13;
?&#13;
: 0ne caree r opportunity for a&#13;
graduating Communication maior. mother&#13;
words . somebody find me a&#13;
PAD T ' V !!!!!!! —An Ex-Editor&#13;
o J Friday, Dec. 11. Everyone invited.&#13;
8:30 p.m. 1825 60th St., Kenosha. &#13;
Fall letterwinners honored&#13;
Most Mn&lt;st Valll^Hlo nloVAnn ~ A... ~ . _ valuable players, captains&#13;
and letterwinners have been&#13;
named for the six fall sports&#13;
teams at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside.&#13;
Most valuable players include&#13;
Racine (Park) sophomore Dan&#13;
Stublaski for men's cross -&#13;
country; Kenosha (Bradford)&#13;
junior Debbie Spino for women's&#13;
cross-country; Racine (Horlick)&#13;
senior Todd Schalinske for men's&#13;
golf; Kisii, Kenya, senior John&#13;
Momoima - Onyiego for men's&#13;
soccer; Kenosha (Bradford)&#13;
senior Kathy Thomas for women's&#13;
tennis; and Neenah (Neenah)&#13;
sophomore Laurie Hess for&#13;
women's volleyball.&#13;
. Captains for 1981 included&#13;
Stublaski for men's cross -&#13;
country; Muskego (Muskego)&#13;
junior Dona Driscoll for women's&#13;
cross - country ; Oak Creek (Oak&#13;
Creek) junion Mark Peterson for&#13;
men's golf; and Racine&#13;
(Lutheran) junior Alan Gibson,&#13;
St. Paul, Minn. (Hill - Murray)&#13;
junior John McNulty and Robbinsdale,&#13;
Minn. (Robbinsdale)&#13;
junior Bob Newstrom for soccer&#13;
Selected as captains for their&#13;
1982 teams were Peterson and&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper) sophomore&#13;
Bob Sobol for golf and McNulty for&#13;
soccer. Peterson was selected the&#13;
most improved golfer while&#13;
McNulty received similar honors&#13;
for soccer.&#13;
Letterwinners follow, by sport:&#13;
MEN'S CROSS - COUNTRY&#13;
(Coach Lucian Rosa) - Tom&#13;
Barrett, Steve Brunner, John&#13;
Cogan, A1 C orrea, Rich Sowlles,&#13;
Dan Stublaski.&#13;
WOMEN'S CROSS - COUNTRY&#13;
(Coach Mike DeWitt) - Dona&#13;
Driscoll, Lowrie Melotik, Sue&#13;
Meyer, Barb Osborne, Linda&#13;
Pfeilstifter, Debbie Spino, Sandy&#13;
Venne.&#13;
MEN'S GOLF (Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens) - Gary Fox, Mark&#13;
Peterson, Mike Ritacca, Todd&#13;
Schalinske, John Schneider, Bob&#13;
Sobol.&#13;
MEN'S SOCCER (Coach Hal&#13;
Henderson) - Cris Birdsall, Rich&#13;
Blay, Jeff Bolwerk, Don Cops,&#13;
Ralph DeGraff, Jeff Dennehy,&#13;
Brad Faust, Scott Gerhartz, Alan&#13;
Gibson, Jeff LaForce, Don&#13;
Matanowski, John McNulty,&#13;
Roger Menk, John Monks, Bob&#13;
Newstrom, Chiedu Okonmah,&#13;
John Momoima - Onyiego, Dan&#13;
Opferman, Jim Spielman, Don&#13;
Theisen, Paul Wieland, Adrian&#13;
Rietveld.&#13;
WOMEN'S TENNIS (Coach&#13;
Noreen Goggin) - Lori Bleashka,&#13;
Karen Froseth, Charlotte Hall,&#13;
Nancy Kivi, Kathy Thomas, Carol&#13;
Wagner.&#13;
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL&#13;
(Coach Linda Henderson) - Fran&#13;
Busalacchi, Sherry Festge, Robin&#13;
Henschel, Laurie Hess, Deb&#13;
Justman, Callie Lee, Laurie Pope,&#13;
Cindy Ruffert, Bonnie Schmelter,&#13;
Kim Tesher.&#13;
Nordic Ski Club to sponsor race&#13;
The Nordic Ski Club will be&#13;
sponsoring a 15k cross country&#13;
skiing race and citizens tour on&#13;
January 10 at 11:00 a.m. The race&#13;
is open to everyone, and you can&#13;
register anytime up until 10:30&#13;
p.m. on the day of the race.&#13;
Awards in the form of finishing&#13;
pins will be given to the first 150&#13;
participants to cross the finishing&#13;
line. A computerized timing&#13;
system along with a manual back -&#13;
up will be used to insure accurate&#13;
results.&#13;
The Nordic Ski Club, according&#13;
to Ed Wallen, the club's&#13;
advisor, is "A group of Parkside&#13;
staff, students and community&#13;
members with an interest in cross&#13;
country skiing." The race,&#13;
however, is not for the beginner&#13;
skier, and only those with intermediate&#13;
to advanced skills&#13;
should attempt it.&#13;
The record time for the course is&#13;
currently held by Norwegian Stig&#13;
Heir, with a time erf 49 minutes.&#13;
Former Olympic member Joe&#13;
McNulty won the race last year,&#13;
and is expected to return to defend&#13;
his title. Wallen believes that Bill&#13;
Olsen, a community member who&#13;
won a Roller Ski race sponsored&#13;
by the Nordic Ski Club will finish&#13;
high in his age group, while Kai&#13;
Hansen, the President of the&#13;
Nordic Club, will finish very high&#13;
in his age group.&#13;
Wallen is expecting anywhere&#13;
from 300 t o 400 people to show up&#13;
for the race which is one of the&#13;
biggest cross country races held&#13;
in the midwest. The better and&#13;
faster skiiers will be trying for&#13;
good times while most of the&#13;
entrants will just try to finish.&#13;
"Skiing is easier than running,&#13;
because you can glide," commented&#13;
Warren.&#13;
In the last four years that the&#13;
race has been held, it has been&#13;
postponed three times. Two times&#13;
for inadequate snow, and once for,&#13;
believe it or not, too much snow!&#13;
The course that the skiiers will&#13;
follow has trails 10 - 25 feet wide&#13;
and is characterized by long,&#13;
gradual uphills and downhills,&#13;
with a few short, steep down runs.&#13;
The course is double tracked by a&#13;
VISIT-ENJOY...&#13;
"The Wonderful World&#13;
of WEDDINGS"&#13;
STATE FAIR PARK - SOUTH EXHIBIT HALL&#13;
JANUARY 9-10, 1982&#13;
A SHORT COURSE" W&#13;
WEDDING MANNINGS&#13;
IT'S FUN...&#13;
ITS INFORMATIVE...&#13;
with E VERYTHING for&#13;
EVERYONE I NTERESTED&#13;
in WEDDINGS!&#13;
v&#13;
EXHIBITS: Bridal gowns • invitations • flowers • silver-china •&#13;
photos • jewelers • honeymoon travel • cookware • wedding&#13;
cakes • formalwear • reception sites • favors • wedding music&#13;
• luggage • limousine service • financial services (comparison&#13;
shop - most catagories).&#13;
BRIDAL FASHION SHOWS: SEVERAL BRIDAL SALONS&#13;
will showcase an exquisite array of spring &amp; summer bridal&#13;
fashions. Men's formalwear too! Bring the whole bridal party!&#13;
SPECIAL FEATURES: (1) "Cooking for Newlyweds"&#13;
(2) "How to Pack Honeymoon Luggage"&#13;
(3) The "LOVE PRITST", Father Gene Jakubek .S.J.&#13;
AMERICA'S MOST COMPLETE&#13;
BRIDAL SHOW&#13;
SHOW HOURS&#13;
Saturday, january 9 - 1 to 10 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, January 10 - 1 to 5 p.m.&#13;
BOX OFFICE ADMISSION - $3.00&#13;
ORDER TICKETS BY MAIL:&#13;
Send request with check ($3.00 per ticket) to:&#13;
WONDERFUL WORLD OF WEDDINGS&#13;
6111 W. Bluemound Rd., Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53213&#13;
Woodcrest Gyro Groomer and&#13;
Track Mould.&#13;
For now, the Nordic Club awaits&#13;
January and whatever snow&#13;
conditions that it holds. In case of&#13;
a lack of snow, or Heaven forbid&#13;
too much snow, the rescheduled&#13;
dates will be January 24 or&#13;
February 7. More information is&#13;
available in the P.E. Building.&#13;
More trivia&#13;
1. Who was voted by the press as&#13;
the greatest roundballer of 1900 -&#13;
1950?&#13;
2. Whose 68 pts. vs. Knicks in '77&#13;
set a one - game record for&#13;
guards?&#13;
3. Who was elected to both&#13;
basketball and football Halls of&#13;
Fame?&#13;
4. Which college basketball&#13;
squad was led by Bill Russell to 60&#13;
consecutive wins?&#13;
•oosioudjj uvs p 83dis&#13;
ozuojy souiy £ qoMDJDft aidj&#13;
Z uvqw aSuoaQ j :Sti3A\SNV&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 10&#13;
CONCERT at 5 p. m. in Union Square featuring the Parkside Jazz Band. Admission&#13;
is free for Parkside faculty, staff and students. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 11&#13;
WORKSHOP "Test Anxiety" at 1 p. m. in MOLN 111. Call ext. 2605 for more information.&#13;
&#13;
MOVIE "The Great Santini" (PG) will be shown at 7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission at the door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
PLAY "The Doctor's Farces" at 8 p. m. in CA Studio B. Admission is $2.00 f or&#13;
Parkside students, faculty, staff and senior citizens and $3.00 for others. Tickets&#13;
are available at the Union Information Center and at the Fine Arts Division&#13;
Office.&#13;
DANCE/CONCERT at 9 p. m. in Union Square featuring "Legacy". Admission at&#13;
the door is $2.00 for a Parkside student and $2.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 12&#13;
PLAY "The Doctor's Farces" will be repeated at 8 p. m. in CA Studio B.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 13&#13;
RECEPTION for December graduates at 2 p. m. in Main Place. The event is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
CONCERT at 3:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema featuring the Parkside Chorus and&#13;
Chorale. Admission at the door is 50* for students and senior citizens and $1.00 for&#13;
others.&#13;
MOVIE "The Great Santini" will be repeated at 7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 15&#13;
CONCERT at 12:30 p. m. in Main Place featuring the Parkside Wind Ensemble.&#13;
The concert is free and open to the public.&#13;
DANCE in Union Square after the Basketball Game, featuring "UWX". Admission&#13;
is free with your basketball ticket. Sponsored by Student Life.&#13;
Patronize R anger&#13;
Christmas A duertisers!!&#13;
| Engagement Sets From *95°°&#13;
OUR EVERYDAY PRICES ARE LOWER&#13;
THAN OTHER'S "DISCOUNT PRICES"&#13;
COME IN &amp; COMPARE&#13;
Christmas Hours&#13;
MON DAY - F RI DAY 9:30 to 9:00&#13;
SATURDAY 9:30 to 5:15&#13;
SUNDAY 12:00 to 4:00&#13;
THE STORE WITH MORE —&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST JEWELER&#13;
HERBERT'S&#13;
CORNER 58th ST. &amp; 7th AVE. &#13;
14 Thursday, December 10,1981 RANGER&#13;
Experience-Progress for women's basketball&#13;
by Greg Bonofij .figlio&#13;
The Parkside women's&#13;
basketball season opened in a&#13;
positive manner last Saturday.&#13;
Two Laurie Pope free throws With&#13;
14 seconds left in over - time lifted&#13;
the Ranger women to a dramatic&#13;
78-77 upset victory over UWWhitewater.&#13;
&#13;
Pope led the Ranger attack with&#13;
an impressive 23 point performance.&#13;
The junior center&#13;
connected on eight of twelve from&#13;
the field and six of seven from the&#13;
line. Sophomore forward Robin&#13;
Henschel added 14 points and&#13;
freshman forward Theresa Bye 11&#13;
points in the season opener for the&#13;
Parkside cagers.&#13;
Two free throws by Kim&#13;
Johnson tied the game at 68 apiece&#13;
with just seven seconds remaining&#13;
in regulation play. Whitewater&#13;
blew a golden opportunity to win&#13;
the game but missed the first free&#13;
throw in a one - and - one situation.&#13;
They also had a chance to win it in&#13;
overtime, but missed on a last&#13;
second 22 footer from the left side.&#13;
Coach Noreen Goggin is optimistic&#13;
about this year's team,&#13;
and she has every right to be.&#13;
Saturday's victory came against a&#13;
team that was third in the nation&#13;
last year.&#13;
One reason Coach Goggin and&#13;
assistant coaches Dale Snyder&#13;
and Bob Seidel are optimistic is&#13;
the fact that Parkside has six&#13;
letterwinners returning from last&#13;
year's squad. Among those six&#13;
include four starters: 5-4&#13;
sophomore guard Cindy Ruffert&#13;
(Milwaukee Hamilton); 5-9&#13;
sophomore forward Jeanne&#13;
Jacobs (Milwaukee St. Mary's);&#13;
5-8 sophomore forward Robin&#13;
Henschel (Hartland Arrowhead);&#13;
and junior center Laurie Pope&#13;
(Omro High School, Omro). The&#13;
other two letterwinners include 5-3&#13;
guard Linda Masters (Wilmot)&#13;
and 5-10 sophomore center Tracie&#13;
Sylvester (Central).&#13;
Newcomers to the team are: 5-2&#13;
sophomore guard Laura Laurenzi&#13;
(Kenosha Tremper); 5-6&#13;
sophomore guard - forward&#13;
Denova Franklin (Chicago&#13;
Vocational); 5-7 freshman guard&#13;
Holly Just (Union Grove); 5-8&#13;
freshman forward Theresa Bye&#13;
(Eau Claire North); 5-9 freshman&#13;
forward Lynn Kissinger (Eau&#13;
Claire North); 6-0 freshman&#13;
center Shelley Laffin (Wausau&#13;
West); and 5-8 freshman forward&#13;
Kim Johnson (Kenosha St.&#13;
Joseph).&#13;
Last year's 6-20 team had only one&#13;
returning player. But, as a group,&#13;
this is a much improved Ranger&#13;
team. "We've improved from last&#13;
year's team in every category.&#13;
(With) four of our five starters&#13;
back this year, we're doing things&#13;
differently, especially on defense.&#13;
We're going to a man - to - man&#13;
this year instead of the zone we&#13;
used last year. We're also emPhoto&#13;
by S. Squirrel&#13;
ploying more patterned offense.&#13;
We move the ball around more&#13;
and wait for the good shot instead&#13;
of looking for one or two people to&#13;
score all the points," Goggin said.&#13;
"Yeah, it is (a young team), but&#13;
we're more lucky than last year.&#13;
We have four experienced people&#13;
starting this year compared to&#13;
only one last year. But we're weak&#13;
on overall experience. If we went&#13;
against an evenly matched opponent,&#13;
we'd be at a disadvantage&#13;
because of (the lack of overall)&#13;
experience. Hopefully, we can&#13;
keep our players for next year,"&#13;
Goggin said.&#13;
"Obviously we want to improve on&#13;
last year. I think we can go .500 or&#13;
better. Beating Whitewater was a&#13;
big indication of our improvement.&#13;
They were third in the&#13;
nation last year and they only lost&#13;
one player. I h ope we can make it&#13;
to the area play-offs and possibly&#13;
even the nationals," Goggin said.&#13;
Key players for the Parkside&#13;
team include: Lori Pope, the&#13;
leading rebounder and scorer for&#13;
the Rangers. "She's been consistently&#13;
strong for us both last&#13;
year and. this year." Another&#13;
player Goggin has high hopes for,&#13;
especially in the rebounding&#13;
department, is Jeanne Jacobs,&#13;
whom Goggin describes as "a&#13;
strong and tall post player." For&#13;
leadership on the court, expect to&#13;
see Cindy Ruffert. "She's the one&#13;
who gets the offense running and&#13;
keeps things moving for us. While&#13;
she doesn't score often, she does&#13;
keep things going," Goggin said.&#13;
Perimeter shooting will be in the&#13;
capable hands of Robin Henschel.&#13;
"She's a real good shooter and can&#13;
hit from anywhere outside,"&#13;
Goggin said. Two promising&#13;
freshmen are forwards Kim&#13;
Johnson and Theresa Bye.&#13;
Johnson scored eight critical&#13;
points late in the Whitewater&#13;
game and should see a lot of action&#13;
this season.&#13;
Goggin hopes the turnout for&#13;
last Saturday's game will continue.&#13;
"Our game is unique from&#13;
the Men's. We have a 30 second&#13;
clock which doesn't allow you to&#13;
stall away the last four minutes of&#13;
the game. Those games aren't&#13;
very exciting when they do that."&#13;
Fans can attest to that.&#13;
The Rangers play Northeastern&#13;
Illinois tonight at 7 p.m.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
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Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
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414-657-1340&#13;
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694-9206 JM WW JT, (MQBVt, W&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
(1) WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
LENDER&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
Final Week Hours&#13;
Dec. 14-19&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
WEDNESDAY&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
9a. m. -6p. m.&#13;
9a. m. -6 p. m.&#13;
9 a. m.-6p. m.&#13;
9a. m. -6 p. m.&#13;
9a. m. -6p. m.&#13;
6p. m. 12a. m.&#13;
50* SPECIAL Mon.-Fri.&#13;
Bowling - 50* Game&#13;
Pool - 50* % Hour&#13;
Moonlite Bowling&#13;
Sat. 8 pm-12 am&#13;
Inside UW-P Sports &#13;
RANGER&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Thursday, December 10,1981 15&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
The Parkside men's basketball&#13;
team got off on the wrong foot last&#13;
week with a loss in the season&#13;
opener, but came back to win their&#13;
next three games.&#13;
The Rangers travelled to&#13;
Chicago to battle the Illinois Institute&#13;
of Technology last&#13;
Tuesday, but apparently weren't&#13;
ready to play, as IIT jumped off to&#13;
a quick 10-4 lead which was never&#13;
lost. Parkside ended up on the&#13;
short end of the 73-65 score.&#13;
"We didn't play well in any part&#13;
of the game," said coach Steve&#13;
Stephens. "It was our first game&#13;
and we just didn't get on track."&#13;
Parkside was led in scoring by&#13;
6-5 senior center - forward John&#13;
Herndon with 18 points. Freshman&#13;
forward Cornell Sattler, who&#13;
Stephens said "played as well as&#13;
anybody," and junior center&#13;
Wilbert Webb each added 16&#13;
points.&#13;
In the Rangers' home opener&#13;
last Friday, the Parkside fans got&#13;
their first look at two exciting&#13;
freshmen, guardDarron Brittman&#13;
and center Ray Duckworth, in a&#13;
77-61 win over St. Xavier College.&#13;
"We were pretty tentative in the&#13;
first half," commented Stephens.&#13;
"But the second half we got it&#13;
going." St. Xavier got off to a&#13;
quick 10-0 lead and held that lead&#13;
until halftime for a 31-30 lead.&#13;
Freshman Brittman literally&#13;
stole the game, making an impressive&#13;
debut in his first college&#13;
game with 10 points, three assists,&#13;
and eight steals, seven more than&#13;
the entire opposing team.&#13;
"He's extremely quick," said&#13;
Stephens. "Our defense has not&#13;
been all that great, but the opponents&#13;
are always looking for&#13;
Darron."&#13;
Duckworth, at 6-8 and 250&#13;
pounds proved to be a force to be&#13;
reckoned with in the middle as he&#13;
led the Rangers with 18 points and&#13;
contributed five rebounds. Buster&#13;
Webb added 17 points and 7&#13;
rebounds, followed by Herndon&#13;
with 11 points, and Saddler with&#13;
nine.&#13;
The Rangers then took to the&#13;
road again Saturday night to&#13;
Sheboygan to battle Lakeland&#13;
College. Parkside got off to a&#13;
quick 17-2 lead, only to see&#13;
Lakeland close the gap to 23-21.&#13;
Parkside went into the intermission&#13;
with a 43-38 advantage.&#13;
The second half started off the&#13;
Rangers loin three of four opening games&#13;
game by a 75-64 score.&#13;
John Herndon again paced the&#13;
Rangers with 26 points, with Webb&#13;
adding 23. Brittman again showed&#13;
his quickness with six steals and&#13;
seven assists.&#13;
The Rangers came home&#13;
Monday night to battle a tough&#13;
Loras College squad. Loras held a&#13;
20-14 lead seven minutes into the&#13;
first half, but the Rangers put on&#13;
one of their patented scoring&#13;
spurts, outscoring Lakeland 16-3&#13;
in the next seven minutes, and&#13;
went on to take a 39-35 halftime&#13;
lead.&#13;
The two teams played fairly&#13;
evenly in the second half, with the&#13;
Rangers getting key plays when&#13;
they needed them to fend off Loras&#13;
to capture their third win in four&#13;
tries by a 66-62 s core.&#13;
John Herndon again dominated&#13;
the inside as he led both teams&#13;
with 25 points, 12 rebounds, and&#13;
six blocked shots. Senior guard&#13;
Dave McLeish added 14 points,&#13;
and Darron Brittman scored 11&#13;
points, dished out three assists&#13;
and stole the ball four times.&#13;
"We wanted to get the ball inside&#13;
early," said Stephens, "and&#13;
John just sat back on his own."&#13;
Loras coach Doug Smith had&#13;
praise for the Parkside quickness.&#13;
"We're not as quick as Parkside,&#13;
so we tried our 2-3 zone defense&#13;
and backcourt press. We tried to&#13;
keep the lid on them."&#13;
The Rangers, who have played&#13;
three games in four days, will now&#13;
go on the first real tough road trip&#13;
of the season as they take on&#13;
Arkansas Thursday night and&#13;
.Kansas State Saturday night&#13;
before coming home to battle&#13;
Ferris State Tuesday night for&#13;
their last game before the Ranger&#13;
Classic on December 28-29.&#13;
Participating in this year's&#13;
tourney are Carthage, UWOshkosh&#13;
and Saginaw Valley.&#13;
same, with the Rangers building'&#13;
up a 19 p oint advantage at 60-41,&#13;
only to see Lakeland again bounce&#13;
Photo by S. Squirrel&#13;
back to within two at 64-62.&#13;
Parkside fought off Lakeland in&#13;
the final four minutes to take the&#13;
50&lt; SPECIAL&#13;
Doc. 14-23&#13;
"50&lt;t specials in the Rec Center during final week." exclaims&#13;
Stroll in' Bowlin', "What a great deal." Strollin'&#13;
Bowlin' soon learns that bowling is only 504 per game and&#13;
pool is only 504 per half hour. The specials begin December&#13;
14 and run through December 23. Discounted prices are&#13;
available Monday - Friday during play hours. Why not stop&#13;
down and take a break from your finals for a relaxing&#13;
game of bowling or pool.&#13;
Have a&#13;
runner&#13;
on your&#13;
list?&#13;
We have what he (or the)&#13;
wanti for Chrintmat.&#13;
Shoes, Shirt*, Suit*&#13;
Books, and morel&#13;
tunning / Basketball&#13;
•reeks&#13;
Nike &gt;Nik. Adidas&#13;
- Sony New Mens,&#13;
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(tonic&#13;
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Tennis&#13;
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• HOURS*&#13;
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Sat. 10-5&#13;
Sun. 13-4&#13;
ERRITTS RUNNING&#13;
CENTER&#13;
Specialists in Athletic Footwear&#13;
and Running Clothing&#13;
5200 WASHINGTON AVE.&#13;
In Wathington Square — Racine&#13;
Telephone 632-4699&#13;
** i* I* THE PARKSIDE UNION I*&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
*&#13;
CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
SKI RENTALS&#13;
| • NEW EQUIPMENT • GREAT TRAILS • LOW COST&#13;
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*• .*•&#13;
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•*&#13;
HALF DAY: '3.7S UWP Student $4.75 Guest&#13;
FULL DAY: *5.00 UWP Student $6.50 Guest&#13;
WEEKEND: $ 12.00 UWP Student $ 14.00 Guest&#13;
FOR TRAIL CONDITIONS CALL ***-2695&#13;
HOLIDAY BREAK&#13;
BOWLING/BILLIARDS&#13;
—HOURS—&#13;
Closed Dec. 20 - Jan. 3&#13;
Jan. 4-15&#13;
7:00 pm - 10:30 pm&#13;
*•' L*&#13;
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J* 7:00 pm - 10:30 pm **&#13;
** FOR TRAIL CONDITIONS CALL ***-2695 - ** A/**- Ww&#13;
** *z&#13;
** ** &#13;
16 Thursday, December 10,1981 RANGER&#13;
Parkside Food Service &amp;&#13;
The Parkside Union&#13;
invite you to attend&#13;
(JW-PARKSIDE'S ANNUAL&#13;
CHRISTMAS PARTY&#13;
FRIDAY, DECEMBER II&#13;
11:00 am-l:00 pm&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
FREE COOKIES, CAKE, COFFEE &amp; PUNCH&#13;
PLUS . . . SPECIAL CHRISTMAS DINNER&#13;
• CARVED BAKED HAM WITH FRUIT SAUCE&#13;
• ESCALLOPED OR SWEET POTATOES&#13;
• ASPARAGUS SPEARS OR CAULIFLOWER&#13;
• SPICED CRABAPPLE&#13;
• GINGERBREAD &amp; WHIPPED TOPPING&#13;
• COMPLIMENTARY WINE OR PUNCH&#13;
MERRY&#13;
CHRISTMAS&#13;
NEW YEAR </text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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      <tag tagId="1224">
        <name>ronald reagan</name>
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