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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>"Save the Library Day" set</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Soger&#13;
Thursday, April 29, 1982 Vol. 10 - No. 28&#13;
Semester worth of books, parking pe rmit are top pr izes&#13;
Save the Library Day" set&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Members of student&#13;
organizations — PAB, PSGA,&#13;
Ranger and SOC — are organizing&#13;
"Save the Library Day" on&#13;
Wednesday, May 12 in an effort to&#13;
raise funds for the library, which&#13;
has been seriously hurt by the&#13;
state - mandated budget cuts.&#13;
The library is also receiving&#13;
attention from the PSGA Senate&#13;
and the Science Division Ad Hoc&#13;
Library Crisis Committee. The&#13;
PSGA Senate April 22&#13;
unanimously approved a&#13;
resolution stating "that all&#13;
possible alternatives to maintaining&#13;
our present library should&#13;
be explored" and that "PSGA,&#13;
Inc. supports the establishment of&#13;
a student endowment fund in&#13;
order to further this end."&#13;
The Science Division Ad Hoc&#13;
Library Crisis Committee was&#13;
formed following Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin's announcement March 23&#13;
that he would soon act on the&#13;
Library Staff recommendation to&#13;
cut $70,000 from the periodicals&#13;
and serials acquisition budget.&#13;
The committee made two&#13;
conclusions: "1) we should move&#13;
slowly, exploring all our options&#13;
as we proceed; and 2) we must&#13;
begin work immediately to&#13;
dramatically improve our access&#13;
to off - campus sources of library&#13;
materials."&#13;
In its report, the committee&#13;
urged library staff and the administration&#13;
to explore the&#13;
following recommendations: a&#13;
community user fee, a Cartha""&#13;
College student fee, a student fee&#13;
coming somehow from SUFAC,&#13;
faculty donations, alumni&#13;
donations and faculty subscriptions.&#13;
See next week's&#13;
Ranger for a more in - depth look&#13;
at the recommendations the&#13;
committee, and others, have&#13;
made.&#13;
The Save the Library Day&#13;
Committee, an informal gathering&#13;
of student leaders, met on Wednesday,&#13;
April 21 for the first time.&#13;
By the next meeting on Monday,&#13;
April 26, much headway had been&#13;
made for the May 12 event.&#13;
Over 30 donations have been&#13;
donated (at press time) to a raffle&#13;
that will be conducted on the&#13;
"Save the Library Day." The top&#13;
prize, being donated by College&#13;
Stores Associates, is a semester of&#13;
textbooks free of charge next fall.&#13;
Another prize is a white annual&#13;
parking permit for next year.&#13;
(SUFAC Tuesday approved $135&#13;
for the purchase of the permit and&#13;
a couple other items.)&#13;
At press time, plans were made&#13;
to have members of the committee&#13;
go to Madison to get the&#13;
permit to conduct a raffle.&#13;
Other campus - related prizes&#13;
include: a week of free lunches&#13;
from Heritage food service; 10&#13;
lines of free bowling in the Rec&#13;
Center; $10 of beverage / food&#13;
tickets for The End, to be held&#13;
May 22-23; a $5 gift certificate for&#13;
the Sweet Shoppe; one basic two -&#13;
person outdoor rental (tent,&#13;
sleeping bags, cookware, etc.) for&#13;
one weekend.&#13;
Activities planned for the event&#13;
so far include: a dunk tank, a pie -&#13;
in - the - eye, free throw contest&#13;
(teams of four — two male, two&#13;
female), tug-of-war (same team&#13;
requirements), kiss - a - thon, beer&#13;
drinking contest and a bake sale.&#13;
Sign up for the contests at the&#13;
PSGA office (by the Coffee&#13;
Shoppe) or the Rec Center.&#13;
T-shirts with the "Save the&#13;
Library" logo will also be for sale.&#13;
Prize donators from the community&#13;
include: from Kenosha,&#13;
Ray Radigan's, Oage Thomsen's,&#13;
Candlelite Supper Club, Captain's&#13;
Steak Joynt, Greco's, Casino&#13;
Townhouse. Jensen's, Country&#13;
Kitchen, Hungry Head, Bidinger's&#13;
Music House and Carmichael&#13;
Associates movie theaters.&#13;
wososoxccccccccoscocoeocooccocoooocccoccococc&#13;
Support the library —&#13;
attend "Soue the Library Day"&#13;
»coocooocco sccsooscoosecco&#13;
Dump&#13;
site?&#13;
Donators from Racine include:&#13;
Corner House, The Sanctuary,&#13;
Ferraro's, Giovanni DeRango's,&#13;
Infusino's Pizza, Famous Recipe&#13;
Fried Chicken, Obie's, Martha&#13;
Merrill's, Walden Books, and&#13;
Marc Theaters.&#13;
More prizes will be solicited up&#13;
until the day of the event.&#13;
"White Lie" will be playing&#13;
from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and&#13;
activities will be conducted&#13;
throughout the day. There is no&#13;
admission charge. All proceeds&#13;
will go towards the library endowment&#13;
fund.&#13;
See next week's Ranger for&#13;
more details.&#13;
Activist McAllister's goal:&#13;
"conspire for the sake of life"&#13;
by Edward Beal&#13;
On April 21, the Mobilization for&#13;
Survival sponsored a lecture by&#13;
Elizabeth McAllister. She spoke at&#13;
1 p.m. on civil disobedience, and&#13;
again at 7 p.m. on the arms race —&#13;
national security vs. national&#13;
defense.&#13;
During the afternoon lecture,&#13;
she presented her philosophy&#13;
through the perspective that&#13;
people have a powerful way of&#13;
abolishing certain acts, but the&#13;
risks are very high. "Don't get&#13;
involved if you're not ready for the&#13;
consequence and change it will&#13;
bring on you," she said. Civil&#13;
disobedience is truly a powerful&#13;
way to effect change.&#13;
McAllister, who's been a social&#13;
activist for fifteen years, doesn't&#13;
trust the government. In her&#13;
opinion, "There are no tools left&#13;
for those who are controlling our&#13;
destiny." She says that her faith in&#13;
a non - nuclear war is in the people&#13;
not legislation. Moreover,&#13;
"Congressmen, administrators&#13;
and government in general, will&#13;
not act until they see that their&#13;
(political) survival depends on&#13;
it." Whenever someone's survival&#13;
is at stake, they often retaliate in&#13;
some form. Take the cause of civil&#13;
rights legislation for instance; the&#13;
only reason they exist is because&#13;
the government had to enact&#13;
them. McAllister notes that the&#13;
minute they think they can get&#13;
away with it they try to take them&#13;
back — consider the affirmative&#13;
action per se.&#13;
When asked how her life has&#13;
been affected by her involvement&#13;
in the social activist movement,&#13;
McAllister replied, "It's been the&#13;
envelope of my life." She is forty -&#13;
two years old and the mother of&#13;
three children. She resides in a&#13;
community which consists of&#13;
eleven adults and four children.&#13;
The main goal of the community is&#13;
to "conspire for the sake of life,&#13;
and to act, for the sake of life, and&#13;
to accept the consequences." She&#13;
added that all members of the&#13;
community have, for some form&#13;
of civil disobedience, been jailed.&#13;
Later that evening, she spoke on&#13;
the survival of humanity.&#13;
Specifically speaking, the topic&#13;
was on the arms race between the&#13;
two "superpowers." She hopes to&#13;
make the public realize that the&#13;
time to stop the total destruction&#13;
of the human race is now. She&#13;
discussed the "first strike&#13;
strategy", whereby the U.S. is&#13;
concentrating on building a series&#13;
of accurate weapons. Large&#13;
corporations such as Wisconsin&#13;
Electric contribute capital for&#13;
manufacturing nuclear warheads.&#13;
In addition, 55-65% of income tax&#13;
money is used for military aide.&#13;
The battle between these&#13;
superpowers has got to end&#13;
somewhere, and through local and&#13;
regional chapters throughout&#13;
America, MOBE (Mobilization for&#13;
Survival) can possibly achieve the&#13;
abolishment of the arms race.&#13;
However, it needs the support of&#13;
the public.&#13;
At both lectures, the turnout of&#13;
students can't compare to the size&#13;
of the audience which received G.&#13;
Gordon Liddy, although they were&#13;
free.&#13;
For students who are interested,&#13;
MOBE meets every Wednesday at&#13;
1 p.m. in MOLN D-133. The&#13;
organization has four main goals:&#13;
ban nuclear power, non -&#13;
existance of proliferation, stop tht&#13;
arms race and fund human needs.&#13;
United Council discusses UW budget&#13;
Photo by Masood Shafiq&#13;
DRUMS containing possibly dangerous&#13;
chemicals were found this week off the&#13;
Outer Loop'road by the Union. The DNR&#13;
was called in to investigate how&#13;
dangerous the chemicals may be. The&#13;
labels on the drums said rubber gloves,&#13;
goggles and a rubber apron should be&#13;
used when handling the drums. Ranger&#13;
will investigate the matter further to try&#13;
to find out how the chemicals got there.&#13;
by Edward Beal&#13;
The United Council of UW&#13;
student governments is an&#13;
organization with vital functions.&#13;
Its constitution states that its&#13;
purposes are to defend the quality&#13;
of education, represent students,&#13;
serve as a liaison, and foster&#13;
student interchange. The UC&#13;
consists of six committees;&#13;
presidential, legislative affairs,&#13;
ethnic minority affairs, academic&#13;
affairs, women's affairs, and the&#13;
directors committee.&#13;
Last weekend in Platteville, the&#13;
council took up the issue of the UW&#13;
budget cutbacks. The legislative&#13;
affairs committee feels we will&#13;
probably get an across the board&#13;
cut of 2% instead of 4% because of&#13;
recent lobbying effects. In addition,&#13;
we will probably receive a&#13;
minimum of $80 or a maximum of&#13;
$240 in tuition increase.&#13;
The committee then talked&#13;
about financial aid cutbacks; on&#13;
the national level, Reagan is&#13;
getting a lot of flack from&#13;
representatives who don't want to&#13;
cut financial aid. Therefore, we&#13;
probably won't be hit as hard as&#13;
we previously thought for next&#13;
year. On the state level, the increase&#13;
of $1.6 million to the budget&#13;
should help a bit for next year&#13;
also. The committee also talked&#13;
about the lobbying success with&#13;
landlord - tenant reform, which&#13;
passed the legislature and is&#13;
now awaiting the governor's&#13;
signature. There were no&#13;
resolutions passed because the&#13;
state of the budget repair bill is&#13;
still undecided.&#13;
Another issue that the council is&#13;
taking up is the problem of&#13;
recruitment and retention of&#13;
ethnic minority students. The bulk&#13;
of the problem is with retention;&#13;
there has been a problem with&#13;
retaining junior and senior level&#13;
ethnic minorities. The minority&#13;
affairs committee has discussed&#13;
non - academic factors that may&#13;
affect these students such as&#13;
cultural differences and have&#13;
come up with various solutions to&#13;
the problem. One, tutorial services&#13;
for the advanced standing&#13;
classmen; two, peer counseling;&#13;
and three, a multi - cultural class,&#13;
which could be created and offered&#13;
mainly for ethnic majority&#13;
students.&#13;
In the presidential committee&#13;
the president of UC, Robert&#13;
Kranz, announced that the Boarc&#13;
of Regents, which is comprised ol&#13;
directors of the UW system&#13;
proposed to change the ad&#13;
missions policy for the UW&#13;
schools. According to Kranz, tht&#13;
Regents feel as though it's toe&#13;
easy to get into UW schools.&#13;
All of the issues that weren'i&#13;
resolved will be discucced at the&#13;
June UC meeting in Madison&#13;
Unfortunately, the United Counci&#13;
needs a two year budget base ii&#13;
order to be maintained — con&#13;
trary to what the chancellors fron&#13;
various schools in the UW systen&#13;
think. They seem to pose a threa&#13;
to disband UC. PSGA Presiden&#13;
Jim Kreuser states, "This i;&#13;
because most chancellors fear i&#13;
mandatory funding formula fo;&#13;
United Council. This assure:&#13;
UC a base to constantly advo&#13;
cate for student concerns."&#13;
If, for some reason, student:&#13;
choose not to further support UC&#13;
they may request a refund of 5'&#13;
cents within thirty days after eacl&#13;
academic session has com&#13;
mended. &#13;
2 Thursday, April 29, 1982 RANGER&#13;
Poor coverage of Liddy&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am writing in response to&#13;
editor Ken Meyer's "interpretive"&#13;
account of G. Gordon&#13;
Liddy's appearance at Parkside&#13;
on April 19. As an editor, I believe&#13;
that Mr. Meyer certainly owes it&#13;
to the Ranger's readers to give an&#13;
objective and factual report on&#13;
any event. I do not feel that in this&#13;
case he even approached fulfilling&#13;
his responsibility. Mr. Meyer was&#13;
very obviously biased before he&#13;
heard Mr. Liddy utter a single&#13;
word. It almost seems as if he&#13;
may have written his story the&#13;
night before and added a few&#13;
perfunctory quotations afterwards&#13;
to give it some&#13;
credibility.&#13;
Apparently Ken Meyer should&#13;
also check his dictionary on what&#13;
it means to quote a person: it&#13;
means to repeat EXACTLY what&#13;
another person has said. With his&#13;
illusory remark about Jack Anderson's&#13;
writing a story that&#13;
"endangered a spy's life," Mr.&#13;
Meyer misrepresented Liddy. As I&#13;
recall it, G. Gordon Liddy did not&#13;
say that a spy's life was merely&#13;
"endangered" due to Anderson's&#13;
story; he said that the man was&#13;
tortured to death. Just a slight&#13;
incongruity, wouldn't you say?&#13;
Meyer's manipulative selection of&#13;
his so-called quotations taken out&#13;
of context could make Captain&#13;
Kangaroo seem like a fiend.&#13;
G. Gordon Liddy committed a&#13;
crime; he was put on trial and&#13;
convicted. He served time in&#13;
prison and was released, all according&#13;
to the American judicial&#13;
course of events. I felt he was a&#13;
supremely intelligent and well -&#13;
spoken man and was fascinated&#13;
by him. Although I do not approve&#13;
of his crime, I am glad to say I&#13;
listened with a completely open&#13;
mind and felt enlightened by Mr.&#13;
Liddy's talk.&#13;
Perhaps next time around Mr.&#13;
Meyer should employ one of his&#13;
staff writers who harbors no&#13;
preconceived notions about such a&#13;
controversial subject as was G.&#13;
Gordon Liddy.&#13;
Susan M. Barr&#13;
Editor's reply:&#13;
First of all, interpretive stories&#13;
are not totally objective — that's&#13;
why they're called interpretive. It&#13;
was a legitimate editorial decision&#13;
to write an interpretive story for&#13;
several reasons: also present was&#13;
an equally long Q and A interview&#13;
in which Liddy's comments and&#13;
opinions remained uninterpreted;&#13;
in order to save space in an eight&#13;
page paper, the "news story" and&#13;
"editorial" were combined, and&#13;
the factual report was indeed very&#13;
factual.&#13;
(Concerning Anderson, which&#13;
wasn't a "quote", the phrasing&#13;
could have been better, but the&#13;
main point remains the same — as&#13;
soon as t he story was printed, the&#13;
spy's life was "endangered." Yes,&#13;
the spy was tortured to death, but&#13;
Liddy objected to the fact that the&#13;
spy's life was "endangered" — let&#13;
alone the spy being killed. It was&#13;
the act of endangering — not the&#13;
killing — that Liddy objected to.)&#13;
One last reason for the interpretive&#13;
account of Liddy appearance&#13;
— after entering the&#13;
event professionally objective and&#13;
listening to Liddy evade questions&#13;
and do the other things I mentioned&#13;
in the story, I decided I&#13;
"owed it to the readers" who&#13;
weren't able to attend or didn't&#13;
want to attend (for moral,&#13;
political or personal reasons) the&#13;
one event in the past many years&#13;
that brought some life into this&#13;
habitually lifeless campus.&#13;
Challenge column on Liddy&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Mr. Ostrowski's impassioned&#13;
plea for the right of Mr. Liddy to&#13;
speak for an exorbitant fee was&#13;
fraught with non sequitur&#13;
passages that deserve to be&#13;
challenged. The most disturbing&#13;
of these to me was his cavalier use&#13;
of the oxymoronic phrase "liberal&#13;
fascism," which he simply&#13;
defined as "opposing to any point&#13;
of view that is far right of their&#13;
own."&#13;
I should love to see the dictionary&#13;
from which Mr. Ostrowski&#13;
drew his definition. My Webster's&#13;
Dictionary defines fascism as a&#13;
"political philosophy, movement&#13;
or regime that exalts nation and&#13;
race above the individual and&#13;
stands for centralized autocratic&#13;
government headed by a dictatorial&#13;
leader, severe economic&#13;
and social regimentation, and&#13;
forcible suppression of opposition."&#13;
The appropriate&#13;
Webster's definition for liberal, as&#13;
Mr. Ostrowski used this modifying&#13;
term, reads "of or pertaining to&#13;
the principles of liberalism,"&#13;
which in turn is defined as a&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
Write a&#13;
Letter to&#13;
Ranger!!!!&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
-982&#13;
THIS SYMBOL STANDS FOR.: a)THE CIVIL DEFENSE&#13;
PROGRAM, b) A CRUEL DECEPTION, c) BOTH.&#13;
Rebuttal entirely misses the point&#13;
"political philosophy based on a&#13;
belief in progress, the essential&#13;
goodness of humanity and the&#13;
autonomy of the individual, and&#13;
standing for the protection of&#13;
political and civil liberties." To&#13;
put it simply for Mr. Ostrowski,&#13;
there can be no such thing as&#13;
"liberal fascism."&#13;
Such sloppiness and inaccuracy&#13;
mars the entire text of Mr.&#13;
Ostrowski's letter. The charge of&#13;
fascistic behavior more properly&#13;
rests upon Mr. Liddy's record of&#13;
deeds than upon the actions of the&#13;
peaceful, law - abiding picketers.&#13;
The concern at paying exorbitant&#13;
speaking fees to an unrepentant&#13;
convicted felon in times of fiscal&#13;
retrenchment is legitimate. The&#13;
fact that Mr. Liddy draws his&#13;
audience as a Watergate figure,&#13;
yet consistantly avoids disclosing&#13;
anything about that incident,&#13;
borders on false advertising.&#13;
Moreover, it is not "good&#13;
finance" to pay nearly $5,000 for a&#13;
speaker who has said all that he&#13;
has to say in his book. Since this&#13;
book and other ones concerning&#13;
every "type of philosophy&#13;
available" for "consumption" are&#13;
themselves available in most local&#13;
libraries for free and bookstores&#13;
for purchase, it is not possible that&#13;
not hiring Liddy to speak here&#13;
infringes upon anyone's access to&#13;
what he has to say.&#13;
A final point, in fact no one was&#13;
denied the right to pay to see this&#13;
felon. It is Mr. Ostrowski who&#13;
wants no dissent as he indulges his&#13;
curiosity about this strange&#13;
person, Mr. Liddy, a man of&#13;
mystery with no secret.&#13;
Angela Howard Zophy&#13;
The Ranger needs staffers:&#13;
photographers •news writers «ad reps&#13;
Call 228 7 or 2295 or Stop in!&#13;
We're in WLLC DI73&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Chuck Ostrowski's rebuttal of&#13;
April 15 — if you can call it a&#13;
rebuttal — misses the point entirely.&#13;
I don't know whether it was&#13;
my letter which he was particularly&#13;
responding to, but if so,&#13;
some clarification is in order.&#13;
First of all, I did not suggest&#13;
that Chuck or any other opinion&#13;
writers sifted through the&#13;
editorial pages of other college&#13;
newspapers before writing their&#13;
own columns, nor do I recall&#13;
anyone else suggesting that. I&#13;
agree that it is not "purposeful"&#13;
that most campus editorials sound&#13;
the same — there's no Master&#13;
Dictator sitting somewhere ordering&#13;
all student editors what to&#13;
print — but this does not mean&#13;
that the lack of diversity is&#13;
"coincidental." Let's fact it,&#13;
everyone; it's due partially to the&#13;
natural tendency of students to be&#13;
"Utopian" as Chuck states, but it's&#13;
also due to peer - group pressure&#13;
and the desire to conform and not&#13;
sway too far from the line. You&#13;
don't have to read any other&#13;
campus newspapers to know what&#13;
the "correct" campus position is&#13;
on most issues, and that if you&#13;
don't agree, you're not quite one of&#13;
the crowd.&#13;
The desire to conform is a&#13;
natural human tendency and&#13;
there's nothing terrible about it in&#13;
general, but I would encourage&#13;
people to be wary of it where the&#13;
expression of ideas is concerned.&#13;
Because for any issue, the&#13;
examination and analysis of all&#13;
sides is crucial. If peer pressure&#13;
results in the formation of dogmas&#13;
on issues, I would encourage&#13;
people to resist it and to come to&#13;
their own conclusions independently&#13;
after careful&#13;
analysis.&#13;
And here we're getting to what&#13;
really amused me about Chuck's&#13;
attempted rebuttal. Because what&#13;
he is really doing is defending his&#13;
own preference for taking&#13;
positions without any careful&#13;
analysis at all! He says we have&#13;
"nothing to lose from viewing&#13;
situations and problems&#13;
idealistically" and that it's more&#13;
"reasonable" to be "utopianish."&#13;
About political issues? About&#13;
solutions to problems? Really,&#13;
Chuck!&#13;
First of all, forget the "liberal&#13;
vs. conservative" classification.&#13;
"Conservatives" are often just as&#13;
"idealistic" as are "liberals";&#13;
witness the large number of them&#13;
who think the world would bloom&#13;
with roses everywhere if we were&#13;
only able to make kids pray in&#13;
school again. Anyway, I find&#13;
Chuck's statements in defense of&#13;
"utopianism" with regard to.&#13;
proposed solutions a bit naive.&#13;
And his statements about adults&#13;
(being "feeble - minded", etc.)&#13;
only serve to bolster the impression&#13;
that campus "idealism"&#13;
is merely a displaced form of&#13;
jealousy toward Daddy carried&#13;
over from the Oedipal years.&#13;
There are plenty of reasons for&#13;
opposing Ronald Reagan, but his&#13;
age is not one of them.&#13;
The defense of utopianism,&#13;
however, is more frightening.&#13;
Doesn't Chuck realize that some&#13;
of mankind's greatest disasters&#13;
have been due to people who&#13;
refused to acknowledge that their&#13;
Utopian ideas were unworkable —&#13;
Joseph Stalin and the Reverend&#13;
Jim Jones, for example?&#13;
Throughout history, refusal to&#13;
recognize the shortcomings of&#13;
Utopian ideas has been a recipe for&#13;
disaster. If for no other reason,&#13;
Chuck should re - examine hr&#13;
statements about utopianism, and&#13;
students should not be swayed by&#13;
them too quickly. It would be far&#13;
better for all of us to closely&#13;
examine all proposed solutions&#13;
that sound a bit too rosy. Caution&#13;
is always preferable to&#13;
carelessness.&#13;
I wish to make a distinction,&#13;
however, between idealism and&#13;
utopianism. Or perhaps, a better&#13;
way to put it, between personal&#13;
idealism and political idealism.&#13;
Political idealism too easily&#13;
degenerates into the Utopian&#13;
disaster of advocating solutions&#13;
without regard to their actual&#13;
effects. Personal idealism is&#13;
something different. It is the&#13;
application of your ideals to your&#13;
own life; to your own ethical&#13;
standards and to your relationships&#13;
with other people. Stretching&#13;
it a bit, personal idealism&#13;
could be defined as the ability to&#13;
be idealistic about life in general&#13;
(rather than excessively&#13;
realistic), to perceive the things in&#13;
life which can't be explained&#13;
rationally. For instance, a personal&#13;
idealist will understand&#13;
when someone associates the&#13;
breaking of the sun through the&#13;
clouds with the idea of freedom; a&#13;
personal reationalist won't know&#13;
what the heck you're talking&#13;
about.&#13;
This quality of personal&#13;
idealism is essential to anyone&#13;
who wishes to be able to create&#13;
anything of artistic and aesthetic&#13;
value. Unfortunately, one of the&#13;
great tragedies of recent times&#13;
has been the inability of many of&#13;
the world's finest artists to&#13;
distinguish between personal&#13;
idealism and political idealism,&#13;
which has often resulted in their&#13;
own disgrace even when their&#13;
artistic ability has been&#13;
unquestionable. One only has to&#13;
recall all of the fine artists who&#13;
made fools of themselves in the&#13;
'30s by embracing Stalinism as a&#13;
"great experiment" only later to&#13;
fall into a (understandable)&#13;
humiliated silence when it&#13;
became obvious what it was really&#13;
all about. I feel that our culture&#13;
has still not recovered.&#13;
It so happens that I prefer the&#13;
company and conversation of&#13;
personal idealists, such as I&#13;
described, even though all too&#13;
often they tend to show the same&#13;
inability to distinguish the personal&#13;
and the political. That is&#13;
their right, but what is especially&#13;
disturbing is that it seems to be&#13;
respected by personal idealists,&#13;
one of the litmus tests that you&#13;
Continued On Page Six&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Steve Myers&#13;
Mark Sanders&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Andy Petersen&#13;
Linda Andersen&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
ganger Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Co-Photo Editor&#13;
Co-Photo Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Edward Beal, Greg Bonofiglio, Carol Burns, Eric Elsmo,&#13;
rl?&#13;
ryu a ' Bob Kiesling, Joe Kimm, Rick Luehr, Dick&#13;
Oberbruner, Chuck Ostrowski, Masood Shafiq, Tammy&#13;
Shuemate, Eric Wichmann, Jeff Wicks.&#13;
uw"'&#13;
rkM ,hw &gt;re&#13;
RANGER is prlntedby the Un?o?Siwaffp dUri&#13;
"&#13;
9 brCakS a&#13;
"&#13;
d holidayS'&#13;
Br&amp;sS Ranger&#13;
'&#13;
univers,,y&#13;
°&#13;
f wis consin&#13;
paper with one inch margins^Afu^t " ,ypewrit,en&#13;
' cioublespaced on standard size&#13;
eluded for verification ' letter&#13;
s must be signed and a telephone number inDSnriorTen&#13;
i,hhe&#13;
'&#13;
d&#13;
'°&#13;
r Valid reasons&#13;
-&#13;
reserves all editoria? privileges''in publica,ion or&gt; Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content. refusing to print letters which contain false or &#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 29, 1982&#13;
winners announced for ICPS I Ande rson resigns, Parkside loses&#13;
WVinners in the Southeast Shim and advised hv&#13;
Wisconsin - Northeast Illinois&#13;
portion of the International&#13;
Computer Problem Solving&#13;
Contest sponsored by Parkside&#13;
have been announced.&#13;
The contest was held at UW-P&#13;
and about 400 other testing&#13;
stations around the world on&#13;
Saturday, April 17. Fifty teams of&#13;
one to three persons competed in&#13;
three divisions at UW-P.&#13;
The area winners, whose scores&#13;
will be judged along with those&#13;
from the other testing stations to&#13;
determine the top ten world - wide&#13;
winners, are:&#13;
Senior high division (grades 10-&#13;
12): First place, David Nice and&#13;
Robert Goll, an independent team&#13;
from Kenosha and winners in the&#13;
junior high division for two years&#13;
and for a second year in the senior&#13;
division; second place, a Maine&#13;
Senior High School team from&#13;
Park Ridge, 111., composed of&#13;
John Port, Rob Verbrugghe and&#13;
David Kitchell and advised by&#13;
Tom Mahon; and third place, an&#13;
Adlai Stevenson High School team&#13;
from Prairie View, 111., i ncluding&#13;
Steve Gould, Jon Shaw and David&#13;
Shim and advised by Scott Oliver.&#13;
Junior high division (grades 7-&#13;
9): First place, a Prairie School&#13;
team from Racine including&#13;
Stephen Schmidt, Dan Shafer and&#13;
Jonathan Johnson and advised by&#13;
Bruce Campbell; second place, a&#13;
Whitnall High School team from&#13;
Greenfield composed of Scott&#13;
Trent and advised by Mary Kay&#13;
Morgan; and third place, a&#13;
Waukesha area team of Jonathan&#13;
Sadler, Mark Palmer and Mark&#13;
Melendes and advised by Walter&#13;
Sadler of UW-Waukesha.&#13;
The elementary division&#13;
(grades 4-6) was won by a team&#13;
from St. Lucy's School, Racine,&#13;
including Jennifer Leffleman,&#13;
Ann Kozich and Shannon Sack and&#13;
advised by Ken Sack.&#13;
The winning teams in the area&#13;
contest were awarded trophies.&#13;
UW-Parkside Prof. Donald&#13;
Piele, organizer of the international&#13;
competition, said&#13;
results from the 400 testing&#13;
stations will be sent to UW-P&#13;
where the world - wide winners&#13;
will be determined. Last year,&#13;
students on four continents&#13;
competed.&#13;
by Edward Beal&#13;
For the past five years,&#13;
Parkside has had the privilege of&#13;
retaining Mike Anderson, a&#13;
chemistry 101 level instructor.&#13;
There is a phrase that is often&#13;
used, which says "all good things&#13;
must come to an end." Perhaps&#13;
that cliche is most applicable in&#13;
this case.&#13;
Anderson's leaving is not a&#13;
result of tenure denial or an administratively&#13;
denied contract&#13;
renewal. He chose to resign. When&#13;
asked what his reasons for leaving&#13;
Parkside were, he replied, "My&#13;
job here has no chance for advancement."&#13;
He added that there&#13;
were no hard feelings. He explained&#13;
that he knew what the&#13;
conditions were when he accepted&#13;
the job.&#13;
Placed in the category of being&#13;
a "specialist / adjunct instructor,"&#13;
Anderson went up for&#13;
contract renewal every year. He&#13;
obviously just wanted to excel in&#13;
his career. Well, he now has that&#13;
opportunity.&#13;
Anderson has been offered a&#13;
research fellowship in Portland,&#13;
Parkside computer fair held&#13;
The focus will be on small&#13;
business applications, graphics&#13;
and fun and games at the 6th&#13;
Parkside Computer Fair on&#13;
Saturday, May 1, in the Campus&#13;
Union. The event is sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Computer Club&#13;
(PCC) and all sessions are free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
The program:&#13;
"Computer Graphics on&#13;
Display: Siggraph Video Review"&#13;
by Loren Buchanan of the PCC,&#13;
from 9 a.m. to noon;&#13;
"Wang Laboratories and Office&#13;
Automation" by Donald Benson of&#13;
Wang Laboratories and "The&#13;
Atari Computer: State of Graphic&#13;
Arts" by Steve Hanson of Magic&#13;
Lantern Computers, Madison,&#13;
both at 10 a.m.;&#13;
"I Think It Can Do What They&#13;
Say It Can: Testimonial From a&#13;
First - Time Micro - Computer&#13;
User" by William Todd, director&#13;
of the Kenosha Community Impact&#13;
Program, at 11 a.m.;&#13;
"Software Engineering from&#13;
the User's Perspective" by Ron&#13;
Gatterdam, UW-P professor of&#13;
mathematics and computer&#13;
Jobs available&#13;
The Private Industry Council of&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin, Inc. will&#13;
have a limited number of temporary&#13;
jobs available for current&#13;
post high school students who will&#13;
be returning to school in the fall.&#13;
Most jobs will become available&#13;
over the summer months and will&#13;
involve a variety of occupations in&#13;
the business, communications,&#13;
health services, and hospitality&#13;
fields.&#13;
Students must meet income&#13;
eligibility guidelines before they&#13;
are referred to a job opening.&#13;
Interested students are invited to&#13;
submit their resume to Mr. Mike&#13;
Piatt, U.W.P. Job Service, WLLC&#13;
D-173.&#13;
science, and a Colortron&#13;
presentation, both at noon;&#13;
"Color Computer Graphics&#13;
Slide Show: Examples in Art,&#13;
Science and Business" by&#13;
Buchanan and "The Vanmil&#13;
Concept" by Telcom Industries,&#13;
Milwaukee, both at 1 p.m.;&#13;
"Special Purpose Software for&#13;
the Small Businessman:&#13;
Technology and Terminology" by&#13;
Gatterdam and Tim Fossum, UWP&#13;
professor of applied computer&#13;
science, and "Interactive Games&#13;
Using the Fourth Language" by&#13;
Bruce Langenbach of PCC, both at&#13;
2 p.m.;&#13;
And, "Online Databases:&#13;
Electronic Information at Your&#13;
Fingertips" by Virgil Diodato of&#13;
the UW-Milwaukee School of&#13;
Library and Information Science,&#13;
at 3 p.m.&#13;
Specific room locations for the&#13;
presentations will be available at&#13;
a registration table in the Union.&#13;
The fair also will include&#13;
computer displays by a number of&#13;
vendors.&#13;
SAVE THE&#13;
LIBRARY DAY&#13;
WEDNESDAY, MAY 12&#13;
Union Square - Union Pad&#13;
Free admission&#13;
Featuring:&#13;
WHITE LIE 11 a.m.-2:30 p. m.&#13;
Other Events:&#13;
Dunk tank, tug - of - war, free throw contest, Kiss - a - thon,&#13;
beer drinking relays, and more&#13;
Raffle:&#13;
prizes include: parking permit, 1 we ek of f ree lunches, 4&#13;
season basketball passes, 10 lines of free bowling, $5 Sweet&#13;
Shoppe gift certificate, $10 food/beverage tickets for The&#13;
End, 2 free dinners at a dozen local restaurants, and more&#13;
Coming&#13;
THE END&#13;
May 22 &amp; 23&#13;
Oregon at the Oregon Graduate&#13;
Center as a research assistant.&#13;
The program is closely related to&#13;
that of an internship. After his&#13;
first year, he will spend the&#13;
majority of the time in labs. He&#13;
will also be given the opportunity&#13;
to do some research of his own.&#13;
His response to the question of&#13;
whether or not he would return to&#13;
Parkside, he said, "The pay in the&#13;
chemical industry is significantly&#13;
greater than that of an academic&#13;
staff member."&#13;
On Monday, May 10 at 4 p.m. in&#13;
the Union Square, there will be a&#13;
party in Mike Anderson's honor.&#13;
The party is being organized by&#13;
some students of Mike's, and&#13;
Keith Ward, a chemistry&#13;
professor. The party is open to all&#13;
students.&#13;
In the worcte of Keith Ward,&#13;
"Anderson's been a very, very&#13;
popular teacher — enjoyable&#13;
colleague — he's going to be very&#13;
difficult to replace."&#13;
From a student's perspective,&#13;
Mike Scoon told of his encounters&#13;
with Anderson. Although he hasn't&#13;
had Anderson for an instructor, he&#13;
has received numerous amounts&#13;
of aid with chemistry problems.&#13;
"His concern was for all students,&#13;
not just in his classes," said&#13;
Scoon.&#13;
Concert of Compositions&#13;
A concert of compositions by&#13;
Parkside music students will be&#13;
presented at 8 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
April 30, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. The free public&#13;
program is sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Chapter of the Music&#13;
Educators National Conference.&#13;
. Included will be works by David&#13;
Bremel, Racine Unified School&#13;
District choral director, and&#13;
Donald W. Crouch, Kenosha&#13;
Unified School District choral&#13;
director. Both have done graduate&#13;
work in composition at UW-P.&#13;
Other student composers&#13;
represented are Jeffrey Clementi,&#13;
Debbi Gorecki - Roland, Shirley&#13;
Grothe, Edward Parker and Peter&#13;
Simon, all of Racine; Patricia&#13;
Pedersen and Tom Vignieri,&#13;
Kenosha; and Michael Edgerton,&#13;
Sturtevant.&#13;
Community choral ensembles&#13;
performing in the Gremel, Grothe&#13;
and Crouch works respectively&#13;
are The Racine Chorale, the John&#13;
Bullen Junior High School 7th&#13;
Grade Boys' Choir of Ke nosha and&#13;
the senior choir of the First&#13;
Evangelical Lutheran Church of&#13;
Racine.&#13;
All of the students whose works&#13;
are being performed have studied&#13;
with Prof. August Wegner andsome&#13;
also studied with visiting&#13;
composer Otto Luening during his&#13;
recent stay on campus.&#13;
Wondering what&#13;
to do with your&#13;
books?&#13;
CAMPUS BOOK&#13;
EXCHANGE ^&#13;
accepting and selling books.&#13;
WE'LL GIVE YOU MORE $ $ $ FOR YOUR BOOKS.&#13;
STOP BY FOR DETAILS.&#13;
We're On The WLLC Concourse&#13;
ttuvcrsi^rof "Wisconsin" Farlvside ^&#13;
Communication. Arts Theatre&#13;
April23-24, &amp;&#13;
April 25,2Pm&#13;
April 30-AW1,&#13;
wpm. J.\ \l / /&#13;
HURRER,&#13;
IAKNML&#13;
lichets: Union Info. DcsH &amp; at the DooY"&#13;
553-2345 ©1* &gt;53-2042&#13;
$2.50 Panuidt Stvdmts,Sta», S«i\io**&#13;
$3.5© Public CiUWs &#13;
4 Thursday, April 29,1982 RANGER&#13;
"Personal Best" is story of competition and love&#13;
11 ...L — — n Mn im fU«&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
There is a temptation, when&#13;
talking about a film such as&#13;
"Personal Best," to allow one's&#13;
feelings to get in the way erf t he&#13;
perception of what the movie&#13;
actually is. Anyone can pick up a&#13;
newspaper or magazine and find a&#13;
reviewer saying that the film is or&#13;
is not significant; that it deals&#13;
with the emotional problems of&#13;
athletic competition honestly or&#13;
dishonestly; or whether it is in&#13;
favor of or against homosexual&#13;
relationships. Both sides of these&#13;
questions have been argued pro&#13;
and con by various film critics.&#13;
But that is missing the point.&#13;
The power of this exceptionally&#13;
frank film is that every viewer&#13;
can draw his/her own conclusions&#13;
from the questions at issue.&#13;
Here's a brief summation of the&#13;
plot: Mariel Hemingway plays a&#13;
young athlete, Chris Cahill, who,&#13;
coached by her father, fails to&#13;
place in the 1976 Olympic trials. At&#13;
this meet, she is spotted by&#13;
Patrice Donnelly, a world - class&#13;
pentathlete, who sees through&#13;
Hemingway's athletic reticence&#13;
the potential to become an&#13;
Olympic contender and, not the&#13;
least, a certain amount of p hysical&#13;
attraction.&#13;
Hemingway is therefore invited&#13;
by Donnelly's character Tory to&#13;
practice with her and her coach,&#13;
well played by Scott Glenn. After&#13;
gaining Glenn's approval and&#13;
getting her competitive act&#13;
together, she must, at Glenn's&#13;
insistance, break her emotional&#13;
ties with Donnelly, who he feels is&#13;
hurting Hemingway in her ability&#13;
to compete, especially when&#13;
Glenn places her in the pentathlon,&#13;
pitting Tory and Chris in&#13;
direct competition with each&#13;
other.&#13;
It is the two themes, competition&#13;
and love, that give the&#13;
movie its direction. The, complication&#13;
is that the lover is also&#13;
the competitor.&#13;
The most disturbing aspect of&#13;
the film is also a necessary one. In&#13;
the interest of maintaining the&#13;
film's fast pace, director Robert&#13;
Towne chose rather than to show&#13;
how Chris' personal conflicts are&#13;
resolved he takes for granted the&#13;
fact that they are resolved. The&#13;
audience is shown the what,&#13;
sometimes the how, but never the&#13;
why. Even so, by eliminating what&#13;
Miller times ^ Miller High Life&#13;
Sa-^e old story.&#13;
These college guus&#13;
love you atrniaWt&#13;
and toss ucm out&#13;
in the morningare,&#13;
in effect, the qualifying&#13;
statements in the film, he has&#13;
created, right or wrong, a much&#13;
more direct statement. It is at the&#13;
expense of some detail, with the&#13;
added benefit of allowing the&#13;
audience to draw their conclusions,&#13;
how perceptive filmmakers&#13;
maintain their cinematic&#13;
balance.&#13;
A technically ambitious film,&#13;
the production crew often seems&#13;
to take more risks than the&#13;
athletes themselves. While the&#13;
photography is nothing flashy, it&#13;
never fails to convey the vital&#13;
details of the current event. But&#13;
it's the editing and the soundtrack&#13;
along with it that make the film&#13;
dynamic as it is. Except for two or&#13;
three bad cuts, the montaged&#13;
athletic events, with the&#13;
associated sound effects, show the&#13;
events as intensely, violently,&#13;
emotional, and at the same time,&#13;
curiously graceful.&#13;
The screenplay, casting, and&#13;
acting are right on. Again, nothing&#13;
frilly, just good common sense. In&#13;
particular, Hemingway is perfect&#13;
for her part. She displays the&#13;
same mixture of awkwardness&#13;
and grace found in a newborne&#13;
colt. As her character Chris&#13;
grows, she grows also, until, in the&#13;
final sequences she has matured&#13;
into a full - blown track star and&#13;
women.&#13;
While director Towne has been&#13;
accused of sensationalism in&#13;
filming the movie's lesbian love&#13;
scenes, it is largely a personal&#13;
decision whether or not you would&#13;
be comfortable with them. For&#13;
myself, I found them tastefully&#13;
done and occupying their proper&#13;
plaee in the grand scheme of the&#13;
film. But it is up to the individual&#13;
viewer to find their own meaning&#13;
here. And that is the power of&#13;
"Personal Best." Whether viewed&#13;
in a superficial context, or with a&#13;
deeper interpretation, it has the&#13;
potential to become a personal&#13;
winner.&#13;
Art lecture&#13;
to be held&#13;
"Duchamp's Mysticism:&#13;
Toward a Theory of Modernism&#13;
and Post - Modernism" will be the&#13;
topic of a lecture by Jack Burnham,&#13;
professor of art at Northwestern&#13;
University, at 3:30 on&#13;
Thursday, May 6, at the Univ. of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside in&#13;
Greenquist Hall 101.&#13;
The slide - illustrated lecture&#13;
will explore the significance of&#13;
Marcel Duchamp's esoteric art&#13;
and its importance to the&#13;
development of modern and avant&#13;
- garde aesthetic innovations.&#13;
Duchamp, who died in 1968, was&#13;
one of the most influential and&#13;
controversial artists of. the&#13;
twentieth century and is often&#13;
credited as the originator of p ost -&#13;
formalist or conceptual art. This&#13;
lecture is the final one in the free&#13;
public art history seminar series&#13;
organized by the Art Discipline at&#13;
UW - Parkside, (titled "Art, Style,&#13;
and Society").&#13;
Burnham is a specialist in&#13;
modern and contemporary art,&#13;
and for the last few years has&#13;
focused his theoretical research&#13;
on Duchamp. Originally a&#13;
sculptor, he received his M.F.A.&#13;
from Yale University School of&#13;
Art, and has taught previously at&#13;
Colgate University.&#13;
The art history seminar series&#13;
was funded by UW - Parkside and&#13;
coordinated by the Art Discipline.&#13;
c 1981 Beer Brewed by Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
needs&#13;
writers! &#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 29,1982&#13;
Punkers, Poppers, and New Wavers make mark on music scene&#13;
bvy Joe Kimm _•&#13;
In England, a band called The&#13;
Sex Pistols recorded a song called&#13;
"God Save The Queen." It caused&#13;
a rage in the British press and&#13;
started a whole wave of bands&#13;
called Punk Rock bands. It was&#13;
about to start a new trend in music&#13;
for years to come.&#13;
On the home front, a band called&#13;
The Ramones was churning out&#13;
three chord zip songs for middle&#13;
America. They even made a&#13;
movie called the Rock and Roll&#13;
High School which was to star the&#13;
five piece band. Wendy and the&#13;
Plasmatics were chopping off&#13;
baby's heads and playing with&#13;
pythons on stage to standing room&#13;
only audiences across the vast&#13;
midwest as well as both coasts.&#13;
Other groups resorted to Mohawk&#13;
haircuts and other gimmicks to&#13;
maintain this phenomena called&#13;
Punk Rock.&#13;
What is punk rock? On the&#13;
surface, it seems to be rehashed&#13;
50's music with a lot of stage&#13;
gimmicks. It has its roots in Elvis&#13;
and Bill Haley, who went against&#13;
the social and musical norms of&#13;
the day to create a rebellious style&#13;
of music. It had its counterpart in&#13;
bands like Kiss and Alice Cooper&#13;
who borrowed theatrical gimmicks&#13;
to enhance their shows.&#13;
Thus, the punk rockers used&#13;
safety pins, outrageous makeup,&#13;
far - out hairdo's and wild&#13;
costumes to further intensify what&#13;
was already a pretty intense form&#13;
of music. Imagine four bodies up&#13;
there, jumping around, wheeling&#13;
their guitars around and&#13;
screaming into the microphone&#13;
such obnoxious lyrics as "Pain&#13;
Pain is good, Feel it, Reel it, Pain&#13;
is good . . . ."&#13;
There was a whole generation of&#13;
this punk rock music groups&#13;
which later turned into new wave.&#13;
XTC, Boomtown Rats, Blown&#13;
Volkswagens, and The Dead&#13;
which originated in UK, and later&#13;
filtered down into the Greenwich&#13;
Village scene in the lower west&#13;
side of Manhattan advocated&#13;
violence, drugs, rebellion and&#13;
general chaos. The Clash, which&#13;
was another British band, best&#13;
personified this anger felt in the&#13;
young people against the conventions&#13;
of society and the thin&#13;
fabric of morality which&#13;
civilization is generally made up&#13;
of. They wrote songs on school,&#13;
drugs, the revolution, the militia,&#13;
and the general militarism that&#13;
was going on in the UK between&#13;
the Catholics and the Protestants,&#13;
the Irish and the British, and the&#13;
working class struggle which&#13;
generated resentment against the&#13;
wealthy.&#13;
Burned up&#13;
The New Wave trend was best&#13;
initiated in the States by groups&#13;
like The Cars which combined&#13;
hooks and musical gimmicks to&#13;
introduce the masses into this&#13;
powerful form of music. Groups&#13;
like The Knack eventually gave&#13;
way to Joe Jackson and The&#13;
Pretenders which say great&#13;
popularity in being hip, chic, and&#13;
being aware and in tune with the&#13;
scene. Home - made remedies saw&#13;
in the way of Talking Heads and&#13;
the like which combined sixties&#13;
harmonies with fifties power&#13;
chords of rock and roll to carry&#13;
punk rock into a new realm.&#13;
New Wave was more stylized&#13;
than punk rock, and advocated&#13;
being fashionable as opposed to&#13;
being militant. It led the way in&#13;
clothes, new sayings and trendy&#13;
places to dwell in.&#13;
Power Pop was the next step in&#13;
the evolution of this finer form of&#13;
music. It isn't exactly clear what&#13;
this is, but I gather it is a more&#13;
refined form of New Wave with&#13;
more of a song structure and more&#13;
vocal harmonies borrowed from&#13;
the sixties. More emphasis was&#13;
put on lyrics and the whole format&#13;
was more tightly structured. Song&#13;
form was highly emphasized, as&#13;
were the words that fitted into&#13;
them and there was actually a&#13;
progression being followed in&#13;
Signs of the times are 'picture perfect'&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
Here we go again. The parking&#13;
lots at Parkside have long been a&#13;
center of controversy. In fact, so&#13;
much has been said about them&#13;
that almost no one really cares to&#13;
discuss the subject anymore. But&#13;
regardless of their faults, the lots&#13;
have one strong point: the signs&#13;
are in words.&#13;
Just think — the lots could have&#13;
been set up with those strange&#13;
international picture signs. Instead,&#13;
it was taken for granted&#13;
that people using the lots can&#13;
read! This in itself says a lot for&#13;
Parkside students.&#13;
Consider a "No Parking at Any&#13;
Time on This Road" sign. It could&#13;
easily be replaced by a sign which&#13;
has a big black "P" with a&#13;
diagonal red line through it. A sign&#13;
like that could be interpreted&#13;
several ways. Besides "No&#13;
Parking," it might mean "No&#13;
Passing," "No Parkside," "No&#13;
Parties," "No Pets," "No Petting;"&#13;
or it could mean that a&#13;
certain bodily function is not&#13;
allowed.&#13;
There are other simplified signs&#13;
that can be confusing to a driver:&#13;
a truck on a small black triangle;&#13;
stick figures without feet that&#13;
appear to be walking; pictures of&#13;
stoplights. In view of budget cuts,&#13;
is it possible that the last type of&#13;
sign is to serve as a cheap substitute&#13;
for the real thing?&#13;
These new signs are supposedly&#13;
for the benefit of regular drivers,&#13;
foreign drivers, and drivers who&#13;
aren't real sharp in the reading&#13;
department. In other words, there&#13;
are people driving around out&#13;
there who probably cannot read!&#13;
Somehow, that's not a very&#13;
comforting thought.&#13;
The picture signs are not limited&#13;
to drivers, however. In some&#13;
areas, there are wordless signs for&#13;
pedestrians. A white silhouette of&#13;
a person means walk. An orange&#13;
hand means don't walk. An orange&#13;
hand? Come on now!&#13;
What's wrong with words? Is&#13;
this a signal of the falling I.Q. of&#13;
the United States? Does it mean&#13;
that future generations will lose&#13;
the ability to read? Are we being&#13;
cleverly coerced into a world of&#13;
wordless images?&#13;
Will "English 101" be replaced&#13;
by "Fun With Pictures"?&#13;
Member P arkside 2 00&#13;
Mention this a d! &amp;&#13;
SM US for your&#13;
Mother's Day Flowers&#13;
Many Styles — Custom Arrangement&#13;
Jesoph C. Cucu nato&#13;
4433 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
* All Major Credit Cards Accepted&#13;
' Mother's Day is Sunday, May 9. ^&#13;
« ARNESON'S&#13;
FLOWERS&#13;
QVudX OU£&#13;
Open Mother's Day&#13;
Sunday, May 9&#13;
9-5&#13;
OPEN DAILY&#13;
7509 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha. Wl 53140&#13;
Phone657-1118&#13;
Send flowers to that girl back home.&#13;
This Mother's Day, remember Mom with an FTD* Big&#13;
Hug® Bouquet. A beautiful arrangement of fresh flowers&#13;
in a distinctive Ceramic Pot. Just stop by your nearest&#13;
FTD® Florist before May 9, and send the FTD Big&#13;
Hug Bouquet. It's a special Mother's Day gift the girl&#13;
back home won't ever forget.&#13;
Send your love with special care.&#13;
The FTD Big Hug Bouquet is generally available for less than 518.50.&#13;
As independent retailers. FTD Florists set their own prices. Individual&#13;
prices may vary. Service charges and delivery may be additional.&#13;
&lt; 1982 Florists' Transworld Delivery Association. " Registered&#13;
trademark of Florists' Transworld Delivery Association. "A cooperV^stively&#13;
owned floral wire and membership service.&#13;
' .teafMhtA qe no moriform&#13;
of chordal structures. It was&#13;
nearing the pop songs of the&#13;
sixties in format but with more&#13;
power and zest put into the song&#13;
and performance was definitely&#13;
emphasized.&#13;
Adam and The Ants received a&#13;
lot of media publicity when they&#13;
declared their style of performance,&#13;
the New Romantics. It&#13;
was basically a ritualization and&#13;
glorification of the mating ritual&#13;
accompanied by chanting and&#13;
tribal atmosphere. It gained&#13;
immense popularity and&#13;
momentum in the early eighties&#13;
and won acclaim as the definitive&#13;
new style in the musical scene.&#13;
Well, that didn't last long.&#13;
So what's next? Why the Go&#13;
Go's, of course. Combining New&#13;
Wave with the old, the Power Pop&#13;
with the good old fashioned dance&#13;
rhythms, they paved their way to&#13;
the top with "We've Got The&#13;
Beat." So why not with the Go&#13;
Go's. Why not an all - girl band. So&#13;
let's go with the Go Go's and we've&#13;
all got the beat. . . .&#13;
In The Parkside Union&#13;
announces&#13;
"GOING&#13;
NUTS&#13;
SALE ff&#13;
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
Daily&#13;
40% OFF&#13;
ALL N UTS&#13;
INCLUDING&#13;
CASHEWS&#13;
&amp; PISTACHIOS&#13;
WHILE THEY LAST&#13;
WEEK OF&#13;
MAY 3rd THRU 7th&#13;
COMMUNITY&#13;
"Let us therefore love one another as far as we are&#13;
able and by our love draw one another to possess&#13;
God within us — St. Augustine&#13;
the Hu6ustinlans Brothers called to a life&#13;
of community in service to the church.&#13;
the Hu*ustinians&#13;
For further information 20300 Governors Hwy A&#13;
without obligation, write: Olympla Fields. IL 60461 tffi&#13;
312 748-9500 &#13;
6 Thursday, April 29,1982 RANGER&#13;
Scholarship Day honors many&#13;
The annual Scholarship Day at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside on Sunday, April 25,&#13;
resulted in awards and honors for&#13;
more than 70 students.&#13;
The program included an address&#13;
by UW-Parkside history&#13;
professor Thomas C. Reeves,&#13;
author of "The Life and Times of&#13;
Joe McCarthy," a major new&#13;
biography of the Wisconsin&#13;
senator, and music by The Oriana&#13;
Trio, resident chamber ensemble&#13;
at UW-P.&#13;
The event also included&#13;
remarks by Prof. Richard&#13;
Carrington, on behalf of the&#13;
Campus Awards and Ceremonies&#13;
Committee which sponsors the&#13;
program, and Douglas G. Devan,&#13;
M.D., on behalf of the Parkside&#13;
Alumni Association.&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin&#13;
presented the awards:&#13;
• The Joanne M. Esser&#13;
Scholarship of $400, f or a student&#13;
interested in ecology, went to John&#13;
R. Ertl, Racine.&#13;
• Kenneth L. Greenquist&#13;
Scholarships of $250 each, named&#13;
for the former University regent&#13;
and Racine attorney and civic&#13;
leader, were awarded to Kristine&#13;
Wendt, Kenosha; and Jeffrey A.&#13;
Medin, Kenosha.&#13;
• Irvin G. Wyllie scholarships&#13;
of $250 each, named for UWParksrde's&#13;
founding chancellor,&#13;
went to Donna Marie Felsing,&#13;
Kenosha; and Kim E. Lindquist,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
• Bernard C. Tallent&#13;
Scholarships of $250 e ach, which&#13;
memorialize the former dean of&#13;
the university's Kenosha campus,&#13;
went to Timothy Scott Houden,&#13;
Kenosha; Maria A. Veronico,&#13;
Burlington; Brian J. Passino,&#13;
Kenosha; and Kimberly A.&#13;
McLeod, Racine.&#13;
Premenstrual Syndrome explored&#13;
The National Association of&#13;
Social Workers will sponsor the&#13;
6th Annual NASW Workshop on&#13;
Friday, May 7 from 9 a.m. to noon.&#13;
The issue of Premenstrual Syndrome&#13;
will be addressed. PMS is&#13;
the unhappy complex of symptoms&#13;
affecting a vast number of&#13;
women. The havoc this syndrome&#13;
can wreak upon the personal and&#13;
work lives of its sufferers is obvious.&#13;
The workshop will address&#13;
issues of identification, treatment,&#13;
and prognosis for sufferers and&#13;
for professionals dealing with&#13;
clients who may exhibit various&#13;
symptomology.&#13;
The fee for the workshop is $5,&#13;
and it will be held in Tallent Hall.&#13;
For further information, call Dale&#13;
Landis, Chairman of the Racine -&#13;
Kenosha branch of NASW at 636-&#13;
3272.&#13;
/&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Elmwood Plaza/Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Public forum&#13;
HELPING THE VICTIMS &amp; THEIR FAMILIES&#13;
7:30 p. m., Monday, May 3rd&#13;
Union Cinema Theater&#13;
• Louis Ferman, professor of social work and research&#13;
director, University of Michigan Institute of Labor and&#13;
Industrial Relations; author of "The Economy and&#13;
Mental Health" and "Plant Shutdown and Relocation"&#13;
• Melva Meachem, coordinator, Concentrated Industrial&#13;
Outreach Division, Illinois State AFL-CIOand director&#13;
of a n intervention team for communities experiencing&#13;
large - s cale job loss&#13;
• Rev. Charles Rawlings, officer for church and society,&#13;
The Episcopal Diocese of Ohio; former coordinator,&#13;
ecumenical coalition project on the steel mill shutdowns&#13;
in Youngstown, Ohio; author, "Community and Capital&#13;
in Conflict: Plant Closings and Job Loss"&#13;
• Kenneth Hoover, moderator and Public Forum director;&#13;
professor of political science, UW - Parkside and UWEX&#13;
Department of Governmental Affairs&#13;
FREE AN D OPEN TO THE PU BLIC&#13;
Co-sponsored by the University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
and the UWEX Department of Governmental Affairs&#13;
• Ernst and Whinney&#13;
Scholarships of $250 each in accounting&#13;
went to Paula Denig,&#13;
Racine; and Suzanne Denzine,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
• William W. Petrie Scholarships&#13;
of $250 in labor and industrial&#13;
relations went to John E.&#13;
Arnold, Kenosha; and Margaret&#13;
Lee, Kenosha.&#13;
• The Johnson Wax Award of&#13;
$100 in science went to&#13;
Christopher Robert Sartori,&#13;
Kenosha, and the Sam Poerio&#13;
Award of $100 and a traveling&#13;
trophy for a student in education&#13;
went to Mary Jo Fleming, Racine.&#13;
Club Events&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
. . . . . V P P u b l i c R e l a t i o n s , J a y G r a n t ;&#13;
JVl.b.U. SOC Representative, Kris&#13;
Schaefer. On April 28, at 1 p.m., the&#13;
Minority Student Union will be&#13;
holding their First Annual Awards&#13;
Day, in Union 106.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
PSE Executive Board election&#13;
results: President, John Funk;&#13;
VP Personnel, Carla Chatterton;&#13;
VP marketing, Mathew Sullivan;&#13;
VP Promotion, Ross Thompson;&#13;
Women's Concourse&#13;
Women's Concourse will meet&#13;
Wednesday, May 5 in Moln. 113 at&#13;
1 p.m. They will be electing new&#13;
officers and discussing activities&#13;
for the Library Fund Raising&#13;
Event. All members are encouraged&#13;
to attend, and take part.&#13;
They will need help to make the&#13;
event a successful one!&#13;
Stevens Point announces overseas study&#13;
UW - Stevens Point has announced&#13;
plans for overseas study&#13;
programs it will sponsor this&#13;
summer and fall.&#13;
The summer offerings are in&#13;
England and Poland and the fall&#13;
semester programs are in Germany,&#13;
Republic of China&#13;
(Taiwan), England and Poland.&#13;
Dr. Pauline Isaacson, director&#13;
of International Programs, said&#13;
students from throughout the UWSystems&#13;
and the state's private&#13;
colleges have traditionally joined&#13;
Stevens Point collegians in&#13;
overseas study travel since UWSP&#13;
offerings were first developed&#13;
in the late 1960's.&#13;
She said UW-SP is noted for&#13;
offering extensive travel at&#13;
inexpensive prices.&#13;
Here's a summary of the&#13;
programs (the price covers&#13;
travel, tuition, food and lodging):&#13;
• Summer in Britain — June 7 -&#13;
July 4 — $1400 approximately with&#13;
two weeks travel northward to&#13;
Scotland and 12 days in London.&#13;
Emphasis will be on theatre and&#13;
psychology.&#13;
• Summer in Poland — July 12 -&#13;
August 8 — $1400 a pproximately&#13;
with two weeks in and around&#13;
Cracow in picturesque Southern&#13;
Poland and 12 days travel northward&#13;
to Warsaw and Gdansk.&#13;
Emphasis will be on art and folk&#13;
art.&#13;
• Semester in Britain — August&#13;
18 - December 10 — $2600 approximately.&#13;
Students may earn&#13;
13-17 semester hours of credit.&#13;
Principal base will be Britain's&#13;
capital, London. The first 28 days&#13;
will focus on Continental Travel&#13;
Study which will include visits to&#13;
Amsterdam, Koln, Munich,&#13;
Salzburg, Florence, Rome, Basel,&#13;
Paris, Bruges. The price stated&#13;
will cover air fare, room and&#13;
board, continental rail travel, side&#13;
excursions, and Wisconsin&#13;
Resident Tuition. Each student&#13;
will be responsible for his own&#13;
personal costs such as sundries.&#13;
• Semester in Poland — August&#13;
18 - December 10 — $2150 approximately.&#13;
13-17 hours of credit.&#13;
Principal base will be&#13;
Jagiellonain University, Cracow,&#13;
Poland. The first 12 days Travel&#13;
Study will feature visits to Germany,&#13;
Yugoslavia, Hungary, and&#13;
Austria. Upon arrival in Poland,&#13;
the group will have Travel Study&#13;
To important points of interest,&#13;
south to the Tatra Mountains, then&#13;
north to cities of special interest,&#13;
and the ports on the Baltic. A final&#13;
10 days of Travel Study in&#13;
December will focus on a five day&#13;
program in Berlin, and visits to&#13;
Amsterday and Bruges in&#13;
Belguim.&#13;
All costs essential to the&#13;
program are included in the&#13;
quoted price. Each student is&#13;
responsible for his own personal&#13;
costs such as sundries.&#13;
• Semester in Germany —&#13;
August 18 - December 18 — $2800&#13;
approximately. 13-17 hours credit.&#13;
This program located in Munich,&#13;
West Germany, is preceded by&#13;
visits to other sites in Germany&#13;
and Austria, including a week's&#13;
study program in Berlin. Students&#13;
are introduced to art, architecture,&#13;
history, and&#13;
economics, of cities and cultural&#13;
areas — Hamburg, Regensburg,&#13;
Augsburg, Koln in Germany and&#13;
COMPUTER&#13;
CENTER&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
SESSIONS&#13;
The main idea behind the sessions is to make&#13;
available regular times when users can get together&#13;
informally with the Center's Operations Manager&#13;
Academic Consultant and Systems Programmer and&#13;
discuss users' questions, suggestions and concerns.&#13;
The last of this semester's information sessions for&#13;
students, faculty and staff who use U. W. Parkside's&#13;
(PrnTSl""^&#13;
1 thP&#13;
niTRMeSeaHCh Timesha™g System&#13;
wrn te held: academic computing system,&#13;
Monday, May 3;&#13;
4 - 5 P. M.&#13;
MOLN. ill&#13;
(Faculty Lounge)&#13;
Students faculty and staff are encouraged to attend&#13;
any or all of the sessions. auena&#13;
Salzburg, Innsbruck and Lienz in&#13;
Austria. At the close of the study&#13;
program, the group will visit&#13;
Amsterdam.&#13;
• Semester in the Republic of&#13;
China — Au gust 18 - December 10&#13;
— $2900 ap proximately. As in the&#13;
other programs, students may&#13;
earn 13-17 credits. The program is&#13;
based at Soochow University,&#13;
Taipei, Taiwan. Projected Travel&#13;
Study will be to select areas in&#13;
Mainland China, if such can be&#13;
arranged, Hong Kong, and to&#13;
other parts of the island of&#13;
Taiwan. Featured are courses in&#13;
art, Chinese language, and&#13;
Chinese culture and civilization.&#13;
Inquiries about the program&#13;
may be directed to Dr. Pauline&#13;
Isaacson, Director of International&#13;
Programs, Main&#13;
Building, University of Wisconsin&#13;
- Stevens Point, 54481.&#13;
Rebuttal misses&#13;
the point . . .&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
must subscribe to their political&#13;
idealist positions as well. Thus, I&#13;
am continually bombarded with&#13;
the feeling that, if I want any&#13;
respect, I must support handgun&#13;
banning even though I find it&#13;
totalitarian, or that I must support&#13;
ERA even though I find severe&#13;
dangers in it. This is the type of&#13;
subtle censorship which I referred&#13;
to in a previous letter.&#13;
Lastly, I'd like to say a good&#13;
word about Chuck — I'm glad he&#13;
stood up for the right of free&#13;
speech, as much as I don't care for&#13;
Gordon Liddy. I would hope,&#13;
however, that Chuck would&#13;
reconsider his statements in&#13;
defense of coming to political&#13;
conclusions without thorough&#13;
analysis. I would hope the same&#13;
for others, but of concern that they&#13;
will not one day find the true value&#13;
of their works and achievements&#13;
marred by a disaster of any&#13;
Utopian political solution which&#13;
they may have lent support to.&#13;
R.K. Becker&#13;
Treks planned&#13;
Applications are now available&#13;
for the American Lung&#13;
Association Canoe and Bike&#13;
Treks. Treks are a series of four&#13;
and eight day planned and guided&#13;
wilderness adventures. Because&#13;
Trek Bicycle Corporation of&#13;
Waterloo, Wisconsin is sponsoring&#13;
the bike trek, scheduled for June&#13;
3-6 in the Kettle Moraine State&#13;
Forest, all funds raised will be&#13;
used to support Lung Association&#13;
programs for asthmatic children.&#13;
June 10-13 a canoe trek will be&#13;
held through Sylvania Recreation&#13;
Area. Canoes and all equipment&#13;
are furnished.&#13;
All Treks include orientation&#13;
sessions for participants designed&#13;
to lend advice on gear and&#13;
clothing, and promote sound&#13;
wilderness ethics.&#13;
For an application or more&#13;
information call the American&#13;
Lung Association at 463-3232. O ut&#13;
of the metropolitan Milwaukee&#13;
area, call toll - free: 1-800-242-5160. &#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 29, 1982 7&#13;
Reeves to teach McCarthy course | Student ranks&#13;
high in math Prof. Thomas C. Reeves, author&#13;
of "The Life and Times of Joe&#13;
McCarthy," a new biography of&#13;
the Wisconsin senator, will teach a&#13;
special history course with the&#13;
same title during the fall&#13;
semester. The 3 - credit class will&#13;
meet from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. on&#13;
Thursdays.&#13;
Reeves' book is a selection of&#13;
the Book of the Month Club,&#13;
History Book Club and Quality&#13;
Paperback Book Club and has&#13;
been receiving overwhelmingly&#13;
favorable reviews in major U.S.&#13;
newspapers and periodicals.&#13;
Pre - registration for the fall '82&#13;
semester began Tuesday, April 27.&#13;
Bassis co-authors sociology textbook&#13;
A Parkside sociologist is a coauthor&#13;
of a new college - level&#13;
textbook, "Social Problems," just&#13;
published by Harcourt, Brace,&#13;
Jovanovich, Inc.&#13;
The authors are Michael S.&#13;
Bassis, Associate Dean of Faculty&#13;
and Associate Professor of&#13;
Sociology at UW-P, Richard J.&#13;
Gelles of the University of Rhode&#13;
Island and Ann Levine.&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Men finally win&#13;
Continued From Page Eight&#13;
baseman Dan Sykes followed with&#13;
two of his own.&#13;
The men were losing 7-3 until&#13;
the sixth inning when they scored&#13;
five runs. John Hyatt came&#13;
through with a home run for the&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
The second game was considerably&#13;
shorter than the first as&#13;
it was called after four and one -&#13;
half innings due to the ten run&#13;
rule. The final score of the day&#13;
was 14-1, with such incidents as&#13;
Rich Salisbury's and Joe Krisiks&#13;
back - to - back homers. Brian&#13;
Steinhoff, Parkside's starting&#13;
pitcher received the victory as&#13;
Sykes and Salisbury led the attack&#13;
with three hits a piece.&#13;
The Rangers will take on&#13;
George Williams College on home&#13;
turf tomorrow at 1 p.m.&#13;
competition&#13;
A Parkside senior, David&#13;
Vollmer, is among students who&#13;
ranked in the upper one - fourth of&#13;
students participating in the 1981-&#13;
82 William Lowell Putnam&#13;
Mathematical Competition.&#13;
He was among 2,043 students&#13;
from 343 colleges and universities&#13;
in the U.S. and Canada who took&#13;
part in the competition last&#13;
December. Results were announced&#13;
last week. The competition&#13;
is funded by the Putnam&#13;
Fund for the Promotion of&#13;
Scholarship and is held under&#13;
auspices of the Mathematical&#13;
Association of America.&#13;
Vollmer, of 563 Sheridan Road,&#13;
Racine, has a double major in&#13;
physics and mathematics at&#13;
Parkside. Only one other&#13;
Wisconsin student (from Beloit&#13;
College) ranked in the competition.&#13;
&#13;
STUNNING STYLES&#13;
HAPPEN HERE&#13;
Best&#13;
Haircut&#13;
of Your&#13;
Life&#13;
Or&#13;
Money&#13;
Back&#13;
Best&#13;
Haircut&#13;
of Your&#13;
Life&#13;
Or&#13;
Money&#13;
Back&#13;
3519 52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wl&#13;
654-61 54&#13;
3532 Meachem Rd.&#13;
Racine, Wi SHair Studio 554-8600&#13;
$ REDKEN Salon Prescription Center&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
SERVICES OFFERED&#13;
TYPING Professionally done. Reasonable&#13;
rates. Fast service. North Kenosha. Call&#13;
551-7438 o r 658-9229, anytime.&#13;
TYPING for professionals and students. 5&#13;
minutes from Parkside. 552-8293 (after 5&#13;
p.m.)&#13;
Write RANGER&#13;
A Letter!&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
JOIN US FOR THIS SUMMER and earn&#13;
tuition, spending money. Compete for $1,000&#13;
scholarship. No experience needed.&#13;
Company training. Start immediately. Car&#13;
necessary. Interview at Racine Holiday&#13;
inn, Room 233, Monday, May 3 at 5 p.m. and&#13;
6 p.m. sharp!&#13;
WANTED: Students to sell advertising for&#13;
Ranger. 15% commission plus bonus.&#13;
Here's the perfect way to make $$$$. Stop in&#13;
Ranger office (next to Coffee Shoppe) if&#13;
interested.&#13;
WANTED: News, feature and sports writers,&#13;
photographers, graphic artists. Stop by&#13;
Ranger office.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
ROOMMATE NEEDED after graduation.&#13;
Wood Creek, 552-9175, Dick O.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FILM - T HEATRE — Shakespeare book sale&#13;
thru May 5. Quality used and out-of-print&#13;
books at The Old Book Corner at Martha&#13;
Merrell's Bookstore, 312-6th St., Racine.&#13;
Also, to celebrate Shakespeare's Birthday&#13;
on April 23, a selection of prints and&#13;
engravings from the 18th and 19th centuries.&#13;
Over 1200 used books in all areas for&#13;
sale.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
FORMAL DANCE at Marc Plaza. Female&#13;
escort needed. Brendan, 962-8081.&#13;
STILL NEED DATE for Naval Ball on&#13;
4/30/82. Brendan, 962 8081.&#13;
COM' ON GIRLS, use that formal dress in the&#13;
closet. Brendan.&#13;
SOMEONE MUST HAVE a formal dress for&#13;
Naval Ball. Brendan.&#13;
I HAVE TWO DAYS to find a date. Please I! I&#13;
Brendan.&#13;
I'M NOT TRYING TO SOUND FORWARD,&#13;
just benevolently convincing. Brendan.&#13;
PEOPLE — put aside your alienation. Get on&#13;
with the fascination.&#13;
DAVE: when I get my candlestick, you'll get&#13;
your letter.&#13;
BREAD, YEA, YEA! Backseat driving&#13;
without a driver. Merlin.&#13;
MARQUETTE CAMPUS PARTY 5/1/82.&#13;
Any preppy girls interested? Junior, 552&#13;
8770.&#13;
PARKSIDE can be preppier than Marquette!&#13;
Biff, Junior and Buffy.&#13;
HEY PREPPIES: It's time to wear your&#13;
IZOD shirts. Biff.&#13;
COM' ON GIRLS, don't be so shy. Brendan&#13;
needs responses.&#13;
COM' ON ATTRACTIVE GIRLS: Brendan&#13;
isn't a bad guy. He's alright.&#13;
TO MY FAVORITE ZOMBIE: How's life with&#13;
the living?&#13;
JENNY — The Zombie walks. Signed,&#13;
Chipmunk.&#13;
ROBIN: Golf courses and broken tables!&#13;
Where will it all end? Chipmunk.&#13;
THANKS J.R. for your help. Rico.&#13;
LET'S HAVE a new - w ave orgy. Birdman.&#13;
EVERYBODY, let's get boofed . . . Bruno&#13;
THE BIRDMAN has arrived from planet X&#13;
. . . Bruno.&#13;
PUNKS JERK IT back and forth. Rico.&#13;
ED — Those who can't see other's point of&#13;
view have no right to force their opinions on&#13;
others!&#13;
SNOOPY Kiss me you fool!!&#13;
THE PARTY OF GROTHE, PEDERSEN&#13;
AND LETTER: Br»vo ladies, Bravo!&#13;
TO ALL WHO HAVE TAKEN SHOTS at&#13;
CHUCK in the Classifieds: I'm not defending&#13;
him, but it is a shame that all of that&#13;
energy was wasted on such child's play.&#13;
i ^&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
E. F. MADRIGRANO&#13;
1831 - 55th St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wise.&#13;
558-3553&#13;
'if it feels like a weekend,&#13;
it must be Michelob'.'&#13;
Put a little&#13;
weekend&#13;
in your week. &#13;
8 Thursday, April 29, 1982 RANGER&#13;
Softball&#13;
Women have good week, now 11-7&#13;
by Kathleen Pohlman&#13;
The women's Softball team&#13;
played a very busy week last&#13;
week, but started out with a&#13;
victory against Carthage 12-2. The&#13;
winning pitcher was Lynn Barth&#13;
who was also one of the star hitters,&#13;
batting 3 for 5. Cindy Ruffert&#13;
also batted well, 3 for 4. The&#13;
second game started but ended in&#13;
the fifth inning due to cold and&#13;
darkness. Even with the bad luck,&#13;
the women pulled out another win,&#13;
3-2. The star batter was Nancy&#13;
Kivi as she hit a triple with the&#13;
bases loaded. Michele Martino&#13;
was the winning pitcher.&#13;
On Tuesday the women hosted&#13;
Elmhurst College and won the&#13;
Bike for MD&#13;
Well, it's time to dig that bicycle&#13;
up and out from the basement and&#13;
get it in working order. Greg&#13;
Scarlato and Chuck Neustifter&#13;
have already done just that, and&#13;
they have even planned their first&#13;
trip of the season.&#13;
The two intend to bike for two&#13;
weeks across Wisconsin for&#13;
Muscular Dystrophy (MD),&#13;
starting on June 1. Although the&#13;
exact route has not yet been&#13;
plotted, they plan to go 60 miles a&#13;
day, traveling on mostly county&#13;
highways through the central part&#13;
of the state.&#13;
Scarlato and Neustifter are&#13;
presently looking for people to join&#13;
their excursion, and they are also&#13;
looking for sponsors. Should they&#13;
raise $500 or more, they will get to&#13;
present a check to Jill Geisler on&#13;
Channel 6 television.&#13;
The trip is not, in the words of&#13;
Scarlato, "for softies". There will&#13;
be no support vehicle, and each&#13;
participant is expected to carry&#13;
his or her own equipment. They&#13;
will be camping overnight in state&#13;
parks.&#13;
Anyone interested should call&#13;
Greg Scarlato at 657-5714.&#13;
first game with a score of 13-2.&#13;
Lynn Barth, the winning pitcher,&#13;
along with the other great defense&#13;
on the team, held Elmhurst&#13;
scoreless until the seventh inning.&#13;
Lynn Barth hit a triple and Ann&#13;
Althaus hit a double. Nancy Kivi&#13;
went 2 for 3. Due to unreasonable&#13;
weather the second game was&#13;
cancelled. However, on Wednesday&#13;
the weather cleared but&#13;
the women still had a hard time,&#13;
losing against St. Francis, 1-0. The&#13;
loss went to Michele Martino. The&#13;
game was close but the Rangers&#13;
just could not score. The second&#13;
game was tougher and the women&#13;
lost it, 9-0. Lynn Barth was the&#13;
losing pitcher.&#13;
The weekend had a full schedule&#13;
when the Rangers played in the&#13;
Chicago Circle Tournament. The&#13;
first game of the day (Friday)&#13;
was against North Eastern 111.&#13;
The loss proved to be vital. The&#13;
score ended at 6-1. Lynn Barth got&#13;
the loss. The Rangers had a tough&#13;
time getting the bats to go. The&#13;
second game proved to be better.&#13;
They played St. Xavier for the&#13;
fourth time this season and won&#13;
again, 4-1. Michele Martino was&#13;
winning pitcher. Lynn Barth was&#13;
the leading batter, 2 for 3 with one&#13;
triple. Nancy Kivi and Janet&#13;
Broeren showed great skill and&#13;
teamwork when they pulled&#13;
several double plays on St.&#13;
Xavier. During the game Paula&#13;
Sandahl was injured when a&#13;
player slid into her accidentally&#13;
spiking her in the hand. Coach&#13;
Linda Henderson does not know&#13;
when Paula will return to the line&#13;
up.&#13;
On Saturday the tournament&#13;
continued. The first game was&#13;
against Eastern 111. T he Rangers&#13;
lost 2-0. Michele Martino was the&#13;
losing pitcher. The second game&#13;
was against DePaul and ended&#13;
victoriously, 3-1. Lynn Barth was&#13;
the winning pitcher. Janet&#13;
Broeren went 2 for 2.&#13;
The Rangers are now 11-7. They&#13;
play at home at Petrified Springs&#13;
this Friday against Carthage.&#13;
They also play on Saturday&#13;
against St. Francis at home.&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Finally!! Victory for men! Photo by Bob Kiesling&#13;
by Tammy Shuemate&#13;
Plagued by losses, the Parkside&#13;
men's baseball team finally broke&#13;
their six game losing streak when&#13;
they took on the Carthage Redmen&#13;
and beat them 7-0 on April 20.&#13;
The Rangers then took on the&#13;
Milwaukee School of Engineering&#13;
in Milwaukee. They were victorious&#13;
in the first game of the&#13;
doubleheader 4-1. Brian Steinhoff&#13;
pitched a three hitter and catcher&#13;
Carl Tortensen led the hitting with&#13;
two.&#13;
The second game also proved to&#13;
be a victory for the men as they&#13;
beat Milwaukee once again with a&#13;
score of 4-2. Scott Hartnell kept&#13;
Milwaukee to three hits while his&#13;
teammate Dan Sykes led the&#13;
Rangers with two hits.&#13;
Last Saturday proved to be a&#13;
fruitful day for the baseball team&#13;
as they played against Lakeland&#13;
College for the first and only time&#13;
this year. The first game was a&#13;
close one, but the men stuck it out&#13;
to win 8-7. Rich Salisbury led the&#13;
batting with three hits and second&#13;
Continued On Page Seven&#13;
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THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
(1) WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
How to&#13;
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Simple. Fly Capitol Air's Economy Class. Our&#13;
fares are the lowest of any scheduled airline so&#13;
you can use the money you save for lots of&#13;
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And, if you are flying to Europe this summei;&#13;
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So if you want to do well in Economy Class,&#13;
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Capitol at 312-347-0230 in Chicago, 800-572-&#13;
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CHECKING!&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-4861&#13;
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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, W&#13;
414-843-2388&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5%% Interest If Y our Dally&#13;
Balance is $500.00 or Morel&#13;
ISLE&#13;
LENDER&#13;
WE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU GROW </text>
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              <text>Students lobby to override veto</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Earl, Democratic candidate for&#13;
Governor, visits Parkside&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
Tony Earl, a Democratic&#13;
candidate for Governor, spoke at&#13;
Parkside to approximately 60&#13;
people on April 28. He opened with&#13;
formal remarks before answering&#13;
questions from the audience.&#13;
Earl spoke briefly on higher&#13;
education in Wisconsin, saying&#13;
that the state has always held to&#13;
the notion of "affordability" for&#13;
all state universities, but that the&#13;
ideas concerning them financially&#13;
seemed to be changing. He said&#13;
that before, the notion was that&#13;
"The student paid 25% of the cost,&#13;
and the state paid 75% of t he cost.&#13;
It was never felt that it was a&#13;
subsidy. It was always felt that it&#13;
was an investment."&#13;
Earl went on to say that people&#13;
are now saying that the state&#13;
subsidy cannot remain at 75% and&#13;
the students must pay a larger&#13;
amount. "I think it would be a&#13;
terrible mistake for this state to&#13;
break its tradition, even though&#13;
we are in economic tough times.&#13;
There is never a more important&#13;
time to have a strong university&#13;
system than when times are&#13;
tough, so that when we do come&#13;
TONY EARL&#13;
out of it, we come out stronger&#13;
than ever," Earl said.&#13;
When asked about Governor&#13;
Dreyfus' recent announcement&#13;
that he would not run for a second&#13;
term, Earl said it definitely&#13;
changes the nature of the race in&#13;
that, although not insurmountable,&#13;
whoever the&#13;
Democratic candidate turns out to&#13;
be in September, he/she won't be&#13;
the underdog he/she would have&#13;
been if Dreyfus was running. "At&#13;
this point, the Democrats&#13;
probably will start out the&#13;
favorite. But that alone won't be&#13;
enough to win the election," Earl&#13;
said. Eaii also added that the&#13;
Democrats are measurably better&#13;
off now than they were a few&#13;
weeks ago, prior to the announcement.&#13;
&#13;
Other questions that were&#13;
directed to the candidate were:&#13;
Project ELF - ("It is indefensib&#13;
le, militar ily,&#13;
economically and environmentally.")&#13;
&#13;
Nuclear transportation - (fine,&#13;
"... so long as it is done with appropriate&#13;
safety measures.")&#13;
Legalized gambling - ("It&#13;
would not be a strong revenue -&#13;
raiser for the state.")&#13;
Collective bargaining - ("It is an&#13;
important right which should not&#13;
be denied.")&#13;
Social services - ("It is wrong&#13;
that the focus is on the cuts where&#13;
the spending has been modest...&#13;
but not on big services such as&#13;
Medicaid, which provide for a&#13;
wider range of services than the&#13;
average person who is privately&#13;
insured.")&#13;
3rd A nnual&#13;
Awards Banquet honors students&#13;
Approximately 150 people attended&#13;
the Third Annual Student&#13;
Awards Banquet last Friday&#13;
night. Student organizations&#13;
selected two members from&#13;
within their organizations for&#13;
distinguished service awards and&#13;
Kathy Slama was given the&#13;
campus - wide Distinguished&#13;
Student Service Award.&#13;
Students had to be nominated&#13;
for the Distinguished Student&#13;
Service Award, which was&#13;
decided by Student Life personnel.&#13;
Other award winners are:&#13;
Ranger - Pat Hensiak and Ken&#13;
Meyer;&#13;
PSGA - Mike Pfaffl and Kathy&#13;
Slama;&#13;
PAB - Chris Hammelev, Mark&#13;
Kleine and Jeff Schoor;&#13;
Peer Support - Sharon Charlton&#13;
and Pat Mulligan;&#13;
SOC - Carla Thomas and Jerry&#13;
Zigner.&#13;
The Presidents' Awards&#13;
(chosen by the leaders of the&#13;
major student organizations)&#13;
were given to Chris Hammelev&#13;
and Mike Pfaffl.&#13;
The Advisor of the Year Award&#13;
was presented to Irene&#13;
Herremans, advisor of W omen in&#13;
Business.&#13;
Award&#13;
Winners&#13;
"Save the Library Day&#13;
to be held Wednesday&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
The finishing touches are being&#13;
done on "Save the Library Day,"&#13;
the student - organized event on&#13;
Wednesday, May 12 to raise funds&#13;
for the budget - cut ridden library.&#13;
The proposed reduction of the&#13;
library's periodical budget&#13;
($70,000 from $170,000) brought&#13;
leaders of major student&#13;
organizations together for a&#13;
brainstorming session. Their idea&#13;
materialized into "Save the&#13;
Library Day."&#13;
The band "White Lie" will play&#13;
from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and&#13;
many other events are planned. A&#13;
dunk tank will give students an&#13;
opportunity to dunk administrators&#13;
and faculty members&#13;
in a tank of water ; and pie - in&#13;
- the - eye will offer administrators,&#13;
faculty members&#13;
and students as targets. The dunk&#13;
tank costs only 50 cents for two&#13;
throws and two pie throws go for&#13;
only $1.&#13;
A kiss - a - thon will be conducted&#13;
from noon to 3 p.m. Participants&#13;
will fill out sponsor&#13;
sheets; sponsors will donate a&#13;
certain amount of money for a&#13;
certain amount of t ime the couple&#13;
remain in the kiss - a - thon.&#13;
Sponsor sheets are available at a&#13;
table set up in the Molinaro Hall&#13;
concourse, in the PSGA and&#13;
Ranger offices and the Rec&#13;
Center. Sponsor sheets must be&#13;
returned by 10 a.m. Wednesday.&#13;
The couple turning in the most&#13;
money from sponsors will receive&#13;
two free dinners at their choice of&#13;
Ray Radigan's in Kenosha or The&#13;
Corner House in Racine.&#13;
A free throw and tug - of - war&#13;
contests will also be held. Both&#13;
require teams of two male and two&#13;
female members. The winning&#13;
teams will receive a large pizza&#13;
and a pitcher of beverage from the&#13;
Union Square. An individual beer&#13;
drinking contest is another contest&#13;
planned. Sign up sheets for these&#13;
events are also available at the&#13;
Molinaro Hall table, PSGA and&#13;
Ranger offices and the Rec&#13;
Center.&#13;
Throughout the day there will be&#13;
a bake sale, a flower sale and a&#13;
raffle featuring approximately 40&#13;
prizes. The top raffle prize is a&#13;
semester's worth of textbooks&#13;
next fall free of charge. The&#13;
second prize is a white annual&#13;
parking permit.&#13;
Other campus - related prizes&#13;
are: four season basketball&#13;
tickets, a $5 gift certificate from&#13;
the Sweet Shoppe, 10 free lines of&#13;
bowling in the Rec Center, $10&#13;
worth of food / beverage tickets&#13;
for "The End" (May 22-23), one&#13;
week of free lunches from&#13;
Heritage food service, and one&#13;
Continued On Page Two&#13;
Chemicals found to be safe&#13;
The Parkside community&#13;
can rest easy. The drums that&#13;
were found off the Outer Loop&#13;
road by the Union do not&#13;
contain any dangerous substances.&#13;
The barrels actually&#13;
carry a substance called&#13;
Diatomacious Earth. That is, a&#13;
light crumbly silica — containing&#13;
material derived&#13;
chiefly from diatom remains&#13;
and used especially as a filter&#13;
and adsorbent.&#13;
In this case, it is used in the&#13;
swimming pool filtration&#13;
system. The substance is&#13;
highly organic. What is&#13;
marked on the barrels is not&#13;
what is in the barrels. What is&#13;
marked is what Parkside&#13;
originally received in the&#13;
barrels. However, after the&#13;
barrels are rinsed and washed,&#13;
the diatomacious earth is put&#13;
in the barrels to dry, and then&#13;
the remains are spread on the&#13;
trees and bushes around&#13;
campus.&#13;
Students lobby to&#13;
override veto&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
Award winners are (top row, left to right) Jeff Schoor, Ken&#13;
Meyer, Mike Pfaffl, Mark Klein, Jerry Zigner, (bottom row) Pat&#13;
Hensiak, Kathy Slama, Sharon Charlton, Pat Mulliger, Chris&#13;
Hammelev and Carla Thomas.&#13;
Students in Wisconsin had&#13;
something extra to protest on&#13;
April 29, the national day of&#13;
protest against cuts to higher&#13;
education. On that day, Governor&#13;
Dreyfus vetoed from the budget&#13;
repair bill an additional $1.6&#13;
million in student grant money for&#13;
1982-1983 that the Legislature had&#13;
included in the budget repair bill.&#13;
United Council immediately&#13;
vowed to begin work on having&#13;
that veto overriden by the&#13;
Legislature in the veto session&#13;
scheduled to begin May 26.&#13;
"College students cannot afford&#13;
to lose this additional money for&#13;
financial aid," according to&#13;
Wendy Strimling, Legislative&#13;
Affairs Director for United&#13;
Council — the statewide student&#13;
association. "Cuts in state support&#13;
of the University of Wisconsin&#13;
have already resulted in a spring&#13;
semester tuition surcharge, and&#13;
the cuts to the UW just passed in&#13;
the budget repair bill might result&#13;
in a tuition increase next fall.&#13;
Higher tuition, coming on top of&#13;
drastic cutbacks in federal&#13;
financial aid, make that extra $1.6&#13;
million in state support for student&#13;
grants worth fighting for."&#13;
Strimling also points out that&#13;
Governor Dreyfus is not making&#13;
all groups sacrifice equally in his&#13;
plea for getting Wisconsin out of&#13;
its fiscal crunch. "At the same&#13;
time that Governor Dreyfus&#13;
justified vetoeing $1.6 million in&#13;
financial aid because of the fiscal&#13;
condition of the state, he cost the&#13;
state $13 million in lost revenue by&#13;
vetoeing the tax on oil companies,"&#13;
Strimling said.&#13;
The Legislature had included in&#13;
the budget repair bill $1,092,600 for&#13;
the Wisconsin Higher Education&#13;
Grant (WHEG) Program and&#13;
$507,400 in the Tuition Grant&#13;
Program for the 1982-1983 fis cal&#13;
year. The Department of Administration&#13;
has put $1.9 million&#13;
from the WHEG and Tuition&#13;
Grant Programs' 1981-1982 budget&#13;
into reserve; that money, which&#13;
will automatically lapse into the&#13;
general fund as of J uly 1, 1982, is&#13;
thus lost to financial aid for this&#13;
year. The additional $1.6 million&#13;
passed by the Legislature would&#13;
have basically compensated for&#13;
the loss of $1.9 mill ion from these&#13;
same programs in 1981-1982.&#13;
"The Legislature recognized the&#13;
situation students are facing —&#13;
higher tuition,, less federal&#13;
financial aid, and fewer parttime&#13;
jobs available — a nd recognized&#13;
the importance of essentially&#13;
restoring money for financial aid&#13;
taken from those programs this&#13;
year," Strimling said. "Hopefully,&#13;
legislators will stand by their&#13;
principles and override Governor&#13;
Dreyfus' veto." &#13;
2 Thursday, May 6,1982 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
SCCOCCOCOOCCOOCOOOOOO&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;
5COOOOOOSOCOOO! ioooooocoeeoooccooooocoooooa&#13;
Remember "Saue the Library"&#13;
Remember Wednesday, May 12 is "Save the Library Day."&#13;
Write it in your calendar, write it on your hand, or attach a note&#13;
to your eyeglasses — just remember that from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.&#13;
on the Union Pad, behind the Union Square, students will be&#13;
raising money to help defray the effects the state - mandated&#13;
budget cuts had on the library.&#13;
It has been recommended that the $170,000 library budget be&#13;
cut $70,000. That's bad. That's bad for the students, the faculty&#13;
and the university as a whole and something should be done&#13;
about it.&#13;
That was the exact thought the leaders of student&#13;
organizations had when they met on April 21. By the end of that&#13;
informal meeting, the wheels were rolling on the event that was&#13;
planned to be held in only three weeks.&#13;
Three weeks isn't much time, but everything is now set. The&#13;
event will have free admission and the band "White Lie" will&#13;
play from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. A free band on a Wednesday afternoon&#13;
is something in itself, but there's more. A lot more. .&#13;
Other events include dunking members of the administration&#13;
and faculty in a dunk tank, hitting people (hopefully the same&#13;
people, if they quit being chicken) with a pie in the face, free&#13;
throw and tug - of - war contests, a bake sale and a flower sale.&#13;
The best thing, though, is the raffle that will be held&#13;
throughout the afternoon. For only $2 a ticket (or three for $5)&#13;
you can't go wrong. The prizes are superb — the top one is a&#13;
semester's worth of textbooks free of charge next fall and the&#13;
second one is a white annual parking permit. (See story on page&#13;
one for the many other prizes.)&#13;
Remember that all the proceeds from the event will go&#13;
towards maintaining the library — your library. Buy raffle&#13;
tickets, attend the event and help raise money for the thing that&#13;
helps all of us.&#13;
And, by the way, here's a proposal (more like a challenge):&#13;
how about if the faculty (and administration), match the amount&#13;
of money the students raise for the library? That only seems&#13;
fair since students aren't the only ones who utilize the library.&#13;
Think about it... and see you Wednesday, May 12 on the Union&#13;
Pad. Don't forget.&#13;
Vending machines a rip-off&#13;
machines. She also stated that the&#13;
University is doing the students a&#13;
favor by returning the money to&#13;
us; and after so many slips are&#13;
filed you will not get your money&#13;
back. Why d oesn't the University&#13;
do us a favor by just making sure&#13;
the machines are kept in proper&#13;
working order, or would that be&#13;
too easy?&#13;
Patricia Juskewicz&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It seems like every time I decide&#13;
to buy something from the snack&#13;
machines I end up empty handed&#13;
— no snacks and no money. I was&#13;
recently hassled by one of the&#13;
employees when I was filling out a&#13;
refund slip at the coffee shop. I&#13;
was told that the University is not&#13;
connected with the company&#13;
which provides the snack&#13;
"Save the Library Day"&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
basic two - person outdoor rental&#13;
kit for a weekend (the kit includes&#13;
a tent, sleeping bags, and basic&#13;
camping necessities).&#13;
Other raffle prizes have been&#13;
donated from the community.&#13;
From Kenosha: Oage Thomsen's,&#13;
House of Gerhard, Casino&#13;
Townhouse, Jensen's, Greco's,&#13;
Candlelite Club, Captain's Steak&#13;
Joynt, Country Kitchen, Hungry&#13;
Head, Bidinger's Music House,&#13;
and Carmichael and Associates&#13;
movie theaters (Roosevelt and&#13;
Market Square).&#13;
Dona tors from Racine: The&#13;
Sanctuary, DeRango's, Bistro&#13;
Bartholomew, York Steak House,&#13;
Ferraro's, Obie's, Infusino's&#13;
Pizza, Chic -Fil-A, Martha&#13;
Merrell's, Walden Books, and the&#13;
Marc movie theaters.&#13;
More prizes will be solicited&#13;
until the day of the event.&#13;
All proceeds from "Save the&#13;
Library Day" will go towards the&#13;
library.&#13;
"w&#13;
GOOD NEWS, RAN16N!&#13;
RADIO ARGENTINA SAYS «THE&#13;
S.S. PUNO DE LATA HAS J UST&#13;
DOWNED THREE BRITISH&#13;
I VULCAN BOMBERS AW IS&#13;
PURSUING AN ENENVY&#13;
SUBMARINE'&#13;
o&#13;
y&#13;
Balsano deserves recognition&#13;
Dear editor:&#13;
Having Joseph Balsano for an&#13;
instructor for Quantitative&#13;
Biology and Evolutionary Biology&#13;
was a unique experience. Dr.&#13;
Balsano taught biology outside of&#13;
the rigid dogmatic framework so&#13;
often used by other professors. He&#13;
presented science as a field of&#13;
study imbedded in its own unique&#13;
history and assumptions. Balsano&#13;
stressed the inadequacies of the&#13;
false assumption of "scientific&#13;
truth." The grades I received&#13;
from Dr. Balsano were at first&#13;
below my previous standards, not&#13;
because of a lack of ability or&#13;
effort but because most science&#13;
teachers previously stressed&#13;
memorization above understanding.&#13;
Balsano, unlike the&#13;
others, stressed understanding&#13;
major ideas by emphasizing&#13;
specific examples and by using a&#13;
well - planned methodology. In&#13;
other words, you learned how to&#13;
"think scientifically!" My grades&#13;
slowly improved as a function of&#13;
hard work and of le arning how t o&#13;
think from a "scientific&#13;
framework."&#13;
Balsano's extreme concern for&#13;
student understanding was&#13;
demonstrated in class discussions&#13;
and post class office hours as he&#13;
attacked question after question&#13;
with an intensity often unseen in&#13;
college professors. I vividly&#13;
remember Balsano's biochemical&#13;
demonstrations in which he would&#13;
literally contort his body into&#13;
strange configurations to visually&#13;
put his point across. How many&#13;
teachers do you know that would&#13;
subject themselves to possible&#13;
ridicule for the sake of demonTeaching&#13;
Excellence decision difficult&#13;
strating the relative strength of a&#13;
giant ant?&#13;
Joseph Balsano will probably&#13;
never gain the teaching&#13;
recognition he deserves for two&#13;
reasons. First, he teaches the&#13;
inherently boring and difficult&#13;
Quantitative Biology, and&#13;
secondly, he demands a great deal&#13;
from his students, such as a&#13;
willingness to learn and to put&#13;
forth that second effort, both often&#13;
shunned by students. But as I&#13;
enter graduate studies, one&#13;
thing's for certain, that is the&#13;
importance and usefullness of&#13;
having had Joseph Balsano as an&#13;
instructor will no doubt surface&#13;
again and again.&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
Joseph L. Ripp&#13;
Parkside Alumnus&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
We the members of the&#13;
Nominations Committee for&#13;
Teaching Excellence Award&#13;
would like to inform you that the&#13;
process of narrowing down&#13;
eligible qualified candidates for&#13;
the 1982 award has just been&#13;
completed. However, we have&#13;
discovered a few points of interest&#13;
that we feel should be shared with&#13;
everyone. First of all, it should be&#13;
is now accepting applications for&#13;
Editor&#13;
for the 1982-83 academic year.&#13;
Applicants must be registered UWParkside&#13;
students planning to take&#13;
at least 6 credits each semester.&#13;
Deadline for applications:&#13;
Noon, May 7, 1982&#13;
Send application RANGER&#13;
UW - Parkside • &amp; resume to: Box No 2&lt;wo&#13;
Kenosha, WI. 53141&#13;
stated emphatically that the&#13;
number of 'excellent' teachers in&#13;
our university is just overwhelming.&#13;
We received a great&#13;
many and varied nominations to&#13;
evaluate for the 1982 Teaching&#13;
Excellence Award. The teachers'&#13;
abilities seemed to have reached&#13;
into the hearts and minds of a lot&#13;
of students, including those on the&#13;
Nominations Committee.&#13;
Now, because we had so many&#13;
valid nominations it was a difficult&#13;
task to choose who we would&#13;
submit to the Selections Committee.&#13;
Our task was made more&#13;
difficult because we had only five&#13;
weeks to accomplish something&#13;
normally completed in an entire&#13;
semester. The reason for the lack&#13;
of time? Well, it seems that&#13;
order to prevent the same con&#13;
troversy that occurred last year&#13;
the PSCA was given the op&#13;
m&#13;
portunity to revise the criteric&#13;
used by last year's Nominations&#13;
Committee. Needless to say, thf&#13;
proposal supposedly put togethei&#13;
by Jim Kreuser was not acceptec&#13;
by the Faculty Senate. No furthei&#13;
action as to the rewriting of the&#13;
proposal was taken. This problen&#13;
caused our delay and added to the&#13;
difficulty of our task. But we are&#13;
not here to blatantly criticize the&#13;
PSGA for its efforts. Rather, we&#13;
would suggest that members oi&#13;
PSGA and the Nominations&#13;
Committee discuss the criteric&#13;
and process to be implemented foi&#13;
future Teaching Excellence&#13;
Awards committees. Maybe ther&#13;
Jim Kreuser would know wha&#13;
he's talking about and perhaps&#13;
he'll be able to submit an ac&#13;
ceptable proposal.&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Steve Myers&#13;
Mark Sanders&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Andy Petersen&#13;
Linda Andersen&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
ganger&#13;
Toni Zdanowsk&#13;
&gt; Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Co-Photo Editor&#13;
Co-Photo Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
STAFF Distribution Manager&#13;
MaryKaddal; ^nh l?.&#13;
on?&#13;
fi9&#13;
,i&#13;
°' Car&#13;
°" Burns, Eric Elsmo,&#13;
Oberbrurtr rh^ L K'&#13;
e&#13;
s»'ng, Joe Kimm, Rick Luehr, Dick&#13;
Shuematp FH^ w Ostrowsk., Masood Shafiq, Tammy bnuemate, Eric Wichmann, Jeff Wicks.&#13;
respondble'&#13;
S&#13;
f or"its'ed iforfal°poMcy''arid'content °' UWParkside and theV are solely&#13;
RANGER f^printed'bythe UnVo^c^DP^r m'p Vh*&#13;
r excepf durin&#13;
9 breaks and holidays,&#13;
.&#13;
Parkside, Box No. 2000, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53U? ^ Un,versi,V of Wisconsin&#13;
paiTSw!?h^eEdS marJrns^AM^Sei-VrsT^t?' d0dblesP&#13;
a«&#13;
d standard&#13;
eluded for verification signed and a telephone number innS&#13;
t&#13;
f.r&#13;
i,hheld ,or va&#13;
''&#13;
d reasons.&#13;
reserves all wiitoria? pr^feqes^in9 reh.si^ publica,ion on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content. refusing to print letters which contain false or &#13;
Thursday, May 6,1982&#13;
New Honors program offers a lot to students&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
In the fall semester, two courses&#13;
will be offered through the new&#13;
honors program. The first course&#13;
is entitled, "Explaining Things."&#13;
The process of explanation will be&#13;
studied by having a new person&#13;
from a selected area of study&#13;
speak each week on methods of&#13;
explanation. The second program&#13;
is the "Honors Colloquium&#13;
Seminar." Every year, the course&#13;
will have a new theme. For the&#13;
1982-83 year, the theme is&#13;
"Imagination," with the purpose&#13;
being to study the human&#13;
phenomenon of imagination. For&#13;
the course "Explaining Things," a&#13;
3.2 GPA is necessary, and for the&#13;
"Honors Colloquium Seminar,"&#13;
the consent of the instructor is&#13;
necessary.&#13;
The present Honors Program&#13;
has been in operation for the&#13;
spring semester, and offers much&#13;
more than the two above - mentioned&#13;
courses. The program has&#13;
three main objectives: to enrich&#13;
the intellectual atmosphere for&#13;
students and faculty at Parkside;&#13;
to provide an alternative but&#13;
demanding path to graduation&#13;
with distinction; and, to attract&#13;
more academic achievers to&#13;
Parkside, and to retain them.&#13;
The basic program consists of&#13;
honors coursework, that is:&#13;
honors courses are arranged by&#13;
agreements between individual&#13;
students and instructors of&#13;
already existing courses. Such&#13;
agreements shall specify additional&#13;
or exceptional levels of&#13;
student course achievement.&#13;
Each agreement must be approved&#13;
by the Honors Program&#13;
Steering Cimmittee. Honors&#13;
coursework is restricted to&#13;
Peer Support give $50 scholarship&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Peer Support, which was given&#13;
formal major organization status&#13;
last semester, presented Dawn&#13;
Kawa of Racine with its first&#13;
scholarship to a continuing&#13;
student.&#13;
Peer Support is a program&#13;
which originated 2-1/2 years ago&#13;
by and for non - traditional&#13;
students age 25 and over.&#13;
Kawa, 40, received her $50&#13;
scholarship at last Friday's&#13;
Student Awards Banquet.&#13;
Peer Support members were&#13;
highly impressed with Kawa's&#13;
scholarship application in which&#13;
she stated her educational goals.&#13;
"My educational goal is," wrote&#13;
Kawa, "to graduate with a degree&#13;
earned through honest and sincere&#13;
effort. However, the commitment&#13;
towards that goal is much deeper&#13;
than the above statement implies.&#13;
It is closely associated with the&#13;
enrichment and meaning of life.&#13;
After spending twenty years&#13;
raising a family of se ven children&#13;
of school age, my attendance at&#13;
Parkside has truly been at one&#13;
time the attainment of the long -&#13;
awaited goal of my early years as&#13;
well as the beginning of a new&#13;
chapter of my life.&#13;
"At the end of this first year, my&#13;
reflections are completely&#13;
positive. I have experienced the&#13;
joy of learning, literally soaking&#13;
Planetary geologist&#13;
to speak&#13;
Dr. Ronald Greeley, a planetary&#13;
geologist from Arizona State&#13;
University will present two free&#13;
public lectures at Parkside this&#13;
week.&#13;
Greeley will talk on "Geological&#13;
Exploration of the Plants" at 8&#13;
p.m. on Thursday, May 6, and on&#13;
"Wind Erosion on Earth, Mars&#13;
and Venus" at noon on Friday,&#13;
May 7. Both lectures are in&#13;
Molinaro Hall, Room 105.&#13;
The first talk is sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Geology Club and the&#13;
Racine Geological Society and the&#13;
second is a part of the UW-P&#13;
Geology Colloquium series.&#13;
Greeley's space science studies&#13;
are focused on the moon and&#13;
planets in order to gain an understanding&#13;
of planetary surface&#13;
processes and geological&#13;
histories. His approach involves a&#13;
combination of spacecraft data&#13;
analysis, geological field studies&#13;
on Earth of features similar to&#13;
those observed on other planets&#13;
and laboratory experiments.&#13;
He is active in planetary&#13;
geologic mapping programs,&#13;
Mars data analysis and the&#13;
Galileo mission to Jupiter. He also&#13;
directs a consortium of e ngineers&#13;
and scientists simulating&#13;
planetary processes in the&#13;
laboratory using wind tunnels,&#13;
NASA's hypervelocity ballistic&#13;
impact range and carbowax&#13;
models of lava flows.&#13;
Greeley is author or co-author of&#13;
several books dealing with&#13;
planetary geology, most recently&#13;
one titled "Earthlike Planets."-&#13;
Since 1977, he has held a joint&#13;
professorship in geology and the&#13;
Center for Meteorite Studies at&#13;
Arizona State.&#13;
up knowledge, in an atmosphere&#13;
of acceptance, and I have been&#13;
able to apply that knowledge to&#13;
add dimension to my life and&#13;
perhaps in some small way to the&#13;
lives around me. I feel fortunate to&#13;
be free of the stress of having to&#13;
complete my education with a&#13;
time limit and also for the appreciation&#13;
of an education that&#13;
comes with maturity.&#13;
"My goal is to emerge from my&#13;
years of education a more&#13;
knowledgable and well - rounded&#13;
individual; an individual who can&#13;
be open to new experiences and&#13;
growth and yet one who can still&#13;
question and make a personal&#13;
decision; and most importantly, a&#13;
more contributing member of my&#13;
family, my community, and my&#13;
world."&#13;
The thought of " someday going&#13;
back to school" has been with&#13;
Kawa for about 10 years, but she&#13;
waited until her youngest&#13;
daughter started first grade.&#13;
Kawa is now completing her&#13;
second semester; she took six&#13;
credits each semester. She has&#13;
taken such courses as Religions of&#13;
the West and Death and Dying,&#13;
and she has completed her&#13;
English competency.&#13;
What Kawa enjoys most about&#13;
Parkside, she said, is the "feeling&#13;
of acceptance" from other&#13;
students. She isn't treated differently&#13;
just because she isn't the&#13;
traditional college student age of&#13;
18-22. Non - traditional students&#13;
make up 40% of Parkside's&#13;
student body.&#13;
The Peer Support scholarship&#13;
was based on three criteria:&#13;
• The applicant has not been a&#13;
full - time student within the past&#13;
-seven years;&#13;
• The applicant will not be&#13;
receiving state and/or federal&#13;
educational financial aid; and&#13;
• Completion of a paragraph&#13;
indicating the applicant's&#13;
educational goals.&#13;
Peer Support will be awarding&#13;
two more scholarships for next&#13;
fall semester. Both new and&#13;
continuing students may apply;&#13;
the deadline is the end of July. The&#13;
Peer Support office is located in&#13;
WLLC D175.&#13;
students who have an overall GPA&#13;
pf 3.2 or higher.&#13;
The second part of the honors&#13;
coursework is a major semester&#13;
course in which students develop&#13;
and present a Senior Honors&#13;
thesis. Each thesis will be&#13;
evaluated by a three - member&#13;
faculty committee appointed by&#13;
the seminar director. The seminar&#13;
is restricted to students who have&#13;
a 3.2 or higher overall GPA, who&#13;
have earned 86 or more credits&#13;
and who have completed or intend&#13;
to complete 15 credits of honors&#13;
coursework.&#13;
A student will then be eligible&#13;
for degrees of distinction. Each&#13;
satisfactorily completed honors&#13;
course will be designated on a&#13;
students' transcript if the&#13;
students' grade in that course is Bplus&#13;
or better Any student who&#13;
has a 3.2 or higher overall GPA&#13;
will qualify for graduating "with&#13;
distinction" by completing 15&#13;
credits of Honors coursework. At&#13;
least half of .these credits must be&#13;
outside the student's primary&#13;
major. Any student who qualifies&#13;
for graduation with distinction&#13;
and who completes the Senior&#13;
Honors Seminar and Thesis will&#13;
graduate with "Distinction,"&#13;
"High Distinction," or "Highest&#13;
Distinction" upon the recommendation&#13;
of his or her faculty&#13;
thesis committee.&#13;
Arrangements to take courses&#13;
for Honors must be initiated by&#13;
the student. A student can propose&#13;
to the instructor of one or more&#13;
regular courses, during&#13;
registration, or no later than the&#13;
fourth week of each semester, will&#13;
a student be permitted to take a&#13;
course for honors. The&#13;
requirements will be determined&#13;
between the instructor and the&#13;
student. Basically, the work&#13;
should involve more academic&#13;
interaction. If the instructor&#13;
agrees, a student may achieve&#13;
honors in a course by performing&#13;
well above the normal "A" for&#13;
that course. To be credited, a&#13;
student must satisfactorily&#13;
complete the honors program or&#13;
project, and receive at least a Bplus&#13;
in the course.&#13;
Fellowship recipients named&#13;
Something lost may be found&#13;
by Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
Have you misplaced your&#13;
calculator? Left your books on a&#13;
table in the Coffee Shop? Had a&#13;
warm pair of gloves that you don't&#13;
remember what you did with?&#13;
Maybe you found something and&#13;
don't know who to turn it in to.&#13;
Calculators, books and clothing&#13;
are just some of the many articles&#13;
that get turned into the campus&#13;
lost and found. The Campus&#13;
Security Department is responsible&#13;
for maintaining all the lost&#13;
and found records. Once an item is&#13;
received by the department it is&#13;
'inventoried and stored in the&#13;
department. Items such as&#13;
clothing, books, etc., unclaimed&#13;
after 120 days, are donated to&#13;
different non - profit organizations&#13;
for resale. Calculators, watches,&#13;
rings, etc., unclaimed after one&#13;
year are turned over to the&#13;
campus surplus property officer.&#13;
If there is a name on the item the&#13;
owner is notified. The majority of&#13;
items found do not have any&#13;
names on them, nor are they&#13;
Continued On Page Eight&#13;
The Biomedical Research Institute&#13;
of Parkside has named four&#13;
students as its first undergraduate&#13;
summer research fellows. Each&#13;
ten - week fellowship carries a&#13;
stipend of $1,200.&#13;
The students, selected on the&#13;
basis of research proposals which&#13;
they submitted to the institute,&#13;
will work under the direction of&#13;
Parkside professors associated&#13;
with the institute.&#13;
Recipients of the fellowships&#13;
are:&#13;
• Mark Schaller, Kenosha, a life&#13;
science major, who will work with&#13;
Prof. Joseph Balsano on a study of&#13;
thermal tolerance in fish;&#13;
• Maryann Perozzo, Kenosha, a&#13;
chemistry major who will work&#13;
with Prof. Keith Ward on X-ray&#13;
crystalgraphic characterization&#13;
of a photo - proton called&#13;
aequorin;&#13;
• Daryl Sauer, Kenosha, a&#13;
chemistry major, who will work&#13;
with Prof. Fred Clough on synthesis&#13;
of tri - cyclic nucleoside&#13;
analogs, compounds which are&#13;
used as anti - cancer drugs;&#13;
• Pam Sumi, Racine, a life&#13;
science major, who also will work&#13;
with Clough on synthesis of&#13;
nucleoside analogs.&#13;
The fellowships are supported in&#13;
part by the Johnson Wax Fund of&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Prof. Eugene Goodman,&#13;
director of the Biomedical&#13;
Research Center (BRI), said the&#13;
fellowships indicate the value to&#13;
students of re search carried on by&#13;
Parkside professors.&#13;
"The initiation of the BRI&#13;
summer research fellowships is a&#13;
small but specific example of how&#13;
students directly benefit from an&#13;
active, intellectually stimulating&#13;
research environment," Goodman&#13;
said. "Opportunities and&#13;
programs of this type are found&#13;
only in institutions where faculty&#13;
are actively engaged in research&#13;
activities."&#13;
Biomedical research programs&#13;
in progress at \JW-Parkside include&#13;
work on development of anti&#13;
- cancer drugs, studies of blood&#13;
diseases, molecular control of&#13;
growth and development,&#13;
biochemistry and physiology of&#13;
reproductive processes, research&#13;
on environmental health hazards&#13;
and study of the aging process.&#13;
The institute is devoted to&#13;
fostering research at UW-P in the&#13;
biomedical sciences, furthering a&#13;
research environment that fosters&#13;
interdisciplinary inquiry into&#13;
biomedical problems and&#13;
providing a focal point for&#13;
dissemination of r esearch data to&#13;
both the local and national&#13;
biomedical communities.&#13;
HAL DAVIS&#13;
MAKES MORE&#13;
DECISIONS&#13;
IN ONE HOUR&#13;
THAN&#13;
MOST RECENT&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
GRADS&#13;
MAKE ALL DAY.&#13;
"I'm a cavalry platoon leader,&#13;
in charge of 43 men," says Hal. "I'm&#13;
responsible for their education, their&#13;
training, their well-being. So you can&#13;
bet I'm making rapid-fire decisions&#13;
all day. Decisions that have an impact&#13;
on people's lives."&#13;
Army ROTC is a great way&#13;
to prepare for being an Army officer.&#13;
ROTC helps you develop discipline&#13;
of mind and spirit. As well as your&#13;
ability to make decisions under&#13;
pressure.&#13;
Taking Army ROTC pays off&#13;
in other ways. Like financial assistance&#13;
—up to $1,000 a year for your last&#13;
two years of ROTC. You could also&#13;
win an ROTC scholarship, as Hal&#13;
did. Each scholarship covers tuition,&#13;
books, and more.&#13;
If you'd like to step out of college&#13;
and into a job with responsibility,&#13;
do what Hal Davis did. Step into&#13;
Army ROTC now.&#13;
And begin your future as an&#13;
officer.&#13;
2nd Lt Hal Davis was an industrial management&#13;
major at the University ot Tennessee and a&#13;
member of Army ROTC"&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.&#13;
Call: Cpt. Moldenhauer&#13;
Marquette Un. A. ROTC&#13;
Call collect 1-224-7229/7915 &#13;
4 Thursday, May 6,1982 RANGER&#13;
Rock's future in the hands of women&#13;
by Joe Kimm&#13;
Musical trends are as follows:&#13;
dual female vocalists, female&#13;
guitar players, more keyboards&#13;
and electronic effects, and a more&#13;
sharp edged expansive sound. I&#13;
came to these conclusions after&#13;
spotting certain trends in musical&#13;
styles. You see, everything goes in&#13;
cycles and music is no exception.&#13;
After peaking in the 60's harmonically&#13;
and vocally with the&#13;
Beatles and the Beachboys, the&#13;
70's saw a more hard cutting&#13;
edged sound in the pentatonic&#13;
mode. With the advent of 24 track&#13;
mixing boards and microcircuitry,&#13;
the 80's saw an expansion&#13;
in the listening grooves with&#13;
digital recording techniques.&#13;
After running out of theatrical&#13;
gimmicks and stage effects, the&#13;
only thing left to explore is, well,&#13;
women in music.&#13;
Women in music has been a&#13;
cyclical trend as far back as the&#13;
1920's. After trendy ragtime and&#13;
be bop had passed by, the swing&#13;
era saw an emergence of female&#13;
vocalists with Bessie Smith and&#13;
Billie Holiday and the like. In the&#13;
white pop mode, it was Doris Day,&#13;
Peggy Lee and Marion Hutton&#13;
basically. The rock and roll of the&#13;
fifties ruled out women for this&#13;
new radical style of music but&#13;
with more exposure and&#13;
refinement of this truly American&#13;
art, so called female rock singers&#13;
began to come out of the woodwork,&#13;
though at first, only as a&#13;
gimmick.&#13;
Janis Joplin was one of the&#13;
earlier well known torch singers&#13;
to hit the spotlight; she became&#13;
well known after her debut at&#13;
Woodstock and her heroin overdosed&#13;
death added to her fame.&#13;
During the 70's bands like Heart,&#13;
Patty Smith and Fleetwood Mac&#13;
capitalized on the idea to set&#13;
trends for bands to follow. When&#13;
the scene began to sag in the late&#13;
70's, bands began rehashing 60's&#13;
pop with 70's heavy metal to&#13;
synthesize Punk Rock and New&#13;
Wave which later became Power&#13;
Pop. Disco also had a significant&#13;
number of women vocalists in the&#13;
area and they were mostly solo&#13;
artists with a backup band. It&#13;
wasn't a band concept so it was&#13;
similar to the Big Band era&#13;
singers who would sing with any&#13;
kind of a musical backup.&#13;
Anyway, as far as the bands&#13;
were concerned, they were&#13;
nothing new. So, ladies like Wendy&#13;
Williams of the Plasmatics and&#13;
Chris Hynde of the Pretenders&#13;
figure headed the macho women&#13;
vocalist movement and Deborah&#13;
Burned up&#13;
Metric madness is menace&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
We are being manipulated. The&#13;
movement is slow and gradual SQ&#13;
that it is not openly apparent. In&#13;
fact, right now not many people&#13;
are even concerned about it.&#13;
However, Parkside students as&#13;
well as the general public are&#13;
affected by this menace. The&#13;
metric system is upon us.&#13;
Try as you might, it's nearly&#13;
impossible to escape from&#13;
metrics. We are being forced into&#13;
liters, grams, and meters. This&#13;
country is supposedly a&#13;
democracy, but how many of you&#13;
got to vote on whether or not you&#13;
wanted to change? Let's not go&#13;
down without a fight!&#13;
The metric system has its place&#13;
in laboratories, industries, and&#13;
hospitals. For everyday life, it's&#13;
just too heavy. Metrics can be&#13;
extremely discouraging to people&#13;
who are not hell - bent on&#13;
precision. Some humans get&#13;
freaked out by all those numbers&#13;
and decimal points.&#13;
Someone once asked me how&#13;
long the 100 - yard dash was. I&#13;
found it hard to sympathize with&#13;
this person until the metric&#13;
ARNESON'S&#13;
FLOWERS&#13;
Wt&amp;Xoas&#13;
Open Mother's Day&#13;
Sunday, May 9&#13;
9-5&#13;
OPEN DAILY&#13;
7509 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wl 53140&#13;
Phone 657-1118&#13;
system hit me. Now when&#13;
somebody says 50 meters or 89&#13;
grams, I say, "Okay, but how far&#13;
is it? How much does it weigh?" If&#13;
the U.S. converts everything into&#13;
metrics, many people, including&#13;
this writer, will be sentenced to a&#13;
life of total confusion. Is that&#13;
really fair?&#13;
A person is not even safe in the&#13;
privacy of his or her own car.&#13;
Kilometers per hour share double&#13;
billing with miles per hour on&#13;
speedometers. Road signs&#13;
sometimes post distances in&#13;
metric parlance. Newer car&#13;
engines are measured in metrics.&#13;
Almost everything in grocery&#13;
stores is now listed in metric as&#13;
well as the good old English&#13;
terms. Those horrible plastic soft&#13;
drink containers, destined to be&#13;
part of our environment for&#13;
milleniums to come, are of the&#13;
metric persuasion. People buy&#13;
them anyway, unaware of any&#13;
subliminal manipulation. Where&#13;
will it end?&#13;
One can only imagine the&#13;
psychological torment that Betty&#13;
Crocker will experience when&#13;
teaspoons and ounces are no&#13;
longer in vogue.&#13;
Harry of Blondie and Pat Benatar&#13;
refined it as he t definitive sound of&#13;
the eighties. Currently, Quarterflahs&#13;
and Joan Jett head the&#13;
charts with their rock sounds.&#13;
Backed by razor edged guitars&#13;
and sub harmonic monster bass,&#13;
their femme fatale cries added an&#13;
adaptable counterbalance to the&#13;
macho sonic attacks. Added were&#13;
some dependable heart beat&#13;
drums and spaced aged electronic&#13;
keyboards to round out the&#13;
glistening product and the results&#13;
were enviable pieces of vinyl, both&#13;
artistically and financially.&#13;
You see, this music business is&#13;
actually infinitely limited and&#13;
bound by many physical boundaries.&#13;
The human hearing&#13;
mechanism can only perceive&#13;
sounds from 20 to 20,000 cycles per&#13;
second and fatigue sets in after&#13;
Sierra Club&#13;
holds meetings&#13;
The month of May will be a busy&#13;
time for the members of the newly&#13;
formed Racine - Kenosha unit of&#13;
the Sierra Club.&#13;
On Saturday, May 8, the John&#13;
Muir Chapter of the Sierra Club&#13;
will meet at Old World Wisconsin.&#13;
There will be a hike through the&#13;
Kettle Moraine at 9 a.m. Dinner&#13;
featured speaker will be Gay lord&#13;
Nelson, director of the Wilderness&#13;
Society, Washington, D.C. Car&#13;
pooling may be arranged. For&#13;
information call Donna Peterson,&#13;
637-3141.&#13;
On Wednesday, May 12, a bird&#13;
hike will be held at Bong&#13;
Recreation Area, state highways&#13;
75 and 142. Participants are asked&#13;
to assemble at the Main Gate at&#13;
5:30, do some reconnoitering&#13;
nearby on their own, and at 6 p.m.&#13;
small groups will set out with&#13;
leaders with birding skills. Come&#13;
early and bring a bag lunch if&#13;
desired. For further information&#13;
call Joan Bennett, 633-6420.&#13;
On Wednesday, May 19, 7 p.m.,&#13;
the regular monthly meeting of&#13;
the group will be held at Riverbend&#13;
Nature Center. Pete Jensen,&#13;
Director of Racine County&#13;
Emergency Government, will&#13;
speak on hazardous and toxic&#13;
waste in Kenosha and Racine&#13;
Counties.&#13;
Plans are also underway for a&#13;
busy June. The Sierra group invites&#13;
interested persons to any&#13;
and all of these meetings. Call one&#13;
of the above numbers, or Mary&#13;
Ellen Johnson (632-8871) or&#13;
Richard Marciniak (633-4712) for&#13;
information.&#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;
STUNNING STYLES&#13;
HAPPEN HERE&#13;
Best&#13;
Haircut&#13;
of Your&#13;
Life&#13;
Or&#13;
Money&#13;
Back&#13;
Best&#13;
Haircut&#13;
of Your&#13;
Life&#13;
Or&#13;
Money&#13;
Back&#13;
3519 52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha. Wl&#13;
654-6154&#13;
'air studio&#13;
• REDKEN Salon Prescription Center&#13;
3532 Meachem Rd.&#13;
Racine, Wl&#13;
554-8600&#13;
4 LaothtiNh tffe n o niori—&#13;
exposure to anything above 102&#13;
decibels. Added to the fact that&#13;
you can only achieve about 98&#13;
decibels in signal to noise ratio&#13;
on todays records and you are&#13;
already hemmed in. Besides,&#13;
there are only so many notes on a&#13;
keyboard and they've all been&#13;
overused. Today's music has only&#13;
two basic modes, the Diatonic&#13;
mode and the pentatonic rock and&#13;
blues mode. The best the&#13;
musicians can do is work on the&#13;
rhythm, tone and melody and&#13;
gimmicks to attract an audience,&#13;
besides writing catchy lyrics. The&#13;
production has pretty well peaked&#13;
with digital recording techniques&#13;
and generally the top groups can&#13;
get top sounds according to their&#13;
worth to the record companies.&#13;
The top records are produced by a&#13;
handful of artists and the music is&#13;
often recorded by a handful of&#13;
session men who put in all the hot&#13;
licks.&#13;
King Richard's Faire&#13;
seeks entertainers&#13;
An apprenticeship program&#13;
specifically designed for students&#13;
who are interested in developing&#13;
performance proficiency in acting,&#13;
mime, magic, juggling,&#13;
stage combat, and other related&#13;
skills through on-the-job training&#13;
at the Tenth Annual King&#13;
Richard's Faire has been announced&#13;
by Michael Dvorak,&#13;
Faire program director.&#13;
All classes will be taught by&#13;
professional artists who also&#13;
perform throughout the Faire. In&#13;
addition, wide - ranging&#13;
workshops are conducted just&#13;
before and during the Faire by&#13;
specially commissioned instructors.&#13;
Some of the instructors&#13;
and the respective disciplines&#13;
include Judith Belkin, mine; Tom&#13;
Tremont, magic; Frank Harnish,&#13;
Shakespearean acting class;&#13;
Robert Dawson, stage combat;&#13;
and Mike Vondruska, juggling.&#13;
Scheduled for weekends July 3,&#13;
4 and 5 through August 14 an d 15,&#13;
the Faire, held at the Illinois /&#13;
Wisconsin state line in Bristol&#13;
Township, is a living re-creation&#13;
of the Renaissance.&#13;
To be selected, applicants&#13;
should demonstrate training in at&#13;
least one of the five performance&#13;
areas, enthusiasm and interest in&#13;
the performing arts or interest in&#13;
the Renaissance period. According&#13;
to Dvorak, applicants&#13;
must also make a time commitment&#13;
for the seven weekends&#13;
and selected weekday afternoons&#13;
and/or evenings prior to the&#13;
Faire.&#13;
Applicants to the 1982 Apprenticeship&#13;
Program are asked&#13;
to send a letter specifying why&#13;
they wish to enroll in the program,&#13;
enclose a resume, picture and&#13;
references. Applicants meeting&#13;
the basic requirements will be&#13;
contacted by telephone at which&#13;
time an interview will be&#13;
scheduled.&#13;
For information and application,&#13;
contact Michael&#13;
Dvorak, Program Director, King&#13;
Richard's Faire, 12420 128th&#13;
Street, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53142;&#13;
phone 312/689-8687 or 414/396-4385.&#13;
COMMUNITY&#13;
ah! USt&#13;
^&#13;
refore /ove one another as far as we are&#13;
Cnrt °&#13;
Ur&#13;
'°&#13;
Ve&#13;
°&#13;
ne a&#13;
"&#13;
0ther t0 Possess&#13;
God wtth/n us — St Augustine&#13;
mc flutustinlans Brothers called to a life&#13;
of community in service to the church.&#13;
_ . . . , the Huftustinians&#13;
ror further information 20300 finu.re-. u&#13;
without obligation, write: Olwrnni... ^ Olympia Fields. IL 60461&#13;
312 748-9500 &#13;
RANGER Thursday, May 6,1982 5&#13;
Review&#13;
Victor, Victoria" a joy&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
There are very few movies&#13;
these days that could be called&#13;
perfect. However, "Victor, Victoria"&#13;
is as close as I've seen in a&#13;
long time. This movie has&#13;
everything going for it: acting,&#13;
directing, comedy (both&#13;
sophisticated and slapstick),&#13;
music, glorious production&#13;
numbers, etc.&#13;
"Victor, Victoria," which is&#13;
based on a 1933 German film&#13;
entitled "Viktor und Viktoria,"&#13;
concerns Victoria Grant (Julie&#13;
Andrews), an out of work opera&#13;
singer in 1934 Paris, who is so&#13;
destitute, she offers to sleep with&#13;
her landlord for a meatball. She&#13;
meets up with Toddy (Robert&#13;
Preston), a homosexual nightclub&#13;
singer. Toddy gets an idea to help&#13;
himself and Victoria make&#13;
money. He convinces her to&#13;
masquerade as a man so she can&#13;
get a job as a female impersonator.&#13;
This ploy works and&#13;
she becomes the toast of Paris.&#13;
The plot becomes complicated&#13;
with the introduction of King&#13;
Marchand (James Garner).&#13;
Marchand, a Chicago nightclub&#13;
owner, is enchanted by Victoria&#13;
before he finds out she is a "man."&#13;
However, he doesn't believe that&#13;
she is a he, and becomes determined&#13;
to find out for sure whether&#13;
she is male of f emale.&#13;
Julie Andrews is delightful as&#13;
Victoria, even though it is kind of&#13;
difficult to accept her as a man.&#13;
Robert Preston is superb as&#13;
Toddy, one of the most endearing&#13;
characters to hit the screen in&#13;
years. Preston gives a funny, yet&#13;
sensitive, portrayal of a&#13;
homosexual who is much more&#13;
than a stereotype, and is quite&#13;
content with his lifestyle. As King&#13;
Marchand, James Garner does a&#13;
marvelous job of portraying a&#13;
man who starts to become unsure&#13;
of his ow n sexual preference when&#13;
he falls in love with Victoria.&#13;
The supporting cast is equally&#13;
talented. Lesley Ann Warren&#13;
breaks her Cinderella image as&#13;
Norma Cassidy, Marchand's&#13;
floozy girlfriend. As Squash,&#13;
Marchand's bodyguard, Alex&#13;
Karras turns in a wonderful&#13;
performance. Also notable are&#13;
John Rhys - Da vies, who is better&#13;
known as Indiana Jones' friend&#13;
Sallah in "Raiders of the Lost&#13;
Ark," and Graham Stark as a&#13;
waiter who plays a pivotal role in&#13;
the latter part of the film.&#13;
The screenplay by Blake Edwards&#13;
is full of clever lines and&#13;
double entendres. Without giving&#13;
too much away, I will say that the&#13;
final scene will have you rolling&#13;
in the aisles.&#13;
"Victor, Victoria" is a joy to&#13;
watch. It is a funny film full of&#13;
fascinating characters. If you&#13;
have to beg, borrow, or steal, see&#13;
"Victor, Victoria." You won't be&#13;
disappointed.&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Photo by Masood Shafiq&#13;
Men place third in tourney&#13;
Patronize RANGER A duertisers&#13;
by Tammy Shuemate&#13;
The culmination of the spring&#13;
season for the Parkside soccer&#13;
team occurred during the past&#13;
weekend when Parkside hosted an&#13;
eight team tournament. Among&#13;
those teams participating were&#13;
UW - Milwaukee, UW - Green Bay,&#13;
UW - Madison, Trinity, Aurora,&#13;
Lewis and Northwestern.&#13;
"The tournament is kind of a&#13;
highlight for us in the spring,"&#13;
said Parkside Coach Hal Henderson.&#13;
"It was a good tournament,&#13;
one of the best we've ever&#13;
had."&#13;
The results of the tournament&#13;
were good for Parkside, but as&#13;
Smotherman's album cute, but banal&#13;
by Joe Kimm&#13;
Michael Smother man is a tall,&#13;
blond haired fellow with a charming&#13;
smile. He looks like a heck of&#13;
a nice guy. He has blue eyes and a&#13;
penchant for Latin rhythms. So&#13;
much so that he's done a whole&#13;
album full of t hem — ten songs in&#13;
all. From an authentic rhumba to&#13;
samba and calypso, and even an&#13;
original rhythm made up all by&#13;
himself. What a guy.&#13;
He's got a fascination with&#13;
words like Fais do do and&#13;
jacaranda. His lyrics are quite&#13;
good, asymetrically interesting as&#13;
a matter of fact and sort of pseudo&#13;
poetic. Here's a sample:&#13;
"Over and over I tired up your&#13;
telephone line, all that tequila and&#13;
all that lemon and lime. All along I&#13;
thought we thought all along the&#13;
same lines. Just to find out that to&#13;
you it's just a matter of time."&#13;
Pretty good so far, right?&#13;
Michael gets nasty on side two&#13;
with a song called If You Think&#13;
You're Hurting Me, Girl, You're&#13;
Crazy. Here's what he has to say.&#13;
"Oh you say we're gonna party&#13;
well. I can dig that kinky stuff. But&#13;
are you trying to tell me&#13;
something like maybe I ain't&#13;
enough." Is he getting a little bit&#13;
paranoid? Then he says, "Stop&#13;
crying baby, you say that you&#13;
wrecked my car, and it's sitting&#13;
dead and smoking in the lot behind&#13;
the bar. And there's still&#13;
somebody in it, a naked man you&#13;
say. Well I'll be right over, but&#13;
what is he doing there anyway?"&#13;
Well, maybe he's got a good&#13;
reason to be sarcastic. But if you&#13;
listen to the whole song, it sounds&#13;
like he's not sure how to deal with&#13;
it.&#13;
That leads to my next point, the&#13;
music. I'm not sure how to deal&#13;
with it. It's pretty MOR (that's&#13;
middle of the road) but then it has&#13;
a poolside appeal on a nice day in&#13;
July. It's not July yet so the 3-1/2&#13;
inches of snow we're getting&#13;
outside doesn't help too much. But&#13;
this I can tell, though. The album&#13;
was written with the lyrics in&#13;
mind, over a preconceived rhythin&#13;
base. The chords were put in&#13;
between that with a piano&#13;
(because he plays keyboards),&#13;
and then the lead sheets were&#13;
written from that.&#13;
Then the sheets were given to&#13;
session musicians who played the&#13;
familiar I-IV-V pattern with&#13;
standard parts and then extras&#13;
were added for their distinctive&#13;
chops. As a matter of fact, 90&#13;
percent of m usic out of Nashville&#13;
(that's country music, folks) is&#13;
recorded and produced this way.&#13;
And 90 percent of that never&#13;
makes it to the charts. It's a duck&#13;
soup way of making music.&#13;
Okay, the songs. Crazy In Love&#13;
is an okay samba with a cute&#13;
honky tonk piano. Green Eyes is&#13;
about a girl. (They all are.) Magic&#13;
Wishes sounds light, no substance.&#13;
Matter of Time is weakly&#13;
produced but danceable. Cold&#13;
Burn is a wet noodle. Side two. If&#13;
You Think You're Hurting Me is&#13;
kinda catchy. Do I Ever Cross&#13;
Your Mind - only at midnight,&#13;
when I'm asleep. Fais Do Do -&#13;
that's a Frenchy Latin Rhythm,&#13;
another danceable original. Would&#13;
You Love Me All the Way Down -&#13;
no, it's not a dirty song, it's more&#13;
like a spaghetti western theme -&#13;
another wet noodle. And lastly,&#13;
Freedom's Legacy, Michael's&#13;
attempt at a historic ballad, a&#13;
pillow lecture by a workaholic&#13;
husband to his wife who is&#13;
probably frigid by this time.&#13;
Maybe that's a pretty biased&#13;
review, maybe the album turned&#13;
out the way he wanted it to. He's&#13;
had a blast making it (it even said&#13;
so on the sleeve). But it's not a&#13;
serious contender for the Top 100 -&#13;
maybe not even in the ball park.&#13;
It's something he could show off to&#13;
his girlfriend as a part of h is pop&#13;
recording star routine. Chuck his&#13;
suave image, his plaid suit and his&#13;
cute tie and he's pretty naked all&#13;
around. There's not enough backbone&#13;
to feed a cat. A loosely put&#13;
together group of "listen to me"&#13;
girl songs with a weak airy&#13;
production is all it is. Sorry,&#13;
Michael, that's not enough, we&#13;
need a tighter band and a stronger&#13;
voice, but I'll tell you what, I'll&#13;
give you two stars for being brave&#13;
and courageous, okay? Okay.&#13;
"Parkside&#13;
STILL&#13;
Has Style"&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC.&#13;
TEAM SALES — ALL SPORTS&#13;
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR&#13;
FOR ALL SPORTS&#13;
TRORMCS AND AWARDS&#13;
FAST. M-HOUSC CNQRAVSM SERVICE&#13;
SPOUTS&#13;
• .ROOKS&#13;
• •-•QER&#13;
• MAI&#13;
• PUMA&#13;
• PONY&#13;
• CONVERSE&#13;
• SPOT-SUIT&#13;
• SAUCONY&#13;
• SPALDING&#13;
• NEW BALANCE&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
MON.-FM. 10 00 AM. • ISO P.M.&#13;
SAT. 10*0 AM. -t:00PM.&#13;
CLOSED SUNDAYS S HOUDAYS&#13;
The Active Aiftetes One Stop&#13;
694-9206&#13;
SH&#13;
nM MM ST. ONORM, W&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCO UNT ONE&#13;
(1) WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED. _&#13;
Coach Henderson stated, "It's&#13;
ironic, we did not give up a goal&#13;
and we got third place."&#13;
Placing first was UW - Green&#13;
Bay with Lewis College coming in&#13;
second. Technically, Parkside&#13;
tied with UW - Madison for third&#13;
place.&#13;
Parkside first played Aurora&#13;
and defeated them 1-0. They then&#13;
met Northwestern whom they&#13;
were victorious over with a score&#13;
of 1-0 also. In the third game,&#13;
against Green Bay, the final score&#13;
was a stagnant 0-0.&#13;
According to Henderson,&#13;
"Because of the goal difference,&#13;
we took the first place from one&#13;
division and played the second&#13;
place in the other and vice versa."&#13;
He went on to explain that also&#13;
because of the goal difference,&#13;
"Green Bay went through as&#13;
number one in our group and we&#13;
went through as number two."&#13;
Green Bay went on to play&#13;
Madison, defeating them 2-0 in the&#13;
semi - finals.&#13;
Parkside went up against Lewis&#13;
and played through regulation and&#13;
two sudden death overtimes —&#13;
still without a score. They then&#13;
had to go into a professional&#13;
shootout and were defeated 1-0 in&#13;
that shootout.&#13;
Now that the spring club season&#13;
is over, the soccer team can begin&#13;
to anticipate the official fall&#13;
season.&#13;
Henderson stated, "I would be&#13;
premature in talking about new&#13;
recruits although I think we've got&#13;
six or eight coming. Three or four&#13;
are blue chip, although I haven't&#13;
signed them yet."&#13;
It has been undetermined as to&#13;
how many players would be&#13;
returning next year, but it is&#13;
thought that approximately ten&#13;
starters would be back.&#13;
"We should be considered a&#13;
dark horse coming at them," said&#13;
Henderson of the fall outlook. "If&#13;
we would get a couple of blue chip&#13;
players in, I think we could be&#13;
considered."&#13;
for the girl with her head in the&#13;
clouds and romance in her heart.&#13;
If an engagement is in the offing -&#13;
if wedding bells will ring shortly&#13;
thereafter - consider these matched&#13;
i pairs to symbolize the events.&#13;
Engagement rings from *90&#13;
THE STORE WITH MORE • KENOSHA'S LARGEST JEWELER&#13;
HERBERT'S&#13;
CORNER 58th ST. &amp; 7th AVE. &#13;
6 Thursday, May 6,1982 RANGER&#13;
• CHOC. RAISINS&#13;
Vi OFF&#13;
ALL ITEMS&#13;
WHILE THEY LAST&#13;
Kenosha, Wise.&#13;
658-3553&#13;
Disarmament demonstration planned •••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Club Events&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Geology Colloquium&#13;
The Geology Colloquium this&#13;
week will feature Dr. Ronald&#13;
Greeley speaking on "Geological&#13;
Exploration of the Planets," and&#13;
"Wind Erosion on Earth, Mars,&#13;
and Venus." The "Geological&#13;
Exploration of the Planets" will&#13;
be held on Thursday, May 6 at 8&#13;
p.m. in Molinaro 105. "Wind&#13;
Erosion on Earth, Mars, and&#13;
Venus" will be held on Friday,&#13;
May 7 at 12 noon in Molinaro 105.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
The Accounting Club is proud to&#13;
announce the election of the&#13;
following officers for next term:&#13;
President - Jerry Zigner; Vice&#13;
President - Mike Worcester;&#13;
Treasurer - Paul Bartelt;&#13;
Secretary - Debbie Milasch.&#13;
Elected committee chairpersons&#13;
include: Membership - Donella&#13;
Elsen; Social Development - Sue&#13;
END OF THE YEAR&#13;
CLEARAHCE&#13;
SALE!&#13;
Dengine; Finance - Bob Nyberg;&#13;
Special Projects - Sharon Elliot;&#13;
Professional Development -&#13;
Chuck Bequith; Publicity - Joe&#13;
Sykora. We encourage all friends&#13;
and accounting club members to&#13;
meet these newly elected people&#13;
at the Accounting Clubs' membership&#13;
meeting on May 10, in&#13;
Union 104 at 1 p.m.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
May 7 and 8 mark the opportunity&#13;
of a lifetime when Accent&#13;
on Women will again take&#13;
place here at Parkside. Women in&#13;
Business is sponsoring ten of the&#13;
speakers who will be present at&#13;
this event. Please call information&#13;
if you have any questions about&#13;
late registration for this event.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon would like to&#13;
congratulate the team number&#13;
nine for winning the Second Annual&#13;
LOOP 500 bicycle race, held&#13;
on April 28. The winning team&#13;
members were: Ron Jake, Ted&#13;
Miller, Kam Cascio, and Carri&#13;
DeCamp.&#13;
Alexander Haig wants to fire a&#13;
nuclear warning shot over&#13;
Europe. Ronald Reagan thinks a&#13;
nuclear war is winnable and&#13;
wouldn't hesitate to strike first to&#13;
begin a nuclear war.&#13;
Is it any wonder, then, that&#13;
hundreds of thousands of people,&#13;
outraged and horrified, are&#13;
converging on New York City&#13;
from June 11 - 14 for actions&#13;
during the U. N. Special Session&#13;
on Disarmament? Grandmothers&#13;
for Nuclear Disarmament is&#13;
organizing in Texas. A national&#13;
Children's Campaign for Nuclear&#13;
Disarmament has been launched&#13;
from Vermont. And on hundreds&#13;
of campuses, Ground Zero Week,&#13;
a week of intensive education&#13;
about nuclear weapons and the&#13;
dangers of nuclear war, has swept&#13;
the country. For every age group,&#13;
every income background, every&#13;
occupation, one can find a group&#13;
organizing to oppose the government's&#13;
military policy.&#13;
Why are people becoming so&#13;
active now when we've had&#13;
nuclear weapons for a long time?&#13;
People give many different&#13;
reasons. An obvious one is the&#13;
drastic cutbacks in social services&#13;
that have accompanied the&#13;
massive increases in military&#13;
spending. Like the many students&#13;
unable to continue (or start) their&#13;
educations because of cutbacks in&#13;
student loans, people of many&#13;
backgrounds are being&#13;
dramatically affected by&#13;
Reagan's spending policy. The&#13;
Reagan administration speaks of&#13;
sending troops into El Salvador.&#13;
They decide to continue draft&#13;
registration and prosecute non -&#13;
registrants. And then Reagan&#13;
talks about winning a nuclear&#13;
war! Of course people are scared&#13;
— and they're ready to do&#13;
something!&#13;
In New York City, the second&#13;
week of June will be packed full of&#13;
events. June 12 will experience&#13;
one of the largest demonstrations&#13;
for nuclear disarmament and&#13;
human needs that we have ever&#13;
seen. The march and rally is&#13;
called by a large coaltion of peace,&#13;
labor, religious, Third World and&#13;
student groups. On June 13 will be&#13;
an "Anti - draft festival and&#13;
Celebration of the Resistance".&#13;
On June 14, non - violent civil&#13;
disobedience actions will take&#13;
place at the U. N. embassies of the&#13;
five largest nuclear nations.&#13;
Thousands are flying in from&#13;
England, Germany, Greece and&#13;
Japan to join the demonstration.&#13;
The government of Greece has&#13;
loaned its Olympic Torch to the&#13;
event and runners will carry it&#13;
from Montreal to New York in&#13;
time for the U. N. Special Session.&#13;
Thousands of children will lead&#13;
the June 12 march from the U. N.&#13;
to Central Park. The Talking&#13;
Heads, Stevie Wonder and Susan&#13;
Sarandon (Janet) from Rocky&#13;
Horror Picture Show) are using&#13;
their talents to organize for&#13;
disarmament.&#13;
So what will students be doing&#13;
between now and June? Who will&#13;
be arranging buses from your&#13;
community? Mobilization for&#13;
Survival (48 St. Marks PI, NY NY&#13;
10003, 212-533-0008) can provide&#13;
students with detailed information&#13;
about the events and suggest ideas&#13;
and materials for organizing on&#13;
the issues. United States Student&#13;
Association (2000 P St. NW,&#13;
Washington DC, 202-775-8943) has&#13;
leaflets specifically written for&#13;
campuses about the June activities.&#13;
&#13;
The movement to "end the arms&#13;
race and save the human race" is&#13;
rapidly growing. Those who don't&#13;
trust Haig's finger on the button&#13;
will be heading to New York City&#13;
June 11 -14 for the U. N. Second&#13;
Special Session on Disarmament.&#13;
• CHOC. CREME DROPS&#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;
• Y O G U R T 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;
• P E A N UT BUT TER&#13;
KISSES&#13;
• PEPPERMINT KISSES&#13;
• LICORICE BULLIES&#13;
•JELLY BEANS&#13;
• ASSORTED PERKYS&#13;
• ORANGE SLICES&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
E. F. MADRIGRANO&#13;
1831 - 55th St.&#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;
"Michelob after work&#13;
makes you glad&#13;
there's a rush hour'.'&#13;
Put a little&#13;
. weekend&#13;
in your week. &#13;
Basketball Photo by Steve Jansen&#13;
Rees Johnson new coach&#13;
The appointment of Rees&#13;
Johnson as men's basketball&#13;
coach at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside was announced&#13;
yesterday by Parkside&#13;
athletic director Wayne E.&#13;
Dannehl.&#13;
Johnson, 41, who will assume his&#13;
new position as soon as possible,&#13;
will also serve as an adjunct&#13;
assistant professor of physical&#13;
education.&#13;
He comes to Parkside from&#13;
Augsburg College in Minneapolis,&#13;
where he's been head coach for&#13;
the past four years, compiling a&#13;
74-39 record and leading two of his&#13;
teams to the NAIA national&#13;
tournament. Johnson has also&#13;
served as an assistant professor of&#13;
physical education, supervised&#13;
student teachers and been&#13;
assistant intramural director at&#13;
Augsburg.&#13;
Prior to that, Johnson was head&#13;
coach at Carroll College in&#13;
Waukesha for two seasons,&#13;
assistant coach at Milwaukee for&#13;
two years and head coach and&#13;
athletic director at Center -&#13;
Richland at Richland Center for&#13;
three years. As a head coach, his&#13;
overall college record is 176-83. In&#13;
four years at Peterson, Minn.,&#13;
High School, from 1966-70,&#13;
Johnson coached teams to a 52-20&#13;
mark.&#13;
Johnson succeeds Steve&#13;
Stephens, the only basketball&#13;
coach Parkside has ever had, who&#13;
announced his resignation prior to&#13;
the start of the 1981-82 season, his&#13;
13th. Parkside conducted a&#13;
national search for Stephen's&#13;
replacement.&#13;
In announcing the appointment,&#13;
Dannehl said that "Rees was&#13;
clearly the first choice of the&#13;
athletic board, the search and&#13;
screen committee, the physical&#13;
education staff and the education&#13;
division executive committee. We'&#13;
were impressed not only with his&#13;
coaching ability but also with his&#13;
teaching strengths and&#13;
educational values.&#13;
"We're looking forward to the&#13;
continued development of our&#13;
program as an outstanding one in&#13;
the NAIA and NCAA Division II."&#13;
Johnson, a native of Rushford,&#13;
Softball&#13;
Conference season finishes 5-1&#13;
by Kathleen Pohlman&#13;
The woman's Softball team&#13;
played their last two conference&#13;
games last Monday against&#13;
Platteville. Even with the cold&#13;
weather they won both games.&#13;
The first game was won 11-3 with&#13;
Michele Martino as the winning&#13;
pitcher. The Rangers had a total&#13;
of eight hits including Nancy Kivi&#13;
and Jean Jacobs both 2 for 4 with a&#13;
double apiece. Janet Broeren had&#13;
an unassisted double play. The&#13;
second game was even better, 10-&#13;
1. Michele Martino was again the&#13;
winning pitcher. The star hitters&#13;
of this game were Bonnie Schmelter&#13;
(2-4) and Nancy Kivi (2-5).&#13;
With the end of conference games&#13;
Minn., earned his B.S. in 1965 rof m&#13;
Winona (Minn.) State University&#13;
with a major in physical education&#13;
and a minor in biology. He added&#13;
an M.S. degree in physical&#13;
education in 1971 at Winona State&#13;
and served as assistant basketball&#13;
coach.&#13;
"I'm really looking forward to&#13;
coming to Parkside," Johnson&#13;
said. "I'm excited about the&#13;
challenge. I know it's been an&#13;
excellent program and I'm&#13;
committed to continuing that&#13;
excellence."&#13;
Johnson's second Augsburg&#13;
squad, the 1979-80 unit, was 25-4&#13;
and won the Minnesota Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletic Conference&#13;
(MIAC) title with a 16-2 record&#13;
and was ranked fourth in the final&#13;
NAIA poll.&#13;
His 1980-81 team was ranked&#13;
second in the last NAIA poll and&#13;
HELP NEEDED&#13;
1 Intramural Assistants&#13;
Starting Sapt. 1, 1982&#13;
Approximately 10 hourt/wook&#13;
See Leren Rein-Athletics&#13;
Ph. 553-2310&#13;
the Rangers ended with a 5-1&#13;
record.&#13;
On Wednesday, the women&#13;
played DePaul at a tiny park near&#13;
DePaul. The first game was won&#13;
by DePaul. Michele Martino&#13;
received the loss. With only three&#13;
hits, including Bonnie Schmelter's&#13;
hit which drove in two runs, the&#13;
score ended 3-2. The second game&#13;
the Rangers won, 8-4. They scored&#13;
four runs in the second inning and&#13;
the other four in the third. Lynn&#13;
Barth was the winning pitcher.&#13;
Then on Friday they played&#13;
Carthage once again and won yet&#13;
again. The first game ended 6-2&#13;
with Lynn Barth the winning&#13;
pitcher. Nancy Kivi had a double&#13;
play when she caught a fly ball&#13;
and threw the woman on first out.&#13;
Cindy Ruffert had a hit and two&#13;
RBI's. The next game was also a&#13;
victory for the Rangers, 5-1. Lynn&#13;
Barth went 2 for 4 with a triple and&#13;
Nancy Kivi went 2 for 3 with a&#13;
triple also. Michele Martino&#13;
received the win.&#13;
The Rangers have six more&#13;
games ahead, and all will prove to&#13;
be tough games. With a record of&#13;
16-8 they were invited again this&#13;
year to the National Tournament&#13;
in Kearney, Nebraska. The&#13;
tournament will be played on May&#13;
25, 26, 27. More about the tournament&#13;
next week.&#13;
TEAM NINE won the second annual "Loop 500" bicycle race held April 28. Members of the&#13;
winning team were (not in order) Ron Jake, Ted Miller, Kam Cascio and Carri DeCamp.&#13;
advanced to the NAIA national&#13;
tournament quarter - finals. Its 29&#13;
- 2 record, however, was dropped&#13;
to 12 - 19 after Augsburg had to&#13;
forfeit 17 victories before Jan. 30&#13;
because of a rules misinterpretation&#13;
over the eligibility of&#13;
two transfer students who were&#13;
reserves on Augsburg's team.&#13;
Augsburg was not placed on&#13;
probation by the NAIA but was&#13;
assessed a two - year probation by&#13;
its conference.&#13;
Johnson also has some international&#13;
experience in the&#13;
sport, having coached the Bahrain&#13;
national team for five months in&#13;
1978, including participation in the&#13;
Taiwan Games. He went back to&#13;
Taiwan in 1981 as coach of the U.S.&#13;
squad in the William Jones Cup&#13;
Tournament in Taipei.&#13;
How to&#13;
do well in&#13;
Economy Class&#13;
Simple. Fly Capitol Air's Economy Class. Our&#13;
fares are the lowest of any scheduled airline so&#13;
you can use the money you save for lots of&#13;
other things. Like a Eurail pass if you fly us to&#13;
Brussels, Frankfurt or Zurich. More time in the&#13;
sun if you're headed for Miami, San Juan or&#13;
Puerto Plata. Or for even more fun in New York,&#13;
Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago or Boston.&#13;
And, if you are flying to Europe this summer,&#13;
make your reservation and buy your ticket&#13;
now. With our guaranteed fare policy you are&#13;
protected against any fare increases from now&#13;
until departure.&#13;
So if you want to do well in Economy Class,&#13;
fly Capitol's.&#13;
For reservations, call your Travel Agent or&#13;
Capitol at 312-347-0230 in Chicago, 800-572-&#13;
5788 in Illinois or 800-621 -5330 outside Illinois.&#13;
No one makes Economy Class&#13;
as economical as we do.&#13;
SCHEDULED AIRLINE SERVICE&#13;
y THE LOWEST FARES&#13;
San&#13;
Los&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
CAMPING&#13;
RENTALS&#13;
• 2 MAN TENTS&#13;
• 4 MAN TENTS&#13;
• SLEEPING BAGS&#13;
• GROUND PADS&#13;
G GAS HEATERS&#13;
• GAS LANTERNS&#13;
• COOK STOVES&#13;
• COOKING KITS&#13;
• ICE CHESTS&#13;
• WATER JUGS&#13;
• CANTEENS&#13;
G VITTLE KITS&#13;
• CAMP SHOVELS&#13;
• BELT AXES&#13;
G HUNTING KNIVES&#13;
G POCKET KNIVES&#13;
G COMPASSES&#13;
G FIRST AID KITS&#13;
• FLASHLIGHTS&#13;
G CAMP STOOLS&#13;
G FISHING RODS&#13;
G FISHING NETS&#13;
G FISH BASKETS&#13;
ADVANCE&#13;
RESERVATIONS&#13;
NECESSARY&#13;
CALL:&#13;
553-2408 &#13;
8 Thursday, May 6,1982 RAN GER&#13;
Village officials to bring suit against soccer players&#13;
by Tammy Shuemate&#13;
Shedding a completely different&#13;
light on the life of the soccer team&#13;
is the fact that several of the&#13;
players had a run - in with the&#13;
owner and management of the&#13;
Parkside Village where they&#13;
reside.&#13;
During a recent party, it has&#13;
come to public knowledge that a&#13;
specific apartment had been&#13;
damaged in various ways.&#13;
Because of this incident, a lawsuit&#13;
against a few of the players is said&#13;
to be pending. The Ranger confirmed&#13;
through Mr. Emil Abendroth,&#13;
from the company that&#13;
owns the Village, that the lawsuit&#13;
"has not been filed as of yet, but it&#13;
will be."&#13;
Considering whether or not this&#13;
may reflect upon the status of t he&#13;
soccer players in question and&#13;
indirectly affect the team, the&#13;
following interview was conducted.&#13;
&#13;
John Monks, a member of the&#13;
soccer team who resides in the&#13;
apartment, although he is not&#13;
involved in the charge, was asked&#13;
the following questions:&#13;
Ranger: Do you think it (the&#13;
lawsuit) reflects on the soccer&#13;
team?&#13;
John Monks: No, not at all. It&#13;
had nothing to do with the soccer&#13;
team at all. It was the people of&#13;
this apartment having a party.&#13;
Ranger: Do you think perhaps&#13;
that because of this incident and&#13;
others in the past similar to it will&#13;
have any bearing on how the&#13;
coach feels — of who's going to be&#13;
playing next year?&#13;
J.M.: No, if it does, he's a fool.&#13;
His job is to have a winning team&#13;
on the field. Personal matters&#13;
don't belong on the field.&#13;
Ranger: As a resident of the&#13;
apartment in question, do you feel&#13;
that the damage is worth the&#13;
amount of money that Mr.&#13;
Abendroth has been talking&#13;
about?&#13;
J.M.: No. He's saying that we&#13;
have to put a new carpet in there,&#13;
which is crazy. I mean, you go in&#13;
there and it's perfectly clean. The&#13;
carpet is cleaner than it's ever&#13;
been — cleaner than it was when&#13;
we moved in. He's saying there's&#13;
going to be a beer smell in there&#13;
and you can walk in there now and&#13;
you can't smell beer. The&#13;
damages are — t here's a hole in&#13;
the wall and a hole in the floor.&#13;
The hole in the floor takes a $10 —&#13;
Security lost and found&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
claimed. If you have lost&#13;
something on campus, give the&#13;
Security office a call or stop in. If&#13;
your lost article has not been&#13;
turned in at the time of your&#13;
inquiry, you can leave your name&#13;
and number with a description of&#13;
the article and you will be notified&#13;
if the article is turned in.&#13;
If you find something on campus&#13;
you can turn it in at the Security&#13;
Office, at the Union Information&#13;
Desk or at the L-l desk of the&#13;
Library. Items unclaimed after 90&#13;
days may be claimed by the finder&#13;
(other than Parkside employees).&#13;
If you lost something on campus,&#13;
the Security Department&#13;
may have it. Check now, those&#13;
gloves that kept you warm last&#13;
winter may do the same next&#13;
winter.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thursday, May 6&#13;
SLIDE/LECTURE at 3:30 p.m. in GR 101. Prof. Burnham of Northwestern&#13;
University will talk on "Duchamp's Mysticism: Toward a Theory of Modernism&#13;
and Post - Modernism." The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, May 7&#13;
MOVIE "Clash of the Titans" (PG) at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema. Admission at&#13;
the door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
PERFORMANCE "Ties That Bind" by Dr. Jessie Potter at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission is $3.00; tickets are available at the Union&#13;
Information Center and will be available at the door.&#13;
DANCE at 9 p.m. in Union Square featuring "Arroyo." Admission will be charged&#13;
at the door. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Monday, May 10&#13;
ROUNDTABLE at 12:15 p.m. in Union 106. Prof. Ken Hoover will talk on&#13;
"Watergate Ten Years Later: Reflections on Oligopoly and Democracy (Expletives&#13;
Included)." The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Thursday, May 13&#13;
CONCERT at 12 noon in Main Place with the Parkside Wind Ensemble. All are&#13;
welcome.&#13;
SAVE THE&#13;
LIBRARY DAY&#13;
WEDNESDAY, MAY 12&#13;
Union Square - Union Pad&#13;
Froo admission&#13;
Featuring:&#13;
WHITE LIElla. m.-2:30p.m.&#13;
Other Events:&#13;
Dunk tank, tug - of - war, free throw contest, Kiss - a - thon,&#13;
beer drinking relays, and more&#13;
Rnffle 2 Top prize'- semester's worth of textbooks&#13;
prizes include: parking permit, 1 week of free lunches, 4&#13;
season basketball passes, 10 lines of free bowling, $5 Sweet&#13;
Shoppe gift certificate, $10 food/beverage tickets for The&#13;
End, 2 free dinners at a dozen local restaurants, and more&#13;
HAL HENDERSON&#13;
at the most — piece of plywood&#13;
and they'll nail it back in. It's&#13;
nothing.&#13;
Ranger: Do you feel that if a&#13;
lawsuit is filed it should be fought?&#13;
J.M.: Oh, absolutely.&#13;
Ranger: Do you think it will be?&#13;
J.M.: I know it will be. I know it&#13;
will. I can guarantee you that&#13;
right now.&#13;
Ranger: Any further comments?&#13;
&#13;
J.M.: Abendroth has taken a&#13;
complete tax loss on these things.&#13;
He doesn't give a shit what happens&#13;
to them: He's soaking us for&#13;
everything he can get and he's&#13;
lucky if half of it's repaired. He's&#13;
just soaking us — that's all he&#13;
wants to do.&#13;
The following interview was&#13;
conducted with Dan Opferman,&#13;
also a member of th e soccer team&#13;
and directly involved with the&#13;
pending lawsuit.&#13;
Ranger: Are yop going to play&#13;
soccer next year?&#13;
D.O.: Yeah, maybe. Oh yeah,&#13;
I'll be playing.&#13;
Ranger: Any comment on the&#13;
pending lawsuit?&#13;
D.O.: I don't know what the&#13;
lawsuit is yet. Nobody's talked to&#13;
us yet.&#13;
Ranger: Do you think this incident&#13;
has any reflection on your&#13;
being a member of the soccer&#13;
team and playing next year?&#13;
D.O.: I don't, but a lot of other&#13;
people do.&#13;
Ranger: Like who?&#13;
D.O.: Like the athletic director&#13;
and our coach and — things like&#13;
that.&#13;
The following interview was&#13;
conducted with Coach of the&#13;
soccer team Hal Henderson.&#13;
Ranger: Would you care to&#13;
comment on the recent lawsuit&#13;
that will be filed against several of&#13;
the soccer players. Does that have&#13;
anything to do with the team?&#13;
H.H.: There has been some&#13;
negotiations between the owner of&#13;
the Village, the manager of the&#13;
Village and my boss. Nothing has&#13;
come out of that yet. At this point,&#13;
until somebody indicated the&#13;
relationship of these players with&#13;
the soccer team is established,&#13;
then I'm not going to make any&#13;
moves.&#13;
I've already talked to all of the&#13;
players involved and they know&#13;
where I'm at. A couple of them&#13;
have been on probation with me&#13;
before and they're kind of at the&#13;
end of t heir string with me. But I&#13;
also feel somewhat obligated&#13;
because I brought them here, I put&#13;
them in the Village and so I kind of&#13;
feel that I've got to stand behind&#13;
them a little bit. Realistically, this&#13;
has happened before with some of&#13;
the same guys and they paid for&#13;
the damage and were allowed to&#13;
move back in there. At this point,&#13;
they've indicated to me that they&#13;
did not do the damages. O.K.,&#13;
that's fine, then they should&#13;
corner up the people who did the&#13;
damages and make them be&#13;
responsible as well. But, by law,&#13;
they're responsible for what goes&#13;
on within that apartment so they&#13;
know that consequence.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
SERVICES OFFERED&#13;
TYPING Professionally done. Reasonable&#13;
rates. Fast service. North Kenosha. Call&#13;
551-7438 or 658-9229, anytime.&#13;
HELPWANTED&#13;
JOIN US FOR THIS SUMMER and earn&#13;
tuition, spending money. Compete for $1,000&#13;
Scholarship. No experience needed.&#13;
Company training. Start immediately. Car&#13;
necessary. For info, call Mr. Yorg'an at 634-&#13;
7106,9 a.m. -1 p.m., Friday, May 7.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
ROOMMATE NEEDED after graduation.&#13;
Wood Creek, 552-9175. Dick O.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1969 PONTIAC CATALINA, good runner,&#13;
needs work, best offer. 654-5932.&#13;
BOOK SALE - U nitarian Church, 625 College,&#13;
Racine. Saturday, May 8, 10 a .m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
Wide selection. Cheap.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
HEY MARK LOOK!) It's La - La Land!!&#13;
Doy, Doy, Doy! Bread.&#13;
BECOME A REFORMED DRUID: sacrifice&#13;
oak trees and worship virgins.&#13;
BLONDE GIRL WITH RED CAMARO. Study&#13;
together? (3rd Floor) Roderick.&#13;
SABINE, watch out for those Singapore&#13;
slings!&#13;
SNOOPY - HAPPY BIRTHDAY! How's it feel&#13;
to be old(er)? I'll pick you up around 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
TONY - Dr. Drew Who?&#13;
ANNOUNCING Mark Sanders as the&#13;
President of the Barry Manilow Fan Club.&#13;
Sorry, he's no relation to the colonel, unless&#13;
you consider chicken legs a relation.&#13;
CONGRATS Ken and Pat!!&#13;
CONGRATS Kathy Slama: there has never&#13;
been a more deserved award!&#13;
TO ALL OF US WINNERS at the Student&#13;
Awards Banquet this last Friday: we all&#13;
deserved them and had a good time getting&#13;
them. Congratulations to you all!!&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS especially to you,&#13;
Kathy - T his award is most assuredly the&#13;
first of the many that you'll receive in your&#13;
life. I wish you the best of luck after&#13;
graduation in all you do. Sincerely, Linda&#13;
(Meyer)!&#13;
ME TOO Ken&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS KEN AND PAT, with&#13;
all my love to you both. Your ABM.&#13;
TO ALL OF YOU WHO HAVEN'T HEARD&#13;
OF YET - Ken Meyer, the Ranger's&#13;
esteemed Editor and Linda L. Andersen,&#13;
the Assistant Business Manager, have&#13;
become engaged!! Yeah!!!&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCI ATI ON&#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 % % Interest If Your Dally&#13;
Balance is $500.00 er Mere! LENDER&#13;
WE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU OROW! </text>
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              <text>Thursday, September 24, 1981&#13;
41" University of Wisconsin • Parkside&#13;
Vol. 10· 0.3&#13;
age&#13;
Nora becomes manager&#13;
r.y Ken Meyer&#13;
NewaEdJlor&#13;
'ftiIty. year· old Pat Nora took&#13;
as foad .-vice manager at&#13;
da AIIlIU8t 3 after Steve&#13;
, tile previous manager,&#13;
pramoted to tile general&#13;
"Ier of Heritage Food&#13;
Herltale took over as&#13;
da', foad service June I,&#13;
....... tIIey oulbid SAGA&#13;
CIltlle amount of reba te the&#13;
ty would receive from the&#13;
oervt ... The Heritage conIlIpuJated&#13;
a one year span&#13;
four pouIble me year exten-&#13;
. The emtraet was renewed&#13;
lIIo1IIIIIlIIler.&#13;
~ lD Nora, this year's&#13;
IOI'VI ..... ill be similar to last&#13;
's, it will be run according to&#13;
ral Heritale policy. One&#13;
lIIotla expected. This year&#13;
10 increaoe in prices, but an&#13;
per_tageof increase is dif10&#13;
deternilDe because prices&#13;
~lICI'eaoed equally across&#13;
IIeuoaa for the increase in&#13;
I aid Nora, are increases in&#13;
Ind raw materials. The&#13;
of prices involves "a&#13;
l&#13;
lllnpl\OiJycated,ystem, not aroetting&#13;
prices," he said.&#13;
are lDdexed according to&#13;
t it CllIla I student to eat at&#13;
UW campuses and in the&#13;
r COIDDumity.&#13;
ClOd PI'kea at Parkside are "on&#13;
par With other universities"&#13;
Bill Niebuhr, director of the&#13;
de Unim. "Some, I'm sure&#13;
Iotier than us," he said. uI'm&#13;
sure we fit somewhere in the&#13;
mainstream. Overall, some items&#13;
are lower and some are higher."&#13;
Compared to other UW campuses,&#13;
said Niebuhr, Parkside's&#13;
prices are close to the middle,&#13;
perha IJl a bit on the higher side.&#13;
Other universities are lower than&#13;
Parkside, he explained, because&#13;
they have dormitories which bring&#13;
guaranteed cash inflow. Now that&#13;
Green Bay has some housing,&#13;
Parkside is the only "no - housing&#13;
campus" in the UW system.&#13;
Heritage's financial condition&#13;
during their first year, said&#13;
Niebuhr. are "around break&#13;
even." SAGA Foods operated at a&#13;
loss during the first two years of&#13;
their five year tenure. Special&#13;
catering, not day - to - day&#13;
operations, contributed to SAGA&#13;
not operating at a loss their last&#13;
three years.&#13;
1bere aren't any major changes&#13;
in the food offered this year, according&#13;
to Nora. The ethnic food&#13;
lunches will continue, featuring&#13;
Greek and Italian foods. Nora said&#13;
tha t they are open to suggestions&#13;
concerning ethnic lunches. The&#13;
Union Square will also festure&#13;
"The Beast'', a 1/2 . pound&#13;
hamburger.&#13;
Nora has lived in Green Bay for&#13;
the past 13 years and his family&#13;
has heen in the food business,&#13;
mainly restaurants, for all of his&#13;
life. He has operated a pi.... chain&#13;
restaurant, owned an Italian&#13;
family - style restaurant and has&#13;
been in the food brokerage&#13;
business for the last two years.&#13;
INSIDE •••&#13;
* NO letters ? ! ? ! ?&#13;
*&#13;
Graduate interviewing' tips&#13;
* Strollin' Boner f *&#13;
Rangers win, lose and forfeit&#13;
Guskin discusses $$$$ cuts&#13;
by G. Helgeson matter of just meeting the budget dollar amount, then nobody wouJd&#13;
. Editor cuts; it was really taking a serious want to cut their area. Then&#13;
This year Parkside, along with look at our priorities. everybody protects. When we&#13;
the other UW-system schools, Ranger: What did that mean? started wilb priorities, everybody&#13;
faced a mandated state budget cut Guskin: Each senior ad- said "That's what we believe we&#13;
totalling 4.4%. At Parkside, the ministrator was then asked to hav~ to cut that way." The&#13;
cut was implemented this fall work outa plan for their area - no computer center and academic&#13;
according to decisions' made by dollar amounts specified at the sI&lt;ills were clearly critical &amp;reaS.&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin and the lime. The key issue was to see how Cuts for them were never even&#13;
University administrative deeply we could go without hur- discussed. To cut would mean&#13;
executive committee. The ling any major service, with the violaling a key priority.&#13;
following is an interview with understanding that all major Haager: WhY did you deal&#13;
Guskin. areas of the university would have specifically with athlelics?&#13;
Ranger: How did you go about to contribute to the whole. Guskln: Everybody knew that&#13;
cutting Parkside's budget? Theo we came hack. In almost that was one that would be cut, On&#13;
Guskin: We decided to try to every case, we talked to people in any campus across the country,&#13;
search out what the consensus their areas. We knew early on when there are cuts, athletics are&#13;
was on the campus, We talked a there would be some cuts, so we the first to go. It's necessary and&#13;
good deal about it and there was hinted at them. We talked in very it's important to the institutim,&#13;
no disagreement. When the cuts abstract terms. Next meeting, we but it's not as important as other&#13;
came down (in late July) we met. looked for some kind of plan for things. It's not an academic unit&#13;
We decided that if we were serious cuts. or suppcrt area. So it wasn't very&#13;
about the priorities of our in- Next, we looked for more difficult for me to deal with the&#13;
stitution, we would have to fund concentrated meetings, with cuts. It was a cmsensus.&#13;
them. It was very clear that just chairs of divisions, the directors of Haaler: How much discussion&#13;
cutting back across the board units. It became clear some things was going m during this period?&#13;
would violate our priorities. We would be cut deeply. We all agreed GuskiD: These proposals also&#13;
then decided that just to cut that the plan for the ceoters, went through a number of&#13;
enough to meet the mandated cuts which was arrived at in the reviews, a lot of back and forth.&#13;
would leave us hurling in the spring, would bold. That con- Some of us had second tholI&amp;hts&#13;
areas we cut, even through !bey tributed about $75,000 esch year. about each other's areas, There&#13;
were low priority. Butwe wouldn't Albletics reports to me. I was a lot of diIeuIoioo going on&#13;
be helping the high priority areas combined physical education aod between the senior officers and&#13;
which were in great difficulty athletics, I agreed to deal with myself. Very ioformal - 10 you&#13;
because of the strain of inflation them as one unit, and lied off With could check things out, test run an&#13;
and other things. my recommendation. At Iirst, it idea without being embarTuoed.&#13;
Therefore, we chose to go fairly was considerably beyood what it Once we settled m !be ktDda of&#13;
deep in the budget cutting in order ended up at. Wayne Danneh\ and I cuts to be made, intenae&#13;
to reallocate to areas which were talked many times. discusaions began between adhigh&#13;
prinrity. The best example RaDger: How did other minlstraton. The wbaIe _&#13;
would be !be library. We were university adminiatralors react to came out. obody _ it ....&#13;
worried ahout !be library. The your request? being dooe 8cnJIa !be board&#13;
problem was we wanted to Gaskin: The primary concern of People were actinl very&#13;
maintain the periodical list. With each person was the university as professionally. There ... no&#13;
a $28,000 increase, same list, a whole. There was representation nuDor· mongering. 1bat helped&#13;
you've lost thal much in a $60,000 of their area, but no defending of us tremendously.&#13;
budget for books. Inflation's territory. The clear interest of Wetried to hold oH as long as we&#13;
bringing the cost of books up, so every representative was to could on the Iinal dec, ion until&#13;
you're really buying half the maximize the priorities of the people came back (from summer&#13;
number of hooks. It wasn't a institution. IT we'd started with a absences). We were very womed&#13;
about this being done over the&#13;
summer because you ha ve to talk&#13;
to people. We decided then on a&#13;
very formal process of open&#13;
oonsultatioo I think we touched&#13;
every base.&#13;
Haage.: Are the results of your&#13;
work now flnal!&#13;
Guskln: Of cou rse , there is&#13;
room for revision, if anyone can&#13;
convince the rest of us that one is&#13;
needed. But we're very happy&#13;
with the way things are going. It's&#13;
es rly in the semester, though If&#13;
there are problems, for iDltanee&#13;
in safety on campus, we can k)ok&#13;
again at our decision.&#13;
Haager: If you bad to do .t&#13;
again, you'd do it the same way'&#13;
Guskln: IT we had to do .t over,&#13;
CODtlnuedOn Page Ten&#13;
Student directories face funding problems&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
EdItor&#13;
The sale of student directories&#13;
to Parkside students is me service&#13;
that may be cut hack this year,&#13;
according to Carla Stoffle,&#13;
assistant chancellor for&#13;
educational ~ervices. The&#13;
problem is that nobody wants to&#13;
buy or sell them so far.&#13;
Last yesr, the adminiatration&#13;
complied and printed 5000&#13;
directories, offertng 4000 to&#13;
P.S.G.A. to sell. The initial 1000&#13;
were distributed to faculty and&#13;
staff. P.S.G.A. agreed to sell the&#13;
bulk to students and groulJl at a&#13;
cost of $1 per copy. With the sales&#13;
revenue, P.S.G.A. was to pay the&#13;
$2000 printing cost and set up a&#13;
student loan fund with the olber&#13;
$2000. rdi to What happened? Acco ng&#13;
Stolfie, "They tried to sell them,&#13;
but every on-campus phone got a&#13;
copy already. Also, we can't get&#13;
them wt before November tst, so&#13;
they couldn't catch new students&#13;
at registration. Returning&#13;
students often figure they have all&#13;
the pbune numbers they will need&#13;
from the old directory."&#13;
Stoffie also noted that other&#13;
campuses that have better luck&#13;
selling their directories via&#13;
student groulJl have dorms, and&#13;
students need the intra campus&#13;
phone numbers. At Parkside,&#13;
students think they can find their&#13;
friends' phooe numbers in local&#13;
city directories.&#13;
P.S.G.A. ended up selling only&#13;
enough copies to pay a frsclion oJ.&#13;
the !rinling bill. The rest of the&#13;
bill was paid by the adminiatration&#13;
out of New Program&#13;
Development monies, according&#13;
to Stoffle. And no student loan&#13;
fund was set up.&#13;
As a result, directories may not&#13;
he available for all students this&#13;
year, Sloffie said. "We're asking&#13;
if we should spend $2000, wilb the&#13;
way we've cut our budgets, on&#13;
directories," she said. "Is that I&#13;
reaoonable way to spend our&#13;
money or are there other services&#13;
students should have instesd? Is it&#13;
worthwhile to try to get a loan&#13;
fund set! Do we need (directories)&#13;
at am" Sloffie asked.&#13;
Dave Pedersen, dean of .11Ident&#13;
life, is now trying to find an&#13;
alternative method of marketing&#13;
the directories. While he asks !be&#13;
same questions as StofOe, be it&#13;
also "trying to find out if any c1ubll&#13;
want to sell them. We would be&#13;
willing to work with a group or&#13;
groups on marketing them."&#13;
Pedersen indicated that student&#13;
groulJl interested in selling lhIa&#13;
year's student directories sbnIIld&#13;
contact him at ext 2367.&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday. September 24. 1981&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorials&#13;
Ion of the majority of the editorial&#13;
Ran,er editorial. reflect the °ttnit editorial ideas to the editor for&#13;
ola/f. Par.aide student. may .udmol be typed to be con. ide red.&#13;
con.eideraUon. Editorial idea. nee " th t&#13;
. . k's Ranger a . . di ales m this wee Parkside Chancellor Alan Guskin m IC sibility of future (so far&#13;
students will begin to shoulder. the. res&amp;~feels he has cut as much as&#13;
"possible") budget cuts to the UOlNv~sltbimany of the programs he a~d&#13;
from Parkside's budget o. ou areas met cuts that m&#13;
::-=planned for did not surface this ~ea.:;.S:M:~onal funding in light of&#13;
belter limes would have, perhaps, rece~~se they provided a much&#13;
the progress they were making, or . roduct&#13;
wanted student, staff or faculty drv~e or ~ of the administrative&#13;
P maps this time Guskin an e. res e in cutting not Just&#13;
ex~lives should be applauded for their cou;::,s services, products&#13;
dollars from this university's dbuhadget,bU~P:g easily claimed as their&#13;
nd 'lions that they coul ve JU&#13;
~te:~" and kept at the cost of other areas.&#13;
But about this surcharge Idea.&#13;
lt is absolutely the pits. and $100 each semester at the&#13;
Most students hereinglpsy~t:;n&#13;
=&#13;
They find it diffi~lt to PSYdbookstore.&#13;
Not.Wln y, ha been ~educed and loans WIllbe har er&#13;
now that financIal aid funds ve .&#13;
to afford in tbe future. t a mandated budget cut is asking&#13;
Asking students to POl' extra 0 cor; be asked whether they prefer to&#13;
for trouble ..Perhaps stoo;-rs ~=."unlimited" access to a computer&#13;
attend a university rt;:'t 0 ~ble to afford to attend at all. ;~:~:~~:;~;~~~i::~::~:;:~;~:Z:::;~~~~~~;;:~:~~:t~(:~;~:~:~:~:~:::::::;:::::~:~:::))))i(t:&#13;
week taff editorial tilled "A white elephant? stated that&#13;
Last a s hi hi traeted by UW • Parkside to provide Heritage Food Service, w C IS con. s beer and wine&#13;
food and heveragesdeont&#13;
ca.mpu&#13;
con&#13;
s&#13;
,':~~rotb~:".:::,i~':liroUgh local beer service. The stu n union&#13;
distributors. . _ .&#13;
~::::;::~:~;)~(;~())t:tt:::::;:~:}t~;~~~~::::::::~:~:;t;~:~:~t:;tt::tti))))~t:):::t::::::::::ttt::::::;&#13;
(1t\&#13;
Deregulate the parking lots&#13;
. . 1 ded They mention Come on now, Parkside ' hy Carol Burns - IS me u. f us don't don't need all these litlle&#13;
Much has been said lately aboudt pakrkmg. P:~~:n rel";'~sOnotto park Let's get something I&#13;
all the unnecessary. rules an now exis , money. Let's forget all !be&#13;
regulations put upon indUSttryBb~ t""Ieiy&#13;
attempt at humor is made parking regulations ~nd&#13;
the federal governmen. us. . f ed them with Just one major&#13;
frequently it is not only industry when whit~ permIts. ar,~ re e:;rall PARK IN THE RIGHT&#13;
that has to deal with ridiculous to as ':huntm~ permits, f~:::lthe OR YOU'LL NEVER SEE&#13;
restrictions the prime white lots are I'VE AGAIN'&#13;
Unlikely' as it may seem, student has just paid extra for the CAR ALI uld he so m~ch&#13;
Parkside has such a situation. privilege of parking at Tallent Life wo OTE' F&#13;
lik the weather everybody But the real corker IS the white FOOTN . or&#13;
Just I e about it hut nobody sheet entitled "Tips on Avoiding slddenls unable 10 contrel&#13;
~~Pa~';':'hing aboui deregulating Parking Tickets at Parkside." parking hahils, a new,&#13;
the king lots I What this really means IS: "WE formmg- Parkers Anony&#13;
A!;~ne who r";'ently purchased ARE OUT TO GET YOU!" first names only.&#13;
a parking permit was handed a&#13;
fair amount of literature concerning&#13;
said lots. Those students&#13;
who actually took the time to read&#13;
them were surely appalled by the&#13;
myriad of regulations contained&#13;
within.&#13;
Everything - from where to&#13;
display permits, on down through&#13;
the alphabet to parking penalties&#13;
From t'he Files&#13;
10 years ago -&#13;
"To or To Not a Student Govern·&#13;
ment," by Ken Konkol&#13;
Thursday ... Parkslde wit·&#13;
nessed the first meeting of the&#13;
Student senate In foor months.&#13;
Problems were encountered ...&#13;
because (notice) did not reach&#13;
senators till the day of the&#13;
meeling. By some marvelous&#13;
coincidence 8 quorum was&#13;
established . . . and the meeting&#13;
came to dlaorder.&#13;
The firsl official order of&#13;
bualneas was the resignation of&#13;
Walter Ulbrights who slated the&#13;
convenlion was illegal according&#13;
to the senate conatitution which&#13;
called for a meeling during the&#13;
summer.&#13;
IIwas decided more or less by&#13;
..-nt among the rest of the&#13;
sena tOri, no vote taken, to&#13;
suspend the constitution&#13;
retroactively since the last&#13;
meeting.&#13;
A report from the Student Union&#13;
Committee was '" aboul enforced&#13;
subservience to the ad·&#13;
minlBtration ...&#13;
Gary Davies spoke eloquently&#13;
for aboul 45 minutes on the plana&#13;
of Academic Policies to get a hold&#13;
on power for control of student&#13;
affairs ... proposals for the ex.&#13;
panalon of the inlIepen4ent studies&#13;
program '" and the establlahment&#13;
of a proposed day care&#13;
center. In cClllClualonhe gave his&#13;
oral resignation to the remainder&#13;
of the senate ...&#13;
Along about the lime tbe&#13;
eleclion committee reported it&#13;
was discovered that the senate&#13;
bad resigned itself out of quorum&#13;
and 'the _log broke up.&#13;
So, after only five mimths of&#13;
operation the senate has reduced&#13;
its memhership from 21 to 15, but&#13;
those 15 are putting up a valiant&#13;
struggle to give students a voice at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
- UW-Parkside Newscope, vol. 5,&#13;
no. 3, Sept 3), 19'11 _&#13;
gone on to other schools because&#13;
they were offered better jobs, Th!s&#13;
continuing loss of faculty will&#13;
become more and more critical&#13;
unless we, the students, do&#13;
something ahout it '&#13;
We've seen one major (communication)&#13;
sent down the road of&#13;
oblivion. Let's become involved&#13;
and stop this senseless firing of&#13;
faculty who are excellent teachers&#13;
but who haven't published enough&#13;
in the eyes of· other faculty&#13;
members.&#13;
IT we don't create more of a&#13;
sense of community than we have&#13;
now, the spirit of Parkside will&#13;
die ...&#13;
- Ranger, vol. 5, no. 3, Sept 22,&#13;
19'16&#13;
5 years ago-&#13;
"Sense of community gained" by&#13;
Bruce Wagner&#13;
The students of Parkaide seem&#13;
to be gaining a sense of com.&#13;
munity. This is beginning to come&#13;
true through two steps: the&#13;
building of the Union and the&#13;
subsidy for the Belle Urban&#13;
System bus from Parkside to&#13;
Ra:,.,neUnion must pay for itself. 1 year ago -&#13;
This may mean tight prices for' "Case of the vacant PSGA veep"&#13;
awhile, but once paid for, the by Ken Meyer&#13;
Union will become busier because Nobody's absolutely sure what&#13;
, an increase In the number of the requirements are to fill the&#13;
activities programmed will lower position (of vice • president of&#13;
costs to the student 'PSGA) unless the vote of the&#13;
You may complain that the' senate is unanimous, as it was last&#13;
arrival and departure times (of spring when Dave Hale became&#13;
the bus) are poor and that they vice president. But these cirdon't&#13;
provide night service; thus cumstances are different because&#13;
you may he unable to lake some of the senate is not unanimous in its&#13;
the evening courses you need to vote.&#13;
graduate. The procedure to install officers&#13;
But you can do something ahout of the executive branch is for the&#13;
it. Ride the BUS ... IT enough President to nominate somebody&#13;
ride, yoo can change the system. for a 2/3 senate approval. (In this&#13;
A sense of commlllll,ty is needed case) the 2/3 goal has not heen&#13;
... We don't want Parkaide to he achieved.&#13;
regarded as an enlarged local The reason the nomination&#13;
high school. hasn't been apProved by the&#13;
Nothing is going to improve Senate is because the senators are&#13;
lIIll,esswe get off our butts and do divided OVer who should become&#13;
something. 'We've seen a year in vice· president.&#13;
wlac:b _al PNf-a bave -Ranger,SepI. 18.Illl1O,vol.9,no. 3&#13;
"Criminal ilJstice Process"&#13;
oHered at Gateway&#13;
Police officers, teachers of law&#13;
related courses in high and middle&#13;
schools, pre-law students, and&#13;
persons Interested in the criminal&#13;
justice system are encouraged to&#13;
sign·up for "Criminal Justice&#13;
Process," a Parkside course&#13;
offered in room 322 of the&#13;
Technical Building of the Racine&#13;
Campus of Gateway Technical&#13;
Institute. The course, which&#13;
started Septemher 8, will meet on&#13;
Tuesday evenings from 6:00· 8:45.&#13;
The course is designed to meet&#13;
several goals: provide an understanding&#13;
of the operation of the&#13;
criminal justice system; provide&#13;
an understanding of the criminal&#13;
law / defendants' rights d"!'trines&#13;
of the Supreme Court; teach&#13;
stuMnts to find, briel, and digest&#13;
decisions of the Supreme Court;&#13;
and prepare students to engage in&#13;
more extensive legal research.&#13;
Amoog the major topics to be&#13;
treated in this course&#13;
criminal justice courts,&#13;
procedure in crirnin;Bl.&#13;
of police in the cnminsl&#13;
system, problems of"&#13;
crime, search and&#13;
dards, interrogations&#13;
fessions, the death pens&#13;
trapment, the bail .&#13;
juvenile justice, trial by&#13;
the right to counsel.&#13;
Professor John F. Kozl&#13;
the instructor for this&#13;
Besides teaching criminll&#13;
and public law co~'.&#13;
has been achve ID&#13;
educa tion and training .&#13;
research on crime and VI&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin,&#13;
research techniques. \&#13;
For further information&#13;
course, contact Dr. .&#13;
Pernacciaro, CoordlD8ti&#13;
Community Educs&#13;
Programs, at 553-3)32.&#13;
tR!,nger,&#13;
Ginger Helgeson E&#13;
Ken Meyer NewS E&#13;
Tony Rogers Feature E&#13;
Karen Norwood Sports Ed&#13;
Dan McCormack Photo Ed&#13;
Andy Buchanan Business Man'&#13;
Mike Farrell Ad Man'&#13;
Jul; Janovicz Distributinn Ma~&#13;
Frank Fa Iduto Advi&#13;
STAFF '&#13;
Greg Bnnofiglio, Carol Burns, Doug Edenhauser. Earl.&#13;
Frederick. Pat Hensiak, Jim Kreuser. Jim Me&#13;
Charles Perce. Sue Stevens, Dan Werbie, Jeff WickS,&#13;
"RANGER is written and edited by stUdents of UW-Parkslde and they art&#13;
res~sible for its editorial policy and content. . dnoll Published every Thursclay during the academ Ie year except during breaks an sin&#13;
RA.NGER Is P!I~ted by the Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, WISCon .&#13;
Written permISSionis required '01'" reprint of any portion of RANGER. 0139, U&#13;
All correspondence shOUld be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, WL.L.C&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, WI 53141 . I'd&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be 'acceptecl It typewritten doublespaced on stand"I)8l"&#13;
paper with one . inch margins. All letters must be signed and a telephone nulTl dUded fOr verification.&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid reasons. ,AN&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 9 a.m. for publication on Thursday. The R&#13;
tllilf reserves all editorial privileges In r~uslng'to print letters which contain defamatory content.&#13;
"rt II ew communication professors&#13;
ring new ideas to Parkside&#13;
by sua. Stevens&#13;
eel! you were introduced&#13;
~w Dew communication&#13;
and to one of the new&#13;
memberS, David Habbel.&#13;
lYdlld_tiOll of that story,&#13;
a tbe ft6\Ilts ri interviews a:, remaining three new&#13;
ben of Parkside's comID&#13;
tiCII department. They are&#13;
ea LeVY _ Habbel, Debra&#13;
• and Martin Paskov,&#13;
LeVY • Rabbel comes to&#13;
~. from the State&#13;
A_ ... a&#13;
p'lYrjNewYork at Buffalo&#13;
sbe received her MA in&#13;
~"",nonal Communication.&#13;
. aurently working on her&#13;
~ djasertaliOll, a study of&#13;
communication between&#13;
lmelllblrl ria dance company, for&#13;
.aIDe university: She&#13;
__ 1IoP'" an interest in this&#13;
bject during here un-&#13;
[ji,P~·le studies at the New&#13;
'" Stale University College -&#13;
port wbere she received her&#13;
" in Interdisciplinary Com-&#13;
. tioIl with a dual major in&#13;
Ier.&#13;
_ HablJel worked as a&#13;
1==~"'=istant involved with b communication and&#13;
apeaking during her&#13;
Ie studies. She also helped&#13;
a communication skills&#13;
'" during this lime. As a&#13;
duat. fellow, she studied&#13;
c:o-qualitalive methodolgy&#13;
two yean.&#13;
" believe that communication&#13;
Ibe nexus of human develop-&#13;
, where sociology,&#13;
bology, anthropology, and&#13;
onmental design come&#13;
," Levy - Habbel said. She&#13;
lIIatthe communication field&#13;
a very dynamic one and that it&#13;
't be a dichotomy of&#13;
versus twmanity as it is&#13;
to be at times. lilt's a meta&#13;
tIIclpline," she said.&#13;
TIle Partside communication&#13;
a..... ls to her because,&#13;
-iI, "It seems to be on the&#13;
eI becoming representative&#13;
.. attitude of interdisciplinary&#13;
-".,..,__ tion." The size of the&#13;
ent is also important.&#13;
IIItbandand Iare two people&#13;
iIlputIn a department of five&#13;
... That gives us the op-&#13;
.1llIn1tj to help the program&#13;
ill the directions we feel are&#13;
"Wl"&#13;
, like her husband David&#13;
, believe that this is the&#13;
Iooallon in the midwestern&#13;
'11'a a beautiful blend of&#13;
and rural settings," she&#13;
:&#13;
~*=Sbe:. enjoys working with and likes Parkside's&#13;
a 011 teaching also.&#13;
is a dynamic departblftwithideas&#13;
and plans for&#13;
s.:1;~~nl which I find easy to&#13;
iI to," Levy - Rabbel conDebra&#13;
Paschke, another new&#13;
faculty member, is teaching the&#13;
radio a nd television production&#13;
course here. As a member of the&#13;
staff of WITI Channel 6 in&#13;
Milwaukee, Paschke hopes to give&#13;
students some "hands on" experience&#13;
in the production studios&#13;
of Parkside.&#13;
Paschke received a B. A. in&#13;
broadcast journalism from the&#13;
University of Nebraska. She is&#13;
originally from Lincoln,&#13;
Nebraska.&#13;
After receiving here degree, she&#13;
and her husband travelled to&#13;
different positions across the&#13;
country.' She started a broadcasting&#13;
department at Souix City,&#13;
Iowa. This experience motivated&#13;
her to emphasize to ber students&#13;
the importance of starting careers&#13;
with small firms.&#13;
Before joining the Channel 6&#13;
team, Paschke worked as a news&#13;
reporter and weekend producer&#13;
for WNTV of Madison. She has&#13;
worked for Contact 6, a news&#13;
feature for the Milwaukee station,&#13;
and she has done additional&#13;
production work at TV 6.&#13;
When asked why she chose to&#13;
teach, Paschke said; "I never&#13;
taught before, and whenever new&#13;
people would start at one of the&#13;
stations I've worked for I'd help&#13;
them out." She enjoys the&#13;
business she's in and she hopes to&#13;
transmit some of her enthusiasm&#13;
to ber students.&#13;
"The program here is very&#13;
different from other places. The&#13;
school I went to trained people to&#13;
go out and get jobs in the business.&#13;
The emphasis was en mechanics&#13;
there, whereas here it's more on&#13;
an application from the business&#13;
angle. It has a broader scope, and&#13;
it gets into the ideas more," she&#13;
says.&#13;
Why did she choose to come to&#13;
Parkside in particular? "Well, it's&#13;
a beautiful campus; the facilities&#13;
are nice. I haven't been her-e&#13;
enough, but I'm impressed by the&#13;
quality of the students. The kids&#13;
that come here seem to have some&#13;
good smarts. The competence&#13;
tests show that. It's a major&#13;
problem (the low quality of&#13;
reading and writing in many&#13;
schools) and people may not think&#13;
that it's important in TV, but it&#13;
is. "&#13;
Her experiences so far at&#13;
Parks ide have been good.&#13;
"Everybody in the class seems to&#13;
like it" she said. "College&#13;
student~ don't see limitations.&#13;
That's good. Imagination is important&#13;
in my area, and I look&#13;
forward to working in this setting."&#13;
Martin Paskov also brings some&#13;
unique experiences to Parkside,&#13;
along with his out~tandlOg&#13;
credentials. After receIvmg hISB.&#13;
A. from Southwest Mi~ouri State&#13;
Dance to the music of&#13;
Amusement"&#13;
Park&#13;
Friday, Sept. 25&#13;
9 p.m. Union Square $2.50 Guests&#13;
$2.00 UW-P students&#13;
A contemporary entertainmen! t;l~e."t .&#13;
-. • •. ~""~".J',... '.~ .... _".,,_ ... - • - .. ~&#13;
Springfield. Paskov earned an M.&#13;
A. and a Ph. D. in organizational&#13;
communication at the University&#13;
of l1linois - Champaigne. He&#13;
taught at the University of Tennessee&#13;
- Knoxville for two years&#13;
and then moved to Western&#13;
Illinois University for an additional&#13;
two - year teaching ex.&#13;
perrence.&#13;
Paskov resigned his post tion at&#13;
Western Illinois after a motorcycle&#13;
accident severely injured&#13;
me d his arms. He spent more&#13;
than three months in a hospital,&#13;
and then used his own brand of&#13;
therapy to regain the use of an&#13;
arm his doctors told him would&#13;
remain incapacitated. He joined a&#13;
cement contractor and struggled&#13;
with shovels and other tools until&#13;
he could use both arms equally&#13;
well.&#13;
Although he worked as a consultant&#13;
and professional speaker&#13;
on the side, he missed students.&#13;
He applied for the Parkside&#13;
position this summer and accepted&#13;
the one - year appointment&#13;
when it was c:ifered.&#13;
"I was almost bere in 1976 wben&#13;
I applied at Parkside, but I chose&#13;
Western Illinois at that lime,"&#13;
said Paskov. "Now that I'm here,&#13;
I'll be thinking about staying ...&#13;
I'll be playing it as though I'll be&#13;
here 15 years, not just one. It&#13;
Paskov hopes to give students a&#13;
perspective that will help them in&#13;
the real world. "Learning goes&#13;
well beyond the classroom," be&#13;
said. "Many students get out of&#13;
school, get a job with a big&#13;
company, and expect someone to&#13;
hand them a syllabus. I hope to&#13;
give them a strategy to work with&#13;
that will be realislic to use in&#13;
business. "&#13;
He is very enthusiastic about&#13;
teaching and working within the&#13;
communication program here.&#13;
"Everyone in the communication&#13;
department communicates.&#13;
I like that. You won't&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 2., 1981 3&#13;
FALLFEST, a "welcome" from Student Life to Parks/de&#13;
students, featured a christening of tile new union pad by&#13;
Chancellor Allan Guskin along with the music of Hans and Dr.&#13;
Becker.&#13;
find that in many univerai- ::_&#13;
ties," he said.&#13;
He hopes to see more contact&#13;
with industry. &lt;lAn intern&#13;
program (which is now being&#13;
w&lt;rked out) will be good for&#13;
Parkside communication&#13;
majors," he said.&#13;
About Parkside and its students,&#13;
Paskov coocluded, "1 like the fact&#13;
that most of the people work. On a&#13;
traditional campus many students&#13;
come in with ideas that aren't as&#13;
realistic."&#13;
Patronize&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Adverllsers&#13;
How a&#13;
sophomore&#13;
at U.W. PARKSIDE&#13;
can graduate&#13;
an Army officer.&#13;
During the ne I 2 y ar ,&#13;
you're ... rning your cho -n •&#13;
you can also pr par for an of he r·&#13;
commi ion in t he nlred tal&#13;
Army.&#13;
You tart ril'(ht now. By applymg&#13;
for 6 week of RO umm... boo1&#13;
at Fort Knox, Ky. With pay (0' r&#13;
55001.&#13;
Your averag .. ummer hoot· n't&#13;
exactly what" e have in mmd. ho&#13;
ev .... Because wen bP parking 'our&#13;
mind and body with th 2)' of&#13;
ROT leadership training you',e&#13;
missed.&#13;
Do well and 'Ou can qualif)' f r ad·&#13;
vanced Arm~ ROTC cour and&#13;
nearly 2000 worth of financial aid&#13;
during your junior and enior~' rs&#13;
And graduate a an orricer m the ac·&#13;
tive Anny Or Reserv .&#13;
Apply by April 1.&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
LEARN WlOO' IT 1MES 1'0 L.EAD.&#13;
For an inten.1ew, contact·&#13;
EROLUIE:-TOFFICER&#13;
~lilllanSnvic. o.p&lt;.&#13;
~t.~rqu~ttel".&#13;
l-n~lI"&#13;
• Thundlly, september 2-4, 1981&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Minority students' confer~~e ~~ne~m~:~~n,.ac:&#13;
'!'be r-tb .-t CGIIfertDCe muter's and docllIt'81 lev. counting and economics,&#13;
... Graduale EducaU ... for aeaaI_ provide=-=e:: psychology and so.cial work:&#13;
~lJ StudlIIts, III be be1d al the reasons why their education education and the SOCialscienCe8the,&#13;
-'I of II"---s al shou1d pursue, h anities and the fine arts; the UDi... .- '1 IllRN beyond the bacbe1... s degree, on um ical sciences mathematics&#13;
~?e:'I~::"::-~:n'= planning ndunde:gl~::;af:: ~~ engineeringi an~ the .n..m thai iDc1udes a pre' proIl1"am&amp;, a 00n: .I aid biological and medical SCiences,&#13;
coDlereace workshop on lbe admission and for ~Ia ~ including nursing and technical =':t Record EDmiDatioo The free cooference IS open. 'd ee program.&#13;
by a ltaff member ai all undergradua~~ ..~,ino .. ~ ~~,::,,ses'::fonal graduale&#13;
TstiIII Servi students and to ............. s medicine dentistry ~:ference, the oDiyce.-of iludents. Sessi_ are -:t'edu!ed ~0Il1";"'"will mt be b.cJuded at&#13;
tts ktnd In the 1IIdw000, la IPOI1' froI!'l III6 p. m., with registration the co~;ence.&#13;
---' .... the ~-'ttee 00 In· begiooing at 12 noon. F dditional information call -- v,........... A special pre • conference or a (312) IlItu1ioDa1 &lt;:ooperatioo (C1C), the worksh 00 the Graduate Record the C1Coffice in Evanstoo at&#13;
coaaortlum of the Big Ten Exa.m:tiOO will be held at 10:30 866-6630.&#13;
lIIIi-alioa and the UnivenilJ of a. m. It is designed fJll" college ;::~;:.;..---:----,&#13;
ChIcago. All will be held counselors and advisors, but Nat1 teacher&#13;
In the DlIDois Room of UlCC's students are also wel~me to&#13;
C1acago CIrcle Center, 750 S. attend, It is also free. e,vams offered Ha1aled Street, Chicago. scheduled f A&#13;
'!'be .;,- _I_a confereoce w...dIIopo are ., or&#13;
.. - ~ -. and sludents who are consldeflng&#13;
is eJ-I""" III better inform -aduate sludy in any of six pl'eIlare rm-IlJ students for ...&#13;
graduale sludy at both the general aress:&#13;
Roundtable&#13;
Neubauer d1scusses budget cuts&#13;
I&gt;yJeffWk ..&#13;
"BudIIol Wa... Pari n: Wben&#13;
the Empire Strlkea back" was the&#13;
lIUe of the Social Science Round·&#13;
table .. ssion Monday. The&#13;
apeaker was Rep. Jeff Neubauer,&#13;
(D·Racine) of the Wisconsin&#13;
Assembly Dlalrict 62.&#13;
Neubauer discussed budget cuts&#13;
by Governor Lee Dreyfus and cuts&#13;
that will be made in the future. He&#13;
ssid that DOl enough revenue is&#13;
coming inlo the stste, despite s&#13;
somewhat "rosy scenario"&#13;
psinted by some economists in the&#13;
Dreyfus administralloo. In other&#13;
w... ds, revenue projectioos are&#13;
higher than the actusl money that&#13;
comes into the state.&#13;
Neubauer stated that of all the&#13;
state agencies, the UW System&#13;
was hit the least. Although&#13;
Dreyfus wanted sepsrste 6% cuts&#13;
f... the 1981-83 fiscal yesrs, only&#13;
2% and 1% respectively, has been&#13;
cut for this bi-ennlum. Neubauer&#13;
feels the UW System as a whoie&#13;
can expecl to see more money cut&#13;
from their budget in the future.&#13;
WIN&#13;
YOUR&#13;
OWN&#13;
PINBALL&#13;
MACHINE&#13;
""I11III .......... High Score To Date:&#13;
152,930&#13;
Prasert Rungcharassaeng&#13;
High Score Takes This Machine Home - The contest ends&#13;
Friday. October 2, so stop down to the Rec Center for your&#13;
chance fo wlnlll&#13;
1&gt;ACK 1)CW10l&#13;
WELCOME BACK!&#13;
Duringyou, leh"l Y"', th, hli,&#13;
lIyIim ,t RuFFolo $ will '" hippy&#13;
to IBN' yoU' hli, fJlf6 n"dl.&#13;
Preetaton Haircuti' and&#13;
Hafralyflng for Guy. '"&#13;
Gfrla.&#13;
For lppOintm.nt&#13;
Ph. 654-6154&#13;
i&lt;~; fsau Studio&#13;
3519 52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha. Wis.&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
Student author pays his tuition&#13;
through an informal, but crucial&#13;
"Working Y:l:'en w?n a new other students. "Take a~ hau&#13;
school" has . ber of knock on 60 doors - ask s&#13;
meaning for a growmg ~~ their if they'll buy the product. U&#13;
students. ::es~oi::erything of them say no, you've&#13;
own bu81nll. ' T shirts and yourself a lot of money and from se tng - he&#13;
h late chip cookies to ~ys. .&#13;
~::etin.g sophistica ted com- su~~:~~:'J:.::.an -:'~t~~&#13;
puter eqwpment. / optics firm with two Ja&#13;
Now one studenl entrepreneur students from Harvard sa&#13;
has made it easier for o~ers:: move by students to ;tart&#13;
start their own comparues E Y own companies reflee&#13;
wri ting "The Student n- changing altitude - s&#13;
trepreneur's Guide," a Ten S~ dislike for big business&#13;
Press book; The book reach menl and a growing&#13;
bookstores m late July. private business. "Students&#13;
Its author, Brett Kingstone, ran want to work for the&#13;
his own bedding compsny for one profit from their own crea .&#13;
quarter while at Slan;ford U. and he says.&#13;
relies heavily on his own ex- Planning ahead is !be&#13;
perience and that of other .student important, and most f&#13;
business people nallo,",:,de m overlooked aspect of s&#13;
writing the book. It profiles en- student business, he st&#13;
trepreneurs ranging from Slan- encourages those who want&#13;
ford students who opened their it on their own, but also&#13;
own late night deli delivery ser- them to start small,&#13;
vice to Harvard undergraduates overhead low and use&#13;
who invented and are now labor at iower cost.&#13;
marketing a com.puter link that Kingstone himself didn't&#13;
monitors production ~wpm~nt. ahead when he came to bis&#13;
And, Kingstone says,. It outli!'es His firm, Kingstone BeddiD&amp;&#13;
the various steps m. gettmg set up to earn him five s&#13;
started, from acqumng ap- credits based on a pi&#13;
propriate licenses to test promi';'d to write. "The&#13;
marketing to filing tax forms. liked the psper, but i .&#13;
Most student businesses operate expand it into a book - 00&#13;
on campus, Kingstone says, no gra~, he said/'. .&#13;
finding a natural, easy - to • reach recalls. I had to do It, I&#13;
market. "All you need is a the five credits to graduate.&#13;
creative idea - usually something I'm glad I did. The advance&#13;
you'd like yourself to have on book more than covered the&#13;
campus," he says. The next step is my tuition."&#13;
Nationai Teacher&#13;
Examinations, for stude~ts&#13;
completing teacher preparation&#13;
programs and ad,:,~n&lt;&gt;:d deg'7"&#13;
candidates in specIfiC fields, Will&#13;
be offered at Parkside on three&#13;
different test dates during the&#13;
1981-82 academic yesr.&#13;
Reglstrationdesdllnes are: OCt.&#13;
12 for the Nov. 14 test; Jan. 18 for&#13;
the Feb. 20 test; and March 15 for&#13;
ihe April 17 test. Registration·&#13;
forms and additional information&#13;
aboilt the tests, which are administered&#13;
nationally by&#13;
Educational Testing Service, are&#13;
available fi-om Olivia Lui·Hayne&#13;
at Parkside's Testing Office&#13;
(phone 553-26(5).&#13;
Results of the NTE tests are&#13;
considered by a numher of large&#13;
school districts, including the&#13;
Racine Unified School District, as&#13;
ooe of the factors in selection ci&#13;
new teachers.&#13;
Women &amp; degrees&#13;
Women are esrning a growing&#13;
proportion of all college degrees,&#13;
says the Nation Center of&#13;
Education statistics. Nearly half&#13;
of all bachelor's and master's&#13;
. degrees awarded in 1979 went to&#13;
women, who comprised more than&#13;
half of the 11.7 million college&#13;
.students enrolled in the fall of&#13;
1980.&#13;
'\egal" speed&#13;
The sale of "legal" speed is&#13;
being challenged by Illinois state&#13;
officials. The so - called amphetamine&#13;
look - alike pills, which&#13;
are made from caffiene and over -&#13;
the - counter medicines, have·&#13;
generated. controversy at several&#13;
campuses after being advertised&#13;
in student newspapers. State&#13;
heslth cificials in Illinois say the&#13;
pills are potentially dangerous,.&#13;
and they are taking action against&#13;
the R-S-L Corporation, a&#13;
Maryland - based firm that&#13;
manufactures the pills.&#13;
Award reJected&#13;
A Presidential Scholar Award&#13;
was rejected recently by a 17 _&#13;
year - old Texas high school&#13;
student, who said the prestigious&#13;
program is a flagrant waste of&#13;
taxpayers' money. Kyle Khron _&#13;
the first student in the program's&#13;
17 - year history to refuse an&#13;
award - took issue with the use of&#13;
. federal funds for a three - day&#13;
expense - paid trip to Washington&#13;
for the 141 scholarship winneI'!!.&#13;
Use Ranger&#13;
Contact&#13;
Sheets'&#13;
Booking network formed&#13;
Population class to be·offe&#13;
Inexperience, lack of staff and&#13;
yearly turnover often leave&#13;
college entertainment&#13;
programmers at the mercy of&#13;
booking agencies and promoters.&#13;
But a new statewide entertainment&#13;
network could help&#13;
correct that imbalance of power&#13;
for schools in New York.&#13;
Working throngh the Student&#13;
Association of the State U. of New&#13;
York, (SASU) independent&#13;
promoter Rudy Scott recently&#13;
established a block booking format&#13;
that he claims will provide 70&#13;
participating schools with dance&#13;
bands, films and concerts at lower&#13;
prices. Working through campus&#13;
representatives, Scott provides&#13;
each campus with a roster of&#13;
available artists, along with dates&#13;
open. Program chairs can then&#13;
sign up for those acts in which&#13;
they're interested, Scott says.&#13;
The program helps booking&#13;
agencies and promoters by&#13;
eliminating the hassles of dealing&#13;
with each campus individually, he&#13;
says, and by booking more open&#13;
dates in one area. Negotiations&#13;
are underway with two major&#13;
booking agencies, and favorable&#13;
talks ha ve been held with two&#13;
others, Scott says.&#13;
He is expanding the semester _&#13;
old program to New Jersey and&#13;
Connecticut this fall and is&#13;
working with the Uniled States&#13;
Are there to many people on the&#13;
Earth today~ asks Richard&#13;
Walasek, Assistant Professor of&#13;
Geography at UW-Parksi.de.&#13;
Walasek, through the UWExtension,&#13;
is the instructor for a&#13;
noncredit short course on Current&#13;
Population Issues. Under consideration&#13;
will be the slatus of&#13;
global population issues pstterns&#13;
of pop~lation growth, i';'pscts of&#13;
expanding populations on supplies&#13;
of food, energy, and other&#13;
resourco:s, the growing gap between&#13;
nch. and poor nations and&#13;
prospects for slowing population&#13;
growth.&#13;
The class will meet on four&#13;
Wednesdays, beginning October 7&#13;
7:30 p.m. in Molinaro Hall at trW:&#13;
Student Association on s&#13;
national block booking&#13;
"We know the program's g .&#13;
work because the response&#13;
the colleges, at all levels, has&#13;
very good," Scott says. II .&#13;
have ,been gelling ripped&#13;
because promoters know&#13;
have the money and because.&#13;
personnel are often&#13;
perienced. We think this will&#13;
them a break."&#13;
The National Entertai&#13;
and Campus Acli&#13;
Association already ru&#13;
national cooperative&#13;
program through which s&#13;
schools nationwide hire&#13;
formers, said NECAA&#13;
director Steve Flagle. M05t&#13;
activities focuses on the&#13;
na tional and 11 regional&#13;
ferenees at which available&#13;
is showcased and proll1"8&#13;
techniques are discussed.&#13;
is also moving into COO&#13;
buying plans for lectUres&#13;
arts programs, but doeS not&#13;
films or' major touring&#13;
tractions, says Flagle. "A&#13;
sharing, in terms of major&#13;
goes on informally on a 5&#13;
wide level," he says. "Ce&#13;
a network were put loI.&#13;
handle that type of thing,l!&#13;
not conflict with, and&#13;
possibly eompliment what&#13;
already doing."&#13;
Parkside. A fee will 8&#13;
Preregister with Uni&#13;
Extension at Parkside,&#13;
1i0M1l'$:tMKlWlt'ii!JIiM#Wt'l1%!l&#13;
U. pres. to deci&#13;
student electioflS&#13;
I&#13;
Student election results ~~&#13;
of Oklahoma will be deC'&#13;
the university president, d&#13;
both the original election 8~eJl&#13;
ron - off elections were chal&#13;
by students .. The unive&#13;
Tribunal, a student _faculty C&#13;
upheld the results of the&#13;
run - off election but its&#13;
could be overtur~ed by univ&#13;
president William BlanoW&#13;
RANGER Thursdlly. september 24.1982 5&#13;
"""COunting Club&#13;
cterviewers oHer seniors tips&#13;
Emphasis should be placed on firm, is short because. exp1alDl&#13;
things tha t show leadership Kraegle "It's not our lime to sell&#13;
qualities. One should also know our f";"." Any questions !be&#13;
every point on hislber resume. interviewee has about !be firm&#13;
"It's amazing how many people should be asked at this lime. It is&#13;
don't know !be points on their beneficial to know something&#13;
resumes," said Kraegle. HAsk a about the firm before the in-&#13;
... terview; there are campus&#13;
brochures available that !be firms&#13;
provide.&#13;
The fourth and final phase is a&#13;
3O-second 01" one - minute eonelusion.&#13;
At tbis point in tbe interview&#13;
it will be said how !be&#13;
process of communication will be&#13;
oonducted - wbo calls whom&#13;
within what lime spsn. ("Thank&#13;
you. we'lI get in touch with you&#13;
within two weeks.")&#13;
O!ber pointers mentioned:&#13;
• if you know someone who was&#13;
interviewed earlier, get feedbsck&#13;
on how that certain firm conducts&#13;
interviews;&#13;
• be yourself; don't put on a&#13;
facade because !be interviewer&#13;
will probsbly see through it;&#13;
• don't bring up !be matter of&#13;
salary in !be first interview; !be&#13;
goal of !be first interview is to get&#13;
a second interview at the firm's&#13;
home ollice; and&#13;
• it's your interview I so if you&#13;
have some informatim you want&#13;
communicated, SAY IT!&#13;
Recruiting interviews have&#13;
often been termed "30 minutes to&#13;
a career /' said Kraegle, Uso think&#13;
about what you want to accomplish&#13;
in !be 30 minutes wben&#13;
you go into that interview."&#13;
A second workshop on Sept. 30&#13;
will feature several mock interviews&#13;
between. students and&#13;
representatives of four "Big 8"&#13;
finns.&#13;
* Club Events&#13;
Bowling&#13;
The Parkslde Bowling Club is&#13;
looking for new members. Men&#13;
and women are welcome; there is&#13;
no minimum average to join.&#13;
Members participate in a Wednesday&#13;
afternoon league in the&#13;
Rec Center. The league begins&#13;
Sept. so, and runs from 1-2 p.m. In&#13;
addition. the elub will participate&#13;
in the Walt Peabody Classic in Las&#13;
Vegas. The schedule for this year&#13;
is:&#13;
October 25: Sbeboygan (Northeast&#13;
Coliegiate)&#13;
November 7-8: Milwaukee&#13;
(lnvilational)&#13;
December H: Oshkosh (Invilational)&#13;
December 3ll-31: Las Vegas&#13;
(Walt Peabody Invilational)&#13;
February 20-21: Milwaukee&#13;
(Midwest Collegiate)&#13;
No dates yet: DeKalb (Huskie&#13;
Invila tiona l)&#13;
No dates yet: Chicago (National&#13;
Collegiate Individual Match&#13;
Game)&#13;
For more information on joining&#13;
this Bowling Club. conlact Mike&#13;
Menzbuber in the Rec. center.&#13;
Anfhro. club&#13;
The AnthropolOllY Club I.&#13;
planning a trip to the Field&#13;
Museums' fourth annUlI aDthropoIogy&#13;
film f.. Uval. The club&#13;
will meet at !be Tallent Hall&#13;
parking lot at 8: 15 a.m. on SUDday.&#13;
Sept. rI. to take a UDiveralty&#13;
van to Chicago, and will return&#13;
about 9 p.m. The trip fee is N.&#13;
A wide variety d: fllma will be&#13;
shown at !be muaewn, including&#13;
short subJecta on ancient&#13;
astronauts, native American life&#13;
and customs. and oevera! oounter&#13;
- culture fibn spoofs.&#13;
The club will eat in Chicago;&#13;
members are requated to brinlI&#13;
their own beverages. Interested&#13;
students should sign up in MOLN&#13;
321.&#13;
by KenM.y.r&#13;
N.... Edllor&#13;
The Parkside Accounting Club&#13;
red a w&lt;rkshop Sept. 17&#13;
tided "Interviewing Strategy"&#13;
belp students prepare for the&#13;
I uiting interviews for "Big 8"&#13;
unting firms later this year ..&#13;
Tbis is !be first time in&#13;
'de's history that "Big 8"&#13;
I counting firms will be&#13;
, ting bore.&#13;
The workshop, first of two. was&#13;
cted by the "Big 8" firm&#13;
t Marwick, Mitcbell and Co.&#13;
give busineI8 majors an opty&#13;
to develop interviewing&#13;
and strategies.&#13;
Fred KraegJe. an audit partner&#13;
the firm, spoke briefly about&#13;
students should know about&#13;
recruiting interviews; Kent&#13;
Iiar'lI'W'dt and Mark Miller, also&#13;
tile firm, oonducted a mock&#13;
Interview - a type of&#13;
tervlew students may enAccounting&#13;
club&#13;
The Parkside Accounting Club&#13;
will sponsor a w&lt;rkshop fIr seni&lt;r&#13;
accounting students on Sept. 30 at&#13;
7 p.m. in rooms 104 and 106 of !be&#13;
Student Union. The purpose of !be&#13;
w&lt;rkshop is to give students actusl&#13;
interview experiences with&#13;
regional public accounting and&#13;
local business firms. The&#13;
simulated interviews will last IS&#13;
minutes. and will be followed by a&#13;
5-minute critique of !be student·.&#13;
performance ,&#13;
Sign-up f&lt;r !be w&lt;rkshop will&#13;
take place in MOLN DI39 on&#13;
Friday. Sept. 25 between 8 a.m.&#13;
and noon. Sign-up will be on a fll"llt&#13;
come, first served basis; resumes&#13;
should be presented at sign-up.&#13;
''TbiI' il our approach," em-&#13;
"lsizlld Kraegle. "Each firm you&#13;
'ew is l\Oing to take a clift&#13;
approach. This is just one&#13;
mpie."&#13;
KraegJe d:1ered pointers contile&#13;
pre - interview time:&#13;
't be late and dress contively&#13;
("Firms are usually&#13;
• foliowers, not trend -&#13;
..... ) O!ber negative things&#13;
t may stand out in !be in-&#13;
) ewer's mind are smoking,&#13;
ewing gum. and appearing&#13;
ean (c1otbes, shoes, items&#13;
ing carried, etc,). "These&#13;
ngs may seem simple or&#13;
etNng everyone thinks of,"&#13;
Kraegle. "but from exonce.&#13;
we see these things&#13;
ppeulng."&#13;
'I1Je Interview. wbich usually&#13;
:ll mlnulel. cnnaisls of four&#13;
- tile opening, evaluation,&#13;
the firm and the oonUIlCII.&#13;
I "Fint Impressions are very&#13;
~:::~t." said Miller. "A firm&#13;
~ e when you greet !be&#13;
ewer is very important.&#13;
-,",'w"", that you are agreasive&#13;
self· oonfldent." be said. The&#13;
being Interviewed should&#13;
e the interviewer's lead nn&#13;
r to addnBs !be otber by&#13;
!be&lt; first name &lt;r proper&#13;
me, be added.&#13;
'I1Je opening phase. or tbe put-&#13;
-ease phase. gives the inrviewer&#13;
an opportunity to&#13;
• Usb a repoIre with !be person&#13;
Interviewed, This stage&#13;
y tak.. three to five minutes&#13;
lIlpics are usually hobbies or&#13;
t.rest. mentioned on the&#13;
Women in business&#13;
Wornen in Business will hold a&#13;
bake sale next Monday between 8&#13;
a.m. and 2 p.m. on !be main&#13;
concourse near !be library.&#13;
New d:ficers ofWIB for !be 1981-&#13;
82 scbool year are: Barb Kingery.&#13;
president; Wendy Gease. vice -&#13;
president; Carla Thomas,&#13;
secretary; Ellen Breitbach.&#13;
recording secrelary; Jude McFarland.&#13;
treasurer. Advisor for&#13;
WIB is Irene Heiviemans,&#13;
Tbe next WIB meeting is&#13;
scbeduled for Oct. 5 at I p.m. in&#13;
Union 104. Interested students are&#13;
welcome to attend.&#13;
friend to proofread your resume&#13;
(for mistakes)."&#13;
"You're selling yourseU," said&#13;
Kraegle. so tslking a Int is not as&#13;
much of a problem as not saying&#13;
enough. "I don't think you're&#13;
going to go wrong in telling tbe&#13;
interviewer too much about&#13;
yourself or your skills and&#13;
capabilities," he said.&#13;
Tbe interviewer will give signs&#13;
wbetber or not to keep talking.&#13;
said Kraegle. such as nodding&#13;
hislber head or saying things to&#13;
encourage you to keep talking. "If&#13;
!bey're nodding !beir bead and&#13;
tbeir eyes are closed, that's a&#13;
different sign." be said.&#13;
Tbe third phase, selling !be&#13;
Art addicts&#13;
Art Addicts Club will bold its&#13;
first meeting Monday. Sept. 28 at I&#13;
p.m. in CA DI41 to elect officers&#13;
and to d!8CUII activitlel spcaored&#13;
by !be Art Addlcla. including !be&#13;
Student Art smw. All inUre.ted&#13;
students are invited II&gt; attend.&#13;
Cheerleaders&#13;
Parkside's cheerleaders will&#13;
hold clinics for tbe 1981-82&#13;
cheerleading squad on Sept. 28&#13;
and 30 at 6 p.m. in the Phy Ed.&#13;
building. Try-outs for !be squad&#13;
.will be on Oct. 4 at 5:30 p.m. in !be&#13;
Phy. Ed. building.&#13;
Both men and wornen may try&#13;
out. Women will be judged on !beir&#13;
performance of one Parkside I I&#13;
=~.:nro~~~::~:.ra: I SaUESOet on a rep.::,I:;!~~~ ch....'" I&#13;
with Parkside's fight song and I or 2Set nn a small with I&#13;
optional gymnastic stunts. Men I meal and chec"" I&#13;
will be judged bslance and coordination. on physical ability. I CHEF SALADS I&#13;
Judges fIr this year's try-outs I I&#13;
will be Dick Cummings. personnel h • I&#13;
I Hungry Head ~ Chef Salad .. arl' madE' &lt;&gt;1cn~)' l('lIlKe" Ityoo, Ir,mJih ,Jnu&#13;
manager; Ginger Helgeson, onion .. topped with little ('hunk~ ollur\..ey .,"d holm plu S",,, ,md &lt;t-iJ.u I&#13;
Ranger editor; Jim Kreuse.t'! I chet&gt;&lt;oe."then sprinl..led "'llh Y~lurtavonle .... Iad dr In~ ~hCH J and I,~hr'&#13;
PSGA president; and two alunuu I Hungry Head Sandwich Shops I&#13;
members. I I&#13;
Througbout tbe basketball I ~ Tw. " ••,. ARE",,".,···. I&#13;
season the cheerleaders travel •• HEADWEST 3112R_h ROAd 694 1212&#13;
with the team to various college I --:.-.:...-- HEAD EAST S06 $6lh SUM' 6521212 I&#13;
cam ses This year, possible " I~.I 10,tw laolo. TJw,al,..) I&#13;
" PJ·gh·ters" include UW-La I. - \\1 I l ....~'.iI.... )OIJMU.. Jt~ I&#13;
overm n..i_ I Expires 10'4 81 . ' •. to.)O,am' ,no.",&#13;
Crosse, Lakeland UDiv., ,",~.1 PR Q 24 TP" , lOMII')..om I&#13;
Univ. and hopefully •. a triP!beto I _'"'COUPONl. _&#13;
Kansas City for the fmals m _&#13;
spring.&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
Adult students are invited to&#13;
share their impressions of !be Oral&#13;
few weeks of school when !be Peer&#13;
Support meets Tuesday. Sept. 29&#13;
at 7 p.m. in Moln 111.&#13;
Career Hungry Head's money saver&#13;
Workshop&#13;
to be held&#13;
Community Student Services&#13;
and Student Development are&#13;
sponsoring a &amp;-session Career&#13;
Exploration Workshop for&#13;
students undecided about tbe ..&#13;
major or career goals, The&#13;
workshop is free to current&#13;
Parkside students. but bas a&#13;
limited enrollment. WorkshOp&#13;
participants will be offered an&#13;
opp&lt;rtuntty to assess !be.. values.&#13;
personal characteristics. interests&#13;
and skills and relate ~m to&#13;
career decisions. Information. ~ill&#13;
. a1&amp;o be presented on decISIon&#13;
styles' how to conduct career&#13;
resea.:et.· goal setting and how to&#13;
develop. uwell as put into effect,&#13;
an action plan. !be&#13;
call 553-2000 to enroll before&#13;
October I deadline. The sessions&#13;
will take place Mondays and&#13;
Wednesday from 1:00 • 1:50 on&#13;
october 5, 7, 12, 1~, 19 and 21.&#13;
Please do not register for !be&#13;
workshop unless you can attend&#13;
all 6 sessions. If you bave&#13;
questions call Wendi Schneider at&#13;
553-2496 or Barbsra Larson 553-&#13;
2122.&#13;
During your fint interview. said&#13;
egIe. "You're going to be&#13;
... so the interviewer is&#13;
bly going to take a IitUe&#13;
in that phase. But as you go&#13;
...uyou get used to going in&#13;
Inlervi..... it's going to take&#13;
time."&#13;
The evaluation phase, the&#13;
, COIIIumeshalf of the 30-&#13;
. te interview. In this phase.&#13;
~ plains Kraegle. "The in-&#13;
... Will ask open • ended&#13;
estion. looking for you to&#13;
becauae, to a certain&#13;
t. it's your interview _ you&#13;
take it in !be direction that&#13;
want to go. It would be very&#13;
• ended statements and&#13;
CIII. lCllking for you to ex·&#13;
• Upoo some of !be things&#13;
ve done. things that you've&#13;
t CI:I your resume."&#13;
NEW" ,&#13;
AT UNION&#13;
SQUARE GRIll&#13;
L ..J INTRODUCING&#13;
THE&#13;
BEAST&#13;
14&#13;
'SPECW~&#13;
-&#13;
...&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
One half pound of hand . patted pure&#13;
ground beef served on a Marth baked&#13;
Italian bun,&#13;
$1.89&#13;
OR ... THE BEAST FEAST BASKET&#13;
$2.19&#13;
3 mos. membership&#13;
or&#13;
6 mos. membership&#13;
6 Thursday. 5eptember 24. 1981 RANGE R •&#13;
Recent Parkside graduates now teaching her&#13;
. malt 'bute to higher education, possible to acqwre tn any other teaching at the unl .&#13;
by Pal Heallak purpose of the program:: ~ . e con~y by offering time to give way during undergraduate study. and feels that t~t&#13;
There isn't a better way f~ a students more aware ti im- ~inars on their profession. It would also give students a Parkside is a gOOd~ ....&#13;
college to show tbat they believe portance of ~o~mw.ucaon:'.;r the The 'cation oUtreach chance to question the him to find out if this ~!tq&#13;
in tbetr studeo18 than to hire two "Commumca on IS commum the professional on what courses they area appeals to hi&#13;
of their undergraduates as in- only things that ~p!? d~'t have progra~ would extend to • took as students and what courses plans on gdng an 111.&#13;
structcn. Janet WtiI1s and Bob a choice about dOUlll, said wtiI1s. people in the SlllTounding com the wish they had taken receive a Ph D . EtJJ&#13;
Hoffman graduated from "Everything you d~ ~entua~y munities and would ~lso. offer Y , . • .. m&#13;
ParUide earlier this year and are looks into commumcation. It s workshops on commumcation. Bob Hoffman, also ~ UW .. p When asked if it felt&#13;
oow instructcn here. importa!'t that ~e learn to The development of an in- underg~aduate, . majored ,.n he teaching at the col1e&amp;t&#13;
Janet WtiI1s majored in Com. comm~cate well. ternship program for studentsEcon~m,cs and Philosophy and IS tended, Hoffman said,'&#13;
municatiOllll and Engltsh. She Wells IS working on ~ program majoring in communication would teaching as an ad . hoc. Hoffman ~n,ges. When 1 was a&#13;
teaches at Parkside on a tem- that would accomplish t~ree 'enable students to broaden their teaches AmerIcan Economy. He didn t see how illl&#13;
porary 1ICI11ester• to . semester things: ~ motivate profesSIOnal educational backgrounds and give plans on instructing at Parkside , tendance was, now 1 do&#13;
contrsct Imown aa an ad . hoc. com~umcato~ to make ~ con- them real world problems and for one year.. care now about what 111.&#13;
Wells commented tbatone of the tribution to higb!r &lt;;ducation, to experiences that would be im- Hoffman plans a career used and how it is&#13;
advantages to graduating offer a commumcation outreach .&#13;
recently is being able to em- program for citlrens of the&#13;
psthize with the students. community and to develop an&#13;
The newly created position of interns~ip program for comthe&#13;
Profesaional Development munication majors.&#13;
Coordinator of. Communication Wells wants to motivate&#13;
has also been filled by Wells. The professional communicators to&#13;
{t&#13;
*************** ~S Film Presents&#13;
~ Ifthey've really got what ittakes.&#13;
{t it's going to take everything&#13;
{t they've got&#13;
{(&#13;
{t&#13;
{t&#13;
{t&#13;
{t&#13;
{t&#13;
{t&#13;
{t&#13;
{t&#13;
{t&#13;
{(&#13;
{(&#13;
{t $1.50 Union Cinema ~~~~~~~~~~~~*~~&#13;
*****&#13;
NEXT ~&#13;
WEEK'S&#13;
*&#13;
MOVIE&#13;
*&#13;
FEATURE ~&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
1}&#13;
~~~~~&#13;
M(lM1!tt.&#13;
1.11, ~ ......... fiil~hu"&#13;
o&#13;
R P&#13;
o E&#13;
10&#13;
N P&#13;
A L&#13;
R E&#13;
Y&#13;
s~:7:30 p.m.&#13;
Bedford Duo to perform&#13;
regions in the U. S. She is known to area&#13;
Miss Dougherty's career as a fans as a former Affiliate&#13;
performing artist has taken her Carthage College and&#13;
throughout the U. S. alld Europe Wingspread Artist affOia&#13;
for recitals, orchestral dates and the Johnson F'oundat&#13;
opera and oratorio appearances in Racine, and a member&#13;
such diverse settings as Carnegie Wisconsin Conservatory rI&#13;
Hall, Alice Tully Hall and the faculty.&#13;
Broadway stage in New York, the The concert is co .&#13;
White House and Kennedy, Center The Goethe House of&#13;
in Washington, D. C. and concert and will precede a receptiGll&#13;
halls in Germany, Austria and Library Room adjoini&#13;
most major U. S. cities. church.&#13;
The Bedford Duo - oboist&#13;
Monte Bedford and harpsichordist&#13;
Frances Bedford - will present a&#13;
free public concert at St. Luke's&#13;
Church, 614Main st., Racine, at 8&#13;
p. m. on Saturday, Oct. 3.&#13;
Soprano Lee Dougherty will he&#13;
guest artist with the duo for a&#13;
group of Bach arias and "Blake&#13;
songs."&#13;
The program will include the&#13;
world premiere of Will Gay&#13;
Bottje's Sonata II as well as the&#13;
composer's Sonata I, which the&#13;
duo premiered last January at&#13;
Southern Illinois University where&#13;
Bottje Is a'faculty memher. Also&#13;
programmed are Bach's Sonata,&#13;
G Minor, BMV 1030B, Ralph&#13;
Vaughn Wiliams' Songs for&#13;
Soprano and Oboe based on poetry&#13;
by William Blake and featuring&#13;
Miss Dougherty, and Domencio&#13;
Cimarosa's Concerto for Oboe.&#13;
Members of the duo - Monte&#13;
Bedford is oboist with the Capstone&#13;
Woodwind Quartet and&#13;
music faculty memher at the&#13;
University of Alabama and&#13;
Frances Bedford is a music&#13;
faculty member at UW • Parkside&#13;
- have performed in concert in&#13;
the East, Midwest and Southern&#13;
NOW&#13;
Wustum to ofter art das&#13;
The Racine Art Association, disabled adults will be&#13;
Inc. announces its new session of Saturdays. All other adult&#13;
Fall Art Classes at the Charles A. will be held on Weekday&#13;
Wustum Museum of Fine Arts In ings, afternoons and ev&#13;
Racine. Classes for adults begin Tuition hegins at $22.00f~&#13;
September 28 and will continue week Sesssioo.&#13;
through December 10. New art Fall Art· Class&#13;
classes for Fall 1981 include available and may be oil&#13;
C,:,a~ve Stitcher~, Silk Screen calling the Museum at&#13;
Printmg on Fabnc, Calligraphy by stopping in to pick&#13;
and Photography ~th 35mm color Museum hours are J.6 p.m.&#13;
slIdes .. A speCIal course In days a week and from 1&#13;
CeramIcs for developmentally Mondays and Thuradaya.&#13;
Patronize Ranger 'I Adverils&#13;
50%&#13;
FOR STUDENTS ONL&#13;
OFF&#13;
VIC TANNY HEALTH CL&#13;
\ (STUDENT MUST PRESENT 10 CARD)&#13;
CALL NOW 552·9513 ,&#13;
I&#13;
OFFER EXPIRES OCT. 16, 1'981&#13;
OFFER VALID ONLY AT&#13;
VIC TANNY HEALTH CLUB&#13;
HY. 32 &amp; K.R.&#13;
'\&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 24,1981 7&#13;
tinental Divide"&#13;
A clean break for John Belushi&#13;
by Carol Bums ~ystenous" Nell Porter, the ship develops between Souchak&#13;
or most of. us" the. term eagle lady. and Nell which somehow might be&#13;
t!nenlal Dlvl(!e brlllgs to just a little bit better with Che&#13;
grade - school geography Next we find Souchak huffmg Chase as the leading vy&#13;
. . It refers to the great Rocky and puffing his way up the man. S ntains, which split our con- mountains. It's the last place he Also, the film tries to make a&#13;
t into "fruited plains" and wants to he. Hardly fit for such point about the small number of&#13;
_ rple mountain majesties." Not exertion, he is more concerned. bald eagles left in North America,&#13;
more. with his cigarettes than anything the senseless killing of these great&#13;
John Delushi's new movie, else. He is led to Nell Porter's birds for "sport" and the&#13;
t!nental Divide" may well he small cabin and left there at the ironically fragile chance they&#13;
'ng point in his career. As mercy of the wilds. have for survival on their own,let&#13;
'eSouchak, the slightly rotund Blair Brown, as game warden alone with human's interference.&#13;
ege d!"p-out who ma,naged to and ornithologist Dr. Nell Porter When Ernie returns to Chicago&#13;
a job at Chicago s S~n. - fits well in her role as the plain i and his column with the Suno&#13;
es newspaper, Be.1ushl ~s pretty recluse. Anyone more Times, his heart isn't in his work,&#13;
evable. However, this mOVIe glamorous could not have handled but eventually he forgets about&#13;
t be a.p~oached With an open it. When Porter finds Souchak Porter and goes back to his old&#13;
,font,snottheraunchyt~ there, she is a little less than ways. But tben Dr. Nell Porter,&#13;
lapst,ck for which Belushi IS pleased. She does not take kindly main speaker at a seminar about&#13;
ousi&#13;
. tal D' ide" • t nl to company, especially that of a eagles, comes to town. Souchak&#13;
Con men . IVI e no 0 y writer. But he persuades her to let attends, and Nell's answer to his&#13;
a . plot, It actually says him stay till his guide comes back, eagle question is loaded with&#13;
ething a~ well. At .the on the condition that he will not double entendre.&#13;
'nmng, Errue Souchak, writer write about her.&#13;
a controversial personal The ending to "Continental&#13;
.on column, is hot on the trail But Souchak does write __ Divide" is not what might be&#13;
a dishonest councilman. secretly, and mostly about this expected from a Belushi movie.&#13;
' ......_L·_.'S editor, fearing for his female hermit. These are some of But then this isn't a real&#13;
ly, warns him to back off, but the cuter scenes of the movie. "Belushi" movie. He acts in this&#13;
chak won't. To protect Trusting him, Porter finally one. By all means, see it. The film&#13;
chak from himself, the editor allows him to accompany her on is now playing at Cinema I in&#13;
him on assignment to the the daily jaunts she takes to check Racine. :O~i;Wh:~'"IM'~~;;h: liO-=-.-::"'H=-e-. r-v-o--:I~u-n-te-e-r -w-o-r-k-s-h""":'o=p=\&#13;
. d I . Orgamzatio~ USlOg v?lunteers the participants (presidents; recruitment, training, and&#13;
15tra· It·lona Slmon hav~foundathmesa major cause board memhers and other of- development of voluntary citizen&#13;
of meffechveness in many fleers) identify problems and leadership.&#13;
volunteer programs is the lack of strategies in building effective&#13;
staff support and acceptance. working relations among paid Tbe workshop will be held Oct. 6&#13;
Volunteers are adversely affected staff and ~ol~teers. Instructor and 7 (Tuesday and Wednesday)&#13;
by negative attitudes of staff Frank Martmelli, of the Cent",: for from 9 a.m. to 4 p.rn. in Tallent&#13;
toward them, and can work ef- Public Ski lls Trammg, Hall. It is offered through the UWfeclively&#13;
only if they feel they are Milwaukee, has .had over 12 years Extension. Fee is $32 (not inpart&#13;
of a team. of work experieace With com- cIuding lunch). Registration is&#13;
. . munity organizations and public requested by September 28 at&#13;
This 2-day workshop will help agencies, and specializes in University Extension, 553-2312.&#13;
by Pal Henslak&#13;
eil Simon's newest movie is&#13;
ya work of art. "Only When I&#13;
gh" has many of the familiar&#13;
on trademarks, the most&#13;
nt heing his ability to&#13;
ch out and let the audience feel&#13;
t the characters are going&#13;
ther Simon trademark is&#13;
Mason, Mason. who is&#13;
t in the role of Georgia, is&#13;
ensely touching as an&#13;
olic actress. As the film&#13;
.Masonis in the midst of her&#13;
session with per counselor at&#13;
alcoholism rehabilitation&#13;
ital. Georgia then prepares to&#13;
en home by her dear friend&#13;
ie (Joan Hackett).&#13;
hen Georgia gets home, the&#13;
.11' 'ence is introduced to Jimmy&#13;
,. mes Coco). It is established&#13;
te early in the film that Jimmy&#13;
sy. The general consensus is&#13;
t this is to prevent a love story&#13;
iniscent of "Goodbye Girl"&#13;
een Jimmy and Georgia.&#13;
lnally Kristy McNichol comes&#13;
the picture. Polly (Kristy&#13;
ichol) is Georgia's mature&#13;
ght.... In fact, Polly is often&#13;
more mature than her mother.&#13;
After all those years of living&#13;
with her father, Polly wants to get&#13;
to know her mother by moving in&#13;
with her.&#13;
The last major character is&#13;
David (David Dukes), Georgia's&#13;
ex - lover. David writes a play&#13;
entitled Only When I Laugh and it&#13;
centers on his life and relationship&#13;
with Georgia. He wants her to&#13;
play the leading lady in the play&#13;
and after she accepts, vivid&#13;
memories of her past are&#13;
resurrected.&#13;
As Georgia and David begin to&#13;
work together on the play, some of&#13;
the old feelings they had for each&#13;
other begin to show. As Georgia&#13;
shares her life with Jimmy and&#13;
Tobie, the sincere dedication of&#13;
true friendship begins to show. As&#13;
Georgia and Polly begin to&#13;
discover each other, the undyiog&#13;
love that only a mother and&#13;
daughter can feel also begins to&#13;
show.&#13;
The end result is a dramatic but&#13;
lightbearted film that will touch&#13;
many people in a wonderful way.&#13;
"Only When I Laugh" starts&#13;
tomorrow at Cinema II in Racine.&#13;
amily heritage explored&#13;
complete and easy system for genealogical systems and forms,&#13;
ating, recording and un- as well as texts and archives. One&#13;
standing family history will be of the meetings of his class will be&#13;
ght by Kim Baugrud, UW- a direct learning experience in&#13;
te ns ion , UW-Parkside, how to use local resources. - the&#13;
inning October 6. UW-Parkside Archives.&#13;
L&#13;
augrud has traced all of his The class will meet on five&#13;
n Norwegian grandparents Tuesdays, 7-9 p.m., in Tallent&#13;
to 1591,and one of the family Hall. The fee is $10 per person, or&#13;
bers - from the Sauer $15 for family. Register with UWtre&#13;
farm area - back to 1398. Extension at Parkside, phone 553-&#13;
is conversant with 2312.&#13;
(IL Y I SE&#13;
OYER Sf00 A MONT&#13;
IN A CASH&#13;
SCHOLARSHIP&#13;
FOR YOIR LAST TWO&#13;
YEARSOF COLLEGE?&#13;
If you are a junior or senior&#13;
with good grades in math, physics,&#13;
Visit Kenosha's chemistry or engineering you might qualify.&#13;
LARGEST&#13;
Record Department&#13;
,Sl ~ -Records-&#13;
-Sheet Muslc-&#13;
-Instructional Music - \&#13;
JS'~&#13;
"TM Plac« To Buy RecortU'&#13;
DOWNTOWNKENOSHA&#13;
626 56th St.&#13;
Phone 654-2932&#13;
CALL' TOLL FREE&#13;
1·800·242·1569&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION&#13;
8&#13;
Thursday, September 24, 1981&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Strollin' Boners awarded&#13;
"swmner fix the holes in the Rec&#13;
center ';'aDs, hut they still get&#13;
another Strollin' Boner Award for&#13;
failinll to order enough wood for&#13;
the outdoor fence.&#13;
Strollin' presents his next award&#13;
to Jan Becker, manager of&#13;
Follett's "Folly" Book Store, for&#13;
creating a legend in her own mind.&#13;
Yes folks, as far as this cowboy&#13;
knows the hook store has turned a&#13;
profit 'for the first time in five&#13;
years. Fortunately, we students&#13;
have an alternative. A Student&#13;
Senate book exchange is now, and&#13;
will be, operational for buying and&#13;
selling hooks.&#13;
Look for Strollin' next week&#13;
when he presents his next awards.&#13;
This is the fint week of the&#13;
Strollin' Boner. Strol1in' (his&#13;
nickname) will travel around the&#13;
campus findiJ~ titillating facts&#13;
about your own mUe Parkside. A&#13;
"StroI1in' Boner Award" will be&#13;
given to varioll! deserV!nll people,&#13;
places, and things for odditi"'! of&#13;
the norm.&#13;
The first Strollin' Boner Award&#13;
goes to the bureaucracy of administration.&#13;
This university has&#13;
been here for twelve years. Most&#13;
students have hooks, right? Where&#13;
do you put the damn things when&#13;
you go to the washroom? The&#13;
Assistant ChanceIloc responded&#13;
upon a Student Senator's inquiry,&#13;
lale in 1980.It is now in the hands&#13;
d the bureaucracy ... red tape&#13;
and no resulta.&#13;
The next Strollin' Boner Award&#13;
goes to Physical Plant foc their&#13;
construction d things 011 campus.&#13;
It must be noted that they cannot&#13;
measure accurately after two&#13;
pitchers.&#13;
The oldest Strol1in' Boner&#13;
Award must go to the Physical&#13;
Education Department. After&#13;
about five yesrs, the sauna in the&#13;
gym lltill wOll't be operational,&#13;
thanks to sev... al oversights in the&#13;
crtglna1 pia~ and the fact that&#13;
the manufactur ... of the broken&#13;
unit is now out d business.&#13;
Strol1in' recngnizes that&#13;
Physical Plant did, over the&#13;
Behavior _mod.&#13;
help offered&#13;
Are you a perent - or do you&#13;
know a perent - who is having&#13;
dljficu1ty in getling a child (or&#13;
children) to act in desired ways?&#13;
(For example: to do chores, pick&#13;
up and put away playthings, play&#13;
coop..-atively with others, be on&#13;
time, talk politely, toilet train, do&#13;
schoolwork, overcome fears,&#13;
learn new skills, or other behavior&#13;
goals'&gt;&#13;
This semester students in&#13;
psychology Prof. William&#13;
Morrow's class in Behavior&#13;
Modification are doing projects in&#13;
which, under his supervision, they&#13;
advise parents (and sometimes&#13;
teachers) on how to&#13;
systematically modify children's&#13;
behaviors in desired ways. A&#13;
major emphasis is on systematic&#13;
use of rewards; other procedures&#13;
will also be suggested. Parents&#13;
will he guided in keeping simple&#13;
daily recorda of target behaviors,&#13;
to tell if the behavior is changing.&#13;
IT not, adjustments in procedures&#13;
will he suggested.&#13;
Interested parents may contact&#13;
Prof. Morrow by phoning 553-2476&#13;
or 633-1724, or leaving a message&#13;
(name and phone number) at 553-&#13;
2658.&#13;
THE m 6&#13;
9&#13;
...-.-&#13;
BEERlO R&#13;
IPHXlOSOJP Vol 1 No 1&#13;
--../&#13;
Distributed by E. F. MADRIGRANO 1831 • 55th&#13;
Stroh' .' . St. Kenosha, Wise. 658-3553&#13;
S - NEW ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
----....... -...... ----... -.&#13;
UW-system&#13;
the record&#13;
Enrollments are&#13;
tainly at record high&#13;
again this faIl at uw&#13;
universities. While it is '&#13;
early to have solid dall&#13;
indica lions are that the&#13;
wide total by headcount&#13;
in the neighborhood ~&#13;
Last fall's was 155,499.&#13;
Furthermore, it a&#13;
the increase is distributed&#13;
the state, and that&#13;
perhaps most - universl&#13;
UW system have&#13;
additional enrollment&#13;
again this year.&#13;
UW-Stout is an es&#13;
teresling case. Efforts&#13;
made over the last few&#13;
reduce the overall&#13;
200. To that end the&#13;
estimates it turned&#13;
something on the order&#13;
applicants. And, indeed,&#13;
student admissions are d&#13;
planned. But continuing&#13;
stayed on in much&#13;
numbers than had been&#13;
experienced.&#13;
As a result, instead of the&#13;
for enrollment of 7200 it now&#13;
as if the final figure couldbe&#13;
7500.&#13;
Commenting on the si&#13;
UW-Stout Chancellor&#13;
Swanson said, "Our staff&#13;
working hard to keep us wi&#13;
planned enrollment. H&#13;
doing this we were fsced&#13;
certain human factors&#13;
cannot control .. , T&#13;
element that no one ell&#13;
control is student choice."&#13;
SKIP&#13;
NO~&#13;
19th.&#13;
On November 19,&#13;
we'd like you to stoP&#13;
smoking cigarettes for&#13;
24 hours. It's worth a&#13;
try. Because if yoU&#13;
can skip cigarettes lor&#13;
a day, yOUmight&#13;
discover you can skip&#13;
'em forever.&#13;
THEGREATAMERI~&#13;
SMOKEOUT \&#13;
American Career 5&lt;JCIeIl' •&#13;
r&#13;
t. Joseph's plans fund drive&#13;
A _,000 campaign to create&#13;
....... ent and improvement&#13;
far st. Joesph's High School&#13;
K.... bs Is beillll planned for&#13;
I fall with the theme,&#13;
preserving Choice Through&#13;
.... Spea1''''"''ld&lt;bea.. din~· ~ the drive are&#13;
tbsD a dooen of Ken08bs's&#13;
Dnancial, business, media,&#13;
, and religious leaders, who&#13;
.... arganlzed the campaign in llanolllll meetillllll over the past&#13;
lIlllIItbs.&#13;
Ricbsrd Arneson, vice -&#13;
dent of Arneson Foundry in&#13;
.... osbI Is cbsirillll the camp&#13;
which will begin later this&#13;
onu. and continue through&#13;
ber. Honorary celebrity&#13;
en will be announced at a&#13;
ter dote, Arneson said.&#13;
ArDeIOD said the jIIblic appeal,&#13;
lint such in 10 years, is aimed&#13;
creating a foundation to insure&#13;
ncla1 stability, keep tuition&#13;
fordlble, and to improve&#13;
salaries of teacbers, as well as to&#13;
provide for Immediate physical&#13;
upgrading of the high school.&#13;
Particular emphasis will be&#13;
placed on providing greater&#13;
energy efficiency for the buildings&#13;
and renovating the boys' locker&#13;
room.&#13;
About $350,000 of the $500,000&#13;
goal will be earmarked for the&#13;
endowment fund, $150,000 for&#13;
physical improvements. AU funds&#13;
will be managed by a board of&#13;
KenOllbs residents with expeJ:lise&#13;
in various financial areas. Arneson&#13;
said that board will be&#13;
separate and distinct from the&#13;
School Sisters of St. Frsncis,&#13;
which owns the high school.&#13;
"This campaign is the fruit of&#13;
more than two years of analysis to&#13;
provide educational opportunity&#13;
for youllll people of KenOllha&#13;
County and northern Illinois who&#13;
seek a balanced education of faith&#13;
and reason" Arneson said "It is&#13;
a realisti~ plan to meet SI.&#13;
Joseph's future with a program of&#13;
action that will help ensure sound&#13;
management, fmanclal stability&#13;
and flexibility in the instruetlonai&#13;
program.&#13;
"Our !berne, 'Preserving Choice&#13;
Through Independence' really&#13;
says it all," Arneson said.' uClxi.ce&#13;
among schools is the most natural&#13;
and efficient way to make schools&#13;
accountable to students and&#13;
provides a dynamic force for the&#13;
improvement of education. But to&#13;
preserve that choice, there must&#13;
be financial independence."&#13;
Arneson pointed out that St.&#13;
Joseph'S saves taxpayers nearly&#13;
$1 million annually because it&#13;
receives no local tax support.&#13;
''That adds up to millions of&#13;
dollars of savings since the school&#13;
was founded in 1957. Tuition, fees,&#13;
and voluntary gifts are the only&#13;
sources of operating funds&#13;
available to the school." St.&#13;
JOlleph's currently enrolls about&#13;
670 students.&#13;
t. Joe's&#13;
linaro and Ameche· will launch drive&#13;
I Televisionstar AI Molinaro and&#13;
.football great Alan Ameche&#13;
ve accepted the honorary coirmanShip&#13;
of the $500,000 st.&#13;
ooeph's High School endowment&#13;
improvement fund drive.&#13;
Campaign chairman Richard&#13;
eson said both Kenosha&#13;
I lives "accepted with ensiasm&#13;
and will return to&#13;
to aid the campaign."&#13;
Molinaro will visit Kenosha to&#13;
JaUDch the campaign at St.&#13;
's on Saturday, October 3.&#13;
campaign "kickoff' was&#13;
nally scheduled to be beld&#13;
• . 19, but bsd to be rescheduled&#13;
round Molinaro's TV taping&#13;
Ie for his popular series,&#13;
ppy Days."&#13;
Ameche, the only player from&#13;
Unl.... slty 01 Wisconsin ever&#13;
win the Helsman Trophy,&#13;
warded to college football's&#13;
ed cI&#13;
I/tf.teti°lng becomes celebration&#13;
I by PaUy DeLulsa&#13;
• Dr. ZSezUllll Kim, a Racine&#13;
"'1ial., wu the guest speaker at&#13;
celebration/meeting sponsored&#13;
Parblde's Pre-Med Club last&#13;
y.&#13;
Dr. Kim spoke about his busy&#13;
actlce and gave a basic exnation&#13;
01 how immunities and&#13;
es are formed and treated.&#13;
irtormal question and answer&#13;
CII followed his talk.&#13;
The highlight 01 the meetillll&#13;
the surprise celebration for&#13;
CI' pre-med student SUIlllHyok&#13;
, who became an American&#13;
tIzen earlier tbst day.&#13;
Soq wu presented with a cake&#13;
ongratulatlng him on his&#13;
tura1lzatlon. He admitted that&#13;
party wu a pleasant surprise&#13;
that he felt very honored by it.&#13;
outstanding player, will visit&#13;
Kenosha in November, the concluding&#13;
month of the campaign.&#13;
Both Molinaro and Ameche&#13;
retain close ties with Kenosha and&#13;
have given freely of their time and&#13;
resources in support of community&#13;
projects.&#13;
On "Happy Days," Molinaro is&#13;
widely known as "AI," the owner&#13;
of the soda shop which is the&#13;
favorite hangout of "Fonz"&#13;
(Henry Winkler) and his buddies.&#13;
He 'first came to TV prominence&#13;
as Murray the cop on "The Odd&#13;
Couple," in which he starred with&#13;
Jack Klugman and Tony Randall.&#13;
Ameche, a two-time All -&#13;
American at Wisconsin, went on to&#13;
professional football stardom with&#13;
the Baltimore Colta (1955-llO). He&#13;
Is still the Badgers' second&#13;
leading rusher of all time (3,212&#13;
yards) and led the College AUSUIIllis&#13;
an exceptional student;&#13;
he has learned a new and difficult&#13;
language (English) in addition to&#13;
his native Korean, and he studies&#13;
at every available opportunity.&#13;
SUIIlland his family arrived in&#13;
the United Stales in May 01 1975,&#13;
when he was twelve years old. In&#13;
September of that year, SUIIllwas&#13;
placed in ninth grade at Kenosha's&#13;
Lincoln Junior High School and&#13;
later attended Tremper High&#13;
School, from which he graduated&#13;
in 1979.&#13;
In addition to carrying a full&#13;
load, SUIlll is preliarlllll for his&#13;
Medical College Admissions Test&#13;
(MCAT). He would like to attend&#13;
the Medical College of Wisconsin&#13;
in Milwaukee and has expressed&#13;
an interest in the field of dermatology&#13;
as a specialty.&#13;
• Patronize RANGER Adverlisers&#13;
Stars to a 30-27 upaet of the&#13;
Cleveland Browns in the 1955 AUStar&#13;
game. His Heisman trophy is&#13;
on permanent display at&#13;
Kenosha's Pub " Grub.&#13;
The St. Joseph's fund drive is&#13;
aimed at creating a foundation to&#13;
insure financial stability, keep&#13;
tuition affordable, and to improve&#13;
salaries of teachers, as well as to&#13;
provide for immediate physical&#13;
upgrading 01 the high school.&#13;
Cbsirman Arneson said initial&#13;
response to the campaign's major&#13;
gifts division, which is seeking&#13;
"substantial pacesetting contributions,"&#13;
has been encouraging.&#13;
"I'm very optimistic&#13;
that our first public appeal for St.&#13;
Joseph'S In 10 years is going to be&#13;
a complete succeas," he said.&#13;
Arneson said the first campaign&#13;
report will be issued at the october&#13;
3 kickoff at the high school.&#13;
Caffeine pUislegal&#13;
Legal caffeine pills are being&#13;
advertised on a number of college&#13;
campuses, including American&#13;
U., the U. of Maryland and the U.&#13;
of Michigan.&#13;
A variety of stimulants, sold in&#13;
lots of 1000, are featured in ads&#13;
placed in student newspapers by a&#13;
variety of entrepreneurs. One&#13;
such firm, Akers Pharmaceutical&#13;
of Lewistown, Penn., sells similar&#13;
over &gt; the . counter medicines to&#13;
truck drivers and reportedly just&#13;
entered the student market.&#13;
RANGER Thundlly. September U. 1981 9&#13;
_:...&#13;
Women leaders network&#13;
Faced with the Moral Majority&#13;
backlash, growing hopelessness&#13;
over passage of the Equal Rights&#13;
Amendment and the Reagan&#13;
administration's plan to relax&#13;
Title IX standards, the National&#13;
Women's Student Coalition isn't&#13;
beating a hasty retreat.&#13;
Instead, the NWSC is trying to&#13;
organize a women's leadership&#13;
network on campuses across the&#13;
country that will help female&#13;
students develop leadership and&#13;
organizational skills. The&#13;
program is funded through a two -&#13;
year women's Education Equity&#13;
Act grant. The first year d. the&#13;
grant period was spent evaluating&#13;
needs and defining the technical&#13;
assistance that should he provided&#13;
on campuses, according to Donna&#13;
Brownsey, director 01 NWSC. It&#13;
culminated in a national CODference&#13;
last spri ng.&#13;
nus year. "we're trying to&#13;
activate the network itself," says&#13;
Brownsey. Field organizers at&#13;
individual campuses will be&#13;
setting up workshops, conferences&#13;
and organizing efforts, all aimed&#13;
at getting women to become more&#13;
active leaders. The workshops&#13;
will focus on how to get campus,&#13;
regional and even natiooaJ aetloD&#13;
(Xl women's issues.&#13;
U successful, the network will&#13;
draw in enough women to keep the&#13;
program gcing after grsnt fw&gt;.&#13;
ding expires and to provide&#13;
enough leaders to act as mentors&#13;
(or c:tber women on campus, Mys&#13;
Lana Ott, the program's _istAnt&#13;
director. Brownsey and Otl&#13;
believe current attacks on&#13;
women's rights will galvanize&#13;
campus movements.&#13;
The main focus this year will be&#13;
on trying to maintain Tille IX,&#13;
says Brownsey. The school year&#13;
opens with National Tille IX&#13;
Awareness Week (OCt. 5 - 9)&#13;
during which NWSC field&#13;
representatives will he organizing&#13;
campus support for cOnlinllecl&#13;
educational equality for womeD.&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC. ATtUTlC fOOTWLUl&#13;
_AU_Ta&#13;
TEAM ....... - AU. .cIIIT.&#13;
~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~/;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~&#13;
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or&#13;
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Beard &amp; Mustache Trimming&#13;
HOURS BY APPOINTMENT&#13;
Tue. &amp; Wed. '-6; Thurs. &amp; Fri. '-7; Sat. 8-\&#13;
Donna Arnott - Owner 554-0777&#13;
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VISIT OUR NEW&#13;
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IN&#13;
It Ql)lbt&#13;
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PARKSIDE UNION BAZAAR&#13;
10:00 am • 4:00 pm&#13;
featuring a variety of&#13;
• SEEDS AND NUTS&#13;
• FRUIT AND NUT MIXES&#13;
• YOGURT COVERED CANDIES&#13;
• CAROB COVERED CANDIES&#13;
10 ThursdaY, September 24, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Guskin talks about budget cuts.&#13;
ositions open on the facull¥ -&#13;
pbout 16. We're going to contmue&#13;
a I don't know if we'll do as well&#13;
:~t year as we did this year, but&#13;
we damn well better do a good Job.&#13;
There's going to be a lot of up~t&#13;
people, me being one, If we d",! t.&#13;
. The commitment of the se~or&#13;
administrators here is .to social&#13;
justrce, which is aff1~m.all~e&#13;
action on one level, to bnngmg 10&#13;
the kinds ci people who will have&#13;
the expertise as faculty to create&#13;
models for students. So f~r m~ ~e&#13;
issue of affirmative action IS 10&#13;
social justice and educatIOnal&#13;
issues, not in terms of some legal&#13;
mandate. I see no reason we&#13;
should change our commitments&#13;
at all.&#13;
We do have a formal goal; I&#13;
think we're in good shape in terms&#13;
of legality. In terms of availability&#13;
of women and minorities in&#13;
specific areas, the market is very&#13;
good for faculty positions. But it's&#13;
difficult to get people away from&#13;
business anyway. The pay is a&#13;
whole lot.better. Also, women and&#13;
minorities are only a small percentage&#13;
of the graduating classes&#13;
in science and business majors.&#13;
You have to be careful: you can't&#13;
demand more than what is&#13;
produced. But in areas like history&#13;
and women's studies, where there&#13;
are relatively more candidates&#13;
available, the likelihood of filling&#13;
a vacant position with a woman or&#13;
a minority is pretty high.&#13;
Ranger: If you could restore&#13;
some of the dollars lost in the&#13;
budget cuts, where would you put&#13;
them1&#13;
Guskin: The library budget;&#13;
that would be the first area to get&#13;
additional funding, even though it&#13;
wasn't cut. Also, the computer&#13;
center and capital purchasing&#13;
would get support above our&#13;
usual.&#13;
We all live in fear . . . these&#13;
buildings are all 10to 12 years old.&#13;
All supplies were purchased at the&#13;
beginning. We would also try to&#13;
restore student help, and review&#13;
spring course offerings in light of&#13;
enrollment, to make sure we offer&#13;
enough courses.&#13;
We would not restore other&#13;
position cuts. We think they were&#13;
appropriate to make. If you&#13;
believe in the decisions you make,&#13;
you have to stick with them. And,&#13;
you can't restore a person's job&#13;
only to find it not fundable the next&#13;
year. Otherwise, there's a good&#13;
deal that could be done. But we&#13;
.wouldn't restore the things we cut&#13;
because we believe we can live&#13;
without them.&#13;
ConUnued From Page One&#13;
it would be the same way. In the&#13;
future I don't know what's going&#13;
to happen at the state level. I'm&#13;
hopeful. I just can't tell - is the&#13;
state going to force us into another&#13;
cut? If,and I stress if, they do, we&#13;
won't have any choice. .&#13;
My hope is that if there IS&#13;
soother cut there'd be a surcharge&#13;
to ofiset it. Ithink that it's&#13;
in the student's interest not to&#13;
have us suffer, not to have to cut&#13;
things that are going to hurt them.&#13;
Ihate to be terribly cold - hearted&#13;
about it but $30 is not a lot of&#13;
mooey these days. Really, with&#13;
the 4.5%tuition increase ... that's&#13;
about the lowest in the country.&#13;
I think the cuts will come (if&#13;
they come) because of the Reagan&#13;
cuts. We're not through with that;&#13;
he's going to cut again. It won't&#13;
affect the university directly this&#13;
time, except in financial aids -&#13;
and we doo't know what the scope&#13;
ci that will be yet. The real effects&#13;
will be on health and human&#13;
services. I doo't know how the&#13;
govern... 's going to come out on&#13;
that yel. Ifhe tries to cut any more&#13;
in the univenities, we're going to&#13;
be lurt. If he cuts a few bucks, no&#13;
Il"Oblem, but if he wants to cut&#13;
from 2 to 5%, we're talking about&#13;
a deep cut. Then we can't sustain&#13;
that without some hurts of&#13;
significance. I mean, hurting&#13;
athletics is one thing. But we're&#13;
talking about hurting major areas&#13;
Iithe university at that point.&#13;
I think all chancellors will fight&#13;
very hard for a surcharge. I would&#13;
Ie8d that fight. I think the cost per&#13;
student here is relatively small.&#13;
I'm not cruel and cold about it, but&#13;
$30 a year is $1 a week. We'd get&#13;
about $4-5 million, and that's&#13;
equal to a percentage point in a&#13;
budget cut. A 3% cut would mean&#13;
about $100 per student in the&#13;
system.&#13;
SIrmgly supporting a surcharge&#13;
for any increase that's passed .on&#13;
doesn't make me popular With&#13;
students, but I think we've taken&#13;
pretty much what we can. And&#13;
alter that if the Reagan cuts or&#13;
state problems mean more cuts,&#13;
we should assess the students.&#13;
What are the choices? If you want&#13;
a good library, access t~ the&#13;
computer enough resources m the&#13;
laboratories. there aren't many.&#13;
We were yelling like crazy to&#13;
raise taxes for everybody at one&#13;
time. What they're doing is forcing&#13;
the taxes on a limited number&#13;
of people who are directly affected&#13;
by the service. They don't do that&#13;
for any other area besides&#13;
educa tion. In every other area, we&#13;
tax everybody. At tbe university&#13;
level, the only way we can handle&#13;
it is through surcharge.&#13;
To give the legislators their due,&#13;
they did bite the bullet. Other&#13;
state agencies got cut 8%. They're&#13;
going to have to bite the bullet.&#13;
again and support the universities,&#13;
though.&#13;
Ranger: Don't you think a&#13;
surcharge would affect&#13;
enrollment by raising the cost of&#13;
education beyond some students'&#13;
ability to afford it?&#13;
Guskln: Right now, total&#13;
enrollment is way up beyond our&#13;
expectations. It's up 7%; we&#13;
projected 4-5%. We have the&#13;
largest freshman class in our&#13;
history.&#13;
It's a great irony for us - as the&#13;
economy gets bad, and people&#13;
can't afford to send their children&#13;
... themselves away to school,&#13;
they stay home to go to school. As&#13;
long as you offer quality education&#13;
nearby, people will make the&#13;
sacrifice. But that's what an&#13;
urhan school is all about; serving&#13;
the people of the area.&#13;
Ranger: Do you think future&#13;
cuts would affect affirmative&#13;
action?&#13;
GUlkin: We still have a lot of&#13;
PAIKSIMI""&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
. -o-:.... C;; .-;.&#13;
...,-~ .&#13;
-~~~&#13;
.~~\)~&#13;
~V~~&#13;
~S: • ~\\'" C~~&#13;
1~~Oooo;l~ite'~. ~~~~ ~&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. .";J~. ~.&#13;
10:ooa.m.- ~&#13;
7:00p.m. • 1&#13;
Fridays&#13;
.. \&#13;
"Meet and old friend in the Square&#13;
... or make a new one"&#13;
Tennis forfeits&#13;
hy Greg Bonoliglio&#13;
The' Parkside Women's Tennis&#13;
Team forfeited its match last&#13;
Satu~day at U. W. Oshkosh. Ac-&#13;
~ordlDg to Coach Goggin, an inJUry,&#13;
a schedule conflict, and a&#13;
s~al~er than usual team were the&#13;
prmclpal re~sons for the forfeit.&#13;
This year s team has only 7&#13;
players, of which. 4 are returnees&#13;
The 2 plarers who couldn't play i~&#13;
Saturday s game left. Parkside&#13;
WIth.Just 5 players; that's one&#13;
pos.llon short of the 6 pos'r&#13;
deplOYed in te . 1 Ions oms.&#13;
Parksi~e's record now stands at&#13;
0-2follow109 Saturday'S game d&#13;
a seaSon an&#13;
M·l k opener loss to&#13;
t wau ee.&#13;
BEGINNER OR ADVANCED - Cost is about the same as a&#13;
semeste~~..: a U.S. college: $2.889. Price includes jet round year tlrne spanl YOur Spamsh stUd'&#13;
trlp to ~Ue from New York, rOOm. board, and tuition opponunltles not available In a U ~es Will be enhanced by&#13;
complete. Government grants and loana available for ef'lllbi IZed tests show our students' I classroom Standard_&#13;
students. e students completmg two anguage skills supenor to&#13;
. year programs tn U S&#13;
lIve WIth a SpanIsh family. attend classes fOur haul'S a da Hurry, It takes a lot of time t&#13;
four days a week, four months. Eam 16 hrs. of credit {equ~: depart Jan 31, and retum JU~ make alt arrangements We&#13;
valent to 4 semestet'$-taught in U.S. colleges over a two ITED-A program of Tnnltv Ch~ 1, 1982. FUllY ACCRED.&#13;
SEMg'§I~!t!.N, SPAIN (A Program of Trinity Chri.lI~n C~II~::) 49506&#13;
CALL TOLL FREE forfullinf .-&#13;
(In Mich., or " loll free line inoperallve call 1-6 ormation 1-800-253-9008&#13;
16-942·2541COllect.)&#13;
Cross countty..&#13;
Rangers host In&#13;
by Pally DeLuisa ,&#13;
According to Parkslde s two&#13;
cross country coaches,. Lucian&#13;
Rosa and Mike DeWItt, the&#13;
Ranger harriers are young but&#13;
gaining valuable experience as&#13;
the season progresses. .&#13;
Rosa the men's coach, claims&#13;
that uris year's team is "unhalanced,"&#13;
possessing a gamut of&#13;
running talent. HIS strongest&#13;
runner yet is sophomore Dan&#13;
Stublaski from Racine . (Park)&#13;
who paced the Rangers 10 their&#13;
first two outings, as expected. In a&#13;
four school meet hosted by&#13;
Parkside on September 19,&#13;
Stublaski placed seventh overall&#13;
with a time of 27:52 covering 8,000&#13;
meters,&#13;
In that same meet, other entries'&#13;
for Parkside were sophomores Al&#13;
Correa 10th, clocked at 28:15, jmd&#13;
Tom B~lTett, 14th, with a time of&#13;
28:28. Freshman Robert Mayfield&#13;
was close behind with a time of&#13;
28:37 for 15th place.&#13;
Junior Rich Sowlles ran a time&#13;
of 29: 23 for the 18th position. Steve&#13;
Brunner, a sophomore, was the&#13;
next finisher (19th), with a time of&#13;
29:47.&#13;
Freshman Austin Booker and&#13;
John Cogan ran 22nd and 26th,&#13;
respectively.&#13;
At this time, Rosa&#13;
that his team is as s&#13;
could be. He did admit&#13;
"tickled pink" if a&#13;
ners qualified for ~ ~&#13;
are scheduled for five&#13;
now.&#13;
Coach DeWitt, CIt&#13;
hand, seemed more&#13;
stating that the womea's&#13;
a good first meet&#13;
Saturday at Ma&#13;
competed against Ii&#13;
teams, placing third&#13;
85 points.&#13;
Junior Debbie Spin.&#13;
excellent time of 19:18&#13;
eighth individually.&#13;
Also scoring for Pa&#13;
senior Barb Osborne .&#13;
of 20:14 for 13th '&#13;
Driscoll, clocked at :Ill:&#13;
place; and freshman&#13;
coming in at 21:47 for&#13;
Three other Ranger&#13;
covered the 5,000 m&#13;
They were senior&#13;
sophomore Sandy V&#13;
sophomore Linda Pf&#13;
Marquette's Katie&#13;
the race in 18:25. The&#13;
team was first overall&#13;
by UW - Steven's Pollll,&#13;
Parkside, UW - Oshkosh,&#13;
University and Carroll&#13;
Sports&#13;
Calendar&#13;
Friday, Sept. 18: Golf vs. UW - Oshkosh Invitational, Cbasb&#13;
Appleton. Volleyball vs. Ranger invitational (3 p. m.)&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 19: Volleyball vs. Ranger Invitational (8:30&#13;
Cross - Country vs, Marquette, Mitchell Park, Milw. Tennis YS.&#13;
Oshkosh Tournament (8 a. m.)&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 20: Soccer vs. Western Michigan, Kalazamoo,&#13;
p. m.) .&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 22: Tennis vs. Carthage College (3 p. m.)&#13;
Aurora, Ill., College (3:30 p. rn.) Golf vs. Marquette &amp; UWTumblebrook&#13;
C. C.&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 24: Tennis vs. De Paul University (2:30)&#13;
BOWLING TEAM SCHEDULE - 1st Semester&#13;
October 3 or 4 - Whitewater&#13;
October 10 - Milwaukee&#13;
October 17 - Platteville&#13;
October 25 - Sheboygan (Northeast Collegiate)&#13;
November 7-8 - Milwaukee (Invitational)&#13;
November 14 - Parkside&#13;
November 27-28-SI. Louis (National Team Match Games)&#13;
December 4-6 - Oshkosh (Invitational)&#13;
December 30-31 - Las Vegas (Walt Peabudy Invitational)&#13;
2nd Semester&#13;
February 6 - Oshkosh&#13;
February 11-13 - Parkside (ACU-I Regional Tournament)&#13;
February 20-21 -:- Milwaukee (Mia west Collegiate)&#13;
March 6 - Madison (Conference Roll-olfJ&#13;
No dates yet -:- DeKalh (Huskie Invitational); Chicago IN&#13;
Collegiate IndIvidual Match Game)&#13;
a&#13;
MEN'S CROSS - COUNTRY SCHEDULE&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa&#13;
Sept. 5 (11:4Oa. m.) UW - Stevens Point UW _Whitewater,&#13;
Stevens Point (4 miles) ,&#13;
Sept. 11 (3 p. m.) Northwestern; Parkside (8,000 meters)&#13;
(8soooept.19 (11 a. m.) Northwestern Illinois _ Chicago Circle; , meters) ,&#13;
Sept. 26 (12 noon) TFA/USA Midwest Collegiates' parkSide&#13;
meters) ,&#13;
g~:.; (311'm.) Notre Dame Invitational; Notre Dame, Ind. 15&#13;
te· (3 p. m.) Purdue invitational' West Lafayette, Ind. me rs) ,&#13;
gc:. 24.(11:30 a. m.l Carthage Invitational' Kenosha (smiles)&#13;
me~~~1 (11 a. m.) NCAA-II Regional; Big Rapids, Mich.&#13;
~~~. 71~2;~~p. m. TFA/USA Midwest Open; Parkside (8,000&#13;
meter~) a. m.) NCAA-II Championship; Lowell, Mass·&#13;
Nov. 21 (11 a. m.) NAJA Championship; Parkside (8,000meterS)&#13;
~LEADER'&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Elmwood PlazalRacine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's weor&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's Vi&#13;
RANGER Thursday, Septem~ 2~, 1981 11&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Women show improvements&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
The Parkside women's&#13;
volleyball team kept its record&#13;
even at 4 ~ 4 last weekend with two&#13;
wins Friday and two losses&#13;
Saturday in the sixth annual&#13;
Ranger Invitational. The College&#13;
of St. Francis won the ten - team&#13;
tournament with UW - LaCrosse&#13;
taking second.&#13;
The Rangers started oif the&#13;
event by deleating Chicago State&#13;
in two games, 15 - 8, and 15 • 8.&#13;
They then beat Loras College 15-12&#13;
and 15 - 6, but that was where the&#13;
Rangers luck ended, as they lost&#13;
to a tough Northern Illinois team 9&#13;
- 15, 12 - 15. The next match&#13;
against LaCrosse could have&#13;
gotten the Rangers into the&#13;
semifinals, oot again Parkside&#13;
came out on the short end of the 9 -&#13;
15, 10 - 15 scores.&#13;
"The play was real weU matched,&#13;
as far as the level oi the&#13;
GO&#13;
RANGERS&#13;
teams," said coach Linda Henderson.&#13;
"We played betler, there&#13;
is improvemenl 1be girls are&#13;
improving every ...-eek to&#13;
The Rangers ",II try to move&#13;
above the 500 level Monday as&#13;
they host. 'orth Park and Carroll&#13;
College at 6 p. m ID the gym&#13;
F ........&#13;
........&#13;
...&#13;
...... 1et.2&#13;
"Fall bowling leagues," exclaims Strollin' Bowlin', "What&#13;
a great way to spend an afternoon or an evening. Why the&#13;
Rec Center eve~ supplies trophies and holds an end of the&#13;
year piua party for each league. What a deal for ONLY&#13;
$2.75 per person." For information on how you can loin a&#13;
Fall bowling league call 553-2695 or stop by the control desk&#13;
in the Rec Cenfer. Fall leagues begin the week of October 2.&#13;
whng conference&#13;
new oHicers&#13;
At its alDlual meeting in late&#13;
the Big G Bowling Con-&#13;
, elected Jerry Zigner of&#13;
'de conference president.&#13;
officera elected were Steve&#13;
th of UW-Platteville as vice&#13;
'dent and Dionne Schulist of&#13;
·Milwaukee as secretary /&#13;
urer.&#13;
1981-82Big G Cooference&#13;
1IItcbe&lt;1uIe is: Oct. 3 at Whitewater,&#13;
. 10a1 Milwaukee, Oct. 17 a1&#13;
ltevilIe, Nov. 14 at Parkside,&#13;
. &amp;at Oshkosh and March 6 at&#13;
(roll-off).&#13;
Students interested in joining&#13;
club should contact Mike&#13;
uber in the Union Roo.&#13;
Ier before Sept. 28.&#13;
CLASSIFIeD&#13;
ADS'&#13;
'!be deadline for classified ads&#13;
the Ranger is noon no Friday&#13;
or pUblicalion the following&#13;
rsday. Cost: ~ per ten&#13;
WANTED&#13;
ItISTUDY !.twents for issue room.&#13;
EMI'f mornings or )·6 p.m. Contact Lorlln&#13;
"lflii, Aftllellcs. In person.&#13;
ide&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
USIO lOOKS III ~rtna Merrell's "old book :Ilfr_" 30" off all books II you bring this&#13;
w.th YOU. Hardcover books at paperback&#13;
lIfiCIS J1~Sixrtl St .. Racine.&#13;
'_ON Wnoculer microscope lor lO.40.100x&#13;
~~l"" . .can, accessories. Excellent&#13;
, 1llI'I, 16OlI. 639.6825.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
-:~USINESS LOOKINGfor working&#13;
",!lUon IQ CIPel"lIte extension of muttt.&#13;
GOllar cemPen.,. Phone 658.4618.&#13;
fYl"N WORK WANTE 0&#13;
(5 ~ returns, lermpapers, tneses ,&#13;
"...,;IPf1. etc. 14 years exeeeteoce. d. ble rlltes. 694·1825 or 652.&amp;599.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAINOFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658.2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.l.C.&#13;
A REVEALING COMEDY ABOUT REACHING THE TOP&#13;
BY WAY OF THE BOTTOM&#13;
RYAN O'NEAL&#13;
JACK WARDEN MARIANGELA MELATO RICHARD KIEL&#13;
"SO FINE"&#13;
A LOBELL/BERGMAN PRODUCTION&#13;
MUSIC BY ENNIO MORRICONE PRODUCED BY MIKE LOBELL&#13;
WRITI'EN AND DIREarED BY ANDREW BERGMAN&#13;
~&#13;
,....... IffOl"lw...-BtosO ...~Cot - e-.,. R.='7'·;;;'1~- .•'-- .... -&#13;
..........,-&#13;
OPDS SIPTIMBD 88th III A '!BBA!BB IIIA1l YOU!&#13;
12 Thursday, September 24, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Soccer splits pair&#13;
by Cbarles Perce&#13;
In a very close game 00 Sunday,&#13;
Parkside came out 00 the short&#13;
end of a 1 - 0 decision against&#13;
Western Michigan. It was a very&#13;
close game until the Western&#13;
Michigan goal.&#13;
''Their goal - keeper was fantastic!&#13;
He kept them in the&#13;
game," commented Coach&#13;
Henderson. Western Michigan&#13;
used two goal - keepers in the&#13;
effort. Parkside had a .chance to&#13;
score, but their goal - keeper&#13;
made a fantastic deflected save.&#13;
TIle shot was missed from 2.5&#13;
feet.&#13;
Parkside defender Alan Gibson&#13;
miss - hit a head shot, which&#13;
deflected into the Partslde goal,&#13;
resulting in Western Michigan's&#13;
mly score.&#13;
Parkside outshot W. Michigan&#13;
22-17, but noae Iithe shots were&#13;
lucky to squeak into the net for a&#13;
score.&#13;
Parkside was in much heller&#13;
physical shape than Western&#13;
Michigan. However the Rangers&#13;
played without the aid of Roger&#13;
Menk. Menk sprained his ankle&#13;
attempting to steal the ball in the&#13;
Beloit game two weeks ago.&#13;
The depth rif the bench was&#13;
superb. Freshman Rich Blay&#13;
came elf the bench for some excellent&#13;
shots. Don Tyson, a new&#13;
player from Minnesota, also&#13;
played well. John McNulty, a&#13;
former starter from last season,&#13;
has been making his presence&#13;
known by playing an excellent&#13;
defense.&#13;
After the game, Coach Henderson&#13;
said tha t the key to better&#13;
play will be "to put together the&#13;
offense and play more productively."&#13;
• • •&#13;
NOWTHE&#13;
GOOD NEWS! !!&#13;
Earlier in the week, Parkside&#13;
devastated Trinity. The final&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Wanltowin two free pitchers of beer? All you have to do is fill out this&#13;
form and pick the correct winners. Put a check mark by your picks and&#13;
bn~ the form down to the Ranger office, WLLC0139.&#13;
-- Baltimore at Buffalo --&#13;
-- Chicago at Minnesota --&#13;
-- Cincirmati at Houstoo --&#13;
-- Cleveland at Los Angeles --&#13;
-- Dallas at St. Louis --&#13;
-- Denver at 0....1and --&#13;
-- Detroit at TamPB Bay --&#13;
-- Green Bay at N. Y. Giants--&#13;
-- Kamas CitJ at New England --&#13;
-- N. Y. Jeta at New Orleans --&#13;
-- San Francisce at Washington --&#13;
-- Seattle at san Diego --&#13;
Tie • break.: will be the total&#13;
...... bIned poiDtsSCCll'ell in the Green Bay - N. Y. Giants game.&#13;
Last WIDDer was TOIIllverson, 7 correct, 41points.&#13;
Kales:&#13;
S.S. No. Name ;-==================~&#13;
I. One entry per person.&#13;
2. Entrants must be Parkside students&#13;
:: :~er=f~ppedal mf,:::"rs and ~ir families are ineligible.&#13;
5 Enlri us! be . Ranger ISSue. pr«eedJ';:::" gam~ In to the Ranger office by noon of the Friday&#13;
6. WilUlerswill be chosen by the Sports Edlto&#13;
7. Winners will be allllOUncedthe followi r. k . .&#13;
8 Entries must be .... ibl t be ng wee In Pro PICks.&#13;
. .~ e 0 considered.&#13;
score was 5 ~ 1.&#13;
Last week's "Player of the&#13;
Week", Jeff Dennehy, scored one&#13;
goal to move him to within two&#13;
goals of the school record for the&#13;
most goals in one season, and it's&#13;
only the fifth game of the season.&#13;
He is also within five of taking&#13;
over third place on the all - time&#13;
scoring list, and Dennehy's only a&#13;
sophomore.&#13;
This week's Player of the Week,&#13;
Bob Newstrom, scored two goals&#13;
in the triumph over Trinity.&#13;
Newstrom is also moving up on&#13;
some scoring lists.&#13;
Senior John "MoMo" Onyiego,&#13;
who has been ill all week, also&#13;
scored a goal to help in the defeat.&#13;
Parkside's over - all record thus&#13;
far in the season is 2 - 3. They will&#13;
be traveling to UW - Whitewater,&#13;
an inner - state rival, in hopes of&#13;
raising their record to 3 - 3 on&#13;
saturday, September 26, at 3:30.&#13;
They win then be traveling to&#13;
Marquette on Monday, September&#13;
28 at 4 p. m. to boost them above&#13;
.500. The next home game is October&#13;
2 and 3 for the Chancellor's&#13;
Cup Tournament at 3:00 p. m. in&#13;
the bowl behind the Phy Ed&#13;
Building.&#13;
Children lead Cheers&#13;
Parkside's cpeerleaders and&#13;
advisor Shirley Schmerling are&#13;
organizing a junior squad to get&#13;
faculty, staff and students&#13;
children involved in Parkside&#13;
athletics.&#13;
Six positions on the 12 - girl&#13;
squad are still open. The girls&#13;
~ust be 4 - 10 years old to PBrticipate,&#13;
Parents are responsible&#13;
for having a Parkside cheerleader&#13;
uniform made over to fit their&#13;
child. Parents must also supply&#13;
white tennies and socks for tbeir&#13;
child To sign ull your child call&#13;
Schmerling, ext. 2320 by ac't. 20.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Tbursday,Sept.Z4&#13;
BUS TOUR to Chicago led by Rita Tallent Picken (formerly of UW - Pa&#13;
ext. 2312 for reservations. Sponsored by UW - Extension.&#13;
Friday, sept. 25&#13;
MOVIE "Fame" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema. A&#13;
door is $1.50for a Parkside student and $1.50lor a guest. Sponsored byP&#13;
DANCE/CONCERT at 9 p. m. in Union Square featuring "Amuzemenl&#13;
Admission at the door is $2.00 for a Parkside student and .$2.50 for a&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 26&#13;
WORKSHOP "Professionalism: Pathways and Pitfalls" at 8:30 a. m.1D&#13;
Hall. Call ext. 2312 for more details. Sponsored by UW"- E&#13;
Professional Secretaries International.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. Z7&#13;
MOVIE "Fame" will be repeated at 7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday. Sept. Z8&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12:15 p. m. in Union 106. George Hagglund, Dlredor(i&#13;
School for Workers, will talk on 'IAn Invisible Dimension in Univeralty&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Tharsday, Oet. 1&#13;
COURSE "Investing Those DoUara After You've Earned Them" at 7 p.&#13;
Tallent Hall.,Call ext. 2312for reservations. Sponsored by UW - ExteIlIioD.&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING I&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5%% In'.r •• , • Y•• Dall,&#13;
Balance J. 5500.00 .r M.nl&#13;
WE'RE HERE 10 HELP YOU 1.0&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing BlVd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 694.1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin ..&#13;
414 - 658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 657-1340&#13;
410 .Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisco&#13;
&#13;
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                <text> Student publications</text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>Pat Hensiak elected next Ranger editor</text>
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              <text>Thursday, May 13, 1982&#13;
iff University of Wisconsin - Parkside anger&#13;
Vol. 10 - No. 30&#13;
Pat Hensiak elected&#13;
next Ranger Editor&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Pat Hensiak was elected Editor&#13;
of Ranger for the 1982-83&#13;
academic year. Hensiak served as&#13;
News Editor this semester and&#13;
was a writer for the Horlick (High&#13;
School) Herald in the past.&#13;
"Next year I'm looking forward&#13;
to another great year," said&#13;
Hensiak. "The anticipation of all&#13;
the things that could go wrong is&#13;
tremendous. However, if we have&#13;
a staff like this year's, we won't&#13;
have any problems we can't&#13;
tackle.&#13;
"There is always room for&#13;
improvement," said Hensiak.&#13;
"This year has been a year of&#13;
incredible improvements.&#13;
Everyone did their best, all the&#13;
time. I feel fortunate to have&#13;
worked under Ginger Helgeson&#13;
and Ken Meyer. Ginger made me&#13;
want to learn the newspaper&#13;
business and Ken taught that&#13;
business to me.&#13;
"We received a lot of support,&#13;
campus - wide," she said. "It feels&#13;
good to have played a role in&#13;
that."&#13;
Hensiak feels confident that&#13;
Ranger will be good next year.&#13;
"I'll expect a lot of myself and the&#13;
staff. When we've done a good job,&#13;
we'll know because the school will&#13;
be well - informed. I'm sure we'll&#13;
all look forward to a feeling of&#13;
satisfaction, knowing we've done&#13;
our best."&#13;
Hensiak will be working in the&#13;
Ranger office over the summer.&#13;
She will also be recruiting the&#13;
staff for next year. Paid sub -&#13;
editor positions are available and&#13;
Hensiak will be accepting applications.&#13;
"I'll be out here all summer,"&#13;
she said. "Stop in and see us. Sit&#13;
down and tell us what's on your&#13;
mind. We're a service and I hope&#13;
people will utilize what we have to&#13;
offer.&#13;
"The most important thing any&#13;
newspaper does for a campus is to&#13;
keep it informed," said Hensiak.&#13;
"The Ranger does an excellent&#13;
job for Parkside by keeping the&#13;
students as informed as possible.&#13;
We not only have the opportunity&#13;
to help others learn something but&#13;
we have the opportunity to learn&#13;
about ourselves. That's what&#13;
higher education is all about —&#13;
helping each other learn."&#13;
Chris Hammelev to&#13;
be PAB President&#13;
PAT HENSIAK&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Chris Hammelev was elected&#13;
President of the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board iPAB) for the 1982-&#13;
83 academic year. PAB's&#13;
Executive Council also elected&#13;
Mark Schulzen vice - president.&#13;
They won't officially take office&#13;
until after "The End."&#13;
Hammelev has been on PAB for&#13;
a year - and - a - half and was a&#13;
member of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association (PSGA)&#13;
before that.&#13;
Her main two objectives, she&#13;
said, are to bring bigger - name&#13;
acts to Parkside and recruit more&#13;
students to become members of&#13;
PAB. PAB consists of eight sub -&#13;
committees and sponsors dances,&#13;
movies, video, coffeehouses and&#13;
speakers.&#13;
"Our attendance at events has&#13;
gone up a lot this year," stated&#13;
Hammelev, "but we still have&#13;
problems with members and&#13;
recruitment." Membership, at 50&#13;
a couple of y ears ago, is currently&#13;
about 20.&#13;
"It's really tough with the&#13;
amount of p rogramming we try to&#13;
do and the amount of programming&#13;
we should be doing,"&#13;
Hammelev said. "With 20 people&#13;
it burns people out. I think that's&#13;
been a lot of the problem in the&#13;
past — too much work for too little&#13;
people."&#13;
Hammelev's other goal is to&#13;
have more better - known acts at&#13;
Parkside. "We're getting better&#13;
class performers in here year&#13;
after year," she said. "This year&#13;
is probably the best we've had."&#13;
She plans on getting more bands&#13;
that are regional rather than&#13;
local. "Between Chicago,&#13;
Milwaukee and Minneapolis&#13;
there's enough really good&#13;
regional people we can get in&#13;
here," she said.&#13;
PAB has been budgeted for two&#13;
major concerts next year —&#13;
probably one each semester.&#13;
Initial plans are being considered&#13;
to have an event the first week of&#13;
the fall semester, similar to "The&#13;
End."&#13;
"I think we're going to be able to&#13;
do a lot of g ood things next year,"&#13;
Hammelev concluded.&#13;
State Legislature stiffens drunk driver laws&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
A variety of changes have&#13;
recently been enacted ^&#13;
Wisconsin pertaining to trie&#13;
operation of a motor vehicle while&#13;
under the influence of alcohol.&#13;
Changes have been made, and&#13;
took effect on May 1, in such areas&#13;
as: the procedures of determining&#13;
the concentration of alcohol;&#13;
penalties for driving under the&#13;
influence, including repeat offenders;&#13;
and intoxicants in a&#13;
motor vehicle on the highway.&#13;
Chapter 20, of the Laws of 1981,&#13;
details the new laws relating to&#13;
operating a motor vehicle while&#13;
intoxicated (referred to as OWI).&#13;
The state legislature indicates in&#13;
Chapter 20 that it intends by&#13;
passage of these new OWI -&#13;
related laws:&#13;
1. To provide maximum safety&#13;
for all users of the highways of&#13;
this state.&#13;
2. To provide penalties sufficient&#13;
to deter the operation of&#13;
motor vehicles by persons who are&#13;
intoxicated.&#13;
3. To deny the privileges of&#13;
operating motor vehicles to&#13;
persons who have operated their&#13;
motor vehicles while intoxicated.&#13;
4. To encourage the vigorous&#13;
prosecution of persons who&#13;
operate motor vehicles while&#13;
intoxicated.&#13;
5. To promote driver improvement,&#13;
through appropriate&#13;
treatment or education, or both, of&#13;
persons who operate motor&#13;
vehicles while intoxicated.&#13;
Determining intoxication&#13;
One major change concerns the&#13;
way of determining whether or&#13;
not a person is under the influence&#13;
of alcohol. The previous law based&#13;
proof only on the weight of alcohol&#13;
in the person's blood (0.1% or&#13;
more). The new law states that a&#13;
person is intoxicated when the&#13;
person has a blood alcohol concentration&#13;
of 0.1% or more by&#13;
weight of alcohol or 0.1 grams or&#13;
more of alcohol in 210 litres of t hat&#13;
person's breath.&#13;
Chapter 20, therefore, provides&#13;
an alternative chemical measure&#13;
for intoxication. It also establishes&#13;
a separate offense for operating a&#13;
motor vehicle by a person having&#13;
a certain alcohol concentration in&#13;
either his/her blood or breath.&#13;
This offense is separate from OWI&#13;
and a person may be prosecuted&#13;
for either or both offenses if they&#13;
arise out of the same incident.&#13;
However, if a person is found&#13;
guilty of violating both "0.1% or&#13;
• more" and OWI for acts arising&#13;
out of the same incident, the&#13;
person is subject to only one&#13;
conviction for the purposes of&#13;
sentencing and counting convictions.&#13;
Penalties and license&#13;
restrictions for both offenses&#13;
remain the same.&#13;
Penalties&#13;
Under Chapter 20, the following&#13;
changes are made in the penalties&#13;
for OWI:&#13;
1. First offense in five-year&#13;
period. The new law increases the&#13;
Driving&#13;
to drink&#13;
Free b us service at "End M&#13;
There will be free bus service at "The End," May 22 and&#13;
23, to help reduce the number of people having to drive&#13;
home after drinking. The buses (to Kenosha and Racine)&#13;
will travel the same routes as the current evening bus&#13;
service.&#13;
The departure times are only tentative, but buses are&#13;
scheduled to leave Parkside at 11 p.m., 12:30 a.m. and 2&#13;
a.m. There is no charge.&#13;
minimum mandatory fine from&#13;
$100 to $150 and decreases the&#13;
maximum fine from $500 t o $300.&#13;
Also, education or treatment may&#13;
no longer be used to reduce the&#13;
amount of the fine.&#13;
2. Second offense in five-year&#13;
period. The new law increases the&#13;
minimum mandatory fine from&#13;
$250 to $300. The maximum&#13;
mandatory fine of $1000 and the&#13;
imprisonment time (not less than&#13;
five days nor more than six&#13;
months) remain the same.&#13;
However, education or treatment&#13;
may no longer be used to reduce&#13;
the imprisonment time.&#13;
3. Third or subsequent offense in&#13;
five - year period. The new law&#13;
increases the minimum mandatory&#13;
fine from $500 to $600. The&#13;
maximum mandatory fine of $2000&#13;
and the imprisonment time (not&#13;
less than 30 days nor more than&#13;
one year) remain the same.&#13;
Fines are now required for&#13;
persons driving after their license&#13;
was revoked or suspended; the&#13;
fines were optional. Mandatory&#13;
imprisonment was, and still is, a&#13;
penalty for such a violation.&#13;
Intoxicants in&#13;
Motor Vehicles&#13;
Chapter 20 expands and&#13;
clarifies the previous law to cover&#13;
the possession or keeping of open&#13;
or unsealed beer or liquor containers&#13;
in a motor vehicle on a&#13;
highway.&#13;
The old law said that no person&#13;
may drink from or open a container&#13;
of beer or intoxicating&#13;
liquor in a moving motor vehicle&#13;
on a highway (not applicable to a&#13;
motor bus). A person violating&#13;
this may be required to pay a fine&#13;
of not more than $100.&#13;
Under Chapter 20, the fine and&#13;
motor bus exception remain the&#13;
same, but states:&#13;
1. Consumption in vehicle. No&#13;
person is permitted to drink or&#13;
consume beer or liquor in a motor&#13;
vehicle when the vehicle is on a&#13;
highway.&#13;
2. Possession in a vehicle. No&#13;
person is permitted to possess on&#13;
his or her person any bottle or&#13;
receptacle containing beer or&#13;
liquor if the bottle or receptacle&#13;
has been opened or if the contents&#13;
have been partially removed.&#13;
3. Keeping in vehicle. The owner&#13;
of a privately - owned vehicle, or&#13;
the driver if the owner is not&#13;
present in the vehicle, may not&#13;
keep or allow to be kept in the&#13;
vehicle when it is on a highway&#13;
any bottle or receptacle containing&#13;
beer or liquor if: a) the&#13;
bottle or receptacle has been&#13;
opened; b) the seal has been&#13;
broken; or c) the contents have&#13;
been partially removed.&#13;
However, this prohibition does&#13;
not apply if the bottle or receptacle&#13;
is kept in either the trunk of&#13;
the vehicle, or, if the vehicle has&#13;
no trunk, in some other area of t he&#13;
vehicle not normally occupied by&#13;
the driver or passengers. The&#13;
vehicle's glove or utility compartment&#13;
is considered to be&#13;
within the area normally occupied&#13;
by the driver and passengers.&#13;
Evaluation of new laws&#13;
Chapter 20 requires the&#13;
Department of Transportation&#13;
(DOT) to conduct a campaign to&#13;
educate drivers about: the laws&#13;
relating to operating a motor&#13;
vehicle and drinking alcohol&#13;
and/or using controlled substances&#13;
; and the effects of alcohol&#13;
and/or controlled substances on a&#13;
person's ability to operate a motor&#13;
vehicle.&#13;
The new law requires an officer&#13;
who arrests a person for OWI or&#13;
causing injury, great bodily harm&#13;
or death by intoxicated operation&#13;
of a motor vehicle to notify the&#13;
DOT of the arrest as soon as&#13;
possible.&#13;
The new law also requires the&#13;
DOT, in consultation with the Law&#13;
Enforcement Standards Board, to&#13;
study arrest procedure for OWI&#13;
and related crimes. The DOT is&#13;
required to make recommendations&#13;
for improving and&#13;
streamlining arrest procedures&#13;
and report them to the state&#13;
legislature by Jan. 17, 1983.&#13;
Chapter 20 r equires the DOT to&#13;
evaluate the effectiveness of these&#13;
new laws concerning OWI and to&#13;
report its findings and recommendations&#13;
to the state&#13;
legislature by Dec. 31, 1986.&#13;
2 Thursday, May 13,1982 RANGER&#13;
Library Day unifies students&#13;
MR. PRESIDENT, WHY HAVE&#13;
^ YOU NOW COME O UT IN FAVOR&#13;
OF A CONSTITUTIONAL A MENDMENT&#13;
TO A LLOW « VOLUNTARY PRAYER"&#13;
IN PUBLIC SC HOOLS?&#13;
WELL, LET ME T ELL YOU A S TORY.&#13;
IT'S ABOUT O NE BILLY ROBERTS O F&#13;
EDISON, NEW JERSEY, AGE 13.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Save the Library Day came&#13;
about because of the budget cuts&#13;
in the periodical budget. The&#13;
proposed reduction, a $70,000 c ut&#13;
in a $178,000 budget, would have a&#13;
negative effect on the present&#13;
quality that we are used to. Save&#13;
the Library Day was never&#13;
designed to offset the total cut, but&#13;
to show how much the quality of&#13;
the library means to the Parkside&#13;
community.&#13;
It would be impossible for me to&#13;
judge the magnitude of the success&#13;
of Save the Library Day&#13;
because of the Ranger deadline,&#13;
but I can say that it had a unique&#13;
side effect. Save the Library Day&#13;
brought together all the major&#13;
organizations, faculty, staff and&#13;
administration to work together&#13;
for a single cause. Everyone for&#13;
once saw the same problem at&#13;
hand and in the space of three&#13;
short weeks Save the Library Day&#13;
was a reality.&#13;
Without the help of Chuck Betz,&#13;
Phil Pogreba, Ruth Slama, and&#13;
the members of PSGA, Ken&#13;
Meyer, Linda Andersen and the&#13;
entire Ranger staff, Chris&#13;
Hammelev and PAB, Peer Support,&#13;
GSOC, faculty (for the sticky&#13;
and wet work), Chancellor Guskin&#13;
and the rest of the administration,&#13;
Food Service, Dave Pederson and&#13;
Buddy Couvion and Student Life,&#13;
CSA Bookstores, and the Racine&#13;
and Kenosha area business, May&#13;
12 w ould have been just another&#13;
day in the year. THANK YOU&#13;
ALL!&#13;
M. Scoon&#13;
::R.&#13;
i /&#13;
IHISSCHOOLMATESTEMPTED HIM&#13;
WITH A LCOHOL A ND D RUG US E, AND&#13;
BEING A CHRISTIAN LAD, BILLY&#13;
SOUGHT ANSWERS IN PRAYER.&#13;
fTf:&#13;
BECAUSE HE W AS IN SCHOOL AT&#13;
|THE TIME, HE'S NOW SERVING&#13;
10-TO-20 IN FEDERAL PRISON.&#13;
Library director gives thanks&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Compliments to UW - Parkside&#13;
students and the various student&#13;
organizations for their sponsorship&#13;
of "Save the Library"&#13;
day. I have always maintained&#13;
that students are the country's&#13;
most precious resource and it is&#13;
gratifying to note that students at&#13;
UW - Parkside are proving this&#13;
again. They are to be commended&#13;
for their energetic and enterprising&#13;
efforts to focus attention&#13;
on the present library&#13;
dilemma of maintaining an&#13;
adequate materials collection&#13;
with limited budgets and increasing&#13;
inflation.&#13;
Students at UW - Parkside have&#13;
realized that the library is one of&#13;
their most important resources in&#13;
obtaining an education and they&#13;
are trying to help protect this&#13;
resource for themselves and the&#13;
future. For that they have earned&#13;
the gratitude of the library staff as&#13;
well as all of the present and&#13;
future users of the library.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Hannelore B. Rader, Director&#13;
Library/Learning Center&#13;
Once again, I say farewell&#13;
No need for soccer story&#13;
To tYve Editor:&#13;
While the memory of Parkside's&#13;
basketball loss to Eau Claire due&#13;
to the loss of key players because&#13;
of academic shortcomings is still&#13;
fresh, I would like to thank you for&#13;
another slur against Parkside's&#13;
athletic programs. In Tammy&#13;
Shuemate's "Village officials to&#13;
bring suit against soccer&#13;
players", I fail to see the need for&#13;
this article, moreover, I fail to see&#13;
what this piece will ultimately&#13;
accomplish. I realize that every&#13;
reporter is looking for another&#13;
Watergate and at good ol' PU they&#13;
are few and far between, but more&#13;
tact could have been employed in&#13;
presenting this story without&#13;
trampling on an already downtrodden&#13;
program. As an example&#13;
for comparison, at my high school&#13;
in MN we had more fans for our&#13;
fledgling girls' soccer team than&#13;
we have here for an established,&#13;
quality mens' team.&#13;
While I cannot, by any means,&#13;
condone the actions of the parties&#13;
involved, I cannot see the&#13;
correlation between a few isolated&#13;
incidents at the Village, a mere&#13;
place of residence, and the attitudes&#13;
and behavior of the entire&#13;
PU soccer team that your&#13;
reporter was trying to propagate.&#13;
Contrary to the image we have,&#13;
due largely to your ineptness, all&#13;
athletes are not in academictrouble&#13;
or constant inebriation.&#13;
But this is the impression I have&#13;
obtained from many people here&#13;
at PU and outside the confines of&#13;
our institution. And this is sad.&#13;
For within the general communities&#13;
eyes, Parkside's&#13;
athletics (soccer included) are not&#13;
indistinguishable from the&#13;
University itself; so without your&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
It's that time of the year again&#13;
. . . time to sum up the school year&#13;
while giving thanks to those who&#13;
deserve them and try to figure out&#13;
exactly what has happened (if&#13;
anything) over the last eight&#13;
months or so.&#13;
For some funny reason, it seems&#13;
like I did this last year . . . maybe&#13;
that's because I did. But this year&#13;
is different. Last year's Ranger&#13;
was smaller, that's true. One&#13;
reason is because the staff was&#13;
smaller and there was less room&#13;
to report the happenings at&#13;
Parkside. But the major reason is&#13;
because less things happened last&#13;
year.&#13;
This year was eventful to say&#13;
the least.&#13;
knowledge, you are damaging&#13;
your own status with every cheap&#13;
shot at athletics.&#13;
Perhaps a mode of conveying, a&#13;
higher quality image would be to&#13;
fill that space in the paper with in -&#13;
depth looks at individual athlete's&#13;
accomplishments, athletically&#13;
and even academically. For there&#13;
are some who excel just as there is&#13;
beauty in everyone if one only&#13;
looks for it.&#13;
Jeffrey A. Medin&#13;
The year started with stories&#13;
about a severe budget cut at&#13;
Parkside, financial aid becoming&#13;
harder to get and a tuition increase&#13;
being projected. Good&#13;
news, huh? From there we went&#13;
into the inadequacies of the&#13;
bookstore and, the big controversy,&#13;
the Teaching Excellence&#13;
Awards.&#13;
That heated issue was kept alive&#13;
for months, and we students&#13;
finally received what was called a&#13;
"compromise."&#13;
Other stories in the first&#13;
semester's Ranger included the&#13;
prosperity of the new Campus&#13;
Book Exchange, the still - being -&#13;
worked - on Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
requirements, Doc Severinsen's&#13;
appearance on campus,&#13;
miscellaneous PSGA happenings&#13;
(including the vice - president&#13;
resigning), the possibility ol&#13;
Chancellor Guskin becoming the&#13;
President of Temple University in&#13;
Philadelphia, Peer Support&#13;
becoming a major student&#13;
organization, and the threat of&#13;
another tuition surcharge.&#13;
After all that, we all deserved a&#13;
break. But then in January it&#13;
started all over again.&#13;
The editor of Ranger resigned,&#13;
and it was discovered that&#13;
Chancellor Guskin would be&#13;
staying. A new company's bid for&#13;
the bookstore was accepted after&#13;
the then - current company&#13;
refused to place a bid considering&#13;
the deep dissatisfaction on the&#13;
part of everybody who had to deal&#13;
with the bookstore. And then&#13;
PSGA continued being interesting&#13;
: PSGA submitted a new&#13;
budget to SUFAC after the&#13;
preliminary budgeting was&#13;
completed (the PSGA justices&#13;
later ruled that unconstitutional)&#13;
and then the PSGA Senate took&#13;
three weeks to OK the total&#13;
SUFAC budget.&#13;
PSGA happenings remained&#13;
prominent when the presidential&#13;
election was held. Ranger&#13;
sponsored a successful forum for&#13;
the presidential candidates. Then&#13;
there was the nasty campaign,&#13;
followed by a election grievance&#13;
being filed (and later withdrawn),&#13;
and then an attempt to hold a&#13;
recall election (that never&#13;
materialized).&#13;
Other major topics included the&#13;
non - renewal of Sociology instructor&#13;
Jim Bearden, the timely&#13;
grade changes of two starting&#13;
basketball players, the search for&#13;
a new basketball coach, the appearance&#13;
of G. Gordon Liddy, and&#13;
the student - organized "Save the&#13;
Library Day."&#13;
I'd call that quite a year.&#13;
Some of the things turned out&#13;
right, others failed to meet with&#13;
success. As I've always said (and&#13;
am always chided for saying),&#13;
"Oh well." What's past is past, but&#13;
we still have to learn from our&#13;
past experiences and turn our past&#13;
failures into workable solutions&#13;
for our future goals.&#13;
I'm happy for us students for&#13;
what we achieved this semester&#13;
(mainly unification of different&#13;
student organizations) and am&#13;
also happy to have been a part of&#13;
it. I look forward to seeing how&#13;
much better things can become in&#13;
the future. The main thing to&#13;
remember is that we are all in this&#13;
together, so we should all work&#13;
together. We can make things&#13;
better for all of us if we only try —&#13;
together.&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Steve Myers&#13;
Mark Sanders&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Andy Petersen&#13;
Linda Andersen&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
GANGER&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Co-Photo Editor&#13;
Co-Photo Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
STAFF Distribution Manager&#13;
Edward Beal, Greg Bonofiglio, Carol Burns, Eric Elsmo,&#13;
Mary Kaddatz, Bob Kiesling, Joe Kimm, Rick Luehr, Dick&#13;
Oberbruner, Chuck Ostrowski, Masood Shafiq, Tammy&#13;
Shuemate, Eric Wichmann, Jeff Wicks.&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of UW Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
every Tbu,'"sday durin9 the academic year except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
is printed by the Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside, Box No. 2000, Kenosha, Wisconsin, 53141.&#13;
MnperrS«,ith,«LEd't0L Wi" be accePted if typewritten, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
cfuded for v eri if ac tl on™3 r9'ns A" ,et,ers m"st be signed and a telephone number in-&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
reserved 2u SEjwJ? Tues?ay at 9 a m for Publication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory cont t Pr,v,le9es ,n refusing fo print letters which contain false or&#13;
RANGER Thursday, May 13,1982 3&#13;
CSA's policy changes 11000 books donated to library&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
As College Stores Associates&#13;
begins to move into the new store&#13;
(now open across from the&#13;
Library), the store also begins to&#13;
develop some of their policies. The&#13;
three main policies that have&#13;
recently come into action are&#13;
policies on the return of texts,&#13;
check cashing, and credit card&#13;
use.&#13;
The return of a textbook has&#13;
nothing to do with the "buy -&#13;
back" that takes place at the end&#13;
of each semester. The return of a&#13;
new textbook must take place&#13;
within two weeks from the purchase&#13;
date on the receipt. If a book&#13;
is purchased before the opening&#13;
day of classes, it will be returnable&#13;
for a full refund, from the&#13;
first day of classes until the&#13;
second week. Also, the receipt is&#13;
absolutely necessary in order to&#13;
return a book. At the time of&#13;
return, the receipt must be given&#13;
to the bookstore. Finally, the book&#13;
must be totally clean, and free&#13;
from all marks. After two weeks,&#13;
a book is not returnable for a&#13;
refund. If a textbook is purchased&#13;
used, it is not returnable for&#13;
refund unless the class using the&#13;
book is cancelled.&#13;
A book cannot be returned after&#13;
the official add / drop date. Also,&#13;
there is not a sliding price scale&#13;
for the return of the book. If it is&#13;
returned within the two week&#13;
policy guide, and all other policy&#13;
requirements are followed, a full&#13;
refund will be made.&#13;
In order to cash a check, the&#13;
exact amount of the purchase will&#13;
be accepted only. Two forms of&#13;
identification will be required, i.e.&#13;
Parkside I.D. and a driver's&#13;
license.&#13;
Credit card policy states that no&#13;
credit card will be accepted in the&#13;
purchase of textbooks. Credit&#13;
cards will be accepted on the&#13;
concourse level of the store, and&#13;
that is all. Never for the purchase&#13;
of textbooks.&#13;
CSA will have a buy - back&#13;
period. A student can receive 50%&#13;
of the current list price, as long as&#13;
CSA has in writing from a faculty&#13;
member that the book will be used&#13;
in the following semester. Also,&#13;
the book must be the most current&#13;
edition. If the books are not going&#13;
to be used at UW-P in the next&#13;
semester, a national textbook&#13;
buying guide will be used to&#13;
determine how much the student&#13;
will receive in return for the book.&#13;
CSA will buy back any books,&#13;
including trade books. However,&#13;
trade books bring little in return&#13;
for the student if sold back.&#13;
A gift of 1,000 volumes from the&#13;
library of the late John Cameron&#13;
Thompson, a prominent Fox&#13;
River Valley attorney and&#13;
Oshkosh civic leader, has been&#13;
presented to the Parkside Library&#13;
- Learning Center by Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
D. Clyde Buckstaff of 6 Lake St.,&#13;
Oshkosh, who are direct&#13;
descendants of Thompson.&#13;
Commenting on the collection, a&#13;
library appraiser noted that "the&#13;
books are representative of what a&#13;
well - read man in the rural areas&#13;
of Wisconsin in the early 20th&#13;
century read in order to keep&#13;
current with developing ideas in&#13;
law, science and literature."&#13;
Three groups of books within the&#13;
collection are of particular interest,&#13;
the appraiser noted:&#13;
• A "rich collection" of books&#13;
about Wisconsin including scarce&#13;
and out - of - print publications of&#13;
the Wisconsin Historical Society,&#13;
early legal publications and books&#13;
of local historical interest including&#13;
E.B. Usher's eight -&#13;
volume "History of Wisconsin"&#13;
published in 1914 and "Geology of&#13;
Wisconsin" surveys for 1873&#13;
through 1879;&#13;
• A "diverse collection" of&#13;
books dealing with 19th century&#13;
science and scientific controversy&#13;
including the works of Darwin and&#13;
his popularizers, Herbert Spencer&#13;
and Thomas Huxley; many are&#13;
hard to find or out - of - print,&#13;
including Darwin's "History of&#13;
the Conflict Between Religion and&#13;
Science" published in 1895;&#13;
• An "important" Civil War&#13;
chronicle, the 128 - volume "War&#13;
of th e Rebellion," published by the&#13;
War Department over the period&#13;
from 1880 to 1901 and containing&#13;
the official records of the Union&#13;
and Confederate armies.&#13;
Thompson graduated from the&#13;
University of Wisconsin Law&#13;
School in 1893, serving as class&#13;
president, and moved to Oshkosh&#13;
where he joined the firm of&#13;
Thompson, Harshaw and&#13;
Davidson, later Thompson,&#13;
Gruenwald and Frye. He&#13;
remained active in the firm until&#13;
his death in 1934.&#13;
Thompson also was prominent&#13;
in financial and political affairs in&#13;
Oshkosh and the Fox Valley. He&#13;
was active in Republican politics,&#13;
and was involved in the&#13;
presidential campaign of William&#13;
McKinley. He also was a trustee of&#13;
Ripon College and president of the&#13;
Wisconsin Bar Association in 1920-&#13;
21.&#13;
Sexual harassment establishes policies&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The newly formed Sexual&#13;
Harassment Advisory Committee&#13;
has begun to define its functions.&#13;
The basic functions of this committee&#13;
are to assist the Chancellor&#13;
on all matters relating to sexual&#13;
harassment, to advise and assist&#13;
the Chancellor in devising&#13;
programs designed to inform&#13;
employees and students of the&#13;
nature of sexual harassment, to&#13;
increase public sensitivity to it,&#13;
and to publicize the procedures&#13;
and remedies against it. Members&#13;
also assist in informal mediation&#13;
efforts when so requested by the&#13;
Chancellor, serve in an "ombudsman"&#13;
role and give advice,&#13;
counsel, and assistance to&#13;
members of the university in&#13;
matters relating to sexual&#13;
THE&#13;
harassment.&#13;
The committee identifies the&#13;
faculty, academic staff, classified&#13;
staff and students simply as the&#13;
university community. Any&#13;
member of the university community&#13;
who feels harassed, may&#13;
contact any of the members of the&#13;
committee directly. Or, any&#13;
person who feels he / she is being&#13;
sexually harassed can call ext.&#13;
2368 and request to talk to any&#13;
member on the committee. That&#13;
information will be relayed to a&#13;
member. Students do not&#13;
necessarily need to speak with a&#13;
student member; all of the&#13;
committee members are available.,.&#13;
Once a committee member has&#13;
talked to the person with a&#13;
complaint, the member will&#13;
request a meeting of the entire&#13;
committee. At the meeting, no&#13;
names will be used; the caller's&#13;
name and alleged offender's name&#13;
will be known to only one person.&#13;
The entire committee will review&#13;
the situation, and try to devise a&#13;
method to solve the problem informally.&#13;
Before any other action&#13;
is taken, the caller will be notified.&#13;
The committee will seek as&#13;
much information about the&#13;
situation as possible. The more&#13;
information that is offered, the&#13;
simpler and faster the likely&#13;
resolution of the problem. The&#13;
committee will have the opportunity&#13;
to learn from each&#13;
situation, but all of the incidents&#13;
will be handled individually and&#13;
confidentially.&#13;
The committee realizes that&#13;
most people perceive sexual&#13;
harassment as coming from a&#13;
male teacher and directed at a&#13;
female student. However, this is&#13;
only one possible circumstance of&#13;
sexual harassment, and the&#13;
committee hopes to make the&#13;
university community aware that&#13;
sexual harassment can and does&#13;
happen in other situations.&#13;
The members of the committee&#13;
are Stella Gray, ext. 2260; Wayne&#13;
Johnson, 2532; Karen Lourigan,&#13;
2247; Carrie Peters, 2285; Linda&#13;
Piele, 2642; Stu Rubner, 2576;&#13;
Carla Thomas, 2351; Jackie&#13;
Willems, 2228; and Pat Hensiak,&#13;
2295. The main - line number js&#13;
2368. A message can be left there&#13;
during office hours, and a committee&#13;
member will return the&#13;
call. If there is a particular&#13;
committee member that you&#13;
would like to deal with, request&#13;
that member.&#13;
1982 END&#13;
VOLLEYBALL&#13;
TOURNAMENT&#13;
5 GIRLS —5 GUYS&#13;
FOUR TO PLAY AT ALL TIMES— 15 POINT GAMES— BEST OF 3&#13;
SIGN-UP IN UNION 209 UNTIL MAY 19 —SINGLE ELIMINATION SAT. 22&#13;
lH g Location: East of the Union in between the inner loop road and the Union Parking LoT&#13;
I V UIII Prizes: 1st place - free admission to the end on Sunday 2nd place - 5 free beer tickets&#13;
pAB&#13;
4:30 pm finals invite your parents and&#13;
relatives to come and watch&#13;
SATURDAY 22nd&#13;
10am&#13;
Volleyball Tournament&#13;
5:30 Doors open&#13;
6 pm Exhibit A&#13;
9 pm Wally Cleaver&#13;
Food all night long&#13;
SUN. 23rd&#13;
I98* ^ PAB&#13;
GENERAL INFORMATION&#13;
The End tee shirts on sale at the union info&#13;
center $5&#13;
Balloons to be given away Free prior to and&#13;
during the End!&#13;
Students&#13;
*4.00&#13;
State and UWP IDs&#13;
Required&#13;
BRATS&#13;
1/4 Lb ITALIAN SAUSAGE&#13;
JUMBO DOGS 75&#13;
Free coffee for the asking&#13;
Free bus shuttle to Kenosha &amp; Racine&#13;
A FRISBEE GOLF TOURNAMENT IS&#13;
ALSO BEING PLANNED.&#13;
HAVE A SAFE AND HAPPY END 4®&#13;
SUNDAY 23rd&#13;
2 pm&#13;
Huns and Dr. Beeker&#13;
in the Union Square&#13;
Free Free&#13;
4:30&#13;
Volleyball Finals&#13;
5:30 Doors open&#13;
6 pm Legacy&#13;
9 pm Burst&#13;
Food all night long&#13;
Guest&#13;
*5.00&#13;
One guest per student&#13;
ID&#13;
4 Thursday, May 13,1982 RANGER&#13;
Modules with professionals offered&#13;
"What's it really like out&#13;
there?" is a question that most of&#13;
us ask at some point in our&#13;
university studies. Going "out&#13;
there" to pursue a career in&#13;
business or the professions is,&#13;
after all, what most of us are&#13;
preparing for. An early exposure&#13;
to the functions and strategies of&#13;
various Communication careers&#13;
can give the Communication&#13;
major a headstart on success, and&#13;
it can offer the Business major&#13;
knowledge of those all - important&#13;
communication skills.&#13;
In response to our need to know&#13;
now what being a professional will&#13;
require of us, the Communication&#13;
discipline has invited respected&#13;
professionals to conduct a series&#13;
of modules in their areas of expertise.&#13;
These modules are being&#13;
offered for credit and for audit&#13;
starting with the Fall 1982&#13;
semester.&#13;
The modules must be taken in&#13;
blocks that equal one credit. They&#13;
are listed below in their time&#13;
sequence, with the amount of&#13;
credit attached to each. You may&#13;
select Module 3 — for two - thirds&#13;
of a credit — and add either&#13;
Module 1 or Module 2 for a total of&#13;
one credit. The modules, their&#13;
professional leaders, their topics,&#13;
times, and credit values are:&#13;
• Module 1 - James T. Wardrip,&#13;
Public Relations / Promotions&#13;
Manage- for the Journal Times,&#13;
Racine. Wardrip's topic is&#13;
"Jumbo Lives!" The module&#13;
meets from 8-9:15 a.m., on T 9/21,&#13;
R 9/23, T9/28, R 9/30. This module&#13;
is worth 1/3 of a credit.&#13;
• Module 2 - Peg Fisher, of Peg&#13;
Fisher and Associates, Racine.&#13;
Fisher's topic will be "Why&#13;
Bother to Communicate in&#13;
Business?" The module will meet&#13;
from 5-7:15 p.m. on M 10/4 and M&#13;
10/18. This module is worth 1/3 of&#13;
a credit.&#13;
• Module 3 - Gabriella S.&#13;
Birkholz, Vice President of Image&#13;
Management, Milwaukee, and&#13;
Dave Brukhardt, Public Relations&#13;
Manager for the J.I. Case Co.,&#13;
Racine, will present "What's it&#13;
Really Like Out There?" or&#13;
"Looking at Corporations,&#13;
Agencies, and Anything in Between."&#13;
This module will meet&#13;
from 2-4:15 p .m. on R 10/28, R&#13;
11/4, R 11/11, and R 11/18. This&#13;
module is offered for 2/3 of a&#13;
credit.&#13;
To register, obtain a&#13;
registration form from the&#13;
Humanities Office in CA 262 or&#13;
from J. Wells in CA 273. Wells or&#13;
Professor Richard Carrington will&#13;
sign the form for you. Enter the&#13;
course on your computer&#13;
registration card as 41-391,&#13;
Modules with Professional&#13;
Communicators, for 1 credit.&#13;
Keep the signed form as a&#13;
reminder of dates and times.&#13;
This special opportunity is open&#13;
to any student who has sophomore&#13;
standing, with one communication&#13;
course completed.&#13;
Thanks Parkside&#13;
for a groat yoar&#13;
enmr&#13;
tt+GH i/ttt:&#13;
1&#13;
See you&#13;
in September&#13;
C.J.W. Inc.&#13;
2117-81st St.,&#13;
552-7273&#13;
•••••••••• Club Events&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
U.W.P.D.T.&#13;
The final U.W.P.D.T. meeting&#13;
will take place in Union 207, at 1&#13;
p.m., on Friday, May 14. All&#13;
members are urged to attend.&#13;
Summer projects and the final&#13;
party will be discussed and&#13;
planned at this meeting. Bring&#13;
your lunch, bring your friend,&#13;
bring yourself. Refreshments will&#13;
be served.&#13;
Kinship Club&#13;
Kinship will hold a paper drive&#13;
on Saturday, May 22, from 10 a.m.&#13;
to 3 p .m. at Montgomery Wards&#13;
parking lot, in the southwest&#13;
corner. For free pick-up, call 657-&#13;
7387.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
Career Enhancement is Pi&#13;
Sigma Epsilon. See you in the&#13;
Fall!!&#13;
Geology Colloquium&#13;
"Dinosaurs: Montana to&#13;
Milwaukee," will be the topic&#13;
talked about at the Geology&#13;
Colloquium on Friday, May 14, at&#13;
1 p.m. in Greenquist 113. The&#13;
speaker featured will be Dr.&#13;
Robert M. West, Curator of&#13;
Vertebrate Paleontology, for the&#13;
Milwaukee Public Museum.&#13;
Commencement&#13;
1982 calls&#13;
Donald K. Smith, Senior Vice&#13;
President for Academic Affairs&#13;
for the University of Wisconsin&#13;
System from 1973 until his&#13;
retirement in July, 1980, will be&#13;
the speaker at Parksides' commencement&#13;
exercises at 2 p.m. on&#13;
Sunday, May 23, i n the Physical&#13;
Education Building.&#13;
Honorary alumnus status will&#13;
be conferred on Smith during the&#13;
ceremony.&#13;
Prior to joining the UW System,&#13;
Smith served for 22 years as a&#13;
faculty member and administrator&#13;
at the University of&#13;
Minnesota. Throughout his&#13;
professional career he has been a&#13;
steadfast advocate of quality in&#13;
higher education. An authority in&#13;
the field of speech communication,&#13;
he received his PhD&#13;
degree from UW-Madison.&#13;
The May graduating class includes&#13;
about 290 candidates for&#13;
bachelor's degrees and 25 candidates&#13;
for master's degrees.&#13;
Graduates who completed degree&#13;
work at mid-term and those who&#13;
expect to finish their studies&#13;
during summer session also are&#13;
eligible to participate in the&#13;
ceremony.&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin, Vice&#13;
Chancellor Lorman A. Ratner and&#13;
UW System Regent Russell J.&#13;
O'Harrow will confer the degrees.&#13;
The ceremony also will include&#13;
presentation of awards to the&#13;
outstanding graduates of the&#13;
various academic divisions and of&#13;
the Chancellor's Award to the&#13;
outstanding graduate of the 1981-&#13;
82 class.&#13;
Prof. Arthur Corr will be chief&#13;
marshal for the academic&#13;
procession, Prof. James Shea will&#13;
be faculty marshal; Prof. Wayne&#13;
Johnson, bachelor of arts marshal;&#13;
Prof. Timothy Fossum,&#13;
bachelor of s cience marshal; and&#13;
Prof. William Murin, master's&#13;
marshal.&#13;
RANGER NEEDS&#13;
a whole new staff for&#13;
next year, so co me on&#13;
down to our office,&#13;
right outside the Coffee&#13;
Shoppe (N o newspaper&#13;
experience necessary!)&#13;
RANGER Thursday, May 13,1982 5&#13;
Regents O.K. $18,000 grant I Opportunity to protest&#13;
W In June of this year the United&#13;
protest against the Reae&#13;
An $18,000 grant from the Exxon&#13;
Education Foundation of New&#13;
York in support of a three - year&#13;
series of scholarly lectures in a&#13;
variety of academic disciplines&#13;
and mini - r esidencies by .visiting&#13;
artists at Parkside was accepted&#13;
last week by the UW System&#13;
Board of Regents.&#13;
The regents also accepted $4,000&#13;
from S.C. Johnson &amp; Son, Inc.,&#13;
Racine, for tissue culture&#13;
research being carried out&#13;
through Parkside's Biomedical&#13;
Research Institute and $3,000&#13;
from Modine Manufacturing Co.,&#13;
Racine, in support of instruction&#13;
and research in the use of the&#13;
scanning electronic microscope at&#13;
UW-P.&#13;
The Exxon grant will fund&#13;
programs designed to "overcome&#13;
professional isolation for faculty&#13;
at small institutions" over a three&#13;
- year period.&#13;
Prof. Ben Greenbaum,&#13;
Associate Dean of Faculty and&#13;
director of the project, said such&#13;
programs are particularly important&#13;
at mid - size institutions&#13;
such as Parkside which demand&#13;
that their faculty members be&#13;
11&#13;
both teachers and active scholars.&#13;
The program will provide&#13;
Parkside faculty with an opportunity&#13;
for dialogue and interaction&#13;
with colleagues from&#13;
other institutions in their own&#13;
specialties, something that most&#13;
small departments cannot offer,&#13;
Greenbaum said.&#13;
Greenebaum said the program&#13;
also will be open to faculty from&#13;
other institutions, to students and&#13;
the general public.&#13;
The first year of the program&#13;
will focus on presentations&#13;
relating to Behavioral Sciences,&#13;
Humanities and Fine Arts.&#13;
The programs in Behavioral&#13;
Science, being coordinated by&#13;
Prof. Lionel Maldonado, will&#13;
center on programs related to&#13;
race and ethnicity, a research&#13;
interest of UW-P faculty members&#13;
in sociology / anthropology,&#13;
psychology, education and&#13;
history.&#13;
The Humanities program,&#13;
coordinated by Prof. Andrew&#13;
McLean, will focus on recent&#13;
trends in literary criticism,&#13;
particularly the structuralist and&#13;
post - structuralist approach.&#13;
The Fine Arts programming,&#13;
coordinated by Prof. Rhoda Gale&#13;
Pollack, will include activities in&#13;
art, dramatic arts and music and&#13;
is expected to include several mini&#13;
- residencies and invitations to&#13;
guest artists, to visit, perform or&#13;
exhibit.&#13;
Greenebaum said UW&#13;
Parkside has already demonstrated&#13;
the effectiveness of&#13;
bringing visiting scholars to the&#13;
campus through its on - going&#13;
science seminar series and&#13;
programs in fine arts which have&#13;
brought visiting composers and&#13;
visiting drama directors to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
He said such visits have served&#13;
to spark increased research and&#13;
scholarly activity as well as to&#13;
offer insights on effective&#13;
teaching techniques. The Exxon&#13;
Foundation's funds will enable&#13;
UW - Parkside to experiment with&#13;
extending the use of visits into&#13;
areas outside the sciences to&#13;
accomplish the same purposes.&#13;
Prof. Ronald Pavalko, chairman&#13;
of the Behavioral Science&#13;
Division, will coordinate&#13;
evaluation of the entire program.&#13;
The End" is coming — May 22 S 23&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
"The End," the annual PAB -&#13;
sponsored event to close out the&#13;
school year, will be held Saturday&#13;
and Sunday, May 22 and 23, on the&#13;
Union Pad. Admission is $4 for&#13;
students and $5 for guests.&#13;
The first event on Saturday is a&#13;
volleyball tournament. The&#13;
tournament is single elimination&#13;
and teams must consist of five&#13;
males and five females. The finals&#13;
of the tournament will be held&#13;
Sunday at 4:30 p.m. First prize is&#13;
free admission to "The End" on&#13;
Sunday and second prize is five&#13;
free beer tickets. Sign up in Union&#13;
209 u ntil May 19.&#13;
A frisbee golf contest is also&#13;
Student aid&#13;
cuts could&#13;
cost money&#13;
Student aid cuts may save the&#13;
government $1.9 b illion now, but&#13;
could cost it $156 billion in reduced&#13;
tax revenues over the next 20&#13;
years, according to a College&#13;
Press Service estimate.&#13;
Using Bureau of Labor&#13;
Statistics figures to determine the&#13;
earning power of men and women&#13;
with and without college and&#13;
graduate degrees, CPS theorized&#13;
that the almost 900,000 students&#13;
forced out of school by aid cuts&#13;
would ultimately contribute $156&#13;
billion less to tax revenues. The&#13;
900,000 figure was estimated from&#13;
reports by the American Council&#13;
on Education and the National&#13;
Center for Education Statistics.&#13;
being organized.&#13;
Doors open at 5:30 p.m. on&#13;
Saturday. The band "Exhibit A"&#13;
will play at 6 p.m. and "Wally&#13;
Cleaver" will play at 9 p.m.&#13;
Quarter - pound brats, Italian&#13;
sausages and jumbo dogs will be&#13;
sold throughout both evenings for&#13;
75 cents.&#13;
At 2 p.m. Sunday, Huns and Dr.&#13;
Beeker will present a FREE&#13;
concert in the Union Square. The&#13;
doors will open again at 5:30.&#13;
"Legacy" will play at 6 p.m. and&#13;
"Burst" will close "The End"&#13;
with a 9 p.m. concert.&#13;
Free coffee will be available to&#13;
Patronize Ranger&#13;
WE WILL BOX &amp; SHIP&#13;
YOUR ITEMS FOR SAFE, INSURED DELIVERY&#13;
BACK TO YOUR HOME.&#13;
WE SHIP BY U.P.S.&#13;
EZZ2*&#13;
In the Multi - Services Office&#13;
19th &amp; Taylor Avenue in Racine&#13;
Open 7:00 AM to 5:30 PM&#13;
CALL 634-8870&#13;
Nations will hold a Second Special&#13;
Session on Disarmament. A&#13;
campaign has been launched by&#13;
several hundred peace&#13;
organizations throughout the U.S.&#13;
to bring hundreds of thousands of&#13;
people to New York City for the&#13;
largest peace demonstration ever.&#13;
Among the many sponsors of the&#13;
protest demonstration are&#13;
William Winpinsinger, President&#13;
of the IAM, the United Electrical&#13;
Workers, and the Mobilization for&#13;
Survival.&#13;
With buses leaving from the&#13;
Kenosha - Racine area you have&#13;
the opportunity to join in this&#13;
Reagan administration&#13;
policy of nuclear&#13;
arms build-up. Reagan has&#13;
proposed an expenditure of $1&#13;
trillion 600 billion on the military&#13;
while cutting services for human&#13;
needs and supporting plant&#13;
closings and unemployment.&#13;
Seats on the bus must be&#13;
reserved in advance and immediately.&#13;
The bus will depart at 2&#13;
p.m. Friday, June 11 a nd return&#13;
Sunday, June 13 at approximately&#13;
noon. The cost is $65 rou nd trip,&#13;
Kenosha or Racine to N.Y.C.&#13;
For more information and to&#13;
reserve a seat, call any of these&#13;
three numbers: 652-9371, 658-&#13;
0758 o r 553-2017.&#13;
Clarinetist to perform&#13;
those wanting (or needing) it.&#13;
Another feature new to "The&#13;
End" is free bus service to both&#13;
Kenosha and Racine. For no cost,&#13;
one can arrive home safely&#13;
without worrying about having too&#13;
much to drink. The bus routes will&#13;
be the same as the current&#13;
evening bus service. Buses are&#13;
scheduled to leave Parkside at 11&#13;
p.m., 12:30 a.m. and 2 a .m.&#13;
State and Parkside IDs are&#13;
required in order to buy student&#13;
admission tickets. Guests have to&#13;
be accompanied by a Parkside&#13;
student and each student may&#13;
only bring one guest.&#13;
Clarinetist Lee Gibson will&#13;
present a free public recital with&#13;
Carol Bell at the piano at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, May 16, in-the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Gibson is principal clarinetist of&#13;
the Fort Worth (Texas) Opera,&#13;
emeritus professor of woodwinds&#13;
at North Texas State University&#13;
and currently visiting professor of&#13;
single reed instruments at UWMilwaukee.&#13;
He also has served as&#13;
principal clarinetist of the Tulsa,&#13;
Fort Worth and Dallas symphony&#13;
orchestras.&#13;
He is a member of a musical&#13;
family which includes performers&#13;
with the Boston Symphony,&#13;
Louisville Orchestra, Houston&#13;
Symphony and El Paso Symphony.&#13;
Gibson was founding editor of&#13;
"The Clarinet," the journal of th e&#13;
International Clarinet Society,&#13;
and later became president of t he&#13;
society. As an acoustician, he has&#13;
authored a number of papers&#13;
dealing with the design of the&#13;
clarinet and on his research on the&#13;
capacity of the human ear as an&#13;
analyzer of musical sounds.&#13;
Bell is a member of the UW-P&#13;
music staff and pianist of the&#13;
Oriana Trio.&#13;
Aduertisers&#13;
COMMUNITY&#13;
"Let us therefore love one another as far as we are&#13;
able and by our love draw one another to possess&#13;
God within us . . — St. Augustine&#13;
the Iluftustinians Brothers called to a life&#13;
of community in service to the church.&#13;
the nuftustinians .&#13;
For further information 20300 Governors Hwy. Aft&#13;
without obligation, write: OlymPla Fields. IL 60461 lift&#13;
312 748-9500&#13;
ONE MORE TIME&#13;
TONIGHT!&#13;
THURSDAY, MAY 13&#13;
UNION SQUARE 5-7 PM&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
• THE LIVE MUSIC OF UW-PARKSIDE'S&#13;
AWARD WINNING JAZZ BAND&#13;
• 75&lt;t, $1. 00 &amp; $1.25 O FF REGULAR PIZZA PRICES&#13;
• SPECIAL $1.99 SPAGHETTI DINNER WITH SALAD &amp; GARLIC BREAD&#13;
• FREE ADMISSION&#13;
6 Thursday, May 13,1982 RANGER&#13;
RECREATION CTR • M0^'MAY17-FRI.,MAY21 JUNE21-AUGUST14&#13;
l\h,V&lt;l\l.n I IVIt Vl 9:00a.m.- 6 :00 p.m. 6:00 p. m. -10:00 p. m.&#13;
NOTE: CAMPING RENTALS AVAILABLE THROUGHOUT CLOSED r f twppm ccuccrm BREAKS &amp; SUMMER. CALL: 553-2408 CLOSED BETWEEN SEMESTER!&#13;
SWEFT awwcci a^HnOvPrPrFc*. CLO'SMEDA YFO 14R L SAUSMTM DEARY&#13;
Thanks to all&#13;
Feature writers:&#13;
Carol Burns,&#13;
Bob Ki esling, J oe Ki mm,&#13;
Rick Lu ehr,&#13;
Dick Ob erbruner,&#13;
Chuck Ostrowski,&#13;
Pat Hensiak,&#13;
Lisa Linstroth,&#13;
Karla Kobal, and&#13;
Mark Sa nders.&#13;
From Tony&#13;
The Parkside Union&#13;
Robert Wortock tells of his experiences in Poland&#13;
FINAL WEEK &amp; SUMMER HOURS&#13;
UNION SQUARE: MON., MAY 17 — THURS., MAY 20 FRIDAY, MAY 21st&#13;
10:00a. m.-10:00p. m. 10:00a. m.-6:00p. m&#13;
CLOSED FOR THE SUMMER&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Robert Wortock wrote himself a&#13;
poem. It goes like this:&#13;
Life is to be lived, not endured&#13;
life is to be shared, not obscured&#13;
life is a gift, and not a treat,&#13;
life is hope, not self - defeat.&#13;
When life is stripped,&#13;
of peripheral things,&#13;
and all its distractions&#13;
and trappings and things.&#13;
When life is reduced,&#13;
to its absolute basis,&#13;
and the heart enchances,&#13;
so many places&#13;
So listen, my friend,&#13;
take one day, not two,&#13;
and be thankful for the&#13;
divine powers with you.&#13;
This seems to have been Wortock's&#13;
code .for living when he&#13;
organized a relief drive for the&#13;
citizens of Poland shortly after the&#13;
military takeover, when he went&#13;
to Poland with the 1600 boxes of&#13;
food, clothing, and relief items,&#13;
and when he lived a month in&#13;
Poland and came to know the&#13;
people and experience their way&#13;
of life. "The people in Poland&#13;
know how to preserve. If they&#13;
have a pair of blue jeans, that pair&#13;
of jeans will last them ten years,&#13;
fifteen years, and then they will&#13;
hand them down. They don't buy&#13;
like we do, if the style has changed&#13;
or whatever. If you rip your&#13;
clothes, you sew them back up. It&#13;
takes a young married couple ten&#13;
to fifteen years to get a small&#13;
apartment, and until then you stay&#13;
POLISH GIRL SCOUTS guard war memorial in Warsaw.&#13;
Sales representatives wanted to sell stereo components, 35&#13;
mm camera equipment, video equipment, home computers,&#13;
televisions, and calculators. Sell EVERY brand&#13;
rvaw© and model of electronic equipment manufactured.&#13;
Sell electronic equipment In your town at prices drastically&#13;
below those of any store. Very high pay per hour! In addition&#13;
receive 50% of the profits the company earns on&#13;
every sales representative you recruit for the company.&#13;
Bonus plan. Set your own hours. No investment necessary.&#13;
To become a sales representative send $3.50 for your&#13;
confidential price list, sales training manual, and business&#13;
operations manual to:&#13;
SOUNDS GOOD&#13;
P. O. Box 264&#13;
Madison, Wl. 53701&#13;
with relatives. In fact, in some&#13;
cases the husband and wife won't&#13;
even live together. And when they&#13;
have saved up enough money for a&#13;
place, it is usually a cement block,&#13;
with maybe one or two rooms for a&#13;
family of four. Everybody lives in&#13;
cubicles. Three percent of the&#13;
population has cars, so most&#13;
everyone walks. The people are&#13;
strong, nobody's overweight."&#13;
Wortock spoke of the fear that&#13;
he sensed in the people he met in&#13;
Poland, but demonstrated that it&#13;
had not eroded their character.&#13;
"Warsaw is a city of a million and&#13;
half people, about the size of&#13;
Milwaukee. My sixteen year old&#13;
daughter could walk anywhere in&#13;
Warsaw, any time of the day or&#13;
night. If I had a wheelbarrow, and&#13;
went all through Warsaw looking&#13;
for handguns, I'd have a hard time&#13;
filling that wheelbarrow. And if I&#13;
had a litter bag, and went all&#13;
through the city, I would be hard&#13;
pressed to fill the bag with litter. I&#13;
did not hear children crying, or&#13;
yelling at one another. And they&#13;
were passionate people, often&#13;
expressing affection for each&#13;
other. This paints a picture of the&#13;
people — humble, sincere,&#13;
honest."&#13;
Wortock emphasized that the&#13;
Polish people were struggling,&#13;
however. "Probably the biggest&#13;
problem over there is lack of&#13;
motivation. They feel&#13;
discouraged. If you break the&#13;
spirit and will of the people, then&#13;
you can keep them down to just a&#13;
bare survival level. The people&#13;
are strong willed, but they are&#13;
people just like anywhere else.&#13;
They have the same fears, hopes,&#13;
dreams, and so forth. The Poles&#13;
just want to be Poles. They just&#13;
want to be left alone." Wortock&#13;
maintains a non - political stance&#13;
on his joumey to Poland, and this&#13;
is reflected in his philosophy.&#13;
"The people in Poland believe that&#13;
the worst thing that ever happened&#13;
to them was when Stalin&#13;
and Truman got together and&#13;
divided up Europe. What does it&#13;
mean when politicians get&#13;
together and decide things for&#13;
their citizens? You have to deal&#13;
with people on an individual basis,&#13;
one person from one country&#13;
meeting one person from another&#13;
country, and thereby sharing their&#13;
ideas. That's what our project was&#13;
all about." That seems to be what&#13;
Robert Wortock is all about.&#13;
AN ELDERLY WOMAN bicycles her way through the streets of&#13;
Luvitz.&#13;
PAC offers something for everyone&#13;
The Israel Philharmonic Orchestra,&#13;
considered to be one of&#13;
the greatest orchestras in the&#13;
world, performs in Uihlein Hall on&#13;
Monday, May 17 at 8:00 p.m. The&#13;
Milwaukee Jewish Federation is&#13;
sponsoring the concert, to be&#13;
conducted by the orchestra's&#13;
renowned music director, Zubin&#13;
Mehta. Tickets are $17.00, $11.00&#13;
and $7.00, and are available at the&#13;
PAC Box Office and by calling&#13;
PHONECHARGE, 273-7206.&#13;
Popular recording group Asia&#13;
performs in Uihlein Hall on&#13;
Tuesday, May 18 at 8:00 p.m. The&#13;
concert is sold out.&#13;
"Secret Injury, Secret&#13;
Revenge," the final production of&#13;
the Milwaukee Repertory&#13;
Theater's current season, concludes&#13;
this week, after performances&#13;
Tuesday through&#13;
Friday, May 18-21 at 8:00 p.m.,&#13;
with a 2:00 p.m. matinee on&#13;
Wednesday, May 19; Saturday,&#13;
May 22 at 5:00 and 9:15 p.m.; and&#13;
Sunday, May 23, at 7:30 p.m. The&#13;
17th century Spanish classic by&#13;
Calderon de la Barca is being&#13;
presented in a new English version&#13;
by the Rep's resident&#13;
playwright, Amlin Gray. Tickets&#13;
are $3.50 - $11.00 and may be&#13;
purchased at the Box Office and&#13;
by calling PAC PHONECHARGE,&#13;
273-7206.&#13;
On Tuesday, Wednesday, and&#13;
Thursday, May 18-20, the&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra&#13;
presents concerts for area high&#13;
school students, at 10:30 a.m. and&#13;
12:30 p.m. in Uihlein Hall. Guest&#13;
conductor Eric Knight leads the&#13;
orchestra in a pops program,&#13;
"The Best of Broadway", Friday,&#13;
May 21 and Saturday, May 22 at&#13;
8:30 p.m. and Sunday, May 23 at&#13;
7:30 p.m. The Friday and&#13;
Saturday concerts are sold out.&#13;
Tickets are available at $7.00,&#13;
$9.00, $11.00, $13.00, and $14.00 for&#13;
the Sunday performance, and&#13;
may be purchased at the Box&#13;
Office and through PHONECHARGE,&#13;
273-7206.&#13;
Nearly 400 young people perform&#13;
in the spring concert by the&#13;
four orchestras of Music for Youth&#13;
on Sunday, May 23 at 3:00 p.m. in&#13;
Uihlein Hall. General admission&#13;
tickets, at $2.00, are available at&#13;
the PAC Box Office after May 21.&#13;
Piano students of Fran Schuler -&#13;
Ellis give their spring recital&#13;
Sunday, May 23 at 4:00 p.m. in&#13;
Vogel Hall. The recital is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Thursday, May 13,1982&#13;
Want some fun? Join a club!&#13;
by Joe Kimm&#13;
What we need on this campus&#13;
are new clubs, and new student&#13;
organizations to spark up this&#13;
otherwise dreary Campus. I mean&#13;
favorite pasttimes at UW-P are&#13;
napping during lectures, sleepwalking&#13;
in the halls, and reclining&#13;
— comatose in the library.&#13;
How about a Frisbee Club, Short&#13;
People United, Hamburgers and&#13;
French Fry Eaters Anonymous,&#13;
Professional BJobbers Foundation&#13;
and Muff Divers&#13;
Unlimited? It would lend credence&#13;
to our small coffee shop scene and&#13;
would expand our SOC membership&#13;
appreciably.&#13;
A Frisbee Club, for example,&#13;
would really draw attention to our&#13;
most collegiate sport in existence&#13;
next to bicycle racing. It is the&#13;
only phenomena you would observe&#13;
students participating in&#13;
when you visit other state campuses.&#13;
Madison even has a&#13;
fraternity with a local chapter&#13;
devoted entirely to this godly&#13;
sport.&#13;
To become a member, you must&#13;
first demonstrate above average&#13;
skill in twirling and popping a&#13;
small plastic disc — preferrably&#13;
of master rank or better (Olympic&#13;
size is acceptable). No Taco Bell&#13;
discs permitted here. To show&#13;
skillful maneuverance in an above&#13;
- average manner, you must keep&#13;
the artificial discoid up in the air&#13;
for at least three seconds.&#13;
The next step is you must show&#13;
fair to above - average physique,&#13;
especially in the upper torso and&#13;
upper thigh area. Above all, there&#13;
must be that frisbee thrower&#13;
image exuding from your every&#13;
pore. That California tanned look,&#13;
that west coast style that&#13;
epitomizes the sunworshippers'&#13;
unique life style. Only then will&#13;
you be considered for nomination&#13;
to the prestigious flying disc club.&#13;
Other clubs will have varying&#13;
requirements for their new&#13;
members, basically to screen the&#13;
serious contenders from fly - b y -&#13;
night club hoppers that go from&#13;
Summerfest&#13;
this summer&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
This year's Summerfest should&#13;
be the best ever, according to the&#13;
promoters, Summerfest Inc.&#13;
Taking a look at the tentative&#13;
schedule of the bands they have&#13;
booked so far, the show will cover&#13;
a broad range of musical styles.&#13;
The headlining performers&#13;
include: The Bar-Kays, Skyy,&#13;
Chicago, Johnny Mathis, Santana,&#13;
The Charlie Daniels Band, A1&#13;
Jarreau, Arlo Guthrie, and the&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra.&#13;
The promoters said that this is a&#13;
tentative schedule, and that there&#13;
are still four more acts to be&#13;
booked. In addition, they said that&#13;
although the schedules have not&#13;
been released, the country stage&#13;
and jazz oasis will feature a&#13;
combination of local and national&#13;
groups.&#13;
Tickets will be $4 in advance&#13;
and $5 at the door. The general&#13;
admission price includes admission&#13;
to the shows.&#13;
Summerfest will run from June&#13;
24 to July 5. Anyone desiring more&#13;
information can call the Summerfest&#13;
information line at 273-&#13;
FEST.&#13;
People&#13;
Power&#13;
helps&#13;
prevent&#13;
birth&#13;
defects&#13;
Support&#13;
March of Dimes THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER&#13;
one club to another without appreciably&#13;
helping any of them.&#13;
Virgin Associates and&#13;
Professional Air Guitar Players&#13;
and Friends may be the only two&#13;
new clubs that will actually get&#13;
funding by SOC next year. They&#13;
are a relatively new phenomena&#13;
and their initial membership may&#13;
be small, but with some serious&#13;
efforts by its founding members&#13;
(such as cold shower get -&#13;
togethers and midnight jam&#13;
sessions), its size may increase bit&#13;
by bit so that they may meet the&#13;
three members requirement that&#13;
is needed of all new clubs.&#13;
With a few bake sales,&#13;
seminars, picnics, and movies on&#13;
how to become a better virgin or a&#13;
more fluent air guitar technician,&#13;
it may well turn these spectator&#13;
sports into participant happenings.&#13;
This may be the beginning&#13;
of s omething big here.&#13;
All in all, it's a worthwhile&#13;
activity to join or start a new club&#13;
of your choice and take that dull&#13;
edge off your collegiate life and&#13;
maybe this will give you a chance&#13;
to meet some new people and do&#13;
new things, however eccentric&#13;
and strange they may seem at&#13;
first. You will grow into it, I'm&#13;
sure. If you can manage to get&#13;
through Accounting I, well you&#13;
can do this, with no problems!&#13;
Burned up&#13;
Final exams are the final straw&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
Finally. It's Parkside's last&#13;
week of school. It may not have&#13;
seemed to take forever, but it has.&#13;
Why are we the only animal life on&#13;
Earth that insists on torturing&#13;
itself? What is our reward for&#13;
laboring through the past&#13;
seventeen weeks? You guessed it&#13;
— exams.&#13;
Exams. Did you ever notice how&#13;
grade - school teachers call them&#13;
tests, and high - school teachers&#13;
call them quizzes? But when you&#13;
hit the Big Time, watch out —&#13;
they're called EXAMINATIONS.&#13;
Worse yet, at this time of the year,&#13;
they're labeled FINAL&#13;
EXAMINATIONS.&#13;
The name alone is enough to&#13;
make anyone suffering from&#13;
terminal overload go off the deep&#13;
end. If a student is floundering in a&#13;
class, next week will serve to&#13;
finish him off. After all, only a&#13;
super - genius can learn sixteen&#13;
chapters of (pick one) history,&#13;
physics, French, quantitative&#13;
biology, chemistry, calculus,&#13;
anatomy, over the weekend. But&#13;
the number of students that will&#13;
try is amazing.&#13;
For those of you who rely on&#13;
help from a Greater Power, (not a&#13;
friend with last year's answers),&#13;
for passing exams, there is hope in&#13;
the form of a prayer. Barring the&#13;
legalities of prayer in public&#13;
schools, it could be helpful to some&#13;
students. Since Ann Landers&#13;
recycles some of her letters, she&#13;
probably won't be concerned with&#13;
the origin of the following:&#13;
Now I lay me down to study,&#13;
I pray the Lord I won't go nutty.&#13;
If I should fail to learn this junk,&#13;
I pray the Lord I will not flunk.&#13;
But if I do, don't shed a tear,&#13;
Just put a rose behind my ear.&#13;
Tell my teachers I did my best,&#13;
Then pile my books upon my&#13;
chest.&#13;
If I should die before I wake,&#13;
That's one less test I'll have to&#13;
take.&#13;
Just think: Two weeks from now&#13;
it will all be over. So let's all hit&#13;
those books, write those papers,&#13;
solve those problems. Let's show&#13;
the teachers what we can do. Let's&#13;
buckle down and study. Let's start&#13;
tonight — ri ght after MASH.&#13;
If You Could See" is an eye-opener&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
"Blindness isn't necessarily a&#13;
handicap" is the message of the&#13;
marvelous new film, "If You&#13;
Could See What I Hear," the true&#13;
story of s inger - songwriter Tom&#13;
Sullivan. Sullivan, wonderfully&#13;
portrayed by Marc Singer,&#13;
became blind as an infant as a&#13;
result of too much oxygen in his&#13;
incubator. Tom never lets his&#13;
blindness get in his way. He golfs,&#13;
sky dives, and at one point even&#13;
drives a car. He hardly considers&#13;
himself blind at all until an incident&#13;
that makes him realize just&#13;
how blind he is.&#13;
In addition to Mr. Singer's&#13;
spirited performance as Tom, the&#13;
supporting cast is very talented.&#13;
R.H. Thompson is outstanding as&#13;
Will Sl y, Tom's best friend. Also&#13;
notable are Shari Belafonte -&#13;
Harper, daughter of fam ed singer&#13;
Harry Belafonte, and Sarah&#13;
Torgov, as the woman in Tom's&#13;
life.&#13;
You may think that a movie&#13;
about a blind man would be very&#13;
Continued On Page Eight&#13;
THE BARBARIAN&#13;
DINO DE LAURENTIIS ,,&#13;
EDWARD R. PRESSMAN .&#13;
ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER JAMES EARL JONES ,&#13;
"CONAN THE BARBARIAN"&#13;
SANDAHL BERGMAN • BEN DAVIDSON • GERRY LOPEZ • MAKO WILLIAM SMITHMAX VON SYDOWi,,,. » MUSIC Bv ASSOCIATE PRODUCER EXKU'ivf P RODUCERS&#13;
JULIUS ...OLIVER STONE B ASIL POLEDOURIS E DWARD SUMMER D. CONSTANTINE CONTE EDWARD R.PI PRDtJUCFO BV DIRECT FLO BV BUZZ FEITSHANS „ RAFFAEELA DE LAURENTIIS JOHN MILIUS 1 READ THE BANTAMlOK] 1 Based on Hie ctoactei created sy ROBERT E. HOWARD&#13;
|Original Soundtrack on MCA Record s and Tapes] RESTRICTED -31c ]&#13;
UkOM PARIiTN Ml 0Q«U AIWOOSL *r CGCUOAWRPOAlANKr iNC j&#13;
STARTS FRIDAY MAY 14TH AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU&#13;
CHECK DAILY NEWSPAPERS FOR LOCATIONS AND SHOWTIMES&#13;
Coming to a theater near you this summer&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
I've had fun editing Feature&#13;
dept. this past year, and I thought&#13;
that, to conclude the year, I'd say&#13;
a few words. A few words. Ha, ha,&#13;
what a brilliant wit. I oughta be in&#13;
pictures. Well, maybe some day.&#13;
But there are some pretty good&#13;
movies coming out this summer&#13;
(hopefully) and so I thought I'd let&#13;
you know about some of them.&#13;
Fantasy and Science Fiction are&#13;
always big in the movies in&#13;
summer, and this summer will be&#13;
no exception. Early on in the&#13;
summer the sequel to the first&#13;
Star Trek movie will be released,&#13;
tentatively titled "The Uncharted&#13;
Continent." Maybe this second&#13;
film will be better than its&#13;
terrible predecessor.&#13;
"Blade Runner," a sci-fi flick&#13;
based on Philip K. Dick's story,&#13;
"Do Androids Dream of Electric&#13;
Sheep?", will also be released.&#13;
Harrison Ford (Han Solo, Indiana&#13;
Jones) will star, and Vangelis&#13;
(Cosmos, Chariots of F ire) will do&#13;
the soundtrack music. This one&#13;
sounds like a winner. Steven&#13;
Spielberg will have two films&#13;
coming out this summer, one&#13;
entitled "Poltergeist" (you can&#13;
guess what that's about) and&#13;
another one called "E.T.," which&#13;
stands for extraterrestrial.&#13;
Roughly speaking, it will be the&#13;
story of a poor little space child&#13;
who comes to earth and gets lost.&#13;
Sounds interesting. Also coming&#13;
this summer will be "Conan the&#13;
Barbarian," based on the books&#13;
by Robert E. Howard, and "The&#13;
Sword and the Sorcerer," another&#13;
fantasy flick. Horror is an extension&#13;
of fantasy, so I will include&#13;
John Carpenter's remake of "The&#13;
Thing" in this category of film.&#13;
Disney will have an entry in this&#13;
category as well. Entitled "Tron,"&#13;
their fantasy film for the summer&#13;
will be a journey through a&#13;
supercomputer. Hmmm.&#13;
Other flicks in the non - fantasy&#13;
genre will include "Annie," based&#13;
of course, on the original&#13;
Broadway play, which was based&#13;
of course, on the original comic&#13;
TOM BAKER is the current&#13;
Dr. Who on local T.V.&#13;
strip. "The Best Little&#13;
Whorehouse in Texas," which is&#13;
also based on a Broadway play,&#13;
which in turn is based on the&#13;
original Playboy article, will be a&#13;
movie this summer and will star&#13;
Burt Reynolds and Dolly Parton.&#13;
Whew! Woody Allen will have a&#13;
new farce out this summer entitled,&#13;
"A Midsummer Night's Sex&#13;
Comedy," and "Grease II" is also&#13;
on its way. As if we needed a&#13;
sequel to that awful flick. All this,&#13;
and much much more is coming&#13;
this summer to your local Bijou.&#13;
Re-Releases and Re-runs&#13;
Some old favorites will be&#13;
coming back this summer, both in&#13;
the jnovies and on TV. Both "Star&#13;
Wars" and "The Empire Strikes&#13;
Back!" will be re-released in&#13;
August, probably running for two&#13;
weeks consecutively. But my&#13;
inside sources tell me that local&#13;
theatre owners may decide to run&#13;
the two as a double feature, good&#13;
news for "Star Wars" fans who&#13;
are short on funds. Also coming&#13;
this summer is "Raiders of the&#13;
Lost Ark," so with this film and&#13;
the aforementioned "Blade&#13;
Runner," Harrison Ford will be&#13;
saturating silver screens over the&#13;
summer. On TV, "Dr. Who" will&#13;
probably continue to be shown on&#13;
Channel Eleven over the summer,&#13;
but no word yet from WTTW&#13;
programming dept. as to what&#13;
episodes will be shown.&#13;
Negotiations are going on this&#13;
week in an effort to acquire some&#13;
old shows, (possibly with Jon&#13;
Pertwee) but until then we will&#13;
probably keep seeing the current&#13;
Tom Baker episodes. The new&#13;
shows from the BBC with the new&#13;
Dr. Who can't be had for at least&#13;
two years. Oh well, Tom Baker is&#13;
fine with me.&#13;
Other Notes&#13;
A great tragedy may soon come&#13;
to be in Milwaukee. WFMR, the&#13;
classic and jazz radio station in&#13;
Beer City is coming under new&#13;
ownership, and may be changing&#13;
its format. If so, the only classic&#13;
and jazz station to come out of the&#13;
FM stereo in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin will be gone, and all&#13;
that will be left is the mundane&#13;
drivel that we hear on most other&#13;
frequencies on the kilohertz and&#13;
megahertz bands. If you want to&#13;
try and stop this, write a letter to&#13;
the station showing your support&#13;
for its current format. The address&#13;
is: 711 West Capitol Drive,&#13;
Milw., WI. Do it as soon as you can&#13;
if you like Copland and Coltrane,&#13;
Debussy and Dorsey, or any&#13;
others in between.&#13;
As I said before, it's been fun.&#13;
The Ranger has been great, and&#13;
Parkside has been great. As the&#13;
immortal Chico Esquela would&#13;
have put it, "Parkside has been&#13;
bery, bery good to me." I hope all&#13;
you fun - loving feature readers&#13;
can get jobs this summer (I hope I&#13;
can) and I'll see you all next fall.&#13;
Until then, may the force be with&#13;
you, and may the timelords unite!&#13;
"If You Could See&#13;
Continued From Page Seven&#13;
serious and over - sentimental.&#13;
However, "If You Could See . . ."&#13;
is quite the opposite. It is a very&#13;
funny, very warm film that shows&#13;
Tom as a normal young man, who&#13;
just happens to be blind. It is not&#13;
above showing him falling over&#13;
park benches and running into&#13;
furniture. You don't take offense&#13;
at these scenes, mainly because&#13;
Tom has as good a laugh over&#13;
them as we do. The screenplay, by&#13;
Eric Till, which is based on&#13;
Sullivan's autobiography, also has&#13;
its serious moments, which are&#13;
very well done and touching. The&#13;
film also has a duet in the soundtrack,&#13;
by Tom and Helen Reddy,&#13;
that should become a hit.&#13;
"If You Could See What I Hear"&#13;
is a magnificent film which shows&#13;
that, at least in Tom's case,&#13;
blindness is not a handicap, but&#13;
merely an inconvenience. His&#13;
story stimulates sympathy, even&#13;
empathy, but never pity. I&#13;
strongly recommend that you see,&#13;
and hear, this film.&#13;
Jobs available overseas&#13;
A trip abroad, dismissed by&#13;
many students as an impossible&#13;
dream, can cost practically&#13;
nothing. Working overseas on a&#13;
temporary basis offers students&#13;
not only the experience of international&#13;
travel, but also a&#13;
superb opportunity to see a&#13;
foreign country as an insider,&#13;
living and working alongside the&#13;
people.&#13;
The Work Abroad Program,&#13;
sponsored by the Council on International&#13;
Educational Exchange,&#13;
the largest student travel&#13;
organization in the U.S., cuts&#13;
through the red tape to help&#13;
thousands of s tudents every year&#13;
realize their travel goals. Now in&#13;
its twelfth year of operation, the&#13;
Council's Work Abroad program,&#13;
the only one of its kind available in&#13;
the U.S., helps U.S. students work&#13;
in Great Britain, Ireland, France&#13;
and New Zealand.&#13;
Students must be at least 18&#13;
years old and able to prove their&#13;
student status. For more information&#13;
and application forms,&#13;
contact CIEE, Dept. PR-WA, 205&#13;
East 42nd Street, New York, NY&#13;
10017, (212) 661-1414, or 312 Sutter&#13;
Street, San Francisco, CA 94108,&#13;
(415) 421-3473.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE UNION &amp; PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
INVITE YOU TO HAVE A SAFE AND HAPPY TIME AT "THE END"&#13;
THIS YEAR FEATURING:&#13;
• 74 LB. BRATS, DOGS AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE&#13;
SANDWICHES THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE EVENT COOKED BY&#13;
FACULTY, STAFF AND ADMINISTRATORS AT ONLY 75* EACH&#13;
• YOUR FAVORITE SOFT DRINKS &amp; BEER&#13;
• FREE COFFEE FOR THE ASKING&#13;
THERE WILL BE FREE LAT E NIGHT BUS TRANSPORTATION ON BOTH NIGHTS FOR RETURN TO&#13;
RACINE &amp; KENOSHA AS AN ADDED SERVICE TO YOU&#13;
PARK SIBf MR.; ;&#13;
(AMPINS&#13;
RENTALS |&#13;
« 2 MAN TENTS&#13;
© 4 AAAN TENTS&#13;
• SLEEPING BAGS I&#13;
• GROUND PADS&#13;
© GAS HEATERS&#13;
• GAS LANTERNS&#13;
• COOK STOVES&#13;
• COOKING KITS&#13;
• ICE CHESTS&#13;
• WATER JUGS&#13;
• CANTEENS&#13;
© VITTLE KITS&#13;
• CAMP SHOVELS&#13;
• BELT AXES&#13;
• HUNTING KNIVES&#13;
© POCKET KNIVES&#13;
• COMPASSES&#13;
• FIRST AID KITS&#13;
• FLASHLIGHTS&#13;
• CAMP STOOLS&#13;
• FISHING RODS&#13;
• FISHING NETS&#13;
• FISH BASKETS&#13;
ADVANCE&#13;
RESERVATIONS&#13;
NECESSARY&#13;
CALL:&#13;
553-2408&#13;
AVAILABLE&#13;
RANGER Thursday, May 13,1982&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
E. F. MADRIGRANO&#13;
1831 - 55th St.&#13;
Kenosha. Wise.&#13;
658-3553&#13;
"Freshmen wait&#13;
for the weekend&#13;
to have a Michelob.&#13;
Seniors know betterf"&#13;
Put a little&#13;
weekend&#13;
in your week.&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Highlights of the baseball season&#13;
by Tammy Shuemate&#13;
The seemingly short - lived&#13;
baseball season has quickly come&#13;
to an end for the Parkside&#13;
Baseball Team.&#13;
Even though the beginning of&#13;
the season was heavy with snow&#13;
and game cancellations, the&#13;
Rangers managed to end the&#13;
season above .500 with a 9-8&#13;
record.&#13;
An up-to-date report of the last&#13;
few weeks includes Parkside&#13;
meeting against six different&#13;
opponents.&#13;
Last Wednesday they played a&#13;
double - header in Madison,&#13;
winning the first one 3-2 and losing&#13;
the second 10-3. The following&#13;
Friday, Parkside's opponent was&#13;
George Williams College.&#13;
Parkside swept the double -&#13;
header, winning the first game 5-2&#13;
and gaming the edge in the second&#13;
game 6-5.&#13;
On Saturday, a double - header&#13;
was played at Lewis University.&#13;
Parkside was defeated in both&#13;
games, with scores of 5-4 in the&#13;
first and 7-3 in the second.&#13;
MQn^a^ri' the Ran§ers took MSOE. The Rangers held oan&#13;
slugfest in this one and were&#13;
victorious with a score of 11-6&#13;
They weren't quite as lucky when&#13;
they met up with Milton College on&#13;
May 7. Milton out - hit them and&#13;
won with a lopsided score of 16-4.&#13;
Parkside hosts 6 team invite&#13;
by Tammy Shuemate&#13;
Last weekend Parkside hosted a&#13;
six - team Invitational Track&#13;
Meet. Besides Parkside, the other&#13;
schools that participated were&#13;
Beloit, University of Illinois -&#13;
Chicago Circle, Marquette,&#13;
Madison and Illinois Benedictine&#13;
College.&#13;
Placing first for Parkside was&#13;
Mark Witherspoon in the 100&#13;
meter dash with a time of 10.07.&#13;
He also won the 200 meter with a&#13;
time of 21.4.&#13;
Lafayette Harris placed second&#13;
in the 110 meter high hurdles with&#13;
a time of 15.4.&#13;
Glenn Schultz came in fifth in&#13;
the 800 meter with a time of 158.5.&#13;
According to Parkside track&#13;
coach Lucian Rosa, "Mark&#13;
Witherspoon will be going to the&#13;
NAIA Nationals and Glenn Schultz&#13;
may also be going,"&#13;
Rosa also stated that if&#13;
Witherspoon qualifies this&#13;
Saturday at Madison, he will go on&#13;
to the NCAA Division II Championships&#13;
to be held in&#13;
Sacramento, California on Mav&#13;
28-29, J&#13;
That concluded the season and the&#13;
Rangers record now stands at 9-8.&#13;
One of the highlights of the year&#13;
for the players is to be named all -&#13;
Conference, and this year Dan&#13;
Sykes, second base; John Hyatt,&#13;
outfield; and Rich Salisbury as&#13;
DH attained that honor. Making&#13;
the Honorable Mention were Dick&#13;
Sykes, outfield; Kevan Bytnar,&#13;
shortstop; Brian Steinhoff, pitcher;&#13;
and Joe Krisik, pitcher.&#13;
Leading the team in hitting this&#13;
year was Dan Sykes with an&#13;
impressive .464 batting average.&#13;
Coming in second was Rich&#13;
Salisbury, who ended up with an&#13;
average of .378. Other top hitters&#13;
were Joe Krisik, who batted .361,&#13;
and John Hyatt with a .348.&#13;
Win - loss records for the pitchers&#13;
are as follows: Jim Anderson,&#13;
1-0; Paul Czarny, 1-0 •&#13;
Scott Hartnell, 2-1; Mark Schmitz',&#13;
2-3 and Brian Steinhoff, 1-5.&#13;
Parkside Coach "Red" Oberbruner&#13;
had a few closing comments:&#13;
"The season didn't pan out&#13;
like I thought it would. Although at&#13;
the start of the season I said if&#13;
we're .500 t his year, we'll have a&#13;
good season."&#13;
One of the most impressive&#13;
things about Parkside this year&#13;
was their pitching staff, as Coach&#13;
Oberbruner stated: "Our pitching&#13;
staff came along so good that I&#13;
thought by the middle of April that&#13;
we'd really be sizzling. Well, we&#13;
got bad weather. I'm talking&#13;
about indoors, we were indoors&#13;
from January on, so when we went&#13;
down to Indiana State that's a&#13;
good criteria of how you're going&#13;
to come out."&#13;
Parkside had a fairly successful&#13;
season this year — what about&#13;
next? First of all, the team is&#13;
losing some key players, seniors&#13;
Kevan Bytnar, shortstop; second&#13;
baseman Dan Sykes; first&#13;
baseman Mike Carey; and leftfielder&#13;
Dick Sykes — t hey will all&#13;
have to be replaced.&#13;
"We've been recruiting," said&#13;
Coach Oberbruner. "We've got&#13;
some players, a couple of pitchers&#13;
Photo by Steve Jansen&#13;
lined up and we've got an outfielder&#13;
and a couple of infielders.&#13;
I'll probably make more contact&#13;
when I go to some of these&#13;
camps."&#13;
Coach Oberbruner has already&#13;
been asked to help with the Pittsburgh&#13;
camp and most likely will&#13;
also attend the Milwaukee&#13;
Brewers camp, where he should&#13;
get a good look at some top&#13;
prospects.&#13;
The new captains have already&#13;
been chosen for next year. They&#13;
are Joe Krisik and Rich Salisbury.&#13;
So with a record of 9-8 and some&#13;
all - Conference players, the&#13;
Parkside Baseball Team should&#13;
feel satisfied with the end of a&#13;
successful season.&#13;
In the 5000 meter, Parkside's&#13;
Dan Stublaski placed fourth&#13;
coming in with a time of 1500.5.&#13;
JP10&#13;
Thursday, May 13,1982 RANGER&#13;
Abadee abadee abadee, that's all folks by Karen Norwood&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Well, yet another year of sports&#13;
is over at Parkside, and what a&#13;
year of changes it has been. When&#13;
I started writing for the paper at&#13;
the beginning of the year, I&#13;
thought for sure I would be fired&#13;
within a week. Well, I wasn't, and&#13;
so now I must write this big wrap -&#13;
up article. Oh well.&#13;
Looking through large piles of&#13;
Rangers that sit in the corner of&#13;
my room, I realized what a year&#13;
this has really been. In sports&#13;
faculty alone, we either gained or&#13;
lost six people. Budget cuts&#13;
claimed Rudy Collum and Barb&#13;
Lawson's positions at Parkside&#13;
(assistant Basketball coach and&#13;
Swim Team coach), and in an&#13;
indirect way the athletic budget&#13;
cuts also claimed head Basketball&#13;
coach Steve Stephens. Stephens&#13;
resigned partly because he did not&#13;
wish to see his basketball&#13;
program hurt after all the time&#13;
and effort that he put into it.&#13;
Really quite understandable.&#13;
Coach Bob Lawson resigned as&#13;
head Track coach to take the job&#13;
of assistant Track coach in the&#13;
Naval Academy at Annapolis,&#13;
MD, and Mike DeWitt was named&#13;
women's Cross Country coach.&#13;
The sixth person on the&#13;
changeover list is Rees Johnson,&#13;
Parkside's new Basketball coach.&#13;
If you want to know more about&#13;
him, check out the accompanying&#13;
interview.&#13;
So much for the faculty. Let's&#13;
get to the teams, the people who&#13;
worked the Parkside athletic&#13;
program.&#13;
The soccer team started out its&#13;
season by losing its opener, but&#13;
finished a great season with a&#13;
great 12-9 record. If they can only&#13;
manage to keep themselves out of&#13;
trouble over the summer (not to&#13;
suggest all members of the team&#13;
could get into trouble), we should&#13;
be looking forward to an even&#13;
better season next year.&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
wound up their season by placing&#13;
third in the WWIAC tournament,&#13;
even though at the beginning of&#13;
their season they were "crushed"&#13;
and "slaughtered" — or so it read&#13;
in my eye - catching headlines.&#13;
The women's tennis team had a&#13;
less than sparkling season, but&#13;
tied at fourth in the WWIAC&#13;
tournament held in Janesville.&#13;
The bowling team hit the&#13;
Ranger's pages for the first time&#13;
on October 22, and one week later&#13;
John Peterson of said team was&#13;
mentioned for his perfect 300&#13;
game.&#13;
STUNNING STYLES&#13;
HAPPEN HERE&#13;
Best&#13;
Haircut&#13;
of Your&#13;
Life&#13;
Or&#13;
Money&#13;
Back&#13;
Remember,&#13;
Ruffolo's&#13;
has the&#13;
summer&#13;
hair&#13;
style&#13;
for&#13;
you.&#13;
3519 52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wl&#13;
654-61 54&#13;
3532 Meachem Rd.&#13;
Racine, Wi&#13;
Iair studio 554-8600&#13;
#REDKEN Salon Prescription Cente&#13;
The cross country people were&#13;
busy this year hosting meet after&#13;
meet, and they even placed in the&#13;
top ten in a few of them!&#13;
The fencing team season was&#13;
middlin' to mediocre, with the&#13;
exception of Mark Spiess and Sam&#13;
Waller of the men's team, who&#13;
made it to Nationals, and Sabine&#13;
Claus of the women's team who&#13;
placed sixth in the Great Lakes&#13;
Tournament.&#13;
Racewalkers got very little&#13;
coverage this year I'm sad to say,&#13;
but not because they didn't&#13;
deserve it. Parkside's&#13;
racewalkers, as far as I'm concerned,&#13;
are the best in the land. (I&#13;
just didn't have the writers.)&#13;
Next we hit the wrestling and&#13;
basketball teams, (not literally,&#13;
however, as they tend to hit back,&#13;
hard!). Wrestling was extremely&#13;
good this year, with Parkside&#13;
hosting the NCAA Division II&#13;
Championships, and with Dan&#13;
Winter getting his sixth and&#13;
seventh, all - Americans.&#13;
The basketball team lost out on&#13;
going to Kansas City by losing to&#13;
Eau Claire. But the women's&#13;
basketball team did quite well,&#13;
considering they had to put up&#13;
with me as their reporter.&#13;
About this time came our infamous&#13;
Stranger edition of the&#13;
paper, and no, I repeat NO! I was&#13;
NOT killed by a printing press&#13;
(although there are a few people,&#13;
I'm sure, in the Athletic Building&#13;
that wish I were!).&#13;
Softball and baseball and men's&#13;
tennis started up just a few weeks&#13;
ago, all have done quite well, with&#13;
the softball and baseball teams&#13;
finishing above .500.&#13;
And now... for the finale finish!&#13;
I would personally like to thank&#13;
everyone who has had to put up&#13;
with me in any way, shape and&#13;
form during this year (including&#13;
Mom, Dad and Ella Toigo) and I&#13;
would like to especially wish luck&#13;
to Rees Johnson and the Parkside&#13;
sports program in general. They&#13;
do a good job with what they have,&#13;
but we all know that it is the&#13;
athletes who make it all possible&#13;
in the end.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
TYPING Professionally done. Reasonable&#13;
rates. Fast service. North Kenosha. Call&#13;
657-6068 anytime.&#13;
TYPING Reasonable rates - Fast service.&#13;
Contact Liz 694-3658.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
'69 PONTIAC CATALINA • Good runner,&#13;
needs work. Best offer. 654-5932.&#13;
GREEN WHIRLPOOL refrigerator, 13 cu. ft.,&#13;
$180. Call Tim at 552-7536.&#13;
G.M.A.T. preparation kit. Includes 3 books&#13;
and 5 tapes, valued at $120, but for only $40.&#13;
Campus Book Exchange.&#13;
MOVING SALE - Dorm — office - sized&#13;
refrigerator, almost new, $70; bedroom set&#13;
- twi n firm mattress, box spring, book case&#13;
headboard, dresser with large mirror, 4&#13;
drawer chest, $150; stereo set - Ke nwood hifi&#13;
receiver, Technics turntable, Akai&#13;
cassette deck, Fisher speaker, $250; oven -&#13;
broiler, GTE, $15; Toastmaster oven -&#13;
broiler, $25; sandwich grill, $3; Singer zig -&#13;
zag sewing machine, $25; port, electric&#13;
heater, $8; night stand, $3; small kitchen&#13;
table, $5; stereo stand and shelf unit, $30;&#13;
metal bookshelf, $5. Plus miscellaneous&#13;
items. Call weekdays 553-2202 or nights 637-&#13;
2812.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
TO THE GREEK GODDESS in astronomy&#13;
(M,W,F) with newly curled hair: been&#13;
dying to meet you. If you're interested,&#13;
meet me in Molinaro Hall on May 20, 9:00.&#13;
TO KATE: tell me tomorrow if you can be&#13;
mine. Joey.&#13;
KEN MEYER: students at UW Parkside live&#13;
in a democracy. Opinions other than yours&#13;
must be recognized and Printedl&#13;
Totalitarian reporting sucks. P.J.&#13;
TO WHOM it may concern, Nick didn't get&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC.&#13;
TEAM SALES — ALL SPORTS •&gt;nooks&#13;
•&#13;
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FOR ALL SPORTS&#13;
TROPHKa AND AWARDS&#13;
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MO*.-Ha. HMO AM . PM.&#13;
SAT. TMO AJS. - F-OO P-M.&#13;
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694-9206 swum n. am* a&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
(1) WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#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;
married to Tinker, or anyone else either. So&#13;
Eat Shot and Die.&#13;
HELP! I need someone to love me. Mary Ann.&#13;
MIKE PFAFFL, double standards went out in&#13;
the 30's. Your conservative.&#13;
MARY ANN: we're sorry you're taken for&#13;
granted. A Senator,&#13;
MARY ANN: we'll see what we can do about&#13;
it. Student Services.&#13;
MIKE &amp; JIM, men are only good for one&#13;
thing.&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY JIM KREUSER, now a&#13;
legal drinker everywhere.&#13;
TIME LORDS of Galifery unite! Dr. Drew-&#13;
Who.&#13;
KATHY SLAMA: I would like to take this&#13;
opportunity to thank you for all that you&#13;
have done for me. I will try to use what you&#13;
have taught me when working with others.&#13;
You will certainly be missed, and thought of&#13;
often. Good luck! Pat.&#13;
MOVING to Tucson, Arizona. Interested in&#13;
Share-driving? Call 553-2202.&#13;
MERLIN, SCHOLAR, AND SIRE Thanks&#13;
for all the super times we've shared this&#13;
semester! You three are the greatest!!!&#13;
(Good luck with your finals!) Love ya,&#13;
Bread.&#13;
WORM - Thanks for brightening up our&#13;
Tuesday afternoons! Guess Who?!?&#13;
MAR a special tribute to the summer of '82!!&#13;
THANKS NORM for all your help and encouragement.&#13;
Ron S.&#13;
THANKS MARY-BETH for being such a&#13;
pretty bride.&#13;
DAVE, Congratulations on your graduation -&#13;
again! Lori.&#13;
FROM US TOO, DAVE. Linda and Ken!&#13;
FACULTY, staff and students, thanks for&#13;
making "Save the Library Day" a&#13;
"smash." M.S.&#13;
THANKS TO ALL those who helped "Save the&#13;
Library Day" become a reality and a&#13;
success - P ro.&#13;
A HUGE, hearty and heartfelt thanks to all&#13;
the wonderful folks on the Ranger staff and&#13;
a special thanks to Patty D„ Greg B„ Doug&#13;
E„ Kathy P., Tammy S., Chip P., Eric W.&#13;
and Steve B. for putting up with my insanity&#13;
and deadlines.&#13;
TO THE WHOLE RANGER STAFF — I have&#13;
never met a group of people who experience&#13;
in learning and growing In such a way that&#13;
we all are better people because of i t. Good&#13;
luck to all - P at.&#13;
WHAT CAN I SAY TO YA'LL? About all I can&#13;
think ot (ya'll should know by now that I'm&#13;
not a writer) is to say Thank you all for this&#13;
semester that I've been back on staff. It's&#13;
been great fun to get to know all of you and I&#13;
wish you all the best of luck next year with&#13;
Pat as your Editor. If you work together&#13;
like you did this year, then it's got to be a&#13;
fantastic paper!! I'll see ya' round! Love&#13;
your ABM, Linda L. Andersen.&#13;
PAT - you get a special one, 'cause I love you&#13;
and know that you'll put out a great Ranger&#13;
next year. Love, Linda.&#13;
TAMMY, YOU TOO. I'm glad that I call you&#13;
friend and know that we'll stick together in&#13;
the future. Take care and I'm there if you&#13;
should ever need me. Actually both Ken and&#13;
I will be there. Love ya, Linda.&#13;
TO MY SWEETIE, ouy evol I and August 20,&#13;
1983 can't get here soon enough! Just&#13;
signed, YOURS.&#13;
TO EVERYBODY who did work for Ranger&#13;
throughout the year: thank you for making&#13;
this year the best year I've ever experienced&#13;
here. Ken.&#13;
Ranger needs&#13;
news, feature&#13;
and sports writers!&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE FINAL EXAAAS &amp; SUMMER&#13;
HOURS&#13;
FINAL EXAAAS SUMMER SCHOOL&#13;
DINING ROOM:&#13;
UNION SQ. GRILL:&#13;
WLLC COFFEE SHOPPE:&#13;
7:30a. m.-2:00 p.m.&#13;
Thru Wed., May 19&#13;
Closed May 20 -&#13;
June 20&#13;
11:00a. m. -7:00 p. m.&#13;
Thru Fri., May 14&#13;
Closed May 15&#13;
Until Sept. 7&#13;
7:30a. m. - 8:00 p. m.&#13;
Thru May 20th&#13;
Fridays Until 2:00 p. m.&#13;
7:30 a. m. - 2:00 p. m.&#13;
May 24 thru June 18&#13;
Reopens Mon., June&#13;
7:30a. m.-6:00p. m&#13;
Thru Fri., Aug. 13&#13;
Closed Aug. 14 -&#13;
Sept. 6&#13;
Closed Until&#13;
Tues., Sept. 7&#13;
Closed Until&#13;
Mon., Aug. 16&#13;
8:00a.m. 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Aug. 16 - Sept. 3&#13;
Thursday, May 13,1982&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Interview with Rees Johnson — a new beginning&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
"I'm very excited about being&#13;
here. I have to say that I'm happy&#13;
and excited but I'm also very sad&#13;
about leaving Augsburg." Those&#13;
were the first words of Parkside's&#13;
new head basketball coach, Rees&#13;
Johnson, at a recent interview. "I&#13;
really enjoyed being at Augsburg,&#13;
we've had good success and some&#13;
really good people. I had a lot of&#13;
good friends at Augsburg and it's&#13;
always tough to leave good&#13;
friends."&#13;
Johnson comes to Parkside&#13;
knowing how to win. During his&#13;
four years at Augsburg he compiled&#13;
an impressive 74-39 record,&#13;
including two trips to the NAIA&#13;
national tournament, the same&#13;
one that Parkside tries for each&#13;
spring. Augsburg is an NCAA&#13;
division III school, which means&#13;
that no athletic scholarships are&#13;
given out. "Next year it costs&#13;
$7,100 t o go to Augsburg, and we&#13;
have no athletic grants whatsoever.&#13;
Parkside is in a different&#13;
situation." Adds Johnson, "They&#13;
have tuition grants and they have&#13;
some other athletic help. In&#13;
essence I can build a basketball&#13;
scholarship for a young man if I&#13;
really want him. There's a heck of&#13;
a difference. I just really feel that&#13;
it was a step up."&#13;
Johnson appears to have little to&#13;
start with when he begins his first&#13;
season next December. Many of&#13;
the players from last season's&#13;
Ranger team have opted to move&#13;
on to bigger schools. "We had a&#13;
meeting for anybody that's interested&#13;
in basketball, any&#13;
returning players. Not very many&#13;
showed up, quite frankly and&#13;
that's their own choice. From&#13;
what I understand, basically&#13;
everybody (returning players) did&#13;
know about it. I have a general&#13;
idea from who I talked to that&#13;
there will be three or four players&#13;
coming back. This is not definite&#13;
but from what I've been led&#13;
to believe the young men are&#13;
(Greg) Carlson, (Ken) Rudzinski,&#13;
(Cornell) Sadler, and (Tom)&#13;
Trotter, and even those aren't&#13;
definite."&#13;
Johnson would like to put&#13;
academics before athletics for his&#13;
players, pointing out that how a&#13;
student does in the classroom&#13;
carries over to how he does on the&#13;
court. "I've had a chance to find&#13;
out academically how some of t he&#13;
players were doing. They weren't&#13;
doing very well. I've also talked to&#13;
many coaches, high school and&#13;
college coaches who know about&#13;
the Parkside program and the&#13;
attitude of some of the players&#13;
was not real quality, as far as&#13;
academics. But I'm sure that&#13;
carries over to basketball." He&#13;
uses that philosophy in his&#13;
recruiting, looking for people with&#13;
character. "I want to recruit&#13;
character kids. I want to recruit&#13;
quality people. When the going&#13;
gets tough, when we need to make&#13;
the big play, talent is good, but&#13;
character is better. I would like to&#13;
be able to find a player that's got&#13;
the character and the talent, but&#13;
I'll take the character first.&#13;
"I strongly believe that&#13;
academics is number one and&#13;
basketball is number two,"&#13;
Johnson continues. "And I have&#13;
some strong reasons for that. If&#13;
you could put yourself into a&#13;
basketball program and play four&#13;
years and spend that much time&#13;
and effort, and fall short, and&#13;
although you played basketball&#13;
for four years, whether you were&#13;
successful or not you should be&#13;
upset not to get a degree. The light&#13;
at the end of t he tunnel has got to&#13;
be that degree first. Otherwise I&#13;
feel that I have used that young&#13;
man. I want him to know that I&#13;
have given him my best, on and&#13;
off the court. I want him to know&#13;
what's expected of him. I expect&#13;
him to do well in the classroom.&#13;
Off the court he represents&#13;
himself, of course, but he also&#13;
represents Parkside, he How to&#13;
do well in&#13;
Economy Class Simple. Fly Capitol Air's Economy Class. Our&#13;
fares are the lowest of any scheduled airline so&#13;
you can use the money you save for lots of&#13;
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sun if you're headed for Miami, San Juan or&#13;
Puerto Plata. Or for even more fun in New York,&#13;
Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago or Boston.&#13;
And, if you are flying to Europe this summei;&#13;
make your reservation and buy your ticket&#13;
now. With our guaranteed fare policy you are&#13;
protected against any fare increases from now&#13;
until departure.&#13;
So if you want to do well in Economy Class,&#13;
fly Capitol's.&#13;
For reservations, call your Travel Agent or&#13;
Capitol at 312-347-0230 in Chicago, 800-572-&#13;
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No one makes Economy Class&#13;
as economical as we do.&#13;
SCHEDULED AIRLINE SERVICE&#13;
y THE LOWEST FARES&#13;
SanFranclao^&#13;
represents his teammates, the&#13;
basketball program, but most&#13;
important to me is that he&#13;
represents me."&#13;
As far as his philosophy on the&#13;
court, like all other coaches he has&#13;
his own style. "I have a style I like&#13;
very much and I really do feel that&#13;
as a coach I have to adjust to the&#13;
talents of my players, what I can&#13;
do to take advantage of their&#13;
skills. My basic style is press and&#13;
REES JOHNSON&#13;
run, with very strong defense. We&#13;
do a lot of matchup, a lot of m an -&#13;
to - man, a lot of stunting out of t he&#13;
matchup." This may be much the&#13;
same style of past Ranger teams,&#13;
whereas past coach Steve&#13;
Stephens has also emphasized&#13;
defense. Johnson adds, "I have&#13;
my own ideas now, and we'll take&#13;
off cm my path."&#13;
Johnson will be running a one&#13;
man show, where in the past&#13;
Parkside has had a full - time&#13;
assistant to aid in the recruiting.&#13;
"I've been through it before. It's&#13;
not as easy and it's not as fun, but&#13;
that's the way it is and I'm willing&#13;
to handle it."&#13;
By working alone Johnson will&#13;
obviously not be able to handle the&#13;
recruiting territory that he would&#13;
like. "I strongly feel that any&#13;
program has to look in its own&#13;
backyard first. Parkside's&#13;
backyard is the Milwaukee,&#13;
Racine and Kenosha area. Also&#13;
you have to look in your own state&#13;
first. After that you have to look&#13;
out of state. I. have ties in the&#13;
Minneapolis - St. Paul area. As a&#13;
matter of fa ct I have three young&#13;
men with me today from the&#13;
Minneapolis area, three all - state&#13;
Minnesota players. I also have&#13;
contacts in the Chicago area, I&#13;
have contacts in the Ohio area and&#13;
I have contacts in the New York&#13;
area. We're looking for young men&#13;
with character and that's the way&#13;
we're going to approach it."&#13;
Johnson has a different approach&#13;
to scheduling than&#13;
Stephens had, but is pretty much&#13;
stuck with next seasons' tough&#13;
schedule. "Down the road five&#13;
years from now, if somebody&#13;
looks back at the 1981-82 record of&#13;
14-15 and they look at the 82-83 and&#13;
see a 20-6 record, they're not going&#13;
to care who they played, they're&#13;
going to look at the record. That's&#13;
kind of A1 McGuire's policy, to&#13;
play a few tough teams and play a&#13;
few patsies and win your twenty.&#13;
It's like a major league pitcher,&#13;
you've got to win your twenty.&#13;
That's my goal too, to win&#13;
twenty."&#13;
Trying to put together a winning&#13;
team at this late a date is going to&#13;
really tough for Johnson. The&#13;
transfers he expects to bring in&#13;
probably won't be eligible until&#13;
the spring semester of 1983 . Even&#13;
then, most of the players will be&#13;
playing together for the first time.&#13;
"I'm very apprehensive about&#13;
this first year. I'm coming in late&#13;
to recruit. There's a lot of p layers&#13;
leaving Parkside. I know that the&#13;
schedule has been set for me. I&#13;
don't have much say in who I play&#13;
or when I play them. I think it's&#13;
going to take 'til about the middle&#13;
of January 'til we're anywhere&#13;
near where we want to be. During&#13;
the second semester we'll be a&#13;
much better team than we will be&#13;
the first semester."&#13;
Johnson knows that he has a&#13;
tough act to follow, but he has a&#13;
history of winning, and should&#13;
keep Parkside in the news as far&#13;
as winning basketball is concerned.&#13;
"I'm going to work as&#13;
hard as I can work, and I'm going&#13;
to give it the best effort that I can&#13;
give it and it'll all work out."&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••• Patronize&#13;
Ranger&#13;
A duertisers&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••&#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!/«% Interest K Your Dally&#13;
Balance Is $500.0Q er Morel&#13;
WE'RE HERE 10 HELP YOU OROW!&#13;
12 Thursday, May 13,1982 RANGER&#13;
e buy all* USED textbooks....&#13;
WHETHER USED HERE OR NOT&#13;
MUST HAVE CURRENT MARKET VALUE&#13;
WHEN:&#13;
Mon., May 17 thru Thurs., May 20&#13;
9 a.m. - 7 p.m.&#13;
and&#13;
Fri., May 21-9 a.m. - 3 p.m.&#13;
WHERE:&#13;
Alcove next to&#13;
Campus Store</text>
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              <text>Student Union - Neibuhr plans ahead</text>
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              <text>D&#13;
tJr University of Wisconsin . Perkside&#13;
Thursday, October 1, 1981 • Vol. 10· 0.4&#13;
Neibuhr plans ahead&#13;
growth) is that we spend a lot of&#13;
time looking at food service"&#13;
Neibuhr said. "Mainly becau~&#13;
food affects all students. We did a&#13;
comparative, random - sample&#13;
survey which we got a good&#13;
response to early on. We learned a&#13;
lot - some of which was not good&#13;
news. But we're doing a much&#13;
better job as a result."&#13;
The survey caused a lot of&#13;
changes 3-1/2 years ago, Neibuhr&#13;
said. Replans to repeat the survey&#13;
at the end of the current semester,&#13;
followed by one on building usage&#13;
and programming in the spring.&#13;
The Rec. Center's business has&#13;
also "picked. up a lot in the last&#13;
two years," Neibuhr said. "That&#13;
has a lot to do with Mike Menzhuber&#13;
(Bee. Center Supervisor)&#13;
coming to campus."&#13;
Today, the Rec. Center and&#13;
Union Square work particularly&#13;
well in terms of day - to - day use,&#13;
Neibuhr said, "but the bazarre&#13;
area has been disappointing,&#13;
because we had envisioned a very&#13;
active area. But the way the architect&#13;
designed tbe stairs, it's&#13;
really out of the way for most&#13;
people. "&#13;
The Sweet Shoppe, Neibuhr&#13;
said, has been particularly. successful&#13;
so far this semester. with&#13;
sales up 50 - 100% daily over last&#13;
year. However. expansion of&#13;
Sweet Shoppe foods could possibly&#13;
compete with the Union's food&#13;
service contract with Heritage&#13;
Foods, Neibuhr said. He noted&#13;
though that it would be possible to&#13;
offer bulk ice cream or fudge -&#13;
making supplies through tbe&#13;
Sweet Shoppe in the future.&#13;
To fund these and other areas&#13;
and activities, the Union depends&#13;
heavily on the revenues collected&#13;
by food services. Its highest&#13;
source of revenue is the Union&#13;
Square, Neibuhr said, with&#13;
Heritage rebates for attended food&#13;
contract events running second.&#13;
Other major food service&#13;
money makers include the Rec.&#13;
Center, the Sweet Shoppe, and&#13;
cash bars for catered events .•&#13;
Revenue from other areas also&#13;
support the Union. Rebates from&#13;
the vending machines in the Union&#13;
building, amusement games,&#13;
facility use fees (building rentals&#13;
primarily from outsiders).&#13;
University fees and monies&#13;
carried over year to year all&#13;
contribute to the Union's&#13;
operations. Monies carried year to&#13;
year, Neibuhr said, are put hack&#13;
into the union to buy equipment,&#13;
sponsor projects, provide services&#13;
and pay for building expansions.&#13;
How does the Union spend the&#13;
money? Tbe highest yearly expenditure,&#13;
according to Neibuhr,&#13;
is the Union's debt service. a 30-&#13;
year mortgage originally funded&#13;
with federal monies. Debt service&#13;
CC6tsthe Union $105,000 per year.&#13;
The second highest expenditures&#13;
for the Union are&#13;
salaries paid to academic area&#13;
and classified workers. Other&#13;
Union expenditures include:&#13;
student help salaries, the cost of&#13;
goods, utilities (which are paid to&#13;
the University), physical plant&#13;
labor for maintenance and repairs&#13;
of the facilities, liability insurance&#13;
as required by the state, building&#13;
equipment reserve (for&#13;
replacement of major structures)&#13;
as required by the state, capital&#13;
equipment purchases (of office&#13;
equipment, kitchen equipment&#13;
and new supplies for projects),&#13;
office operating costs, postal costs&#13;
and taxes.&#13;
All monies, Neibuhr said., "stay&#13;
in the Union to provide more&#13;
services. Even with the Union's&#13;
slow start, we were more successful&#13;
sooner than we had anticipated.&#13;
Today. even thougb we&#13;
can't predict enrollment precisely&#13;
or anticipate the economy, the&#13;
costs of things or interest rates,&#13;
we balance on paper."&#13;
By spring, Neibuhr plans to&#13;
make more changes in the Union.&#13;
For example, he plans to set up an&#13;
outdoor recreation equipment&#13;
check - out area. The idea, he said,&#13;
was originally planned for the&#13;
Sweet Shoppe area, but was unfeasible&#13;
at the time because the&#13;
Union could not afford the&#13;
equipment. Now plans for the&#13;
purchase of new equipment -&#13;
camping, hiking and backpacking&#13;
supplies, along with ski equipment,&#13;
hasketballs, volleyhalls and&#13;
llANO.... .,. 0. _c:w.eaa&#13;
BILL NEIBUHR&#13;
horseshoes for the pad area - will&#13;
increase Union facility use.&#13;
Neibuhr also plans to study the&#13;
Union Square closely. "There are&#13;
dead periods which we need to&#13;
make more attractive by running&#13;
specials, introducing new product&#13;
items," he said. eibuhr admitted&#13;
that the Union will have "dead&#13;
periods" after activity periods&#13;
and in the evenings when there&#13;
aren't many people on campus, no&#13;
matter what is &lt;tfered. But he&#13;
hopes to induce more people to&#13;
"come in earlier and stay later,"&#13;
be said.&#13;
As for the pad, Neibuhr par·&#13;
tially blamed weather problems&#13;
for its lack of use by students this&#13;
fall. In the spring, Neibuhr said,&#13;
"!t'll get heavy use. We will have&#13;
the equipment set to make it&#13;
operate ~Uy, and It'll be&#13;
tolal1y e"c1o.ed by then ..&#13;
'eibuhr also hopes to do llOm&#13;
joint planning with other bran&lt;:&#13;
of Sl1Jdent life this year "The&#13;
student life office is nol the lilly&#13;
way to develop programs for the&#13;
campus," he said. He pointed to&#13;
Phy. Ed, the Health Office and&#13;
the Child Care Center IS other&#13;
units he'd like to see p1anmng&#13;
activities in conjunction wilh&#13;
Student Life. .&#13;
This period should be I&#13;
productive one for the Union,&#13;
Neibuhr said, because of ua real&#13;
positive altitude amlllg the SUff&#13;
Over the past sev-eral years we'&#13;
reorganized, made ~rsonntl&#13;
changes, had a student turnover&#13;
All these changes bnng In dif·&#13;
ferent Idea s."&#13;
UWP • Kenosha bus service cut&#13;
the funding cuts by selectiv Iy&#13;
cutting areas that have been&#13;
unproductive, such IS the talfhour&#13;
service and late runs.&#13;
With the phasmg wt of federal&#13;
subsidies. the department's&#13;
concem IS where to pick up the&#13;
needed addItional fundIDg&#13;
Alternatives include further&#13;
support with local momes or&#13;
havmg the state pick up ~ of&#13;
the bill. Supplemental locI I&#13;
support may be derived from an&#13;
increase in fares and/or some sort&#13;
of tax to help support tra~lt&#13;
operations, according to Jenkins.&#13;
35% reduction in fiscal year 1983,&#13;
a 65% cut the following year. and&#13;
in fiscal 1985 there will be no&#13;
federal support at all.&#13;
Federal monies currently pay&#13;
for 50% of the operating deficit&#13;
with the city of Kenosha picking&#13;
up 20% ri. the deficit. The state&#13;
currently pays 21% of the&#13;
operating costs; that figure will go&#13;
up to 30%beginning the first of the&#13;
year for a 21 month period.&#13;
"Y 00 may be seeing less of&#13;
buses," said dispatcher Dan&#13;
Cesario. "If (there's) no federal&#13;
subsidies, maybe no buses." The&#13;
department is trying to anticipate&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Racine students at Parkside&#13;
haven't seen any major changes&#13;
in daily bus service, but Kenosha&#13;
students have seen many&#13;
reductions in their bus service.&#13;
Kenosha's bus transportation&#13;
department experimented with&#13;
half - hour service for a full year,&#13;
hoping for a dramatic increase in&#13;
ridership. That increase never&#13;
materialized. Ridership increased&#13;
1% but operating costs jumped&#13;
40%, resulting in a $500,000loss.&#13;
The half-hour service and the&#13;
last daily run were discontinued&#13;
as cost - cutting measures. The&#13;
last daily bus leaves Parkside at 5&#13;
p.rn., not 6 p.m. as in the past,&#13;
because the last run now leaves&#13;
downtown Kenosha for the garage&#13;
at 5:40 p.m. The Kenosha and&#13;
Racine evening Jelco buses leave&#13;
Parkside at 9:30 p.m. Monday&#13;
through Thursday.&#13;
Kenosha's bus transportation&#13;
department faces severe funding&#13;
cuts from the federal government&#13;
over the next three years, according&#13;
to Ed Jenkins, director of&#13;
transportation. There will be a&#13;
OC elects vice-chair&#13;
At an emergency meeting of&#13;
de'. Student Organizations&#13;
. il (soc) 00 Sept. 23, SOC&#13;
II" Sarkis Yogourtdjian an-&#13;
. the resignation of vice -&#13;
II" Chuck Neu and a general&#13;
embership hallot vote replaced&#13;
With Jerry Zigner of Bowling&#13;
Physics Ciub.&#13;
SOC is a sub - committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association. It coordinates the&#13;
INSIDE ...&#13;
*&#13;
A letter! A letter!&#13;
*&#13;
"Mommie Dearest"&#13;
JERRY ZIGNER&#13;
planning of student club activities.&#13;
The BRC reviews budgets and&#13;
makes club funding recommendations&#13;
to the SOC general&#13;
membership in the spring.&#13;
*&#13;
Cross country&#13;
hosts championship&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday, October 1, 1981&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
., 1h ma 'oriiy 0/ the editorial&#13;
Ranger editorial. reflect the oplnl,on ~'tt f I ileas to the editor for&#13;
alaI!. ParJtside students may Bubmlt e l or a be considered.&#13;
coruideratlon. Editorial ideas need not be typed to&#13;
f W n two years ago shocked Since the Task Force on the Status 0 orne id f "buried"&#13;
campus officials across the UW system with eVI o:'f ~n a plan to&#13;
sexual harassment inciden.ts, the s~stem bas been ~ d tr::l manner, 2)&#13;
I) deal with complaints fairly andb'lnthe n;;o;l ~:~g:" the behavior of&#13;
educate the system about the p~o em an&#13;
those who vicimize others in this way.. id&#13;
G ne Norwood chair of the University Committee at Parksl e, ;ys&#13;
tha~the Cammitt;""s recommendattons on implementing system p ~~y&#13;
at Parkside are due soon. And he says theydWlfllprob~~% ~7~~f'I'::cls o~&#13;
ChanceUor Guskin that a group compnse 0 mem&#13;
campus individuals be responsible for working WIth tbe problem at&#13;
Parkside. . gl 'nd"d I perhaps Guskin told the Ranger that he prefers a sm e I. IV' ua ,&#13;
two or three persons over a committee. He IS worried about the confidentialityof&#13;
the gro~p and concerned that a committee would not work&#13;
weU in this case. . sl h d if However, two of the three system goals would .be senou. Y .ar,?e I&#13;
the students that Guskin would exclude from active partictpatron 10 the&#13;
group are not allowed to be members.&#13;
In order to educate students about the problem, we need to understand&#13;
direcUy what student concepts of it are, and there IS no better&#13;
way to do that than to interact directly WIththem. Also, to change. the&#13;
hehavior of both tbose who harass women by their words and actions&#13;
and these who are harassed, we need to tell both groups that students do&#13;
not have to remain those acted upon, that students do h~ve the power to&#13;
act in resolving their awn problems. Sexual harassment IS a problem for&#13;
students as it is for any group of women Withlow status.&#13;
Confi~tiality can be protected in other ways, if students are a&#13;
threat: it is important now to involve students 10 an Issue that WIllaffect&#13;
them the rest of their lives.&#13;
Parkside needs a statue&#13;
by Carol Bums&#13;
There's something missing at&#13;
Parkside. Most students will&#13;
probably never realize exacUy&#13;
what it is. Years ago, it would&#13;
have been hard to find a college&#13;
without one. Parkside needs a&#13;
statue. A bust of a former chancellor&#13;
just won't do- it has to be a&#13;
full - blown statue.&#13;
Statues serve many purposes; a&#13;
place to meet friends; a landmark&#13;
for freshmen; a perch for birds;&#13;
something to paint green on St.&#13;
Patrick's Day The&#13;
possibilities are endless.&#13;
Who should be immortalized by&#13;
this statue? Parkside's officials&#13;
must realize that since they are in&#13;
the position to someday have an&#13;
entire building named in their&#13;
honor, they must be eliminated as&#13;
statue candidates. It would also be&#13;
hard to democratically choose one&#13;
member of Parkside's faculty.&#13;
The proposed statue should be a&#13;
memorial to the perpetual&#13;
student. There seems to be a lot of&#13;
them at Parkside. It could be a&#13;
composite of all the students who&#13;
have spent five eX' more years of&#13;
their lives in pursuit of a college&#13;
education.&#13;
Just think of tbe inspirational&#13;
qualities such a statue would have&#13;
for anyone who has never really&#13;
wanted to graduate! Once the&#13;
word got out, it might even attract&#13;
professional students from all&#13;
over the country. Parkside would&#13;
be a haven for students too shy for&#13;
the real world. With the increased&#13;
enrollment due to the statue, no&#13;
one would ha ve to worry about&#13;
budget cuts!&#13;
Yes, Parkside needs a statue.&#13;
SO I'D LIKE YOU TO GET IN TOUCH&#13;
WITH '(OUR SToe K&#13;
BROKE.RS &amp; INVESTORS&#13;
AND TELL THEM THAT&#13;
vou BELl~"E IN OUR&#13;
BIPARTISANRE.COVERY&#13;
pl.AN ANDTHAT yOu&#13;
WAtIT TO sEE STOCK.&#13;
PRICES GO lIB&#13;
Write a&#13;
letter&#13;
to the&#13;
Ranger&#13;
From the Files&#13;
10 years ago -&#13;
"Merger Effects OIl UWP could be&#13;
severe," by WarTen Nedry, Editor&#13;
- in - Chief&#13;
Chancellor Irvin Wyllie thinks&#13;
that the merger of the UWwith the&#13;
WSUsystem "could have a severe&#13;
impact on the operations at&#13;
Parkside. The governor tied the&#13;
merger to the budget and the&#13;
budget is at distinctly lower levels&#13;
than we had anticipated."&#13;
State enrollment funding to&#13;
universities is based on an&#13;
average allotment per student.&#13;
Traditionally, UW funding levels&#13;
have been higher than those of the&#13;
WSU system. Under the merger,&#13;
funding to all institutions will be at&#13;
WSU levels.&#13;
"In addition to lower funding&#13;
levels," Wyllie said, "the budget&#13;
failed to cover the decision items&#13;
in our budget proposals."&#13;
Decision items are those new or&#13;
improved areas that account for&#13;
the growth of a university.&#13;
"These decision items&#13;
amounted to $4.3 million and include&#13;
funding for new majors&#13;
fUnding for staff for tbe library&#13;
learning center and decentralization&#13;
of business services&#13;
made from Madison to the&#13;
Kenosha I Racine area ... In&#13;
effect, what we're being tDld in&#13;
this new budget is we have to fund&#13;
those items out of the average&#13;
instructional costs of the WSU&#13;
system," Wyllie said.&#13;
He characterized the lowered&#13;
funding levels as "a potential&#13;
threat to the quality of tbe UW."&#13;
Some possible effects of the&#13;
merger on Parltside are larger&#13;
classes, elimination &lt;i those less&#13;
attractive and productive&#13;
programs, temporary instructDrs&#13;
eliminated non . fllling of&#13;
vacancies, shorter library&#13;
hours ...&#13;
One advantage of the merger&#13;
system is (that) the rewording of'&#13;
the legislation will open the door&#13;
to creating a graduate degree&#13;
program at Parkside. Previous&#13;
legislation created a 4-year school&#13;
only.&#13;
- from the Parkslde Newscope,&#13;
Sept. 21, 1911, vol. 5, no. 4&#13;
5 years ago-&#13;
"Enrollment down 400: Budget&#13;
to be cut" by Robert Hoffman&#13;
The segregated fees budget will&#13;
be cut by up to $33 100 if&#13;
enrollment figures stay ~t their&#13;
present levels.&#13;
Head count enrollment has&#13;
fallen by 600 if projected figures&#13;
are correct and is 400 less than&#13;
last year's enrollment.&#13;
These cuts will hurt the student&#13;
union the most. Tony Totero&#13;
coordinator of student&#13;
programming, said that possible&#13;
cutbacks could mean reductions&#13;
10 the coffee house, hours of the&#13;
Urnon, or dances and activities.&#13;
Only half of the union's activities&#13;
budget is from segregated&#13;
fees. The other half is raised Irom&#13;
rev~1'!-u.esfrom dances and the&#13;
actIvItIes staged. This means that&#13;
as activities and dances are cut&#13;
back, revenue would fall, leading&#13;
to further cutbacks.&#13;
(Totero said), "It's too bad that&#13;
thi~ had to occur the first year, but&#13;
we 11Just have tD play it by ear&#13;
and see how it goes."&#13;
Othe~ areas that receive seg.&#13;
fees 'WIll not be as drastically&#13;
affected by the cutbacks.&#13;
The athletics,. housing, health&#13;
and transportation departments&#13;
will make up for the deficit by&#13;
drawing on reserve carry - over&#13;
funds.&#13;
Declines (in enrollment) will&#13;
not affect Parkside (academically),&#13;
according to&#13;
Gary. Goetz, director of budget&#13;
planning and analysis. Goetz said&#13;
"There will be no cutbacks of&#13;
classes and absolutely no cutbacks&#13;
of staff."&#13;
- Ranger, Sept. 29, 1976, vol. 5,&#13;
no. 4&#13;
1 year ago-&#13;
"Resolve over - crowded bus&#13;
situation,' by Gary Ledger&#13;
Racine . Parkside bus riders&#13;
!low have two express runs servIng&#13;
them. The huses will transpor~&#13;
riders from downtown&#13;
Hacme tD Parkside non-stop. The&#13;
regular route 9 bus will run as&#13;
usual, picking up students and&#13;
othe~s along the way.&#13;
This solution is the result of&#13;
overcr?w~mg conditions during&#13;
:route 9 s flrsttwo runs ... The alltime&#13;
record occurred Wednesday&#13;
(Sept. 17) when 86 students were&#13;
packed ~n. After relaying this&#13;
mformation to the dispatcher,&#13;
(the dnver) was instructed to pull&#13;
over. Five students were transfered&#13;
Immediately to a bus&#13;
SUpervIsor's car.&#13;
According to bus officials&#13;
average ridership for the first tw~&#13;
rons, before the express service&#13;
was 70 to 80 riders each. The bu~&#13;
has a seating cal"city of 41.&#13;
... the problem is to make sure&#13;
Parkside nders continue to ride&#13;
the bus. If not, the express service&#13;
WIllbe.drop~ dUring the times I&#13;
runs ndership is low.&#13;
- Ranger, Sept. 25 1980 vol ·9&#13;
110.4 " "&#13;
::;;:::;:;:::;::;;:;:::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;::;;;;;:;;:::;;:::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;;;;::::&#13;
To the editor:.&#13;
Gallagher oHers moral&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Congratulations to the Ranger for raising the issue of the B&#13;
UW - P. Naturally, when the Bookstore personnel tell the sto&#13;
moral is likely to be, "It's the fault of the faculty" or "Bla&#13;
publishers." Such morals make no difference to the students&#13;
receive their textbooks late, or not at all, But, as a faculty mem&#13;
a person ill-inclined to blame myself, I'd like to expand this s&#13;
offer a new moral.&#13;
Chapter One&#13;
In a recent semester, two required textbooks which I&#13;
properly and on time never arrived. The publisher told me that they&#13;
never been ordered"&#13;
Chapter Two&#13;
The bookstore told one faculty member shortly before the stsrt&#13;
,recent semester that his properly ordered text was out of print.&#13;
publisher subsequently told the faculty member that the bookw&#13;
deed available.&#13;
Chapter Three&#13;
Another required text properly ordered by faculty was not&#13;
from the publisher, because the Bookstore could not find the pub&#13;
phone number, even though the faculty member had provided&#13;
phone number in writing to the Bookstore.&#13;
Chapter Four&#13;
(DANGER: The moral approaches) While we faculty memberS&#13;
make serious mistakes on text orders (and owe students and B&#13;
apologies for these), we have discovered alarming "standard 0&#13;
procedures" which almost guarantee major problems in the&#13;
Example: the Bookstore tells me that "It is impossible to know&#13;
a book has been ordered." ApparenUy no records are kept. An&#13;
matter what ugly fate befalls your properly ordered book, youwill&#13;
hear from the Bookstore without your own initiative to investigate,&#13;
(Many chapters deleted in the interest of brevity)&#13;
MORAL: If the Bookstore does not want to take responsibili~&#13;
these semi-annual disasters (for which students pay the highest&#13;
let's take the responsibility away from this Bookstore. A univ&#13;
our caliber deserves a real bookstore.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Mary Beth Gallagher&#13;
Beha vioral Science Division&#13;
Editor's -n:ote~-&#13;
, Thank you for your long - awaited letter. Is there a dissent&#13;
assenting voice out there?&#13;
.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.:::::::;::::;::;;::;;;;:::;:;;:;::::;:;;;;;::;;:;;;:;:;;;:;:;:;:;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;::::::::;;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;;:::;;:::;;;:;:;:;::::,&#13;
~hger.&#13;
Edi&#13;
NewS E •&#13;
Feature Edi&#13;
Sports Edl&#13;
Photo E&#13;
Business Ma)lll&#13;
Ad Mana&#13;
Distribution '1:~G&#13;
Ginger Helgeson&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Ka ren Norwood&#13;
Dan McCormack&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Juli Janovicl&#13;
Frank Falduto&#13;
, STAFF&#13;
Greg B~nofiglio, Carol Burns, Doug Edenhauser, Earl.&#13;
Frederick, Pat Hensiak, Jim Kreuser, Jim Mert·&#13;
Charles Perce, Sue Stevens, Dan Werbie, Jeff WickS.&#13;
RANGER is written and dOt . are so&#13;
responsible for its ed"' . e I ed by stUdents Of UW-Parkside and theY .&#13;
Published every Thur~orlal ~licV and content. holid8~&#13;
RANGER is printed b t~Y tu~mgthe acad~mic year except during break~ BndSifl.&#13;
Written permission is ~eqe. n~on Coo~ratlve Publishing Co., Kenosha, WISCon&#13;
All correSPOndence sho ul~e b for reprint of any portion Of RANGER. Dl)9, U&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, WI ~J141 e addresSed to: Parks ide Ranger, WLLC&#13;
Letters to the Editor '11 b . dard&#13;
paper With one. inch ';;,1 ~ accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on sian mild&#13;
elUded for verification. argms. All letters must be signed and a telephoneI'll)&#13;
Nam~ will be Withheld for valid reason&#13;
Deadline for letters is T S. RltN&#13;
reserves .all. ~Itoria~ ~~~ay at 9 a:m. for PUblication on .Thursday. The f&#13;
defamatory cOntent. pt'IVI tge! II;'! refl'Slng to· P!"i.nt "ett&amp;r~ -whic.h c~t.!"-&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October I, 1981 3&#13;
University committee&#13;
discusses issues&#13;
The University Committee met&#13;
t before school opened to&#13;
tscuss three topics: the ParkSide&#13;
udget cuts, the sexual&#13;
arassment policy and the&#13;
roposed title change of Coorinator&#13;
of Community&#13;
cational Programs.&#13;
The committee made the&#13;
Howing statement about&#13;
neeIlor Alan Guskin's budget&#13;
uctions and reallocations:&#13;
"(We are) please to see that the&#13;
aintenance and enhancement of&#13;
demic programs, quality and&#13;
'ze of the faculty, and of key&#13;
pport services is a stated top&#13;
'ority in the Chancellor's plan&#13;
dealing with budget reducOIlS.&#13;
However I we note with&#13;
neern that real and very subantial&#13;
reductions have been&#13;
de in the academic area and&#13;
reductions will have a&#13;
efinite impact on academic&#13;
rams.&#13;
"Obviously, there is a two - step&#13;
ure implicit in the Adinistration's&#13;
plan. First,&#13;
ovision is being made for the&#13;
sibility of further budget&#13;
uctions in the course of the&#13;
seal year. We find this provision&#13;
be both reasonable and prudent.&#13;
cond, major budget&#13;
allocations are being cooplated.&#13;
We trust that the&#13;
ministration will continue to&#13;
ult closely with the University&#13;
mmittee and other appropriate&#13;
ps as it develops its plans for&#13;
dget reallocations."&#13;
The committee also discussed a&#13;
aft prepared by Chairperson&#13;
gene Norwood, based on the&#13;
ork of a committee chaired by&#13;
rot. Ted Finman at UWadison,&#13;
which addresses&#13;
mpus implementation of the&#13;
in!.&#13;
ook&#13;
RED PIN BOWLING&#13;
S3.00 NITE&#13;
Board of Regents - approved&#13;
policy statement on sexual&#13;
harassment.&#13;
Norwood reported that the&#13;
Chancellor suggested that the&#13;
word "rules" be changed to&#13;
"procedures" whenever used to&#13;
. apply to tbe faculty. The Chancellor&#13;
also raised the issue of&#13;
whether the "ombudsman"&#13;
function could be better filled by a&#13;
single person instead of a committee.&#13;
Vice - Chancellor Lorman&#13;
Ratner proposed changing the&#13;
title of the Coordinator of Community&#13;
Educational Programs to&#13;
Associate Dean for Community&#13;
Outreach and Summer session.&#13;
The Committee unanimously&#13;
approved tbe following resolution,&#13;
moved by Willi. m Moy: "The&#13;
Committee objects, once again, to&#13;
the appointment of an Academic&#13;
Dean without an explicit search&#13;
for that position. The Committee&#13;
feels that there would have been&#13;
more applicants for the position&#13;
originally, if tbe title of 'Associate&#13;
Dean' were contemplated." .&#13;
The Parkside Piano Duo of&#13;
Carol Bell and August Wegner will&#13;
present the first program in the&#13;
Kemper Center Fall Concert&#13;
Series at7 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 2&#13;
in the Manor House, 6536 Third&#13;
Ave., Kenosha. The event is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
The program will include Jesu,&#13;
Joy of Man's Desiring by Bach,&#13;
Variations on a Theme by&#13;
Beethoven by Saint - Saens, Billy&#13;
the- Kid by Copland and Three&#13;
American Dances by Gilbert.&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
WEEKLY SPECIALS&#13;
OCT. 5 - OCT. 11&#13;
$.60/game&#13;
EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO TELL US&#13;
ABOUT THE COLLEGIATE SKILLS PROGRAM. BUT&#13;
NEVER 0101&#13;
Dear Students:&#13;
Recently a leiter reminding you of the Collegiate Skills&#13;
requirements at UW-Parkside was mailed to you. Included&#13;
with your leiter was a survey asking your reaction to the&#13;
Collegiate Skills Program. ALL students receiving the&#13;
letter are asked to complete the survey and return It to:&#13;
The Information K"lOsk (WLLC)&#13;
or .&#13;
;r,~ The Office of Educational Program Support&#13;
~"~&#13;
~"&#13;
(WLLC D 197)&#13;
',:',.;..' Surveys must be returned by October 15. .'&#13;
""~ Thank you for your assistance with this project!&#13;
""',;';;&lt; t· C ·It "'" The Collegiate Skills Evalua Ion omml ee&#13;
l'i'~'f! ...__ i......w ........ ~ ,o •• ;r..-.;;.... :,.:~.:~--:..., ,.: __ .&amp;:'_~"'·_R_""&#13;
Les Aspin to speak at conference&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin will be&#13;
the featured speaker at a day-long&#13;
conference on the effects of fiscal&#13;
cuts on health, human services&#13;
and education in Kenosha County&#13;
on Friday, Oct. 9, at Parkside.&#13;
Aspin will present a national&#13;
perspective on the effect of&#13;
federal social program cuts.&#13;
Conference sponsors said the&#13;
program is designed to help&#13;
school, human services and health&#13;
education personnel deal with the&#13;
new block grant method of&#13;
dispensing federal aid in the face&#13;
of budget cutbacks and uncertainties&#13;
about the future of&#13;
many social service programs.&#13;
Speakers in addition to Aspin&#13;
include State Rep. Dismas&#13;
Becker, chairperson of the&#13;
Committee on Health and Human&#13;
Services; Archie A. Buchmiller,&#13;
assistant state superintendent of&#13;
the Department of Public Instruction&#13;
Division for&#13;
Management and Planning;&#13;
Eleanor Fitch, director of the&#13;
Wisconsin Council on Human&#13;
Concerns; Supervisee James O.&#13;
Keegan, chairman of the Kenosha&#13;
County Board Health and Social&#13;
Services Committee; Rep.&#13;
Michael A. Kirby, co-chair &lt;J. the&#13;
assembly Subcommittee on&#13;
Health and Social Services; NeIlie&#13;
Johnson, Slale Department of&#13;
Administration Human Resources&#13;
learn leader; and Prof William&#13;
Murin, director &lt;J. the Master of&#13;
Public Service Administration&#13;
Program at UW·Parkside.&#13;
The conference is sponsored by&#13;
the UW-Parkside Education&#13;
Outreach Office, the UW Exlensioo&#13;
Department of Governmental&#13;
Affairs and Parent&#13;
Education and Childhood Enrichment&#13;
(PEACE) of Kenosha&#13;
Reservations can be made until&#13;
OCt. 5 with Esther Letven al the&#13;
Parkside Educational Outreach&#13;
Ollice. The $8.50 fee includes&#13;
luncheoo.&#13;
MBA Admission Forum scheduled&#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 participate in a&#13;
unique MBA Admission Forum at&#13;
the University of Illinois at&#13;
Chicago Circle, 750South Halsted,&#13;
October 16th and 17th. The&#13;
Chicago Forum is one of five&#13;
regional meetings being sponsored&#13;
by the Graduate&#13;
~IIII11I11I1II11I1I11I1I11I1I1I11I1I11I1I11I1UlllmmnIUIIHllllmlllllllnaallllllllUllIlIlIlIllllIIlIlIIlIllll"&#13;
! I&#13;
IRATHSKELLER I&#13;
§ LOUNGE i&#13;
! I&#13;
5 ~&#13;
~ SUN. 50' Kamokazee ~&#13;
~ ~&#13;
I TUES. 75' Cocldails I&#13;
~ i&#13;
I THURS. Ladies Nite I&#13;
§ Y2 Price Drinks i&#13;
~ i&#13;
~ Variety of Music Every Night For !&#13;
= = § §&#13;
§ Your Listening &amp; Dancing Pleasure I&#13;
All you can bowl THUR. 7 p.rn. 'til 10 p.rn. § !!&#13;
or play pool FRI. 10 p.m. 'till a.m. !!&#13;
MOONLITE BOWLING $.90/game SAT. 8 p.m. 'till a.m. I 3931 45th Street JI&#13;
1::::::::::::::::::::::~~~;;';;:~~~~;-: ~lIIl1mIllHIIIHIIU"lUllllllltunlllnlllllllnlllllllmll"-III1lI_='-&#13;
; ********************************&#13;
~ Parkside Activities Board Presents ~&#13;
~ }}&#13;
g Doc Severinsen ~&#13;
t &amp; Xebron ~&#13;
~ }}&#13;
g Tues., Ode 20th ~&#13;
~ 8 pm - UW-Parkside Phy Ed Building ~&#13;
~ }}&#13;
~ Advance Tickets }}&#13;
~ }}&#13;
{.t $5.00 UW-Parksicle Students }}&#13;
{.t ~ $6.00 Other Students, UW-Parksicle Staff, }}&#13;
*&#13;
~ Alumni, Sr. Otizens ~&#13;
~ $7,00 General Public :t&#13;
~ A Contemporary '&lt;&#13;
~ Tickets $7.00 at the door Entertainment Event ~&#13;
~&#13;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~&#13;
Piano duo to perform Friday&#13;
BeIl, who teaches applied piano&#13;
students, also is the pianist of the&#13;
Oriana Trio. Wegner teaches&#13;
theory and composition and is codirector&#13;
c:J. the New Music at&#13;
Parkside series, devoted to the&#13;
performance of work by contemporary&#13;
composers. His own&#13;
compositions, which include&#13;
several chamber works, a concerto&#13;
for prepared piano and a&#13;
cantata, have been featured in a&#13;
number of concerts devoted to&#13;
new works both in the east and the&#13;
midwest.&#13;
MON. 9 a.m. 'til Noon&#13;
TUE. Noon 'til 6 p.rn ,&#13;
FRI. 3 p.m. 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
Management Admission Council&#13;
to enable prospective MBA&#13;
candidates to have access to&#13;
admissions officers representing&#13;
a wide range of business schools.&#13;
The forum is designed to belp&#13;
men and women decide whether&#13;
securing an MBA degree is Ole&#13;
best career decision for them&#13;
while eliminating a possibly costly&#13;
and time ccesuming search for&#13;
the same information. The MBA&#13;
Admission Forum also is designed&#13;
to provide information about&#13;
managerial careers in the public&#13;
and private sectors, graduate&#13;
programs and admission&#13;
requirements for a wide range d&#13;
~mA programs and to attract&#13;
highly qualified individuals who&#13;
might otherwise not ha ve an&#13;
opportunity to explore the many&#13;
~mA degree options available.&#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&gt; (800) 257-5160.&#13;
4 Thursday. october 1. 1981&#13;
Mobe.plans&#13;
film series&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Mobilization for Survival is&#13;
sponsoring a series of films on&#13;
wednesday, Oct. 7,1981. The fil~&#13;
deal with various topics relating&#13;
to the crganization. .&#13;
9:00 - Moln 116 "A City Fannstead"&#13;
and "Solar Frontiers"&#13;
10:00 - Moln 114 "EJ Salvador:&#13;
Another Viet Nam?"&#13;
11:00 - Moln 112 "Legacy of a&#13;
Dream: Martin Luther King" and&#13;
l~ven Chance!'&#13;
12:00 - Moln 107 "Who Invited&#13;
Us?"&#13;
1:00 - Moln 107 "Babies and&#13;
Banners: The Story of a Women's&#13;
Emergency Brigdade"&#13;
2:00 - Moin 112 "Wild America:&#13;
Who Needs It?" and "Time' for&#13;
Survival"&#13;
3:00 - Moin 112 "Hiroshima -&#13;
Nagasaki 1945" and "Interview&#13;
with My Lai Veterans"&#13;
3:00 - Moin 112 "Hiroshima -&#13;
Nagasaki 1945" and "Interview&#13;
With My Lai Veterans"&#13;
6:30 - Moin lOS "Hunger In,&#13;
America"&#13;
7:30 - Moin 165 "EI Salvador:&#13;
Another Viet Nam?"&#13;
There will also he a bake sale,&#13;
everyone is invited to attend the&#13;
films, •&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selectioo&#13;
Ir (l)lbr&#13;
Pwrrt PlIoppr&#13;
PARlSIDE UNION&#13;
10:111 • - 4:111111&#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&#13;
CUPS&#13;
• STARS&#13;
• YOGURT PEANUTS&#13;
• CAROB MALTED&#13;
MILK BALLS&#13;
• CAROB PEANUTS&#13;
• SUNFLOWER SEEDS&#13;
• CARIBBEAN&#13;
DELICACY&#13;
• CALIFORNIA MIX&#13;
• STUDENT FOOD&#13;
• GIANT CASHEWS&#13;
• NATURAL&#13;
PISTACHIOS&#13;
• SPANISH PEANUTS&#13;
• BLANCHED PEANUTS&#13;
• YOGURT RAISINS&#13;
• YOGURT SESAME&#13;
BRITTLE&#13;
• RED SKIN PEANUTS&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK II ItT. 5&#13;
CALIFORNIA MIX&#13;
40% OFF&#13;
RANGER&#13;
~~~~~Club Events&#13;
Physics&#13;
The Physics Club will meet on&#13;
Monday, october 5 at 1 p.m. m&#13;
Grnq. 230 to dis~uss t~IS&#13;
semester's field trips. Trips&#13;
planned so far include: a late&#13;
October trip to UW-Milwaukee for&#13;
a conference on physics research;&#13;
an early November tour of Fenni&#13;
Laboratory, a national researcb&#13;
lab in Illinois' and an unscheduled&#13;
tour of Yerkes Observatory in&#13;
Williams Bay in conjunction with&#13;
the Racine Astronomical Society.&#13;
Those interested in physics or in&#13;
participating in the club's activities&#13;
are encouraged to attend&#13;
Monday's meeting. The Physics&#13;
Cluh meets the first Monday of&#13;
each month at 1 p.m. in Grnq. 230.&#13;
Additional meetings will be announced.&#13;
History&#13;
The History Club will hold it's&#13;
first annual "Apathy" book sale&#13;
on Wednesday, Oct. 7 from 10a.m.&#13;
to 4 p.m. Books will be sold on the&#13;
Union bridge, with prices ranging&#13;
from ten cents to a few dollars. A&#13;
wide range of topics of interest to&#13;
all will be available. For further&#13;
information, contact Oliver&#13;
Hayward in Moln. 377 (ext. 2697).&#13;
IIHIIE .SIROIHI9~&#13;
BIEIER JLO R&#13;
IPIHIKJLOSOIP&#13;
Women In Business&#13;
Women in Business win pr~nt&#13;
an hour long seminar entItled&#13;
"Planning a Working Wardrobe"&#13;
on Monday, Octoher 5, at Ip.m, in&#13;
Union'104. .&#13;
Mary Brunnelson of Mmnesota&#13;
Fabrics will present the seminar,&#13;
which will provide tips for making&#13;
the most of your wardrobe by&#13;
adding pieces as well as tips on&#13;
making your wardrobe last&#13;
longer. .&#13;
A brief general memhe~shlp&#13;
meeting will preceed the sermnar.&#13;
Coffee and cookies will be served.&#13;
All students are welcome.&#13;
MSU&#13;
Minority Student Union will&#13;
sponsor a dance on Saturday at 7&#13;
p.m. in the Union Square. Disc&#13;
jockey James Barker will be&#13;
fea tured. Admission is $1 for&#13;
MSU members, $2 for non -&#13;
members. MSU membership can&#13;
also he purchased at the door for&#13;
$5.&#13;
Use Ranger&#13;
Contact&#13;
Sheets'&#13;
Adivity period continued&#13;
classes are held. Stud&#13;
faculty may use the tuta&#13;
to schedule meetings free Iirl&#13;
club or &lt;l'ganizationa?d Olilr&#13;
Also, many semina ev&#13;
programs will be s fa a&#13;
during activity periOds.&#13;
This fall courses are&#13;
scheduled at Park~ide aro~nd&#13;
"activity periods, Just like&#13;
last year. Activity periods are&#13;
w-minute periods (M-W-F, I -&#13;
2:50 p.m.) during which no&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thand.y. oct.!&#13;
COURSE "Investing 'Those Dollars After: You've Earned Them" Itarta&#13;
Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312 for more information. Spoo.lored by UW.ltf&#13;
FrIday, Oct Z&#13;
DANCE/CONCERT at 9 p.m. in Union Square featuring "TeU'1led"&#13;
at tbe door is $2.00 for a ParksJ.de student and $2.50 for a lUeet. .&#13;
PAB. Saturday. Oct. 3&#13;
DANCE at 1:30 p.m. In Union Square. AdmlBlioD will be charled at&#13;
Spoosored by Minority Student Union.&#13;
Sunday J Oct •.f,&#13;
. CONCERT at 2 p.m. in MaiD Place featuring the Parkllde Wind E&#13;
mission is $1.00 for the general public and senior citizens will be&#13;
Monday, Oct. 5&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12:15 p.m. in Union 106. Donald Thompson, of lhe&#13;
Unified School Dlstriet, will talk on "The Social Sciences in High SehooI..&#13;
Status and New Directions". The program is free and open to the P1blle.'&#13;
Tuelday, Oct. 8&#13;
COURSE "Searching for Your Ancestors" starts at 7 p.m. in Tallent Han.&#13;
2312 for reservations. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
_ Wedneldly, Oct. 7&#13;
COURSE "Current Population Issues" starts at 1:30 p.m. in MOLN 2211&#13;
2312 for registration. Sponsored by UW·Extension. .&#13;
LECTURE/HYPNOTIST at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema featuring Tom&#13;
Admission at the door Is $2.00 for a Parkside student and $2.50 for the&#13;
public. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Vol 1 No 2&#13;
/0&#13;
O• t ·b db' THE STitOH 8IE .....UY IS n ute y E F MAORIG COM"N'. 0,,"0". M'CH'GAN,""81&#13;
• . RANO 1831 • 55th 5&#13;
I t. Kenosha. Wise. 658.3553&#13;
Strolu- NEWON TAPATUNION SQUARE&#13;
•&#13;
RANGER&#13;
UA1MmieDearest"&#13;
l~ Christina Crawford remembers&#13;
~ by Pal Hensiak. soaping and scrubbing and rinsing Crawford, wanting herself and her&#13;
Crawford; incredible, as if she were a surgeon preparing home to he picture perfect is seen&#13;
a '::'illul, young, famous. That's for surgery. Steam begins to rise scrubbing the floors and inmoot&#13;
people ~memher her. from the sink and she takes the hot specting the work tbat the maid&#13;
wfard's incredible personal water and spashes It upon her has dille. If it isn't dille perfectly&#13;
is shown. in "Mommie face. Without pausing, she takes she wants to know why. •&#13;
rest " 8 movie tlu!t ca ptures ~e alcohol - covered Ice from the Crawford is presented as a&#13;
I ..beautiful young actress dish and hegins to put it on her lunatic at times, as she strives for&#13;
Is with as she acquires fame, f8.ce. The woman then showers, perfection in herself, in her hired&#13;
children and age. help and eventually in her&#13;
aye Dunaway. portrays children, especially in her&#13;
wfard excellently in all of her daughter Christine.&#13;
nt moods. The movie itself Crawford adopts a baby. She&#13;
[)UJlllway'sportrayal are both wants her to he good to herself and&#13;
· it's hard to rememher that learn how to dn for herself. It is&#13;
's' lilly a movie." difficult to leach this to a child&#13;
ra Hollel plays the young when the teacher doesn't know the&#13;
ter. Diana Scarwid plays lesson, and Crawford is at times&#13;
doughier as a young teen and very unsure of herself simply&#13;
t. The resemblance hetween from the pressures rL society.&#13;
two girls is arnazing and the Crawford also adopts a little&#13;
that both of them do IS boy, Christopher. She doesn't&#13;
.... lD8IfIt,able. seem to need to instill in him the&#13;
recurring problem throughout perfectionist qualities she forces&#13;
filDlhowever,is distinguishing on her daughter; the reason for&#13;
time that lapses from one that remains unknown.&#13;
I to another. It is difficult at . Through the entire movie, the&#13;
.. to realize bow old the girls girl always loves her mother and&#13;
and also how old Joan the mother always loves her girl,&#13;
wford is. . although both Crawford and&#13;
The picture npens with the gets dressed and has coffee. She Christina become very bitter&#13;
'01 ci an alarm clock that goes to get her coat, and racks and toward one another at various&#13;
do 4a.m. The body gets up and racks rL shoes can he seen neatly points.&#13;
to the bathroom. As a hand set aside. The woman runs This is a motion picture that&#13;
the faucet on for the sink, downstairs, gets into a chauf- shows struggle, bitterness, unity&#13;
hand is seen pouring feu red limcstne and begins and love. For a change, it's about&#13;
· g alcohol over a large dish autographing pictures - Joan a woman that very few people&#13;
ice The woman then scrubs her Crawford. knew wen, except for her&#13;
· and arms very thoroughly, At many limes during the movie daughter.&#13;
elain sings at Vance's&#13;
'!be program will include March&#13;
. I in F by Beethoven, GeschDdmarsch&#13;
by Hindemith,&#13;
medre by Vaughn Williams,&#13;
de for 13 Winds, op. 7, by&#13;
... and Florentiner March - I I&#13;
lXIeMarciaItaliana by Fucik. psarty m.one Tbe ensemble's other fan I&#13;
y ¥ES' I I I&#13;
will he SUnday, Nov. 8 at I I&#13;
p.m. and Tuesday, Dec. 15 at I&#13;
:30p.m., both in Main Place. I I&#13;
I When you buy an Extra large (I8") or Super size (36") I&#13;
I&#13;
sandwich or sub. 0 . f I I&#13;
P t this week or weekend? Order your favorite in ~ bigger size. on tool I a;;u~d with ~11kinds of stuff to munch-simply get ~n Exlr~ luge or Super&#13;
I Iii.';;;;; Hi;:~rSandwich Shops :&#13;
I&#13;
Two heads ARE better than one' III • HEADWEST 3812RoowveltRo.d 694·1212 15-&#13;
I&#13;
HEADEAST 506· 56th Strul 652·1212&#13;
(ned 10the l.&amp;keThe.I,") I&#13;
I • WI:.KEOI'ENWH[.'\IYQUREHl'CM) I&#13;
I&#13;
. 5un-Thu. 10)(/,om lOll JO.lm&#13;
PR 101 1 TP ~,,5., to lO.m ul J,om I&#13;
I rCOUPON~ _&#13;
-------_ ....&#13;
by Joe Fromm&#13;
Saturday night at Vance's&#13;
in Sturtevant, rising young&#13;
try singer Charly McClain&#13;
armed for two shows. About&#13;
nd &amp;Isemble&#13;
perform&#13;
first 01 three fall concerts&#13;
the Parkside Wind Ensemble&#13;
by Prol. Scott Mather&#13;
be presented at 2 p.m. on&#13;
y, Oct. 4, in Main Place of&#13;
WyDie Library - Learning&#13;
ter. Admission is $1 for the&#13;
I public; free for senior&#13;
Patronize&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Adverlisers&#13;
six hundred people showed up for&#13;
the concert, which was promoted&#13;
by Chuck Edwards of WWEG&#13;
radio and Vance's Bar.&#13;
The Jim Chambers hand opened&#13;
for Charly at 8 p.m. The Charly&#13;
McClain band played for about an&#13;
hour before Charly came out. The&#13;
band included drummer Dr. Don&#13;
Mars, keyboard player Steve&#13;
Ingeson, bass guitarist Steve Hill,&#13;
and country guitarist Joe Erkman.&#13;
McClain sang "Women Get&#13;
Lonely" "You're a Part of Me,"&#13;
and top ten hits like "Sleepin' With&#13;
the Radio On" and "Who's&#13;
Cheatin' Who."&#13;
McClain has been on the road&#13;
for about four years playing one -&#13;
night stands. Her last stop was&#13;
Nashville, Tenn.; their next stop&#13;
will he Tampa, Fla. The band&#13;
originated in Nashville. CHARL Y McCLAIN&#13;
Hungry Head's money saver&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
WEEKLY SPECIALS&#13;
ocr. 5 - ocr. 9&#13;
BACKGAMMON TOURNEY $1.00 Entry Fee MON., OCT. 5, 1-2 p.m.&#13;
I VIDEO GAME TOURNEY $1.00 Entry Fee WED., OCT. 7, 1-2 p.m.&#13;
CHESSTOURNEY $1.00 Entry Fee WED., OCT. 7, 1-2 p.m.&#13;
BILLIARD TOURNEY $2.00 Entry Fee FRI., OCT. 9, 1-2 p.m.&#13;
Thursday, October 1, 1981 5&#13;
Mooradian to speak&#13;
on artist Gorky&#13;
Arshile Gorky, the 20th century&#13;
artist who has been caUed "the&#13;
Armenian - American Van Gogh,"&#13;
will he the topic of two lectures by&#13;
Karlen Mooradian, a widely •&#13;
respected authority on Armenian&#13;
art history and a nephew of&#13;
Gorky, on Monday, Oct •.&#13;
Mooradian will give a free&#13;
public lecture at Parkside at I&#13;
p.m. in the Comm. Arts Building,&#13;
Room 125. At 7:30 p.m., he will&#13;
speak before members of the&#13;
Racine Art Guild at the Wuslum&#13;
Museum, Racine.&#13;
Gnrky's work is the subject 01 a&#13;
massive retrospective show including&#13;
more than 250 paintings&#13;
and drawings which opened last&#13;
May at the Guggenheim 1useum&#13;
in New York. Currently in Dallas,&#13;
the show then moves to Los&#13;
Angeles. Critics view Gorky as the&#13;
bridge between European&#13;
modernism and abstract expressionism&#13;
in America.&#13;
At Parkside, Mooradian's&#13;
lecture will highlight the&#13;
historical and stylistic&#13;
achievements of Gorky througb&#13;
slides and will feature unusual&#13;
insights into the artist's life and&#13;
times. Mocradian is in a unique&#13;
position to evaluate Gorky from&#13;
the perspectives of an art&#13;
historian, a student 01 the artist&#13;
from 1942until 1948and a family&#13;
member.&#13;
During his academic career,&#13;
Mooradian bas been a p1l1leer in&#13;
oral art history techniques. He baa&#13;
completed two books and three&#13;
monograpm on Gorky and OVOS'&#13;
the years he has conducted over&#13;
8,000 pages of mterviews and&#13;
tapes on G&lt;&gt;rItywith OVOS' 1:10&#13;
people associated with the artiat&#13;
His most recent book IS "11M!&#13;
Many Worlds rL Anhile Gorky,"&#13;
published in 19l1l by Gilgam h&#13;
Press, Chicago.&#13;
Mooradian currenLly is a&#13;
professor rL jaumahsm at the&#13;
University of Oklahoma and&#13;
formerly taught at American&#13;
University in Washington, DC,&#13;
and Ball Stale Uoiveraity,&#13;
Muncie,fIX!. He received his Ph D&#13;
degree from orthwestern&#13;
University.&#13;
His Partside appearance is&#13;
sponsored by the Art Discipline&#13;
WHAT MAKES&#13;
THE&#13;
RUNNER&#13;
STUMBLE?&#13;
4 ACADEMY&#13;
AWARDS&#13;
NEXT&#13;
WEEK'S&#13;
MOVIE&#13;
FEATURE&#13;
IS&#13;
8 FILM SERIES&#13;
s~~:7:30 p.rn,&#13;
$1.50 Union Cinema&#13;
LADY&#13;
SINGS&#13;
THE&#13;
BLUES&#13;
$1.50&#13;
Does:&#13;
Park n't (But "')&#13;
WEEK&#13;
6&#13;
Thursday, October 1, 1981 RANGER&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
• •&#13;
ConstitUtlO~.,,~...&#13;
paid advertisement&#13;
of Ih~ University of&#13;
We. the stUdents do hereby organize&#13;
Wisconsin parkS:d~o Wisconsin sretvre&#13;
OUfMlves PUn.Uil~ ks'de Student Govern36&#13;
091.51 an.:' Ihe I er C~t1t1Jtlon Art. 4.' In&#13;
mtfl' Assoclatlt~ :;~'Inthis conslltution and&#13;
the mat'll"ler n e:enllltives to pltrlicipale in&#13;
select our rep' . Ihe manner set&#13;
Inslltulional gOYet'nanc~ ::. powers of this.&#13;
forth bel~. We Inve Parlu,jde Student&#13;
consllhHlon In 'lt1e, Inc All previous&#13;
Gov!rnmenl AsSOC atlon t Association&#13;
P.rlUlde Student Gov.. nm:'nd void upon&#13;
CO,,.lItullons shall be null on on March 5&#13;
ratificalion of Ihis c~~s~:~I~all be the SOIf'&#13;
and 6, 1910 This cons 1 U I Governmefll&#13;
conslilullon ot P",kslde s,~ t body and&#13;
Assoc:la'lon Inc. and Ihe s en&#13;
, I 10 amendments.&#13;
sublKt OIl Yk Id Studrnt Government&#13;
Th~ II:::' I~ ~hall be responsible to.'h!&#13;
=n~s 0; Ihe' Unive-rslly of Wiscon.sln -&#13;
P'T'hk&gt;,ideparkslde Siudent Government&#13;
I h me power 10 en·&#13;
::CI::np~~~ec~hf~e ,~=~g t:~~~e~~&#13;
piIIu",g mollons,.!e$O.,: studenl's rights are ad Ion to INure '"&#13;
Viol: sludenlS seeking po5itions i.n the&#13;
pa~ksi~.sS,~~: 7~~~)rnr;~ns't Afs~~:~t~~i&#13;
Inc Ir~ments of Ihal office in accord~~ce&#13;
~~~ Studenl Lite Eligibility Criteria specified&#13;
in the ~nate Rules&#13;
ARTICLE I&#13;
s.ctlon l. All legislallve powers gran:~&#13;
r.t'ein shall be vesled In !tie Senale of e&#13;
Ps.G~ ~n;'h&lt;e Senate of 'he P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
sh~onsl;' of 11 sluoent members, hall', ?'&#13;
W!'liChwill be elected in the spring and ha In&#13;
ttle lall, wnCl!leterm Shall be for one year.&#13;
Sectlon J. The' Senate of Ihe P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
shall choose their 0WTl officers and also a&#13;
President Pro Ternpore. .&#13;
s.d' &lt;4 In tile absence of Ihe Vice·&#13;
presld':t at PS.GA" Inc. who shall be the&#13;
",denl of the Senale, the Presldenl Pro&#13;
'rernpore shall be tile President of the Senale.&#13;
The President Pro Tempol'"e shall be a&#13;
Senator and shall be a member of ell Senate&#13;
CommlNees.&#13;
When vacancies happen In the repr~sen;&#13;
lallon Irom any al large !leal, tile Preslden&#13;
Pro Tempore Shall 1111 such vec.an~les with&#13;
me concurrence of a simple malOrllv of Ihe&#13;
tn'''e legislalive branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
s.cttOn 5. A simple malorlty ot Ihe tolal&#13;
$erlafe shall constilute a quorum to do&#13;
bu::;s.:n •. Th. Senate of the P,S.G.A" Inc.&#13;
thalllNlv.,he ~r to delermine the rules of&#13;
its procHdings, censure Its members for&#13;
d,sord«ly conduct and, with Ihe concurrence&#13;
of two thirds of ""e I!'lllre Senale, eX~1 a&#13;
,,*,"11« Th. SeNlte shall keep a lournal of&#13;
,ts prOCe.dings, end publish the same mon&#13;
""\'1' .t the mlftlmum, a copy Of the journal&#13;
....a" be .yallatwe kif' reYlew by 1M public: In&#13;
.... PSG A., Inc. oftK:ft&#13;
TM s.Nte 0' til. PSGA., Inc. shall m~1&#13;
al an established place and lime no less ~an&#13;
onCl a week during the '.11 anet spring&#13;
semlSt ..... and no less than once 1!I month&#13;
during Itle SI.Imm~r session&#13;
Upon p4"ftefllation of a petllion by a SImple&#13;
malOrttyof the enlir~ Senate a met!tlng shall&#13;
bec.lled by the VicePrlSidlnt or In the case&#13;
of ~ Vice President's abMnc.th. Presidenl&#13;
Pro Tempor. shill! have the responslbll1ty to&#13;
U111 iI m..,ing within "I hour,&#13;
Sect*' 7 SlIlt 'Ny either originate In the&#13;
s.n._ or be sen! to 1tI. s.nate from the&#13;
bee-utly. brilnch of ttl. PS.G.A., Inc. Every&#13;
bill. oreMr', r'ftOlutlon, or vot. on which the&#13;
concurrence of til. senat. Is necessary shall&#13;
l\ii;y. paMICl the Senate by • ,Impl. malority&#13;
al1d sMll be Pf'lMnted to the President of the&#13;
P S GA" Inc, befOre It taklS effect. If the&#13;
Presj~t don not .~e, h./sh. shall Send&#13;
It ~ck to th. s.n.te for reconsldertlon wIth&#13;
hl'lMr rNSClft$ fOr r'!Ktlon.&#13;
If, aHer Wctl reconslderallm, a sImple&#13;
maJority of 1M Intir. Sanat. shall agrN to&#13;
pen 1M bill, It shall become I..,. But In all&#13;
sud! caNS ttl. votes of san.te shalt be&#13;
~mlMd by a roll ull YOt.j al1d tt1e names&#13;
of p.naftl voting tor _net .,.In,t tt1e bill shan&#13;
be Mter.a In 1M laumal of the Senate. If any&#13;
btll $Nil not be r.tum.a by tM PreskMnt&#13;
Wf"",n tin "hool days aft... It has been&#13;
pr-.nt~ to hlmltler,"'" same shaill becom.&#13;
1_, In ttl. manner a, It IlI/Sh. h~ slgn.a it.&#13;
Allllf'OCHdIngs of ttl. sen.t. of the P.S.G.A..,&#13;
Inc. ll\all be Hnt to "". blCutlv. branc:h fOr&#13;
IncorporatIOn PUr'PClMS. If IN Presldant&#13;
.....on rM leglslanon, hI/itt. lhell Mncl It&#13;
bkJl; to "". sentte. A Noto-Itllrdl \tOf. of the&#13;
antlr. Senate sIMtI be requlr", to oyerrlde ttl.&#13;
....&#13;
s.ctteft •. The SlNte snail h..... "". powe,-&#13;
to make motlm" resolutions, or take legal&#13;
K'l1Oro' Which shall be fllCfSUry .and proper .&#13;
for carrying Into lUCutlon IN foregoing&#13;
ere vested by this powers, and all omer pow Inc&#13;
constitution in the P.;G~:the P.·S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Section •. The seoe to amend fhls con.&#13;
shall have the pow,:r vote of Ihe entire&#13;
stltution by a tWO.~h;d:n amendment being&#13;
Senate. In the even . amendment shall&#13;
passed by the se:l~e't ~~'fhe next election. If&#13;
be placed on the . 0 amendment by a&#13;
the studen.ts .confirm i~h:hall be added to the&#13;
simple maloroty votet&#13;
dents vole against it,&#13;
Constitulion. If th~ IS~ deleted. In ttle event&#13;
the amendment wll f'rm the proposed&#13;
Ihe Senate doe.~ n~e~~t wlll not appear&#13;
amendment, sal a tof an amendment&#13;
on the ballot. The proponen If he or she so&#13;
that is tu••,;;: ~~;r:~~res set up in Ar. chooses,&#13;
ticle V, Section 2. t are up for approval they&#13;
When amend men s October and March&#13;
sha'h lIppear on th~ urgency a special&#13;
ballols. In cases °held at an; time.&#13;
ref@l'"e~um mT·hy~:nate shall have the sale&#13;
SectIon 10. e wer to try&#13;
power of impeac~m~~~ ~7~i~ for thai&#13;
all impeachm~nll'be of oattl or affirmati0'.l'&#13;
purpose they s a of the PSG A., Inc. IS&#13;
w, ,~':.n!','c~~:;11::ice of the' J'udicial court&#13;
,,~ '" rsOfl shall be con·&#13;
shall pr~side't ~hnd ~c~ence of two_thirds&#13;
vicled wlthou e c ment in cases of&#13;
of the entire Senate. Judge end further than&#13;
impeachmenl Sh;.I~en~tn:x~isqualificatlon to&#13;
removal from 0 I off'ce or position that the&#13;
hopS"0"'" enll~:. a~~s i'urisdicllon over, ap,.&#13;
.... , . to Impeachmen&#13;
paintment to,. or el.ectlon th'~dS of the entire&#13;
shall not begll'l until two· t oled to hold&#13;
Senate of the P.S.G.A., .lnc. have v&#13;
an im,?eachment~,~g~les of Order shall&#13;
sect,on th Ro . f all Parkside vern Ihe proceedings 0 •&#13;
ri'udent Gover,"wn:,:t in~::i~:~~o;'ithl~~~ meetrngs excep&#13;
Consfitution of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
ARTICLE II ...&#13;
S ct- 1 All execullve powers, wlthll'l th IS&#13;
art7cl;0=ha'lI be Yestecl in the President .of .'he&#13;
parkside Studei'll Government ASSOCiation,&#13;
In~~ction 2. The President shall hold .office&#13;
during the term of one year together With :~e&#13;
Vice-President who wlll be c~~en for e&#13;
same lerm. They shall be ellgtble for reo&#13;
election and shall not serve more than 2&#13;
consecutive lerms. .&#13;
Before the Presidei'll and Ihe VlcePresident&#13;
elect enters on the ~xecutio~ of the&#13;
office 01 the Presidency or vlc~-preSld~nCy,&#13;
he or she shall take the follOWing oath. .&#13;
"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will&#13;
falthfullv execute the office of President (or&#13;
Vice·President) of the Parkslde. Student&#13;
Governmenl Association Inc. and Will to the&#13;
best of my ability preserve, ~rotect and&#13;
defend Ihe constitution and actions o.f !he&#13;
Park$lde Student Government AssOClat,on&#13;
Inc"&#13;
The President of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Sh~1l&#13;
also be abl. to draw compensation while In&#13;
Office, ttle amount of which shall be det~r.&#13;
mined by a majority vote of the entl~e&#13;
LegIslatIve branch 01 the P.S.G.A., Inc. ThIS&#13;
compensation can be suspended by the Senate&#13;
while the Presidenl is on trial for purpose~ of&#13;
impeachment. if,. however, af!er ,",:"&#13;
peachment proceedings the PreSident tS&#13;
found to be innocent, all benefits will be paid&#13;
to him/her retroactlye from the date of&#13;
SUsPension. Increases In compensation will&#13;
not be awarded to a President while in office&#13;
unless he/she is re-elected to another term of&#13;
office or to hiS/her immedlete successor, at&#13;
which time such benefits would begin to be&#13;
Implemented. All Increases must be approved&#13;
by a malorlty of the entire Senate.&#13;
Upon resignatlon or removal from office or&#13;
InabilllV to discharge pow@l'".anddutlesof the&#13;
Presidency, the Vice·President Shall assume&#13;
the office of President of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
and Shall meet the constitutional&#13;
requirements of the Presidency of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
section 3. The President shall have ttle&#13;
power by and with the advice and consent of&#13;
the malority of the P,S.G.A., Inc. Senate to&#13;
nominate and appoint the treasurer,&#13;
corresponding secrelary and all ottler officers&#13;
of the ellecutive branch of the P.S.G.A.., Inc.&#13;
and all stuDent Iudges With the consent of two.&#13;
thirds of the entIre Senate.&#13;
The President shall haye the power to lineitem&#13;
veto specific portions of Senate bills.&#13;
H'/"'e may l1ne·item yeto ttle P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
budQIt, but shall not line-Item veto the&#13;
segregated Fee BUdget. The President may&#13;
not vito legIslation or any portion of it, passed&#13;
by the senate whIch deals with the Senate&#13;
PrOCedural Rules, Re&lt;o!ulations or Senate&#13;
appointments.&#13;
The President shall have the power to&#13;
require written reports from all standing or&#13;
special commIttees and IndiViduals to whom&#13;
responsibilities haye been delegated wIthin&#13;
1M P.S.G.A., Inc. and Shall be required to&#13;
furnish MINen reports on hlslh@l'" executive&#13;
. latlve branch of the&#13;
activities to th~ le:,SmajOrlty vote of the&#13;
p.S.G.A., Inc..y rttten reports Shall be&#13;
Senate. Any requl~ed w nd shall be received&#13;
requested in writing a esentlltion of such&#13;
within one week ofdh&#13;
: ~nc. member being&#13;
request to the P:S. the·'report.&#13;
required to furnish ve the power, by and&#13;
The Presl~enl sha~~:entof the L.egislative&#13;
with the adVice ang A., Inc. to sign contracts,&#13;
branch of the P.S. : u of the entire Senate&#13;
prOVided that a malorl Y&#13;
concurs. d w up the p.S.G.A.,&#13;
The President shal~ rt&#13;
ato the Legislative&#13;
Inc. bUdget and sen 'Inc. for app·roval.&#13;
branch of t~e P.S~.~l' take care that the&#13;
The p~esldent pas G A Inc. and its by·&#13;
constitution of the .. ted'&#13;
lawS be fai!hfulty :~~~~res'ident and all of.&#13;
The President, I shall be removed&#13;
ficers of. the P.s.Ge~~tio~c~f duty or faHure to&#13;
from offlcef~rt~er onsf1tution of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
takecare.'hat e~ be faithfully executed.&#13;
Inc. and ItS by·la P es'dent of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Section 4. The r I t oinlees to all&#13;
Inc. shall nominate stu~~~eSa':ith a simple&#13;
fac~lt~. Codlfi::e&#13;
c:::;ir;'~ Senate need~ f~r&#13;
malOrity of II blish such vacancies tn approval and sha pu&#13;
the student newspaper. f the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Sedion 5. The tr:~~re:n~ recipts on all&#13;
Inc. sh~1t keep r,', ~ S G A. Inc. monies and expenditures of a ...'.&#13;
shall make such records public.&#13;
ARTICLE III 1 the&#13;
Sed,on 1. All IU~~!~~,:w~:slu~IClary&#13;
PSG A, Inc shall urts that the Senate of&#13;
courp"s'ond~n :~e:;,~~establish The ludges,&#13;
the, . ood behaVior of all courts, shall matn!atn g office&#13;
a~e~~:~a2~t~~ed~~~~~I~:~~¥~e~Fr~11:0~tS~~~~:&#13;
four ~;e~fant~eon~Udlc:al branch of the&#13;
mem A Inc shall be University of&#13;
PSG 1'1 l~ Parkslde stUdents, and must be&#13;
WtS;~r:ed by the Chancellor of the UntverSlty ~f"~'SConStn Parkslde after a two thl':S&#13;
I b the entire Senate of the PSG ,&#13;
~~~r~~apol~tments to the ludiclal branch of&#13;
the PSG A , Inc, shall be for three years&#13;
SectIon 3. In the case of deciding the con&#13;
st,tut,onal,ty of the actions of the PSG :11.&#13;
Inc the deCISions shall be btndlng on t&#13;
rtles II'Ivolved, and shall be forwardE:&lt;f a&#13;
~e deSignated diSCiplinary head of th,"',&#13;
I branch of the Uftlversl y a&#13;
:;;:~~~,~ve Parkslde on to the appropriate&#13;
authorities for implementation.&#13;
ARTICLE I.V&#13;
Section 1. The P.S.G.A., Inc., sublect to the&#13;
responsibilities and powers of the Boa.rd of&#13;
Regenls, the President of the Unlverslfy of&#13;
Wisconsin system, the Chanc~l1or of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin . parksld~, and. the&#13;
faculty of the University of WISC~SIn&#13;
Parkside shall be active participants In !he&#13;
immediate governance .of and pOlICy&#13;
development for such InStlfut.lons. As wch,&#13;
the P.S.G.A. shall have primary r.espon.&#13;
sibliity for the fOrmulation. and r~vlew of&#13;
policies concerning student life, serVICes, and&#13;
interests. As such, the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be&#13;
the sale representative student group of .'he&#13;
students of Ihe University of Wisco:nSln. _&#13;
Parkside allowed to participate In In·&#13;
stitutlonal governance.&#13;
SUB-ARTlCL.E I&#13;
Sedion I. The P.S.G.A., Inc., in con·&#13;
sultatlon with the Chancellor of the Univer.&#13;
sityof Wisconsin. ParkSlde and subject to the&#13;
final confirmatIon of the Board of Regents&#13;
shall have the responsibility 'for the&#13;
disposition of those student fees which constitute&#13;
substantial support for campus&#13;
student activities.&#13;
Section 2. An Allocation Committee-shall be&#13;
established as a sUbcommlNee of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate. The committee shall&#13;
review requests for program support and&#13;
budget allocations of the allocable portion of&#13;
the segregated University fee. All aellon of&#13;
said committee shall be subject to the final&#13;
approve I of the P.S.G.A., Inc. In conJunction&#13;
with the Chancellor of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin. Parkslde.&#13;
A. MEMBERSHIP. The Allocations&#13;
CommitteeShall consist Of 8 voflng members,&#13;
6 of Whom shall be P.S.G.A., Inc. Senators.&#13;
The remainIng 2 shall be chosen by the&#13;
stUdent body of the UnlY8t'sity of Wisconsin _&#13;
Parkside, one elected in the spring, one&#13;
elected in the fall. Three P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Senators shall be chosen In the Spring and&#13;
three Shall be chosen in the fall by blind&#13;
draWing of interested P.S.G.A., Inc. Senators.&#13;
The drawing shall be conducted by the&#13;
Judicial Branch of the P.S.G.A.., Inc. The&#13;
term of office shall be one year. The commIttee&#13;
shall elect its own chairperson after&#13;
each spring election. In additIon, the&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for EducatIonal ser.&#13;
vIces, ASSIStant Chancellor for Admlftlstratlon&#13;
and F~~~I s~ff~I,~~' t~~ cot~e&#13;
Campus Controller meers Should a&#13;
mtttee as non-vo:~ng A~~atlons Committee&#13;
vacancy occur on ~res shall be used&#13;
the follOWing p~oc~ Pro Tempore of the&#13;
1 The presld~ In consultlltlon With the&#13;
PSG A .Inc sene e. Will fill any unocChancellor&#13;
or destgn~~ th the confIrmatIon&#13;
CUpied Senatorial sea I te&#13;
of the PSG A ,Inc Sf~: PSG A, Inc, In&#13;
2 The President ofChancellor or ceeranee.&#13;
consultation With the t large seat on the&#13;
shall appotnt to any a The PSG A, Inc&#13;
AllocatIons committeeect fa approve the&#13;
Senate does not ne&#13;
President's appo~n~~e~pon the call of the&#13;
B PROCEDU . dent of the PSG A ,&#13;
Chancellor and t~t~:r~~11 annually prepare&#13;
Inc the Comml the disbursal of the&#13;
recommendatIons on F e Should the&#13;
Segregated Uniyersitrhe r:Commendat,on,&#13;
PSG A ,Inc co~cr~nA Inc shatl so advise&#13;
the PresIdent of Chairperson of the&#13;
the Chancellor ant~ e Should the Chan&#13;
Allocations Comml ep&#13;
S G A Inc recom&#13;
cellor concur I~ thehall arran~e for Its ,m&#13;
mendation, he/ e Sid the Chancellor not&#13;
plementat,on ShOsU,ons under negotlaflons&#13;
concur, the pr~v~ nate may noframend the&#13;
shall be used Z em~ttee recommendation&#13;
AllocatIOns om CommIttees' recornRelect,on&#13;
of the 213 vote of the entire&#13;
~~~d,:tl~;t~:~~S:Of r.ejectlC:;1 b~e~~~:~:t~~&#13;
the reasons for relec"ol1 sh •• tho&#13;
ded t the Cha irperson&#13;
and forwar 0 ttee The Allocations&#13;
Allocations Comml nS'der ItS recomComml!tee&#13;
shalll::::'~~a:d It to the Senate&#13;
m~nd~~:'OaT'1A~~NS. The PreSident of the&#13;
PSG A, Inc, the Chairperson of S U ~ At;e&#13;
nd the PreSident Pro Tempore&#13;
~ S G A , Inc Senate or their designees ~:~&#13;
must be members of the P S.G A , Inc)&#13;
be e resentatlves ofthe PSG A ,Inc In any&#13;
co:s~tatlon With the chancellp.'s ci :,s~~~r&#13;
d e In dealing With the ,&#13;
A'IT'~~~flons CommIttee If the Pres,denf Pro&#13;
of the PSG A, Inc Senate!s a&#13;
Tempore f S U F A C then the Senator with&#13;
~:~~~~ ~enlonty of the PSG A ,Inc Senate&#13;
will assume the dutIes of the Pro Tempore In&#13;
negotiations with the Chancellor. "&#13;
If the P.S.G.A., Inc. and the Cha~ce or&#13;
cannot reconcile their differences. In th~&#13;
allocation of the allocable p~tlon ~&#13;
Segregated University Fees, each will submit&#13;
a set of recommendations to the Board of&#13;
Rents for final dISposition. .&#13;
~. DUTIES. The Allocatio~~ C?mmlt!ee&#13;
shall have primary responslbill.'Y In setting&#13;
the allocable portion of the aUXiliary b~dget&#13;
and to insure proper monetary ellPe~dltures&#13;
in total and within budgetary categories. The&#13;
Allocalions Committee shall moo! year round&#13;
to review the allocable portion of the&#13;
Segregated Fees Budget according to the&#13;
procedures set up in the Senate Rules.&#13;
SUB ARTICL.E II -&#13;
Section 1 A standing senate Committee,&#13;
the Student OrganIzation Council,. shall be&#13;
established consisting of the Presidents (or&#13;
their designees) of all student organizations&#13;
who choose to partIcipate. .&#13;
Section 2. No student shall be ~en~ed&#13;
membership to anyon-campus orgamzatlon&#13;
for reasons of race, color, religious creed,&#13;
national origin, sex, past criminal record,&#13;
political belief, political action, or sexual&#13;
preference.&#13;
Section J. Students sQall be fre.e to&#13;
assemble, to demonstrate, to commUnicate,&#13;
and to protest indivldualiV or through a&#13;
student organization so long as no federal,&#13;
state, or municipal law is violated.&#13;
.Sedion 4. StUdents shal1 be free to use&#13;
campus facilities for meetings of stUdent&#13;
organizations, subject to uniform regul~t.lons&#13;
to time and manner governing the faCIlity.&#13;
Section S. Students Shall have the right to&#13;
invite and hear speakers of their choice and&#13;
approvalshall not bewitheld bV the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. or university authorities for purposes of&#13;
censorship.&#13;
Section 6. Affiliation with an extramural&#13;
organization shall not in itself disqualify a&#13;
stUdent organization from stUdent govern.&#13;
ment recognition or institutional recognition.&#13;
Sedlon 7. The stUdent press shall be free of&#13;
censorship and advance approval of copy,&#13;
and Its editors shall be free to develop their&#13;
own editorial policies and news coverage.&#13;
Section I. The student press shall be ac.&#13;
corded all those rights as stated In the United&#13;
States Constitution.&#13;
Sedion •. Sfudents shall have the right to&#13;
distribute or sell information of a printed&#13;
nature that does nof conflict with University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkslde binding contracts.&#13;
ARTICLE V&#13;
Section 1. Fall elections for the P.S.G.A."&#13;
Inc. shall be held the third week of Oelober.&#13;
At that time, one half of the representatlYe5&#13;
•from the legislative branch as well as one at _&#13;
large S U F A C seat shall be etecttl;l&#13;
electrons for the PSG A , Inc Shall&#13;
dur Ing the eighth week Of the&#13;
semester At that time the Presllltnt&#13;
PreSident, remaining legiSlative sea"&#13;
large S.U.F.A.C. seat ancl f1~t'&#13;
Operating Board seers shall be et&#13;
sectten 1. The students, uPOnrtqu&#13;
petf tfon With 10 percent Of the Signa&#13;
the entire student body, shall have lilt&#13;
request a constrtunonet referendl,lm!o&#13;
this ccnstttuttcn. or to request an&#13;
referendum The petition shall be&#13;
to both the President and the Vice.&#13;
aOO ttle President Pro Tempore Of p&#13;
Inc. ,&#13;
Section J.&#13;
1) For recall against a Senator or&#13;
p.S.G.A., Inc., any University of&#13;
Parkslde student may start the petl&#13;
any Universlfy of Wiscon$ln . p&#13;
student ma,y sign it. Fifteen perCtnt&#13;
Parkside student body must sign the&#13;
2) The recall petition must&#13;
statement of the reason(s) for remov&#13;
office. This must deal with .actions&#13;
in t.he present term of offIce.&#13;
3) The student(s} shall.p~esentthe&#13;
10 the Senate. Upon receiving verI!&#13;
the petition, Ihe Senate must im&#13;
notify the school paper that a r&#13;
progress and a special election&#13;
place. There must be an election w&#13;
school days after notification of Iht&#13;
petition is received by the Senate.&#13;
4) Upon recelvin!!: the recall. Petit&#13;
Senate must immediately turn It OVIl\'&#13;
election committee. The election&#13;
shall have five days to verifythenames&#13;
petition. 11'1 the event that there is no&#13;
committee, the Senate must a&#13;
Within live days.&#13;
If illegal names are found on the&#13;
and the number of legal names drop&#13;
than 15%, the election commIttee must&#13;
the student{s) who presented the&#13;
Upon notification, the stud~nls&#13;
school days to get the r~Ulred n&#13;
names. If they fail to do so, their&#13;
petition shall be declared null. At th&amp;&#13;
of the studenf(s) who presented the&#13;
the election committee must shOW&#13;
names are illegal.&#13;
No legal name can be removed&#13;
petition after filing. Once the petl&#13;
presented to the Senate, it cannot&#13;
drawn. A person can be recall~onIY.&#13;
offense during his/her term In 0ff,e&#13;
person who is cited in the recall petl&#13;
have his/her name placed ~n the&#13;
automatically unless he/she r';S,gns.5&#13;
who wish to run for the position $hl!I1I&#13;
normal election procedure.&#13;
S) If a Senator or Office.r resigns&#13;
reappointed to a position Wlttlin Ihe&#13;
office he/she last held, it shall be e&#13;
only a continuation of his term.&#13;
ARTICLE VI .&#13;
Section 1. An applicant shall not be&#13;
admission to the University of W&#13;
Parkside for reasons of race, ~IOf, :&#13;
origin, relig ious creed, sex, p~evlous&#13;
record, political beliefs, political ae&#13;
sexulll preference,. . h It not be&#13;
Section 2. Financial aid s a fonal&#13;
for reasons of race, color, n.a's eri&#13;
religious creed, sex, prevl.ou&#13;
record, political beliefs, politICal&#13;
sexual preference. t&#13;
Section 3. StUdents are free. 0&#13;
caption to the data presented or VI&#13;
in any course of study and may&#13;
alternative opinions to those presen&#13;
the classroom. ." "y&#13;
Section 4 All Student O,sclp 1'1&#13;
will be pr~essed through the ug&#13;
Wisconsin . Parkside Student I&#13;
Procedures Chapter UWS 17.&#13;
Section S. Students shall be eva~bl&#13;
on their knowledge of the .s&#13;
academic performan.ce ~nd tl:nd&#13;
responsible to maintain s heel&#13;
academic performance est~bl1s&#13;
course they have enrolled 10. tsPO!&#13;
Section 6. Disclosure of stu~en "",I&#13;
personal beliefs in connect:&#13;
c&#13;
w&#13;
work shall not be made Pu t&#13;
press permIssion of the studen .&#13;
Section 7. Stud~nt. r~cord~c~&#13;
performance al)d d,sclpllnary&#13;
sepa rate. aU&#13;
Section 8. Information from c de&#13;
disciplinary files shall not be m.~out&#13;
to persons on or off campus ""'v'olV&#13;
press consent of the student In&#13;
under legal compulsion. . 01&#13;
Section'. All records and.'nf tofft&amp;&#13;
on fileshall be readily acces,ble&#13;
to whom they pertain. e It1II&#13;
Section 10. Students shall h:'&#13;
inll5 be present at all committee m&#13;
affecting the stUdents. rig&#13;
Section 11. The constitutional 511&#13;
student, as stafed in ltIe ~nlt~yUIft&#13;
stitution, Shall not be denl~ r:Slde,&#13;
University of Wisconsin· a&#13;
FALL SENATORIAL&#13;
ELECTIONS&#13;
OCT. 14 &amp; 15&#13;
Petitions Available in P .S.G.A. Office&#13;
, .,~...... ,.. ~,&#13;
olleybcJlI&#13;
~Women's team splits pair&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser __ '"&#13;
h Parks ide women's&#13;
ebaH loom continued on its&#13;
&lt;Ynt treed, winning ooe and&#13;
'08 one as they defeated North&#13;
Coll;,geand lost to Carroll&#13;
ege in a home meet Monday&#13;
~~lDg the first ,game of&#13;
'de's match against North&#13;
k the women played exr&#13;
ely well as they decemated&#13;
~pnnents IS-I. After that, as&#13;
cb Linda Henderson put It,&#13;
ey didn't mentally conII'8te."North&#13;
Park came back&#13;
take the second game of the&#13;
IA:h before the Rangers won the&#13;
gameby a close 15-13 score. In&#13;
t last game the Rangers were&#13;
. g 9-3, l&gt;It North Park tied&#13;
1C(I'e at orne.&#13;
rroU CoUege, a much imteam&#13;
over a year ago, heat&#13;
Pari&lt; 15-11 and 15-10 with&#13;
net play and overall team&#13;
·urn.&#13;
.de put on their own&#13;
y of team playas they&#13;
elted Carroll in the first game&#13;
IIlatmatch, 15-7. Carroll came&#13;
with enthusiasm in the&#13;
d and third games to heat.&#13;
'de liHl and 15-13.&#13;
'In the lirst games of both&#13;
Idles they (Parkside) played&#13;
y weD, then they just lost&#13;
. eeneentration," said Hen-&#13;
. ''They can't hold their&#13;
cl play against weaker&#13;
s,"&#13;
'Sherry Festge played exUy.Shehit&#13;
well, set well and&#13;
," sa id Henderson. "Kim&#13;
Tesher also played well. She's&#13;
always played well defensively,&#13;
but last night (Monday) she was&#13;
more aggressive at the net."&#13;
Parkside will lake its' 5-5 record&#13;
to the Michigan Slate Invitational&#13;
this weekend for some tough&#13;
games. A new member to the&#13;
team, Bonnie Schmelter from&#13;
Ashwaubenon, will make the trip,&#13;
giving the team a little more&#13;
depth.&#13;
RANGER pho!O by 0." McCorm_dl&#13;
I Sport shorts I&#13;
The men's and women's track&#13;
teams are practicing every day at&#13;
3: 15. All interested students&#13;
should contact Coach Lawson.&#13;
• • •&#13;
Tom Coursiere - 9 correct&#13;
.picks, 25 combined points.&#13;
The Swim Club is forming now&#13;
for students interested in competitive&#13;
swimming, water polo,&#13;
diving, etc. Practice is Monday -&#13;
Thursday, from 3:30 to 5:30 in the&#13;
pool.&#13;
:.:.:.;.:.:.:.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::.:::.:.:.:.:.:.&#13;
..:.:-:.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;::.:.:::::::.:.;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::&#13;
NOW&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 1, 1981 7&#13;
Sports Calendar ,&#13;
Friday, O&lt;:t. z: eross.&lt;:ountry VS. otre Dame invItational, (2 p.m ).&#13;
Golf vs. UW - Parkside InvitatiooaJ, (8:30 a. m.): Soccer . UW&#13;
Chancellors Cup Tournament (I p. m)&#13;
Saturday, 0&lt;:1.3:Soecer v... UW Chancellors Cup Tournament (3p. m ),&#13;
Volleyball vs. Michigan State Invitational; Cross-country at&#13;
Northern Illinois Invilational.&#13;
Wednesday, 0&lt;:1.7, Soccer vs. Lawrence University (4 p. m ). T nob&#13;
vs. College cl SI. Francis (5 p. m.)&#13;
50% OFF&#13;
FOR STUDENTS ONLY&#13;
3 mos. membership&#13;
or&#13;
6 mos. membership&#13;
·VIC TANNY HEALTH CLUB&#13;
(STUDENT MUST PRESENT 10 CARD)&#13;
CALL NOW 552-9513&#13;
OFFER EXPIRESOCT. 16, 1981&#13;
OFFERVALID ONLY AT&#13;
VIC TANNY HEALTH CLUB&#13;
HY. 32 &amp; K.R.&#13;
•&#13;
8&#13;
. Thursday. October 1. 1981 RANGER&#13;
Golfers place 3rd and 5th&#13;
b Cbarles Perce finish. Number 1 player Todd Saturday. UW:Oshkosh ca&#13;
~d d S turday the SChelienske was plagued With first place with a total Pilt&#13;
Last Fn ay an a , . hl ba k t k hil U 01 Parkside Ranger golf team severe muscle s~sms 10 IS C. S ro E!S' w e W-Steve~&#13;
com ted in the Green Bay In- On Saturd~y, ram pelted down aU the wmner of the tournalll&#13;
vitalfonal. The 36 hole tournament day, causmg the 11es on t~e previous weekend, claill1ed&#13;
was played at Brown County for fairway to .be very difficult to hit. Arch - rival UW-Milwaukee&#13;
the first 18 holes and at North- Accomp~mng the heavy ram were ninth with 886.&#13;
brook for tlie next 18. Seven 35-45 mile per hour wmds .. To Chris S~lft of Marqueltt&#13;
tams participated' Parks ide illustrate how strong the wmds the medalist shooting a&#13;
~aced third with a ~core of 801. were, a very tall, double oak tree 157.Bob Sobol shot 163with&#13;
p UW-Stevens Point took first with a diameter of ab&lt;)ut 3 feet of 84-79, Mark Peterson&#13;
with a score of 775 while rival was feUed by the wmd. For- (86-81), John Schneider&#13;
competitorUW-Milw~ukee placed tnnately, no one was injured. (88-85), injured Todd Sc&#13;
fifth with a score of 853. UW-Green On Sunday and Monday, Sep- had a 174 (92-82), and G&#13;
Bay hosted tbe tournament but did tember 26 and 27, Parkside placed rounded off the field shoo'&#13;
not have a final score because fifth out of .ten teams at the (96-82).&#13;
they didn't have a full team due to Mascutin CoUegiate Invitational Parkside's next match'&#13;
injuries. at Berlin, Wisconsin. The 36-hole - UW-Parkside Invitation:&#13;
Karl Smith of UW-LaCros~e, total for Parkside was. 855, 54 Friday, September I&#13;
was the medalistfor the meet WIth more strokes than on Friday and Brightendale G.C.&#13;
a score &lt;i 78-71 for 149. Parkside&#13;
scores were: Todd Schelienske,&#13;
82-72, 154; Bob Sobol, 76-78', 154;&#13;
Gary Fox, 87-77, 159; Mark&#13;
Peterson, 87-80, 167; John&#13;
Schneider, 93-74, 167.&#13;
"There were many factors&#13;
contributing to the third place&#13;
,&#13;
RANGER pMto by Dan McCormack •&#13;
0055 country&#13;
Rangers host championship&#13;
by Patty De LuIsa&#13;
The Parksidecnlll8 country trail&#13;
blazed this past Saturday as the&#13;
Rangers hooted the TFAIUSA Mid&#13;
_ American CoUegiate Cross&#13;
Country Championships.&#13;
Forty-six men's and women's&#13;
teams competed for midwest&#13;
titles. Gordm Sanders of Hillsdale&#13;
won the men's 8,000 meter race&#13;
with an excellent time &lt;i 26:03.&#13;
The team crown was taken by&#13;
Saginaw VaUey (Michigan),&#13;
paced by foorth place runner&#13;
Duane Johnsm. His time was&#13;
26:21.&#13;
The Parkside men also did quite&#13;
well. Sophomore Dan Stublaski&#13;
was the rmt Ranger to cross the&#13;
fIDisb l1ne, with a time of 27:57 for&#13;
75th place. Rqbert Mayfield, a&#13;
freahman. captured 97th place&#13;
with a clocking of 28:27.&#13;
Sophomore Tom Barrett placed&#13;
103rdwith a time of28:39. The two&#13;
remaining sophomores, Steve&#13;
8nlnner and AI Correa, ran&#13;
cIooely together for 1071h and&#13;
IlIIth places, respectively and&#13;
Junior Rich SOWU.. ran 142nd.&#13;
Also running for Parkside were&#13;
frelltunen Austin Book .. and John&#13;
Cogan. As a team, the Rangers&#13;
took 16th place.&#13;
The women's 5,000 meter event&#13;
was just as exciting. Junior&#13;
Debbie Spino was the first Ranger&#13;
to finish the race at 46th place with&#13;
an exceptional time of 19:39.&#13;
Senior Barb Osborne ran the 5K in&#13;
20:40, a good time to place 77th.&#13;
Immediately behind her was&#13;
teamrna te Dona Driscoll, a junior.&#13;
Dona's time was 20:42 for 78th&#13;
place.&#13;
Freshman Sue Meyer contributed&#13;
a time of 21:58 for the&#13;
105th position. Senior Lowrie&#13;
Melotik did her part also by&#13;
mnoing 119tb. Two sophomores&#13;
also scored for UW-P, Sandy&#13;
Venne and Linda Pfeilstiefter.&#13;
FOrIDer Parkside star barrier&#13;
Wendy Burman, now a junior at&#13;
Purdue, dazzled spectators with&#13;
her usual running style and her&#13;
time &lt;i 18:29. Wendy placed 12th&#13;
individually.&#13;
Dorthe Rasmussen of Iowa&#13;
State won the event with a speedy&#13;
time of 17:46.The Iowa State team&#13;
ran away with the Mid - American&#13;
title'scoring a total of 42 points.&#13;
Parkside took 14th place overaU .&#13;
. SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC. ATlUTIC FOOTWEAR&#13;
FOR AU SPORTS&#13;
TEAM SALES - AU 8l'ORTS&#13;
Oktoberlesf&#13;
;S Old Style&#13;
Time'&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
ADS&#13;
The deadline for classified ads&#13;
in the Ranger is noon m Friday&#13;
for publica tion the following&#13;
Thursday. Cost: 5~ per ten&#13;
words.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
NEED AMBITIOUS PEOPLE to help operate&#13;
business six hours a week. two to three days&#13;
- Own hours 658-4678&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
TYPIN.G . Resumes, termpepets. theses,&#13;
manuscripts, etc. 14 years experience.&#13;
Reasonable rates. 694-1825 or 652-6599.&#13;
MEN'S TAILORING - suits, coats, jeans,&#13;
alterations, repairs. 633-7946,3 to 7 p.m.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
NEED A RIDE BOTH WAYS for Mon., 'roes.,&#13;
Wed. 6 p.mzctass. All Ol'" anyone day, Will&#13;
share expenses. Live near Lathrop and&#13;
TaylO1'" in Racine. Call 554-0712.&#13;
POOL&#13;
.$150&#13;
Per Hour'&#13;
"Pool tables in the Rec Center," says Strolliu Bowlin' "and&#13;
the cost is only $1.50 per hour. I sure would like to get ~ good&#13;
game of 8 - ball going." If your an 8 - ball player or just like&#13;
to playa little pool why not stop down to the Rec Center and&#13;
try out the tables? The pool tables are available 7 days a&#13;
week and 8 - ball leagues begin the week of Oct. 5. Sign up is&#13;
at the Rec Center control desk.&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING I&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5%% latere.t H Yo. Dally&#13;
Balaace II5500 00 •. · or onl&#13;
WE'RE HERE 10 HELP YOU 1.0&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - ,658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414·694-1380&#13;
'IROOItS 'CONVEflIl ,.,.===:.w:. ::" :=T ..... '1'VtAA t 'AlDlNG&#13;
lliI-'..&amp;.IL ,. tPONY tHEWIAl.AMCl&#13;
... T.' ,. ~_".IIOLDl'f'&#13;
ThI_._OnoSlap 01:=.&#13;
694-9206 _ ....._.&#13;
4235 • 52nd Street&#13;
. Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
·414·657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisco&#13;
414 - 248-9141&#13;
24726 - 75th Street - RI.&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem,&#13;
414 - 843-2388</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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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;
FOR&#13;
MEN &amp; WOMEN&#13;
PHONE 654-6154&#13;
airstudlo&#13;
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HAVE YOU TRIED UNION SQUARES&#13;
AUTHENTIC ENGLISH STYLE&#13;
Fish 'n Chips&#13;
BATTER DIPPED BY HAND &amp; FRENCH FRIES&#13;
SERVED WITH AAALT VINEGAR OR TARTER SAUCE&#13;
A BLOODY GOOD DEAL AT THE REGULAR $1.69&#13;
ONLY $1.49&#13;
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;
FOR SALE&#13;
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;
HELP WANTED&#13;
AREA BUSINESS LOOKING for working&#13;
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;
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 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;
"S&#13;
TROPHIES AND AWARDS&#13;
FAST. IN-HOUSE ENORAVMQ SERVICE&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
SUPER SPORTS MON.-FRI. 10.-00 A M. - I«o P.M.&#13;
-*• SAT. 10.00 AM. - tOO P.M.&#13;
ttOSED SUNDAYS k HOUOAYS&#13;
• BROOKS&#13;
• TIGER&#13;
• NIKE&#13;
• PUMA&#13;
• PONY&#13;
•CONVERSE&#13;
• SPOT-BUILT&#13;
•SAUCONY&#13;
• SPALDING&#13;
• NEW BALANCE&#13;
FOOTWEAR. ETC&#13;
The Active Athletes One Stop&#13;
694-9206&#13;
mz-zm&#13;
«snsm$T,aN0SMA.M&#13;
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>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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      <tag tagId="4533">
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      <tag tagId="1383">
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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;
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Mvorc rh V H®ns,ak&#13;
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Kreuser, Jim Mertins, Steve&#13;
Wicks' erce&#13;
' Sue Stev&#13;
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^^o^ible'^oMts^^i^tarponcyhand'content °' UW Parkside&#13;
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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;
• DANISH TORTE CAKES • KRINGIES • WEDDING&#13;
CAKES • CAKES FOR AU OCCASIONS • RNE&#13;
ITAUAN BREAD • HARD ROLL A BUN SPECIALISTS&#13;
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BAKERY SERVICE&#13;
EVERY WEDNESDAY mun.-rm. daih • bpm&#13;
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Go/n Pickin WEAR LOOSE CLOTHING &amp; TENNIS SHOES&#13;
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;
RACINE MOTOR INN&#13;
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;
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• 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;
FOOTWEAR, ETC. ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR&#13;
FOR A LL SPORTS&#13;
TEAM SALES — A LL SPORTS&#13;
TROPWES AND AWARDS&#13;
FAST. M-HOUSE ENGRAVING SERVICE&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
1PER SPORTS MON.-FRI. 10 :00 AM. -100 P.M.&#13;
SAT. 1040 AM. - BOO P.M.&#13;
CLOSED SUNDAYS Si HOOD AYS&#13;
• BROOKS&#13;
• TIGER&#13;
• NIKE&#13;
• PUMA&#13;
• PONY&#13;
• CONVERSE&#13;
• SPOT-BUILT&#13;
• SAUCONY&#13;
• 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>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 10, issue 6, October 15, 1981</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;
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'SEVEN-UP A&gt;IO·7 UP- ARE TRADEMAR'IS or rut SEVE" UPCOMPANYC'99~1</text>
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              <text>UW-P honors to be offered</text>
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              <text> " University of Wisconsin - Parkside er&#13;
hUr8day~()ctober 29, 1981 Vol. 10 . No.8&#13;
W·p honors to be offered already existing course work.&#13;
Each agreement must be approved&#13;
by the Honors Program&#13;
Steering Comll'ittee. To qualify&#13;
for this initial work, students must&#13;
have a GPA of 3.2 or higher. Each&#13;
course in honors will be&#13;
designated as such on the&#13;
student's transcripts if the&#13;
student's grade in the course is a&#13;
B-plus or better. To remain in the&#13;
program, students must maintain,&#13;
their 3.2 or better gradepoint&#13;
while doing the additional work&#13;
that will be required by honors&#13;
instructors.&#13;
After a student has completed 15&#13;
credits of honors course work&#13;
(with at least half of those credits&#13;
earned outside of the student's&#13;
primary major), she or he is&#13;
eligible for graduation "with&#13;
distinction" noted on transcripts.&#13;
At this point, the student is also&#13;
eligible to enroll in the Senior&#13;
Honors Seminar, a two semester&#13;
course in which students develop&#13;
and present a Senior Honors&#13;
Thesis. Enrollment is the seminar&#13;
is basically for seniors, since&#13;
students must have completed at&#13;
least 116credits before enrolling.&#13;
Each thesis will be evaluated by a&#13;
three member faculty committee&#13;
appointed by the Seminar&#13;
Director.&#13;
Students who qualify to&#13;
graduate "with distinction" and&#13;
students on redesigning the&#13;
program.&#13;
The Honors Program was&#13;
referred from the Faculty Senate&#13;
back to the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee last spring for&#13;
clarification and was passed at&#13;
the early fall Faculty Senate&#13;
meeting. "Essentially, the&#13;
program as it now stands was&#13;
designed by students, with minor&#13;
changes as suggested by the&#13;
steering committee" 'Thayer&#13;
said. '&#13;
Thayer said the program. was&#13;
also unusual because it "assumes&#13;
realistically a level of maturity on&#13;
the part of academic achievers&#13;
that regular academic programs&#13;
don't assume."&#13;
Thayer said the program&#13;
"relies on student initiative and is&#13;
determined by the achievement of&#13;
students as they work with the&#13;
advising of individual faculty&#13;
members." A Student Advisory&#13;
Committee will also administer&#13;
the program in conjunction with&#13;
the Director and the Faculty&#13;
Steering Committee, composed of&#13;
elected representatives from each&#13;
division.&#13;
The basic components of the&#13;
program are honors course work&#13;
and a senior honors seminar.&#13;
Course work is arranged through&#13;
agreements between individual&#13;
students and instructors of&#13;
proposal for an unusual&#13;
rsity wide Honors&#13;
ram, developed by comatim&#13;
professor Lee Thayer&#13;
task force of students, was&#13;
Uy passed by Parkside's&#13;
ty Senate. Tbe program will&#13;
plemented next semester&#13;
students will be able to&#13;
r for courses that will&#13;
them for honors credits&#13;
ntrance to the program.&#13;
program will not replace&#13;
traditional departmental&#13;
system, hased on GPA&#13;
• but it will replace the&#13;
emically Talented and&#13;
ly Skilled Program, which&#13;
cing dwindling enrollment&#13;
major course, a seminar.&#13;
year, Thayer worked with&#13;
Happy Halloween ••••••••••••• He also sees a record of&#13;
association with the program as&#13;
"a clear indication of advantage"&#13;
to both future employers and&#13;
graduate schools.&#13;
Tbe thesis completed at undergraduate&#13;
level is itself&#13;
"significant recognition of many&#13;
accomplishments not implied by&#13;
GPA alone," Thayer said, "like&#13;
the ability to write and communicate&#13;
across disciplines, the&#13;
ability to handle sophisticated&#13;
ideas and a high level of scholarly&#13;
dedication. "&#13;
Last this fall, all continuing&#13;
qualified Parkside students will&#13;
receive an Honors Program&#13;
brochure and an invitation to a&#13;
who complete the Senior Honors&#13;
Seminar will graduate with&#13;
"Distinction." "High' Distinction,"&#13;
or "Highest Distinction,"&#13;
depending upon the recommendation&#13;
of his or her faculty&#13;
thesis committee.&#13;
Thayer said students will be&#13;
able to use the program "to their&#13;
(JW'nadvantage" because there&#13;
are several pay-offs for students.&#13;
"If they fulfill the requirements,&#13;
they will graduate with some sort&#13;
of uni.versity - wide distinction,"&#13;
be said.&#13;
"Another real advantage to&#13;
students is that they will gain&#13;
additional intellectual interaction&#13;
with not only each other, but with&#13;
faculty members," Thayer said. Continued On Page Five&#13;
GA Senators look forward to an active term on campus&#13;
bNyeKwesnEMdeityoerr Earlene Frederick 1.i'k~,to be a p~;t of what IS gom. g comp!is~ment of student goals." maioly because of its commuter&#13;
e are profiles of the mem- on.. sbe said, I like to ~?w when While 10 office, Mertz hopes to status, and I wanted to do&#13;
f the PSGA Senate who were Earlene Frederick, a freshman thing~ happe~ and why. make changes that will help anything to destroy this image.&#13;
ed in the October 14-15 still deciding on a major, ran for . While 10 office, she hopes to get students. "This should be tbe "When I received my ap-&#13;
.ODS. They will officially take the Senate because she wanted to involved 10 a Senate sub- primary objective of every person plication (to run for the Senate),"&#13;
on November 4. be involved at Parkside. "I would cpoamrti~cIip1aItntete. and be an active who believes in student gover- be said, "I was not aware of what I~ meetmgs.. nance," he said. needed to be accomplished, but 1&#13;
She doesn t know what ISSUes The major issues be plans to will address any matter that Wll:! come up dunng'loor. term in address ~re "those which direcUy comes up-with the utmost equality&#13;
office, she said, but I WIll try to affect or influence students on this and fairness of a just human&#13;
be mformed on each as It arises." campus," he said. beTinhge.r"e are several issues Pfafn&#13;
plans to address as a Senator, tbe&#13;
first being student apathy. "I&#13;
believe the parking system also&#13;
must have some revamping," he&#13;
said, "such as the costs of permits&#13;
and the giving of tickets." He also&#13;
thinks that tbe library should&#13;
receive all the material that is&#13;
needed to further students'&#13;
educations. "A closer look at the&#13;
bookstore's activities will also be&#13;
a good idea," he said.&#13;
"Students could be a very large&#13;
political force in America," he&#13;
said, "if they wanted to exert their&#13;
force in a positive way. such as&#13;
rebuttals on the school, state and&#13;
national levels of administration.&#13;
I believe the time is coming when&#13;
students must join together to&#13;
exert their voice in America, and&#13;
this can't be done with apathy."&#13;
n forum scheduled&#13;
rkside Chancellor Alan&#13;
kin has scheduled an&#13;
en Forum II for Wedy,&#13;
Nov. 4 between 11:30&#13;
1 p.m. in Union 104 - 106.&#13;
purpose of the forum is to&#13;
rate discussion between&#13;
ents and the adlstration.&#13;
The forum will be&#13;
ucted informally, Guskin&#13;
, so that students may ask&#13;
questions they have ahout&#13;
University.&#13;
ivities nights scheduled&#13;
eluding shoes) and pro football TV&#13;
viewing. In addition, the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board will sponsor&#13;
movies on the last 3 Sundays -&#13;
"Tribute" on Nov. 8, "Death&#13;
Hunt" on Nov. 15, and "Starting&#13;
Over" on Nov. 22. Tickets for the&#13;
movies are $1.50for adults, 7~ for&#13;
children.&#13;
Tbe Parkside Child care Center&#13;
will be open from 4 to 8 p. m. each&#13;
Sunday for infants and pre - school&#13;
children. There will be no charge&#13;
for the use of the Center, but&#13;
children must be pre - registered&#13;
since space is limited. To pre -&#13;
register call 553-2227.There will&#13;
be no food service available on&#13;
campus except for snack items.&#13;
"Sundays at Parkside" marks&#13;
the first majot cooperative&#13;
planning venture between Student&#13;
Life and Physical Education.&#13;
More such events are in the&#13;
planning stages, according to&#13;
Student Life sources. All students,&#13;
faculty and staff are invited to&#13;
take part.&#13;
dfices of Student Life and&#13;
.cal Educa tion ha ve comefforts&#13;
to sponsor II aces&#13;
nights" on the first four&#13;
ays in Novernber. A variety •&#13;
nned activities, in addition to&#13;
recreation, will be available&#13;
ch of these Sundays between&#13;
and 9:30 p.m. All Parkside&#13;
ts will receive a complete&#13;
scbeduleof events in tbe mail&#13;
Randy Klees John Peterson&#13;
Randy Klees, a freshman&#13;
majoring in communication, was&#13;
first elected to tbe Senate last fall.&#13;
He became a Senator "because I&#13;
wanted to represent the students&#13;
of Parkside in relation to administrative&#13;
decisions that concern&#13;
Parkside," he said. HI also&#13;
wanted to learn about how policies&#13;
aOddecisions are made tha t cover&#13;
the whole UW System as far as&#13;
budgeting and funding are concerned."&#13;
Klees has been involved with&#13;
SUFAC since last year. "One of&#13;
our major goals is to finish tbe&#13;
budget process for the 1982-33&#13;
school year," he said. "I also hope&#13;
to broaden student awareness to&#13;
SUFAC in terms of how part of&#13;
tbeir tuition, segregated fees, will&#13;
be used."&#13;
Klees is also serving on the&#13;
Athletic Board and Bookstore&#13;
Committee. "While I'm on these&#13;
committees" he said "I will&#13;
continue to Jserve as a' representative&#13;
expressing the attitudes&#13;
and concerns of other Parkside&#13;
students. "&#13;
John Peterson, a junior&#13;
majoring in political science and&#13;
history, was appointed to tbe&#13;
Senate in late September and was&#13;
required to run in the fall election.&#13;
Peterson sees being a Senator&#13;
"as an opportunity to serve the&#13;
students of Parkside in a way 1&#13;
f",:l I am qualified. 1 also hope to&#13;
gam experience m an area which I&#13;
plan to follow as a career."&#13;
His goal as a Senator is to&#13;
represent and inform students. "I&#13;
would like to see students more&#13;
informed ahout Parkside and its&#13;
inner workings, tI he said. "I would&#13;
also like to promote more student&#13;
participation in campus activities.&#13;
"Students haye input in \be&#13;
policies set forth by the faculty&#13;
and student committees," he said.&#13;
"But do the students know this?&#13;
This issue will be one of my major&#13;
priorities thatI will be concerned&#13;
with. Others are the parking&#13;
regulations and segregated fees."&#13;
the phy. ed. building, events&#13;
uled are: open swim, open&#13;
etball, open volleyball, open&#13;
uetball (maximum of 32&#13;
ers must pre·register at the&#13;
n Info Desk), and aerobic&#13;
. Also, tbe weight room will&#13;
vailable for use. special acies&#13;
planned include a "fitness&#13;
" and children's activities&#13;
games for 4-11 year olds.&#13;
ers and showers will be open&#13;
. One family member must&#13;
a valid Parkside ID at the&#13;
. ed. building door to register.&#13;
Union Rec. Center will offer&#13;
ling (at ~ per game in-&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez, a&#13;
sophomore majoring in business&#13;
sees being a PSGA Senator as a~&#13;
opportunity to serve Parkside&#13;
students. Sbe hopes to gain experience&#13;
and knowledge about&#13;
student government in the uw&#13;
System.&#13;
"I hope to be a representative of&#13;
the students at Parkside," said&#13;
Rodriguez, "aiding each otber in&#13;
discussing policies or problems&#13;
we may encounter as st\ldents."&#13;
Student participation is the&#13;
major issue she plans to address&#13;
while in office. "Students being&#13;
allowed to become involved and&#13;
Continued On Page Five&#13;
Mike Pfaffl&#13;
Mike Pfaff!, a sophomore&#13;
majoring in political science, ran&#13;
for tbe Senate for many reasons.&#13;
First, he feels it will furtber his&#13;
education in political science.&#13;
"Second," he said, "I consider&#13;
myself a political activist and also&#13;
belong to Students Mobilization&#13;
for Survival, so I believe in action&#13;
and getting problems solved wben&#13;
they appear. Third, I believe our&#13;
school suffers from apathy,&#13;
INSIDE • • •&#13;
Viewpoint: Learning to live with a handicap Steve Mertz&#13;
Steve Mertz, a sophomore&#13;
majoring in engineering, ran for&#13;
the Senate because "PSGA does&#13;
have power (and) that power&#13;
affects tbe student body. I feel&#13;
that it is of tbe utmost importance&#13;
that the supply of different&#13;
viewpoints result in the ac-&#13;
David Kherdian interview&#13;
Student bowls 300. club wins toumament&#13;
t,r Universify of Wisconsin - Parkside er&#13;
hursday ~ Qctober 29, 1981 Vol. 10 - No. 8&#13;
W -P honors to be offered&#13;
proposal for an unusual&#13;
rsity wide Honors&#13;
ram , developed by comcation&#13;
professor Lee Thayer&#13;
task force of students, was&#13;
tJy passed by Parkside's&#13;
llty Senate. The program will&#13;
plemented next semester&#13;
t students will be able to&#13;
, r for courses that will&#13;
ify them for honors credits&#13;
entrance to the program.&#13;
program will not replace&#13;
traditional departmental&#13;
system, based on GPA&#13;
e, but it will replace the&#13;
:lemically Talented and&#13;
ially Skilled Program, which&#13;
facing ct.vindling enrollment&#13;
major course, a seminar.&#13;
year, Tilayer worked with&#13;
n forum scheduled&#13;
&gt;arkside Chancellor Alan&#13;
kin has scheduled an&#13;
1 en Forum" for WedY,&#13;
Nov. 4 between 11 :30&#13;
I 1 p.m. in Union 104 - 106.&#13;
e purpose of the forum is to&#13;
rate discussion between&#13;
ents and the ad-&#13;
. tration. The forum will be&#13;
ucted informally, Gusk.in&#13;
d, so that students may ask&#13;
questions they have about&#13;
niversity.&#13;
students on redesigning the&#13;
program.&#13;
The Honors Program was&#13;
referred from the Faculty Senate&#13;
back to the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee last spring for&#13;
clarification and was passed at&#13;
the t;arlY fall Faculty Senate&#13;
meeting. "Essentially, the&#13;
program as it now stands was&#13;
designed by students, with minor&#13;
changes as suggested by the&#13;
steering committee " Thayer&#13;
said. '&#13;
Thayer said the program was&#13;
also unusual because it "assumes&#13;
realistically a level of maturity on&#13;
the part of academic achievers&#13;
that regular academic programs&#13;
don't assume."&#13;
Thayer said the program&#13;
"relies on student initiative and is&#13;
determined by the achievement of&#13;
students as they work with the&#13;
advising of individual faculty&#13;
members." A Student Advisory&#13;
Committee will also administer&#13;
the program in conjunction with&#13;
the Director and the Faculty&#13;
Steering Committee, composed of&#13;
elected representatives from each&#13;
division.&#13;
The basic components of the&#13;
program are honors course work&#13;
and a senior honors seminar.&#13;
Course work is arranged through&#13;
agreements between individual&#13;
students and instructors of&#13;
already existing course work.&#13;
Each agreement must be approved&#13;
by the Honors Program&#13;
Steering Comi}ittee. To qualify&#13;
for this initial work, students must&#13;
have a GPA of 3.2 or higher. Each&#13;
course in honors will be&#13;
designated as such on the&#13;
student's transcripts if the&#13;
student's grade in the course is a&#13;
B-plus or better. To remain in the&#13;
program, students must maintain&#13;
their 3.2 or better gradepoint&#13;
while doing the additional work&#13;
that will be required by honors&#13;
instructors.&#13;
After a student bas completed 15&#13;
credits of honors course work&#13;
(with at least haH of those credits&#13;
earned outside of the student's&#13;
primary major), she or he is&#13;
eligible for graduation "with&#13;
distinction" noted on transcripts.&#13;
At this point, the student is also&#13;
eligible to enroll in the Senior&#13;
Honors Seminar, a two semester&#13;
crurse in which students develop&#13;
and present a Senior Honors&#13;
Thesis. Enrollment is the seminar&#13;
is basically for seniors, since&#13;
students must have completed at&#13;
least 86 credits before enrolling.&#13;
Each thesis will be evaluated by a&#13;
three member faculty committee&#13;
appointed by the Seminar&#13;
Director.&#13;
Students who qualify to&#13;
graduate " ith distinction" and&#13;
Happy Halloween&#13;
••••eeeeeeeee&#13;
who complete the Senior Honors&#13;
Seminar will graduate with&#13;
"Distinction," "High Distinction,"&#13;
or " Highest Distinction,"&#13;
depending upon the recommendation&#13;
of his or her faculty&#13;
thesis committee.&#13;
Thayer said students will be&#13;
able to use the program "to their&#13;
own advantage" because there&#13;
are several pay-offs for students.&#13;
"II they fulfill the requirements,&#13;
they will graduate with some sort&#13;
of university - wide- distinction "&#13;
he said. '&#13;
"Another real advantage to&#13;
students is that they will gain&#13;
additional intellectual interaction&#13;
with not only each other, but with&#13;
He also sees a record of&#13;
association with the program a&#13;
"a clear indication of advantage"&#13;
to both future employers and&#13;
graduate schools.&#13;
The thesis completed at underg&#13;
ra dua te level is itself&#13;
"significant recognitioo of many&#13;
accompli hments not implied by&#13;
GPA alone," Thayer said, "like&#13;
the ability to write and comm~~&#13;
cate aero disciplines, the&#13;
ability to handle sophisticated&#13;
ideas and a high level of scholarly&#13;
dedication."&#13;
La this fall, all continuing&#13;
qualified Parkside students will&#13;
receive an Honor Program&#13;
brochure and an invitation to a&#13;
faculty members," Thayer said. ontinued On Page Five&#13;
GA Senators look f 01Ward to an active term on campus&#13;
by Ken Meyer . . .&#13;
ews Editor Earlene Frederick lik~, to be ~ ~rt ~f what 1s gomg comp_lis~ment_ of student goals." mainly becau e of its commuter&#13;
e are profiles of the mem- on., she said. I like to know when While m office, Mertz hopes to status, and I wanted to do&#13;
of the PSGA Senate who were Earlene Frederick, a freshman thing~ ~ppe~ and why." make changes that will help anything to d troy !hi image.&#13;
ted in the October 14-15 still deciding on a major, ran for . While m o_fflce, she hopes to get t~dents. "This should be the "Wh n I rec ived my aplions.&#13;
They will officially take the Senate because she wanted to rnvol":ed m a Senate ~b- primary objective of every person plication ( to run for the enate),"&#13;
on November 4. be involved at Parkside. 'I would com~ttee . and ~ an active who believes in student gover- he said, "I was not aware or what&#13;
part1c1pant 1f1 meetmgs. . nance," h~ said. needed to be accompli hed, but I&#13;
tivities nights scheduled&#13;
offices of Student Life and&#13;
ical Education have comefforts&#13;
to sponsor "ac&#13;
·es nights" on the first four&#13;
ays in November. A variety •&#13;
nned activities, in addition to&#13;
n recreation, will be available&#13;
• ch of these Sundays between&#13;
~ n and 9:30 p. m. All Parkside&#13;
n ts will receive a complete&#13;
schedule of events in the mail&#13;
n.&#13;
the phy. ed. building, events&#13;
uled are: open swim, open&#13;
etball, open volleyball, open&#13;
quetball (maximum of 32&#13;
yers must pre-register at the&#13;
.on Info Desk) , and aerobic&#13;
1 . Also, the weight room will&#13;
vailable for use. Special acties&#13;
planned include a "fitness&#13;
11'" and children's activities&#13;
I games for 4-11 year olds .&#13;
: ers and showers will be open&#13;
use. One family member must&#13;
a valid Parkside ID at the&#13;
y. ed. building door to register.&#13;
Union Rec. Center will offer&#13;
ling (at 50f per game ineluding&#13;
shoes) and pro football TV&#13;
viewing. In addition, the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board will sponsor&#13;
movies on the last 3 Sundays -&#13;
"Tribute" on Nov. 8, "Death&#13;
Hunt" on Nov. 15, and "Starting&#13;
Over" on Nov. 22. Tickets for the&#13;
movies are $1.50 for adults, 7~ for&#13;
children.&#13;
The Parkside Child Care Center&#13;
will be open from 4 to 8 p.m. each&#13;
Sunday for infants and pre - school&#13;
children. There will be no charge&#13;
for the use of the Center, but&#13;
children must be pre - registered&#13;
since space is limited. 'l'o pre -&#13;
register call 553-2227 . There will&#13;
be no food service available on&#13;
campus except for snack items.&#13;
"Sundays at Parkside" marks&#13;
the first major cooperative&#13;
planning venture between Student&#13;
Life and Physical Education.&#13;
More such events are in the&#13;
planning stages, according to&#13;
Student Life sources. All students,&#13;
faculty and staff are invited to&#13;
take part.&#13;
• • •&#13;
Vi poi : Lea ing to live with a handicap&#13;
Da rid herdian interview&#13;
uden bowl 300. c b wins tournament&#13;
She doesn t know what J.SSues The maJor issues he plans to will addr any matter that&#13;
wi1:) come up_ chlring .. her. term in addres &lt;!-re "those which directly comes u~with the utm t equality&#13;
off~ce, she sa1d, but I ~ll !ry to affect or mfluence students on this and fairne of a just human&#13;
be informed on each as 1l anses." campus," he said. being."&#13;
Randy Klees&#13;
Randy Klees a freshman&#13;
majoring in communication, was&#13;
first elected to the Senate last fall.&#13;
He became a Senator "because I&#13;
wanted to represent the tudents&#13;
of Parkside in relation to administrative&#13;
decisions that concern&#13;
Parkside," he said. "I also&#13;
wanted to learn about how policies&#13;
and decisions are made that cover&#13;
the whole UW System as far as&#13;
budgeting and funding are concerned."&#13;
Klees bas been involved with&#13;
SUFAC since last year. "One of&#13;
our major goals is to finish the&#13;
budget process for the 1982-83&#13;
school year," he said. "I also hope&#13;
to broaden student awareness to&#13;
SUF AC in terms of how part of&#13;
their tuition, segregated fees, will&#13;
be used."&#13;
Klees is also serving on the&#13;
Athletic Board and Bookstore&#13;
Committee. "While I'm on these&#13;
committees," he said, ' I will&#13;
continue to serve as a representative&#13;
expressing the attitudes&#13;
and concerns of other Parkside&#13;
students."&#13;
Steve Mertz&#13;
Steve Mertz, a sophomore&#13;
majoring in engineering, ran for&#13;
the Senate because "PSGA does&#13;
have power (and) that power&#13;
affects the student body. I feel&#13;
that it is of the utmost importance&#13;
that the supply of different&#13;
viewpoints result in the ac-&#13;
John Peterson&#13;
John Peterson , a junior&#13;
majoring in political science and&#13;
history, was appointed to the&#13;
Senate in late September and was&#13;
required to run in the fall election.&#13;
Peterson sees being a Senator&#13;
"as an opportunity to serve the&#13;
students of Parkside in a way I&#13;
feel I am quaWied. I also hope to&#13;
gain experience in an area which I&#13;
plan to follow as a career."&#13;
His goal as a Senator is to&#13;
represent and inform students. "I&#13;
would like to see students more&#13;
informed about Parkside and its&#13;
inner workings ," he said. "I would&#13;
also like to promote more student&#13;
participation in campus activities.&#13;
"Students have input in \he&#13;
policies set forth by the faculty&#13;
and student committees,•' he said.&#13;
"But do the students know this?&#13;
This issue will be one of my major&#13;
priorities thal"I will be concerned&#13;
with. Others are the parking&#13;
regulations and segregated fees."&#13;
Mike Pfaffl&#13;
Mike Pfaff!, a sophomore&#13;
majoring in political science, ran&#13;
for the Senate for many reasons.&#13;
First, he feel it will further his&#13;
education in poli(ical science.&#13;
"Second," he said, "I consider&#13;
myself a political activist and also&#13;
belong to Students Mobilization&#13;
for Survival, so I believe in action&#13;
and getting problems solved when&#13;
they appear. Third, I believe our&#13;
school suffers from apathy,&#13;
There are everal i u Pfaff}&#13;
plans to addr a a Sena tor, the&#13;
first being tud nt apathy. "I&#13;
believe the parking ystem also&#13;
must have ome r vamping," he&#13;
said, " uch a the co ls of permits&#13;
and the giving of tickets." He al&#13;
thinks that the library hould&#13;
receive all the material that ls&#13;
needed to further tudent •&#13;
educations. "A closer look al the&#13;
bookstore' activiti will also be&#13;
a good idea," he aid.&#13;
"Students could be a very large&#13;
poJitical force in America," he&#13;
said, "if they wanted to exert their&#13;
force in a positive way, uch a&#13;
rebuttal on lhe chool, tat and&#13;
national level of admini tration.&#13;
I believe the time is coming when&#13;
students must join together to&#13;
exert their voice in America, and&#13;
this can't be done with apathy."&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez, a&#13;
sophomore majoring in bushle •&#13;
sees being a PSGA Senator as an&#13;
opportunity lo serve Parkside&#13;
tudents. She hopes to gain experience&#13;
and knowledge about&#13;
student government in the UW&#13;
System.&#13;
" I hope to be a representative of&#13;
the students at Parkside," said&#13;
Rodriguez, ''aiding each other in&#13;
discussing policies or problems&#13;
we may encounter as tudents."&#13;
Student participation i the&#13;
major issue she plans to address&#13;
while in office. "Students being&#13;
allowed to become involved and&#13;
Conlinued On Page ive&#13;
2 I'VE PEOPLE I INA", _&#13;
TO GET 1ilE NEC~&#13;
TRAINING TO GET A ~y&#13;
DE.CENT JOB.&#13;
.&#13;
Thursday. October 29.1981 'Editorial&#13;
Thank you! .'&#13;
The Ranger's open hearing during last Friday's a~tlVlty&#13;
period was both a failure and a success. A failure becagse only a&#13;
f of our readers attended, a success because the ISCUSdlOn&#13;
::s interesting and we learned mor~ about what our rea ers&#13;
like and dislike about the Ranger this year. . .&#13;
We learned that some students are interested m attendmg&#13;
n meetings on campus, but feel they are prevented from&#13;
~ending because no announcement Is posted on campus&#13;
detailing the locations and times of meetings, Br next week, we&#13;
hope to be able to publish schedules of open meetings on campus.&#13;
We also learned that students do not know how to submit&#13;
editorials editorial ideas and letters to the Ranger. So once&#13;
a in au'will see our policies on these pages next week.&#13;
~e ~ISO learned that students are still thinking about, and&#13;
talking about this year's Teaching Excellence Award problems.&#13;
We're pleased about that. It's great that people who are members&#13;
of an institution of higher education are applyin~ what they&#13;
are learning in their courses - are not only learning how to&#13;
but trying out their equipment - to a problem that affects&#13;
them and their teachers. . ,&#13;
Last but not least - we got some compliments on this rea~ s&#13;
Ranger. Some of you like our news coverage, some o'!r editorial&#13;
page. Thank you. We'll schedule another open hearmg. for the&#13;
end of this semester. Watch for an announcement on this page.&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
Reply to Guskin&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The purpose of this letter is twofold:&#13;
to clear up a slight misunderstanding&#13;
with PSGA and to&#13;
take issue with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin's letter in the October ~&#13;
issue 11 the Ranger.&#13;
The motion passed by the&#13;
student Senate which reads, In&#13;
part. " ... actions taken by the&#13;
teaching excellence award&#13;
committee in conjunction with the.&#13;
Chancellor as being ... " is&#13;
misleading and wrong. Le me&#13;
state tha t the teaching excellence&#13;
award committee is not in conjunction&#13;
with the Chancellor&#13;
concerning his latest decision not&#13;
to give Dr. Shirley Kersey her&#13;
award.&#13;
It was common knowledge on&#13;
campus that Dr. Kersey was&#13;
denied tenure would be gone&#13;
after the end of the school year.&#13;
Instead of sitting back and&#13;
relaxing or doing very little, Dr.&#13;
Kersey still taught with the same&#13;
endless enthusiasm and excellence&#13;
sbe always had. I think it&#13;
is to ber credit that sbe could&#13;
accomplish this and still win the&#13;
teaching award considering the&#13;
circumstances.&#13;
The idea of not awarding this&#13;
honor to someone not returning to&#13;
the university is absurd. Consider&#13;
the following "ifs" if this line of&#13;
logic is carried a step further.&#13;
Suppose one of the recipients&#13;
would happen to die over the&#13;
summer? Or suppose the recipient&#13;
was offered a job at a prestigious&#13;
university someplace else and&#13;
could not turn it down?&#13;
In both of these cases&#13;
reputations would be tarnished by&#13;
administrative insensitivity.&#13;
Carry this logic even further and&#13;
it becomes ridiculous. Here would&#13;
be three ,ases to ponder. Prof.&#13;
, Gar MGfHER5 WHO CAN'T&#13;
LISTEN, PAL.~(:~R.Y ~~ORD NOT TO WORK BUT&#13;
PEOPLE IN MI _ CAN'T TO HIRE A&#13;
WITH PRPBLEMS. _-\.. IlA&amp;YSlTTER. EITHER..&#13;
1&#13;
Bonnie Smith won this award' a&#13;
few years ago. She was granted a&#13;
leave of absence for one year to do&#13;
research in Europe. She returned,&#13;
taught for two years and then left&#13;
to teach in Rochester, New York.&#13;
Prof. Barbara Maris won this&#13;
award a year ago with Prof.&#13;
Robert Esser and both are no&#13;
longer at Parkside. Maris was&#13;
denied tenure at division level and&#13;
Mr. Esser retired.&#13;
Now, by the above line of&#13;
thought, all three should be&#13;
required to return a portion of&#13;
their award. Of course this is&#13;
absurd but it proves my point -&#13;
that the teaching excellence&#13;
award should not be concerned&#13;
with an instructor's job security&#13;
and should stay with the idea of&#13;
presenting it to excellent&#13;
teachers. Unlike a research grant&#13;
which is concerned with work yet&#13;
to be done, the teaching excellence&#13;
award is for .work&#13;
already accomplished.&#13;
In May of 1970,Prof. Salimans&#13;
Cacs won a teaching excellence I10 !IUS II}) "Editorial" by Jobn Koloen&#13;
The record or the Student&#13;
Government Association&#13;
speaks for itself: roe out of the&#13;
past six meetings came I1f. Not&#13;
much to say, is it?&#13;
The elected representatives&#13;
of the student body promised to&#13;
serve their cooslituents when&#13;
they were elected last spring&#13;
but have faUed mi_ably. The&#13;
blame for this Ii.. on the.&#13;
shoulders 11 thooe senators&#13;
who have reneged their&#13;
obligations to the students by&#13;
faDing to attend government&#13;
meetings. The same general&#13;
apathy that infects the student&#13;
body at - large, i.e. poor&#13;
election turn - outs is exemplified&#13;
by the attendance&#13;
records at meetings.&#13;
Nothing can be more&#13;
damaging to tbe prospects 11a&#13;
strong student voice in the&#13;
university than an Irrespon_&#13;
sible and apparently dish"&#13;
terested porlim or the senate.&#13;
It is not even possible to impeach&#13;
those senators guilty 11&#13;
absenteeism unless they attend&#13;
the meetings. It is not possible&#13;
to change quorum ruling unless&#13;
there is first a quorum&#13;
reached. It is not possible for&#13;
the PSGA toadhpt an operating&#13;
budget without a full senate to&#13;
vu.e m it.&#13;
At the very least these&#13;
senators who do not want the&#13;
responsibUity or serving the&#13;
students sbouId attend one&#13;
meetfng in order to give those&#13;
who would like the opportunity&#13;
to serve the opportunity to do so.&#13;
- Newse_, vol. 5, DO. 8. O&lt;:t.&#13;
25, 1971&#13;
From the Files&#13;
years ago -&#13;
"Guskin meets students" by-&#13;
Mona Maillet&#13;
On Thursday, Oct. 21,&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin held&#13;
his first open meeting of the&#13;
year with students. He was&#13;
pleased with the turnout of&#13;
ahoot IS people, saying that a&#13;
similar meeting during the&#13;
summer attracted only one&#13;
person ...&#13;
Guskin was asked (about)&#13;
his feelings on student involvement&#13;
in their education.&#13;
He replied that he strongly&#13;
feels that students should get&#13;
involved. in the university.&#13;
Every student - oriented&#13;
cOO)mittee has at least one&#13;
student III it. He stated that&#13;
student government assists&#13;
him in making decisions on&#13;
student matters.&#13;
Regarding having students&#13;
visit him, Guskin said, tiff a&#13;
student wants to see me I&#13;
won't say no to a student.':&#13;
He also expressed regrets at&#13;
lack of interest in student&#13;
government.&#13;
A student asked Guskin&#13;
ahoot the ability to govern&#13;
through increasing committees.&#13;
Guskin answered that&#13;
he consults committees, not&#13;
governs through them.&#13;
He said, "People assume&#13;
that people in authority are&#13;
SOB's trying to manipulate the&#13;
hell out of everybody." He feels&#13;
that ... by proper interaction&#13;
between administration and&#13;
students this feeling can be&#13;
reduced.&#13;
R~rding future meetings&#13;
of this type, he said that he&#13;
would like to have them on a&#13;
regular basis, poasibly every&#13;
As as forbidden,"&#13;
of the '&#13;
held, elections in in&#13;
Tbe 11the of tbe&#13;
- Ranger. vol. 5, DO. 8. Wed.•&#13;
27. 1976&#13;
/&#13;
Iyear ago -&#13;
"Parkside accepts grants"&#13;
Gifts and grants totalling&#13;
more than $320,000 were accepted&#13;
for Parkside by the UW&#13;
system's Board of Regents&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Tha t sum included $316670&#13;
from the federal office' of&#13;
Education for the Basic&#13;
Educational Opporhmily'&#13;
Grants Program.&#13;
Gifts accepted included&#13;
$6,437 for athletics or other&#13;
scholarships from multiple&#13;
droors; $100for the George and&#13;
Madeline Molinaro Scholarship&#13;
fund from Elsie D. Mosca; and&#13;
$50 for the Kenneth L&#13;
Greenqutst fund from Mark&#13;
Madsen.&#13;
The. regents also accepted&#13;
$250 . m support of synthetic&#13;
peptide substrate reserves at&#13;
UW-P and $100 Support of the&#13;
life science seminar series.&#13;
- Ranger. Oct. 23. 1980 vol 9&#13;
no. 8 • '.&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Greg Bonofiglio, Carol Burns. Doug Edenhauser, ~&#13;
Fran~, Pat Hensiak, Jim Kreuser, Pat McDonald, J!nt&#13;
,Mertons. Steve Myers. Laurie Painter. Charles Perce, KIIII&#13;
Schlater. Sue Stevens. Dan Werbie, Jeff Wicks.&#13;
RANGER is written and ed·ted b . so'fIY&#13;
responsible for its editor" I I I' V students of ~W·Pllrkslde and they are&#13;
Published every Thursda'~ p? ICV and content. olldJ)'St&#13;
RA,NGER is printed b thV ur.lng the I'Icademic year except during breaks and h&#13;
Written permission Is~eqe.u~on Coop~ratlve Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
correspondence stI0~1~ ~or ~':fnnt portion of ,39 UW'&#13;
Parksi1e, Kenostla, WI 53141 a ressect to: Parkslde Ranger. WLLC 0 "&#13;
Letters to the Editor will b . d site&#13;
paper With one . inch m ~ accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on standar In'&#13;
cluded for verification. a~g,"s. All letters must be signed and a telephone nurnbel"&#13;
~~~n:~~ ~et~~h~el~ for valid reasons. NO!!!&#13;
reserves aU edltor~~~ pr~~~y at. a.m .. for pUblication on ,Thursdav. Th~ R~alsedefamatory&#13;
content. es In refuslI'log to print letters which contaIn&#13;
J!r-..... I'VE. GOT STUDENT:&gt; WHO&#13;
CAN'T AfFORD TO~TTEND&#13;
THE.COLLEGE. OF THEIR.&#13;
CHOICe., AND ON _&#13;
AND Of'l AND DN...&#13;
award even though he would not&#13;
be returning the following year.&#13;
Criteria and procedures aside,&#13;
just this one case is more than&#13;
enough justification for the school&#13;
adrrrinistratlon to reverse its&#13;
decision and present Dr. Shirley&#13;
Kersey with the teaching excellence&#13;
award sbe so richly&#13;
deserves.&#13;
Gustave R. Sorenson&#13;
Awards not resoloed&#13;
I&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Unfortunately, putting the&#13;
matter of the teaching award&#13;
simply "behind us" will not&#13;
rectify the injustice done. Some&#13;
issues denoted in a letter to the&#13;
editor, in last week's Ranger need&#13;
clarification.&#13;
1. Ironically, last spring the&#13;
budget allowed for two $500&#13;
awards. The committee was instructed&#13;
to pick two recipients for&#13;
the awards. If the budget allows&#13;
for one $500 award, what happened&#13;
to the other $500? Where did&#13;
the money go?&#13;
2, "Proposed" changes are just&#13;
that, proposed, not retroactive. I&#13;
agree that the criteria must he&#13;
more strict and clear, but to deny&#13;
Dr. Shirley Kersey her award is&#13;
unfair. The criteria was not set up&#13;
by Dr. Kersey and she should not&#13;
be penalized for the oversight.&#13;
3. The delay of the other awards&#13;
being presented would not have&#13;
occured if the administration&#13;
would have presented the awards&#13;
to all the recipients the committee&#13;
had chosen. The delay was&#13;
brought about by the ad-·.&#13;
ministration, not the committee&#13;
as the letter to the editor implied.&#13;
4. If this situation is put "behind&#13;
us".' the administration may use&#13;
their power and authority to&#13;
overrule other student committee&#13;
decisions. In a democratic institution,&#13;
which the University&#13;
Ginger Helgeson&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Tony Rogeh&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Dan McCormack&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
Frank Fa Iduto&#13;
professes, this is not&#13;
problems are solved. The&#13;
is not that simple.&#13;
Perhaps it is time for&#13;
students to seriously review&#13;
policies and solutions to&#13;
the administration has.&#13;
Mary Jo Dagenhach&#13;
Editor's note:&#13;
In the Oct. 8. 198118...&#13;
RANG ER, the p. 1 story&#13;
that this year's unawarde4&#13;
Teaching Excellence stipend&#13;
remain in a system •&#13;
Parkside account cortS'&#13;
private donations to the&#13;
sity. .&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
Write Letter to&#13;
RangerlW&#13;
EdllGl&#13;
News Editlll&#13;
Feature EdllGl&#13;
sports Edi&#13;
Photo EdllGl&#13;
Business Mana ...&#13;
Mana ...&#13;
Distribution Manal&#13;
Adv&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thursday, 29, 1981&#13;
\!fOUI . , ..&#13;
Th Rang r' Friday s act1V1ty&#13;
riod wa becau_se onlr r f ur attended. d1scuss1on&#13;
;; ~n~eresting readers&#13;
lik we campus nding a~ouncement _is d tailing meetings. Br to meetmgs campu~.&#13;
we itorials, again you will We al O plea ed ~ho member&#13;
f applym~ re Jearrung think, La t rea: Rang r ome our pag . hearing_ sem ter to Editor .&#13;
twofold&#13;
: a misunderstanding&#13;
lake 1s ue Gu kin's in 22&#13;
j_ ue d tudent reads, part , " . . in the&#13;
Chancellor a being . . . " is&#13;
late that a ard conjunction&#13;
con rning hi lat t to giv Dr Shirley Kersey her&#13;
wa mpu d nied t nure and be aft r [nstead excellence&#13;
she her she still caITied to the be three &lt;:.:3ses to ponder. Prof.&#13;
EN DAL \'VE GOT&#13;
LIST ' r"' ',.WI.I COUNTR.Y&#13;
l'VE c,ar MOfHER.5 WHO CAN~&#13;
1'FFORD AFFORD BA&amp;YSITTER. EITHER.&#13;
l'VE GOT PEOPLE. !-!NAB&#13;
THE NEc~lc:&#13;
TrlA!NING 'jENJ'.&#13;
PEOPLE IN M1 ~ PROBLEMS.&#13;
award · he be administration excellence&#13;
she Gust.ave resolued&#13;
Unfortunately, putting the&#13;
simply "behind us" will not&#13;
be an job $500&#13;
be ex- incellence&#13;
award is for work structed 1970, $500 hapCacs&#13;
pened $500? k .&#13;
zij&#13;
•:;;_ . f\t:":':f~:~:f.\~ ..&#13;
The sol&#13;
is prob&#13;
Dagenbach&#13;
Editor's note:&#13;
In the Oct. 8, 1981 issue of&#13;
RANGER, the p. l story e.x ·&#13;
unawarded&#13;
Teaching Excellence remain -&#13;
Parkside account co11sisting 111&#13;
private donations the uni&#13;
sity.&#13;
r-------------------------------------- the money go? Fl':om the F·11es I 2. "Proposed" changes are just&#13;
10 ymrs ~ -&#13;
., dilorial" John ord of tudenl&#13;
Gov rnm nt As ociation&#13;
peak for it lf: one out p t. 'x m ting off. ot&#13;
y, The I cted repre ntatives&#13;
th ·tud nl rv constituents th y w lected but have f iled miserably. blam thi Ii the ,&#13;
houJd of th senators&#13;
who hav reneged their&#13;
obligatim th failing to att nd me tin . apathy that infects the tudent&#13;
1 ction turn - outs is exemplified&#13;
r ord at m tings.&#13;
othing dam ging to the pro peels of a&#13;
trong tu nt voice in univ ity an irTesponbl&#13;
disinted&#13;
pcrtion of the senate.&#13;
It i even possible to impeach&#13;
cl.&#13;
absenteeism unless attend&#13;
m tings. It is not possible&#13;
lo change quorum unless&#13;
there is first a quorum&#13;
reached. It i not possible for&#13;
th PSGA to adopt an operating&#13;
budget without a full senate vote on il&#13;
Al very least these&#13;
nators who not want the&#13;
r ponsibility of serving the&#13;
students should attend one&#13;
meetfng in order to give those&#13;
to serve opportunity to do&#13;
so.&#13;
- ew cope, vol. 5, no. 8. Oct.&#13;
25, 1971&#13;
I I that, proposed, not retroactive. agree that the criteria must be&#13;
5 years ago _ other week. As long 85 students&#13;
more strict and clear, but to deny&#13;
are interested and attend,&#13;
Dr. Shirley Kersey her award is&#13;
"Guskin meets students" by- "nobody and no topic is for- unfair. The criteria was not set up&#13;
Mona Maillet bidden," said Guskin.&#13;
by Dr. Kersey and she should not&#13;
21, be penalized for the oversight.&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin held "Turnout one of the poorest:&#13;
3. The delay of the other awards&#13;
his first open meeting of the elections seat six" by Bruce&#13;
being presented would not have&#13;
Wagner · if the administration&#13;
pleased with the turnout of The Parkside Student&#13;
would have presented the awards&#13;
about 15 people, saying that a Government held . their fall&#13;
to all the recipients the committee&#13;
similar meeting during the electi?ns this week, with six&#13;
had chosen. The delay was&#13;
summer attracted only one seats 10 the senate and seats in brought about by the ad- ·&#13;
person . - . the segregated fees allocation&#13;
ministration, not the committee&#13;
Guskin was asked (about) committee being filled.&#13;
as the letter to the editor implied.&#13;
his feelings on student in- The election turnout was one&#13;
4. If this situation is put "behind&#13;
volvement in their education. cl. the poorest ever at Parkside&#13;
us", the administration may use&#13;
He replied that he strongly with approximately 2% of the their power and autherity to&#13;
feels that students should get student body voting.&#13;
overrule other student committee&#13;
involved in the university. _ Ranger, vol. s, no. s, Wed., decisions. In a democratic in-&#13;
Every student - oriented Oct. 27, 1976 stitution, a&#13;
Letter Ranger11ll&#13;
committee m I year "Parkside accepts grants"&#13;
&lt;R!,nger&#13;
visit rum, Guskin said, "If a&#13;
student wants see me I&#13;
won't say no to a student.':&#13;
He also ~xpressed regrets at&#13;
lack interest in student&#13;
about the . ability to govern&#13;
through mcreasing committees.&#13;
answered that&#13;
he consults committees, not&#13;
governs through them.&#13;
He said, "People assume&#13;
that, ~le in authority are&#13;
SOB s trymg to manipulate the&#13;
ootof that · · · by proper interaction&#13;
between administration and&#13;
be&#13;
reduced.&#13;
R~rding future meetings&#13;
of this type, he said that be&#13;
would like to have them on a&#13;
regular basis, possibly every&#13;
Gifts and gran~ accepted&#13;
for Parkside the uw&#13;
Friday.&#13;
That $316 670&#13;
from the federal office ' Education for the Basic&#13;
Educational Opporkmity ·&#13;
Grants Program.&#13;
Gifts aceepted included&#13;
$6,437 for athletics or other&#13;
scholarships from multiple&#13;
dmors; $100 for George and&#13;
Madeline Molinaro Scholarship&#13;
fund from Elsie D. Mosca; and&#13;
$50 for the Kenneth L&#13;
Greenquist fund from Mark&#13;
Madsen.&#13;
The_ regents also accepted&#13;
$250. 10 peptide substrate reserves at&#13;
{!W-P _and $100 support of the&#13;
life science seminar series.&#13;
- Ranger, Oct. 23, 1980 vol 9&#13;
no. 8 ' • •&#13;
Rogel's&#13;
Falduto&#13;
Editor&#13;
Editor&#13;
Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Editor&#13;
Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Manager&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Bonofiglio,. Burns, J~~&#13;
~F~ra7n1~n,s ,P at Hens1ak, Jim Kreuser, Pat McDonald, J!"' Myers, Laurie Painter, Charles Perce, K•"'&#13;
c ater, Stevens, is written edit ,olell&#13;
resp0nsible for its editorial l":'l by students of .iw-Parkslde and they are&#13;
Thursd PO ,cy . id•~&#13;
RA_NGER is printed by 1~~ tur_lng te acad!m le year except during breai&lt;S and hol&#13;
Written permission is requ·r;',;o/' oop~rat,ve Publishing co., Kenosha, w1scoos1n.&#13;
All ccrresp0n&lt;1ence sh I or reprint of any POrtlon cf RANGER. iJ'//·&#13;
Kenosha, wi°~~41be addressed Parkside Ranger, 0139,&#13;
be· paper with one . Inch marginsacl~1Ple;' if typewritten, doublespaced on stand•~ 111·&#13;
eluded for verification · e lers must be Signe(! telephone num&#13;
~~~n:'\'c:, ~e11.::~~:1~J~:alid reasons. . NGE~&#13;
reserves all editori;,I prlvile,g~satl 9 a.m. _for publication on .Thursday. The R~lst rl&#13;
defamatory n refusing cootain&#13;
. . .&#13;
E~o ~ ~ ~----;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; RANG_E_R ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Thursda~y, _O_ctobe;;r;;;;;;;2i9,1981 __ J&#13;
. ters cont. * * * * * -Club Events- * * * n n From boners to haircuts&#13;
Boner's boners&#13;
Editor:&#13;
IIin' Boner Jim Kreuser, in&#13;
article on late book orders,&#13;
a crucial assumption In&#13;
luding that many faculty&#13;
bers "failed to meet the&#13;
k ordering deadline." He&#13;
med that his sources of !nation&#13;
and consequent .tnetation&#13;
were accurate. I find&#13;
assumption to be unanted&#13;
and, in at Jeast one&#13;
to be patently false. But&#13;
, I suppose, Strollin' Boner&#13;
'occasionally pull some of his&#13;
"ne Johnson&#13;
Prof., Humanities Division&#13;
the Editor: .&#13;
· is in response to the Ingative&#13;
report by Mr. Kreuser&#13;
ming the absence of text&#13;
for the (aU semester.&#13;
am an adjunct instructor. I&#13;
on July 15 that f would be&#13;
ing a course in the fall, well&#13;
the deadline for ordering the&#13;
book. This resulted in&#13;
· g a text that is not of my&#13;
choosing. Someone else must&#13;
been lale with the book Offeel&#13;
that investigative&#13;
ing should have included a&#13;
10 the teacher to find out if&#13;
was a reason for the late&#13;
teachers I have met at&#13;
·de are dedicated to fine&#13;
"01 and really do "care"&#13;
their students.&#13;
nda Mossman&#13;
y tests 'arbitrary'&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
letter is addressed to you&#13;
the Ranger staff for&#13;
tication, with my hope that it&#13;
find an appropriate audience.&#13;
am angry about some of the&#13;
lIleph Szafraniec, an employee&#13;
aUons representative at&#13;
conda . American Brass&#13;
alion, and Deloras Fergus,&#13;
personnel coordinator for&#13;
et retail stores, will present a&#13;
kshop entitled "Effective Job&#13;
erviewing" on Wednesday,&#13;
en..4 from I to 2 p.m. in Moln.&#13;
two member panel will&#13;
e short presentations and will&#13;
answer questions.&#13;
Tech program&#13;
applications&#13;
t Mary's Medical Center of&#13;
cine ~ now taking applications&#13;
their 12-month medical&#13;
hnology program from&#13;
ts who will possess bac-&#13;
Ureate degrees in suitable&#13;
ce majors by next summer.&#13;
~ program of clinical exence&#13;
leads to a na tional&#13;
rt.ification examination in&#13;
cal technology.&#13;
eligible to apply for the&#13;
. ~ram must have had a&#13;
D1~um of 16 credits in&#13;
e;lISl?, i~cluding organic&#13;
or biological chemistry; a&#13;
I mum of 16 credits In bIOlogy,&#13;
Udlng micro . biology and&#13;
~ rnunology; and a minimum of&#13;
• COursein mathematics.&#13;
The deadline foi: applications&#13;
~ next summer's program is&#13;
ve~ber 15. For more inaHon,&#13;
oonlact Educational&#13;
1 ~nator Pat Landenberger,&#13;
J&gt;rlI1g SI., Racine WI 534M&#13;
lIle 636-4212). '&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Does anyone want a free&#13;
haircut? Ireceived a call the other&#13;
day from Ruffolo's Hair Studio,&#13;
3519 52nd SI. in Kenosha offering&#13;
free shampoo, cut and styliog to&#13;
UW-Parkside students (I'm not&#13;
sure about faculty and staff)&#13;
during the evenings of Nov. 8,9, 10&#13;
and 11. There are no catches to&#13;
this offer; it is being done in&#13;
connection with Ruffolo's opening&#13;
a new studio in Racine. Those&#13;
To the Editor: interested should call Ruffolo's at&#13;
Recently I ha ve been wondering 654-6154 during the day to make an&#13;
about the nature of the institution appointment for one of tbose Student Mobe.&#13;
called upper level education. I November evenings. Ruffolo _ , .. .&#13;
b d· b t hose services both men and women. ParkSlde s Student Mobl1LZ.atlon&#13;
ihnatveerest een twheon aecratndgemiaC ?U wworld Wa It Shi rer. . for dSurvival '30is meetin. g 101on&#13;
d bo t h h takes Director of Pubhc InformatIOn Toes ays at 3. p.m. In. n&#13;
serves an ". u w 0 as sMAURICE BUCHANAN TURNED&#13;
DOWN A BASKETBALL SCHOLARSHIP&#13;
. FOR AN ARMY ROTC SCHOLARSHIR&#13;
d t" n&#13;
11 II rc&#13;
LPI I&#13;
"cad "our la rs fR(&#13;
l(&lt;&gt;Udl,ea) "ltng r&#13;
\ u altcr CI.~I do" hal un&#13;
Buchanan d,d&#13;
Appl k&gt;r an Army R&#13;
hola"lup Toda,&#13;
And begm y{lUf luturc a an&#13;
oftlcer&#13;
tests that I ha ve taken in some of&#13;
my classes thus far this semester,&#13;
of the particular kind, essay tests&#13;
in whole or part. It seems to me&#13;
that if professors want essays&#13;
from their students then the time&#13;
to have them written is not while a&#13;
student is, or ought to be, an.&#13;
swering definitive questions about&#13;
course material. I expect that if&#13;
an essay is rightly assigned by a&#13;
professor to be written by a&#13;
student it will never have to be&#13;
done on SUrprise notice within the&#13;
duration of one class session, and&#13;
if so, certainly not for credit, but&#13;
rather for some other more immediate&#13;
satisfaction known most&#13;
usually only to the professor&#13;
himself. I do not understand Why&#13;
tests in class cannot be, or simply&#13;
Willfully are not, confined to&#13;
definitive questions that a student&#13;
may be reasonably certain of&#13;
answering correctly if he has&#13;
attended the course lectures and&#13;
studied the accompanying texts&#13;
according to the direction of the&#13;
professor who conducts the use of&#13;
them both. I can tell you, for instance,&#13;
that the lectures in my&#13;
advanced composition class have&#13;
been so pathetically mismanaged,&#13;
to the point of becoming&#13;
pecuJarily offensive, that if ever a&#13;
test were derived from them, it&#13;
would most fairly have to he.&#13;
wholly incomprehensible, or at&#13;
the very least inaccessibly biased&#13;
as to mock an answering to by&#13;
anyone except its author. I believe&#13;
that careful testing involves an&#13;
explicit affirmation between&#13;
students and their professor as to&#13;
what their collected matter of&#13;
inquiry brings to issue, and&#13;
SUbsequently what may be said to&#13;
have resolved between them in&#13;
reference to their cooperative&#13;
studies. A test that incorporates&#13;
inconclusive questions that solicit&#13;
arbitrary responses is not a test of&#13;
any detenninable worth. Alter.&#13;
natively, tests that are designed to&#13;
elicit a specific response from&#13;
their audience would be of&#13;
calculable service to students and&#13;
professors alike. Thank you.&#13;
Kevin L. Zuehlsdorf&#13;
Maintain perspective&#13;
in the performance of this very&#13;
integral part of the 'Real World.'&#13;
Does everybody inVOlved, administrators&#13;
to janitors, realize&#13;
what the whole of society is put.&#13;
tiog out to provide the opportunity&#13;
for educational advancement? Do&#13;
we all acknowledge the fact that&#13;
the reason we are provided this&#13;
educational opportunity is so that&#13;
we may give an the more back to&#13;
those whom we represent? Or are&#13;
we only desirous of self - serving&#13;
benefits?&#13;
Sometimes I wonder whether&#13;
the academic world thinks that&#13;
they hold something above and&#13;
beyond the government and&#13;
business sectors. If anybody does&#13;
feel this way I hope that they&#13;
realize that one cannot stand&#13;
without the support of the other. U&#13;
anyone has a way for the&#13;
academics to exist without&#13;
business or government being&#13;
involved, let me know.&#13;
Do not take this letter as a&#13;
person being down on the&#13;
academic world. Nothing could he&#13;
farther from the truth. AU I wish&#13;
to say is that I believe that the&#13;
goals, reasons, and objectives for&#13;
the existence of academics be&#13;
constantly evaluated from within&#13;
so that the proper perspectives&#13;
may be maintained. An academic&#13;
world that understands and&#13;
performs its functions is very,&#13;
very good while an academic&#13;
world that leans toward seU _&#13;
serving goals is of use to no one.&#13;
Let us all hope that the academics&#13;
continue to be introspective and&#13;
very, very good.&#13;
Christopher P. Dorf&#13;
634-8463&#13;
Free hair cuts!&#13;
"1knew I needed to go to&#13;
college. Ineeded to get chac ticket&#13;
punched to be successful:' says&#13;
Maurice. "Why did I select an Army&#13;
RarC scholarship over a basket-' .&#13;
ball scholarship' Beeause I knew I d&#13;
have a job after graduation. And [hat s&#13;
more than a lot of my peers could say.&#13;
"I may stay in the military.&#13;
But if I decide to ge[ out, I've got the&#13;
best job reference in the world-a&#13;
commission in che United Scares&#13;
Army." ....&#13;
Army ROTC can do the same&#13;
~foryou. .&#13;
Qualify, and you can wm.&#13;
an ROTC scholarship, as Maur.lCe&#13;
did. Each scholarslup covers tUttion,&#13;
books, and more.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
Women in Business will hold a&#13;
general business meeting on&#13;
Monday, [ov, 2 at 1 p.m. in Union&#13;
104 Anyone interested in&#13;
becoming a part of this growing&#13;
network of women concerned with&#13;
working toward entrance and&#13;
active participation in the&#13;
professional world is welcome to&#13;
attend. •&#13;
Congratulations to ;'\'argarel&#13;
Rodriguez, an active member of&#13;
WID. on her election to the PSGA&#13;
Senate. We're sure she'U be an&#13;
invaluable asset to the senate.&#13;
eed an invigorating mid-week&#13;
pick - me • up? Join us every&#13;
Wednesday from I to 2 p.m. in the&#13;
wrestling room oCthe gym for an&#13;
aerobic dance session. An hour of&#13;
fun and fitness is just what you&#13;
need.&#13;
Geology&#13;
The Geology Club will oCfer a&#13;
Colloquium on Friday, OcL 30 at I&#13;
p.m. in Grnq. 113on "The Glomar&#13;
Explorer: Deep Sea Drilling for&#13;
Oil, fntelligience and Science."&#13;
The colloquium will he presented&#13;
by William N. Orr from the&#13;
University of Oregon's Department&#13;
of Geology.&#13;
Nurse:s Org.&#13;
A student nurse's meeting will&#13;
be held on Monday, Nov. 2 at noon&#13;
in Union 'lJ11 to get students in.&#13;
valved in the consortiaJ bac.&#13;
calaureatte nursing program at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Volunteers are still needed for&#13;
the Smoke Out on Thursday, Nov.&#13;
19. To volunteer, C&lt;lltact Peggy&#13;
Rather.&#13;
Computer Oub&#13;
The Parkside Compute- Club&#13;
will be holding its monthly&#13;
meeting on Monday, Nov. 2 at&#13;
noon in Grnq. 103 to discuss the&#13;
programming contest, field trips&#13;
and the Computer User's Forum.&#13;
The User's Forum will be held in&#13;
Grnq. 103 immediately followi"8&#13;
the Computer Club meeting&#13;
The Computer Club urges all&#13;
students concerned with the&#13;
utilization of computer facilit,es&#13;
at Parkside to attend and voice&#13;
their opinions. Both meetings are&#13;
open to all students and faculty&#13;
DI28. Mobe IS oppcoed to nuclear&#13;
IlO" er • wea p&lt;lni a nd the a no.&#13;
race We support ba!iic human&#13;
rights and lhe fUndl"8 of human&#13;
needs. The Parkstde chapl ... ha&#13;
sponsored peekers, flims and&#13;
workshops directly and ir"hrectly&#13;
related to the ab&lt;/l;e Anyone In.&#13;
terested '5 InVtted to attend the&#13;
meetings&#13;
Bowling Club&#13;
The B""'hng Club meets every&#13;
week in the Roc. Center At&#13;
present the oCftce tnclude. John&#13;
Peterson. president Ellen&#13;
Becwar. Vice president, Bob&#13;
N~'berg, secretary. Jay Podella.&#13;
treasurer; and .Itite ~Ienzhuber.&#13;
advisor&#13;
The Bowling Club has t"O big&#13;
tournaments coming up, one In t&#13;
Louis C. aucnal Team . falch&#13;
Games) and one In Las Vegas&#13;
(Walt Peabody Invttational' The&#13;
Club placed third in t LouIs Ia I&#13;
year&#13;
The club needs women bowl rs&#13;
for next semester. Anyone 10'&#13;
terested in joining BowIl"8 Club&#13;
should contact Mike .Ienzhuber In&#13;
the Rec. Center&#13;
Women' 5 Concourse&#13;
Parkside Women's Concoune&#13;
will hold an organiz.ational&#13;
meeting on Monday, ,·ov. 2 at I&#13;
p.m. tn ~Ioln. 165. The purpose d&#13;
concourse IS to faclhtate&#13;
awareness of women's concerns&#13;
at Parkslde All tudent&gt; and&#13;
faculty and staff are "elcome to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Health&#13;
screemng&#13;
offered&#13;
The UWMIlwauk Consort I&#13;
•'ursingPtogrBm at Par df"U1&#13;
offer a FREE blood re&#13;
height and \\ tIght ere nlng&#13;
program on Thursda , Oct 211&#13;
from 8:30 am. unlll 12'30 pm In&#13;
the alcove ,d the book t&#13;
The ser\"lce ts avallabl to&#13;
ludents, facultY,taff and oth." Interested The nursmg tudl-n&#13;
who "til take the blood pr ur •&#13;
heights and " ,gh'" are fl t&#13;
semf' ter JUDlor. enrolled In&#13;
. 'ursing Practice III&#13;
C,lPl M.luncc Buchanan wa~ a m.llh ~'t .1{&#13;
(hI:' Unl\crSl(~' tlfec,'tl,'13&lt;lnJ a mcmhefl.j '\rmy&#13;
ROTC ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.&#13;
For details contact: ENROLLMENT OFFICER&#13;
MILITARY SERVICE DEPT. MARQUETTE U.&#13;
1-224-7195&#13;
~ ~&#13;
~ •tters, cont.&#13;
RA GER hursday, 0d r 29, 1 81&#13;
-From boners to haircuts **&#13;
.p teachers 'care '&#13;
the Editor: .&#13;
i in response to the m-&#13;
. Jbgalive report b Mr. Kreuser&#13;
1s noc ming the absence of text&#13;
. The (or the fall semester .&#13;
am an adjunct instructor. I&#13;
ed on July 15 that I would be&#13;
hing a course in the fall, well&#13;
th deadline for ordering the&#13;
s 11 book . This resulted in&#13;
· u:hmg a text that is not of my .&#13;
choosing. Someone else must&#13;
1 i41111r&#13;
tory&#13;
e n late with the book orreel&#13;
that investigative&#13;
mg should have included a&#13;
to the teacher to find out if&#13;
was a reason for the late&#13;
teachers I have met at&#13;
· de are dedicated to fine&#13;
hing and really do "care"&#13;
t their students.&#13;
enda Mossman&#13;
say tests 'arbitrary'&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
rhi letter is addressed to you&#13;
the Ranger staff for&#13;
lication, with my hope that it&#13;
find an appropriate audience.&#13;
am angry about some of the&#13;
a terviewing&#13;
orkshop offered&#13;
to eph zafraniec , an employee&#13;
allons representative at&#13;
onda - American Brass&#13;
ation, and Deloras Fergus,&#13;
onnel coordinator for&#13;
rget retail tores, will present a&#13;
rkshop entitled ''Effective Job&#13;
t r\'iewing" on Wednesday,&#13;
• 4 from 1 to 2 p.m. in Moln.&#13;
Oi,&#13;
The two member panel will&#13;
Ii hort presentations and will&#13;
an wer questions .&#13;
. Tech pr~ram&#13;
l&lt;lng applications&#13;
I Mary' Medical Center of&#13;
cine is now taking applications&#13;
their 12-month medical&#13;
hnology program from&#13;
ent who will possess baclaureate&#13;
degrees in suitable&#13;
•ence majors by next summer.&#13;
e program of clinical ex,&#13;
1ence leads to a national&#13;
rtificalion examination in&#13;
1cal technology.&#13;
Those eligible to apply for the&#13;
O~ram must have had a&#13;
inimum of 16 credits in&#13;
emistry, including organic&#13;
~or biological chemistry; a&#13;
1~m_um of ~6 credits in biology,&#13;
udmg micro - biology and&#13;
munology; and a minimum of&#13;
course in mathematics.&#13;
The deadline for applications&#13;
r next summer's program is&#13;
ove~ber 15. For more inma?&#13;
on, contact Educational&#13;
rd1 nator Pat Landenberger&#13;
I prirlg St., Racine , WI 53404&#13;
&lt;Xie 636-4212&gt;.&#13;
test that I have taken in some of&#13;
my cla es thus far this semester,&#13;
of the particular kind, essay test&#13;
in whole or part. It seem to me&#13;
that if profe sors want essays&#13;
from their tudents then the time&#13;
to have them written is not while a&#13;
tudent i , or ought to be, answering&#13;
definitive questions about&#13;
course material. I expect that if&#13;
an ay is rightly assigned by a&#13;
professor to be written by a&#13;
student it will never have to be&#13;
done on surpri e notice within the&#13;
duration of one class session , and&#13;
if o , certainly not for credit, but&#13;
rather for some other more immediate&#13;
sati faction known most&#13;
usually only to the profes or&#13;
himself. I do not under land why&#13;
tests in cla cannot be, or simply&#13;
willfully are not , confined to&#13;
definitive questions that a tudent&#13;
may be reasonably certain of&#13;
answering correctly if he has&#13;
attended the course lectures and&#13;
studied the accompanying texts&#13;
according to the directjon of the&#13;
professor who conducts the use of&#13;
them both. I can tell you, for instance,&#13;
that the lectures in my&#13;
advanced composition cla have&#13;
been so pathetically mismanaged,&#13;
to the point of becoming&#13;
pecularily offensive, that if ever a&#13;
test were derived from them, it&#13;
would most fairly have to be&#13;
wholly incomprehensible, or at&#13;
the very least inaccessibly biased&#13;
as to mock an answering to by&#13;
anyone except its author. I believe&#13;
that careful testing involves an&#13;
explicit affirmation between&#13;
students and their professor as to&#13;
what their collected matter of&#13;
inquiry brings to issue, and&#13;
subsequently what may be said to&#13;
have resolved between them in&#13;
reference to their cooperative&#13;
tudies . A test that incorporates&#13;
inconclusive questions that solicit&#13;
arbitrary responses is not a test of&#13;
any determinable worth. Alternatively&#13;
, tests that are designed to&#13;
elicit a pecific respon e from&#13;
their audience would be of&#13;
calculable service to students and&#13;
professors alike. Thank you .&#13;
Kevin L . Zuehl dorf&#13;
in the performance or this very&#13;
integral part of the 'Real W rid .·&#13;
D everybody involved, administrators&#13;
to janitor , realize&#13;
what lh whole of society is putting&#13;
out to provide the opportunity&#13;
for educational ad\•ancement? Do&#13;
we all acknowledge the fact that&#13;
the reason we are provided this&#13;
educational opportunity is so that&#13;
we ma give all the more ba to&#13;
th e whom w represent'? Or are&#13;
we only desirou of self • rving&#13;
benefits?&#13;
ometimes I wonder wheth&#13;
the academic world think that&#13;
they hold something above and&#13;
beyond the government and&#13;
business sectors. If anybody d&#13;
feel th. way I hope that they&#13;
realize that one cannot stand&#13;
without the upport of the other. If&#13;
anyone has a way for the&#13;
academic to exist ithout&#13;
busines or government being&#13;
in olved, let me know .&#13;
Do not take this letter as a&#13;
person being down on the&#13;
academic world. othing could be&#13;
farther from the truth. All I wish&#13;
to say i that I believe that the&#13;
goals. reasons, and objectives for&#13;
the existence of academics be&#13;
constanUy evaluated from within&#13;
so that the proper perspectives&#13;
may be maintained. An academic&#13;
world that understands and&#13;
performs its functions is very,&#13;
very good while an academic&#13;
world that leans toward self •&#13;
rving goals is of use to no one.&#13;
Let us all hope that the academics&#13;
continue to be introspective and&#13;
very, very good.&#13;
Christopher P . Dorf&#13;
634-8463&#13;
Free hair cuts[&#13;
To the Editor :&#13;
Doe anyone want a free&#13;
haircut? I received a call the other&#13;
day from Ruifolo's Hair tu&lt;lio ,&#13;
3519 52nd St. in Kenosha offering&#13;
free shampoo, cut and tyling to&#13;
~-Parkside stud nts (I'm not&#13;
sure about faculty and staff)&#13;
during the evenings of ov . 8, 9, 10&#13;
and 11. There are no catches to&#13;
thi offer ; it is being done in Ma .lntain perspective conneclion with Ruifolo's opening&#13;
a new tudio in Racine. Tho&#13;
To the Editor : inter led hould call Ruffolo' at&#13;
urse:s Org.&#13;
A student nurse'&#13;
be held on onday ,&#13;
in nion 2fl1 to e&#13;
volved in the co&#13;
calaureatte nursin&#13;
Par ·de .&#13;
Volunt are still n for&#13;
the moke Out oo Thursday, ' o ·•&#13;
19. To volunteer, cootact P&#13;
Rather.&#13;
Computer Club&#13;
Recently I have been wondering 654-6154 during the day to make an&#13;
about the nature of the institution appointment for _ on of tho e&#13;
called upper level education. I ov~mber evening .. Ruffolo tud nt&#13;
Health&#13;
have been wondering ab?ut whose erv,ces_ both men and women . fo r ur i ·al ' m t i n&#13;
::;~~'!.~":oo~~~~.m~, ~~'~i\il~J&amp;i&amp; I&#13;
D£':'1e LM, ROTC SCHOLARS R&#13;
"! knC\\ I needed tn go to&#13;
college I needed m get ha ti ket&#13;
punched ro be su c ful:' :.ay&#13;
tau rice. "Why did I :,elect an Army&#13;
ROTC sc h la hi O\'er a ba ket· .&#13;
ba ll holarsh ip? Because I knew Id,&#13;
haveaj b aftergraduation Andthat&#13;
more than a lotof my rs c uld say.&#13;
·•1 may cay m che m.ihta ry.&#13;
Bue if I dee id to get ut. I ve got th&#13;
be t job refe rence m the wo rld -a&#13;
co mmi io n in rh e United ta t&#13;
Army."&#13;
Army ROTC ca n d the sa me&#13;
'for y u. .&#13;
Quali fy, and ou ca n win_&#13;
an R0fC hola r hip, a. faunc&#13;
d id _ Each scholarship c v rs ui ti&#13;
o n , books, and m re.&#13;
I&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.&#13;
For details contact: ENROLLMENT OFFICER&#13;
MILITARY SERVICE DEPT. MARQUETTE U.&#13;
1-224-719S&#13;
3&#13;
The University Committee had&#13;
some heated discussion in its Sept.&#13;
24 meeting concerning the&#13;
proposed title change of Coordina&#13;
tor of Communi ty&#13;
Educational Programs to&#13;
Associate Dean for Outreach and&#13;
Summer Session.&#13;
Thursday. October 29. 1981 RANGER&#13;
lighting of handicap&#13;
lot is inadequate&#13;
by J lm Kreuser&#13;
Due to the fact that people in&#13;
certain positions are unhappy&#13;
with the borrowing d the title&#13;
"Stroltin'," I have changed the&#13;
format of this column insignificantly.&#13;
Truisms about&#13;
Parkside cannot (and will not) be&#13;
censored.&#13;
The intent of this column is not&#13;
to bad - mouth Parkside, ,but&#13;
rather to make information&#13;
available to Parkside students.&#13;
So, this roving report er will be&#13;
toolin' around the school scooping&#13;
out the oddities althe norm. Wen,&#13;
here's "Kreuser's Cozy Corner."&#13;
This week, Parkside interacts&#13;
with the State. What does the Slate&#13;
have to do with Parkside? Well,&#13;
there's a little problem in back of&#13;
Molinaro HaU. You know the&#13;
place. That's where all the bigwigs&#13;
(the Chancellor, the&#13;
Assistant Chancellor) park tbeir&#13;
cars. Not only do they park their&#13;
cars there, but so do handicapped&#13;
people.&#13;
These are the people I am&#13;
concerned about. They must deal&#13;
with the added handicap of&#13;
darkness. Ever since handicapped&#13;
parking was made available on&#13;
this spot, there have been no&#13;
outside lights. Of course, the&#13;
university wants the best possible&#13;
lighting system for this area.&#13;
Although funds are short, they&#13;
found it feasible to look elsewhere&#13;
for the money. Enter a State&#13;
agency.&#13;
Because the Building Commission&#13;
meets once a month (or&#13;
once every other month), it might&#13;
be awhile before Parkside gets on&#13;
the agenda. If by chance Parkside&#13;
is allocated money, we'll be in&#13;
good shape. If not, we're going to&#13;
have to spend money out of the&#13;
university's pocket, which will&#13;
probably mean another Physical&#13;
Plant disaster.&#13;
Until we find out the result of&#13;
whether or not the money is&#13;
coming from elsewhere, the lights&#13;
will be on in the classrooms adjacent&#13;
to this area. This does&#13;
provide some light, even if it is&#13;
only a temporary solution to the&#13;
problem.&#13;
Committees discuss Faculty Senate issues&#13;
result from requiring "hands on" after a short di~cussion.&#13;
artistic experience of all students. In o~her bus~ness, Uni&#13;
The committee then agreed With CommIttee chair Gene N&#13;
her suggestion to make ~p- reported to the committee&#13;
predation courses, along With Par~slde .has faced a&#13;
studio and performance courses, declIne In purchasing&#13;
eligible to complete the breadth between 1972 and the&#13;
area. Parkside's purchasing&#13;
Committee member Walter fallen about 28%, NorwOOd&#13;
Feldt then noted that other areas "It is beyond dispute that&#13;
of the proposal need work, to has been a substantial d&#13;
which committee members Norwood said. "I'm&#13;
agreed. It was unanimously suggesting that we're&#13;
established that a committee stricken, but this decline&#13;
would acton the proposal If It IS continue .wlthout real Pro&#13;
passed by the Faculty Senate this With quahty developing."&#13;
fall. Norwood said that a&#13;
The University Committee surcharge implemented&#13;
decided not to take a stand on the semester could generate&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge proposal $200,000 for Parkside.&#13;
\&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Both the AcademiC policies&#13;
Committee (APCl and the&#13;
University Committee met last&#13;
Thursday to .discuss two matters&#13;
to be presented to the Faculty&#13;
Senate at their late fall meeting&#13;
next month, the Honors Program&#13;
and the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
proposal.&#13;
The APC indicated that the&#13;
Honors program policy needed&#13;
"some language straighte~ed&#13;
up." They then unanimously&#13;
passed a motion to indicate that&#13;
the program's director would be&#13;
chosen from a slate of candidates&#13;
submitted to the Dean of Faculty.&#13;
The director's term is for 1 year.&#13;
The University Committee agreed&#13;
with the APC.&#13;
APC chair Beecham Robinson&#13;
said he hoped the Sena te would&#13;
pass the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
proposal "pretty much the way&#13;
we've put it forward," while other&#13;
members noted that "even this&#13;
group is not united on it."&#13;
Alter Rhoda-Gail Pollack of tbe&#13;
Fine Arts Division presented a&#13;
suggestion to the committee on&#13;
the fine arts requirement, they&#13;
supported her suggestion. She&#13;
noted that while it is important to&#13;
"train people to appreciate artistic&#13;
work," the faculties in the&#13;
fine arts departments are not&#13;
large enough to cope with the&#13;
higher enrollment that would&#13;
Title change discussed&#13;
Present at tbe meeting were&#13;
Eugene Norwood, chairperson;&#13;
Richard Keehn, William Moy,&#13;
Beecham Robinson, Carole Vopat,&#13;
members; Vice Chancellor&#13;
Lorman Ratner; and Walter&#13;
Feldt, Secretary of the F&#13;
The committee pe&#13;
Ratner that a search I&#13;
position should - be cond&#13;
rather than only changi&#13;
position's title. Ratner&#13;
search would have to be .&#13;
because the funds and&#13;
count do not exist to ena&#13;
outside search.&#13;
Ratner explained that&#13;
there are positions wherea&#13;
would be clearly appropria&#13;
others where it would not,&#13;
also an intermediate&#13;
positions where one c&#13;
either. Ratner told the co&#13;
that although there w&#13;
written policies which&#13;
a search for any positioo&#13;
Vice - Chancellor, he oow&#13;
that a search should inva .&#13;
conducted for academ&#13;
ministrative positions.&#13;
The process to select&#13;
members for the search&#13;
mittee was the matter&#13;
created disagreement.&#13;
told the committee whichf&#13;
members he proposed to a&#13;
to the search committee&#13;
asked the committee for ad&#13;
the proposed appointments.&#13;
committee members st&#13;
advocated that the co&#13;
itself should provide a&#13;
nominees.&#13;
In response, Ratner m&#13;
clear that he was not pr&#13;
follow that procedure in .&#13;
As the direct supervisor&#13;
Associated Dean, Ratner f&#13;
is in a better position to&#13;
members whose judgm&#13;
trusts, who will underst&#13;
role of the Associate Dea&#13;
who, collectively, will&#13;
balanced committee repr&#13;
different campus groups,&#13;
eluding minorities and&#13;
Several committee m&#13;
vigorously protested Ra&#13;
decision to proceed that&#13;
After at times heated ex&#13;
Ratner suggested that the&#13;
mittee state its position in&#13;
to Chancellor Alan GUskiD'&#13;
invite a discussion of the i&#13;
general sense - who should&#13;
the faculty membership&#13;
search committee at pa&#13;
The discussion having&#13;
an impasse, Chairperson N&#13;
asked whether the commi .&#13;
willing to leave the quest&#13;
procedures to enter In&#13;
discussion concerl1:ingof&#13;
proposed membersbtt'&#13;
search committee. By a 3-1&#13;
the committee agreed to&#13;
Ratner stated that all three&#13;
choices were senior facultY&#13;
experience in previous&#13;
who had worked with, or&#13;
strong interest in, outreacb&#13;
tivities, and that his&#13;
represented a balance of&#13;
constituencies.&#13;
Members of the com&#13;
objected to some of Ra I&#13;
choices and suggested lila&#13;
dilional campus constlj,old•&#13;
involved in outreach s~er&#13;
represented, but did not Ra&#13;
alterna tive. choices.&#13;
agreed to drop one .\&#13;
member at the campti&#13;
suggestion, and to CO&#13;
enlarging the search .com&#13;
so tha t other groups VI&#13;
represented.&#13;
TUE STROU9~&#13;
BEERlO R&#13;
]PUXlOSOJP&#13;
Distributed by E. F. MADRIGRANO 1831 . 55th St. Kenosha. Wi.se. 658.3553&#13;
Stroh's - .NEW ON TAP \A' T UNION SQUARE&#13;
Vall No 6&#13;
Thursday, October '19, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Lighting of handicap&#13;
lot is inadequate&#13;
b Jim Kreu r&#13;
Due to the fact that people in&#13;
c rt in it1on are unhappy&#13;
with th borrowing ci the tiUe&#13;
" trollin '," l have changed the&#13;
format of this column ini&#13;
nificanUy. Trui ms about&#13;
P rkside cannot (and will not ) be&#13;
ored .&#13;
The intent of this column is not&#13;
to bad • mouth Parkside, ,but&#13;
rather to make information&#13;
vailabl to Par ide tudents.&#13;
with the added handicap of&#13;
darkness . Ever since handicapped&#13;
parking was made available on&#13;
this pot, there have been no&#13;
out ide lights. Of course, the&#13;
university wants the best poosible&#13;
lighting system for this area.&#13;
Although funds are short, they&#13;
found it feasible to look elsewhere&#13;
for the money . Enter a State&#13;
agency .&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Both the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee (APC) and the&#13;
University Committee met last&#13;
Thursday to .discuss two matters&#13;
to be presented to the Facu_lty&#13;
Senate at their late fall meetmg&#13;
next month, the Honors Program&#13;
and the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
proposal.&#13;
result from requiring "hands on"&#13;
artistic experience of all studen_ts.&#13;
The committee then agreed with&#13;
her suggestion to make 8:Ppreciation&#13;
courses, along with&#13;
studio and performance courses,&#13;
eligible to complete the breadth&#13;
area.&#13;
Committee member Walter&#13;
Feldt then noted that other areas&#13;
of the proposal need work, to&#13;
which committee members&#13;
agreed. It was unanimously&#13;
established that a committee&#13;
would act on the proposal if it is&#13;
passed by the Faculty Senate this&#13;
fall.&#13;
The University Committee&#13;
decided not to take a stand on the&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge proposal&#13;
. thi roving reporter will be&#13;
t Im ' around th school cooping&#13;
out th odditie of the norm . Well,&#13;
her ' " Kreu r' CO'ly Corner."&#13;
Because the Building Commission&#13;
meets once a month (or&#13;
once every other month) , it might&#13;
be awhile before Parkside gets on&#13;
the agenda . If by chance Parkside&#13;
is allocated money, we'll be in&#13;
good shape. If not, we're going to&#13;
have to spend money out of the&#13;
university's pocket, which will&#13;
probably mean another Physical&#13;
Plant disaster.&#13;
The APC indicated that the&#13;
Honors program policy needed&#13;
"some language straightened&#13;
up." They then unanimously&#13;
passed a motion to indicate that&#13;
the program's director would be&#13;
chosen from a slate of candidates&#13;
submitted to the Dean of Faculty.&#13;
The director's term is for 1 year.&#13;
The University Committee agreed&#13;
with the APC .&#13;
APC chair Beecham Robinson&#13;
said he hoped the Senate would&#13;
pass the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
proposal "pretty much the way&#13;
we've put it forward," while other&#13;
members noted that "even this&#13;
group is not united on it."&#13;
Title change discussed&#13;
Thi week. Parkside interacts&#13;
v.1th the tate. What does the tale&#13;
ha\' to do with Parkside? Well,&#13;
th re' a litUe problem in back of&#13;
r-. olinaro Hall . You know the&#13;
place. That's here all the bigv.&#13;
,g ( the hancellor, the&#13;
i tant Chancellor&gt; park their&#13;
cars. 'ot only do they park their&#13;
cars th re, but so do handicapped&#13;
pie.&#13;
These are the people l am&#13;
c cerned about. They must deal&#13;
Until we find out the result of&#13;
whether or not the money is&#13;
coming from elsewhere, the lights&#13;
wiJI be on in the classrooms adjacent&#13;
to this area. This does&#13;
provide some light, even if it is&#13;
only a temporary solution to the&#13;
problem.&#13;
After Rhoda-Gail Pollack of the&#13;
Fine Arts Division presented a&#13;
suggestion to the committee on&#13;
the fine arts requirement, they&#13;
supported her suggestion. She&#13;
noted that while it is important to&#13;
"train people to appreciate artistic&#13;
work," the faculties in the&#13;
fine arts departments are not&#13;
large enough to cope with the&#13;
higher enrollment that would&#13;
The University Committee had&#13;
some heated discussion in its Sept.&#13;
24 meeting concerning the&#13;
proposed title change of Coordinator&#13;
of Community&#13;
Educational Programs to&#13;
Associate Dean for Outreach and&#13;
Summer Session.&#13;
Present at the meeting were&#13;
Eugene Norwood, chairperson;&#13;
Richard Keehn, William Moy,&#13;
Beecham Robinson, Carole Vopat,&#13;
members; Vice Chancellor&#13;
Lorman Ratner; and Walter&#13;
IlHilE SIROlHI 9&#13;
~&#13;
BlElER lO ~R&#13;
IPlHII[lOSOIP Vol 1 No 6&#13;
--.. ✓&#13;
Distributed by E. F. MADRIGRANO 1831 . 55th S .&#13;
t. Kenosha, Wisc.&#13;
Stroh's NEW ' - ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
658-3553&#13;
Feldt, Secretary of the Fa&#13;
The committee persu&#13;
Ratner that a search for&#13;
position should- be cond&#13;
rather than only changi~&#13;
position's title. Ratner said&#13;
search would have to be i&#13;
because the funds and&#13;
count do not exist to enable&#13;
outside search.&#13;
Ratner explained that&#13;
there are positions whe re a&#13;
would be clearly appropriate&#13;
others where it would not,&#13;
also an intermediate class&#13;
positions where one could&#13;
either. Ratner told the co ·&#13;
that although there were&#13;
written policies which de:111111•••&#13;
a search for any positioo&#13;
Vice • Chancellor, he now&#13;
that a search should invaria&#13;
conducted for academic&#13;
ministrative positions.&#13;
The process to select f&#13;
members for the search&#13;
mittee was the matter&#13;
created disagreement. Ra&#13;
told the committee whi ch f&#13;
members he proposed to a&#13;
to the search committee&#13;
asked the committee for advi&#13;
the proposed appointments.&#13;
committee members st&#13;
advocated that the co ·&#13;
itself should provide a slate&#13;
nominees.&#13;
In response, Ratner made&#13;
clear that he was not pr&#13;
follow that procedure in this&#13;
As the direct supervisor Ii&#13;
Associated Dean, Ratner feels&#13;
is in a better position to&#13;
members whose judgment&#13;
trusts, who will understand&#13;
role of the Associate Dean.&#13;
who, collectively, will bt&#13;
balanced committee repr&#13;
different campus groups,&#13;
eluding minorities and w&#13;
Several committee mern&#13;
vigorously protested Rat&#13;
decision to proceed that&#13;
After at times heated excha&#13;
Ratner suggested that the .&#13;
mittee sfate its position in w&#13;
to Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
invite a discussion of the issue&#13;
general sense - who should&#13;
the faculty membership f!I '&#13;
search committee at Pa&#13;
The discussion having r&#13;
an impasse, Chairperson No&#13;
asked whether the committee&#13;
willing to leave the questi~&#13;
procedures to enter into&#13;
discussion concerning&#13;
proposea membership ol&#13;
search committee. By a 3-2&#13;
the committee agreed to P&#13;
Ratner stated that all threed&#13;
choices were senior faculty&#13;
experience in previous sea lJld&#13;
who had worked with, or&#13;
strong interest in, outreach&#13;
tivities, and that his&#13;
represented a balance of ca&#13;
constituencies. i&#13;
Members of the conun&#13;
objected to some of Rat&#13;
choices and suggested _tllll&#13;
~tional campus constit uld:&#13;
mvolved in. outreach sho&#13;
represented, but did not of~t&#13;
alternative choices . t&#13;
agreed to drop one ~ti&#13;
member at the comJ11 1&#13;
5·&#13;
suggestion, and to con·&#13;
enlarging the search _coJlluJd&#13;
so that other groups wo&#13;
represented.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 29, 1911&#13;
rate dofllWte deIIp The fillli&#13;
~gna .... thrn prtIIl!ftltd for&#13;
approval&#13;
At tho same urne tho dirtetor II&#13;
audltlonln« tud nLa. 'MHo&#13;
.udJUona 1" tho dlra-tor a&#13;
chance 10wrlte clown un ....&#13;
bod}' charactensti&lt;s,and all othPr&#13;
Ibough~ .boul IJIe penon&#13;
Aft.... I parta hav e&#13;
the rehea .... 1process .. ThI&#13;
IncJudt5 a first .... em. tm&#13;
prOVI5IUonabout tho cbaraC'l&#13;
and blo&lt; '1l out m poIt&lt;ms&#13;
The actors put In a da&#13;
rehea I'5l '1llor an sve", 0I1hr&#13;
hours a da) Ou de 01.rme!,~"&#13;
time lh&lt;-y mu I m&#13;
ark _Ith other .CIOT&#13;
usually ha, e prI,"&amp;te sesslou&#13;
thodJl't'Ctor&#13;
While all 01 Iii&#13;
t and costam&#13;
dered This 1 prlmaril&#13;
luden ,th IJIe ..... ,,--&#13;
pE"n 1501) Uon \hi&#13;
lini hed the) are ready lor&#13;
l«hrucal rtbea .... Is.1n tho&#13;
des,gners and dirtetor 'Itch lor&#13;
small deta, thai nm:I adj&#13;
The) are now after I Ihort&#13;
• read for log nI I&#13;
Tb,. RunJW'r Slurnbl titt&#13;
11"1 pia) It • p1.y t rlluIl&#13;
dedlC:auon .nd b1mallllm lJJIn&#13;
tile C Iholoc ",10 Ion&#13;
Fragile Magic Theatre group&#13;
holds auditions today&#13;
life easier for the UW~Pstudent in&#13;
any way possible. It&#13;
The Fragile Magic Theatre&#13;
Group. a locally based traYellin&amp;&#13;
acting tr ... pe baa opened&#13;
auditions lor "And Other Sl&lt;lrits:'&#13;
written by Woody Allen and David&#13;
Mamel of Chicago Audilinns will&#13;
he held today belween S and 7; 4S&#13;
p.m. in Moin. 109 OIl a walk·m&#13;
basis. There .... 11male ports.nd&#13;
8 female parts open. ,'0 acti'1l&#13;
experience is necessary.&#13;
"And Otller Stories" consiSts 01&#13;
four one-act comedies, mcluding&#13;
"Death Knocks" and "Mr Big"&#13;
's weekend&#13;
'Runner Stumbles' opens dramatic season "1'''' Runner Stumbles," a play&#13;
..... b~%,=::;:~sw:~ Th ki f h I ~~ti:.~·rar:;~atic arts e rna Ing 0 t e p ay ..-.... • change from previous&#13;
. the I '11 b} Jeff Frau&#13;
~ practice, pay WI The creative process 01 run two consecutiv~ weekends produci'1l a play encompasses&#13;
wIIb performances at 8 p.rn. on weeks of hard work and&#13;
friday and Saturday, Oct. 30 and dedication on tho part of many&#13;
D·2pm.ooSunday,Nov.l;and8 people. It aU begins "';th the&#13;
,.;. ;,. Friday and Saturday, selection of the play which is&#13;
,I /IIf. 6.nd 7 in the Communication made from a groop collecttd by&#13;
Arl8 The.ter. informal poll. This process lD- 'It Reserved seating can be \,01\..,. the readi'1l of plays. by tho&#13;
~ed in advance by calling director, in an attempt to find tho&#13;
163-2345 or 553-2042. Admission is proper piece for the Partside&#13;
",50 foraenlor citizens and UW-P Theatre.&#13;
....... 15 and staff; $3.50 for the The Ronner Stu9'bl by Milan&#13;
...... 1 public. suu, to be performed al&#13;
1beplay, set in a small northern Parkside's Com. Arts Theatre&#13;
IlidUgan community in 1911, is Oct. 30-31, j ~ov 1 and • .ov 6.7.&#13;
bued on a real case in which a was selected for rnanv reasons&#13;
.... 1parish priest was accused 01 Director Lee Van o..1&lt;e first&#13;
~ • nun. . considered the number Of actors,&#13;
1beplaydoes not seek to m,rror budget. and work loree. Also \e&lt;)'&#13;
die contemporary church, but an important in the choos,ng of lhe&#13;
torlier more rigid institution, play was the educational goal of&#13;
.....,nng to director Leon Van e.xpos'ng students to a ".de range&#13;
o,ke, associate professor of of dramatic literature and&#13;
.nmatic arts. Rather, Van Dyke themes.&#13;
e .,s, it portrays the priest's Mter the play has been selected&#13;
.... tioo and the nun's human there is a preliminary meeting&#13;
dmllioo to her calling providing a between the director, the costume dram. tic metaphor for in- PATRICIA CASCIARO and Scott Reichelsdorf star in "The designerandsetdesignerlOVoluch&#13;
ftIIiPting love of Gnd, of fellow Runner Stumbles". the director talks about Ius con.&#13;
- and of one's calling or DC- cepl of the play and ""'" he would&#13;
apolioo. are Greg Flesher of Zion (Ill.); Broadway opening, critic Brendon like to see it. The designers.&#13;
1be Milan Stitt drama, wluch Andrew Francis Brhel of CUdahy; Gill of The New Yorker said: faculty or student. then go off 10&#13;
.,.ed 00 Broadway in 19'76, Bob Cash and Mary Beth Kelleher "'The Runner Stumbles' is a new, work on sketches. In the next&#13;
a cinematic style. It of Kenosha; and Vicki Knapp, serious, well-made and con- meetings the sketches are "orked&#13;
... in a courtroom with flash- Colleen Quiggle and John tinuously interesting American&#13;
(beginning with the nun's Miskulin, all of Racine. play, all the more worthy of our&#13;
III'tvalin the parish) illuminating Barbara Thompson is costume attention because it comes at a&#13;
action. designer and Charles Erven is time when most of what is new on&#13;
Scott Reichelsdorf of Kenosha scene and lighting designer. Both Broadway isn't serious, most of&#13;
JIIyI Father Rivard and Patricia are members of the dramatic arts what is well-made isn't interesting&#13;
'oro of Kenosha is Sister staff. and most of what is interesting is&#13;
. Other members of the cast Reviewing the play on its not American."&#13;
-'-"ndfnavian Seminar accepts applications .&#13;
students, graduates, and other Denmark, is also oow available.&#13;
adults who want to study in a Mter orientation in Denmark&#13;
Scandinavian country, becoming and a 3~week intensive language&#13;
part of another culture and courSe, generally followed by a&#13;
learning its language. A new one - family stay, studen~ an: placed&#13;
semester program only in individually at SCandlllav,an Folk&#13;
, Schools or other specialized in~&#13;
stitutions, where they live and&#13;
study with Scandinavians of&#13;
diverse backgrounds.&#13;
Because the Scandinavian&#13;
countries are small, opeD, and&#13;
accessible, the year provides an&#13;
unusual opportunity for the&#13;
student to explore his or her&#13;
particular field of interest by&#13;
doing an independent stud)\,&#13;
project. On the hasis 01 a detailed&#13;
written evaluation of their work,&#13;
most college students receive full&#13;
or partial academic credit for&#13;
their year .&#13;
The fee, covering tuition, room,'&#13;
board, and all course - connected&#13;
travels in Scandinavia, is $5,900.&#13;
Interest - free loans are granted&#13;
on the hasis of need, as are a few&#13;
partial scholarships.&#13;
For further information, please&#13;
write to: SCANDINAVIAN&#13;
SEMINAR, 100 East 85th Street,&#13;
New York, N.Y. 10028.&#13;
Scandinavian seminar is now&#13;
ilatlCllPlit· 'R.pplicalions for its 1982-&#13;
• academic year abroad in&#13;
Deamart, Finland, Norway, or&#13;
........ This unique learning&#13;
"pri'encE is designed for college&#13;
PSGASenators to begin term&#13;
CoatiDaed From Page One •&#13;
.... involved is important," she&#13;
lIld. "My major concern will he&#13;
..... with new policies the&#13;
llherlily system may pass, and&#13;
.... they will affect students."&#13;
AI Spallato&#13;
.~SpoU.to, a junior majoring in&#13;
... Science, ran for Senate&#13;
"Iaetauae I was interested in&#13;
f!aditlg wt exactly what PSGA is&#13;
~ or can do lor the studenfs at ';;(P - and help if possible," he&#13;
Ills ."'omplishment he hopes to&#13;
Idllevewbilein office is "to make&#13;
Honors program&#13;
CODtiauedFrom Page One&#13;
:OPtion at which the program&#13;
... ~ further explained and, any&#13;
~lIIs answered, Thayer said.&#13;
l-O0iII1ha SPring, qualilied students ve their first chance to get&#13;
by Vedin the Honors Program&#13;
~Iling in the two credit&#13;
lIIerect Colloquium (OS.3Sll) to be&#13;
.... by the program. The&#13;
Ibe .... coll"9wum will bring to&#13;
&lt;0 UIllV~.ty and surrounding&#13;
a-:RlU01~le~:'ao outstanding&#13;
lri . disCIplinary humanist -&#13;
~ed scholar who will spend a&#13;
... on campus and be very&#13;
fa esa.bletostudents," according&#13;
&lt;o~Yer. Students enrolled in the&#13;
.ellles~,um will spend next&#13;
~~ developing the&#13;
&lt;boOs' s themes and criteria,&#13;
I&lt;hoI11lg next semester's visting&#13;
'lid :.. and studying the ethics&#13;
~ -Ill IS of the scholar's work,&#13;
by Allen nothPr AIJec&#13;
"The Whore 01 ME~,,"&#13;
.... "pled for lite&#13;
Teny and rt .~Carthr&#13;
K..... ba '7be Duct hria Is by Onld _&#13;
The play .. II direded&#13;
M.rt )lcC.rtb), a&#13;
veIl-ran of comm r&#13;
sumrDf'f _tao&#13;
of IJIe eru,' ly 01 T &lt;do Tbc&#13;
play .. Ube prosenttd .t wr uu.....&#13;
Clnfma on Jan&#13;
eop me-n II"f'&#13;
Dave White·&#13;
David Wlute, a freshman still&#13;
deciding on a major, ran for the&#13;
Senate mainly to keep the&#13;
students informed. "There are&#13;
many students not in tune with the&#13;
activities around campus," he&#13;
said. "With student government, I&#13;
hope to represent and inform the&#13;
student bndy of the goings-on at&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
White hopes to improve student&#13;
involvement and relations with&#13;
student government because, he&#13;
said, the reason student govern·&#13;
ment exists is the students.&#13;
"I plan to address the question&#13;
of parking regulations and the&#13;
issue of Breadth of Knowledge,&#13;
which have, in the past .. caused&#13;
great discussion," he said.&#13;
"Patbide&#13;
mu&#13;
Has Style"&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
"Gee this Rec Center Is a fun place to go." exclaims&#13;
Sfrollin' Bowlin'. '" wonder what other lun things there are&#13;
fo do'" StroWn' Bowlin' doesn·t have to wonder very long&#13;
as he'soon discovers the Rec Center offers table tennis tor&#13;
only:JOe per hour and free M-W·F affernoons from 1 2 p.m.&#13;
Stop down and learn what Stollln' Bowlin' has already&#13;
found out - how much fun table tennis can be in the Rec&#13;
Center.&#13;
•&#13;
IlALLO_ COSa.&#13;
CaON•$ PAmI OCTOIER3ht&#13;
HOUILYOAMIS a I'IlZlSI&#13;
AmAllNO UVI ON STAGeOCT.3ht&#13;
BLACK SLAX &amp; THE CADILLACS&#13;
(9.1 A.M.)&#13;
HOUIS:&#13;
MON.-SAT. l1AM· MIDNIGHT&#13;
SUN. 9 AM • MIDNIGHT&#13;
RICSON'S RESTAURANT &amp; PUB INC.&#13;
7940_DANIO.I(_A, WIS. 53140&#13;
652-1220&#13;
*perllovr&#13;
TABLE TENNIS I'&#13;
RA GER&#13;
This weekend&#13;
;-Runner- Stumbles' opens dramatic seaso&#13;
•1'he Runner Stumbles," a play&#13;
n binin&amp; courtroom drama with&#13;
com1 or repressed emotion, is the Th k• f h I ~ main Stage '":amatic arts --,~''°"·'..._ e ma 1ng O t e p ay rodlJclion at Parkside.&#13;
P In 8 change. from previo~ ·&#13;
h ulill8 practice, the play will u=~~•"' ·&#13;
run two consecutiv~ weekends DN'-.N11ttt1&#13;
~th performances at 8 p.m. on&#13;
fndaY nd Saturday, Oct. 30 and&#13;
31• 2p.monSunday, ov.l;and8&#13;
' oo Friday and Saturday,&#13;
1 p_.m_&amp;and7intheCommunication&#13;
Theater.&#13;
R erved seating can _be&#13;
rranged in advance by_ ~llu~g&#13;
2345 or 5.53-2042. Admission 1s&#13;
• for senior citizens and UW-P&#13;
udent and staff; $3.50 for the&#13;
ral public .&#13;
The play, set in a small northern&#13;
lidugan community in 1911, is&#13;
on a real ca e in which a&#13;
rural parish priest was accused of&#13;
ilh~ a nun&#13;
The play does not seek to mirror&#13;
contemporary church, but an&#13;
rher more rigid institution,&#13;
arcording to director Leon Van&#13;
D e, a sociate professor of&#13;
dram lie arts. Rather, Van Dyke&#13;
v it portrays the priest's&#13;
dedi~tion and the nun's human&#13;
devotion to her calling providing a&#13;
dramatic metaphor for inligating&#13;
love of God, of fellow&#13;
o and of one's calling or oclion.&#13;
The 1ilan Stitt drama, which&#13;
~ned on Broadway in 1976,&#13;
employ a cinematic style. It&#13;
in a courtroom with flash&lt;&#13;
beginning with the nun's&#13;
amval in the parish) illuminating&#13;
action.&#13;
It Reichelsdorf of Kenosha&#13;
play Father Rivard and Patricia&#13;
· aro of Kenosha is Sister&#13;
Rita. Other members of the cast&#13;
PATRICIA CASCIARO and Scott Reichelsdorf star in " The&#13;
Runner Stumbles" .&#13;
are Greg Flesher of Zion (Ill.);&#13;
Andrew Francis Brhel of CUdahy;&#13;
Bob Cash and Mary Beth Kelleher&#13;
of Kenosha; and Vicki Knapp,&#13;
Colleen Quiggle and John&#13;
Miskulin, all of Racine.&#13;
Barbara Thompson is costume&#13;
designer and Charles Erven is&#13;
scene and lighting designer. Both&#13;
are members of the dramatic arts&#13;
staff.&#13;
Reviewing the play on its&#13;
Broadway opening, critic Brendon&#13;
Gill of The ew Yorker aid:&#13;
'"The Runner tumbles' i a new,&#13;
erious , well-made and continuously&#13;
interesting American&#13;
play, all the more worth of our&#13;
attention becau it com at a&#13;
time when most or what i new on&#13;
Broadway isn 't serious, mo t of&#13;
what is well-made i n't interesti!lI&#13;
and most of what is inter ting i&#13;
not American."&#13;
Scandinavian Seminar accepts applications&#13;
Scandmavian Seminar is now&#13;
ptmgapplications for its 1982·&#13;
&amp;1 academic year abroad in&#13;
Denmark, Finland, or way , or&#13;
ed n. This unique learning&#13;
a ience i designed for college&#13;
students, graduates, and other&#13;
adults who want to study in a&#13;
Scandinavian country, becoming&#13;
part of another culture and&#13;
learning its language. A new one -&#13;
semester program , only in&#13;
Denmark. i also now available.&#13;
PSGA Senators to begin term&#13;
After orientation in Denmar&#13;
and a 3-week intensive language&#13;
course, generally followed by a&#13;
family stay , tudents are placed&#13;
individually at Scandinavian Fo&#13;
Schools or other specialized in·&#13;
stitutions, where they live and&#13;
study with candinavian or&#13;
onlinued From Page One&#13;
1~ involved is important," she&#13;
1d. " 1y major concern will be&#13;
dealing with new policies the&#13;
uruver ity system may pass, and&#13;
how they will affect students."&#13;
Al Spallato&#13;
Al pallato, a junior majoring in&#13;
Ute Science, ran for Senate&#13;
ause I was interested in&#13;
linding oot exactly what PSGA is&#13;
~ng or can do for the students at&#13;
.,"',\.p _ and help if possible," he&#13;
1d.&#13;
H accomplishment he hopes to&#13;
achieve while in office is "to make&#13;
Honors program&#13;
· ntinued From Page One&#13;
ill g:on at which the program&#13;
. further explained and any&#13;
qu ltCllS ~wered, Thayer said.&#13;
~ pnng, qualified students&#13;
hl\'ol ve _their first chance to get&#13;
by Ved 1_n t~ Honors Program&#13;
H nrolhng m the two credit&#13;
"~ Colloquium (05-350) to be&#13;
~red by the program. The&#13;
the~ _col1°9uium will bring to&#13;
com ruv~1ty and surrounding&#13;
er mun1tie~ "an outstanding&#13;
on · disciplinary humanist -&#13;
ented scholar who will spend a&#13;
cc on campus and be very&#13;
lo 'Ina Ible to students," according&#13;
con Yl:I' · Students enrolled in the&#13;
oquium will spend next&#13;
em est Pl't&gt;gr e~ developing the&#13;
t ~m s themes and criteria,&#13;
ho! ing next semester' s visting&#13;
_ar and studying the ethics&#13;
1 id ues of the scholar's work,&#13;
life easier for the UW-P student in diverse backgrounds.&#13;
any way possible." Because the candinavian&#13;
Dave White&#13;
David White, a freshman still&#13;
deciding on a major, ran for the&#13;
Senate mainly to keep the&#13;
students informed. "There are&#13;
many students not in tune with the&#13;
activities around campus," he&#13;
said. "With student government, I&#13;
hope to represent and inform the&#13;
student body of the goings-on at&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
White hopes to improve student&#13;
involvement and relations with&#13;
student government because, he&#13;
said, the reason student government&#13;
exists is the students.&#13;
"I pfan to address the question&#13;
of parking regulations and the&#13;
issue of Breadth of Knowledge ,&#13;
which have , in the past , caused&#13;
great discussion ," he said.&#13;
countries are small, open, and&#13;
acces ible, the year pro ides an&#13;
unu ual opportunity for th&#13;
student to explore hi or her&#13;
particular field or interest b&#13;
doing an independent tud&#13;
project. On th basis of a detailed&#13;
written evaluation of their work,&#13;
most college stud nts rec ive full&#13;
or partial academic credit r r&#13;
their year.&#13;
The fee , covering tuition , room.•&#13;
board, and all courSe - connected&#13;
travels in Scandinavia, i , .&#13;
Interest - free loans are granted&#13;
on the ba i of need, as are a few&#13;
partial cholarships.&#13;
For further information, pl e&#13;
write to : CA DI A IA&#13;
SEMINAR, 100 East 85th treet,&#13;
ew York, Y 10028&#13;
HALLO- COSTUIII&#13;
" PAITYI&#13;
C$0NS OCTOBER 31 .,&#13;
HOUILY OAMIS&#13;
~ &amp;NIDSI&#13;
APNAIING UVE ON STAGI OCT. 31 tt&#13;
BLACK SLAX &amp; THE CADILLACS&#13;
(9 -1 A.M.)&#13;
HOUIS:&#13;
MON.-SAT. 11AM • MIDNIGHT&#13;
SUN. 9 AM - MIDNIGHT&#13;
RICSON'S RESTAURANT &amp; PUB l &lt;.:.&#13;
7940 SHEIIDAN ID. KINOSHA. WIS. 53140&#13;
652-1220&#13;
Fragile Magic&#13;
holds auditions t&#13;
''Parksi&#13;
S1:ILL&#13;
Has Styl "&#13;
r u&#13;
ON TAP A UNION SQUARE&#13;
T LET&#13;
6 Thursday. October 29,1981 RANGER&#13;
Handicapped Awareness Day to be held .&#13;
A "Handicapped Awareness available for informal discussion effort to foster awareness .~~&#13;
Da ." marki the United Nations from 2 to 3 p.m. A problems faced by persons WI&#13;
.~ goated ~ternational Year of neurophysiologist research diaabi lit.ies , eight student~&#13;
Dlsa~led Persons will he held at surgeon, he has headed his own faculty members and a.-&#13;
Parkside on Wednesday, Nov. 4. firm, Clinical Convenience mlnistrators Will spend the day in&#13;
Products, Inc., of Madison for ten wheeleham,.&#13;
The han~i~pped awareness years. All of the events are free ~nd&#13;
program will include a talk by . . . . open to the public. A bus provided&#13;
Don Warren, . rehabilitation An exhibit featuring adaptive by the Kenosha Department of&#13;
engineer and director of the e9U1pment, literature a,nd Transportation Will provide free&#13;
Wisconsin Foundation for Applied displays by. area ag.encles shuttle service from 'the Tallent&#13;
Technology. on "Innovative p~ovldmg serV1ce~to th~ disabled Hall parking lot between 11:30&#13;
EQu~pme,nt0' and Jo~ S,ite Will be on the Uruon Bridge from a.rn. and 2:15 p.m.&#13;
Modification at 1 p.m, ID Urnon 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The program is sponsored by&#13;
t04 The Sign Singers of Mitchell the Campus Health and Student&#13;
Warren is an authority on Junior High School will perforrri'in Activities Offices in cooperation&#13;
development of devices to assist the cafeteria from noon to 1 p.m. with Society's Assets .of Racine,&#13;
people with haodlcaps to adjust to The group is directed by school Abolish Barriers for Lifetime&#13;
various work and home life principal Richard Anderson, who Efficiency (ABLE) of Kenosha&#13;
situations. He will demonstrate will provide guitar ac- and the State Department of&#13;
some of the devices and be companiment. As a part of the Vocational Rehabilitation.&#13;
lynda Martha Dance Company to perform at .tlW-P&#13;
The Lynda Martha Dance&#13;
Company will present a program&#13;
01 modem dance flavored with the&#13;
jazz idiom at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside Communication&#13;
Arts Theater on&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 11, at 8 p.m.&#13;
under sponsorship of the student&#13;
Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
Admission is $2.50for students;&#13;
$3 for the public and tickets will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Martha's seven - member troupe&#13;
is in residence at the Giordano&#13;
Dance Center, where Martha is&#13;
director of the modern dance&#13;
department. She also is a member&#13;
of the dance faculty at the&#13;
University of Illinois Circle&#13;
Campus.&#13;
A dancer, choreographer and&#13;
teacher, Martha's own work, as&#13;
well as that of her troupe, has won&#13;
critical praise throughout the&#13;
Midwest and the South for energy&#13;
and originality.&#13;
Once a championship baton&#13;
twirler, Martha was encouraged&#13;
as a child to study dance to improve&#13;
her twirling performance.&#13;
As a choreographer. her works&#13;
are included in the repertoires of a&#13;
number of regional companies&#13;
including the Mississippi Coast&#13;
Ballet, Darwin Dance Theater,&#13;
Southern Ballet Theater the&#13;
Minnesota Jazz Dance Co~pany&#13;
and the Gos Giodano Jazz Dance&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Its \'\01 like. 'lOlA drive. \..\o;.e.0. f1\o.n\o.c \10,'0\&#13;
b~tIthinK \ jus-t Sl..Ilo,\\owed. ffij tee1\(.&#13;
Irked by independent area dri&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
Parkside's location leaves&#13;
students with several choices&#13;
when mode of transportation is&#13;
considered. Some walk. Others&#13;
run', There is public bus service&#13;
available. Students may come by&#13;
bike, moped, and motorcycle. The&#13;
rest come by private car,&#13;
Therefore, the following guide&#13;
has been provided for the student&#13;
who would .like to know the unwritten&#13;
rules of the IRKD,.&#13;
What do all tbese students have&#13;
in common besides their general&#13;
destination? They have confronted&#13;
tbe IRKD (Independent&#13;
Racine I Kenosha Drivers) of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin, These&#13;
people drive by their own rules.&#13;
For anyone who has not grown up&#13;
in this area, traveling through&#13;
Racine or Kenosha can be like&#13;
learning to drive all over again.&#13;
SPEED LIMIT: Although most&#13;
roads in both counlies have speed&#13;
limit signs, their presence is&#13;
generally ignored. The IRKD will&#13;
travel at a rate which is 15 mph&#13;
• faster or slower than that posted&#13;
depending on whether or not th~&#13;
student is late for class.&#13;
BLINKERS: An IRKD&#13;
surprised to learn that&#13;
cars come equipped wilb&#13;
important safety feature.&#13;
traveling behind an IRKD&#13;
for brake lights as an indi";'&#13;
an impending him.&#13;
ENTERING J'RAFFIC&#13;
IRKD is always anxious to •&#13;
the road. Helshe will nev'&#13;
the opportunity to pull out&#13;
of someone. Watch for&#13;
especially if the speed .&#13;
grea ter than 45 mph.&#13;
LEAVING TRAFFIC:&#13;
done by the IRKD witliJi&#13;
blocks of cutting someone&#13;
ENTERING TRAFFIC) TIle&#13;
D slows to approximately&#13;
for several hundred yards&#13;
the corner in order to naviga&#13;
turn.&#13;
U-TURNS at CONT&#13;
INTERSECTIONS: For&#13;
reason, this is not consi&#13;
traffic viola lion by an&#13;
However, this practice is&#13;
recommended for the&#13;
driver.&#13;
Good luck to all students&#13;
encounter tbe IRKD.&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING I&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR -D.TAILS&#13;
5%% Interest HY•• Dall,&#13;
Balance Is s500.00 .r M.re.&#13;
WE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU IRO"I&#13;
5935'- 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin·&#13;
414·658·4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 694-1380&#13;
4235· 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-0120&#13;
. 8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414·248-9141&#13;
24726 _75th Street· RI. 50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wi&#13;
414 - 843·2388&#13;
6 Thursday, October 29, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Handicapped Awareness Day to be held&#13;
" H ndicapp d v. arene s available for informal discussion effort to foster awareness -ri&#13;
D ... m r in the ruted ations from 2 to 3 p.m. A p~oblt:~s. faced ~y persons w1&#13;
• ) i n t lntcrnatronal Year of neurophysiologist res_earch d1sab1hties, eight student~&#13;
o· bled will be held at urgeon, he has headed hi~ own fa_c~lty me~bers and a. -&#13;
Par I n Wedn •day , ov . 4. firm, Clinical Convenience muustrat~rs will spend the day m&#13;
Products, Inc., of Madison for ten wheelchairs.&#13;
Th h nd1capp d awarene s year . All of the events are free and&#13;
~r m ·ill include a talk by open to the public. A bus provided&#13;
Don Warr n , rehabilitation An exhibit featuring adaptive by the Kenosha Department of&#13;
, r and dir tor of ~he equipment, literature and Transportation will provide free&#13;
w· o ·in F undation for pphed displays by area agencies shuttle service from 'the Tallent&#13;
T chnol gy. on "Innovative providing services to the disabled Hall parking lot between 11:30&#13;
Equipm •_nt .. and Jo~ _ite will be on the Union Bridge from a.m. and 2 :IS p.m.&#13;
1 1ftcat1on at I p.m . m Uruon 10 a .m. to 3 p.m. The program is sponsored by&#13;
1 • The ign Singers of Mitchell the Campus Health and Student&#13;
Junior High School will perforntin Activities Offices in cooperation&#13;
the cafeteria from noon to 1 p.m. with Society's Assets . of Racine,&#13;
The group is directed by school Abolish Barriers for Lifetime&#13;
principal Richard Anderson, who Efficiency (ABLE) of Kenosha&#13;
will provide guitar ac- and the State Department of&#13;
companiment. As a part of the Vocational Rehabilitation. Irked by independent area driv·&#13;
Lynda Martha Dance Company to perform at .tJW-P by Carol Burns&#13;
Parkside's location leaves&#13;
students with several choices&#13;
when mode of transportation is·&#13;
considered. Some walk. Others&#13;
run. There is public bus service&#13;
available. Students may come by&#13;
bike, moped, and motorcycle. The&#13;
rest come by private car.&#13;
student is late for class.&#13;
BLINKERS: An ffiKD&#13;
surprised to learn that&#13;
cars come equipped With&#13;
important safety feature&#13;
traveling behind an IRKD.&#13;
for brake lights as an indi~ ·&#13;
an impending turn.&#13;
Th Lynda 1artha Dance&#13;
Company will pr enl a program&#13;
ol m m dance flavored with the&#13;
jazz icliom at the University oC&#13;
Wi ·con m - Park ide Communication&#13;
Arts Theater on&#13;
Wednesday, ov . 11, at 8 p.m.&#13;
under sponsorship of the student&#13;
Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
Admission is $2 .50 for students;&#13;
$3 for the public and tickets will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Martha's seven - member troupe&#13;
is in residence at the Giordano&#13;
Dance Center, where Martha is&#13;
director of the modern dance&#13;
department. She also is a member&#13;
of the dance faculty at the&#13;
University of Illinois Circle&#13;
campus.&#13;
A dancer, choreographer and&#13;
teacher, Martha's own work, as&#13;
well as that of her troupe, has won&#13;
critical praise throughout the&#13;
Midwest and the South for energy&#13;
and originality.&#13;
. Once a championship baton&#13;
twirler, Martha was encouraged&#13;
as a child to study dance to improve&#13;
her twirling performance.&#13;
As a choreographer, her works&#13;
are included in the repertoires of a&#13;
!1um~r of regional companies&#13;
mcludmg the Mississippi Coast&#13;
Ballet, Darwin Dance Theater&#13;
Southern Ballet Theater th~&#13;
Minnesota Jazz Dance Co~pany&#13;
and the Gos Giodano Jazz Dance&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Therefore, the following guide&#13;
has been provided for the student&#13;
who would like to know the unwritten&#13;
rules of the IRKD.&#13;
What do all these students have&#13;
in common besides their general&#13;
destination? They have confronted&#13;
the IRKD (Independent&#13;
Racine / Kenosha Drivers) of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin. These&#13;
people drive by their own rules.&#13;
For anyone who has not grown up&#13;
in this area, traveling through&#13;
Racine or Kenosha can be like&#13;
learning to drive all over again.&#13;
SPEED LIMIT: Although most&#13;
roads in both counties have speed&#13;
limit signs, their presence is&#13;
generally ignored. The IRKD will&#13;
travel at a rate which is 15 mph&#13;
• faster or slower than that posted&#13;
depending on whether or not th~&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE .&#13;
ENTERING l'RAFFIC·&#13;
IRKD is always anxious to ·&#13;
the road. He/she will never&#13;
the opportunity to pull out in&#13;
of someone. Watch for&#13;
especially if the speed ·&#13;
greater than 45 mph.&#13;
LEA YING TRAFFIC:&#13;
done by the IRKD witlan&#13;
blocks of cutting someone~ENTERING&#13;
TRAFFIC) The&#13;
D slows to approximately 5&#13;
for several hundred yards&#13;
the corner in order to navigate&#13;
turn.&#13;
U-TURNS at CONTRO&#13;
INTERSECTIONS: For&#13;
reason, this is not consi&#13;
traffic violation by an&#13;
However, this practice is&#13;
recommended for the&#13;
driver.&#13;
Good luck to all students&#13;
• encounter the IRKD.&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
5935·_ 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin -&#13;
414 - 658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
l&lt;enosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 • 694-1380&#13;
4235 • 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
· 8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 248-9141&#13;
24726 - 75th Street - Rt. 50&#13;
&lt; Paddock Lake) Salem, Wis.&#13;
414 - 843-2388&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR l~TAILS&#13;
5¼% Interest I Yo• Dally&#13;
Balance Is ssoo.oo or Morel&#13;
WE'RE HERE 10 HELP YOU &amp;RO.I&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 29,1981 7&#13;
Learning to live with what you have&#13;
.. week, "Viewpoint" rncuses severed spinal cord, and they will The night before, we had been some d. them never will be. We readY to go but by Thunclay or&#13;
"Awareness Day" and some tell you that person will never diving into the water and it was are certainly aware d. the fact Friday, 1 "!as very dragged out&#13;
bers or Ihe Parkslde com- walk again. I always tell myself over six feet deep. The level had that there are problems, and we Because d. thai, I not only leomed&#13;
y who are handicapped. that betw~n now and the Ii'!'e changed from sixfeetto a foot and work with them.". . to aUow time for myael!, J I med&#13;
here's a way around that I die, I m gomg to walk again. a hal! overnight. It has something The Dean was m a wheelchair to take It easy 0 that by the end of&#13;
thing, there are ways to deal I really chng to that, but then to do with locks. for about eight months and he did the week. I still had some _raY&#13;
everything, my waysusually agam, nght now I have things I When I dove in, I broke my have problems at times. "At left"&#13;
more time," said Gus wanttodoandpenplelneedtosee neck. My friend realized right times, I would have to be 00 the The people at Parb.de alwaya&#13;
e n. Gus is disabled and has and places I 'Yant to go to." away what had happened, and be other end of the campus and it was showed a great dee I of concern for&#13;
in a wheelchair for twelve Dave Schneider is a junior at knew that I shouldn't be moved. I difficult to give myself enough Pedersen. "One d. the thl/lll I&#13;
Parkside majoring m Psychology. yelled up to him and told him that time to get there. When I was late, noticed w'hen I was first injured,&#13;
r:' are very different now He has been in a wheelchair for I couldn't move. The people that it was very frustrating. A lew and even now, IS the greel deol d.&#13;
:: his attitude and ways &lt;i. four years. He thinks that the were with us took a board and years ago, I was one &lt;i.the people concern. Irom the people on&#13;
• ~ng'with things have both Parkside facilities are some of the submerged it under the water and thai spent a day in a wheelchair on campus, It'S never' ending. RIghi&#13;
ed "A lot of the way I deal best. "The Parkside lacilities are letitfloatup underneath me. Then Awareness Day, and I never after my accident,1 would tend to&#13;
. Ie where at other times great. It's better than most of the they packed my head in said so cheated and got out of thai chair, get frustrated WIth aU of the&#13;
~v;' just gotten up and schools I've. been to. The good that it wouldn't move Irom side to but then too, I noticed that my people trying to help me out. Ilelt&#13;
edaway, or argued further or thing about tt IS that the whole side. A lot of limes, it's the arms and hands got exceptionally like I was helpless at tim Then.&#13;
somebody in the head, I uruverstty IS contamed in one movement after the initial injury tired, and that It ~as a problem to l~getseaSler to~d on people a&#13;
seldom do that anymore. I that makes it worse. 1 was lucky get to places on time. When I was little more for a bUJe help. Il&#13;
djust rather do it diflerently. ,i that the penplewith me knew what in my wheelchair for a long period wasn't an easy thing for me&#13;
no! very big on spur of the tr'~ "to do." &lt;i.time, I noticed that on Moodays though I adjusted. I think m (&#13;
ent type things, I always try Jf ~ Dave does his best to keep his I would usually be very strong and people can."&#13;
things through before I do spirits up. "I have a pretty&#13;
Before il I got mad and ~ ~ positive attitude towards people. ' / »&gt; Re.ervetlona Apprecleted ;n out df the room, no big ~ A lot of penple told me that people 4 II t ~ or I could just go hack and ~ were going to stare at me, and an~lei e fPAAI.t tUtJ 654-6933&#13;
ize tater. ~ that little kids are going to ask a a rrr&gt;:&#13;
be best way to put it is that ~ bl; lot of questions. I have never ~ 4814 Sherlden Rd. Keno.he&#13;
seem to burn easier now, really experienced that at all.&#13;
that's something I don't want Everybody is curious. Whether&#13;
go ci. I need people more you're in a wheelchair or on&#13;
than 1 ever have. A lot of it is crutches, everyone wants to know ®l a need to be around people. what happened. U you face it with&#13;
are a lot of things'1 won't a posilive outlook and tell them&#13;
... do to oflend them. This is Internat'lonal Year straight out what happened, it's a-..;.-----:;=~m~'M'-:;:::;------1 way I do things now and It'S the best way to go througb It. The TUE DAY, :'iOV.3rd&#13;
a an act where hefore, twelve of important thing is that you have to An Evening In Pam IU5&#13;
rs ago: it would have been an realize the ~ro~lem and realize&#13;
" explained Gus. Disabled Persons h?wtodealwlthlt.lnman~cases,&#13;
also finds it very important It s a matter of leanung different&#13;
thought 01 as a person before building. If you want to use the .ways of doing things."&#13;
thing else. "First and pool, there is a lift in the pool for Dave Pedersen, Dean of Student&#13;
most I. am a person, ~nd ~ot the people that need it. Life, has also experienced getting&#13;
eone In a wheelchair. 1 m "The one problem we used to around in a wheelchair at&#13;
n, and frieridly and honest. have was going to registration on Parkside. Pedersen sustained an&#13;
of the things I probably value that middle level. Wegot around it ankle injury a little over a year&#13;
tis Iriendship. I've got a lot of by moving registration for lbe ago. "The Parkside facilities are&#13;
, but some are friends disabled to the student records probably some of the best I've&#13;
so than others. As far as I'm office. Before we started ever seen. When this school was&#13;
moo, if t~ere's •anyth:in~ I registration there, we had to have built, everything was put in. When&#13;
do for a fnend, I 11do It. people run our schedules through a new school is built it doesn't&#13;
here are times that Gus finds for us. If there was any kind of seem to cost as much to have&#13;
1£ questioning the opinions problem, we would have to start equipment put in as it does to&#13;
people around him and how all over again, and the person remodel in order to put in proper&#13;
leel about him. "I guess I've doing the running for us had to aceomndalions. When I was in a&#13;
ays wondered what people bring everything back." wheelchair, I experienced the&#13;
. I wonder what some of Dave's aceident happened while accessability of this school, and il&#13;
people say inside. At times on a trip, and he leels fortunate to is extraordinary. If there seems to&#13;
bad the feeling that people have come out of it the way he did. be a big inconvenience, a problem&#13;
astonished that I can talk, it's "I was very fortunate that with a student's mobility, we do&#13;
t like their faces are saying, someone was with me when my our best to take care of it. A prime&#13;
can talk.' II accident occurred. My church example would be the lecture&#13;
facilities at Parkside for the group had a houseboat on the rooms. Students in wheelchairs&#13;
bled are very adequate to Mississippi River, and on the last wouldn't be able to wheel up to the&#13;
, although there have been day of our trip, a friend and I were countertop areas because the&#13;
when he's had a problem going to wash our hair. Instead of chairs are underneath the counter&#13;
winler's ice. "I can't be more walking to the edge and going into tops. The problem was solved by&#13;
n a few feet away from the the water, I dove in. The water simply removing a chair. Not all&#13;
, but the lact that I'm on an was only a foot and a half deep. of the problems are solved, and&#13;
line makes it difficult to move. • ••••&#13;
there is ice or snow on the&#13;
nd.l'm sure that as kids most&#13;
Ie have tried to ride a bike on&#13;
and they've laUen all over, the&#13;
spins and there's no control.&#13;
now and then I'll run into&#13;
t problem, but like I said, there&#13;
a way around everything. So&#13;
t I dm'l get caugbt in the cold,&#13;
U the health office and tell&#13;
that I'll he there at a certain&#13;
e~and someone comes to my&#13;
g spot and gives me a&#13;
nd."&#13;
re are also certain things&#13;
I keep Gus going. "1 refuse to&#13;
pi the idea that I will never&#13;
lk. again. You can ask -any&#13;
cal doctor to descrihe a&#13;
ew int&#13;
People&#13;
Power&#13;
helps&#13;
event&#13;
birth&#13;
S defects uppon&#13;
March of Dimes&#13;
HAI.1.0IlEES. I., Oct. 31&#13;
U yoo're wearing a Halloween C06wme (we&#13;
will bel, your meal will be discounted 15'l;&#13;
s&#13;
lR@rE&#13;
Jack Lemmon&#13;
Robby Benson&#13;
Lee Remick&#13;
sJSo&#13;
7:30 Friday &amp; Sunday,&#13;
Nov. 6 &amp; 8&#13;
1100lnlr " lot ~&#13;
to~"fatNr&#13;
thIIn juJt 1m"""son.&#13;
NEXT WEEICS MOVlE&#13;
DEATH HUNT&#13;
* JOB OPENING * Position: STUDENT SUPERVISOR· PARKSIDE UNION BULDING * responsible for coordination of activities and supervision&#13;
of building during weekends and evenings,&#13;
* 15-20 hours weekly * '3,75 per hour starting rate&#13;
Qualifications: PARKSIDE STUDENT - MINIMUM OF 6 CREDITS&#13;
Business. Management. or Supervisory Elcpe"enC8 preferred&#13;
Application Deadline: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2&#13;
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN ROOM 209 IN UNION BUILDING--&#13;
-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Learning to live with what you have&#13;
I ~ttk, "Viewpoint" focu evered pinal cord, and they will The night before, we had been om ci them · r ill W to bu b • ""'··~•"&#13;
., orene Day" and ome tell you ~at person will never diving into the water and it was are rtainl a ·are ci fact ri ), I 1&#13;
rn r of the Parkside com- walk again. I alway tell myself over six feet deep. The level had that th re are prob\ • and&#13;
ii who ar handicapped. that ~tween now and the time changed from ix feet to a foot and wock with th m ."&#13;
There' a way around that I die, I'.m going to walk again. a half overnight. It has omething The D n wa in a w I ir&#13;
-thing, there are ways to deal I r-E:3llY. chng to that, but then to do with lock . for about eight month; and h did&#13;
. ne erything, my ways usually again, nght now I have things I hen I dove in, I broke my have problems at tun . " t&#13;
e more time," said Gus wantto do and people I need to see neck. My friend realized right tim , I would have to be m the&#13;
on Gu is disabled and has and place I ~ant to go to." away what had happened, and he other end of the campu and it ·&#13;
r in a wheelchair for twelve Dav~ &amp;hn~1~er !5 a junior at knew that I houldn't be moved. I difficult to give my If enou h&#13;
~ Parkside maJonng m Psychology. yelled up to him and told him that time to get there. \ 'hen I ·a late,&#13;
·n are very different now He has been in a wheelc~ir for I couldn't move. The people that it was v rru rating. fe&#13;
, Gu , hi attit~de and ways of four years. He thinks that the were with us took a board and ears ago. I ·a e of the I&#13;
Jing with things have both Parkside facilities are some of the ubrrierged it under the water and that pent a day in aw )chair n&#13;
ed "A lot of the way I deal best. "The Parkside facilities are letitfioatupunderneathme. Then wareness Day, and t never&#13;
n people, where at other times great. It's better than most of the they packed my head in said so cheated and got out of that chair,&#13;
ay have just gotten up and sc~ools I've been lo. The good that it wouldn't move from ide to but th n too, I n iced that m&#13;
lked away, or argued further or thmg about it is that the whole side . A lot of limes it's the arms and han got cep 1onally&#13;
ted omebody in the head, I university is contained in one movement after the initial injury tired, and that i wa a problem to&#13;
, ldom do that anymore. I ------------ that makes it worse. I was lucky get to place on time. n I wa&#13;
d ju t rather do it differently. that the people with me knew what · in my wh lchair for a long penod&#13;
not very big on spur of the to do." ci time, I noticed that on tonda_&#13;
ent type things, I always try Dave does his best to keep hi I would usuall be · tro and&#13;
ink things through before I do spirits up. "I have a pretty -------------------------,&#13;
em. Before, if I got mad a~d ,.jllllll.ID][IJJ\f positive attitude to ards people. d&#13;
lked out of the room, no big ~ A lot of people told me that people&#13;
I or I could just go back and -..-...-re were going to stare at me, and&#13;
. ~ize later. that little kids are going to a&#13;
'The best way to lX,lt i~ is that lot of questions. I have never&#13;
dg seem to burn easier now, really experienced that at all .&#13;
II that' something I don't want Everybody is curious . Whether&#13;
let go d.. I need people more ...:=:.;...-~"""'--~ you 're in a wheelchair or on&#13;
than r ever have. A lot of it is crutches, everyone wants lo know&#13;
a need to be around people. what happened. If you face it with&#13;
re are a lot of things I won't a positive outlook and tell them&#13;
. r,- do to orfend them. This is I straight out what happened, it'&#13;
way I do things now and it's lnternationa Year the best way to go through it. The&#13;
1 an act, where before, twelve of important thing is that you have to&#13;
rs ago, it would have been an realize the problem and realize&#13;
"explained Gus. Disabled Persons how lo deal with it. ln many case ,&#13;
Gus also finds it very important ____________ it's a matter of learning different&#13;
thought of as a person before building. II you want to use the .ways ci doing things."&#13;
tri ·thing else. "First and pool , there is a lift in the pool for Dave Pedersen, Dean of Student&#13;
remost I am a person, and not the people that need it. Life, has also experienced getting&#13;
eone in a wheelchair. I'm "The one problem we used to around in a wheelchair at&#13;
an, and frieridly and honest. have was going to registration on Parkside. Pedersen sustained an&#13;
of the things I probably value that middle level. We got around it ankle injury a little over a ear&#13;
tis rriendship. I've got a lot of by moving registration for the ago . " The Parkside facilities are&#13;
nds, but some are friends disabled to the student records probabl ome of the best I' e&#13;
e o than others. As far as I'm office. Before we started ever seen. When this school was&#13;
cerned, if there's anything I registration there, we had to have built, everything was put in. When&#13;
do for a friend, I'll do it." people run our schedules through a new school i built it doe n t&#13;
here are times that Gus finds for us. U there was any kind of seem to cost as much to have&#13;
self questioning the opinions problem, we would have to start equipment put in as it does to&#13;
people around him and how all over again, and the person remodel in order to lX,lt in proper&#13;
Jack Lemmon&#13;
Robby Benson&#13;
Lee Remick&#13;
S JSO y feel about him. "I guess I've doing the running for us had to accomodations. When I wa in a&#13;
ays wondered what people bring everything back." wheelchair, I experienced the&#13;
nk . I wonder what some of Dave's accident happened while acces ability of this school, and it&#13;
e people say inside. At times on a trip, and he feels fortunate to is extraordinary. If there seems to&#13;
had the feeling that people have come out of it the way he did be a big inconvenience, a problem&#13;
astonished that l can talk, it's "I was very fortunate that with a tudent's mobility, we do&#13;
ost like their faces are saying, someone was with me when my our best to take care of it. prime&#13;
7:30 Friday &amp; Sunday,&#13;
Nov. 6 &amp; 8&#13;
can talk.' " accident occurred. My church example would be the lecture&#13;
he facilities at Parkside for the group had a houseboat on the room . Student in wheelchair&#13;
bled are very adequate to Mississippi River, and on the last wouldn't be able to wheel up to the&#13;
, although there have been day of our trip, a friend and I were countertop areas because the&#13;
NEXT WEEK'S MOVIE&#13;
when he's had a problem going to wash our hair. Instead of chairs are underneath the counter&#13;
th winter's ice. "I can't be more walking to the edge and going into tops . The problem a solved by&#13;
n a few feet away from the the water, I dove in . The water simply removing a chair. ot all&#13;
r, but the fact that I'm on an was only a foot and a half deep. of the problems are solved, and&#13;
DEATH HU&#13;
line makes it difficult to move&#13;
there is ice or snow on the&#13;
nd . I'm ure that as kids most&#13;
le have tried to ride a bike on&#13;
and they've fallen all over, the&#13;
pins and there's no control.&#13;
ry now and then I'll run into&#13;
t problem, but like I said, there&#13;
a way around everything. So&#13;
l I doo't get caught in the cold,&#13;
call the health office and tell&#13;
m that I'll be there at a certain&#13;
e'. and someone comes lo my&#13;
arking spot and gives me a&#13;
and"&#13;
t There are also certain things&#13;
t keep Gus going. "I refuse to&#13;
pt the idea that I will never&#13;
1k again. You can ask .any&#13;
cal doctor to describe a&#13;
helps&#13;
prevent&#13;
birth&#13;
S defects uppon&#13;
March of Dimes&#13;
* JOB OPENING * Position: STUDENT SUPERVISOR· PARKS DE UNION B ID G&#13;
* respons·ble for coordination of activities and supervision&#13;
of building during weekends and evenings.&#13;
* 15-20 hours weekly * 53.75 per hour starfng rote&#13;
Qualifications: PARKSIDE snJDENT ·MN OF 6 DITS&#13;
Business, Management, or Supervisory &amp;perien p&#13;
Application Deadline: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2&#13;
APPLICATIONS AVAllABLE IN ROOM 209 IN UNIO BUILDI G&#13;
rred&#13;
8 Thursday. October29.1981 RANGER •&#13;
Author Kherdian talks about a life of writing&#13;
was certainly no American mU~lc, .&#13;
there was no idea of art. The first&#13;
real art I saw was when I was&#13;
twenty-four; the first time I went&#13;
to New York after the army I&#13;
remember seeing a Vincent Van&#13;
Gogh from way across the&#13;
corridor. I was just shocked to my&#13;
core because I'd seen somethng&#13;
that'I was totally unpr~red for&#13;
and I knew I was wltnessmg&#13;
something miraculous ..&#13;
It was in my twenl1es that I&#13;
began to pursue things. I was&#13;
twenty when I first read Theodore&#13;
Drieser, which was the first real&#13;
book of literature I'd read. I knew&#13;
instantly that there was a ~?rld&#13;
within the world that J was living.&#13;
There was another stream of life&#13;
that my life had never touched&#13;
before one that was unknown to&#13;
me. I think I was very fortunate in&#13;
this because I had all the raw&#13;
. materials of life, and experience&#13;
is simply raw material ....&#13;
A large part of that was a deep&#13;
resentment toward all schools,&#13;
toward all forms of formal&#13;
learning, because I c;.ouldsee that&#13;
they were hankrupt. I didn't&#13;
respect the teachers; I didn't&#13;
respect the schools ·or the&#13;
curriculum or any of it. None of it&#13;
made sense to me, and it still&#13;
doesn't. You can't represent life in&#13;
books, especially 'for a child. Life&#13;
is life; it's represented&#13;
everywhere for them but in the&#13;
schoolroom. I .&#13;
Ranger: What trends do you&#13;
see, what do you think of current&#13;
media and fine arts?&#13;
Kherdian: You almost can't&#13;
even call it that anymore it's so'&#13;
poor. I think that one. of the big&#13;
mistakes made is the belief that, if&#13;
you turn up the volume you improve&#13;
the perfonnance - whether&#13;
the volume is nudity, profanity or&#13;
actual volume itself as in music,&#13;
'you know. People become so&#13;
desperate to be noticed that they'll&#13;
do almost anything, and all' of&#13;
those things take one further and&#13;
further away from the reality of&#13;
art. And of course, I'm as far as&#13;
you can go on the otber extreme&#13;
because my work is so quiet, so&#13;
unobtrusive and so easy to miss.&#13;
And that's okay. That's what's&#13;
true for me. But as a potential&#13;
audience for other people's work,&#13;
I can't really get very interested&#13;
in it because I don't think it's&#13;
honest.&#13;
Ranger: Sort of to spectacular,&#13;
too exhibitionist?&#13;
Kherdlan: All of those things ..&#13;
Also, the need for everything to&#13;
pay, to payoff, that everything&#13;
must bring a big return.&#13;
Ranger: Do you see money as&#13;
being the prime motivator in what&#13;
is done in the arts?&#13;
Kherdian: It is in cinema, for&#13;
example. It's impossible for&#13;
anyone who makes movies to call&#13;
themselves artists. It isn't&#13;
possible because of the conditions&#13;
of the work. You can't do it unless'&#13;
it brings in money .... For some&#13;
reason, today's artists can't. give&#13;
by Toay Ragen&#13;
Feature EdIlor&#13;
Racine-b«n poet and author&#13;
David Kherdian was In Ra~ne&#13;
this past weekend for the Racine&#13;
Public Library's Emily A. Lee&#13;
celebration. Kberdian has had 18&#13;
books and anthologies of poetry&#13;
published. In t979 his first novel,&#13;
11Ie Road From Home, was&#13;
published and since then has won&#13;
.. unerous awards. The book is the&#13;
st«y of Kherdian's mother, who&#13;
.. rvived the Turkish massacres&#13;
of the Annenian people. A sequel&#13;
to the book, FiDdIng Home, was&#13;
published this year. I interviewed&#13;
Kherdian last Saturday about life&#13;
in depression-era Racin~'s Armenian&#13;
community and his work.&#13;
Kberdlan: I think it was distinct&#13;
for us, but at the same time the&#13;
same distinctions existed for other&#13;
minorities, I think tbe city was&#13;
lormed of little sub-cultural&#13;
pockets, and the Armenian was&#13;
me, and there were others as well.&#13;
Of course. at that time the whole&#13;
toner city. which now seems to be&#13;
in rather bad shape, was active&#13;
and alive. All the stores were&#13;
used, everything was used. It had&#13;
a qualily 01 newness about it, as&#13;
compared to what it is now. And&#13;
although one might look back&#13;
upon it. perhaps as an adult, and&#13;
think that you were living in the&#13;
slums - this would have been&#13;
called a ghetto perhaps - but one&#13;
had no sense of this at the lime.&#13;
And of course we were very poor,&#13;
and one had no sense of poverty&#13;
because everyone was living the&#13;
same life. I grew up in the&#13;
depression and everyone was&#13;
poor, so in a sense nobody was&#13;
poor. Everyone was just living the&#13;
life they were living.&#13;
Ranger: Was there much more&#13;
of an ethnic feeling about the city&#13;
then?&#13;
Kherdian: Oh it was very&#13;
strong. There were two cultures&#13;
going at once. Tbere was the&#13;
culture of the home and the&#13;
culture of the. streets. The culture&#13;
of the home being Annenian in our&#13;
case, and of course the same&#13;
culture of the streets for ev~one&#13;
was American. The neighhorhoods&#13;
were alive, because the&#13;
immigrants had come, they we~&#13;
re-lounding their race 1R this&#13;
"You can't represent&#13;
life in books,&#13;
especially for&#13;
a child. - - "&#13;
country and having children - the&#13;
neighborhoods were full of&#13;
children. One had a sense of the&#13;
schools being new, everything&#13;
being - well, I keep saying alive.&#13;
When I look back on it, that was&#13;
the feelinll-&#13;
Ranger: I've read that, as a&#13;
child, you had no real interest in&#13;
books. One might think tha t would&#13;
be contrary to being a writer.&#13;
Kherdian: Well, a writer doesn't&#13;
come out of books. A writer makes&#13;
books, but I think reading is just&#13;
one stage in a long, long apprenticeship&#13;
in a writer's service.&#13;
It occurs much further along than&#13;
childhood - childhood is meant&#13;
for otber things. Of course, you&#13;
can grow up in a home where&#13;
books are used and cherished and&#13;
so on, but there was no such infiuence&#13;
in our homes. . . There&#13;
were no books in our homes, there&#13;
'UM'KIN&#13;
-.iitiA~CAIYIN. CONTEST&#13;
Sign Up in Union&#13;
Rea8CJIion Center&#13;
at Control Desk&#13;
Fri., Oct. 3', 1·2 •••.&#13;
.1 ••1 PAl AIEA&#13;
• 51.00 Entry Fee&#13;
• Pumpkin provided&#13;
(bring your own knife)&#13;
• Prizes Awarded on&#13;
Originality &amp;&#13;
Creativity&#13;
• Entrys limited to 1st 20&#13;
people to sign up&#13;
No Cover&#13;
Variety of Music Every Night For&#13;
Your Listening &amp; Dancing Pleasure&#13;
• ii&#13;
&amp;.111&#13;
3931 45th St~eet&#13;
~~ ,~' ,&#13;
"You didnt -: ~..&#13;
gQtp&#13;
cOll~&#13;
. toseU&#13;
msurance9 .;..&#13;
,h" . .....&#13;
right?" f;&#13;
DAVID KHERDIAN&#13;
up the idea that they must be&#13;
successful. And as long as you&#13;
operate on that premise, you are&#13;
doomed to a deep spiritual failure&#13;
because you're working for the&#13;
wrong reasons. Art serves&#13;
something else, it must serve&#13;
something else and it can't serve&#13;
both. It can't serve commerce ...&#13;
Ranger: Your motber asked you&#13;
to write her story. Are all your&#13;
works based on your life experiences&#13;
or the experiences of&#13;
those close to you?&#13;
Kherdian: All my work is&#13;
autobiographical. I've always&#13;
only been interested in telling my&#13;
"I don't think anyone&#13;
is an artist out of&#13;
any real choke."&#13;
own story because it's the only&#13;
story I'm really qualified to tell&#13;
and there's no end to it. My story:&#13;
if I can really tell it, if I can really&#13;
understand it, is .everybody's&#13;
story. I would hope that&#13;
everything I've published would&#13;
speak, not to everybody because&#13;
that's impossible, but to&#13;
everybody who wants to examine&#13;
SIX REASONS WHY YOU CAN&#13;
BE MORE SUCCESSFUL WITH&#13;
THE MUTUAL OF OMAHA&#13;
COMPANIES&#13;
Full Producl Line With health, lite, auto&#13;
• and home Insurance to otter your clients as&#13;
well as mutual funds, nearly everyone you&#13;
call on IS a prospect.&#13;
UnUmited Income How much you earn is&#13;
entIrely; up to you.&#13;
Advenced Tratnlng Our comprehensive&#13;
program ISamong the tines.t in the industry.&#13;
Flrll'Ye:e, Bonu. You can Qualify tor up to&#13;
$2,200 In additional income&#13;
Advencement Opportunl~ We need people&#13;
.~'th management potential to till key&#13;
POSItions.&#13;
Nelton" Adverttllng SUpport Our pro-&#13;
~~~I~n~rOduces thousands ot leads to&#13;
.see if yoU .can Qualify, Contact:&#13;
Placement Office tor an interview time&#13;
before Nov, 12, 1981.&#13;
their own life. I told my&#13;
story because it hadn't&#13;
A whole generation went&#13;
the massacres, came lilt&#13;
no spokesman, I was a&#13;
took up the burden.&#13;
Ranger: Is art life for&#13;
life art?&#13;
Kherdian: In the&#13;
when I'm writing the&#13;
the book, the story, it's II&#13;
anything to me. It's&#13;
the same time, I don't&#13;
substitute writing for&#13;
Living is another thing.&#13;
writing itself is a part of&#13;
me, but it doesn't take&#13;
of, or excuse, one's&#13;
Ranger: Is there any a&#13;
could give to a college s&#13;
hopes to become a writ&#13;
Kherdian: Find a way&#13;
in yourself. Don't be .&#13;
or influenced by the OIl&#13;
others. Work very hard at&#13;
a full apprenticeshipt&#13;
in many things - reading,&#13;
trying many, many ways&#13;
You don't really knoww&#13;
is going to be yours in&#13;
Know tha t it may never&#13;
that you may be a total&#13;
failure, and ask yourseH,&#13;
still want to do it?" If&#13;
have the means, don't&#13;
guts, don't do it. Do&#13;
else. I don't think any&#13;
artist 'out of any real&#13;
There's just no other way.&#13;
Sports caIelrtdll&#13;
."_IIII__IIlIlI_llI1IIIlIIIIIIIIlUDImn"lmllllllllllllllallllllllllllllllllllllllnl~&#13;
Rathskeller I&#13;
Lounge;&#13;
SUN. 3 Shorlles for S 1.25 I&#13;
Stroh's or Stroh Ute i&#13;
TUES. 75' Coclctal's I&#13;
THURS.Ladles Nlte ;&#13;
!h Price Drinks ~=&#13;
;:&#13;
2;:&#13;
;:i=&#13;
~=§&#13;
§&#13;
§&#13;
;:&#13;
;:&#13;
;:&#13;
;:&#13;
Ii&#13;
INTERVIEWING&#13;
ON CAMPUS&#13;
. NOVEMBER 12, 1981&#13;
MutuillC\&#13;
&lt;if{)milhil,Q.1&#13;
PM,Ip ... -- ••..&#13;
Friday, Oct. 30 ,&#13;
Volleyball vs. Valpar&#13;
vitational&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 31 .&#13;
Volleyhall vs. Valpar&#13;
vitational&#13;
Soccer vs. Illinois InS&#13;
Teclmology (l p.m.)&#13;
Cross-Country (M) vs. N&#13;
Great Lakes Regional&#13;
Cross-Country (W) vs.&#13;
,Championship (11 a.m.)&#13;
Thursday, NOv.S.&#13;
Volleyhall vs. Lewis U&#13;
(7 p.m.)&#13;
Affilialed Comp~ni~: Uniled 01 Om h&#13;
The Omaha Indemnity Compan a a&#13;
MUlual of .Omaha Fund Manasemefll tompany&#13;
~QuaJ Opportunity Companies M/F&#13;
8 Thursday, October 29, 1981 RANGER ,&#13;
Author Kherdian talks about a life of writing&#13;
was certainly no American mu~1c,&#13;
b Ton Rog&#13;
ture EdJtor&#13;
Ra in -b&lt;rn poet and author&#13;
vid J{herdian wa in Racine&#13;
thi pa w end for the Racine&#13;
Public Library' Emily A. Lee&#13;
I bration. Kherdian bas had 18&#13;
b and anthologies of poetry&#13;
p.ibli hed . In 1979 hi first novel ,&#13;
1b Ro d r m Home, was&#13;
p.ibli bed and ince then has won&#13;
nume u awards. The book is the&#13;
tory of Kherdian' mother, who&#13;
rvived the Turkish massacres&#13;
of I.he rm nian people. A sequel&#13;
to th k , indlng Home, was&#13;
publi ed thi year. I interviewed&#13;
Kherd ian la t aturday about life&#13;
III depr ion-era Racine's Armenia&#13;
n community and hi work.&#13;
Kh rdian : I think it was distinct&#13;
f r u , but at the same time the&#13;
· m d i tinc tion ex · ted for other&#13;
mm or iti . I think the city was&#13;
fo r med o f li ttle ub-cultural&#13;
pock , and th e Armenian wa s&#13;
on , and th r we re other as we ll.&#13;
cou e, at that time the whol e&#13;
1M r city, wruch now ms to be&#13;
in rath r bad ha pe , was a ctive&#13;
and aliv . II th tor were&#13;
u , ev rythmg wa s us ed. It ha d&#13;
a quality or n · about it, as&#13;
compa d to what it is now . And&#13;
a lthough one might l back&#13;
upon it, perha ps as a n adult, and&#13;
think that you wer living in the&#13;
Kherdian: Oh it was very&#13;
strong. There were two cultures&#13;
going at once. There was the&#13;
culture of the home and the&#13;
culture of the.streets. The culture&#13;
of the home being Armenian in our&#13;
case, and of course the same&#13;
culture of the streets for eve~one&#13;
was American. The neighborhoods&#13;
were alive, because the&#13;
immigrants had come, th~y we~&#13;
re-founding their race m this&#13;
there was no idea of art. The first&#13;
real art I saw was when I was&#13;
twenty-four; the first time I went&#13;
to New York after tl_le army I&#13;
remember seeing a Vmcent Van&#13;
Gogh from way across the&#13;
corridor. 1 was just shocked to my&#13;
core because I'd seen somethng&#13;
that '1 was totally unpre~red _for&#13;
and I knew I was w1tnessmg&#13;
sometning miraculous ..&#13;
It was in my twenties that I&#13;
~✓-&gt;""'✓✓✓-=00""'✓✓✓✓✓...0--..r✓✓.r✓..r- began to pursue things. I was&#13;
twenty when I first read Theodore&#13;
Drieser, which was the first real&#13;
book of literature I'd read. I knew&#13;
instantly that there was a world&#13;
within the world that I was living.&#13;
There was another stream of life&#13;
that my life had never touched •&#13;
before one that was unknown to&#13;
me. I think I was very fortunate in&#13;
this because I had all the raw&#13;
materials of life, and experience&#13;
"You can't represent&#13;
life in books,&#13;
especially for&#13;
a child ... "&#13;
~_,-_,.....,....,.._,.....,....,.....o"'...,......,.....,...r.r✓.r✓.r✓✓✓- is simply raw material ....&#13;
A large part of that was a deep&#13;
resentment toward all schools,&#13;
toward all forms of formal&#13;
learning, because I could see that&#13;
they were bankrupt. I didn' t&#13;
respect the teachers ; I didn't&#13;
respect the schools or the&#13;
curriculum or any of it. None of it&#13;
made sense to me, and it still&#13;
doesn' t. You can't represent life in&#13;
books, especially for a child. Life&#13;
is life ; it's represented&#13;
everywhere for them but in the&#13;
c oun t ry and having children - the&#13;
ne ighborhoods were lull of&#13;
chi ldren . One had a sense of the&#13;
schools being new , everything&#13;
be ing - well, I keep saying alive.&#13;
When I look back on it, that was&#13;
the feeling.&#13;
Ranger: I've read that, as a&#13;
child you had no real interest in&#13;
books . One might think that would&#13;
be contrary to being a writer.&#13;
schoolroom. 1 •&#13;
lums - this would have been&#13;
ca lled a ghetto perhaps - but one&#13;
bad no nse of this at the time.&#13;
nd of course we were very poor,&#13;
and one had no nse of poverty&#13;
because everyone wa living the&#13;
Kherdian: Well, a writer doesn't&#13;
come out of books. A writer makes&#13;
books , but I think reading is just&#13;
ooe stage in a long, long apprenticeship&#13;
in a writer's service.&#13;
It occurs much further along than&#13;
childhood - childhood is meant&#13;
for other things. Of course, you&#13;
can grow up in a home where&#13;
books are used and cherished and&#13;
so oo, but there was no such influence&#13;
in our homes . .. There&#13;
were no books in our homes, there&#13;
Ranger: What trends do you&#13;
see, what do you think of current&#13;
media and fine arts?&#13;
DAVID KHERDIAN&#13;
me life . I gr w up in the&#13;
d pr ion and everyone was&#13;
poor , so in a ense nobody was&#13;
poor . Everyone was ju t living the&#13;
li.fe th y were living.&#13;
Rang r : Was there much more&#13;
ol an thnic feeling about the city&#13;
then ?&#13;
PUMPKIN&#13;
CARVIN&amp; CONTEST&#13;
Fri., Oct. 30, 1-2 p.a.&#13;
1• 10• PAI AREA&#13;
• s1.00 Entry Fee&#13;
• Pumpkin provided&#13;
Sign Up in Union (bring your own knife)&#13;
• Prizes Awarded on&#13;
Reaeotion Center Originality &amp;&#13;
at Control Desk&#13;
Creativity&#13;
• Entrys limited to 1st 20&#13;
people to sign up&#13;
~ 11111111111111111111111111111111m IIIIIII Ill Ill II Ill I Ill Ill I llt 111111111111111111111 HI II IIIIIIIII Ill I IIIUIIIIII IIIH ll£&#13;
j Rathskeller I&#13;
- Lounge;:====&#13;
SUN. 3 Shorlies for s 1.25&#13;
~&#13;
; TUES. s;;h;:;;::h Ute I&#13;
;=IIIIIFWI&#13;
No Cover&#13;
Variety of Music Every Night For&#13;
Your Listening 8. Dancing Pleasure&#13;
3931 45th Street&#13;
kl a11111wra111111111WZ-•11na1• 1tt11111an 1 r••llllii&#13;
up the idea that they must be&#13;
succe!jisful. And as long as you&#13;
operate on that premise, you are&#13;
doomed to a deep spiritual failure&#13;
because yoo're working for the&#13;
wrong reasons. Art serves&#13;
something else, it must serve&#13;
something else and it can' t serve&#13;
both. It can't serve commerce .. .&#13;
Ranger: Your mother asked you&#13;
to write her story. Are all your&#13;
works based on your life experiences&#13;
or the experiences of&#13;
those close to you?&#13;
Kherdian: All my work is&#13;
autobiographical. I've always&#13;
only been interested in telling my&#13;
Kherdian: You almost can't&#13;
even call it that anymore it's so·&#13;
poor. I think that one. of the big&#13;
mistakes made is the belief that, if&#13;
you turn up the volume you improve&#13;
the performance - whether&#13;
the volume is nudity, profanity or&#13;
actual volume itself as in music,&#13;
·you know. People become so&#13;
desperate to be noticed that they'll&#13;
do almost anything, and all · of&#13;
those things take one further and&#13;
further away from the reality of&#13;
art. And of course, I'm as far as&#13;
you can go on the other extreme&#13;
because my work is so quiet, so&#13;
unobtrusive and so easy to miss.&#13;
And that's okay. That's what's&#13;
true for me. But as a potential&#13;
audience for other people's work, :r..,........-..,......,...~_,...._,._,-....o,-..r....-....-....-..,......,......,......,.....,.._,.&#13;
I can't really get very interested&#13;
in it because I don't think it's&#13;
honest.&#13;
Ranger: Sort of to spectacular,&#13;
too exhibitionist?&#13;
Kherdian: All of those things.&#13;
0 1 don't think anyone&#13;
is an artist out of&#13;
any real choice." Also , the need for everything to&#13;
pay , to pay off, that everything&#13;
must bring a big return. :;r..,.-..,.-..,....c,'".,o,-..r..,.-.r..,.-..,.....,...__,.....,......,......,.....,.....,..""'°'&#13;
Ranger: Do you see money as&#13;
being the prime motivator in what&#13;
is done in the arts?&#13;
Kherdian : It is in cinema, for&#13;
example. It's impossible for&#13;
anyone who makes movies to call&#13;
themselves artists. It isn't&#13;
possible because of the conditions&#13;
of the work. You can't do it unless·&#13;
it brings in money . ... For some&#13;
reason, today's artists can't. give&#13;
right?" . • f '&#13;
own story because it's the only&#13;
story I'm really qualified to tell&#13;
~nd there's no end to it. My story:&#13;
if I can really tell it, if I can really&#13;
understand it, is everybody's&#13;
story. I would hope that&#13;
everything I've published would&#13;
speak, not to everybody because&#13;
that's impossible, but to&#13;
everybody who wants to examine&#13;
SIX REASONS WHY YOU CAN&#13;
BE MORE SUCCESSFUL WITH&#13;
THE MUTUAL OF OMAHA&#13;
COMPANIES&#13;
Full Prod~cl Line With health. lite . auto&#13;
• and home insurance to oiler your clients as&#13;
well as .mutual funds, nearly everyone you&#13;
call on ,s a prospect&#13;
Unl,lmlted Income How much you earn Is&#13;
entore ty up to you.&#13;
AclHnced Trelnlng Our comprehensive&#13;
program 1s among the finest in the industry.&#13;
Flrat-Yeer Bo~':'• You can quali fy for up to&#13;
$2.200 ,n add1t1onal Income.&#13;
Adv~c•ment Oppo,tunlU.1 We need peo"&#13;
Esi~i~s~anagement potentoal to fill key&#13;
•Ilona! Adwertltlng Support Ou, pro~~&#13;
Ti";.nproduces thousands of leads to&#13;
See If you can qualify. Contact:&#13;
Placement Office for an Interview t ime&#13;
before Nov. 12 , 1981 .&#13;
INTERVIEWING&#13;
ON CAMPUS&#13;
. NOVEMBER 12, 1981&#13;
MuttmlC\&#13;
~milha .V ,,... ............ .&#13;
~ffiliated Comp.mies: United of Onliha&#13;
The Om•h• Indemn ity Compon&#13;
MutuilJ of Omah• fund M.anage-nt "Y · """" Company&#13;
i::qual Oppertunity Companies MI F&#13;
their own life. I told my&#13;
story because it hadn't beea&#13;
A whole generation went&#13;
the massacres, came rut&#13;
no spokesman. I was a&#13;
took up the burden.&#13;
Ranger: Is art life for&#13;
life art?&#13;
Kherdian: In the sense&#13;
when I'm writing the cha&#13;
the book, the story, it's as&#13;
anything to me. It's pal&#13;
the same time, I don't&#13;
substitute writing for ·&#13;
Living is another thing.&#13;
writing itself is a part of · ·&#13;
me, but it doesn't take the&#13;
of, or excuse, one's conduct.&#13;
Ranger: Is there any a ·&#13;
could give to a colleges&#13;
hopes to become a writer!&#13;
Kherdian: Find a way to&#13;
in yourself. Don't be di&#13;
or influenced by the op· ·&#13;
others. Work very hard al&#13;
a full apprenticeship, whidl&#13;
in many things - reading,&#13;
trying many, many ways to&#13;
You don't really know what&#13;
is going to be yours in the&#13;
Know that it may never wmt&#13;
that you may be a total&#13;
failure, and ask yourself,&#13;
still want to do it?" If yoo&#13;
have the means, don't ha1'&#13;
guts, don't do it. Do so&#13;
else. I don't think anyooe&#13;
artist ·out of any real&#13;
There's just no other way.&#13;
Sports Calendar&#13;
Friday, Oct. 30 .&#13;
Volleyball vs. Valpar~&#13;
vitational&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 31 .&#13;
Volleyball vs. ValparaiSO&#13;
vitational&#13;
Soccer vs. Illinois Jnstitult&#13;
Technology (1 p.m.) C&#13;
Cross-Country (M) vs. N&#13;
Great Lakes Regional&#13;
Cross-Country (W) vs.&#13;
, Championship (11 a .m.&gt;&#13;
Thursday, ov. 5 .&#13;
Volley ball vs. Lewis OIIIV&#13;
(7 p.m.)&#13;
RANGER , 52 --5&#13;
urity experiments&#13;
ith propane car&#13;
Wisconsin by the Security&#13;
department to learn how to install&#13;
the eqpipment needed to convert&#13;
to propane. "He is the only one&#13;
w~o works on the car," Brinkman&#13;
said. The conversion kit was&#13;
purchased from Midstates Gas&#13;
Equipment. The cost to teach the&#13;
mechanic how to install it&#13;
equipment, and installatio~&#13;
totalled about $1300. Despite a&#13;
state mandate tha t declares all&#13;
state vehicles to he sold after&#13;
55,000 miles, the propane equipment&#13;
will be taken off and used&#13;
again. Brinkman feels that the&#13;
money spent on the initial cost will&#13;
eventually be saved in less consumption&#13;
and maintenance.&#13;
"&lt;?ver a period of three years, it&#13;
Will pay for itself," Brinkman&#13;
stated.&#13;
There are some setbacks in the&#13;
experiment. For example. there is&#13;
10% less pick-up when running on&#13;
propane and less trunk space&#13;
because the propane tank is there,&#13;
but overall Brinkman is very&#13;
happy with the car.&#13;
Cruise pIannOO&#13;
World Explorer Cruises is&#13;
featuring a seven day New Year's&#13;
Cruise departing Sunday, Dec. TI&#13;
from Port Everglades, Florida.&#13;
The S. S. Universe will call at&#13;
Pla.ya Del Carmen, Cazumel, and&#13;
Ocho Rios. This cruise is open to&#13;
everyone of all ages.&#13;
For people with more time there&#13;
are two 14 day affordable Transcanal&#13;
cruises departing Jan. 31&#13;
and Feb. 14.&#13;
This is more than a cruise - it's&#13;
a learning experience.&#13;
For more information about&#13;
these or Summer 1982 cruises to&#13;
Alaska, contact Holly Beth&#13;
Hinrichs, Box 153, Germantown,&#13;
Wis. 53022, or phone (414) 255-3497&#13;
after 4 p. m.&#13;
Soviet Seminar&#13;
holds meeting&#13;
An introductory meeting for&#13;
students interested in taking&#13;
the Soviet Seminar next&#13;
semester, including a two week&#13;
trip to the U.S.S.R. in March&#13;
will he held in Union 'JffI ,.;&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 4 at 3 p. m.&#13;
Dr. Oliver Hayward&#13;
Assistant Professor Da~&#13;
McGovern and students wbo&#13;
participated in earlier trips to&#13;
the U.S.S.R. will show slides&#13;
and answer questions.&#13;
Wind Ensemble&#13;
toperfonn&#13;
The Parkside Wind Ensemble&#13;
will present a concert al2 p.m. on&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 8, in IIlain Place d.&#13;
Wyllie Library - Learning Center&#13;
under the direction of Scott&#13;
Mather.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
Hammersmith, Prelude and&#13;
Scherzo by Holst, Do Not Go&#13;
Gentle Into That Good ight by&#13;
Del Borge, Handel in the Strand&#13;
by Grainger, Psalm by Persichetti&#13;
and L'Inglesina by Delle&#13;
Cese.&#13;
Admission is free for senior&#13;
citizens; $1 Cor others.&#13;
Social Security benefits to&#13;
students 18-22 attending colleges&#13;
and other post - secondary schools&#13;
will he sharply curtailed under a&#13;
recently enacted law, Carlo R.&#13;
Ricciardi, Social security district&#13;
manager in ICellO'Sha, said&#13;
recently.&#13;
First, children who become&#13;
eligible for Social Security&#13;
benefits after July 1982 will not&#13;
receive post - secondary student&#13;
benefits.&#13;
Second, post - secondary school&#13;
students who first become eligible&#13;
for benefits in the period September&#13;
1981 - July 1982 will only&#13;
receive benefits through July 1982&#13;
Basic SkiIs&#13;
Educators to meet&#13;
About 150 educators from&#13;
colleges and universities&#13;
throughout the Midwest a~ expected&#13;
to attend the Tlurd Besic&#13;
Skills Conference at Parksule&#13;
today and tomorrow Theme of the&#13;
1981 conference is "Developmental.&#13;
Education' A Total&#13;
Campus Commitment 10&#13;
Principa I speaker "ill he Prof&#13;
John E. Roueche, dlrector of the&#13;
Community College Leadership&#13;
Program at the Uruversitv of&#13;
Texas at Austin and an authOnty&#13;
on developmental and remedial&#13;
education. He will talk on&#13;
"Holistic Literacy ill College&#13;
Teaching," the subject 0( hi most&#13;
recent book.&#13;
Roueche will 1lJ"" his keynote&#13;
address at a dinner torught and&#13;
also will talk tomorrow at a&#13;
morning workshop sessioo, one of&#13;
24 small-group sessions planned&#13;
over the two-day conference on a&#13;
variety of SUbjects Involving&#13;
developmental education&#13;
Other speakers at general&#13;
sessions will mclude Dr Joseph&#13;
Kauffman, Executive ViCE&#13;
President of the UW System "'!xl&#13;
will talk on "Working Together on&#13;
(one month for sexne stucien&#13;
Finally, students currently&#13;
receiving benefits (or child&#13;
beneficiaries who begin their&#13;
college or paM • seeonclar)&#13;
e&lt;b:ation before May 1!lll2 will&#13;
receive limited Shadrntl lIenefits&#13;
Benefit rates fer _ ..... ts who&#13;
are eligible for cootiraling benefits&#13;
will he frozen at the July l!IIl1&#13;
level, Ricciardi said. Furthermore,&#13;
these rates will be&#13;
reduced 25 percent eldl ,.r&#13;
starting with August 1981, and&#13;
benefits cannot he poid to students&#13;
during May, June, Jul) or Augusl&#13;
starting in 1982. As a result, no&#13;
further student henefits ".II be&#13;
po KI or pn I 11115&#13;
",. conIereoce&#13;
by I?'" -Parkside and the l.'VI&#13;
lern,," C ler Jor the I"'"&#13;
0( _1.--. and Disad&#13;
vantaged COIIf rene coor&#13;
dlnalcn are Carol J GI&#13;
Par ide and ow.. Pallard al&#13;
UW·, Iilw&#13;
Student Social Security benefits cut&#13;
Gain Pickin' •&#13;
Irick., I, ••• wi'"&#13;
.... &amp; Lace Friday,&#13;
Oct. 30&#13;
9:30 .11 1:30&#13;
PRIZES FOR&#13;
BEST COSTUMES&#13;
•••• ,.1 ...... 11&#13;
" •••1. &amp; L.c.&#13;
~.l ,v&#13;
COUNTRY IWESTERN SALOON&#13;
RACINE MOTOR INN&#13;
535 Main Street in Downtown Racine&#13;
Howard Butten (Buffo) graduated from the&#13;
Ringling Bros. and Barnum &amp; Bailey Clown&#13;
College, and toured 2 years with the Circus&#13;
Bartok. In 1972 Bulten wrote and co -&#13;
starred in WXYZ (ABC) television's&#13;
"Super Circus" show. Later he became&#13;
Buffo, combining his talents as a dov..n.&#13;
singer t musician, mime and artist into one&#13;
character.&#13;
Wednesday, November 4&#13;
·8 p. m,&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Tickets Available at the&#13;
UNION INFO CENTER&#13;
and at the DOOR&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
CHILDREN'S PRICES&#13;
WORKSHOPS&#13;
WITH BUFFO&#13;
will be held on&#13;
Wednesday, November 4&#13;
BUFFO&#13;
the clown&#13;
ecurity experiments&#13;
ith propane car&#13;
b\ Jeff Wick&#13;
ide' ecurity Departp&#13;
r ~ an effort to ave money&#13;
' 1oergy, i currently exnung&#13;
with a dual f~eled&#13;
d car. which runs on either&#13;
Ille or propane gas.&#13;
car. a 1981 AMC _ Concord&#13;
8 ~.cylinder engme, was&#13;
\-erted and ready to. use on&#13;
1 this year. Ron Brmk:man,&#13;
) r d ecu rity, says it will&#13;
ror I U in three years.&#13;
'" man got th e idea while&#13;
tttnding a work.shop in Lincoln,&#13;
a in Ma rch. "I was very&#13;
• .,.,m-e!;seo at one ci. the sessions&#13;
h dea lt with motor vehicle&#13;
. ca,servation. The session&#13;
t wi th the co n version of&#13;
1es to propane gas as a&#13;
tute fuel whi le s til1 al1owing&#13;
~elud e to use unleaded gas in&#13;
even t it is needed," Brinkman&#13;
When he ca me back, he&#13;
· tely ubmitted a proposal&#13;
A i ta nt Cha n cellor Gary&#13;
for approval of a conversion&#13;
m tll periment with propane in&#13;
d ca r . It was a pproved in&#13;
innkman is ve ry pleased with&#13;
ults so ra r , and he plans to&#13;
the car to the UW System&#13;
ty meeting in Madison next&#13;
moog the adva ntages of using&#13;
ne gas is tha t it increases&#13;
life, it is cleaner burning,&#13;
it is not dependent on foreign&#13;
pn . Propane gas, which is&#13;
plentiful supply at this time, is&#13;
based at Van 's Gas Service&#13;
2?nd Averrue in Kenosha for&#13;
I a gallon. The car has a&#13;
gallon propane tank mounted in&#13;
trunk in addi t ion to the 20&#13;
Don gas tank . P ropane also has&#13;
higher octane whic h reduced&#13;
tl) engi ne repa irs by reducing&#13;
I changes, park plug wear and&#13;
er ha ust emissions.&#13;
Bruce Berman was the&#13;
hanic ent to Holstein,&#13;
Wisconsin by the ecurity&#13;
department to learn how to install&#13;
the eq_uipment needed to convert&#13;
to propane. 'He is the only one&#13;
w~o works on the car," Brinkman&#13;
said. The conversion kit was&#13;
purchased from 1id tates Gas&#13;
Equipment. The cost to teach the&#13;
me~hanic how to install it,&#13;
equipment, and installation&#13;
totalled about $1300 . Despite a&#13;
state mandate that declares all&#13;
state vehicles to be sold after&#13;
55,000 miles , the propane equipment&#13;
will be taken off and used&#13;
again. Brinkman feels that the&#13;
money spent on the initial cost will&#13;
eventually be saved in less consumption&#13;
and maintenance&#13;
"Over a period of three years ii&#13;
will pay for itself," Brinkn{an&#13;
stated.&#13;
There are some setbacks in the&#13;
experimen_t. For example, there is&#13;
10% less pick-up when running on&#13;
propane and less trunk space&#13;
because the propane tank is there,&#13;
but overall Brinkman is very&#13;
happy with the car.&#13;
Cruise plannoo&#13;
World Explorer Cruises is&#13;
featuring a seven day ew Year's&#13;
Cruise departing Sunday, Dec . Zl&#13;
from Port Everglades, Florida.&#13;
The S. S. Universe will call at&#13;
Pia-ya Del Carmen, Cozumel , and&#13;
Ocho Rios . This cruise is open to&#13;
everyone of all ages.&#13;
For people with more time there&#13;
are two 14 day affordable TTanscanal&#13;
cruises departing Jan. 31&#13;
and Feb. 14.&#13;
This is more than a cruise - it's&#13;
a learning experience.&#13;
For more information about&#13;
these or Summer 1982 cruises to&#13;
Alaska, contact Holly Beth&#13;
Hinrichs, Box 153, Germantown,&#13;
Wis . 53022, or phone (414 ) 255-3497&#13;
after 4 p . m .&#13;
~oin Pickin'&#13;
lrlck er lre• t ....&#13;
h • I• &amp; Lace Friday,&#13;
Oct . 30&#13;
9:30 Ill I :30&#13;
PRIZES FOR&#13;
BEST COSTUMES&#13;
- Ret•r•l•I New . 11&#13;
De• I• &amp; L• ce&#13;
COUNTRY /WESTERN SALOON&#13;
RACINE MOTOR INN&#13;
53 5 Main Street in Downtown Racine&#13;
RA GER&#13;
Basic Skil Soviet Seminar&#13;
holds meeting&#13;
An introductory mee ing for&#13;
tudents inter ted m ing Educato s to meet&#13;
the oviet eminar next&#13;
emester, includin a tv:o w&#13;
trip to the . . .. R. in arch&#13;
will be held in nion 2fT1 ~&#13;
Wednesday, 'ov. 4 at 3 p . m .&#13;
Dr. Oliver Hay ard&#13;
A si tant Profe sor Da~&#13;
McGovern and student ho&#13;
participated in earlier trips to&#13;
the .S.S.R wil1 show sh&#13;
and answer questions .&#13;
Wind Ensemble&#13;
to perlonn&#13;
The Parkside Wind Ensembl&#13;
will present a concert at p.m . on&#13;
unday , ov. 8, in fain Place ci.&#13;
Wyllie Library - Learning Center&#13;
under the direction of cott&#13;
ather.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
Hammersmith, Prelude and&#13;
cherzo by Hol t , Do , ' ot Go&#13;
Gentle Into That Good 'igbt b&#13;
Del Borgo, Handel in the trand&#13;
by Grainger, Psalm by Perichetti&#13;
and L'logl ina by Delle&#13;
Cese.&#13;
Admission is free for senior&#13;
citizens ; $1 for others.&#13;
Student Social Security beneft&#13;
ocial Security benefit to&#13;
students 18-22 attending colleges&#13;
and other pa;;t - econdary chool&#13;
will be sharply curtailed under a&#13;
recently enacted la , Carlo R .&#13;
Ricciardi Social Security district&#13;
manager in iCeoosha , said&#13;
recently.&#13;
First, children ho become&#13;
eligible for ocial curity&#13;
benefits alter July 1982 will not&#13;
receive post - condary tud.ent&#13;
benefits.&#13;
Second, p t • ecoodary I&#13;
students who first become eligible&#13;
for benefits in the period September&#13;
1981 - July 1982 ill only&#13;
receive benefits through July 1982&#13;
BUFFO&#13;
the clown&#13;
Howard Butten &lt;Buffo) gradu ted from&#13;
Ringling Br . and Barnum Bail e.&#13;
College , and toured 2 yea \\.1th Ci&#13;
Bartek. In 1972 Butten ·ro e and co •&#13;
starred i n YZ ( B t I&#13;
" u r Circu " sho ·• L t h&#13;
Buffo, combining hi tal&#13;
inger, musician, mime and artist nto&#13;
character.&#13;
W e dnesday, o vemh r&#13;
• 8 p . m .&#13;
Union Cine ma&#13;
T icke t Availab le at t h&#13;
U IO I FO CE TE R&#13;
an d at th e DOOR&#13;
SPECIA L&#13;
CHILDRE PRICE&#13;
WORKSHOPS&#13;
WITH 8 FO&#13;
will he h e ld on&#13;
Wedne sday,&#13;
cut&#13;
10 Thursday, October 29,1981 RANGER&#13;
VoIJevbaI' losses&#13;
Coach says talent there&#13;
by Doug Ed.Db .... r&#13;
If the Parkside women's&#13;
volleyball team has any hope of&#13;
doing well in the state tournament&#13;
caning up next month, they had&#13;
belter start playing up to their&#13;
.bIIities.&#13;
The Rangers moved their&#13;
record to 16-2118stweekend with a&#13;
l-3 showing at the Carthage Invitational.&#13;
Parkside lost the first&#13;
two matches to St. Xavier, 11-15&#13;
and 11-15,and UW-LaCrosse, 3-15,&#13;
15-10 and 12-15, before heating&#13;
UW-Whitewater 16-14 and 15-9.&#13;
The Rangers then dropped their&#13;
last match to Elmhurst College,&#13;
12-15,15-5and 11-15.&#13;
Coach Linda Henderson is&#13;
disappointed at the team's present&#13;
level of play. "I reaDy don't know&#13;
what to say. We stopped improving&#13;
after the Wright Slate&#13;
tournamenl. We're not doing&#13;
things with sny greater consistency&#13;
than we were."&#13;
The Rangers have much talent,&#13;
as they showed earlier in the&#13;
season hut that talent seems to be&#13;
hidden'lately. "The talent is there,&#13;
hut it's very frustrating that I&#13;
can't bring it out," said Henderson.&#13;
"I'm disappointed that&#13;
we're not winning games that we&#13;
should win."&#13;
The Rangers hosted Bradley&#13;
University and UW-Oshkosh&#13;
Tuesday night, heating Bradley&#13;
and losing to Oshkosh. .&#13;
Parkside played well to handily&#13;
deleat Bradley in two games hy&#13;
scores of 15-7 and 15-6. Oshkosh&#13;
proved 00 be too much for the&#13;
Rangers, heating them 11-15, 11-&#13;
15.&#13;
The Rangers bave only two&#13;
more meets before the upcoming&#13;
WWIAC tournament. This year's&#13;
tourney will be held at Parkside&#13;
November 13th and 14th. This&#13;
weekend Parks ide travels to&#13;
Valparaiso, Indiana to take part in&#13;
the Va!p&lt;raiso Invitational. They&#13;
then travel to Romeoville, Illinois&#13;
next Thursday to battle a tough&#13;
Lewis University squad.&#13;
Swimming course offered&#13;
Are yoo afraid of water? Do you&#13;
bate the idea of swimming? WeDif&#13;
you answered yes to either of the&#13;
ahove _tioos you will have a&#13;
chance to learn to swim at a Basic&#13;
Water Safety and stroke class&#13;
being offere.J in November.&#13;
The best thing ahoutthe class is&#13;
that it is free. The class, open to&#13;
every level of swimmer, will be&#13;
held the first two Mondays and&#13;
• Wednesdays in November, the&#13;
2nd, 4th, 9th and 11th from I to 2&#13;
p.m. in the gym.&#13;
There will be two instructors for&#13;
the class to provide lots of individual&#13;
attention. All swimmers&#13;
who survive the class will be&#13;
issued a Red Cross Basic Water&#13;
safely Certification card.&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC. ATHLlTIC FOOTWEAll&#13;
FOR AU SPORTS&#13;
TEAM aAUS - AlL IPOfIIT8&#13;
.1flClOK1 .~&#13;
~,.,.._ • nGIJII • ..". ..... T •...,...... -..v-..-va .,.... MUCON'l'&#13;
_ .1"\JIlIM •• ~ iiI&#13;
-' ...,_ . I'ON'I' • NlWII.IlLANCl ~ n .,.&#13;
ThlActMA .... O"&amp;QP ~. 694-9206 __ •.__&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
III WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
Dates &gt; Nov. 4 &amp; 5&#13;
Time· 10·2, 4-6&#13;
Place • Alcove&#13;
Women harriers&#13;
place second&#13;
by Pally DeLuisa&#13;
In their "best race of the year,"&#13;
Mike DeWill's Ranger harriers'&#13;
scored 57points to capture second&#13;
place in the Second Annual&#13;
Carthage College Cross - Country&#13;
Invitational Saturday at&#13;
Petrifying Springs Park. Ten&#13;
teams competed. Coach DeWitt&#13;
commented that the women ran&#13;
their finest limes of the season at&#13;
the meet.&#13;
Junior Debbie Spino led her&#13;
teammates by placing third&#13;
overall with a time of 17:44.1.&#13;
Junior Dona Driscol and Senior&#13;
Barb Osborne ran closely together&#13;
again, placing 9th and 10th&#13;
respectively, with clockmgs of&#13;
18:40.9 and 18:43.8.&#13;
Freshman Sue Meyer was not&#13;
far behind as she placed 14th with&#13;
a time of 19:10.1. Senior Lowrie&#13;
Melotik was 29th at 20:10.7.&#13;
Sandy Venne, a sophomore, also&#13;
ran well for parkside. sandy's&#13;
timewas 20:33.4, good for the 32nd&#13;
scoring position. Sophomore&#13;
Linda Pfeilstifter placed srst;&#13;
Cheryl Konkol of UWMilwaukee&#13;
won the three mile&#13;
race with a time of 17:05.7. Her&#13;
team also took the invitational&#13;
crown by scoring only 41 points.&#13;
UW.()shkosh placed third with 60&#13;
points.&#13;
This coming Saturday (Oct. 31)&#13;
the Rangers will host the&#13;
Wisconsin Women's Intercollege&#13;
Athletic Conference (WWIAC)&#13;
meet. Coach DeWitt believes that&#13;
his runners will do well, hoping for&#13;
a team finish of fourth place. The&#13;
running begins at noon.&#13;
Parkside was paced by&#13;
sophomore Dan Stublaski, who&#13;
placed 18th with a 25:55.1&#13;
clocking. Sophomore Tom Barrell&#13;
ran a quick 27:04.9 to take 7lst&#13;
place. Sophomores Steve Brunner&#13;
and AI Correa strided hack - 00 -&#13;
back with times of 27:08.6 and&#13;
27:09.1 for 77th and 78th places&#13;
respectively. '&#13;
. Freshman Robert Mayfield&#13;
finished 89th with a time of&#13;
-27:23.1. Sophomore Ray Sharp&#13;
placed 94th and Junior Rich&#13;
Sowlles finished 131st.&#13;
Mike Axinn of the University of&#13;
Chicago won the race with a time&#13;
of 24:57.8. North Central College&#13;
won, the team title with 63 points.&#13;
.CLASSIFIED&#13;
ADS' HELP WANTED&#13;
EARN EXTRA CASH. Home mailing&#13;
program. Send self - addressed, stamped&#13;
env:lop: to A. B. Enterprises, 3065&#13;
cauccne. Racine, 53402.&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
FRE.NCH, GERMAN. SPANISH LESSONS,&#13;
Price open. caroline 886.4206.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
ANYONE INTERESTED in going to "Film&#13;
lndi.a".at Chicago Art Institute, Sundays&#13;
beglnnlfl~ Nov. 1. Share the ride, cost of gas&#13;
and parking. Contact Vivian 639-2602or 656-&#13;
6956.&#13;
SHERRY FESTGE spikes pumpkin as&#13;
Henschal look on.&#13;
ADULT&#13;
MASKS&#13;
_ t2fX) illhx:k&#13;
2~OFF&#13;
ADULT&#13;
COSTUMES&#13;
f1l/I6I snd ~&#13;
for_gfor.&#13;
614 56th St. Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Moonllte sOwl&#13;
RED PIN&#13;
$3.00 Nlte&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
WEEKLY SPECIALS&#13;
Nov. 2 - Nov. 7&#13;
60'/game MON. 9 a.m .. 'til Noon&#13;
TUE. Noon 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 3 p.m. 'til 6 p.m-&#13;
All you can bowl&#13;
or play pool&#13;
THUR. 7 p.m. 'til 10 p.rn-&#13;
FRI .. 10 p.m , 'til 1 a.m·&#13;
90'/game SAT. 8 p.m. 'til 1 a.m·&#13;
•&#13;
10 Thursday, October '19, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Volleyball losses&#13;
Coach says talent there&#13;
bOuEdnh r&#13;
1r the Park ide women's&#13;
v I y II team ha any hope of&#13;
doin lJ in the tale tournament&#13;
comin up n xt month, they had&#13;
b t tart playing up to their&#13;
ablliti&#13;
Th R nger moved their&#13;
ord lo 16·21 la t weekend with a&#13;
1-3 howm at the Carthage In•&#13;
·1tational. Par ide lo t the first&#13;
two matche to t. avier, 8-15&#13;
nd Il-15, and W-LaCrosse, 3-15,&#13;
1 -10 and 12-15, before beating&#13;
W-Whitew ter 11&gt;-14 and 15-9.&#13;
The Rang rs th n dropped their&#13;
la" match to Elmhurst College,&#13;
12-15, 15-5 and 11-15 .&#13;
C ch Linda Hender on is&#13;
d1 ppointed at the team's present&#13;
I v I of play. "I really don't know&#13;
hat to ay. We stopped im•&#13;
pro ing aft r the Wright State&#13;
tournament. We're not doing&#13;
thin with any greater con•&#13;
l ncy than w were."&#13;
The Rangers have much talent,&#13;
th y owed earlier in the&#13;
season but that talent seems to be&#13;
hidden°lately. ''The talent is there,&#13;
but it's very frustrating that I&#13;
can't bring it out," said Henderson.&#13;
"I'm disappointed that&#13;
we're not winning games that we&#13;
should win."&#13;
The Rangers hosted Bradley&#13;
University and UW-Oshkosh&#13;
Tuesday night, beating Bradley&#13;
and losing to Oshkosh. .&#13;
Parkside played well to handily&#13;
defeat Bradley in two games by&#13;
scores of 15-7 and 15-6. Oshkosh&#13;
proved to be too much for the&#13;
Rangers, beating them 11-15, 11-&#13;
15.&#13;
The Rangers have only two&#13;
more meets before the upcoming&#13;
WWIAC tournament. This year's&#13;
tourney will be held at Parkside&#13;
ovember 13th and 14th. This&#13;
weekend Parkside travels to&#13;
Valporaiso, Indiana to take part in&#13;
the Valparaiso Invitational. They&#13;
then travel to Romeoville, Illinois&#13;
next Thursday to battle a trugh&#13;
Lewis University squad.&#13;
Swimming course offered&#13;
re you afraid of water? Do you&#13;
hate the id or swimming? Well il&#13;
you amw red yes to either of the&#13;
abo e qu tims ou will have a&#13;
chance to learn to wim at a Basic&#13;
Wa er fely and troke class&#13;
being offered in ovember.&#13;
The t thing about the cla is&#13;
that it i fr . Th class, open to&#13;
e.,- ry le I r immer, will be&#13;
held the first two Mondays and&#13;
. Wednesdays in ovember, the&#13;
2nd, 4th, 9th and 11th from 1 to 2&#13;
p.m. in the gym.&#13;
There will be two instructors for&#13;
the class to provide lots of in·&#13;
dividual attention. All swimmers&#13;
who survive the class will be&#13;
issued a Red Cross Basic Water&#13;
Safety Certification card.&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC. ATHLETIC FOOTW£AII&#13;
FOR All SPORTS&#13;
TEAM IALII - ALL Sl'OftTS&#13;
• MDOIS • CON\llll9!&#13;
• tl""AIII ..... •PUMA _.,.. ,.=.. ....... __, ... ,, __. .... , ...&#13;
~-n•-n&#13;
• 9P01' ....... , ·-• Sl'AU&gt;lflG&#13;
•HEWL&lt;il.ANa&#13;
Thi ActNt A!Neta One Step&#13;
694-9206 --If.-.•&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
(1) WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
Date ov. 4 &amp; 5 Only.&#13;
Time - 10-2, 4-6&#13;
~6at0!1{ s Place - Alcove&#13;
Women harriers&#13;
place second&#13;
by Patty DeLuisa&#13;
In their "best race of the year,"&#13;
Mike DeWitt's Ranger harriers·&#13;
scored 57 points to capture second&#13;
place in the Second Annual&#13;
Carthage College Cross · Country&#13;
Invitational Saturday at&#13;
Petrifying Springs Park. Ten&#13;
teams competed. Coach DeWitt&#13;
commented that the women ran&#13;
their finest times of the season at&#13;
the meet.&#13;
Junior Debbie Spino led her&#13;
teammates by placing third&#13;
overall with a time of 17:44.1.&#13;
Junior Dona Driscol and Senior&#13;
Barb Osborne ran closely together&#13;
again, placing 9th and 10th&#13;
respectively, with clockings of&#13;
18:40.9 and 18:43.8.&#13;
Freshman Sue Meyer was not&#13;
far behind as she placed 14th with&#13;
a time of 19: 10.1. Senior Lowrie&#13;
Melotik was 29th at 20:10.7.&#13;
Sandy Venne, a sophomore, also&#13;
ran well for parkside. Sandy's&#13;
time was 20:33.4, good for the 32nd&#13;
scoring position. Sophomore&#13;
Linda Pfeilstifter placed 61st.&#13;
Cheryl Konkol of UWMilwaukee&#13;
won the three mile&#13;
race with a time of 17:05.7. Her&#13;
team also took the invitational&#13;
crown by scoring only 41 points.&#13;
UW-Oshkosh placed third with 60&#13;
points.&#13;
This coming Saturday (Oct. 31)&#13;
the Rangers will host the&#13;
Wisconsin Women's Intercollege&#13;
Athletic Conference (WWIAC)&#13;
meet. Coach DeWitt believes that&#13;
his runners will do well, hoping for&#13;
a team finish of fourth place. The&#13;
running begins at noon.&#13;
Parkside was paced by&#13;
sophomore Dan Stublaski, who&#13;
placed 18th with a 25:55.1&#13;
clocking. Sophomore Tom Barrett&#13;
ran a quick Z7:04.9 to take 71st&#13;
place. Sophomores Steve Brunner&#13;
and Al Correa strided back • to -&#13;
back with times of Z7 :08.6 and&#13;
Z7:09.l for 77th and 78th places&#13;
respectively. '&#13;
Freshman Robert Mayfield&#13;
finished 89th with a time of&#13;
Z7:23.l. Sophomore Ray Sharp&#13;
placed 94th and Junior Rich&#13;
Sowlles finished 131st.&#13;
~ke Axinn of the University of&#13;
Chicago won the race with a time&#13;
of 24:57.8. North Central College&#13;
won , the team title with 63 points.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
ADS·&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
EARN EXTRA CASH. Home malling&#13;
program. Send self • addressed, stamped&#13;
env~lop~ to A. B. Enterprises, 3065&#13;
Cahdorua, Racine, 53402.&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
FRENCH, GERMAN, SPANISH LESSONS.&#13;
Price open . Ca rollne 886-4206.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
ANYONE INTERESTED in going to "FIim&#13;
lnd(a" at Chicago Art Institute, Sundays&#13;
beg,nnin~ Nov. 1. Share the ride, cost of gas&#13;
:;:park,ng. Contact Vivian 639 -2602 or 656 -&#13;
RED PIN&#13;
$3.00 Nite&#13;
Moonlite Bowl&#13;
SHERRY FESTGE spikes pumpkin as&#13;
Henschal look on.&#13;
ADULT&#13;
MASKS&#13;
•IBJ111/otl&#13;
2~0FF&#13;
fflEATRICAL&#13;
MAKEUP .&#13;
Bp,t $11/sdr,n&#13;
II 11,s ,,. ADULT&#13;
OOSTUMES&#13;
614 56th St. Downtown Kenosha&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
WEEKL V, SPECIALS&#13;
Nov. 2 - Nov. 7&#13;
60'/game&#13;
All you can bowl&#13;
or play pool&#13;
90'/game&#13;
MON. 9 a.m. 'til Noon&#13;
TUE. Noon 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 3 p.m. 'tll 6 p.m.&#13;
THUR. 7 p.m. 'til 10 p.!Tl ·&#13;
FRI. 10 p.m. 'til 1 a.rn.&#13;
SAT. 8 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
RANGER Thursday. October 29.1981 11&#13;
ngers win two out of three&#13;
mday, October 20, the&#13;
Soccer team took the field&#13;
Purdue - Cahunet and&#13;
t with a s-2 linal score.&#13;
ngers shut down the two&#13;
yers of Purdue - Calumet,&#13;
re the fourth and eighth&#13;
scorers in the National&#13;
ation of Intercollegiate&#13;
C5 (NAlA).&#13;
team (Parkside) played&#13;
very well defensively and extremely&#13;
well offensively," stated&#13;
Coach Henderson.&#13;
John (MoMo) Onyiego led all&#13;
scorers with two goals. Jeff&#13;
LaForce, Ralph DeGraff and Don&#13;
Theisen all added one goal apiece&#13;
to help lead them to victory,&#13;
'giving Parkside their eighth win&#13;
of- the season.&#13;
On Friday, Octoher 23, UWParkside&#13;
shattered St. Norbert&#13;
College 5-{).&#13;
BOB NEWSTROM&#13;
Photo by Dan McCOrmack&#13;
"We totally dominated them!"&#13;
exclaimed Henderson. "We held&#13;
them to poly five shots the whole&#13;
game." Jeff Dennehy and Ralph&#13;
DeGraff each scored two goals,&#13;
while Cheidu Okemah knocked in&#13;
the fifth goal. Along with scoring&#13;
the goals, Dennhy had two assists,&#13;
as did Bob Newstrom. Brad Faust&#13;
also added one assist.&#13;
Dennehy's two goals have tied&#13;
him with the Single Season&#13;
Scoring Record of nine goals.&#13;
His two assists tied him for the&#13;
career Assist Record with sixteen&#13;
assists. Brad Faust's one assist&#13;
also tied with Dennehy for sixteen&#13;
assists. The third record he set&#13;
was the All-Time Scoring List on&#13;
- which he is third with twentyseven&#13;
points. Bob Newstrom's two&#13;
assists give him fourth place on&#13;
the same list with twenty-three.&#13;
Parkside challenged the Golden&#13;
Gophers of Minnesota which was a&#13;
type ci "homecoming" for many&#13;
Ranger players from Minnesota.&#13;
The Rangers had control of the&#13;
ball early when they had four&#13;
excellent scoring opportunities,&#13;
but they just couldn't score. The&#13;
half-time scare was CH&gt;.&#13;
Then eight minutes into the half&#13;
Parkside gave up a free kick,&#13;
boosting the score to 1-0.&#13;
Minutes later, John (MoMo)&#13;
Onyiego was removed from the&#13;
game because of lighting. Due to&#13;
the fact that the team cannot&#13;
substitute for a player kicked out&#13;
of the game, they had to play the&#13;
remainder of the second half short&#13;
one man.&#13;
"We never got back into the&#13;
game after that," said Henderson.&#13;
Minnesota scored another goal&#13;
later in the half for the final goal,&#13;
dropping Parkside's season&#13;
record to 9-8.&#13;
JOHN PETERSON&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Peterson scores 300&#13;
by Laurie Painter which set a new tournament&#13;
record. He placed first of 500&#13;
bowlers, of which the top 96&#13;
buwled the weekend &lt;i Oct. 24th.&#13;
The top t6 bowlers from the 96 will&#13;
bowl head to head on Halloween.&#13;
Willy Yee, also in the tournament,&#13;
has an 846 series and&#13;
qualified near 50th place or 560&#13;
with an average cI. 253. Peterson&#13;
and Vee are members of the&#13;
Parkside Bowling Club.&#13;
On Sunday, Octoher 18, John&#13;
Peterson topped his high buwling&#13;
score of 298 with a perfect 300&#13;
game. John is a twenty year old&#13;
sophomore who has been buwling&#13;
for 11years. During a state singles&#13;
tournament in Balero, Peterson&#13;
bowled his 300 game along with&#13;
scores of 234, 209 and 268. His&#13;
astronomical scores totaled 1011,&#13;
1981-82 RANGER BASKETBALL&#13;
HOME GAMES&#13;
(all 7:30 p. rn. unless otherwise noted)&#13;
Friday. Dec. 4 St. Xavier&#13;
Monday, Dec. 7&#13;
Tuesday. Dec. 15&#13;
Monday-Tuesday,&#13;
Dec. 28-29&#13;
Saturday. Jan. 2&#13;
Tuesday. Jan. 12&#13;
Thursday -, Jan. 14&#13;
Saturday. Jan. 16&#13;
Wednesday. Jan. 20&#13;
Saturday, Jan... 30&#13;
Wednesday. Feb. 10&#13;
Loras&#13;
Ferris State&#13;
Ranger Classic&#13;
(Carthage. UW-Oshkosh.&#13;
Saginaw Valley State)&#13;
UW-Plattevi lie&#13;
Lakeland&#13;
McNeese State&#13;
St. Norbert&#13;
Illinois Tech&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Another exciting season of UW-Parkside&#13;
Ranger basketball will soon be starting III&#13;
JOIN THE CROWD AT PARKSIDE&#13;
AND ENJOY EXCITING&#13;
COLLEGE BASKETBALL ACTION.&#13;
The 1981-82 edition of Ranger basketball will feature the&#13;
following:&#13;
• Enthusiastic cheerleaders&#13;
• The Junior Ranger Club for kids 12and under, complete with&#13;
special membership card, Junior Ranger badge and other&#13;
special "goodies" tnrcusnout the season. , .&#13;
• FREE T - shirt to every purchaser of a season ticket. , .&#13;
SEASON PASSES NOW AVAILABLE&#13;
AT THE PHYSICAL EDUCATION BLDG. OFFICES,&#13;
PRICED AT $18TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC&#13;
AND $10TO STUDENTS ...&#13;
BUY ONE NOW AND GET READY TO BE A&#13;
RANGER ROOTER IN 81-82!!!!&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 29, 1981 11&#13;
angers win two out of three&#13;
uesday, October 20, the&#13;
Soccer team look the field&#13;
t Purdue - Calumet and&#13;
out with a 5-2 final score.&#13;
ngers shut down the two&#13;
layers of Purdue - Calumet,&#13;
re the fourth and eighth&#13;
t scorers in the ational&#13;
iation of Intercollegiate&#13;
·cs ( AIA) .&#13;
team (Parkside) played&#13;
very well defen.5ively and extremely&#13;
well offen.5ively," stated&#13;
Coach Henderson.&#13;
John (MoMo) Onyiego led all&#13;
scorers with two goals. Jeff&#13;
LaForce, Ralph DeGraff and Don&#13;
Theisen all added one goal apiece&#13;
to help lead them to victory,&#13;
' giving Parkside their eighth win&#13;
of- the season.&#13;
On Friday, October 23, UWParkside&#13;
shattered St. orbert&#13;
College 5-0.&#13;
Photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
BOB NEWSTROM&#13;
"We totally dominated them."&#13;
exclaimed Henderson. "We held&#13;
them to pnly five shots the whole&#13;
game." Jeff Dennehy and Ralph&#13;
DeGraf£ each scored two goals,&#13;
while Cheidu Okomah knocked in&#13;
the fifth goal. Along with scoring&#13;
the goals, Dennhy had two assists ,&#13;
as did Bob ewstrom . Brad Faust&#13;
also added one a ist.&#13;
Dennehy's two goals have tied&#13;
him with the Single Season&#13;
Scoring Record of nine goals .&#13;
His two assists tied him for the&#13;
Career Assist Record with ixteen&#13;
assists. Brad Fau t's one assist&#13;
also tied with Dennehy for sixteen&#13;
assists. The third record be set&#13;
was the All-Time Scoring List on&#13;
· which he is third with twentyseven&#13;
points. Bob ewstrom's two&#13;
assists give him fourth place on&#13;
the same list with twenty-three.&#13;
Parkside challenged the Golden&#13;
Gophers of Minnesota which was a&#13;
type a "homecoming'' for many&#13;
Ranger players from Minnesota .&#13;
The Rangers had control of the&#13;
ball early when they had four&#13;
excellent scoring opportunities,&#13;
but they just couldn't score. The&#13;
half-time score was 0-0 .&#13;
Then eight minutes into the half&#13;
Parkside gave up a free kick,&#13;
boosting the score to 1--0.&#13;
Minutes later, John (MoMo )&#13;
Onyiego was removed from the&#13;
game because of fighting. Due to&#13;
the fact that the team cannot&#13;
substitute for a player kicked out&#13;
of the game, they had to play the&#13;
remainder of the second half short&#13;
one man.&#13;
"We never got back into the&#13;
game after that," said Henderson .&#13;
Minnesota scored another goal&#13;
later in the half for the final goal,&#13;
dropping Parkside' s season&#13;
record to 9-8.&#13;
JOH N PETE RSON&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Peterson scores 300&#13;
b Laurie Paint r&#13;
On Sunday, October 18, John&#13;
Peterson topped his high bowling&#13;
score ci 298 with a perfect&#13;
game. John is a twenty ~ear old&#13;
sophomore who has been bowling&#13;
£or 11 years . During a state singles&#13;
tournament in Balero. Peterson&#13;
bowled his 300 game along with&#13;
scores or 234, 209 and 268 . Hi&#13;
astronomical score totaled 1011,&#13;
t a new toumam nt&#13;
1981-82 RANGER BASKETBALL&#13;
HOME GAMES&#13;
(a ll 7: 30 p. m . unless otherwi se noted)&#13;
Friday, Dec . -4 St. Xavier&#13;
Monday , Dec . 7&#13;
Tuesday, Dec . 15&#13;
Monday -Tuesday,&#13;
Dec . 28-29&#13;
Saturday, Jan . 2&#13;
Tuesday, Jan . 12&#13;
Thursday, Jan . 1-4&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 16&#13;
Wednesday, J a n . 20&#13;
Saturday, Jan . 30&#13;
Wednesday , Feb. 10&#13;
Loras&#13;
Ferris State&#13;
Rang e r Cla ssic&#13;
(Cartha ge, UW-Oshkosh,&#13;
Sag inaw Valley State)&#13;
UW- P lattevi I le&#13;
Lakela nd&#13;
McNeese State&#13;
St . Nor bert&#13;
Ill ino is Tech&#13;
Nor t hern Michi gan&#13;
UW -Mil wa ukee&#13;
Another exciting seaso n of UW-Porkside&#13;
Ranger basketball will soon be starting ! I I&#13;
JOIN THE CROWD AT PARKSIDE&#13;
AND ENJOY EXCITING&#13;
COLLEGE BASKETBALL ACTION.&#13;
The 1981 -82 edi t ion of Ra nger ba s k etbal l will f eature the&#13;
fol l ow i ng:&#13;
• Enthusiasti c cheerleaders&#13;
• The Junior Ranger Cl ub for k ids 12 and under, complete with&#13;
special membership card, Juni or Ra nger b adge and ot he r&#13;
special "goodies" throughout the seaso n ...&#13;
• FREET. sh i rt to every purchaser of a season t i c ket ...&#13;
SEASON PASSES NOW AVAILABLE&#13;
AT THE PHYSICAL EDUCATION BLDG. OFFICES,&#13;
PRICED AT $18 TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC&#13;
AND $10 TO STUDENTS . •.&#13;
BUY ONE NOW AND GET READY TO BE A&#13;
RANGER ROOTER IN 81-82! ! ! !&#13;
~~~ place fourth in tournament&#13;
Over !he weekend, the Parkside 10-11 on the year; a good r-&#13;
Women s Tennis team officiall formance 10 an otherwise diS~1&#13;
~ed the season, tied for fourth ~ year for the Tenrus learn.&#13;
. JW.W.L.A.C. Tournament held f Rathngersenior Nancy Kivi took&#13;
10 .anesville. our pia,:" . in Number Three&#13;
SIX tea"'! participated in the Smgles. Kivi lost to Panther&#13;
event which lell M Jeanne Scheller (7-5&#13;
fmlshing on top with .:rqu~tte defeated Beth Aaro of Cart;;'6),&#13;
UW-Mllwaukee placed spo nlsd· (7-5, 6-2), and lost to E·I ge&#13;
With 57 . econ Roge f C 1een&#13;
was th~?~'32Carthage College 4). Id~i °linia:ed°llthCOllege(6-2, 6-&#13;
and Ca points. Parkside C s e season 9-9&#13;
with 1;'11. College tied for fourth too~r ~~ll, a Parkside jUni~r&#13;
Green points apiece, and UW- S ou place 10 Number F~&#13;
home 8 ';lntilaced fifth laking o:~~e;:.o(~~~re:~ng Kathy. Gray&#13;
Pa k.de . M· hell ,~, 6-1) losing to r 51 senior Kathy _ IC e Heller of UW M'·I uk&#13;
tSoionkglethsirbdy pta.eceeoi10 NumbrenromOanse o(6f -0Uw6--G2)' defeating Ly-nnIewCaonleeye&#13;
four matc.:mrung three of her reen Bay (6-4, 6-1) and&#13;
Ruby Ack s, Thomas defeated&#13;
erman of Gree Ba&#13;
2, 6-2), loot to Marge G ~af y (6-&#13;
EUsWte-rMTriolwaukee (6-2,6-0u)s,defesaotnedof&#13;
(6-2, 6-0)m:.::;r ': fCarroll College&#13;
Ruby Ackerm e eated Phoenix&#13;
4, 6-4), Her pea~oarmseacnocned tJiemfte h(e6r-&#13;
12 Thursday. October 29,1981&#13;
Tennis&#13;
WOW! What A selectioo&#13;
PARKS IDE UNION&#13;
10:11 • - 4:11 JIll&#13;
• SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
.JUBE JELLS&#13;
• CARAMELS&#13;
:~~~~~;L BULLIES&#13;
.TOFFEES&#13;
• JOTS&#13;
.BRIDGE MIX&#13;
.MALTED MILK&#13;
• CHOC. CREME g:LLS&#13;
• CHOC. RAISINS OPS&#13;
• CHOC. PEANUTS&#13;
• PEANUT BU&#13;
• STARS TTER CUPS&#13;
: ~~~:T PEANUTS&#13;
BALLS MALTED MILK&#13;
• CAROB PEANUTS :~~~~i~~r SEEDS&#13;
• CALIFORN~ ~ELlCACY&#13;
• STUDENT Fooi/&#13;
• GIANT CASHEWS&#13;
• NATURAL&#13;
• SPANISH PE~~TACHIOS&#13;
• BLANCHE UTS&#13;
• YOGURT ~AISI~~ANUTS&#13;
• BYROITGTULRET SESAME&#13;
: ~~~T S~~~EER~NUTS&#13;
:~OTARLIGHT MINTS&#13;
UR BALLS&#13;
• CINNAMON DISKS&#13;
• COFFEE&#13;
•• RBOUOTTTERBSCEEO;CH DISKS&#13;
• POPS BARRELS&#13;
• KPIESASNESUT BUTTER&#13;
• PEPPERMIN&#13;
• LICORICE B~ KISSES&#13;
.JELLY BEAN;L1ES&#13;
: ~~~NR~i~:;~:SKYS&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF NOV. 2&#13;
RED SKIN:&#13;
PEANUTS 40% OFF&#13;
..&#13;
RANGER&#13;
I .&#13;
C&#13;
",mg to Debbie Doughtery of&#13;
arthage (6-3,6-3).&#13;
The Rangers' Doubles team of&#13;
Nancy. Kivi and Kathy Thomas&#13;
the bnghtest spot on .this year'~·&#13;
team, placed second in the&#13;
tournament by defeating Beth&#13;
Aaro and Hope Henschel f&#13;
Carthage (6-4, 6-3), hut losing ~o&#13;
RoblD Barksdale and M&#13;
Cornell of Marquette (6-2, :.rr Their .overall record was 11-6 .&#13;
G~'fnsapp.~nted Coach Nor~en&#13;
team H sal .about this year's&#13;
, We did alright (for the&#13;
• nduivmidbuearllyof ~eIa~~s) we had. Incould&#13;
ex~ct." as well as you&#13;
~f~~e~g~~~~~~yDo1u3r9.picks and bring. the form dowwnintnoetrhs.e PRuatngaercheek&#13;
__ Atlanta at New Orleans Office,&#13;
__ Ba~timore at Miami ~&#13;
__ Chicago at Tampa Bay --&#13;
__ Cleveland at Buffalo ---&#13;
__ Dalla~ at Philadelphia --&#13;
__ DetrOIt at Los Angeles --&#13;
__ Houston at Cincinnati --&#13;
__ Kansas City at San Diego&#13;
=__=New England at Oakland --- N.Y. J~ts at N.Y. Giants == __ St. LoUIS at Washington -- ~&#13;
San Francisco at Pittsb h&#13;
__ Seattle at Green Bay urg --&#13;
NaLmaest wmn.er was Bruce Duchac ' 11correct, 46 total .&#13;
S.S. No. potnta.&#13;
R~' 'n roll.""'" ,n"~".1I" =in'" fa'Un(S"",rom.' &amp; we. And.n ""'" ,nun'" on&#13;
d&#13;
""""&#13;
nndi""', """ d_&#13;
in&#13;
(~" "mlki", ,nn"'" "'''''' W",1&amp; -,. Enin, nu' qualitY in _",n. ' Rock itroll stirs with&#13;
SneJl &amp;SneJl&#13;
St1l9rllm~&#13;
12 Thursday, October 29, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Tennis&#13;
~~~~~ place fourth in tournament&#13;
Over the week.end the p 1cs·d HH1 on the year· a good Wome ' T ' ar I e forma · ' per- losing t D b o s ennis team officiall nee m an otherwise dismal o e bie Doughtery of&#13;
~ed the season, tied for fourth fu year for the Tennis team. Carthage (6-3, 6-3).&#13;
W w .1:,.A.C. Tournament held f Ranger senior Nancy Kivi took The Rangers' Doubles team of&#13;
m ~anesville. S~urJth place in Number Three Nancy_ Kivi and Kathy Thomas&#13;
IX teams participated . th mg es . Kivi lost to p th the bnghtest spot on .this year';&#13;
;\·~~ which left Marq~ett! ~:n~ed Scheller (7-5 a~-6~r team, placed second in the ; _Jf on top with 68 points. (7-Sea ~ Beth Aaro of c'arthag~ tournament by defeating Beth&#13;
J waukee placed se d ' 2), and lost to Eil Aaro and Hope Henschel f&#13;
=~~h~f:•&#13;
32&#13;
Ca~hage Co~~:e ~~:f!i ~rus~hrredoJJthCollege (6-2e:t Cart!18ge (6-4, 6-3), oot losin fo&#13;
and c po,nts, Pa,kside c e season 9-9 Rohm Ba&lt;ksdale and Mg&#13;
with :tpo~nC,~lleagep1·ectiede, fanordfourU th too. ~!u~hallp,laaceP1·narNksumidebeJr·uni~r. Cor~ell of Marquette (6-2 6~:r G .., W F Their .overall record was 1i-6 . ho= 8 !~ntilaced fifth takio~ ~:nt!~o~r /6~3ea4~ng6-Kl)athl Y. a:; GogAg?isap~ointed Coach Nor~en p k M' , .,, os1ng to m said about this&#13;
ar ' de senior Kathy Th ichelle Heller of 'uw MiJ uk team "We d'd Ir year's took third place . omas (6--0 6-2 ) def . . wa ee number ex 11 a ight (for the&#13;
ngl by winni m umber One of UW-c'reenea:ng Lynne Conley . dividually p aydi~ds) we had. Infour&#13;
matches T~g three of her ay (6-4 , 6-1) and uJd , we as weJJ as you&#13;
Ruby Ackerm~n or°ias defeated co expect."&#13;
2, 6-2 ), lost to Marge ~een Bay (6-&#13;
- filwaukee ( 6- ustafson of&#13;
~~~r ~~m:~r t f ~lld~U~~&#13;
Ruby Ackerm e eated Phoenix&#13;
4, 6-4 &gt;. Her pe~! second time ( 6- mance left her&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selectioo&#13;
PAR~SIDE UNION&#13;
10:IIJ • - 4:111 ,.,,&#13;
e SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
eJUBE JELLS&#13;
e CARAMELS&#13;
: ~~~~~SEL BULLIES&#13;
• TOFFEES&#13;
eJOTS&#13;
e BRIDGE MIX&#13;
•MALTED MILK BALLS&#13;
•cHoc CRE&#13;
• CHoc: RA1s1:: DROPS&#13;
e CHOC . PEANUTS&#13;
e PEANUT BU&#13;
•STARS TTER CUPS : ~~i:T PEANUTS&#13;
BALLS MAL TED MILK&#13;
e CAROB PEANUTS&#13;
: ~~~i~~~~R SEEDS&#13;
• CALIFORNIA ~~ilCACY&#13;
e STUDENT FOOD&#13;
• GIANT CASHEWS&#13;
e NATURAL&#13;
oo~::~~~~~.e ,~!&lt;S your picks and bring the ci:::r winners. Put a :;e locfoi&#13;
DI39. own to the Ranger oec~ ~&#13;
- - Atla~ta at New Orleans - - ff1ce,&#13;
-- Ba}tlmore at Miami --&#13;
-- Chicago at Tampa Ba _ _&#13;
-- Cleveland at Buffalo _Y __&#13;
-- Dalla~ at Philadelphia _ _&#13;
- - Detroit at Los Angeles __&#13;
-- Houston at Cincinnati - -&#13;
-- Kansas City at San Diego&#13;
-- New England at Oakland - == N.Y. J~ts at N.Y. Giants==&#13;
St. Louis at Washington&#13;
--San Francisco at Pittsburgh&#13;
-- S~ttle at Green Bay __ -&#13;
Last wmner was Bru D ch Name . ce u ac, 11 correct, 46 total .&#13;
S.S. No. =======-----== P0ints.&#13;
e SPANISH PE:ISTACHIOS&#13;
e BLANCHED NUTS&#13;
e YOGURT RAISl:;ANUTS&#13;
e YOGURT&#13;
BR I TTLE SESAME&#13;
: :7i/~OOIN PEANUTS&#13;
Rock 'n roll really stirs with the exciting taste of Seagram:s 7 &amp; 7UR. And so Mes country and west,TII,&#13;
and jazz, and disco-in fact, everything sounds better with 7 &amp; 7. Enjoy our quality in moderation.&#13;
Rock n roll stirs with e ST LERS&#13;
• so~RRLBIGHT MINTS&#13;
ALLS&#13;
: ~6~~~~0N DISKS&#13;
e BUTTERSC&#13;
• ROOT B OTCH DISKS&#13;
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              <text>PSGA tables motion on teaching award conflict</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;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC.&#13;
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SUPER SPORTS MO*-** 10*0 A*. 8:00 M*. #PONY -NEW BALANCE&#13;
.«fc A USAT. f 1IMKMX) A1A.M. U • wi • u&#13;
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CLOSED SUNDAYS S HOUDAVS&#13;
The Active Athletes One Stop&#13;
694-9206&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
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;
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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;
the skills you'll need&#13;
to succeed in this rapidly&#13;
expanding business. And&#13;
unlike many professions,&#13;
your earnings aren't affected&#13;
by the ups and&#13;
downs of the economy.&#13;
As a service representative for Mutual of Omaha,&#13;
youU have the satisfaction of providing others with&#13;
vitally needed financial security.&#13;
So, if you feel like college is preparing you for just&#13;
one job, talk to us about a rewarding sales career with&#13;
Mutual of Omaha.&#13;
INTERVIEWING ON CAMPUS&#13;
NOVEMBER 12,1981&#13;
Contact: Placement Office for an interview time before&#13;
Nov. 12, 1981.&#13;
Mutual 4T\&#13;
^OmahaSL/&#13;
Equal Opportunity Companies M/F&#13;
People (fou can count on...&#13;
Lite Insurance Aifiliale: United of Omaha&#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, Wi&lt;&#13;
414 - 843-2388&#13;
ILS&#13;
5VA% Interest K Y our Daily&#13;
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;
A BLEND&#13;
u&gt;4u4ey fdh&amp;nc&amp;ve c4a*ad»&#13;
•*0100/4, Mtc4. fdf-ftwoud&#13;
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l IOI1K0 UNDER US. GOVERNMENT SUPE«W&#13;
»r iy_ 8* JOSEPH E. SEAGRAM l OSNS M1.&#13;
' SO SAN fRANCISCO.CA -'SO*(««H0,1&#13;
ASTEROIDS&#13;
PAC MAN&#13;
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>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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                <text>1981-11-05</text>
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                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="69925">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="69926">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69927">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69928">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69929">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69930">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69931">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69932">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="963">
        <name>chancellor alan guskin</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="222">
        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1383">
        <name>teaching excellence award</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
