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              <text>Parkside Village pros and cons</text>
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              <text>Pholo&#13;
b.y M.  W. Hofnwhl&#13;
Parkside  Village&#13;
Pros and  Cons&#13;
castle,"  Jackie  McBride,  a student&#13;
living   in&#13;
923,&#13;
began   as   she&#13;
iIiUer&#13;
C2ld_~~~tur~~_ describe~ ~k~ide_   Vil.!!ge. She&#13;
g. narrow  path  of   calls the quality  of the soundproof.&#13;
before  me,  littered&#13;
iog  "Rotten.   You  can  hear  people&#13;
peels.&#13;
beer  and  soda    downstairs  and next door,"&#13;
~&#13;
buns,   and   milk&#13;
On   construction&#13;
quality.    she&#13;
into the snow.&#13;
It&#13;
was   said.  "When   the  heater   starts,&#13;
it&#13;
walkway  to   Parkside&#13;
sounds  like  an  army  of antelopes.&#13;
IIIDding&#13;
923.  Behind  the    You have to hit the&#13;
lights   a certain&#13;
the&#13;
parking    lot   was   way to get them  to come  on:'   Eric&#13;
.....&#13;
with&#13;
ice.&#13;
Thoresen,   a student  in another  923&#13;
....  three buildings   that&#13;
apartment,   had  a similar  problem.&#13;
bouse&#13;
students.&#13;
there&#13;
"It&#13;
took  five months   to get the  light&#13;
......&#13;
windows,   broken&#13;
switch fixed,"  he said.&#13;
IDd damaged   street-&#13;
In McBride's  apartment   the  roof&#13;
.....&#13;
ys&#13;
were  ice-covered&#13;
is  leaking   in  two  places,   one  of&#13;
the'&#13;
whole  complex  or   those  for  over  a  month.  _Repairs?&#13;
at&#13;
all,&#13;
"We're    on   a  waiting   list   with&#13;
130&#13;
students  live  in  the    everybody  else."  Rental  price?  "It's&#13;
lC:COrding to   Parkside&#13;
super-expensive&#13;
for   what   we're&#13;
sources.   I  found    getting.  I'm  not  coming  back  here&#13;
-people   at home  in each    to live next year,"  she added.&#13;
the&#13;
buildings.   When   I&#13;
"There  is something  living in two&#13;
two&#13;
days later,  scribbling&#13;
of the walls, one in the kitchen,  one&#13;
aid&#13;
llipping  on  unshoveled.    in  the  small  bedroom,"   said  Eric&#13;
11, a  Parks ide   Village&#13;
Thoresen.   Response  to complaints?&#13;
appeared  and  tried   to   "The  manager   doesn't   do  much:'&#13;
Ole&#13;
"'abay   of some  of the    he   said.    He   also    mentioned&#13;
·It&#13;
"'IS : futile task  in the    problems   with  holes  in  the  patio&#13;
-,&#13;
3&#13;
• call  it   the   cardboard&#13;
cont. on&#13;
pg.&#13;
Regents Approve&#13;
Parkside  Grants&#13;
The   regents   also   accepted    a&#13;
National&#13;
Science&#13;
Foundation&#13;
undergraduate&#13;
research   participa-&#13;
tion -grant  of  $11.946.   Under  the&#13;
grant.  six  undergraduate&#13;
students&#13;
will work on a one· to-one basis with&#13;
chemistry-life   science  faculty. mem·&#13;
bers during  the summer  seSSion on&#13;
various   research   projects   in  the&#13;
disciplines.&#13;
A  grant   of  S159.913  from  ~he&#13;
Department   of  Health,   Educat~on&#13;
and  Welfare   for  basic  education&#13;
opportunity   grants  to students  a.nd&#13;
'ft&#13;
f'&#13;
$9000  from  the  Parkslde&#13;
a gl&#13;
0&#13;
•&#13;
.&#13;
200 Club  in support  of the  ath!eUc&#13;
program  also were accepted.&#13;
lnd&#13;
grants totalling  almost&#13;
. for  the   University    of&#13;
'Parkside  were  accepted&#13;
UW  System   Qoaro   of&#13;
her.&#13;
Friday,&#13;
"'lit   '&#13;
of&#13;
Includes   $2,905   in&#13;
an assessment  study  of&#13;
't1~OU~ty.human  needs  and&#13;
eXiSting agencies   are&#13;
() them.   Profs.    William&#13;
.  avidBarone and  Kenneth&#13;
.&#13;
'&#13;
re   conducting&#13;
the&#13;
,tthich is sponsored  by the&#13;
COunty Social   Services&#13;
t&#13;
C&#13;
'&#13;
8oard'&#13;
omprehensive   Ser-&#13;
and  Kenosha   United&#13;
Robbery&#13;
at&#13;
Parlcside&#13;
.f&#13;
•&#13;
v&#13;
•&#13;
• 24&#13;
Security  Exami&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
An  armed   robbery   that   took&#13;
place  two weeks  ago.  at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
late on the night of March  Sth. has&#13;
brought   up&#13;
the&#13;
question  of "Hoy.&#13;
safe is Parkside?"&#13;
Celess  Strickland.    a&#13;
Parkside&#13;
student,  walked  out&#13;
(0&#13;
her  car&#13;
10&#13;
the  Union  parking   lot.  alone.  at&#13;
about  10:00 p.m.  on  the  night  or&#13;
March&#13;
Sth.&#13;
Just as she&#13;
got&#13;
into  her&#13;
car four&#13;
juveniles   between&#13;
the ages&#13;
of&#13;
13&#13;
and&#13;
17&#13;
stopped  her  and  hit&#13;
heron  the head  with a gun.&#13;
T....&#13;
o or&#13;
the  youths   forced   her   into   the&#13;
backseat  of  her  car  and  drove  to&#13;
Petrifying  Springs.  where  she&#13;
\\35&#13;
forced  out. The other&#13;
rwo&#13;
followed&#13;
in another  car. She made  it back to&#13;
Parkside&#13;
and    informed&#13;
the&#13;
Uw-Parkside&#13;
Security   office   at&#13;
about  10:20 p.m.&#13;
Thanks&#13;
to&#13;
a&#13;
very&#13;
clear&#13;
description  of the four youths  from&#13;
Ms.  Strickland.   Security  .....as  able&#13;
to send  out  a good  description   of&#13;
the  suspects   and  the  stolen  car.&#13;
Detectives  in Racine  recognized  the&#13;
description   and  were able  to track&#13;
down the juveniles  by noon the next&#13;
day.  They  had  switched  cars  and&#13;
lea~lice&#13;
on a car chase  back  out&#13;
to   Parkside&#13;
where   they   were&#13;
cornered  on highway E.&#13;
However.  despite   no  one  being&#13;
seriously injured  and  the  criminals&#13;
being caught  quile quickly,  the fact&#13;
that  such  an  incident   did  occur&#13;
raises  questions  about  the  securil)'&#13;
situation  here .&#13;
In  an   intervie....  with   Ronald&#13;
Brinkmann,   the head  of Parlc:side's&#13;
Security  Department   for  the  pasl&#13;
eight  years,&#13;
Rangrr&#13;
was  Informed&#13;
that  this  incident  was practially  a&#13;
unique  case.  Brinkmann   said  thai&#13;
the  frequenc.y  of assaults.   \·andal·&#13;
e&#13;
tsrn,&#13;
~nd&#13;
lheft&#13;
h~~&#13;
not&#13;
lDCTr:ased&#13;
over&#13;
the&#13;
past&#13;
month'S&#13;
~nd&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t   re&#13;
were  no plarn   10&#13;
~11oC&#13;
the&#13;
set-up al Par  side In an   a&#13;
Accordmr&#13;
10&#13;
1r&#13;
hnn&#13;
Parkside  ha  mu  b ~&#13;
rt&#13;
mflj,1 campuo:oes  In 1M&#13;
L"Yt-&#13;
s&#13;
\tadlSOn.   for  In tance    had&#13;
assault  , ..&#13;
robbenes&#13;
..&#13;
rapt".&#13;
burglaries    and  1&#13;
lhefu&#13;
He&#13;
uld.&#13;
that&#13;
m&#13;
I  'l&#13;
It&#13;
(&#13;
r&#13;
campuses  are&#13;
u\uaU&#13;
wrpriled&#13;
&amp;1&#13;
hew Iil1le\iaocbh  m.nd  tbdllbcTc&#13;
is at Park,,'de.  He a&#13;
poInu:d&#13;
t&#13;
that  most&#13;
0$&#13;
the  cnree&#13;
COIDra.&#13;
cd&#13;
at   Parkside    ~&#13;
dOM   b&#13;
students.   1M&#13;
robbc.'1&#13;
and&#13;
UIoIU&#13;
of&#13;
March   5th  ~ an&#13;
example&#13;
of&#13;
In&#13;
answer&#13;
to&#13;
a&#13;
question&#13;
a&#13;
I&#13;
tbt&#13;
feasabihry    of  a&#13;
plan  to   eep&#13;
i.O&#13;
b&#13;
indi\TMiuats  out&#13;
of&#13;
tbe&#13;
unl&#13;
en&#13;
Bnnkmann&#13;
said&#13;
lhal  thn.&#13;
Id&#13;
be&#13;
nearly   imposSible.&#13;
The&#13;
fad&#13;
t&#13;
•&#13;
Parksjde&#13;
is    a&#13;
pubhc   LMututJOa&#13;
means that a.n)one must be •&#13;
-cd&#13;
on  campus.   Furtbennore.&#13;
II&#13;
IS&#13;
relatively   impossible&#13;
to&#13;
idenuf&#13;
those '" ho intend  cnme&#13;
from&#13;
those&#13;
90&#13;
ho  do   nOI.  Appeanncn&#13;
~rt&#13;
decel\lng.&#13;
HO"C\er.   Mr.  Bnn  mann  did&#13;
point out Ihal the Studrnl  UntOft&#13;
u.&#13;
~:&#13;
.. ~:..::;'~&#13;
an  exceplion&#13;
to&#13;
thl.\.  rvk:&#13;
i-.:::~.~rt,nc;:&#13;
Union&#13;
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run b. studenl&#13;
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be  used&#13;
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r, &#13;
,dnesday &#13;
21, &#13;
1979 &#13;
Photo &#13;
b_&gt;&#13;
· &#13;
M. &#13;
W. &#13;
Holnwhl &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Village &#13;
Pros &#13;
and &#13;
Cons &#13;
lly &#13;
Unda &#13;
Adams &#13;
castle," &#13;
Jackie &#13;
McBride, &#13;
a &#13;
student &#13;
living &#13;
in &#13;
923, &#13;
began &#13;
as &#13;
she &#13;
a &#13;
bitter &#13;
cold &#13;
S~tu_r~&#13;
~&#13;
-&#13;
descr!,!&gt;«:,d &#13;
~~rk~ide&#13;
~-&#13;
Vi)lage. &#13;
She &#13;
, &#13;
a &#13;
long&#13;
,  narrow &#13;
path &#13;
of &#13;
calls &#13;
the &#13;
quality &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
soundproof-&#13;
ilacbed &#13;
before &#13;
me&#13;
,   littered &#13;
ing &#13;
"Rotten. &#13;
You &#13;
can &#13;
hear &#13;
people &#13;
annae &#13;
peels, &#13;
beer &#13;
and &#13;
soda &#13;
downstairs &#13;
and &#13;
next &#13;
door." &#13;
aprttte &#13;
butts, &#13;
and &#13;
milk &#13;
On &#13;
construction &#13;
quality, &#13;
she &#13;
frozen &#13;
into &#13;
the &#13;
snow. &#13;
It &#13;
was &#13;
said, &#13;
"When &#13;
the &#13;
heater &#13;
starts, &#13;
it &#13;
k &#13;
walkway &#13;
to &#13;
Parkside &#13;
sounds &#13;
like &#13;
an &#13;
army &#13;
of &#13;
antelopes. &#13;
building &#13;
923. &#13;
Behind &#13;
the &#13;
You &#13;
have &#13;
to &#13;
hit &#13;
the &#13;
lights &#13;
a  certain &#13;
, &#13;
the &#13;
parking &#13;
lot &#13;
was &#13;
way &#13;
to &#13;
get &#13;
them &#13;
to &#13;
come &#13;
on."' &#13;
Eric &#13;
coated &#13;
with &#13;
ice. &#13;
Thoresen, &#13;
a &#13;
student &#13;
in &#13;
another &#13;
923 &#13;
first &#13;
three &#13;
buildings &#13;
that &#13;
apartment, &#13;
had &#13;
a  similar &#13;
problem. &#13;
house &#13;
students, &#13;
there &#13;
"It &#13;
took &#13;
five &#13;
months &#13;
to &#13;
get &#13;
the &#13;
light &#13;
broken &#13;
windows, &#13;
broken &#13;
switch &#13;
fixed," &#13;
he &#13;
said. &#13;
ts. &#13;
and &#13;
damaged &#13;
street-&#13;
In &#13;
McBride's &#13;
apartment &#13;
the &#13;
roof &#13;
Walkways &#13;
were &#13;
ice-covered &#13;
is &#13;
leaking &#13;
in &#13;
two &#13;
places, &#13;
one &#13;
of &#13;
t  the &#13;
whole &#13;
complex &#13;
or &#13;
those &#13;
for &#13;
over &#13;
a &#13;
month. &#13;
Repairs? &#13;
led &#13;
at &#13;
all. &#13;
"&#13;
We're &#13;
on &#13;
a &#13;
waiting &#13;
list &#13;
with &#13;
t &#13;
130 &#13;
students &#13;
live &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
everybody &#13;
else." &#13;
Rental &#13;
price? &#13;
"It' &#13;
according &#13;
to &#13;
Parkside &#13;
super-expensive &#13;
for &#13;
what &#13;
we're &#13;
ation &#13;
sources. &#13;
I &#13;
found &#13;
getting. &#13;
I'm &#13;
not &#13;
coming &#13;
back &#13;
here &#13;
1 &#13;
lew &#13;
people &#13;
at &#13;
home &#13;
in &#13;
each &#13;
to &#13;
live &#13;
next &#13;
year," &#13;
she &#13;
added. &#13;
frve &#13;
buildings. &#13;
When &#13;
I &#13;
"There &#13;
is &#13;
something &#13;
living &#13;
in &#13;
two &#13;
hro &#13;
days &#13;
later, &#13;
scribbling &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
walls, &#13;
one &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
kitchen, &#13;
one &#13;
Ind &#13;
slipping &#13;
on &#13;
unshoveled &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
small &#13;
bedroom.'" &#13;
said &#13;
Eric &#13;
ays. &#13;
a &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Village &#13;
Thoresen. &#13;
Response &#13;
to &#13;
complaints? &#13;
appeared &#13;
and &#13;
tried &#13;
to &#13;
"T&#13;
he &#13;
manager &#13;
doesn&#13;
't &#13;
do &#13;
much.'" &#13;
9o'alkway &#13;
of &#13;
some &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
he &#13;
said. &#13;
He &#13;
also &#13;
mentioned &#13;
-&#13;
It &#13;
was &#13;
a" &#13;
futile &#13;
task &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
problems &#13;
with &#13;
holes &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
patio &#13;
~ &#13;
3 &#13;
it &#13;
the &#13;
cardboard &#13;
cont. &#13;
on &#13;
pg. &#13;
Regents &#13;
Approve &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Grants &#13;
'&#13;
nd &#13;
grants &#13;
totalling &#13;
almost &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
in.&#13;
Park &#13;
.d &#13;
st &#13;
e  were &#13;
accepted &#13;
h &#13;
UW &#13;
System &#13;
Board &#13;
of &#13;
ere &#13;
Friday&#13;
. &#13;
um &#13;
includes &#13;
$2 &#13;
905 &#13;
in &#13;
or &#13;
' &#13;
an &#13;
assessment &#13;
study &#13;
of &#13;
!&#13;
Co&#13;
unty &#13;
human &#13;
needs &#13;
and &#13;
I &#13;
e  .  . &#13;
~•sting &#13;
agencies &#13;
are &#13;
I) &#13;
th&#13;
em. &#13;
Profs. &#13;
William &#13;
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description &#13;
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the  suspects &#13;
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day. &#13;
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car &#13;
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ase &#13;
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to &#13;
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where &#13;
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despite &#13;
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for &#13;
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eight &#13;
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2 &#13;
Wednesday Marell&#13;
21,&#13;
1919&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Logan Appointed&#13;
Guskin's Assistant&#13;
iPeople Must&#13;
I&#13;
Be Careful&#13;
::::&#13;
::::&#13;
byJobn Stewart&#13;
place to work and study, we should still take~;~&#13;
~~~:&#13;
certain precautions. For instance,&#13;
wandering :~:~&#13;
;", At a public institution like Parkside, situated around Parkside, late at night by yourself, when ::::&#13;
~:~:near two mid-size cities, one may expect a certain the buildings are practically deserted, isjust not a":::'&#13;
?&#13;
amount of petty theft and vandalism. But when smart thing to do. The chance always exists of&#13;
} something as extreme as the armed robbery of running into a bad situation. Security can always&#13;
~~~~March 5th described in the story on page one giveyouan escort&#13;
if&#13;
youneed one.&#13;
•&#13;
::::takes place, it tends to shake one up.&#13;
Second. leaving property lying around the&#13;
~:~~When] went to interview Parkside's Security school, assuming that no one would think of&#13;
::::chief, Mr. Brinkmann, for that story,&#13;
I&#13;
was quite taking it is also foolish. Parkside does suffer from&#13;
} convinced something radical should be done to&#13;
some&#13;
theft. Also all your valuables should be&#13;
/ keep such individuals as the gang that robbed and properly identified in order to make recovery of ';;'&#13;
::::assaulted  Ms Strickland. off of this campus. stolen goods easier. The Security office at Tallent (&#13;
~~~While, Mr. Brinkmann  reassured me that this Hall can give you some pointers on this. -&#13;
:1:.:~'&#13;
t&#13;
was probably an isolated incident,&#13;
I&#13;
still believe  Lastly, you always have the option of calling sec&#13;
r&#13;
that the Security team could&#13;
be&#13;
increased. Since urity&#13;
to&#13;
check out any suspicious situation you&#13;
't&#13;
.::~with.....only a&#13;
compliment&#13;
of nine officers, there is may come across. Mr. Brinkmann  assured me&#13;
r&#13;
:::~usually only one or two officers on duty at anyone that following up hunches and gut feelings is&#13;
r&#13;
::::time.&#13;
standard police procedure. Also any lights that ,:,'&#13;
:::: Vet it would probably be 'impossible  to should be on at night but are not should be ",:&#13;
::::eliminate the possibility of such crime occuring, reported to Security immediately (their number is )&#13;
~:~:no&#13;
matter how many guards Parkside employed. extension 2455).&#13;
~~.;.:&#13;
I&#13;
Therefore. the problem must be largely addressed  These precautions should not make anyone feel&#13;
t&#13;
by the people who use Parkside. The students. that they are living under a state of siege. The. ::::&#13;
~:~:faculty and staff can Increase the&#13;
simple truth is that when you go&#13;
anywhere&#13;
you ::::&#13;
) effectiveness ofthe Security personnel many times should assume that the possibility' exists that you ::::&#13;
~~~~by following a few basic and common sense may run into trouble. Having this attitude will :~&#13;
:i&#13;
:.:j ::&#13;
,;:,practices.&#13;
help you avoid that trouble.&#13;
,~,~ While Part- :1e is a very peaceful and pleasant&#13;
' .&#13;
tL::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::}&#13;
""&#13;
RANGERlawrlttanand&#13;
adltad&#13;
byatudanta of&#13;
U.W.&#13;
ParkaIde&#13;
end thay are solely reaponalble for Ita&#13;
edltortat&#13;
policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
I&#13;
Publlahed every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holldays~ RANGER Is printed by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written pennlaalon Is required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGERcontent. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkslde Ranger, U.W. Parkslde, WLLC&#13;
0-139,&#13;
Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
53141.&#13;
IIIllelIurphy&#13;
Editor&#13;
Jon F~n&#13;
,,&#13;
0&#13;
1&#13;
M.n.get&#13;
Tom Cooper&#13;
Student&#13;
Ad.l.or&#13;
JohrMlt&#13;
rt .. , ............•••..........&#13;
New.&#13;
Editor&#13;
Sue St&#13;
FNture Editor&#13;
Doug&#13;
Edenhau_&#13;
Sporta Editor&#13;
Chrl.&#13;
1111I&#13;
AdM.n.g ..&#13;
IIlkoHolmdohl.&#13;
Photo EditOl&#13;
REPORTINGSTAFF&#13;
linda&#13;
Ad.ma, Sholla Aula, Cathy Brownl.. , Molllo&#13;
Cllrk., DI•• CramM, Tom Fervoy, 0.. Goodwin, Ro••&#13;
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PHOTO&#13;
Tony Raymond,&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
lI.thow Pollakon.&#13;
letters to the Editor will&#13;
be&#13;
accepted for publication&#13;
If&#13;
they&#13;
are typewrItten, double spaced with one Inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must&#13;
be&#13;
Included&#13;
for purposes of verification. Names&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
withheld from&#13;
publication, when valid reasons&#13;
are&#13;
giveR.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right  to edit letters and refuse&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All  material must&#13;
be&#13;
received by Thursday noon for&#13;
~ubllcatlon  on the following Wednesday.&#13;
Lawrence&#13;
B. Logan, a&#13;
lecturer in&#13;
UW&#13;
-Parkside's business program,&#13;
has&#13;
been appointed  executive&#13;
assistant to Chancellor Alan E.&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Logan, who&#13;
will&#13;
begin his new&#13;
duties June I,&#13;
will&#13;
continue to teach&#13;
two or three courses a year in the&#13;
division of Business and Adminis-&#13;
trative Science.&#13;
Ho1der of an MBA from the&#13;
Uni~ersity of Chica~o School of&#13;
Business, Logan, 43, joined the&#13;
UW·P staff in&#13;
1975&#13;
after&#13;
17&#13;
years&#13;
experience in private industry.&#13;
While working full time, Logan&#13;
attended college nights from 1965&#13;
to 1973 to earn his bachelor's and&#13;
master's degrees from Roosevelt&#13;
University and Chicago.&#13;
I&#13;
His experience includes&#13;
positio&#13;
as "financial analyst with&#13;
Josep&#13;
Schlitz Co., cost accountant wi&#13;
Inland Steel and data processin&#13;
production manager with Chi&#13;
Tabulating Co.&#13;
As executive assistant to Gustin&#13;
Logan will work on special pro]&#13;
ofthe chancellor's office as well&#13;
with other offices in the areas&#13;
student development' and ca&#13;
planning both on campus and .&#13;
the community.&#13;
Logan  said  he was "vee&#13;
pleased"  with the appointmen&#13;
"because it affords me opportuni&#13;
ties  both  to  broaden  m&#13;
professional" experience&#13;
and&#13;
t&#13;
expand the ways I can work wit&#13;
students."&#13;
8y&#13;
Matt Po';alcon&#13;
Wednesday &#13;
March &#13;
21, &#13;
1979 &#13;
RANGER &#13;
If &#13;
w&#13;
~~;~::~:;. &#13;
~ &#13;
~ &#13;
~:;~~;~~ &#13;
~:~~~~;~ &#13;
' &#13;
! &#13;
!People &#13;
Must &#13;
[ &#13;
i &#13;
Be &#13;
Careful &#13;
li &#13;
.... &#13;
At &#13;
a  pubH, &#13;
,.::.::.&#13;
5&#13;
::.,k~de, &#13;
situated &#13;
::~~ &#13;
::::~;~;t:.~ig;:i;~;::~i~i?.! &#13;
[ &#13;
{ &#13;
near &#13;
two &#13;
mid-size &#13;
cities, &#13;
one &#13;
may &#13;
expect &#13;
a certain &#13;
the &#13;
buildings &#13;
are &#13;
practically &#13;
deserted, &#13;
is &#13;
just &#13;
not &#13;
a &#13;
} &#13;
} &#13;
amount &#13;
of &#13;
petty &#13;
theft &#13;
and &#13;
vandalism. &#13;
But &#13;
when &#13;
smart &#13;
thing &#13;
to &#13;
do. &#13;
The &#13;
chance &#13;
alw~ys &#13;
exists &#13;
of &#13;
{ &#13;
} &#13;
something &#13;
as &#13;
extreme &#13;
as &#13;
the &#13;
armed &#13;
robbery &#13;
of &#13;
running &#13;
into &#13;
a  bad &#13;
situation. &#13;
Security &#13;
can &#13;
always &#13;
f &#13;
{ &#13;
March &#13;
5th &#13;
described &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
story &#13;
on &#13;
page &#13;
one &#13;
give &#13;
you &#13;
an &#13;
escort &#13;
if &#13;
you &#13;
need &#13;
one. &#13;
~ &#13;
{ &#13;
{ &#13;
talces &#13;
place, &#13;
it tends &#13;
to &#13;
shake &#13;
one &#13;
up. &#13;
Second, &#13;
leaving &#13;
property &#13;
lying &#13;
around &#13;
the &#13;
/ &#13;
f &#13;
When &#13;
I  went &#13;
to &#13;
interview &#13;
Parkside&#13;
's  Security &#13;
school, &#13;
assuming &#13;
that &#13;
no &#13;
one &#13;
would &#13;
think &#13;
of &#13;
? &#13;
}  chief, &#13;
Mr&#13;
. Brinkmann, &#13;
for &#13;
that &#13;
story, &#13;
I  was &#13;
quite &#13;
taking &#13;
it &#13;
is &#13;
also &#13;
foolish. &#13;
Parkside &#13;
does &#13;
suffer &#13;
from &#13;
( &#13;
( &#13;
convinced &#13;
something &#13;
radical &#13;
should &#13;
be &#13;
done &#13;
to &#13;
some &#13;
theft. &#13;
Also &#13;
all &#13;
your &#13;
valuables &#13;
should &#13;
be &#13;
{ &#13;
{  keep &#13;
such &#13;
individuals &#13;
as &#13;
the &#13;
gang &#13;
that &#13;
robbed &#13;
and &#13;
properly &#13;
identified &#13;
in &#13;
order &#13;
to &#13;
make &#13;
recovery &#13;
of &#13;
\ &#13;
{ &#13;
assaulted &#13;
Ms &#13;
Strickland, &#13;
off &#13;
of &#13;
this &#13;
campus. &#13;
stolen &#13;
goods &#13;
easier. &#13;
The &#13;
Security &#13;
office &#13;
at &#13;
Tallent &#13;
:&#13;
;:: &#13;
} &#13;
While, &#13;
Mr&#13;
.  Brinkmann &#13;
reassured &#13;
me &#13;
that &#13;
this &#13;
Hall &#13;
can &#13;
give &#13;
you &#13;
some &#13;
pointers &#13;
on &#13;
this. &#13;
} &#13;
f &#13;
was &#13;
probably &#13;
an &#13;
isolated &#13;
incident, &#13;
I  still &#13;
believe &#13;
Lastly, &#13;
you &#13;
always &#13;
have &#13;
the &#13;
option &#13;
of &#13;
calling &#13;
Sec &#13;
} &#13;
? &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
Security &#13;
team &#13;
could &#13;
be &#13;
increased. &#13;
Since &#13;
urity &#13;
to &#13;
check &#13;
out &#13;
any &#13;
suspicious &#13;
situation &#13;
you &#13;
{ &#13;
\ &#13;
with &#13;
only &#13;
a  compliment &#13;
of &#13;
nine &#13;
officers, &#13;
there &#13;
is &#13;
may &#13;
come  across. &#13;
Mr. &#13;
Brinkmann &#13;
.assured &#13;
me &#13;
/ &#13;
{  u  ually &#13;
only &#13;
one &#13;
or &#13;
two &#13;
officers &#13;
on &#13;
duty &#13;
at &#13;
any &#13;
one &#13;
that &#13;
following &#13;
up &#13;
hunches &#13;
and &#13;
gut &#13;
feelings &#13;
is &#13;
} &#13;
f &#13;
time. &#13;
standard &#13;
police &#13;
procedure. &#13;
Also &#13;
any &#13;
lights &#13;
that &#13;
} &#13;
f &#13;
Yet &#13;
it &#13;
would &#13;
probably &#13;
be &#13;
·impossible &#13;
to &#13;
should &#13;
be &#13;
on &#13;
at &#13;
night &#13;
but &#13;
are &#13;
not &#13;
should &#13;
be &#13;
{ &#13;
/   eliminate &#13;
the &#13;
possibility &#13;
of &#13;
such &#13;
crime &#13;
occuring, &#13;
reported &#13;
to &#13;
Security &#13;
immediately &#13;
(their &#13;
number &#13;
is &#13;
) &#13;
f &#13;
no &#13;
matter &#13;
how &#13;
many &#13;
guards &#13;
Parkside &#13;
employed. &#13;
extension &#13;
2455). &#13;
{ &#13;
} &#13;
Therefore, &#13;
the &#13;
problem &#13;
must &#13;
be &#13;
largely &#13;
addressed &#13;
These &#13;
precautions &#13;
should &#13;
not &#13;
make &#13;
anyone &#13;
feel &#13;
} &#13;
} &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
people &#13;
who &#13;
use &#13;
~arkside. &#13;
The &#13;
students, &#13;
that &#13;
they &#13;
are &#13;
living &#13;
under &#13;
a  state &#13;
of &#13;
siege. &#13;
The &#13;
f &#13;
[&#13;
:i &#13;
faculty &#13;
and &#13;
staff &#13;
can &#13;
mcrease &#13;
the &#13;
simple &#13;
truth &#13;
is &#13;
that &#13;
when &#13;
you &#13;
go &#13;
anywhere &#13;
you &#13;
} &#13;
} &#13;
effectiveness &#13;
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! &#13;
RANGER &#13;
Is written &#13;
and &#13;
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students &#13;
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Parkside &#13;
and &#13;
they &#13;
are &#13;
solely &#13;
responsible &#13;
for &#13;
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editorial &#13;
policy &#13;
and &#13;
content. &#13;
Published &#13;
every &#13;
Wednesday &#13;
during &#13;
the &#13;
academic &#13;
year, &#13;
except &#13;
during &#13;
breaks &#13;
and &#13;
holidays, &#13;
RANGER &#13;
Is &#13;
printed &#13;
by &#13;
Zion &#13;
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Company, &#13;
Zion, &#13;
Illinois. &#13;
Written &#13;
permission &#13;
Is &#13;
required &#13;
for &#13;
reprint &#13;
of &#13;
any &#13;
portion &#13;
of &#13;
RANGER &#13;
content. &#13;
All &#13;
correspondence &#13;
should &#13;
be &#13;
addressed &#13;
to &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Ranger, &#13;
U.W. &#13;
Parkside, &#13;
WLLC &#13;
D-139, &#13;
Kenosha, &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
53141. &#13;
Mike &#13;
Murphy &#13;
. .&#13;
..&#13;
. . .&#13;
........&#13;
.&#13;
.................. &#13;
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Jon &#13;
Flanagan &#13;
.&#13;
...&#13;
.&#13;
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...&#13;
....&#13;
. . . . &#13;
General &#13;
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Tom &#13;
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...&#13;
..&#13;
. . .&#13;
...&#13;
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..&#13;
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..&#13;
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.&#13;
....&#13;
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... &#13;
Photo &#13;
Editor &#13;
REPORTING &#13;
STAFF &#13;
Linda &#13;
Adams, &#13;
Shella &#13;
Asala, &#13;
Cathy &#13;
Brownlee, &#13;
Mollle &#13;
Clarke, &#13;
Dave &#13;
Cramer, &#13;
Tom &#13;
Fervoy, &#13;
Dee &#13;
Goodwin, &#13;
Rose &#13;
Kolbasnlk, &#13;
Pete &#13;
Jackel, &#13;
Thomas &#13;
Jenn, &#13;
Nickl &#13;
Kroll, &#13;
Kim &#13;
Pu!man, &#13;
Carolyn &#13;
Rudd, &#13;
Donald &#13;
Scherrer, &#13;
Rosemary &#13;
Sh,erk &#13;
Chan~ &#13;
Epps &#13;
&amp; &#13;
Denise &#13;
Sobieski. &#13;
PHOTO &#13;
Tony &#13;
Raymond, &#13;
GRAPHIC &#13;
Mathew &#13;
Pollakon. &#13;
Letters &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
Editor &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
accepted &#13;
for &#13;
publication &#13;
If &#13;
they &#13;
are &#13;
typewritten, &#13;
double &#13;
spaced &#13;
with &#13;
one &#13;
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margins &#13;
and &#13;
signed &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
author. &#13;
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telephone &#13;
number &#13;
must &#13;
be &#13;
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for &#13;
purposes &#13;
of &#13;
verification. &#13;
Names &#13;
will &#13;
b~ &#13;
withheld &#13;
from &#13;
publication, &#13;
when &#13;
valid &#13;
reasons &#13;
are &#13;
glveA&#13;
. &#13;
Logan &#13;
Appointed &#13;
Guskin' &#13;
s &#13;
Assistant &#13;
Lawrence &#13;
B. &#13;
Logan, &#13;
a lecturer &#13;
in &#13;
UW-Parkside's &#13;
business &#13;
program, &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
appointed &#13;
executive &#13;
assistant &#13;
to &#13;
Chancellor &#13;
Alan &#13;
E. &#13;
Guskin. &#13;
Logan, &#13;
who &#13;
will &#13;
begin &#13;
his&#13;
· &#13;
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duties &#13;
June &#13;
1, &#13;
will &#13;
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to &#13;
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a  year &#13;
in &#13;
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division &#13;
of &#13;
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and &#13;
Adminis-&#13;
trative &#13;
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Holder &#13;
of &#13;
an &#13;
MBA &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
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of &#13;
Chicago &#13;
School &#13;
of &#13;
Business, &#13;
Logan, &#13;
43, &#13;
joined &#13;
the &#13;
UW-P &#13;
staff &#13;
in &#13;
1975 &#13;
after &#13;
17 &#13;
years &#13;
experience &#13;
in &#13;
ptjvate &#13;
industry. &#13;
While &#13;
working &#13;
full &#13;
time, &#13;
Logan &#13;
attended &#13;
college &#13;
nights &#13;
from &#13;
1965 &#13;
to &#13;
1973 &#13;
to &#13;
eam &#13;
his &#13;
bachelor's &#13;
and &#13;
master's &#13;
degrees &#13;
from &#13;
Roosevelt &#13;
University &#13;
and &#13;
Chicago. &#13;
His &#13;
experience &#13;
includes &#13;
positions &#13;
as &#13;
· financial &#13;
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with &#13;
Joseph &#13;
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., &#13;
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with &#13;
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assistant &#13;
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· &#13;
Logan &#13;
will &#13;
work &#13;
on &#13;
special &#13;
projects &#13;
.ila &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
chancellor's &#13;
office &#13;
as &#13;
well &#13;
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with &#13;
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offices &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
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and &#13;
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· &#13;
planning &#13;
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and &#13;
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11 &#13;
the &#13;
community. &#13;
. &#13;
::Ja &#13;
Logan &#13;
said &#13;
he &#13;
was &#13;
"very &#13;
lm! &#13;
pleased" &#13;
with &#13;
the &#13;
appointment &#13;
"because &#13;
it  affords &#13;
me &#13;
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ties &#13;
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students." &#13;
RANGE~ &#13;
reserves &#13;
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right &#13;
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edit &#13;
letters &#13;
and &#13;
refuse &#13;
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to &#13;
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with &#13;
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content. &#13;
All &#13;
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must &#13;
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by &#13;
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on &#13;
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following &#13;
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              <text>Forum attracts crowd</text>
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              <text>Wednesday May 2, 1979&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Vol. 7 No. 30&#13;
Forum Attracts Crowd&#13;
Counseling Position&#13;
Questioned&#13;
by Cathy Brownlee&#13;
After existing for four years here&#13;
at Parkside, the position of&#13;
Psychological Counselor will be&#13;
eliminated. The decision has been&#13;
made by Interim Assistant&#13;
Chancellor. Carla Stoffle, on the&#13;
basis that terminating the position&#13;
will make UW-Parkside's counseling&#13;
services "more cost-effective."&#13;
The decision is in no way based&#13;
on the performance of the present&#13;
Psychological Counselor. Clifford&#13;
Johnson.&#13;
Mr. Johnson came to Parkside in&#13;
June ot 1975. He was assigned&#13;
various responsibilities as a&#13;
personal counselor, advisor, and&#13;
recruiter. After about 1 lA years,&#13;
then Assistant Chancellor Clayton&#13;
Johnson, realized that a full-time&#13;
psychological counselor was needed.&#13;
In September of 1977, Johnson&#13;
was placed in his present position&#13;
to be responsibile "for all phases of&#13;
personal psychological counseling,&#13;
crisis intervention, family counseling,&#13;
and individual and group&#13;
psychotherapy."&#13;
Upset with the decision to&#13;
terminate his position, Johnson has&#13;
decided to fight. He has received&#13;
support and encouragement from&#13;
both Parkside faculty and&#13;
community supporters. He stressed&#13;
though, that he is "not just fighting&#13;
for a person's job, but for a&#13;
function—a position that is very&#13;
important." He feels that besides&#13;
attending to the emotional needs of&#13;
students, his work also retains&#13;
students by preventing them from&#13;
dropping out.&#13;
According to Stoffle, the&#13;
Psychological Counselor's duties&#13;
can be absorbed by the Student&#13;
Development and Community&#13;
Student Services Departments.&#13;
Like the majority of counselors in&#13;
these two Departments, Mr.&#13;
Johnson has a Masters Degree in&#13;
Guidance and Counseling. But he&#13;
feels that the continued education&#13;
he has obtained is essential when&#13;
counseling persons with serious&#13;
mental problems. He has attended&#13;
the Institute for Advance Study in&#13;
Rational Psychotherapy, N.Y. and&#13;
will receive final certification this&#13;
summer. He also had the&#13;
opportunity to study under Albert&#13;
Ellis, a very prominent psychologist.&#13;
Ail of his continued education&#13;
has been financed wholly by&#13;
himself.&#13;
Carla Stoffle says that the&#13;
change she proposes is somewhat&#13;
based on the UW-Green Bay&#13;
Counseling System. When Ranger&#13;
questioned Green Bay's health&#13;
office, they said that they have two&#13;
divisions. One is the Student&#13;
Development Counseling Center&#13;
which staffs four professional&#13;
counselors. These counselors refer&#13;
serious problems to psychological&#13;
consultants. The other division&#13;
deals with Academic Counseling.&#13;
Green Bay, with 3600 students,&#13;
doesn't feel they're large enough to&#13;
provide PhD Psychological Counseling.&#13;
&#13;
Stoffle commented that she&#13;
talked individually to some of the&#13;
counselors" in Student Development&#13;
and Community Student&#13;
Services. They feel qualified to&#13;
assume the psychological counselling&#13;
but would like more&#13;
information on the community&#13;
agencies available. Stoffle said that&#13;
information workshops would be&#13;
planned to fill this need. She feels&#13;
that "personal counselling" can be&#13;
done by counselors, but serious&#13;
things should be referred to the&#13;
excellent community facilities.&#13;
Since Parkside is a commuter&#13;
campus, it should make use of the&#13;
community's agencies.&#13;
Johnson feels that the commuter&#13;
campus argument is wrong. He&#13;
cited, the third edition . of&#13;
Recommended Standards and&#13;
Practices for a College Health&#13;
Program. March 1977, as refuting&#13;
th£ difference between a residential&#13;
and commuter campus: "The&#13;
responsibility for a mental health&#13;
program is no less binding upon the&#13;
institution attended by predominant.&#13;
on pg. 3&#13;
.About 30 HtipprI nupportern picked oot.idc the Chancellor', re.idence la., Saturday. Kelly Spark., a millwright «n d&#13;
member of the executive board of HAW Local 180, .aid that many people are attending Park.ide now becau.e of&#13;
I'rof. Happel and the purpo.e of the protc.t wa. to let the Chancellor know that Happel ha. community .upport.&#13;
•*e want the Chancellor to make hi. deci.ion," .aid Spark.. The picketer., comprised of trade union Racine&#13;
teacher., and Park.ide student, were protesting Prof. Happel'. recent refusal of tenure&#13;
Photo by M. Murphy&#13;
I tilted&#13;
Psychological Counselor Clifford Johnson&#13;
by Mike Murphy&#13;
The Nuclear Power Forum last&#13;
Wednesday attracted approximately&#13;
400 people, most of whom were&#13;
representatives of the surrounding&#13;
communities. The forum was the&#13;
first in a series of forums to be&#13;
sponsored by the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, focusing on&#13;
current topics of interest and&#13;
importance.&#13;
Dr. Kenneth Hoover, Associate&#13;
Professor of Political Science, acted&#13;
as moderator for a panel of seven&#13;
speakers representing all sides of&#13;
the Nuclear Power issue.&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin opened&#13;
the forum by quoting a New York&#13;
Times article on the Three Mile&#13;
Island incident. "Civilization must&#13;
be as strong as our technology is&#13;
powerful," said Chancellor Guskin.&#13;
The Chancellor went on to talk&#13;
about the plight of nuclear science&#13;
as a result of Three Mile Island.&#13;
Guskin explained that Three Mile&#13;
Island served as a grim reassurance&#13;
that the "science of Nuclear energy&#13;
is incomplete." Three Mile island,&#13;
said Guskin may have serious&#13;
psychological repercussions. "Emotionalism&#13;
replaces reason in events&#13;
like Three Mile Island. We must&#13;
think about it, and we must talk&#13;
about it."&#13;
The Chancellor concluded by&#13;
justifying the need for a public&#13;
torum. "An issue where there is&#13;
serious difference of opinion is an&#13;
issue for a university sponsored&#13;
public forum."&#13;
Frank Palmer, manager of&#13;
Consoldate Edison in Chicago and&#13;
a senior reactor operator who had&#13;
just returned from Three Mile&#13;
Island defended the need for&#13;
nuclear power and its continued&#13;
growth. "Every energy form must&#13;
be considered in its total&#13;
scope...its risks to people and&#13;
environment."&#13;
Palmer said that comparisons of&#13;
Three Mile Island and the Zion&#13;
nuclear power plant are unwarranted.&#13;
Palmer explained that the two&#13;
plants differ in designers (Westinghouse&#13;
designed the Zion plant while&#13;
Babcock Willcott designed Three&#13;
Mile Island) and the amount of&#13;
steam generators servicing the&#13;
nuclear core (Zion plant has four as&#13;
opposed to the three at Three Mile&#13;
Island).&#13;
Mr. Palmer exposed a fallacy&#13;
expounded by the recent movie,&#13;
"The China Syndrome" that it&#13;
takes virtually minutes for a&#13;
nuclear core to melt down. If such&#13;
an event were to occur. Palmer&#13;
explained, it would take hours for a&#13;
meltdown allowing for more time to&#13;
control the situation.&#13;
"Three mile Island was not the&#13;
worst incident for a nuclear power&#13;
plant," explained Palmer, "They&#13;
are designed to handle much worse&#13;
incidents." In example, Plumber&#13;
cited that the fuel at Three Mile&#13;
Island never melted or disintegrated.&#13;
"The only radiation that&#13;
was pumped immediately into an&#13;
auxiliary building."&#13;
Palmer concluded by calling for&#13;
the Three Mile Island plant to be&#13;
put back in service and for the&#13;
continued growth of nuclear&#13;
power. "We have a big investment&#13;
in nuclear power in Illinois."&#13;
cont. on pg. 5&#13;
Director Appointed&#13;
Carol J. Cashen has been named&#13;
Director ot Educational Program&#13;
Support at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. She will begin&#13;
her duties June 1 and report to&#13;
Carla J. Stoffle, interim Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Educational Services.&#13;
&#13;
In the post, she will have&#13;
responsibility for the support&#13;
services for UW-Parkside's Collegiate&#13;
Skills Program, which&#13;
requires that students, by their&#13;
junior year, must pass competency&#13;
tests in reading, writing, mathematics&#13;
and library skills and write a&#13;
satisfactory research paper in order&#13;
to remain in school.&#13;
The Collegiate Skills program,&#13;
one of the first and most&#13;
comprehensive competency requirements&#13;
in the nation, has&#13;
drawn widespread interest from&#13;
educators and has been the subject&#13;
of articles in The New York Times,&#13;
Chicago Tribune and other major&#13;
newspapers as well as network&#13;
television and radio coverage&#13;
including a "Today Show"&#13;
segment.&#13;
Educational program support&#13;
services are designed to provide&#13;
assistance and information to&#13;
prospective and enrolled students&#13;
with potential for college Success,&#13;
but who need improvement in basic&#13;
learning-study skills. Educational&#13;
support services include testing,&#13;
diagnostic assessment, tutorial and&#13;
small group instruction and a&#13;
learning skills laboratory.&#13;
Cashen presently is director of&#13;
the Learning Laboratory and&#13;
program chairperson for Developmental&#13;
Studies at Indiana&#13;
Vocational- Technical College in&#13;
Indianapolis. She also has taught at&#13;
Indiana University and the&#13;
University of Rochester (N.Y.) and&#13;
in high schools in New York,&#13;
Wisconsin and Illinois. Her&#13;
professional interests include&#13;
reading problems and developmental&#13;
studies.&#13;
Cashen received her masters&#13;
degree at the University of&#13;
Rochester and did her doctoral&#13;
work at Indiana University. She is a&#13;
1952 graduate of Carroll College in&#13;
Waukesha and attended high&#13;
school in Milwaukee (South&#13;
Division).&#13;
She succeeds Carole Hagarty,&#13;
who resigned the post last fall. In&#13;
the interim, mathematics professor&#13;
Samuel Filippone has served as&#13;
acting director of the program. &#13;
Wednesday May 2, 1979&#13;
RANGER&#13;
To The Editor&#13;
Previous Letter Misinformed&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In response to the letter of April&#13;
18, 1979 by Mr. Robert Hoffman,&#13;
I'm sorry to say, but Mr. Hoffman&#13;
seems to have a few facts mixed up.&#13;
I realize there are two sides to every&#13;
story. We desperately need energy&#13;
to sustain the standard of living we&#13;
have become accustomed to.&#13;
However, we should proceed&#13;
cautiously in the area of nuclear&#13;
energy.&#13;
On January 3, 1961, SL-1, a&#13;
portable reactor designed to supply&#13;
power to remote Arctic installations,&#13;
killed its three operators.&#13;
Richard Legg, Johny Byrnes, and&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D-139, Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Mike Murphy Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan General Manager&#13;
Ton. Cooper Student Advisor&#13;
John Stewart News Editor&#13;
®U8S&#13;
'&#13;
8,8n8 Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Sports Editor&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Linda Adams, Sheila Asala, Cathy Brownlee, Mollie&#13;
°&#13;
av®Cramor&#13;
' Chavez£ppS Dee Goodwin,&#13;
Pete Jacket, Thomas Jenn. Nlcki Kroll, Kim Putman.&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Mathew Pollakon.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted for publication If t hey&#13;
are typewritten, double spaced with one inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be included&#13;
for purposes of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
publication, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and refuse&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All material must be received by Thursday noon for&#13;
publication on the following Wednesday.&#13;
Richard McKinley perished in a&#13;
nuclear accident. Evidence points&#13;
to a low grade atomic explosion. No&#13;
dangerous "Massive amounts of&#13;
radiation" released? The heads and&#13;
hands of those bodies were buried&#13;
with "other" irradiated wastes.&#13;
Only the bodies and legs were&#13;
allowed to be publically buried.&#13;
An isolated incident? Not by a&#13;
long shot. Between December 12,&#13;
1952 and October 5, 1966, there&#13;
were three accidents in the United&#13;
States, and three in other countries&#13;
of which I have been made aware:&#13;
These include:&#13;
December 12, 1952 — NRX&#13;
Reactor — Chalk River Falls,&#13;
Canada.&#13;
November, 1955 — EBR-1 Reactor&#13;
— Idaho Falls, Idaho.&#13;
October 10, 1957 — Winscale Pile&#13;
#1 — SeaScale, England. Radioactive&#13;
particles detected 300 miles&#13;
away in London two days later.&#13;
May 23, 1958 — NRU Reactor —&#13;
Chalk River Falls, Canada.&#13;
October 5,1966 — FERMI Reactor&#13;
— Lagoona Beach, Michigan.&#13;
And as for the Rasmussen&#13;
Report being the most famous, I&#13;
submit the Wash-740 Report (also&#13;
known as the Brookhaven Report).&#13;
The numbers of people who might&#13;
suffer the effects of radiation&#13;
poisoning is mind-boggling. Up to&#13;
3,400 people within 15 miles of the&#13;
plant can be expected to die; severe&#13;
radiation sickness would befall&#13;
those who live within 44 miles (up&#13;
to 43,000) people and in an area of&#13;
up to 200 miles away, 182,000&#13;
people could be exposed to enough&#13;
radiation to double their chances&#13;
for cancer.&#13;
This information came from the&#13;
Book We Almost Lost Detroit, by&#13;
John G. Fuller, Copyright 1975.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Michael R. Prudhom&#13;
Cynthia Mason&#13;
in Student&#13;
Recital&#13;
Pianist Cynthia Mason will&#13;
present a student recital at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, May 2, in&#13;
the Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
She will play two of, her own&#13;
compositions for piano as well as&#13;
Chopin's Nocturne in B-flat Minor,&#13;
Op. 9, No. 1; Kabalevsky's&#13;
Sonatina in C Major; and&#13;
Beethoven's Sonata in C Minor,&#13;
Op. 13 (Pathetique).&#13;
Ms. Mason is a student of&#13;
Barbara English Maris.&#13;
Sexual Acts&#13;
Debated&#13;
The UW-Parkside Debate and&#13;
Forensics Club is sponsoring i&#13;
panel discussion on the issue: "Are&#13;
any non-violent sexual acts between&#13;
consenting adults immoral?" The&#13;
event will be held on Thursday,&#13;
May 3rd at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
UW-Parkside Union Cinema.&#13;
The four member panel includes,&#13;
on the affirmative side of this&#13;
question, Norman Geisler from&#13;
Trinity Evangelical Divinity School,&#13;
Deerfield, Illinois; and Barry&#13;
Kolanski, Youth Pastor at First&#13;
Assembly of God in Kenosha.&#13;
Arguing the negative will be Wayne&#13;
Mionske, Lutheran minister and&#13;
counselor from Milwaukee, and&#13;
Aaro Synder, UW-Parkside Associate&#13;
Professor of Philosophy.&#13;
Each speaker will give a 10&#13;
minute presentation of his position.&#13;
Following the presentation there&#13;
will be an opportunity for audience&#13;
participation. For more information,&#13;
call Bruce Weaver, Debate&#13;
Coach at 553-2024.&#13;
This event is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Job Hunting&#13;
Workshop&#13;
16th &amp; 23 rd&#13;
Resume writing and job hunting&#13;
skills will be the subject of a&#13;
two-session workshop conducted by&#13;
Verna Zimmermann, Placement&#13;
Coordinator at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, from 6:30 to 9&#13;
p.m. on May 16 and 23. Deadline&#13;
for reservations, which are being&#13;
handled by University Extension in&#13;
Tallent Hall (Phone 553-2312), is&#13;
May 4. •&#13;
The first session will deal with&#13;
writing a resume and the second&#13;
with developing job hunting skills.&#13;
Both will meet in Tallent Hall. The&#13;
fee for one session is $1.50; $2.50&#13;
for both. The workshop is&#13;
sponsored by UW-Parkside andUniversity&#13;
Extension.&#13;
Bear He!&#13;
e danger&#13;
mill tj nlii an aptn&#13;
hnarii nf iiimtara&#13;
meeting&#13;
3. 1979&#13;
at 11 am in ti fe&#13;
WJ (E nn f e r e nce&#13;
Knnm 0174.&#13;
Bear f e!&#13;
By Matt Poliakon&#13;
rve WrJ it, a X/e new «o&lt;U oJ /i, e r e f oe ver really tl&gt;0vjht.. " &#13;
Wednesday May 2, 1979&#13;
Cliiwaukee News Continued from page 1&#13;
Gardening Tips&#13;
for 1979&#13;
from the friends of the food co-op&#13;
Growing your own fruits and vegetables can be an experience&#13;
rewarding not only nutritionally and taste wise, but also&#13;
economically and psychically. One serious consideration should be&#13;
the added control you can exercise over what goes into your body.&#13;
Vegetables grown in harmony with nature, free from chemicajs in&#13;
soil that is naturally fertilized can add an entirely new dimension to&#13;
your life.&#13;
When you buy seeds, try to be aware of those that emphasize the&#13;
nutrition and taste value of the particular variety you want. For&#13;
example, the Burgess Seed Co. in Galesburg, Michigan has two&#13;
types of tomatoes that provide excellent nutritional value. The&#13;
Double Rich has twice the vitamin C content of the ordinary variety&#13;
and Caro-Red provides ten times the vitamin A of most brands.&#13;
Illini-Chief sweet corn sold by Shumway Seeds in Rockford,&#13;
Illinois provides a very sweet flavor. Fairfax makes the tastiest&#13;
strawberries, and the Farmers Seed and Nursery in Faribault,&#13;
Minnesota provides excellent squash and beets.&#13;
These suggestions are just a few of the possibilities that you'll&#13;
become familiar with as you travel through the seed catologues. So,&#13;
don't just rely on the nearest sport available that sells seeds because&#13;
you could be losing out on some very good results. (Your food co-op&#13;
has many seed catologues available.)&#13;
The average date for the last killing frost in this area is about&#13;
April 30th and we shouldn't feel it again until October 20th. That&#13;
means you should get busy.&#13;
An important part of gardening is to determine what you're&#13;
going to grow and how to arrange it in the garden. To improve&#13;
growth and flavor of certain plants and to diminish their&#13;
susceptibility, companion planting is suggested. Insects are very&#13;
finicky eaters.&#13;
The proximity of their natural repellents greatly affects their&#13;
attacks on your crops. An insect will not be able to jump from row&#13;
to row devouring your vegetables if you companion plant, thus only&#13;
plants will flourish in your garden and not insects or disease.&#13;
conf. on pg. 4&#13;
Counselor's Job Pending&#13;
ately commuting students that it is&#13;
upon a university where the&#13;
majority of students are in&#13;
residence or near the campus."&#13;
Johnson said that many students&#13;
would never thank of seeking&#13;
counselling in the community&#13;
because of the stigma attached and&#13;
the high cost. This is why he&#13;
requested an office "out of the&#13;
way" at WLLC D197B so that those&#13;
needing help would not have to feel&#13;
insecure by having to walk through&#13;
a large reception room. Also his&#13;
services are available day or night.&#13;
His office is WLLC D-197B.&#13;
Dave Pederson, Dean of Student&#13;
Life, is the person to whom the&#13;
Psychological Counseling Department&#13;
directly reports to. Pederson&#13;
presents another view in that the&#13;
position "isn't appropriate" or&#13;
feasible and can't be supported on&#13;
a "long-term" basis of counseling&#13;
the same person w k after&#13;
week. Pederson pointed out&#13;
that one exception would be the&#13;
counseling and work done with the&#13;
physically handicapped.&#13;
Johnson feels that this is a flaw in&#13;
the title of "Psychological&#13;
Counselor." He feels the name is&#13;
killing it because "no body wants to&#13;
recognize" the issue of mental&#13;
health. People admit and find help&#13;
when they are physically ill, but feel&#13;
that "I can't have anything wrong&#13;
with my mind!' Johnson stressed&#13;
that a huge stigma has been&#13;
attached to emotional instability, as&#13;
exemplified by Mrs. Carter's&#13;
testimony before the Senate&#13;
Sub-committee on health and&#13;
scientific research, in which she&#13;
stressed erasing "the stigma&#13;
attached to mental health&#13;
problems."&#13;
According to Education Professor&#13;
Paul Klein, professors often&#13;
find themselves faced with the task&#13;
of speaking with students that have&#13;
serious emotional problems. Professor&#13;
Klein says that he worries&#13;
about such students, but that he is&#13;
"not a therapist" and needs&#13;
somewhere to turn to for referrals.&#13;
In reference to the elimination of&#13;
the Psychological Counseling&#13;
position, Prof. Klein would like to&#13;
see a quick survey on what the&#13;
faculty feels. He said that three&#13;
things should be considered: The&#13;
need (existence of problems), the&#13;
position (how best served—licensed&#13;
therapist? counselor?), and finally,&#13;
the person (how good is he or she?).&#13;
Professors who have encountered&#13;
students with emotional problems&#13;
have referred them to Clifford&#13;
Johnson for help. After counseling,&#13;
remarkable changes have been&#13;
noted. Past students, parents,&#13;
community members, and faculty&#13;
have written numerous letters to&#13;
the Chancellor and Assistant&#13;
Chancellor in favor of keeping the&#13;
Psychological Counseling Position.&#13;
With these and the daily records of&#13;
those he has counselled Johnson is&#13;
ready to defend the questions that&#13;
have arisen about how many people&#13;
he has seen. He also revealed that&#13;
the PSGA supports his views.&#13;
Emotional problems definitely&#13;
do exist here at Parkside and&#13;
answers to questions on how to best&#13;
solve these problems are also&#13;
needed.&#13;
Tired Term Papers? Raunchy Reports?&#13;
QUIT TYPING!&#13;
End your semestGr with your best work prepared electronically.&#13;
Error Free. Reasonable Rates. Fast Service.&#13;
In Racine Call M E N IN G SY S T E M S 414-886-5998&#13;
• SPECIALISTS IN WORD-PROCESSING FOR:&#13;
TERM PAPERS EXECUTIVE RESUMES&#13;
REPORTS SURVEYS&#13;
RESEARCH PAPERS GENERAL TYPING&#13;
(ganger is now seeking to&#13;
fill the positions of&#13;
* News Editor&#13;
* Feature Editor&#13;
* Sports Editor&#13;
* Photo Editor&#13;
For the 1979-80 Academic Year&#13;
Please apply in p erson at the&#13;
Ranger office near the Coffee&#13;
Shoppe. These are paid positions.&#13;
P NEED SON€ C 4&#13;
Bring&#13;
RLBUfTIS To&#13;
You Set&#13;
Bought - YOU&#13;
your unwanted&#13;
The Book Co-op Houu&#13;
The Price - When Its&#13;
GET THE CASH&#13;
Some Students Have Sold 30 to 60 Albums !&#13;
and there is NO CHARGE .for C.S.C. Members &#13;
Wednesday May 2, 1979&#13;
RANGER 4&#13;
Jazz Concert May 8th&#13;
Parkside Jazz Ensembles I and II&#13;
will present a music scholarship&#13;
benefit concert under the direction&#13;
ot Tim Bell at 8 p.m. on Tuesday,&#13;
May 8, in the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. Admission is $1&#13;
for all students; $2 for the general&#13;
public. Advance tickets are&#13;
available at the Campus Union&#13;
Information Center.&#13;
Jazz Ensemble I recently won&#13;
outstanding band" honors for the&#13;
third time at the Mid-West College&#13;
Jazz Festival and eight of its&#13;
members received individual&#13;
awards for outstanding musicianship.&#13;
&#13;
Ensemble 1 will draw its program&#13;
from a repertoire including Elf A&#13;
Tribute to Art Fern, Life Raft&#13;
Earth, Chiefs Blues, Mas O&#13;
Menus, Quiet Riot, Phonk A Trois,&#13;
Rackafracker, But Beautiful,&#13;
Neverbird and Runaway Hormones.&#13;
Ensemble II will play Little&#13;
Pixie, The Thrill Is Gone, Sir&#13;
Gawain and the Green Knight,&#13;
Send in the Clowns, and Alone.&#13;
Bell has directed the UW-P&#13;
ensembles since 1975. Before&#13;
coming to Parkside, he played&#13;
saxophone and clarinet for four&#13;
years with the famed North Texas&#13;
State One O'clock Band before&#13;
becoming its assistant director,&#13;
touring with the group in Mexico&#13;
and performing at the White&#13;
House.&#13;
Percussion Ensemble Performs May 7&#13;
A free public concert will be&#13;
presented by the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Percussion&#13;
Ensemble under the direction&#13;
Linda Raymond at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Monday, May 7, in the&#13;
ot Communication Arts Theater^&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On T ap A t U nion S quare&#13;
ganger&#13;
IS SEEKING A&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER FOR&#13;
THE X979-80 PUBLICATION&#13;
YEAR. INTERESTED&#13;
INDIVIDUAL WOULD BE&#13;
WILLING TO DEVOTE 5-10&#13;
HOURS PER WEEK. THIS&#13;
IS A COMPENSATED,&#13;
MANAGERIAL POSITION.&#13;
FOR FURTHER DETAILS,&#13;
CONTACT:&#13;
JON FLANAGAN&#13;
WLLC D-139 553-2287&#13;
UW-P Dramatic Arts presents --&#13;
the&#13;
Happy Journey&#13;
flfcya Thornton Wilder ^&#13;
mcgoglhtauiF!&#13;
Zona Gale&#13;
MAY 4,5,6 8 p.m.&#13;
MAY 6 2 p.m.&#13;
COMMUNICATION ARTS&#13;
STUDIO THEATRE&#13;
No Admission&#13;
Limited Seating&#13;
For reservations call 553-2457&#13;
Works programmed include&#13;
Philidor's March for Two Pairs of&#13;
Kettledrums featuring Warren&#13;
Hanrahan and Richard Hansen,&#13;
J.S. Bach's Concerto in D Minor&#13;
featuring David Lenz on marimba,&#13;
Jerry Matteucci on vibraphone and&#13;
Laura Frisk at the keyboard,&#13;
Cage's A mores, and Davis'&#13;
Mau-Mau Suite.&#13;
Other ensemble members are&#13;
Michael Heberling, Paul Kafer,&#13;
David Kapralian and Peter Simon.&#13;
In addition to teaching percussion&#13;
students at UW-Parkside, Ms.&#13;
Raymond is a percussionist with&#13;
the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra.&#13;
&#13;
Timothy Bell&#13;
in Concert&#13;
Clarinetist Timothy Bell will&#13;
present a faculty recital at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 6, in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
He will be assisted by pianist&#13;
August Wegner.&#13;
Their free public program will&#13;
include works by Brahms, Berg and&#13;
Maslanka as well as Otto Luening's&#13;
"Festival Brevis." Luening was&#13;
visiting composer at UW-Parkside&#13;
earlier during the semester.&#13;
Bell is a frequent soloist on both&#13;
clarinet and saxophone with area&#13;
bands in addition to filling guest&#13;
assignments as conductor and&#13;
clinician. He performs with the&#13;
faculty baroque and contemporary&#13;
ensembles as well as community&#13;
and campus orchestras.&#13;
Before coming to UW-Parkside&#13;
in 1975, he was assistant director of&#13;
North Texas State University's&#13;
famous One O'Clock Jazz Band&#13;
and played first chair clarinet with&#13;
the North Texas State Concert&#13;
Band. He is director of the awardwinning&#13;
Parkside Jazz Ensemble in&#13;
addition to teaching woodwind&#13;
students at UW-P.&#13;
Cont from pg 3&#13;
Gardening&#13;
Here are some common herbs, beneficial weeds and flowers thatwork&#13;
for you in the garden:&#13;
Herb Companions and Effects&#13;
Basil Companion to tomatoes. Improves flavor,&#13;
repels flies and mosquitoes.&#13;
Borage Companion to tomatoes, squash &amp; strawberries;&#13;
deters tomato worm; improves&#13;
growth &amp; flavor.&#13;
Camomile Companion to cabbages &amp; onions.&#13;
Catnip Plant in borders; deters flea beetle.&#13;
Dill Companion to cabbage; dislikes carrots; improves&#13;
growth &amp; health of cabbage.&#13;
Garlic Plant near roses and raspberries; deters&#13;
Japanese beetles; improves growth and&#13;
health.&#13;
Plant at corners of potato patch to deter&#13;
potato bug.&#13;
The indispensible garden tool. Plant&#13;
throughout the garden to discourage&#13;
Mexican bean beetles, nematodes and others&#13;
Companion to cabbage and tomatoes deters&#13;
white cabbage moth.&#13;
Deters moles and mice if planted her and&#13;
there.&#13;
Companion to radishes, cabbage. Plant&#13;
under fruit trees. Deters aphids, squash&#13;
bugs, striped pumpkin beetles.&#13;
Planted among cabbage repels the white&#13;
cabbage butterfly.&#13;
Protects Beans&#13;
Companion to cabbage, bean, carrots and&#13;
sage; deters cabbage moth, bean beetles and&#13;
carrot fly.&#13;
Use in conjunction with Rosemary, keep&#13;
away from cucumbers.&#13;
Grow in corn.&#13;
As a border, keeps animals away.&#13;
Horseradish&#13;
Marigold&#13;
Mint&#13;
Mole Plant&#13;
Nasturtium&#13;
Peppermint&#13;
Petunia&#13;
Rosemary&#13;
Sage&#13;
Wild Morning Glory&#13;
Wormwood&#13;
Creating your own sprays can be done by first discovering what&#13;
protects the affected plant and make an extract of it. Select those&#13;
protectors or plants having strong or disagreeable odors, such as&#13;
hot peppers, onions, garlic, and marigolds. Add equal amounts of&#13;
the plant and water to a blender and blend. Strain the plant&#13;
remains until just the liquid is left. Dilute this extract (a ratio of&#13;
one teaspoon to a pint.of wdtetj and spray. This was you avoid the&#13;
possibility of burning up your plants, your skin &amp; poisoning you in&#13;
case you ingest too much chemcial pesticide. Just applying&#13;
chemicals can be costly and dangerous, not only to you but also to&#13;
other plants previously not damaged or to natural predators of the&#13;
insect doing the damage.&#13;
To avoid bugs keep the ground area clean. Never compost with&#13;
infected plants. Learn what insects affect what ahd how.&#13;
Remember some birds and bugs eat insects and should be&#13;
encouraged near or in the garden. Get rid of weak or susceptible&#13;
plants and don't expect total eradication of the problem.&#13;
Some considerations of gardening are:&#13;
Soil structure the best being loam that allows excess water to&#13;
drain while retaining enough to growth.&#13;
Fertilizers — organic are best like blood meal, hoof and horn meal,&#13;
cottonseed meal, fish meal and fish emulsion.&#13;
Watering — a good steady watering that penetrates deep into the&#13;
soil is better than light watering that doesn't reach the roots. It&#13;
needn't be done so often this way either.&#13;
Planting &amp; Mulching — be sure it's after the last frost. Hold off&#13;
mulching the vegetable patch until the hot weather comes because&#13;
if it's done too soon, it just insulates the ground that is cold and&#13;
wet, except strawberries, they like it cool.&#13;
Mulching materials are grass clippings, partially decomposed&#13;
compost, ground bark, leaf mold, manure, peat moss, pine needles,&#13;
sawdust and straw or hay. Inorganic mulches like gravel, sand,&#13;
plastic and rock can also be ver effective.&#13;
Composting — using materials otherwise going to waste to add&#13;
precisou nutrients to the soil is very cost and evergy efficient.&#13;
Insect/Disease control — try all organic measures before resorting&#13;
to harmful chemicals.&#13;
Good harvest!&#13;
* •X- -Y-&#13;
*&#13;
*•&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
THE END is coming&#13;
May 19 and 20th&#13;
Watch n ext w eek for f ull d etails&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
•*&#13;
*•&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
•*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
•*&#13;
•*&#13;
*&#13;
*•&#13;
•*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*•&#13;
*&#13;
* &#13;
Wednesday May 2, 1979&#13;
RANGiR&#13;
Scenes From Awareness Day&#13;
Chancellor Guakin running the wheelchair obstacle&#13;
Handicapped Awareness Day.&#13;
course Wednesday during&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
Pholoi by M. Murphy&#13;
Public Forum&#13;
Charles Cicchetti, Chairperson&#13;
for the Wisconsin Public Service&#13;
Commission emphasized the cost&#13;
and problems associated with&#13;
nuclear power. Cicchetti explained&#13;
that the cost of storage and&#13;
availability of fuel and commissioning&#13;
a plant is surprising and that&#13;
nuclear power alternatives are&#13;
suffering from an "incredible&#13;
amount of allays."&#13;
"The NRC, (Nuclear.-Regulatory&#13;
Commission) didn't tell the whole&#13;
truth about Three Mile Island,"&#13;
Cicchetti continued. He explained&#13;
that eight more Babcock Willcott&#13;
plats are scheduled to be shut&#13;
down.&#13;
Dr. Morris Firebaugh, Professor&#13;
of physics at Parkside, attempted to&#13;
provide insights into the risks of&#13;
nuclear power by using graphs and&#13;
reports he had compiled. Firebaugh&#13;
said the events such as Three&#13;
Mile Island will allow for a more&#13;
serious and objective study of&#13;
nuclear power. He cited as an&#13;
example, that the threat of a&#13;
hydrogen bubble was never&#13;
conceived of, but that one can be&#13;
assured that, as a result of Three&#13;
Mile Island, the threat will be&#13;
eliminated in the future.&#13;
The remainder of Dr. Firebaugh&#13;
is talk compared possible health&#13;
hazards among present forms of&#13;
energy production. Dr. Firebaugh&#13;
quoted the now controversial&#13;
Rasmussen study which shows that&#13;
coal power kills 50 times more&#13;
people than nuclear power, and the&#13;
nuclear power is overall cheaper&#13;
than coal power.&#13;
Concerning the disasterous affect&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
M A INO FFICE&#13;
A U TO B A N K&#13;
2 4 H O U R TEL LER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBE® F.D.I.C.&#13;
of a nuclear power accident Dr.&#13;
Firebaugh said that in using&#13;
hydroelectric power, 260,000&#13;
people could be killed if a&#13;
hydroelectric dam were to break.&#13;
State Senator Joseph Strohl&#13;
centered his talk on the problems of&#13;
nuclear waste disposal but&#13;
emphasized throughout that there&#13;
are no definite answers to any of the&#13;
problems.&#13;
.•**. Strohl said that is,cost Wisconsin&#13;
Electric up to $20,000 a year to&#13;
have low level radiation wastes,&#13;
those from byproducts of the plants&#13;
such as papers and rags, are&#13;
disposed of at one of six earth&#13;
trench sites in the country.&#13;
Approximately one third of the&#13;
fuel at a nuclear power plant has to&#13;
be replaced each year and there are&#13;
currently no operating reprocessing&#13;
plants in the United States which&#13;
would allow the fuel to be reused.&#13;
As a result, Strohl explained, the&#13;
supply of nuclear will soon be&#13;
deplenished.&#13;
Strohl said that one solution to&#13;
disposal of nuclear waste is to&#13;
temporarily store it at the nuclear&#13;
plant but, he explained "do we&#13;
want to see the plant? become the&#13;
permanent resting place of nuclear&#13;
fuel."&#13;
Edith Sobel, President of the&#13;
Racine-Kenosha Citizens for the&#13;
Environment quoted a Life&#13;
magazine article calling Three Mile&#13;
Island "a case study in failure."&#13;
"Our entire genetic heritage may&#13;
be jeopardized" said Sobel, "The&#13;
radioactive poisons generated from&#13;
nuclear plants are more severe than&#13;
the Hiroshima bomb."&#13;
Sobel said it is "time to reassess&#13;
the direction of our energy&#13;
problem...we must phase out&#13;
nuclear reactors with significant&#13;
problems.''&#13;
Ray Majerus, Director of the&#13;
U.A.W. Region 10, rounded out the&#13;
forum.&#13;
Majerus explained that his&#13;
knowledge of nuclear power was&#13;
limited but went on to say that the&#13;
attitudes of his fellow U.A.W.&#13;
members were inconclusive.&#13;
Majerus, however, did not&#13;
hesitate to interject his own&#13;
assessment of the situation and was&#13;
the most vocally received of all the&#13;
panelists.&#13;
"It's incredible that they would&#13;
consider opening Three mile Island&#13;
with so many unanswered&#13;
questions," said Majerus, "I don't&#13;
want them to build one more&#13;
nuclear plant until they find those&#13;
issues (problems)."&#13;
the forum concluded with&#13;
questions from the audience and a&#13;
brief concluding statement from&#13;
each of the panelists.&#13;
VIVMWVWWWMWW j&#13;
|&#13;
fARE ANY NON-VIOLENT&#13;
SEXUAL ACTS BETWEEN&#13;
CONSENTING ADULTS&#13;
IMMORAL?"&#13;
Come Listen to the Debate,&#13;
Thurs. May 3rd at 7:30pm&#13;
in the Union Cin ema.&#13;
For more IIMFO:&#13;
Call Bruce Weaver, Debate Coach&#13;
at 553-2420&#13;
J NEED A SUMMER JOB?&#13;
J Positions Available $6 - 8 / Hour&#13;
I Work Near Your Home&#13;
I&#13;
Attend Opportunity Meeting:&#13;
Room 104 Union May 2&#13;
9:00 A.M. 12 Noon 3:00 P.M.&#13;
RENT -A-C A N O E&#13;
inFO X R I V ER&#13;
} NIPPERSINK&#13;
CHA IN- 0- C R E E K&#13;
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H W Y. C W I L M O T , WIS&#13;
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Freshman student ( Sophomore, 1 979-80) t o act&#13;
as A nheoser-Boseh o n-campns r epresentative&#13;
for 1 979-80. M ost b e aggressive.&#13;
Salary provided. O pportunity for f ull-time&#13;
employment d uring summer a nd vacations.&#13;
Chance for m any "fringe" b enefits. C ontact:&#13;
E.F. MADRIGRANO Company&#13;
1831-55th Street K enosha, Wisconsin &#13;
Wednesday May 2, 1979 6&#13;
Women Pray for Good Weather&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The women's softball team must&#13;
be praying to the great softball god&#13;
in the sky for some decent weather&#13;
to play in, because last week the&#13;
team had eight games scheduled&#13;
and managed to get in but two.&#13;
However the two they played&#13;
really counted, as they were league&#13;
games and the Rangers came away&#13;
with a sweep of the double header&#13;
by beating Oshkosh 5-0 behind the&#13;
one hit pitching of freshman Donna&#13;
Mann (2-1) in the first game and&#13;
taking the nightcap 8-b behind the&#13;
pitching of junior Sue Veselik (2-2),&#13;
who has returned to last year's form&#13;
and will be a vital part in this year's&#13;
drive to the playoffs.&#13;
The games that were rained out&#13;
were to pit the Rangers against the&#13;
College of Lake County, Carthage&#13;
and UW-Whitewater.&#13;
This week's games see the&#13;
rangers taking on Carthage and a&#13;
rematch with Oshkosh with hopes&#13;
of improving on their 3-1 league&#13;
record.&#13;
Diana Kolovos, Alias 'Killer'&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
Diana Kolovos has aptly been&#13;
fitted with the nickname "Killer."&#13;
It matches her style of play because&#13;
she is a fiesty, hardnosed,&#13;
aggressive, emotional player. The&#13;
22 year-old senior is a natural&#13;
leader as is proved by her being&#13;
picked as captain of the volleyball&#13;
NOW AT 2 LOCATIONS&#13;
6100 Washington Ave.&#13;
Pioneer Village&#13;
886-5077 • 886-0207&#13;
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634-2373 • 634-2374&#13;
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FEMALE STAFF&#13;
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— E. Z. Cash, Kelly Gazette KLLM He"&#13;
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For the office in your neighborhood call:&#13;
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An Equal Opportunity Employer m/f&#13;
team four years in a row. Afterall,&#13;
she says, "I was sort of the founder&#13;
of the team here at Parkside. When&#13;
I came it was just an intramural&#13;
program, and I helped develop it&#13;
into a sport."&#13;
She was also an All-Conference&#13;
selection to the 1977 and 1978&#13;
volleyball team. She was captain of&#13;
the basketball team two years and&#13;
of the softball team once.&#13;
In analyzing this year's softball&#13;
team Kolovos says, "I would just&#13;
like to make it to the Regionals. I'm&#13;
being realistic. We can't compete&#13;
with the other teams. This is my&#13;
last year and I'm hoping we can do&#13;
something." As for "all the team&#13;
difficulties, it's hard to have a good&#13;
team in softball up north because&#13;
of the weather and the facilities.&#13;
We only got outside three times&#13;
before we played our first game and&#13;
got bombed 15-1." But being the&#13;
battler she is, she's leading the&#13;
team to prosperity this year.&#13;
For her future plans, the math&#13;
major wants to get out of the state&#13;
and go down south or out west. "I&#13;
want to get away from this crummy&#13;
weather."&#13;
Classified&#13;
Ads&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
Female models needed for life drawing and&#13;
painting classes at Parkside. Contact Art&#13;
Office, CA 284, 553-2457.&#13;
Mature, responsible, adult supervision&#13;
needed for three kids ages 10, 12, 14. Five&#13;
days a week, 9-3. Two weeks in Jund and&#13;
Whole month of August. $35 a week.&#13;
Between 3 &amp; 4 Mile Roads, north side of&#13;
Racine. Own transportation. Call 639-5731.&#13;
Summer work Interviews. If tr avel and good&#13;
profits interest you, come to Moln. 109 at&#13;
1:00, 4:00, or 7:00 p.m. on May 2. Those&#13;
selected can make $246 per week!&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Camera &amp; equipment: Olympus OM-1, 1:8&#13;
50 mm. lens, 75-159 telezoom lens, A-1 and&#13;
B-1 filters, camera case, strap, tripod. 4&#13;
months old. $425. Call 279-5823.&#13;
1962 1200 Roadster Fiat. New Engine. Runs&#13;
excellently but needs body work. Call after 5&#13;
p.m. at 537-4942.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Roommate to share cost of modest&#13;
apartment or flat. If I nterested call 553-2244&#13;
and ask for Mary.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
Inter- Varsity Christian Fellowship's Friday&#13;
night Bible-study will be at Paul Quist's, 32&#13;
Steeplechase Dr. in Racine at 7:15. Anyone&#13;
can call 639-3810 for details.&#13;
IVCF's Monday night Bible-study is at Kathi&#13;
Limbach's, 1514 78th St. in Kenosha at 7:15.&#13;
Everyone is welcome and may call 654-9041&#13;
for details.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Wednesday, May 2&#13;
RECITAL at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre featuring&#13;
Cynthia Mason. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
MEETING at 8 p.m. in MOLN 111. Prof. Wayne Johnson will talk&#13;
on "The Mutual Hazards Faced by Males and Females." The&#13;
program is free and open to the public. Sponsored by Single Again&#13;
Students Assn.&#13;
MEETING for the Annual Life Science Club at 4 p.m. in GR&#13;
D115. The meeting will be to elect new officers for 1979-1980.&#13;
Discussion of annual picnic (food, activities, place, &amp; time).&#13;
Possible canoe trip during summer.&#13;
Thursday, May 3&#13;
WORKSHOP "Me, for a Change" on life-work decision making&#13;
starting at 9 a.m. in Union 104. Please call ext. 2312 for&#13;
reservations.&#13;
CONCERT by students at 2 p.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre.&#13;
The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
DEBATE on sex at 6 p.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public. Sponsored by Debate and&#13;
Forensic Club.&#13;
SYMPOSIUM at 7 p.m. in MOLN 107. Prof. Robert Goff and staff&#13;
of UW-Madison will present "The Religious Impulse and&#13;
Sociobiology." The program is free and open to the public. Please&#13;
call ext. 2312 for reservations.&#13;
Friday, May 4&#13;
SEMINAR "Child Custody Under No Fault Law" starting at 9&#13;
a.m. in GR 103. Please call ext. 2312 for reservations.&#13;
COLLOQUIUM at 12 noon in Union 104. Prof. Elaine Hendry will&#13;
talk on "Is Anyone Out There? SETI and the Search for&#13;
Extraterrestrial Intellegence." The program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
SEMINAR Chem/Life Sci. at 2 p.m. in MOLN 107. The program&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
MOVIE "The Sorcerer" will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre. Admission at the door is $1.00 for a Parkside&#13;
student and $1.00 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
PLAYS "The Neighbours" and "The Happy Journey" will be&#13;
presented at 8 p.m. in Studio "B" of the CA bldg. by the Dramatic&#13;
Arts Discipline. Admission is free, however, due to limited seating&#13;
capacity, please call ext. 2457 for reservations.&#13;
Saturday, May 5&#13;
A/E SERIES presents Margaret Hillis conducting the combined&#13;
Racine and Kenosha Symphony Orchestras and a 180 voice chorus&#13;
in Verdi's "Requiem" at 8 p.m. in the Physical Education Bldg.&#13;
Admission is $3.00 for students and senior citizens and $5.00 for&#13;
others. Tickets are available at the Union Information Center and&#13;
will be available at the door.&#13;
PLAYS "The Neighbours" and "The Happy Journey" will be&#13;
repeated at 8 p.m. in CA Studio "B", which is room D155.&#13;
Sunday, May 6&#13;
PLAYS "The Neighbours" and "The Happy Journey" will be&#13;
repeated at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m.&#13;
MOVIE "The Sorcerer" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre.&#13;
RECITAL at 3:30 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre,&#13;
featuring Tim Bell on the Clarinet and August Wegner at the&#13;
piano. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Monday, May 7&#13;
CONCERT at 8 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre featuring&#13;
the Parkside Percussion Ensemble with. Linda Raymond directing.&#13;
The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Tuesday, May 8&#13;
MEETING Trico-Cetac at 9 a.m. in Union 106. The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
CONCERT at 8 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre featuring&#13;
Tim Bell directing the Parkside Jazz Ensemble. Admission is $1.00&#13;
for students and $2.00 for others. Tickets are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center, and will be available at the door.&#13;
Wednesday, May 9&#13;
DANCE at 8 p.m. in Union Square featuring the Juggernut Jug&#13;
Band. Admission will be charged at the door. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Presents&#13;
The 3rd Annual Cong Show at 'THE END"&#13;
Sunday, May 20 3:00 p.m.&#13;
Sign-up deadline&#13;
Friday, May 11&#13;
-UNION 209&#13;
0'i I s#*-* V L&gt;&#13;
/ &#13;
4433-22nd Avenu e Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-07 74&#13;
ALL M AJOR C REDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
DON'T LET THE TIGHT MARKET&#13;
ON YOUR PLANS!!!&#13;
BOOST YOUR FINANCIAL&#13;
SITUATION THIS SUMMER . .&#13;
STUDENTS MADE&#13;
$997&#13;
Per Month Last Summer&#13;
SUMMER WORK INTERVIEWS&#13;
Come to Moln 109&#13;
May 2 1,4, &amp; 7 PM&#13;
Photon by Mike Murphy&#13;
Fashions 'Model Entertainment&#13;
film s eries presents&#13;
Neil Simon&#13;
Wednesday M a y 2, 1979&#13;
could bring out the best in the&#13;
Minority Student Union with the&#13;
help of area merchants and professionals.&#13;
&#13;
Participation for this event was&#13;
broad. Faculty and staff people&#13;
contributed as well as some professional&#13;
models. The Parkside&#13;
people to be thanked by the MSO&#13;
are Assistant Chancellor Carla&#13;
Stoffle, Prof. Lionel Maldonado,&#13;
Prof. Leo Bonner, Mr. Esrold&#13;
Nurse, and Mr. Howard Hill, who&#13;
showed their modeling talents in&#13;
the show.&#13;
At times,, one couldn't tell the&#13;
difference between the style of the&#13;
professional model guests and that&#13;
of the students participating. The&#13;
student models are to be&#13;
commended for their display of&#13;
talent. Those who performed on&#13;
stage were Kiya Blanton, Rita&#13;
Davis, Pershell Denson, Cheryl&#13;
Harris, Jonathan Hilson, Susan&#13;
Larson, Loretta Lewis and Michael&#13;
Watley.&#13;
The professional models included&#13;
Demetria Blanton, Miyosha&#13;
Blanton, Karen Caesar, Dave&#13;
Conda, Genero Espisito, Robert&#13;
McGee and Cheryl Ross. Some of&#13;
these models are also students.&#13;
There were many other people&#13;
involved who deserve recognition&#13;
for their work also.&#13;
Next year will see the second&#13;
annual fashion show, according to&#13;
President Hilson, "We'll try to&#13;
expand everything and make next&#13;
year's show even more successful&#13;
than this year's. I'm sure we can do&#13;
it, especially since we'll have even&#13;
more people in the Minority&#13;
Student Union next year."&#13;
Cheap Detective&#13;
STARRING&#13;
Peter F alk &amp; Ann Margret&#13;
Fri. May 4 8pm Sunday, May 6 7:30&#13;
UNION CINEMA $1.00&#13;
The fTIiller Brewing Company&#13;
and C.J.W. Distributing would&#13;
like to congratulate the&#13;
winners of the&#13;
miller Eight Ball Classic&#13;
held April 26th, 1979.&#13;
1. Ron Schneider&#13;
2. Bill Piercer&#13;
3. Perry Hartneli&#13;
4. John Krusa&#13;
We would also like to thank&#13;
all those who participated to&#13;
make this contest an&#13;
overwhelming success.&#13;
ffiichael (Tlullikin&#13;
miller Campus Rep.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Pike River Run M ay 19th&#13;
I he PAB Outdoor Recreation&#13;
Committee will hold its Second&#13;
Annual Pole, Paddle, Portage &amp;&#13;
Push Pike River Run on May 19 at&#13;
12:15 p.m. The canoe race,&#13;
beginning in Pet's at the main playground,&#13;
will wind its way down the&#13;
Pike River to the river's mouth at&#13;
Lake Michigan.&#13;
Only eight canoes participated in&#13;
last year's race, so the sponsors are&#13;
hoping for more racers this year.&#13;
Gary Thompson, member of the&#13;
kecreation Committee said,&#13;
"We're expecting the turnout to be&#13;
twice that of last year."&#13;
If you want to register before&#13;
classes end, do so in Union 206.&#13;
After that, participants can register&#13;
at the starting point on the day of&#13;
the race.&#13;
For those who don't own a canoe,&#13;
the PAB will attempt to secure one.&#13;
If you don't have a canoe or kayak,&#13;
go to Union 206 by May 11th and&#13;
someone will try to make arrangements.&#13;
&#13;
The race is open to anyone in the&#13;
community, and registration will be&#13;
open up until one half hour before&#13;
the race. The registration, fee is $1&#13;
per paddler.&#13;
by Sue Stevens&#13;
The Minority Student Union's&#13;
First Annual Spring Fashion Show&#13;
was a success in the eyes of all who&#13;
attended last Saturday night.&#13;
Everything, from the clothes&#13;
modeled by students to the entertainment,&#13;
contributed to the fine&#13;
example of what student organizations&#13;
on the Parkside campus can&#13;
do if given the chance.&#13;
"Step Into Our Life," as the&#13;
show was titled, was a benefit&#13;
activity from which the proceeds&#13;
went to the local chapter of the&#13;
NAACP and the Spanish Center.&#13;
Jonathan Hilson, the club's&#13;
president, has been working toward&#13;
recognition for the club both inside&#13;
and outside the university. As he&#13;
stated, "Yes, I think the show was&#13;
successful. It's just one example of&#13;
the MSU's growth during the&#13;
year."&#13;
When the idea for a fashion show&#13;
came to Hilson and others, they&#13;
were searching for a spring activity&#13;
that would reach out to others.&#13;
After talking with advisors John&#13;
Tyson and Esrold Nurse, it was&#13;
decided that a show of this kind &#13;
Wednesday May 2, 1979 RANGER 8&#13;
Now comes Miller time.&#13;
&amp; 1977 Miller Brewing Co.-,- Milwaukee, Wis. </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 7, issue 30, May 2, 1979</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>SUFAC OKs final budget</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="90338">
              <text>l&#13;
IP University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
SUFAC OKs final budget&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
The Segregated University Fees&#13;
Allocations Committee (SUFAC)&#13;
has approved the final auxiliary&#13;
budget for the 1981-82 academic&#13;
year. The final figure, as approved&#13;
by P.S.G.A. Senate's&#13;
emergency meeting held on&#13;
December 22 a nd reaffirmed on&#13;
January 19, is $583,441. This figure&#13;
represents a 4.55% i ncrease over&#13;
the 1980-81 final allocations&#13;
($556,893). Alan Guskin, Chancellor,&#13;
is expected to approve this&#13;
auxiliary budget within the next&#13;
few days.&#13;
Greg Davies, chairman of&#13;
SUFAC, estimated that each fulltime&#13;
student at Parkside will be&#13;
paying about $144 in segregated&#13;
fees for the 1981-82 academic year.&#13;
The segregated fees plus the 50&#13;
cent United Council fee should not&#13;
increase in cost over the 1980-81&#13;
fees if the projected student&#13;
enrollment is correctly estimated.&#13;
Student Health was granted a&#13;
budget increased by $8637. K athy&#13;
Slama, PSGA assistant President&#13;
Pro Tempore, reports that this&#13;
increase will provide another&#13;
nurse, increase typist hours, and&#13;
permit TB testing for both nursing&#13;
and education students. Last year,&#13;
Student Health received the major&#13;
budget hike, which amounted to&#13;
$14,129.&#13;
Budget increases ranging&#13;
around $3000 were granted to&#13;
Union Operations, Athletics,&#13;
Intramurals and Recreation,&#13;
,PAB, Student Activities Office,&#13;
and Housing. SOC received an&#13;
increase of $2,250. PS GA, Student&#13;
Activities Building and Ranger&#13;
received increases of $450, $650,&#13;
and $976, respectively. Central&#13;
Administration suggested that an&#13;
8% increase in all budgets would&#13;
be reasonable, considering&#13;
current inflation.&#13;
SUFAC and Child Care Center&#13;
received budget decreases of $100&#13;
and $425 respectively.&#13;
Cooperative Services Collective&#13;
(CSC) was dropped from the&#13;
budget. Slama said that CSC is no&#13;
longer considered a student&#13;
organization because CSC would&#13;
not sign a rental agreement with&#13;
the university.&#13;
Business Services for auxiliary&#13;
accounting costs was added to the&#13;
budget for the first time. This&#13;
represents a charge made by&#13;
Central Administration for&#13;
computer time.&#13;
Winter Carnival was also added&#13;
to the budget. Entertainment&#13;
from Bad Boy and Sierra will cost&#13;
$1550. Publicity will cost about&#13;
$700. The remaining expenditures&#13;
will be used for prizes, the Blood&#13;
Drive and miscellaneous expenses.&#13;
&#13;
Any further information&#13;
regarding SUFAC's budget&#13;
allocations can be obtained from&#13;
the PSGA Office or by calling&#13;
extension 2244.&#13;
FINAL REQUEST PRELIM. FINAL&#13;
NAME&#13;
Union&#13;
1980/81&#13;
Operations 194,857&#13;
Union&#13;
Debt Service 105,500&#13;
Athletics 48,790&#13;
Intramurals/&#13;
48,790&#13;
Recreation 35,000&#13;
Health 49,685&#13;
Parkside&#13;
49,685&#13;
Activities Board 33,460&#13;
Performing Arts&#13;
33,460&#13;
&amp; L ectures&#13;
Student Organization&#13;
Council 22,320&#13;
Student Activities&#13;
22,320&#13;
Office 14,793&#13;
Ranger 14,286&#13;
Housing 10,448&#13;
Child Care&#13;
Center 6,931&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. 6,300&#13;
Student Activities&#13;
6,300&#13;
Building 2,400&#13;
SUFAC 300&#13;
Co-operative Services&#13;
Collective 8,823&#13;
Business Services -&#13;
8,823&#13;
Aux. Accounting Costs&#13;
Winter&#13;
Carnival&#13;
TOTALS $556,893&#13;
1981-82 1981-82 1981-82&#13;
194,857 197,857 197,857&#13;
105,500&#13;
51,585&#13;
105,500&#13;
51,585&#13;
105,500&#13;
51,585&#13;
37,605&#13;
58,322&#13;
37,605&#13;
58,322&#13;
37,605&#13;
58,322&#13;
25,210 27,227*&#13;
8,910 8,910&#13;
26,920 24,570 24,570&#13;
15,976&#13;
15,261.60&#13;
13,789&#13;
17,586&#13;
15,261.60&#13;
13,789&#13;
15,976&#13;
15,261.60&#13;
13,789&#13;
17,586&#13;
15,261.60&#13;
13,789&#13;
17,586&#13;
15,262*&#13;
13,789&#13;
6,506&#13;
6,750&#13;
6,506&#13;
6,750&#13;
6,506&#13;
6,750&#13;
3,050&#13;
200&#13;
3,050&#13;
200&#13;
5,722 5,722&#13;
3,000 3,000 3,000&#13;
$581,423.60 $583,441&#13;
•Changed during finals&#13;
Workers^ HAGGLUND (left), Director of the School for&#13;
Labor Studies program&#13;
to begin this spring&#13;
University of Wisconsin officials&#13;
and state labor leaders outlined&#13;
plans here Jan. 14 for a Labor&#13;
Studies program; the first of its&#13;
kind in the state, to be offered&#13;
jointly by UW-Parkside and&#13;
University Extension's School for&#13;
Workers.&#13;
The new program, scheduled to&#13;
begin in September, 1981, will lead&#13;
either to a bachelor's degree in&#13;
Labor and Industrial Relations or&#13;
to a two - year certificate in Labor&#13;
Studies. Neither option previously&#13;
has been available in a&#13;
collaborative program between a&#13;
UW campus and the School for&#13;
Workers.&#13;
A recent survey of 59 unions&#13;
representing about 50,000 union&#13;
members in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin and northern Illinois&#13;
determined overwhelming support&#13;
for a structured Labor&#13;
Studies program. The survey,&#13;
conducted jointly by UW-Parkside&#13;
and Gateway Technical Institute,&#13;
also revealed that programs run&#13;
by the School for Workers are the&#13;
most frequently used source of&#13;
labor education by both large and&#13;
small unions.&#13;
A director for the new program&#13;
will be jointly selected and funded&#13;
by UW-Parkside and the School&#13;
for Workers, and faculty from&#13;
both units will teach courses in the&#13;
program, according to UW-P&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin and&#13;
School for Workers Director&#13;
George Hagglund.&#13;
At Wednesday's meeting,&#13;
Guskin, Hagglund and other&#13;
university officials discussed the&#13;
program with a number of labor&#13;
leaders including Ralph Koenig,&#13;
director of United Auto Workers'&#13;
Region 10, and other UAW officials&#13;
including Jack Rice, international&#13;
representative, Ralph&#13;
Amerling, education director,&#13;
Tony Valeo, former international&#13;
representative; John Schmitt,&#13;
president of the Wisconsin AFLCIO;&#13;
Bert McNamara, director of&#13;
United Steelworkers District 32,&#13;
and Don Marzec, Steelworkers'&#13;
international representative; and&#13;
Arnie Potthast, chief supervisor,&#13;
state Vocational - Techinical&#13;
Education Board.&#13;
A primary goal of t he program,&#13;
planners say, is to provide the&#13;
education necessary for union&#13;
members to assume leadership&#13;
positions within their unions. In&#13;
addition to providing specialized&#13;
labor courses, the program will&#13;
offer courses emphasizing the&#13;
economic, social, political and&#13;
cultural contributions of labor.&#13;
General university degree&#13;
requirements also will have to be&#13;
met.&#13;
The specialized labor courses&#13;
which will be part of t he program&#13;
reflect the interests of the labor&#13;
unions which responded to the&#13;
needs assessment Survey. These&#13;
courses include Labor&#13;
Management Relations, Labor&#13;
History, Protective Labor&#13;
Legislation, Grievance Handling&#13;
and Arbitration, Collective&#13;
Bargaining, Union Administration,&#13;
Production Standards&#13;
/ Job Evaluation / Wage&#13;
Incentive, and Comparative&#13;
Labor Movements.&#13;
Students who complete the two -&#13;
year certificate will have satisfied&#13;
about 60 percent of the&#13;
requirements for a B.S. degree in&#13;
Labor and Industrial Relations&#13;
and half of the university's&#13;
general degree requirements.&#13;
Scheduling of courses in the&#13;
program will be geared to the&#13;
needs of part - time students.&#13;
Many students will find that&#13;
employers will reimburse their&#13;
tuition costs. Such reimbursement,&#13;
for example, is part of&#13;
the new labor contract between&#13;
the UAW and American Motors&#13;
Corp.&#13;
Mourning in&#13;
Main Place&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
Parkside students participated in a silent vigil Tuesday afternoon&#13;
"to protest the inauguration of Reagan and to say we&#13;
will stand together for the next four years."&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• From the Parking Lot: John Lennon&#13;
• Movie reviews: Christmas's big&#13;
moneymakers&#13;
• Basketball improves record &#13;
2 Thursday, January 22, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Student clarifies parking problem, policy&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In the November 20, 1980 iss ue&#13;
of the Ranger there was, what I&#13;
would call, an inaccurate&#13;
statement in he t Contact section of&#13;
the paper. I am the Parkside&#13;
student who brought the Security&#13;
situation to the attention of PSGA.&#13;
The article contained the&#13;
following statement: "Brinkman&#13;
said that, in this case procedure&#13;
was not followed. He was more&#13;
than glad to clear up the&#13;
problem." This is the statement&#13;
which I have written about earlier&#13;
in this editorial reply.&#13;
Mr. Brinkman was much less&#13;
than helpful, in fact, he was rude.&#13;
Extremely rude. I would just like&#13;
to clear up this statement. Mr.&#13;
Brinkman also was not glad to&#13;
clear up the problem at hand. Mr.&#13;
Brinkman would not listen to my&#13;
problem until after I had spoken&#13;
with Mr. Goetz, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Administration and&#13;
Fiscal Affairs. It was not until&#13;
after I had told Mr. Goetz how&#13;
Brinkman had treated me that&#13;
Mr. Brinkman would listen to and&#13;
take care of this problem.&#13;
I would also like to take this&#13;
chance to remind the student body&#13;
of policy for parking tickets.&#13;
Procedure states: A minimum of&#13;
two warning tickets will be issued&#13;
to any vehicle violating any of the&#13;
following parking violations&#13;
before a parking violation ticket is&#13;
issued: A. parking prohibited&#13;
(posted) B. parking in non -&#13;
designated area C. no permit D&#13;
parking with improper permit for&#13;
area E. improper parking in&#13;
designated area F. parked in&#13;
physically disabled stall G.&#13;
restricted parking (specific time)!&#13;
Thank you for this chance to&#13;
express my feelings and clear up&#13;
something that has been bothering&#13;
me. c. Sincerely,&#13;
Mike Loos&#13;
Refutes article on nuclear power's 'malignant' nature&#13;
by Kelly Starks&#13;
Ms. Elzinga wrote an article in&#13;
the last 1980 issue of the Ranger in&#13;
which she disagrees with the&#13;
previous article by Terry&#13;
Rasmussen and myself, and lists&#13;
what she believes to be proof of&#13;
nuclear power's "malignant"&#13;
nature, although she doesn't&#13;
argue any of our points. I will&#13;
attempt to prove that her&#13;
statements are inaccurate and&#13;
strongly biased by her personal&#13;
beliefs rather than by any&#13;
research she has done.&#13;
Ms. Elzinga expresses her belief&#13;
that uranium miners who are&#13;
subjected to radon gas have&#13;
greatly increased chances of lung&#13;
cancer. Radon is common in all&#13;
deep rock mines, although not to&#13;
the same extent as in uranium&#13;
mines. Even before ventilating&#13;
systems were required, the lung&#13;
cancer rates were about average&#13;
for deep - rock miners with the&#13;
exception of the rates for coal&#13;
miners, which were far higher.&#13;
With the new ventilation systems,&#13;
the lung cancer rates for uranium&#13;
miners are among the lowest for&#13;
the mining industry.&#13;
Mention is made of the ore&#13;
tailings which now constitute&#13;
approximately 140 million tons.&#13;
These tailings still contain&#13;
uranium, but in concentrations too&#13;
low to be presently economically&#13;
recoverable. Previous to 1976 the&#13;
federal government had no&#13;
regulations regarding disposal, so&#13;
many companies dumped them&#13;
into piles. Some of these tailings&#13;
were even used in making concrete&#13;
for the foundations of local&#13;
homes. Since its formation, the&#13;
Nuclear Regulatory Commission&#13;
has been attempting to regulate&#13;
this, and is now in the process of&#13;
properly disposing of these&#13;
tailings. The federal government&#13;
is also removing the contaminated&#13;
concrete. Although it is important,&#13;
Ms. Elzinga greatly exaggerates&#13;
the danger to public health,&#13;
claiming ". . . an abnormal increase&#13;
in babies with congenital&#13;
defects, and an abnormally high&#13;
rate of leukemia in one of these&#13;
areas." This conflicts with the&#13;
statistics from over the last fifty&#13;
years, which have shown no increase&#13;
in the cancer rates of the&#13;
occupants of these homes, and no&#13;
increase in the birth defect rates.&#13;
The particular incident Ms.&#13;
Elzinga notes pertaining to fuel&#13;
fabrication is that of the Kerr -&#13;
McGee plant which became&#13;
famous due to the case of Karen&#13;
Silkwood. Since this, is the only&#13;
example she cites, it seems fair to&#13;
point out that not only is it not an&#13;
average standard for processing&#13;
plants, this plant only produced&#13;
fuel elements for experimental&#13;
reactors. The Kerr - McGee plant&#13;
was noted for its poor performance,&#13;
and eventually went&#13;
out of business due to poor workmanship.&#13;
There has never been&#13;
any documented claim of safety&#13;
violations in this plant, and no&#13;
workers are known to have been&#13;
contaminated. Ms. Elzinga's&#13;
article flatly states that 87&#13;
workers at the Kerr - McGee plant&#13;
had been contaminated with&#13;
plutonium.&#13;
The case of Karen Silkwood has&#13;
been stated as being a classic&#13;
example of the nuclear industry's&#13;
inhumanity in the interests of&#13;
profit. Ms. Silkwood had&#13;
originally charged Kerr - McGee&#13;
with safety violations and was&#13;
attempting to prosecute through&#13;
the union. She was then found to&#13;
be contaminated with plutonium&#13;
and died shortly thereafter in an&#13;
automobile accident while driving&#13;
to a meeting with union&#13;
representatives and a New York&#13;
Times reporter. Supposedly she&#13;
was bringing documentation to&#13;
prove her charges of safety&#13;
violations at the plant.&#13;
Immediately claims arose that&#13;
she had been deliberately contaminated,&#13;
and later run off the&#13;
road and killed by Kerr - McGee&#13;
as part of the a cover - up effort.&#13;
The investigation showed no&#13;
evidence of foul play in the car&#13;
accident, and her autopsy&#13;
revealed excessive amounts of&#13;
tranquilizers and alcohol in her&#13;
blood. There is no evidence&#13;
supporting the existance of the file&#13;
she was reportedly carrying.&#13;
The idea that the company had&#13;
contaminated her is somewhat&#13;
ridiculous when you consider that&#13;
her contamination with plutonium&#13;
is the last thing the company&#13;
would want, since it would lend&#13;
credence to her claims of the plant&#13;
contaminating personnel. It&#13;
seems probable that Ms. Silkwood&#13;
inadvertently contaminated&#13;
herself while trying to doctor&#13;
urine samples that were going to&#13;
be used to test her for contamination,&#13;
especially since there&#13;
were irregularities in these&#13;
samples. In any event, Kerr -&#13;
McGee was never charged with&#13;
contaminating her, they were&#13;
instead charged with lax security&#13;
procedures which allowed&#13;
someone to smuggle out tiny&#13;
quantities of plutonium which&#13;
were then used to contaminate her&#13;
(sources for this are the New York&#13;
Times, and Time and Science&#13;
magazines).&#13;
Ms. Elzinga then goes from fuel&#13;
fabrication to its use in reactors&#13;
with the statement ". . . the&#13;
uranium has been converted into&#13;
fuel for for the dragon ...," which&#13;
seems to represent a somewhat&#13;
biased attitude. She mentions that&#13;
Three Mile Island (TMI) serves as&#13;
a warning "to move swiftly away&#13;
from this ominous source of&#13;
power."&#13;
The TMI accident has served to&#13;
greatly reassure all those connected&#13;
with nuclear power of the&#13;
resiliency and failsafe nature of&#13;
the design of the safety systems&#13;
and reactors used commercially&#13;
in this country. As more evidence&#13;
and test results on the TMI&#13;
reactor and the area surrounding&#13;
it has come in, it has been proven&#13;
that no member of the public or&#13;
public property has in any way&#13;
been harmed, with the exception&#13;
of economic and psychological&#13;
effects. These psychological effects&#13;
are due'mainly to the incredibly&#13;
inaccurate and sensationalized&#13;
news reporting&#13;
surrounding the accident. Horror&#13;
stories of deformed fetuses&#13;
conflict strongly with the drop in&#13;
miscarriages and pre - natal&#13;
abnormalities in the area after the&#13;
accident, and the fears of long -&#13;
term damage from radiation&#13;
conflict with the total lack of&#13;
detectable radiation contamination.&#13;
&#13;
The reactor, despite rather than&#13;
because of the actions of the&#13;
control room personnel,&#13;
automatically shut itself down&#13;
safety. All safety systems and&#13;
structures performed perfectly,&#13;
and in many instances far exRanger&#13;
wants&#13;
to hear from you!&#13;
Got a gripe, a question, a startling revelation,&#13;
a compliment, a rebuttal, or something on your&#13;
mind that you want to share? Write a letter to&#13;
the editor! Just follow the guidelines printed in&#13;
the masthead (to the right).&#13;
ceeded their design performance.&#13;
The TMI accident — although&#13;
important — can hardly be used&#13;
as a prophetic warning against&#13;
nuclear power since it proved that&#13;
the designed reactor safety&#13;
systems do perform as expected&#13;
in actual reactor accidents.&#13;
Ms. Elzinga mentions three&#13;
scientists from General Electric&#13;
who resigned their management&#13;
positions in order to ". . . commit&#13;
(themselves) totally to the&#13;
education of the public on all&#13;
aspects and dangers of nuclear&#13;
power ..." There are about 50,000&#13;
scientists and engineers working&#13;
in the nuclear power industry,&#13;
30,000 of which recently signed&#13;
and sent to the president a petition&#13;
advocating the immediate, accelerated&#13;
development of the&#13;
nuclear power industry. Along&#13;
with this came the strong endorsement&#13;
of nuclear power by&#13;
professional societies ranging&#13;
from the American Association of&#13;
Engineering Societies to the&#13;
American Medical Association.&#13;
The recent international meeting&#13;
in Europe of the heads of all major&#13;
world governments in regard to&#13;
possible solutions to the energy&#13;
crisis strongly and unanimously&#13;
advocated the expansion of&#13;
nuclear power. If one is attempting&#13;
to decide the issue of&#13;
nuclear power on the basis of the&#13;
reputations and numbers of advocates&#13;
of the particular points of&#13;
view, three G. E. scientists can&#13;
hardly be considered a decisive&#13;
edge.&#13;
Mention is also made of the&#13;
"problem" of nuclear wastes, that&#13;
there "... is no known permanent&#13;
storage method." There are actually&#13;
several known methods.&#13;
The two Ms. Elzinga lists; granite&#13;
and salt burial, are either in&#13;
commercial operation or are&#13;
under construction internationally.&#13;
The chief problem&#13;
that stands in the way of a permanent&#13;
disposal site in the United&#13;
States is political, not technical.&#13;
Fortunately the political climate&#13;
has changed drastically in the last&#13;
year, resulting in a dramatic&#13;
increase in effort and funding to&#13;
resolve the issue.&#13;
It is important to remember&#13;
that most nuclear wastes are not&#13;
in any way a product of nuclear&#13;
power. Under one - tenth of high -&#13;
level nuclear waste is a result of&#13;
nuclear power; some is medical&#13;
waste, and 90% of the total is&#13;
from the military.&#13;
Ms. Elzinga's statement that&#13;
salt is unsuitable because it's&#13;
water - soluble is based on&#13;
ignorance. The main reason for&#13;
choosing salt formations is that&#13;
there can't be ground water if&#13;
there's salt, otherwise the salt&#13;
wouldn't still be there. If ground&#13;
water were suddenly introduced,&#13;
it would take thousands to tens of&#13;
thousands of years to dissolve the&#13;
salt surrounding the wastes and&#13;
expose the wastes to ground&#13;
water. Since the wastes are sealed&#13;
in glass, which is immune to&#13;
water, they would have to be&#13;
crushed, and the uranium&#13;
dissolved. After about seven&#13;
centuries the wastes are less toxic&#13;
than the original uranium ore.&#13;
After the thousands of years that&#13;
it would take to dissolve the salt,&#13;
the wastes would be effectively&#13;
harmless.&#13;
If Ms. Elzinga had bothered to&#13;
attend the guest lecture put on by&#13;
the Geology Club, or the&#13;
discussion by the Students for&#13;
Nuclear Rationality on nuclear&#13;
waste disposal (not to mention&#13;
doing a little research on the&#13;
topic), she might have realized&#13;
this. Considering the fact that Mr.&#13;
Rasmussen and I stated this all in&#13;
a previous article for the Ranger,&#13;
she might have become curious&#13;
enough to check it out.&#13;
Ms. Elizinga's articles usually&#13;
paint a picture of her as a town&#13;
crier alerting the public to an as -&#13;
yet unperceived danger that she&#13;
has discovered, and that the pro -&#13;
nuclear faction is trying to conceal.&#13;
I and most others who have&#13;
investigated Ms. Elzinga's&#13;
statements have found them to be&#13;
more of her misunderstanding of&#13;
the facts and technologies than&#13;
any actual danger. We've also&#13;
found that most of her new and&#13;
alarming information is old information&#13;
that others, rather than&#13;
concealing, had already investigated&#13;
and discredited years&#13;
ago.&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Q™3&#13;
" Business Manager&#13;
¥&#13;
ICii, 4* I News Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Edit0r&#13;
Brian Passino photo Edit0r&#13;
Ginger Helgeson Editor&#13;
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5:&#13;
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RANGER fsVprinted&#13;
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he academic year except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
Written oermisTin!?ic the&#13;
.&#13;
Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
All corrKDonrinnr J Wi* ,0r reprint any portion of RANGER.&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha wl 53141 addressed ,0: parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UWpapeTwIth'one6&#13;
Wk Wi&#13;
" be accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
eluded for verification"^&#13;
9&#13;
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5&#13;
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be withheld for valid reasons&#13;
reserves a°f editortaf Tues?&#13;
ay at 9 a.m. for publication on Thursday. The R&#13;
defamatory content privile9es 10 refusing to print letters which contain &#13;
RANGER&#13;
Writes book&#13;
Thursday, January 22, 1981&#13;
Kubly probes Swiss psyche&#13;
f\f Annma TV. 1&#13;
Sabbatical leaves approved!&#13;
Parkside Professor Herbert&#13;
Kubly dates the beginning of work&#13;
on his new book, "Native's&#13;
Return," to a 1951 v isit to Switzerland.&#13;
But in a special sense this&#13;
11th volume by the Wisconsin -&#13;
born author and National Book&#13;
Award winner has been a lifetime&#13;
in the making.&#13;
"An American of Swiss descent&#13;
unmasks an enigmatic land and&#13;
people," the book's dust jacket&#13;
trumpets beneath the title. Stein&#13;
and Day, the New York publishing&#13;
firm, will issue the book in mid -&#13;
April. &lt;&#13;
Though Kubly's home port is&#13;
Wisconsin — he has taught&#13;
creative writing at Parkside since&#13;
1969 and maintains a farm home&#13;
at New Glarus, a Wisconsin&#13;
community founded by Swiss&#13;
immigrants — his literary log&#13;
carries entries from moorings&#13;
across the face of Europe,&#13;
amassed in years as a traveler,&#13;
humanist and author.&#13;
Kubly's first book, "An&#13;
American in Italy," won a&#13;
National Book Award and was&#13;
followed by a number of sharply&#13;
observant reports from other&#13;
European locales including&#13;
"Easter in Sicily" and "Gods and&#13;
Heroes", a book on Greece in the&#13;
year before the military coup&#13;
which toppled King Constantine.&#13;
"Gods and Heroes" won a first&#13;
place award for non - fict ion from&#13;
the Council for Wisconsin Writers&#13;
and his latest fictional work, "The&#13;
Duchess of Glover" which is set&#13;
both in the U. S. and in a variety of&#13;
European countries, won the&#13;
council's fiction award.&#13;
Now, Kubly adds a new&#13;
dimension, probing what he calls&#13;
the "psychological human landscape"&#13;
of Switzerland. The book is&#13;
both "deeper" than its&#13;
predecessors and closer to his&#13;
heart, Kubly says, for he speaks&#13;
both as an observer and an insider&#13;
of the Swiss psyche.&#13;
A descendant of the Swiss who&#13;
settled in New Glarus more than&#13;
100 years ago, Kubly retains&#13;
hereditary Swiss citizenship in&#13;
addition to U. S. citizenship. He&#13;
has kept in touch with his Swiss&#13;
roots through frequent visits and&#13;
residences including a teaching&#13;
assignment at the University of&#13;
Zurich and, most recently, a 1977&#13;
summer stay.&#13;
'The Swiss are a very complex&#13;
people psychologically," says&#13;
Kubly. "They live in the oldest&#13;
democracy in the world. They are&#13;
intensely individualisti c;&#13;
traditional fighters for liberty;&#13;
each so aware of his own rights."&#13;
Yet, says Kubly, Switzerland is&#13;
an "artificial" country embracing&#13;
two religions, four languages and&#13;
three national groups, German,&#13;
French, and Italian, all crowded&#13;
together and forced into dialogue&#13;
by the omnipresent Alps.&#13;
"Jung (the psychologist) could&#13;
only happen in Switzerland," says&#13;
Kubly.&#13;
The turbulent alpine landscape,&#13;
subject to. avalanches, fierce&#13;
winter storms and spring floods&#13;
profoundly influences the Swiss&#13;
psyche, Kubly says.&#13;
Although the country is rapidly&#13;
becoming industrialized and&#13;
urbanized, each Swiss is only one&#13;
or two generations removed from&#13;
his parochial mountain village,&#13;
says Kubly. The isolated village&#13;
life led to intermarriage and inbreeding,&#13;
mental illness and a&#13;
profound depression rooted in the&#13;
oppression of the mountains, he&#13;
says.&#13;
A sort of national schizophrenia&#13;
prevails. Switzerland is the&#13;
richest nation in the world on a per&#13;
capita basis, has produced the&#13;
world's most sophisticated&#13;
bankers and boasts some of the&#13;
globe's best private art collections,&#13;
yet "emotionally, the people&#13;
still are subject to demonology,"&#13;
the heritage of v illage life, Kubly&#13;
says.&#13;
Survival in the modern world, a&#13;
persistent theme in both Kubly's&#13;
fiction and non - fiction, is evident&#13;
PROFESSOR HERBERT KUBLY&#13;
in the latest volume as well. The&#13;
Swiss are survivors. "They&#13;
squabble, but they manage well,"&#13;
says Kubly.&#13;
"I have been aware through the&#13;
years of social and political,&#13;
changes," Kubly writes in a&#13;
forward to the book. "But the&#13;
Swiss psyche and character are&#13;
slow in changing and my attention&#13;
has been focused on an introverted&#13;
and troubled people that&#13;
most of the world has met but few&#13;
have understood."&#13;
Kubly hopes his new book will&#13;
shed some light on the dark night&#13;
of the Swiss soul.&#13;
Though the critical notices&#13;
aren't in yet for "Native's&#13;
Return," his previous "travel&#13;
books" (Kubly abhors the term)&#13;
have received rave reviews with&#13;
critics who place them on a par&#13;
with such well - known "travel&#13;
writers" as D. H. Lawrence and&#13;
E. M. Forester.&#13;
Already embarked on yet&#13;
another new book, Kubly also is&#13;
immersed in classroom activities.&#13;
This spring, he will teach a&#13;
creative writing course for both&#13;
graduate and undergraduate&#13;
students at Parkside. The course&#13;
will take the form of a working&#13;
seminar with students working on&#13;
short stories, a novel or&#13;
playwriting.&#13;
"Emphasis will be on the&#13;
recognition and use of personal&#13;
experiences as source and&#13;
character as well as the substance&#13;
of both fiction and drama," he&#13;
said.&#13;
If the students master the&#13;
principal, they may be on their&#13;
way to careers as writers. It's&#13;
worked well for their teacher.&#13;
Sabbatical leave during the&#13;
1981-82 ac ademic year has been&#13;
approved for two Parkside faculty&#13;
members, Prof. Alan Grossberg,&#13;
physics and engineering science,&#13;
and Prof. John D. Buenker,&#13;
history.&#13;
A total of 60 UW System faculty&#13;
members was selected to participate&#13;
in the 1981-82 sabbatical&#13;
program, which is designed both&#13;
to provide opportunity for&#13;
professional growth and to bring&#13;
contemporary work in the participants'&#13;
academic areas into the&#13;
classroom. Each UW System&#13;
campus is awarded roughly one&#13;
sabbatical for each 100 tenured&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
Grossberg has been a member,&#13;
of the UW-Parkside faculty since&#13;
the campus opened in 1968 and&#13;
previously taught at the university's&#13;
Racine and Kenosha&#13;
campuses. He will use his sabbatical&#13;
to update two laboratory&#13;
manuals in engineering physics,&#13;
which he authored in the early&#13;
1970's using FORTRAN comp uter&#13;
language, to BASIC, a more easily&#13;
- learned introductory computer&#13;
language which has come into&#13;
increased usage with the advent of&#13;
inexpensive microcomputer&#13;
equipment.&#13;
Grossberg, who will be on leave&#13;
for both the fall and spring&#13;
semesters, also will develop a new&#13;
general introductory physics&#13;
course for science, engineering&#13;
and pre - medical students at UWP&#13;
and will be working in the field&#13;
of advanced digital electronics&#13;
with emphasis on the study of&#13;
microprocessors.&#13;
Buenker, a UW-P faculty&#13;
member since 1970 and director of&#13;
its Center for Multi - cultural&#13;
Studies since 1977, will use his&#13;
sabbatical for studies in U.S.&#13;
urban history.&#13;
Buenker plans to develop a&#13;
series of sample research projects&#13;
using resources of the Area&#13;
Research Center at UW-P to investigate&#13;
the course of urban&#13;
development in Rac ine and&#13;
Kenosha and to prepare a source&#13;
book adaptable to any city with&#13;
similar research materials. Die&#13;
research approach, designed to&#13;
heighten student appreciation of&#13;
the processes of urban development,&#13;
would be incorporated into&#13;
urban history courses at Parkside&#13;
and also would be available to&#13;
historians on other campuses.&#13;
Buenker, author of a number of&#13;
books and articles on urban&#13;
history, urban reform and immigration,&#13;
will be on sabbatical&#13;
during the s pring, 1982, s emester.&#13;
Career planning offered&#13;
A six session Career Planning&#13;
Seminar will be offered by&#13;
Community Student Services and&#13;
Student Development February 9,&#13;
11, 16, 18, 23, an d 25, 1981, from&#13;
1:00 p.m. to 1:50 p.m. Participants&#13;
will analyze their skills, values,&#13;
and interests, and learn different&#13;
ways of using the Career&#13;
Resource Center and how to&#13;
research a career. If you are&#13;
uncertain about your chosen&#13;
career, or would like some&#13;
assistance in making a career&#13;
choice, plan to attend this&#13;
seminar. Call Barbara Larson at&#13;
553-2122 or Wendi Schneider at 553-&#13;
2496 for more information or to&#13;
sign up. Deadline is Febraury 4.&#13;
Women abuse class given&#13;
"How to Counsel Men Who&#13;
Batter Their Wives/Women" is&#13;
the focus of an all-day educational&#13;
course and training program at&#13;
Parkside, in Tallent Hall, on&#13;
Friday, January 23, 8:30 a .m. to&#13;
3:45 p. m.&#13;
The course is directed at&#13;
professional counselors, social&#13;
workers, human service personnel,&#13;
and clergy, who have&#13;
initial and on-going contacts with&#13;
men who are known to have&#13;
physically abused their wives or&#13;
girl friends. The goal of the&#13;
program is to teach counselors&#13;
how to "deprogram" these men so&#13;
that wife/woman battery will be&#13;
eliminated from the couple's&#13;
relationship.&#13;
Faculty for the course include&#13;
Samuel D. Stellman, Professor of&#13;
Criminal Justice for the UWExtension&#13;
Criminal Justice Institute,&#13;
and Ralph A. Magnus,&#13;
A.C.S.W.&#13;
Registration will be accepted at&#13;
UW-Extension at Parkside. Call&#13;
Professor Kim Baugrud at 553-&#13;
2312. Fee for the all-day course is&#13;
$20.00.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
"National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO B ANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SONNE RS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F .D.I.C.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
'The Place To Buy Records'&#13;
^ 626 56th St. 654-2932 9&#13;
Rec Center&#13;
Winter Specials&#13;
Vi PRICE X-COUNTRY SKI RENTAL: M,W,F 1-2 pm&#13;
RED PIN BOWLING: 507GAME (M 9 am-noon F 3-6 pm)&#13;
BILLIARDS FOR A BUCK: $1.00 per HOUR M,W,F 1-2 pm&#13;
TABLE TENNIS: FREE M,W,F 1-2 pm &#13;
Thursday, January 22, 1981 RANGER&#13;
AOE series offers historical&#13;
theater piece with music&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
John Lennon&#13;
"Brahms and Clara," a fully&#13;
staged and costumed historical&#13;
theater piece with music featuring&#13;
Robert Guralnik as Johannes&#13;
Brahms and Sandra Jennings as&#13;
Clara Schumann, is the next offering&#13;
in the Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series at Parkside.&#13;
Curtain time is 8 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 29, in the Comm.&#13;
Arts Theater. Tickets are $7 a nd&#13;
are available at the Campus&#13;
Union Information Center (phone&#13;
553-2345). UW-P student tickets&#13;
are $4.&#13;
Written and directed by Harold&#13;
Guskin, "Brahms and Clara" tells&#13;
the poignant triangular love story&#13;
of the young Brahms, a self -&#13;
taught pianist who supported&#13;
himself by playing in brothels;&#13;
Robert Schumann, the immensely&#13;
talented composer who sank into&#13;
madness; and Clara Schumann,&#13;
the woman who gave up a&#13;
promising concert career to&#13;
marry Robert and, on his death,&#13;
continued her relationship with&#13;
Robert's protegee, Brahms.&#13;
Much of the dialogue in the&#13;
production is "imagined," but is&#13;
based on Guskin's extensive&#13;
research into the period and the&#13;
lives of the principals.&#13;
The music is an important part&#13;
of their story and includes&#13;
selections from the great song&#13;
cycles of Brahms and Robert&#13;
Schumann, piano works of Brahms&#13;
such as the G minor Rhapsody&#13;
and selections from his Intermezzi,&#13;
Cappriccios and&#13;
Ballades, as well as parts of&#13;
Robert Schumann's "Scenes from&#13;
Childhood" and Fantasy Pieces.&#13;
This is a return engagement for&#13;
Pianist Guralnik, whose 1979&#13;
WANTED:&#13;
PEOPLE&#13;
LOOKING FOR&#13;
ADVENTURE.&#13;
The Navy is looking for people&#13;
to work on submarines,&#13;
jets, and surface ships. Tbp&#13;
benefits. Career training.&#13;
Great future. For more information&#13;
see:&#13;
Rick Gallaher&#13;
(Old Market Square)&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140&#13;
Ph. 694-6994&#13;
show, "Chopin Lives," was&#13;
warmly received by Accent&#13;
audiences. A v eteran of C arnegie&#13;
Hall recitals and widely acclaimed&#13;
American and European&#13;
concert tours, Guralnik has&#13;
pioneered the concert / theater&#13;
form typified by "Brahms and&#13;
Clara" which combines great&#13;
music with dramatic dialogue to&#13;
create a new "double category" of&#13;
entertainment. This is his third&#13;
such collaboration with Guskin, a&#13;
New York director, who&#13;
previously worked with him to&#13;
create programs featuring Chopin&#13;
and Liszt.&#13;
Ms. Jennings also displays&#13;
multiple talents, as singer, actress&#13;
and author. She studied&#13;
voice and opera at Indiana&#13;
University's School of Music and&#13;
on graduation was awarded a&#13;
fellowship to sing with the Opera&#13;
Theater at the Philadelphia&#13;
Musical Academy. As a&#13;
professional actress, she has&#13;
appeared in leading roles off -&#13;
Broadway and has completed a&#13;
second play under a National&#13;
Endowment Grant for videotape&#13;
performance. She also has&#13;
completed a novel and composed&#13;
a number of a rt songs.&#13;
Guskin recently directed a new&#13;
jazz, poetry and dance piece,&#13;
"Life Dance of Is," performed at&#13;
the New York Shakespeare&#13;
Festival and the Lenox Art Center&#13;
and directed Ms. Jennings' play&#13;
"Beware of the Jubjub Bird" and&#13;
Brecht's "Jungle of Cities." He&#13;
directed the New York City Opera&#13;
Theatre production "Opera&#13;
Americana" and was associate&#13;
artistic director of opera at the&#13;
Philadelphia Musical Academy&#13;
before coming to New York. He&#13;
also has been on the faculties of&#13;
New York University and Illinois&#13;
Wesleyan University and has&#13;
written several screenplays.&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Where were you the day John&#13;
Lennon was supposedly shot and&#13;
killed by a slimy worm who&#13;
identified so closely with Lennon,&#13;
his idol, that he couldn't stand to&#13;
see Him suffer through the pain of&#13;
mortal existence another second?&#13;
Yes, it says "supposedly" in&#13;
that last paragraph. He's not&#13;
really dead, you know. He's&#13;
recording an album in Brooklyn.&#13;
It's called "Double Pharmacy."&#13;
There's going to be a movie,&#13;
maybe a couple of them: Pharmacies&#13;
I and II.&#13;
Yoko has already begun work on&#13;
the screenplay. Brian Eno and&#13;
Stevie Wonder and Paul McCartney&#13;
and Neil Young are&#13;
battling for the lead role. It's a&#13;
very multi - dimensional role.&#13;
Special effects are to be handled&#13;
by the entire "Star Wars" crew.&#13;
Filming will be on location in&#13;
Cambodia — w here "Apocolypse&#13;
Now" sets and props are waiting&#13;
for further use.&#13;
The movie is going to cost over&#13;
$500,000,000,000 to make.&#13;
Then there will be a book.&#13;
Lennon and Yoko are writing it&#13;
together. The first four chapters&#13;
have been distributed to major&#13;
literary minds all over the world.&#13;
In the first four chapters alone, it&#13;
has been said that "the entire&#13;
mind and soul of modern man and&#13;
woman, with all the inherent&#13;
human primal longings for peace&#13;
and conflicting urges toward&#13;
annihilation of the species is&#13;
contained in these 29 pages of&#13;
beautiful prose - poetry. It rivals&#13;
the Bible in scope, and the combined&#13;
works of e very great artist&#13;
known to humankind for depth."&#13;
Lennon says the central idea of&#13;
his latest endeavor is "the interaction&#13;
between two very&#13;
human, fragile people. It's about&#13;
their attempts to transcend&#13;
identity. And it's about chance,&#13;
too, you know? Which is mostly&#13;
what life is about."&#13;
Students prepare&#13;
dinner theatre&#13;
Parkside Players cordially&#13;
invites you to attend the first&#13;
annual dinner theatre party in the&#13;
cafeteria on January 23.&#13;
Cocktails will begin at 6 p.m.,&#13;
followed by a sit - down dinner at 7&#13;
p.m. You may select either the&#13;
turkey dinner or the sea - food&#13;
platter when you place your ticket&#13;
order.&#13;
For your entertainment,&#13;
Parkside Players will present&#13;
three segments of student&#13;
directed, student designed, and&#13;
student performed drama.&#13;
The first segment includes&#13;
Elaine May's charming rendition&#13;
of th e game of life, "Adaptation."&#13;
The second segment will consist of&#13;
four short Harold Pinter sketches&#13;
from the "Dwarfs." Finally, we&#13;
will bring you our production of&#13;
the notable Off - Broadway success,&#13;
"Next", by Terrence McNally.&#13;
&#13;
Tickets will be available at $8.00&#13;
per person from the Parkside&#13;
Union Information Center (553-&#13;
2345) today only. They ask that&#13;
you have the following information&#13;
available at the time of&#13;
purchase: One name under which&#13;
your party may be listed for&#13;
seating, the number of p ersons in&#13;
your party, and their choices of&#13;
turkey or sea-food platter. _ « mi RKy ui sea-iooa ]&#13;
Parsons' Project still creates classical rock&#13;
by Carol Klees&#13;
Classical rock bands are&#13;
becoming harder and harder to&#13;
find nowadays with the return of&#13;
more simplistic music as&#13;
evidenced by the popularity of&#13;
New Wave groups. The general&#13;
taste towards rock music slides&#13;
between the hard rock groups, the&#13;
rock balladeers, and the newer&#13;
slice as presented by talents as&#13;
diverse as Pat Benatar, Elvis&#13;
Costello and Gary Newman.&#13;
One of the extremely few groups&#13;
left creating classical - flavored&#13;
"'"/^University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
IYTONA BEACH&#13;
SPRING BREAK&#13;
'81&#13;
J / \J MARCH&#13;
/ y r 13-22&#13;
FtOR&#13;
rock music is the Alan Parsons'&#13;
Project. Their newest effort, "The&#13;
Turn of a Friendly Card," is a&#13;
smooth, classy album which&#13;
fluctuates between classical,&#13;
bluesy and ballad'ish.' It's&#13;
definitely APP in tonal flavor,&#13;
blending feelings which were&#13;
successful on earlier albums into&#13;
the sometimes - ethereal style of&#13;
music which is their trademark,&#13;
and yet easily succeeding in&#13;
avoiding the creation of a carbon -&#13;
copy of their earlier work. The&#13;
Project always manages to give a&#13;
fresh performance, and on&#13;
"Turn" they triumph.&#13;
After the free-for-all composition&#13;
of " Eve," Eric Woolfson&#13;
and Alan Parsons are back at the&#13;
reins, composing all eight tracks&#13;
so that every piece fits smoothly.&#13;
Each melody surges cleanly with&#13;
the next so that there are quiet&#13;
shallows and swift rapids. Alan&#13;
Parsons, who also produced and&#13;
engineered the album, knows how&#13;
to arrange the tracks extremely&#13;
well. The placement of a song on&#13;
an album is very important; it can&#13;
mean the difference between&#13;
monotony and excellence. This&#13;
quality is especially important on&#13;
classic - rock albums. The mixing&#13;
and placement must be clean,&#13;
fluid and masterfully handled, or&#13;
else it can turn out bad.&#13;
"The Turn of a Friendly Card"&#13;
never lags in the story it tells. Oh&#13;
yes. As usual, there is a theme&#13;
involved, and this time APP enters&#13;
the world of the gambler with&#13;
songs such as the pulsing, rhythmic&#13;
"Snake Eyes," the quiet&#13;
ballad "Nothing Left to Lose,"&#13;
and the title cut, where "There&#13;
are unsmiling faces in fetters and&#13;
chains/On a wheel of perpetual&#13;
motion/Who belong to all races&#13;
and answer all names/With no&#13;
show of an outward emotion."&#13;
"Turn" is a lyrical success for&#13;
the Project. The group has never&#13;
suffered backsliding other than&#13;
minimal lapses on "Pyramid"&#13;
and "Eve." Their style continues&#13;
to evolve, and hasn't yet suffered&#13;
from stagnation. Perhaps it is the&#13;
contact of all tracks conforming to&#13;
a central theme which is to account&#13;
for it. Still, a musical story&#13;
can die more easily than a conventional&#13;
hodgepodge album.&#13;
The Alan Parsons' Project has&#13;
come a long way from "Tales of&#13;
Mystery and Imagination." The&#13;
creative leaders, Parsons and&#13;
Woolfson, continue to create&#13;
beauty even when the message&#13;
they relate is bitter, as evidenced&#13;
by "Turn's" central statement:&#13;
— And they think it will make&#13;
their lives easier / But the doorway&#13;
before them is barred / And&#13;
FROM INCLUDES:&#13;
EA ^ #GREYHOUNDTYPE BUS&#13;
10®7NIGHTSLODGINGOCEANSIDEHOTEL Z&#13;
* MM • OPTIONAL POPULAR SIDETRTPS 1&#13;
FOR APPLICATION AND FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: S&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION. R OOM 209 553-2200 !&#13;
A&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha.&#13;
Elmwood Plaza Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kehosha for women's wear&#13;
^ r&#13;
the game never ends when&#13;
your whole world depends / On the&#13;
turn of a friendly card."&#13;
* * *&#13;
When I first listened to the&#13;
Photos' debut album I thought oh,&#13;
hell. I have to review that? I let it&#13;
sit and indulged in procrastination&#13;
until I realized the origin of&#13;
several of the tunes which kept&#13;
running through my head.&#13;
There's something quaint in the&#13;
lyrics and something just this side&#13;
of repetitious in the melodies.&#13;
They're good enough to be catchy,&#13;
if you listen several times. I really&#13;
don't know what the Photos were&#13;
shooting for (no pun intended).&#13;
Maybe they like silliness. "She's&#13;
So Attractive," for example,&#13;
sports such profound lyrical&#13;
passages as * "I could be a&#13;
covergirl / So demure and divine /&#13;
My clothes are so heavenly / Da&#13;
da da da da." You can't get much&#13;
worse than that.&#13;
Such silliness could be intended,&#13;
or at least I hope so. This also goes&#13;
for Wendy Wu's vocals. She does&#13;
Blondie's Debbie Harry's flat -&#13;
toned vocals one better by singing&#13;
flatly through her nose. The other&#13;
three band members create a&#13;
solid foundation for Wu's vocals,&#13;
and Wu's quirky voice lends&#13;
strange accents to the instrumentals.&#13;
&#13;
In most of the album's tracks,&#13;
the refrains are the liveliest&#13;
sections — t he verses, accept in&#13;
"Loss of Contact," "Irene," and&#13;
"All I Want" are rather sleepy&#13;
musically. "All I Want" is so&#13;
damned fast I thought someone&#13;
kicked the speed up on my turntable.&#13;
Here, Steve Eagles is&#13;
finally given the chance to let his&#13;
guitar sing. He's the best edge the&#13;
group has, and it's good to hear&#13;
him get in at least one solo riff.&#13;
The Photos are somewhat like&#13;
mold. They grow on you. &#13;
Member P arkside 2 00&#13;
Mentisa t his a d!&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phon* *54-0774&#13;
ALL M AJOR C REDIT C ARDS A CCEPTED&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, January 22,1981&#13;
®°™"'&#13;
ce X-mas hits not all worth the money&#13;
„ by Ke by Ken " Me Meyeyer r old Erands„n) . M&#13;
The Christmas season has&#13;
always been the biggest money -&#13;
making time of the year for the&#13;
movie industry, and this past&#13;
holiday season set a new record.&#13;
The top four box - office hits ("Stir&#13;
Crazy," "Any Which Way You&#13;
Can," "Popeye" and "9 to 5")&#13;
brought in a total of $142 million&#13;
by the first week of January.&#13;
All four films have some things&#13;
in common: all are comedies of&#13;
some sort and none of them are&#13;
completely successful. "Popeye"&#13;
and "9 to 5" are about three -&#13;
fourths successful while "Stir&#13;
Crazy" and "Any Which Way You&#13;
Can" are as bad as they are good.&#13;
"Popeye"&#13;
The best of the four, I feel, is&#13;
"Popeye," which has received&#13;
very mixed reactions. Many&#13;
people complain that there is too&#13;
much music and too little comedy&#13;
in this musical - comedy.&#13;
True, there are too many songs&#13;
and they are all forgettable, but it&#13;
is the originality of the film and&#13;
the people involved that make the&#13;
music less of an irritation.&#13;
Director Robert Altman&#13;
("M*A*S*H," "Nashville") is in&#13;
fine form, Robin Williams is&#13;
totally convincing as Popeye, and&#13;
Shelley Duvall found her ideal role&#13;
in Olive Oyl.&#13;
The film opens with Popeye the&#13;
sailor rowing into the port of&#13;
shantytown Sweethaven in search&#13;
of hi s pappy. It's hard at first to&#13;
understand Williams' muttering,&#13;
but one has to adapt to it, just like&#13;
one has to adjust to Sweethaven&#13;
and its residents. An entire&#13;
shantytown was constructed on&#13;
the Mediterranean island of Malta&#13;
for the movie. The town and its&#13;
people look like they are from a&#13;
cartoon, not in a silly way but in a&#13;
realistic way.&#13;
Popeye rents a room at Nana&#13;
Oyl's house and meets the constantly&#13;
complaining Olive Oyl,&#13;
who is engaged to the much -&#13;
feared Bluto. While Bluto destroys&#13;
the Oyl house waiting for Olive,&#13;
she and Popeye discover a baby&#13;
left in a basket. Popeye becomes&#13;
the baby's mother, as he says, and&#13;
calls him Swee'pea. "What you&#13;
want me to call him?" he asks&#13;
Olive. "Baby Oyl?"&#13;
The baby (Altman's one - year -&#13;
grandson) will win&#13;
SEW ^&#13;
r t&#13;
'&#13;
a n d A" ™-&#13;
uses the baby's cuteness extensively.&#13;
&#13;
The major distinction between&#13;
r. ?&#13;
nd the other three&#13;
Christmas hits is that "Popeye" is&#13;
T?e only one not to lose its&#13;
direction or momentum halfway&#13;
through the picture. The film&#13;
opens leisurely, showing the&#13;
unique people of Sweethaven and&#13;
then moves into Popeye's&#13;
relationship with Olive and&#13;
Swee pea. Bluto kidnaps&#13;
Swee pea so Popeye searches for&#13;
both his baby and pappy.&#13;
f:„K?&#13;
pey?L only Sets into three&#13;
fights m the movie, but the special&#13;
effects in each are well done&#13;
cartoon - style. One major change&#13;
is that Williams' Popeye hates&#13;
spinach, the source of his great&#13;
strength.&#13;
Put simply, "Popeye" brings&#13;
the cartoon to life, quite an accomplishment&#13;
considering the&#13;
unique characters. Sure it would&#13;
have been better without so much&#13;
music, but this adaptation is&#13;
entertaining because one gets the&#13;
feeling of being in a completely&#13;
different environment. The&#13;
cartoon characters seemed real&#13;
and the fun was just beginning&#13;
when the movie ended.&#13;
"9 to 5"&#13;
"9 to 5" is good overall, but not&#13;
as good as "Popeye" because the&#13;
story turns too ridiculous at about&#13;
the midway point.&#13;
The premise is promising: Lily&#13;
Tomlin, Dolly Parton and Jane&#13;
Fonda play three secretaries who&#13;
get fed up with their male&#13;
chauvinistic boss and want&#13;
to get even.&#13;
Each of them has a good reason.&#13;
Tomlin has repeatedly lost&#13;
promotions to less - deserving&#13;
men, Parton was shunned by her&#13;
co-workers because the boss&#13;
spread rumors that they were&#13;
having an affair, and Fonda's exhusband&#13;
left her after having an&#13;
affair with his secretary. And&#13;
besides, he's a man who deserves&#13;
to be hated.&#13;
The film reaches its highest&#13;
point (no pun intended) when the&#13;
ladies smoke a joint of Maui-Waui.&#13;
During all their giggling, they&#13;
each tell their fantasy of how to&#13;
kill the boss. Fonda's and Parton's&#13;
fantasies are good, but Tomlin's is&#13;
one of the best scenes, in the&#13;
movie. She becomes Snow White&#13;
and dispenses death with a happy&#13;
smile and song.&#13;
Tomlin's fantasy also marks the&#13;
point of whe n a good examination&#13;
of wo men in the work force turns&#13;
into a harmless, silly piece of fluff.&#13;
Tomlin accidentally puts rat&#13;
poison in the boss's coffee and&#13;
after a few mishaps, believes that&#13;
she really killed him. Tomlin&#13;
steals a body from the hospital&#13;
and speeds around the city, not&#13;
realizing she has the wrong&#13;
corpse. The ladies soon discover&#13;
the boss isn't dead, but he finds&#13;
out about the near - poisoning and&#13;
threatens to turn Tomlin in. So&#13;
they kidnap him until they find&#13;
evidence to blackmail him.&#13;
They finally find something —&#13;
but they have to wait six weeks for&#13;
the incriminating invoices to&#13;
arrive. The secretaries pretend&#13;
their boss is in his office working,&#13;
making changes as they see fit (an&#13;
in-house day care center, flexible&#13;
hours, job sharing and completely&#13;
refurnishing the office). What&#13;
started as a funny, biting look at&#13;
the working woman turns into a&#13;
lame - brained comedy with an&#13;
intricate kidnapping plot. It's not&#13;
a disaster, not by a long shot. It&#13;
just changes its focus in the&#13;
middle of the picture and takes the&#13;
easy way out.&#13;
The actresses are in fine form,&#13;
overall. Tomlin's quiet humor&#13;
steals many scenes, as does&#13;
Parton's screen charm. Fonda,&#13;
however, is lackluster in a&#13;
lackluster role.&#13;
The only problem lies in the&#13;
script. If "9 to 5" had continued&#13;
as it began, it would&#13;
have been a fruitful workday.&#13;
But here the filmmakers took&#13;
a lunchbreak and never came&#13;
back, or they had a liquid&#13;
lunch.&#13;
"Any Which Way&#13;
You Can"&#13;
"Any Which Way You Can" is&#13;
very easy to describe. Clint&#13;
Eastwood fights and Clyde, his&#13;
orangutan, monkeys around. If&#13;
that's your idea of a fun movie,&#13;
you'll love this sequel to "Every&#13;
Which Way But Loose," because&#13;
x YAM&#13;
WHAT&#13;
YAM&#13;
mm.&#13;
mm&#13;
that's all there is to it.&#13;
The bare plot has Eastwood&#13;
retired from his successful bare -&#13;
knuckled fighting career, but&#13;
some big thugs put up some big&#13;
money and persuade him to fight.&#13;
But he changes his mind so the&#13;
thugs kidnap his girlfriend to&#13;
persuade him again.&#13;
So he agrees to fight. The catch&#13;
is (there's always a catch) that&#13;
the man he is to fight is the same&#13;
man who owes his life to Eastwood&#13;
after cool Clint saved his life. But&#13;
then that favor was returned&#13;
during a bar fight, and&#13;
then.... .who really cares?&#13;
The only hit of the movie is&#13;
Clyde. The orangutan handles&#13;
Eastwood's finances, scraps cars,&#13;
drinks beer, punches people and&#13;
(everybody's favorite) leaves a&#13;
mess in every police car he&#13;
manages to sit in. The monkey is&#13;
the real second banana to Eastwood,&#13;
none of the other characters&#13;
are given as much screen time.&#13;
Clyde is a full - fledged character&#13;
who contributes to the film's&#13;
actions.&#13;
Need any more be said about the&#13;
film's actions?&#13;
"Stir Crazy"&#13;
The teaming of Gene Wilder and&#13;
Richard Pryor worked well in&#13;
"Silver Streak" and now they're&#13;
reunited in "Stir Crazy." The&#13;
same is true for both movies:&#13;
Richard Pryor is the only good&#13;
thing.&#13;
In "Stir Crazy" they are&#13;
mistakenly arrested for robbing a&#13;
bank and get sentenced to 125&#13;
years in prison. The prison&#13;
warden's pet project is a prison&#13;
rodeo, and he discovers that&#13;
Wilder can ride a bucking bronco&#13;
exceptionally well. The warden&#13;
tries to force Wilder into competing,&#13;
but Wilder holds out until&#13;
he gets what he wants — to be able&#13;
to bring his own crew. Why? So&#13;
they can escape, of c ourse.&#13;
That's where "Stir Crazy" loses&#13;
the little comic thrust it had&#13;
managed to pick up despite&#13;
Wilder's obnoxiousness overshadowing&#13;
Pryor's wonderful&#13;
underplaying. When the escape&#13;
plan is launched, the humor gets&#13;
away. The film doesn't even tiy to&#13;
be funny; the comedy that&#13;
everybody came to see becomes a&#13;
prison escape drama.&#13;
But the first half is what people&#13;
will remember because of P ryor.&#13;
He gets almost all the laughs&#13;
while Wilder repeatedly spouts off&#13;
about how people only need to be&#13;
talked to gently. This is the only&#13;
film in which I didn't care for a&#13;
Wilder performance, but this time&#13;
he was too much.&#13;
If an ything does, it's Pryor who&#13;
makes "Stir Crazy" worthwhile.&#13;
His task now is to find a comedy&#13;
suitable for his talents because&#13;
•"Stir Crazy" isn't it. It's a&#13;
schizophrenic film with a costar&#13;
and a prison escape that get in the&#13;
way of t he film's real funny man.&#13;
TRANSFERS&#13;
Photograph or Your Artwork&#13;
NO MINIMUM!&#13;
$2&#13;
00 each&#13;
CUSTOM LETTERING&#13;
ALSO AVAILABLE&#13;
Old Market Square&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd. &#13;
Thursday, January 22, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Students applaud surcharge withdrawal&#13;
Pr PrpessiHont H'Moil'c . . . ident O'Neil's decision to&#13;
withdraw a request for a second&#13;
$30 surcharge on University of&#13;
Wisconsin student tuition will&#13;
avoid the problem of harming&#13;
access to the U.W. system for the&#13;
students, but creates new&#13;
problems of determining where&#13;
the budget axe will fall, said Kim&#13;
Kachlemyer, President of United&#13;
Council, the statewide U.W.&#13;
student lobby.&#13;
"While it is certainly positive&#13;
that students' ability to afford an&#13;
education will not be $30 f urther&#13;
eroded next semester," said&#13;
Kachelmyer, "we fully realize&#13;
that this is a pyrhhic victory in&#13;
that it means the U.W. will have to&#13;
trim $3.75 million from some&#13;
portion of its budget."&#13;
The students are prepared to&#13;
assist the administration in&#13;
planning the necessary cuts, said&#13;
Kachelmyer. "In a sense, the&#13;
U.W. is going to be a laboratory&#13;
testing whether it is possible, as&#13;
Governor Dreyfus insists, to trim&#13;
spending without seriously harming&#13;
education. We don't believe&#13;
the Governor is correct, and we&#13;
see what will happen as the&#13;
Governor's policies backfiring on&#13;
him."&#13;
The students do not blame the&#13;
Regents or administration for&#13;
trying to avoid cutting spending,&#13;
said Kachelmyer, but do not&#13;
believe that another surcharge&#13;
would have been fair to the&#13;
students, who already accepted 20&#13;
percent of the burden of the&#13;
cutback with a first semester&#13;
surcharge. "We blame a&#13;
politically gutless state government&#13;
which found it politically&#13;
easy to give away $942 million in&#13;
tax revenue and now can't find $10&#13;
million to save its own university,"&#13;
said Kachelmyer.&#13;
The request for the second&#13;
surcharge was probably withdrawn&#13;
because it had become&#13;
increasingly evident that the&#13;
Legislatures Joint Finance&#13;
Committee, which would have had&#13;
to approve the expenditure of&#13;
another surcharge, was not likely&#13;
to do that. "Our lobbyist has&#13;
coordinated a low key campaign&#13;
against the surcharge in Joint&#13;
Finance," said Kachelmyer, "and&#13;
we feel a great deal of the&#13;
reasoning behind O'Neil's&#13;
reversal on the surcharge was the&#13;
realization that the votes on Joint&#13;
Finance weren't there. No one&#13;
wants to take the heat the Regents&#13;
would for adopting another surcharge&#13;
only to lose the whole thing&#13;
in the Legislature."&#13;
Students do believe the fiscal&#13;
Kidney Foundation rebuts rumor&#13;
There is no truth to the rumor&#13;
that collecting empty cigarette&#13;
packages, tea bag tags, yogurt&#13;
tops, universal price codes found&#13;
on frozen food packages or&#13;
anything of the sort can lead to the&#13;
purchase of dialysis equipment or&#13;
to pay for time on a dialysis&#13;
machine.&#13;
According to the National&#13;
Kidney Foundation, these rumors&#13;
have sprung up periodically&#13;
throughout the nation for the past&#13;
30 years. No one knows how the&#13;
rumors were started or how they&#13;
are perpetuated.&#13;
Persons interested in helping&#13;
the fight against kidney disease&#13;
should contact their local Kidney&#13;
Foundation or write to the&#13;
National Kidney Foundation, 2&#13;
Park Avenue, New York, New&#13;
York, 10016, for information.&#13;
There are many ways to help.&#13;
Unfortunately, collecting tea bag&#13;
tags is not one of them.&#13;
Group counseling programs offered here&#13;
Do you want help to develop&#13;
assertive skills? dating skills? To&#13;
overcome public speaking&#13;
anxiety? To overcome&#13;
depression? To overcome fear of&#13;
heights, snakes, water activities,&#13;
or some other specific nonsocial&#13;
fear?&#13;
Special group counseling&#13;
programs are being offered this&#13;
semester to Parkside students&#13;
(and other interested persons)&#13;
concerned with any of these&#13;
problems. The programs are&#13;
sponsored by professor of&#13;
psychology William Morrow and&#13;
| ACADEMY OF BATON &amp; DANCE&#13;
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Gymnastic Suits; Tights&#13;
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students in his class in Behavioral&#13;
Counseling. Students will conduct&#13;
the counseling under his supervision&#13;
as part of the course&#13;
requirements.&#13;
The programs will employ&#13;
structured counseling and&#13;
training procedures which have&#13;
been found in controlled outcome&#13;
studies to be relatively effective&#13;
for the particular problem. Each&#13;
program will involve about six to&#13;
eight scheduled counseling&#13;
sessions, plus homework activities.&#13;
&#13;
Sign-up cards to register for any&#13;
of these programs are available at&#13;
the following locations:&#13;
Behavioral Science Division&#13;
Office, Molinaro 275; Main Place&#13;
Information Kiosk; Union Information&#13;
Kiosk. Those interested&#13;
are asked to sign up by not later&#13;
than Friday, February 6.&#13;
problems of the U.W. are real and&#13;
serious. "We intend to pursue two&#13;
main avenues of involvement.&#13;
First, we will insist on having a&#13;
voice in the determination of what&#13;
services and programs are cut.&#13;
Second, we will further intensify&#13;
our campaign to persuade the&#13;
Legislature to help out the U.W. in&#13;
January when it meets to review&#13;
Dreyfus' cutback order, and the&#13;
regular session debate over the&#13;
biennial budget. We've seen the&#13;
U.W. lose more than $140 per&#13;
student in real dollar funding&#13;
since 1972, and we're determined&#13;
to reverse that trend."&#13;
Arguing that the U.W. is not to&#13;
blame for state tax problems,&#13;
Kachelmyer pointed out that the&#13;
U.W. has added only 100 positions&#13;
since 1972 while the rest of state&#13;
government has added more than&#13;
5,000 p ositions. U.W. funding has&#13;
climbed by about 60 percent since&#13;
1972 while other state spending&#13;
has climbed by 153 percent. The&#13;
U.W. spent 1.32 percent of&#13;
Wisconsin personal income in&#13;
1970; today, it spends barely more&#13;
than one percent.&#13;
"Students will fight to maintain&#13;
education as a right for all people&#13;
in the state, and a major element&#13;
of that battle will be fighting for&#13;
more state money next year."&#13;
Soviet trip offered&#13;
Parkside will sponsor a 15 - day&#13;
trip to the Soviet Union in March.&#13;
The trip will include guided tours&#13;
of Moscow, Leningrad and Tallin,&#13;
visits to state farms, schools,&#13;
factories and museums and an&#13;
evening at the Bolshoi ballet.&#13;
The trip is being offered in&#13;
conjunction with a series of lectures&#13;
by UW - Parkside faculty on&#13;
Soviet history, economics,&#13;
culture, politics and philosophy.&#13;
The lecture series and trip can be&#13;
taken for 1 to 3 credits or on a&#13;
noncredit audit basis.&#13;
Cost of the trip including&#13;
transportation, meals, lodging&#13;
and registration for one credit is&#13;
$1,345. Registration deadline is&#13;
Jan. 30. Additional information is&#13;
available from Prof. Daniel&#13;
McGovern at 553-2316 or 637-8402.&#13;
Prof. McGovern, who will lead&#13;
the Parkside group, said they will&#13;
join students from ll other UW&#13;
campuses on the tour March 8 to&#13;
23. Twelve UW - P students participated&#13;
in a similar tour last&#13;
year. McGovern said participants&#13;
will stay at the best Soviet hotels,&#13;
eat authentic Russian food and&#13;
visit English - speaking students&#13;
at Soviet friendship houses.&#13;
New nurse on campus&#13;
Nancy Kachel Wild recently&#13;
joined the staff at the Campus&#13;
Health Office.&#13;
Nan is originally from Minneapolis,&#13;
Minnesota, attended&#13;
Augustana College in Sioux Falls,&#13;
South Dakota from 1970 to 1974,&#13;
and graduated with a Bachelor of&#13;
Science in nursing. She first&#13;
practiced as a Medical - Surgical&#13;
staff nurse at Lutheran Deaconess&#13;
Hospital in Minneapolis. In 1975,&#13;
she became a public health nurse&#13;
in the Twin Cities, making home&#13;
visits and working on a research&#13;
project in child abuse prevention.&#13;
In 1978, she moved to Anchorage,&#13;
Alaska, and worked in physical&#13;
rehabilitation.&#13;
Uttech's art displayed here&#13;
and&#13;
by&#13;
An exhibition of oil&#13;
watercolor paintings&#13;
Milwaukee artist Tom Uttech will&#13;
be on display in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery from&#13;
Jan. 14 through Feb. 10. The one -&#13;
man show will consist mainly of&#13;
figurative landscapes inspired by&#13;
the northern Wisconsin wilderness&#13;
and treated in a unique symbolic -&#13;
visionary stylistic approach.&#13;
Uttech is an associate professor&#13;
of art at UW - Milwaukee, where&#13;
he has taught since 1969. He&#13;
received his Master of Fine Arts&#13;
degree in painting from the&#13;
University of Cincinnati in 1967.&#13;
During his career Uttech has&#13;
exhibited in many major juried&#13;
and invitational shows throughout&#13;
the mid - west and the nation,&#13;
including the Whitney Museum&#13;
Biennial in New York City and the&#13;
Chicago &amp; Vicinty Show at the&#13;
Chicago Art Institute, both in 1975.&#13;
In 1977 he was featured in a major&#13;
two - man show, with artist&#13;
Jerome Krause, at the Milwaukee&#13;
Art Center. He recently received a&#13;
grant from the Wisconsin Arts&#13;
Board to pursue his painting and&#13;
photography of the landscape&#13;
theme.&#13;
Regular gallery hours at the&#13;
Communications Arts Gallery are&#13;
Monday through Thursday from&#13;
12:30 to 5:30 p. m. and Tuesday&#13;
and Wednesday from 7 to 10 p. m&#13;
In conjunction with the&#13;
exhibition, a free public slide -&#13;
lecture will be presented by the&#13;
artist on Tuesday, Jan. 27, at 4 p.&#13;
m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Building.&#13;
Nominate students for award&#13;
Parkside students have been&#13;
nominated as Truman Scholars&#13;
under the Harry S. Truman&#13;
S c h o l a r s h i p F o u n d a t i on&#13;
established by Congress in 1974 to&#13;
honor the 33rd U. S. President and&#13;
encourage young people to&#13;
prepare for careers in public&#13;
service.&#13;
The nominees are Shelly Zavala&#13;
and Brian Ebener, both of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The foundation awards one&#13;
scholarship per state each&#13;
academic year on the basis of&#13;
merit as shown by academic&#13;
performance and potential for a&#13;
career in public service. Students&#13;
are nominated by their faculty.&#13;
Awards are made to college&#13;
juniors and may be renewed for&#13;
up to four years, through a&#13;
master's degree program. Names&#13;
of scholarship winners will be&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
ANYONE picking on Jeff Manian will be&#13;
exterminated. The Joker&#13;
MARY! Be nice to your brother for a change.&#13;
Me&#13;
RORY SPEARS is a woosy. M.E.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1980 SUZUKI S50L black, very clean. Call 553&#13;
9262 a fter 4 p . m.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
A G ENETICS TEXT BOOK by Jenkins, used&#13;
spring 1980 — 654-7598.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
EARN UP TO $1000 or more for a&#13;
evenings work. No selling. Just&#13;
posters on your campus advertising our&#13;
half price tours of Europe. For details,&#13;
write: TRAVEL STUDY INTERNATIONAL,&#13;
2030 East 4800 South,&#13;
Suite 101, Salt Lake City, UT 84117&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED: To assist group&#13;
home Staff in providing tutoring and&#13;
recreational services for adolescents.&#13;
Schedule is flexible, five hours per week&#13;
and mileage reimbursment. Some college&#13;
background In human service field or&#13;
education. Training in group home model&#13;
w.li be provided. Contact Michael Angeli,&#13;
657-7188.&#13;
few&#13;
hang&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
r~&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads —&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30$ will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words &lt;&#13;
or less.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE.&#13;
Any registered UW-P student or student organization is qualified&#13;
to insert a classified line ad in the Ranger at no cost if under or&#13;
equivalent to 10 words. (Phone numbers equal 1 word.)&#13;
Classification:&#13;
Name&#13;
SS No.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
WLLC D139&#13;
nietUs&#13;
CAN&#13;
YburGift&#13;
Birthday&#13;
I ivr&#13;
Transfer&#13;
Fashions&#13;
Old Market Square&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd. &#13;
Coming Events&#13;
are available at the Union Information CeJtPr RS W®dmissio—n Price. —Tickets -&#13;
MOVIE "Kramer vs. Kramer" wSMEt ®{&gt;^&#13;
180re&#13;
^&#13;
d by the Parkside Players.&#13;
at the Coor U a&#13;
MOVIE "Kramer vs. Kramer" «• , will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
VIDEO TAPES "Football Follies"wffl h^S" ** * ,&#13;
miSSi0h iS free tor Par^e K£35®£&#13;
- ext. *3. tor&#13;
==frSt"SS • — aot a&#13;
=&#13;
e&#13;
«St'ST&amp;V&#13;
and the&#13;
RANGER Thursday, January 22, 1981&#13;
Photo by Brian Passino&#13;
Women win&#13;
tournament&#13;
Parkside's women's basketball&#13;
team took its own tournament&#13;
here last weekend with wins over&#13;
St. Xavier 76-67, and Milton&#13;
College 73-65 in the championship&#13;
game.&#13;
Parkside beat an outmanned St.&#13;
Xavier squad Friday night with a&#13;
balanced scoring attack and good&#13;
shooting. Freshman Robin&#13;
Henschal led all scorers with 17&#13;
points followed by five women&#13;
with eight points a piece; Cindy&#13;
Ruffert, Julie Leszczynski,&#13;
Jeanne Hintz, Debbie Lopez and&#13;
Laurie Pope. Parkside shot 49 per&#13;
cent from the field compared to 43&#13;
per cent for St. Xavier.&#13;
In the championship game&#13;
Parkside used its height advantage,&#13;
along with a little help&#13;
from Milton's coach in the form of&#13;
three technical fouls, to win the&#13;
tourney.&#13;
Parkside led the entire way and&#13;
again outshot their opponents&#13;
from the field 40 to 31 per cent.&#13;
The Rangers totally outclassed&#13;
their opponents on the boards,&#13;
taking a 45-23 rebounding edge.&#13;
The big difference came on&#13;
Milton's offensive rebounds.&#13;
Milton managed just one offensive&#13;
rebound while the Rangers pulled&#13;
down 32 defensive rebounds, led&#13;
by Laurie Pope's nine and 14&#13;
overall. She also led the team with&#13;
26 po ints and four blocked shots.&#13;
Parkside, now 4-7, will host UW -&#13;
Green Bay Saturday afternoon at&#13;
1:30 and Marquette Tuesday night&#13;
at 7 p. m.&#13;
C&amp;R AUTO SERVICE&#13;
Quality Auto Work&#13;
Done At&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
10% OFF FOR&#13;
UW-P STUDENTS&#13;
Call 553-9092or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00&#13;
Wrestlers compete over break&#13;
by Dan McCormack&#13;
The UW-P wrestling team was&#13;
active in two tournaments over&#13;
semester break. The first was on&#13;
Jan. 10th at Carthage and the&#13;
second took place this past&#13;
weekend at the Midwest Classic,&#13;
Anderson, Ind.&#13;
At Carthage, the Ranger&#13;
matmen piaced first with nine&#13;
place - winners. Dan Winter,&#13;
undefeated at 134, placed first&#13;
along with Bob Pekarske at 158&#13;
and Freshman Brian Irek who&#13;
won the 177 weight class with&#13;
three pins. Placing second were&#13;
Dean Quam at 118, Tom Vania at&#13;
126 and Kevin Casper at 142.&#13;
Placing third were Ron Perron at&#13;
150, Rus Drankiewicz at 167 an d&#13;
Paul Roth at HWT.&#13;
Last weekend, in the twenty&#13;
team Midwest Classic, the&#13;
Rangers placed fourth. Bob&#13;
Pekarske was the Rangers only&#13;
champion with Dan Winter losing&#13;
his first match of the season in&#13;
overtime, placing second. Dean&#13;
Quam, who lost his semi - final&#13;
match in overtime came back to&#13;
win third place. Mike&#13;
Muckerheide -158 and Paul Roth&#13;
both placed fourth.&#13;
The UW-Parkside matmen&#13;
meet UW-LaCrosse&#13;
here, Friday at 4 p.m.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
r^KSIDE assistant coach Bob Gruner pins opponent in finals&#13;
winte^bSak&#13;
Sm e9&#13;
'&#13;
ate wre&#13;
stling tournament held over&#13;
Mudwrestling takes hold&#13;
Colleges and universities&#13;
usually attract the best in cultural&#13;
events — concerts, speakers, rock&#13;
stars, road shows, mud wrestling.&#13;
Mud wrestling?&#13;
That's right, the new entertainment&#13;
craze that's showing&#13;
up in bars from coast to coast is&#13;
now coming to campuses as well.&#13;
Regency Artists is beginning a&#13;
national tour of a mud wrestling&#13;
show with a few test dates in&#13;
November and a limited tour this&#13;
winter. By next year, says&#13;
Regency's David Snyder, the&#13;
show will be going coast to coast.&#13;
Snyder is quick to point out that&#13;
the only thing the Regency show&#13;
has in common with what's seen in&#13;
bars is the mud. "The bar show is&#13;
a real sexist thing —you've got a&#13;
bunch of sc antily dressed women&#13;
jumping around in the mud while&#13;
the men watch," says Snyder.&#13;
"Ours will be more like pro&#13;
wrestling." That means bringing&#13;
"celebrity" mud wrestlers on the&#13;
tour, letting both men and women&#13;
wrestle and using some real&#13;
wrestling technique.&#13;
On each campus, fraternities,&#13;
sororities and other groups will be&#13;
encouraged to challenge each&#13;
other, with the winners facing the&#13;
"celebrity wrestlers." The shov&#13;
comes complete with music&#13;
costumes and more, he promises&#13;
"It'll be sheer buffoonery, pie-in&#13;
the-face stuff."&#13;
Thus far, a direct mai!&#13;
promotion has produced "mostlj&#13;
total shock," says Snyder. "II&#13;
ranges from people laughing sc&#13;
hard they can't talk to those whc&#13;
call me up and say it's the mosl&#13;
obscene thing they've evei&#13;
heard." One women's college sem&#13;
the material back unopened, says&#13;
Snyder, although he later admits,&#13;
"That was probably because it&#13;
was addressed wrong."&#13;
Ranger needs sports writers&#13;
Inquire at Ranger office&#13;
WLLC D 139&#13;
(Next to Coffee Shoppe)&#13;
Rati Centex&#13;
Bottling Special's&#13;
MmMk Ming: Sat, 8 pm-Midnite&#13;
Cash prizes awarded&#13;
% bow&amp;wj: M, 9 am-Noon&#13;
Fri, 3 pm-6 pm&#13;
towftwj: Sat, 1-6 pm, Sun, 1-6 pm&#13;
all yo u can bowl $3.00/hr.&#13;
Hcb Fwc-Bcui£! &#13;
8 Thursday, January 22,1981 RANGER&#13;
Rangers improve on worst season start ever&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
at Kansas State, Dec. 13&#13;
The Parkside men's basketball&#13;
team lost it's seventh straight&#13;
game that Saturday to Kansas&#13;
State 72-58 for the worst start in&#13;
the team's 12 year history.&#13;
The Rangers led the Wildcats&#13;
27-24 with just over five minutes&#13;
left in the first half before the Big&#13;
Eight conference favorite took&#13;
over for good.&#13;
Parkside trailed only 36-31 at&#13;
half time, but couldn't stay with&#13;
their major college foes, who&#13;
outscored Parkside 8-2 in the&#13;
opening 7-1/2 minutes of the&#13;
second half. Curtis Green led the&#13;
Rangers with 19 points and freshman&#13;
guard Chucky Perry added&#13;
17. Ed Nealy led Kansas State&#13;
with 16 points and 17 rebounds,&#13;
vs UW-Milwaukee, Dec 15&#13;
The Rangers finally got that&#13;
much needed and deserved first&#13;
win of the year by outclassing&#13;
Milwaukee 83-67 at home.&#13;
Parkside jumped out to a huge&#13;
27-6 lead midway through the first&#13;
half and utilized its quickness,&#13;
both on offense and defense, to&#13;
maintain that margin for a 42-22&#13;
halftime lead.&#13;
The Panthers outscored&#13;
Parkside 45-41 in the second half&#13;
as coach Steve Stephens used his&#13;
bench at will. Milwaukee couldn't&#13;
outrun the somewhat tired&#13;
Rangers to overcome such a large&#13;
deficit.&#13;
Senior forward Reggie Anderson&#13;
led the Rangers in scoring&#13;
with 19 points and Chucky Perry&#13;
added 18. Perry also had seven&#13;
steals, five of which he turned into&#13;
baskets. Curtis Green added 13&#13;
points and reserve John Herndon&#13;
added 12. Ricky Trotter of UW-M&#13;
led all scorers with 20 p oints.&#13;
Ranger Classic, Dec 29-30&#13;
First round&#13;
The Rangers began their fourth&#13;
annual Ranger Classic by beating&#13;
Kenosha rival Carthage College&#13;
80-62 in the second game of the&#13;
first round. Ouachita Baptist of&#13;
Arkansas beat Minnesota - Duluth&#13;
69-58 in the opening game.&#13;
Parkside jumped on Carthage&#13;
quickly to gain a 10-0 lead in the&#13;
opening three minutes. The&#13;
Redmen called a timeout and&#13;
settled down to cut the Ranger&#13;
lead to 18-11. The Rangers then&#13;
went to their inside game to&#13;
maintain a 36-30 h alftime lead.&#13;
At the start of the second half&#13;
the Rangers pulled away to a 49-32&#13;
lead that they never relinquished.&#13;
Center - forward Curtis Green&#13;
led all scorers with 19 points while&#13;
Reggie Anderson and guard&#13;
Walter Greene added 18 each.&#13;
Gordie Zastrow led Carthage with&#13;
18 points.&#13;
Second round&#13;
Parkside won its fourth successive&#13;
Ranger Classic with a 76-&#13;
58 win over Ouachita Baptist in&#13;
the championship game.&#13;
Ouachita kept pace with a&#13;
healthy Ranger club in the first&#13;
eleven minutes of the game to stay&#13;
tied at 19. The Rangers then&#13;
switched to their tough zone&#13;
defense to shut down Ouachita's&#13;
quick guard Willie Hall and forward&#13;
Terry Woods and take a 38-&#13;
26 lea d.&#13;
Ranger coach Stephens used his&#13;
bench in the second half to outlast&#13;
Ouachita, whose players were in&#13;
constant foul trouble the entire&#13;
second half.&#13;
Reggie Anderson paced the&#13;
Rangers in scoring with 18 points,&#13;
Walter Greene added 14 and&#13;
Curtis Green scored 10 points and&#13;
grabbed six rebounds. John&#13;
Herndon came off the bench again&#13;
for a fine performance with eight&#13;
points and seven rebounds.&#13;
Wilbert 'Buster' Webb, playing in&#13;
only his second game for the&#13;
Rangers, added eight points and&#13;
four rebounds.&#13;
The last-second shot for&#13;
Parkside typified the whole&#13;
tourney, as Bobby Burns gunned&#13;
in a 35-footer with one second left.&#13;
Parkside dominated the all -&#13;
tournament team placing Walter&#13;
Greene, Curtis Green and most&#13;
valuable player Reggie Anderson.&#13;
Willie Hall of Ouachita Baptist,&#13;
Chris Neumann of Minnesota -&#13;
Duluth and Gordie Zastrow of&#13;
Carthage rounded out the team,&#13;
vs UW-Green Bay, Jan 3&#13;
The Rangers ran their winning&#13;
streak to four games with a tough&#13;
74-66 win over a strong Green Bay&#13;
team. The Phoenix recently took&#13;
the Wisconsin Badgers into two&#13;
overtimes before losing by a&#13;
basket.&#13;
Parkside dominated the game&#13;
throughout most of the first half&#13;
until Green Bay took the lead at&#13;
33-31 with less than a minute to&#13;
play in the half. Parkside tied the&#13;
score at 35 just before the intermission.&#13;
&#13;
The lead seesawed back and&#13;
forth throughout most of the&#13;
second half until Green Bay got&#13;
into foul trouble. Parkside's final&#13;
10 points came on the foul line to&#13;
put the game away.&#13;
Parkside forward Arthur Bright&#13;
had possibly his best game as a&#13;
Ranger by leading the team with&#13;
19 points and eight rebounds.&#13;
Walter Greene added 16 points&#13;
and Curtis Green 13. Green Bay's&#13;
6-8 center Nathan Barnes took&#13;
game honors in both scoring, with&#13;
21 points, and rebounds, with 12.&#13;
at Iowa State, Jan 5&#13;
Parkside started their third&#13;
major college road trip of the&#13;
season by throwing a scare into&#13;
Iowa State before yielding 67-58.&#13;
The Rangers held the lead&#13;
throughout most of the game&#13;
behind hot shooting from freshman&#13;
star Chucky Perry and All -&#13;
American Reggie Anderson. The&#13;
Rangers led 25-21 at the half.&#13;
Iowa State too^ it's first lead of&#13;
the game midway through the&#13;
second half at 40-39, but the&#13;
Rangers came back to lead 47-42&#13;
with 9:24 left to play. Iowa State&#13;
then went on a 12-4 scoring binge&#13;
to take the lead and the game over&#13;
for good.&#13;
Parkside's downfall was the&#13;
poor shooting of Walter Greene&#13;
and Curtis Green, who between&#13;
them scored just seven points.&#13;
Chucky Perry led the Rangers&#13;
with 20 points and Reggie Anderson&#13;
had 18.&#13;
Ron Harris of Iow a " ate led all&#13;
scorers with 21 points along with&#13;
10 r ebounds,&#13;
at Colorado, Jan 7&#13;
Parkside played its worst game&#13;
of the season that Wednesday&#13;
night as they were totally outclassed&#13;
by Colorado 91-51.&#13;
The Rangers shot a horrid 31&#13;
percent from the field compared&#13;
to 50 p ercent for Colorado. Coach&#13;
Stephens said that it lr ked like&#13;
his team "had their feei nailed to&#13;
the floor."&#13;
Parkside trailed 44-21 t halftime&#13;
and was never in the game.&#13;
None of the Rangers scored more&#13;
than eight points, while Wilbert&#13;
Webb led all rebounders with 11.&#13;
at Cal State - Fullerton, Jan 10&#13;
The Rangers first victory over a&#13;
major college opponent this&#13;
season came mainly from the hot&#13;
shooting of senior guard Walter&#13;
Greene, who led all scorers with a&#13;
season high 25 points.&#13;
The lead went back and forth&#13;
between the two teams all&#13;
throughout regulation play. The&#13;
score was tied at the end of the&#13;
first half 22-22 and again at the end&#13;
of the second half 54-54. Buster&#13;
Webb scored on a free throw to tie&#13;
the game with six seconds left on&#13;
the clock. He could have sealed&#13;
the victory but missed the second&#13;
free throw and sent the game into&#13;
overtime.&#13;
The Rangers scored 11 of their&#13;
15 overtime points from the free&#13;
throw line to take a 69-61 win.&#13;
Along with Greene's 25 points,&#13;
Reggie Anderson had 16 and&#13;
Chucky Perry 12. Center Dave&#13;
Wear led Fullerton with 19 points&#13;
and 10 rebounds,&#13;
at Hawaii - Hilo, Jan 13-14&#13;
The Rangers ended their west&#13;
coast road trip with back - to -&#13;
back games in the harsh climate&#13;
of Ha waii. The tough opponent on&#13;
this, the teams first ever trip to&#13;
the islands, was NAIA power&#13;
Hawaii - Hilo, which at the time&#13;
was ranked in the top 20 in the&#13;
NAIA with a record of 12-3.&#13;
The first game was well played&#13;
with the score close all the way.&#13;
Hilo led 38-35 at the half and beat&#13;
the Rangers by that same margin&#13;
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
PARKSIDE'S Curtis 'Tree' Green goes up for a rebound over&#13;
Ouchita Baptist's Charles Dilworth in the championship game of&#13;
the Fourth Annual Ranger Classic basketball tournament.&#13;
74-71. The Rangers lost the game&#13;
at the free throw line, where they&#13;
were outscored 18-7.&#13;
Parkside was led by Chucky&#13;
Perry with 17 points and a Ranger&#13;
season high 10 assists. Reggie&#13;
Anderson added 16 points. Ia&#13;
Saipaia led all scorers for Hilo&#13;
with 24 po ints.&#13;
The second game wasn't nearly&#13;
as close as Hilo outgunned&#13;
Parkside 8(F68. T he Rangers got&#13;
into foul trouble in this game, as&#13;
their whole starting front line,&#13;
Anderson, Webb and Green fouled&#13;
out.&#13;
Parkside was tired and couldn't&#13;
keep up with the hot shooting Hilo&#13;
team. Parkside trailed 36-30 at&#13;
halftime.&#13;
Anderson led Parkside with 16&#13;
points while Walter Greene added&#13;
14. Ia Saipaia again led all scorers&#13;
with 20 points.&#13;
The Rangers ended up the break&#13;
with a 5-11 record, not a bad start&#13;
considering the caliber of teams&#13;
Parkside has played thus far. /&#13;
"instant justice" for rowdy fans&#13;
Rowdy football fans at Clemson&#13;
University don't have to fear&#13;
being taken across town to jail if&#13;
picked up by police. Thanks to an&#13;
"instant justice" court set up&#13;
during games in a building right&#13;
Awards announced at Fall Sports Banquet&#13;
Most valuable nlavers rantains PlwoknfK i : i„ rr„n r^._&#13;
next to the stadium, those picked&#13;
up for drunken or disorderly&#13;
behavior can appear before a&#13;
magistrate, have bond set, pay it&#13;
and return to the game without&#13;
missing many of the big plays.&#13;
Most valuable players, captains&#13;
and letterwinners from UWParkside&#13;
fall sports teams were&#13;
honored December 10, 1980 at the&#13;
annual fall sports awards banquet&#13;
at the Parkside Union.&#13;
Most valuables included NAIA&#13;
national champion Wendy Burman,&#13;
a sophomore from Fond&#13;
du Lac (Gaxirich), for women's&#13;
cross-country; Paul Cannestra,&#13;
a junior from Milwaukee (Messmer),&#13;
for men's cross-country;&#13;
Todd Schalinske, a junior from&#13;
Racine (Horlick) for men's golf;&#13;
Mike Kiefer, a senior from&#13;
Cudahy, for men's soccer ; Kathy&#13;
Thomas, a senior from Kenosha&#13;
(Bradford) for women's tennis;&#13;
and Terri Rieser, a senior from&#13;
Wauwatosa (West), for women's&#13;
volleyball.&#13;
Captains honored at the banquet&#13;
were Cannestra and Dave&#13;
Mueller, a junior from New Berlin&#13;
(West Allis Hale), for men's crosscountry;&#13;
Burman for women's&#13;
cross - country; Brian Graham, a&#13;
junior from Racine (Horlick), for&#13;
men's golf; Kiefer for soccer;&#13;
Thomas for women's tennis; and&#13;
Elizabeth Venci and Linda Zeihen,&#13;
both seniors from Kenosha&#13;
(Bradford), for women's&#13;
volleyball.&#13;
Mark Peterson, a sophomore&#13;
from Oak Creek, was named 1981&#13;
men's golf captain while three&#13;
players will captain the soccer&#13;
squad. They are Racine&#13;
(Lutheran) sophomore Alan&#13;
Gibson, St. Paul, Minn. (Hill -&#13;
Murray) sophomore John McNulty&#13;
and Minneapolis (Robbindale)&#13;
sophomore Bob&#13;
Newstrom.&#13;
Awards for "most improved"&#13;
went to Kimberly freshman Jeff&#13;
Bolwerk for men's soccer and to&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper) freshman A1&#13;
Correa for men's cross - country.&#13;
Letterwinners, by sport, follow:&#13;
Men's Cross - Country&#13;
Tom Barrett, freshman,'&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper); Steve&#13;
Brunner, freshman, Kenosha (St.&#13;
Joseph); Paul Cannestra, junior,&#13;
Milwaukee (Messmer); A1&#13;
Correa, freshman, Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper); Dave Mueller, junior,&#13;
New Berlin (West Allis Hale);&#13;
Dan Stublaski, freshman, Racine&#13;
(Park).&#13;
Women's Cross - Country&#13;
Kelli Benzow, freshman, Racine&#13;
(Case); Wendy Burman,&#13;
sophomore, Fond du Lac&#13;
(Goodrich); JoAnne Carey, freshman,&#13;
Racine (Case); Dona&#13;
Driscoll, sophomore, Muskego;&#13;
Linda Pfeilstifter, freshman,&#13;
Racine (Case); and Sandra&#13;
Venne, freshman, Racine&#13;
(Horlick).&#13;
Men's Golf&#13;
Brian Graham, junior, Racine&#13;
(Horlick); Jeff MuzertSki, freshman,&#13;
Racine (Horlick); Mark&#13;
Peterson, sophomore, Oak Creek:&#13;
Mike Redfearn, senior, Racine&#13;
(Green Bay West); Todd&#13;
Schalinske, junior, Racine&#13;
(Horlick); John Schneider, freshman,&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper).&#13;
Men's Soccer&#13;
John Bieser, freshman,&#13;
Wauwatosa (West); Jeff Bolwerk,&#13;
freshman, Kimberly; Don Cops,&#13;
freshman, Appleton (Xavier);&#13;
Jim Cops, freshman, Kimberly;&#13;
Ralph DeGraff, freshman,&#13;
Chicago, 111. (Qui gley South); Jeff&#13;
Dennehy, freshman, Minneapolis,&#13;
Minn. (Irondale); Brad Faust,&#13;
sophomore, White Bear Lake,&#13;
Minn. (Mariner); Scott Gerhartz,&#13;
freshman, Kimberly; Alan&#13;
Gibson, sophomore, Racine&#13;
(Lutheran); Mike Kiefer, senior,&#13;
Cudahy; Jeff King, freshman,&#13;
Kimberly; Ignacio Marchena,&#13;
freshman, Panama (Subiaco&#13;
Academy, Art.); John McNulty,&#13;
sophomore, St. Paul, Minn. (Hill -&#13;
Murray); Jeff Medin, freshman,&#13;
New Brighton, Minn. (Mounds&#13;
View); John Monks, freshman,&#13;
Chicago, 111. (Qui gley South); Bob&#13;
Newstrom, sophomore, Minneapolis,&#13;
Minn. (Robbinsdale);&#13;
Chiedu Okomah, freshman,&#13;
Chicago, 111. (Quigley South); Dan&#13;
Opferman, freshman, Chicago,&#13;
111. (Quigley South); Dave Schwartz,&#13;
freshman, Kenosha&#13;
(Shoreland Lutheran); Todd&#13;
Wenslaff, sophomore Milwaukee&#13;
(Juneau); Paul Wieland, freshman,&#13;
Milwaukee (Tech).&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
Laura Bianco, junior, Kenosha&#13;
(St. Joseph); Laura Bleashka,&#13;
sophomore, Kenosha (Bradford);&#13;
Nancy Kivi, junior, Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper); Lisa Lindsay, freshman,&#13;
Racine (Horlick); Emily&#13;
Modiz, senior, Albert Lea, Minn.&#13;
(Central); Pam Sumi,&#13;
sophomore, Racine (Horlick);&#13;
Kathy Thomas, senior, Kenosha&#13;
(Bradford).&#13;
Women's Volleyball&#13;
Terri Bieser, senior,&#13;
Wauwatosa (West); Chris&#13;
Dament, freshman, Racine (St.&#13;
Catherine's); Sally Heiring,&#13;
freshman, Kenosha (Bradford);&#13;
Robin Henschel, freshman,&#13;
Hartland (Arrowhead); Laurie&#13;
Hess, freshman, Neenah; Jeanne&#13;
Jacobs, freshman, Milwaukee (St.&#13;
Mary's Academy); Callie Lee,&#13;
freshman, Sterling, 111.; Roxanne&#13;
Nelson, senior, West Allis (Hale) ;&#13;
Laurie Pope, sophomore, Omro;&#13;
Jane Prissel, freshman, Durand;&#13;
Paula Sandahl, freshman,&#13;
Waukegan, 111. (East); Elizabeth&#13;
Venci, senior, Kenosha (Bradford);&#13;
Linda Zeihen, senior,&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford). </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 9, issue 15, January 22, 1981</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;
3519 52nd STREET&#13;
KENOSHA, Wl 53142&#13;
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;
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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, 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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          <element elementId="41">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69860">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="40">
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          <element elementId="49">
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            <elementTextContainer>
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              <elementText elementTextId="69865">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="69866">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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          <element elementId="42">
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            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="69867">
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          <element elementId="44">
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            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69868">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
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              <elementText elementTextId="69869">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          </element>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="69872">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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      <tag tagId="1392">
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      </tag>
      <tag tagId="4533">
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      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1383">
        <name>teaching excellence award</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1388">
        <name>tim bell</name>
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        <element elementId="97">
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          <description/>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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              <text>One-time" tuition surcharge proposed,&#13;
will go to Regents tomorrow&#13;
UW President Robert O'Neil&#13;
has asked the Board of Regents&#13;
for a $23 and a $30 spring&#13;
semester surcharge for all&#13;
schools in the UW System.&#13;
O'Neil asked last Thursday&#13;
for a $30 tu ition surcharge for&#13;
UW-Madison and UWMilwaukee&#13;
students and a $23&#13;
tuition surcharge for other UW&#13;
System students. He said the&#13;
"one-time" surcharge would&#13;
generate about $3.1 million for&#13;
the system.&#13;
He said past budget shortages&#13;
and unexpectedly high&#13;
1981-82 enrollments have&#13;
"seriously strained teaching&#13;
resources."&#13;
The proposed $30 s urcharge&#13;
would put UW's overall 1981-82&#13;
fee and tuition increase 4%&#13;
above last year, he said. The&#13;
surcharge proposal will go to&#13;
the Regents' Business and&#13;
Finance Committee today and&#13;
the full Board tomorrow.&#13;
W University of Wisconsin - Porkside&#13;
PSGA tables motion&#13;
on teaching award conflict&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. Senate&#13;
made a few resolutions during its&#13;
Oct. 28 meeting but failed to pass a&#13;
statement on this year's Teaching&#13;
Excellence Awards due to a lack&#13;
of information available to the&#13;
Senators.&#13;
The first business was to put a&#13;
phone in WLLC to replace the one&#13;
that was stolen from the WLLC&#13;
Information Desk. Kathy Slama&#13;
moved, and Luis Valldejuli&#13;
seconded, to install a campus&#13;
phone on the first floor of the&#13;
library. The motion was approved&#13;
unanimously. The installation fee&#13;
will be $82.30 with monthly&#13;
charges of $6.98.&#13;
The Senate made a statement&#13;
supporting the current Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge proposal that was&#13;
scheduled to go before the Faculty&#13;
Senate this week. John Peterson&#13;
moved and Randy Klees seconded&#13;
to "support the general criteria&#13;
set down for Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge without Symbolic&#13;
Systems." The motion was approved&#13;
5-0-1 w ith Phil Progreba&#13;
abstaining.&#13;
Joe Ripp made a motion&#13;
strongly denouncing Chancellor&#13;
Alan Guskin's actions concerning&#13;
the Teaching Excellence Awards.&#13;
The two awards, which are&#13;
usually presented at the very&#13;
beginning of each school year,&#13;
were delayed this year because&#13;
Shirley Kersey, one of the&#13;
recipients, is no longer teaching&#13;
here. She will not receive the&#13;
award; only one other teacher will&#13;
receive it.&#13;
The Senate issued a statement&#13;
two weeks ago that they consider&#13;
"the actions taken by the&#13;
Teaching Excellence Award&#13;
Committee in conjunction with the&#13;
Chancellor as being inappropriate&#13;
to the situation at hand." A&#13;
committee member answered last&#13;
week that the committee was not&#13;
in conjunction with the Chancellor's&#13;
decision not to give&#13;
Kersey the award.&#13;
Ripp introduced the following&#13;
motion, seconded by Progreba:&#13;
"Be it known that the PSGA, Inc.&#13;
feels that Chancellor Guskin's&#13;
decision to not give former&#13;
Parkside Prof. Kersey the&#13;
Teaching Excellence Award when&#13;
rightfully hers, was wrong and&#13;
uncalled for and that we, as the&#13;
representatives of the student&#13;
body, ask that Chancellor Guskin&#13;
change his decision and give Prof.&#13;
Kersey her rightful award and the&#13;
$500."&#13;
The Senate discussed the issue&#13;
but tabled the motion until more&#13;
information is made available to&#13;
the Senators. According to Slama,&#13;
president protempore, "The&#13;
original stand went into effect, so&#13;
we have to rescind that one before&#13;
we talk about this one." The topic&#13;
was planned to be addressed at&#13;
yesterday's Senate meeting. See&#13;
next week's Ranger for details.&#13;
Roundtable&#13;
Rieber speaks on Cancun&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
"The Cancun Conference and&#13;
the New International Order" was&#13;
the topic of a Social Science&#13;
Roundtable on Nov. 2. The&#13;
speaker was William Rieber, an&#13;
economics professor whose&#13;
research interest is international&#13;
trade history.&#13;
At the Cancun Summit, which&#13;
was held on Oct. 22 and 23 in&#13;
Cancun, Mexico, President&#13;
Reagan told "have not" nations to&#13;
look to trade, not aid, as a solution&#13;
to their economic problems. Of the&#13;
20 countries that attended the&#13;
conference, 14 were considered&#13;
"developing" economies.&#13;
"What prompted the proposal of&#13;
the North - South summit/ at&#13;
Cancun was the general&#13;
dissatisfaction among developing&#13;
economies with the current international&#13;
order," Rieber said.&#13;
"Despite progress, the gap in&#13;
income between developed and&#13;
developing countries has grown&#13;
wider. As a consequence, the&#13;
developing economies have called&#13;
for a new international economic&#13;
order that would better serve their&#13;
interests."&#13;
Some major proposals of the&#13;
New International Economic&#13;
Order are:&#13;
• Developed countries should&#13;
contribute seven - tenths of 1% of&#13;
their GNP to official development&#13;
aid. Rieber stated that currently&#13;
the U.S. allocates one - fifth of 1%&#13;
of our GNP to aid.&#13;
• Establishment of int&#13;
e r n a t i o n a l c o m m o d i ty&#13;
Guaranteed loans&#13;
Changes, volume cause delays&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
The following is part one of a&#13;
three - part series on delays in&#13;
finanical aids at Parkside.&#13;
About 40 Parkside students have&#13;
not yet received their financial aid&#13;
checks for Guaranteed Student&#13;
Loans this semester, although&#13;
they have signed proposals and&#13;
Parkside's financial aid office has&#13;
sent their forms to the Higher&#13;
Educational Aids Board in&#13;
Madison to be processed.&#13;
"Anybody who filed in late&#13;
August or September of this year&#13;
doesn't have their money yet,"&#13;
according to Jan Ocker, Director&#13;
of Financial Aids. He estimated&#13;
that about 30 students filed during&#13;
that time period. Also, Ocker said&#13;
that about 10 students who filed in&#13;
July and early August haven't&#13;
received their money yet.&#13;
"During the last two or three&#13;
years," Ocker said, "there have&#13;
been some delays on different&#13;
programs. But this year's delay —&#13;
two months of waiting for loans&#13;
for some students — is in my&#13;
opinion too long." This year's&#13;
delay is in the Wisconsin&#13;
Guaranteed Student Loan&#13;
program, which is administered&#13;
by the state for those students who&#13;
are turned down by their banks.&#13;
A combination of factors have&#13;
contributed to what Ocker termed&#13;
a "backlog at Madison." First,&#13;
this year's number of applicants is&#13;
nearly triple last year's number,&#13;
Ocker said. The added volume&#13;
means more work for both the&#13;
Parkside and Madison staffs.&#13;
Ocker noted that the Higher&#13;
Educational Aids Board has&#13;
shifted lots of people into the loans&#13;
program to try to expedite the&#13;
backlog.&#13;
The federal government also&#13;
changed its rules for state administered&#13;
loans to students twice&#13;
this year. Ocker said that people&#13;
who applied at the end of September&#13;
will have to fill out new&#13;
forms — forms the state has not&#13;
supplied them with yet. He said&#13;
that the forms would be in next&#13;
week and students would be&#13;
notified if their loan cannot be&#13;
processed because they have not&#13;
filled out the correct form.&#13;
Also, there are some applications&#13;
that can not be&#13;
processed because of a combination&#13;
of the other two factors.&#13;
Ocker said, "With the volume&#13;
alone, the state was about a month&#13;
behind." Other loans, he said,&#13;
could not be processed as quickly&#13;
because of delays caused by later&#13;
applications that were not accompanied&#13;
by the correct forms.&#13;
"Unfortunately, there's nothing&#13;
that can be done through this&#13;
office," Ocker said. The office&#13;
already sent a list of students to&#13;
Madison on Sept. 25 to "try to get&#13;
them going," Ocker said, "and it&#13;
doesn't do any good to call."&#13;
Richard Johnson, HEAB's&#13;
Administrator for Student Support,&#13;
commented on the situation&#13;
at Parkside with a "no comment"&#13;
and indicated that he would have&#13;
to know each individual student's&#13;
position in order to explain delays&#13;
in the disbursement of checks.&#13;
Next Week: How do you get&#13;
through 2/3 of a semester without&#13;
a dollar to your name?&#13;
Career Resource Night to offer alumni advice&#13;
agreements on those commodities&#13;
produced by developing countries&#13;
to assure them equitable prices.&#13;
• Reducing trade restrictions&#13;
in developed countries on imports&#13;
from developing countries.&#13;
• General debt relief in the&#13;
form of forgiveness or postponement&#13;
of repayment of the&#13;
developing economies on their&#13;
external debts.&#13;
• Changing the decision -&#13;
making procedures of the IMF&#13;
and World Bank to give greater&#13;
weight to developing countries.&#13;
Traditionally, the countries .that&#13;
gave the most had the most say in&#13;
these affairs.&#13;
Rieber said that the third&#13;
proposal is probably the most&#13;
effective.&#13;
Rieber said that the most&#13;
significant accomplishment to&#13;
come out of the summit was that&#13;
the rich and poor nations agreed&#13;
to participate in global&#13;
negotiations on the proposals.&#13;
"Reagan's philosophy on international&#13;
economics is quite&#13;
consistent with his domestic&#13;
economic philosophy," said&#13;
Rieber. "He asserted at the&#13;
conference that laissez - faire&#13;
capitalism and private enterprise&#13;
principles, as opposed to government&#13;
enterprise, are the key to&#13;
solving international economic&#13;
problems. Accordingly, of the new&#13;
features of the new International&#13;
Economic Order, very few are&#13;
likely to be supported by the&#13;
United States," he said.&#13;
The second annual Alumni&#13;
Career Resource Night set for&#13;
Tuesday, November 10, will offer&#13;
students a chance to obtain career&#13;
advice from UW - Parkside&#13;
alumni. Sponsored by the Office of&#13;
Alumni and Placement Services,&#13;
the event begin at 5 p. m. with 15&#13;
panels of alumni speaking on&#13;
specific career areas. Among the&#13;
more than 60 alumni will be:&#13;
• James Greco, Sociology '74,&#13;
Executive Director, Big Brothers&#13;
of Racine. BEHAVIORAL&#13;
SCIENCE PANEL.&#13;
• Pamela Ensweiler, Business&#13;
Management '79, Tax Accountant,&#13;
Arthur Anderson &amp; Co. ACCOUNTING/FINANCE&#13;
PANEL.&#13;
• Gail Ross, Communication&#13;
'80, Account Executive, Shecker&#13;
Design Group. COMMUNICATION&#13;
PANEL.&#13;
• Keith Kramer, Business&#13;
Management '74, Production&#13;
Control Manager, Racine Steel&#13;
Castings. ADMINISTRATIVE&#13;
AND PROD UCTI ON&#13;
MANAGEMENT.&#13;
• Robin Smerchek, Applied&#13;
Science &amp; Technology and&#13;
Mathematics '74, Engineer,&#13;
Wisconsin Electric Power&#13;
Company. APPLIED SCIENCE &amp;&#13;
A P P L I E D C O M P U T ER&#13;
SCIENCE PANEL.&#13;
• Peter Pingitore, History '78,&#13;
Teacher, Roosevelt Elementary&#13;
(Ken osha ). EDUCATION&#13;
PANEL.&#13;
• John Mardoian, Engineering&#13;
Technology '79, Engineer, S C&#13;
Johnson &amp; S on. ENGINEERING&#13;
TECHNOLOGY PANEL.&#13;
• Dr. Nicolet DeRose Schissel,&#13;
Chemistry '75, Pedodontist&#13;
(Children's Dentistry), DeRose&#13;
Dental Clinic. HEALTH&#13;
PROFESSIONS PANEL.&#13;
• Cindy Grueter, Business&#13;
Managment '80, Systems&#13;
Development Specialist, JI Case&#13;
Compa ny. INFO RMA TION&#13;
SYSTEMS PANEL.&#13;
• Arthur Simpson, Business&#13;
Management '76, Attorney with&#13;
the firm of Capwell, Berthelsen,&#13;
Nolden, and Casanove, LTD. LAW&#13;
PANEL.&#13;
• Sandra Cooper, Business&#13;
Management '78, Marketing&#13;
Research Analyst, Tenneco&#13;
Automo tive MARKETI NG&#13;
PANEL.&#13;
• Jeff LeMere, Business&#13;
Management and Labor / Industrial&#13;
Relations '80, Personnel&#13;
Supervisor, Modine Manufacturing&#13;
Company. PERSONNEL /&#13;
LABOR RELATIONS PANEL.&#13;
• David Prins, Physics '75,&#13;
Quality Engineer, J I Case&#13;
Company. PHYSICS AND MATH&#13;
PANEL.&#13;
• Jack Plovanich, Music '75,&#13;
Music Director, Marriott's Great&#13;
America. MUSIC PANEL.&#13;
• Arlyn C. Frederick,&#13;
Economics '73, Corporate&#13;
Planning Analyst, Wisconsin&#13;
Electric Power Company,&#13;
SOCIAL SCIENCE PANEL.&#13;
Panel members will provide&#13;
tips for students on preparing for&#13;
specific career areas, information&#13;
on graduate schools they attended,&#13;
availability of ope nings in&#13;
their career area and career&#13;
advancement opportunities from&#13;
entry level positions.&#13;
Following these individual&#13;
panels students will hear Judy&#13;
Murray, Manager, Corporate&#13;
Employer Relations and Career&#13;
Development at JI Case Company&#13;
speak on "Job Opportunities: How&#13;
to Find Them and Make the Most&#13;
of Them". A rec eption, sponsored&#13;
by t he UW-P Alumni Association,&#13;
will follow her presentation.&#13;
Registration tables will be in the&#13;
concourse on Thursday and&#13;
Friday. Registration is also&#13;
p o s si b le in the A l u m ni and&#13;
Placement Office, WLLC D173.&#13;
Late registraion will be possible&#13;
from 4:30 - 5:00 p. m. on Tuesday&#13;
(Nov. 10) in the Union Dining&#13;
Room.&#13;
UC gains Women's Director&#13;
Madison — Sandra P. Starrett,&#13;
President of the UW-Madison&#13;
Sports Club and a Teaching&#13;
Assistant in the UW-Madison&#13;
Women's Studies Program, accepted&#13;
appointment Monday as&#13;
Women's Director of the United&#13;
Council of University of Wisconsin&#13;
Student Governments.&#13;
The position has been vacant&#13;
since September. Her appointment&#13;
was made by United&#13;
Council President Robert Kranz,&#13;
and is subject to confirmation by&#13;
the United Council Executive&#13;
Board after two months.&#13;
Kranz appointed Starrett&#13;
because of her "constructive&#13;
commitment to women's issues,&#13;
and the high degree of scholarship&#13;
and professionalism she will bring&#13;
to United Council."&#13;
INSIDE&#13;
• Mid-semester burnout&#13;
* Trophies for Bowling Club &#13;
2 Thursday, November 5,1981 RANGER&#13;
o the Editor&#13;
Computer Center problems&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The acquisition of a new computer&#13;
on campus has resulted in&#13;
an interest in computing facilities&#13;
at Parkside. However, new&#13;
problems have arisen, and some&#13;
old problems persist. The purpose&#13;
of this editorial is to enlighten&#13;
readers to some of these problems&#13;
and present possible solutions, as&#13;
noticed by students.&#13;
Applied Computer Science1 and&#13;
Business Administration are the&#13;
two programs on campus which&#13;
rely heavily on computers at&#13;
Parkside. They are also the&#13;
fastest growing courses of study&#13;
on campus. However, at the&#13;
recent Computer User's Forum&#13;
held by the Computer Center on&#13;
November 2, attendance was&#13;
sparse. We feel that in some&#13;
respects the Computer Center&#13;
contributed to this lack of attendance&#13;
by not informing&#13;
students and faculty through&#13;
announcements in the Ranger or&#13;
providing in-class announcements.&#13;
It was as though&#13;
they did not want anyone to attend.&#13;
&#13;
Before the acquisition of the&#13;
new PDP-ll/70 computer system,&#13;
there was ample , space for&#13;
program development and informal&#13;
consultation among&#13;
students. Now, with the increase&#13;
in services provided by the new&#13;
computer (and consequently the&#13;
increase in students using the&#13;
interactive system), this important&#13;
aspect of study has been&#13;
eliminated. The Computer Center&#13;
now provided practically non -&#13;
existant consulting facilities and&#13;
is not actively supportive of&#13;
student efforts to obtain such&#13;
facilities.&#13;
The performance of computer&#13;
operators, Remote Job Entry&#13;
(RJE) operators, and consultants&#13;
could stand improvement. Instances&#13;
of mishandled or&#13;
misplaced printed and punched&#13;
output occur frequently. Consultants&#13;
do not have the depth of&#13;
knowledge to deal with subjects&#13;
such as system error messages,&#13;
IBM job control language, and&#13;
PDP 11/70 editors. System efficiency&#13;
has suffered due to&#13;
inattentive monitoring of student&#13;
programs by computer operators.&#13;
We propose a number of possible&#13;
solutions to help alleviate these&#13;
problems.&#13;
1. Evaluation of student employees&#13;
each semester, similar to&#13;
the system used by the Library,&#13;
must be implemented. This would&#13;
encourage employees to improve&#13;
their performance.&#13;
2. An ongoing program should&#13;
be implemented in training&#13;
students for Computer Center&#13;
work. In our opinion a consultant&#13;
should be a student of computer&#13;
languages and software packages,&#13;
and an operator should have a&#13;
thorough understanding of how a&#13;
computer system works.&#13;
3. Members of the Parkside&#13;
Computer Club (PCC) could informally&#13;
consult students on&#13;
errors and problems. PCC&#13;
members could be willing to&#13;
provide this service given an&#13;
adequate study area as mentioned&#13;
above. A PCC consultant could be&#13;
reimbursed through increased&#13;
computer resources.&#13;
4. Applied Computer Science&#13;
majors should be required to&#13;
assist in Computer Center and&#13;
RJE operations. Students could&#13;
work for one to two hours per&#13;
week in exchange for a one credit&#13;
class. This provides students with&#13;
practical experience and it saves&#13;
the Computer Center money used&#13;
for paying student operators and&#13;
consultants.&#13;
The money saved from this new&#13;
program could be used to extend&#13;
operating hours of the computer&#13;
facilities to coincide with the&#13;
Library's hours. Additional&#13;
documentation of equipment and&#13;
software could also be obtained&#13;
for general use.&#13;
These are just some of the&#13;
problems we feel exist with the&#13;
operation of the Computer Center.&#13;
Anyone noticing other problems&#13;
with the computing facilities or&#13;
having other possible solutions to&#13;
these problems should contact the&#13;
Parkside Computer Club, or&#13;
Loren Buchanan, the student&#13;
representative to the Computer&#13;
Advisory Committee.&#13;
Loren A. Buchanan&#13;
Donald J. Sorenson&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
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WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
There's a lot more&#13;
to being a father&#13;
than just having a son.&#13;
Tribute&#13;
Jock Lemmon&#13;
Robby Benson&#13;
Lee Remick&#13;
$ J 5 0&#13;
7:30 Friday &amp; Sunday,&#13;
Nov. 6 &amp; 8&#13;
NEXT WEEK'S MOVIE&#13;
DEATH HUNT&#13;
. .FIRST OF ALL, I'D LIKE&#13;
TO DISPEL ONE MYTH ABOUT&#13;
OUR. POLICY. WE AR.E NOT&#13;
ENGAGING IN AN AR MS RA CE&#13;
WITH THE SOVIET UNION.&#13;
RUNNING IN A&#13;
BLIND PANIC, PERHAPS&#13;
BUT, NOT IN A RACE.&#13;
Possible precedent to teaching excellence explored&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The problem I wish to address is&#13;
one that has received a great deal&#13;
of emphasis lately in the Ranger.&#13;
It concerns the yet unresolved&#13;
issue of the 1981 Teaching Excellence&#13;
Award. Dr. Shirley&#13;
Kersey, winner of one of last&#13;
year's awards, has not yet&#13;
received her rightful recognition.&#13;
As proposed by the Chancellor,&#13;
stricter guidelines should be&#13;
enacted for future Selection&#13;
Committees. This is a good&#13;
suggestion, although as it has&#13;
been stated in a previous Letter to&#13;
the Editor (October 29, 81) these&#13;
proposed changes in guidelines&#13;
should not be retroactive to the&#13;
previous list of winners. All&#13;
winners should receive their&#13;
awards, particularly Dr. Shirley&#13;
Kersey.&#13;
The Chancellor's reasoning of&#13;
budget cuts and the requirement&#13;
of future employment at this&#13;
campus of a winner is unsupported&#13;
by the criteria used on&#13;
the nomination form. This alone&#13;
should be enough to suggest he&#13;
reverse Ms decision. If not, the&#13;
following precedent setting&#13;
situation that occurred here at&#13;
UW-Parkside should be. There are&#13;
an amazing number of&#13;
similarities between the present&#13;
problem and this past event.&#13;
In the March 23,1970 issue of the&#13;
Collegian, now known as the&#13;
Ranger it was reported that&#13;
Salimons Cacs was not reappointed&#13;
as a math professor at&#13;
UW-Parkside. Within three&#13;
months he won the Teaching&#13;
Excellence Award, then known as&#13;
"The Parkside Teacher." The&#13;
following is a list of the comparisons&#13;
between the two cases.&#13;
1) Both were highly qualified to&#13;
hold their respective positions&#13;
here at UW-P. Salimons Cacs&#13;
received high recommendations&#13;
from the math department head&#13;
at the University of Khartoum,&#13;
Sudan. Mr. Cacs was a&#13;
representative for the U.S. under&#13;
a contract with the Sudanese&#13;
government to improve the&#13;
teaching quality of the University&#13;
program there. Without&#13;
hesitation, Dr. Shirley Kersey was&#13;
offered other teaching positions at&#13;
two UW System schools. Dr.&#13;
Shirley Kersey holds her Ph.D.&#13;
from UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
2) Both were denied tenure&#13;
before any part of the Nomination&#13;
process began.&#13;
3) Both professors maintained a&#13;
high standard of quality in their&#13;
teaching practices after their&#13;
respective denial of renewal.&#13;
Other professors have done less in&#13;
similar situations and still others&#13;
who hold Ph.D.'s and are tenured&#13;
continue to do less.&#13;
4) Peers and students showed&#13;
support for both Mr. Salimons&#13;
Cacs and Dr. Shirley Kersey from&#13;
the beginning of the denial of&#13;
renewal. Continued support is&#13;
being shown for Dr. Kersey. The&#13;
students wrote letters to the&#13;
editor. And for peer support Mr.&#13;
Cacs has been quoted as being ".&#13;
. a man who strives for excellence&#13;
in teaching" by the physics and&#13;
math department chairman at&#13;
Indiana Central College. Whereas&#13;
Dr. Kersey had the support of a&#13;
Ginger Helgeson&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Dan McCormack&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
Frank Falduto&#13;
ganger&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Advisor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Greg Bonofigho, Carol Burns, Doug Edenhauser, Jeff&#13;
Frank, Pat Hensiak, Jim Kreuser, Pat McDonald, Jim&#13;
Mertins, Steve Myers, Laurie Painter, Charles Perce, Kim&#13;
Schlater, Sue Stevens, Dan Werbie, Jeff Wicks.&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of UW-Parkside and thou ,&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content. V sole,y&#13;
Published every Thursday during the academic year except durino hreak^ ann&#13;
RANGER is printed by the Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin '&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER&#13;
Park°id^,SK^noshat WI^L* addreSSed ^ ParkSide Ranqer&lt; WL&#13;
^ D139, UWeluded&#13;
for verification. *&gt;snea ana a telephone number inNames&#13;
will be withheld for valid reasons&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 9 a .m. for publication on Thursday The RiwrcD&#13;
reserves all editorial privileges in refusing to print letters which r/Jt/ Rf^&#13;
GER&#13;
defamatory content. which contain false or&#13;
UW-M Dr. of Education at her&#13;
open hearing.&#13;
5) Both garnered the highest&#13;
percentage of student nomination&#13;
at the time of selection.&#13;
6) Both ballots stated clearly&#13;
and explicitly that this award is&#13;
not a popularity contest, but&#13;
rather one of recognition of&#13;
superior teaching.&#13;
7) Both were denied renewal on&#13;
the basis of apparent status&#13;
gained by the acquisition of a Ph.-&#13;
D. and or by the publishing of&#13;
material. Neither of these&#13;
requirements indicate real&#13;
teaching excellence, only in the&#13;
classroom can this be displayed.&#13;
Here the similarities unjustifiably&#13;
STOP! Mr. Salimons&#13;
Cacs RECEIVED his award.&#13;
Shirley Kersey did NOT. I feel the&#13;
Chancellor should abide by the&#13;
precedent setting similarities of&#13;
these situations. Doing so would&#13;
cure two problems:&#13;
1) Dr. Shirley Kersey would&#13;
receive her award, and&#13;
2) it would also ". . . put the&#13;
matter behind us."&#13;
Jeff Schoor&#13;
Chancellor's&#13;
decision 'petty'&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin explains&#13;
his reasons (in the Oct. 22&#13;
Ranger) for denying Dr. Shirley&#13;
Kersey a duly accorded award for&#13;
excellence in .teaching at UWParkside.&#13;
The reasons he gives, as&#13;
pointed out by others in letters to&#13;
the editor, lack accuracy and&#13;
cogency and carry the same&#13;
disappointment as his initial&#13;
decision.&#13;
The decision of the Chancellor to&#13;
refuse a duly accorded award to&#13;
Dr. Kersey is petty and embarrasses&#13;
the entire University&#13;
community.&#13;
If I were the Chancellor, I'd&#13;
stick my head in a paper sack.&#13;
Larry Bowersox&#13;
Correction&#13;
Each week, staff member&#13;
Pat Hensiak writes an article&#13;
for the Ranger about the people&#13;
that make the Parkside&#13;
community what it is. These&#13;
articles, collectively referred&#13;
to as "Viewpoint," are and&#13;
have been the result of Hensiak's&#13;
interviews with people&#13;
you see every day but don't&#13;
know much about. Recently,&#13;
we have neglected to run&#13;
Hensiak's by-line above her&#13;
"Viewpoints." Thus, this&#13;
public apology. &#13;
Cable TV system expanded&#13;
RANGER Thursday, November 5,1981&#13;
Expansion of Parkside's "innouse&#13;
cable television system&#13;
*&#13;
nd&#13;
, .Iff external reception&#13;
IhP&#13;
?m! c&#13;
y **&#13;
en aPP&#13;
r&#13;
°ved by&#13;
the UW System Board of Regents.&#13;
nf&#13;
T«£ S™* 0K d aPP&#13;
roPriation&#13;
of $56,078 for the project, which&#13;
has been in the planning stage&#13;
since 1974.&#13;
The expansion will provide a&#13;
cable link between classrooms&#13;
arKJ laboratories in Greenquist&#13;
and Mohnaro Halls with a central&#13;
control center in Wyllie Library -&#13;
Learning Center (WLLC).&#13;
The control center, installed as&#13;
part of the original WLLC building&#13;
Teachers&#13;
needed&#13;
The Foreign &amp; Domestic&#13;
Teachers Organization needs&#13;
teacher applicants in all fields&#13;
from Kindergarten through&#13;
College to fill between five and six&#13;
hundred teaching vacancies both&#13;
at home and abroad.&#13;
Since 1968, the organization has&#13;
been finding vacancies and&#13;
locating teachers both in foreign&#13;
countries and in all fifty states.&#13;
They possess hundreds of current&#13;
openings and have all of the&#13;
pertinent information on&#13;
scholarships, grants, and&#13;
fellowships.&#13;
The principal problem with first&#13;
year teachers is where to find the&#13;
jobs!&#13;
For additional information&#13;
about the organization, write to&#13;
the Portland Oregon Better&#13;
Business Bureau or the National&#13;
Teacher's Placement Agency&#13;
UNIVERSAL TEACHERS, Box&#13;
5231, Portland, Oregon 97208.&#13;
Write" RANGER&#13;
A Letter!&#13;
project, contains terminal and&#13;
monitoring equipment that can&#13;
"store" television programs on&#13;
videotape for later viewing or&#13;
switch them directly into instructional&#13;
areas. The center also&#13;
is linked to 28 video monitors&#13;
which are available for use by&#13;
individual students in WLLC.&#13;
In addition to installation of&#13;
cable in Greenquist and Molinaro&#13;
Halls, the expansion program will&#13;
include installation of a TV&#13;
receiving antenna on the WLLC&#13;
roof. The antenna will make&#13;
available 16 regional commercial,&#13;
independent and educational TV&#13;
stations in the Milwaukee and&#13;
Chicago areas for classroom&#13;
instruction. Twenty other channels&#13;
originating in the control&#13;
center also will be available.&#13;
The Parkside cable installation&#13;
will be compatible with Racine&#13;
Cable TV and with the CATV&#13;
system planned for Kenosha.&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
Confidence building given&#13;
On Thursday, November 12,&#13;
from 5:00 - 6:30 p.m. in Union 207&#13;
Women In Business Club will&#13;
sponsor a workshop entitled,&#13;
"Confidence Building." The&#13;
workshop will be presented by&#13;
Ruby Hanson, Executive Consultant&#13;
with Hanson Seminars,&#13;
Evanston, Illinois. Hanson has a&#13;
B.A. in Psychology from the&#13;
University of Minnesota, and a&#13;
Master of Social Work degree&#13;
from the University of Denver.&#13;
Hanson has over twenty years&#13;
experience in problem - solving&#13;
with organizations, groups and&#13;
individuals. She is experienced in&#13;
developing training programs for&#13;
professional and nonprofessional&#13;
staffs. As a teacher, she has&#13;
developed and conducted&#13;
management courses for colleges&#13;
and universities. She is a lecturer&#13;
and seminar leader deeply&#13;
devoted to helping individuals and&#13;
organizations realize their full&#13;
potential. Hanson is an experienced&#13;
consultant and&#13;
executive who has guided&#13;
organizations, programs and&#13;
agencies toward greater viability&#13;
and increased productivity. Her&#13;
special strengths are her ability to&#13;
identify organizational problems&#13;
and to work effectively with&#13;
diverse groups and individuals.&#13;
This seminar is free and open to&#13;
Meeting&#13;
notices&#13;
Course and Curriculum, Friday,&#13;
Nov. 6 at 1 p.m., Grnq. 318A; to&#13;
discuss proposed curriculum&#13;
changes.&#13;
Collegiate Skills Implementation,&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 5 at&#13;
1 p.m., Grnq. 344A; to review&#13;
program and discuss self -&#13;
evaluation report for APPR&#13;
review.&#13;
Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review, Tuesday, Nov.&#13;
10 at 3 p.m., Grnq. 344A; to discuss&#13;
master's program in business&#13;
administration.&#13;
Patronize R anger&#13;
Aduertisers!!!&#13;
TSIOTI&#13;
•. .. , 5205-52ndShree}&#13;
ijclicatessett. ® I&lt;icp.ars &amp; Wines&#13;
657-9001&#13;
MILLER LITE&#13;
12 cans *3"&#13;
3203-52nd St.&#13;
everyone interested.&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
THE PARKSIDE&#13;
ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE&#13;
Brings To You&#13;
Dana Clark&#13;
Live From Chicago&#13;
For A One Afternoon Show&#13;
In Midd le Main Place&#13;
November 11 — From 12:00-2:00&#13;
International Coffee and Wine Will Be Sold&#13;
This is a Free Event&#13;
All Students Are Invited&#13;
Go/n P/ck/n'&#13;
Friday,&#13;
Nov. 11&#13;
9:30 III 1:30&#13;
Denim &amp; Lace&#13;
STETSONS&#13;
COUNTRY/WESTERN SALOON&#13;
RACINE MOTOR INN&#13;
535 Main Street in Downtown Racine&#13;
ACADEMIC&#13;
ADVISING&#13;
for&#13;
SPRING SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are seeking a degree at UWParkside)&#13;
should consult their academic adviser prior to registration for Sprinq&#13;
Semester. A Certification of Advising form, signed by the adviser, is required for&#13;
registration.&#13;
Spring Semester Course Schedules will be available on November 10. November&#13;
11 - 25 has been designated as an academic advising period, and advisers will&#13;
make every effort to meet with you then.&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
Contact Your Adviser&#13;
For An Appointment&#13;
If you have any questions, contact the Office of the Dean of Faculty.&#13;
348 Wyllie Library - Learning Center, 553-2144&#13;
£!°TE.\ N on-matriculant students (students not seeking a degree at UWParkside)&#13;
are exempt from this requiremertt. &#13;
4 Thursday, Novembe r 5,1981 RANGER&#13;
How Con You Save $ At?&#13;
CENTER OF THE WORM UQOORS&#13;
ONE SWEET MEAN RECOROS A TARES&#13;
SONNYSNME BAR A RESTABRANT&#13;
BBSNWACKER'S SALOON A CAFE&#13;
NBNORY NEAR SANBWKB SHOOS&#13;
PANTS TOWNE&#13;
OEORCTS BAR&#13;
WMBPMNT PBMP&#13;
TIMER'S UQBOR&#13;
BANBEE UQBOR MART&#13;
BUY A&#13;
"METRO-MISER" CARD&#13;
UU by M Mi ban *f PSE&#13;
'Dinner Party' and&#13;
Hopper trip offered&#13;
The Racine Art Association,&#13;
Inc. of the Charles A. Wustum&#13;
Museum of Fine Arts announces a&#13;
Bus Trip to Chicago on Saturday,&#13;
November 21, 1981. The trip is&#13;
being organized to view the&#13;
current art exhibition "Edward&#13;
Hopper: The Art and the Artist"&#13;
at the Art Institute of Chicago and&#13;
"Judy Chicago's Dinner Party."&#13;
Hopper is considered by many&#13;
to be one of the foremost, realist&#13;
painters of the 20th century. This&#13;
extensive exhibition includes 150&#13;
oil paintings, 35 watercolors and&#13;
100 drawings and was organized&#13;
by the Whitney Museum of&#13;
American Art in New York.&#13;
The Dinner Party is a&#13;
monumental work created by over&#13;
400 people who were directed and&#13;
inspired by artist Judy Chicago.&#13;
The work consists of a large&#13;
triangular table that is fifty feet&#13;
on each side, with 39 table settings,&#13;
each symbolically honoring&#13;
women from ancient times to the&#13;
present.&#13;
Buses will leave the Wustum&#13;
Museum parking lot at 8:00 a.m.,&#13;
arriving at the Art Institute at 9:30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
For ticket information, call&#13;
Wustum Museum at 636-9177.&#13;
De Vinny art exhibited&#13;
"The Rembrandt Revisited&#13;
Suite," an exhibition of recent&#13;
work by Parkside art professor&#13;
Douglas De Vinny, will be on&#13;
display in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery through Nov. 25.&#13;
The show includes a group of&#13;
prints, drawings and watercolors&#13;
that utilize themes and compositions&#13;
based on Rembrandt&#13;
paintings. De Vinny says the work&#13;
contains "a little humor, a little&#13;
biography and a lot of satire."&#13;
DeVinny joined the Parkside&#13;
faculty in 1979. He received his&#13;
MFA degree from Indiana&#13;
University and previously taught&#13;
at Mesa College and Skidmore&#13;
College.&#13;
DeVinney's work won the&#13;
Burpee Art Museum Purchase&#13;
Award in the 57th Annual Rockford&#13;
(111.) a nd Vicinity Jury Show&#13;
last spring and was included in the&#13;
Boston Printmakers 33rd National&#13;
Exhibition, also held last spring&#13;
He won an award for excellence in&#13;
the Wisconsin Watercolor '80 show&#13;
and had a solo exhibition of prints&#13;
and drawings at Colorado State&#13;
University, Fort Collins.&#13;
The Communication Arts&#13;
Gallery will be open. Mondays&#13;
through Thursdays from l to 6&#13;
p.m. and Tuesdays and Wednesdays&#13;
from 7 to 10 p.m. during&#13;
the current exhibition. Friday&#13;
hours can be arranged by appointment&#13;
with the Fine Arts&#13;
Divisional Office.&#13;
Ait competition announced&#13;
The Racine Art Association&#13;
announces its annual competitive&#13;
art exhibition, RACINE AREA&#13;
ARTS, 1981. The competition is&#13;
open to all artists living in Racine,&#13;
Kenosha and Walworth Counties&#13;
and includes work in all media.&#13;
Entries may be delivered to the&#13;
Charles A. Wustum Museum of&#13;
Fine Arts for jurying on Thursday,&#13;
November 12 from 1-9 p.m.;&#13;
Friday, November 13 from 1-5&#13;
S,,OH ^&#13;
Distributed by E. F. MADRIGRANO 1831 • 55th St. Kenosha, Wise. 658-3553&#13;
Stroh's NEW ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
p.m. and Saturday, November 14&#13;
from 9-11 a.m.&#13;
Kit Basquin, owner and director&#13;
of the Kit Basquin Gallery in&#13;
Milwaukee will be the juror. She&#13;
was formerly owner/director of&#13;
the Washington Gallery in Indianapolis,&#13;
Indiana and was on the&#13;
staff of the Indianapolis Museum&#13;
of Art. Ms. Basquin will select the&#13;
exhibition from works that have&#13;
been entered and award $450 in&#13;
prize money. There is an entry fee&#13;
of $3.00 and artists may enter up to&#13;
two pieces of their work which&#13;
may be in any medium.&#13;
For further information on the&#13;
exhibit and a copy of the entry&#13;
forms, interested artists may stop&#13;
at Wustum Museum from 1-9 p.m&#13;
on Monday and Thursday and&#13;
from 1-5 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday,&#13;
Friday, Saturday and&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
The exhibition opens Sunday,&#13;
November 22, 1981 with a&#13;
reception for the public from 2-4&#13;
p.m. Prizes will be awarded at&#13;
this time. The exhibition will&#13;
continue through Sunday&#13;
December 12.&#13;
UW-P poets to&#13;
give readings&#13;
Two Parkside faculty poets,&#13;
Chinese food and chocolate addicts&#13;
Carl Lindner and Alan&#13;
Shucard, will give a reading of&#13;
their poems in the library's&#13;
second floor Overlook Lounge on&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 11 from 1-2 p.m.&#13;
Both have published two collections&#13;
of poems, Lindner Vampire&#13;
and The Only Game, Shucard The&#13;
Gorgon Bag and The Louse on the&#13;
Head of a Yawning Lord.&#13;
FREE!&#13;
Important Sominar&#13;
Intonr lowing&#13;
MAN POWER COUNSELOR&#13;
* Carol Merrick*&#13;
a s guest speaker&#13;
Wed., Nov. 11&#13;
MOLN D113&#13;
1-2 p.m.&#13;
tPf first&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C. &#13;
Trials and tribulations&#13;
of mid-semester burnout&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
Have you seen students wandering&#13;
around Parkside with dark&#13;
circles under and glazed looks in&#13;
their eyes? Did their blank faces&#13;
make you think that perhaps&#13;
they're living in another world?&#13;
Have you maybe found yourself&#13;
sitting alone with a noisy group of&#13;
friends? While you quietly contemplate&#13;
the total cubic foot area&#13;
of Union Square, are they avidly&#13;
discussing their weekends?&#13;
This is something that is affecting&#13;
our regular students, not&#13;
just the eraserheads or pre-meds&#13;
for whom this condition is normal.&#13;
What is causing such inner turmoil&#13;
for students? Is it love? No,&#13;
wrong time of y ear. Irregularity?&#13;
Could be. Drugs? Of co urse not —&#13;
everybody knows there are no&#13;
drugs at Parkside!!&#13;
Such symptoms can only be&#13;
attributed to one thing: midsemester&#13;
burn-out. It happens&#13;
when youthful enthusiasm for&#13;
institutes of higher learning wears&#13;
off; when classes have become&#13;
grinding routines. It happens&#13;
anywhere between the first and&#13;
eighth week of school. It's no&#13;
wonder we're disillusioned.&#13;
One thing that can really cause&#13;
students to freak is if an instructor&#13;
should be so brash as to actually&#13;
change a mid-term exam he has&#13;
given for the last three years. Now&#13;
that takes real nerve, especially&#13;
when some students spend so&#13;
much time memorizing those past&#13;
tests!&#13;
They say it's the little things&#13;
that put you over the brink. If yo ur&#13;
favorite vending machine is out of&#13;
Pearson's Salted Nut Rolls, calm&#13;
down. It's not the end of th e world.&#13;
If you drop your hairbrush in the&#13;
toilet, try not to panic. When your&#13;
chapstick kicks off its cap and&#13;
escapes in search of its creator,&#13;
let it go.&#13;
Of course, when you're a third&#13;
semester senior with 21 credits to&#13;
go and you realize that one of the&#13;
classes you'll need to graduate&#13;
won't be offered til the Spring of&#13;
1983, burning out just might be the&#13;
answer.&#13;
Students chronically burned out&#13;
are probably beyond help, but for&#13;
the rest of us the condition should&#13;
only be temporary. We have to be&#13;
adult about the burn-out. Don't do&#13;
anything to enhance it. Stay away&#13;
from electronic games if you&#13;
always lose. Avoid Rubik's Cube&#13;
at all costs. Maybe we could even&#13;
get Security to declare a&#13;
moratorium on parking tickets for&#13;
a while.&#13;
Keep in mind that twenty years&#13;
from now n o one will ask or even&#13;
care what your grades were. It's&#13;
not worth getting messed up over&#13;
silly little numbers like grade&#13;
point averages if you can't function&#13;
in the real world. People out&#13;
there usually don't understand&#13;
about burn-out.&#13;
Just don't give up. The semester&#13;
won't last forever. Every cloud&#13;
has a silver lining. And nothing is&#13;
ever so bad that a good party can't&#13;
cure.&#13;
Hartl featured at RAA&#13;
The Racine Art Association,&#13;
Inc. (RAA) announces its featured&#13;
artist of the month in the Art Sales&#13;
and Rental Gallery it operates at&#13;
the Charles A. Wustum Museum&#13;
of Fine Arts, Racine, Wisconsin.&#13;
Featured artist for the months of&#13;
October and November is&#13;
photographer Ray Hartl of&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin. His works&#13;
will be featured in the Gallery&#13;
through November 15, 1981.&#13;
Hartl's work has been shown at&#13;
Wustum Museum in Wisconsin&#13;
Photography 1979 and 1981, the&#13;
state - wide juried biennial&#13;
photo graph y comp etiti on&#13;
organized by the RAA.&#13;
Museum visting hours are 1-5&#13;
p.m. seven days a week and from&#13;
1-9 p.m. on Mondays and Thursdays.&#13;
&#13;
'Parkside&#13;
STILL&#13;
Has Style"&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
WEEKLY SPECIALS&#13;
Nov. 9 - Nov. 14&#13;
RED PIN&#13;
$3.00 Nlte&#13;
Moonlife Bowl&#13;
60Vgame&#13;
All you can bowl&#13;
or play pool&#13;
90'/game&#13;
MON. 9 a.m. 'til Noon&#13;
TUE. Noon 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 3 p.m. 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
THUR. 7 p.m. 'til 10 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 10 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
SAT. 8 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
He (Pltie&#13;
In the Parkside Union 10:00 am - 4:00 pm&#13;
OVER 40 SELECT VA RIETIES INCLUDING&#13;
This Week's Special...&#13;
SPECIAL!&#13;
Nov. 9-13&#13;
PISTACHIO NUTS&#13;
40% OFF&#13;
You Won't Find Them Lower Priced!&#13;
LYN6A,&#13;
Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. II&#13;
3 p. m&#13;
Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater&#13;
Students -&#13;
$250&#13;
General -&#13;
s3.00&#13;
6ancc com pan y &#13;
6 Thursday, November 5,1981 RANGER&#13;
#•••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Anthropology&#13;
A slide show and lecture entitled&#13;
"Starving in the Land of Plenty —&#13;
Shanty Towns and Black&#13;
Homelands in South Africa" will&#13;
be sponsored by Anthropology&#13;
Club on Wednesday, Nov. 11 at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in Moln 105. The lecture&#13;
/ slide show will be presented by&#13;
Dr. Aidan Southall from the&#13;
Anthropology program at UWMadison&#13;
and Dr. Christine Obbo,&#13;
an African anthropologist and&#13;
author of "African Women: Their&#13;
Stuggle for Economic Independence."&#13;
&#13;
Accounting&#13;
The Accounting Club will hold a&#13;
general club meeting on Monday,&#13;
Nov. 9 at 1 p.m. in Moln D107.&#13;
Tickets will be available at this&#13;
meeting for the Manager's Dinner&#13;
to be held on Nov. 30. Tickets will&#13;
also be available at the Union&#13;
Info. Center until Nov. 20. Cost is&#13;
$10 per person. Also, nomination&#13;
materials will be available for&#13;
club offices that will be vacated in&#13;
December. All Accounting Club&#13;
members and business students&#13;
are encouraged to attend this&#13;
meeting. Refreshments will be&#13;
served.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
Mark your calendar so you&#13;
won't miss these upcoming&#13;
Women In Business events:&#13;
-Friday, Nov. 6: Members of&#13;
WIB ushering at "The Runner&#13;
Stumbles"&#13;
-Saturday, Nov. 7: Poster&#13;
Making Party at 2008 Kinzie, 7&#13;
p.m.; BYOB and munchies&#13;
-Thursday, Nov. 12: 5-6:30 p.m.&#13;
in Union 207; "Confidence&#13;
Building" workshop with Ruby&#13;
Hanson, Executive Consultant,&#13;
Hanson Seminars, Evanston, 111.&#13;
-Monday, Nov. 16: Bake Sale 8&#13;
a.m. 'til 2 p.m.&#13;
-Friday, Dec. 4: Tree Trimming&#13;
Party; open to members of&#13;
|1|&#13;
I *£ kl&#13;
i 3&#13;
£3&#13;
ii&#13;
88&#13;
• •&#13;
CI CO&#13;
Club Events&#13;
IVCF Math Qub&#13;
all UW-P business clubs; more&#13;
details to follow.&#13;
-Monday, Dec. 7: 1 p.m. in&#13;
Union 104; general business&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Remember, if you can pinch&#13;
more than an inch, join us for fun&#13;
and fitness every Wednesday&#13;
from 1 to 2 p.m. in the wrestling&#13;
room for an invigorating Aerobic&#13;
Dance lesson.&#13;
Philosophical&#13;
The Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society will hold a meeting on&#13;
Nov. 11 at 3:30 p.m. in Comm Arts&#13;
233. During the meeting, students&#13;
and faculty will meet in an informal&#13;
setting to discuss ideas&#13;
important in philosophy.&#13;
On Nov. 12 at 6:30 p.m. in Comm&#13;
Arts 125, Mark Singer will discuss&#13;
his ideas on the Philosophy of&#13;
Biology and the philosophical&#13;
ideas of reductionism.&#13;
Geology&#13;
The Geology Club will sponsor a&#13;
colloquium entitled "Regional&#13;
Metallogenic Studies: An Exploration&#13;
Guide?" tomorrow at 1&#13;
p.m. in Grnq. 113. Speaking will be&#13;
Dr. John R. Griffins from the&#13;
Department of Geology at the&#13;
University of Arkansas.&#13;
Poli. S ci. C lub&#13;
There will be a Political Science&#13;
Club organizational meeting on&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 10 at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Moln. 112. Topics to be discussed&#13;
are the election of club officers,&#13;
future events and the formulation&#13;
of a club constitution. All political&#13;
science majors are urged to attend.&#13;
Although the organization is&#13;
of particular interest to political&#13;
science majors, it is open to the&#13;
entire student body.&#13;
If you're eager to have a good&#13;
time and make new friends, come&#13;
to the Inter - Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship Brown Bag Social at 1&#13;
p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
There will be a Math Club&#13;
meeting on Wednesday, Nov. 18 at&#13;
1 p.m. in Grnq. D127. The meeting&#13;
will deal with career planning for&#13;
math majors.&#13;
FEEL LIKE COLLEGE&#13;
PREPARES YOU FOR&#13;
ONLY ONE JOB?&#13;
Take another look - at&#13;
Mutual of Omaha. Whether&#13;
you're in liberal arts, fine&#13;
arts, marketing or accounting,&#13;
we can offer you a rewarding&#13;
career in insurance&#13;
sales.&#13;
Our advanced training&#13;
program helps you develop&#13;
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;
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People (fou can count on...&#13;
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CHECKING!&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
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Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414-248-9141&#13;
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414 - 843-2388&#13;
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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;
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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>Forum. Teaching award issues raised</text>
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              <text>MT University of Wisconsin - Parkside |TAU-it*tTiP WHi*IMy fiookf&#13;
OIPNT CKTUSA, TH- T«£ C-aASSCi I&#13;
-pAtir*L^*isiCu,s£auT&lt;;U '&#13;
Trl-THE*j AJO RhAuchl.&#13;
Ami/ o oc'uhatis rr!f! yo»$orrA&#13;
••• w.«(w&lt;r&#13;
Teaching Award issues raised...&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
An "open forum" held by&#13;
chancellor Alan Guskin drew a&#13;
group of about 25 students last&#13;
Wednesday to "ask any questions,&#13;
listen to any comments you have&#13;
to make," Guskin said.&#13;
Guskin opened the forum with a&#13;
statement about the new Breadth&#13;
of Knowledge proposal. "One of&#13;
the most significant pieces of&#13;
legislation has just been passed by&#13;
the Faculty Senate — t he Breadth&#13;
of Knowledge proposal, the new&#13;
general education requirement.&#13;
That'll go into effect in September&#13;
of '83. It will serve to give our&#13;
general education requirements&#13;
an academic sense, rather than&#13;
the cafeteria style requirement&#13;
we presently have."&#13;
Guskin emphasized the "critical&#13;
role" students played in revisions&#13;
of the proposal over the past year.&#13;
Guskin said student in-put&#13;
resulted in the final credit&#13;
requirement being reduced and&#13;
"the result was that the committee&#13;
didn't agree with&#13;
everything students said, but&#13;
students were taken into account,"&#13;
Guskin said.&#13;
The meeting was then divided&#13;
between student concerns about&#13;
the Teaching Excellence Award&#13;
program and other issues. (See&#13;
other story).&#13;
Next year's convocation,&#13;
Guskin said, would be the time for&#13;
the public award to Oliver&#13;
Hayward, the sole recipient of this&#13;
year's award. Also, the staff&#13;
winner this year, Edith Eisenberg&#13;
and the academic staff winner will&#13;
be awarded at that time, along&#13;
with next year's winners, Guskin&#13;
said.&#13;
Peer Support becomes&#13;
major organization&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. Senate&#13;
went on record during its Nov. 4&#13;
meeting to support giving Peer&#13;
Support major organization&#13;
status.&#13;
What that means is that Peer&#13;
Support, a program which&#13;
originated 2 1/2 years ago by and&#13;
for non - traditional students age&#13;
25 an d over, will go directly to&#13;
SUFAC for future funding. The&#13;
program currently receives funds&#13;
from Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Educational Services Carla&#13;
Stoffle; the funds are designed for&#13;
new programs to test their ability&#13;
to become viable organizations.&#13;
The resolution to grant Peer&#13;
Support major organization status&#13;
met with much discussion but the&#13;
roll call vote was 10-1-1 with John&#13;
Peterson voting "no" and Luis&#13;
Valldejuli abstaining. PSGA&#13;
President Jim Kreuser signed the&#13;
resolution within hours after the&#13;
Senate meeting.&#13;
Irene Vilona of Peer Support&#13;
addressed the Senate and answered&#13;
questions. "One of the&#13;
most important reasons for&#13;
requesting major organization&#13;
status is that we want our identity&#13;
enhanced," she said. "We want&#13;
definite funding. We wish to be&#13;
independent, subject only to the&#13;
rules that govern the other major&#13;
organizations."&#13;
Vilona replied to specific concerns&#13;
that some Senators have&#13;
voiced since the proposal was first&#13;
brought up two weeks ago. "The&#13;
problem that seems to face Peer&#13;
Support is not whether it is a&#13;
viable organization," she said,&#13;
"but how we receive our funding.&#13;
Peer Support wishes the Senate to&#13;
understand that the volunteers&#13;
who make up Peer Support feel&#13;
that we are a service organization&#13;
— we are not a club.&#13;
"It has been said that the services&#13;
we provide are already&#13;
provided by the school itself," she&#13;
said. "This is partly true. We do&#13;
have Community Student Services&#13;
which staffs five people to service,&#13;
over 2000 students. Campus&#13;
statistics show that the enrollment&#13;
this year has increased over&#13;
projection and the increase lies in&#13;
the over 25 age grou p. This trend&#13;
(is expected) to continue. It is not&#13;
possible for Community Student&#13;
Services to do what we are trying&#13;
to do. It is not possible for (them)&#13;
to help each student,&#13;
"Also," she continued, "we do&#13;
not wish to 'belong' to the administration.&#13;
We are a network of&#13;
students helping students. We do&#13;
not wish to be dependent on the&#13;
administra tion's receptiveness.''&#13;
Vilona responded to the concern&#13;
that Peer Support's base of non -&#13;
traditional students is not strong&#13;
enough to warrant major&#13;
organization status. "Peer Support&#13;
says to you that we are&#13;
concrete," she told the Senate,&#13;
"that we started 2 1/2 years ago&#13;
with an idea and we now have a&#13;
solid corps of 25 vo lunteers. We&#13;
have solid programs and directions&#13;
in which to follow."&#13;
Vilona then answered questions&#13;
from the Senators. "Every time&#13;
that you're referring to students in&#13;
this proposal," said Valldejuli, "it&#13;
is referred to as a non - traditional&#13;
Continued On page Seven&#13;
INSIDE&#13;
• Career Corner&#13;
• Interview with&#13;
student impressionists&#13;
• Basketball preview&#13;
"I think everything's settled&#13;
until everything is behind us in&#13;
terms of time. The issue is not&#13;
Ollie (Hayward), so why should he&#13;
suffer? I'm just waiting for an&#13;
opportune moment to present the&#13;
award," Guskin said.&#13;
However, students did not agree&#13;
that the award issue was settled&#13;
and continued to ask questions&#13;
about the process and Guskin's&#13;
decision.&#13;
Joe Ripp asked Guskin what he&#13;
meant when he said the&#13;
"nomination forms for the awards&#13;
are not clear," referring to an Oct.&#13;
8 Ranger article on the subject.&#13;
"They're not consistent with what&#13;
I always assumed was our&#13;
policy," Guskin replied. "The&#13;
purpose of the award is to say 'We&#13;
like your work' and to give the rest&#13;
of the faculty a role model. To give&#13;
it to part - time faculty makes no&#13;
sense."&#13;
Guskin said that he felt that his&#13;
assumption was understood by the&#13;
committee and said he did not&#13;
make specific directives known&#13;
because "it was a faculty committee&#13;
and I try not to get too&#13;
involved in their work. I should&#13;
have known, but the Intent of the&#13;
award has always been clear in&#13;
my mind."&#13;
"I have no problem giving the&#13;
award to faculty members who&#13;
Continued On Page Five&#13;
Financial aid, pt. 1&#13;
among other issues.&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
Although discussion of this&#13;
year's Teaching Excellence&#13;
Awards dominated last week's&#13;
"open forum," students also&#13;
had other issues on their&#13;
minds.&#13;
Students who objected to the&#13;
time the forum was held as&#13;
"discouraging to attendance"&#13;
were told by Guskin and&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Carla&#13;
Stoffle that the availability of&#13;
the room (Union 207) and their&#13;
schedules as well as student&#13;
group meeting times contributed&#13;
to the decision.&#13;
Carol Campbell raised the&#13;
issue of equivalency tables,&#13;
remarking, "I've been told&#13;
they exist, but they're in some&#13;
corner hiding. Students don't&#13;
have access to information&#13;
about courses offered at&#13;
nearby schools that they could&#13;
access if they knew about&#13;
them," Campbell said. Stoffle&#13;
replied, "The registrar's office&#13;
has them."&#13;
Guskin said that he thought&#13;
that one of the reasons for&#13;
departments not offering the&#13;
tables was because the&#13;
Parkside faculty was not large&#13;
enough or stable enough in&#13;
members or curriculum to&#13;
create them. He said he would&#13;
"look into it and try to do&#13;
something about it."&#13;
Campbell also raised the&#13;
issue of collegiate skills&#13;
tests currently required of all&#13;
Parkside students. Guskin&#13;
replied: "Our requirement&#13;
here is test based, not course&#13;
based. For some students it is a&#13;
matter of a couple of hours of&#13;
tests and it's easy for them, but&#13;
it keeps the principle going."&#13;
Superior students, Guskin said,&#13;
"should not be exempted from&#13;
the program. It's not a basic&#13;
skills program like you have in&#13;
high school. This says you must&#13;
be able to function in the&#13;
academic world. Those&#13;
students who are very bright&#13;
won't have any trouble. But all&#13;
students must have ail skills."&#13;
When asked about the budget&#13;
cuts in athletics, specifically&#13;
the Parkside basketball&#13;
program, Guskin said: "We'll&#13;
still be very competitive in&#13;
district II schools. We'll be&#13;
playing teams weVe riot sure&#13;
we can beat. Last year, we&#13;
Continued On Page Five&#13;
Students find options limited&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
The following,is part two of a&#13;
three - part series on fall semester&#13;
financial aids at Parkside. Last&#13;
week, the RANGER discovered&#13;
through Jan Ocker, Director of&#13;
Finaicial Aids, that about 40&#13;
students have not yet received&#13;
their Guaranteed Student Loans&#13;
because of problems at the state&#13;
level. Madison's Higher&#13;
Educational Aids Board refused to&#13;
comment.&#13;
This year more Parkside&#13;
students than usual are facing&#13;
financial problems because new&#13;
federal financial aid regulations&#13;
exclude some previously eligible&#13;
students from the grant and loan&#13;
programs and delay others' loan&#13;
monies because of corresponding&#13;
paperwork changes. Also, a high&#13;
volume of applicants (three times&#13;
Parkside's previous number)&#13;
have increased the staff loads at&#13;
both Parkside and Madison.&#13;
How do some of these students&#13;
get through 2/3 of a semester&#13;
without a dollar to their names?&#13;
Some students, according to&#13;
various sources, who counted on&#13;
financial aid that was either&#13;
denied or is late will find that they&#13;
cannot make it. Their options on&#13;
this campus are few — they must&#13;
either quit school or find a job.&#13;
So far, "there have been student&#13;
withdrawals from the University,&#13;
but no more than usual," according&#13;
to Ocker. "Although that&#13;
just means students haven't been&#13;
approaching me in greater&#13;
numbers."&#13;
Tuition payment deadlines have&#13;
just been reached at this time and&#13;
Ocker indicated that unless&#13;
students applied for financial aid&#13;
before Oct. 3 and have paid&#13;
tuition, they will soon have to be&#13;
cancelled. But if they've paid their&#13;
fees, and have other costs to meet&#13;
(rent, food, books, etc.), there are&#13;
currently no campus programs to&#13;
assist them, Ocker said.&#13;
Ocker added, "We can delay&#13;
cancellation of those students who&#13;
are undergoing validation&#13;
problems (at the state level).&#13;
Dean of Student Life, Dave&#13;
Pedersen said, "Financial Aids is&#13;
about it other than jobs on this&#13;
campus." In special circumstances,&#13;
jobs have been found&#13;
for needy students, he said, and&#13;
collections have been taken up&#13;
among the student life staff.&#13;
Pedersen said that temporary&#13;
loan funds for students have not&#13;
worked out at Parkside. "We&#13;
attempted at one time to set up a&#13;
loan fund (to be initiated by PSGA&#13;
with the selling of campus&#13;
telephone directories last year.) It&#13;
never materialized." He also&#13;
mentioned the loan fund at&#13;
Financial Aid.&#13;
According to Ocker, "The funds&#13;
dried up. The student default rate&#13;
has been high. It's supposed to be&#13;
a revolving fund, but it doesn't&#13;
revolve too well. It's now limited&#13;
to book fees at the beginning of the&#13;
semester if the student's money is&#13;
delayed for three or four weeks."&#13;
Mike Plate, Parkside's oncampus&#13;
Job Service representative,&#13;
said that he has had two&#13;
students contact him about employment&#13;
who were in very bad&#13;
financial shape. "One of them&#13;
called today and asked me if I'd&#13;
seen anything yet. He said 'Hey,&#13;
my financial status is very poor. It&#13;
looks like I'm going to have to quit&#13;
school and apply for welfare.'&#13;
Maureen Budowle, director of&#13;
the Child Care Center, represents&#13;
one of the few Parkside programs&#13;
that services students on a running&#13;
tab basis because other&#13;
student maintenance costs like&#13;
rent and food are met in the&#13;
surrounding communities.&#13;
Budowle said that some of the&#13;
parents that use the Child Care&#13;
Center this year are "literally&#13;
sneaking past my office during&#13;
pay weeks. If I see them about&#13;
meeting their payments, they say&#13;
'My financial aid isn't in but its&#13;
coming soon. There's nothing I&#13;
can do about it.' It's really hard on&#13;
them.&#13;
When asked if the end of this&#13;
semester means the end of the&#13;
problems with financial aid,&#13;
Ocker said, "I can't say that. The&#13;
loan program is probably targeted&#13;
for more cuts.&#13;
Next week: What are the&#13;
changes in financial aid&#13;
regulations? </text>
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              <text>Teaching Awards - Gukin agrees to sign certificate for Kersey</text>
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              <text>w University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, November 19, 1981 Vol. 10 - No. 11&#13;
Teaching Awards&#13;
Guskin agrees to sign certificate for Kersey&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
After talking with students&#13;
during an "open forum" two&#13;
weeks ago, Parkside Chancellor&#13;
Alan Guskin has agreed with&#13;
student members of last year's&#13;
Teaching Excellence Awards&#13;
Selections committee to sign an&#13;
award certificate for Shirley&#13;
Kersey, one of two teachers&#13;
chosen by the committee to&#13;
receive the award. Kersey taught&#13;
last year under contract non -&#13;
renewal and Guskin vetoed&#13;
Kersey's award this fall because&#13;
she is no longer teaching at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Student committee members&#13;
said they were not given any&#13;
directive to award only teachers&#13;
who are to be employed by&#13;
Parkside following receipt of the&#13;
award. Presently, there is no&#13;
policy statement concerning&#13;
present status or future employment&#13;
by Parkside contained&#13;
in the policy (PSF 20/79-80).&#13;
Guskin indicated this fall that it&#13;
was the $500 stipend attached to&#13;
the award that he felt he could not&#13;
support giving to a person who is&#13;
no longer employed by the&#13;
university. He also said that the&#13;
award had always been "intended"&#13;
for continuing teachers.&#13;
"The idea (to give Kersey the&#13;
certificate) came up in the&#13;
forum," Guskin said. "It sounded&#13;
like a good idea. I talked to Mary&#13;
Jo Dagenbach (a student committee&#13;
member) afterward. She&#13;
persued it, and it sounded even&#13;
better. It seemed to solve many of&#13;
the student concerns."&#13;
"My committment is to write a&#13;
letter to Shirley to notify her, to&#13;
confirm to her on behalf of the&#13;
"This year's teaching&#13;
awards are probably the&#13;
most controversial issue&#13;
we've had in the last&#13;
three or four years."&#13;
— Alan Guskin&#13;
committee that they chose her and&#13;
to sign the certificate," Guskin&#13;
said. "Then my role in it is over&#13;
with. It's my understanding that&#13;
they (the committee) are more&#13;
satisfied than before. We agreed&#13;
that this would mark a resolution&#13;
of the matter."&#13;
Student committee members&#13;
Mary Jo Dagenbach and Gus&#13;
Sorenson told the Ranger on&#13;
Tuesday that they are not happy&#13;
about the resolution of Kersey's&#13;
award, but that they feel&#13;
reasonable compromises were&#13;
made by both Guskin and&#13;
themselves.&#13;
According to Dagenbach, a&#13;
reception has been scheduled for&#13;
Kersey on Wednesday, Dec. 3 at 3&#13;
p.m. in Union 207. The award will&#13;
be presented to her by students at&#13;
that time.&#13;
Guskin said he has no objections'&#13;
to what is being done by the&#13;
student members of the committee.&#13;
"I think Shirley will be&#13;
happy to know it is being&#13;
presented by the students," he&#13;
said. "The only thing that really&#13;
hurt me about this whole thing&#13;
was that some students felt&#13;
denigrated because of this one&#13;
issue. Hie fact that I continued to&#13;
enter the dialogue with them&#13;
showed my respect."&#13;
Guskin said he feels no particular&#13;
strain on his relations with&#13;
students because of the&#13;
disagreement. "There are some&#13;
students and faculty who will&#13;
always think, for whatever&#13;
reason, that whatever I do is&#13;
wrong. Most students don't know&#13;
what I do. But I think people agree&#13;
much more than the majority of&#13;
the time. I felt very good about&#13;
how (members of the committee&#13;
and myself) talked. I felt good&#13;
about people acting maturely,&#13;
coming away with mutual&#13;
respect."&#13;
"The fact is, we don't have a lot&#13;
of controversy on this campus,"&#13;
Guskin said. "This years teaching&#13;
awards are probably the most&#13;
controversial issue we've had in&#13;
the last three or four years. But&#13;
it's a narrow issue.&#13;
"We do listen to students. I think&#13;
on balance, if one analyzes the&#13;
teaching awards situation, you&#13;
can see that," Guskin said. "I&#13;
agreed to things at the end that I&#13;
did not think about at the beginning.&#13;
I did that because I respect&#13;
students and what they have to&#13;
say. Students involved were&#13;
tough, they were clear."&#13;
Currently, the Policy on&#13;
teaching excellence awards is&#13;
under revision by a subcommittee&#13;
of th e University Committee. The&#13;
revision must be passed by the&#13;
University Committee and the&#13;
Faculty Senate to become policy.&#13;
Guskin said, "It's faculty&#13;
legislation; it's a subcommittee,&#13;
so no administrator sits with&#13;
them. I might see a copy before&#13;
the revision goes to the Senate. I&#13;
probably will write a memo to try&#13;
to clarify procedures to make sure&#13;
we all agree ahead of time. But&#13;
I've already raised the issue with&#13;
the University Committee and I&#13;
have very few criteria. But it is no&#13;
longer my job to get involved. I&#13;
very rarely do get involved in&#13;
standing faculty committees&#13;
unless it involves die university as&#13;
a whole or money."&#13;
Open forum scheduled&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Alan Guskin has scheduled the second of&#13;
his "open forums" for the 1981-82 school year for Wednesday,&#13;
Dec. 2. All students, faculty and staff are invited to the forum&#13;
between 1 and 2 p.m. in Union 104.&#13;
The forums are "an opportunity for students, especially, to&#13;
meet with me and ask questions and make comments about&#13;
anything that comes up relating to Parkside," Guskin said.&#13;
Guskin said that he enjoys the forums because his university&#13;
and system duties prevent him from meeting directly with&#13;
students as often as he would like to.&#13;
P.S.G.A. fails to ratify teaching award stand&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. Nov. 11&#13;
voted down a resolution&#13;
demanding that Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin change his decision not to&#13;
give Shirley Kersey the Teaching&#13;
Excellence Award. The roll call&#13;
vote was 6-3-3; a two - thirds vote&#13;
was needed.&#13;
In order to vote on, and even&#13;
discuss, a stand on the awards, the&#13;
Senate had to rescind a motion&#13;
passed four weeks ago (see insert).&#13;
The Joe Ripp / Phil Pogreba&#13;
motion to recind the previous&#13;
stand passed on a 9-2-1 vote, with&#13;
Kathy Slama and Luis Valldejuli&#13;
voting "no" and John Peterson&#13;
abstaining.&#13;
Ripp then moved and A1&#13;
Spallato seconded to accept&#13;
Ripp's resolution which had been&#13;
re-written since the meeting the&#13;
week before.&#13;
"I think we should change the&#13;
wording if possible," said Jim&#13;
Pugh. What Pugh said he had in&#13;
mind was being more specific,&#13;
changing "Chancellor" to&#13;
"Chancellor Alan Guksin."&#13;
Most of the discussion concerning&#13;
the wording was about the&#13;
word "demand." "I ask the&#13;
Senate to be careful about this&#13;
resolution, coming out and&#13;
demanding something from the&#13;
Chancellor on something he is not&#13;
going to change," said PSGA&#13;
President Jim Kreuser. "You can&#13;
say you believe that he did wrong,&#13;
but to demand for him to change it&#13;
... you ought to just consider what&#13;
you're saying because he is not&#13;
going to change his position.&#13;
"How is the student government&#13;
going to go about demanding that&#13;
he change his decision?" asked&#13;
Mike Pfaffl.&#13;
"When we decide, it may be&#13;
published in the Ranger . . ."&#13;
answered PSGA Vice - President&#13;
Kathy Bambrough. "He'll hear it&#13;
and he'll read it, and that's about&#13;
it. We can demand (but) we can't&#13;
force him to do anything. We can&#13;
pressure (him) and that's about it.&#13;
What we have been doing (in the&#13;
past) is negotiating with him.&#13;
That's all we can do."&#13;
As a point of i nformation for the&#13;
Senators who weren't at the&#13;
Chancellor's open forum, Bambrough&#13;
told them that Guskin said&#13;
the awards committee could give&#13;
Kersey the same award that the&#13;
other recipient will receive. "I&#13;
also personally asked him if it&#13;
would have his signature on it. . .&#13;
and he said yes. So therefore, he&#13;
has given in on that point. He said&#13;
that she can have the award," she&#13;
said.&#13;
Pfaffl mentioned that at the&#13;
open forum, Guskin said he will&#13;
but does that mean we can't take a&#13;
stand that we think what he did to&#13;
begin with was wrong? The point&#13;
is that this (resolution) is the&#13;
stand (in which) the student&#13;
government and the student body&#13;
are saying that we feel it was ex&#13;
First motion, presented four weeks ago and rescinded last week:&#13;
"PSGA, Inc. considers the actions taken by the Teaching Excellence Awards&#13;
Committee in conjunction with the Chancellor as being inappropriate to the&#13;
situation at hand."&#13;
First version of resolution, presented two weeks ago and tabled:&#13;
"Be it known that the PSGA, Inc. feels that Chancellor Guskin's decision to not&#13;
give former Parkside Professor Kersey the Teaching Excellence Award when&#13;
rightfully hers, was wrong and uncalled for and that we, as the representatives of&#13;
the student body, ask that Chancellor Guskin change his decision and give&#13;
Professor Kersey her rightful award and the $500 stipend."&#13;
Current resolution, presented last week and lost 8-3*3:&#13;
"Whereas, the PSGA, Inc. sees the need for the revision of the existing Teaching&#13;
Excellence Awards guidelines.&#13;
"Be it known that the PSGA, Inc. shall be responsible to the students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside.&#13;
"Therefore the PSGA, Inc. in conjunction with the student body believes that the&#13;
Chancellor's decision to not allow former Parkside Professor Shirley Kersey the&#13;
Teaching Excellence Award which was rightfully due her, was wrong and uncalled&#13;
for, and that we, as the representatives of the student body, demand that Chancellor&#13;
Guskin change his decision and give Shirley Kersey her Teaching Excellence&#13;
Award and the $500 do llar award money.&#13;
"And be it known that the PSGA, Inc. shall continue to uphold students' rights in&#13;
the decision - making process and to prevent further ex post facto or other unjust&#13;
decisions from occurring."&#13;
INSIDE&#13;
• SUFAC revises schedule,&#13;
begins budgeting&#13;
• New TV season bested by PBS&#13;
• Inside UW-P sports:&#13;
Pick-up basketball&#13;
give Kersey the award certificate&#13;
but he won't give it to her in public&#13;
and won't give the $500 that goes&#13;
with the award.&#13;
Pogreba brought up the&#13;
possibility of changing the word&#13;
"demand" to "ask."&#13;
"I think the whole purpose of&#13;
this thing is being changed," said&#13;
Ripp. "(The resolution) is a&#13;
statement that we feel the original&#13;
decision he made hurt many&#13;
people. This has nothing to do with&#13;
if he changes his decision now . ..&#13;
this is a statement that we can get&#13;
involved. This is what the students&#13;
feel, not just us. I've talked to&#13;
plenty of students and they're&#13;
saying that we demand, instead of&#13;
just asking.&#13;
"I mean, are we afraid?" asked&#13;
Ripp. "It's like, OK, he's giving in&#13;
post facto, after the fact, and that&#13;
it was an unjust decision.&#13;
(Guskin's) not going to die&#13;
because of this — this is saying&#13;
that it was wrong. Is he going to&#13;
take retribution against us?&#13;
That's what I thought about Jim&#13;
(Kreuser's) statement about&#13;
'demanding'."&#13;
"I just want to stress Jim's&#13;
point," said Valldejuli. "It's not&#13;
that we are afraid that he's going&#13;
to bite us or anything — just make&#13;
sure that y&lt;xi know what you are&#13;
demanding from the Chancellor.&#13;
It's my opinion, (and) I've never&#13;
met (Kersey), but I would think&#13;
she would be more interested in&#13;
getting some kind of recognition&#13;
from the students instead of the&#13;
money."&#13;
Spallato moved to call the&#13;
question, with Ripp seconding.&#13;
The roll call vote was: Aye - Steve&#13;
Mertz, Pfaffl, Pogreba, Pugh,&#13;
Ripp and Spallato; Nay - Peterson,&#13;
Slama and Valldejuli; Abstentions&#13;
- Earlene Frederick,&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez and David&#13;
White.&#13;
Immediately following the&#13;
meeting, Ripp said, "I had a&#13;
personal feeling that it (the&#13;
decision) was a combination of&#13;
people who didn't want to speak&#13;
out against the Chancellor&#13;
because they were afraid of&#13;
repercussions. I think people&#13;
didn't get the gist of the whole&#13;
resolution, which was stating no&#13;
matter what Chancellor Guskin&#13;
does now, the point is that his&#13;
original decision is what we voting&#13;
on. It was ex post facto and it was&#13;
unjust because he admitted to me&#13;
at the open forum that it was his&#13;
total decision not to give her the&#13;
award — the money or the&#13;
award."&#13;
Asked about changing the word&#13;
"demand" to "ask," Ripp said, "I&#13;
wanted it the way it was. I feel&#13;
that 'asking' is putting the student&#13;
body at his feet and more or less&#13;
saying 'Pretty please, will you&#13;
give her back this award.' When&#13;
'demanding' (means) 'Hey, we&#13;
think it's wrong. You should give&#13;
her the award, you should give her&#13;
the money'."&#13;
Ripp feels the main issue was&#13;
confused. "I don't know if it was&#13;
purposely confused or not by a few&#13;
members of the Senate who are&#13;
against it. (They confused the&#13;
issue by) saying 'Now he is&#13;
changing his mind, he's going to&#13;
sign it.' But that has no bearing on&#13;
the resolution at all."&#13;
Asked whether or not he will&#13;
bring the resolution up at the next&#13;
Senate meeting (yesterday), Ripp&#13;
said, "It depends. I have to talk to&#13;
a few of the Senators and what&#13;
not." &#13;
2 Thursday, November 19,1981 RANGER&#13;
Editorials&#13;
VOOOOOMOOCCCO! &gt;SOCCOSOQOSCGGSCOOOOSOOOOO&amp;!&#13;
Ranger editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the editorial&#13;
staff. Parkside students may submit editorial ideas to the editor for&#13;
consideration. Editorial ideas need not be typed to be considered.&#13;
SCCCOOSOOSCOOCCCOCOSCCOSOCCOSOOCOOOOOCOCOOCOSO!&#13;
Why not work on it?&#13;
Those Parkside students who have been waiting for three and&#13;
a half months for their Guaranteed Student Loans no doubt wish&#13;
they had access to a short term (1 semester) loan program to&#13;
assist them with their tuition and books — at least.&#13;
In light of the recognition lately given to Peer Support, a major&#13;
student organization devoted to assisting students with other&#13;
adjustment problems, it seems ironic that Parkside gives no&#13;
similar support to students facing temporary financial difficulties&#13;
besides allowing their debts to accumulate for a very&#13;
limited time.&#13;
Last week, campus officials explained to the Ranger that a&#13;
student - initiated fund has already bombed out and that the&#13;
"books only" fund administered by the financial aids office is&#13;
also on the way to limbo because of student defaults on loans.&#13;
It is indeed a shame that students and organizations have&#13;
failed to raise funds and some students have defaulted on loans.&#13;
But those are not reasons to ignore the real need students have&#13;
for funds during times of unexpected delays. Rather than give up&#13;
on short term emergency student loan fund, why not work with&#13;
students to devise a fund that will work?&#13;
Do students have a say?&#13;
During the past few months, a great deal of concern has been&#13;
expressed, along with much debate, about 1981 Te aching Excellence&#13;
Award almost - recipient Shirley Kersey.&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin's decision to exempt Kersey from&#13;
eligibility (despite the lack of policy agreement with Guskin's&#13;
assumptions) because she was no longer employed by UW-P&#13;
after the long faculty selection process had been completed has&#13;
been called "ex post facto" and "illogical" by students, faculty&#13;
and Kersey herself.&#13;
The issue was not the $500 stipend usually allocated by Guskin&#13;
to each award winner. The issue was the nature of Guskin's&#13;
decision.&#13;
Since a recent reversal by Guskin, in which he promised to&#13;
sign an award certificate to be presented to Kersey identical to&#13;
the certificate given to past winners, it has become clear that&#13;
though it is not easy to do, students do have some say in decisions&#13;
made by their university. But maybe only when they sit on the&#13;
committee deciding the issue, and then only if some of them are&#13;
still around to witness administrative actions the next year.&#13;
Write Ranger a Letter!!!&#13;
, Say, Jfcmi-Saby'...&#13;
S&#13;
^C&#13;
^ICC™ A TOW&#13;
.CrurCKsj&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
Nobody 'gave a hoot'&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I had thought of quoting the&#13;
story from the Old Testament&#13;
which resulted in the oft asked&#13;
question "Am I my brother's&#13;
keeper?" I had thought of&#13;
referring to the lack of caring of&#13;
what happens (ed) to the "boat&#13;
people" or others fleeing from&#13;
oppression, or to the non - concern&#13;
over the environment or even&#13;
nuclear war. I had even thought of&#13;
reminding readers of the many&#13;
news - reported stories of crime&#13;
being committed on our streets&#13;
while totally unconcerned individuals&#13;
"turn their heads the&#13;
other way."&#13;
I decided, however, that these&#13;
references were not as apFrom&#13;
the Files&#13;
propriate as my simple report told&#13;
with utter chagrin and, I must&#13;
admit, some anger, of the total&#13;
disregard shown by so many&#13;
people (be they students or&#13;
passers-by) when I fell on that&#13;
terribly dangerous brick floor in&#13;
the concourse last week. Not one&#13;
"human" being bothered to&#13;
venture forth to help me up, to&#13;
inquire if I were all right (with the&#13;
exception of one young woman&#13;
who did), or if I needed help&#13;
getting somewhere. I was able to&#13;
gather myself together, even&#13;
though my knees were smarting&#13;
with pain and my pride suffering&#13;
from some embarrassment.&#13;
The result of the fall: badly&#13;
bruised, but not broken, knee cap,&#13;
some injured and torn ligaments&#13;
and tendons, bound foot and&#13;
crutches (though temporary). The&#13;
cause of the fall: none gave a&#13;
diagnosis, but I will venture an&#13;
opinion. I have never yet walked&#13;
down that extremely dangerous&#13;
brick concourse without seeing&#13;
debris, be it paper (which can be&#13;
slippery if conditions warrant it),&#13;
water, coffee, mushy food that&#13;
had dropped from non - caring&#13;
person's hand (present as I went&#13;
tumbling, I might add), cigarettes&#13;
or what have you.&#13;
I put it to You student body: Are&#13;
you coming to the university to&#13;
live in this world (which includes&#13;
giving a "hoot" about what&#13;
happens to others) or are you&#13;
coming to further your education&#13;
to learn new techniques for&#13;
stepping on and not caring a wit&#13;
about others with your added&#13;
knowledge?&#13;
Lois Lederman&#13;
10 years ago —&#13;
"Athletics: Story One" by Marc&#13;
Eisen&#13;
Two former Parkside athletes&#13;
have revealed how they were lied&#13;
to and misled by Parkside Athletic&#13;
Director Tom Rosandich when&#13;
they were recruited to come here.&#13;
A third athlete, still active in&#13;
UW-P athletics, told of similar&#13;
statements made to him, but&#13;
declined to characterize them as&#13;
being either misleading or lies.&#13;
Stories similar to these have&#13;
surfaced on campus before but&#13;
have never been substantiated.&#13;
The . . . stories, besides giving&#13;
evidence of Parkside's recruiting&#13;
methods, tell how their experience&#13;
with UW-P athletics has destroyed&#13;
their desire to compete anymore.&#13;
(John) Patten is presently a&#13;
pole vaulter on the track team,&#13;
while Mary (Libal) is a student&#13;
here and Judy (Zimmerman) is a&#13;
student at UWM.&#13;
While she readily acknowledges&#13;
that the track coaches are&#13;
talented, (Libal) says of them: "I&#13;
think the coaches are most concerned&#13;
about their own names.&#13;
Secondly, they'll try to develop the&#13;
name of Parkside. Only last are&#13;
they concerned with the athletes."&#13;
(Patten said), "In my career as&#13;
an athlete I've never seen so much&#13;
subversion in the ranks as I did at&#13;
Parkside — men and women, even&#13;
the coaches. But I think it was a&#13;
normal reaction to the situation —&#13;
with so much money being cut."&#13;
Zimmerman said, "I was&#13;
burned out at Parkside."&#13;
Between them, (Libal and&#13;
Zimmerman) held the Wisconsin&#13;
Women's AAU titles in the 100&#13;
yard dash, the 220, the 440, the 880,&#13;
the cross country mile, the mile&#13;
and a half and the ten mile runs.&#13;
Track was their lives, they say&#13;
simply. Today they don't compete.&#13;
&#13;
—Newscope, vol. 5, no. 12, Nov. | year OgO&#13;
senate.&#13;
A motion was then made by&#13;
Neilsen requesting Arnold's&#13;
resignation. The motion failed.&#13;
—Ranger, vol. 5, no. 11, Nov. 24,&#13;
1976&#13;
Kersey to be honored&#13;
5 years a go —&#13;
"Charges Dropped" by Douglas&#13;
Edenhauser&#13;
The student government&#13;
meeting last Wednesday night&#13;
provided a great amount of&#13;
confusion for those who came to&#13;
watch Senator Mary Arnold's&#13;
impeachment trial.&#13;
Though Arnold wished the trial&#13;
to take place in open session, a&#13;
motion introduced by President&#13;
Pro Tempore Dan Neilsen was&#13;
passed by the senate the close the&#13;
proceedings.&#13;
Neilsen indicated that&#13;
(parliamentary procedure)&#13;
required that such a trial be held&#13;
in executive session.&#13;
In rebuttal to arguments that&#13;
this would be in violation of&#13;
Wisconsin's open meeting law,&#13;
Neilsen replied that according to&#13;
definitions within this law, "we&#13;
(Student Government) are not a&#13;
governmental body."&#13;
. . . N e i l s e n i n t r o d u c e d a m o t i o n&#13;
to hold the trial in open session,&#13;
which was passed unanimously by&#13;
the senate.&#13;
After a few questions and a little&#13;
discussion ... the charges were&#13;
dropped in the best interests of the&#13;
"Food prices to increase 3 percent"&#13;
by Janet Wells&#13;
An overall increase of 3 percent&#13;
in the price of food at Parkside is&#13;
projected for January 1981, according&#13;
to Bill Niebuhr, director&#13;
of the Student Union... Many food&#13;
items will remain the same, while&#13;
selected items will probably be&#13;
penny increased.&#13;
In view of (the food price index&#13;
projection of a 12-15 percent increase&#13;
in food prices overall from&#13;
last January to next) and nation -&#13;
wide inflation, Niebuhr declares&#13;
that the Union and Heritage Foods&#13;
have done well in holding price&#13;
increases to a necessary&#13;
minimum, though Heritage loses&#13;
money in its day - to - day&#13;
operations.&#13;
• . Parkside facilities is&#13;
Heritage's main source of&#13;
revenue, compensating for the&#13;
loss sustained in daily operations.&#13;
Five years ago, 50 percent of the&#13;
Union's budget was derived from&#13;
segregated fees, 50 percent from&#13;
revenues. Today, . . . segregated&#13;
fee dollars are only 38 percent of&#13;
the budget, with the remaining&#13;
coming from revenue producing&#13;
operations like the food service.&#13;
—Ranger, vol. 9, no. 12, Nov. 26,&#13;
1980.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
After Gustave Sorenson, Ann&#13;
Roland, Jeff School and myself&#13;
met with Chancellor Guskin on&#13;
November 12, it is my pleasure to&#13;
announce that Chancellor Guskin&#13;
will give a certificate of Teaching&#13;
Excellence to the student committee&#13;
so that we may properly&#13;
honor Dr. Shirley Kersey.&#13;
The certificate to be presented,&#13;
identical to the one Oliver&#13;
Hayward will receive, will bear&#13;
the Chancellor's signature.&#13;
I want to thank Chancellor&#13;
Guskin for being willing to&#13;
compromise and accomodate for&#13;
what I and many have felt to be an&#13;
injustice.&#13;
I want to urge all students, that&#13;
if there is anything that they feel&#13;
needs to be revised; speak up.&#13;
You, the students, have just&#13;
witnessed what can be done.&#13;
Changes can occur. STUDENTS&#13;
DO HAVE A VOICE!&#13;
Mary Jo Dagenbach&#13;
Ginger Helgeson&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Dan McCormack&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
Frank Falduto&#13;
Greg Bonofiglio, Carol&#13;
ganger&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Advisor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Burns, Doug Edenhauser, Jeff&#13;
!!? "&#13;
ensiak&#13;
' WarV Kaddatz, Jim Kreuser, Pat&#13;
McDonald, Jim Mertins, Steve Myers, Laurie Painter,&#13;
72&#13;
r&#13;
!?r ,&#13;
Perce&#13;
' Kim Schlater. Sue Stevens, Dan Werbie,&#13;
Jeff Wicks.&#13;
UW.riartald* and they are so.efy&#13;
Written permission Is required for reprint of any portion of RA NGER&#13;
•°'^0"&#13;
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eluded for verific ation. sl&#13;
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.Names will be withhe ld for valid reasons&#13;
sis sr ass# ;X,K&#13;
defamatory content.&#13;
H 'eners which contain false or &#13;
UW-P reps take stand at United Council&#13;
Thursday, November 19,1981&#13;
oy Parkside's&#13;
U.C. Delegation&#13;
Student r&#13;
Cek SOme Park&#13;
side student Government Association,&#13;
tHn f?c&#13;
esentatives a road&#13;
rHL? /?Uper&#13;
.&#13;
1&#13;
,&#13;
or t0 attend the United Council of UW Student&#13;
Governments meeting. Thev were&#13;
SE^S Pr&#13;
.&#13;
ederick&gt; Kreuser,&#13;
Mlk® Pfaffl, Margaret Rodriguez&#13;
and Dave White. They took active&#13;
stands on various issues.&#13;
One of these issues was the&#13;
collective bargaining proposal.&#13;
Parkside swung all four votes&#13;
against this proposal. Their&#13;
reasoning was that the rules and&#13;
practices are not defined&#13;
specifically concerning student&#13;
participation in the collective&#13;
bargaining process.&#13;
Another issue was the tuition&#13;
surcharge. The United Council&#13;
Executive Board which is maae&#13;
up of 53 delegates from the UW&#13;
system took a stand against the&#13;
tuition surcharge.&#13;
Reasoning for this, say the&#13;
representatives, was that a&#13;
surcharge does not solve the long -&#13;
term problem for the university of&#13;
adjusting to an era of shrinking&#13;
financial resources. Now, they&#13;
feel, is the time for long - rangeplanning.&#13;
With the country in a&#13;
recession and unemployment&#13;
hitting 8 percent, families and&#13;
working students cannot afford&#13;
hation increases, they say. The&#13;
Parkside Student Senate has not&#13;
taken a stand on this issue as of&#13;
yet, but it was scheduled to be&#13;
brought up at yesterday's&#13;
meeting.&#13;
One of th e major issues brought&#13;
up at the Executive Board&#13;
meeting was a motion to begin an&#13;
impeachment hearing against the&#13;
President of the United Council,&#13;
Robert Kranz. After four hours of&#13;
intense discussion, Parkside&#13;
swung all four votes against&#13;
proceeding with the hearing. They&#13;
voted that way on the basis that it&#13;
was detrimental to the purpose of&#13;
the United Council.&#13;
There are many issues that are&#13;
coming up in U.C. that are important&#13;
to the students of Parkside&#13;
and the entire UW system.&#13;
This was one of the first times in&#13;
the United Council history that&#13;
Parkside sent five delegates to a&#13;
U.C. meeting.&#13;
Each student at Parkside pays&#13;
50 cents per semester to be&#13;
represented as an active member&#13;
of the United Council. The five&#13;
delegates hope that in the future&#13;
Parkside students will become&#13;
aware of issues that are dealt with&#13;
in the United Council and which&#13;
affect them. If a student has any&#13;
questions about the United&#13;
Council, please feel free to stop&#13;
down at the PSGA office, by the&#13;
Coffee Shop. *&#13;
SUFAC begins budgeting&#13;
ThThe e Sefircff Segregaatpd ted TTn Unive ivorrsioifir ty Fees *i j: ^ »&#13;
Allocations Committee (SUFAC)&#13;
began its budgeting process last&#13;
week approving some preliminary&#13;
budget requests from student and&#13;
campus organizations.&#13;
SUFAC, a seven - member&#13;
subcommittee of PSGA, annually&#13;
allocates the portion of each&#13;
student's total tuition fee called&#13;
segregated fees. This year's full -&#13;
time undergraduate student paid&#13;
$72 in segregated fees, the lowest&#13;
in the UW System. Last year's&#13;
total SUFAC budget was $580,441.&#13;
SUFAC allocates money to 18&#13;
different areas, one more than&#13;
last year because Peer Support&#13;
was recently granted major&#13;
organization status. The seven&#13;
SUFAC members are PSGA&#13;
Senators (chosen by random&#13;
draw) Randy Klees, John&#13;
Peterson, Phil Pogreba, Kathy&#13;
Slama and Luis Valldejuli,&#13;
chairperson; and two members&#13;
elected during student body&#13;
elections, Greg Davies and Ken&#13;
Meyer.&#13;
The first budget request to come&#13;
before SUFAC last Thursday was&#13;
the Student Activities Office with&#13;
a request of $13,556, down $4,030&#13;
from last year's $17,586. The&#13;
major reason for the decrease is&#13;
that some funding areas were&#13;
transferred to the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) budget.&#13;
Meyer moved, and Pogreba&#13;
seconded, to approve the $13,556&#13;
request. The motion passed&#13;
unanimously.&#13;
The second budget request was&#13;
Housing, with a proposed increase&#13;
of $12,082 from $13,789 to $26,771.&#13;
After much discussion Meyer&#13;
moved, and Klees seconded, to&#13;
table the discussion. The motion&#13;
was approved unanimously. The&#13;
Housing budget request was&#13;
discussed again Friday. After&#13;
more discussion Meyer moved,&#13;
and Peterson seconded, to table&#13;
the discussion again.&#13;
The major reason for the increase&#13;
lies in the salary of Shirley&#13;
Schmerling, Housing Coordinator.&#13;
In the past, segregated fees paid&#13;
50% of the salary, with the state&#13;
paying 50%. This year's request is&#13;
for 100% of the salary.&#13;
The third budget request&#13;
Thursday was for Winter Carnival&#13;
and Fall Fest. The request was for&#13;
$4000, a $1000 increase over last&#13;
year mainly because last year's&#13;
Fall Fest was funded by New&#13;
Program Development funding.&#13;
Pogreba moved, and Meyer&#13;
seconded, to approve the $4000&#13;
request. The motion passed 6-0-1,&#13;
with Davies abstaining.&#13;
The first budget deliberation&#13;
Friday was on Student&#13;
Organizations Council (SOC),&#13;
which requested $26,540, a $1970&#13;
increase over last year's $24,570.&#13;
After discussion Slama moved,&#13;
and Peterson seconded, to&#13;
allocate $24,660 to SOC. This accounts&#13;
for an increase in salaries&#13;
and supplies but the same amount&#13;
for services as last year given to&#13;
new and existing clubs. The&#13;
motion passed 4-2-0, w ith Davies&#13;
aqd Meyer voting "no" (Pogreba&#13;
absent).&#13;
The next budget request&#13;
discussed was that of the Child&#13;
Care Center, with a proposed&#13;
increase of $10,317 fr om $6506 to&#13;
$16,823. Until now, the Center has&#13;
been a non-profit corporation. The&#13;
Center is now a formal university&#13;
operation. The change in status&#13;
involves moving the director to an&#13;
academic stall position. After&#13;
almost an hour - and - a - half of&#13;
discussion Meyer moved, and&#13;
Klees seconded, to grant Child&#13;
Care its request. The motion&#13;
passed 4-0-2, with Peterson and&#13;
Valldejuli abstaining (Pogreba&#13;
absent).&#13;
The third budget deliberated&#13;
Friday was for Athletics, asking&#13;
Here is an updated SUFAC&#13;
budgeting schedule. The&#13;
previous schedule was changed&#13;
as the Ranger went to press&#13;
last week. The meetings are&#13;
open to anyone interested and&#13;
will be held in Comm Arts (CA)&#13;
132 un less otherwise noted.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 19&#13;
Intramurals, 1:00 (CA 128)&#13;
Business Services, 3:30&#13;
Union Debt Services, 4:00&#13;
Friday, Nov. 20&#13;
PAB, 1 p.m.&#13;
Performing Arts and Lectures,&#13;
1:50&#13;
Ranger, 2:30&#13;
PSGA, 3:20&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 25&#13;
Health Office, 1:00&#13;
Monday, Nov. 30&#13;
Union, 4:00 (CA 142)&#13;
for a $2000 increase from $51,585 to&#13;
$53,585. After discussion, Meyer&#13;
moved, and Peterson seconded, to&#13;
approve the request. The motion&#13;
passed 4-0-1, with Davies abstaining&#13;
(Klees and Pogreba&#13;
absent).&#13;
SUFAC met Monday and passed&#13;
two preliminary budgets. Slama&#13;
moved, and Davies seconded, to&#13;
allocate $2400 to the Student&#13;
Activities Building. The motion&#13;
was approved 6-0-0 (Klees absent).&#13;
&#13;
SUFAC also approved its own&#13;
budget Monday, allocating $160&#13;
for duplicating and wages for a&#13;
secretary. Peterson moved, and&#13;
Pogreba seconded, to pass the&#13;
SUFAC budget. The motion&#13;
passed 6-0-0 ( Klees absent).&#13;
Peer Support was scheduled to&#13;
present its budget request to&#13;
SUFAC yesterday. See schedule&#13;
for upcoming budget presentations.&#13;
See next week's Ranger&#13;
for an update on SUFAC's&#13;
preliminary budgeting.&#13;
Career Niaht&#13;
Alumni help students&#13;
prepare for careers&#13;
by Mary Kirton Kaddatz&#13;
"Only two in one hundred people&#13;
are prepared (for job interviews)&#13;
and they are the people who get&#13;
hired," said Judy Murray,&#13;
Manager of Corporate Employer&#13;
Relations and Career Development&#13;
at J.I. Case of Racine at the&#13;
second annual Alumni Career&#13;
Resource Night last week.&#13;
According to Tom Krimmel,&#13;
Director of Alumni and&#13;
Placement Services, approximately&#13;
170 Parkside&#13;
students attended the event,&#13;
which featured over 50 alumni&#13;
panel speakers and a lecture by&#13;
Murray on "Job Opportunities:&#13;
How to find them and make the&#13;
most of them."&#13;
The most popular panels were&#13;
engineering, communication,&#13;
business - marketing, personnel&#13;
and information systems. Liberal&#13;
and fine, arts panels were cancelled&#13;
due to low student interest.&#13;
Both panels have been&#13;
rescheduled for spring semester.&#13;
"Our goal was to make students&#13;
aware of information on the job&#13;
market that Alumni can share&#13;
with them, to give students experience&#13;
in terms of talking with&#13;
people in their major course area&#13;
in a safe environment where&#13;
students can freely ask questions&#13;
and be candid," Krimmel explained.&#13;
&#13;
Panel members gave students&#13;
suggestions on preparing themselves&#13;
for specific career areas,&#13;
projected employer demand in&#13;
each area, explained economic&#13;
factors affecting job areas and&#13;
discussed career advancement&#13;
from choosing an entry level&#13;
position on up.&#13;
Murray recommended that&#13;
students "investigate the job&#13;
market, conduct an organized&#13;
search, be imaginative and&#13;
determined" in conducting a job&#13;
search. Unusual job leads she&#13;
suggested students use to secure&#13;
their first job included temporary&#13;
jobs, which she called "a foot in&#13;
the door," and Chamber of&#13;
Commerce directories, among&#13;
others.&#13;
Before the interview, Murray&#13;
told students to prepare the&#13;
resume carefully. "Design the&#13;
appearance first, then create the&#13;
words to fit the format of your&#13;
resume," she said. "Focus on&#13;
training, experience, accomplishments&#13;
and personal&#13;
qualities."&#13;
The format of the resume should&#13;
be basically "one page in length,&#13;
with strong points attractively&#13;
arranged," Murray said. "Use&#13;
action words; no gimmicks."&#13;
Murray also recommended&#13;
sending a "thank you letter within&#13;
24 hours after the interview. Very&#13;
few people do, but it could be the&#13;
deciding factor for two equal&#13;
candidates. Letters should make&#13;
sense and be to the point. One&#13;
paragraph is sufficient," she said.&#13;
The next Alumni and Placement,&#13;
seminar, entitled "Cracking A&#13;
Tough Job Market in the 80's,"&#13;
will feature Roger L. DeRose. The&#13;
seminar is scheduled for Tuesday,&#13;
Dec. 1 from 8 to 10 p.m. in Union&#13;
106 and will cover camp'^?&#13;
recruiting techniques, the Interview,&#13;
the follow - up interview,&#13;
and job performance along the&#13;
career ladder.&#13;
Dance&#13;
to the&#13;
Sound of&#13;
THE BABIG ND'&#13;
SATURDAY,&#13;
NOVEMBER 28th&#13;
8:00 p. m.&#13;
$3.00 PER PERSON&#13;
DOOR PRIZES&#13;
Contact&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
at&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
For Tickets&#13;
SOUTH HILLS&#13;
COUNTRY CLUB&#13;
FRONTAGE ROAD&#13;
North at Hwy. 20&#13;
Sponsored by&#13;
RACINE&#13;
SOCCER CLUB&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
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4 Thursday, November 19,1981 RANGER&#13;
New TV season&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
In setting out to do an article on&#13;
the new television season, I&#13;
scanned the tube for signs of&#13;
anything worth watching, and&#13;
more importantly, worth writing&#13;
about. As you have probably&#13;
already surmised, I found, with&#13;
only a very few exceptions,&#13;
nothing. No witty new comedies,&#13;
no intelligent slice - of - life&#13;
dramas, nothing.&#13;
I did say that there were a few&#13;
exceptions, however. I don't want&#13;
to seem overly cynical, so I gave a&#13;
few shows chances that they&#13;
might not even deserve. But even&#13;
these shows are so few and far&#13;
between that I would be hard&#13;
pressed to fill a decent - sized&#13;
article with them. So what I am&#13;
going to do is Drum roll,&#13;
please. - - - I am going to write&#13;
about my favorite T. V. shows,&#13;
new or not. My own personal&#13;
favorites, that I think the Ranger&#13;
audience might enjoy.&#13;
Most of my personal picks are&#13;
shows broadcast on the Public&#13;
Broadcasting System; my&#13;
favorite PBS show is Carl Sagan's&#13;
"Cosmos". This stunning 13 - part&#13;
show takes audiences through&#13;
space and time on it's grandest&#13;
scale, from the birth of the&#13;
universe up to present day and far&#13;
beyond. The visual effects are&#13;
brilliant, the musical score is&#13;
stirring, and Dr. Sagan effectively&#13;
explains many scientific points in&#13;
a way anyone could understand.&#13;
Most importantly, Sagan conveys&#13;
his own wonder for the immensity&#13;
and beauty of the universe to his&#13;
audience. Watch "Cosmos"&#13;
Tuesday nights on PBS.&#13;
A la rge part of PBS airtime is&#13;
devoted to shows imported from&#13;
the British Broadcasting CorPBS&#13;
imports and reruns are better viewing&#13;
poration. "Masterpiece Theater,"&#13;
probably the most famous BBC&#13;
show in the states, is beginning it's&#13;
second decade of real - life&#13;
dramatizations. At first glance the&#13;
show seemed dry and stuffy to me,&#13;
but once I got past Allistair&#13;
Cooke's bland introduction, I&#13;
became pretty engrossed in the&#13;
various stories and characters.&#13;
Right now the show airs Sunday&#13;
nights on PBS, with reruns from&#13;
past shows shown during&#13;
weeknights.&#13;
British humor has always appealed&#13;
to me more than any other&#13;
kind, and I used to be a passionate&#13;
"Monty Python" fan until it&#13;
stopped showing in the U. S. All is&#13;
not lost, however. John Cleese,&#13;
former star of "Monty Python,"&#13;
can be seen on the PBS in "Fawlty&#13;
Towers," yet another BBC show.&#13;
Cleese stars as Basil Fawlty, a&#13;
harried hotel manager in Devon,&#13;
England. Typical English wit,&#13;
satirical, tongue - in - cheek,&#13;
sarcastic, is in abundance in this&#13;
show. PBS's Chicago affiliate,&#13;
WTTW, airs "Fawlty Towers"&#13;
Sunday nights at ten.&#13;
I have to slip in one more show&#13;
from England, this one being my&#13;
favorite. It may be of interest to&#13;
"Star Trek" and "Lost in Space"&#13;
fans to know that the world's&#13;
longest - running science fiction&#13;
T.V. show is on, and has been for&#13;
the past eighteen years, the BBC.&#13;
Yes, sci-fi fans, "Dr. Who" is&#13;
that very show. The show is about&#13;
Dr. Who, a timelord from the&#13;
planet Galifrey. Timelords, as you&#13;
might have guessed, have the&#13;
ability to travel through time with&#13;
the aid of a machine called&#13;
TARDIS (Time and relative&#13;
dimensions in space.) Each week&#13;
the Dr. travels to a different&#13;
planet and encounters a myriad of&#13;
aliens, both hostile and&#13;
benevolent. By the end of the show&#13;
the Dr. has managed to save the&#13;
planet from destruction of one&#13;
kind or another.&#13;
Over the years there have been&#13;
several actors who have played&#13;
Dr. Who, the current star being&#13;
British actor Tom Baker. The&#13;
show is more imaginative than&#13;
any other science - fiction I've&#13;
seen, and when a bit of British&#13;
humor is interjected as well, the&#13;
combination makes for a truly&#13;
delightful show. Channel 11 in&#13;
Chicago airs "Dr. Who" Sunday&#13;
nights at 11 p. m.&#13;
Now I come to my favorite&#13;
American shows. "Nova," an&#13;
excellent science show, airs on&#13;
PBS Sundays at 7 p. m. While it&#13;
lacks the exuberance of&#13;
"Cosmos," "Nova" is chock full&#13;
of the latest controversies in the&#13;
various fields of science.&#13;
"Odyssey," which shows Tuesday&#13;
nights on PBS, is a look at various&#13;
cultures around the world. But&#13;
enough of educational shows.&#13;
Let's move on to the commercial&#13;
networks.&#13;
Never has a television show&#13;
been critically acclaimed by so&#13;
many and watched by so few. This&#13;
is the case with "Hill Street&#13;
Blues," which began last year on&#13;
NBC. The show was a sensitive&#13;
dramatization of li fe in a big-city&#13;
police precinct, and virtually&#13;
swept the Emmy awards. But the&#13;
viewing audience failed to take&#13;
notice, and the show was only&#13;
saved through the grace of G rant&#13;
Tinker, Mary Tyler Moore's&#13;
former spouse and new head of&#13;
programming at NBC. The show&#13;
returned this year, and the ratings&#13;
look hopeful. I whole - heartedly&#13;
recommend this show. The plots&#13;
are realistic, slice - of - life&#13;
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dramas, that, unlike many typical&#13;
"cop" shows, seems to accurately&#13;
reflect the lives of police officers.&#13;
All the actors are superbly cast in&#13;
their roles, and are unfailingly&#13;
convincing. Don't miss this&#13;
Thursday nights at 9 p. m. on&#13;
NBC.&#13;
At the beginning of this article I&#13;
said that there were a few new&#13;
shows that weren't half bad, a few&#13;
exceptions to the rule. A very few.&#13;
In fact, only one. There is one new&#13;
show I have seen that might&#13;
possibly be promising.&#13;
"The Two of Us" stars British&#13;
comedian Peter Cook as Brentwood,&#13;
and English butler in&#13;
America. This is the show's basic&#13;
plot. Pretty cheesy, I suppose. But&#13;
the show succeeds somewhat due&#13;
to Cook's portrayal of Bren twood.&#13;
I stress that the show succeeds&#13;
somewhat - - - it is still nothing&#13;
spectacular. It also stress that it&#13;
succeeds due to Cook; the rest of&#13;
the cast is terribly lame. But Cook&#13;
makes it a bit humorous, and it&#13;
might just be worth seeing on&#13;
CBS, Tuesday nights at 7:30 p. m.&#13;
Wustum announces library opening&#13;
The Racine Art Association&#13;
Inc., announces that it will open&#13;
an Art Library at the Charles A.&#13;
Wustum Museum of F ine Arts on&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 22. The library will&#13;
contain nearly 1,000 vo lumes and&#13;
periodicals dealing with the arts&#13;
in general and the visual arts in&#13;
particular. Both art history and&#13;
"How To" books are included in&#13;
the collection of hard and soft&#13;
cover books. In addition, the RAA&#13;
maintains subscriptions to 11 art&#13;
periodicals.&#13;
The official opening of the&#13;
library will be held in conjunction&#13;
with a reception being held for two&#13;
new exhibits at the museum, the&#13;
Racine Area Arts exhibit and the&#13;
Racine Camera Club's First&#13;
Annual Juried Print Show. The&#13;
reception will be held from 2 to 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
The Racine Area Arts exhibit is&#13;
an annual all - media competition&#13;
open to all artists 18 years or older&#13;
who are residents of Racine,&#13;
Kenosha and Walworth counties.&#13;
The Racine Camera Club's&#13;
exhibit includes 35 photographs by&#13;
16 photographers over 18 from&#13;
Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
Both the exhibits and the library&#13;
opening are part of t he museum's&#13;
40th anniversary festivities. The&#13;
museum first opened on Nov. 16,&#13;
1941.&#13;
The Ranger needs staffers:&#13;
• photographers »ad reps&#13;
• news writers&#13;
Call 2287 or 2295 or Stop in!&#13;
We're in WLLC DI73&#13;
10% DISCOUNT&#13;
To Parkside students and faculty&#13;
members only, on all merchandise&#13;
in our store. Parkside I.D. required&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
JEWELERS&#13;
Kanothi'i Diamond Contar&#13;
5617 - 6th Avenue&#13;
Phona 658-2525 Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Rated&#13;
presents:&#13;
It's a comedy to cheer about. It's just excellent."&#13;
-Gene Shalit, NBC-TV (Tbday Show)&#13;
BURT REYNOLDS&#13;
JILL CLAYBUR6H&#13;
CANDICE BERGEN&#13;
This Fri., Nov. 20, Sun., Nov. 22&#13;
Admission '1.50 7:30 p.m. Union Ciner&#13;
Next Week:&#13;
Dustin Hoffman as LENNY&#13;
Rated "R" &#13;
RANGER Thursday, November 19,1981&#13;
Video game madness is invading&#13;
Viewpoint&#13;
Photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
Amazing. Among its more&#13;
beneficial advancements, modern&#13;
technology has recently derived a&#13;
method of turning human beings&#13;
into "houseplants." The biggest&#13;
rage right now, discounting&#13;
Preppies, has got to be video and&#13;
electronic games.&#13;
You'll find them everywhere —&#13;
the corner convenience store,&#13;
shopping malls, computer centers&#13;
and even at Parkside. Curiosity&#13;
prompts nearly everyone to try&#13;
their hand at such games, and&#13;
some people are all but consumed&#13;
by these electronic wizards.&#13;
1984 i s right on schedule. Why&#13;
bother leaving the warm, dry&#13;
comfort of t he great indoors for a&#13;
game of football, baseball or&#13;
soccer when a video game can do&#13;
it for you? The barbaric oofs and&#13;
grunts of real players get replaced&#13;
by cute little beeps and buzzes.&#13;
For electronic game fans, these&#13;
are the sounds of music; for the&#13;
rest of us, they join the annoying&#13;
category of "head noises."&#13;
To what can we attribute the&#13;
immense popularity of electronic&#13;
and video games? Do these&#13;
computerized masterpieces&#13;
convey some type of subliminal&#13;
suggestion which mesmerizes&#13;
players? Have the Communists&#13;
replaced rock music and drugs as&#13;
the mainstay for undermining&#13;
American youth? Are we&#13;
becoming a nation of lazy, vapid -&#13;
eyed video freaks?&#13;
Or is it simply that a two -&#13;
dimensional world is easier to&#13;
comprehend? Video games are,&#13;
after all, by far the best way to&#13;
wage wars or conquer new&#13;
peoples.&#13;
The notion that little physical&#13;
energy is expended while playing&#13;
video games is nonsense. Players&#13;
get totally engrossed in their&#13;
games. Surely constricted pupils,&#13;
sweaty palms and increased blood&#13;
pressure do something for the&#13;
participants. The question is how&#13;
long before video ulcers join the&#13;
respected ranks of shin splints,&#13;
tennis elbow and skiers knees as&#13;
medically recognized maladies.&#13;
There's no doubt about it —&#13;
video games are here to stay.&#13;
Those who despise this modern&#13;
form of entertainment may as&#13;
well make the best of i t and pray&#13;
for a power failure. Who knows,&#13;
video games might even convey&#13;
deep philosophical messages for&#13;
some of us — by the time we&#13;
finally figure out how to play, the&#13;
game is over.&#13;
Smokers ponder today's smokeout&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Tobacco is a plant of many uses.&#13;
When its leaves are dried or&#13;
cured, they can be rolled into&#13;
cigars, processed for chewing,&#13;
ground into snuff or shredded for&#13;
use in pipes or cigarettes. Tobacco&#13;
was first used principally in&#13;
connection with religious&#13;
ceremonies, but by the end of the&#13;
fifteenth century tobacco smoking&#13;
had become a common practice.&#13;
Cigarettes are the most common&#13;
way of smoking tobacco today, but&#13;
it has been determined that&#13;
cigarette smoking is hazardous to&#13;
health. The American Cancer&#13;
Society has set aside one day a&#13;
year as a push to convince people&#13;
to stop smoking for twenty-four&#13;
hours. If people can stop for&#13;
twenty-four hours, why not&#13;
longer? In honor of today's&#13;
"smoke-out" a number of&#13;
Parkside smokers were interviewed&#13;
and questioned on their&#13;
reasons for smoking.&#13;
Ron Wurzer was 18 when he&#13;
started smoking. "I've smoked for&#13;
five years. I guess I started&#13;
because I was working and going&#13;
to school at the same time. It&#13;
seemed like the thing to do, but it&#13;
wasn't peer pressure. Now I&#13;
smoke from habit. I don't really&#13;
want to quit, but I don't have any&#13;
deep desire to smoke. I don't think&#13;
I'm going to quit on the day of th e&#13;
smokeout."&#13;
Dave Schmidt started smoking&#13;
at age 15. "I started just to try it.&#13;
A lot of p eople did. Sometimes I'd&#13;
like to quit, but I enjoy smoking. I&#13;
probably won't stop on the date of&#13;
the smokeout."&#13;
Karen Sniatynskii started&#13;
smoking at age 13. "I took my first&#13;
cigarette because of curiosity.&#13;
Now, I don't think that it's a habit.&#13;
I never buy my own cigarettes.&#13;
When I'm around people that&#13;
smoke, I'll have one. During the&#13;
smokeout, I probably won't smoke&#13;
because I don't smoke all the&#13;
time."&#13;
Elizabeth Checkvala started&#13;
smoking when she was 18. "Peer&#13;
pressure is the main reason; I was&#13;
around people that smoked. I&#13;
would definitely like to quit, for&#13;
health reasons. I'm going to try to&#13;
quit on the 19th."&#13;
Saeid Rahmanpanah started&#13;
smoking at age 17. "The first time&#13;
that I had a cigarette, I got high&#13;
from it. I don't get high anymore,&#13;
but it's a habit. I would like to quit&#13;
for my health, but I don't plan on&#13;
stopping for the Great American&#13;
Smokeout."&#13;
Cindy Olson started smoking at&#13;
age 14. "It was cool to smoke, go&#13;
Bedford Duo to perform Downey composition&#13;
Music by Milwaukee composer&#13;
John Downey, including the world&#13;
premiere of his Duo for Oboe and&#13;
Harpsichord, will be presented in&#13;
the first concert of the 1981-82 New&#13;
Music at Parkside series at 3:30&#13;
p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 22, in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside Communication Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
The new work will be performed&#13;
by The Bedford Duo — oboist&#13;
Monte Bedford and harpsichordist&#13;
Frances Bedford — which commissioned&#13;
the composition with&#13;
support from a grant by the&#13;
Wisconsin Arts Board.&#13;
Downey, composer - in -&#13;
residence at UW-Milwaukee, will&#13;
be at the keyboard for two of his&#13;
piano works, Eastlake Terrace&#13;
and Edges, and the Parkside&#13;
Piano Duo — Carol Bell and&#13;
August Wegner—will perform his&#13;
Adagio Lyrico.&#13;
Frances Bedford, Bell and&#13;
Wegner are UW-Parkside music&#13;
faculty members. Monte Bedford&#13;
is on the music faculty of the&#13;
University of Alabama and oboist&#13;
with its resident Capstone&#13;
Woodwind Quintet.&#13;
Tenor Daniel Nelson and pianist&#13;
Jeffrey Peterson, of the UWM&#13;
music faculty, will present three&#13;
Downey songs based on texts by&#13;
Yeats and Shakespeare. Nelson&#13;
also will be soloist for the&#13;
chamber work, A Dolphin,&#13;
assisted by an ensemble including&#13;
Downey at the piano, Carol&#13;
Meves, flute, Mary Norquist,&#13;
viola, and Marty Shadd, percussion.&#13;
The ensemble members&#13;
are from the UWM school of music&#13;
and the Dolphin text is by Irusha&#13;
Downey, the composer's wife.&#13;
Downey's compositions have&#13;
bad major performances in the&#13;
U.S., Europe and Asia and he has&#13;
received a number of important&#13;
commissions including his Cello&#13;
Sonata for George Sopkin; Earthplace,&#13;
an electronic sound score&#13;
for the Public Broadcasting&#13;
Corporation; Symphinic Modules&#13;
Five for the Milwaukee Symphony;&#13;
and a work for the Fine&#13;
Arts String Quartet Foundation of&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
He has received a number of&#13;
awards including a Fulbright&#13;
Award and a scholarship from the&#13;
government of France, which also&#13;
honored him as a Knight a la&#13;
Chevalier.&#13;
Downey received his bachelor of&#13;
music degree from DePaul&#13;
University, which has presented&#13;
him with a Distinguished Alumni&#13;
Award, and a masters degree&#13;
from the Chicago Musical College&#13;
of Roosevelt University. He later&#13;
studied in Paris where he was&#13;
awarded both a prix de composition&#13;
from the Conservatoire&#13;
National de Musique and a PhD&#13;
(Docteur es Lettres) from the&#13;
University of Paris at the Sorbonne.&#13;
His principal teachers&#13;
have included Darius Milhaud and&#13;
Nadia Boulanger.&#13;
Admission for the concert is $1&#13;
for students and senior citizens; $2&#13;
for others. Concert - goers are&#13;
invited to attend a wine and&#13;
cheese reception after the&#13;
program.&#13;
The second concert in the New&#13;
Music series, at 8 p.m. on Feb. 26,&#13;
will feature the Oriana Trio,&#13;
resident chamber ensemble at&#13;
UW-P, and the third, at 8 p.m. on&#13;
April 2, will feature the music of&#13;
Wisconsin - born composer Otto&#13;
Leuning. Wegner and Harry&#13;
Sturm of the UW-P music staff&#13;
direct the series.&#13;
He ®lbe&#13;
£uieet $l{oppe&#13;
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3 DAYS ONLY — NOV. 23,24 &amp; 25&#13;
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down and stand by the creek and&#13;
smoke. I like to smoke, I enjoy it. I&#13;
would like to quit for my health. I&#13;
plan on trying to stop for the&#13;
smokeout."&#13;
Margo Katerdjian began&#13;
smoking when she was 16. "I had&#13;
some problems, and having a&#13;
cigarette let me deal with it a little&#13;
easier. I smoke now because the&#13;
people around me smoke and it&#13;
calms me down. I would like to&#13;
quit because it's not good for my&#13;
health and I plan on trying to stop&#13;
for the Great American&#13;
Smokeout."&#13;
Bob Varnes started smoking at&#13;
age 19 or 20. " It was fun, and it&#13;
was the thing to do. Now, I love to&#13;
smoke. Although I would like to&#13;
quit for health reasons, I would&#13;
rather quit on the day that I&#13;
choose. So, I probably won't quit&#13;
on the smokeout."&#13;
'Welcome back students!" Have fun!&#13;
FMXLLTB BAKERY&#13;
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25* per Game&#13;
Gee, says Strollln' Bowlin', "I can't believe all the&#13;
different fun things there are to do - why the Rec Center&#13;
even has foosball tables." Strollin' Bowlin' quickly finds&#13;
°y.t tha&#13;
J Joosball is only a quarter per game and very exciting.&#13;
Why not discover how much fun foosball is in the&#13;
Rec Center? &#13;
Thursday, November 19,1981 RANGER&#13;
Events************ • §* A Alii *»#» J A m m _ Cheerleaders&#13;
"Add a little greenery to your&#13;
world" at the Cheerleaders' Plant&#13;
Sale on Nov. 23, 24 a nd 25 f rom&#13;
noon 'til 2 p.m. on the main concourse.&#13;
&#13;
Reminder to all basketball fans:&#13;
Parkside's first home game of the&#13;
season is on Dec. 4. Buy your&#13;
season passes today from any&#13;
cheerleader. Passes cost $10 for&#13;
students; $18 for adults.&#13;
Geology Club&#13;
"Introduction to Remote Sensing:&#13;
A Tool for the Earth&#13;
Sciences" will be a lecture by&#13;
Professor Ben Richason, of the&#13;
Geography Department at Carroll&#13;
College, will be presented by the&#13;
Geology Club on Friday, Nov. 20&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Grnq. 113.&#13;
Women's Concourse&#13;
Cindy Van Vreede, chair of the&#13;
Wisconsin National Organization&#13;
For Women Task Force on Media,&#13;
will speak on "Women and Cable&#13;
TV" on Thursday, Nov. 19 at 7&#13;
p.m. in Grnq. 101. The program is&#13;
sponsored by Parkside Women's&#13;
Concourse, Kenosha NOW and the&#13;
Women's Studies Minor Committee.&#13;
Van Vreede is a production&#13;
assistant and Associate&#13;
Producer for channel 10/36 and&#13;
assistant coordinator for&#13;
Milwaukee NOW.&#13;
Anthropology Club&#13;
The Anthropology Club will&#13;
sponsor a lecture by Dr. Henry&#13;
Dobyns and a film entitled "So&#13;
That Men Are Free" on Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 25 in Molinaro D-137.&#13;
Dr. Dobyns will be speaking on his&#13;
work with Cornell University&#13;
involving the actual "rental" of&#13;
lands and peoples in Vicos, Peru&#13;
between 1952 and 1957. This work&#13;
not only led to the revolution in the&#13;
feudal system of Vicos and Peru&#13;
itself, but also to a revolution in&#13;
the field of applied anthropology&#13;
— from policies of observation to&#13;
those of intervention.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
The Accounting Club will&#13;
sponsor the 3rd annual Managers&#13;
Dinner on Monday, Nov. 30. T he&#13;
event will begin with an "attitude&#13;
adjustment" period at 6 p.m. in&#13;
the Parkside Dining Hall, followed&#13;
by dinner at 7 p.m.&#13;
After dinner, Richard Schmidtlein,&#13;
Managing Partner of the&#13;
CPA firm Ernst and Whinney of&#13;
Milwaukee, will speak on "The&#13;
Making of a Professional."&#13;
One hundred business&#13;
executives from southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin and northern Illinois,&#13;
representing all fields of business&#13;
are expected to attend the event.&#13;
Tickets for the Managers&#13;
Tlinnor oi*o now *11&#13;
be sold by Jerry Zigner, John&#13;
Peterson, Darlene Bodi and the&#13;
Union Information Center until&#13;
Nov. 20. B usiness dress attire is&#13;
required and all business students&#13;
are encouraged to come and meet&#13;
future prospective employers.&#13;
IVCF&#13;
Inte r-Varsity Christi an&#13;
Fellowship will host a social on&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 25 in Union 106..&#13;
It will be an enjoyable time of&#13;
games, singing and sharing so all&#13;
students should feel welcome.&#13;
IVCF also hosts its booktable in&#13;
the bookstore alcove to discuss&#13;
issues pertinent to Christianity.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
The Executive Board of Women&#13;
In Business will meet on Friday,&#13;
Nov. 20 at 1 p.m. in the cafeteria.&#13;
The next general business&#13;
meeting of Women In Business&#13;
will be held on Dec. 7 at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Union 104.&#13;
All business club members are&#13;
invited by WIB to a tree - trimming&#13;
party at Barb Kingery's&#13;
(2008 Kinz ie, Racine) on Friday,&#13;
Dec. 4 at 8 p.m. All guests should&#13;
bring an ornament.&#13;
All WIB club members are&#13;
urged to buy tickets for the Accounting&#13;
Club's Managers Dinner&#13;
on Nov. 30. This is an opportunity&#13;
Guskin, Ratner visit Regents&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin and Vice Chancellor&#13;
Lorman Rather were invited to&#13;
open the UW System Board of&#13;
Regents meeting in Madison last&#13;
Thursday with a presentation on&#13;
the planning and process used by&#13;
Parkside to reallocate resources&#13;
to high priority areas during its&#13;
recent budget cutbacks.&#13;
The Regents also accepted more&#13;
than $24,000 in gifts and grants for&#13;
Parkside, including a grant of&#13;
$22,048 from the Governor's&#13;
Employment and Training Office&#13;
in support of a study directed by&#13;
Prof. Barbara Shade of effectiveness&#13;
of different teaching&#13;
techniques on the learning&#13;
responses of students from&#13;
several ethnic backgrounds. The&#13;
study will involve a group of ninth&#13;
grade students from the Racine&#13;
and Kenosha Unified School&#13;
Districts.&#13;
Other items included a grant of&#13;
$1,200 from the U.S. Department&#13;
of Education College Library&#13;
Resources Program; $453 for the&#13;
Very Special Arts Festival for&#13;
handicapped children to be held&#13;
next spring on campus; $150 for&#13;
the CHAMP Program for minority&#13;
high school students; $100 for the&#13;
Life Science Seminar Series; $100&#13;
for the Kenneth L. Greenquist&#13;
Scholarship Fund; and a gift of&#13;
hospital equipment for use in&#13;
nursing training laboratories.&#13;
College Skills Council named&#13;
MADISON — A 22 - member&#13;
advisory council concerned with&#13;
such fundamental skills as&#13;
reading and arithmetic at the&#13;
college level has been appointed&#13;
by UW S ystem President Robert&#13;
,M. O'Neil. The College Skills&#13;
Council includes some members&#13;
from the state's Department of&#13;
Public Instruction, the&#13;
Vocational, Technical and Adult&#13;
•N| A&#13;
A A&#13;
Vol 1 No 9&#13;
"Uphold&#13;
your&#13;
college&#13;
traditions"&#13;
Distributed by E. F. MADRIGRANO 1831 - 55th St. Kenosha, Wise. 658-3553&#13;
Strop's NEW ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
Education System, and independent&#13;
colleges.&#13;
Vice Chancellor Lorman Ratner&#13;
of Parkside will chair the new&#13;
council.&#13;
The creation of the College&#13;
Skills Council was recommended&#13;
by the 1980-81 Basic Skills Council&#13;
which urged the continuation of its&#13;
work but suggested changing the&#13;
name to College Skills Council to&#13;
reflect the group's full range of&#13;
concerns. The council recommended&#13;
that the new group be&#13;
formed by appointing a&#13;
representative from each of the&#13;
universities in the UW System,.&#13;
Extension and the Center System,&#13;
as well as the outside&#13;
organizations.&#13;
Suzuki violin&#13;
lessons offered&#13;
The University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Extension, UW - Parkside Suzuki&#13;
violin program is offering a 45&#13;
minute group lesson to young&#13;
people who study the Suzuki violin&#13;
music by memory.&#13;
The instructor will be Nancy&#13;
Ohnstad. It will be held on&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 21 at the Parkside&#13;
Union Theater.&#13;
The schedule is: 9:45 for&#13;
beginners throu gh Twinkle and&#13;
10:30 for Lightly Row through&#13;
Book II.&#13;
More advanced students are&#13;
welcome even though material&#13;
beyond Book II may not be&#13;
covered. For more information&#13;
and to pre - register call 634-1729&#13;
or 553-2312. T here is no fee. The&#13;
registration deadline is November&#13;
16.&#13;
THE&#13;
FARCES&#13;
AN EVENING&#13;
WITH&#13;
ANTON CHEKHOV&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C. &#13;
Rangers snap Minnesota jinx&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser |"»***——• —•— f&#13;
To cap off the most successful&#13;
season ever, the Parkside men's&#13;
soccer team vanquished a six year&#13;
plague by defeating Bethel&#13;
College of St. Paul, Minnesota in&#13;
the district championship game&#13;
by a 2-0 score last Thursday.&#13;
Parkside took an 11-8 record&#13;
into the game compared to&#13;
Bethel's impressive 15-1-3 mark&#13;
The Rangers scored both of their&#13;
goals in the first half, the first one&#13;
by Chiedo Okonmah with an assist&#13;
going to John Onyiego. The second&#13;
goal was scored by Ralph DeGraff&#13;
with an assist going to Scott&#13;
Gerhartz. Coach Hal Henderson&#13;
felt that the score could have been&#13;
5-0, pointing out that his team&#13;
missed a couple of easy shots.&#13;
Henderson thought that there&#13;
were four factors which could&#13;
have affected the outcome of the&#13;
contest. The first one was the&#13;
horrible condition of the field. "It&#13;
was a hard, dirt field, and we need&#13;
a soft field to be at our best." The&#13;
second factor was Bethel's style of&#13;
play. "We tend to play like our&#13;
opponents, and they played with&#13;
the ball in the air a lot, which isn't&#13;
our style."&#13;
"The last 20 minutes of the&#13;
game every call (by the refs) went&#13;
against us," said Henderson. "It&#13;
seemed like the refs were trying to&#13;
keep them in the game."&#13;
The fourth factor was the&#13;
defense of s enior John Onyiego in&#13;
keeping Bethel's star midfielder,&#13;
Bobby Clark, in check. All Henderson's&#13;
scouting reports said that&#13;
if the Rangers were to win they&#13;
had to keep Clark in check.&#13;
"Momo kept him out of the game.&#13;
That was an extreme factor in&#13;
shutting their offense down."&#13;
Henderson also had praise for his&#13;
team as a whole. "We played very&#13;
good defense as a team. We&#13;
weren't going to be denied."&#13;
The win over Bethel had added&#13;
significance to Henderson personally.&#13;
It was not only the&#13;
twelvth win for the Rangers as a&#13;
team, the most in Parkside&#13;
history, but it was also the 100th&#13;
win for Henderson in his 17 year&#13;
college coaching career.&#13;
The win over Bethel advanced&#13;
the Rangers to the NAIA Area 5&#13;
championship against four time&#13;
national champion Quincy&#13;
College. Quincy, with an impressive&#13;
15-3-1 record coming into&#13;
the game, was rated by Henderson&#13;
as "by far the best team&#13;
we've ever played."&#13;
The Ranger hopes of moving on&#13;
to the national tournament in&#13;
Springfield, Illinois were dashed&#13;
Photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
as Quincy overpowered Parkside&#13;
and took the contest by a 5-0 ta lly&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
Quincy, the number one&#13;
nationally rated team for the past&#13;
eight weeks, took control of the&#13;
game early with their first goal&#13;
just 38 seconds into the game.&#13;
Parkside trailed 2-0 at the end of&#13;
the first half and were badly&#13;
outshot by their opponents 16-2.&#13;
"We played about as well as we&#13;
can play, but we did make&#13;
mistakes, partly because of our&#13;
inexperience against this sort of&#13;
team and partly because of our&#13;
youth." The Rangers will only lose&#13;
one senior to graduation from this&#13;
years team, Onyiego.&#13;
The Rangers finished the season&#13;
with an admireable 12-9 record.&#13;
"It was a good year for us. We lost&#13;
five games by just one goal. Our&#13;
record could have easily have&#13;
been 16-5."&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Rangers place third in state&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
The Parkside women's&#13;
volleyball team ended its season&#13;
last weekend with a third place&#13;
finish at the WWIAC state tournament&#13;
held at Parkside. UWMilwaukee&#13;
won the tournament,&#13;
earning the right to advance to&#13;
regional playoffs.&#13;
The Rangers got off on the&#13;
wrong foot, losing to Marquette in&#13;
three games in their first match of&#13;
the tourney. Parkside beat the&#13;
Warriors in the first game of that&#13;
match by a 15-6 score, but&#13;
Marquette battled back to take the&#13;
final two decisive games by scores&#13;
of 12-15 and 7-15.&#13;
Carthage was the next Parkside&#13;
opponent, and this time the&#13;
Rangers came out on the winning&#13;
end, defeating Carthage in two&#13;
| Open Meetings&#13;
Collegiate Skills Implementation Sub -&#13;
committee (APC)&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 19&#13;
1 p.m., Grnq. 344A&#13;
Agenda: Reading Placement Test,&#13;
Regional Testing, December meeting&#13;
with high school English and&#13;
mathematics teachers and counselors&#13;
on "Expectations," extended student&#13;
survey, reviewers for CSP review, L.&#13;
Comerford's memorandum.&#13;
Social Science Division Executive&#13;
Committee&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 19&#13;
3 p.m., Moln..367A&#13;
Agenda: Personnel matter — a&#13;
motion will be made to convene in&#13;
closed session under Wisconsin&#13;
statutes 19.85 (1) (b) and (c).&#13;
Academic Actions&#13;
Friday, Nov. 20&#13;
Agenda: Student requests — c losed&#13;
under Wisconsin statute 19.85 (1) (f).&#13;
Behavorlal Science Division&#13;
Faculty Meeting&#13;
Friday, Nov. 20&#13;
2:30 p.m., Moln. 324&#13;
Agenda: Meeting with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin and Vice Chancellor Ratner.&#13;
UW-P Faculty Senate&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 1&#13;
3-30 p.m., Moln. D107&#13;
Agenda items due last Tuesday.&#13;
Academic Policies Committee&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 24&#13;
1 P.m., Grnq. 318A&#13;
Agenda: Review catalogue copy for&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge, other items.&#13;
games, 15-9 and 17-15, eliminating&#13;
the lady Redmen from the tournament.&#13;
&#13;
Parkside had a little tougher&#13;
time defeating Carroll College in&#13;
their next match, being down 10-4&#13;
in the first game, but coming back&#13;
to take the game by a 18-16 score.&#13;
The second game was just the&#13;
opposite as the Rangers jumped&#13;
out to a quick 10-1 lead only to see&#13;
Carroll fight back before Parkside&#13;
eliminated Carroll, winning the&#13;
game 15-10, and the match.&#13;
A rematch with Marquette&#13;
proved to be the undoing of the&#13;
Rangers as far as any hopes of&#13;
advancing in this years tournament&#13;
were concerned.&#13;
Marquette handily defeated the&#13;
Rangers in two quick games, 15-4&#13;
and 15-7, eliminating Parkside&#13;
from the double elimination&#13;
tournament.&#13;
The Rangers finished the season&#13;
with a disappointing 17-28 record,&#13;
the worst ever at Parkside. The&#13;
Rangers have no graduating&#13;
seniors and coach Linda Henderson&#13;
is looking forward to a&#13;
more experienced team next year.&#13;
Sophomore Lauri Hess was&#13;
voted the teams Most Valuable&#13;
Player by her teammates this&#13;
year, while Lauri Pope and Sherry&#13;
Festge were voted to the all -&#13;
conference team.&#13;
GIFTS&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
JEWELRY&#13;
RAIMBOW&#13;
uptown&#13;
kenosha&#13;
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Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
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RECORDS &amp; TAPES&#13;
Uwtst Pric* In Town&#13;
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$73 1&#13;
pus&#13;
40~ OFP WITH TMS~ COUPON&#13;
for Hm purchasf of&#13;
ALBUM OR TARE&#13;
1 Coupon per Album or Tape Good thru Dec. 10th, 1981&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of beer? All you have to do is fill&#13;
out this form and pick the correct winners. Put a check mark by&#13;
your picks and bring the form down to the Ranger office, WLLC&#13;
D139.&#13;
Denver at Cincinnati&#13;
Detroit at Chicago&#13;
Green Bay at Tampa Bay&#13;
Miami at N.Y. Jets&#13;
New England at Buffalo -&#13;
New Orleans at Houston&#13;
N.Y. Giants at Philadelphia&#13;
Pittsburgh at Cleveland&#13;
St. Louis at Baltimore&#13;
San Diego at Oakland&#13;
San Francisco at Los Angeles&#13;
Seattle at Kansas City&#13;
Washington at Dallas&#13;
Last week's winner was Kris Schaefer with 9 correct, 38 total&#13;
combined points.&#13;
Tie Breaker: will be the total combined points in the&#13;
Green Bay - Tampa Bay game.&#13;
Name&#13;
S.S. No.&#13;
Rules:&#13;
1. One entry per person.&#13;
2. Entrants must be Parkside students.&#13;
3. Ranger staff, general members and their families are&#13;
ineligible.&#13;
4. Entry must be clipped from Ranger issue.&#13;
5. Entries must be turned in to the Ranger office by noon of the&#13;
Friday preceeding the games.&#13;
6. Winners will be chosen by the Sports Editor.&#13;
7. Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks&#13;
8. Entries must be legible to be considered.&#13;
jil&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
m&#13;
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'"&#13;
8 Thursday, November 19,1981 RANGER&#13;
Inside UW-P Sports&#13;
Pick-up basketball becomes habit&#13;
by Greg Bonofiglio&#13;
Dennis Skrzypchak takes the&#13;
inbounds pass, fakes right and&#13;
dribbles to the left, stops and puts&#13;
up an eighteen footer from the&#13;
baseline. The shot rolls off and&#13;
there's a battle for the rebound.&#13;
Pat McDonald picks up the loose&#13;
ball and fires it down court to Jim&#13;
Allegretto cheating on the break.&#13;
Allegretto drives the lane and lays&#13;
it in for the final basket of the&#13;
game.&#13;
Now who in the hell is Skrzypchak,&#13;
McDonald or Allegretto?&#13;
Don't feel too bad if you don't&#13;
recognize these names. Few&#13;
people do. They don't play for any&#13;
professional basketball team nor&#13;
do they play for the Rangers.&#13;
These players take part in a&#13;
unique league of sorts in the P.E.&#13;
building. The name of t he game is&#13;
pick-up basketball and for a&#13;
handful of players, it's a weekly&#13;
tradition.&#13;
There is no formal set of rules&#13;
governing this "league." All that&#13;
exists is a mutual understanding&#13;
to meet in the gym every Monday,&#13;
Wednesday, and Friday around&#13;
noon. As soon as there are ten&#13;
players, a game begins. Often as&#13;
many as thirty players will show&#13;
up for these games. Last Friday,&#13;
about twenty - five players were&#13;
on hand, a good number of which&#13;
are regulars. Some of the more&#13;
hard core members of this group&#13;
include:&#13;
Walt Nassauer, Jon Cuccio,&#13;
Andy Karls, Dick Sykes, Dennis&#13;
Skrzypchak, Jim Allegretto,&#13;
Kevin Stein, Pat McDonald, Kevin&#13;
Stein, Jeff Dahl, Mike Plemon (an&#13;
assistant football coach at&#13;
Kenosha Tremper), Walt Graf fin&#13;
(Associate Professor of English at&#13;
UW-P), Ron Jalkes, and Gene&#13;
Biatto.&#13;
"Pro" nicknames are better&#13;
known than some of the player's&#13;
real names. There's "Stretch,"&#13;
"All World," "Golden Boy" and&#13;
"The Vet" just to name a few.&#13;
Briefly, here's how the games&#13;
start up. After sides are picked&#13;
and a few rules quickly agreed&#13;
upon, the game begins with one&#13;
side taking the ball out. Quickly&#13;
each player picks the player he'll&#13;
cover throughout the game.&#13;
Scoring goes by ones to fifteen.&#13;
Each game is tb eleven if there&#13;
are other teams waiting for one of&#13;
the two courts to open up. If your&#13;
team wins, you keep the court.&#13;
The ball is taken out between&#13;
mid-court and the top of the key on&#13;
a foul or an out of bounds play.&#13;
After a basket, the ball is taken&#13;
out behind the endline. With&#13;
players calling their own fouls, the&#13;
games are generally clean.&#13;
Some of the players in this&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
group play for various city league&#13;
teams in Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
Some do not. You don't have to be&#13;
a great player to get on one of&#13;
these teams. I was proof of that on&#13;
Friday. My high point came when&#13;
I set up a devastating pick which&#13;
completely wiped out a player.&#13;
Unfortunately, he was on my&#13;
team. But if basketball is your&#13;
game, I'm sure there are enough&#13;
players out there who'll be more&#13;
than happy to accomodate you.&#13;
Although the only ones who&#13;
watch these games are the&#13;
players themselves, these "pickup"&#13;
games don't go completely&#13;
unnoticed either. Parkside&#13;
basketball coach Steve Stephens&#13;
was impressed enough with what&#13;
he saw in one player, Walt&#13;
Nassauer, that he asked him to try&#13;
out for the team.&#13;
Most players say they come out&#13;
to the gym to stay in shape, take&#13;
advantage of the free gym, and&#13;
just to play ball.&#13;
In an era of player strikes,&#13;
holdouts, free agentry, and offer&#13;
sheets, it's always refreshing if&#13;
not reassuring to find a sport&#13;
whose participants still play for&#13;
the sake of simply enjoying the&#13;
game.&#13;
Photo by Steve Myers&#13;
PICKUP BASKETBALL in Parkside's gym attracts students,&#13;
staff and faculty.&#13;
SERVICES OFFERED&#13;
FORMER TEACHER with two masters&#13;
degrees will edit, critique and type term&#13;
papers for $2 per page. Will not write term&#13;
paper for you. Consultant only. 632-9798.&#13;
FRENCH, GERMAN, SPANISH LESSONS.&#13;
Price open. Caroline 886-4206.&#13;
TYPING. Resumes, termpapers, theses,&#13;
manuscripts, etc. 14 years of experience.&#13;
Reasonable rates. 694-1825 or 652-6599.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
TWO YOUNG MEN (25 and 30), with exceptional&#13;
taste and qualities looking for&#13;
female companionship with someone who&#13;
appreciates the finer things in life, and who&#13;
respects themselves, others and natural&#13;
beauty. Address correspondence to: Ron&#13;
(25) or Bob (30) P. O. Box 167, Winthrop&#13;
Harbor, II. 60096-0167.&#13;
SAY GUYS! Afraid of women? I may have&#13;
iust the alternative you're looking for.&#13;
"Beastiality and Me" (or, how to teach old&#13;
dogs new tricks) Interested? Call Jeff&#13;
Schoor.&#13;
MEN: Do you enioy wearing womens' underwear?&#13;
I have what you're looking for:&#13;
panties, garters, low cut bras . . . sorry&#13;
girls, men's sizes only. If interested call&#13;
Markie Kleine.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
PIONEER AMPLIFIER AND TUNER,&#13;
Sanyo cassette deck (Dolby), synergistics&#13;
speakers. Must sell for out - of - state&#13;
tuition. 632-5365.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
HOUSE FOR RENT. 2 bedroom, 2 story in&#13;
Kenosha area. Call Lori, 552-9372, for&#13;
details. Available Dec. 1.&#13;
t h t h e exciting taste&#13;
/?ZfwUh 7&amp; 7. Enjoy&#13;
**:» r°U Sec" ftS^unds&#13;
and jazz, an&#13;
7 nnuntry and western,&#13;
^^UjAndsodoes^ moderation.&#13;
Zg'sounds better with •&#13;
roll stirs wrth&#13;
Seagrams&#13;
SEAGRAM DISTILLERS CO.. N.Y.C. AMERICAN W HISKEY-A BLEND. 80 PR OOF SEVEN U P ANCTVUP' AR E TRADEMARKS OF THE SEVEN U P COMPANVCX </text>
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              <text>Open Forum - Guskin addresses proposed tuition surcharge</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="90621">
              <text>l&#13;
IP University of Wisconsin - Porkside&#13;
Thursday, December 10, 1981&#13;
IS tbe seasop to spcpd n)ope.r:&#13;
Jfa fa fa fa fa, ra fa fa fa.&#13;
I it) &gt;3o broke, it isp't Puppy;&#13;
Ja fa fa fa fa, Za fa fa fa&#13;
HXPRESS^ hjto debt arid) £ay abandon;&#13;
4,Sy _&lt;^vja Za fa fa, Za fa fa.&#13;
^—r Credit cards are njopeyls stapdrin&#13;
j&amp;f* fa fa fa fa, Za fa fa fa!&#13;
VISA MAVER&#13;
FCCCEPTED&#13;
ASTROro&#13;
^«IST/Vt&#13;
Let) and Barbie are bionic: — |&#13;
Jfa fa la la la~Za fa fa fa?&#13;
Lnen &lt;5crabble's electronic: J?&#13;
Ja fa fa fa la; £a la fa fa! C 3&#13;
JVoay tbeybe put soiye toys witlj braips out&#13;
Za fa la, (Bob la fa, Za he ha,&#13;
T1)at get depressed uri)ei)e'er it raips out:&#13;
Jfa fa la la fa, 3Et extern. w&#13;
WE'LL M OVE O N TO C HRISTMAS&#13;
IN A MOMENT, BUT FIRST A&#13;
FEW FINAL WORDS...&#13;
- drp&amp;n mcZZd %(MU&#13;
^0%&#13;
What's going on at UW-Parkside?&#13;
Just look INSIDE . . .&#13;
* Surcharge "modest,"&#13;
Nwv Guskin tells students&#13;
^ * Milwaukee night life&#13;
/&#13;
beats the blues&#13;
• Women's basketball&#13;
gets going&#13;
• Slama ele cted PSGA&#13;
Vice President&#13;
• Reviews: "Doctor's&#13;
Farces!' and Village&#13;
Voice rock critic&#13;
• Fall sports letter&#13;
winners announced&#13;
• Book Exchange gears up&#13;
for 2nd semester sal es&#13;
* Is social drinking&#13;
a problem at UW-P?&#13;
* Rangers win 3 of 4&#13;
openers &#13;
2 Thursday, December 10,1981 RANGER&#13;
Open Forum&#13;
Guskin addresses proposed tuition surcharge&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The proposed $23 tuition surcharge&#13;
was the major topic of&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin's second&#13;
open forum with students this&#13;
semester. Only a dozen students&#13;
attended the Dec. 2 forum.&#13;
Phil Pogreba, a PSGA Senator,&#13;
asked Guskin where last year's&#13;
surcharge money was spent.&#13;
Guskin explained that the surcharge&#13;
- generated money was a&#13;
part of a pool of funds that are&#13;
usually allocated but weren't in&#13;
order to make up for budget cuts&#13;
the university system faced. "So,&#13;
in effect," said Guskin, "the&#13;
campus never saw that money. It&#13;
was sort of given with one hand&#13;
and taken with the other. (This&#13;
year) I don't think it's going to be&#13;
a very different situation."&#13;
Everything depends on what&#13;
Governor Dreyfus says in his&#13;
January revenue statement.&#13;
Guskin said, "If the Governor&#13;
says that we have enough money&#13;
in the state to fund what we said&#13;
we were going to fund in the state&#13;
and if we get the $23 per student —&#13;
which would be in the order of&#13;
$75,000 - 80,000 — my guess is that&#13;
we'll use (the money) for the&#13;
library, materials in the labs —&#13;
things of that nature that we're&#13;
really hard pressed on now.&#13;
"What will happen in January,&#13;
however, is the Governor will&#13;
come out with revenue projections&#13;
for the fourth quarter and the&#13;
experience of the second and third&#13;
quarters," said Guskin. "The&#13;
result of that will be, everybody is&#13;
estimating, not very good news for&#13;
the state."&#13;
Guskin said that a lot of the&#13;
"$23 urns a modest&#13;
amount giuen the&#13;
benefits that it would&#13;
bring about."&#13;
surcharge money will probably go&#13;
to make up for the mandated cuts.&#13;
"So we'll still be behind the eight -&#13;
ball," he said. "So the library still&#13;
will have less books than we feel is&#13;
appropriate and labs still will not&#13;
have the chemicals and other&#13;
materials that we think are&#13;
necessary," he said.&#13;
Mike Pfaffl, a PSGA Senator&#13;
who organized a letter writing&#13;
campaign to State Senator John&#13;
Maurer against the surcharge,&#13;
asked Guskin why there aren't&#13;
any long term solutions to the UW&#13;
System's financial woes. Pfaffl&#13;
also noted that the UW System&#13;
budget was only cut 2% while all&#13;
other state agencies were cut 8%,&#13;
and that the UW System is enjoying&#13;
higher enrollments than&#13;
projected.&#13;
"Students, because of the 2%&#13;
cut and because of the formula,&#13;
probably paid the lowest tuition&#13;
increase in the entire country,"&#13;
said Guskin. "The average in the&#13;
country is 13 percent; students&#13;
here paid 4.5 percent. I personally&#13;
think it was much too low and was&#13;
a mistake and we're suffering now&#13;
with the mistake because&#13;
students, not inappropriately, say&#13;
we don't want to pay any more."&#13;
Guskin suggested that the&#13;
money should have been picked up&#13;
with a larger tuition increase,&#13;
maybe 6 or 7 percent, because&#13;
then it would become part of the&#13;
base. "What's happening with this&#13;
surcharge business is that every&#13;
year we have to go back and&#13;
request again because it's not part&#13;
of the base and qilite appropriately&#13;
the students are upset.&#13;
"The problem we really have,&#13;
which is a very ticklish one, is can&#13;
the university continue to sustain&#13;
the kind of cuts that are brought&#13;
about by inflation and the lack of&#13;
"Students probably paid&#13;
the lowest tuition&#13;
increase in the entire&#13;
country&#13;
money and can we continue to&#13;
sustain that over a long period and&#13;
still maintain the kind of quality&#13;
university we want?"&#13;
Guskin said that access always&#13;
has to be balanced with quality.&#13;
"You can't just look at access&#13;
alone because you have to have&#13;
access to an institution that you&#13;
respect," he said. "Just having&#13;
access to the halls doesn't mean&#13;
very much. Having access to a&#13;
library that doesn't have the&#13;
books you want doesn't make a&#13;
whole lot of sense."&#13;
Guskin feels that we are&#13;
heading for a very difficult period&#13;
in terms of access to universities&#13;
and quality in universities. "I&#13;
think Reagan doesn't really care a&#13;
whole lot about access. I believe&#13;
the philosophy of Reagan and the&#13;
people around him is such that&#13;
universities like this are not high&#13;
on his agenda.&#13;
"(Dreyfus), as a person, is&#13;
deeply committed to access," said&#13;
Guskin. "He's also a politician,&#13;
though. Now, he's not a chancellor&#13;
of a university any longer and he's&#13;
got to worry also about running&#13;
for election in a year and that&#13;
affects a lot of things he does. But&#13;
nevertheless it doesn't make a&#13;
difference what his personal&#13;
beliefs are. I think the reality is&#13;
we're headed for a very, very&#13;
tough time in terms of universities&#13;
and students having the ability to&#13;
pay the cost.&#13;
"Nobody's figures out any&#13;
answers yet," said Guskin. "I&#13;
think until we figure out what an&#13;
answer is we have to do it this&#13;
way."&#13;
Guskin said that $23 is not a lot&#13;
of money. "But the $23, m y own&#13;
feeling was, was a modest amount&#13;
given the benefits that it would&#13;
bring about. I would expect&#13;
students to disagree. That's a&#13;
difference of perspective; that's&#13;
legitimate because my job is to&#13;
protect the future of the university.&#13;
Your job is to try to figure out&#13;
how you're going to go to school."&#13;
Photo by Jim Mertens&#13;
CHANCELLOR ALAN GUSKIN talks to students during his&#13;
second 1 " 0pen forum" of the semester Dec. 2.&#13;
Other issues discussed&#13;
Bookstore, basketball program, Temple Unberslty&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Other topics discussed at the&#13;
open forum include: problems&#13;
with the bookstore, the status of&#13;
the basketball program after&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens leaves, and&#13;
Chancellor Guskin's job interviewing&#13;
for President of&#13;
Temple University.&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
Guskin has set up a small&#13;
committee consisting of Nicholas&#13;
Burckel, Guskin's executive&#13;
assistant; Jim Kreuser, PSGA&#13;
President; Linda Henderson,&#13;
administrative intern; and Dave&#13;
Holle, campus controller.&#13;
"They're actually given carte&#13;
blanche," said Guskin. "They can&#13;
come up with a recommendation&#13;
or recommendations that will&#13;
solve the bookstore problem." The&#13;
committee will report to Guskin&#13;
Dec. 15 and again probably in mid&#13;
- January.&#13;
The committee is visiting other&#13;
campus bookstores and will talk to&#13;
people at Follett Corporation,&#13;
which currently operates&#13;
Parkside's bookstore.&#13;
Said Guskin, "(The committee's&#13;
recommendation) will enable us&#13;
to do either of two things — create&#13;
a contract language with Follett&#13;
so that we get the kind of service&#13;
we want or if that's not possible,&#13;
create our own bookstore. We're&#13;
prepared to, if we have to, run our&#13;
own bookstore."&#13;
"The goal is to reach the level of&#13;
service that is expected of the&#13;
campus bookstore," said Guskin,&#13;
"namely have between 95 - 98&#13;
percent of the books in for people&#13;
registered. Then get the quality of&#13;
materials in the bookstore so that&#13;
people can enjoy walking into a&#13;
nice bookstore. That probably will&#13;
require more space and we're a&#13;
long way from solving that."&#13;
One point brought up by a&#13;
student was that the bookstore&#13;
charges five percent over a book's&#13;
list price. "That will stop," said&#13;
Guskin. "We have to figure out a&#13;
way to do that, but that will stop.&#13;
It's the result of the rental charges&#13;
and the amount of returns. We&#13;
have the highest return rate, I&#13;
think, in the country. We can"&#13;
figure out why that is and we're&#13;
going to do a number of things to&#13;
stop it."&#13;
The bookstore operated foi&#13;
three years in a row without a&#13;
profit, enabling them to charge&#13;
five percent over list price.&#13;
"I'm not being critical of the&#13;
bookstore at Follett," said&#13;
Guskin. "They're not in business&#13;
to make all of you feel good. They&#13;
hope that by making you feel good&#13;
they make money. They probably&#13;
have done neither right now."&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Guskin said that he assumes the&#13;
basketball program will continue&#13;
after Steve Stephens leaves his&#13;
coaching position. Stephens has&#13;
said this is his last season.&#13;
"I'm not terribly involved (in&#13;
the process)," said Guskin. "What&#13;
will happen, my guess is, is that&#13;
the Athletic Director will make a&#13;
recommendation to the Vice -&#13;
Chancellor. I would assume that&#13;
we're going to have a respectable&#13;
basketball program. It may not be&#13;
the same kind of program we have&#13;
now, but it may take a while to&#13;
build it back up — I don't know."&#13;
Temple University&#13;
Guskin hopes to hear from&#13;
Temple University "soon" about&#13;
his application for the presidency&#13;
of the university. "I'll be happy&#13;
when it's all over, one way or the&#13;
other," he said. "I didn't expect to&#13;
be involved in this this year. I&#13;
expected it the next two, three,&#13;
four years."&#13;
"I believe, like a lot of&#13;
presidents of universities believe,&#13;
that you should not stay more than&#13;
10 years under any circumstances&#13;
— unless you have to. Namely&#13;
because an institution needs a&#13;
change every so often in people&#13;
who are at the top because some&#13;
styles have to be changed, things&#13;
have to be done and tried again —&#13;
things that were tried and didn't&#13;
work. New people have to come in&#13;
to try it again and see if they&#13;
work."&#13;
PSGA Senate elects Kathy Slama vice-president&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
In its Dec. 2 meeting, the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. Senate moved&#13;
one step closer to having a full&#13;
slate of officers by approving&#13;
Kathy Slama as vice - president&#13;
but, for the third week in a row,&#13;
failed to elect a President Pro&#13;
Tempore and Assistant President&#13;
Pro Tempore.&#13;
Slama, previously President&#13;
Pro Tempore, has been acting&#13;
vice - president since Kathy&#13;
Bambrough resigned the post on&#13;
Nov. 18. According to the PSGA&#13;
Constitution, the PSGA President&#13;
appoints a new vice - president&#13;
with the advice and consent of a&#13;
majority of the Senate.&#13;
PSGA President Jim Kreuser's&#13;
appointment of Slama failed to be&#13;
approved when he brought it up&#13;
during his report at the beginning&#13;
of the meeting. The vote was 5-1-2&#13;
with Earlene Frederick John&#13;
Peterson, Mike Pfaffl, Luis&#13;
Valldejuli and Dave White voting&#13;
KATHY SLAMA&#13;
"Aye," Joe Ripp voting "Nay"&#13;
and Phil Pogreba and A1 Spallato&#13;
abstaining.&#13;
But towards the end of the&#13;
meeting Pogreba moved to&#13;
remotion Slama's appointment. "I&#13;
request that this be a secret ballot&#13;
and I hope that all of you don't&#13;
leave me hanging out on a limb by&#13;
myself for too long," Kreuser told&#13;
the Senate. The request for a&#13;
written ballot has to come from a&#13;
Senator, according to the PSGA&#13;
Constitution, and Valldejuli made&#13;
the request.&#13;
The secret ballot approved&#13;
Slama as the new PSGA vice -&#13;
president with a 7-0-3 v ote.&#13;
For the third week in a row, with&#13;
two ballots taken each week, the&#13;
Senate was unable to elect a&#13;
President Pro Tempore and&#13;
Assistant President Pro Tempore.&#13;
Pogreba and Rodriguez are&#13;
nominated for Pro Tempore and&#13;
Peterson and Spallato are&#13;
nominated for the Assistant&#13;
position.&#13;
The reason for the failure to&#13;
elect someone to either position is&#13;
that a two - thirds vote is needed.&#13;
There are curreiftly 13 Senators in&#13;
the 18 seat Senate making the&#13;
necessary number of votes be&#13;
nine. The problem that has&#13;
plagued the Senate for the past&#13;
three weeks is that there were&#13;
only nine or 10 Senators in attendance,&#13;
making the vote have to&#13;
be unanimous or nine out of ten,&#13;
which seems nearly impossible!&#13;
Elections for the two positions&#13;
will continue each Senate meeting&#13;
until there is a decision.&#13;
In a somewhat related matter,&#13;
Valldejuli received a two week&#13;
leave of absence with a 8-0-1&#13;
Senate vote. Valldejuli is&#13;
currently acting President Pro&#13;
Tempore; during his leave of&#13;
absence, Randy Klees, the&#13;
Senator with the highest seniority&#13;
will fill the position until&#13;
Valldejuli returns or somebody&#13;
gets elected.&#13;
Last Ranger of semester&#13;
19M ateuw"d tI"®" marks the close ot the faH seme5te&#13;
«- -&#13;
distribute^All2RanS ?&#13;
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semester. deadlines will remain effective during&#13;
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"' semester,&#13;
semester. on n&#13;
* 19 and every Tuesday of&#13;
Classified ads - noon on Jan. 15 and every Friday of the semester.&#13;
next sem^ter.^nt^fh^^^sho^r^ *** Par&#13;
.&#13;
kside community ag&#13;
holiday season! ' readers all the best of the com &#13;
Faculty Senate&#13;
Guskin, Ratner make * update report"&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin and Vice - Chancellor&#13;
Larry Ratner gave faculty an&#13;
"update" on their recent budget&#13;
presentation to the UW - System&#13;
Board of Regents and other&#13;
campus issues at the Dec. 1 late&#13;
fall Faculty Senate meeting.&#13;
The other Faculty Senate&#13;
issues, the proposed policy on&#13;
Teaching Excellence Awards and&#13;
the Policy on Merit Portion of&#13;
Annual Compensation Adjustment&#13;
for Faculty, were also discussed.&#13;
The Teaching Excellence&#13;
Awards proposal was sent back to&#13;
the University Committee for&#13;
further study after students and&#13;
faculty members present stated&#13;
their objections to the proposal.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc., will&#13;
continue working with the&#13;
Committee on the policy.&#13;
The Merit Portion proposal was&#13;
approved without dissent on a&#13;
voice vote. The policy gives the&#13;
University Committee&#13;
authorization to advise the administration&#13;
and report to the&#13;
Senate when campus discretion is&#13;
allowed for increases not specified&#13;
as merit or across - the - board.&#13;
This summer, the University&#13;
Committee made a successful&#13;
recommendation to split an&#13;
unexpected 2% "equity" adjustment&#13;
1% across - the - board,&#13;
1% merit. The Committee also&#13;
recommended that the Senate's&#13;
relative policy (PSF 8/77-78) be&#13;
"clarified" to cover such additional&#13;
increases, although the&#13;
Committee said "the designation&#13;
of such a component in the future&#13;
is unpredictable."&#13;
Guskin said his report reflected&#13;
a "hectic time" for he and Ratner&#13;
because they not only had&#13;
discussed many issues with the&#13;
Regents and System President&#13;
Robert O'Neil, but also had other&#13;
reports to make to the Senate.&#13;
Some of the issues discussed&#13;
during the meeting ere:&#13;
• Parkside as a maturing&#13;
university. Parkside, Guskin said,&#13;
should no longer be "clustered"&#13;
with other UW System schools&#13;
according to the level of education&#13;
offered. He has suggested to the&#13;
Regents that clustering be&#13;
designated by either major or&#13;
numbers of students or by history.&#13;
• The "teacher - scholar"&#13;
model. Ratner said that since the&#13;
Parkside faculty appears on many&#13;
tables to have very light teaching&#13;
loads, they decided to let the&#13;
Regents know how strongly they&#13;
felt that Parkside's faculty, as&#13;
teacher - scholars, "add breadth&#13;
to the UW System." Guskin added,&#13;
"We ask them to support us&#13;
for what we are."&#13;
• Affirmative Action. Guskin&#13;
said that this spring and summer&#13;
he will be reporting to various&#13;
local and state agencies on&#13;
progress so far and future Affirmative&#13;
Action goals at&#13;
Parkside. "This means we will&#13;
have to finish discussion of our&#13;
goals soon," he said.&#13;
• Sexual harassment. A policy&#13;
to address sexual harassment has&#13;
been sent from the Senate to the&#13;
Regents, Guskin said, with implementation&#13;
to follow approval&#13;
and the agreement of PSGA and&#13;
the academic staff.&#13;
• The Bookstore. "We have to&#13;
resolve the bookstore problem,"&#13;
Guskin said. "If we have to, we'll&#13;
run our own bookstore,. Guskin&#13;
said he has put together a committee&#13;
to "very quickly look at&#13;
some alternatives" by visiting&#13;
other campuses that have widely&#13;
diverse methods of handling&#13;
books. The committee will be&#13;
submitting a proposal by the first&#13;
of the year, he said.&#13;
• Interdisciplinary project&#13;
plans. Guskin said that several&#13;
interdisciplinary programs will be&#13;
put together at Parkside next&#13;
semester, featuring visiting&#13;
professionals and cooperative&#13;
seminar series, with other various&#13;
interdisciplinary projects occurring.&#13;
&#13;
• Budget cuts. Guskin and&#13;
Ratner also presented to the&#13;
Senate a basic version of their&#13;
Regents presentation on budget&#13;
cuts. Guskin said his method of&#13;
"using the budget as a tool of the&#13;
institution's priorities rather than&#13;
just cutting every year" makes&#13;
budgeting "a very human&#13;
process" and eliminates&#13;
automatic decreases in institutional&#13;
quality because of key&#13;
program eliminations.&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
FORMER PARKSIDE TEACHER Shirley Kersey received a&#13;
certificate in honor of her achievement from some student&#13;
members of the Teaching Excellence Awards Committee at a&#13;
reception held on Dec. 3. Kersey was denied the usual $500&#13;
stipend by Chancellor Alan Guskin on the grounds that she was&#13;
no longer employed by UW-P. After negotiating with students&#13;
this fall, Guskin agreed to sign Kersey's certificate.&#13;
Reward system on trial basis&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
In an effort to reduce and deter&#13;
crime on campus, four UW -&#13;
System campuses (Milwaukee,&#13;
Superior, Oshkosh, and Parkside)&#13;
have been offering rewards that&#13;
will pay up to $100 for information&#13;
about crimes that occur on&#13;
campus.&#13;
Although this program has only&#13;
been in effect on a trial basis for&#13;
about a month now, its effectiveness&#13;
in reducing crime is&#13;
hard to determine so far. But the&#13;
success of this program depends&#13;
on the awareness by everyone of&#13;
the Reward for Information&#13;
Program (RIP) and how it works.&#13;
"It takes time to build up the&#13;
system," says Dave Pedersen,&#13;
Dean of Student Life.&#13;
In the four years that Pedersen&#13;
has been at Parkside, he can&#13;
recount many instances that the&#13;
reason someone has been caught&#13;
for major theft and vandalism is&#13;
because a student got involved&#13;
enough to notify the proper&#13;
authorities. "The fact that the&#13;
reward system exists is a&#13;
deterrent (to crime)," Pedersen&#13;
said. "When people get used to&#13;
using it, and seeing it more, it will&#13;
be a deterrent because other&#13;
people worry about being turned&#13;
in. It's also an encouragement to&#13;
do it," he said.&#13;
Pedersen points out that the&#13;
more visible a criminal action&#13;
becomes, the less likely people are&#13;
to do it for fear of getting caught,&#13;
not only by Security, but by&#13;
students, faculty and staff as well.&#13;
Essentially, the reward system&#13;
used here is the same as police use&#13;
in other communities. If&#13;
somebody sees someone committing&#13;
a crime on campus, they&#13;
can call Security at 553-2455 a nd&#13;
inform them of what they have&#13;
seen. The caller remains&#13;
anonymous and is immediately&#13;
issued a case number. If the information&#13;
received by Security&#13;
results in the apprehension of&#13;
somebody in the act of committing&#13;
a crime, or an investigation that&#13;
leads to the apprehension of&#13;
someone who committed the&#13;
crime, Security notifies a committee,&#13;
which has been setup, that&#13;
consists of someone in the Purchasing&#13;
office, the President of&#13;
the Student Senate, and Pedersen.&#13;
"If the information turns out to be&#13;
accurate, and that is of use to&#13;
Security, then Security informs&#13;
the committee," Pedersen said.&#13;
The caller can then call Pedersen&#13;
or Security and reveal his/her&#13;
case number. The committee&#13;
determines if a reward should be&#13;
given, and if so, how much.&#13;
The emphasis of the system is&#13;
on confidentiality of the informant,&#13;
which is the reason for&#13;
the special number and the small&#13;
size of the committee. The person&#13;
collecting the reward can tell the&#13;
committee if he / she wants the&#13;
reward, which Pedersen calls "a&#13;
Thank - you fee", in cash or check,&#13;
Holiday library schedule&#13;
The Wyllie Library Learning Center will be open the following&#13;
hours during finals week and semester break:&#13;
Dec. 16 - 22 — Regular schedule except:&#13;
Dec. 18, 7:45 a.m. - 10 p .m.&#13;
Dec. 22, 7:45 a.m. - 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Dec. 23 - Jan. 17 — Mon. - Fri., 9 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.&#13;
Closed Sat. and Sun.&#13;
Dec. 24 — 9 a.m. - noon&#13;
Dec. 25 - Closed&#13;
Dec. 31 — 9 a.m. - noon&#13;
Jan. 1 — Closed&#13;
Book Exchange gears&#13;
up for business&#13;
mailed to them or picked up&#13;
personally.&#13;
Since the reward system began,&#13;
one case has already occurred.&#13;
Pedersen said that someone&#13;
witnessed University property&#13;
being taken, called Security, and&#13;
an arrest was made while the&#13;
crime was still in progress.&#13;
Pedersen said that University&#13;
discipline action has already&#13;
taken place and the eyewitness is&#13;
getting a reward.&#13;
Pedersen said that the person&#13;
who committed the crime has his&#13;
name kept confidential, as well.&#13;
"The person who was paid in 99&#13;
chances out of 100, probably&#13;
doesn't know the name of the&#13;
person he turned in. Even when he&#13;
calls Security about a reward, it's&#13;
referred to by the case number.&#13;
He's never given the name of the&#13;
person he dealt with, never,"&#13;
Pedersen said.&#13;
"You're dealing with a small&#13;
minority of people," Pedersen&#13;
says, when referring to offenders&#13;
on campus. But 96 thefts totalling&#13;
$24,331, and 27 offenses of criminal&#13;
damage to state and personal&#13;
property occurred on campus last&#13;
year. Parkside's Security&#13;
Department, faced with budget&#13;
cuts and a limited staff, can only&#13;
patrol so much at any one time&#13;
and cannot be expected to catch&#13;
all lawbreakers and solve all&#13;
thefts. It is up to the students to&#13;
prevent crime and deter vandalism,&#13;
when possible. It is hoped&#13;
by many that RIP can help.&#13;
by Susan K. Stevens&#13;
After one semester in operation,&#13;
the Campus Book Exchange is&#13;
gearing up its efforts to help&#13;
students alleviate some of the pain&#13;
involved in buying and selling&#13;
books. Extended hours are&#13;
planned for this week and next in&#13;
order to handle the rush of&#13;
students hoping to make more&#13;
money on their used books.&#13;
Although students may have to&#13;
wait until the beginning of the&#13;
spring semester for their books to&#13;
be sold, there is one distinct advantage&#13;
to selling books through&#13;
the Exchage rather than through&#13;
the Bookstore — more money.&#13;
While book sellers will receive 50&#13;
percent of the price for which they&#13;
bought their books from the&#13;
Bookstore, they will receive 55&#13;
percent of the original price from&#13;
the Exchange when their books&#13;
are sold.&#13;
Here is an example that shows&#13;
how much money students could&#13;
be saving through the Book Exchange:&#13;
&#13;
If student A buys a book from&#13;
the Exchange for $6.50 (that would&#13;
be 65% of the original price of&#13;
$10), $5.85 (55% of the original&#13;
price) would go to the person who&#13;
brought the book to the exchange.&#13;
Then if student A brings the book&#13;
back to the Exchange at the end of&#13;
the semester and it is sold, student&#13;
A would also get $5.85 when it is&#13;
sold again for $6.50.&#13;
If student A had sold the book,&#13;
which he or she had bought for&#13;
$6.50, back to the Bookstore, he or&#13;
she would receive 50% of the price&#13;
for which it was last sold — in this&#13;
case it would be $3.25. It contrast,&#13;
the student would make $2.60&#13;
more by selling the used book&#13;
through the Exchange.&#13;
There are a few changes being&#13;
made in the Exchange that will&#13;
help serve students more efficiently&#13;
next semester. Manager&#13;
Kathy Slama is currently working&#13;
on plans to sell student artwork in&#13;
cooperation with the Parkside Art&#13;
Department.&#13;
Students who have had&#13;
problems finding the right books&#13;
for their classes will be glad to&#13;
know that the Book Exchange now&#13;
has a file of all the spring&#13;
semester courses and the books&#13;
that will be required for each. The&#13;
Exchange obtained this information&#13;
through the division&#13;
offices. "Most of the division&#13;
offices were very cooperative,"&#13;
said Tim Zimmer, Book Exchange&#13;
worker. "The faculty seems to&#13;
truly want to help us. To me, that&#13;
means that they see us as a worthwhile&#13;
organization."&#13;
The Book Exchange is run with&#13;
funding from the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
budget. Although 10 percent is&#13;
taken from each book sold, the&#13;
revenues have not come near&#13;
paying expenses. The amount&#13;
generated during this first&#13;
semester of operation totalled&#13;
$91.73. Although that figure is&#13;
expected to increase, the revenues&#13;
will not pay the bills.&#13;
As Zimmer put it, "We don't&#13;
want to become a profit - making&#13;
organization. We just want to keep&#13;
our budget requests to a minimum&#13;
while serving the students in the&#13;
best way that we can."&#13;
In order to take advantage of&#13;
the end of the semester book&#13;
selling period, the Exchange will&#13;
have extended hours ' this week&#13;
and next. The specific hours are&#13;
posted on the counter of the Exchange&#13;
located in the WLLC&#13;
concourse. If business demands&#13;
that it stay open longer, the Exchange&#13;
staff, plus a few PSGA&#13;
volunteers, will keep the doors&#13;
open longer.&#13;
If you have a few books that&#13;
you'd like to sell for more, bring&#13;
them to the Book Exchange now.&#13;
The Exchange will accept books in&#13;
any condition. The students who&#13;
buy them will judge whether or&#13;
not they will sell, not the Exchange.&#13;
&#13;
UC President Krantz&#13;
visited Parkside students&#13;
President Robert Kranz of the&#13;
United Council of University of&#13;
Wisconsin Student Governments&#13;
visited the Parkside campus on&#13;
December 9. The purpose of the&#13;
visit, according to Kranz, was to&#13;
give Parkside students an opportunity&#13;
to pose questions&#13;
relating to the purposes and effectiveness&#13;
of United Council.&#13;
Kranz held office hours in the&#13;
lobby of the Student Center to&#13;
meet and talk with Parkside&#13;
students. While on campus, Kranz&#13;
also met with leaders of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, and administrative&#13;
officers. Kranz also met with the&#13;
PSGA Senate at its regularly&#13;
scheduled meeting.&#13;
Kranz has served as United&#13;
Council President since June l!&#13;
Prior to assuming office, Kranz&#13;
served as the President of the&#13;
Oshkosh Student Association&#13;
during the 80-81 a cademic year,&#13;
and until recently was a member&#13;
of the Winnebago County Board.&#13;
As United Council President,&#13;
Kranz's responsibilities include&#13;
administering the day to day&#13;
operation of United Council, and&#13;
serving as the primary liaison&#13;
between UW students and UW&#13;
System Administration and the&#13;
UW Board of Regents.&#13;
United Council is a federation of&#13;
UW Student Governments.&#13;
Currently, all UW four year&#13;
campuses, with the exception of&#13;
Eau Claire, are participating&#13;
members of United Council.&#13;
United Council is funded by a 50c&#13;
per semester refundable fee paid&#13;
by UW students on campuses&#13;
participating in United Council. &#13;
Thursday, December 10,1981 RANGER&#13;
Editorials THERE ARE. REPORTS TODAY OF&#13;
A LIBYAN HIT SQJJAD PLANNING&#13;
TO ASSASSINATE SANTA CLAUS.&#13;
WEL T AKE Y OU T O SAM P ONALDSON&#13;
Oh, no! Nudity in class!&#13;
Last week's "Viewpoint," if you remember, featured a conversation&#13;
with one of Parkside's art department models for life&#13;
drawing classes. He explained his job, talked a little about the&#13;
rest of his life and said that if he had a chance, he would model at&#13;
another school or for other artists. Nothing earth - shattering.&#13;
But the interview did cause a stir in the art department. At&#13;
first we didn't understand it — why were the interviewee and the&#13;
course instructor so careful about wh~* they said and so eager to&#13;
see the article before it went to print9&#13;
In talking with Doug DeVinny, who teaches life drawing here,&#13;
we found the answer. He feels that there could be repercussions&#13;
from conservative individuals and groups at Parkside and in the&#13;
surrounding communities, that for some folks "nude" translates&#13;
"obscene."&#13;
For those of you that do have problems with nudity in the&#13;
classroom, the Ranger has included the above sketches in this&#13;
week's issue.&#13;
We're not saying that Parkside students create this sort of&#13;
work (but maybe they do); we're only saying that the world's&#13;
finest artists, way back to the cave days, used the unclothed&#13;
human figure to sharpen their eyes and coordinate their vision.&#13;
Action, but how affirmative?&#13;
In searching and screening for the position of Assistant&#13;
Coordinator of Student Activities, the committee appointed has&#13;
come up with some problems this fall. It seems that a firm&#13;
grounding in Parkside's Affirmative Action Policy and Implementation&#13;
Procedures would solve the problem.&#13;
The committee, first of all, is composed of individuals who are&#13;
all of Caucasian descent. While it is not always a sure bet to&#13;
implement affirmative action by putting minority individuals on&#13;
a committee, the point must be made that the reason that all the&#13;
search and screen committee members turned out to be "white"&#13;
is that there simply is no one in a position of administrative&#13;
leadership in the area of Student Life who makes direct contact&#13;
with students who is not "white."&#13;
The committee should be applauded for at least attempting to&#13;
work according to Affirmative Action guidelines with respect to&#13;
stating from the outset that "if an equally qualified man and&#13;
women are up for the job, the woman will be hired." They should&#13;
also be applauded for making an effort to locate women and&#13;
minority individuals for the job. However, since the position is&#13;
an entry level position, the level of expertise they have been&#13;
searching for has led to a stalemate of sorts. Of course, the&#13;
Caucasian men are most qualified.&#13;
At this point, the committee has tentatively decided to initiate&#13;
a new search and screen process, while hiring an intern to take&#13;
some of the workload that Coordinator Buddy Couvion has been&#13;
forced to handle in the meantime.&#13;
Let's hope the new committee will become familiar with and&#13;
o c&#13;
ONOFf v«&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
Ho, Ho, Ho . . . Merry Easter!&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
Does that headline sound a little&#13;
strange to you? It should; you've&#13;
undoubtedly grown up wishing&#13;
people either a "Merry Christmas"&#13;
or a "Happy Easter." You&#13;
may not mix your adjectives.&#13;
The point is, of course, that&#13;
Easter is not a merry time, or it's&#13;
not historically supposed to be.&#13;
And while the Christmas season is&#13;
certainly a happy time for most&#13;
people, there's something&#13;
suspicious (I've always thought)&#13;
about Christmas cards that beg to&#13;
tell your friends and relatives to&#13;
be happy. They can't help it if&#13;
they've had deaths in the immediate&#13;
family they'd rather be&#13;
left alone to mourn.&#13;
But — strangely enough, there&#13;
is nothing wrong with telling them&#13;
you want them to be merry. Merry&#13;
is "Well, at least act like you're&#13;
having fun." Merry is Santa&#13;
Claus' jolly old elf face all reddened&#13;
up from the invigorating&#13;
weather. It doesn't matter if he&#13;
has vein problems. Merry is "Put&#13;
on some kind of act for God sake&#13;
or you'll ruin Christmas for the&#13;
be ready to implement affirmative action at Parkside. After all,&#13;
the Assistant Coordinator will be responsible for working&#13;
directly with Parkside students, 6.8% of which are minority&#13;
persons. So far, these students do not see anyone in Student&#13;
Activities who represents their interests. And with so much talk&#13;
lately about "selling" activities programs to non - traditional&#13;
students and other commuters, it's time someone thought of&#13;
"selling" activities to minority students, some of whom are also&#13;
non - traditional.&#13;
rest of us." Merry doesn't seem&#13;
fair.&#13;
Besides, I've never actually felt&#13;
merry. Come to think of it, I've&#13;
never really felt completely happy&#13;
with myself and the rest of the&#13;
world all at one time either. Well,&#13;
not for very long, anyway. No,&#13;
happy is too much to ask of people.&#13;
How about "joyous?" It may&#13;
sound a mite on the transcendental&#13;
side, even too opulent&#13;
in this age. "Wonderful?" Too late&#13;
— Ronco uses that one. One last&#13;
resort: "Have a nice Christmas."&#13;
Pretty vague, huh?&#13;
Sorry, it seems the best I can&#13;
honestly do is wish you all at least&#13;
a very small time in your holiday&#13;
season when you will experience&#13;
contentment, a feeling you will&#13;
probably find tucked away with&#13;
the rest of your childhood teddy&#13;
bears and dreams. By next year,&#13;
"Have a contented Christmas"&#13;
may be on all the cards, and then&#13;
you'll be out of luck.&#13;
From the Files&#13;
10 years ago —&#13;
"Swimming Pools for Parkside?"&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
Those of you who attend classes&#13;
at Greenquist Hall probably have&#13;
noticed those two holes in the&#13;
ground, one behind the Library&#13;
Learning Center and one on the&#13;
north side of Greenquist at the end&#13;
of the old access road. Those two&#13;
mudsided swimming pools are to&#13;
become the Communication Arts&#13;
Building and Classroom Building.&#13;
The building, started last&#13;
month, will be completed&#13;
January of 1973 with&#13;
possibility of having&#13;
classroom portion done in time for&#13;
the fall semester next year. It will&#13;
be the smallest educational&#13;
facility on campus at 104,500&#13;
square feet. The cost for the Com&#13;
Arts Building is $4,220,000.&#13;
The Classroom Building will&#13;
have an area of 126,000 square feet&#13;
and will be completed at a cost of&#13;
$4,093,420.&#13;
--Newscope, Dec. 13,1971, vol. 5,&#13;
no. 15.&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
the&#13;
5 years ago —&#13;
"Senate discusses Basic Skills"&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
The Faculty Senate has just&#13;
completed its November meeting&#13;
and a lengthy discussion of the&#13;
Basic Skills Program Report from&#13;
the Academic Policies Committee.&#13;
The Senate discussed the&#13;
report in two successive Tuesday&#13;
meetings . .&#13;
The 31-page document was&#13;
issued one and one half weeks&#13;
previous to the Senate meeting to&#13;
allow all members of the faculty&#13;
to read the report and respond.&#13;
The first meeting . . . was taken&#13;
up by extensive discussion of the&#13;
goals and speaking skills sections&#13;
as they pertain to usage and style.&#13;
Specifically, the Senate felt that&#13;
"The problem of establishing&#13;
appropriate standards when&#13;
coupled with the difficulties of&#13;
evaluation (i.e. as they relate to&#13;
minority linguistic cultures), has&#13;
raised broad and deeply felt&#13;
concerns among the faculty. We&#13;
recommend at least part and&#13;
perhaps all of the speaking skills&#13;
component be postponed."&#13;
As far as overall goals the&#13;
Faculty Senate felt strongly that&#13;
they should emphasize "that the&#13;
specific skills outlined under the&#13;
goals to be met with the program&#13;
are meant to be illustrative and&#13;
that a student may demonstrate&#13;
the required level of competence&#13;
without demonstrating every skill&#13;
listed."&#13;
Testing in relation to evaluation&#13;
(of students) would be left to the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee .for&#13;
further study with any final approval&#13;
of these tests left to the&#13;
Senate.&#13;
— RANGER, Dec. 8, 1976, v ol. 5,&#13;
no. 13&#13;
I year ago —&#13;
"Tuition now $433: $30 surcharge&#13;
withdrawn" by Ken Meyer&#13;
UW System President Robert&#13;
O'Neil last week withdrew his&#13;
request for another $30 tuition&#13;
surcharge for the second&#13;
semester. A similar surcharge&#13;
was initiated last fall after&#13;
Governor Lee Dreyfus ordered a&#13;
state - wide 4.4% budget cut.&#13;
The state's worsening revenue&#13;
situation, inflation and increasing&#13;
enrollment were the reasons&#13;
O'Neil cited to the Board of&#13;
Regents for the revival of the&#13;
surcharge. In his letter to the&#13;
Regents . . . O'Neil said that the&#13;
surcharge would prevent "further&#13;
harm to educational quality and&#13;
student access."&#13;
The surcharge would have&#13;
needed the approval of the&#13;
Regents, Dreyfus and the state&#13;
legislature's Joint Finance&#13;
Committee. Dreyfus and the&#13;
chairs of the committee have&#13;
expressed opposition to the second&#13;
surcharge. The Regents approved&#13;
the first fee by only a close&#13;
margin.&#13;
O'Neil withdrew his request for&#13;
the second surcharge because he&#13;
didn't see a ny use in advocating&#13;
something that would get shot&#13;
down, according to Gary Goetz,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor of Administration&#13;
and Fiscal Affairs at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
— RANGER, Dec. 11, 1980, vol. 9,&#13;
no. 14&#13;
533 SISSX S5* *33 X53 JS&amp; WJSSJ J5SJ 55J jafc J8SS jag? J55S S5J&#13;
Wishing our readers 1&#13;
a happy holiday season. |&#13;
See you in January! I&#13;
— The Ranger Staff |&#13;
^ 1&#13;
Ginger Helgeson&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Dan McCormack&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
Frank Falduto&#13;
GANGER&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Advisor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Autn F°rfnmf&#13;
i&#13;
9&#13;
i&#13;
,0/&#13;
.&#13;
CxxrJ&#13;
l Burns&#13;
' Dou9 Edenhauser, Zachry&#13;
Jim KrpiKot- D ** *« Frank, Pat Hensiak, Mary Kaddatz,&#13;
Mark Sandpit McD°nald, Jim Mertins, Steve Myers,&#13;
Jeff Wicks Schlater, Sue Stevens, Dan Werbie,&#13;
UW Parkside and th&#13;
*V are solely&#13;
RANGER is printedby the Union C^&gt;oer»r^BVM?r excepf dur&#13;
'n8 breaks and holidays,&#13;
Written permission ls required fSr r?nr1nf^Ve Publishi&#13;
"9 Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
AM correspondence shou.d bi addressM ,nV P&#13;
^'T of RANGERParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wi 53141. aaress&#13;
^&#13;
d to: Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UW-&#13;
^efamatoraycfn'tmr&#13;
t&#13;
,al privile&#13;
9« In refusing ?o print'°|etters^"wliictv^ontain"false^or &#13;
RANGER Thursday, December 10,1981&#13;
Opinion: From Kinship to hypotherm&#13;
,.^ll&#13;
?f, °/,personal ^Pinion, whether they be political, relieious or defamatory nature will be reviewed by the Editor. No articles will be&#13;
censored by any members of the Ranger staff (or anyone else)&#13;
because they disagree in content with opinions held by the staff, or&#13;
other individuals or organizations either on or off campus.&#13;
adventures with an eight - year -&#13;
old who believes that turbo -&#13;
charged shoes with 100 horsepower&#13;
can get you across the&#13;
world faster than a Corvette.&#13;
Welcome back students!" Have fun!&#13;
• DANISH TORTE CAKES • KRINGUES • WHXXNG&#13;
J&amp;PUDi CAKES • CAKES FOR A U OCCASIONS • FINE&#13;
ITAUAN BREAD • HARD ROU A BUN SPECIALISTS&#13;
I COMPLETE RES TAURANT&#13;
BAKERY SERVICE&#13;
MON.-FRI. 6AM - 9PM a-. A.A.&#13;
SAT. &amp; SUN. 6AM - 6PM (faff 654-0785&#13;
6020 39TH AVENUE&#13;
atrond&#13;
Winter chill could kill at Parkside&#13;
&gt;&lt;eadon&#13;
Rathskellar Lounge&#13;
Educational Program&#13;
Support&#13;
Hungry Head&#13;
Ruffolo's Hair Studio&#13;
Stetson's Country /&#13;
Western Saloon (Racine&#13;
Motor Inn)&#13;
FURR by Us&#13;
Georgetown Hairquarters&#13;
Ricson's Restaurant &amp; Pub&#13;
Bun &amp; Games Body Shop&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc.&#13;
Mutual of Omaha&#13;
The Bookstore&#13;
Public Information&#13;
Tenuta's Liquors&#13;
Institutional Analysis and&#13;
Registration&#13;
Physical Education&#13;
Fashion Plus (Westgate&#13;
Mall)&#13;
Career Motivators&#13;
Coastal Tours&#13;
May Beverage&#13;
Monument Square Art&#13;
Fair, Inc.&#13;
Merritt's Running Center&#13;
Village Inn Pancake House&#13;
Ken-Zon's Pantry&#13;
Vic Tanny Health Club&#13;
Super Sports Footwear, etc.&#13;
Parkside Union&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
Astrup's Warehouse Ski&#13;
Outfit&#13;
Marketing Club&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Rec Center&#13;
Army ROTC&#13;
Northwestern National&#13;
Insurance Company (The&#13;
Quiet Company)&#13;
Career Planning and&#13;
Placement&#13;
E. F. Madrigrano&#13;
Distributors&#13;
Kenosha Savings and Loan&#13;
Dramatic Arts&#13;
First National Bank of&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Rainbow Records and&#13;
Tapes&#13;
Racine Soccer Club&#13;
Bidinger Music House&#13;
Paielli's Bakery&#13;
Ventura and Sons Jewelers&#13;
Racquet ball and Fitness&#13;
Club of Kenosha&#13;
Seagram's&#13;
CASS&#13;
Village Smithy&#13;
Cobblestone, Ltd.&#13;
Sunnyside Club&#13;
The Leader Store&#13;
Cross Advertising&#13;
Wonderful World of&#13;
Weddings&#13;
Flowers by Joseph&#13;
Fashion Distributors&#13;
Warn Bam Singing&#13;
Telegram&#13;
Autry Country&#13;
Herbert's Jewelers&#13;
Sheridan Pro Shop&#13;
The Body Shop&#13;
Candlelite Supper Club&#13;
riune&#13;
Feel alive again! *&#13;
Try Cross-Country Skiing.&#13;
Doctors say cross-country skiing is the&#13;
second healthiest sport after swimming.&#13;
We're the cross-country experts, selling&#13;
top quality equipment at low, warehouse mi ~&#13;
outlet prices. ' ^&#13;
Astrup's skis, poles, and bindings packaged from: $60.90!&#13;
Astrup's ski packages including boots from: $83.95!&#13;
Stop In And See Our Wide Selection-34 Different Skis To Choose From!&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As a concerned student and a&#13;
member of P .S.G.A. Inc., I would&#13;
like to express my dismay at the&#13;
low student turnout at this week's&#13;
open forum with the Chancellor.&#13;
Once again the Chancellor gave&#13;
an hour of his time to talk to the&#13;
students on any concerns, and&#13;
once again there were only seven&#13;
students there. For any effective&#13;
form of government to work it&#13;
must have input from its constituency,&#13;
namely the students. I&#13;
feel the future is going to be hard&#13;
on the students of America, we&#13;
must stick together and help each&#13;
other out. Feel free to come to the&#13;
P.S.G.A. office anytime.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Michael A. Pfaffl&#13;
Warehouse Ski Outlet&#13;
4516 52nd St. Kenosha, Wl 53142 652-8461 or 654-3484 &#13;
6 Thursday, December 10,1981 RANGER&#13;
Small town blues? Try Milwaukee's night life&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Hey all you Parkside students!&#13;
Are you and your fellows fed up&#13;
with frequenting your familiar old&#13;
flats? Tired of cavorting and&#13;
carousing at dingy dives and&#13;
dumps? I mean, there are a few&#13;
nice bars and such in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha, but there's also some&#13;
fun to be had in the night scene to&#13;
the north. Yessirree, I speak of&#13;
none other than the beer capital of&#13;
the world, the town that made&#13;
Wisconsin, old Milwaukee.&#13;
Drinking is a large part of the&#13;
social life of students, and you&#13;
can obtain your favorite spirits&#13;
at just about any bar around. But&#13;
have you ever thought that a bar&#13;
could be more than just a place to&#13;
get blitzed? That a bar could&#13;
actually be an interesting place in&#13;
itself? If y ou haven't, think again.&#13;
Milwaukee has oodles of night&#13;
spots where you can eat, drink,&#13;
socialize and get away from the&#13;
usual teeny bopper crowd. Like I&#13;
said, there's oodles of them, but&#13;
these are a few of my favorites.&#13;
If you enjoy spy novels and&#13;
James Bond movies and have&#13;
fantasies of being an intrepid&#13;
secret agent, then the Safe House&#13;
is for you. If you can find it, that&#13;
is. There is no "Safe House" sign&#13;
on the building, just a small&#13;
plaque on the door saying "International&#13;
Exports, LTD." Once&#13;
you get inside, you must know a&#13;
secret password to get in. If you&#13;
don't know the password, you&#13;
might have to do something silly&#13;
in front of a hidden TV camera to&#13;
gain entrance. I had to do a&#13;
Russian bear dance once.&#13;
Anyway, after you get through all&#13;
this a bookcase opens into a secret&#13;
passageway which leads to the&#13;
fascinating interior of the Safe&#13;
House, which includes several&#13;
bars, a "UFO" to serve you&#13;
sandwiches, a telephone with&#13;
recorded background noises, and&#13;
the world's largest moving puzzle.&#13;
Sound interesting? The Safe&#13;
House is located at 779 North St.&#13;
If you're looking for a bar in the&#13;
tradition of olde English pubs,&#13;
then you might find John Hawks&#13;
Pub appealing. The interior is&#13;
refreshingly subdued and true to&#13;
old style pubs, with wooden plank&#13;
tables and floors, beamed&#13;
cealings, all bathed in a sort of&#13;
candlelight luminescence. What&#13;
John Hawks lacks in Safe House&#13;
type gimmickry it makes up for in&#13;
elegance. With a wide selection of&#13;
imported and domestic beer and&#13;
great food, John Hawks is a great&#13;
place to spend an evening. John&#13;
Hawks is located on 607 North&#13;
Broadway.&#13;
Last but not least on my list of&#13;
bars is Someplace Else, a nice&#13;
sort of tavern located near the&#13;
heart of the downtown area.&#13;
Someplace Else is not as fancy as&#13;
John Hawks and has no intriguing&#13;
gadgetry as does the Safe House,&#13;
isnm&#13;
_ 5205-52r.aSJree&gt; Delicatessen ® Liquors &amp; Wines&#13;
i&#13;
BUDWEISER&#13;
24 cans *6"&#13;
MICHELOB&#13;
24 NR bottles s8"&#13;
657-9001 3203-52nd St.&#13;
but is just a terrific place to stop&#13;
and get a bite to eat and&#13;
something to drink. Someplace&#13;
Else has all kinds of food (I&#13;
recommend the chili) — pr obably&#13;
more, in fact, than the Safe House&#13;
or John Hawks. It is usually jam -&#13;
packed in the early evening, but&#13;
later on, around one or two a.m.,&#13;
is the best time to go. The bartender&#13;
always plays Beatles tunes&#13;
on the stereo, which is fine with&#13;
me. In fact, Someplace Else is&#13;
really something else, and is a&#13;
particular favorite of m ine. You'll&#13;
find Someplace Else on 634 N.&#13;
Water St.&#13;
Okay, I've given you a bunch of&#13;
addresses, but if you don't&#13;
frequent Milwaukee they won't&#13;
help much, right? So I'll give&#13;
some directions. Take 1-94 north to&#13;
Milwaukee, and exit off the Civic&#13;
Center - Wells St. exit. Got that so&#13;
far? Now, go straight until you hit&#13;
Water St., then turn right. From&#13;
there it should be easy to find all&#13;
three of the bars I've listed, as&#13;
they are all located in that same&#13;
general area. You will pass the&#13;
Safe House first, which is to your&#13;
right on a little alley called North&#13;
St. If you keep going straight you&#13;
will come to Someplace Else,&#13;
which will be on your left. To get&#13;
to John Hawks is somewhat more&#13;
difficult, as this area is filled with&#13;
annoying one - way streets. I&#13;
recommend just parking on Water&#13;
St. and walking to John Hawks,&#13;
which is right around the block&#13;
from Someplace Else. Just be&#13;
sure that if it is late at night you&#13;
walk with someone. I don't want&#13;
anyone getting mugged and then&#13;
suing me because of this article.&#13;
And don't blame me if you get lost,&#13;
either.&#13;
I like going to see movies, and&#13;
I'll bet you do too. Racine and&#13;
Kenosha both have theaters that&#13;
carry the latest blockbusters&#13;
released from the major studios.&#13;
But in case you haven't noticed,&#13;
every once in a while there occurs&#13;
a plague throughout local movie&#13;
theaters, a plague that I term the&#13;
big bubonic box - office bust&#13;
plague. This is a period when the&#13;
HMH ®m r&#13;
;&#13;
-&#13;
showing classic old films thp&#13;
Oriental features the one and onlv&#13;
Rocky Horror Picture Show everv&#13;
Friday and Saturday night at&#13;
midnight. If you haven't gone \n&#13;
see RHPS, go. You'll become&#13;
addicted to it, as I am. In fact&#13;
you'll probably be doing the time&#13;
warp for the rest of your earthbound&#13;
years. Go see the Rocky&#13;
Horror Picture Show and you'll&#13;
know what I mean by that. The&#13;
Oriental Theater is at 2230 N&#13;
Farwell Ave.&#13;
final favorite Milwaukee&#13;
spot is for music lovers.&#13;
theaters are devoid of any good&#13;
movies of any size, shape or form.&#13;
So when this occurs I have taken&#13;
to going to a particular theater in&#13;
Milwaukee, namely the Oriental.&#13;
The Oriental is a revival - type&#13;
movie house that features second -&#13;
run movies from the past few&#13;
years as well as old classics. Gobs&#13;
of g ood flicks are featured, with a&#13;
double feature every night at only&#13;
three dollars for admission, the&#13;
Oriental is a real deal as well. The&#13;
theater itself is one of those&#13;
beautiful old show palaces, with&#13;
ornate decorations, elegant&#13;
chandeliers hanging from high&#13;
ceilings, and so forth. In addition to&#13;
My&#13;
night&#13;
specifically jazz lovers. The Jazz&#13;
Gallery on 932 East Center St&#13;
features live jazz every night of&#13;
the week. Usually local combos&#13;
are featured, but nationally&#13;
renowned musicians have performed&#13;
there as well. The interior&#13;
of the building is nothing fancy,&#13;
just small tables and a small stage&#13;
for the musicians. But late at&#13;
night the improv jazz heats up,&#13;
and for jazz lovers there is nothing&#13;
better than the sweat of a live&#13;
jam.&#13;
Directions are, again, pretty&#13;
easy to follow. Follow 1-94 north to&#13;
the North Ave. exit. Go straight on&#13;
North, turn right on Weil St. and&#13;
follow it to the Jazz Gallery. To&#13;
get to the Oriental follow North to&#13;
N. Farwell and turn right. You'll&#13;
see the Oriental theater staring&#13;
you in the face.&#13;
Some of these places I've&#13;
mentioned have a cover charge.&#13;
You may find that, along with the&#13;
long ride involved, a big hassle.&#13;
But I think that if you try one of&#13;
these places just once, you will&#13;
return regularly to the Milwaukee&#13;
night scene.&#13;
"Doctor's Farces" good entertainment&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
"The Doctor's Farces: An&#13;
Evening with Anton Chekhov" is&#13;
the current offering from&#13;
Parkside's Fine Arts and&#13;
Dramatic Arts Disciplines. It is&#13;
also a good college theater&#13;
production, though it had one or&#13;
two technically uneven moments&#13;
last Friday night.&#13;
The play, which consists of&#13;
three "playlets" — "The Bear," a&#13;
tale of similarly false, though&#13;
conflicting male and female&#13;
personalities; "The Night Before&#13;
the Trial," a tale of false identity&#13;
and seduction; and "The Anniversary,"&#13;
a tale which reveals&#13;
the conflict between the rigidly&#13;
divided concerns of men at work&#13;
and women usually excluded from&#13;
PRELIMINARY JURYING&#13;
Saturday, January 16, entries due before 10 a. m.&#13;
Bring 3 pieces to:&#13;
Wustum Museum&#13;
2519 Northwestern Ave.&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
or mail 10 slides to:&#13;
223-6th Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
53403&#13;
20th ANNUAL&#13;
MOHUMENI SQUARE ART FAIR&#13;
June 12-13,1982&#13;
For more information call (414) 637-7706 or 633-3215&#13;
the business world.&#13;
The three pieces as a whole&#13;
work well together — "The Bear"&#13;
opens with a view that is&#13;
somewhat superficial. Popova&#13;
(Rebecca Julich) pouts and&#13;
lingers over her husband's death&#13;
with an obviously false air, while&#13;
Smirnov (Charles Neustifter)&#13;
rages and fumes overdramatically,&#13;
alternately&#13;
demanding money and making&#13;
advances to Popova. Both&#13;
characters, by the end of th e play,&#13;
have reversed themselves.&#13;
In "The Night Before the Trial,"&#13;
Zaytsev (David Schroeder) and&#13;
Zina (Delina Christie) re-enact&#13;
the male - female attraction&#13;
theme set by "The Bear," but with&#13;
a new twist. Delina is much more&#13;
subtle in her hypocrisy, and&#13;
Zaytsev admits his attraction to&#13;
her and his plot to have a "nice&#13;
evening" with her from the start.&#13;
Continued On Page Seven&#13;
TONIGHT!&#13;
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10&#13;
UNION SQUARE 5-7 PM&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
• THE LIVE MUSIC OF UW-PARKSIDE'S&#13;
AWARD WINNING JAZZ BAND v&#13;
• 75C, $1.00 &amp; $1.25 OFF REGULAR PIZZA PRICES&#13;
• SPECIAL $1.99 SPAGHETTI DINNER WITH SALAD &amp; GARLIC BREAD&#13;
• FREE ADMISSION &#13;
Ranger staff reviews Village Voice rock critic&#13;
by Tony IV Rnpprsoge ...&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Recently the Ranger staff&#13;
received a copy of Christgau's&#13;
Record Guide - Rock Albums of&#13;
the '70s (Ticknor and Fields&#13;
$9.95). The book, by Village Voice&#13;
music critic Robert Christgau, is a&#13;
compilation of his stockpile of&#13;
record reviews from the past ten&#13;
years.&#13;
The Ranger staff, all being&#13;
consummate connoisseurs of&#13;
various types of music, had strong&#13;
opinions on some of Christgau's&#13;
reviews, and the following quotes&#13;
are a sampling of our staff's&#13;
critique of the critic.&#13;
Sue Stevens: "For some people&#13;
he reviews every album that&#13;
person makes, and for another&#13;
person or group he'll only review&#13;
one of their albums and judge&#13;
them totally from that. He also&#13;
has a bias towards loud rock.&#13;
Anyone who would give Kiss a&#13;
high grade gets a low grade from&#13;
me."&#13;
Pat Hensiak: "It's one man's&#13;
opinion. I don't agree with him — I&#13;
listen to a lot of Chuck Mangione,&#13;
and he thinks Mangione's albums&#13;
should be melted down. But like I&#13;
said, it's one man's opinion."&#13;
Andy Buchannan: "He seems&#13;
stingy with the grades that he&#13;
gives. He'll say that he really likes&#13;
the tracks on a certain album, that&#13;
they are some of the best he's ever&#13;
heard, but then he gives a B minus&#13;
to the album. Why doesn't he give&#13;
it an A if h e likes it so much? Some&#13;
of my favorite groups, like ELO's&#13;
New World Record, he said the&#13;
songs were great, but then gave&#13;
the album a B-."&#13;
Becky Odland, friend of the&#13;
staff: "I don't think he has any&#13;
nght to write this book. He's only&#13;
got one opinion, how can he write&#13;
a whole book about it? He grew up&#13;
in an atmosphere that favored&#13;
certain kinds of music, and he is&#13;
trying to rate all kinds of music.&#13;
How can you rate music on a&#13;
grade level?"&#13;
Ginger Ilelgeson: "He's&#13;
probably one of the best reviewers&#13;
there are, being a critic for the&#13;
Village Voice. But I question how&#13;
anyone could maintain their taste&#13;
when they are listening to albums&#13;
14 hours a day, as he does. He&#13;
doesn't seem to favor a whole&#13;
group. He rates their albums&#13;
RECORD&#13;
IGUIDEI&#13;
differently, so he must be judging&#13;
each album on its own merits. One&#13;
of the reasons he's written this&#13;
book is to help people build up a&#13;
good record library. But lots of&#13;
people who will read this book&#13;
weren't even listening to music&#13;
when some of these older songs&#13;
came out in the early 60's.&#13;
Younger people who have never&#13;
heard many of these songs, have&#13;
only his opinion on what is good&#13;
and bad."&#13;
The book is conveniently&#13;
organized, with listings arranged&#13;
alphabetically under the name of&#13;
the musician or band. Albums are&#13;
listed chronologically under the&#13;
group's name, and it is interesting&#13;
to see how Christgau's reviews&#13;
progress over the years. The book&#13;
has three introductions, the first&#13;
on the book itself entitled "The&#13;
Guide," the second a short survey&#13;
of the seventies entitled "The&#13;
Decade" and the third, in which&#13;
Christgau outlines his criteria for&#13;
reviewing albums is, as you have&#13;
probably surmised, entitled "The&#13;
Criteria." This is followed by over&#13;
four hundred pages of reviews,&#13;
with everything from "ABBA" to&#13;
"Zappa." The reviews are&#13;
followed by several of Christgau's&#13;
own categories for certain bands&#13;
— Y oko Ono is listed under subjects&#13;
for further research, while&#13;
Sha Na Na is listed under&#13;
"Meltdown."&#13;
Christgau concludes the book&#13;
with his own picks for a good rock&#13;
record library, with his picks&#13;
listed under the year they were&#13;
released. Albums from the fifties&#13;
and sixties are each lumped into&#13;
their respective decades, while&#13;
the seventies albums are listed by&#13;
each individual year.&#13;
Christgau's reviews are certainly&#13;
outspoken, and if nothing&#13;
else he is certainly brave.&#13;
(Anyone who admits that they like&#13;
K.C. and the Sunshine Band must&#13;
be brave.) He doesn't seem to&#13;
care what bands are in vogue with&#13;
other critics, and he readily admits&#13;
to liking bands that most&#13;
other critics wouldn't touch. (He&#13;
really likes K.C. and the Sunshine&#13;
Band?) His writing is short, terse,&#13;
almost hyperactive at times, atid&#13;
is virtually crammed with other -&#13;
worldly adjectives. This makes&#13;
for interesting reading, but&#13;
Christgau's funky wording&#13;
sometimes puts a candy - apple&#13;
gloss over whatever meat there is&#13;
in his reviews. And to the average&#13;
reader, Christgau may appear&#13;
ambiguous, as he often refers to&#13;
little - known bands as a comparison&#13;
to whatever group he is&#13;
reviewing at the moment.&#13;
Chances are that you'll disagree&#13;
with many of Christgau's album&#13;
appraisals, but for the most part&#13;
he seems to know what he is&#13;
talking about, and you will&#13;
probably respect, his opinion.&#13;
Aside from his liking for K.C. and&#13;
the Sunshine Band. But then&#13;
nobody's perfect.&#13;
Whether you agree with&#13;
Christgau or not, you probably&#13;
won't be able to stop paging&#13;
through the book to find your&#13;
favorite groups. Which makes&#13;
Rock Albums of the 70's a great&#13;
Christmas gift, a fact we're sure&#13;
Christgau and his publisher are&#13;
well aware of.&#13;
MZ&#13;
3205 60th St.&#13;
6!J7-5666&#13;
Open 7 days a week 'til 10pm&#13;
We accept food stamps&#13;
PEPSI PEPSI LIGHT&#13;
Continued From Page Six&#13;
But it is in "The Anniversary"&#13;
that the audience realizes&#13;
Chekhov's genius — and that all of&#13;
these people who relate to each&#13;
other rather superficially are&#13;
from different worlds. In "The&#13;
Anniversary," Shiputchin (Alan&#13;
Ventura) is confronted by his&#13;
wife, Tatyana Alexeyevna&#13;
(Rebecca Julich) at his place of&#13;
business, a bank. He is trying to&#13;
conduct "business" while his wife&#13;
insists on talking "family."&#13;
It is Madame Mertchutkin&#13;
(Delina Christie) who brings the&#13;
point home, though. As she&#13;
ignorantly pleads for her disabled&#13;
husband's pension from a non -&#13;
government official, and&#13;
Shiputchin reacts with confusion&#13;
and finally rage, the audience&#13;
finally sees through the elaborate&#13;
conventions and guises these&#13;
characters have worn. Men and&#13;
women, Chekhov is saying, simply&#13;
cannot understand each others'&#13;
worlds, yet are forced by circumstance&#13;
to remain dependent&#13;
on each other.&#13;
The element of this production&#13;
that saves it from becoming&#13;
overly heavy and thus incredible&#13;
is the humor inserted by Chekhov&#13;
and the presentation of the humor&#13;
maintained by the cast. When&#13;
Neustifter mimics an elderly&#13;
servant in "The Bear" and his&#13;
voice literally is that of a n elderly&#13;
man, the audience is shocked into&#13;
laughter.&#13;
Also, Rebecca Julich turns in a&#13;
fine performance in both of her&#13;
roles. Her overdramatic voice,&#13;
actions and expressions evoke a&#13;
"real" character. I suspect I&#13;
would not trust her if I met her&#13;
tomorrow in the Square to remain&#13;
calm. She also pouts very well.&#13;
One problem did mar Friday&#13;
night's performance — the fact&#13;
that "The Doctor's Farces" is a&#13;
studio production means that&#13;
audience entrances to the studio&#13;
are also characters' entrances.&#13;
However, co - p roducer Leon Van&#13;
Dyke is assured that the problem&#13;
of late audience members entering&#13;
on characters' cues has&#13;
been solved by holding the&#13;
production start - time until most&#13;
people are seated and by reserving&#13;
a few seats near the door so&#13;
that those who arrive late can be&#13;
seated unobtrusively.&#13;
"The Doctor's Farces" will be&#13;
presented again this weekend,&#13;
Dec. 11 and 12, at 8 p.m. Tickets&#13;
are $2 for students, faculty and&#13;
senior citizens, and $3 for the&#13;
general public. Since seating in&#13;
Studio B is limited it is advisable&#13;
to call (553-2042 or 553-2345)&#13;
reserve tickets.&#13;
IS&#13;
Ken Zon's offers your Holiday Needs&#13;
SODA&#13;
PEPSI, PEPSI LIGHT &amp; M OUNTAIN DEW&#13;
12 pak, 12 oz. cans&#13;
$3&#13;
09&#13;
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8 pak, 16 oz. returnables •&#13;
RC, RC 100, Diet Rite 6 pack cans $1.55&#13;
RC, Nehi, Tonic 1 Lt. N.R .....69&#13;
Coke, Tab, Sprite 12 pk. Cans $3.19&#13;
Coke, Tab, Sprite 2 Lt. N.R .99&#13;
Coke 24 pk. cans $5 99&#13;
Grafs 2Lt. N.R '99&#13;
7-UP, Ale Club 10 oz. 6 pk. N.R. btls $1.45&#13;
BEER&#13;
MICKEY'S 6 pk ....$2.19 1&#13;
MICH 6pk. NR bottle ....$2.29 1&#13;
OLD STYLE 24 pk. cans .... $7.49&#13;
OLD STYLE 12pk. bottles ....$3.79&#13;
OLD STYLE 12 pk. cans ... $3.99&#13;
OLD STYLE 6 pk. bottles ....$1.99&#13;
PABST 12pk. bottles ....$3.89&#13;
... $3.89&#13;
... $7.79&#13;
MILLER 6pk. bottles ... $1.99&#13;
BUDWEISER 24pk. cans ... $7.59&#13;
BUDWEISER l2pk. bottles .... $3.79&#13;
SCHLITZ 6 pk. cans ....$1.95&#13;
MOOSEHEAD6pk. bottles ....$3.29&#13;
STROH'S 12 pk. bottles ....$3.49&#13;
PARTY ICE CUBES AVAILABLE&#13;
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| DAIRY AND PRODUCE. g&#13;
5JSSC Sfis: £« -ESX 553* &gt;£SS£ &amp;X S53£ •£« £« £S£ £2$&#13;
MM &amp;&#13;
Women&#13;
Look&#13;
Good for tho&#13;
Holidays with&#13;
a Hair Stylo&#13;
from Ruffolos&#13;
3532 MEACHEM "RD.&#13;
RACINE. Wl 5 3405&#13;
PHONE (414) 554-8600&#13;
3519 52nd STREET&#13;
KENOSHA. Wl 531 42&#13;
PHONE (4 14) 654-6154&#13;
To Mik e Far roll, selling Ranger advertising&#13;
means paying tuitien.&#13;
"Thanks to the new commission plus bonus&#13;
plan, I've made my tuition and textbook&#13;
money by selling ads for the Ranger this&#13;
semester.&#13;
"The work isn't always easy. It takes lots of&#13;
initiative; it helps if you feel comfortable&#13;
talking to all kinds of people. The Ranger is&#13;
easy to sell, though.&#13;
"Also, there's no clock to punch. I'm free to&#13;
schedule my work around classes.&#13;
"I get satisfaction out of building my accounts,&#13;
acquiring new ones, getting a contract&#13;
signed with a business that said they'd&#13;
never advertise with a college newspaper.&#13;
"When I graduate, I'll be telling&#13;
prospective employers I spent my college&#13;
years working with a successful student - run&#13;
corporation. That's going to help me."&#13;
THF RANGFR m U W ~&#13;
Parkside s&#13;
E1% • independent student newspaper.&#13;
Call 553-2295 or stop in at WLLC D 139 for details &#13;
8 Thursday, December 10,1981 RANGER&#13;
by Hat Hensiak&#13;
As one of the biggest holidays of&#13;
the year approaches, we are again&#13;
faced with the problem of the&#13;
"social drinker." What is the first&#13;
question asked of you at a party —&#13;
"What would you like to drink?"&#13;
In order to outline and clarify this&#13;
issue, we traveled to the Parkside&#13;
Union and asked many students&#13;
that seem to frequent this area&#13;
their thoughts on social drinking.&#13;
A total of 50 people were interviewed,&#13;
'25 male and 25 female.&#13;
All of them said they went to the&#13;
Union to socialize more than&#13;
anything else. Drinking was the&#13;
second most common answer,&#13;
with 41 people going there to&#13;
socialize and drink. The majority&#13;
(33) did not feel that the people&#13;
that frequent the Union tend to&#13;
drink too much, and 38 felt that&#13;
social drinking is not a problem at&#13;
Parkside. Only 12 said they are&#13;
usually not intoxicated at the end&#13;
of the evening, Or when the&#13;
drinking has stopped. There was&#13;
one non - drinker in the 50 interviewed.&#13;
When asked if drinking&#13;
affects their performance, (good&#13;
or bad) 43 people said yes and 7&#13;
said no. Consumption increases&#13;
for 38 people every Christmas,&#13;
and those same 38 people said they&#13;
Social drinking at Parkside: Is it a problem?&#13;
iHllCialr f AH Iko ( n #1.^ ^1. I.__ , _ * ' « 1 • -I4 A nfill o lnnlinl t O rv felt that a drink or two seems to&#13;
promote the Christmas spirit.&#13;
Here are a few of the reasons&#13;
why these people drink:&#13;
"For social reasons more often&#13;
than anything."&#13;
"For taste with meals, like a&#13;
Margarita with dinners at&#13;
Mexican restaurants. At holiday&#13;
traditions or something unique. At&#13;
parties, at the "beginning of the&#13;
evening, there's a lot of pressure&#13;
to have a drink. There is so much&#13;
tied into it. If you meet someone&#13;
and if y ou refuse to have a drink,&#13;
they're hurt. Mostly I drink&#13;
because I'm not strong enough to&#13;
say no. I end up with a drink to be&#13;
nice."&#13;
"I like the taste of certain things&#13;
that I drink. I usually drink what I&#13;
have a taste for, soda, wine,&#13;
whatever."&#13;
"Usually if I have a sandwich, a&#13;
beer goes pretty well. I like the&#13;
taste of beer. It's fun to catch a&#13;
buzz every once in a while."&#13;
"To depress my respiration, to&#13;
decrease my reaction rate and to&#13;
raise my blood pressure."&#13;
"I drink to relax."&#13;
"I like the taste of beer."&#13;
"I drink to relax and to forget&#13;
the problems."&#13;
"I drink to get drunk. If I&#13;
wanted something that tastes&#13;
good, I would have soda."&#13;
"Because it's there. It's the way&#13;
that most people socialize."&#13;
"It relaxes me and lets me have&#13;
more fun. It eases the tension."&#13;
"To have a better time."&#13;
"Being brought up in the beer&#13;
and brandy capitol of the world,&#13;
drinking socially is a common&#13;
occurrance. My acceptance of this&#13;
along with an acquired taste for&#13;
beer and liquor is probably my&#13;
reason for drinking."&#13;
"Pleasure, enjoyment, and the&#13;
relief of the tension building up&#13;
during the day. Also, the enjoyment&#13;
of a good beverage with&#13;
friends during a certain period of&#13;
the day."&#13;
"I don't drink. I have never&#13;
acquired a taste for liquor. At&#13;
times people look down on me&#13;
because I don't drink. I don't think&#13;
that's right. I think people drink to&#13;
Unlock a social door. Going to the&#13;
bar for a drink is one of the few&#13;
things that a male and female can&#13;
do together without creating a&#13;
scene. Drinking is one of the few&#13;
socially acceptable pasttimes."&#13;
In America, the use of alcohol&#13;
receives wide support. An introduction&#13;
to alcohol is given to&#13;
most people at a family setting:&#13;
Thanksgiving, Christmas or&#13;
Sunday dinner. If someone&#13;
becomes a little tipsy, they are&#13;
received as cute and learn very&#13;
quickly that alcohol can be an&#13;
attention getter. Drinking for a&#13;
growing boy is often looked upon&#13;
as a part of growing up. When&#13;
people begin to date, a restaurant&#13;
or bar that serves alcohol is often&#13;
a good place to meet new friends.&#13;
Advertisements on TV, radio and&#13;
newspapers tell us that to be a&#13;
liberated woman, an introduction&#13;
of wine is necessary to the&#13;
relationship. A certain beer can be&#13;
used to measure friendship.&#13;
Another beer can be used to win.&#13;
In all of t his constant praising of&#13;
alcohol, there is a failure to&#13;
perceive the ruined lives and&#13;
broken homes that can result from&#13;
alcohol abuse. Alcohol is so attractive&#13;
to most people, that when&#13;
they are requested to consider the&#13;
possibility that over - drinking is&#13;
an illness, there is a general&#13;
reaction that it can't be so. If a&#13;
person can't handle alcohdl, it is a&#13;
character flaw or poor genes or&#13;
one hundred other reasons.&#13;
Alcohol has found a way to destroy&#13;
people for hundreds of years and&#13;
Your last 2 years of college&#13;
can be your first 2 years of management.&#13;
This summer, you can begin 2 years of&#13;
management education to complement your&#13;
college degree program. Then, upon graduation,&#13;
enter a position of instant management&#13;
responsibility. As an officer in the active&#13;
Army or Reserves. The Army ROTC&#13;
2-year program starts with 6 weeks of&#13;
summer training at Fort Knox, Ky. With&#13;
pay (over $500).&#13;
You'll learn what it takes to be a soldier&#13;
— to have your body toughened, your confidence&#13;
developed.&#13;
Do well and you can qualify for Army&#13;
ROTC courses in the fall. Do exceptionally&#13;
well, and you may be heading back to&#13;
college with a two-year full tuition&#13;
scholarship.&#13;
For the next 2 years, you'll learn what&#13;
it takes to be an Army officer. You'll be&#13;
challenged both mentally and physically.&#13;
You'll get the kind of management experience&#13;
that will be an asset to you in any&#13;
career, military or civilian. You'll receive&#13;
an extra $100 a month, up to 20 months.&#13;
And when you graduate, you'll have&#13;
earned your college degree along with the&#13;
gold bars of an Army officer.&#13;
If you'd like to graduate with 4 years&#13;
of college plus 2 years of management,&#13;
apply by April 1 for the Army ROTC&#13;
2-year program.&#13;
* ARMY ROTC&#13;
LEARN WHAT IT TAKES TO LEAD.&#13;
To arrange an interview appointment, contact: Capt. Fred Herron&#13;
Marquette U. ROTC&#13;
Call Collect:&#13;
1-224-7729/7195&#13;
still alcohol is enjoyed by millions&#13;
When alcohol does damage, and&#13;
the damage is recognizable, the&#13;
problem is usually minimized&#13;
denied or rationalized. There is a&#13;
failure to recognize the alcoholic&#13;
and alcoholism. Alcoholism is the&#13;
use of alcohol to the extent which&#13;
it hinders the health and well -&#13;
being of the individual, the family&#13;
and/or society.&#13;
Racine and Kenosha both have&#13;
accessible ways of helping people&#13;
get back onto their feet. Jon&#13;
Christensen is the Intervention&#13;
Coordinator at the A-Center in&#13;
Racine. "Most people think that&#13;
an alcoholic is an adult, male&#13;
drunk. For that reason, most&#13;
people never pay attention to&#13;
organizations around them until&#13;
the problem comes up," he said.&#13;
There are a number of ways to&#13;
receive help at the A-Center in&#13;
Racine. "If there is a family&#13;
member that is an alcoholic, and&#13;
someone has a concern, they can&#13;
come to us here. I can't guarantee&#13;
help for the alcoholic or other&#13;
family members, but I can help&#13;
the people seeking it. We try to&#13;
take care of those people," he&#13;
said.&#13;
"People also don't realize that&#13;
professional help is necessary. I&#13;
can't know why people resist —&#13;
when they have a problem with&#13;
their sink, they call a plumber.&#13;
They don't have any problem&#13;
phoning a plumber. When they&#13;
have to call on help for a problem&#13;
drinker, they have a big problem&#13;
calling. Alcohol and pot are&#13;
constantly used by chemically&#13;
dependent people because they&#13;
are the most accessible. A drug is&#13;
a drug is a drug. It doesn't make&#13;
any difference, because they all&#13;
have the same effect. Processes of&#13;
becoming and recovering from&#13;
chemical dependency is the&#13;
same."&#13;
Some people choose to attend&#13;
the day hospital. If they do this,&#13;
they are at the Center from 8:30&#13;
a.m. to 3:30 p.m. That still gives&#13;
the patient time with his family or&#13;
at a job at night.&#13;
The second option is becoming&#13;
an out - patient. An out - patient&#13;
goes through three different&#13;
stages of counseling. The patient&#13;
Continued On Page Nine&#13;
NEEDED:&#13;
STUDENT REP&#13;
JOB: To advertise, promote and collect&#13;
payments tor our annual Spring break&#13;
trips to Florida.&#13;
TIME: January to Spring break.&#13;
PAY: Commission of $5.00 / person ($200&#13;
per bus) and FREE TRIP TO&#13;
FLORIDA.&#13;
Contact:&#13;
Doug Watson&#13;
Coastal Tours Inc.&#13;
5461 N. East River Rd.&#13;
Chicago, IL 60656&#13;
(312) 693-4759&#13;
VDLI ARE E NTITLED&#13;
TO I TREE P LAY A T&#13;
ANY V IDEO OR&#13;
PINBALL G AME&#13;
AT BU N fi GAMES.&#13;
Present to clerk or manager lor&#13;
redemption Good at any Bun &amp; Games&#13;
location. Expires 12'31 81&#13;
I Please limit 1 coupon per customer&#13;
un&#13;
»l 4124 - 5 2nd Street (by K Mart)&#13;
Open everyday at 10:30 am&#13;
*2 8030 22nd Avenue (Sunnyside Park'&#13;
Open every day al 8 am&#13;
Hi HHI BH • PR&#13;
Viewpoint &#13;
Vansen to speak in gallery today&#13;
Paintines hv T.AdiD r .. '&#13;
RANGER Thursday, December 10,1981&#13;
Paintings by Leslie Loomis&#13;
Vansen, a member of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Milwaukee art faculty, will be on&#13;
display at the UW - Parkside&#13;
Communication Arts Gallery&#13;
Sports Trivia&#13;
1. Who is known as the "Father&#13;
of American Football"?&#13;
2 Who booted a 63 - yard field&#13;
goal with only half a foot?&#13;
3. Who threw a TD pass in 47&#13;
consecutive pro games?&#13;
svi)U[\ tuuyof £ KasduidQ uiQ1&#13;
•Z dwDj jajiVAi 7 :SV3MSMV&#13;
through Dec. 23. The artist will he&#13;
hISy"1 ^ 3 g3llery ta,k at 4 P- ma&#13;
numhH haS&#13;
f&#13;
been the reciPient of&#13;
a number of prizes including a&#13;
CnrHH ™ard in the "Mississippi&#13;
Corridor" Exhibit at the&#13;
Davenport Art Gallery last fall&#13;
and 1S represented in many&#13;
private, institutional and corK&#13;
h&#13;
C°&#13;
lleCti0nSHer&#13;
^intings&#13;
the m exhibited throughout&#13;
coast 3nd&#13;
°&#13;
n the East&#13;
She received the BFA from the&#13;
University of Iowa and the MFA&#13;
from the University of Colorado.&#13;
Regular gallery hours are&#13;
Mondays through Thursdays from&#13;
xv a 5' and Tuesdays and&#13;
Wednesdays from 7 to 10 p. m. *'• iicK.01 price&#13;
Is social drinking a problem at UW-P?&#13;
fnnHniipH Frnm .I&#13;
Racine Opera&#13;
to present&#13;
Hansel and Gretel&#13;
Racine Opera will present two&#13;
performances of Englebert&#13;
Humperdink's English opera,&#13;
Hansel and Gretel." Performances&#13;
will be held at&#13;
Washington Park High School in&#13;
Racine on Saturday, Dec. 26 at 8&#13;
p.m., and on Sunday, Dec. 27 at 3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Tickets may be obtained from&#13;
Opera Racine by calling 639-1316&#13;
Tickets are $9.75 for orchestra&#13;
seats and $6.50 for all others.&#13;
Parkside students are eligible for&#13;
a one dollar reduction on regular&#13;
ticket prices.&#13;
Continued From Page Eight&#13;
starts in an assessment group,&#13;
which helps the alcoholic better&#13;
understand the problem and&#13;
better understand how people can&#13;
work together to deal with the&#13;
problem. The second stage is the&#13;
intermediate counseling. This is a&#13;
point where the alcoholic has the&#13;
want to stop. Stage three begins&#13;
when the alcoholic is a serious&#13;
stopper. He's felt the need to stop&#13;
and he's made a decision to do&#13;
something about it.&#13;
The final option is becoming an&#13;
in - patient. About 50 percent of the&#13;
patients at the A-Center are in -&#13;
patients. "People are afraid to&#13;
become in - patients. People are&#13;
afraid of being locked up. Because&#13;
we are certain of the fear that&#13;
most people have, we are very&#13;
gentle," added Christensen.&#13;
When a patient comes into the&#13;
hospital, he or she is given and&#13;
room and a chance to get cleaned&#13;
up. Then he or she goes through a&#13;
period of detoxification, which&#13;
lasts from three to five days. It's a&#13;
chance to get physically healthy.&#13;
The patient's clothes are taken&#13;
away because sometimes people&#13;
are afraid to stick it out. If&#13;
someone makes a definite&#13;
decision to leave, they can get&#13;
their clothing back.&#13;
After the detoxification period,&#13;
the patient is put into intermediate&#13;
care. He or she begins&#13;
to see a counselor occasionally.&#13;
The patient also begins to meet&#13;
people who have the same&#13;
problem.&#13;
Some patients are let go after&#13;
those two weeks, but some need&#13;
two more weeks. If they do, the&#13;
next two weeks are filled with&#13;
lectures, films, workshops and&#13;
spiritual analysis. All of the&#13;
people are asked the question,&#13;
"Who are you?" Most of them&#13;
don't know the answer.&#13;
Christensen also stated that the&#13;
place to begin helping an alcoholic&#13;
recover is with yourself. Learn&#13;
everything that you can. Put it&#13;
into practice, not just into words.&#13;
That in itself will be far more&#13;
effective than anything you could&#13;
attempt to do directly to the&#13;
alcoholic.&#13;
Kenosha County offers help to&#13;
youth, adults, couples, families or&#13;
anyone with an alcohol or drug&#13;
abuse problem. The services&#13;
include an assessment of the&#13;
person's drinking. Alternative&#13;
methods are looked into to find a&#13;
way to help him change his&#13;
drinking lifestyle. Counseling on&#13;
an individual and on a group basis&#13;
is available for both young and&#13;
adult abusers as well as counseling&#13;
for the spouses and family&#13;
members. After - care services for&#13;
continuing support for the individual&#13;
and families and referral&#13;
treatment to other agencies for&#13;
anyone in need of more&#13;
specialized services is also&#13;
available.&#13;
The Kenosha Alcohol and Drug&#13;
Council also has a number of&#13;
special community programs:&#13;
A Community Education&#13;
Program which offers a comprehensive&#13;
range of alcohol&#13;
education for the general public&#13;
and for special groups. Women&#13;
Reaching Women is a task force of&#13;
volunteers who seek to heighten&#13;
the awareness of the general&#13;
public about the issues of the&#13;
woman alcoholic. A unique&#13;
Employee Assistant Program&#13;
called the Triad Consortium is a&#13;
cooperative arrangement between&#13;
the Council, St. Catherine's&#13;
Hospital and several local industries&#13;
and labor organizations&#13;
to aid in resolving alcohol abuse&#13;
problems in industry. The&#13;
Criminal Justice Outreach&#13;
Program deals with persons who&#13;
were known to be intoxicated at&#13;
the time their crimes were&#13;
committed, and an assessment of&#13;
the drinking drivers is also done.&#13;
The Recidivist Alcoholic&#13;
Management Program serves&#13;
people who have been in repeated&#13;
treatment for drinking and are in&#13;
the chronic phase of their&#13;
alcoholism.&#13;
Alcoholism was once thought of&#13;
as a symptom of emotional&#13;
problems, a weakness of&#13;
character and even a sin. Today,&#13;
it is recognized as an illness. Like&#13;
many illnesses, it began innocently&#13;
enough and was caused&#13;
by the person (you can't be an&#13;
alcoholic if you don't drink). But,&#13;
at some point, the illness takes&#13;
over the controls. It is not known&#13;
exactly when control is lost, but it&#13;
does occur. The same process&#13;
happens when people use other&#13;
drugs as well. The same process&#13;
of misuse, abuse, family&#13;
problems, trouble at work, school&#13;
or with the law seem to occur,&#13;
regardless of the drug. The people&#13;
who feel a need to seek help can be&#13;
sure that they aren't alone.&#13;
Presents&#13;
This Week's Movie&#13;
THE GREAT SANTINI&#13;
Fri., Dec, 11 Rated PG&#13;
Sun., Dec. 13&#13;
Admission s1.50 7:30 p.m. Union Cinema&#13;
NEXT WEEKS MOVIE&#13;
Thank you for attending&#13;
this semester's movies.&#13;
We ©ItiE&#13;
&amp;iueet ^Ijoppe&#13;
IN THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
CLOSED FROM&#13;
DEC 12&#13;
UNTIL&#13;
JAN. 8, 1982&#13;
THANKS FOR YOUR PATRONAGE AND . . .&#13;
"MAY YOUR NEW YEAR BE A SWEET ONE"&#13;
This Bud's for Wisconsin&#13;
Financial gain wasn't what&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Madison&#13;
fans had in mind when they began&#13;
their own version of the Budweiser&#13;
beer song, screaming out&#13;
at football games: "When you say&#13;
Wis-consin, you've said it all!"&#13;
But Budweiser liked the idea so&#13;
much it used the Badger fans'&#13;
rendition in two TV commercials,&#13;
and subsequently pledged&#13;
donations of more than $25,000 to&#13;
the university.&#13;
The commercials include shots&#13;
of Madison football and the&#13;
marching band, whose upbeat&#13;
version of the Budweiser song&#13;
inspired fans to chant along at&#13;
each game this season. The irony&#13;
that it was Wisconsin folks doing&#13;
the chanting — folks whose state&#13;
is noted for its breweries — was no&#13;
doubt part of the marketing appeal&#13;
to the St. Louis brewer.&#13;
While there's no formal contract&#13;
requiring Anheuser - Busch to pay&#13;
for using the Madison images, the&#13;
company has donated $10,000 to&#13;
the band, $11,000 for athletic&#13;
scholarships, and $5,000 to the&#13;
campus TV station for delayed&#13;
telecasts of Badger football. In&#13;
addition, the company will be&#13;
sending commercial residuals to&#13;
the band fund.&#13;
The university isn't officially&#13;
involved in the commercials, but&#13;
cannot bar use of the school's&#13;
image, says Arthur Hove,&#13;
assistant to the chancellor.&#13;
Michael Leckron, director of UWMadison&#13;
bands, adds that Budweiser's&#13;
actions have been in&#13;
"extraordinarily good taste —&#13;
nothing tacky. What they are&#13;
trying to do is say that Anheuser -&#13;
Busch really endorses Wisconsin."&#13;
&#13;
Holiday concert at Cinema Sunday&#13;
The Chorus, Chorale, Orchestra&#13;
and Brass Ensemble of Parkside&#13;
will join forces for a holiday carol&#13;
concert on Sunday, Dec. 13 at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theater. Admission is $1 for the&#13;
general public; 50 cents for&#13;
students and senior citizens.&#13;
The program will include Antonio&#13;
Vivaldi's Magnificat and&#13;
Carl Phillip Emanuel Bach's&#13;
Heilig 1st Gott, both works for&#13;
chorus and orchestra. Also&#13;
programmed are groups of&#13;
Spanish, Irish and English carols.&#13;
The audience will be invited to&#13;
join in singing such familiar noels&#13;
as Silent Night, Deck the Halls,&#13;
r&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
Hark the Herald Angels Sing and&#13;
Joy to the World.&#13;
Vocal soloists will be Ann Marie&#13;
Conrad, Trevor; Deborah Krause,&#13;
Bristol; James Schatzman,&#13;
Racine; Barbara Kempf,&#13;
Kenosha; Cheryl Brown,&#13;
Kenosha; Julie Harper, Somers;&#13;
Laura Potenziani, Kenosha;&#13;
Nancy Ohnstad, Racinp, will be&#13;
guest harpist for the group of Irish&#13;
carols performed by the combined&#13;
women's choruses.&#13;
The Chorale is directed by&#13;
Frank Mueller, the Chorus by&#13;
Glenda Mossman; and the Brass&#13;
Ensemble by Scott Mather.&#13;
SAVE 20%&#13;
ON YOUR TOTAL PURCHASE&#13;
FASHION DISTRIBUTORS |&#13;
1661 Douglas Av. In Flatiron Mall&#13;
(use this coupon for your early • I&#13;
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Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
/&#13;
THE DOCTOR'S FARCES&#13;
An Evening with Anton Chekhov&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PARKSIDE&#13;
COMMUNICATION ARTS STUDIO THEATRE&#13;
December 11,12 at 8:OOp.m.&#13;
$2.00 students, faculty, senior citizens&#13;
$3.00 general public&#13;
Limited seating: 553-2042 or 553-2345 &#13;
10 Thursday, December 10,1981 RANGER&#13;
MOM &amp; DAD&#13;
Stocking&#13;
fugge/tion&#13;
THE *50.00 DEPOSIT&#13;
I yff&#13;
'fT University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
IYTONA BEACH&#13;
SPRING BREAK&#13;
VS -'82&#13;
j / ]} MARCH&#13;
/ y r 12-22&#13;
FIOR&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• I?T.^R? P0RTATI0N VIA AIR CONDITIONED BATHROOM E QUIPPED MOTORCOACH&#13;
PLAZATHOT°EDLGING AT THE DELUXE OCEANSIDE&#13;
• FREE PARTIES 6. EX TRAS&#13;
• FULLY ESCORTED THROUGHOUT&#13;
• ALL HOTEL TIPS &amp; TAXES&#13;
ONLY *219&#13;
FOR A PP LI C A TI O N AND F UR T H ER INFORMATION&#13;
CONTACT:&#13;
PARKSIDE UN IO N , ROOM209 — 5 5 3 -2 2 0 0&#13;
Club Events^w&#13;
Parkside Players&#13;
Parkside Players will be&#13;
sponsoring a dance on Friday,&#13;
Dec. 18 featuring "Take Me" in&#13;
the Union Square. The doors will&#13;
open at 8 p.m. Admission is $2.50&#13;
for Parkside students and $3.50 for&#13;
guests.&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
Art Addicts will present a slide&#13;
lecture by Parkside professor of&#13;
art David Holmes on Monday,&#13;
Dec. 14 at 1 p.m. in Com Arts 125.&#13;
His lecture "Almost Ten Years —&#13;
Two Works: 1972-81" will discuss&#13;
the development of his two environments,&#13;
The Greater&#13;
Christian Carnival and Holmtown,&#13;
USA. The public is invited.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
The Parkside Accounting Club&#13;
will be holding their last meeting&#13;
of the 1981 fall semester on&#13;
Monday, Dec. 14 at 1 p.m. in Union&#13;
104.&#13;
Topics for discussion during this&#13;
meeting will include the&#13;
scholarship fund and Christmas&#13;
party. All members and&#13;
prospective club members are&#13;
invited to attend. Refreshments&#13;
will be served.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
Are you interested in becoming&#13;
more aware and knowledgeable&#13;
about the conditions awaiting&#13;
women as they enter the&#13;
professional world? Then you&#13;
should be interested in Women in&#13;
Business Club. Through a variety&#13;
of channels, members of WIB are&#13;
introduced and exposed to various&#13;
aspects of the professional world.&#13;
Our goal is to increase awareness&#13;
of what's facing women as they&#13;
enter the professional world. By&#13;
promoting a well - rounded&#13;
education that combines&#13;
professional development&#13;
seminars, social activi ty and&#13;
community involvement, we hope&#13;
to accomplish this.&#13;
If you have an interest in these&#13;
issues, we invite you to join this&#13;
growing organization. For more&#13;
information, call Carla Thomas at&#13;
553-2351.&#13;
Women's Concourse&#13;
Parkside Women's Concourse&#13;
will meet on Monday, Dec. 14 in&#13;
Moln. 165 at 1 p.m. to decide on&#13;
meeting times for next semester.&#13;
All students are invited.&#13;
Anthropology Club&#13;
Anthropology Club will sponsor&#13;
a bake sale in the WLLC alcove on&#13;
Monday, Dec. 14 all day. Look for&#13;
our upright posture, stereoscopic&#13;
vision, opposable thumbs and&#13;
smiling faces. We feature "Boaz&#13;
Brownies," "Levi - Strauss&#13;
Strudel," "Edward Tyler Tidbits"&#13;
and "Malinowski Muffins."&#13;
Why bake for Christmas when&#13;
we'll do the baking for you?&#13;
Phillipine arts, crafts displayed&#13;
A display of arts and crafts from&#13;
the Philippine Islands is on&#13;
display at Parkside on the concourse&#13;
level of the Library -&#13;
Learning Center through Feb. 1.&#13;
The exhibit, from the collections&#13;
of members of the local Filipino&#13;
community and recent visitors to&#13;
the islands, includes tribal artifacts,&#13;
textiles, baskets, ceramic&#13;
and bronze pots, clothing items,&#13;
jewelry and a collection of hats&#13;
from various geographical&#13;
regions. Some of the items are&#13;
antiques and some are contemporary.&#13;
&#13;
The display is sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Anthropology Club.&#13;
RESUME SERVICE&#13;
Expert Professional Career Counseling&#13;
Confidential Personal Service&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
CAREER MOTIVATORS&#13;
632 - 88 05&#13;
CELEBRATE&#13;
THE SEASON&#13;
WITH STYLE XV-or iter* s-^. ... M M ^ &#13;
RANGER Thursday, December 10,1981 11&#13;
SUFAC finishes preliminary budgets, begin finals&#13;
The Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocations Committee&#13;
(SUFAC), a subcommittee of&#13;
PSGA, has finished&#13;
preliminary budgeting for the&#13;
1982-83 academic year.&#13;
SUFAC annually allocates the&#13;
portion of a student's total&#13;
tuition fee called segregated&#13;
fees. A full - time undergraduate&#13;
student paid $72&#13;
in segregated fees this year.&#13;
This table shows the&#13;
preliminary budgets approved&#13;
by SUFAC for various campus&#13;
groups and organizations.&#13;
Final budgeting is now going&#13;
on and should be completed by&#13;
the end of December.&#13;
SUFAC Budget Summary Sheet&#13;
Unit&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Intra murals&#13;
Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
Health Office&#13;
Housing&#13;
Union&#13;
Auxiliary Accounting System&#13;
Union Debt Service&#13;
Child Care Center&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Performing Arts &amp; Lecture&#13;
Student Organization Council&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Winter Carnival / Fallfest&#13;
Student Activities Office&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
TOTAL&#13;
81/82&#13;
$51,585&#13;
37,605&#13;
3,050&#13;
58,322&#13;
13,789&#13;
194,857&#13;
5,722&#13;
105,500&#13;
6,506&#13;
27,227&#13;
8,910&#13;
24,570&#13;
6,750&#13;
3,000&#13;
17,586&#13;
200&#13;
15,262&#13;
$580,441&#13;
82/83&#13;
Proposed&#13;
$53,585&#13;
40,483&#13;
2,400&#13;
66,248&#13;
26,771&#13;
194,857&#13;
6,000&#13;
90,500&#13;
16,823&#13;
35,542&#13;
9,267&#13;
26,540&#13;
7,503&#13;
4,000&#13;
13,556&#13;
160&#13;
17,057&#13;
4,733&#13;
$616,025&#13;
Dollar&#13;
Change&#13;
$2,000&#13;
2,878&#13;
(650)&#13;
17,926&#13;
12,982&#13;
Change&#13;
3.9&#13;
7.7&#13;
278&#13;
(15,000)&#13;
10,317&#13;
8,315&#13;
357&#13;
1,970&#13;
753&#13;
1,000&#13;
(4,030)&#13;
(40)&#13;
1,795&#13;
20.4&#13;
94.1&#13;
4.9&#13;
158.6&#13;
30.5&#13;
4.0&#13;
8.0&#13;
11.2&#13;
33.3&#13;
11.8&#13;
$35,584 6.1&#13;
82/83&#13;
Preliminary&#13;
$53,585&#13;
40,483&#13;
2,400&#13;
66,248&#13;
20,153&#13;
194,857&#13;
6,000&#13;
90,500&#13;
16,823&#13;
35,542&#13;
9,267&#13;
24,660&#13;
7,503&#13;
4,000&#13;
13,556&#13;
160&#13;
17,057&#13;
4,733&#13;
$607,527&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
There is an organization at&#13;
Parkside dedicated to making&#13;
people aware of such issues as&#13;
nuclear power and waste, the&#13;
arms race and meeting human&#13;
needs amo ng others.&#13;
Some members of the group&#13;
label themselves a social change&#13;
group while others call it a&#13;
progressive, environmentally&#13;
concerned group.&#13;
But the name everyone knows it&#13;
by is Student Mobilization for&#13;
Survival.&#13;
Mobe currently has a "core" of&#13;
about a dozen members while the&#13;
"floating membership" numbers&#13;
around 20.&#13;
"In the fall of 1979 I spent much&#13;
time in frustration with Parkside&#13;
because of the lack of student&#13;
involvement in many of the&#13;
pressing issues of our time," said&#13;
Jeanna LeSuer - Mandernack, one&#13;
of Mobe's founders. "I had been in&#13;
school one semester and knew&#13;
that it was the 'politicizing' of&#13;
students that was lacking."&#13;
"In October I put a notice in the&#13;
Ranger asking anyone who was&#13;
interested in the issues of nuclear&#13;
power and weapons to please get&#13;
in touch with me in the hopes of&#13;
starting an organized group on&#13;
campus," said LeSuer - Mandernack.&#13;
But no one responded.&#13;
Distressed, LeSuer - Mandernack&#13;
and a friend went to&#13;
Student Life and filled out a form&#13;
making Mobe a recognized group&#13;
on campus. "I had been in touch&#13;
with the MFS in Milwaukee and&#13;
we decided to use their name as&#13;
the n ame of our group since we&#13;
had the same goals and the affiliation&#13;
would help us get started,"&#13;
said LeSuer - Mandernack. v&#13;
By December there were four or&#13;
five people meeting once a week in&#13;
the Union to discuss what they&#13;
could do to promote awareness,&#13;
discussion and activism, to the&#13;
nuclear issues, on the Parkside&#13;
campus.&#13;
"With the help of Milwaukee&#13;
Kenosha Unified&#13;
offers jobs to&#13;
Parkside students&#13;
Kenosha Unified School District&#13;
#1 w ill have a selected few job&#13;
openings for clerical, library, AV&#13;
aides and warehouse assistants&#13;
between Jan. 15, 1981 and May 30,&#13;
1982. Workers will earn $3.35&#13;
(federal minimum wage) and&#13;
work a ten hour week average.&#13;
To qualify for the jobs, applicants&#13;
must be Kenosha&#13;
residents between 14 and 21 years&#13;
of age and be economically&#13;
disadvantaged (by CETA&#13;
criteria). All workers must be&#13;
enrolled at Parkside as full time&#13;
students.&#13;
Pre-screening of applicants will&#13;
be done by Wisconsin Job Service.&#13;
To apply, see Mike Plate in WLLC&#13;
D173between 8:30 a.m. and 4 p.m.&#13;
Student Mobilization raises student awareness&#13;
Mobe," said LeSuer - Mandernack,&#13;
"we set up tables of&#13;
literature and sold buttons and&#13;
bumperstickers. By May we had&#13;
speakers, films and workshops&#13;
presented at Parkside; about 15&#13;
members; and about 10&#13;
representatives from Parkside&#13;
going to a Washington, D. C. rally&#13;
for a nuclear - free world. We&#13;
knew we had been successful at&#13;
starting activism on campus."&#13;
Mobe currently receives $1139&#13;
from SOC. That figure represents&#13;
the fourth highest budget in SOC.&#13;
"By becoming members of SOC,&#13;
we were able to plan farther&#13;
ahead for events," said LeSuer -&#13;
Mandernack. The year 1980-81 was&#13;
quite successful. We participated&#13;
in many events, gained a wider&#13;
recognition on campus and the&#13;
community and we gained new&#13;
membership and new interests.&#13;
We began to work on issues&#13;
beyond nuclear because we saw&#13;
the need for involvement in other&#13;
areas."&#13;
Mobe organized rallies during&#13;
the two major periods of draft&#13;
registration and worked with&#13;
Vietnam Vets Against the War&#13;
and Vietnam Vets Still Suffering&#13;
to put an Awareness Day of toxic&#13;
chemicals. Mobe also put on their&#13;
first annual No Nuke Teach - In&#13;
which included films, speakers,&#13;
and workshops.&#13;
So far this year Mobe has&#13;
sponsored films, had Rosa Rivera&#13;
speak on El Salvador and brought&#13;
Dr. Michio Kaku to talk on nuclear&#13;
technology. Plans for next spring&#13;
semester include more films,&#13;
another Teach - In, and hopefully&#13;
a solid workshop at the end of the&#13;
year on Civil Disobedience.&#13;
"We would like to increase our&#13;
membership and the attendance&#13;
at our events," said LeSuer&#13;
Mandernack. "To be successful in&#13;
awareness and activism, we need&#13;
people. The more people we have,&#13;
the better commitment and&#13;
strength we will be able to display.&#13;
People do not need to have vast&#13;
amounts of science. and&#13;
technological know - how to begin&#13;
to understand the nuclear industry.&#13;
What is required is a mind&#13;
that is willing to question and&#13;
learn, and as each person continues&#13;
to be involved, he or she&#13;
will learn and gain the knowledge&#13;
necessary to understand, question&#13;
and respond to the issues&#13;
surrounding us."&#13;
Some Mobe members were&#13;
asked why they think Mobe is&#13;
Important. "As the mother of&#13;
three daughters, I'm concerned&#13;
about their future welfare," said&#13;
Judy Tegtman. "I feel it's very&#13;
important that people become&#13;
aware of what we're doing to this&#13;
world and to our future&#13;
BUY 1 GET 1&#13;
ii} M I&#13;
•&#13;
of equal or lesser value&#13;
Sale Ends Dec. 13, 1981&#13;
Christmas Hours:&#13;
Mon., Thurs., Fri. 9:30-8 P.M.&#13;
Tues., Wed., Sat. 9:30-5, Sun. 1-4&#13;
FURR by US&#13;
generations. We must begin to&#13;
become more people - oriented if&#13;
humanity is to survive."&#13;
"Mobe is important because,&#13;
first, I've come to believe that&#13;
nuclear power is a dangerous&#13;
technology," said Deborah&#13;
Elzinga. "Second, I'm afraid of a&#13;
nuclear war. Our task is to raise&#13;
these issues to the students. Mobe&#13;
people realize these issues affect&#13;
them and that they can help to&#13;
change things. It's crucial, particularly&#13;
now with Reagan in&#13;
office, to get involved with groups&#13;
like Mobe."&#13;
One problem Mobe members&#13;
see is that people don't come to&#13;
their meetings because they think&#13;
Mobe is a clique. "But we want&#13;
everybody to come," said one&#13;
member.&#13;
Mobe meets Tuesdays at 3:30 in&#13;
Moln. D128. Anyone interested in&#13;
any of these "social" issues&#13;
should join the organization that is&#13;
speaking out on them and trying to&#13;
do something about them.&#13;
§ '&#13;
§ Member P arkside 200&#13;
Mention this ad! ^ Joseph&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Premium Quality Fruit Year around orders&#13;
Many Styles — Custom Arrangement&#13;
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Eggs, Bacon &amp;&#13;
all the Pancakes&#13;
you can eat! $1.99&#13;
Any time of day. Anu day of the week&#13;
2 AA farm-fresh eggs fixed any way you Here's another one of the breakfasts that&#13;
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you can eat&#13;
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Thursday, December 10,1981 RANGER&#13;
Cheerleading hard work&#13;
by Karen Norwood&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Often ignored, stereotyped and&#13;
overlooked are the Parkside&#13;
cheerleaders, but there is more to&#13;
them than meets the eye. Ever&#13;
striving to improve their performances,&#13;
this year's squad will&#13;
be trying to prove that Parkside&#13;
cheerleaders aren't just a group of&#13;
people that make noise during a&#13;
game.&#13;
Kathy Nielson, a member of the&#13;
cheerleading squad, feels that this&#13;
year's squad is the best ever.&#13;
"We've improved greatly in our&#13;
gymnastics," said Nielson, "and&#13;
the new girls have added new&#13;
style and variety to the squad."&#13;
Along with the "new girls" are&#13;
the new guys, or as the announcer&#13;
of Friday night's game called&#13;
them, "Parkside's macho men."&#13;
This year's squad has nine girls&#13;
and eight guys. "It's great having&#13;
the guys on the team," commented&#13;
Nielson. "This year we&#13;
have them coming out of our&#13;
ears." This is opposed to last year&#13;
when the squad had "one or two&#13;
full - time guys, and the rest&#13;
helped out when they could." This.&#13;
More trivia&#13;
1. Who wore and tested the first&#13;
football helmet?&#13;
2. Who was the first woman&#13;
golfer to win five straight pro&#13;
events?&#13;
3. Who was the first bowler to&#13;
win money in 51 consecutive pro&#13;
tournaments?&#13;
£ zado7 &lt;fouD/vr Z 'miutswH&#13;
sauivp jq j :SV3MSNV&#13;
is only the second year that&#13;
Parkside has had male&#13;
cheerleaders, and they have&#13;
added much variety to the&#13;
routines.&#13;
With the addition of the new&#13;
cheerleaders also came some new&#13;
cheers. "We got some new ideas&#13;
from one of the new girls from&#13;
Michigan. Hers and some other&#13;
new ideas have added to our&#13;
style."&#13;
One thing that is often&#13;
overlooked about the cheerleaders&#13;
is the hours of hard work that the&#13;
cheerleaders put into each&#13;
routine. Theresa Schiffer, a freshman&#13;
member of the cheerleading&#13;
squad said, "Wa,work just as hard&#13;
as any track team, or any sports&#13;
team does."&#13;
Nielson added to Schiffer's&#13;
comments by saying, "To look&#13;
good you must work hard. What&#13;
you put into it is what you'll get&#13;
out of it." All of this hard work&#13;
seems to be paying off. After&#13;
Friday night's game the squad got&#13;
many compliments on their&#13;
routines. "We've never before&#13;
gotten so many comments on our&#13;
cheers," said Nielson.&#13;
Yet even with all the hard work&#13;
that the cheerleaders have&#13;
already put in, there is still a lot of&#13;
work that must be done. "We are&#13;
basically a self - taught team,"&#13;
said Schiffer.&#13;
Added Nielson, "We are still&#13;
using old cheers that we learned in&#13;
high school. We just started to&#13;
cheer at a college level on&#13;
Friday."&#13;
The cheerleaders are sponsoring&#13;
many programs this year.&#13;
One that attracted much attention&#13;
during half - time of Friday's&#13;
game was the Rangerettes,&#13;
children between the ages of 4 and&#13;
11. "I think that it made the&#13;
show," sqid Nielson, commenting&#13;
on the little cheerleaders. AcTreat&#13;
YiwmIvm Ta A Sift&#13;
Of Total Fftnass&#13;
1st Momborship at Rag. Prict *210&#13;
2nd Momborship at Va Prlco *105&#13;
With Tho First.&#13;
Unlimited Use ef Our&#13;
Facility, 7 Days A Week&#13;
Skewers and Locker&#13;
Room Facilities Included.&#13;
COUPON&#13;
20% OFF&#13;
all Vitamins and Supplements.&#13;
Expires Dec. 19th, 1981&#13;
THE B ODY SHOP&#13;
FITNESS CENTER&#13;
FOR MEN &amp; W OMEN&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
2111 456th Street&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Mon thru Fri. 8am to 9:30pm. Sat. 8am to 6pm. Sun. 9am to 5pm&#13;
Ph.652-1459&#13;
cording to Nielson, the Rangerette&#13;
program has encouraged many&#13;
people to get involved with the&#13;
school's spirit. School spirit is the&#13;
cheerleaders prime directive.&#13;
"We want to get people more&#13;
involved with school athletics. It&#13;
(the Rangerette program) went&#13;
well on Friday, and hopefully&#13;
more people will start to attend&#13;
sports activities."&#13;
The cheerleaders are also involved&#13;
in a high school recruitment&#13;
program where they ask&#13;
senior cheerleaders from area&#13;
high schools to come in and cheer&#13;
during a Parkside game. "We let&#13;
them see us and also see what it is&#13;
like to cheer a college game,"&#13;
stated Nielson. "We have also&#13;
judged some local high school&#13;
cheerleaders in competition."&#13;
The cheerleaders are also&#13;
selling season passes to&#13;
Parkside's basketball games, and&#13;
from all accounts the sales are&#13;
going well. The cheerleaders have&#13;
also had several bake sales and&#13;
even a plant sale. In case you were&#13;
wondering where all the proceeds&#13;
are going, wonder no more. Some&#13;
of what the cheerleaders earn&#13;
goes for new uniforms and&#13;
equipment, but most of what they&#13;
earn is used to fund trips to&#13;
various away games, hopefully&#13;
including a trip to Kansas City and&#13;
the NAIA Nationals.&#13;
The biggest problem that the&#13;
cheerleaders have is overcoming&#13;
a negative stereotype. "We are&#13;
stereotyped as being airy," said&#13;
Nielson. "There is more to it than&#13;
getting out there and shaking your&#13;
butt a little," Schiffer readily&#13;
agreed.&#13;
"Friday night we worked as&#13;
hard as the basketball players,"&#13;
said Schiffer. She went on to add,&#13;
"Cheerleaders are not dizzy!"&#13;
Why are they cheerleaders? The&#13;
answer is a little surprising. "I&#13;
think that without being involved&#13;
in cheerleading in my freshman&#13;
year I wouldn't have stayed at&#13;
Parkside. There is not a lot of&#13;
social life at Parkside, just books&#13;
and classes. Cheerleading introduced&#13;
me to some great people.&#13;
I've gained friendships that I will&#13;
cherish for the rest of my life,"&#13;
said Nielson.&#13;
Sheridan • %&#13;
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IN STOCK!&#13;
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EBONITE BALLS $25&#13;
IN STOCK&#13;
Fitted &amp; Drilled&#13;
SHOES in stock&#13;
Dexter, Hush Puppies&#13;
40% OFF&#13;
25% OFF ANY&#13;
SINGLE BAG&#13;
With the purchase&#13;
of new ball&#13;
*All bags carry a 3-year&#13;
guarantee from Stebco(r)&#13;
Tobeawinner&#13;
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GIFT CERTIFICATES&#13;
AVAILABLE&#13;
80th &amp; Sheridan - Kenosha&#13;
at Sheridan Lanes&#13;
654-5999&#13;
SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSNSS^&#13;
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Southern Wisconsin's Largest Selection&#13;
NEW IN KENOSHA&#13;
Save 50%&#13;
on Men's Shirts&#13;
Save 20%&#13;
on All B oots&#13;
Save $5 on S tetson H at&#13;
(Felts &amp; Straw)&#13;
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For The Christmas Season&#13;
GIFT CERTIFICATES&#13;
Are Available&#13;
In Dedication To Our Western&#13;
Heritage Autry County Exists At:&#13;
5014 7th Ave.&#13;
Kenosha, Wl&#13;
Mon-Sat. 9:30-6&#13;
Friday 'til 9&#13;
Sunday 12-4:30&#13;
501 6th St.&#13;
Racine, Wl&#13;
632-9077&#13;
ssasssssssx&#13;
Photo by S. Squirrel&#13;
This, however, is not the only&#13;
reason for being a cheerleader.&#13;
"I'm sort of addicted to it. Next&#13;
year there can be an even better&#13;
squad," Nielson said. "It is a&#13;
challenge because in the past&#13;
there hasn't been much school&#13;
involvement, and now Parkside is&#13;
becoming closer together. It is a&#13;
good feeling knowing that you're&#13;
helping people get closer together&#13;
and more into the games.&#13;
This year's cheerleading squad&#13;
is doing more with a better team&#13;
than ever before. It should be&#13;
quite interesting to see how much&#13;
they improve during the&#13;
remainder of the season and over&#13;
the new few years. Indeed there is&#13;
more to cheerleading than meets&#13;
the eye.&#13;
Ad rate changes&#13;
The Parkside Ranger has&#13;
reduced its classified ad rates to&#13;
students in an effort to make&#13;
advertising more accessible to&#13;
students.&#13;
Ads to students were formerly&#13;
free, until the beginning of this&#13;
semester when a blanket fee of 50*&#13;
per ten words was attached as&#13;
part of general advertising rate&#13;
increases.&#13;
Students may now place&#13;
classified ads at a rate of 35* per&#13;
ten words. No advertising will be&#13;
accepted that is deemed by the&#13;
editor as defamatory in content.&#13;
The reduced ad rate for students&#13;
is the result of student request.&#13;
Classified A ds&#13;
TY PI kj r* |&#13;
ERV,CESOFFERED&#13;
T PING. Resumes, term papers, theses,&#13;
manuscripts, etc. 14 years experience.&#13;
Reasonable rates. 694 1825 or 652 6599&#13;
TYPING in my home — term papers,&#13;
manuscripts, essays, resumes, letters,&#13;
' e,c&#13;
' Pro,e&#13;
ssional results. Call 639-&#13;
6023.&#13;
TYPING. Professionally done. Reasonable&#13;
rates. Fast service. South Kenosha, 657-&#13;
6U68.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
ROOMATE WANTED, male to share&#13;
spacious renovated two bedroom downtown&#13;
apt. in Racine. Call 633-4143.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
LYMOU TH VOLARE station wagon 1977,&#13;
excellent, $3000. Call Amin, ext. 2547, GR&#13;
341.&#13;
CA A RJ^&#13;
M.&#13;
A.&#13;
S SALE at ,he 0ld Book corner at&#13;
Martha Merrell's Bookstore, 312 Sixth St.,&#13;
M™C'"&#13;
e&#13;
.'J10% oft a&#13;
" used b00ks wi,h ,his ad&#13;
'&#13;
NOW sthetimeto build up your library; buy&#13;
yourself a good book.&#13;
,,1L1 PERSONALS&#13;
WHO DO YA KNOW wants to look beautiful?&#13;
Avon products can help! Call 654 1953 after&#13;
6 p.m. Ask for Patty.&#13;
T&#13;
?,,T,£E RANGER STAFF: It was fun. To&#13;
UWP: Goodbye!!!!!!!!!!&#13;
W^&#13;
NI&#13;
EI&#13;
?&#13;
: 0ne caree r opportunity for a&#13;
graduating Communication maior. mother&#13;
words . somebody find me a&#13;
PAD T ' V !!!!!!! —An Ex-Editor&#13;
o J Friday, Dec. 11. Everyone invited.&#13;
8:30 p.m. 1825 60th St., Kenosha. &#13;
Fall letterwinners honored&#13;
Most Mn&lt;st Valll^Hlo nloVAnn ~ A... ~ . _ valuable players, captains&#13;
and letterwinners have been&#13;
named for the six fall sports&#13;
teams at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside.&#13;
Most valuable players include&#13;
Racine (Park) sophomore Dan&#13;
Stublaski for men's cross -&#13;
country; Kenosha (Bradford)&#13;
junior Debbie Spino for women's&#13;
cross-country; Racine (Horlick)&#13;
senior Todd Schalinske for men's&#13;
golf; Kisii, Kenya, senior John&#13;
Momoima - Onyiego for men's&#13;
soccer; Kenosha (Bradford)&#13;
senior Kathy Thomas for women's&#13;
tennis; and Neenah (Neenah)&#13;
sophomore Laurie Hess for&#13;
women's volleyball.&#13;
. Captains for 1981 included&#13;
Stublaski for men's cross -&#13;
country; Muskego (Muskego)&#13;
junior Dona Driscoll for women's&#13;
cross - country ; Oak Creek (Oak&#13;
Creek) junion Mark Peterson for&#13;
men's golf; and Racine&#13;
(Lutheran) junior Alan Gibson,&#13;
St. Paul, Minn. (Hill - Murray)&#13;
junior John McNulty and Robbinsdale,&#13;
Minn. (Robbinsdale)&#13;
junior Bob Newstrom for soccer&#13;
Selected as captains for their&#13;
1982 teams were Peterson and&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper) sophomore&#13;
Bob Sobol for golf and McNulty for&#13;
soccer. Peterson was selected the&#13;
most improved golfer while&#13;
McNulty received similar honors&#13;
for soccer.&#13;
Letterwinners follow, by sport:&#13;
MEN'S CROSS - COUNTRY&#13;
(Coach Lucian Rosa) - Tom&#13;
Barrett, Steve Brunner, John&#13;
Cogan, A1 C orrea, Rich Sowlles,&#13;
Dan Stublaski.&#13;
WOMEN'S CROSS - COUNTRY&#13;
(Coach Mike DeWitt) - Dona&#13;
Driscoll, Lowrie Melotik, Sue&#13;
Meyer, Barb Osborne, Linda&#13;
Pfeilstifter, Debbie Spino, Sandy&#13;
Venne.&#13;
MEN'S GOLF (Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens) - Gary Fox, Mark&#13;
Peterson, Mike Ritacca, Todd&#13;
Schalinske, John Schneider, Bob&#13;
Sobol.&#13;
MEN'S SOCCER (Coach Hal&#13;
Henderson) - Cris Birdsall, Rich&#13;
Blay, Jeff Bolwerk, Don Cops,&#13;
Ralph DeGraff, Jeff Dennehy,&#13;
Brad Faust, Scott Gerhartz, Alan&#13;
Gibson, Jeff LaForce, Don&#13;
Matanowski, John McNulty,&#13;
Roger Menk, John Monks, Bob&#13;
Newstrom, Chiedu Okonmah,&#13;
John Momoima - Onyiego, Dan&#13;
Opferman, Jim Spielman, Don&#13;
Theisen, Paul Wieland, Adrian&#13;
Rietveld.&#13;
WOMEN'S TENNIS (Coach&#13;
Noreen Goggin) - Lori Bleashka,&#13;
Karen Froseth, Charlotte Hall,&#13;
Nancy Kivi, Kathy Thomas, Carol&#13;
Wagner.&#13;
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL&#13;
(Coach Linda Henderson) - Fran&#13;
Busalacchi, Sherry Festge, Robin&#13;
Henschel, Laurie Hess, Deb&#13;
Justman, Callie Lee, Laurie Pope,&#13;
Cindy Ruffert, Bonnie Schmelter,&#13;
Kim Tesher.&#13;
Nordic Ski Club to sponsor race&#13;
The Nordic Ski Club will be&#13;
sponsoring a 15k cross country&#13;
skiing race and citizens tour on&#13;
January 10 at 11:00 a.m. The race&#13;
is open to everyone, and you can&#13;
register anytime up until 10:30&#13;
p.m. on the day of the race.&#13;
Awards in the form of finishing&#13;
pins will be given to the first 150&#13;
participants to cross the finishing&#13;
line. A computerized timing&#13;
system along with a manual back -&#13;
up will be used to insure accurate&#13;
results.&#13;
The Nordic Ski Club, according&#13;
to Ed Wallen, the club's&#13;
advisor, is "A group of Parkside&#13;
staff, students and community&#13;
members with an interest in cross&#13;
country skiing." The race,&#13;
however, is not for the beginner&#13;
skier, and only those with intermediate&#13;
to advanced skills&#13;
should attempt it.&#13;
The record time for the course is&#13;
currently held by Norwegian Stig&#13;
Heir, with a time erf 49 minutes.&#13;
Former Olympic member Joe&#13;
McNulty won the race last year,&#13;
and is expected to return to defend&#13;
his title. Wallen believes that Bill&#13;
Olsen, a community member who&#13;
won a Roller Ski race sponsored&#13;
by the Nordic Ski Club will finish&#13;
high in his age group, while Kai&#13;
Hansen, the President of the&#13;
Nordic Club, will finish very high&#13;
in his age group.&#13;
Wallen is expecting anywhere&#13;
from 300 t o 400 people to show up&#13;
for the race which is one of the&#13;
biggest cross country races held&#13;
in the midwest. The better and&#13;
faster skiiers will be trying for&#13;
good times while most of the&#13;
entrants will just try to finish.&#13;
"Skiing is easier than running,&#13;
because you can glide," commented&#13;
Warren.&#13;
In the last four years that the&#13;
race has been held, it has been&#13;
postponed three times. Two times&#13;
for inadequate snow, and once for,&#13;
believe it or not, too much snow!&#13;
The course that the skiiers will&#13;
follow has trails 10 - 25 feet wide&#13;
and is characterized by long,&#13;
gradual uphills and downhills,&#13;
with a few short, steep down runs.&#13;
The course is double tracked by a&#13;
VISIT-ENJOY...&#13;
"The Wonderful World&#13;
of WEDDINGS"&#13;
STATE FAIR PARK - SOUTH EXHIBIT HALL&#13;
JANUARY 9-10, 1982&#13;
A SHORT COURSE" W&#13;
WEDDING MANNINGS&#13;
IT'S FUN...&#13;
ITS INFORMATIVE...&#13;
with E VERYTHING for&#13;
EVERYONE I NTERESTED&#13;
in WEDDINGS!&#13;
v&#13;
EXHIBITS: Bridal gowns • invitations • flowers • silver-china •&#13;
photos • jewelers • honeymoon travel • cookware • wedding&#13;
cakes • formalwear • reception sites • favors • wedding music&#13;
• luggage • limousine service • financial services (comparison&#13;
shop - most catagories).&#13;
BRIDAL FASHION SHOWS: SEVERAL BRIDAL SALONS&#13;
will showcase an exquisite array of spring &amp; summer bridal&#13;
fashions. Men's formalwear too! Bring the whole bridal party!&#13;
SPECIAL FEATURES: (1) "Cooking for Newlyweds"&#13;
(2) "How to Pack Honeymoon Luggage"&#13;
(3) The "LOVE PRITST", Father Gene Jakubek .S.J.&#13;
AMERICA'S MOST COMPLETE&#13;
BRIDAL SHOW&#13;
SHOW HOURS&#13;
Saturday, january 9 - 1 to 10 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, January 10 - 1 to 5 p.m.&#13;
BOX OFFICE ADMISSION - $3.00&#13;
ORDER TICKETS BY MAIL:&#13;
Send request with check ($3.00 per ticket) to:&#13;
WONDERFUL WORLD OF WEDDINGS&#13;
6111 W. Bluemound Rd., Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53213&#13;
Woodcrest Gyro Groomer and&#13;
Track Mould.&#13;
For now, the Nordic Club awaits&#13;
January and whatever snow&#13;
conditions that it holds. In case of&#13;
a lack of snow, or Heaven forbid&#13;
too much snow, the rescheduled&#13;
dates will be January 24 or&#13;
February 7. More information is&#13;
available in the P.E. Building.&#13;
More trivia&#13;
1. Who was voted by the press as&#13;
the greatest roundballer of 1900 -&#13;
1950?&#13;
2. Whose 68 pts. vs. Knicks in '77&#13;
set a one - game record for&#13;
guards?&#13;
3. Who was elected to both&#13;
basketball and football Halls of&#13;
Fame?&#13;
4. Which college basketball&#13;
squad was led by Bill Russell to 60&#13;
consecutive wins?&#13;
•oosioudjj uvs p 83dis&#13;
ozuojy souiy £ qoMDJDft aidj&#13;
Z uvqw aSuoaQ j :Sti3A\SNV&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 10&#13;
CONCERT at 5 p. m. in Union Square featuring the Parkside Jazz Band. Admission&#13;
is free for Parkside faculty, staff and students. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 11&#13;
WORKSHOP "Test Anxiety" at 1 p. m. in MOLN 111. Call ext. 2605 for more information.&#13;
&#13;
MOVIE "The Great Santini" (PG) will be shown at 7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission at the door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
PLAY "The Doctor's Farces" at 8 p. m. in CA Studio B. Admission is $2.00 f or&#13;
Parkside students, faculty, staff and senior citizens and $3.00 for others. Tickets&#13;
are available at the Union Information Center and at the Fine Arts Division&#13;
Office.&#13;
DANCE/CONCERT at 9 p. m. in Union Square featuring "Legacy". Admission at&#13;
the door is $2.00 for a Parkside student and $2.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 12&#13;
PLAY "The Doctor's Farces" will be repeated at 8 p. m. in CA Studio B.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 13&#13;
RECEPTION for December graduates at 2 p. m. in Main Place. The event is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
CONCERT at 3:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema featuring the Parkside Chorus and&#13;
Chorale. Admission at the door is 50* for students and senior citizens and $1.00 for&#13;
others.&#13;
MOVIE "The Great Santini" will be repeated at 7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 15&#13;
CONCERT at 12:30 p. m. in Main Place featuring the Parkside Wind Ensemble.&#13;
The concert is free and open to the public.&#13;
DANCE in Union Square after the Basketball Game, featuring "UWX". Admission&#13;
is free with your basketball ticket. Sponsored by Student Life.&#13;
Patronize R anger&#13;
Christmas A duertisers!!&#13;
| Engagement Sets From *95°°&#13;
OUR EVERYDAY PRICES ARE LOWER&#13;
THAN OTHER'S "DISCOUNT PRICES"&#13;
COME IN &amp; COMPARE&#13;
Christmas Hours&#13;
MON DAY - F RI DAY 9:30 to 9:00&#13;
SATURDAY 9:30 to 5:15&#13;
SUNDAY 12:00 to 4:00&#13;
THE STORE WITH MORE —&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST JEWELER&#13;
HERBERT'S&#13;
CORNER 58th ST. &amp; 7th AVE. &#13;
14 Thursday, December 10,1981 RANGER&#13;
Experience-Progress for women's basketball&#13;
by Greg Bonofij .figlio&#13;
The Parkside women's&#13;
basketball season opened in a&#13;
positive manner last Saturday.&#13;
Two Laurie Pope free throws With&#13;
14 seconds left in over - time lifted&#13;
the Ranger women to a dramatic&#13;
78-77 upset victory over UWWhitewater.&#13;
&#13;
Pope led the Ranger attack with&#13;
an impressive 23 point performance.&#13;
The junior center&#13;
connected on eight of twelve from&#13;
the field and six of seven from the&#13;
line. Sophomore forward Robin&#13;
Henschel added 14 points and&#13;
freshman forward Theresa Bye 11&#13;
points in the season opener for the&#13;
Parkside cagers.&#13;
Two free throws by Kim&#13;
Johnson tied the game at 68 apiece&#13;
with just seven seconds remaining&#13;
in regulation play. Whitewater&#13;
blew a golden opportunity to win&#13;
the game but missed the first free&#13;
throw in a one - and - one situation.&#13;
They also had a chance to win it in&#13;
overtime, but missed on a last&#13;
second 22 footer from the left side.&#13;
Coach Noreen Goggin is optimistic&#13;
about this year's team,&#13;
and she has every right to be.&#13;
Saturday's victory came against a&#13;
team that was third in the nation&#13;
last year.&#13;
One reason Coach Goggin and&#13;
assistant coaches Dale Snyder&#13;
and Bob Seidel are optimistic is&#13;
the fact that Parkside has six&#13;
letterwinners returning from last&#13;
year's squad. Among those six&#13;
include four starters: 5-4&#13;
sophomore guard Cindy Ruffert&#13;
(Milwaukee Hamilton); 5-9&#13;
sophomore forward Jeanne&#13;
Jacobs (Milwaukee St. Mary's);&#13;
5-8 sophomore forward Robin&#13;
Henschel (Hartland Arrowhead);&#13;
and junior center Laurie Pope&#13;
(Omro High School, Omro). The&#13;
other two letterwinners include 5-3&#13;
guard Linda Masters (Wilmot)&#13;
and 5-10 sophomore center Tracie&#13;
Sylvester (Central).&#13;
Newcomers to the team are: 5-2&#13;
sophomore guard Laura Laurenzi&#13;
(Kenosha Tremper); 5-6&#13;
sophomore guard - forward&#13;
Denova Franklin (Chicago&#13;
Vocational); 5-7 freshman guard&#13;
Holly Just (Union Grove); 5-8&#13;
freshman forward Theresa Bye&#13;
(Eau Claire North); 5-9 freshman&#13;
forward Lynn Kissinger (Eau&#13;
Claire North); 6-0 freshman&#13;
center Shelley Laffin (Wausau&#13;
West); and 5-8 freshman forward&#13;
Kim Johnson (Kenosha St.&#13;
Joseph).&#13;
Last year's 6-20 team had only one&#13;
returning player. But, as a group,&#13;
this is a much improved Ranger&#13;
team. "We've improved from last&#13;
year's team in every category.&#13;
(With) four of our five starters&#13;
back this year, we're doing things&#13;
differently, especially on defense.&#13;
We're going to a man - to - man&#13;
this year instead of the zone we&#13;
used last year. We're also emPhoto&#13;
by S. Squirrel&#13;
ploying more patterned offense.&#13;
We move the ball around more&#13;
and wait for the good shot instead&#13;
of looking for one or two people to&#13;
score all the points," Goggin said.&#13;
"Yeah, it is (a young team), but&#13;
we're more lucky than last year.&#13;
We have four experienced people&#13;
starting this year compared to&#13;
only one last year. But we're weak&#13;
on overall experience. If we went&#13;
against an evenly matched opponent,&#13;
we'd be at a disadvantage&#13;
because of (the lack of overall)&#13;
experience. Hopefully, we can&#13;
keep our players for next year,"&#13;
Goggin said.&#13;
"Obviously we want to improve on&#13;
last year. I think we can go .500 or&#13;
better. Beating Whitewater was a&#13;
big indication of our improvement.&#13;
They were third in the&#13;
nation last year and they only lost&#13;
one player. I h ope we can make it&#13;
to the area play-offs and possibly&#13;
even the nationals," Goggin said.&#13;
Key players for the Parkside&#13;
team include: Lori Pope, the&#13;
leading rebounder and scorer for&#13;
the Rangers. "She's been consistently&#13;
strong for us both last&#13;
year and. this year." Another&#13;
player Goggin has high hopes for,&#13;
especially in the rebounding&#13;
department, is Jeanne Jacobs,&#13;
whom Goggin describes as "a&#13;
strong and tall post player." For&#13;
leadership on the court, expect to&#13;
see Cindy Ruffert. "She's the one&#13;
who gets the offense running and&#13;
keeps things moving for us. While&#13;
she doesn't score often, she does&#13;
keep things going," Goggin said.&#13;
Perimeter shooting will be in the&#13;
capable hands of Robin Henschel.&#13;
"She's a real good shooter and can&#13;
hit from anywhere outside,"&#13;
Goggin said. Two promising&#13;
freshmen are forwards Kim&#13;
Johnson and Theresa Bye.&#13;
Johnson scored eight critical&#13;
points late in the Whitewater&#13;
game and should see a lot of action&#13;
this season.&#13;
Goggin hopes the turnout for&#13;
last Saturday's game will continue.&#13;
"Our game is unique from&#13;
the Men's. We have a 30 second&#13;
clock which doesn't allow you to&#13;
stall away the last four minutes of&#13;
the game. Those games aren't&#13;
very exciting when they do that."&#13;
Fans can attest to that.&#13;
The Rangers play Northeastern&#13;
Illinois tonight at 7 p.m.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE&#13;
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Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
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Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
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694-9206 JM WW JT, (MQBVt, W&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
(1) WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
LENDER&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
Final Week Hours&#13;
Dec. 14-19&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
WEDNESDAY&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
9a. m. -6p. m.&#13;
9a. m. -6 p. m.&#13;
9 a. m.-6p. m.&#13;
9a. m. -6 p. m.&#13;
9a. m. -6p. m.&#13;
6p. m. 12a. m.&#13;
50* SPECIAL Mon.-Fri.&#13;
Bowling - 50* Game&#13;
Pool - 50* % Hour&#13;
Moonlite Bowling&#13;
Sat. 8 pm-12 am&#13;
Inside UW-P Sports &#13;
RANGER&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Thursday, December 10,1981 15&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
The Parkside men's basketball&#13;
team got off on the wrong foot last&#13;
week with a loss in the season&#13;
opener, but came back to win their&#13;
next three games.&#13;
The Rangers travelled to&#13;
Chicago to battle the Illinois Institute&#13;
of Technology last&#13;
Tuesday, but apparently weren't&#13;
ready to play, as IIT jumped off to&#13;
a quick 10-4 lead which was never&#13;
lost. Parkside ended up on the&#13;
short end of the 73-65 score.&#13;
"We didn't play well in any part&#13;
of the game," said coach Steve&#13;
Stephens. "It was our first game&#13;
and we just didn't get on track."&#13;
Parkside was led in scoring by&#13;
6-5 senior center - forward John&#13;
Herndon with 18 points. Freshman&#13;
forward Cornell Sattler, who&#13;
Stephens said "played as well as&#13;
anybody," and junior center&#13;
Wilbert Webb each added 16&#13;
points.&#13;
In the Rangers' home opener&#13;
last Friday, the Parkside fans got&#13;
their first look at two exciting&#13;
freshmen, guardDarron Brittman&#13;
and center Ray Duckworth, in a&#13;
77-61 win over St. Xavier College.&#13;
"We were pretty tentative in the&#13;
first half," commented Stephens.&#13;
"But the second half we got it&#13;
going." St. Xavier got off to a&#13;
quick 10-0 lead and held that lead&#13;
until halftime for a 31-30 lead.&#13;
Freshman Brittman literally&#13;
stole the game, making an impressive&#13;
debut in his first college&#13;
game with 10 points, three assists,&#13;
and eight steals, seven more than&#13;
the entire opposing team.&#13;
"He's extremely quick," said&#13;
Stephens. "Our defense has not&#13;
been all that great, but the opponents&#13;
are always looking for&#13;
Darron."&#13;
Duckworth, at 6-8 and 250&#13;
pounds proved to be a force to be&#13;
reckoned with in the middle as he&#13;
led the Rangers with 18 points and&#13;
contributed five rebounds. Buster&#13;
Webb added 17 points and 7&#13;
rebounds, followed by Herndon&#13;
with 11 points, and Saddler with&#13;
nine.&#13;
The Rangers then took to the&#13;
road again Saturday night to&#13;
Sheboygan to battle Lakeland&#13;
College. Parkside got off to a&#13;
quick 17-2 lead, only to see&#13;
Lakeland close the gap to 23-21.&#13;
Parkside went into the intermission&#13;
with a 43-38 advantage.&#13;
The second half started off the&#13;
Rangers loin three of four opening games&#13;
game by a 75-64 score.&#13;
John Herndon again paced the&#13;
Rangers with 26 points, with Webb&#13;
adding 23. Brittman again showed&#13;
his quickness with six steals and&#13;
seven assists.&#13;
The Rangers came home&#13;
Monday night to battle a tough&#13;
Loras College squad. Loras held a&#13;
20-14 lead seven minutes into the&#13;
first half, but the Rangers put on&#13;
one of their patented scoring&#13;
spurts, outscoring Lakeland 16-3&#13;
in the next seven minutes, and&#13;
went on to take a 39-35 halftime&#13;
lead.&#13;
The two teams played fairly&#13;
evenly in the second half, with the&#13;
Rangers getting key plays when&#13;
they needed them to fend off Loras&#13;
to capture their third win in four&#13;
tries by a 66-62 s core.&#13;
John Herndon again dominated&#13;
the inside as he led both teams&#13;
with 25 points, 12 rebounds, and&#13;
six blocked shots. Senior guard&#13;
Dave McLeish added 14 points,&#13;
and Darron Brittman scored 11&#13;
points, dished out three assists&#13;
and stole the ball four times.&#13;
"We wanted to get the ball inside&#13;
early," said Stephens, "and&#13;
John just sat back on his own."&#13;
Loras coach Doug Smith had&#13;
praise for the Parkside quickness.&#13;
"We're not as quick as Parkside,&#13;
so we tried our 2-3 zone defense&#13;
and backcourt press. We tried to&#13;
keep the lid on them."&#13;
The Rangers, who have played&#13;
three games in four days, will now&#13;
go on the first real tough road trip&#13;
of the season as they take on&#13;
Arkansas Thursday night and&#13;
.Kansas State Saturday night&#13;
before coming home to battle&#13;
Ferris State Tuesday night for&#13;
their last game before the Ranger&#13;
Classic on December 28-29.&#13;
Participating in this year's&#13;
tourney are Carthage, UWOshkosh&#13;
and Saginaw Valley.&#13;
same, with the Rangers building'&#13;
up a 19 p oint advantage at 60-41,&#13;
only to see Lakeland again bounce&#13;
Photo by S. Squirrel&#13;
back to within two at 64-62.&#13;
Parkside fought off Lakeland in&#13;
the final four minutes to take the&#13;
50&lt; SPECIAL&#13;
Doc. 14-23&#13;
"50&lt;t specials in the Rec Center during final week." exclaims&#13;
Stroll in' Bowlin', "What a great deal." Strollin'&#13;
Bowlin' soon learns that bowling is only 504 per game and&#13;
pool is only 504 per half hour. The specials begin December&#13;
14 and run through December 23. Discounted prices are&#13;
available Monday - Friday during play hours. Why not stop&#13;
down and take a break from your finals for a relaxing&#13;
game of bowling or pool.&#13;
Have a&#13;
runner&#13;
on your&#13;
list?&#13;
We have what he (or the)&#13;
wanti for Chrintmat.&#13;
Shoes, Shirt*, Suit*&#13;
Books, and morel&#13;
tunning / Basketball&#13;
•reeks&#13;
Nike &gt;Nik. Adidas&#13;
- Sony New Mens,&#13;
Tiger&#13;
(tonic&#13;
Sa weeny&#13;
Con verve&#13;
Tennis&#13;
•ocquetboll&#13;
NX Nik.&#13;
\ Adidas&#13;
Nike&#13;
•tmic&#13;
Tied II&#13;
Tretem&#13;
• HOURS*&#13;
Dally 10-1&#13;
Sat. 10-5&#13;
Sun. 13-4&#13;
ERRITTS RUNNING&#13;
CENTER&#13;
Specialists in Athletic Footwear&#13;
and Running Clothing&#13;
5200 WASHINGTON AVE.&#13;
In Wathington Square — Racine&#13;
Telephone 632-4699&#13;
** i* I* THE PARKSIDE UNION I*&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
*&#13;
CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
SKI RENTALS&#13;
| • NEW EQUIPMENT • GREAT TRAILS • LOW COST&#13;
."A"&#13;
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* WEATHER PERMITTING AFTER JANUARY 4th BEGINNING AT 1:00 PM DAILY&#13;
*• .*•&#13;
* .*&#13;
* .*&#13;
•*&#13;
HALF DAY: '3.7S UWP Student $4.75 Guest&#13;
FULL DAY: *5.00 UWP Student $6.50 Guest&#13;
WEEKEND: $ 12.00 UWP Student $ 14.00 Guest&#13;
FOR TRAIL CONDITIONS CALL ***-2695&#13;
HOLIDAY BREAK&#13;
BOWLING/BILLIARDS&#13;
—HOURS—&#13;
Closed Dec. 20 - Jan. 3&#13;
Jan. 4-15&#13;
7:00 pm - 10:30 pm&#13;
*•' L*&#13;
* .*&#13;
%&#13;
**&#13;
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J* 7:00 pm - 10:30 pm **&#13;
** FOR TRAIL CONDITIONS CALL ***-2695 - ** A/**- Ww&#13;
** *z&#13;
** ** &#13;
16 Thursday, December 10,1981 RANGER&#13;
Parkside Food Service &amp;&#13;
The Parkside Union&#13;
invite you to attend&#13;
(JW-PARKSIDE'S ANNUAL&#13;
CHRISTMAS PARTY&#13;
FRIDAY, DECEMBER II&#13;
11:00 am-l:00 pm&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
FREE COOKIES, CAKE, COFFEE &amp; PUNCH&#13;
PLUS . . . SPECIAL CHRISTMAS DINNER&#13;
• CARVED BAKED HAM WITH FRUIT SAUCE&#13;
• ESCALLOPED OR SWEET POTATOES&#13;
• ASPARAGUS SPEARS OR CAULIFLOWER&#13;
• SPICED CRABAPPLE&#13;
• GINGERBREAD &amp; WHIPPED TOPPING&#13;
• COMPLIMENTARY WINE OR PUNCH&#13;
MERRY&#13;
CHRISTMAS&#13;
NEW YEAR </text>
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              <text>Book Exchange provides alternative&#13;
hi; U'An I\lAifAw 1 l... i 11 i « by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Business has been booming at&#13;
the Campus Book Exchange since&#13;
registration started Jan. 12. The&#13;
Exchange offers students a&#13;
chance to save money buying&#13;
textbooks, a welcome relief to&#13;
students who are forced to pay a&#13;
$23 tuition surcharge and inflated&#13;
costs at the bookstore.&#13;
The semester - old Exchange,&#13;
located in the Level 1 WLLC&#13;
concourse near the bookstore, has&#13;
been attracting crowds of book&#13;
buyers and sellers most of the&#13;
hours it has been open.&#13;
The Exchange, operated by the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. (PSGA), is&#13;
taking a chunk out of the&#13;
bookstore's business. The&#13;
bookstore, operated by Follett,&#13;
Inc., has been under fire recently&#13;
and alternative ways of running&#13;
the bookstore are being considered&#13;
(see accompanying&#13;
story). Follett's contract with&#13;
Parkside expires after this&#13;
semester. They are able to charge&#13;
5% over a book's list price&#13;
because they operated at a loss for&#13;
two years.&#13;
PSGA Vice - President Kathy&#13;
Slama, who is the manager of the&#13;
Exchange, described one common&#13;
type of customer: a student who&#13;
has purchased a textbook at the&#13;
bookstore who stops by the Exchange&#13;
to see if they have the&#13;
book. If they have it, he/she&#13;
checks out the price, returns the&#13;
book to the bookstore for a refund&#13;
and then purchases it at the Exchange.&#13;
&#13;
Tim Zimmer, the only paid&#13;
worker at the Exchange,&#13;
described another type of&#13;
customer — a student who purchases&#13;
whatever books he/she can&#13;
at the Exchange and then says,&#13;
"Well, I have to go to Shopko&#13;
now."&#13;
This, is how the Exchange&#13;
works: a student gives a book to&#13;
the Exchange and it is put on a&#13;
shelf until another student buys it.&#13;
The buyer pays 65% of the list&#13;
price, even if the book is used. The&#13;
Exchange keeps 10% (or 6.5% of&#13;
the list price) for operating expenses.&#13;
The remainder (59.5% of&#13;
list price) is then returned to the&#13;
student who gave the book to the&#13;
Exchange.&#13;
This system is more advantageous&#13;
for both the buyer and&#13;
the seller than going to the&#13;
bookstore, which buys books back&#13;
at 50% of the price it was last sold&#13;
(used or new) and then sells it at&#13;
75% of the same price.&#13;
Although the Exchange is&#13;
competitive with the bookstore,&#13;
that is only the case with used&#13;
books, said Slama, because the&#13;
Exchange doesn't deal with new&#13;
books. "But if we had the books to&#13;
sell, we would sell them easily,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
"We're doing probably 70 or&#13;
more percent of our business on&#13;
introductory - type courses," said&#13;
Zimmer. "It's a haven for freshBookstore&#13;
Committee&#13;
Options weighed&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
A recent Bookstore Committee&#13;
meeting led to the approval&#13;
of a "report on&#13;
bookstore options." The report&#13;
was developed by a small&#13;
group of Parkside people&#13;
consisting of Nicholas Burkel,&#13;
Chancellor Guskin's executive&#13;
assistant; Jim Kreuser, PSGA&#13;
President; Linda Henderson,&#13;
administrative intern; Dave&#13;
Holle, Campus Controller; and&#13;
Thomas Moore, Assistant&#13;
Professor of Sociology. The&#13;
task of this committee was to&#13;
come up with a recommendation&#13;
that would solve the&#13;
bookstore problem.&#13;
The report at the meeting&#13;
suggested that the university&#13;
should follow a strategy of&#13;
submitting the bookstore&#13;
contract to competitive bidding&#13;
by outside vendors. At the&#13;
same time, advertising for a&#13;
bookstore manager who would&#13;
run the bookstore as a&#13;
university - run operation&#13;
would take place.&#13;
The bids for the bookstore&#13;
are tentatively due Feb. 10 and&#13;
11. The university is under no&#13;
obligation to accept the bids.&#13;
The university has the right to&#13;
reject all of the bids if the bids&#13;
are not in the best interest of&#13;
the state.&#13;
STUDENTS crowd Campus Book Exchange to buy and sell books.&#13;
Photo by Steve Myers&#13;
men out there . . . and they're&#13;
getting all their books from us."&#13;
Slama noted that a problem&#13;
with upper - level courses is that&#13;
students tend to keep their books&#13;
from those courses. Another&#13;
problem, she said, is that upper -&#13;
level textbooks often change from&#13;
year to year.&#13;
One unexpected business, according&#13;
to Zimmer, was the large&#13;
number of students bringing&#13;
books to the Exchange to be sold.&#13;
The bookstore only buys back&#13;
books at the end of the semester.&#13;
"What's been happening," said&#13;
Slama, "is we deplete our inventory,&#13;
we fill it, deplete it, and&#13;
fill it. It's just a constant circle. I&#13;
think that whoever is setting up&#13;
the new rules for the bookstore is&#13;
going to have to realize that there&#13;
is a market for buying books back&#13;
during the year and not just at the&#13;
end of the year."&#13;
Slama and Zimmer summed up&#13;
&gt; their feelings about the service the&#13;
Exchange provides to students. "I&#13;
feel that setting this up was&#13;
something that this school really,&#13;
really needed," said Slama. "It's&#13;
taken off and it's worked. I really&#13;
feel good about it."&#13;
Said Zimmer: "(We're&#13;
providing an alternative source of&#13;
going to the bookstore because&#13;
you know everybody really dreads&#13;
going into that bookstore and&#13;
paying the prices that they're&#13;
paying. If we can setup something&#13;
like this and allow them to come to&#13;
us and get a better deal, it makes&#13;
you feel good."&#13;
Many students share that good&#13;
feeling, too — e specially in their&#13;
pocketbooks.&#13;
Ranger Editor&#13;
Helgeson resigns&#13;
Guskin to stay at Parkside&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Alan E.&#13;
Guskin, who was a finalist for the&#13;
presidency of Temple University&#13;
in Philadelphia, was notified that&#13;
the Temple Board of Trustees has&#13;
selected Peter J. Liacouras, 50,&#13;
Dean of Temple's Law School, to&#13;
be the university's new president.&#13;
Guskin was one of three finalists&#13;
at Temple, which is one of the&#13;
country's largest and most&#13;
comprehensive urban universities.&#13;
'&#13;
Guskin said the decision to&#13;
choose an internal candidate&#13;
surprised him and others close to&#13;
the scene. "There had been very&#13;
strong indications throughout the&#13;
process that Temple would go&#13;
outside for their new president,"&#13;
he said. "Obviously the Board was&#13;
persuaded otherwise."&#13;
Guskin said he had "mixed&#13;
emotions" over the outcome but&#13;
"was relieved that the situation&#13;
was resolved."&#13;
"The challenge was very appealing,&#13;
but the process has been&#13;
very distracting to me, my family&#13;
and the university. As I said when&#13;
my candidacy became publicly&#13;
known, leaving Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin would have been a very&#13;
difficult personal and professional&#13;
decision. I love it here and my&#13;
only desire now is to get on with&#13;
our work at this university."&#13;
Ginger Helgeson&#13;
Ginger Helgeson officially&#13;
resigned as Editor of Ranger at&#13;
Monday's Ranger Board of&#13;
Directors meeting. Elected to&#13;
replace her was Ken Meyer, who&#13;
was Editor last year and News&#13;
Editor last semester.&#13;
"In short," read Helgeson's&#13;
resignation notice, "neither the&#13;
salary nor the creative challenge&#13;
of the position has proven to be&#13;
worth the time and energy I find I&#13;
have had to put into the job.&#13;
"I would like at this time to&#13;
thank all of last semester's Ranger&#13;
staffers for their help and support,"&#13;
concluded the resignation&#13;
notice.&#13;
Meyer expressed his disappointment&#13;
in Helgeson's&#13;
resignation. "It's a shame she had&#13;
to resign," he said. "Under her&#13;
editorship last semester the paper&#13;
was the best it has ever been in its&#13;
10 years of existence.&#13;
"This semester might be the&#13;
roughest semester ever," continued&#13;
Meyer, "because a few&#13;
other key people aren't returning.&#13;
We'll also have a tough time in&#13;
trying to maintain our independence."&#13;
&#13;
Meyer hopes that students, staff&#13;
and faculty will support Ranger in&#13;
its efforts to serve Parkside.&#13;
"We'll do the best we can with&#13;
what we have," he said, "but we'll&#13;
need the help of others — e ven if&#13;
the help is only support — if we&#13;
want to keep things the way they&#13;
should be."&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
INSIDE . . .&#13;
Editorial: Union closed during finals?!&#13;
Christmas movies reviewed&#13;
Mens § womens basketball&#13;
Thursday, January 21, 1982&#13;
Competes with bookstore&#13;
W University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Vol. 10 - No. 15 &#13;
2 Thursday, January 21,1982 RANGER&#13;
Editorials&#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;
icocoooa «ccoc&lt;&#13;
KEVIN P ETERS, SALEM&#13;
INDEPENDENT SENTINEL,&#13;
MR. SECRETARY. HOW CAN&#13;
WE JUSTIFY SANCTIONS&#13;
AGAINST T HE U .S.S.R. OVER&#13;
THE POLISH C RACKDOWN&#13;
WHEN W E SUPPORT RE&#13;
PRES3IVE R EGIMES IN&#13;
CHILE, THE PHILLIPINES,&#13;
AND SOUTH&#13;
Good job, Book Exchange&#13;
Our heartiest congratulations go out to the PSGA-run&#13;
Campus Book Exchange, which met with prosperous&#13;
business during registration last week and the first days of&#13;
classes this week.&#13;
The success of the Book Exchange hinges on the strong&#13;
dissatisfaction of many students with the campus&#13;
bookstore. The bookstore is operated by Follett, Inc. and its&#13;
contract with Parkside expires after this semester.&#13;
Chancellor Guskin has expressed his position that the&#13;
university will operate the bookstore if that is what's&#13;
necessary in order to have a satisfactory bookstore.&#13;
We applaud Guskin's stand on this issue and we&#13;
congratulate the Campus Book Exchange for filling the&#13;
void created by the bookstore not satisfying the majority of&#13;
the students.&#13;
Union closed during finals?!&#13;
The last three days of final exams last fall semester&#13;
(Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, Dec. 21, 22 and 23)&#13;
made many students angry. Not because they had tough&#13;
exams, but because they discovered the Union Square and&#13;
the Rec Center were closed.&#13;
Union administrators gave two reasons for deciding to&#13;
close the Union Square and Rec Center: the final exam&#13;
week was interrupted by a weekend and the exam schedule&#13;
indicated that there wouldn't be enough students to&#13;
warrant keeping them open.&#13;
The decision to close the Union Square and Rec Center&#13;
was wrong on both counts. A week of final exams is a week&#13;
of final exams whether or not there is a two-day break in&#13;
the middle. Also, there were many people at school those&#13;
last three days of finals, especially Monday and Tuesday&#13;
The number of people in the Coffee Shoppe area alone&#13;
would have filled a sizeable portion of the Union Square.&#13;
And considering that almost every group of people had&#13;
beer, wine and/or champagne, many drinks would have&#13;
been purchased at the Union Square — if it was open.&#13;
In a time of tight money, it would seem natural for administrators&#13;
to try to generate as much revenue as&#13;
possible. But in this case Union administrators showed&#13;
poor judgement and ignored the possibility of making some&#13;
money — not to mention providing a service to the students&#13;
and faculty and staff at the same time.&#13;
Hopefully next time will be different.&#13;
YOUNG M\N, I'M NO T GOINQ T O DIGNITY-LEND&#13;
THAT Q jJERY WITH E VEN A C RYPTIC REPLY.'&#13;
I THINK IT'S ABOUT TIME W E STOPPED&#13;
THE USE OF THIS CRITICAL MODE&#13;
OF POLICY&#13;
ASSESSMENT^ k&#13;
YOU CAN TAKE YOUR HYPOCRITICIZED MORALITY&#13;
AND THIS TOOTHBRUSH AND CLEAN EVERY COM­ MODE IN THIS UNIT ^ WITH THEM! A ND I&#13;
WANNA&#13;
Editor's column&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Boy, what a difference a month&#13;
makes.&#13;
I never expected to be writing&#13;
any more Editor's columns (at&#13;
least not for Ranger, that is), but&#13;
due to unforeseen circumstances,&#13;
I am again Editor.&#13;
This semester will be an interesting&#13;
one to say the least. Over&#13;
semester break, Ranger lost its&#13;
Editor, Ad Manager and other&#13;
staff members.&#13;
What a pity that is because last&#13;
semester's Ranger was the best it&#13;
has ever been in the history of&#13;
Parkside. That's not just my&#13;
opinion but also that of the many&#13;
people who complimented our&#13;
noticeable improvement last&#13;
semester.&#13;
But (there's always a but) that&#13;
may all change. Our staff has&#13;
been so drastically reduced that it&#13;
will be tough to maintain last&#13;
semester's excellence. But we'll&#13;
try and, hopefully, we'll succeed.&#13;
That will only be possible if we&#13;
Here we go again&#13;
receive help. Students can help us&#13;
and themselves in many ways by&#13;
joining our staff. For example, we&#13;
offer a 15% commission to advertising&#13;
salespersons, and ads&#13;
are the lifeline of any newspaper.&#13;
There are also two paid positions&#13;
currently open — that of Advertising&#13;
Manager and News&#13;
Editor. If anyone feels qualified&#13;
for either position, feel free to&#13;
come to Ranger office and talk to&#13;
me. The application deadline is&#13;
Friday, Jan. 29.&#13;
Another change this semester&#13;
will be in the rates for classified&#13;
advertising. It was announced in&#13;
the last issue in December that the&#13;
rate for 10 words or less would&#13;
decrease from 50 cents to 30 cents.&#13;
That has changed again. We now&#13;
offer one free classified ad (10&#13;
words or less) per week to&#13;
Parkside students, faculty and&#13;
staff. Additional ads will cost 50&#13;
cents for 10 words or less.&#13;
One more quick point: please let&#13;
us know if you feel something&#13;
should be brought to the attention&#13;
of the entire Parkside populous. If&#13;
you have an opinion about an&#13;
issue, let us hear your views in a&#13;
letter to the editor. We want to&#13;
hear from you; that's why we're&#13;
here.&#13;
From the Files&#13;
10 years ago&#13;
"SGA Book Exchange Successful&#13;
Despite Handicaps," by Marc&#13;
Eisen&#13;
The university bookstore's&#13;
monopoly on selling books to UWP&#13;
students was jolted twice last&#13;
week as the Parkside Book Exchange&#13;
opened last Friday with&#13;
unexpected success, and as Attorney&#13;
Jay Schwartz told Student&#13;
Government leaders he would be&#13;
willing to sue the University and&#13;
the bookstore in the event&#13;
negotiations with them fell&#13;
through.&#13;
The Book Exchange, despite a&#13;
minimum of pu blicity and opening&#13;
Friday, after the bulk of&#13;
registration was over, had over&#13;
$350 in sales, with another $100&#13;
estimated in sales made before&#13;
the books could be processed. The&#13;
organizers said that 80 people&#13;
brought books in to be sold. They&#13;
estimated 400 people stopped in&#13;
during the day.&#13;
The exchange was organized&#13;
jointly by students Fred Zievers&#13;
and Tom Werbie along with&#13;
Student Government.&#13;
The success of the Book Exchange&#13;
surprised most of its&#13;
organizers. They noted the handicaps&#13;
— the refusal of the&#13;
University to allow them to hold it&#13;
on campus, the lack of&#13;
organization, the lack of publicity,&#13;
the fact it was held after most&#13;
students had registered and many&#13;
had already bought their books,&#13;
the difficulty of obtaining a book&#13;
list, and the famed apathy of&#13;
Parkside students.&#13;
—Newscope, Jan. 17, 1972&#13;
5 years ago —&#13;
"Bookstore Bungles?," by&#13;
Christopher Clausen&#13;
In the past the Parkside&#13;
Bookstore has been the subject of&#13;
criticism from both students and&#13;
faculty. Charges of unjustified&#13;
high prices and sloppy&#13;
management have been leveled&#13;
consistently with little done to&#13;
probe these charges.&#13;
This semester less than 25% of&#13;
the books ordered have arrived as&#13;
of Thursday, Jan. 13. In an interview&#13;
with Ranger, bookstore&#13;
manager Paul Hoffman commented&#13;
on some of these questions&#13;
as well as others:&#13;
RANGER: How do you determine&#13;
your prices?&#13;
HOFFMAN: For new books we&#13;
use the publisher's suggested&#13;
retail price. For the used books we&#13;
raise the price by 25% from the&#13;
price we paid for them to cover&#13;
expenses and make a profit.&#13;
RANGER: What is the&#13;
reason(s) behind the current lack&#13;
of books for this semester?&#13;
HOFFMAN: Well, we had&#13;
several late requests turned in by&#13;
the faculty and the weather has&#13;
not helped for deliveries either.&#13;
There are other reasons but they&#13;
will come out later.&#13;
—Ranger, Jan. 19, 1977&#13;
I year ago —&#13;
"Students applaud surcharge&#13;
withdrawal"&#13;
President O'Neil's decision to&#13;
withdraw a request for a second&#13;
$30 surcharge on University of&#13;
Wisconsin student tuition will&#13;
avoid the problem of harming&#13;
access to the UW System for the&#13;
students, but creates new&#13;
problems of determining where&#13;
the budget axe will fall, said Kim&#13;
Kachlemyer, President of United&#13;
Council, the statewide UW student&#13;
lobby.&#13;
The students do not blame the&#13;
Regents or administration for&#13;
trying to avoid cutting spending,&#13;
said Kachlemyer, but do not&#13;
believe that another surcharge&#13;
would have been fair to the&#13;
students, who already accepted 20&#13;
percent of the burden of the&#13;
cutback with a first semester&#13;
surcharge. "We blame a&#13;
politically gutless state government&#13;
which found it politically&#13;
easy to give away $942 million in&#13;
tax revenue and now can't find $10&#13;
million to save its own university,"&#13;
said Kachlemyer.&#13;
—Ranger, Jan. 22. 1981&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
BUSINESS STUDENTS&#13;
DO Y OU — N EED BUSINESS EXPERIE NCE?&#13;
CAN YOU — FUNCTION IN A SALES EN VIRONMENT?&#13;
COULD Y OU — MANAGE A SALES TEAM?&#13;
OU R ADV E RTISING MAN AG E R&#13;
EARN ED OVER $500 IN COMMISSION ALONE.&#13;
Applications now being accepted for:&#13;
ADVERTISINC MANAGER&#13;
(This is a paid postion)&#13;
Appl ications are also being accepted for&#13;
NEWS E DITOR&#13;
v*,r,.-rlkli&#13;
0BENTAILS ASSIGNING, EDITING AND&#13;
WRITING NEWS STORIESON VARIOUS CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
Salary-12hrs./wk.,:$3.35 per hour&#13;
Contact Editor Ken Meyer at Ranger Office&#13;
WLLC D139 (next to Coffee Shoppe)&#13;
Ranger is an equal opportunity employer&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
ganger&#13;
Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
~ „ STAFF&#13;
Edrnar^°&#13;
npat'iHensiak0&#13;
' .""T?' DeLuisa&lt; *achry&#13;
°&#13;
f UW P a r k si d e a n d , h eV solely&#13;
RANGER isVpr&#13;
rLT&#13;
e&#13;
hdVthe UnVo^ciope^aliv^'pJbrsh&#13;
6&#13;
^^' ^J'"&#13;
9 ^ h0,idays&#13;
'&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wl 53141. dressed ,0; Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UW&#13;
paper with one^inch margins&#13;
3CAn&#13;
P 1 ettnr = *&#13;
ype&#13;
*""'&#13;
f,en&#13;
' doublespaced on standard size&#13;
eluded for verification™'&#13;
9&#13;
'"&#13;
5&#13;
' A" '&#13;
e&#13;
'&#13;
,erS must be si&#13;
9&#13;
ned and a telephone number inNair.es&#13;
will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
reserves all ed/toria? pr^leqes^in9 ri&gt;T' I™ l&#13;
?&#13;
ublica,ion on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content Pr&#13;
'&#13;
Vlle9es in re&#13;
'&#13;
uS'"9 to print letters which contain false or &#13;
Prof. McKeown dies&#13;
RANGER Thursday, January 21,1982&#13;
nrnf E' McKeOWn,&#13;
professor of sociology at Parkside&#13;
died Dec. 13 in Chicago.&#13;
A private burial service was&#13;
u 2 m Chicag° for Prof.&#13;
rh t°&#13;
WnV62&#13;
' 1469 N" Sherida&#13;
"&#13;
Ka., Kenosha, who died at Billings&#13;
hospital where he had been&#13;
hospitalized for Several weeks. A&#13;
memorial service also was held at&#13;
the University of Chicago's Bond&#13;
Chapel Dec. 19.&#13;
Prof McKeown joined the&#13;
Parkside faculty in 1970, c oming&#13;
from DePaul University where he&#13;
chaired the sociology department&#13;
from 1962-70. A s cholarship fund is&#13;
being established in his name at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Prof. McKeown received his&#13;
PhD in sociology from the&#13;
University of Chicago in 1949 He&#13;
also taught at St. Xavier College&#13;
and New Mexico Highlands&#13;
University.&#13;
At both DePaul and Parkside&#13;
his career was marked by strong&#13;
commitment to community&#13;
service. He was active as a&#13;
volunteer in a wide range of&#13;
service organizations in Racine&#13;
and Kenosha dealing with social,&#13;
political and humanitarian concerns.&#13;
He encouraged students to&#13;
become involved in community&#13;
affairs and established a course&#13;
on community volunteerism. This&#13;
popular course gave students the&#13;
opportunity to work as volunteers&#13;
in many human service agencies&#13;
in Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
In addition to his service and&#13;
teaching accomplishments, his&#13;
career was distinguished by his&#13;
scholarship. He was the author of&#13;
numerous articles in professional&#13;
journals, monographs and books.&#13;
His research and writing covered&#13;
a wide range of topics including&#13;
juvenile delinquincy and criminal&#13;
justice, aging, urban politics,&#13;
social theory and race relations.&#13;
He recently completed the&#13;
manuscript for a high school&#13;
sociology text which will be&#13;
published next year.&#13;
Prof. James McKeown&#13;
Club Events&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
Women in Business has many&#13;
events planned and hopes to get&#13;
off to a good start by encouraging&#13;
all interested students to attend&#13;
the first meeting Feb. 1 in the&#13;
Business Conference Room (Moln&#13;
327) at 1 p.m.&#13;
Before last semester ended,&#13;
Carla Thomas was elected&#13;
President because former&#13;
President . Barb Kingery&#13;
graduated. All other offices have&#13;
remained the same; however,&#13;
elections for next semester will&#13;
start in a month.&#13;
Some future events are: a bake&#13;
sale Jan. 25 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.&#13;
on the main concourse near the&#13;
library and a Phi Gamma informal&#13;
meeting Jan. 30 t o decide&#13;
whether they should become a&#13;
chapter. The meeting will be held&#13;
in the Faculty Lounge (Moln 111)&#13;
from 1 t o 3 p.m.&#13;
MAKE&#13;
A WORLD OF&#13;
DIFFERENCE&#13;
There's an endless frontier of need out there, stretching&#13;
from the Sahara to the Andes to the Atolls of the South&#13;
Pacific. In 20 years, 80,000 Peace Corps volunteers&#13;
have traveled to all of them, to work with people in over&#13;
60 countries. They've done everything from helping&#13;
villagers dig wells and build houses, to teaching them&#13;
languages and skilled trades, to giving advice on&#13;
farming and health care. Join a phenomenal tradition.&#13;
The difference is a better world, and a better you.&#13;
BOOTH ON CONCOURSE, MARCH 30 &amp; 31.&#13;
Interviews in Placement Office, MARCH 31.&#13;
Special counseling offered I „,&#13;
c&#13;
t&#13;
s£tt?&#13;
Do you need help.&#13;
— to develop assertive skills?&#13;
— to develop dating skills?&#13;
— t o overcome public speaking&#13;
anxiety?&#13;
— to quit smoking?&#13;
— to overcome a specific non -&#13;
social- fear (such as fear of&#13;
heights, water activities, driving,&#13;
bees, etc)?&#13;
Special group counseling&#13;
programs are being offered this&#13;
semester to Parkside students&#13;
(and others) concerned with any&#13;
of these problems. The programs&#13;
are sponsored by psychology&#13;
professor William Morrow.&#13;
Students in his class in Behavioral&#13;
Counseling will conduct the&#13;
groups under his supervision. The&#13;
programs are free and open to all.&#13;
The programs will employ&#13;
structured counseling and&#13;
training procedures which have&#13;
been found in controlled studies to&#13;
be relatively effective for the&#13;
particular problems. Each&#13;
program will involve six to 10&#13;
counseling / training sessions,&#13;
plus homework activities.&#13;
Sign-up cards to register for any&#13;
of these programs are available at&#13;
the Main Place Information Kiosk&#13;
and the Information Kiosk. Those&#13;
interested are asked to sign up by&#13;
Friday, Feb. 5, 1982.&#13;
Auditions&#13;
set&#13;
Auditions for two plays for&#13;
spring semester, The Land of&#13;
The Dragon and A Thurber&#13;
Carnival will be held in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
today (Thursday) and&#13;
tomorrow at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
No advanced preparation is&#13;
required and anyone interested&#13;
in acting in a show is invited to&#13;
come.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger has&#13;
reduced its classified ad rates to&#13;
students in an effort to make&#13;
advertising more accessible to&#13;
students.&#13;
Ads to students were formerly&#13;
free, until the beginning of this&#13;
semester when a blanket fee of 50«&#13;
per ten words was attached as&#13;
part of general advertising rate&#13;
increases.&#13;
Students may now place&#13;
classified ads at a rate of 35? per&#13;
ten words. No advertising will be&#13;
accepted that is deemed by the&#13;
editor as defamatory in content.&#13;
The reduced ad rate for students&#13;
is the result of student request.&#13;
SERVICES OFFERED&#13;
TYPING — Professionally done. Reasonable&#13;
rates. Fast service. South Kenosha. 657&#13;
6&#13;
°68. WANTED&#13;
NEED A RIDE from Lathrop and Taylor&#13;
Monday through Thursday for 6-8:45 p. m.&#13;
class. Will share expense. Call 554-0712. Ask&#13;
for Medha.&#13;
WANTED: sportswriters to cover various&#13;
winter sports. Stop in or call Karen at the&#13;
Ranger office, 553-2295.&#13;
ALSO WANTED: News writers, feature&#13;
writers, advertising salespersons,&#13;
photographers, cartoonists. Don't be shy,&#13;
stop by Ranger office right away III!! The&#13;
office is next to the Coffee Shoppe in WLLC.&#13;
Ask for Ken.&#13;
CRACKING A TOUGH JOB MARKET&#13;
IN THE 80 V*&#13;
A seminar by&#13;
RODGER L. DE ROSE&#13;
Manager, U.S. New Products, S.C. Johnson &amp; Son, Inc.&#13;
(UW-Parkside Graduate'72)&#13;
Wednesday, January 27, 1982&#13;
Parkside Union, Rooms 104-106, 12-2 PJNA.&#13;
• Campus Recruiting Techniques&#13;
• The "In the Door" Interview&#13;
• Now that You've Got the Job,&#13;
"Plot a Route to the Top"&#13;
Reservations requested by Jan. 26, 1982&#13;
CALL 553-2452&#13;
OR&#13;
Stop in the Alumni &amp; Placement Services&#13;
Office, WLLC DI73&#13;
VALUABLE COUPON&#13;
REDEEM IN THE REC CENTER DURING THE MONTH OF JANUARY&#13;
AND RECEIVE ONE FREEGAMEOF BOWLING AND&#13;
FREE SHOE RENTAL (RETAIL VALUE 95&lt;)&#13;
LIMITONE COUPON PER PERSON&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
STROLLIN' BOWLIN' BUCK&#13;
Saw a 10% to 75% on.&#13;
Art Supply Sale&#13;
• UQUITEX OILS • TURPENTINE • PENCILS • PASTELS • SPEEDBALL ACRYLICS&#13;
CONTE CRAYONS • CANVAS • PADS OF PAPER *ANK • SHEETS OF PAPER .&#13;
^t&#13;
riSs • KNEADED ERASERS • PORTFOLIOS • STRETCHER BARS • CERAMIC TOOLS • CLAY • BRUSHES • TAPE • GLUE&#13;
MAT BOARD • DRAWING BOARD • CALLIGRAPHY &amp; LETTERING PENS &amp; NIBS • &#13;
Thursday, January 21, 1982 RANGER&#13;
• • • "Reds" and "Ragtime" turn out to&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Christmas is a time for giving&#13;
gifts, decorating trees, drinking&#13;
booze and joining in general&#13;
holidaic merrymaking with&#13;
family and friends. It's also the&#13;
time for buying the gifts, trees,&#13;
decorations, booze, and all the&#13;
other accruements necessary for&#13;
having a good time over the&#13;
holidays. Christmas is a time to&#13;
spend money, and merchants&#13;
know this. So do moviemakers,&#13;
which is why we see some of the&#13;
studios' most expensive and&#13;
highly touted films released at&#13;
this time of the year. The films of&#13;
this past Christmas season did&#13;
only moderate business box -&#13;
office wise, but unlike many other&#13;
years, there were several truly&#13;
excellent offerings from&#13;
Hollywood over the 1981 season.&#13;
Ragtime&#13;
There were very good and very&#13;
bad Christmas' films, but&#13;
"Ragtime" was one of the best of&#13;
the lot. This latest film from Milos&#13;
Forman stars, among others,&#13;
Mary Steenburgen, Moses Gunn,&#13;
and the legendary James Cagney.&#13;
Based on the book by E.L. Doctorow,&#13;
the film is an account of the&#13;
scandals and controversies&#13;
surrounding such famous (or&#13;
infamous) figures as Harry K.&#13;
Thaw, Evelyn Nesbit and Harry&#13;
Houdini at the turn of the century.&#13;
All the actors are terrifically&#13;
cast — Marilyn McGovern is&#13;
perfect as Evelyn Nesbit, as is&#13;
Mary Steenburgen (one of my&#13;
favorite actresses) in her role. But&#13;
the highlight of the film has to be&#13;
Howard E. Rollins' portrayal of&#13;
Coalhouse Walker Jr., a young&#13;
black musician - turned militant.&#13;
Walker's frustration and anger for&#13;
the racist society of turn - of - the -&#13;
century America is heartbreak&#13;
ingly communicated in an&#13;
electrifyingly emotional performance,&#13;
perfectly executed by&#13;
' Rolins every step of the way. In&#13;
fact, without Rollin's performance,&#13;
"Ragtime" might be&#13;
somewhat devoid emotionally.&#13;
The film follows the lives of many&#13;
different people; Coalhouse&#13;
Walker Jr. is the closest the film&#13;
comes to having a central&#13;
character. Add to that the fact&#13;
that many of the characters are&#13;
not in the least bit likeable, and&#13;
the audience is left with very few&#13;
characters to indentify and empa&#13;
thasize with in the film. But&#13;
Rollin's performance, combined&#13;
with Forman's superb direction,&#13;
leaves little room for doubt.&#13;
"Ragtime" effectively captures&#13;
the essence of America at that&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKSIDE&#13;
ANNUAL&#13;
SPRING BREAK&#13;
- DAYTON A BEACH&#13;
MARCH 12-22, 1982 *219 Complete&#13;
VIA AIR-CONDITIONED, BATHROOM&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• ROUND TRIP TRANSPORTATION&#13;
EQUIPPED MOTORCOACH&#13;
• 7 NIGHTS LODGING AT THE DELUXE OCEAN - SIDE PLAZA HOTEL&#13;
• FREE PARTIES &amp; OTHER E XTRAS&#13;
• FULLY E SCORTED THROUGHOUT&#13;
• ALL TAXES &amp; HOTEL GRATUITIES&#13;
SIGN CP NOW&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION OFFICE,&#13;
RM. 209, 8 A.M. - 4:30 P.M.&#13;
MON. - FRI.&#13;
OR CALL 553-2200&#13;
FIRST BUS FILLED —2ND FILLING FAST—LIMITED SPACE!&#13;
time, America as seen through the&#13;
eyes of philantropists, movie&#13;
stars, and poor immigrants, just&#13;
off ships from Europe. The film's&#13;
cinematography is fantastic, and&#13;
the score by Randy Newman&#13;
("Short People") is perfect for&#13;
this film. Don't miss this one.&#13;
Modern Problems&#13;
Miss this one, though. "Modern&#13;
Problems" isn't worth the film it's&#13;
printed on, much less the admission&#13;
price. The film, starring&#13;
Chevy Chase, is the story of a mild&#13;
mannered air traffic controller,&#13;
who, while driving home one&#13;
night, gets behind a truck&#13;
carrying gallons of sickly green&#13;
nuclear waste. Gobs of the goo&#13;
spill out all over Chase, and the&#13;
next morning he wakes up to&#13;
discover that he has somehow&#13;
acquired telekinetic powers from&#13;
the iieluge of nuclear gook. A&#13;
rediculous plot you say? Well,&#13;
maybe so, but Chevy Chase and&#13;
his co-stars could have possibly&#13;
pulled it off, had they injected&#13;
even a modicum of comic acting&#13;
into the film.&#13;
The film isn't in the least bit&#13;
funny, or even entertaining for&#13;
that matter. Time after time&#13;
situations in the plot were&#13;
presented that had the potential to&#13;
be funny. I wanted to laugh when&#13;
Chevy Chase had a radiation&#13;
milkshake poured on him. I&#13;
wanted to laugh when he walked&#13;
unsuspectingly into a gay bar. But&#13;
I could not bring myself to laugh,&#13;
or even snicker, and that was all&#13;
Chevy Chase's fault. He saunters&#13;
through this movie as if his dog&#13;
had just died, and displays about&#13;
as much personality and comic&#13;
wit as would a wet piece of cardboard.&#13;
Maybe he thought the film&#13;
was a bum deal, and wanted to get&#13;
out as fast as he could. But he&#13;
made it a bummer.&#13;
Neighbors&#13;
"Neighbors" is another case of&#13;
comic mindfood turned sour. I&#13;
walked into the film expecting&#13;
something like the "Blues&#13;
Brothers," you know, something&#13;
funny. But instead I found a&#13;
totally weird flick that was supposed&#13;
to be funny, and that&#13;
everyone kept telling me was&#13;
funny. Oh, the film isn't totally&#13;
terrible. John Belushi turns in a&#13;
very good performance as Earl&#13;
Keese, the quiet, middle - aged&#13;
suburban homeowner, and Dan&#13;
Akryoid as Captain Vic is at once&#13;
obnoxious and loveable. The film&#13;
does even find a few laughs, here&#13;
and there. But I guess I was expecting&#13;
some bellylaughs, the&#13;
kind you get out of "Animal&#13;
House" or "Blues Brothers." For&#13;
me at least, "Neighbors" was just&#13;
too weird to be very funny.&#13;
Sharkey's Machine&#13;
While "Neighbors" was&#13;
something of a dissappointment,&#13;
"Sharkey's Machine" was a very&#13;
pleasant surprise. This latest Burt&#13;
Reynolds film also stars Charles&#13;
Durning, Brian Keith and Bernie&#13;
Casey as a team of vice squad&#13;
cops out to bust up a local&#13;
prostitution ring. At the film's&#13;
opening, Reynolds, as Sergeant&#13;
Thomas Sharky is actually&#13;
working in narcotics division, but&#13;
is demoted to vice when he has a&#13;
shoot - out with a drug dealer, and&#13;
a civilian bus driver is * shot.&#13;
Sharky resigns himself to a life of&#13;
"Porkside&#13;
STILL&#13;
Has Style"&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
Mlbe&#13;
8&gt;iueet IHfoppe&#13;
IN THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
announces&#13;
THINGS FOR YOUR HEALTHYSWEETTOOTH&#13;
10 a. m. - 4 p. m&#13;
Daily&#13;
YOGURT&#13;
• Peanuts&#13;
• Raisins&#13;
• Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Sesame Brittle&#13;
• Bridge Mix&#13;
CAROB&#13;
• Peanuts&#13;
• Raisins&#13;
• Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Bridge Mix&#13;
FRUITS &amp; NUTS&#13;
• Carribbean Delicacy&#13;
• California Mix&#13;
• Student Food&#13;
• Sesame Seeds&#13;
• Cashews&#13;
• Blanched Peanuts&#13;
• Spanish Peanuts&#13;
• Pistachio Nuts&#13;
• Fa• "incivy j MIVIixIAed tfU Nuts&#13;
SPECIAL THRU JANUARY&#13;
40% OFF&#13;
J^2j^L21£^g2gjyALTED MILK BALLS &#13;
RANGER Thursday, January 21, 1982 5&#13;
be best films of the holiday season * *&#13;
hustine hookers, perverts, and '&#13;
•&#13;
busting hookers, perverts, and&#13;
local riff - raff in vice squad, until&#13;
he and his "machine," as vice is&#13;
called, discover that a candidate&#13;
for governor is having an extramarital&#13;
affair with Dominoe,&#13;
one of the $1000 a night prostitutes&#13;
they have been following.&#13;
As you might suspect, a whole&#13;
conspiracy is eventually tracked&#13;
into higher and higher eschelons&#13;
of the city. Sharky falls in love&#13;
with Dominoe, and lots of people&#13;
end up getting killed, in order to&#13;
silence the investigation. The plot&#13;
is not exactly new or innovative,&#13;
but the film works. Lots of well -&#13;
paced, exciting action, is pitted&#13;
with a dramatic, romantic love&#13;
story, and with an occasional&#13;
comic touch to top it off. The film&#13;
isn't the usual silly drivel that&#13;
Reynolds makes, in other words.&#13;
All the actors tum in fine performances,&#13;
one of the best being&#13;
Bernie Casey's sensitive portrayal&#13;
of Arch, one of the vice&#13;
squad cops. Reynolds not only&#13;
played his role as Sharky exceedingly&#13;
well, he also directed&#13;
the film. All in all, "Sharky's&#13;
Machine" works and works well.&#13;
This is the kind of film that&#13;
Reynolds should be in.&#13;
TAPS&#13;
Taps&#13;
"Taps" was a sad, tragic film, a&#13;
hard one to watch. The film,&#13;
starring George C: Scott and&#13;
Timothy Hutton, is in the same&#13;
genre as books like "Lord of the&#13;
Flies," a tale of what happens&#13;
when kids try to take things into&#13;
their own hands, and run things as&#13;
they see fit. In this case, the&#13;
setting is Bunker Hill Military&#13;
Academy, whose students, after&#13;
finding out that the academy is to&#13;
be closed, take over the school, as&#13;
well as it's large supply of&#13;
munitions, until the school's board&#13;
of trustees agrees to negotiate&#13;
with them on the sale of the&#13;
school. Things go well at first. The&#13;
boys are well versed in standard&#13;
military procedure, and their&#13;
takeover of the school is both&#13;
organized and effective. But when&#13;
the National Guard is called to the&#13;
scene, we sense impending&#13;
tragedy.&#13;
George C. Scott is cast as&#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 H Your Dally&#13;
Balance is s500.00 or Morel&#13;
WE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU CROW!&#13;
General Bache, the old - soldier -&#13;
in - residence at the school, who&#13;
has influenced much of what&#13;
Brian Moreland (Hutton), the&#13;
school's senior ranking cadet,&#13;
things about honor and courage.&#13;
Moreland leads the takeover,&#13;
following Bache's example of&#13;
fighting for honor, and ideals. The&#13;
obvious theme of the film is the&#13;
difference that Moreland&#13;
discovers between the glory of&#13;
fighting for honor, and the cold,&#13;
brutal reality of the death and&#13;
destruction that comes out of war.&#13;
The film's plot is not realistic, nor&#13;
is it meant to be. It conveys its&#13;
message well, in fact, all too effectively&#13;
in the tragic conclusion.&#13;
Not a fun film, not a great film,&#13;
but perhaps an important one.&#13;
Reds&#13;
Last but not least is "Reds," the&#13;
epic film that Warren Beatty not&#13;
only starred in, but produced,&#13;
directed, and co-wrote as well.&#13;
The film, also starring Diane&#13;
Keaton and Jack Nicholson, is the&#13;
story of American journalists&#13;
Jack Reed and Louise Bryant,&#13;
who became swept up in the&#13;
Russian revolution of 1917. The&#13;
film follows Reed and Bryant all&#13;
over the world, in their trek from&#13;
Greenwich Village to Russia, and&#13;
back again. Beatty and Keaton,&#13;
are superb as the two idealists,&#13;
who, fed up with the wretched&#13;
excesses of capitalism, turn to&#13;
socialism, then to communism as&#13;
a more humane form of government.&#13;
Reed, in fact, becomes&#13;
deeply involved in the communist&#13;
revolution, and becomes an integral&#13;
part of the political&#13;
revolution that came into being&#13;
during the early part of the century.&#13;
Yet, for all they are worth,&#13;
the politics serve only as a backdrop&#13;
in "Reds." The heart of this&#13;
film is its love story, the story of&#13;
the on - again off - again&#13;
relationship between Reed and&#13;
Bryant.&#13;
An epic film, but more importantly,&#13;
a great love story.&#13;
"Reds" is an excellent film, in the&#13;
tradition of "Gone With the&#13;
Wind." Beatty could have made&#13;
this a lumbering, floundering&#13;
ordeal, another "Heaven's Gate."&#13;
But Keaton and Beatty hold this&#13;
film together, with an undeniable&#13;
on - screen chemistry that makes&#13;
the love live. In an epic film such&#13;
as this, audiences will feel they&#13;
have lived it as well.&#13;
Coming Ev ents&#13;
Friday, Jan. 22&#13;
DANCE / CONCERT at 9 p. m. in Union&#13;
Square featuring "Overkill". Admission&#13;
will be charged at the door. Sponsored bv&#13;
PAB.&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 23&#13;
CLASS "Balancing Personal Responsibilites:&#13;
Managing Your Time" from 9 a. m. to 4 p.&#13;
m. in Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312 for more&#13;
details. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 27&#13;
WORKSHOP with Rodger De Rose of S. C.&#13;
Johnson Co. at 12 noon in Union 104-106.&#13;
Admission is free for Parkside faculty, staff&#13;
and students. Sponsored by the Alumni&#13;
Office.&#13;
CONTEST Stroh's Case Stacking at 1 p. m. in&#13;
Mid Main Place. The contest is free for&#13;
Parkside students. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC.&#13;
TEAM SALES — ALL SPORTS&#13;
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR&#13;
FOR ALL SPORTS&#13;
TROPMES AND AWARDS&#13;
FAST. S4-MOUSC ENORAVMO SERVICE&#13;
SUPER&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
MON.-FW. 10:00 AM. - 1.-00 PM&#13;
SAT. 10*0 A.M. - *00 P.M.&#13;
CLOSED SUNDAYS A HOUDAYS&#13;
• BROOKS • CONVERSE&#13;
• TIGER • SPOT-SUE.T&#13;
• SAUCONY&#13;
• SPALDING&#13;
• NEW BALANCE&#13;
• NIKE&#13;
• PUMA&#13;
• PONY&#13;
FOOTWEAR.&#13;
The Active Athleies One Stop&#13;
694-9206 US* WIN IT, ONODM, w&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
(1) WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
SUPER BOWL&#13;
SUNDAY&#13;
IN THE SQUARE&#13;
T SCREEN&#13;
PIZZA SPECIAL .75 to 1.25 OFF&#13;
• BEER * SODA • WINE&#13;
* POPCORN&#13;
THE PARKSIDE U NION &#13;
Thursday, January 21,1982 RANGER&#13;
Men's basketball&#13;
Rangers even out over break&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
The Parkside men's basketball&#13;
team had a fairly even semester&#13;
break by winning five games that&#13;
they were pretty much expected&#13;
to win, and by losing four games&#13;
that they were pretty much expected&#13;
to lose. They did, however,&#13;
lose one game that they could&#13;
have won even though they were&#13;
underdogs.&#13;
The break also saw the return to&#13;
action of Chucky Perry, last&#13;
year's freshman sensation. Perry&#13;
was academically ineligible for&#13;
the season's first seven games,&#13;
but the way he played in the&#13;
Ranger Classic and the games&#13;
that followed made it look like he&#13;
hadn't missed a minute.&#13;
Arkansas, Dec. 10&#13;
The Rangers got in over their&#13;
head in this one as they were&#13;
handily defeated by Division I foe&#13;
Arkansas by a 84-59 score.&#13;
Senior guard Dave McLeish led&#13;
the Ranger attack with 15 points,&#13;
followed by Wilbert Webb's 13 and&#13;
John Herndon's 12 points and 11&#13;
rebounds.&#13;
Parkside was never in this one,&#13;
as they trailed 41-30 a t halftime.&#13;
Ranger guard Darron Brittman&#13;
kept Arkansas from running away&#13;
with the game in the first half with&#13;
his quickness defensively, but&#13;
fouled out with 13 minutes left to&#13;
play in the game.&#13;
Kansas State, Dec. 12&#13;
Parkside gave a tough Kansas&#13;
State team a run for their money&#13;
through much of the game before&#13;
State pulled away to take an 83-63&#13;
decision.&#13;
The Rangers cut an early 13&#13;
point deficit down to six for a 33-27&#13;
halftime score. Parkside kept&#13;
coming to pull within four at 39-35&#13;
with 16 minutes remaining in the&#13;
game, only to see their opponents&#13;
pull away to the win.&#13;
Center Wilbert Webb led the&#13;
Rangers with 17 points, while&#13;
freshman Cornell Saddler added&#13;
12 and John Herndon 10 points.&#13;
Ferris State, Dec. 15&#13;
The Rangers, although tired&#13;
after two tough losses on the road,&#13;
were just too fast for Ferris State&#13;
in a 63-59 home victory.&#13;
Parkside led 34-27 a t halftime,&#13;
but Ferris fought back to take a&#13;
51-50 lead with 5:30 left in the&#13;
game. The Rangers put on a final&#13;
spurt to take the victory, with&#13;
Brittman scoring nine of his 17&#13;
points in the final stretch. Freshman&#13;
Ray Duckworth added 17&#13;
points followed by Webb, who had&#13;
16 points and nine rebounds.&#13;
Ranger Classic&#13;
UW-Oshkosh, Dec. 28&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens led&#13;
Parkside to the school's 200th&#13;
victory as the Rangers qualified&#13;
for the championship game for the&#13;
fifth time in as many tries in this&#13;
year's edition of the Ranger&#13;
Classic by beating Oshkosh 79-76.&#13;
This game marked the first time&#13;
that last year's sensational guard,&#13;
Chucky Perry, appeared in the&#13;
Ranger lineup. He showed that he&#13;
was ready to play as he led the&#13;
Rangers with 23 points.&#13;
Oshkosh didn't allow the Ranger&#13;
victory to come easy. They led&#13;
throughout most of the first half,&#13;
and held on to take a 37-36 halftime&#13;
lead. The Titans held a 62-52&#13;
lead late in the second half, but&#13;
that didn't last long as the&#13;
Rangers went on a 13 point scoring&#13;
spurt to take a 65-62 lead that they&#13;
never relinquished.&#13;
Center Wilbert Webb followed&#13;
Perry in Ranger scoring with 18&#13;
points and 13 rebounds, followed&#13;
DO YOU NEED A ROOMMATE?&#13;
Have you solved your housing needs?&#13;
If you have any problems, please call&#13;
SHIRLEY, PARKSIDE HOUSING OFFICE,&#13;
553-2320&#13;
ROOM 286 TALLENTHALL&#13;
by Brittman's 16 points.&#13;
Carthage College defeated&#13;
Saginaw Valley 74-70 in double&#13;
overtime in the other first round&#13;
game to set up a cross town&#13;
championship game.&#13;
Carthage, Dec. 29&#13;
This year's championship game&#13;
just didn't amount up to the battle&#13;
it had appeared it would. Parkside&#13;
used superior quickness and&#13;
height to run circles around the&#13;
Redmen as they handily defeated&#13;
Carthage 89-60.&#13;
Parkside used its three - guard&#13;
offense to get out quicker on the&#13;
fast break on offense without&#13;
losing anything defensively.&#13;
Perry earned tournament Most&#13;
Valuable Player honors by&#13;
leading all scorers with 22 p oints.&#13;
Parkside destroyed Carthage in&#13;
the rebounding department with a&#13;
66-40 advantage. Herndon led the&#13;
assault by pulling down 18 boards&#13;
to go along with 20 points. Webb&#13;
added eight points and 16&#13;
rebounds.&#13;
Saginaw Valley defeated&#13;
Oshkosh 78-68 in the consolation&#13;
game.&#13;
UW-Platteville, Jan. 2&#13;
The Rangers ran their record to&#13;
7-3 with their fourth consecutive&#13;
victory in an 81-67 rout with&#13;
Platteville.&#13;
Platteville took an early 18-15&#13;
lead, but the Rangers went on a 20-&#13;
6 scoring outburst and held on to&#13;
take a 44-35 halftime lead.&#13;
Perry again led the Ranger&#13;
scoring attack with 18 points,&#13;
followed by Brittman with 13,&#13;
Herndon with 12, and Webb and&#13;
Duckworth with 11 each.&#13;
Colorado, Jan. 6&#13;
The Rangers were again outclassed&#13;
by their Division I opponents&#13;
as Colorado used a delay&#13;
offense in the later stages of the&#13;
game to take a 95-77 v ictory.&#13;
Parkside remained within&#13;
striking distance most of the&#13;
game, trailing by nine at halftime,&#13;
47-38, a nd by eight with just over&#13;
five minutes left in the game.&#13;
Colorado gained much of its&#13;
winning margin at the free throw&#13;
line by outshooting the Rangers&#13;
19-7 a t the charity stripe.&#13;
Perry led the Rangers in&#13;
scoring with 20 points, followed by&#13;
Brittman's 15 points. Brittman&#13;
again showed his quickness by&#13;
dishing out seven assists and&#13;
\&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Jasckingfest&#13;
Sat., Ftb. 13 &amp; 20 - 6 p.m.&#13;
Parkside Union Dining Room&#13;
"An evening of fine food and gemuetlichkeit"&#13;
• Rhine Wine Punch Reception&#13;
• Five Course Gourmet German Dinner&#13;
• Live Zither Dinner Music&#13;
• Bavarian Dancers&#13;
• Authentic German Band&#13;
$16.50 pe r person&#13;
— PLUS —&#13;
Imported German Beer, Imported German Wine&#13;
&amp; A Good Time For All.&#13;
RESERVATIONS BEGINNING 8:00 A. M. MON., FEB. 1&#13;
Union Info. Ctr. 553.2345&#13;
Photo by S. Squirrel&#13;
WILBERT WEBB rises above Ferris State for two.&#13;
stealing the ball five times.&#13;
Oklahoma, Jan. 9&#13;
The Rangers fell victim to their&#13;
second Big Eight conference&#13;
opponent of t he week as Oklahoma&#13;
lowered Parkside's record to 7-5&#13;
with a 93-60 w in.&#13;
Parkside again stayed within&#13;
striking distance through the first&#13;
half, trailing 39-30 at intermission,&#13;
only to see the Sooners put on a&#13;
scoring spurt to put the game on&#13;
ice.&#13;
Herndon led the Rangers with 16&#13;
points, while Perry added 14 and&#13;
Cornell 12.&#13;
Herndon led the Rangers with 16&#13;
points, while Perry added 14 and&#13;
Cornell Saddler 12.&#13;
Lakeland, Jan. 12&#13;
For the second time this season&#13;
the Rangers had little trouble&#13;
downing the Lakeland Muskies,&#13;
this time with a humiliating 89-64&#13;
score.&#13;
Parkside's three guard offense&#13;
of Perry - Brittman - McLeish&#13;
accounted for 39 of the Ranger&#13;
points by hitting from outside&#13;
shots. Sometimes the long jumpers&#13;
were just a way to get the ball&#13;
inside as the bigger Rangers&#13;
outrebounded Lakeland 53-36.&#13;
Lakeland came to play, and took&#13;
a 15-14 lead midway through the&#13;
first half, but that didn't last long&#13;
as the Rangers pulled away for a&#13;
39-29 h alftime lead.&#13;
After that, the game looked just&#13;
like a clinic as the Rangers built&#13;
up a 30 point lead to destroy any&#13;
hope Lakeland had of making the&#13;
game look competitive.&#13;
Herndon led the scoring for the&#13;
Rangers with 16 points. Perry had&#13;
15, Brittman and McLeish 12,&#13;
Webb 11, and Saddler 10.&#13;
McNeese State, Jan. 14&#13;
For only the second time in&#13;
Parkside's history, a Division I&#13;
team agreed to visit Kenosha, and&#13;
this time the Rangers came out on&#13;
the short end of an 83-73 score.&#13;
Parkside's three guard offense&#13;
got the better of t hem this night as&#13;
one of the short Ranger guards&#13;
was given the assignment of&#13;
guarding one of the much taller&#13;
McNeese forwards. And this time&#13;
the Ranger quickness wasn't up to&#13;
snuff.&#13;
The Rangers were led by&#13;
Webb's 18 points. Perry added 15,&#13;
Saddler 12, and Duckworth 10.&#13;
The Rangers travel to Louisiana&#13;
this weekend for a rematch with&#13;
McNeese on Saturday and a game&#13;
against New Orleans on Monday&#13;
before hosting Northern Michigan&#13;
next Saturday.&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
SECOND&#13;
SEMESTER HOURS&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
WEDNESDAY&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
SUNDAY&#13;
8:30 a. m.-10 p. m.&#13;
8:30a. m.-10p. m.&#13;
8:30a. m.- lOp. m.&#13;
8:30a. m. -10p. m.&#13;
8:30a. m.-1 a. m.&#13;
12:00 p. m.-1 a. m.&#13;
12:00 p. m.-10 p. m.&#13;
RED PIN SPECIALS&#13;
MON. 8:30 a. m. - noon&#13;
TUE. noon-6:00 p. m.&#13;
Fri. 3:00-6:00 p. m.&#13;
Moon lite Bowling&#13;
Sat. 8 pm-12 am &#13;
RANGER Thursday, January 21,1982&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Women dominate tournament&#13;
by bv KKa&#13;
aren NnrwnnH •V*l I IX^I I &amp;-&lt; ren Norwood&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
While most of us were home&#13;
recovering from the holidays and&#13;
enjoying semester break, the&#13;
women's basketball team was&#13;
doing what they do best, playing&#13;
basketball. To bring you up to&#13;
date, here is a brief synopsis of all&#13;
of the games the women have&#13;
played since Dec. 10. The Rangers&#13;
now have a 8 - 5 season record.&#13;
On Dec. 10 the Rangers took the&#13;
home court to upset Northeastern&#13;
111. with a score of 64 - 59. The&#13;
women cagers trailed Northeastern&#13;
with 10 minutes left&#13;
before the half 15 - 29, but battled&#13;
their way back to tie up the score&#13;
32 - 32. From there on, the&#13;
Rangers played a close game to&#13;
finally win it with Robin Henschel&#13;
leading the scoring with 18 points.&#13;
Henschel was followed by Jeanne&#13;
Jacobs, who contributed a total of&#13;
14 p oints to the Ranger effort.&#13;
The Rangers then traveled to&#13;
Milton, Wis. to take on Milton&#13;
College. Noreen Goggin, the head&#13;
coach for the women's basketball&#13;
team, explains the 56 - 65 loss by&#13;
saying, "We were never really&#13;
into the game, we just couldn't&#13;
seem to bring it all together." It&#13;
wasn't a good shooting game for&#13;
the women, with only 27 out of a&#13;
total 77 shots going in.&#13;
Five days later, the Rangers&#13;
went to the St. Francis tournament&#13;
in Joliet, 111. The Rangers&#13;
took on three teams during the&#13;
three day tournament: Chicago&#13;
btate, St. Ambrose and St. Xavier&#13;
The women first took on and lost&#13;
to St. Ambrose. St. Ambrose's&#13;
defense kept Laurie Pope down to&#13;
only five baskets, and Robin&#13;
Henschel was Parkside's high&#13;
scorer with 13 points.&#13;
But,, not to be held down for&#13;
long, the women came back on&#13;
Saturday with a victory over&#13;
Chicago State, 92-76. Coach&#13;
Goggin said, "It was a good opportunity&#13;
for us to use all of our&#13;
players." Laurie Pope led the&#13;
scoring drive with a hearty 23&#13;
points, and sophomore Jeanne&#13;
Jacobs followed with 20 points of&#13;
her own.&#13;
On the last day of the tournament,&#13;
the Rangers beat St.&#13;
Xavier with a final score of 77 - 62.&#13;
Coach Goggin commented, "We&#13;
played well, and set things up."&#13;
Shelley Laffin, a 6 foot freshman&#13;
from Wausau, was the leading&#13;
scorer of the night with 14 points,&#13;
10 jumpers, and four from the line.&#13;
Terri Bye was the next highest&#13;
scorer on the Ranger team with 10&#13;
points. Next year Coach Goggin&#13;
hopes to make it to the finals of the&#13;
tournament, and not to the consolation&#13;
bracket like this year.&#13;
After a brief vacation, the&#13;
women cagers hit the court again,&#13;
this time in Wausau to take on&#13;
Carroll College, Jan. 8. This was&#13;
the first conference game of the&#13;
Wrestlers grip second&#13;
by Joe Kimm&#13;
The Parkside wrestling team is&#13;
alive and well. Six returning&#13;
lettermen, three of them All -&#13;
Americans, are part of a team&#13;
that has done extraordinarily well&#13;
this season. "We should be able to&#13;
finish in the top ten," commented&#13;
coach Jim Koch, "with&#13;
Winter, Vania, and Muckerhide&#13;
scoring some big points."&#13;
The key to this year's success&#13;
lies between the holds of two&#13;
wrestlers, Dan Winter and Mike&#13;
Muckerhide. Dan has amassed an&#13;
amazing 30 wins and four losses&#13;
record this season, to top off a&#13;
career record of 80 wins and 17&#13;
losses. The five - time All -&#13;
American won 19 of these in pins.&#13;
Mike "West Bend" Muckerhide,&#13;
on the other hand, has found his&#13;
way into the school record books&#13;
by pulling off 29 reversals and 39&#13;
near falls just this season.&#13;
Eleven exciting meets have&#13;
already been played and there are&#13;
18 more to be scored. The&#13;
Parkside wrestling team is well on&#13;
its way to statewide recognition.&#13;
With top 20 status in both NAIA's&#13;
and NCAA II, the team will be&#13;
hosting the NCAA II Nationals in&#13;
the spring.&#13;
Last Friday there was a Midwest&#13;
Classic Tournament at&#13;
Taylor University in Upland,&#13;
Indiana. True to form, our&#13;
Parkside wrestling team came out&#13;
with 89-1/2 points, second only to&#13;
Grand Valley State. Some&#13;
highlights included first place&#13;
finishes by Muckerhide in the 150&#13;
lb. division and Matt Kluge in the&#13;
126 lb. division. Mike Vania and&#13;
Brian Irek placed second and&#13;
third in their weight divisions.&#13;
Paul Roth also placed in the meet&#13;
in the heavyweight division.&#13;
Their next meet will be against&#13;
La Crosse in La Crosse on Friday,&#13;
Jan. 22 at 3 p.m.&#13;
season, and the Rangers won with&#13;
a final score of 80 - 74. Laurie Pope&#13;
and Robin Henschel were tied as&#13;
the leading scorers of the game&#13;
with 16 points apiece. Closely&#13;
trailing Pope and Henschel was&#13;
Cindy Ruffert with 15. Pope was&#13;
busy not only piling up the points,&#13;
but also with rebounding a&#13;
tremendous 18 balls, the most that&#13;
she ever recovered in a single&#13;
game. The game was, however, a&#13;
costly one for the Rangers. Jeanne&#13;
Jacobs injured her neck and back&#13;
during the game, and was off the&#13;
court for the next two games.&#13;
The next night, the women&#13;
battled it out with Oshkosh on&#13;
their home turf. Some of the&#13;
Oshkosh team members made&#13;
a big mistake when they were&#13;
sizing up some of the Ranger&#13;
players. They referred to&#13;
Parkside's Cindy Ruffert as, "the&#13;
little squirt who can't play&#13;
basketball." Ruffert pointed out&#13;
their folly by becoming Parkside's'&#13;
high scorer with a fantastic 25&#13;
points. The 5'4" sophomore hit 11&#13;
out of 12 free throws, putting a&#13;
dent, along with Robin Henschel's&#13;
21 points, in Oshkosh's game.&#13;
Oshkosh did, however, come away&#13;
with the game, helped by a&#13;
tremendous 38 points from their&#13;
Cathy Try(xi.&#13;
The Rangers went into a losing&#13;
game with Milwaukee last&#13;
Thursday because, in Coach&#13;
Goggin's words, "They had a big&#13;
psychological edge over us." The&#13;
Rangers ended up losing to&#13;
Milwaukee 82 - 60. Only 37% of&#13;
Parkside's balls hit the net from&#13;
the field; six of them were from&#13;
Laurie Pope, the Ranger's leading&#13;
scorer with 18 points. Marsha&#13;
Housley from Milwaukee led the&#13;
offensive against Parkside with a&#13;
big 24 points. "Experience beat us&#13;
here," said Goggin. Most of the&#13;
members from Milwaukee's team&#13;
had returned from last season,&#13;
while only a few of the Rangers&#13;
were back from last year.&#13;
Last weekend, the Rangers&#13;
hosted their own tournament with&#13;
Loras College, University of&#13;
Chicago and St. Xavier attending.&#13;
The women took on Chicago first&#13;
and beat them 77-32. The Rangers&#13;
were shooting well — 53% from&#13;
the floor. The biggest problem&#13;
that the Chicago team had was&#13;
during the second half when they&#13;
scored only 11 points. No one on&#13;
their team scored over 10 p oints.&#13;
Last Saturday the Rangers&#13;
edged out St. Xavier 68 - 64 to win&#13;
the tournament for the third&#13;
consecutive year. Robin Henschel&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
LAURIE POPE battles with Oshkosh on her way up.&#13;
was Parkside's top scorer with 18,&#13;
followed by Shelly Laffin with 12&#13;
points. The tournament took its&#13;
toll however, when Laurie Pope&#13;
sprained her ankle in the first few&#13;
minutes of the game. Goggin&#13;
hopes to see her recover quickly.&#13;
Goggin felt that St. Xavier had&#13;
improved greatly since the St.&#13;
Francis tournament, but she felt&#13;
that Parkside would have scored&#13;
more points if they hadn't substituted&#13;
as heavily. Nevertheless,&#13;
it was good, according to Goggin,&#13;
to let some of the other Parkside&#13;
players get playing experience.&#13;
The women's basketball team is&#13;
showing a large improvement&#13;
over last year's season record,&#13;
and with Goggin's two new&#13;
assistant coaches to help her,&#13;
Goggin hopes to finish the season&#13;
with a good record. "If we finish&#13;
16 -10 I'll be elated. A lot depends&#13;
on how well we hold up." Game&#13;
attendance is improving with each&#13;
game as people discover how good&#13;
the team actually is. Goggin hopes&#13;
to see continued good attendance&#13;
in the future, and she feels that&#13;
she will. As she puts it, "We are a&#13;
pretty decent team."&#13;
The women's team takes on&#13;
Marquette University tonight in&#13;
the fieldhouse at 7 p. m.&#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;
„ - auu one lccio Uldl&#13;
** . J*&#13;
•X*&#13;
TUC DADIfCmC IIKIIAKI ,„uu ..dMNte* ~ THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
* *&#13;
* •*&#13;
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CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
SKI RENTALS&#13;
NEW EQUIPMENT • GREAT TRAILS • LOW COST&#13;
HALF DAY: $3.75 UWP Student $4.75 Guest&#13;
FULL DAY: s5.00 UWP Student '6.50 Guest&#13;
WEEKEND: *12.00 UWP Student *14.00 Guest&#13;
FOR TRAIL CONDITIONS CALL: 553-2695&#13;
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* L*&#13;
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SKI RENTAL HOURS&#13;
Mon. -12-2 p. m. 3:30-5 p. m.&#13;
Tue. 12-2 p.m. 3-7 p.m.&#13;
Wed. 12-2 p.m. 3:30-5 p.m.&#13;
Thur. 12-2 p. m. 5-7 p. m.&#13;
Fri. 11 a. m.-6p. m.&#13;
Sat. 9 a. m.-5p. m.&#13;
Sun.9a. m.-5p. m.&#13;
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8 Thursday, January 21,1982 RANGER&#13;
W&#13;
III&#13;
I#&#13;
TEAM IIP&#13;
WITH STROM'S&#13;
Students can WIN PRIZES&#13;
plus WIN CASH for their schools&#13;
FORM YOUR TEAM TODAY!&#13;
The Stack-A-Stroh's Contest consists of four-person teams.&#13;
Each team will try to stack the tallest single stack of empty Stroh&#13;
cases during a three minute time period.&#13;
Eliminations will take place at each school. The top four teams&#13;
will receive a T-shirt and move to the finals at each school.&#13;
The finals at each school will take place preferably during the&#13;
half-time activities of a basketball game.&#13;
The winning team will receive a Stroh jersey and a trophy for&#13;
each member. The team will then compete against other schools&#13;
in your state for the state championship.&#13;
Scores will be posted at your school and the team with the&#13;
greatest number of cases stacked will be the state champion.&#13;
State championship winners will receive a trophy and a Mo-Ped.&#13;
Each state winner will be eligible for the grand prize. The grand&#13;
prizes will be cash donations to the Director of Student Activities&#13;
at the schools with the highest scores.&#13;
THE "STROH CASE STACKING"&#13;
IS A TEAM PROGRAM AND IS CONDUCTED&#13;
BY THE FOLLOWING RULES.&#13;
1. Each team consists of four persons (male &lt;&#13;
or a combination of men and women.&#13;
r female)&#13;
2. The object is to stack empty Stroh cases in a single&#13;
stack as high as possible during a three minute time&#13;
period.&#13;
3. All team participants are required to have their&#13;
feet on the ground at all times (lift the stack from&#13;
the bottom and slide one under).&#13;
4. During the three minute time period, if the cases fall,&#13;
the team may restack them until the whistle I&#13;
1st PRIZE&#13;
s2,000&#13;
2nd PRIZE&#13;
*1,000&#13;
3rd PRIZE&#13;
*500&#13;
i is an opportunity to have fun and win prizes for you and your school.&#13;
m&#13;
mm&#13;
5. Once the whistle blows, all team participants&#13;
move away from their respective stacks. Eachi&#13;
must free-stand for a period of 15 seconds. During&#13;
this period if the stack falls the team will be&#13;
eliminated.&#13;
6. Hard hats must be worn by all participants during&#13;
the competition. Hard hats will be supplied by&#13;
Stroh's.&#13;
7. Decisions of the judges will be final.&#13;
8. In case of a tie the declared winner will be the team&#13;
with the best time. </text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>PSGA Senate discusses a variety of issues</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, January 28, 1982 Vol. 10 - No. 16&#13;
PSGA Senate discusses&#13;
a variety of issues&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Two newly appointed PSGA&#13;
Senators, Jill Nelson and David&#13;
Higgens, found their first Senate&#13;
meeting, held on Jan. 22, quite&#13;
eventful. Among the issues addressed&#13;
included taking a stand&#13;
oti : SUFAC's final budget, the&#13;
State Assembly's Landlord -&#13;
Tenant Reform Bill, Governor Lee&#13;
Dreyfus' proposed budget cuts&#13;
directed towards the UW System,&#13;
and authorization of various UW&#13;
System building projects.&#13;
SUFAC budget&#13;
In the previous Senate meeting,&#13;
the final SUFAC total budget of&#13;
$607,527.10 was abstained on in the&#13;
voting. (SUFAC is a subcommittee&#13;
of PS GA that annually&#13;
allocates funds to over a dozen&#13;
campus groups and organizations.)&#13;
&#13;
The final SUFAC budget needs&#13;
to be approved by the PSGA&#13;
Senate before it goes to Chancellor&#13;
Alan Guskin, who then forwards it&#13;
to the central administration in&#13;
Madison. If Guskin doesn't approve&#13;
the budget, he negotiates&#13;
with SUFAC until a compromise is&#13;
reached.&#13;
The major reason for the abstaining&#13;
on the part of the Senate&#13;
was a lack of knowledge on the&#13;
part of the Senators. "I think it's&#13;
stupid to abstain the budget of&#13;
SUFAC," said SUFAC chairman&#13;
Luis Valldejuli, who said that it&#13;
would have been better if the&#13;
Senate had tabled the budget&#13;
rather than have abstained on it,&#13;
showing that the Senate is looking&#13;
at it rather than putting it off.&#13;
A motion to approve the final&#13;
SUFAC budget was voted down&#13;
almost unanimously.&#13;
After the vote PSGA President&#13;
Jim Kreuser told the Senate, "I&#13;
feel that it would be proper if&#13;
Senators ask the people on SUFAC&#13;
their opinion, maybe rationals,&#13;
(for the individual budgets) in an&#13;
open discussion."&#13;
PSGA Vice - President Kathy&#13;
Slama, said that SUFAC will have&#13;
to figure out some way to adjust&#13;
the individual budgets to coincide&#13;
with what the Senate wants.&#13;
Landlord Tenant Reform&#13;
The first resolution before the&#13;
PSGA Senate was to go on record&#13;
as supporting the State Assembly&#13;
bill called Landlord Tenant&#13;
Reform.&#13;
Major points of the bill include:&#13;
requiring landlords to comply&#13;
with state building codes where no&#13;
local codes exist, and giving&#13;
tenants the right to make repairs&#13;
and deduct the costs from the rent&#13;
if the landlord does not respond&#13;
after a written request for repairs.&#13;
The Senate approved backing&#13;
the bill with a 9-0-0 v ote.&#13;
State budget cuts&#13;
In his Jan. 14 press conference,&#13;
Gov. Dreyfus proposed a cut of $24&#13;
million in the UW System budget.&#13;
Dreyfus proposed a total budget&#13;
cut of $40 million, making the&#13;
UW's share equal to over 60% of&#13;
the total cuts.&#13;
The resolution read, "Be it&#13;
resolved that PSGA, Inc. condemn&#13;
the budget cuts to the UW System&#13;
that Governor Dreyfus has&#13;
proposed for the 1982-83 school&#13;
year. We the students of UWParkside&#13;
feel that education is the&#13;
main foundation of a civilized&#13;
society and that no cuts should be&#13;
made in this area."&#13;
The resolution passed with a 9-0-&#13;
1 vote.&#13;
Building projects&#13;
The third resolution addressed&#13;
by the Senate concerned the&#13;
schedule of UW System building&#13;
projects at various UW campuses.&#13;
The resolution stated that "PSGA&#13;
supports these projects to better&#13;
student services and education in&#13;
Wisconsin."&#13;
"There is a large sum of mo ney&#13;
here for these projects," said&#13;
Senator Pfaffl, who introduced the&#13;
resolution, "but . . . Parkside is&#13;
not represented. Over the week we&#13;
looked at the master plan for&#13;
Parkside, and for the plan for 5000&#13;
students there are two dorms&#13;
attached to the Union. We will try&#13;
to look into that further," he said,&#13;
to see if there is a possibility of&#13;
applying for money for those&#13;
dorms.&#13;
The motion to approve the&#13;
resolution failed with a 8-0-1 vote&#13;
because nine votes were needed.&#13;
One of the senators temporarily&#13;
left the meeting. Later in the&#13;
'meeting Pfaffl asked to have&#13;
another vote, but was told that a&#13;
Vto ^ 'iWJM to.&#13;
tad \\&#13;
i?A /&lt;&#13;
Winter Carnival delayed&#13;
This year's Winter Carnival,&#13;
"Take This Snow and Shovel&#13;
It," has been postponed from&#13;
its original dates of Feb. 1&#13;
through Feb. 5. No definite&#13;
date has been set, but it will be&#13;
held sometime in February.&#13;
Winter Carnival is an annual&#13;
event filled with activities such&#13;
as contests, games, and&#13;
dances. Among this year's&#13;
scheduled events are: snow&#13;
sculpting, beer drinking&#13;
relays, a jello slurping contest,&#13;
a Rubik's Cube contest, outdoor&#13;
volleyball, a blood drive,&#13;
an egg drop contest, Family&#13;
Feud, a fashion show, and a&#13;
dirty joke contest.&#13;
Any club and individual&#13;
interested in participating in&#13;
any of the events can find entry&#13;
forms and complete rules at&#13;
the Union Information Desk&#13;
and the Student Life Office,&#13;
Union 209.&#13;
There are six events that any&#13;
club registered with the&#13;
Student Life Office can enter,&#13;
as well as many individual&#13;
events. The six club events&#13;
are: window painting, banner&#13;
contest, blood drive, parade&#13;
float competition, outdoor&#13;
v o l l e y b a ll tou rna m e nt and&#13;
snow sculpting. Points will be&#13;
given to clubs for each event to&#13;
determine the overall club&#13;
winner at the end of t he week.&#13;
Events open to everybody&#13;
will have first, second and&#13;
third place cash prizes.&#13;
See next week's Ranger for&#13;
details about when Winter&#13;
Carnival will be held, the times&#13;
of the events and any changes&#13;
that might have taken place.&#13;
vote cm something can't occur&#13;
twice under "New Business." The&#13;
resolution was scheduled to be&#13;
brought up at this week's Senate&#13;
meeting and was expected to pass.&#13;
Since voting again was impossible,&#13;
the Senate discussed&#13;
with Dean of Student Life Dave&#13;
Pedersen, the idea of Parkside&#13;
leasing the Racine YMCA as a&#13;
residence hall for the university.&#13;
The YMCA, located in downtown&#13;
Racine, is three blocks away&#13;
from the bus route to Parkside&#13;
and offers things such as two&#13;
gyms, two pools, a weight room,&#13;
TV lounge, study area and private&#13;
parking. The YMCA has 113&#13;
rooms, all singles; all are furnished&#13;
and most have private&#13;
showers.&#13;
Pedersen is currently gathering&#13;
input on the idea of the YMCA as a&#13;
residence hall for Parkside and&#13;
will report his findings to the&#13;
administration. The administration&#13;
will then decide&#13;
whether to get more input, continue&#13;
with the plans or scrap the&#13;
idea.&#13;
Input offered by some PSGA&#13;
Senators include: the YMCA is too&#13;
far away from Parkside and won't&#13;
promote student activity or&#13;
campus life; and it will shift&#13;
business from Parkside to Racine.&#13;
Others pointed out the other side&#13;
of the issue: instead of housing&#13;
students all over the place, a lot of&#13;
students will be residing together;&#13;
and this is the first step to a&#13;
dormatory if Parkside ever&#13;
wishes to have one, making sure&#13;
that the interest is there in the&#13;
first place.&#13;
To keep track of further&#13;
developments in the possibility of&#13;
YMCA bein g a residence hall for&#13;
Parkside, read upcoming issues of&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
\&#13;
PSGA seeks opinions on § decriminalizing pot&#13;
\&#13;
(&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
In order to take a stand at an&#13;
upcoming United Council&#13;
meeting, Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, Inc.&#13;
(PSGA) is surveying Parkside&#13;
students on whether or not to&#13;
decriminalize marijuana.&#13;
There is currently a bill in&#13;
the Wisconsin State Assembly&#13;
to change the criminal&#13;
penalties for possession of 1.5&#13;
ounces or less of marijuana&#13;
without intent to manufacture&#13;
or deliver.&#13;
That bill is drawing the&#13;
lobbying efforts of PSGA's&#13;
Legislative Affairs Committee&#13;
in coalition with United&#13;
Council, the UW-System&#13;
student lobbying group centered&#13;
in Madison.&#13;
But before representing&#13;
Parkside's stand on the issue at&#13;
February's United Council&#13;
meeting, PSGA decided to find&#13;
out exactly how Parkside&#13;
students feel about&#13;
decriminalizing marijuana.&#13;
"We thought that this question&#13;
should be asked of the students&#13;
themselves (rather) than just&#13;
go ahead with action by our&#13;
own Senate," said Mike Pfaffl,&#13;
Legislative Affairs Director.&#13;
Students are asked to give&#13;
their opinions by checking the&#13;
appropriate space in the accompanying&#13;
ballot and then&#13;
depositing it in the box in the&#13;
PSGA office, located by the&#13;
Coffee Shoppe in WLLC.&#13;
Here are the major&#13;
provisions of the Assembly&#13;
bill:&#13;
• A person possessing 1.5&#13;
ounces or less of marijuana&#13;
without intent to manufacture,&#13;
deliver or sell it would face a&#13;
fine of not more than $50.&#13;
Possession of up to 1.5 ounces&#13;
of m arijuana, according to the&#13;
bill, "creates a rebuttable&#13;
presumption that the&#13;
possession is without intent to&#13;
manufacture or deliver the . . .&#13;
marijuana."&#13;
The words "deliver" and&#13;
"delivery," as defined in the&#13;
bill, "do not include the actual&#13;
constructive or attempted&#13;
transfer of marijuana from one&#13;
person to another as a gift&#13;
without rem une rati on&#13;
(payment)."&#13;
• P r e s e n t p e n a l t i e s&#13;
r e g a r d i n g p o s s e ssin g&#13;
marijuana with intent to&#13;
manufacture or deliver for&#13;
profit remain unchanged — a&#13;
fine of not more than $15,000,&#13;
imprisonment for not more&#13;
than five years or both.&#13;
Growing marijuana strictly for&#13;
personal use will not constitute&#13;
manufacturing.&#13;
• Convictions for "simple"&#13;
possession or gift of m arijuana&#13;
will not be considered prior&#13;
convictions for sentencing&#13;
purposes. In response to&#13;
questions regarding criminal&#13;
convictions, a person will not&#13;
be required to mention&#13;
"simple" possession or gift&#13;
convictions. Also, the division&#13;
of corrections and local law&#13;
enforcement agencies are&#13;
directed to strike out&#13;
references to past "simple"&#13;
possession or gift convictions&#13;
when they disseminate&#13;
criminal record information.&#13;
• Possession of marijuana&#13;
in a motor vehicle on the highway&#13;
is prohibited. Violators&#13;
are subject to a fine of not&#13;
more than $100.&#13;
-• Selling marijuana to a&#13;
minor would bring about a fine&#13;
of between $100 and $500 or a&#13;
jail sentence of not more than&#13;
0 days or both.&#13;
• The sale of smoking accessories&#13;
to minors is&#13;
prohibited. Smoking accessories&#13;
are defined as roach&#13;
clips, cigarette papers,&#13;
cigarette holders, pipes, pipe&#13;
screens and bongs. Violators&#13;
are subject to the general&#13;
penalty for violating a statute,&#13;
a fine of u p to $200.&#13;
P f a ffl urg es stu d e nts to&#13;
respond to the accompanying&#13;
referendum and to write their&#13;
state legislators to state how&#13;
they feel about the issue.&#13;
\)&#13;
PARKSIDE LEGISLATIVE AFFAIRS COMMITTEE&#13;
SUBCOMMITTEE OF P.S.G.A. INC.&#13;
Do you support Assembly Bill 693, which calls for statewide&#13;
decriminalization of marijuana up to one ounce, without&#13;
intent to deliver.&#13;
REFERENDUM&#13;
YES NO&#13;
Please return results to P.S.G.A. office located next to the&#13;
Coffee Shoppe in Lower Main Place.&#13;
THANK YOU&#13;
LEGISLATIVE AFFAIRS DIRECTOR: MIKE PFAFFL &#13;
Thursday, January 28,1982 RANGER&#13;
Editorials&#13;
»OOCCCOCCOCOCOOCOCCOO&amp;OCOOCOOOCO!&#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;
5COCOOOCOOOOCOCOO&amp;OCOW soeosccccoccooooooosoa&#13;
Bookstore manager too busy to talk&#13;
For an in-depth story on the situation of the bookstore,&#13;
which is facing possible new management since Follett,&#13;
Inc.'s contract with Parkside expires at the end of this&#13;
semester, a Ranger reporter went to the bookstore&#13;
manager in order to set up an interview.&#13;
This reporter, wanting to represent all sides of the issue,&#13;
planned on talking to all of the people involved — the&#13;
Chancellor, the bookstore manager, the chairman of the&#13;
Bookstore Committee, and members of the same committee.&#13;
&#13;
But when the reporter talked to Jan Becker, the&#13;
bookstore manager, she was told that she would have to&#13;
submit her questions ahead of time. If the questions met&#13;
with Becker's approval, she would then call the reporter&#13;
for an interview. If s he disapproved of the questions, she&#13;
would tell the reporter to come pick up the questions.&#13;
Upon hearing of this, Ranger's Editor went to talk to&#13;
Becker and told her that her plan does not agree with&#13;
Ranger's policy. Becker told the Editor that her schedule&#13;
does not permit time for an interview, even after the editor&#13;
told her that it would be only 20 or 25 minutes within the&#13;
next four days. But still she couldn't find the time to offer&#13;
her insights and tell her story about why the bookstore is&#13;
not satisfying the majority of the student body and faculty.&#13;
What we wonder is: if her schedule takes so much of her&#13;
time that she can't find 20 minutes to tell everybody her&#13;
side of the story, all her work must not bring about any&#13;
noticeable results. Proof of that can be found by talking to&#13;
almost any student or faculty member at Parkside.&#13;
Therefore, in next week Ranger's story on the bookstore,&#13;
don't look for any quotes or opinions from the manager of&#13;
the bookstore because she's too busy making sure the&#13;
bookstore runs smoothly and effectively. That is, unless&#13;
she finds the time in her busy, fruitful schedule to talk.&#13;
Students should check their grades&#13;
Have you ever received a grade which you did not expect,&#13;
either good or bad? If so, how did you find out about&#13;
it? Often, many students find out their final grade for a&#13;
class when grade reports are received in the mail. But too&#13;
often a serious problem can result from this practice,&#13;
because it usually takes around two weeks before a student&#13;
can see the results of their academic performance. And if a&#13;
student feels wronged by the grade he/she was given, the&#13;
passing of two weeks or more does not help matters.&#13;
Concerned students and faculty members alike have&#13;
expressed to the Ranger a need to remind students to&#13;
always check their grades as soon as possible. Never be&#13;
afraid to ask the instructor, for usually an instructor will be&#13;
most happy to oblige. Many times professors will have the&#13;
grades posted on their office door, and the small effort to&#13;
check the grades before it is officially posted might catch a&#13;
grading error.&#13;
Remember: course grades are the end result of your&#13;
time spent at Parkside and a direct measure of your&#13;
academic performance. It's a student's right to know what&#13;
it is and where it came from.&#13;
Catch as catch can&#13;
by Chuck Ostrowski&#13;
One of the more popular art&#13;
forms today is the banning and&#13;
burning of books which we&#13;
disagree with. Never mind that&#13;
our country was partly - founded&#13;
to escape censorship; some books&#13;
just are not meant for morally -&#13;
sound adults and their children.&#13;
Books most frequently taken off&#13;
library shelves or burned include&#13;
Catch-22, Slaughterhouse-Five,&#13;
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's&#13;
Ranger fills Board&#13;
Four empty seats on Ranger,&#13;
Inc.'s seven - member corporate&#13;
Board of Directors were filled at&#13;
the Jan. 22 general membership&#13;
meeting.&#13;
The new Board members are&#13;
Linda Andersen, Assistant&#13;
Business Manager; Steve Myers,&#13;
co-Photo Editor; Tony Rogers,&#13;
Feature Editor; and Jeff Wicks,&#13;
Staff Writer.&#13;
The other Board members are&#13;
Business Manager Andy&#13;
Buchanan, Treasurer; Editor Ken&#13;
Meyer, Chairman of the Board&#13;
and President; and Sports Editor&#13;
Karen Norwood, Secretary.&#13;
Nest, assorted dictionaries, and&#13;
The Catcher in the Rye.&#13;
The Catcher in the Rye in&#13;
particular is one book repeatedly&#13;
targeted by an "irate eitizenery."&#13;
It is a funny and simple story&#13;
detailing the adventures and&#13;
relationships of 17 year - old&#13;
Holden Caulfield. Sounds harmless&#13;
enough, right? And yet it is&#13;
banned, burned, and ostracized by&#13;
many, many people. These critics&#13;
state they object to the book's&#13;
very strong language, but I think&#13;
it's a minor problem for them, and&#13;
certainly not their main concern.&#13;
What Catcher in the Rye's&#13;
dissenters are concerned about is&#13;
Holden Caulfield. Period. He's a&#13;
very likable anti - hero whose&#13;
beliefs indict society. Their&#13;
society! Holden criticizes&#13;
everything held dear — entertainment,&#13;
entertainers,&#13;
customs, etc. . . To hold such a&#13;
character in high esteem would be&#13;
suicide: once students are exposed&#13;
to such dangerous literature&#13;
as Catcher they are forever influenced&#13;
(presumably against&#13;
their parents.) Never mind&#13;
students spending a period of days&#13;
reading about Holden in contrast&#13;
to lifetimes learning from their&#13;
parents.&#13;
But who knows? Maybe the&#13;
"Enemies of Rye" are correct.&#13;
Then w§'d really be in trouble!&#13;
Can you imagine a world filled&#13;
with Holden Caulfields? But then&#13;
again, can you imagine a world&#13;
filled with Jesus Christs?&#13;
From the Files&#13;
10 years ago&#13;
"Funds approved for Newscope,"&#13;
by Larry Jones.&#13;
In a last ditch effort to prevent&#13;
Newscope from dying a sudden&#13;
death, Parkside's Student&#13;
Government Association (SGA)&#13;
Wednesday approved a measure&#13;
to give the paper $2000.&#13;
The measure was approved&#13;
unanimously by SGA in response&#13;
to a plea from newly elected&#13;
Editor John Koloen. . .&#13;
According to Koloen, $4000 of&#13;
(Newscope's) debt was inherited&#13;
from the old Collegian and the&#13;
previous operators of Newscope.&#13;
As the surving Parkside student&#13;
paper, the current editors were&#13;
still responsible for paying the&#13;
money back.&#13;
The $2000 g ranted by SGA will&#13;
be immediately applied to the&#13;
debt and put the paper back on its&#13;
feet, Koloen said.&#13;
The money itself will come from&#13;
SGA's Student Group Support&#13;
Funds, which stood at $4104.09 as&#13;
of the Wednesday, Jan. 19&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Newscope is planning to present&#13;
a request for additional funds to&#13;
several foundations in the near&#13;
future, in an effort to insure&#13;
stability and self - sufficiency for&#13;
the paper in the coming years,&#13;
by&#13;
Koloen said.&#13;
— J an. 24, 1972&#13;
5 years ago —&#13;
"Union bridge 'real slick'&#13;
Chris Clausen.&#13;
Last week students and faculty&#13;
found a new obstacle on the bridge&#13;
between the union and the&#13;
classroom building.&#13;
Ice.&#13;
The answer to how the ice got&#13;
there was provided by the&#13;
Parkside Planning and Construction&#13;
Office. The ice had&#13;
formed because of a lack of insulation&#13;
in the bridge.&#13;
Brien Murray, assistant&#13;
director of planning and construction&#13;
told Ranger that the two&#13;
inches of insulation was left out&#13;
due to an error in a redrawing of&#13;
the original architect's drawing of&#13;
the bridge . . .&#13;
Rather than tear up the bricks,&#13;
the insulation would be put underneath&#13;
the bridge's honey -&#13;
combed bottom. Action is not&#13;
expected for several weeks.&#13;
— Jan. 26, 1977&#13;
I year ago —&#13;
"Faculty Senate to formulate&#13;
draft of policy on sexual&#13;
harrassment," by G. Helgeson.&#13;
Sexual harrassment was the&#13;
subject of a special meeting held&#13;
by Parkside's Faculty Senate on&#13;
Jan. 22. Eugene Norwood,&#13;
Chairman of the University&#13;
Committee, said, "It is not&#13;
whether the problem of sexual&#13;
harrassment exists or if a policy&#13;
will be adopted to deal with it, but&#13;
how it will be dealt with."&#13;
"But in trying to solve one&#13;
problem," Norwood cautioned the&#13;
committee, "we must be careful&#13;
not to establish others."&#13;
Norwood said that a draft policy&#13;
on sexual harrassment compiled&#13;
by the UW-Systems Board of&#13;
Regents on Dec. 5 last year was&#13;
not passed because "it was a&#13;
matter of principle to consult&#13;
individual campuses" before&#13;
implementing the policy.&#13;
Norwood suggested to the&#13;
committee that they "recommend&#13;
to Chancellor Guskin that he&#13;
appoint a committee, similar to&#13;
Affirmative Action, to deal with&#13;
sexual harrassment complaints&#13;
on each campus."&#13;
In an "action meeting" in a&#13;
couple of weeks, Norwood said the&#13;
University Committee will make a&#13;
draft proposal of recommendations&#13;
on sexual&#13;
harrassment, including a&#13;
definition, a policy statement and&#13;
plans for implementation of the&#13;
policy.&#13;
— J arv '*9, '991&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
BUSINESS STUDENTS&#13;
DO YOU — NEED BUSINESS EXPERIENCE?&#13;
^M,&#13;
Yr?&#13;
U ~ funct&#13;
ION IN A SALES ENVIRONMENT?&#13;
COULD YOU — M ANAGE A SALES TEAM?&#13;
LAIJOS&#13;
^T"&#13;
0URADVERT,S,NG MANAGER&#13;
EARNEDOVER$500 IN COMMISSION ALONE.&#13;
Applications now being accepted for:&#13;
ADVERTISINO MANAGER&#13;
(This is a paid postion)&#13;
Appl ications are also being accepted for&#13;
NEWS EDITOR&#13;
Salary-12 hrs./wk.,: $3.35 per hour&#13;
Contact Editor Ken Meyer at Ranger Office&#13;
WLLC D139 (next to Coffee Shoppe)&#13;
Ranger is an equal opportunity employer&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Linda Andersen&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
GANGER&#13;
Edil&#13;
Feature Edi1&#13;
Sports Edi1&#13;
Business Manas&#13;
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Distribution Manas&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Joe&#13;
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lJ&#13;
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' Pat Hensiak&#13;
^soo7s&#13;
mha,iq&#13;
mje«&#13;
ew!ck;.&#13;
PaUl Ne&#13;
"' ChUCk&#13;
°&#13;
S,r0WSki&#13;
ssAssairr," »*-«•"• ~ «. —&#13;
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Written permiss '^ Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
All correspondence Sd^P p0r,i0n of RANGER.&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wl 53141 ddre&#13;
ssed to; Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UV\&#13;
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reserves I'll IrtftTria? pr^feges^n rekis^ publica,ion on Thursday. The RANGEI&#13;
defamatory content. refusing to print letters which contain false c &#13;
Pernacciaro appointed&#13;
C* .» . 1 * __ Prof. Samuel J. Pernacciaro&#13;
has been appointed Associate&#13;
Dean of Faculty for Community&#13;
Educational Programs and&#13;
Summer session at Parkside. The&#13;
position replaces that of Coordinator&#13;
of Community&#13;
Educational Programs, which&#13;
Pernacciaro previously held.&#13;
Pernacciaro reports to Vice&#13;
Chancellor / Dean of Faculty&#13;
Lorman Ratner, who said the title&#13;
change reflects UW-Parkside's&#13;
increasing activity in offering&#13;
credit courses, in - service&#13;
training and general continuing&#13;
education courses for the community.&#13;
&#13;
Pernacciaro's responsibilities&#13;
include liaison between faculty&#13;
resources and the community and&#13;
response to requests from community&#13;
groups for special types of&#13;
educational outreach programs.&#13;
He also will direct summer&#13;
session activities.&#13;
Pernacciaro joined the UW-P&#13;
political science faculty in Fall,&#13;
1974, and was promoted to the&#13;
ranks of tenured associate&#13;
professor in Spring, 1978. He holds&#13;
a PhD degree from Southern&#13;
Illinois University at Carbondale.&#13;
At Parkside, he initiated the&#13;
Public Service Internship&#13;
Program (PSIP), which allows&#13;
Sam Pernacciaro&#13;
students to earn political science&#13;
credit as interns in local, state and&#13;
national governmental agencies.&#13;
••••••••••• Qub Events •••••••••••&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
Accounting Club will hold its&#13;
first general meeting of the&#13;
semester on Monday, Feb. 1 at 1&#13;
p.m. in Union 104.&#13;
Topics of the meeting will include&#13;
appointment of a new&#13;
Treasurer and nominations of&#13;
club officers for the fall semester.&#13;
Refreshments will be served.&#13;
Anthropology Club&#13;
Anthropology Club invites all&#13;
members and potential members&#13;
to a get - together complete with&#13;
treats on Friday, Jan. 29 at 1 p.m.&#13;
in Moln 324. The purpose of the&#13;
meeting is to greet new members,&#13;
discuss club business and to get a&#13;
head start on the weekend.&#13;
The Anthropology Club is alive&#13;
and well and living at Parkside.&#13;
College Republicans&#13;
College Republicans will be&#13;
having its first meeting of the year&#13;
Tuesday, Feb. 2 at 1 p.m. in Union&#13;
104. Visiting will be the national&#13;
student fieldman team from&#13;
Washington, D.C. Topics covered&#13;
will be campaign management&#13;
and starting a new club. All are&#13;
welcome to attend. For more&#13;
information contact Chris at 765-&#13;
2316.&#13;
Inter-Varsity&#13;
Christian Fellowship&#13;
Beginning Monday, Feb. 1, Inter&#13;
- Varsity Christian Fellowship will&#13;
start their second semester&#13;
Monday Bible studies. The three&#13;
study times and places are as&#13;
follows: Moln D128 from 10-11&#13;
a.m.; Moln D131 andD133from 1-2&#13;
p.m. Each group will study the&#13;
book of Ephesians and everyone is&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Life Science&#13;
Life Science Club will present&#13;
Dr. Tom Spencer from the Dermal&#13;
Research Unit at Johnson's Wax&#13;
on Friday, Jan. 29 at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist D101. The topic will be&#13;
insect repellents. Refreshments&#13;
will be served and admission is&#13;
free.&#13;
Physics Club&#13;
Last month 15 people joined the&#13;
Physics Club for a tour of Fermi&#13;
National Lab and Zion Nuclear&#13;
Power Plant. This semester's&#13;
trips will be to Argonne National&#13;
Lab, Adler Planetarium and&#13;
Yerkes Observatory. Dates for&#13;
these trips, which are open to&#13;
anyone interested, will be set at&#13;
the club's February meeting.&#13;
The February meeting will be&#13;
Monday, Feb. 1 at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist 230. They will set dates&#13;
for trips and set up Winter Carnival&#13;
teams. Everyone is welcome&#13;
to attend.&#13;
S.W.E.A.&#13;
S.W.E.A.'s membership drive&#13;
meeting will be held Monday, Feb.&#13;
8 from 1-2 p.m. in Moln D128. New&#13;
members are welcome. Refreshments&#13;
will be served.&#13;
Women's Concourse&#13;
All people interested in women's&#13;
issues are invited to attend a&#13;
meeting of Parkside's Women's&#13;
Concourse Monday, Feb. 1 at 1&#13;
p.m. in Moln 113. They will be&#13;
planning events for this semester.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
This Saturday, Jan. 30,&#13;
representatives from Phi Gamma&#13;
Nu will be at Parkside from 1 to 3&#13;
p.m. in the faculty lounge (Moln&#13;
111). Information about the&#13;
organization and starting a&#13;
chapter of their own will be&#13;
discussed.&#13;
Women in Business will have a&#13;
general meeting on Monday, Feb.&#13;
1 at 1 p.m. Please check posters&#13;
for the place. New members are&#13;
always welcome.&#13;
Scholarships available&#13;
A number of scholarships are&#13;
now available to continuing&#13;
students at Parkside. Application&#13;
forms are available at divisional&#13;
offices and the two information&#13;
Kiosks.&#13;
The name, number and amount&#13;
of, and qualifications for the&#13;
scholarships are:&#13;
Joanne M. Esser (1), $400, interest&#13;
in ecology, need,&#13;
scholarship, completed 30-90&#13;
credits through Spring 1981-82;&#13;
Kenneth L. Greenquist (2), $250,&#13;
need, scholarship, completed 75-&#13;
105 credits through Spring 1981-82;&#13;
Bernard C. Tallent (4), $250,&#13;
scholarship, service and need,&#13;
completed 60-90 credits through&#13;
Spring 1981-82;&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie (2), $250,&#13;
scholarship and need, completed&#13;
75-105 credits through Spring 1981-&#13;
82.&#13;
All scholarship applications&#13;
require the endorsement of a&#13;
faculty member. Application&#13;
deadline is Friday, March 12.&#13;
Reaganomics to be discussed&#13;
"Reaganomics and the Urban&#13;
Poor" will be the subject of a free&#13;
public talk by political economist&#13;
William K. Tabb at Parkside at&#13;
3:30 p.m. today in Molinaro Hall&#13;
107.&#13;
Tabb, an associate professor at&#13;
Queens College of the City&#13;
University of New York, is the&#13;
author of "The Political Economy&#13;
of the Black Ghetto" and editor or&#13;
author of numerous other books&#13;
and articles on politics and the&#13;
economy.&#13;
Prof. Tabb received his doctoral&#13;
degree from UW-Madison in 1968.&#13;
He has also been a visiting&#13;
associate professor at the&#13;
University of California -&#13;
Berkeley and at" the State&#13;
University of New York at Stony&#13;
Brook.&#13;
His Parkside talk is sponsored&#13;
by the Political Science Club.&#13;
Philippines topic of talk&#13;
"Cultural Contours in the&#13;
Philippines: From Luzon to&#13;
Mindanao" will be the topic of a&#13;
free public lecture by anthropologist&#13;
Donald Hart at&#13;
Parkside at 2 p.m., Sunday, Jan.&#13;
31, in the third floor meeting room&#13;
of the Library. A reception will&#13;
follow the talk.&#13;
Hart is a professor of anthropology&#13;
at Northern Illinois&#13;
University in DeKalb. He has done&#13;
extensive research in the&#13;
Philippines and is best known for&#13;
his work on Filipino folk medicine.&#13;
The talk is sponsored by the&#13;
UW-Parkside Anthropology Club.&#13;
A display of arts and crafts from&#13;
the Philippines is also on display&#13;
on the concourse level of the&#13;
Wyllie Library - Learning Center&#13;
through Monday, Feb. 1.&#13;
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS&#13;
Financial Aid funds for 1982-83 are limited.&#13;
Early applications are encouraged.&#13;
Apply by March 15 for priority consideration.&#13;
FINANCIAL AIDS OFFICE&#13;
284 TALLENT HALL&#13;
PARENT-CHILD&#13;
BOWLING LEAGUE&#13;
1 CHILD PLUS1 PARENT MAKE ATEAM&#13;
TIME: 10 a . m. - Noon, Saturdays&#13;
PLACE: Parkside Union Rec. Ctr.&#13;
COST: $2.50 Per Team Per Week&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• BOWLING LANE TIME&#13;
• FREE CHILDREN'S T-SHIRT&#13;
• FREE PIZZA PARTY ON FINAL&#13;
WEEK OF BOWLING&#13;
WHEN: Beginning Sat., Feb. 6 for 10 Wks.&#13;
WHO: Any Child 13 or Under with One Parent. Limited to&#13;
16 Teams. Only A Few Spots Left.&#13;
FOR ENTRY CALL THE REC. CTR. BETWEEN&#13;
9 a. m. and 5 p. m. MON. - FRI. at 553-2695&#13;
HAL DAVIS MAKES MORE&#13;
DECISIONS IN ONE HOUR THAN&#13;
MOST RECENT COLLEGE GRADS&#13;
MAKE ALL DAY.&#13;
Army RQTC at UW-Parkside&#13;
Call Captain Fred Herron&#13;
Marquette University&#13;
Collect —224-7195, 7229 ARMYROTC.&#13;
BE ALL YOU CAN&#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;
was an industrial management&#13;
major at the University of Tennessee and a&#13;
member of Army ROTC &#13;
4 Thursday, Janua ry 28,1982 RANGE R&#13;
Parkside student to star in local production&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Actors, actresses, musicians —&#13;
they are all performers. All of&#13;
them contain a talent and feeling&#13;
that is waiting to be poured out for&#13;
the world to drink in.&#13;
John Miskulin has always been&#13;
interested in music and acting.&#13;
His most recent role is the king in&#13;
the Kenosha production of "The&#13;
King and I."&#13;
"In high school, I was always in&#13;
the swing choir and the other&#13;
choirs. I got into musicals with my&#13;
performances in Oklahoma!, The&#13;
Sound of Music, So This is Paris,&#13;
and Fiddler on the Roof. For&#13;
Fiddler on the Roof I was selected&#13;
out of 50 people from Wisconsin.&#13;
Then I c ame here and I started in&#13;
straight plays, without music.&#13;
"I like both straight plays and&#13;
musicals, but I think straight&#13;
plays give the actor a chance to&#13;
develop a much more solid based&#13;
character. I think musicals are&#13;
more,enjoyable for the audience&#13;
and the actor. A straight play&#13;
makes you develop as an actor.&#13;
There's a statement that the&#13;
famous Russian director&#13;
Stanislowski made, 'You should,&#13;
love the art in yourself, not&#13;
yourself in the art.' When you&#13;
think about that, it's true."&#13;
John feels that theater at&#13;
Parkside is excellent. "The&#13;
directors are fantastic. I've never&#13;
worked with directors quite like&#13;
the ones at Parkside. They are&#13;
always on a professional level. I&#13;
like that. There is also a lot of&#13;
talent, it's unbelievable. I wish&#13;
more people would come to the&#13;
shows. They would be amazed."&#13;
Even though the theater is a lot&#13;
of hard work, and a lot of hard&#13;
hours, John likes it and enjoys it&#13;
because it makes the time more&#13;
interesting. "I guess what it really&#13;
is, is that you start out with&#13;
something, you go to an audition&#13;
and you audition for the part and&#13;
you get cast. Then, eight or nine&#13;
weeks later, down the line, you&#13;
have your end result. It's an accomplishment&#13;
to walk away and&#13;
say, 'I did this show, or that show.'&#13;
It's a proud feeling, to be involved&#13;
with an undertaking like that.&#13;
"The greatest high for me is to&#13;
be on stage and get a response&#13;
from the audience. I guess every&#13;
actor's good feeling comes from&#13;
being on stage and knowing that&#13;
the audience is with you, that you&#13;
have the audience's focus.&#13;
"I'm happy with what I'm doing&#13;
right now. If I'm happy, that's&#13;
good. I would like to keep moving&#13;
up the ladder. I don't think that&#13;
you have to be in New York or Los&#13;
Angeles to run into the right opportunity.&#13;
A lot of people think you&#13;
'/^Unive rsity of W isconsin-Parkside&#13;
1YTONA BEACH&#13;
SPRING BREAK&#13;
;s '82&#13;
MARCH&#13;
12-22&#13;
FKOR&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• TRANSPORTATION VIA AIR CONDITIONED,&#13;
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• FULLY ESCORTED THROUGHOUT&#13;
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ONLY *219&#13;
JOIN THE FOLLOWING&#13;
SCHOOLS PARTICIPATING IN&#13;
THISTRIP:&#13;
• NOTRE DAME O IOWA STATE O DRAKE&#13;
• WESTERN ILLINOIS O CENTRAL MICHIGAN&#13;
• UNIV. OF KENTUCKYOMIAMI UNIVERSITY&#13;
• SOUTHERN ILLINOIS O UNIV. OF VIRGINIA&#13;
• EASTERN KENTUCKY —MEMPHIS STATE&#13;
— ANDMORE!&#13;
FOR APPLICATION AND FURTHER INFORMATION&#13;
CONTACT:&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION, ROOM209 — 553-2200&#13;
"King and I" to open Feb. 6 in Kenosha&#13;
One of the most magnificent&#13;
of Rodgers and Hammersteins'&#13;
musical hits, "The King and I"&#13;
is now cast and has been in&#13;
production for about four&#13;
weeks. This musical classic&#13;
will be presented at Reuther&#13;
Civic Auditorium February&#13;
sixth, seventh, twelfth, thirteenth&#13;
and fourteenth. It is&#13;
being sponsored by the Miss&#13;
Kenosha Scholarship Pageant,&#13;
Inc. and The Lioness of&#13;
Greater Kenosha. Any&#13;
proceeds derived from this&#13;
production will go for Miss&#13;
Kenosha Pageant Scholarships&#13;
and for aid to the visually and&#13;
hearing impaired.&#13;
The setting for "The King&#13;
and I" is Siam in the year 1860,&#13;
where the proud king of the&#13;
country has brought an English&#13;
widow, Anna Leonowens, to&#13;
serve as tutor of the children he&#13;
has fathered with his numerous&#13;
wives. Against the exotic&#13;
background of this oriental&#13;
nation, the story is related of&#13;
how the tutors' most interested&#13;
pupil eventually turns out to be&#13;
the king himself, learning to&#13;
govern his country in more&#13;
enlightened ways from the&#13;
governess.&#13;
Former Miss Kenosha and&#13;
First Runner-up to Miss&#13;
Wisconsin Gail Ann Martin will&#13;
star in the production here as&#13;
the prim, witty and independent&#13;
school teacher.&#13;
John Miskulin portrays the&#13;
fiercely - scowling king who&#13;
becomes so confused by the&#13;
governess' insistence that a&#13;
woman is a person, not a&#13;
chattel. John, a Parkside&#13;
student, has an extensive&#13;
theatrical background. He has&#13;
had lead roles in "Oklahoma,"&#13;
"The Matchmaker" and "The&#13;
Runner Stumbles," among&#13;
others.&#13;
Lioness president Mary&#13;
Prudom suggested that tickets&#13;
be purchased soon. Tickets can&#13;
be purchased at one of three&#13;
outlets — Pacetti Music&#13;
Unlimited, Capri Liquors, or&#13;
Flowers With Love. A person&#13;
may call Libby at 551-8131,&#13;
Frances at 657-3283 o r Ginger&#13;
at 654-2354.&#13;
have to be there. That's not&#13;
always true. There are a lot of&#13;
opportunities right in Chicago. It&#13;
doesn't matter where you are, the&#13;
talent counts."&#13;
John feels that people are&#13;
looking for something new in&#13;
music. "I think that music, if you&#13;
listen to it right now, is making a&#13;
complete circle. It's headed right&#13;
back to the 50's if you listen to the&#13;
beat. It's the same melody line as&#13;
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the old rock and roll."&#13;
Being something special is just&#13;
the beginning of what it takes to be&#13;
a good performer. An open mind is&#13;
also needed. "I think to be a good&#13;
performer or musician, you have&#13;
to appreciate things. A musician&#13;
should appreciate all types of&#13;
music, a wide range. An actor&#13;
should appreciate all types of&#13;
material — Shakespeare, comedy,&#13;
farce, etc. If you don't, you're just&#13;
closing yourself onto one thing.&#13;
"Everybody is really an actor.&#13;
Everybody acts every day of th eir&#13;
life. They don't realize it though.&#13;
People walk on stage and tend to&#13;
overact, but if they would just be&#13;
themselves, they could just let&#13;
their character happen. People&#13;
believe that acting is different&#13;
from everyday life, but it isn't. It's&#13;
reality. That's the most difficult&#13;
thing about acting, creating a&#13;
reality in a well - rounded&#13;
believable character."&#13;
I&#13;
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WE'RE HERE TO HEIP Y OU GRO &#13;
Lindsey's law § Order' likable&#13;
by Chuck Ostrowski&#13;
The look of Law and Order,&#13;
Lindsey Buckingham's first solo&#13;
release, is very striking. The&#13;
album cover consists of a single,&#13;
shaded pose of Buckingham while&#13;
the inside sleeves feature a Tusklike&#13;
collage of pictures and&#13;
paintings. It seems a bit overblown,&#13;
but all is redeemed by the&#13;
polaroid shot in the bottom lefthand&#13;
corner showing&#13;
Buckingham's uncanny resemblance&#13;
to Bobby Van. Anything is&#13;
worth a shot like that.&#13;
The album's sound is also Tusklike.&#13;
One of the interesting things&#13;
about Law and Order, though, is&#13;
that the best songs, are those most&#13;
unlike his on Tusk, Fleetwood&#13;
Mac's 1979 release.&#13;
Law and Order is a very good&#13;
album, sung with revealing intensity.&#13;
It's not an earth - shattering&#13;
L.P., but something to be&#13;
pleased about, as the world always&#13;
seems a better place with good&#13;
music around. Of the 11 cuts, four&#13;
are excellent stand-outs.&#13;
One of these is "September&#13;
Song," originally published in&#13;
1938. Buckingham takes this song,&#13;
already widely known to our&#13;
parents and grandparents, and&#13;
updates it 44 years. Very stylish&#13;
singing, nicely done background&#13;
vocals and a touch of punk mixed&#13;
with country and . . . ta-da — a&#13;
new classic.&#13;
"Trouble," already a hit single,&#13;
greatly highlights his vocals,&#13;
which are a nice smooth tenor. It&#13;
is sung evenly throughout, though,&#13;
which I think is a mistake.&#13;
"Trouble" is highlighted by a&#13;
DeVinny's art on display&#13;
The Racine Art Association,&#13;
Inc. announces its Artist - of - t he -&#13;
Month in the Mini Gallery, the Art&#13;
Sales and Rental Gallery at the&#13;
Charles A. Wustum Museum of&#13;
Fine Arts in Racine. The work of&#13;
Doug DeVinny of Racine will be&#13;
featured from Jan. 17 through&#13;
Feb. 14.&#13;
DeVinny is an Assistant&#13;
Professor of Art at Parkside,&#13;
where he specializes in teaching&#13;
drawing and printmaking. He will&#13;
feature prints, watercolors and&#13;
drawings in his show at the&#13;
Gallery.&#13;
His work has been seen at&#13;
Wustum Watercolor Wisconsin&#13;
'79, '80 and '81. He received an&#13;
excellence award in the 1980 show.&#13;
He was included in the 1980&#13;
| Kinship meets |&#13;
A general information meeting&#13;
for those persons interested in&#13;
volunteering in the Kinship&#13;
Program will be held Saturday,&#13;
Feb. 6 at 10:30 a.m. at the Kinship&#13;
office, 2001 - 80th Street, Kenosha.&#13;
The Kinship Program is&#13;
designed to befriend and help&#13;
children from single parent&#13;
families by matching them with&#13;
mature adults with good&#13;
character. Those adults interested&#13;
in becoming Kinspersons and&#13;
their spouses or special friends&#13;
are encouraged to attend this&#13;
meeting.&#13;
For further information, call the&#13;
Kinship office, 658-0151.&#13;
Placement&#13;
workshops&#13;
scheduled&#13;
The Career Resource Center&#13;
will hold placement workshops&#13;
Feb. 3 at 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. in&#13;
WLLC D174.&#13;
Subjects will be resume writing,&#13;
cover letters and interviewing&#13;
skills.&#13;
Training offered&#13;
Students planning to enter&#13;
health professions who are interested&#13;
in improving their&#13;
assertiveness skills are encouraged&#13;
to attend the assertiveness&#13;
workshop being offered&#13;
Mondays and Wednesdays Feb. 1,&#13;
3, 8, 10 from 12 - 1:50. This&#13;
workshop is sponsored by the UWMilwaukee&#13;
Consortial Nursing&#13;
Program and UW-Parkside's&#13;
Office of Student Development.&#13;
Interested students should&#13;
register by Jan. 29 by calling 553-&#13;
2480 or contacting Ann Boyle, 553-&#13;
2653 or Barbara Larson, 553-2122&#13;
(WLLC D-175).&#13;
Homage to a Lighthouse show at&#13;
Wustum and in the last three&#13;
Racine Area Arts exhibitions,&#13;
winning an honorable mention in&#13;
the 1981 show. DeVinny recently&#13;
had a solo exhibition at Colorado&#13;
State University and was included&#13;
in the Boston Printmakers exhibit&#13;
at the Boston Museum of Fine&#13;
Arts.&#13;
Gallery hours are the same as&#13;
the Museum's, 1-5 p.m. seven days&#13;
a week and 1-9 p.m. Mondays and&#13;
Thursdays.&#13;
The Museum is located at 2519&#13;
Northwestern Avenue (Hwy. 38)&#13;
in Racine.&#13;
delicate guitar refrain played not&#13;
unlike George Harrison at his&#13;
best.&#13;
But THE highlight of the album&#13;
is "Bwana," the very first cut. Not&#13;
that the album goes downhill from&#13;
the beginning, but "Bwana" does&#13;
put you in a mood that expects&#13;
something more than is delivered.&#13;
It is a reggae - influenced tune,&#13;
emotionally sung, showing just&#13;
how far up an excellent tenor&#13;
voice can go. The title refers to a&#13;
nighttime visitor of natives in the&#13;
African jungle. It's an excellent,&#13;
funny song.&#13;
"That's How We Do It In L.A."&#13;
is in the "Bwana" tradition&#13;
melodically and the fourth standout&#13;
cut. Other notable songs include&#13;
"Mary Lee Jones,"&#13;
"Shadow of the West" with&#13;
Christine McVie and "Johnny&#13;
Stew," a belated disco tune.&#13;
Throughout Law and Order,&#13;
Buckingham shows off his artistic&#13;
abilities gently. It's puzzling why&#13;
he didn't go solo earlier because&#13;
he is a very talented and unique&#13;
performer.&#13;
| Art displayed&#13;
Sculpture, painting and&#13;
photography by eight UWMadison&#13;
art faculty members will&#13;
be on display in the Parkside&#13;
Communication Arts Gallery&#13;
through Feb. 9.&#13;
Artists represented are George&#13;
Cramer, Truman Lowe, Victor&#13;
Kord, Hal Lotterman, Ernie Moll,&#13;
Kenneth Ray, Richard Reese and&#13;
Wayne Taylor.&#13;
„ Regular gallery hours are&#13;
Mondays through Thursdays from&#13;
1 to 6 p.m. and Tuesdays and&#13;
Wednesdays from 7 to 9 p.m.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, January 28,1982&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
THURSDAY, JAN. 28&#13;
COURSE "Introduction to Traditional Chinese Healing Practices" starts&#13;
today at 7:30 p.m. in Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312 for more information.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
FRIDAY, JAN. 29&#13;
MOVIE "The Elephant Man" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission at the door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50&#13;
for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
DANCE/CONCERT at 9 p.m. in Union Square featuring "The Britins."&#13;
Admission is $3.00 for a Parkside student and $4.00 for a guest. Tickets&#13;
are available at the Union Information Center. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
SATURDAY, JAN. 30&#13;
BASKETBALL vs. Northern Michigan at 7:30 p.m. Advance tickets are&#13;
available at the Union Information Center. Advance prices are $1.50 for&#13;
Parkside students and $2.00 for others. All pay $2.50 at the door. After the&#13;
game the entertainment in Union Square will feature John Russell of&#13;
WRKR. Admission is free with your basketball ticket or $2.00.&#13;
DINNER/THEATER at 6:30 p.m. in the Union Dining Room. Admission is&#13;
$8.50 a nd tickets are available at the Union Information Center. Sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Players.&#13;
SUNDAY, JAN. 31&#13;
MOVIE "The Elephant Man" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
MONDAY, FEB. 1&#13;
COURSE "Basic Legal Research Skills" at 9 a.m. in WLLC D110. Call ext.&#13;
2312 for more details. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 3&#13;
BLOOD DRIVE from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Union 104-106. All a re. welcome.&#13;
Sponsored by the Parkside Health Office. &#13;
6 Thursday, January 28, 1982 RANGER&#13;
Women's basketball&#13;
Rangers have close shave&#13;
by Karen Norwood&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside women's&#13;
basketball team took to the court&#13;
twice last week to play two very&#13;
close and exciting games. The&#13;
women cagers took on Carthage&#13;
College on Tuesday, Jan. 19, and&#13;
then went on to battle against&#13;
Platteville on Thursday, Jan. 21.&#13;
The first game, against Carthage,&#13;
proved to be a tense game&#13;
with Parkside leading by only one&#13;
point into the half, 34-33. Robin&#13;
Henschel led the half - time&#13;
scoring with a sturdy 12 points,&#13;
followed by Laurie Pope who had&#13;
accumulated eight points before&#13;
the half - time buzzer sounded.&#13;
Jeanne Jacobs and Theresa Bye&#13;
were Parkside's top rebounders&#13;
with 12 apiece. Ten of Bye's and&#13;
eight of Jacob's rebounds were&#13;
defensive. The Rangers were&#13;
shooting a 54% from the field at&#13;
half - time, but dropped to a mere&#13;
27% during the second half to&#13;
average out with an overall 41%&#13;
for the entire game.&#13;
During the second half, the&#13;
action continued with Cindy&#13;
Ruffert making 10 points to give&#13;
her a total of 16 points for the&#13;
entire game. Robin Henschel&#13;
scored 18 points in the game.&#13;
Starter Laurie Pope added 12&#13;
points of her own to help the&#13;
Rangers squeeze past the Redmen&#13;
60-58.&#13;
The women had another close&#13;
call later that week as they barely&#13;
slipped by Platteville in their sixth&#13;
away game.&#13;
The Rangers were trailing by 18&#13;
points with only 12 minutes&#13;
remaining before the end when&#13;
the women came back and tipped&#13;
out Platteville 73-72.&#13;
During the first part of the&#13;
game, the cagers were hampered&#13;
by several problems. One was&#13;
sophomore Cindy Ruffert fouling&#13;
out very early in the first half. The&#13;
other major problem was Robin&#13;
Henschel injuring her foot.&#13;
Henschel will be out for the better&#13;
part of a week, but she did let her&#13;
opponents know that she wasn't a&#13;
loafer by scoring a fantastic 12&#13;
points during the 10 minutes that&#13;
she was in the game.&#13;
According to Dale Synder, the&#13;
assistant coach for the women's&#13;
team, the women won the game&#13;
because of a few things that&#13;
happened during the final&#13;
minutes. "They (the women)&#13;
never gave up hope," said Snyder.&#13;
Platteville only scored two&#13;
points during the last seven&#13;
minutes of the game, which gave&#13;
the Rangers an opportunity to&#13;
handle the ball. Laurie Pope&#13;
grabbed eight rebounds at the end&#13;
of the game that were crucial for&#13;
the win. "Laurie Pope saved the&#13;
game," said Snyder. "We were&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
PARKSIDE'S JUNE BAUER battles it out with a Notre Dame&#13;
opponent at recent match.&#13;
ahead and Pope stepped in and&#13;
took an offensive charge with&#13;
about eight seconds left in the&#13;
game and forced a turnover."&#13;
Kim Johnson grabbed the ball&#13;
with only a few minutes left in the&#13;
game and scored the go ahead&#13;
point that won the game.&#13;
Said Snyder, "We came back&#13;
primarily because we pressed a&#13;
full - court press attack on them,&#13;
and we made a lot of turnovers."&#13;
Another little helper for the&#13;
Rangers was the fact that&#13;
Parkside threw 36 times from the&#13;
free throw line, compared to&#13;
Platteville's eight.&#13;
Most of the second - half was&#13;
played with freshmen members of&#13;
the Ranger team. Pope or Jeanne&#13;
Jacobs substituted in to form a&#13;
substantial offense against the&#13;
Platteville team.&#13;
The Rangers have now compiled&#13;
a 10-5 overall record and a 2-&#13;
1 conference record. Results from&#13;
Monday night's game against&#13;
North Central College will appear&#13;
in next week's Ranger. The&#13;
women appear tonight at 7 p.m. on&#13;
the home court as they take on&#13;
Marquette University.&#13;
Classified Ads&#13;
The information in last&#13;
week's Ranger about&#13;
classified advertising rates&#13;
was incorrectly printed.&#13;
Classified ads for Parkside&#13;
students and faculty are free&#13;
for 10 words or less. There is a&#13;
limit of one free ad per person&#13;
per week. Additional ads cost&#13;
50 cents per 10 words.&#13;
Classified ads for other&#13;
people cost $1.00 per 10 words.&#13;
Deadline for publication&#13;
Thursday is at noon the&#13;
Friday before.&#13;
SERVICES OFFERED&#13;
TYPING Professionally done. Reasonable&#13;
rates. Fast service. South Kenosha. 657-&#13;
6068.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
WANTED: The fencing team needs a&#13;
saborist. Come up to practice in the P.E.&#13;
fencing room Mon. - Thurs., 1-4 p.m.&#13;
WANTED: Ranger needs news, feature and&#13;
sports writers, photographers, graphic&#13;
artists and, most importantly, ad reps&#13;
(where there's money to be made). We're&#13;
not kidding — come see Ken Meyer in the&#13;
Ranger office, next to the Coffee Shoppe in&#13;
WLLC.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
DANCE CLASSES Ballet, tap, jazz. Farm&#13;
Studio new location. Call 552-9473 or 552-&#13;
8460.&#13;
BEGINNER OR ADVANCED Cost is about the same as a&#13;
semester in a U.S. college: $2,989. Price includes jet round&#13;
trip to Seville from New York, room, board, and tuition&#13;
complete. Government grants and loans available for eligible&#13;
students.&#13;
Live with a Spanish family, attend classes four hours a day,&#13;
four days a week, four months. Earn 16 hrs. of credit (equi&#13;
valent to 4 semesters taught in U.S. colleges over a two&#13;
year time span). Your Spanish studies will be enhanced by&#13;
opportunities not available in a U.S. classroom. Standardized&#13;
tests show our students' language skills superior to&#13;
students completing two year programs in U.S.&#13;
Hurry, it takes a lot of time to make all arrangements.&#13;
FALL SEMESTER - S EPT. 10-Dec. 22/SPRING SEMESTER&#13;
- Feb. 1 - J une 1 each year.&#13;
FULLY ACCREDITED A program of Trinity Christian College.&#13;
SEMESTER IN SPAIN&#13;
2442 E. Collier S.E. Grand Rapids, Michigan 49506&#13;
(A Program of Trinity Christian College)&#13;
CALL TOLL FREE for full information 1-800-253-9008&#13;
(In Mich., or if toll free line inoperative call 1-616-942-2903 or 942-2541 collect)&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
PARKSIDE'S ROBIN HENSCHEL during recent game.&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
Nordic Ski Club&#13;
The Nordic Ski Club's annual&#13;
15k cross - country skiing race and&#13;
citizens tour has been rescheduled&#13;
for this Sunday, Jan. 31. You can&#13;
register for the race up until 10:30&#13;
a.m. on Sunday. The race itself&#13;
will start at 11 a.m.&#13;
The race has been cancelled&#13;
twice in the past month due to&#13;
severe weather conditions.&#13;
Further information is available&#13;
in the P.E. Building.&#13;
Dart Qub&#13;
Jim Heiring&#13;
Racewalker Jim Heiring, a&#13;
seven - time All - American at&#13;
Parkside, set a world indoor&#13;
record in the 1500 meter indoor&#13;
racewalk January 16 at the U.S.&#13;
Olympic Invitational Track and&#13;
Field meet at the Meadowlands&#13;
Arena, East Rutherford, New&#13;
Jersey.&#13;
Heiring, a member of the 1980&#13;
U.S. Olympic team, was clocked&#13;
at 5 minutes 27 seconds, breaking&#13;
the 5:28.7 mark set by Reima&#13;
Salonen of Finland in 1977.&#13;
Despite "an awful stiff" back,&#13;
Heiring set an American indoor&#13;
record in the men's two - mile&#13;
walk by beating the old indoor&#13;
best of 12 minutes, 23 seconds set&#13;
in 1979 by Soviet Yevgeniy Yevsyukov.&#13;
Heiring's fantastic time&#13;
in the U.S. Track and Field&#13;
Association meet was 12 minutes,&#13;
20.06 seconds.&#13;
Blue Ribbon&#13;
®&#13;
The Parkside dart throwing&#13;
team announces five openings on&#13;
the team's cheerleading squad.&#13;
Open auditions will be held on&#13;
Friday, Feb. 5 from 1-5 p.m. in&#13;
Union 207. Previous cheerleading&#13;
experience is not needed, but a&#13;
willingness to learn is a must. The&#13;
next dart tournament takes place&#13;
Feb. 13-14. If Friday is not convenient&#13;
for you, contact Tod&#13;
Rawley, the cheerleading coordinator,&#13;
or Jrop off a note in the&#13;
Ranger office listing your&#13;
qualifications and times that you&#13;
can be contacted for an audition.&#13;
These positions are open to&#13;
everyone, so come on and support&#13;
the new Parkside dart team.&#13;
Women's softball&#13;
The women's softball team has&#13;
started up its practice for the&#13;
upcoming season. There is a&#13;
practice tonight at 9 p.m. The next&#13;
two practices are on Feb. 1 and 4&#13;
at 9 and 6 p.m. respectively. All&#13;
individuals interested in trying&#13;
out for the team must attend all&#13;
the practices through February.&#13;
Coach Linda Henderson will make&#13;
the first cut at the end of&#13;
February. Those interested&#13;
should contact Coach Henderson&#13;
in the P.E. Building.&#13;
THE P ARKSIDE UNION PRESENTSPABST&#13;
NIGHT&#13;
featuring "SIERRA II&#13;
WED., FEB. 3 8:00 pm - 12:00 UNION SQUARE&#13;
\FREE ADMISSION — DOOR PRIZES — FUN! &#13;
SKI RENTAL HOURS&#13;
Mon. -12-2 p. m. 3:30-5 p. m&#13;
Tue. 12-2 p. m.3-7p. m.&#13;
Wed. 12-2 p. m. 3:30-5 p. m.&#13;
Thur. 12-2 p. m. 5-7 p. m.&#13;
Fri. lla. m.-6p. m.&#13;
Sat. 9 a. m.-5p. m.&#13;
Sun. 9 a. m.-5p. m.&#13;
The Ranger needs staffers:&#13;
photographers • news writers *ad reps&#13;
Call 2287 o r 2295 or Stop in!&#13;
We're in WLLC DI73&#13;
Men lose twice to McNeese&#13;
nk&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Elm wood Plaza/Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
by Paul Neil&#13;
In a matter of nine days time,&#13;
McNeese State defeated Parkside&#13;
for a second time in their'&#13;
rematch.&#13;
McNeese is a Division I foe, and&#13;
evidently must have seemed too&#13;
tall, too tough, or too talented for&#13;
the scrappy Rangers.&#13;
In the first game, McNeese&#13;
topped Parkside 83-73 in Kenosha,&#13;
and in their rematch on Saturday,&#13;
Jan. 23 in St. Charles, LA., the&#13;
host treated Parkside to a convincing&#13;
92-74 drubbing.&#13;
Cold shooting and foul trouble&#13;
plagued Parkside throughout the&#13;
game, especially in the first half&#13;
when McNeese raced to a 45-34&#13;
lead at intermission.&#13;
Clutch baskets by McNeese&#13;
sustained their advantage in the&#13;
second half as Ranger rallies were&#13;
short - lived.&#13;
As a good sign, four Rangers&#13;
scored in double figures with&#13;
guards Darron Brittman and&#13;
Charles Perry collecting 22 and 17,&#13;
while Wilbert Webb and John&#13;
Herndon added 14 a nd 10 p oints.&#13;
Foul trouble hampered second&#13;
half efforts as Perry and Webb&#13;
fouled - out and Herndon was&#13;
straddled with four personals. Joe&#13;
Dumars and Chris Faggi led a&#13;
balanced attack for the taller&#13;
McNeese squad with 25 and 22&#13;
points.&#13;
Parkside's season record&#13;
slipped to 10-7 with six losses at&#13;
the hands of Division I schools.&#13;
Only one loss has been recorded at&#13;
home as of the time of this writing.&#13;
Their tough schedule on the&#13;
road will provide them with the&#13;
experience needed for their&#13;
stretch - drive towards another&#13;
NAIA regional tournament bid.&#13;
Results from Monday and&#13;
Wednesday nights games will be&#13;
published in the next week's&#13;
Ranger. The Rangers entertain&#13;
Northern Michigan Saturday&#13;
night, Jan. 30.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
SKI RENTALS&#13;
NEW EQUIPMENT • GREAT TRAILS • LOW COST&#13;
HALF DAY: '3.75 UWP Student '4.75 Guest&#13;
FULL DAY: '5.00 UWP Student '6.50 Guest&#13;
WEEKEND: M2.00 UWP Student '14.00 Guest&#13;
FOR TRAIL CONDITIONS CALL: 553-2695&#13;
RANGER Thursday, January 28, 1982&#13;
Men cagers coming of age&#13;
by Greg Bonofiglio&#13;
Note: Due to a shortage of space&#13;
in last week's Ranger, Inside UWP&#13;
Sports was withheld until this&#13;
week. Because of the time differential&#13;
between the Monday&#13;
morning story deadline and the&#13;
games that the men's team played&#13;
during the week, the games&#13;
played on Monday and Wednesday&#13;
night will not be covered until next&#13;
week.&#13;
Seventeen games into the 1981-&#13;
82 season finds the Parkside&#13;
Ranger basketball team at a 10-7&#13;
mark, with only ten games&#13;
remaining until the start of the&#13;
WICA playoffs scheduled to begin&#13;
Feb. 23.&#13;
Although they are only 6-4 since&#13;
the end of the last semester, the&#13;
Rangers did defeat UW-Oshkosh&#13;
and Carthage to maintain their&#13;
dominance of the Ranger Classic.&#13;
Their four losses came at the&#13;
hands of Division I opponents:&#13;
Colorado, Oklahoma, and McNeese&#13;
State.&#13;
Throughout the semester break&#13;
Parkside appeared to be jelling&#13;
into a very formidable team.&#13;
Offensively, the Rangers have&#13;
been impressive, racking up 79,&#13;
89, 81, and 89 points against UWOshkosh,&#13;
Carthage, UWPlatteville,&#13;
and Lakeland&#13;
respectively. Defensively,&#13;
Parkside has reduced the number&#13;
of mental mistakes which had&#13;
plagued the team in the earlier&#13;
part of the season. As a whole, the&#13;
team has shown flashes of the&#13;
traditionally aggressive defense&#13;
which is so characteristic of Steve&#13;
Stephens' coaching.&#13;
Since becoming academically&#13;
eligible, sophomore Charles Perry&#13;
has provided a real spark to the&#13;
team on both ends of the court. In&#13;
his first three games, Perry&#13;
averaged 21 points and 5 rebounds&#13;
per game; his outside shooting&#13;
has opened things up underneath.&#13;
The play of Wilbert Webb&#13;
perhaps best symbolizes the&#13;
improvement the team has made.&#13;
In recent games, and the&#13;
Lakeland game in particular,&#13;
Webb has been a dominating force&#13;
in the middle. Together with&#13;
forward John Herndon, who has&#13;
also come into his own of late, the&#13;
starting back line of the Rangers&#13;
has finally begun to play up to its&#13;
potential.&#13;
As has been the case in the past,&#13;
the Ranger team always seems to&#13;
show improvement after playing&#13;
Division I teams. Coach Stephens&#13;
and his program have received&#13;
criticism for scheduling teams&#13;
from some of the bigger schools in&#13;
the country. Whether such a&#13;
schedule is "logical" or not, the&#13;
fact remains that the level of&#13;
performance by the team steadily&#13;
improves with Parkside playing&#13;
against higher quality opponents.&#13;
Mental mistakes, such as Webb&#13;
putting up a shot with only 17&#13;
seconds and a three point lead on&#13;
the line in the Oshkosh game,&#13;
appear to have been reduced.&#13;
There is a new crispness in the&#13;
play of both the offense and&#13;
defense that simply wasn't there&#13;
in the early part of the season.&#13;
In the Lakeland game, the&#13;
Perry and Webb connection&#13;
worked as well as it has ever&#13;
worked. With defenses sagging in&#13;
on Webb, the Parkside center&#13;
shoveled passes out to Perry who&#13;
would then promptly connect&#13;
them from the outside. When the&#13;
defense countered by pressing&#13;
both Webb and Perry, they&#13;
worked the ball out to either&#13;
Darron Brittman open in the lane&#13;
for an easy jumper, or to Dave&#13;
McLeish on the opposite side for&#13;
one of his patented long range&#13;
jumpers. It has been some time&#13;
since a Ranger team has shown&#13;
such execution. The key here will&#13;
be consistency.&#13;
One player who must show more&#13;
consistency is freshman forward&#13;
Ray Duckworth. A crowd favorite&#13;
and the team personality, Duckworth&#13;
needs to improve on his&#13;
defensive play. On offense he has&#13;
fared much better, and is a&#13;
definite scoring threat whenever&#13;
he is on the court. But here too,&#13;
Duckworth must work on the&#13;
strengths of his game and reduce&#13;
the number of forced shots he's&#13;
taken. He has the potential, but as&#13;
Henry Ford once said, "You don't&#13;
build a reputation on what the&#13;
future holds."&#13;
Guard Darron Brittman has&#13;
shown a lot of poise for a freshman.&#13;
The Ranger playmaker is an&#13;
excellent ball handler and a team&#13;
leader in both assists and steals.&#13;
His 17 point performance against&#13;
Ferris State proves he is fully&#13;
capable of putting the ball up if&#13;
needed. He proved this again in&#13;
the games against LaCrosse and&#13;
the Illinois Institute of Technology&#13;
(IIT).&#13;
Men's basketball&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
PARKSIDE'S JOHN HERNDON shoots over IIT during a recent&#13;
game. &#13;
8 Thurs day, Jan u a ry 28,1982 RANGER&#13;
&gt;' J!- ^idll&#13;
iSifSSISS&#13;
*1 * •&#13;
JOHN PETERSON of Parkside's&#13;
bowling team - look for story in&#13;
next week's Ranger.&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selection&#13;
Photo by Masood Shafiq&#13;
THE PARKSIDE WRESTLING TEAM took on and beat LaCrosse last weekend in LaCrosse.&#13;
Improve your memory.&#13;
Order this memo board now-before you forget!&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10:00 a m - 4:00 p m&#13;
• SPEA RMINT LEAVES&#13;
• J UBE J EL LS&#13;
• CARAMELS&#13;
• CARAMEL BULLIES&#13;
• ROYALS&#13;
• T OF FE ES&#13;
• JOTS&#13;
BRIDGE M IX&#13;
• M ALTED MILK BALLS&#13;
• CHOC. C RE ME DROPS&#13;
• CHOC. RAISINS&#13;
• CHOC. P E ANUTS&#13;
• PEAN UT BUTTER CUPS&#13;
STARS&#13;
• YOGURT PEANUTS&#13;
• CAROB M ALTED MILK&#13;
BALLS&#13;
• CAROB PEANUTS&#13;
• SUNFLOWER S EE DS&#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 RT S E S A ME&#13;
BRITTLE&#13;
• RED SKIN PEANUTS&#13;
• MINT C OOLERS&#13;
• STARLIGHT MINTS&#13;
• SOUR BALLS&#13;
• CINNAMON DISKS&#13;
• C OF FEE&#13;
• BUTTERSCOTCH DISKS&#13;
• ROOT B EER BARRELS&#13;
• POP S&#13;
• P E A N UT B U T T ER&#13;
KISSES&#13;
• P EP PE RM INT KISSES&#13;
• LICORICE BULLIES&#13;
•JELLY BEANS&#13;
• ASSORTED PERK YS&#13;
• ORANGE SLICES&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF FEB. 1&#13;
STUDENT FOOD&#13;
40% OFF&#13;
\ \"* A And remember,&#13;
\W\ good times stir with&#13;
\ +++' Seagrams 7 Crown. </text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="70041">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1364">
        <name>budget cuts</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1464">
        <name>building projects</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="963">
        <name>chancellor alan guskin</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1470">
        <name>dormitories</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1463">
        <name>governor lee dreyfus</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1462">
        <name>landlord-tenant reform bill</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1469">
        <name>racine YMCA</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2482">
        <name>segregated university fee allocation committee (SUFAC)</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
