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A former newspaper reporter who has lived in Franklin for nearly 40 years, Marjorie is active in several Franklin and Hales Corners organizations.

August 2008 - Posts

Celebrity Status. . .I Knew Her When. . .

By Marjorie Pagel
Tuesday, Aug 26 2008, 10:23 AM
Last week I was invited to a book launching party hosted by author Kimberly Stezala whose book Scholarships 101 is hot off the press and available at local bookstores for students and parents wondering how they’ll ever be able to afford college.  The publisher is AMACOM (American Management Association.)

Kim has been so busy this past year she’s scarcely had time to respond to my e-mails.
She’s had to fly to New York t work with her publisher and to other destinations for interviews.   She’s launched her own website and started a newsletter for college-bound young people, and she’s been frequently interviewed about her book and her experetise on tapping into the scholarship market. 

I met Kim 10 years ago when we both worked at St. Ann Center for Intergenerational Care in Bay View – and I’ll write more about that in another blog.  Her radiant energy and her ability to connect with people on a sincere and down-to-earth level is what attracted me to her.  I was there at her wedding when she married Darren (who gets well-deserved credit in her acknowledgments) and I’ve met their two children, Sophie and Jack.  Even though she’s kind of a local celebrity now and destined for an even rosier future (or so I predict), Kim Stezala will always be the same Kim Stezala at heart  – and I’m proud to call her my friend.

These days Kim refers to herself as “The Scholarship Lady.” On the back cover of her book, next to her photograph, we learn that she founded Wisconsin’s first online scholarship database, that she is an advisory board member at Parents Plus Wisconsin, and that she writes a newspaper column about scholarships.

In her introduction to Scholarships 101, Kim says: “I know that the cost of college continues to rise faster than inflation, costs more than a loaded luxury car, and petrifies college-bound students of modest means.”  But there’s hope – and Kim’s encouraging voice emerges with practical advice in every page of her book, subtitled “The Real-World Guide to Getting Cash for College.”

“I have devoted my career to helping families achieve their education dreams,” Kim tells her readers.  Dreams may indeed be the starting point for the students she counsels, but if you’ve ever met Kim you’ll know she’s not the type to walk around with her head in the clouds.  “I tell it like is,” she told her well-wishers at the book-launching party. 

In a radio podcast at the beginning of the summer, Kim offered five tips for students thinking about college.  In summary, those tips are:  1)  Volunteer; 2)  Work at places that offer scholarships to their employees;  3)  Demonstrate a positive work ethic; 4)  Join or attend a pre-college program (see Chapter 4, “College Prep” for details on this;) and 5) Start looking for those scholarships now.  (See: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/The-Scholarship-Lady)

A second podcast, “Surfing for Scholarships,” features Kim interviewing guest Christopher Penn, who has authored an e-book on using Google to search for scholarships.  Kim also offers a free newsletter at her website,  http://scholarshipstreet.com.  And, on top of all that, s
he has just  produced a new video, “Scholarships for Beginners” that offers much of the same advice and practical tips found in her book. 

“What folks should know is that there is about three billion dollars in private scholarships,”  you’ll hear Kim say if you check out that site.  Tapping into those billions is her mission. (I especially like her upbeat voice and enthusiastic “you-can-do-it!” attitude.)

Although I have no children in college right now, I know it took Ericka and Matt many years after graduation to pay off their college loans.  I also see many college students  through my teaching at Concordia University, and I have friends and relatives who have kids with college aspirations.  Although my oldest grandchild is just entering first grade next week, if the next 12 years fly by as quickly as these first 6, it won’t be long before he and his parents will be looking for scholarships too.  Of course, by that time Kim will be launching an updated version of Scholarships 101.

In the meantime, her book is available at Harry W. Schwartz bookstores, at Barnes and Noble, and through Amazon.com.  Many of our local libraries should be carrying it soon – if enough of us request it.  I plan to donate autographed copies to both Franklin and Hales Corners libraries so that high school students and their parents can start thinking and planning for college scholarships NOW.
 

 

Decisions, decisions. . .

By Marjorie Pagel
Tuesday, Aug 5 2008, 08:47 AM

At my age I’ve known many people who decided to retire.  Some have embraced their new life, finding pleasure in the new opportunities all this free time gives them – some to spend more time with family and friends, others to volunteer for organizations and causes they believe in, still others to follow individual pursuits that their working life didn’t allow for – reading, taking classes, gardening, travelling, improving their golf game.  The list goes on.  A year or two after their retirement, you ask, “How’s retirement?” and these people give you the stock answer of how they don’t know how they ever had enough time to work.

 

Others, though, are at loose ends.  They visit old friends at the office and go out for lunch, only to come home dejected with the realization they are no longer part of the working force which have the office (or another kind of job) to return to.  Eventually, most of these people find worthwhile activities (as in the list above) or they find another job – full-time or part-time, something to fill the empty hours and augment the bank account. The lucky ones would be hired as consultants, drawing both a pension and a paycheck; the others would be offered a part-time job at minimum wage or told to look elsewhere.

And then there's Brett Favre – choosing to retire at the end of one season, choosing to make a comeback at the beginning of the next.  

 

The word decide comes from the Latin decidere, meaning “to cut off.” In other words, once we decide to take one course of action, we're cutting off other options, since most of us can't do two things at once.  (My apologies to you multi-taskers who claim you can.) 

I'm reminded of Robert Frost's poem, "The Road Not Taken."  Looking back at his life, the poet recalls a time when "Two roads diverged in a yellow wood/ and sorry I could not travel both/ And be one traveller. . . ." (It was that both/and. . . either/or dilemma.) The poet chose the road "less travelled by"  and later wonders how his life would have turned out had he chosen the other.  Of course, he’ll never know.

 

It must be hard to be Brett Favre – wanting, on the one hand, to retire and wanting, on the other hand, to do what he loves best – play football.  Seeing his wife, Deanna, follow him out of the airplane on the newscast last night, reminded me of all those wives who have followed their husbands into the midst of waiting photographers.  They’re smiling on the outside but what are they really thinking?  With Deanna, for example, is she thinking,  “That’s my man, Brett, whatever he wants is fine with me”  . . .or perhaps, “I wish this husband of mine could make up his mind!” 

I’m not a great sports fan but I do wish both Brett Favre and the Packers well this season.  If Brett helps bring the Packers to victory, all those fans clamoring for his return will say, “I told you so,” but if things don’t work out so well, the others will say, “I told you so.” 

 

One thing is certain though: the next time Favre retires, there won’t be nearly so much hoopla as we saw this past year. 

 

 
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