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            <text>Volume 9, issue 3</text>
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            <text>Aspin brings re-election campaign to Parkside</text>
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            <text>Thursday, Sept. 18, 1980&#13;
ijf University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 3&#13;
Aspin brings re-election campaign to Parkside&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Representative Les Aspin, a&#13;
Democrat seeking his sixth term&#13;
in Congress, addressed a small&#13;
group consisting mainly of&#13;
Parkside students and faculty on&#13;
campus last Friday.&#13;
Aspin spoke on the media's&#13;
coverage of the presidential&#13;
campaign and then answered&#13;
questions about topics such as tax&#13;
cuts, military spending and the&#13;
situation at Fort McCoy.&#13;
Presidential Campaign&#13;
"It's an interesting&#13;
phenomenon," said Aspin, "that&#13;
we have three people running for&#13;
President and not a lot of enthusiasm&#13;
being generated." Aspin&#13;
offered three possible explanations&#13;
for the apathy: the&#13;
system of electing th$ president is&#13;
so horrendous that nobody good&#13;
wants the job, the primary system&#13;
is so "screwed up" that the&#13;
winners are not the best people,&#13;
and the media does such a job on&#13;
all the candidates that even Abe&#13;
Lincoln, if he were running in 1980,&#13;
would look a little shabby.&#13;
The question of the media's&#13;
effect on people's perceptions of&#13;
the candidates is a tough question&#13;
to answer, said Aspin. "I believe&#13;
the media has a large impact and&#13;
the role the media is playing now&#13;
is very, very different and is, in&#13;
some sense, rather destructive."&#13;
Polls show that more and more&#13;
people aren't voting. "When you&#13;
poll those people," said Aspin,&#13;
"and ask why they aren't voting,&#13;
it inevitably comes back to that&#13;
they just don't like what they have&#13;
as alternatives, that they don't&#13;
like the presidential candidates.&#13;
When asked 'Who do you admire?'&#13;
the most frequently mentioned&#13;
name is John F. Kennedy. 'And if&#13;
John F. Kennedy were running&#13;
again,' they say, 'that's the kind of&#13;
person I could vote for.' It's by no&#13;
coincidence that Kennedy was the&#13;
last president to run before investigative&#13;
journalism went&#13;
berserk and started to take over&#13;
the way we perceive politicians,"&#13;
he sai d.&#13;
Aspin went on to say that if John&#13;
Kennedy were running with the&#13;
same kind of media attention that&#13;
candidates get now, he would not&#13;
have been elected president and&#13;
would not even have received the&#13;
nomination.&#13;
There are three facts that never&#13;
came out during the narrowlydecided&#13;
election between Kennedy&#13;
and Richard Nixon. They are:&#13;
Kennedy had Addison's disease, a&#13;
disease that eats away at the&#13;
nervous system; Kennedy didn't&#13;
write Profiles in Courage, but he&#13;
still accepted a Pulitzer Prize for&#13;
writing it; and Kennedy was&#13;
almost cashiered out of the Navy&#13;
for having an affair with a&#13;
proposed Nazi agent and telling&#13;
her things he shouldn't have while&#13;
he was working for Naval Intelligence.&#13;
&#13;
"The role of the press has&#13;
changed," said Aspin. "Maybe&#13;
that's one of t he reasons why it's&#13;
so difficult to get presidential&#13;
candidates who we admire and&#13;
look up to. Maybe it's a good thing&#13;
that we have this lower expectation&#13;
of presidential candidates."&#13;
&#13;
"The things that brought us&#13;
investigative journalism are not&#13;
hard to understand," said Aspin.&#13;
"It was Vietnam, Watergate, and&#13;
the lies and deceptions of a series&#13;
of administrations. First, trying to&#13;
cover up the ever-wider involvement&#13;
in an immoral,&#13;
illogical and irrational war. But&#13;
secondly, the attempt to cover up&#13;
criminal wrongdoings and a lot of&#13;
stuff that was heavily impinging&#13;
in civil liberties and civil rights of&#13;
a lot of American people."&#13;
"So you understand why the&#13;
change occurred," Aspin concluded&#13;
about the media's&#13;
coverage of politics. "The&#13;
government had blown the trust of&#13;
the American people."&#13;
Tax Cuts&#13;
Aspin then answered questions&#13;
from the small group of a bout 36&#13;
people. "I think that's goofy,"&#13;
Aspin said about the Kemp-Roth&#13;
tax bill, a bill calling for a 30%&#13;
Continued On Page Six&#13;
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
REPRESENTATIVE LES ASPIN addresses a Parkside group.&#13;
Boker: "No liberty under Chilean military regime"&#13;
by Leslie J. Thompson&#13;
As Americans, we have been&#13;
brought up in a society where&#13;
freedom of the press has been&#13;
included in our rights as citizens.&#13;
Carlos Boker, assistant professor&#13;
in Communications at Parkside&#13;
says that the same has not been&#13;
true for Chileans since the take -&#13;
over in 1973 by the current&#13;
military regime, headed by&#13;
Chile's president General August&#13;
Pinochet Ugarte.&#13;
"The mass media have been&#13;
completely controlled by the&#13;
regime", said Boker. "There are,&#13;
however, two dissident voices in&#13;
the written media that are, within&#13;
their own limits, very critical of&#13;
the government," he said.&#13;
"Although the regime has closed&#13;
them a few times, they have not&#13;
dared to close them completely, so&#13;
it is possible to find out some of the&#13;
things that are happening there."&#13;
There is one radio station&#13;
controlled mainly by the Catholic&#13;
church that contains many people&#13;
who are in opposition to the&#13;
regime, Boker said. They are&#13;
relatively vocal in their critque,&#13;
relatively only because they must&#13;
be very careful in what they say,&#13;
he says. "One word too many and&#13;
they'd be closed forever."&#13;
Only half as many papers are&#13;
sold now a s were sold before the&#13;
regime took over, according to&#13;
Boker. "This is in part because&#13;
the people are, at the moment, too&#13;
poor to buy the paper and in part&#13;
because they know that the papers&#13;
are not saying anything."&#13;
Commenting on the recent&#13;
referendum in Chile that will keep&#13;
General Pinochet's regime in&#13;
power until 1998, Boker remarked,&#13;
"How can you have a referendum&#13;
as they had in Chile two days ago&#13;
when there is absolutely no&#13;
liberty? When there is no liberty&#13;
to dissent, there is no liberty to put&#13;
to the contrary point.&#13;
"There are no inscribed&#13;
voters," said Boker. "You just go&#13;
and vote. The same person who is&#13;
for the regime can go and vote ten&#13;
times. The ballots are transparent,&#13;
so you can just put them&#13;
to the light to know whether they&#13;
voted 'yes' or 'no'. The regime is&#13;
absolutely regressive. If you say&#13;
that you are against them, they&#13;
will put you in prison or cause you&#13;
a lot of trouble.&#13;
"The government says, 'We&#13;
have won the referendum four to&#13;
one' even before the first ballots&#13;
are opened. The whole thing is a&#13;
tragic farce. How c an you, in an&#13;
absolutely controlled society,&#13;
have a referendum?&#13;
"The regime, by staying in&#13;
power for another 17 years, is&#13;
reshaping the country into a&#13;
fascist model of non - participation,"&#13;
Boker said. "The&#13;
regime's influence on the children&#13;
who were, say twelve in 1973, h as&#13;
led them to believe that this is a&#13;
natural state of affairs. These are&#13;
the people entering the universities&#13;
today and they think that&#13;
things should be as they are&#13;
because they know of no other&#13;
way."&#13;
"The Chile that I was brought&#13;
up in, the Chile that I believed in,&#13;
the Chile that I love when I say&#13;
that Chile is a remarkable&#13;
country, doesn't exist anymore,"&#13;
said Boker. "Ours was a Chile&#13;
with a very free press, a very good&#13;
educational system including&#13;
extremely fine universities, with a&#13;
very high intellectual level&#13;
amongst it's intellectuals, a&#13;
parliament where things were&#13;
debated, a very well organized&#13;
labor union, and mainly a country&#13;
with hope.&#13;
"Now the parliament is closed,&#13;
the press, radio and television are&#13;
not free. All of the intellectuals,&#13;
with scarcely any exception, have&#13;
left the country, as have all the&#13;
artists, too. Nothing is produced in&#13;
Chile.&#13;
"And so, that which I was&#13;
brought up to think of as Chile is&#13;
no more. Lots of the things that&#13;
were the essence of my country&#13;
aren't there anymore, and it will&#13;
take a long time to recreate them.&#13;
More were killed than President&#13;
Allende and his government. A&#13;
whole set of values, a whole view&#13;
of life was killed," says Boker.&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Big Brothers needs you&#13;
• Review: "My Bodyguard"&#13;
• Volleyball splits pair &#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
I would like to address the issue&#13;
of pa rking fees at U. W. Parkside.&#13;
Parkside's students, faculty,&#13;
staff, and visitors are necessarily&#13;
commuters. The overwhelming&#13;
majority of the students rely on&#13;
private transportation. How can&#13;
the university justify charging the&#13;
fees it does for parking considering&#13;
this? The university is&#13;
taking unfair advantage of its&#13;
students. Parking on campus is&#13;
not a privilege, but rather a&#13;
necessity. Alternative parking&#13;
facilities do not exist. I'd venture&#13;
to guess that the administration&#13;
and enforcement of parking&#13;
regulations (including the&#13;
collection of fees) use a great deal&#13;
of the money that the fees&#13;
generate.&#13;
I'd like to strongly suggest that&#13;
the fees be eliminated entirely. I&#13;
am relatively certain, however,&#13;
that since the university has put in&#13;
its thumb and pulled out a plum&#13;
that the fees are here to stay!&#13;
Terri Appleget&#13;
Tell us what YOU think!&#13;
Do you have something you want&#13;
everyone to know? Or something&#13;
everybody should know? If you do,&#13;
the RANGER WOULD LIKE TO&#13;
HEAR FROM YOU!&#13;
The RANGER feels that it is&#13;
important for students to voice&#13;
their opinions, and what better way&#13;
is there than to write a letter to the&#13;
editor? Whether it's about a group&#13;
that you think deserves praise,&#13;
something you feel is unfair, something&#13;
you read in RANGER that&#13;
you stronly agree or disagree with,&#13;
or anything from the presidential&#13;
election to the food service — let us&#13;
know about it! Let your voice be&#13;
heard by your fellow students.&#13;
All you have to do is follow these&#13;
simple guidelines:&#13;
— keep your letters under 500&#13;
words&#13;
— type them, double-spaced with&#13;
one-inch margins on standard&#13;
size typing paper&#13;
— sign the letter and include your&#13;
phone number for verification&#13;
purposes&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid&#13;
reasons, but any letter received&#13;
without a signature and phone&#13;
number will be thrown away.&#13;
The RANGER will publish as&#13;
many letters as space allows, but&#13;
has the right to refuse publication&#13;
of letters with defamatory content.&#13;
Letters will not be editied, so&#13;
misspelled words and grammatical&#13;
errors will remain intact. If you&#13;
need help or have any questions&#13;
about letters, contact Ken Meyer&#13;
editor, in RANGER office.&#13;
The deadline for letters to the&#13;
editor is Tuesday, 9 a.m. for&#13;
publication Thursday.&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
«&#13;
Ff . . Executive Business Manager&#13;
Dan Galbraith Business Manager&#13;
Sue Michetti News Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Dave Cramer ;; Spor1s Editor&#13;
Mike Holmdohl Editor&#13;
Mike Farreil, Bruce-Preston . Advertising Managers&#13;
pQ. - STAFF&#13;
dTi .. ic!&#13;
am^T' Sharon Charlton, Thomas Delany, Patty&#13;
Hefoocnn „&#13;
Edenhauser, Ken Eschmann, Ginger&#13;
McCormi^i?&#13;
e&#13;
f&#13;
n Hervat&#13;
' Caro! Klees, Gary Ledger, Dan&#13;
Schnpirform i-,&#13;
Meyer&#13;
' Br&#13;
'an Passino, Joe RipP/ Art&#13;
Vollrner Stougaard, Leslie Thompson, Dave&#13;
bv&#13;
J&#13;
tuden,s of UW-Parkside and they are solely,&#13;
RANG^fs^Tn^&#13;
-&#13;
ffK:S!4,&#13;
be Parkside Ranger, WLLC ParkViH«T snould b&lt;&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wl 53141&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be&#13;
paper with one-inch margin^&#13;
tor verification,&#13;
DeadIInDor^etters '"tm^ d*''&#13;
d&#13;
, !l&#13;
easons Maximum length accepted is&#13;
reserves all editorial nnwn at a m' for Publication on Thursday. Thi&#13;
defamatory content prlvile&#13;
0&#13;
#s In refusing to print letters which cqnta&#13;
° -~GEdi,or&#13;
wi&#13;
" be accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on stc&#13;
'• All letters must be signed and a telephone numb&#13;
Presidential candidates differ&#13;
I feel that the presidential&#13;
election is the most important&#13;
issue around for the simple reason&#13;
that all the other issues are (or&#13;
can be) affected by our president.&#13;
Many people are regularly&#13;
turned off by politics, but an&#13;
enormously higher number are&#13;
this year, according to the polls.&#13;
But a choice does have to be made&#13;
— a very important choice, too,&#13;
considering the messed up world&#13;
of the 1980s.&#13;
Most of th e disenchanted voters&#13;
are unhappy with the three major&#13;
candidates — a second - rate&#13;
president, a right - wing ex - B -&#13;
movie actor and a self - righteous&#13;
10 - term Congressman. Many&#13;
votes will be cast half - heartedly,&#13;
only because the alternatives are&#13;
even more frightening.&#13;
A recent Time magazine poll&#13;
shows that 34% of Carter's support&#13;
is anti - Reagan, 43% of&#13;
Reagan's backing is anti - Carter,&#13;
and 61% of Anderson's support is&#13;
anti - Carter - Reagan. The same&#13;
poll shows that Carter and Reagan&#13;
are deadlocked with 39% and&#13;
Anderson at the "debatable" 15%.&#13;
So, as it stands now, the election&#13;
is a toss up. But considering the&#13;
previous polls showing Reagan&#13;
way ahead of Carter, it appears&#13;
that Reagan's foot - in - the -&#13;
mouth campaign is bringing him&#13;
down.&#13;
One of the theories I disagree&#13;
with is that voters don't see any&#13;
difference between the candidates.&#13;
Many similarities can be&#13;
found between President Carter&#13;
and John Anderson, with the&#13;
major difference being that&#13;
Carter has shown himself to be a&#13;
second rate president while Anderson's&#13;
presidential abilities&#13;
have not been tapped. But&#13;
anybody who doesn't see any&#13;
difference between Carter and&#13;
Reagan has to be crazy.&#13;
Carter is not the liberal that his&#13;
supporters are trying to pass him&#13;
off as, and neither is Anderson.&#13;
But their places on the political&#13;
spectrum are a few light years&#13;
away from Reagan's place on the&#13;
right. He isn't on the extremist&#13;
right, but too far right just the&#13;
same.&#13;
Just look at the Republican&#13;
party platform that was custom -&#13;
made to fit Reagan's old -&#13;
fashioned views. The platform&#13;
states that they "Support a constitutional&#13;
amendment to restore&#13;
protection of the right to life for&#13;
unborn children." (That's a nice&#13;
way of saying that they favor&#13;
banning all abortions except in&#13;
order to save the mother's life.)&#13;
Instead, why don't they consider&#13;
the life of the unwanted child.&#13;
The Democratic platform states&#13;
that they "Oppose any governmental&#13;
restrictions on abortion or&#13;
the federal funding of abortions&#13;
for the poor." That seems to be a&#13;
statement for the 1980s, unlike&#13;
their political counterparts who&#13;
want to return to the impossible&#13;
dream world of yesteryear.&#13;
Another item in the Republican&#13;
platform: "To achieve overall&#13;
military and technological&#13;
superiority over the Soviet&#13;
Union." Trying to achieve&#13;
"overall superiority" will only&#13;
create an unneeded arms race. A&#13;
better goal would maintain&#13;
equality, which the Democratic&#13;
platform calls keeping America's&#13;
military strength "unsurpassed."&#13;
As you can see, there are differences&#13;
between the candidates&#13;
position. Now the voters just have&#13;
to decide America's future.&#13;
We can progress into this&#13;
decade of the 1980s like we should,&#13;
or we can savor the "good old&#13;
days" and move backwards,&#13;
making it necessary to start all&#13;
over again.&#13;
Case of the vacant&#13;
P.S.G.A. veep&#13;
I wonder what is going on over&#13;
at P.S.G.A. about the vicepresidency&#13;
now that Claire&#13;
Tolstyga left the position vacant.&#13;
Nobody's absolutely sure about&#13;
what the requirements are to fill&#13;
the position unless the vote of t he&#13;
Senate is unanimous, as it was last&#13;
spring when Dave Hale became&#13;
vice-president. But these circumstances&#13;
are different because&#13;
the Senate is not unanimous in its&#13;
vote.&#13;
The procedure to install officers&#13;
of the executive branch is for the&#13;
President to nominate somebody&#13;
for a 2/3 Senate approval. The&#13;
vote has been taken, but the 2/3&#13;
goal of the entire Senate (there&#13;
are about 12 Senators) has not&#13;
been achieved.&#13;
The reason the nomination&#13;
hasn't been approved by the&#13;
Senate is because the Senators are&#13;
divided over who should become&#13;
Vice-President. The President is&#13;
tentatively endorsing one certain&#13;
Senator who was elected only in&#13;
March while some Senators want&#13;
a different Senator — one of whom&#13;
ran for the office, wants • the&#13;
position and is the most qualified&#13;
for the vice presidency.&#13;
Letter to the Editor&#13;
Parking fees should be eliminated&#13;
Thursday, September 18,1980 Ranger&#13;
A personal opinion column&#13;
by Ken Meyer, Editor&#13;
Viewpoint&#13;
Photos by Brian Passino&#13;
Have you noticed any difference in the food service this year?&#13;
Colleen Wishall, sophomore&#13;
"No, it seems to be the same."&#13;
Dan Passino, senior&#13;
"I haven't had the courage to&#13;
oat horn vot "&#13;
Sondra McCants, sophomore&#13;
"No, I don't think so. Just the&#13;
pices."&#13;
James Allen, senior&#13;
"What I ate seemed worse than&#13;
last year." &#13;
Ranger Thursday, September 18,1980 3&#13;
Career resources available&#13;
On Monday, Sept. 22, over 70&#13;
Parkside alumni will return to&#13;
campus to share career info with&#13;
students during the first Alumni&#13;
Career Resource Night. These&#13;
alumni will serve on various&#13;
career panels that will provide&#13;
info on what students can expect&#13;
in specific occupations. The UWParkside&#13;
Alumni Ass'n. and the&#13;
Office of Alumni and Placement&#13;
Services are co-sponsoring this&#13;
event.&#13;
"There is a tremendous need for&#13;
up-to-date career information for&#13;
today's students," said Rex&#13;
Brown, Chairman of the Alumni&#13;
Ass'n. Career Planning and&#13;
Placement Committee and VicePresident&#13;
of Human Relations at&#13;
St. Luke's Hospital in Racine. "It&#13;
is impossible for counselors to&#13;
keep abreast of the thousands of&#13;
ever changing careers available&#13;
today. For example, in the health&#13;
care area alone there are over 200&#13;
different professions. We find that&#13;
the best way to help these students&#13;
with their career questions is to&#13;
put them in touch with people&#13;
working in the specific careers in&#13;
question. Through the Alumni&#13;
Career Resource Night we hope to&#13;
begin developing a career&#13;
resource network between our&#13;
alumni and current Parkside&#13;
students."&#13;
The career panels will help&#13;
students make plans to enter the&#13;
work force or continue their&#13;
education at the -graduate level.&#13;
Alumni can address the concerns&#13;
these students have through&#13;
recent experiences of their own.&#13;
The panel concept is being utilized&#13;
to offer students a broad view of&#13;
the various career avenues one&#13;
can follow with a particular&#13;
major. This event is not meant to&#13;
provide help in finding jobs for&#13;
these students but rather to help&#13;
inform them of the variety of&#13;
opportunities that exist in a&#13;
particular career area. A&#13;
reception, featuring free refreshments&#13;
and informal discussion&#13;
will follow the panel presentations.&#13;
&#13;
This event is open to all&#13;
Parkside students but space is&#13;
limited in each of the sessions.&#13;
Register in advance through the&#13;
Placement Office (WLLC D175).&#13;
Walk-in registration is possible&#13;
starting at 6:15 p.m. the evening&#13;
of the event.&#13;
The program begins with the&#13;
6:15 p.m. pre-registered student&#13;
check-in and late registration&#13;
(concourse bridge between Union&#13;
and Molinaro Hall).&#13;
Session 1, panels involving&#13;
Behavioral Science, Social&#13;
Science, Communication&#13;
(Humanities), Fine Arts and&#13;
Environmental and Energy&#13;
Careers of Earth Science, and&#13;
Physics Alumni will run from&#13;
6:45-7:10 p.m.&#13;
The following panels run from&#13;
6:45-7:40 p.m.: Personnel/Labor&#13;
Relations, Accounting, Information&#13;
Systems, Marketing,&#13;
Production/Operations Management,&#13;
and Finance.&#13;
Session 2, panels involving Law,&#13;
Engineering, Chemistry, Life&#13;
Science, Education; Graduate&#13;
School Options and Job Placement&#13;
Tips will run from 7:15-7:40 p.m.&#13;
Session 3, panels involving&#13;
Health Professions will run from&#13;
7:45-8:10 p.m.&#13;
The reception, limited to those&#13;
attending panel discussions, will&#13;
beheld from 8:10-10:00 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Dining Room. Further&#13;
information can be obtained from&#13;
the Alumni Office, 553-2515.&#13;
The National Research Council&#13;
announces its 1981 Research&#13;
Associateship Programs for&#13;
postdoctoral work in the sciences&#13;
to be conducted in 16 federal&#13;
research institutions with&#13;
laboratories located throughout&#13;
the United States. The programs&#13;
provide postdoctoral scientists&#13;
and engineers of unusual promise&#13;
and ability with opportunities for&#13;
research on problems largely of&#13;
their own choosing yet compatible&#13;
with the research interests of the&#13;
supporting laboratory.&#13;
Initiated in 1954, the&#13;
Associateship Programs have&#13;
enhanced the career development&#13;
of over 3500 scientists ranging&#13;
from recent Ph.D.'s to&#13;
distinguished senior scientists.&#13;
Four hundred or more full-time&#13;
Associateships will be awarded on&#13;
a competitive basis in 1981 for&#13;
research in chemistry,&#13;
engineering, and mathematics,&#13;
and in the earth, environmental,&#13;
physical, space, and life sciences.&#13;
Most of the programs are open to&#13;
both U.S. and non-U.S. nationals,&#13;
and to both recent Ph.D.'s and&#13;
senior investigators.&#13;
Awards are made for a year&#13;
with possible extension through a&#13;
second year; senior applicants&#13;
may request shorter tenures.&#13;
Stipends range from $20,500 a year&#13;
(approximating GS 11, Step 1&#13;
salaries) for recent Ph.D.'s to&#13;
approximately $40,000 a year for&#13;
Senior Associates. Allowances are&#13;
made for relocation and for&#13;
limited professional travel during&#13;
tenure. The federal laboratory&#13;
provides the Associate&#13;
programmatic support including&#13;
facilities, support services, and&#13;
necessary equipment.&#13;
Application to the Research&#13;
Council must be postmarked no&#13;
later than January 15, 1981.&#13;
Awards will be announced in&#13;
April.&#13;
Information on specific&#13;
research opportunities and&#13;
federal laboratories, as well as&#13;
application materials, may be&#13;
obtained from the Associateship&#13;
Office, JH 610-Dl, 2101 Constitution&#13;
Avenue, N.W.,&#13;
Washington, D.C. 20418, (202) 389-&#13;
6554.&#13;
Patronize&#13;
our Advertisers&#13;
ACADEMY OF BATON A DANCE&#13;
5: Headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits,&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — Tap Shoes —&#13;
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Doston tenure appeal denied&#13;
The faculty Hearing and Appeals&#13;
committee at Parkside has&#13;
found no evidence of procedural&#13;
violations in the tenure review&#13;
process which denied tenure to&#13;
Glenh A. Doston, a black assistant&#13;
professor of education who has&#13;
resigned from UW-P to accept a&#13;
position at Ohio University in&#13;
Athens.&#13;
In a unanimous decision, the&#13;
three-member committee which&#13;
heard Doston's appeal said that it&#13;
found ". . . no appropriate&#13;
evidence qualifying as proof that&#13;
any procedure in this case has&#13;
been other than properly and fully&#13;
observed." The committee, which&#13;
is the final campus appeal&#13;
procedure, concluded that "It sees&#13;
no ground for remanding the case&#13;
back to any of the levels in the&#13;
tenure review process." The&#13;
committee's report was directed&#13;
to Chancellor Alan E. Guskin, who&#13;
accepted the findings.&#13;
Doston, who submitted his&#13;
resignation to UW-Parkside officials&#13;
this week, has begun his&#13;
new duties as an assistant&#13;
professor in- Ohio University's&#13;
School of Education.&#13;
Duffeck named DVR rep.&#13;
The Division of Vocational&#13;
Rehabilitation, an agency of the&#13;
State of Wisconsin which provides&#13;
training and employment services&#13;
to the emotionally, mentally or&#13;
physically disabled, has assigned&#13;
David Duffeck as its new Parkside&#13;
campus representative.&#13;
Duffeck, a vocational&#13;
rehabilitation counselor, will be&#13;
on campus Tuesday afternoons,&#13;
from 2 to 4 PM, in WLLC D 198,&#13;
Ext. 2366, for the remainder of the&#13;
semester. Duffeck can also be&#13;
contacted at his Racine office,&#13;
phone 636-3462.&#13;
Clients of the Division of&#13;
Vocational Rehabilitation are&#13;
eligible to receive a variety of cost&#13;
free services, all geared toward&#13;
eventual entry into competitive&#13;
employment. Payment of post -&#13;
high school training costs (tuition,&#13;
books, fees), job placement&#13;
services, medical and psychiatric&#13;
treatment, physical restoration,&#13;
and vocational counseling and&#13;
guidance are a few of the services.&#13;
Roundtables&#13;
talk issues&#13;
by Sue Michetti&#13;
Social Science Roundtable, co -&#13;
chaired by Oliver Hayward&#13;
(history) and Ken Hoover&#13;
(political science), will be&#13;
meeting, contrary to earlier&#13;
reports, at noon on Mondays in&#13;
Union 106. It is free and open to all&#13;
interested. The Roundtable&#13;
presents an opportunity for&#13;
students to be brought together&#13;
with faculty in shared discussion&#13;
outside of the classroom. The&#13;
Roundtable brings the resources&#13;
of the university to bear on&#13;
current issues. This can provide&#13;
people with more perspectives&#13;
than they can get from radio and&#13;
TV. This can also expose people to&#13;
current research and new&#13;
developments in the social sciences.&#13;
&#13;
Other programs in the series&#13;
are "Criminal Insanity: Moral&#13;
Soundness, Conceptual Confusion,"&#13;
by Prof. Aaron Snyder,&#13;
philosophy, Sept. 22; "Incentive&#13;
Systems for Public Sector&#13;
Organizations" by Prof. Anne&#13;
Gurnack, behavioral science,&#13;
Sept. 29; "The Role of Perceptual&#13;
and Semantic Elaboration in the&#13;
Recall of High and Low Imagery&#13;
Sentences" by Prof. Donald&#13;
Walter, psychology, Oct. 6; "The&#13;
Founding Father: George&#13;
Molinaro of Kenosha" by Prof.&#13;
John Buenker, history, Oct. 20;&#13;
and "The 1980 Elections," a&#13;
discussion chaired by Prof.&#13;
Kenneth Hoover, political science,&#13;
on Oct. 27.&#13;
Roundtable programs are free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
Be Another Parkside Success Story !&#13;
Research programs available&#13;
GET FIRST HAND INFORMATION&#13;
FROM M ORE T HAN 70 SUCCESFUL&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE ALUMNI WHO WILL&#13;
BE TELLING THEIR CAREER&#13;
STORIES AT:&#13;
Alumni Career&#13;
Resource Night&#13;
Monday, September 22 6:15 — 9 :00 PM&#13;
Panel Discussions followed by&#13;
Complimentary Refreshments&#13;
TO REGISTER:&#13;
SEE TH E P OSTERS ON C AMPUS OR S TOP IN THE P LACEMENT OFFICE&#13;
(WLLC D175). CALL 553-2515 FOR M ORE INFORMATION.&#13;
ADVANCED R EGISTRATION D EADLINE IS FRIDAY SEPT. 19, WALK-IN&#13;
REGISTRATION WIL L BE HELD ON T HE CONCOURSE B RIDGE FROM&#13;
6-6:30 PM o n SEPT. 22. &#13;
Racine Big Brothers need volunteers&#13;
Big Brothers of Greater Racine,&#13;
Inc. serves all of Racine County&#13;
with two basic programs. The first&#13;
program is the Big Brother&#13;
Program itself.&#13;
Big Brothers is an organization&#13;
of volunteer men that works with&#13;
boys six (6) to fifteen (15) years of&#13;
age who have no father in their&#13;
homes. Each volunteer man is&#13;
expected to see his assigned Little&#13;
Brother at least once per week.&#13;
Usually he engages in some sort of&#13;
activity with the boy during this&#13;
contact. The purpose of a Big&#13;
Brother is to provide adult male&#13;
companionship and guidance to a&#13;
fatherless boy. He need have no&#13;
special background or training to&#13;
be a successful Big Brother. He&#13;
should be interested in children, is&#13;
generally over 18 years of age,&#13;
single or married.&#13;
The Big Brother Staff interviews&#13;
mothers and boys&#13;
referred to our Agency for service.&#13;
They match men and boys on&#13;
the basis of personality and interests&#13;
so that they have a common&#13;
basis on which to build their&#13;
friendship.&#13;
1&#13;
The primary emphasis in the&#13;
Big Brother Program is "one man&#13;
— one boy." However, there are&#13;
some group activities available&#13;
for all Big Brothers and Little&#13;
Brothers to attend.&#13;
Our second program is Project&#13;
Acceptance which uses male and&#13;
female volunteers to give&#13;
guidance, counseling and companionship&#13;
to boys and girls&#13;
between the ages of 11 and 18 who&#13;
are having trouble with the&#13;
system in some way. "This is&#13;
basically a volunteer in probation&#13;
program which has been expanded&#13;
to accept referrals from&#13;
not only the juvenile Court House,&#13;
RUSH and other such agencies.&#13;
People wanting to be volunteers&#13;
in our programs must go through&#13;
similar interviews as a Little&#13;
Brothers referral would. Our&#13;
social worker interviews the&#13;
prospective volunteer in the office&#13;
and in their home. The volunteer&#13;
must attend an orientation session&#13;
and pass through a screening by&#13;
our Board of Directors. We get&#13;
three written references and run a&#13;
police check on every applicant.&#13;
Big Brothers of Greater Racine,&#13;
Inc. is an accredited social service&#13;
agency, open over 40 hrs. a week&#13;
for your convenience; we have a&#13;
24 hr. answering service. We are a&#13;
member agency of Big Brothers of&#13;
America and funded by Racine&#13;
County and the Racine United&#13;
Way. What we need are more&#13;
people who want to get involved.&#13;
There are a number of boys and&#13;
girls who need help. Again, the&#13;
volunteers that are needed do not&#13;
have to have any special&#13;
background.&#13;
However, we want people who&#13;
are serious and would like to&#13;
spend 5 or 6 hrs. a week with a&#13;
child who needs someone. This&#13;
would be ideal for tbose students&#13;
who are in the Social and&#13;
Educational sciences where involvements&#13;
of this kind prove to&#13;
be positive and enriching learning&#13;
experiences. But of course the&#13;
programs are open to all individuals&#13;
who are sincere and&#13;
want to get involved.&#13;
For more information give us a&#13;
call day or night at 637-7625. In&#13;
Kenosha call 652-0151.&#13;
UNGJLiEl&#13;
MUNCHIES&#13;
2423 52ND ST.&#13;
&lt;3^&#13;
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26 different sandwiches&#13;
including:&#13;
Reuben&#13;
Hot Beef Stuffer&#13;
Bar-B-Q Stuffer&#13;
Polish Sausage Stuffer&#13;
Italian Sausage Stuffer&#13;
Italian Meatball Stuffer&#13;
8 different subs&#13;
Free delivery on&#13;
purchases over$10&#13;
INTRODUCING . . .&#13;
SUMMER SALAD SELECTION&#13;
BY THE OZ.&#13;
(Minof 9 Items Daily)&#13;
COTTAGE CHEESE&#13;
MACARONI SALAD&#13;
THREE BEAN SALAD&#13;
KIDNEY BEAN SALAD&#13;
GREEN PEASALAD&#13;
DEVILED EGGS&#13;
WALDORF SALAD c&#13;
POTATO SALAD&#13;
CUCUMBER SALAD&#13;
CARROT SALAD&#13;
PICKLEDBEETS&#13;
ASSORTED RELISHES&#13;
SAURKRAUTSALAD&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
Contact&#13;
SOC represents interest clubs&#13;
by Chris Hammelev&#13;
The Student Organizations&#13;
Council (SOC) represents all the&#13;
student interest clubs here at&#13;
Parkside. In the past, SOC has&#13;
been responsible for handling&#13;
Winter Carnival and will continue&#13;
to sponsor other student activities&#13;
in the future. However, student&#13;
activities are not the only&#13;
responsibilities of the&#13;
organization. The main functions&#13;
of SOC are to set up club&#13;
guidelines and budgets. SOC has&#13;
already allocated $19,500.00 to&#13;
sbme 33 different organizations.&#13;
These organizations include&#13;
everything from academic to&#13;
recreational interests. The clubs&#13;
that have been budgeted for are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
Anthropology Club, Art Addicts,&#13;
Adult Student Assoc., Bowling&#13;
Club, Boxing Club, Chess Club,&#13;
Earth Science Club, Hodag, I&#13;
Phelta Thi, Life Science Club,&#13;
Marketing Club, Math Club,&#13;
Minority Student Union, Accounting&#13;
Club, Parkside Concourse,&#13;
Parkside Area&#13;
Wargamers, Data Processing&#13;
Club, History Club, Philosophical&#13;
Society, Parkside Players, PreMed&#13;
Club, Nordic Ski Club,&#13;
Physics Club, Volleyball Club,&#13;
Political Science Club,&#13;
Psychology Club, Sociology Club,&#13;
Students for Nuclear Rationality,&#13;
Student Mobilization for Survival,&#13;
SWEA, Women in Business,&#13;
Cheerleaders, Union Lifers.&#13;
New clubs are always welcome&#13;
so if none of the existing clubs&#13;
appeal to you it's easy to start a&#13;
new one. About all that is required&#13;
to start a club are a few filled out&#13;
forms, three student members, a&#13;
statement of purpose, and an&#13;
advisor. SOC has a special fund of&#13;
$1,600.00 that is set up specifically&#13;
for new clubs so it's still possible&#13;
to get student funding for a new&#13;
organization.&#13;
If ygu are interested in an&#13;
existing club, forming your own,&#13;
or in SOC activities, contact Jan&#13;
Oechler in the SOC office or call&#13;
553-2594.&#13;
'80 grad salaries&#13;
are up over *79&#13;
Average salary offers to 1980&#13;
college graduates are higher than&#13;
those made to 1979 graduates,&#13;
according to the annual Salary&#13;
Survey by the College Placement&#13;
Council. Despite the economic&#13;
downturn, the CPC found increases&#13;
in starting salary levels in&#13;
all 24 curricula surveyed. Leading&#13;
the field were engineering&#13;
graduates, as petroleum&#13;
engineers attracted average&#13;
starting offers of $23,844 annually&#13;
while chemical engineers were&#13;
offered an average $21,612.&#13;
Computer science graduates&#13;
found average salary offers up&#13;
11% to $18,696.&#13;
Deport working Iranian students&#13;
Eight Iranian students caPan be hpVirninio in/lnn — n .&#13;
deported for taking full or part -&#13;
time jobs without permission from&#13;
the Immigaration and&#13;
Naturalization Service (INS), a&#13;
Virginia judge recently ruled.&#13;
The students were attending&#13;
Norfolk State U., Old Dominion U&#13;
and Tidewater Community&#13;
College and were apparently&#13;
THE POWER PLANT&#13;
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caught in a money crunch when&#13;
they could no longer get funds&#13;
from home. Now they must leave&#13;
the country voluntarily or be&#13;
deported. Some 2,100 students&#13;
have undergone hearings since&#13;
the INS began its crackdown on&#13;
Iranian students last year. As a&#13;
result of that action, 3,183 Iranian&#13;
students have been granted&#13;
voluntary departure, 159 have&#13;
been ordered deported and 417&#13;
students have actually left, say&#13;
INS officials.&#13;
TY\v)*&#13;
s&#13;
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HAS LOWEST STEREO&#13;
PRICE!&#13;
Pioneer SX780 Receiver $189&#13;
Pioneer PL300 Turntable $99&#13;
AKAI GXM10 Cassette$199&#13;
Our Free Catalog has many more deals&#13;
on major brands, even lower prices on&#13;
our monthly specials sheet. Send now and&#13;
find out how to buy current $7.98 list IP's&#13;
for $3.69. Stereo Clearance House Dept&#13;
PA72 1029 Jacoby St. Johnstown, PA.&#13;
15902. Phone Quotes 814-536-1611. &#13;
Ranger Thursday, September 18,1980 5&#13;
Review&#13;
My Bodyguard' portrays friendship&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
"My Bodyguard" will succeed&#13;
because of two things: realism&#13;
and a true friendship. The first&#13;
mentioned is rare among films&#13;
dealing basically with non-adults&#13;
and the latter os something&#13;
needed in this time of trouble.&#13;
It is the story of Clifford Peache&#13;
(Chris Makepeace) a boy who&#13;
refuses to "give in" to the school&#13;
bully, and also of Ricky Linderman&#13;
(Adam Baldwin) a boy&#13;
battling inner-strife.&#13;
Ruth Gordon plays Cliff's&#13;
grandmother, a woman who tries&#13;
to "pick-up" men who range from&#13;
a TV Evangelist to a married man&#13;
to a hotel owner. She's a lush, a&#13;
swinger, and an absolute delight.&#13;
Makepeace is good, but not&#13;
great. He plays his character well,&#13;
but does not overwhelm, as does&#13;
Baldwin. He is brilliant as Ricky&#13;
Linderman, a withdrawn high&#13;
school sophomore, whose&#13;
emotions are scarred by the&#13;
memory of seeing his brother&#13;
accidentally shoot himself. The&#13;
entire school body is afraid of&#13;
Ricky, and most of that fear is&#13;
attributable to his height (he&#13;
towers over his peers). It is also&#13;
hinted that he once tried to&#13;
commit suicide. Baldwin really&#13;
makes us believe that he is this&#13;
disturbed young person.&#13;
Matt ("Little Darlings") Dillon&#13;
is very good as Melvin Moody, a&#13;
student who extorts lunch money&#13;
from other students to supposedly&#13;
protect them from Ricky. He adds&#13;
to the movie's reality by playing&#13;
the type of bully we've all come in&#13;
contact with and hated.&#13;
'Cyrano de Bergerac' opens&#13;
The Milwaukee Repertory&#13;
Theater will open its 1980-81&#13;
season Sept. 12, with a spirited,&#13;
full-scale production of Edmond&#13;
Rostand's romantic masterpiece,&#13;
CYRANO DE BERGERAC. This&#13;
special presentation will be&#13;
performed in Milwaukee's&#13;
historic Pabst Theater through&#13;
Oct 5.&#13;
With its colorful 17th century&#13;
setting, CYRANO DE&#13;
BERGERAC is the story of on e of&#13;
the theater's most splendid&#13;
heroes. Cyrano is the brilliant&#13;
swordsman, poet, musician and&#13;
philosopher whose many talents&#13;
and triumphs are exceeded only&#13;
by the length and shape of his&#13;
enormous nose. It is this unfortunate&#13;
deformity that&#13;
threatens to keep him from&#13;
winning his greatest prize — the&#13;
love of his beautiful cousin,&#13;
Roxanne. Since is premiere,&#13;
CYRANO DE BERGERAC has&#13;
continued to delight audiences the&#13;
world ove r with its rousing blend&#13;
of romance, comedy and adventure.&#13;
&#13;
In mounting this extensive&#13;
production, the MRT has&#13;
assembled one of the largest&#13;
companies in its 27 season history,&#13;
including a 28-member cast.&#13;
Richard Cottrell, a distinguished&#13;
guest director from England, is&#13;
staging CYRANO, and veteran&#13;
actor William Leach is cast in the&#13;
demanding title role.&#13;
Cottrell, who recently completed&#13;
a five-year stint as&#13;
Director of the Bristol Old Vic&#13;
Theater in England, is making his&#13;
American debut with the MRT.&#13;
His theatrical career as an actor,&#13;
director of over 30 major&#13;
productions and translator of&#13;
three of Anton Chekhov's plays&#13;
spans two decades.&#13;
William Leach, who begins his&#13;
second season with the MRT, is no&#13;
stranger to the role of C yrano de&#13;
Bergerac. His most notable&#13;
performance with the Asolo State&#13;
Theater earned him the South&#13;
Florida Critics Award for Best&#13;
Actor of the Year. Last season he&#13;
performed in five MRT productions.&#13;
&#13;
CYRANO DE BERGERAC will&#13;
be performed Tuesdays through&#13;
Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at&#13;
5:00 and 9:15 p.m., and Sundays at&#13;
7:30 p.m. Matinees are on selected&#13;
Sundays and Wednesdays. Tickets&#13;
range from $3.50 to $9.00, with a&#13;
$1.00 discount available for&#13;
students and senior citizens.&#13;
For single and group ticket&#13;
information, call the Pabst&#13;
Theater box office at (414) 271-&#13;
3773.&#13;
One of Cliff's school friends,&#13;
Carson (Paul Quandt), catches&#13;
many laughs as he spews forth&#13;
satirical jems on death and&#13;
destruction (mainly his own)&#13;
throughout the film.&#13;
It is a long awaited relief to&#13;
finally see actors and actresses&#13;
playing high school students who&#13;
look like high school students, not&#13;
college graduates.&#13;
When Cliff refuses to pay Moody&#13;
"protection money," he falls&#13;
subject to a barrage of s enseless&#13;
pranks that show the immaturity&#13;
and destructiveness of some&#13;
students (garbage and food&#13;
thrown on the street clothes and&#13;
books left in Cliff's gym locker, for&#13;
example).&#13;
In a desperate move of genius,&#13;
Cliff tries to hire Ricky as his&#13;
bodyguard. After some reluctance,&#13;
Ricky accepts, but quits&#13;
when he realizes he's being used&#13;
to humiliate Moody and his gang.&#13;
Cliff re ally wants to be a friend&#13;
to Ricky, and attempts to learn&#13;
about his mysterious past (it is&#13;
rumored that he has raped&#13;
teachers and murdered people).&#13;
Little by little, Ricky opens up and&#13;
allows Cliff to become his friend.&#13;
What follows is a close relationship&#13;
that we've all experienced at&#13;
one time or another.&#13;
This friendship succeeds&#13;
because both boys have a need for&#13;
someone. Cliff's mother died when&#13;
Imagine a school where the&#13;
students' main concern is a wellpaying&#13;
job after graduation and&#13;
where the primary disciplinary&#13;
problem is drunkenness.&#13;
That description fits many a&#13;
modern university. But, says USC&#13;
history professor Paul Knoll, it&#13;
also depicts Poland's U. of Cracow&#13;
... in the 14th century.&#13;
Through ten years of research,&#13;
Knoll has learned that campus life&#13;
in that time period is uncannily&#13;
similar to that of t he present day.&#13;
Old disciplinary records show&#13;
students were punished most often&#13;
for drunkenness, but also for&#13;
being disrespectful to teachers,&#13;
stealing and cavorting with&#13;
women. Cracow also had&#13;
problems with racial tensions on&#13;
campus. The discord reached&#13;
such proportions that different&#13;
sects, including Hungarian,&#13;
German and Czechoslovakian&#13;
students, were housed in separate&#13;
dormatories.&#13;
Knoll be lieves there is much to&#13;
be learned from the 14th century&#13;
and plans to write a book on&#13;
Cracow's history and its&#13;
relationship to modern institutions.&#13;
His work already&#13;
reaffirms the basic notion that&#13;
some things never change — the&#13;
typical student letter home, for&#13;
example, was punctuated by the&#13;
familiar phrase "Please send&#13;
money . . . ."&#13;
EARN EXTRA INCOME&#13;
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As Little As $23.00&#13;
Gets You Started In&#13;
A Business Of Your Own&#13;
Get The Whole Story&#13;
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859-2808&#13;
WOODY ALLEN&#13;
DIANE KEATON&#13;
MICHAEL MURPHY&#13;
MARIEL HEMINGWAY&#13;
MERYL STREEP&#13;
ANNE BYRNE&#13;
Showing in the UNION CINEMA&#13;
Friday/ Sept. 19 at 8 p. m.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 21 at 7:30 p. m.&#13;
he was young and his father's job&#13;
(hotel manager) is a 24 ho ur job.&#13;
Hotel personnel become substitutes&#13;
for his parents (he is&#13;
driven to school in the hotel&#13;
limousine and eats many of his&#13;
meals in a corner of the hotel&#13;
kitchen). Because of his brother's&#13;
accident, Ricky has alienated&#13;
himself from all others and has&#13;
regressed into becoming the&#13;
school freak. Through this&#13;
friendship, however, Ricky meets&#13;
more and more people and gains&#13;
more friends at school.&#13;
But good things don't last&#13;
forever, and something happens&#13;
to Ricky to put him back into his&#13;
"shell" (telling you would be&#13;
giving away part of the movie). In&#13;
a dramatic scene, Ricky describes&#13;
to Cliff how his brother really died&#13;
and why he feels so responsible.&#13;
This scene is so intense and so well&#13;
acted by Baldwin that it actually&#13;
numbs you.&#13;
The end sequences may seem to&#13;
violent for some, but it is symbolic&#13;
of both Ricky breaking out of his&#13;
shell for good and Cliff realizing&#13;
he can fight his own battles. Not&#13;
only are these scenes well&#13;
executed, but they are also very&#13;
realistic.&#13;
"My Bodyguard" will have you&#13;
cheering for the "good guys,"&#13;
booing the "bad guys" and&#13;
clapping at the end, it's something&#13;
we've needed for a long time.&#13;
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SPECIAL, FLY NAVY.&#13;
SIGN UP ATTHE PLACEMENT OFFICE&#13;
FOR AN INTERVIEW&#13;
30 SEP —1 OCT &#13;
Thursday, September 18,1980 Ranger&#13;
Aspin visits Parkside&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
across-the-board income tax cut&#13;
over the next three years.&#13;
"If you're going to cut taxes,"&#13;
said Aspin, "don't cut the income&#13;
tax, cut the Social Security tax."&#13;
Aspin favors tax cuts that would&#13;
increase productivity and bring&#13;
jobs. But he feels that an acrossthe-board&#13;
income tax cut of those&#13;
magnitudes is not going to&#13;
generate productivity, but will&#13;
instead generate inflation.&#13;
Democracy in Action&#13;
"It's a common misconception&#13;
that in order to decide something&#13;
in a democracy you need over&#13;
50%," said Aspin. "The general&#13;
kind of tho ught is that if you have&#13;
50% of the people for something,&#13;
it'll happen. No way! In our&#13;
system of go vernment we have so&#13;
many access points for people who&#13;
are opposed, that there's no way&#13;
it's going to happen if only 51%&#13;
(support it). Nothing happens in&#13;
this country unless it's somewhere&#13;
in the crder of 85-90% approval.&#13;
And even then, if the remaining 10-&#13;
15% really is determined to stop it,&#13;
it probably will be stopped. The&#13;
majority does not rule at the&#13;
current status."&#13;
Military Spending&#13;
"There's an unbelievable&#13;
amount of w aste in the military,"&#13;
said Aspin. "It's not to say that&#13;
other large bureaucracies are&#13;
immune from it, it's just that the&#13;
military seems to have a special&#13;
affinity for it."&#13;
Aspin doesn't feel that we have&#13;
to massively increase defense&#13;
spending in order to get a better&#13;
defense. He said that if we want to&#13;
improve our defense, the money is&#13;
already there. It just has to be&#13;
spent more intelligently.&#13;
Aspin doesn't think that the&#13;
military pension plan affects&#13;
people's decisions until they've&#13;
been in the service 10 or 12 years.&#13;
"The 17 or 18 year old enlisting&#13;
isn't thinking about the pension&#13;
plan, he's looking at the pay. The&#13;
less that pay is good, you're not&#13;
going to be able to attract good&#13;
people. This year we're going to&#13;
be spending $12 billion on that&#13;
pension. You can raise pay a lot&#13;
with that and also buy some tanks,&#13;
ships and planes."&#13;
The military doesn't take itself&#13;
seriously enough, according to&#13;
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Aspin. "Look at the way we fought&#13;
the war in Vietnam. People got&#13;
command positions for six months&#13;
and then they were moved out and&#13;
somebody else moved in. Well,&#13;
that's treating the war in Vietnam&#13;
like a training exercise. We didn't&#13;
have seven years of e xperienced&#13;
fighting in Vietnam, we had six&#13;
months of experience 14 times&#13;
over."&#13;
Fort McCoy&#13;
The federal government is&#13;
paying the entire cost of Fort&#13;
McCoy," said Aspin. "The controversy&#13;
arose over whether the&#13;
federal government would pay&#13;
100% cr 70% or some lesser per&#13;
cent of the resettlement costs of&#13;
the refugees being settled in&#13;
communities."&#13;
"Basically, I think what (Gov.)&#13;
Dreyfus was saying is correct,"&#13;
Aspin added. "The federal&#13;
government ought to pay 100% of&#13;
the resettlement costs. But it&#13;
doesn't really affect Wisconsin&#13;
much. The effect is going to be felt&#13;
on states like Florida and other&#13;
southern states. The number of&#13;
Cubans who will want to settle in&#13;
the northern climate, like&#13;
Wisconsin, is very, very small. RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
Socialist presidential&#13;
candidate to appear here&#13;
Dave McReynolds, Presidential&#13;
nominee of the Socialist PartyUSA,&#13;
will be campaigning in the&#13;
Racine-Kenosha area on Tuesday,&#13;
September 23. McReynolds, a&#13;
long-time pacifist has most&#13;
recently been working on the staff&#13;
of the War Resisters League in&#13;
New York City. He will appear on&#13;
the Wisconsin ballot next to&#13;
Carter, Reagan, Anderson, and&#13;
the other Presidential candidates.&#13;
McReynolds is scheduled to&#13;
speak at several classes at UWParkside,&#13;
including a class on&#13;
American Foreign Policy, which&#13;
is scheduled from 12:30-1:45 p.m.&#13;
in Room D-105 in Molinaro Hall.&#13;
He is also scheduled to speak at a&#13;
public meeting at 625 College&#13;
Avenue in Racine at 7 p.m. The&#13;
public is invited to both events.&#13;
The Socialist Party is the party&#13;
of Eugene Debs and Norman&#13;
Thomas. They stand for the&#13;
democratic control of the&#13;
economy, significant reductions in&#13;
military armaments, and full civil&#13;
rights for all. They believe&#13;
capitalism is at the core of&#13;
racism, sexism, and the economic&#13;
disasters of continuous unemployment&#13;
and inflation. Diane&#13;
Drufenbrock, a Catholic nun and&#13;
presently a mathematics instructor&#13;
at Parkside, is the&#13;
Party's Vice-Presidential&#13;
nominee. For more information&#13;
call 878-2639 or 637-6021.&#13;
Earn Up To s800 A Month&#13;
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0 THE PLACEMENT OFFICE&#13;
30 SEP - 1 OCT&#13;
OR CALL CO LLECT&#13;
414-291-3055&#13;
Menter Parkside 200&#13;
Mention this ad! %^7Ph&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Fnona 454-0774&#13;
All MAJOR CREDIT CAR DS ACCEPTED&#13;
ADVERTISING&#13;
REPRESENTATIVES&#13;
NEEDED&#13;
Will receive&#13;
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on every Display Ad you sell&#13;
Applicants must be dependable and&#13;
have some type of transportation.&#13;
No experience is necessary&#13;
but would be beneficial.&#13;
Mike Farrell or Bruce Preston&#13;
In the Ranger Office&#13;
WLLC D139 — 553-2295 &#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
Can't score&#13;
Soccer blanked twice&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
After a big opening victory over&#13;
Indiana State-Evansville two&#13;
weeks ago, the Ranger soccer&#13;
team has dropped two straight&#13;
games without scoring a single&#13;
goal. The team lost to NCAA&#13;
Division I opponent Northern&#13;
Illinois 3-0 in a game marred by&#13;
mistakes and then traveled to&#13;
Beloit and were upset 1-0.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson, though&#13;
his team lost, was still impressed&#13;
with his players in the Northern&#13;
Illinois game. "The problem was&#13;
experience (Northern Illinois)&#13;
against inexperience (Parkside).&#13;
We made a lot of inexperienced&#13;
mistakes and they hurt us." All&#13;
three Northern Illinois goals could&#13;
be attributed to Ranger mistakes.&#13;
Their first goal was scored on a&#13;
corner kick when a Ranger&#13;
halfback misplayed the ball. The&#13;
second score was on a penalty&#13;
kick and the third on a "missed&#13;
clear".&#13;
"We didn't play badly, but we&#13;
made a lot of young- mistakes. I&#13;
wasn't disappointed in the play,&#13;
but by the fact that we lost 3-0."&#13;
The Rangers, who were outshot&#13;
24-14, "aren't creating what we&#13;
could offensively. We just don't&#13;
finish an offensive play that we&#13;
begin."&#13;
That summed it up against&#13;
Beloit because although the&#13;
Rangers outshot Beloit 24-5, they&#13;
lost 1-0. A dejected Henderson&#13;
couldn't find an explanation why&#13;
his team was beaten. "We did&#13;
everything to put the ball in the&#13;
net. We completely dominated the&#13;
game and spent 80% of the game&#13;
in their half of the field. They&#13;
played kick and run, and in this&#13;
case it worked because we made&#13;
one mistake."&#13;
That one mistake v/as a break&#13;
away goal in which Ranger goalie&#13;
Dan Opferman made a spectacular&#13;
save only to have a&#13;
rebound shot go in.&#13;
As for the lack of scoring,&#13;
Henderson said, "It should have&#13;
gone in, it just didn't. If, and I&#13;
mean if we have a problem, it&#13;
would be scoring goals. But then&#13;
everyone has that problem. We've&#13;
got a ways to go but we're going to&#13;
bust open pretty soon."&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
JAY, I lov e you! Have a good semester! Mary&#13;
Jo&#13;
CIN, want to go with Buzz-Band burn one!&#13;
MARY ROLE, get well soon. P.V. 205&#13;
Q- W hy did the Pre - med chicken cross the&#13;
road? I do n't know, Why? A. Because it was&#13;
required. "The Student Militants"&#13;
FREEdance lessons in Union Square; ask for&#13;
Mondo.&#13;
WELL-OFF farm boy seeks anxious cow -&#13;
milking techniques. Ellis Charmer&#13;
PEE WEE: Do you always treat your .friends&#13;
so nice. Werble I&#13;
"THE GANG": Thanks for the best summer&#13;
ever! I'll never forget the "camping trips"&#13;
and all the good times (especially at&#13;
Paula's house!) Have a great year. Love&#13;
"Cin" Quazar&#13;
ETHYL - you're the greatest! — Irvinp&#13;
ROUND TABLE to meet in Union Square&#13;
September 18, 6:3 0 p. m.&#13;
J-Z. — Do you want to go to the beach and&#13;
wait for the green light. Dave&#13;
"I GANG — Werble, Jody, Quazar, Pooh,&#13;
Peewee, Debbie. From Bandit&#13;
LESLIE J. THOMPSON — stop by the dining&#13;
room at noon.&#13;
WAVE upon wave of fermented sick animals&#13;
marched cheerfully out of the Union into the&#13;
dream. lOP's and Pink Floyd.&#13;
"RIS KERMGARD, sophomore • Free&#13;
Problems, inquire MOLN 115. Chain Gang&#13;
RE NEE JONES, sophomore — have you&#13;
'ound any professors? Chain Gang&#13;
"ARKSIDE'S Three Stooges Bill, Tom &amp; Ron&#13;
Inquire CA 120. lOP's&#13;
ANIMALS, you will once again be challenged.&#13;
Guess Who!&#13;
SUPPORT the RANGER, increase its&#13;
readership. Write an ad. lOP's&#13;
FORMERLY Furry Frick finds french - fried&#13;
K M6 ,unny. Ten times fast&#13;
• — Not only ads, we read crummy&#13;
editorials too! lOP's&#13;
'OP S I b et they are the editorials you write&#13;
•or one of your comp. classes!&#13;
IF YOU MORONS, can write that is.&#13;
Hf..&#13;
v&#13;
\&#13;
QUAZAR! Wanna take intro to Moe's&#13;
Wednesday and get tipsy? — Bandit, P. S.&#13;
Your nose is sooo in line.&#13;
F®R ALL you incoming freshmen — lOP's&#13;
means (the undisputed) Idiots of Parkside.&#13;
HARVEY is a Mucko and likes little girls.&#13;
Signed Ranger the dog.&#13;
HARVEY, I'm telling Barb about all the&#13;
things you do while she is away. Ranger the&#13;
dog&#13;
I NEED another hotdog. Ezra&#13;
I REALLY DIG Lee Harvey Oswald. KGB&#13;
SUE MICHETTI, I l ove you. Please join me&#13;
on the Tri - lateral Commission — J. Anderson&#13;
&#13;
WELCOME HOME Chris and Karen. Doug.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
ALTO SAXOPHONE call 694-1964 after 6 p.&#13;
m. $300&#13;
MGB PARTS, many new engine parts. After&#13;
4:00. 639-6413&#13;
PIANO — needs work. $50. Call 694-4730&#13;
'74 AMBASSADOR WAGON — AM/FM&#13;
stereo cassette, PS/PB, good tires, good&#13;
runner. Cheap! 654-2492&#13;
WANTED&#13;
ROOMMATE WANTED. Furnished apt. 1&#13;
mile from campus. 553-9433&#13;
USED CARPETING, whole or pieces. Call&#13;
Marie 889-3319&#13;
COLLEGE REP wanted to distribute&#13;
"Student Rate" subscription cards at this&#13;
campus. Good income, no selling involved.&#13;
For information and application write to:&#13;
TIME, INC. College Bureau, 4337 W. Indian&#13;
School Rd., Phoenix, AZ 85031&#13;
MEETING/EVENTS&#13;
BIBLE - STUDY (Inter - Varsity). All interested&#13;
welcome. Mondays, 1:00, Moln 217&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
REWARD for anyone who has information&#13;
leading to the apprehension and conviction&#13;
of person who hit and run a white '79&#13;
Camaro last Thursday (9-11) night in Union&#13;
parking lot. Alarm was set off. Please&#13;
contact Neil Nelson, 554-5282.&#13;
The Rangers travel to Chicago&#13;
tomorrow to play Roosevelt&#13;
University with hopes of improving&#13;
on their 1-2 record.&#13;
Women's team&#13;
Tennis&#13;
bounced&#13;
by Pete Cramer&#13;
The women's tennis team had&#13;
tough going last week as they&#13;
dropped a dual match with UWMilwaukee,&#13;
6-3; and then placed&#13;
sixth in team standings at the&#13;
Oshkosh Doubles Tournament.&#13;
Against Milwaukee, the&#13;
Rangers found themselves outclassed&#13;
by better talent. Said&#13;
Coach Goggin, "Milwaukee is a&#13;
strong overall team. Losing 6-3 is&#13;
nothing to be ashamed of." As for&#13;
her own team, Goggin was&#13;
pleased by their performance. It&#13;
is this fact that leads her to think&#13;
that the team will have nothing&#13;
but success in the future. "I think&#13;
we're as good as the rest of the&#13;
teams we're going to play this&#13;
year. We're just as good if not&#13;
better."&#13;
Winning for the Rangers were&#13;
number one and number two&#13;
singles players, Lisa Lindsay and&#13;
Kathy Thomas. Thomas and&#13;
Nancy .Kivi teamed up for the&#13;
other win in number one doubles&#13;
play. Both Lindsay and Thomas&#13;
SPORTS CALENDAR&#13;
Friday, Sept. 19: SOCCER at Roosevelt Univ., Chicago (1:30 p.m)&#13;
Friday-Saturday, Sept. 19-20: VOLLEYBALL at Wright State Tournament,&#13;
Dayton, Ohio; GOLF atUW-Green Bay Phoenix Invitational,&#13;
Northbrook C.C., Luxemburg (8:00 a.m.)&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 20: TENNIS at UW-Green Bay (9:30 a. .) with UWStevens&#13;
Point; CROSS-COUNTRY (men) at Hillside College, Mich.&#13;
(11:00 a.m.); CROSS-COUNTRY (women) at Marquette Invitational,&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Saturday-Sunday, Sept. 21-22: GOLF at Mascoutin Collegiate Invitational,&#13;
Mascoutin C.C., Berlin (9:30 a.m.)&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 23: VOLLEYBALL at Marquette with UW-Oshkosh (7:15&#13;
p.m.); SOCCER vs. AURORA COLLEGE (3:30 p.m.); TENNIS at&#13;
Carthage (3:00 p.m.)&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
FRIDAY, SEPT. 19&#13;
SEMINAR — "A Total Program Approach for Community Board Group&#13;
Homes" at 9 a.m. in Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312 for more information.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
MOVIE — "Manhattan" will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission at the door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a&#13;
guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
FILM — "War Games," a simulation of a nuclear attack on a British&#13;
town. Shown continuously from 9:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. in Union 106.&#13;
DANCE — Back to school dance sponsored by the Minority Student&#13;
Union at 8 :00 p.m. in the Union Square. Live D.J. General Admission&#13;
$1.00. Member free with membership I.D.&#13;
SUNDAY, SEPT. 21&#13;
MOVIE — "Manhattan" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
MONDAY, SEPT. 22&#13;
WORKSHOP — "Test Taking Tips" from 1-1:50 p.m. in MOLN 107,161,&#13;
163,165 &amp; 167. Admission is free for Parkside students.&#13;
CAREER NIGHT — for Alumni with a dinner starting at 5 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Dining room. Call ext. 2515 for more details.&#13;
TUESDAY, SEPT. 23&#13;
COURSE — "Behavior Modification Techniques" starts today at 7:30&#13;
p.m. Call ext. 2312 for more information. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
THURSDAY, SEPT. 25&#13;
LECTURE — at 11:45 a.m. in Union 106. Mary Lou France will talk on&#13;
"How Our Union Began." The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
are undefeated this year in singles&#13;
play.&#13;
The Oshkosh tournament was&#13;
doubles play only. The doubles&#13;
team of Thomas-Kivi won the&#13;
number one consolation bracket,&#13;
Pam Sumi-Lisa Lindsay were&#13;
ousted by Marquette after having&#13;
lost earlier to Carroll, Lori&#13;
Bleashka-Laura Bianco won their&#13;
consolation bracket, and Barb&#13;
Pruett-Emily Modiz placed fourth&#13;
in the winners bracket.&#13;
The team's next match is&#13;
Saturday at Green Bay.&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
YASOU PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
EVERY&#13;
THUR.&#13;
IS GREEK&#13;
GYROS&#13;
DAY&#13;
Spiced Greek meat slices in&#13;
folded pita bread, topped with&#13;
sliced onions, tomatoes and&#13;
a creamy dressing. $ 1.89 &#13;
ONLY&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION REC. CENTER&#13;
by Dan McCormack&#13;
The Parkside women's&#13;
volleyball team opened their&#13;
season last Wednesday by&#13;
defeating UW-Whitewater in a&#13;
real mismatch, 3-1. On Thursday&#13;
they then played host to Division I&#13;
school UW-Madison.&#13;
Game one started promptly at&#13;
7:00 p.m. with both teams looking&#13;
equally matched. The Mad-City&#13;
team controlled the net and won&#13;
the first game 15-6. Co ach Linda&#13;
Henderson remarked later, "we&#13;
made certain fundamental&#13;
errors" and that "we played well&#13;
in spurts."&#13;
Game two was an example of&#13;
one of tho se spurts. The Rangers,&#13;
showing top form, easily won the&#13;
game, 15-3. T he action cooled a&#13;
little during game three with&#13;
Parkside losing 15-4.&#13;
In a dual match, you need to win&#13;
three out of five games, which, at&#13;
this point put Madison within&#13;
range to win the match if they won&#13;
the fourth game. The Badgers&#13;
took an early lead before the&#13;
spectators got into the flow of the&#13;
game. When Parkside senior&#13;
Roxanne Nelson took her turn at&#13;
the serve she blasted one over to&#13;
Mad-City's mid-court where it&#13;
proved to be too hot to return. The&#13;
Rangers then seemed to gain&#13;
consistency and went on to win&#13;
that game, 15-12. They lost the last&#13;
game, 17-15, wrapping up the&#13;
Madison victory.&#13;
Henderson was very pleased&#13;
with her team's performance. She&#13;
said "the freshmen looked&#13;
poised." She was also very&#13;
pleased with the crowd.&#13;
Parkside travels to Dayton,&#13;
Ohio this weekend to play in the&#13;
Wright State Tournament.&#13;
AAIIOVV&#13;
FIRST&#13;
'National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phono 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dave Vollmer&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
Improve your&#13;
grades!&#13;
Send $1.00 for your&#13;
306-page, research paper&#13;
catalog. All academic&#13;
subjects.&#13;
Collegiate Research&#13;
P.O. Box 25097H&#13;
Los Angeles, Ca. 90025&#13;
I Enclosed is $1.00.&#13;
| Please rush the catalog.&#13;
j Name&#13;
| Address&#13;
j City.&#13;
• State&#13;
During The Day&#13;
Mon.9:00am -noon&#13;
Thurs. 1 - 5 p. m.&#13;
Friday Afternoons&#13;
3:00 -6:00 pm&#13;
Introductory&#13;
Special!&#13;
Strike when&#13;
the head pin&#13;
is red ...&#13;
Win a Free&#13;
pitcher of.be^r&#13;
or soda&#13;
One customer per day&#13;
Ranger needs&#13;
sports writers&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
EVERY&#13;
TUE.&#13;
IS MEXI-FOOD DAY&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
• TACOS&#13;
• BURRITOS&#13;
• TOSTADOS&#13;
• ENCHILADAS&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
FRESHMAN LAURIE HESS (13) delivers a vicious spike as her teammates look on.&#13;
Volleyball splits pair </text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 9, issue 3, September 18, 1980</text>
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