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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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            <text>Volume 9, issue 4</text>
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            <text>Resolve over-crowded bus situation</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 25, 1980&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 4&#13;
Resolve over-crowded bus situation Kv nQftr T AflrtAi. • by Gary Ledger&#13;
Racine Parkside bus riders now&#13;
have two express runs serving&#13;
them. The buses will transport&#13;
riders from Downtown Racine to&#13;
Parkside non-stop. The regular&#13;
Route 9 bus will run as usual,&#13;
picking up students and others&#13;
along the way.&#13;
This solution is the result of&#13;
overcrowded conditions during&#13;
Route Nine's first two runs. "It&#13;
was just full," explained Junior&#13;
Mary Ann Phelps, "even by the&#13;
time the bus left downtown."&#13;
Upon reaching its last stop,&#13;
students were packed so tightly&#13;
that driver Diane Olson frequently&#13;
called the bus office notifying&#13;
them she would have to bypass&#13;
Tallent Hall, and therefore&#13;
eliminate half the shuttle run.&#13;
The all-time record occurred&#13;
Wednesday (Sept. 17) when 86&#13;
students were packed in. After&#13;
relaying this information to the&#13;
dispatcher, she was instructed to&#13;
pull over. Five students were&#13;
pulled off t he bus and transferred&#13;
immediately to a bus supervisor's&#13;
car.&#13;
Through the efforts of Dave&#13;
Habegger, Parkside Student&#13;
Government Senator, the present&#13;
solution is in progress. According&#13;
to Parkside Security Director&#13;
Ronald Brinkmann, an extra&#13;
express bus will run the first two&#13;
runs of the morning during the&#13;
week of September 22. Statistics of&#13;
ridership will be taken, with the&#13;
express run continuing on the&#13;
days and times they are needed.&#13;
As Mike Glasheen of City Hall&#13;
Transportation Department&#13;
describes: The express run will&#13;
wait downtown. It will leave when&#13;
filled (approximately 7:20) and&#13;
travel to Parkside non-stop under&#13;
the "Express" banner. Upon&#13;
arriving at Parkside, the express&#13;
will return downtown, pick up&#13;
riders, leave when filled (about&#13;
8:30), and again travel to&#13;
Parkside non-stop. From campus,&#13;
it will return to the garage. The&#13;
regular Route Nine will leave&#13;
downtown as scheduled.&#13;
According to bus officials,&#13;
average ridership for the first two&#13;
runs, before the express service,&#13;
was 70 to 80 riders each. The bus&#13;
has a seating capacity of 41. "S he&#13;
couldn't stop fast enough; it was&#13;
just really dangerous" explained&#13;
Phelps. Olson said, "Relief; it's&#13;
taken a lot of pressure off me,"&#13;
having the express run.&#13;
As for students' reactions,&#13;
"Some of them didn't believe it&#13;
was really going to happen (the&#13;
express service), and were&#13;
amazed at how empty the bus&#13;
was," remarked Olson.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
THE RACINE BUS SERVICE has begun express runs to help alleviate the over - crowded buses&#13;
coming to Parkside.&#13;
Student Bill Stougaard said, "I&#13;
like it. I can sit down now."&#13;
"I was elated" exclaimed bus&#13;
rider Karen Bolander. "It felt&#13;
good; I didn't have to balance&#13;
myself in the middle of the aisle."&#13;
Express bus driver Jesse&#13;
Mendoza described the first day:&#13;
"Real smooth. I think it ran very&#13;
good."&#13;
German Professor Seigfried&#13;
Christoph observed, "One week it&#13;
was consistently 7-10 minutes&#13;
late." On Monday, the first day of&#13;
the express run, he said "I think&#13;
it's working just fine."&#13;
Explains Habegger, the&#13;
problem now is to make sure&#13;
Parkside riders continue to ride&#13;
the bus. If riot, the express service&#13;
will be dropped on the runs/times&#13;
ridership is low. But as explained&#13;
by Brinkmann and bus officials,&#13;
the express will run when needed.&#13;
Anderson, Reagan debate without Carter&#13;
by Susan J. Aluise&#13;
Despite the absence of Jimmy&#13;
Carter at Sunday night's League&#13;
of Women Voters Debate, the&#13;
show did go on and seemingly&#13;
well, at least from the viewpoint of&#13;
the Reagan and Anderson cairips.&#13;
Both Reagan and Anderson&#13;
seemed to achieve from Sunday&#13;
night's debate exactly what they&#13;
sought to accomplish; Anderson&#13;
got the media exposure critical to&#13;
the sustanance and growth of his&#13;
campaign and Reagan succeeded&#13;
in convining many skeptics that&#13;
he could go out in public unchaperoned&#13;
and not commit a&#13;
major gaffe. Both men handled&#13;
themselves coolly and were very&#13;
composed in their delivery but,&#13;
perhaps surprisingly in view of&#13;
Reagan's many years of television&#13;
experience, it was Anderson who&#13;
was said by debate judges to have&#13;
scored a slight victory.&#13;
The substance of the debate was&#13;
rather predictable, with both&#13;
Anderson and Reagan&#13;
regurgitating previous campaign&#13;
statements in answer to the&#13;
Analysis&#13;
panel's questions. It is of particular&#13;
significance that the&#13;
majority of Reagan's answers,&#13;
including his three minute closing&#13;
statement, were heavily scripted,&#13;
almost verbatim repetitions of&#13;
previous campaign speeches,&#13;
which could, perhaps in analysis,&#13;
lessen the impressive effect of&#13;
Reagan's overall appearance.&#13;
Anderson, while saying nothing&#13;
new, impressively took the offensive,&#13;
criticizing Reagan's&#13;
understanding of national oil&#13;
reserves, support for MX missile&#13;
funding, advocacy of the Kemp -&#13;
Roth tax proposal, and even&#13;
leveling a charge against&#13;
Reagan's record as governor of&#13;
California; asserting that state&#13;
spending doubled and rose percentagewise&#13;
at a higher riate than&#13;
at any time previously to the&#13;
Reagan term of office.&#13;
Reagan adeptly answered&#13;
Anderson's critiques by saying&#13;
that his statistics on national oil&#13;
reserves were Department of&#13;
Energy figures, maintaining the&#13;
MX system is necessary to the&#13;
preservation of national security&#13;
but that rotating silo construction&#13;
was a waste of taxpapyers money,&#13;
reminding Anderson that he,&#13;
Anderson, had supported and&#13;
signed Kemp - Roth 15 months&#13;
ago, and Reagan defended his&#13;
record as governor of California&#13;
by saying California's rate of&#13;
inflation during the Reagan term&#13;
was well below the national&#13;
average.&#13;
Perhaps one of the more sensitive&#13;
issues raised in the debate&#13;
was in response to the final&#13;
question; whether directives of&#13;
moral majority and church&#13;
organizations should influence the&#13;
decisions and policies of a&#13;
president and if that influence is a&#13;
violation of the separation of&#13;
church and state. The obvious&#13;
issue, that of abortion, was raised&#13;
and the responses reflected the&#13;
greatest degree of emotionalism&#13;
seen in the debate. The Reagan&#13;
response was reflective of the&#13;
Republican Party Platform stand&#13;
on abortion; the belief that a&#13;
constituational amendment to ban&#13;
all abortions should be enacted.&#13;
Anderson predictably, favored&#13;
the woman's right to choose,&#13;
citing the decision by a woman to&#13;
carry a pregnancy to term as the&#13;
most critical emotional decision a&#13;
woman can make in her life and&#13;
that decision should not be dictated&#13;
by government. Reagan,&#13;
almost emotionally defended the&#13;
right of an unborn child to be born&#13;
and Anderson then countered with&#13;
the right of a child to be wanted.&#13;
This emotional exchange of&#13;
opinion on the issue of abortion&#13;
was predictable, but the way in&#13;
which the candidates became&#13;
deeply involved was reflective of&#13;
the intensity of t he issue, and the&#13;
importance a candidate's beliefs&#13;
bring to his campaign and&#13;
inevitably, if the candidate is,&#13;
successful, to the office to which&#13;
he aspires.&#13;
In general, the debates had a&#13;
positive effect for Anderson and&#13;
Reagan and a somewhat negative&#13;
effect for the man who was not&#13;
there, Jimmy Carter. Anderson&#13;
and Reagan seized the opportunity&#13;
to level criticism at&#13;
Carter's absence and made&#13;
references to the failure of Carter's&#13;
programs and policies, but&#13;
whether this negative effect is&#13;
significant in terms of lasting&#13;
injury, it is yet too early to conclude.&#13;
The Carter campaign has,&#13;
and will continue to minimize the&#13;
importance and the impact of&#13;
Sunday's debate and the Reagan&#13;
and Anderson camps will continue&#13;
to play up its significance and&#13;
relevance. But in the end, it is not&#13;
what these campaign&#13;
organizations feel about the&#13;
importance of the debate, but how&#13;
the American voter perceives the&#13;
event and how he applies those&#13;
perceptions in making his decision&#13;
on November 4.&#13;
O'Neill formally inaugurated&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
On September 5th, the&#13;
Inaugural Convocation was held&#13;
at the Memorial Union Theatre in&#13;
Madison. Robert M. O'Neil formally&#13;
accepted the office of&#13;
President of the UW System.&#13;
"The University System should&#13;
be more than simply the sum of its&#13;
parts," said O'Neil. "although the&#13;
constituent institutions are . . . its&#13;
core and its reason for being. The&#13;
System has a responsibility to&#13;
shape and apply policies, enhance&#13;
relations among institutions,&#13;
facilitate contact between institutions&#13;
and state government,&#13;
and represent to the citizens and&#13;
the state the needs of higher&#13;
education in Wisconsin."&#13;
O'Neil said that the diversity of&#13;
our system is a quality of great&#13;
value. He said that we should&#13;
maintain what is special and&#13;
distinctive while resisting&#13;
pressures for commonality.&#13;
"Students in this state enjoy an&#13;
unusual range of choice because&#13;
of the differences among our&#13;
institutions," said O'Neil.&#13;
"Recently there have been&#13;
suggestions that such choice&#13;
should be artificially constrained.&#13;
While I recognize behind these&#13;
suggestions the laudable desire to&#13;
balance enrollments among institutions,&#13;
I would prefer to seek&#13;
that goal in ways that maintain a&#13;
high degree of student choice. We&#13;
should take positive steps to encourage&#13;
study at those institutions&#13;
with greater capacity, rather than&#13;
barring students from more&#13;
populous campuses Freedom&#13;
of choice is a precious value in our&#13;
society, and one that has special&#13;
meaning in a university system of&#13;
which variety and diversity are&#13;
hallmarks."&#13;
O'Neil stated a commitment to&#13;
freedom of inquiry and expression.&#13;
"The next decade will&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• From the Parking Lot:&#13;
Reagan and abortion&#13;
• "Review: "Middle Age Crazy 99&#13;
• Soccer team wins two &#13;
2&#13;
RANGER blasted for column on P.S.G.A.&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
In the best interest of the&#13;
studente at UW . Parkside; the&#13;
nf P Q O ;&#13;
A i&#13;
new Vice • President&#13;
?L k t '•Kay Mullikin; and in&#13;
the best interest of critical&#13;
journalism: I'd like to respond to&#13;
Ken Meyer's article, "Case of the&#13;
vacant P.S.G.A. veep".&#13;
. Meyer, as editor of the Ranger,&#13;
is allowed an opinion but, doesn't&#13;
he have the responsibility to base&#13;
his opinion on fact. Meyer wrote&#13;
an ambiguous, gossipy article&#13;
which puts the credibility of the&#13;
Ranger in competition with the&#13;
National Inquirer.&#13;
The requirements to fill the&#13;
vacancy of Vice - President, open&#13;
since Claire Tolstyga resigned to&#13;
pursue a career decision which&#13;
took her to another campus, are&#13;
stated in the P.S.G.A. constitution.&#13;
The constitution is ac-.&#13;
cessible to every student since it is&#13;
published twice a year in the&#13;
Ranger. The requirements are&#13;
very simple. The candidate must&#13;
be nominated by the President of&#13;
P.S.G.A. with the advice and&#13;
consent of the Senate. This is a&#13;
great responsibility given to the&#13;
President by the students that&#13;
elect him/her; and one that I have&#13;
taken seriously.&#13;
My nomination of Kay Mullikin&#13;
was not approved by the Senate&#13;
the first time it was introduced.&#13;
The reasons were many. When the&#13;
nomination failed, a senator introduced&#13;
the candidate endorsed&#13;
by Meyer without consulting me in&#13;
any way. This is in direct conflict&#13;
with the constitution he must&#13;
follow as a senator. The result was&#13;
a Vice - Presidential race.&#13;
The next time Meyer writes an&#13;
opinion, think about its base.&#13;
Meyer didn't read the P.S.G.A.&#13;
constitution, never consulted me,&#13;
has never even met Kay Mullikin,&#13;
didn't ask the senators that endorsed&#13;
Mullikin their reasons, or&#13;
attend the senate meeting where&#13;
the issue was discussed. From&#13;
where did he draw his conclusion?&#13;
I think the Editor should keep his&#13;
personal life and friendships out of&#13;
the Ranger.&#13;
The students have the right to&#13;
know what is happening in their&#13;
representative body, therefore,&#13;
I'd like to challenge Meyer to&#13;
report critically anything that&#13;
happens in PIS.G.A. but, to base it&#13;
in fact and research.&#13;
Tracy Gruber&#13;
President,&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
Presidential and Parkside politics&#13;
In last week's column I showed&#13;
two differences between the&#13;
Republican and Democratic&#13;
platforms. The two issues I chose&#13;
as examples were abortion and&#13;
the United States' military&#13;
competitiveness with the Soviets.&#13;
After the column was printed, I&#13;
was informed by someone that&#13;
abortion wasn't an issue in this&#13;
presidential campaign.&#13;
Bull.&#13;
Everything that the president&#13;
can effect is an issue in this — or&#13;
any — presidential campaign. Of&#13;
course, some issues weigh more&#13;
heavily than others but all issues&#13;
should be considered, expecially&#13;
ones that show vast ideological&#13;
differences between the two&#13;
major political parties.&#13;
mhn»n in no hotfnr oitnrtipia of.a&#13;
A column of&#13;
personal opinion&#13;
by&#13;
by Ken Meyer, Editor&#13;
difference of opinion than the&#13;
issue of abortion. The Democrats&#13;
oppose any governmental&#13;
restrictions on abortion or the&#13;
federal funding of abortions for&#13;
the poor while the Republicans&#13;
favor a constitutional amendment&#13;
banning all abortions except in&#13;
order to save the mother's fife.&#13;
Abortion, military competitiveness&#13;
and other issues show&#13;
how different the two parties are.&#13;
On issues like these, the popular&#13;
opinion should prevail because&#13;
these issues are what the people&#13;
should vote on — n ot who is the&#13;
'nicer' candidate.&#13;
In response to P.S.G.A.&#13;
President Tracy Gruber's letter&#13;
on this page:&#13;
Forgive me if my column on the&#13;
P.S.G.A. vice-presidency sounded&#13;
gossipy. It wasn't meant to be, but&#13;
I don't think it was, anyway.&#13;
I was asked my intentions for&#13;
writing that story ; the reason was&#13;
to let the student be aware of what&#13;
was happening with the vicepresidency&#13;
before the position was&#13;
fillftfi- Oiay Mulliki.&#13;
proved at Monday's Senate&#13;
meeting.)&#13;
I hold nothing against Kay&#13;
Mullikin personally; I'm sure&#13;
she'll do a fine job. It's just that I&#13;
don't think she was the most&#13;
qualified candidate for that&#13;
position.&#13;
Contrary to what was stated in&#13;
Gruber's letter, the column was&#13;
not based on my personal life and&#13;
friendships. I believe that the&#13;
most qualified person for the vicepresidency&#13;
is Chris Hammelev.&#13;
Yes, she happens to be my friend.&#13;
No, that isn't why I feel that she&#13;
deserves the position.&#13;
The reason is because Chris has&#13;
been in student government,&#13;
through high school and Parkside,&#13;
for five years; the new vicepresident&#13;
has been in student&#13;
government for only six months.&#13;
It doesn't appear to be my&#13;
personal life that is interfering;&#13;
maybe it's the personal life and&#13;
friendships of the President who&#13;
wants to work with a vicepresident&#13;
that she likes personally&#13;
rather than with one who doesn't&#13;
always agree with her.&#13;
;-A£ter._«uiT student government&#13;
urn• t supposed to be a place of&#13;
differences of opinion, discussion&#13;
and resolutions.&#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;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
ganger&#13;
NEEDS. REPORTERS&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
AD REPS&#13;
If you're interested, stop by our office&#13;
(next to the Coffee Shoppe) or&#13;
Phone 553-2295&#13;
Viewpoint&#13;
If the election were held today, who would you vote for&#13;
Carter, Reagan or Anderson?&#13;
Ann Daniels, freshman — "Anderson.'&#13;
Richard Altergott, sophomore&#13;
— "I'd let Carter mess it up some&#13;
more."&#13;
Keno-Kid, senior — "Carter.'&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
Dan rn?hra?th Executive Business Manager £SSS5&#13;
h&#13;
:;:::: Busln&#13;
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!L&#13;
M."&#13;
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Da°edCram,Phal • •• A Ed&#13;
"oI&#13;
sszz,&#13;
szToizz&#13;
Mike Farrell, Bruce Preston Advertising Managers&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Pete Cramer, Sharon Charlton, Thomas Delany, Pattv&#13;
2!in1&#13;
,Sa&#13;
' Edenhauser&#13;
' Ken Eschmann, Ginger&#13;
Helgeson, Dean Hervat, Carol Klees, Gary Ledger, Dan&#13;
McCormick, Lori Meyer, Brian Passino, Joe Ripp, Art&#13;
VoNmer&#13;
erman/ Bl&#13;
" Stougaard&#13;
' Les,ie Th&#13;
°mpson, Dave&#13;
RANGER'is written and edited by students of UW-Parkside and they are solely:&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content j&#13;
RANGER fsVnr7nLhHUh&#13;
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*«pt during breaks and holidays,&#13;
WriM»n ... • V the&#13;
,&#13;
Un&#13;
!°n Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER&#13;
,0: P,rk!id&#13;
» WLLC UW.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
to^veHf[cahwi'nC mar&#13;
°&#13;
mS' A" le,ters must be si9ned and a telephone number included&#13;
'Si&#13;
Sne^or^t^&#13;
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"9th accepted is S00 words.i&#13;
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TuesdaV 31 9 a m- tor publication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content PrMlegeS re,USin9 ,0 print which ^ntain'S" &#13;
Ranger Thursday, September 25,1980&#13;
O'Neil inaugurated&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
not I expect, bring crude or&#13;
blatant threats to freedom of&#13;
thought or inquiry, but may&#13;
threaten liberty in subtler ways&#13;
We must be alert to such threats&#13;
whether they be burdensome&#13;
federal restrictions on research&#13;
activity, intrusive state or local&#13;
government controls, or even&#13;
well-intentioned but clumsy rules&#13;
of System Administration."&#13;
He stressed integrity and&#13;
cooperation with colleagues,&#13;
students, other institutions of&#13;
higher learning, and with the&#13;
public.&#13;
O'Neil stated a commitment to&#13;
access and equal opportunity by&#13;
minority and disadvantaged&#13;
students as well as for nonminority&#13;
persons — those in rural&#13;
areas and less advantaged white&#13;
ethnic groups who have been&#13;
denied a full range of educational&#13;
opportunity. He wants to increase&#13;
participation by women in&#13;
.university curricula.&#13;
O'Neil felt that the quality of our&#13;
institutions, their faculties, their&#13;
facilities, and their programs is&#13;
most vital. "Throughout the last&#13;
century, the quality of these institutions&#13;
has steadily improved. I&#13;
cannot believe that the investment&#13;
which the citizens of this state&#13;
have made in higher education&#13;
through more than a century of&#13;
generous support would be&#13;
allowed to atrophy through half a&#13;
decade of neglect. Higher&#13;
education is too central a priority&#13;
for Wisconsin and its citizens to be&#13;
jeopardized by inadequate support."&#13;
&#13;
Boker films social change&#13;
by Leslie J. Thompson&#13;
Last week Carlos Boker,&#13;
assistant visiting professor in&#13;
Communications at Parkside,&#13;
assisted in documenting the&#13;
ChiVano's traditional Mexican&#13;
pelebration along Milwaukee's&#13;
lake front.&#13;
"The point of the whole project&#13;
is to show how important the&#13;
culture of these people is," he&#13;
said, "and to show how, in order to&#13;
preserve this culture, that&#13;
bilingualism is important." Boker&#13;
feels that people should continue&#13;
their own culture, while learning a&#13;
new one, because from the shock&#13;
of the two cultures something new&#13;
will emerge.&#13;
While in his native Chile, Boker&#13;
made a number of documentary&#13;
films dealing with the preservation&#13;
of national values. He&#13;
would go to a community where&#13;
something important and worthwhile&#13;
was going on, however,&#13;
"the people were not quite certain&#13;
of how it was going, of who they&#13;
were, or of how they'd react to it,&#13;
so we filmed them," he said. "We&#13;
showed them what we had filmed,&#13;
so that they could see themselves&#13;
from the outside. Then we filmed&#13;
their discussions so that they got&#13;
an immediate feedback on what&#13;
they were doing," Boker said.&#13;
"This film was then shown on&#13;
television. Because this media has&#13;
a particular legitimizing quality,&#13;
people saw themselves and&#13;
discovered, 'My goodness, this is&#13;
who we are, we are important, we&#13;
do exist," Boker said. "It was a&#13;
very interesting experience for&#13;
me and a fascinating experience&#13;
for them," he said.&#13;
"My main interest is in social&#13;
change," said Boker. "The people&#13;
have to know that a change is&#13;
possible, and in which direction it&#13;
can go before taking any definite&#13;
steps. The mass media can not by&#13;
themselves bring the change&#13;
about, although they are one of the&#13;
ways in which the change can be&#13;
helped," he said.&#13;
Another type of film that Boker&#13;
has worked with is the social&#13;
documentary. These films show&#13;
the ills in the lives of a determined&#13;
group in society, he said. One&#13;
example is a film he made about&#13;
the children who lived in a slum&#13;
area. The film depicted the&#13;
existing problems, focusing&#13;
primarily on what was being done&#13;
and on what should have been&#13;
done. "You can not go and throw&#13;
ashes over your head and say,&#13;
'Great goodness, look at how&#13;
Enrollment&#13;
increases&#13;
A large class of new freshmen&#13;
accounts for more than half of the&#13;
increase in the fall enrollment at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Parkside's enrollment is 5,408&#13;
1 students this fall, up 116 students&#13;
(or 2%) from last fall's final total&#13;
of 5,292. New freshmen total 1,053&#13;
which is 65 more than last fall's&#13;
frosh class of 988, a gain of seven&#13;
percent.&#13;
Parkside's full-time equivalent&#13;
(FTE) enrollment, a theoretical&#13;
figure which is used in UW System&#13;
funding formulas, increased even&#13;
more, from 3,443 to 3,583, a four&#13;
percent overall gain which is&#13;
double the increase which was&#13;
projected.&#13;
Parkside continues to maintain&#13;
a close balance between full-time&#13;
students (those taking 12 or more&#13;
credits) and part-timers. About 52&#13;
percent of UW-P students are&#13;
attending full-time. '&#13;
Film shown Wed.&#13;
"Footprints in Stone", to be&#13;
shown Wed., Oct. 1, takes into&#13;
debate the origin of Man. The film&#13;
analyzes the 130 year old&#13;
Evolutionary Theory in contrast&#13;
to the much older biblical view of&#13;
creation.&#13;
Original scientific research in&#13;
Paluxy River of Texas has&#13;
revealed human footprints in the&#13;
same rock stratum as dinosaur&#13;
tracks. This would seem to shatter&#13;
the widely taught geological table&#13;
of evolution, and the debate accelerates.&#13;
The film discusses&#13;
whether the table needs to be&#13;
totally reassessed, or only altered&#13;
chronologically.&#13;
"Footprintsin Stone" is meant to&#13;
present certain sides of evolution&#13;
that need to be recosidered. The&#13;
movie will be shown from 1:00 to&#13;
2:00 on Wed. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
It is free and sponsored by the&#13;
I n t e r - V a r s i t y C h ris tia n&#13;
Fellowship.&#13;
horrible this is!; you want to go&#13;
further and say, 'This is awful, but&#13;
things can be done to change it,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
In addition to his work in film,&#13;
Boker has directed several&#13;
political plays. This genre of the&#13;
theater deals with political or&#13;
ideological issues. "Be it a cry or&#13;
a shout against fascism, or the&#13;
presentation of a certain reality in&#13;
a certain point in time," he said,&#13;
"it lets people know that we are&#13;
participating in the change, and in&#13;
the reshaping of the ideas that&#13;
should change them."&#13;
Socialist to speak here&#13;
Michael Harrington, founder of&#13;
the Democratic Socialist&#13;
Organizing Committee and author&#13;
of numerous widely acclaimed&#13;
books on politics and the economy,&#13;
will speak at U.W.-Parkside on&#13;
Friday morning, October 3, at&#13;
10:00 a.m. in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theatre. Harrington's address,&#13;
"A Socialist Agenda for the&#13;
Eighties," is sponsored by the&#13;
Political Science Club and the&#13;
Mobilization for Survival. The&#13;
meeting is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Harrington's book, The Other&#13;
America (1963), played a crucial&#13;
role in generating public support&#13;
for Lyndon Johnson's "War on&#13;
Poverty". His subsequent books&#13;
include The Vast Majority: A&#13;
Journey to the World's Poor (1977)&#13;
and The Twilight of Capitalism&#13;
(1976).&#13;
The Democratic Socialist&#13;
Organizing Committee came&#13;
together in 1973 around the&#13;
principles of "social ownership&#13;
and democratic control of the&#13;
means of production and&#13;
distribution," and "the peaceful&#13;
extension of democratic rule for&#13;
all the peoples of the world."&#13;
DSOC includes John Kenneth&#13;
Galbraith and Robert Dahl,&#13;
among other economists and&#13;
political scientists, in its membership.&#13;
&#13;
Harrington was chairperson of&#13;
DSOC until 1976 and currently&#13;
serves as editor of its newsletter,&#13;
The Democratic Left. In 1973, he&#13;
received the Eugene V. Debs&#13;
Award. This year the Debs Award&#13;
was presented by Harrington to&#13;
Ray Majerus, Secretary&#13;
Treasurer of the United Auto&#13;
Workers, and University of&#13;
Wisconsin Regent.&#13;
Mather to give recital Tues.&#13;
A program by Scott Mather,&#13;
trumpet, will open the fall series&#13;
of faculty recitals at Parkside at 8&#13;
p. m. on Tuesday, Sept. 30, in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theater. Mather&#13;
will be assisted by carol ecu&#13;
(piano), Frances Bedford (harpsichord),&#13;
Daryl Durran&#13;
(bassoon), and Timothy Fox&#13;
(trumpet). The program is free&#13;
and open to the public and will&#13;
include works by G. B. Viviani,&#13;
iXonri Stanley, j. a. cj. fYeruda,&#13;
Alberto Ginastera and Marcel&#13;
Bitsch.&#13;
PARKSIDE FOODSERVICE&#13;
announces&#13;
THE INTRODUCTION OF COUNTRY FRESH&#13;
CHEF'S SALAD&#13;
IN THE SQUARE&#13;
$1.59 — AFTER4:0 0 P. M. DAILY&#13;
UNION SQUARE GRILL&#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;
Fall Semester Bowling Leagues&#13;
Forming Cost includes bowling, shoes, awards&#13;
- Red Pin in effect for all leagues&#13;
LEAGUE TIME TYPE&#13;
BOWLERS PER&#13;
TEAM WEEKS * COST&#13;
LEAGUE&#13;
BEGINS&#13;
Doubles League Mon. 1 p. m. - 2 p. m. Men's 2 player/2 games 9 $1.50/person Oct. 13&#13;
Mixed League Tue. 7 p. m. - 9 p. m. Mixed 4 player/3 game 9 $2.50/person Oct. 14&#13;
Bowling Club Leagues Wed. 1 p. m. - 2 p. m. Mixed 1 player/2 game 10 $1.50/person Oct. 8&#13;
Varsity League Fri. 1 p. m. - 3 p. m. Mixed 1 player/3 games 9 $3.50/person Oct. 10&#13;
Sunday Mixed League Sun. 7 p. m. - 9 p. m. Mixed 4 player/13 games 9 $2.50/person Oct. 12&#13;
For more information and to sign up:&#13;
stop down at UNION rec center counter&#13;
, — &#13;
Thursday, September 25,1980&#13;
Bedford Duo to perform&#13;
ThThe e BReHf ed nrH Hua nAmnmn^/1 *£ 1 « ^ . ford Duo comprised of&#13;
Monte Bedford, oboe, and Frances&#13;
Bedford, harpsichord, will present&#13;
a free public concert at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Saturday, Oct 4, at St. Luke's&#13;
Church, Racine.&#13;
The Bedfords recently returned&#13;
from Edinburgh, Scotland, where&#13;
they performed the European&#13;
premieres of three works written&#13;
especially for the duo at the annual&#13;
meeting of the International&#13;
Double Reed Society. Frances&#13;
Bedford is a member of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
music faculty and Monte Bedford&#13;
is a member of the Capstone&#13;
Woodwind Quartet, the resident&#13;
faculty ensemble at the University&#13;
of Alabama.&#13;
Their program at St. Luke's will&#13;
include works by Handel,&#13;
Cpuperlin, Scarlatti, Britten and&#13;
J.S. Bach.&#13;
Scott Mather, trumpet, will be&#13;
guest soloist for Handel's Suite in&#13;
D Major, assisted by Daryl&#13;
Durran, bassoon. A chamber&#13;
orchestra including S. Eden&#13;
Vaning and Terry Naidicz, violins,&#13;
Patience Balcom, viola, Janine&#13;
Roth, cello, and James Seay&#13;
Dean, bass, will assist the duo for&#13;
the concluding work, Bach's&#13;
Concerto in G Minor.&#13;
Concert-goers are invited to a&#13;
post-concert reception in the&#13;
church library.&#13;
Business fraternity re-instituted&#13;
TT&#13;
hp TT W - Parlreirin T* :n • i he U.W. - Parkside Marketing&#13;
Club is attempting to re-institute&#13;
the business fraternity - PI&#13;
SIGMA EPSILON, chapter&#13;
Gamma Beta. UW-P was&#13;
originally chartered in 1974.&#13;
PI SIGMA EPSILON - is a&#13;
national business fraternity&#13;
designed to provide students with&#13;
opportunities to apply classroom&#13;
nrartiral situations.&#13;
It also will provide an atmosphere&#13;
of social interaction between&#13;
students, faculty, administration,&#13;
and business executives. The high&#13;
point of the academic year will be&#13;
the national convention in&#13;
Houston, Texas, April 3rd - 5th.&#13;
Men and women, who are&#13;
academically successful, and who&#13;
manifest an interest in sales and&#13;
"IT1&#13;
'"""" "•*" eligible for&#13;
membership in PI SIGMA EPSILON.&#13;
&#13;
Support for the chapter has been&#13;
received from Parkside administration&#13;
and the business&#13;
department. Officers include Pete&#13;
Regnery, President; Alane Andresen,&#13;
Vice President; Victoria&#13;
Waisman, Secretary; Josie&#13;
Shema, Treasurer; and Glenn&#13;
Bozon, faculty adviser.&#13;
THE POWER PLANT&#13;
5 3936&#13;
157&#13;
43i01&#13;
St&#13;
'&#13;
/\ ^ LIVE BAND S&#13;
%•/ &gt;0 -i - Fridays, Saturdays&#13;
"7 ^&#13;
unc*&#13;
ay&#13;
s ^ Wednesdays&#13;
\ c&#13;
;SS \4&#13;
Contact&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
Reaganand&#13;
abortion issue&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
During the recent Presidential debates, the abortion issue came up.&#13;
And, predictably Ronald Reagan relied on sentimentality in formulating&#13;
a platform" from which to evoke decent Americans' sympathies&#13;
for a most profound question. At what point, Reagan asked us&#13;
all, does an unborn fetus become a human being? After a heavy pause&#13;
P&#13;
r&#13;
?&#13;
misedAmerica that if he becomes President, abortions will&#13;
I hW available until that moral issue is cleared up, if ever and&#13;
p-obably after a good cry as well.&#13;
I woulcjflike to know how Reagan proposes to decide the question. He&#13;
cannot possibly hope to get away with setting an arbitrary date (three&#13;
days, six months?), and the word of God, even in these born-again&#13;
times, won t hold water in the House or the Senate.&#13;
The scientific method seems to be his best bet. As a matter of f act if&#13;
Reagan can scientifically prove the exact point of fetal development&#13;
that corresponds to humanness, he could probably be a lot more to the&#13;
history scholars than a movie actor, or even a President; if he plots his&#13;
campaign brilliantly, he could make Messiah.&#13;
With all that opportunity waiting, and the man so obviously unable to&#13;
see anything beyond the tears running off the end of his nose, I have&#13;
taken pity on him. Ronald Reagan needs help. So, being a typically&#13;
greedy opportunist, I have devised the following test for Reagan to use&#13;
on an initial sampling of unborn fetuses. The test, I believe, is unbiased&#13;
and reliable because it tests for abilities and traits that can be predicted&#13;
to develop mto human qualities and skills that not only separate the&#13;
human from non-human, but could also be applied at a later date to&#13;
separate American from non-American. And it's so easy to administer&#13;
even Reagan himself could interview the initial sampling. I think he'll&#13;
like it:&#13;
TEST TO DETERMINE THE RELATIVE HUMANNESS&#13;
OF THE UNBORN FETUS&#13;
Section I: Social Security Administration Recognition&#13;
a. Will SS issue a number to subject?&#13;
b. Will SS issue benefits to subject?&#13;
c. Will SS cancel benefits if subject is spontaneously aborted?&#13;
Section II: Following Directions&#13;
a. Subject's handling of computer card test materials&#13;
b. Subject's handling of federal tax materials&#13;
c. Subject's response to draft registration.&#13;
Section III: Recognition of major credit cards&#13;
Section IV: Media Potential&#13;
attention span property regulated to thirteen-minute&#13;
segments of viewing material?&#13;
Can subject recognize products in fifteen-minute segments?&#13;
Of course, the complete test is a bit more complicated than this one&#13;
When you have a good idea, you don't reveal the whole of it to iust&#13;
anyone until you're on the way to the bank. ^&#13;
Positions open on P.S.G.A.&#13;
bv Tracv Gruhpr —ni&#13;
Looks Great.&#13;
Feels Great.&#13;
by Tracy Gruber&#13;
President, P.S.G.A.&#13;
The P.S.G.A. fall elections will&#13;
be held Oct. 15-16, in Molinaro&#13;
Hall. At this time, nine senate&#13;
seats will be up for re-election as&#13;
will one SUFAC position.&#13;
What can an individual gain by&#13;
becoming a member of P.S.G.A.?&#13;
1. Experience in decision&#13;
making: A senator must vote&#13;
his/her conscience while acting&#13;
in the best interests of the majority&#13;
of UW-P students.&#13;
2. Experience in organizational&#13;
structure, procedure, and&#13;
problems.&#13;
3. The change to learn how the&#13;
University system and the&#13;
campus is run and governed.&#13;
4. The opportunity to meet&#13;
students, professors, and administrators&#13;
at UW-P and in the&#13;
UW system.&#13;
5. Proof of your leadership&#13;
abilities. Many employers hire&#13;
graduates who have had&#13;
responsible positions during their&#13;
college years.&#13;
If you are interested in running&#13;
for one of the open positions, the&#13;
first step is to stop in the P.S.G A&#13;
office, WLLC D-137, and pick up a&#13;
petition for nomination form. The&#13;
petition must be signed by 25&#13;
students in order to place your&#13;
name on the ballot. The signed&#13;
petition is due in the P.S.G.A.&#13;
office on Fri. Oct. 3, by noon.&#13;
P.S.G.A. welcomes interested&#13;
persons to stop in and discuss any&#13;
questions you may have.&#13;
Do you think parking permit&#13;
costs at UW-P are out of line for a&#13;
commuter campus? According to&#13;
a Board of Regents policy, all&#13;
parking facilities must generate&#13;
enough revenue to pay for&#13;
themselves.&#13;
The money generated by selling&#13;
parking permits totaled $135,467,&#13;
while $172,167 is generated by&#13;
parking fines, meters, bus tokens,&#13;
and interest income. All of this&#13;
money is used to cover the expenses&#13;
of the Campus Security&#13;
department. The services of this&#13;
department revolve around&#13;
security, parking, and busing. The&#13;
breakdown of expenses are:&#13;
$36,784 — Salaries; $16,000 — Lot&#13;
maintenance, including snow&#13;
removal, clean-up, and lighting;&#13;
$18,471 — Supplies; $32,432 — Bus&#13;
service; $68,480 - Building and&#13;
equipment mairitenance; $172 167&#13;
Total revenue.&#13;
(All these figures are taken&#13;
from the 1980-81 Auxiliary Budget&#13;
booklet, published by the UW-P&#13;
business office.)&#13;
Parking permit costs have&#13;
increased only when, and by an&#13;
amount absolutely necessary to&#13;
meet repair, expansion, and inflation&#13;
demands. Therefore, if you&#13;
Privilege of parking on&#13;
the UW-P campus, you will have&#13;
to pay the expense of maintaining&#13;
the facilities. &#13;
Middle Age Crazy' lacks continuity&#13;
"Middle Age Crazv" comp* y&#13;
.-&#13;
ee s halucinated —— m&#13;
by Bruce E. Preston&#13;
"Middle Age Crazy" comes&#13;
across as though a lot of people got&#13;
drunk, wrote the first hour, then&#13;
sobered up and wrote the last&#13;
twenty minutes. You don't have to&#13;
be middle aged to enjoy this film&#13;
just crazy.&#13;
It attempts to tell the story of&#13;
Bobby Lee Burnett (Bruce Dern),&#13;
a rhan who builds taco stands for a&#13;
living. Upon turning 40, Bobby Lee&#13;
decides he doesn't want the&#13;
hassles and responsibilities of&#13;
growing old. He's just a middle&#13;
aged man who wants to prove he&#13;
still can (as the song goes).&#13;
Along with the fears of o ld age,&#13;
Bobby Lee begins having&#13;
daydreams. Having sex with his&#13;
son's girlfriend, dying, hot rodding&#13;
in a Porsche and having an&#13;
affair with a Dallas Cowgirl, to&#13;
name a few. The latter and the one&#13;
preceeding it become realities&#13;
when he tries to regain his lost&#13;
youth.&#13;
Dern, who turns in some notable&#13;
performances here, is truly this&#13;
film's "diamond in the ruff" (and&#13;
do I mean rough). Many a scene is&#13;
saved by his talent as an experienced&#13;
actor.&#13;
Executive producers Sid and&#13;
Marty Krofft (whose credits include&#13;
such movie and television&#13;
greats as "H. R. Puffenstuff" and&#13;
"Sigmund and the Seamonsters")&#13;
have definitely left their mark on&#13;
the Mickey Mouse beginning of&#13;
this film. It has a great lack of&#13;
continuity.&#13;
Practically no plot is detectable&#13;
for about the first half - hour. A&#13;
theme can then be scraped out of&#13;
Bobby Lee's halucinated&#13;
graduation speech: "the future&#13;
sucks so stay 18 for the rest of your&#13;
life." Some theme.&#13;
Graham Jarvis merely&#13;
regurgitates the weak "country&#13;
bumpkin" role he created for&#13;
TV's "Mary Hartman, Mary&#13;
Hartman" when he appears as&#13;
Bobby Lee's best friend.&#13;
Ann - Margret plays Sue Anne&#13;
Burnett, Bobby Lee's wife. In the&#13;
beginning she's just there as a&#13;
mindless body, but the last half&#13;
brings her to us as a, woman with&#13;
real character. She executes her&#13;
end performances nicely.&#13;
"Middle Age Crazy's" only&#13;
humor (a few laughs now and&#13;
then) comes when it points out the&#13;
real humor of e very day life.&#13;
Carl Kleinschmitt (screenplay)&#13;
must be schizophrenic, for as I've&#13;
mentioned the last 20 minutes or&#13;
so takes on a totally new&#13;
dimension from the boorish first&#13;
hour.&#13;
A mellow song, penned by&#13;
dynamos Burt Bacharach and&#13;
Carol ("They're Playing Our&#13;
Song") Bayer Sager sets the mood&#13;
for some good serious acting by&#13;
Dern and Margret.&#13;
It's a real crime to see such&#13;
potentional (both acting and&#13;
story) actually wasted in an effort&#13;
to gain a few cheap laughs. This&#13;
really could have been a good&#13;
comedy.&#13;
The over glorified advertising&#13;
campaign states, "Science has yet&#13;
to discover a method to prevent&#13;
Middle Age Crazy . . ." Oh well,&#13;
one can always hope.&#13;
Astrologer casts&#13;
students' futures&#13;
by Sue Michetti&#13;
On September 22, Marcella&#13;
Ruble Rook, an astrologer, spoke&#13;
to a group of about twenty&#13;
students in the Union Bazaar.&#13;
She introduced basic&#13;
astrological concepts flippantly&#13;
and superficially. However, there&#13;
was some sense to the rapid&#13;
dissemination of incomplete inf&#13;
ormation.&#13;
ftook explained how the sun&#13;
deals with the inner nature, the&#13;
moon with emotions and women in&#13;
the life, Venus with the emotional&#13;
aesthetic nature and style,&#13;
Mercury with mental qualities,&#13;
Mars with the physical and sex&#13;
drives, Jupiter with financial&#13;
matters as well as the perspective&#13;
and philosophies on life, and&#13;
Saturn with responsibilities.&#13;
"Never give orders, only&#13;
suggestions to Aquarians and&#13;
Pisces," Rook said. "Sagittarians&#13;
and Capricorns can be disarming."&#13;
She said that Gemini's&#13;
often go into PR, communications,&#13;
or computers, but&#13;
that Virgos also can become involved&#13;
with computers.&#13;
"Pisces are good with details.&#13;
They are the best of actors and&#13;
actresses," she said, "because&#13;
they have the ability to absorb or&#13;
become a situation."&#13;
She said that Leo's are the most&#13;
flamboyant and have the best&#13;
personalities; thus, they do well&#13;
on radio and TV.&#13;
Discussing political astrology,&#13;
Rook said that people often&#13;
mistakenly cast election day as&#13;
containing the deciding factors&#13;
when they should look at the&#13;
inauguration day chart. Rook said&#13;
that Carter had good aspects for&#13;
Need students for hunger walk&#13;
"For the people of the Third&#13;
World, walking is more than a&#13;
pass-time. It is the only way to&#13;
survive! In Madagascar, they&#13;
walk seven miles to the well or&#13;
river for every drop of water they&#13;
use. In Peru, they walk fifteen&#13;
miles down the mountain and&#13;
back for medical care. In Haiti,&#13;
they walk twenty miles to the&#13;
market to sell the vegetables from&#13;
their gardens.&#13;
"We walk because more than&#13;
inauguration day.&#13;
In the near future, Rook said&#13;
that people born in the end of&#13;
Gemini, Sagittarius, and Pisces&#13;
should have more stress involving&#13;
authority figures over the next&#13;
few weeks. People born in the last&#13;
six or seven days of Scorpio,&#13;
Cancer, and Pisces will go&#13;
through changes until the end of&#13;
the year. She said that these&#13;
changes will cause the breaking&#13;
away from ruts and that they will&#13;
be finishing up happenings which&#13;
occurred earlier in February.&#13;
Jody Bedore,. a student,&#13;
remarked, "She seems to be&#13;
pretty good."&#13;
"I thought she was fantastic,"&#13;
said Cindy Stokman. "She got me&#13;
thinking about the future. We're&#13;
planning a trip and she told me&#13;
that I'd be getting bruises during&#13;
that time. She gets you thinking."&#13;
Chris Mayeshiba, a junior&#13;
classman, said, "It sounds like&#13;
she knows what she is talking&#13;
about. She seems very experienced.&#13;
She presents astrology&#13;
very fluently."&#13;
Continued On Page Seven&#13;
460,000,000 of these men, women,&#13;
and children are hungry. We walk&#13;
to provide food, seeds, tools. We&#13;
walk to provide wells, roads, and&#13;
schools." This is the message of&#13;
CROP according to Rev. Tony&#13;
Larsen of the Racine hunger walk.&#13;
Walk representatives plan to&#13;
contact church leaders, youth and&#13;
student groups, and civic leaders&#13;
to recruit walk participants and&#13;
sponsors. Sponsors will be asked&#13;
to make a financial contribution&#13;
for each kilometer walked.&#13;
Families, old and young, will be&#13;
asked to participate. For further&#13;
information regarding the hunger&#13;
walk, contact Tom LoGuidice in&#13;
the education office of Carthage&#13;
College. Racine people may call&#13;
552-8520, Ext. 257, Kenosha people&#13;
call 551-8500, ext. 257.&#13;
The 20 Kilometer walk is&#13;
scheduled for Sunday, October 5&#13;
beginning at 12:30 at the Racine&#13;
YMCA. The walk will follow the&#13;
familiar "Lighthouse Run." See&#13;
you there!&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction MusicLowest&#13;
Price Always&#13;
BIDINGER&#13;
MUSIC HOUSE INC.&#13;
626 56th St. 6542932&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents&#13;
"She can wail as well as she can whisper"&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1 st&#13;
1 - 3 p. m.&#13;
Dur ing A c tiv iti es P e r i o d!&#13;
U NION R OOM 1 0 4 - 1 06&#13;
FREE&#13;
PARKSIDE FOODSERVICE&#13;
announces&#13;
BY POPULAR REQUEST&#13;
THE CONTINUATION OF&#13;
*1.00 OFF&#13;
PIZZAS&#13;
(MEDIUM&amp; LARGE)&#13;
DURING ACTIVITIES PERIOD&#13;
1:00 to 2:00 P. M. — Mon., Wed. &amp; Fri.&#13;
UNION SQUARE GRILL &#13;
Thursday, September 25,1980 Ranger&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
I FCTI tri? . „ THURSDAY, SEPT. 25&#13;
7 a&#13;
„ 3 V.&#13;
a min&#13;
Union 106&#13;
• Ron Kent of AFSCME In-&#13;
?"**.&#13;
,How 0ur Union Began&#13;
"&#13;
The program is free&#13;
. c_,_ FRIDAY, SEPT. 26&#13;
^ T,&#13;
LOG"^77&#13;
adings bY Marcella Rubel Rook starting at 1 p.m. in&#13;
tne union Building. Admission is free for Parkside students. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
CONCERT — at 8 p.m. in Union Square with O'Brien and Sevara and&#13;
featuring Josh White, Jr. Admission at the door is $2.00 for Parkside&#13;
students and $2.50 fo r a guest. State and Parkside ID cards are&#13;
required. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
MOVIE — " The End" 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;
SUNDAY, SEPT. 28&#13;
MOVIE — "The End" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
MONDAY, SEPT. 29&#13;
ROUND TABLE — at 11:45 a.m. in Union 207. Prof. Ann Gurnack of&#13;
UWP will talk on "Incentive Systems for Public Sector&#13;
Organizations." The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
WORKSHOP — "Getting Involved" at 1 p.m. in Union 104. The program&#13;
is free for Parkside students.&#13;
VIDEO TAPE "Recording Session" will be shown at 1 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square. Admission is free for Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
TUESDAY, SEPT. 30&#13;
COURSES — "Parenting in Divorce" and "Winners are Communicators"&#13;
start tonight in Tallent Hall at 7 p.m. Call ext. 2312 for&#13;
more information. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
RECITAL —by faculty members Scott Mather and Carol Isell at 8 p.m.&#13;
in the Union Cinema. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
*&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 1&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE — featuring Betsy Kaske at 1 p.m. in Union 104-106.&#13;
Admission is free for Parkside students. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
WORKSHOP — "Math Anxiety" at 1 p.m. in MOLN 223. The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
VIDEO TAPE — "Recording Session" will be shown at 1 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square. Admission is free for Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
COURSES — "Watering and Thirsting" at 7 p.m. and "Cash&#13;
Management" at 7:30 p.m. in Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312 for details.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
MOVIE — "Footprints in Stone" challenges the authenticity of the&#13;
evolutionary theory. Union Cinema Theater 1:00 p.m. Sponsored by&#13;
IVCF.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
ROXANNE NELSON spikes the ball as Parkside waltzed by Chicago St. and Carroll.&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Rangers split in tournament&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The Parkside volleyball team&#13;
hosted Chicago State and Carroll&#13;
last week and totally humiliated&#13;
both teams. The Rangers defeated&#13;
Chicago State 15-13 and 15-4. They&#13;
then demolished Carroll 15-13 and&#13;
15-6. Co ach Linda Henderson had&#13;
praise for her opponents.&#13;
"Chicago State was better than&#13;
expected. They are vastly improved&#13;
from last year. They have&#13;
a very good defense but unfortunately&#13;
for them, no offense."&#13;
Tough trips for tennis&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
Last week the women's tennis&#13;
team ventured into Milwaukee for&#13;
a match against Marquette&#13;
University and came away on the&#13;
short end of a 7-2 team score. The&#13;
only bright spot for the Rangers&#13;
was the play of s ensational freshman&#13;
Lisa Lindsey. She continued&#13;
her unblemished number one&#13;
singles record with a hard fought&#13;
6-4,- 4-6, 6-4 victory over highly&#13;
regarded Marquette star Andrea&#13;
Foeller. The other Parkside&#13;
victory was the number two&#13;
doubles team of Lindsey - Pam&#13;
Sumi.&#13;
Coach Noreen Goggin took the&#13;
loss in stride. "Marquette is an&#13;
excellent team. To get two matches&#13;
against them is nothing to be&#13;
ashamed of. I'm very satisfied&#13;
with the way our people played."&#13;
She may have been satisfied&#13;
with the way her team performed&#13;
against Marquette, but she had&#13;
other thoughts about the team&#13;
when they took to the road against&#13;
Green Bay with Stevens Point.&#13;
The Rangers beat Green Bay 7 - 2&#13;
and was then upset by Stevens&#13;
P o i n t 5-4 .&#13;
"It is hard to play Green Bay&#13;
EXCEPTIONAL&#13;
MANAGEMENT&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
WE OFFER:&#13;
• starting salary up to $14,500;&#13;
increases to $24,000 in 4 years&#13;
• 30 days paid vacation annually&#13;
• fully financed graduate programs&#13;
• superior family health plan&#13;
• more responsibility and leadership&#13;
opportunities&#13;
• world wide travel and adventure&#13;
• prestige and personal growth&#13;
potential&#13;
CURRENT&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES:&#13;
• NUCLEAR ENGINEERING&#13;
• BUSINESS MANAGEMENT&#13;
• AVIATION • LAW • NURSING&#13;
• MEDICAL SCHOOL&#13;
SCHOLARSHIPS&#13;
• INTELLIGENCE&#13;
• CIVIL ENGINEERING&#13;
• SHIPBOARD OPERATIONS&#13;
Ask your Placement Officer to set up an interview with a Navy representative when he&#13;
visits the campus on:&#13;
30 Sept. — 1 Oct.&#13;
or contact your Navy representative at 414-291-3055 Co llect&#13;
NAVY OFFICER PROGRAMS&#13;
611 N. Broadway, Milwaukee, WI 53202&#13;
On Friday and Saturday the&#13;
team participated in the Wright&#13;
State Tournament at Dayton,&#13;
Ohio. Ten schools were invited&#13;
and the format was set up so there&#13;
were two divisions of f ive teams.&#13;
The Rangers were pooled with&#13;
Mount St. Joseph College of Ohi o,&#13;
Franklin College (Indiana),&#13;
Northeastern Illinois and the&#13;
University of Akron, Ohio.&#13;
The Rangers got off to a slow&#13;
start on Friday. "We played&#13;
poorly on Friday. It looked lifce we&#13;
were playing something other&#13;
because they aren't very strong.&#13;
They were very weak overall. It&#13;
just doesn't help to play £ team&#13;
like them. They could barely keep&#13;
the ball in play."&#13;
Stevens Point was a different&#13;
story. "I don't think we should&#13;
have lost. We played sloppy and&#13;
made a lot of mistakes. We just&#13;
should not have lost."&#13;
To be fair to the team it should&#13;
be noted that Nancy Kivi didn't&#13;
join the team on the trip because&#13;
she was down due to illness.&#13;
"Everyone had to play up one to&#13;
make up for Nancy's absence.&#13;
Another thing was that it was&#13;
raining outside so we had to go&#13;
indoors. Then if it stopped raining&#13;
they would make us go outside&#13;
Continued On page Seven&#13;
than volleyball." The Rangers lost&#13;
to Franklin College, 15-6 and 15-9.&#13;
They also lost to Northeastern&#13;
Illinois on Friday, 15-11 and 16-14.&#13;
"We started to show some signs of&#13;
life on Friday and that may have&#13;
started us off for Saturday."&#13;
On Saturday the Rangers beat&#13;
Mount St. Joseph 15-7 and 15-12.&#13;
They followed that up with a 15-1&#13;
and 15-3 killing of Akron. However&#13;
the 2-2 record wasn't good enough&#13;
for the team to advance.&#13;
"If we could have played well on&#13;
Friday we would have advanced.&#13;
It's our own fault." It wasn't a&#13;
complete loss because Henderson&#13;
found out some things ability-wise&#13;
about her players. "I found out&#13;
who can do what best. Each&#13;
player has a role on this team.&#13;
Everybody does something best&#13;
and a tournament can show it.&#13;
Now what we have to do is&#13;
maximize people's strengths. We&#13;
also know what we have to work&#13;
on more."&#13;
This Friday and Saturday the&#13;
Rangers host their own Ranger&#13;
Invitational. The Rangers host&#13;
Stevens Point, St. Xavier,&#13;
Valparaiso, St. Francis and&#13;
Carthage. On Friday evening the&#13;
women play St. Xavier at 6:00&#13;
p.m. and Carthage at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Next Tuesday evening the team&#13;
hosts Milwaukee and Lewis&#13;
starting at 6:00 p.m.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
Personals&#13;
Pavarotti sings UFO. "A resiliant Doctor,&#13;
Doctor" — The Times&#13;
Have bike — will hang I&#13;
B lT^c s M°'&#13;
eCUlar AC'&#13;
d Sfrikes A98in!&#13;
Don S. — Give me a call sometime. I w ant to&#13;
see if you're really the "Hulk". Felicia&#13;
Ken — You have the Ranger staff, but we've&#13;
got YDATE I&#13;
Please bring all dead animals to GRNQ 357&#13;
Thank you&#13;
Lisa: A toast to your twentieth. Happy Birthday.&#13;
NCA&#13;
Ray C. Look-alike and Art Contest. TodayMoln&#13;
115.&#13;
"I Do The exponential to insure my differential."&#13;
Laplace Trans Form&#13;
Tsh??°n P&#13;
"&#13;
e 2 Ke&#13;
" MeVer ' Sh0U,d be lit,le&#13;
(All five of us read it! lOP's/Chain Gang)&#13;
- week? ^pV01&#13;
" ,hfee 8dS P9id ,0r ,ast&#13;
Why do you assume that all three were put in&#13;
by him?&#13;
Hey Mikey, Would you like to help instruct a&#13;
Tushology Seminar? Mom and Jensv&#13;
Admit it Ranger! lOP's ads increase your&#13;
readership 10 percent!&#13;
lOP^s — You're all Muckos. Peepee Caca&#13;
Anxious cow seeks farmer with warm hands.&#13;
M"™l&#13;
|!!'J®Marv&#13;
"&#13;
,ake&#13;
s&#13;
me&#13;
|t&#13;
edma&#13;
r&#13;
shimallows&#13;
morbidly mushy. Ten times fast.&#13;
Are the Student Militants into S&amp;M'&#13;
Frenchfried firefly eating contest&#13;
dining room.&#13;
Dave Vollmer - we like the legs on page 8&#13;
Chain Gang w&#13;
°&#13;
-&#13;
lOP's — Idiots of Parkside? More like&#13;
Ignorant Ovulating Pukeheads.&#13;
S'mTlSpThave""&#13;
H°"&#13;
Gr"' &lt;*-»&#13;
i°f a f&#13;
£&#13;
ather ,,ock t09ether. I&#13;
in ,ove&#13;
- ^eddy Fairy&#13;
i™&gt;».&#13;
C°&#13;
U,d PU&lt; more than 10 wis into a&#13;
Lmp to nfT?®' ,hev would ei,her n&#13;
°' be&#13;
Lif the'r "copy °" " Ran96r&#13;
"°&#13;
Uld h&#13;
° V* ,0&#13;
ri5h&#13;
'&#13;
,0&#13;
-&#13;
1&#13;
Union&#13;
For Sale&#13;
350cc Honda $325. Ph. 885-1214&#13;
72 Ford Maverick, am/fm stereo 8-track,&#13;
ps/pb, 554X10 m iles, good tires and brakes&#13;
637-4312&#13;
Baldwin console piano - like brand new. Call&#13;
633 3964&#13;
Stereo system, Yamaha-AIWA, mint condition.&#13;
Reasonable offer. 886-9126&#13;
West High land Whit e Terri ers. AKC&#13;
registered. Excellent pedigree. $300. Ph.&#13;
859-2808&#13;
Wedding rings — 3 ring set. Appraised $600.&#13;
Best otter. 554-8134&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
"frs.r"&#13;
1&#13;
?&#13;
1&#13;
""&#13;
Address and stuff envelopes at home. $800 per&#13;
o°&#13;
S&#13;
,&#13;
Sible&#13;
' Any a9eor location. See ad&#13;
under Business Opportunities. Triple "S".&#13;
Business Opportunities&#13;
Address and stuff envelopes at home. $800 per&#13;
month possible. Otter, send $1.00 (refundable)&#13;
to: Triple "S", 869-C Juniper Rd ,&#13;
Pinon Hills, CA 92372&#13;
Meetings&#13;
esP&#13;
ano1&#13;
"- Thursdays &lt;&#13;
.00/ Mo In D128. Come and try it! inte&#13;
Varsity Christian Fellowship.&#13;
Miscellaneous&#13;
Ginger — 18 Sept. Parking Lot divided by&#13;
zero? Chain Gang&#13;
Improve your grades) Research catalog -&#13;
306 pages — 10,278 descriptive listings —&#13;
Rush $1.00 (refundable). Box 25097C, Los&#13;
Angeles, 90025. (213) - 477-8226 &#13;
Ranger Thursday, September 25, 1980&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Gerhartz makes his point&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
After being shut out its two&#13;
previous games, the men's soccer&#13;
team came out smoking last week.&#13;
The team journeyed into Illinois&#13;
twice and came away with two&#13;
victories. The men defeated&#13;
Trinity College 2-0, and then in&#13;
overtime smashed Roosevelt&#13;
University 3-1.&#13;
Against Trinity the Rangers, as&#13;
coach Hal Henderson put it,&#13;
"played in the monsoons. It was a&#13;
cold, windy, wet day. It started&#13;
raining in the first 15 minutes and&#13;
it just got worse." The Rangers&#13;
played into the wind in the first&#13;
half and were fortunate to hold&#13;
Trinity scoreless although they&#13;
themselves were blanked.&#13;
The Rangers had the wind and&#13;
rain on their backs in the second&#13;
half and they utilized them to their&#13;
fullest extent. The Rangers were&#13;
able to apply unmerciful pressure&#13;
and scored their first goal on a&#13;
penalty kick by Mike Kiefer. The&#13;
kick followed a hand violation by a&#13;
Trinity player who hit the ball&#13;
with his hand out of frustration&#13;
after he was unable to clear the&#13;
ball because of the weather.&#13;
The second Ranger goal was&#13;
scored when Brad Faust received&#13;
a perfect pass from Jeff Dennehy&#13;
and drilled it into the net.&#13;
"It was just miserable playing&#13;
conditions. The keepers couldn't&#13;
hold the ball, the ball skidded and&#13;
the wind blew the ball. We were&#13;
fortunate they didn't score on us in&#13;
the first half. I was extremely&#13;
pleased with the defense considering&#13;
the elements."&#13;
Although the Rangers outshot&#13;
their opponents, 18-11, and the&#13;
Rangers scored twice, Henderson&#13;
wanted more offensively. "We&#13;
built well but we still don't finish&#13;
well. We've got to get more shots&#13;
off."&#13;
When the Rangers went to&#13;
Chicago to play Roosevelt, the&#13;
offense finally came alive.&#13;
Parkside outshot their opponents&#13;
21-9, and put three of those shots in&#13;
the goal. "We controlled the&#13;
majority of the game but we had&#13;
the same problem as we did with&#13;
Beloit in that we controlled it and&#13;
had opportunities but couldn't&#13;
finish."&#13;
The Rangers almost proved to&#13;
be their own worst enemy because&#13;
their offensive penetration led to a&#13;
break-away goal by Roosevelt.&#13;
Because they controlled the game&#13;
Henderson substituted freely. "I&#13;
substituted freely because of the&#13;
confidence we controlled the&#13;
game. It back-fired." Roosevelt&#13;
scored with 30 seconds left to play&#13;
in regulation to tie Parkside 1-1,&#13;
forcing an overtime.&#13;
Brad Faust scored the only&#13;
Ranger goal in regulation time&#13;
early in the second half. Freshman&#13;
Scott Gerhartz scored three&#13;
goals in regulation time that were&#13;
disallowed. Said Gerhartz, "two&#13;
hand balls were called back and&#13;
one free kick." Of his overtime&#13;
heroics he said "one score was a&#13;
head shot and the other was on a&#13;
break-away and I beat two guys.&#13;
I've been getting a lot of garbage&#13;
goals but I earned the breakaway."&#13;
&#13;
Gerhartz, a freshman from&#13;
Kimberly, has great pride and&#13;
praise for him teammates.&#13;
"We've got a lot of talent this&#13;
year. Our defense has been doing&#13;
a hell of a job so far. Defense is&#13;
keeping us in the games so us guys&#13;
on offense have to score more."&#13;
The men's next game is Friday&#13;
against Whitewater at home. The&#13;
game is scheduled for 4:00 p.m. in&#13;
the Bowl.&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of beer? All you have to do is fill out this&#13;
entry form and bring it down to Ranger office, D139 WLLC Put a check&#13;
by your pick.&#13;
Houston at Cincinnati -&#13;
N.Y. Jets at Baltimore&#13;
Oakland at Buffalo&#13;
San Diego at Kansas City -&#13;
Atlanta at San Francisco —&#13;
Dallas at Green Bay&#13;
Los Angeles at N.Y. Giants&#13;
Minnesota at Detroit&#13;
Philadelphia at St. Louis —&#13;
Chicago at Pittsburgh&#13;
Cleveland at Tampa Bay —&#13;
New Orleans at Miami&#13;
Seattle at Washington&#13;
Denver at New England —&#13;
Tie breaker:&#13;
Philadelphia-St. Louis game.&#13;
will be the total combined points scored in the&#13;
Name:&#13;
S.S. No.&#13;
Rules: 1&#13;
1) One entry per person&#13;
2) Must be a student at UW-Parkside&#13;
3) Person with most correct picks wins (in case of a tie, the total&#13;
pints will be used as a tie-breaker)&#13;
4) Entry must be clipped from Ranger issue&#13;
5) Ranger members ineligible&#13;
6) Entries must be turned into Ranger office by 2:00 p.m on the&#13;
Friday preceeding the games&#13;
7) Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks. Come&#13;
to the Ranger office to collect winnings.&#13;
SPORTS CALENDAR&#13;
Friday, Sept. 26: SOCCER vs. WHITEWATER (4 p.m.); GOLF&#13;
RANGER INVITATIONAL (9:30 a.m.)&#13;
Friday-Saturday, Sept. 26-27:&#13;
VITATIONAL (5 p.m.)&#13;
VOLLEYBALL — RANGER INSaturday,&#13;
Sept. 27: TENNIS at Whitewater Invitational (8 a.m)-&#13;
CROSS-COUNTRY — TF A/USA MIDWEST COLLEGIATE&#13;
CHAMPIONSHIPS (12 no on)&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 30: VOLLEYBALL vs. MILWAUKEE &amp; LEWIS (6 p.m.)&#13;
Astrologer . . .&#13;
Continued From Page Five&#13;
"Everything she said about me&#13;
was right. Some of it was uncanny.&#13;
She said that I was very&#13;
visual as far as color and art are&#13;
concerned. And that I have to&#13;
visualize things to understand&#13;
them. Art is my major and there is&#13;
no way she could have known that.&#13;
She said that I was going to spend&#13;
a lot of money this weekend on&#13;
pleasure, and I'm going to Octoberfest&#13;
this weekend, and it will&#13;
cost a lot of money," remarked&#13;
Kelly Nichols.&#13;
Rick Folsom said, "Some of th e&#13;
observations she made after I&#13;
gave her my birthday were very&#13;
accurate. I was surprised most&#13;
things were complimentary. Most&#13;
people don't tend to deny complimentary&#13;
things."&#13;
Tennis . . .&#13;
Continued From Page Five&#13;
again. It was a matter of a lot of&#13;
things contributing to our loss."&#13;
On Saturday the team travels to&#13;
Whitewater for the Whitewater&#13;
Invitational. Last year the team&#13;
finished third and Goggin has&#13;
hopes of d uplicating that feat. In&#13;
the Whitewater Invitational a&#13;
player is allowed to play in only&#13;
the singles or only the doubles&#13;
competition, but not both. Goggin&#13;
plans to use Lindsey, Pam Sumi&#13;
and Char Hall in singles play and&#13;
doubles teams of Kathy ThomasKivi,&#13;
Lori Bleashka-Laura Bianco&#13;
and Barb Pruett - Emily Modiz.&#13;
(euf/nm/A''&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
PARKSIDE FOODSERVICE&#13;
HAVE YOU TRIED&#13;
OUR&#13;
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IN UNION SQUARE? &#13;
Fashions and a&#13;
wholo lot moro&#13;
WE OFFER:&#13;
GRAND OPENING AND&#13;
SALE*A*BRAHON SALE STARTS&#13;
WED. SEPT. 24TH&#13;
"LAYAWAY&#13;
AND&#13;
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PRIVILEGES"&#13;
GIFT CERTIFICATES&#13;
7AM-10PNI&#13;
AND CONTINUES ALL WEEK.&#13;
REGULAR STORE HOURS&#13;
RACINE I KENOSHA&#13;
MON.-FRI. 9AM-10PM I MON.-FRI,9:30AM-9:30PM&#13;
SAT.19AM-9PM I SAT. 9:30AM-5:30PM&#13;
SUN. 10AM-6PM | SUN. 12 NOON-5PM&#13;
TWO LOCATIONS&#13;
Westgate Mall,&#13;
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8600 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
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variety of necklines Perfect for fall&#13;
ELSEWHERE $30-44&#13;
NOW&#13;
POODLE&#13;
SWEATERS&#13;
Soft, plush, V-neck pullovers in a wide&#13;
range of solid colors in easy care 100%&#13;
acrylic.&#13;
ELSEWHERE $13-16.&#13;
NOW ^9&#13;
YOU'RE INVITED TO OUR...&#13;
GRAND OPENING/SALE-A-BRATION&#13;
•SALE•&#13;
Fashion PLUS is celebrating the Grand Opening&#13;
of our new store in Kenosha&#13;
Our concept of offering first quality Misses &amp; Junior&#13;
name brand fashions at everyday savings of up to 60%&#13;
is so successful, that we're opening a new store. Come&#13;
join the party at both locations.&#13;
SALE STARTS&#13;
WED., SEP. 24TH&#13;
7AM-10PM&#13;
AND CONTINUES ALL WEEK.&#13;
(GRAND OPENING)&#13;
IN&#13;
Westgate Mall, Old Market Square&#13;
Washington at Ohio 8600 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Racine. Wl 53406 Kenosha. Wl 53140&#13;
CHOOSE FROM HUNDREDS OF NAME BRAND&#13;
FASHIONS&#13;
• LEVIS • HAPPY LEGS • BRIGGS • SMARTPARTS • MODERN JUNIOR • FUNNY GIRL&#13;
• BLAZE • PARSON S PLACE • HUG ME • PLIERS • LANDLUBBER • HUK A POO •&#13;
DICKIES • THE EAST SIDE CLOTHING CO • CRAZY HORSE • PUCCINI • OSHKOSH B' GOSH&#13;
• ARDEE • CALVIN KLEIN • WILLIE SMITH • FADED GLORY . HANNA JEFFREYS •&#13;
• BOBBIE BROOKS&#13;
AND MANY MORE!&#13;
SUPER SPECIALS&#13;
SAUZE TOPS&#13;
GAUZE PULL OVER TUNICS&#13;
IN A WIDE RANGE OF&#13;
COLORS GREAT AS A&#13;
JEAN TOP&#13;
$Q5 0&#13;
IVOWV&#13;
ELSEWHERE $12&#13;
COWL NECK&#13;
SWEATERS&#13;
Long sleeve brushed acrylic cowls&#13;
with soft gathered necklines A&#13;
wardrobe basic&#13;
NOW s6&#13;
ELSEWHERE $12 </text>
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