<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3020" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/exhibits/show/rangernews/item/3020?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-09T09:56:27+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="4562">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/438711bceba5e963203afd56b1919d41.pdf</src>
      <authentication>055ea8e6e19155fb593ac066f8e67b87</authentication>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="8">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="97">
        <name>Issue</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="69577">
            <text>Volume 9, issue 7</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="96">
        <name>Headline</name>
        <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="69578">
            <text>Mullikin takes over P.S.G.A. vice-presidency</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="69588">
            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="1">
        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="90330">
            <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, October 16, 1980&#13;
Mullikin takes over P.S.G.A. vice-presidency&#13;
Kflv VniMw?1 !?if&#13;
h _. ..&#13;
sa&#13;
"? Gruber. "Kay's got ex- "We're trvino in not&#13;
by Jim Pugh&#13;
Kay Mullikin will serve the&#13;
remainder of the term of Vice&#13;
President of th e Parkside Student&#13;
Government Assocation, Inc.&#13;
(P-S.G.A.), which was left open by&#13;
the resignation of Claire Tostyga.&#13;
Mullikin was nominated by&#13;
President Tracy Gruber on&#13;
September 22. The senate approved&#13;
the nomination, but&#13;
because of the nature of th e secret&#13;
ballot the exact count of the vote&#13;
can not be disclosed, according to&#13;
Gruber.&#13;
The new vice president was&#13;
approved unanimously following a&#13;
motion from the senate. An earlier&#13;
attempt to appoint Mullikin was&#13;
defeated. Mullikin took the oath of&#13;
office October 6.&#13;
"She is an intelligent person,"&#13;
P.S.G.A. election today&#13;
said Gruber. "Kay's got experience&#13;
in life. She analyzes&#13;
problems and keeps an even level&#13;
on emotions."&#13;
"There are many people who&#13;
would be good vice presidents",&#13;
according to Gruber. "I needed&#13;
someone who can work with me.&#13;
Since the Vice President is&#13;
President of the Senate, she must&#13;
have a good rapport with the&#13;
senators".&#13;
Mullikin has been involved with&#13;
PSGA since her appointment last&#13;
January. She was elected a&#13;
Senator in the spring. Mullikin has&#13;
been a member of SU FAC.&#13;
"I would like to keep the Senate&#13;
going, working on projects, keep&#13;
the Senate organized and keep&#13;
conflicts to a minimum," Mullikin&#13;
stated.&#13;
"We're trying to get the&#13;
students to come too", said&#13;
Mullikin. "The main concern is&#13;
the benefit of students as a whole.&#13;
If students come to us, we can help&#13;
solve the problems they do have."&#13;
Mullikin is from Burlington. She&#13;
has been a student at Parkside for&#13;
two years and is majoring in&#13;
Business.&#13;
"Claire Tostyga who was&#13;
elected in the spring decided she&#13;
was no longer interested in&#13;
business as a major", according&#13;
to Mullikin. "She was more interested&#13;
in education of retarded&#13;
children and is going to Carthage."&#13;
&#13;
Mullikin said that she is undecided&#13;
as to whether or not she&#13;
will seek the office again. "It&#13;
depends on how everything goes&#13;
this year."&#13;
i/«Y AAlll I i i/ i ki / - 1 . x , . RANGER photo by Dan Galbraith&#13;
KAY MULLIKIN (right, background) runs a Senate meeting as&#13;
the new vice - president of P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senate candidates express views&#13;
Kathy (athy Bambroug Bambrough h the way that it should be man already in pen A ...U„ . .. -&#13;
Kathy Bambrough, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is a freshman&#13;
majoring in organizational&#13;
communications.&#13;
Bambrough said, "I am a&#13;
graduate of St. Joseph High&#13;
School, and have not yet had the&#13;
chance to be in a student government&#13;
organization. I have much&#13;
free time which I am willing to&#13;
devote working at the position of&#13;
Senator if I am elected. I feel that&#13;
I am hard working, open minded,&#13;
and perfect for the job."&#13;
Jdmes Doucette&#13;
James Doucette, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is a freshman&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
"I've been interested in&#13;
government for many years, and&#13;
with the experience that I have&#13;
acquired in government, I think&#13;
that I should be able to represent&#13;
our school and our government&#13;
the way that it should&#13;
represented," Doucette said.&#13;
Renee Giilmore&#13;
Renee Giilmore, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is a freshman&#13;
majoring in business&#13;
management.&#13;
Giilmore said, "I would like to&#13;
be elected senator to improve the&#13;
university life of the students. ?&#13;
feel I could do this since I have&#13;
held leadership positions in the&#13;
past, including president of a&#13;
Junior Achievement Company. I&#13;
know that to get ideas across and&#13;
accomplished that I must be involved.&#13;
I am ready and willing to&#13;
become involved. The best way to&#13;
accomplish this is by being involved&#13;
in student government as a&#13;
senator."&#13;
Dave Habegger&#13;
David Habegger, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is a freshman&#13;
already in P.S.G.A. who&#13;
belongs to S.U.F.A.C., Night&#13;
Transportation Committee, Big&#13;
Brothers, and Academic Policies&#13;
Committee.&#13;
Habbegger said, "I would like to&#13;
see night bus service to Parkside&#13;
from both communities."&#13;
"I believe that the bookstore&#13;
charges too much," said Habbegger.&#13;
He feels that this is the&#13;
result of the lack of competition.&#13;
He also thinks that somehow&#13;
faculty should be persuaded to get&#13;
their book orders in on time.&#13;
Habbegger thinks that&#13;
programs and activities should be&#13;
examined for need and benefits&#13;
before money is appropriated for&#13;
them.&#13;
Chris Hammelev&#13;
Chris Hammelev, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is a&#13;
sophomore majoring in&#13;
Accent on Enrichment&#13;
offers student discount&#13;
Parkside students will get a half&#13;
- price break this year on the&#13;
university's Accent on Enrichment&#13;
(AOE) entertainment&#13;
series.&#13;
"In the past most students found&#13;
ticket prices a bit high for their&#13;
means," according to Walt Shirer,&#13;
public information director. "This&#13;
year we are making a limited&#13;
block of season tickets available&#13;
to students at $20 for six performances.&#13;
That's an average of&#13;
just $3.33 a performance for some&#13;
of the best entertainment in AOE&#13;
history. Everybody else will pay&#13;
$39.50 for the series."&#13;
Students also can save more&#13;
than $3 a ticket on individual&#13;
performances, but Shirer said&#13;
that single event availability will&#13;
depend on how many tickets&#13;
remain. "Season ticket orders will&#13;
be filled first," he said, and added&#13;
that season ticket renewal sales&#13;
have passed the 65 per cent mark,&#13;
which is the best rate in series&#13;
history. AOE season ticket sales&#13;
have ranged from 80 to 100 per&#13;
cent sell - outs in recent seasons.&#13;
"The important thing is that&#13;
students now have an affordable&#13;
opportunity to enjoy the series&#13;
which has established the highest&#13;
standard of excellence and entertainment&#13;
value for Kenosha&#13;
and Racine audiences," Shirer&#13;
said.&#13;
Student orders will be filled only&#13;
at the Union Information Center,&#13;
and on a first - come basis. I. D.&#13;
cards must be shown, there is a&#13;
limit of two season tickets per&#13;
student and tickets are not&#13;
transferable to non - students.&#13;
Payment is by check, cash or&#13;
Master Charge.&#13;
Internationally - acclaimed&#13;
French pianist Philippe Entremont,&#13;
appearing with the 100 -&#13;
piece L'Orchestre du Capitole de&#13;
Toulouse under the baton of&#13;
Michel Plasson, will headline the&#13;
1980 81 A OE Series.&#13;
The series will open on Nov. 1&#13;
with stage, film and TV star Kevin&#13;
McCarthy in an election eve&#13;
performance of "Give 'Em Hell,&#13;
Harry," a one - man tour de force&#13;
Continued On Page Sixpsychology.&#13;
She also is a member&#13;
of P.A.B.&#13;
Hammelev said, "I have been&#13;
involved with P.S.G.A. for a year&#13;
now and havo&#13;
President Pro Tempore of&#13;
the Senate. Many inter -&#13;
organizational changes will have&#13;
to be made in order to improve our&#13;
efficiency. These changes deal&#13;
with the structure and Constitution&#13;
of P.S.G.A. — both of&#13;
which are too easily manipulated&#13;
for personal benefits."&#13;
"Parking, tenure, and minority&#13;
student issues should all be dealt&#13;
with as well," said Hammelev. "I&#13;
believe that P.S.G.A. has finally&#13;
got the potential to compete with&#13;
the credibility of some of the other&#13;
major organizations on campus."&#13;
Randy K lees&#13;
Randy Klees, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is a freshman&#13;
who already belongs to&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
"I have always been a hard&#13;
worker," said Klees. "When I&#13;
came to Parkside I was interested&#13;
in the way the university operated&#13;
and how decisions were made.&#13;
When elected, I will try to do a&#13;
good job and will hopefully be able&#13;
to make significant contributions&#13;
to Parkside's student government."&#13;
&#13;
Todd Laszewski&#13;
Todd Laszewski, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is a freshman&#13;
who considers himself a pre -&#13;
law student.&#13;
"I've been involved in student&#13;
government in the past, so I know&#13;
how to get people motivated,"&#13;
said Laszewski. "And that's what&#13;
I think this school needs —&#13;
motivation and more student&#13;
involvement."&#13;
Laszewski said, "My goal is to&#13;
create and promote more activities&#13;
that the students will&#13;
really want to get involved in. I&#13;
also plan to emphasize school&#13;
spirit so everyone can have more&#13;
reason to be proud of P arkside."&#13;
Charles Perce&#13;
Charles Perce, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is currently&#13;
a freshman at Parkside.&#13;
Perce said, "In my six years of&#13;
student congress during junior&#13;
and senior high school, almost all&#13;
of th e propositions were passed. I&#13;
have only voted for the items that&#13;
my peers were for. I worked hard&#13;
on getting those items passed."&#13;
"I would like to see the price of&#13;
parking reduced," Perce continued.&#13;
"I would also like to see&#13;
more of the 450 Minutes' programs&#13;
created on a wider variety of&#13;
subjects. I would like to see more&#13;
clubs on the interests of a bigger&#13;
cross - section of the student&#13;
body."&#13;
Luis Valldejuli&#13;
Luis Valldejuli, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is a freshman&#13;
at Parkside majoring in&#13;
political sciences.&#13;
Valldejuli said that if he is&#13;
elected he will view the position of&#13;
Senator as an opportunity to help&#13;
Parkside as a school. "I've lived&#13;
in Puerto Rico most of my life/'&#13;
Valldejuli said. "I look forward to&#13;
learning at and helping Parkside&#13;
by bringing different ideas and&#13;
opinions to the school as a&#13;
Senator. I believe I should be&#13;
elected because I do have many&#13;
new ideas from having experienced&#13;
different lifestyles "&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Women in government&#13;
• Review: 'Ordinary People'&#13;
• Volleyball team to Sweden? &#13;
To the Editor I Case for nuclear power&#13;
University acts&#13;
unfair to co-op&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
We feel that it was irresponsible&#13;
of the Ranger to give&#13;
credibility to the unsubstantiated&#13;
claims written by A1 Pisula about&#13;
the book co-op by labeling his&#13;
editorial 'Co-op Unfair To&#13;
Members' in the 10-9-80 Ranger.&#13;
None of the assertions in A1&#13;
Pisula's letter were correct.&#13;
To clear up some of the&#13;
misconceptions and felonious&#13;
information presented:&#13;
The rental agreement. We did&#13;
not refuse to sign one. We submitted&#13;
a compromise agreement&#13;
which included all the demands of&#13;
the University. They responded to&#13;
it by sending us an eviction notice&#13;
on June 5th. (Not a very convenient&#13;
time for students to express&#13;
their disapproval.) For a&#13;
copy of their letter, and our&#13;
response, stop at the food co-op&#13;
and ask for our June newsletter.&#13;
Restructuring. The University&#13;
administration has refused to&#13;
accept the structure students have&#13;
set up for C.S.C., which is the&#13;
student organization that includes&#13;
the food and book co-ops, and a&#13;
Learning Center. They will only&#13;
accept the organization if the 550&#13;
students (10% of the Parkside&#13;
student population) are organized&#13;
in a way that they can dominate&#13;
all of their policies.&#13;
C.S.C. has been operating for&#13;
the last 5 years with its present&#13;
structure. The organization includes&#13;
more than 1/2 students who&#13;
have operated and determined&#13;
policy and direction for the group.&#13;
The Parkside administration's&#13;
to witnnoid—o&#13;
segregated fees allocation.&#13;
Segregated Fees. The administration&#13;
has withdrawn the&#13;
already allocated $8,800&#13;
previously approved by them, the&#13;
P.S.G.A., and the Student&#13;
Segregated Fee Committee (the&#13;
responsible student committee for&#13;
allocating this funding). This&#13;
allocation was the basis of the&#13;
budgeting and planning for all of&#13;
our projects, except the food coop.&#13;
The food co-op has received no&#13;
segregated fees since 1978.&#13;
Book Co-op price increase. As a&#13;
result of this segregated fee loss&#13;
we have had to increase membership&#13;
fees and markups in the&#13;
food and book co-ops. This price&#13;
increase in the book co-op only&#13;
amounts to 40 cents on an $8 book.&#13;
We felt that co-op members would&#13;
be willing to pay this nominal fee&#13;
to support this service which is&#13;
still competitive with the book&#13;
store.&#13;
The Book Co-op will remain&#13;
open. C.S.C. has not abandoned its&#13;
commitment to serve students at&#13;
the book co-op. It will be open&#13;
every Tuesday 12:30-4, Wednesday&#13;
2-4, and Thursday 4-6 with&#13;
financial help from the food co-op.&#13;
Regular meetings with the&#13;
administration. A representative&#13;
from C.S.C. has met regularly&#13;
with the University. Between&#13;
biweekly meetings and our faculty&#13;
advisors' availability we have&#13;
been responsible for informing&#13;
them of any major policy changes&#13;
within the organization.&#13;
A1 Pisula's personal interest in&#13;
taking over the book co-op has&#13;
obviously obscured his perception&#13;
of these facts. Instead of coming&#13;
to the board of directors or the&#13;
staff to clarify his misunderstandings,&#13;
A1 opted to go to the&#13;
University with unfounded&#13;
claims, and to try to cause distrust&#13;
for the co-op and alienate the&#13;
membership by his article in last&#13;
week's Ranger. We feel he has&#13;
been encouraged by the administration&#13;
to misrepresent the&#13;
intentions of C .S.C.&#13;
But, besides this short-lived&#13;
controversy, we as students interested&#13;
and concerned for this&#13;
campus feel this eviction will have&#13;
a profound effect on Parkside.&#13;
Co-ops are a synthesis of&#13;
principles, ideals and member&#13;
involvement. At the Chiwaukee&#13;
Prairie Co-op Parkside students&#13;
have always gotten preferential&#13;
treatment. Lower membership&#13;
rates, guaranteed representation&#13;
on the board of directors, and&#13;
staffing primarily through work&#13;
study.&#13;
As the only co-op in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha our group became a&#13;
tor for, rmnejati.&#13;
communities: People from a..&#13;
walks of life were inspired by&#13;
what was happening at Parkside.&#13;
Seniors and students, often one in&#13;
the same, lent their expertise.&#13;
We felt it was invaluable&#13;
community outreach to engage&#13;
folks in activity on our campus&#13;
that we were all proud of.&#13;
We're not just a store that sells&#13;
nutritional food. We're a&#13;
movement providing a necessary&#13;
alternative to a fragmenting&#13;
system of food for profit — not&#13;
people.&#13;
We're sorry if our intentions&#13;
have been misunderstood in&#13;
trying to bring cooperation to this&#13;
campus. In this environment of&#13;
learning and growth there should&#13;
be more room for the diversity&#13;
that higher education claims to&#13;
promote.&#13;
In June, Parkside will be a&#13;
lesser place without the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie Co-op.&#13;
Cooperatively submitted,&#13;
Joan Barten, Jeff Myers,&#13;
and Victoria Wellens&#13;
C.S.C. Board Members&#13;
by Kelly Starks&#13;
and Terry R. Rasmussen&#13;
In the October 9 issue of the&#13;
Ranger, there was an article&#13;
entitled the "Case against nuclear&#13;
power" by Deb Elzinga who&#13;
stated her strong personal views&#13;
against nuclear power. We applaud&#13;
the defense of one's beliefs,&#13;
however, as history has shown,&#13;
strong beliefs are no substitute for&#13;
the facts. We are now taking this&#13;
opportunity to argue the case for&#13;
nuclear power.&#13;
It was stated that there are&#13;
dangers from the very beginning&#13;
of the fuel cycle. It is quite true&#13;
that there are dangers involved to&#13;
people and the environment with&#13;
any fuel cycle. However, the&#13;
nuclear fuel cycle has proven to be&#13;
the safest of any of the alternative&#13;
fuel cycles.&#13;
There was also a mention of&#13;
lung cancer rates among uranium&#13;
miners being 20%. The actual rate&#13;
over the past 60 years was 3%,&#13;
about the same as other forms of&#13;
deep mining, with the exception of&#13;
coal mining which is far higher.&#13;
As to the randon gas, most forms&#13;
of r ock emit this radioactive gas.&#13;
For instance the bricks and&#13;
concrete of Parkside, other&#13;
sources are natural gas, oil, coal,&#13;
as well as most mining and&#13;
milling operations.&#13;
There are many myths about&#13;
nuclear waste disposal, among&#13;
these is the idea that nuclear&#13;
Wastes need to be vigorously&#13;
guarded for thousands of years.&#13;
Due to the nature of radioactive&#13;
decay the more toxic radioactive&#13;
compounds disintegrate rapidly.&#13;
Within three to eight centuries the&#13;
remaining wastes are less toxic&#13;
than the original uranium ore. The&#13;
original ore, however, was not&#13;
fused into ceramic nonleachable&#13;
blocks and sealed in thick walled&#13;
stainless steel canisters buried a&#13;
mile underground in stable, dry&#13;
gpnlopirfl], form at,ions.&#13;
radiation detection and&#13;
measurement devices and crosschecks&#13;
by unexposed&#13;
photographic film taken from&#13;
residences and stores in the area&#13;
around Three Mile Island&#13;
(sources such as EPRI Journal,&#13;
the Atomic Industrial Forum were&#13;
used as references). The article&#13;
had specifically stated, ". . .&#13;
conflicting reports as to just how&#13;
much radiation and other carcinogenic&#13;
and potentially&#13;
genetically damaging substances&#13;
these people were exposed to."&#13;
The authors know of no&#13;
documented conflicting reports,&#13;
concerning this subject.&#13;
One effect of TMI is a great&#13;
increase in confidence among&#13;
nuclear engineers and scientists&#13;
in the resiliency of reactor&#13;
structures and safety systems.&#13;
The reactor core did not melt&#13;
down after several hours without&#13;
any coolant. It is now questioned&#13;
whether or not it is physically&#13;
possible for a reactor core to melt&#13;
down. Since the reactors were&#13;
designed to assure environmental&#13;
safety in case of such accidents as&#13;
meltdowns, this lowers the&#13;
potential danger to the public even&#13;
further. Since nuclear power was&#13;
already the second safest method&#13;
of ge nerating electricity (the first&#13;
is natural gas), this considerably&#13;
reassured the nuclear power&#13;
industry.&#13;
We are at present experiencing&#13;
an "Energy Crisis" caused by an&#13;
overdependence on oil, especially&#13;
foreign sources. This is not&#13;
directly applicable to the&#13;
generation of electricity since well&#13;
under 15% of our electricity was&#13;
generated with oil, by 1979&#13;
statistics. However the solution to&#13;
the energy crisis will require a&#13;
relatively cheap and reliable&#13;
source and/or sources of e nergy.&#13;
This does not require a decentralized&#13;
source of energy, since&#13;
its&#13;
ensterilizing&#13;
many lakes in the&#13;
Northern United States, as well as&#13;
the cancer from coal exhausts&#13;
The cancer from coal exhausts&#13;
are reported as being contracted&#13;
by as many as 40 to 70 people nS&#13;
plant-year. y **&#13;
We feel that the slight monetarv&#13;
savings and abundance of coal&#13;
does not compensate for&#13;
degratory effect on our&#13;
vironment and public health&#13;
Nuclear power, by contrast is&#13;
insulated from the environment&#13;
with the exception of the cooling&#13;
system, which is also inherent in&#13;
other conventional generating&#13;
methods. There are sufficient&#13;
known uranium reserves within&#13;
this country to supply our present&#13;
total electrical demands for over&#13;
60 y ears using conventional light&#13;
water reactors, or for the next&#13;
6,000 years if we were to use&#13;
breeder reactors (based on&#13;
numbers from the United States&#13;
Energy Data Book 1980, an industry&#13;
reference standard)&#13;
Although the breeder reactor is&#13;
being superceded by the fusion&#13;
reactor, which is capable of being&#13;
brought "on-line" within the next&#13;
20 years, the breeder is presently&#13;
commercially available internationally.&#13;
&#13;
Much has been made of the risks&#13;
of the breeder reactor; such as the&#13;
fact that it produces plutonium&#13;
This is correct since it is the&#13;
purpose of t he breeder to produce&#13;
plutonium (i.e., nuclear fuel), all&#13;
normally operating reactors&#13;
produce plutonium, along with&#13;
most every other element in the&#13;
periodic table. A breeder&#13;
produces plutonium much more&#13;
efficiently, thus allowing it to&#13;
refuel other reactors as well.&#13;
Although it is true that plutonium&#13;
is used to make nuclear bombs,&#13;
the grade of plutonium produced&#13;
by commercial breeder reactors&#13;
not usable for weapons&#13;
troduced, it would have virtually&#13;
no effect on the canister, much&#13;
less the ceramic.&#13;
As to the radiation from other&#13;
stages in the nuclear fuel cycle,&#13;
they are trivial when compared&#13;
with other fuel cycles; for&#13;
example it is 1/40 that of coal&#13;
(from randon gas) or the normal&#13;
radiation changes due to location&#13;
or environment.&#13;
Mention was made of the Three&#13;
Mile Island accident, referred to&#13;
as "the accident that wasn't&#13;
supposed to happen," which incidentally&#13;
was statistically&#13;
forecasted by the WASH 1400&#13;
report. Also mentioned was the&#13;
unknown radiation releases and&#13;
long term effects from TMI, actually&#13;
these values are well&#13;
documented and known. In fact,&#13;
these values have been listed as&#13;
less than seven millirems. This&#13;
exposure is approximately&#13;
equivalent to a coast to coast jet&#13;
flight's exposure to radiation.&#13;
These values were measured and&#13;
documented by the various on-site&#13;
jHo wev er, s i n c e i h e&#13;
unreliable in practice. Our&#13;
present North American continental&#13;
energy network is extremely&#13;
reliable considering the&#13;
fact that electricity generated at&#13;
one site on the continent can be&#13;
routed to any other site on the&#13;
continent. At present our&#13;
generating capacity is marginally&#13;
capable of producing the electricity&#13;
required at peak load&#13;
periods. This is caused by the lack&#13;
of generating capacity not fuel.&#13;
Additional generating facilities&#13;
are needed to satisfy the growing&#13;
need for electricity. The presently&#13;
available systems are nuclear&#13;
fission, coal, oil and gas, the latter&#13;
two of which are presently being&#13;
phased out, since these two&#13;
resources are quickly becoming&#13;
rare and expensive. Coal,&#13;
although relatively cheap and&#13;
abundant, is rather harmful to the&#13;
environment, such as in the form&#13;
of ac id rains, which are presently&#13;
tere have been breeder&#13;
reactors that have been&#13;
specifically designed to produce&#13;
weapons grade plutonium, by and&#13;
for the military. As it can be seen,&#13;
breeder technology is a relatively&#13;
old technology. We would rather&#13;
this technology were to be used for&#13;
the benefit of all in the peaceful&#13;
use in the production of nuclear&#13;
fuel.&#13;
Incidentally, in the article it was&#13;
mentioned, ". .. had the potential&#13;
of killing hundreds of thousands of&#13;
people." There is no known&#13;
scenario where any plant accident&#13;
which would kill hundreds of&#13;
thousands, let alone the Fermi&#13;
reactor which was totally incapable&#13;
of a melt down.&#13;
It was stated in the article "...&#13;
we need a solution to the energy&#13;
crisis immediately." Unfortunately,&#13;
since she discounts&#13;
the conventional sources, such as&#13;
nuclear power, she has chosen&#13;
Continued On Page Six&#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;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
Mike Holmdohl . .7.7. SEE Id to&#13;
Mike Farre,., Bruce Preston"!!.!. .*.!!. Advertisi^S&#13;
Paf r STAFF&#13;
Lei ni«r&#13;
aK?&#13;
r/ ^ 5&#13;
aron Charlton, Thomas Delany, Patty&#13;
Garv i I h 9 Edenhauser, Ginger Helgeson, Carol Klees,&#13;
O'Neill 2&#13;
ef/ J McCormack, Lori Meyer, Christiir&#13;
sSrd&#13;
Brs„e&#13;
p^rpsor pugh&#13;
-&#13;
joe Ripp&#13;
'&#13;
Bi&#13;
resporraIbIe'&#13;
S&#13;
for"!ts oditor?af n',!^ by&#13;
_J&#13;
s,uden,s&#13;
°&#13;
f UW-Parkside and they are&#13;
Published everv Thur^ J.&#13;
P&#13;
?"&#13;
CLand con,e&#13;
"fRANGER&#13;
is printed by the Union acad&#13;
fmic year except during breaks and hoi&#13;
Written permission is required for Pub,ishi&#13;
"9 Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
AH correspondence £ h.12Trmto,any Portion of RANGER.&#13;
PaOrslde, Kenosha, Wl 53141 addr&#13;
essed to: Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139.&#13;
paper with one inch°maroint&#13;
eAa&#13;
ii&#13;
:&#13;
?fS,ed " 'VPewrltten, doublespaced on standar&#13;
for verification. otters must be signed and a telephone number in!&#13;
Deadline for^etterT i*s'°Tuesda^''at q&#13;
easons Maximum length accepted is 500 v&#13;
reserves all Editorial priviK in AT1&#13;
" .'&#13;
or Publication on Thursday. The RAI&#13;
defamatory content. refusing, to print letters which contain la &#13;
Women assessed in '80 campaign&#13;
by Susan Michetti • ^&#13;
Martin Gruberg, a Columbia&#13;
graduate and UW - Oshkosh&#13;
political science professor, spoke&#13;
on Women in the 1980 Ele ction&#13;
Campjngn'' at the Wisconsin&#13;
Political Science Association&#13;
Convention held here October 10&#13;
"Since 1964, I have been&#13;
assessing the role of women in our&#13;
elections," Gruberg said, "and&#13;
my preliminary examination of&#13;
races around the country gives&#13;
some reason for optimism. There&#13;
are 55 female candidates for&#13;
Congress: 27 Democrats, 26&#13;
Republicans, one Liberal, and one&#13;
independent. Compare this with&#13;
two years ago when only 48&#13;
women were- candidates and four&#13;
years ago when 52 were. In 1980&#13;
women constitute a ridiculously&#13;
low 17 out of 535 members of&#13;
Congress."&#13;
Gruberg explained that in 1974&#13;
and 1978 there were 16 wo men in&#13;
the House: five Republicans and&#13;
11 Democrats. There was only one&#13;
woman in the Senate.&#13;
Since the 1960's more women&#13;
have been voting than men according&#13;
to Gruberg. In 1976, only&#13;
41 million men went to the polls&#13;
while 45.6 million women voted. So&#13;
in 1980, Gruberg expects that&#13;
there will be four to five million&#13;
more women voting than men.&#13;
Looking at the Senate races this&#13;
year, Gruberg sees that New York&#13;
has a Congresswoman leading the&#13;
field with a fair chance of winning&#13;
the seat that Jacob Javits has&#13;
now. It is possible that a&#13;
Republican woman running for&#13;
M A R T IN G R U B E R G,&#13;
professor at Oshkosh.&#13;
Senate from Florida might also&#13;
win a seat.&#13;
Gruberg does not anticipate a&#13;
win by the women running for&#13;
Senate from Kentucky, Nevada,&#13;
or Colorado.&#13;
"As far as the House races, we&#13;
have quite a few candidates who&#13;
are women," Gruberg stated.&#13;
"Now, we're at the point where we&#13;
have a number of women who are&#13;
climbing the political ladder.&#13;
They are not beginners. They are&#13;
people who have some visibility&#13;
from having run in other elections."&#13;
&#13;
"Maryland is an interesting&#13;
state," Gruber remarked. "Of the&#13;
sixteen women in the House, four&#13;
of them come from just that one&#13;
state."&#13;
Women running for House seats&#13;
from California, Colorado,&#13;
Illinois, New Jersey, New York,&#13;
and Rhode Island, also, have a&#13;
good chance to win a seat according&#13;
to Gruberg.&#13;
"We may have more than 20&#13;
women in the House — an all time&#13;
record — if things work according&#13;
to my assessment one month&#13;
before the polls," Gruberg&#13;
predicted.&#13;
"Since most of the incumbents&#13;
in the national and state elections&#13;
are Democrats, most of the&#13;
women who are challenging are&#13;
Republicans," Gruberg explained.&#13;
"Looking at the House&#13;
races, the G.O.P. has had a more&#13;
extensive program to groom&#13;
candidates — male or female — in&#13;
campaign skills and also to&#13;
provide them with financial and&#13;
other assistance and that is likely&#13;
to have a pay - off not only in&#13;
Congressional races but in state&#13;
races."&#13;
"At present in the whole United&#13;
States, there are just 32 state&#13;
elected officials who are female,&#13;
but again this is an all - time&#13;
record," Gruberg explained.&#13;
There are two female governors,&#13;
and six lieutenant governors.&#13;
There are 770 (10.3%) female&#13;
state legislators which is double&#13;
the figure a decade ago;&#13;
Gruberg stated that in 1976,&#13;
there were 7,944 female elected&#13;
officials on all levels — national,&#13;
state, and local. Today, there are&#13;
16,529. So there is growth in the&#13;
number of females in elected&#13;
offices in the United States.&#13;
Presidential candidates' views on pot&#13;
by Sue Michetti&#13;
Although not publicized by the&#13;
national media, the opinions of&#13;
President Carter, Ronald Reagan,&#13;
Rep. John Anderson, and Ed&#13;
Clark — all Presidential candidates&#13;
— are quite varied&#13;
regarding marijuana.&#13;
Carter has been silent on the&#13;
marijuana issue since 1978, when&#13;
the press reported that some of his&#13;
top aides used 'pot'. Although&#13;
elected in 1976 on a&#13;
decriminalization platform,&#13;
Carter's only stand on the issue&#13;
while President was to defend&#13;
spraying paraquat on Mexican&#13;
marijuana fields.&#13;
Reagan, the Republican candidate&#13;
for President, is strongly&#13;
against marijuana. When he was&#13;
governor of California, Reagan&#13;
vetoed several bills in favor of&#13;
reducing penalties for simple&#13;
possession. He also spoke out in&#13;
favor of strict law enforcement of&#13;
marijuana laws.&#13;
Anderson, the independent&#13;
candidate from Illionis, has not&#13;
co-sponsored any of the&#13;
decriminalization bills introduced&#13;
in the U.S. House of Representatives.&#13;
However, now that he is&#13;
on the campaign trail, he supports&#13;
decriminalization of marijuana.&#13;
Clark, the Libertarian Party&#13;
candidate, supports full&#13;
legalization of marijuana for&#13;
adults, which includes repeal of&#13;
all marijuana laws as well as legal&#13;
cultivation and sale of marijuana&#13;
without governmental regulation.&#13;
Philip Morris Incorporated has&#13;
announced its Twelfth Annual&#13;
Marketing / Communications&#13;
Competition for Students which&#13;
will award a total of $4,000 to&#13;
students. The competition is&#13;
designed to provide an opportunity&#13;
for students nationwide&#13;
to sharpen their marketing and&#13;
communications skills.&#13;
A first place award of $2,000, a&#13;
second place award of $1,000, and&#13;
a third place award of $500 will be&#13;
presented to the winning entries in&#13;
both the graduate and undergraduate&#13;
categories. In addition,&#13;
student representatives&#13;
and faculty advisors will be invited&#13;
to corporate headquarters in&#13;
New York City to discuss their&#13;
projects with Philip Morris&#13;
executives.&#13;
Students are invited to develop&#13;
marketing / communications&#13;
projects related to Philip Morris&#13;
Incorporated or any of its nontobacco&#13;
products and operations.&#13;
The competition is divided into&#13;
graduate and undergraduate&#13;
categories, and is open to students&#13;
Space satellite probes global weather&#13;
Creation of a research institute&#13;
using space satellite information&#13;
to probe the workings of weather&#13;
was jointly approved in late&#13;
August by the National Oceanic&#13;
and Atmospheric Administration&#13;
and UW - Madison. The&#13;
Cooperative Institute for&#13;
Meteoroligical Satellite Studies&#13;
(CIMSS) will support research&#13;
scientists from NOAA's National&#13;
Environmental Satellite Service,&#13;
the university's Space Science and&#13;
Engineering Center and the&#13;
meteorology department, and&#13;
perhaps later, other universities&#13;
and agencies from inside and&#13;
outside the U.S.A.&#13;
Research already earmarked&#13;
for CIMSS includes mations and a&#13;
project named AgRISTARS, a six&#13;
- year effort which includes global&#13;
rain - fall estimates and predictions&#13;
of weather conditions affecting&#13;
major farm crops. Plans&#13;
also call for some work on the&#13;
concept of regional weather&#13;
forecasting.&#13;
Including the transfer erf present&#13;
research and new projects, the&#13;
institute's budget is expected to&#13;
top $1 million within a year. It will&#13;
be one of only six such cooperative&#13;
NOAA institutes in the nation, and&#13;
Member P arkside 2 00&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phon* 654-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
Arnheim will speak on art&#13;
currently enrolled in any accredited&#13;
college or university.&#13;
Undergraduate students must&#13;
work in groups of three or more,&#13;
and graduate students in groups of&#13;
two or more, both under the&#13;
counsel of a full-time faculty&#13;
member.&#13;
For additional information,&#13;
please contact Gerry Rizzo,&#13;
Competition Coordinator, Philip&#13;
Morris Incorporated, 100 Park&#13;
Avenue, New York, New York&#13;
10017.&#13;
Rudolph Arnheim, Harvard&#13;
University's distinguished&#13;
psychologist of art, will speak on&#13;
the creative process in visual art&#13;
at a free public lecture to be held&#13;
at Parkside on Thursday, Oct. 23,&#13;
at 4 p. m. in Greenquist Hall 103.&#13;
His slide - lecture is entitled&#13;
Picasso's "Guernica": Genesis of&#13;
a Painting, and it will focus on the&#13;
psychological dynamics involved&#13;
in the creation of this famous&#13;
artwork that depicts the theme of&#13;
war and tragedy. ("Guernica"&#13;
was painted in commemoration of&#13;
the Basque town that was completely&#13;
destroyed by bombs at the&#13;
start of the Spanish Civil War).&#13;
Arnheim has written eight&#13;
major books and numerous articles&#13;
on the psychology of art. His&#13;
most influential publicantion is&#13;
'Art and Visual Perception',&#13;
which has had great impact on the&#13;
fields of aesthetic psychology and&#13;
art education. In 1976 Arnheim&#13;
received the Distinguished Service&#13;
Award from the National Art&#13;
Education Association for his&#13;
contributions to the world of art&#13;
scholarship.&#13;
Molinaro to be acclaimed&#13;
"The Founding Father: George&#13;
Molinaro of Kenosha" will be the&#13;
topic of a Social Science Roundtable&#13;
talk by University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside history&#13;
professor John D. Buenker at noon&#13;
on Monday, Oct. 20, in the&#13;
Parkside Union.&#13;
An assembly line worker who&#13;
became a bank president, a union&#13;
organizer who became a board&#13;
chairman, a county board&#13;
supervisor who became the dean&#13;
of Wisconsin legislators serving&#13;
both as speaker of the state&#13;
assembly and chairman of the&#13;
joint finance committee, Molinaro&#13;
is credited with many contributions&#13;
to the community..&#13;
Among his proudest accomplishments&#13;
was shepherding&#13;
of the enabling legislation for&#13;
Parkside through the state&#13;
legislature and protection of the&#13;
institution's interests in its formative&#13;
years. Last October, the&#13;
university named a building in his&#13;
honor.&#13;
Learn how to select major&#13;
On Monday, October 20, the&#13;
sixth program from the 50-Minute&#13;
series for new, re-entry and&#13;
transfer students will be offered&#13;
on "Selecting a Major." This&#13;
session from 1:00-2*00 p.m. in&#13;
Union 104-106, is designed to help&#13;
students learn how to make&#13;
decisions regarding their choice of&#13;
majors. Factors which influence&#13;
tVioao dooiaiona w ill Ka&#13;
Students will be taught how to&#13;
investigate majors, their&#13;
requirements and what they have,&#13;
to offer. The session will also&#13;
include information on the&#13;
necessary procedures to declare&#13;
and change majors.&#13;
Students who have questions or&#13;
who have not registered for this&#13;
session may do so by calling 553-&#13;
Student charged with fraud&#13;
Marketing-communications awards offered&#13;
Patrick McCafferty (age 24),&#13;
2421 Chinchilla Lane, Springfield,&#13;
Illinois pled guilty to a one coun t&#13;
criminal charge on August 21,1980&#13;
in the U.S. District Court, Central&#13;
District of Illinois (Springfield).&#13;
The defendent, Patrick McCafferty,&#13;
was granted a&#13;
suspended sentence (maximum&#13;
sentence would be imprisonment&#13;
of one year and a $1,000 fine) and&#13;
placed on probation for five years.&#13;
He was ordered to repay the&#13;
Social Security Administration&#13;
$6,780.90 in student benefits&#13;
illegally obtained (according to an&#13;
agreed upon schedule) by August,&#13;
1985.&#13;
McCafferty on four separate&#13;
occasions had made false&#13;
statement claiming to be a fulltime&#13;
student when he was not.&#13;
Now, this young man has an&#13;
arrest record for the rest of his&#13;
life.&#13;
Young people who are drawing&#13;
student benefits under Title II of&#13;
the Social Security Act are hereby&#13;
reminded of their obligation to&#13;
report cessation of full-time attendance&#13;
to their local Social&#13;
Security District Office. Failure to&#13;
do so could result in criminal&#13;
prosecution.&#13;
the only one dealing with satellite&#13;
information. Prof. Verner E.&#13;
Suomi (MSN-Science Sci/CIMSS)&#13;
was named director of the institute.&#13;
A NOAA official said,&#13;
"The creation of CIMSS&#13;
recognizes one of the most&#13;
productive research capacities in&#13;
the country."&#13;
m.*:.&#13;
ISy $o$epli&#13;
4 BAKERY&#13;
W. til. Iriny Su.rl fo... YOU Sr&#13;
• DANISH TORTE CAKES ^&#13;
• KRINGiES V&#13;
• WEDDING CAKES&#13;
• CAKES FOR A U OCCASIONS&#13;
• RNE ITALIAN BREAD 654-0785 MOM FNI 6 AM 1 0PM • RAID (Oil &amp; KUN tKCUIKK Vvt VI Vv SAT k SUM CAM S AM * owt SCXVJAIIS I &gt; 39TH AVtNUE&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction MusicLowest&#13;
Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654-2932 &#13;
4 Thursday, October 16,1980 Ranger&#13;
rDm. , e—— RANGER photo by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Absent Friends CaSh&#13;
' Sc&#13;
°&#13;
tt Relchelsdorf&#13;
' and Leon Van Dyke, director of&#13;
Play reveals trite reactions&#13;
by Wendy Westphal&#13;
Last week in Chicago Leon Van&#13;
Dyke directed original music&#13;
material showcased for playhouse&#13;
owners and agents. This week&#13;
here at Parkside he will be&#13;
directing Alan Ayckbourn's&#13;
Absent Friends. You may ask&#13;
why?&#13;
Leon Van Dyke is the new coordinator&#13;
of the Dramatic Arts&#13;
discipline. He instructs Beginning&#13;
Acting, Theatre Backgrounds,&#13;
and Advance Acting Styles (an&#13;
Independent Study). Van Dyke&#13;
earned his PhD at Wayne State&#13;
University in Detroit, Michigan.&#13;
At the same time, he was a&#13;
member of the Repertory&#13;
Hillberry Classic Theatre. This&#13;
affiliation allowed for the application&#13;
of ac ademic skills to the&#13;
insight of acting.&#13;
Scattered in Van Dyke's office&#13;
"Cwmrer&#13;
are foils and daggers. Even&#13;
though I was alarmed, I later&#13;
found out that they were only a&#13;
special interest. He directs&#13;
workshops on how to safely&#13;
perform stage violence and is a&#13;
member of the Society of&#13;
American Fight Directors.&#13;
Absent Friends was chosen for a&#13;
number of reasons. It is a&#13;
delightful, modern play. The stage&#13;
characters are young and so are&#13;
the actors at Parkside. Character&#13;
reaches can be made with&#13;
realism. Comedy is always appreciated.&#13;
"All people&#13;
everywhere even in Kenosha and&#13;
Racine have a crying need to&#13;
laugh," said Van Dyke.&#13;
The play demonstrates our&#13;
society's use of trite phrases.&#13;
When Colin's fiancee has&#13;
drowned, what can be said by his&#13;
old friends to comfort him? Our&#13;
constant use of "I'm sorry" has&#13;
taken its meaning away. Complicating&#13;
our language even more&#13;
is the oppostion between what we&#13;
say and how we mean it. This is&#13;
revealed in Paul's wife. She knows&#13;
he is having an affair with one of&#13;
the guests yet she can't come right&#13;
out and ask who it is.&#13;
Absent Friends deals with old&#13;
friends. "Renewing old friendships&#13;
always forces us to rose -&#13;
color our memories," responded&#13;
Van Dyke. What do you do when&#13;
you see old friends? The guests all&#13;
taint their once awful times to be&#13;
remembered as wonderful&#13;
memories.&#13;
Under the direction of Leon Van&#13;
Dyke, Alan Ayckbourn's Absent&#13;
Friends will open Thursday,&#13;
October 23 in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Satisfy your crying&#13;
need to laugh.&#13;
Youth committee promise fulfilled&#13;
by Kathy Slama&#13;
One of the major campaign&#13;
promises of Kenosha's Mayor&#13;
John D. Bilotti was to establish a&#13;
youth committee comprised of&#13;
students. These students were to&#13;
be from Kenosha's junior and&#13;
senior high schools and from area&#13;
colleges and universities. School&#13;
leaders were to recommend&#13;
candidates for the committee to&#13;
the mayor. This promise was&#13;
realized on August 29 when the&#13;
committee held its first meeting.&#13;
The goal of the committee is&#13;
twofold. Primarily it is to open the&#13;
doors for dialogue between the&#13;
mayor's office and area youths. It&#13;
also gives the student a direct&#13;
voice in the governmental&#13;
decisions which concern them.&#13;
Organizations in the area such&#13;
as Special Olympics and the Senior&#13;
Citizens Center can use this&#13;
° covui.mmiiiuitte vwv eas a «veh VC1UL1C icle1Ufor I in- lit&#13;
i *&#13;
The Swinging Sounds of the&#13;
Late '40s and early '50s&#13;
• Jitterbug Contest* Costume Contest*&#13;
• PRIZES*&#13;
off for anyone wearing a costume of the 1940's&#13;
Admission:&#13;
Mixed Drinks Available&#13;
2 ID's Required&#13;
•l&#13;
50 for UW-P Students&#13;
*2°° for Guests&#13;
Friday, October 24, 1980&#13;
9:00 p.m. Union Square j&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
STAMP your&#13;
way to success&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
t&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
This is "Book Review Week"&#13;
here in the Parking Lot. After&#13;
reading last year's reviews,&#13;
literally thousands of major&#13;
foreign and domestic publishers&#13;
have sent hundreds of thousands&#13;
of best-selling and not-so-bestselling-but-hopeful&#13;
books to&#13;
Parking Lot, hoping for that&#13;
famous PL Seal of Approval.&#13;
Some publishers even sent money&#13;
oVer the summer, and I've been&#13;
meaning to send it back, but they&#13;
didn't enclose self-addressed,&#13;
stamped envelopes. Besides, most&#13;
of the tens and twenties have been&#13;
spent.&#13;
Out of those books that were&#13;
sent, one in the category of nonfiction&#13;
was selected to be&#13;
reviewed. Coincidentally, the&#13;
publisher of the book sent me so&#13;
much money that it would have&#13;
been downright embarrassing to&#13;
ignore James A. Sleezy's STAMP&#13;
Your Way to Success: How to Get&#13;
Everything You Always Wanted&#13;
But Didn't Know How to Get&#13;
Because of Moral Inhibitions&#13;
(Knopf, $69.99, hardcover edition&#13;
only).&#13;
In his preface, Sleezy writes,&#13;
"Most people simply don't know&#13;
how to get what they want because&#13;
when they were children, their&#13;
parents forced them to view&#13;
themselves as undeserving of&#13;
almost everything they wanted,&#13;
and they subsequently blocked out&#13;
their desires. People are so busy&#13;
trying to be 'good', 'mature' and&#13;
'moral', that they end up leading&#13;
their lives in an unhappy state&#13;
Thoreau once aptly termed 'quiet&#13;
desperation'. Their desires are&#13;
unfulfilled; even their natural&#13;
desires is the cause of most of&#13;
America's problems. He writes,&#13;
"Society is plauged by many ills,&#13;
but the Black Death of today is&#13;
forming youth in the area of activities&#13;
and programs which can&#13;
directly involve them.&#13;
Some of the ideas which were&#13;
brought forth at the first two&#13;
meetings were finding jobs, bus&#13;
service to the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside campus,&#13;
moving books to the new library,&#13;
and volunteer programs.&#13;
The representative from&#13;
Parkside is Kathy Slama. If&#13;
anyone has suggestions or ideas&#13;
for this committee, contact her in&#13;
the P.S.G.A. office.&#13;
television. Why T.V.? Because&#13;
television teaches you to view an&#13;
enormously attractive product for&#13;
30 to 60 seconds, initiating in you&#13;
an insatiable desire to possess&#13;
that product in truck-load&#13;
quantities, and then it's 'Back to&#13;
our story'. This can be very&#13;
frustrating. Studies show that&#13;
most suicides and homicides that&#13;
occur while the television is on are&#13;
committed at that frustrating&#13;
moment of d isappointment at the&#13;
end of the commercial break."&#13;
Sleezy is not optimistic about&#13;
the future. "The only progress&#13;
that has been made in alleviating&#13;
the public's pain over the past 20&#13;
years has been the toll-free credit&#13;
card telephone number," he&#13;
notes.&#13;
Without STAMP, Sleezy (and,,&#13;
obviously his publisher) wouldn't&#13;
recommend televison-watching to&#13;
anyone. Sleezy also recommends&#13;
the book to anyone who is worried&#13;
about nuclear warfare, writing&#13;
"STAMP-ing will effectively&#13;
replace bombing, if the book sells&#13;
well."&#13;
The balance of STAMP is given&#13;
to an easy-to-follow program that&#13;
guides the reader away from&#13;
inhibited, self-abusive behavior&#13;
like over-eating during commercial&#13;
breaks (an avoidance&#13;
behavior Sleezy calls "directly&#13;
related to the inability to procure&#13;
things like lawn mowers, designer&#13;
jeans and tampons" and steers&#13;
the reader toward open, healthy&#13;
expressions of greed.&#13;
Some of Sleezy's suggestions&#13;
include what he terms a "level&#13;
analysis" of the problem. The&#13;
reader is told to "work through"&#13;
his/her inhibitions by gradually&#13;
becoming, more and more open to&#13;
the desire. Level one is called&#13;
"Screaming", level two is devoted&#13;
to full-fledged "Tantrums", level&#13;
three includes "Agressiveness"&#13;
(not assertiveness, which Sleezy&#13;
calls "wishy-washy") and on&#13;
levels four and five are "Murder"&#13;
and "Psychotic Behavior",&#13;
respectively. Most things can be&#13;
had by the time the STAMP-er has&#13;
reached level three, according to&#13;
Sleezy, but the other two levels&#13;
come in handy at times.&#13;
"If you want it," writes Sleezy,&#13;
"STAMP to get it." STAMP is a&#13;
refreshingly honest guide, and&#13;
you'll have fun using it to acquire&#13;
whatever you set your heart on. If&#13;
you only plan to purchase one&#13;
"How To" book this year, make it&#13;
STAMP.&#13;
ADVERTISING&#13;
REPRESENTATIVES&#13;
NEEDED&#13;
Will receive&#13;
15% Commission&#13;
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 Preslon&#13;
,n the Ranger Office&#13;
WLLC D 139 — 553-2295 &#13;
Review&#13;
'Ordinary People'&#13;
extraordinary&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
"Ordinary People" excellently&#13;
paints a tableau of how a real&#13;
crisis can actually cause a family&#13;
to fall apart. It mixes a host of&#13;
emotions with a wealth of ta lent to&#13;
produce one of this year's most&#13;
profound motion pictures.&#13;
It takes place in lush Lake&#13;
Forest, Illinois and shows what&#13;
happens to a family after one of its&#13;
two sons is killed in a boating&#13;
accident.&#13;
Timothy Hutton is magnificent&#13;
as Conrad, the surviving son, who&#13;
after his brother's death, tried to&#13;
commit suicide and was sent to a&#13;
mental hospital. Conrad is a&#13;
complex,, multi - dimensional&#13;
character who at times is withdrawn,&#13;
slightly insane, or slightly&#13;
incoherent and at others is just a&#13;
ROBERT REDFORD&#13;
high school student trying to put&#13;
the pieces of his life back together.&#13;
Hutton never fails to portray&#13;
Conrad perfectly in each of his&#13;
different moods.&#13;
Mary Tyler Moore plays Beth, a&#13;
mother who is more worried about&#13;
appearances than the feelings of&#13;
her family. It may sound like she's&#13;
a shallow character, but the way&#13;
that Moore presents her, Beth&#13;
becomes both appalling and intriguing.&#13;
&#13;
Beth loved her first son (Buck)&#13;
so much that she blames Conrad&#13;
for his death. She can't bring&#13;
herself to love Conrad because it&#13;
brings back the painful memories&#13;
of Buck. This feeling sets the&#13;
background for some confrontations&#13;
between mother and&#13;
son. In these dramatic scenes, one&#13;
becomes awed at the fact that&#13;
they talk like two strangers, with&#13;
Hutton in another world and&#13;
Moore just going through the&#13;
motions. The excellence of these&#13;
two actors is exemplified here and&#13;
becomes a maintained par&#13;
throughout the movie.&#13;
Donald Sutherland is very good&#13;
as Calvin, the father trying to hold&#13;
his family together but not seeing&#13;
things exactly as they are between&#13;
Beth and Conrad. He tries to keep&#13;
both happy any way he can. He&#13;
becomes elated over the fact that&#13;
his son decides to seek help from a&#13;
psychiatrist but Beth is ashamed&#13;
of it and this type of emotional&#13;
see - saw" eventually becomes&#13;
too much for him.&#13;
Sutherland is effectively&#13;
dramatic in the end scenes when&#13;
he confronts his wife with little&#13;
things that he has been wondering&#13;
about her (why she was so worried&#13;
about what he wore the day of t he&#13;
funeral for example) and with the&#13;
fact that possibly they don't love&#13;
each other any more, He shows&#13;
another side of men when he, a&#13;
successful father and&#13;
businessman, cries.&#13;
Judd Hirsch is Dr. T. C. Berger,&#13;
Conrad's psychiatrist. His&#13;
character is like a new pair of&#13;
jeans; uncomfortable at first, but&#13;
with time they become smoother&#13;
and you grow to like them. He&#13;
helps Conrad to gain insight into&#13;
himself and helps him to experience&#13;
emotions.&#13;
In the scene where Conrad's big&#13;
breakthrough comes, it is so&#13;
dramatic that it will leave you&#13;
tingling. Hirsch and Hutton are&#13;
wonderfully feeling here.&#13;
At school, many students find it&#13;
hard to accept Conrad and one of&#13;
them is Stillman(Adam Baldwin).&#13;
This is a totally differeent&#13;
character from the one Baldwin&#13;
played in "My Bodyguard" and he&#13;
is very good as the "BMOC" who&#13;
gives Conrad a hard time.&#13;
There are some happy scenes&#13;
put in to show that life is not all&#13;
tragedy, and one of the best is&#13;
when Conrad asks a girl at school&#13;
for a date. Again Hutton is good as&#13;
he tries to think of w hat to say to&#13;
her and how low of a voice he&#13;
should use. This scene is real and&#13;
has happened to every high school&#13;
or junior high school boy who has&#13;
ever called a girl and asked her&#13;
for his first date.&#13;
The ending is neither a happy&#13;
Hollywood ending nor is it a&#13;
holocaustal tragic ending, but&#13;
rather a believable one.&#13;
This film marks actor Robert&#13;
Redford's directorial debut and&#13;
except for a few flaws (the weak&#13;
flash - backs where Mary Tyler&#13;
Moore is supposed to be young) he&#13;
has done an excellent job.&#13;
"Ordinary People" is accurately&#13;
titled because all of the&#13;
characters are ordinary. You may&#13;
not find yourself in this film, but&#13;
there is someone in there whom&#13;
you can recognize because you&#13;
have met them at one time or&#13;
another.&#13;
In this day and age when fantasies&#13;
and comedies are over -&#13;
populating our television sets,&#13;
literature, and theatres, "Ordinary&#13;
People" is a fresh breath of&#13;
reality. You must go see it.&#13;
Cancer researcher to speak&#13;
Elizabeth Cavert Miller, one of&#13;
the nation's most distinguished&#13;
cancer researchers, will speak at&#13;
UW-Parkside Friday, Oct. 17, at 1&#13;
p.m. on "Chemical Carcinogens in&#13;
Human and Experimental&#13;
Animals." The talk, sponsored by&#13;
the UW-P Life Science -&#13;
Chemistry Colloquium, will be&#13;
held in Molinaro Hall room 105&#13;
and is free and open to the public.&#13;
Dr. Miller is the WARF&#13;
Professor of Oncology at the&#13;
McArdle Laboratory for Cancer&#13;
Research in Madison. She also has&#13;
served as acting director and&#13;
associate director of the McArdle&#13;
Laboratory and, with Dr. J.A.&#13;
Miller, has recently received&#13;
major cancer research awards&#13;
from the Gardner Foundation,&#13;
Bristol-Myers Co. and General&#13;
Motors Research Foundation.&#13;
During the past decade she has&#13;
received seven other major&#13;
research awards, as well as&#13;
serving as past president of the&#13;
DR. ELIZABETH CAVERT&#13;
MILLER&#13;
American Association for Cancer&#13;
Research board of directors and&#13;
as a member of the National&#13;
Academy of Sciences.&#13;
Review&#13;
ELVIS COSTELLO AND THE ATTRACTIONS&#13;
'Liberties' worth the money&#13;
by Carol Klees&#13;
Usually when a musician is hard&#13;
- up for new album material, the&#13;
consumer gets a live album of&#13;
older songs which is always either&#13;
one of two things: all good, or only&#13;
fit for frisbee practice.&#13;
None of the tracks on Elvis&#13;
Costello's new album, "Taking&#13;
Liberties," are new or live&#13;
recordings, they are never -&#13;
releaseds and flipsides of 45's; but&#13;
that doesn't immediately tag it a&#13;
"bad album." On the contrary,&#13;
"Liberties" is worth the money,&#13;
but be certain you like Costello&#13;
before you buy it, because there&#13;
are twenty (count them, 20) songs&#13;
on the album. Most of the cuts are&#13;
fast - paced, and they are all fairly&#13;
short (never running over 3:30 or&#13;
so), so the opportunity to bog the&#13;
listener down never arises.&#13;
Since its futile and useless&#13;
enumerating what I liked about&#13;
the album, I'll stick to those things&#13;
I didn't like first. 'Stranger in the&#13;
House', mistake number one,&#13;
doesn't try to be anything other&#13;
than it is, a country western tune&#13;
— and hooray for Costello's&#13;
versatility — but it fits in&#13;
"Liberties" like a duck in the&#13;
desert.&#13;
Costello gives that goof - up&#13;
company by sticking his rendition&#13;
of Rogers &amp; Hart's 'My Funny&#13;
Valentine' in towards the end of&#13;
side two. Such a stunt should be&#13;
expected of Costello, he prides&#13;
himself in being belligerently&#13;
deviant. He's smart enough to&#13;
hold it to a minimum in "Liberties,"&#13;
though, and that saves the&#13;
lp.&#13;
Aside from those petty grumblings,&#13;
"Taking Liberties" contains&#13;
some of Costello's better&#13;
work. He's fairly successful in&#13;
doing what I've been waiting for&#13;
new wave rockers to do; this is the&#13;
first "new wave" of the "old&#13;
wave" I have heard which&#13;
transports the music of the 50's60's&#13;
to the present intact. Modern&#13;
musicians seem to have a hard&#13;
time writing "old fashioned"&#13;
music without the styles and&#13;
opinions of the '70's infringing in&#13;
some way upon their work.&#13;
In "Liberties," Costello doesn't&#13;
do a bad job of sticking to&#13;
business; much of the sarcasm&#13;
and bitterness evident in his&#13;
earlier albums is missing, and&#13;
when his sourness makes itself&#13;
known, it's easy to tune him out&#13;
and listen to the melody instead.&#13;
The first time I listened to&#13;
"Liberties" I thought, hey, isn't&#13;
that — Herman's Hermits Paul&#13;
Revere and the Raiders Jan and&#13;
Dean Derekand the Dominoes the&#13;
Purple Pteradactyls Mr Bill and&#13;
the Playdohs? It's rather pleasant&#13;
not being able to distinguish who -&#13;
did - what. The only dead&#13;
giveaway on the album is&#13;
Costello's voice, and he mellows&#13;
out in several of the songs so much&#13;
that it would be hard to recognize&#13;
him on the radio.&#13;
I have a difficult time trying to&#13;
figure out why Costello sat on so&#13;
much of this stuff, too much of it is&#13;
too good to leave around collecting&#13;
dust. Once I was indifferent to&#13;
Costello's music, but "Taking&#13;
Liberties" has caught my interest.&#13;
It's not a bad album, it's&#13;
pretty good. If you enjoy new&#13;
wave, pick up a copy, by all&#13;
means. If you don't like new wave,&#13;
or Costello, you won't be thinking&#13;
of bu ying it in the first place, and&#13;
it's a wonder you're reading this&#13;
review. To those who are curious,&#13;
"Taking Liberties" is a nostalgia&#13;
trip, and not at all a wasted investment.&#13;
&#13;
5'- • Jr&#13;
THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
announces:&#13;
OR^Ki^ST&#13;
"AN EVENING OF FINE FOOD AND FUN."&#13;
NSOATV. . 8, 1980&#13;
6-OOpm - VOOam&#13;
#15. OO&#13;
INCLUDES: * Wine Punch Reception * Five Course Gourmet Greek Dinner *&#13;
Costumed Greek Folk Dancers * Authentic Greek Band * Mediterranean Bellv&#13;
Dancers '&#13;
Tickets on sale beginning Monday, October 20, 1980&#13;
UNION INFORMATION CENTER&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside &#13;
Thursday, October 16,1980 Ranger&#13;
Democracy looks promising&#13;
Latin American nations discussed&#13;
by Sue Michetti&#13;
Thomas G. Sanders, a member&#13;
of the American University Field&#13;
Staff with a Ph.D. in religion from&#13;
Columbia University, visited&#13;
Parkside October 9, and spoke on&#13;
the relationship of industrializing&#13;
Latin American nations to&#13;
democracy.&#13;
"Democracy is an exceptional&#13;
thing. In Latin America, Africa,&#13;
and Asia a lot of authoritarian&#13;
governments can be found which&#13;
oscillate back and forth between&#13;
dem ocr acy and&#13;
authoritarianism," Sanders&#13;
began.&#13;
Sanders explained that the&#13;
Latin American nations contain a&#13;
philospophic basis for democracy&#13;
which dates back to the inspiration&#13;
drawn from the North&#13;
American and French models in&#13;
the e arly 19th ce ntury. Although&#13;
democracy has failed in Latin&#13;
America, the ideals still remain&#13;
along with the sentiment of&#13;
moving toward a democratic&#13;
system.&#13;
"Intervention by the military in&#13;
Latin America is preceived as a&#13;
temporary thing, and somehow&#13;
the idea to restore deomcracy is&#13;
seen as the no rm." Sanders cited&#13;
Argentina which has had 50 years&#13;
of democracy.&#13;
Sanders listed free and open&#13;
elections and constitutionalism as&#13;
some fundamental characteristics&#13;
of liberal democracies as he&#13;
compared Latin American nations&#13;
with those of Southern Europe.&#13;
"Other countries have also&#13;
oscillated between democracies&#13;
and authoritarianism," Sanders&#13;
stated. Sanders said that there has&#13;
been oscillation between the&#13;
military government and&#13;
democracy in both Greece and&#13;
Turkey.&#13;
Sanders said that these nations&#13;
all are only partly developed and&#13;
industrialized, and yet they have&#13;
great aspirations to join the world&#13;
markets of highly technological&#13;
specialization. This attitude&#13;
reflects problems which show why&#13;
authoritarian governments are&#13;
the rule.&#13;
First, economic crises are&#13;
created from the development&#13;
aspirations within the national&#13;
ideology, social pressure from&#13;
groups, and the government&#13;
spending too much money.&#13;
Although certain sectors are&#13;
comfortable, they recognize the&#13;
need to develop more because the&#13;
demands of the underprivileged&#13;
sectors are so great and serious.&#13;
"The argument is that the&#13;
government can't cut expenses,"&#13;
said Sanders, "so they get into&#13;
inflation by printing more money.&#13;
This is used to import raw&#13;
materials which results in balance&#13;
of payment deficits."&#13;
Second, Sanders said, "There is&#13;
the problem of incorporating new&#13;
social groups into society." He&#13;
stated that after the upper class&#13;
and the middle class become well&#13;
off, strong unions develop good&#13;
benefits for their workers&#13;
However, this leaves out a large&#13;
portion of the population, perhaps&#13;
even half of it. "This creates&#13;
dissatisfaction among the lower&#13;
class segments who do n't live as&#13;
well and places a strain on&#13;
society," said Sanders. "This&#13;
creates relatively strong Marxist&#13;
parties which don't dominate '&#13;
government, but gain support&#13;
because of the unequal and only&#13;
partial development in these&#13;
societies."&#13;
Third, he said, "There is a&#13;
histopr of absolutists political&#13;
conflict which is based on strong&#13;
ideologies from which contending&#13;
ideologies view winning by the&#13;
opposition as disaster." Italy is a&#13;
European nation with this type of&#13;
attitude. This polarization of&#13;
society tends to bring charismatic&#13;
leaders to power, as it did in&#13;
Argentina and Chile.&#13;
"There is a tradition of military&#13;
involvement where the military&#13;
becomes the key factor," Sanders&#13;
said. Functioning as an institution,&#13;
the military become&#13;
oriented toward authoritarianism,&#13;
discipline, and a sense of being the&#13;
guardian of the nation when the&#13;
country is viewed as falling apart.&#13;
Last, Sanders said that there is&#13;
a tradition where a strong man as&#13;
the leader becomes the way out.&#13;
People fr om all parties will vote&#13;
enmasse for a strong charismatic&#13;
man. This stems partially from&#13;
paternalistic classs attitudes and&#13;
partially from a military&#13;
government which looks unattractive.&#13;
&#13;
Sanders said that changes can&#13;
be expected to occur. "There is a&#13;
tentativeness of military commitment&#13;
to be in power, mainly to&#13;
rationalize intervention. As time&#13;
goes on and the military power&#13;
develops, some factions within the&#13;
military get the feeling it is time&#13;
to move out. This often leads to a&#13;
split within the military."&#13;
"The country tends to get into,&#13;
severe problems that the military&#13;
can't deal with. This is bad for the&#13;
public image of the military"&#13;
stated Sanders.&#13;
He said that changes can also&#13;
occur from opposition activity&#13;
which is never completely&#13;
eliminated.&#13;
Continued From Page 1&#13;
depicting the presidency of Harry&#13;
S. Truman.&#13;
No stranger to plays about&#13;
politics, McCarthy has appeared&#13;
on the New York stage in such&#13;
varied vehicles as "Best Men&#13;
1976," "Advise and Consent," and&#13;
"Abe Lincoln in Illinois," as well&#13;
as "Cactus Flower," "Two for the&#13;
Seesaw," "Loves Labor's Lost,"&#13;
"Anna Christie" and "Harry&#13;
Outside," for which he won a 1975&#13;
Obie Award for distinguished&#13;
acting. His film credits include&#13;
"Death of a Salesman," "The&#13;
Prize," "The Best Man," "Hotel"&#13;
and many others.&#13;
On Nov. 17 Penelope Reed, long&#13;
- time leading lady of the&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Theater,&#13;
and current Rep star William&#13;
Leach star in the Festival Theater&#13;
production of Jan de Hartog's&#13;
classic comedy of married life,&#13;
"The Fourposter." At that event&#13;
AOE subscribers are incited to a&#13;
pre - performance champagne&#13;
and dessert wedding reception for&#13;
Agnes and Michael, the play's&#13;
principals.&#13;
After a holiday break, the series&#13;
resumes Jan. 29 for an evening&#13;
combining great music and&#13;
moving drama as pianist Robert&#13;
Guralnik and singer Sandra&#13;
Jennings star in "Brahms and&#13;
Clara", bringing to life the story&#13;
of Johannes Brahms and his&#13;
beloved Clara Schumann. This is a&#13;
return to the AOE stage for&#13;
Guralnik, whose 1979 show,&#13;
"Chopin Lives," was warmly&#13;
received by area concert - goers.&#13;
"1000 Years of Jazz" featuring&#13;
"The Legends of Jazz," "The&#13;
Original Hoofers" and jazz vocal&#13;
stylists will perform on Feb. 18 in&#13;
a cabaret - style musical revue&#13;
combining blues, Dixieland, swing&#13;
and Gershwin. Some of the&#13;
musicians in Legends of Jazz&#13;
started performing in New&#13;
Orleans more than 60 years ago.&#13;
Some of the Original Hoofers were&#13;
tapping 40 years ago in Harlem's&#13;
Cotton Club.&#13;
Entremont and the Toulouse&#13;
Orchestra appear March 26.&#13;
Acclaimed on two continents,&#13;
Entremont studied at the Paris&#13;
Conservatoire where he won three&#13;
first prizes by the age of 15. In&#13;
1951, he won the Belgian State&#13;
Competition in Brussels. That&#13;
triumph was followed by his first&#13;
Europen concert tour and a U. S.&#13;
debut with the National Orchestral&#13;
Association in New York&#13;
in 1953.&#13;
An international directory of&#13;
musicians describes him as a&#13;
"brilliant but also highly sensitive&#13;
and intelligent artist (with) great&#13;
popularity on both continents."&#13;
The season finale will be a&#13;
performance by the Erick&#13;
Hawkins Dance Company with&#13;
orchestral ensemble presenting&#13;
its uniquely American dance&#13;
motifs set to the works of&#13;
American composers on April 11.&#13;
All performances are at 8 p. m.&#13;
in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Friday, Oct. 17&#13;
COURSE "Defensive Driving" at 7:30 am and 12:30 pm in Union 207.&#13;
Please call ext. 2455 for registration.&#13;
MOVIE "The Main Event" will be shown at 8 pm 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;
Saturday, Oct. 18&#13;
CPR CLASS at 9 am in Union 104-106. Admission is free for Parkside&#13;
students, faculty and staff. Sponsored by the Parkside Health Office.&#13;
WORKSHOP by Peer Support Organization at 9 pm in MOLN in.&#13;
Discussion will be on money management, financial aids, study skils&#13;
and UW policies. All are welcome.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 22&#13;
BLOOD DRIVE from 9 am to 2:30 pm in Union 104-106. All are welcofrie.&#13;
Sponsored by the Parkside Health Office.&#13;
BROWN BAG LECTURE Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will be&#13;
holding their weekly brown bag lecture. Come and join a relaxing and&#13;
friendly atmosphere. The meeting will be held in Union 207 at 1 pm.&#13;
SLIDE LECTURE "The New Germany" by Harry Walbruck, Emeritus&#13;
Professor of German, at 7:30 pm in Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312 for&#13;
more details. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
WORKSHOP "Energy and Our Way of Life" at 7:30 pm in Tallent Hall&#13;
Registration information at ext. 2312. Sponsored by UW - Extension.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 23&#13;
BROWN BAG LUNCH Dr. Margo Smith of Northeastern Illinois&#13;
University will speak about "Job Opportunities in Anthropology and&#13;
Related fields", in Moln. Ill (the Faculty Lounge) at 12 noon.&#13;
Everyone is welcome, bring your lunch and come and listen! Sponsored&#13;
by the Anthropology Club.&#13;
LECTURE Oct 23,&#13;
1980 at 2:00 - I n Moln. 105, Dr. Margo Smith of&#13;
Northeastern Dliniois Univ., will present a lecture entitled; Women in&#13;
Latin America: Migrants in Lima, Peru at 2 pm. The lecture is free&#13;
and open to the public. Sponsored by the Anthropology Club.&#13;
Case for nuclear power&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
solar power, which by no stretch&#13;
of the imagination is a competitive,&#13;
available and reliable&#13;
source of electricity, this is&#13;
especially true in the case of&#13;
decentralized solar power&#13;
systems.&#13;
The article also mentioned wind&#13;
and water power. Wind power has&#13;
been known to be un reliable and&#13;
unpredictable, followed by high&#13;
maintenance costs. Of the various&#13;
forms of water power, hydroelectric&#13;
generating facilities have&#13;
reached a saturation level in this&#13;
country. As for other water power&#13;
alternatives, such as wave and&#13;
tidal, they tend to disrupt the&#13;
environment and have a short&#13;
service life, being situated in&#13;
highly corrosive saltwater. There&#13;
is one system which could be&#13;
considered water power, that&#13;
being OTEC (Oceanic Thermal&#13;
Energy Converters). This system&#13;
taps the oceans' thermal temperature&#13;
gradient and utilizes this&#13;
temperature difference to&#13;
generate electricity. At present&#13;
there is a research OTEC facility&#13;
situated just off the coast of&#13;
California.&#13;
In closing it is our belief that&#13;
nuclear power is the most&#13;
desirable interim source of&#13;
electrical power between the time&#13;
of fossil fuels until fusion. By the&#13;
way, those of you interested in&#13;
signing and/or promoting a&#13;
petition concerning the&#13;
ratification of the fusion energy&#13;
bill before Congress now, please&#13;
come to the October 24 meeting of&#13;
the Students for Nuclear&#13;
Rationality in the SOC room in D-l&#13;
WLLC, by the Coffee Shoppe at 1&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Black hole to be analyzed&#13;
Michael L. Frame, assistant public talk on "Black Holes, Time&#13;
professor of mathematics at Machines and Demons'" on&#13;
Parkside, will present a free MoS^Hairr^ommP'&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
MICHAELYN (TINY), A nice guv is looking&#13;
for you!&#13;
THE CHAIN GANG doesn't think as a group.&#13;
Chain Gang&#13;
TOM MONOCUS: Next time get penicillin&#13;
first. Dr. B. Kept&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY Dawn Baby — Fry Eyes&#13;
AL I - my hovercraft is full of eels.&#13;
ROUND TABLE, Look inside .'Latin' tree&#13;
bark. Not Anthrax. lOP's&#13;
INDUSTRIAL HYGIENE Majors have&#13;
higher TLV's. "The Student Militants"&#13;
THE CHAIN GANGdoes not think as a group.&#13;
lOP's&#13;
PHIL MARRY and Paul LeRose: Springsteen&#13;
Lives! — Peter&#13;
DPMA — Get back. Write an ad. lOP's&#13;
J, B, &amp; Kwejiave the baseball bats for K.D. Is&#13;
it all really true? — 2nd fl. lib.&#13;
ANIMALS range from Eau Claire to Chicago&#13;
to lowa. Bet that!&#13;
BOUNCE, BOUNCE, Name your place!! —&#13;
Todd H.&#13;
MARY ROLE — Thank you for all that you&#13;
have done for me. Chipmunk&#13;
THE CHAIN GANG doesn't think as a group.&#13;
Chain Gang&#13;
TERRY — After 9 months, I'm still impressed.&#13;
— Tom&#13;
LYNNIE LOOPERS I love you, your Tuna&#13;
Face Fry Eyes.&#13;
NEED PENICILLIN? See Thomas Monacus.&#13;
FOR SALE: PDP-11 time. See Ray Cameron&#13;
take the plunge! LISA, you're a Gem&#13;
Sincerely, Santa.&#13;
GINGER "SHADOW" HELGESON, we love&#13;
you. Chain Groupies&#13;
G.H. Is not the Shadow... guess again!&#13;
B.J. LARSON — We know what B.j! stands&#13;
for. lOP's&#13;
GANG doesn't think as a group.&#13;
ANIMALS ARE ALIVE —You have to search&#13;
for the best!&#13;
SHOOT, reload, then shoot again. Anne Elk&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
GlBSON ES33S guitar, good condition, cherry&#13;
red. Rick 634-8516 evenings.&#13;
'65 OLDS 98 - runs good, am/fm/8 track, $100&#13;
Call 551-9544 after 5:00.&#13;
1975 O PEL 1900 - am/fm, air, new radials.&#13;
Gerry 654-1765.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
WALK, TALK, and assist retired (blind)&#13;
college teacher In straightening out his&#13;
I'brar-y. Earn while you learn. Mature&#13;
Liberal Arts major preferred. Call 694-2251&#13;
for appointment.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
ErT,Vo&#13;
D'f ,&#13;
BIBLICOe&#13;
" Espanil. Jueves. Moln&#13;
D128. A la una.&#13;
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Research&#13;
catalog - 306 pages - 10,278 descriptive&#13;
51,00 (FUNDABLE) BOX&#13;
25097C, Los Angeles, 90025. (213) 477-8226.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization I&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads —&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30$ will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words i&#13;
or less.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE.&#13;
"Saniiation is qualifies&#13;
eX11%1?o&#13;
S^&#13;
PreSr„&#13;
,&#13;
„^^&#13;
n&#13;
s&#13;
9e&#13;
e&#13;
q&#13;
ru&#13;
aa&#13;
,&#13;
i W °&#13;
r&#13;
Classification:&#13;
Name.&#13;
I SS No. Ranger&#13;
WLLCD139 &#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of b eer? All you have to do is fill&#13;
out this entry form and pick the most correct winners. Put a check&#13;
mark by your picks and bring the form down to the Ranger office,&#13;
D139 WLLC.&#13;
Buffalo at Miami&#13;
Kansas City at Denver&#13;
New England at Baltimore&#13;
Seattle at N. Y. Jets&#13;
Atlanta at New Orleans&#13;
Dallas at Philadelphia&#13;
Detroit at Chicago&#13;
Los Angeles at San Francisco&#13;
St. Louis at Washington&#13;
Green Bay at Cleveland&#13;
Minnesota at Cincinnati ,&#13;
N. Y. Giants at San Diego&#13;
Tampa Bay at Houston&#13;
Oakland at Pittsburgh ,&#13;
Tie - breaker: will be the total combined points&#13;
scored in the Oakland - Pittsburgh game.&#13;
Last week's winner: Dave Schmierer, 11 correct, 28 points&#13;
Name:——&#13;
S.S. No.&#13;
Rules:&#13;
1) One entry per person&#13;
2) Must be a student at UW-Parkside&#13;
3) Person with most correct picks win (in case of tie, the total&#13;
points 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 noon on the&#13;
Friday preceeding the games&#13;
7) Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks&#13;
8) Entries must be legible to be considered&#13;
[ RANGER SPORTS&#13;
Working Out&#13;
Know your limitations&#13;
Tennis awaits state tourney&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The women's tennis team has&#13;
been preparing for their state&#13;
tournament since early September.&#13;
Tournament time has&#13;
finally arrived and the team is&#13;
ready for action against their&#13;
respected Division II opponents&#13;
Carthage, Carroll, Green Bay,&#13;
Milwaukee and Marquette.&#13;
Coach Noreen Goggin plans to&#13;
stick with the line-up that helped&#13;
the team post an 8-6 r ecord. Lisa&#13;
Lindsay, undefeated in Conference&#13;
singles play with a 7-0&#13;
record will play number one&#13;
singles. Kathy Thomas (5-2)&#13;
remains as the number two seed.&#13;
Pam Sumi (3-4) will play as the&#13;
third seed, Nancy Kivi (3-3) will&#13;
play fourth singles, Lori Bleashka&#13;
(3-4) will play at fifth singles with&#13;
either Barb Pruett (1-0) o r Laura&#13;
Bianco (1-3) as the sixth&#13;
singles player.&#13;
Thomas-Kivi (5-1) will again&#13;
play number one doubles with&#13;
Sumi-Lindsay (4-2) p laying as the&#13;
second seeded doubles team.&#13;
Bianco-Bleashka will probably&#13;
compromise the third doubles&#13;
team.&#13;
Goggin expects her team to&#13;
finish high in the standings. "We&#13;
should do pretty good if ev eryone&#13;
plays well. Marquette is expected&#13;
to win with us second. But between&#13;
us and Milwaukee,&#13;
Marquette could be upset. If we&#13;
don't finish first we shouldn't do&#13;
any worse than second." -&#13;
The Rangers finished tuning up&#13;
for state play with victories over&#13;
Oshkosh, River Falls and&#13;
Milwaukee last week. The state&#13;
tournament will be played at&#13;
Appleton today and tomorrow.&#13;
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
BARB PRUETT returns a shot against a River Falls opponent.&#13;
Pruett and the rest of the team play in the state tournament&#13;
Thursday and Friday.&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
by Donald Scherrer&#13;
No man has yet known his&#13;
limitations without first reaching&#13;
his potential.&#13;
In bodybuilding, as in all sports,&#13;
there are physical and mental&#13;
barriers, preset by the mind or&#13;
body. Few people perhaps could&#13;
or would want to match Serge&#13;
Nubret's chest routine, 40 sets of&#13;
20 reps of b ench presses, with 210&#13;
pounds (a total of 800 tim es every&#13;
other day), and a metabolism&#13;
exploding diet of 9 pounds of meat,&#13;
400 grams of protein supplement,&#13;
and 32 glasses of water daily! as&#13;
described in the bodybuilding&#13;
classic Pumping Iron.&#13;
Nor could few people match the&#13;
physical potential of Arnold Schwarzenegger&#13;
at 26 years of age. At&#13;
240 pou nds .he boasted a 57 inch&#13;
chest, 22 inch arms, 28 inch thighs,&#13;
20 inch calves, and an ungodly 31&#13;
inch waist. But then, Arnold's life&#13;
at the time was bodybuilding.&#13;
Whether a person squats until&#13;
he can't walk or does standing calf&#13;
raises until his veins explode will&#13;
not guarantee muscular&#13;
development. Nubret's chest&#13;
routine will not in all probability&#13;
land the 140 pound fellow a chest&#13;
in excess of 50 i nches.&#13;
Modern bodybuilding is increasingly&#13;
becoming more&#13;
scientific. Steroids are monitored&#13;
for their effectiveness, and&#13;
dangers, while mega-vitamin&#13;
therapy is believed to be an&#13;
essential part of training. And&#13;
progressive resistance exercise,&#13;
in all of its many phases, is&#13;
presenting unique results.&#13;
Take Mike Mentzer, for&#13;
example. He claims to be&#13;
currently engaged in a weight&#13;
training regimen of a maximum&#13;
of a bout 6 sets per bodypart. The&#13;
guy looks fantastic to be sure.&#13;
(Remember, he took second to the&#13;
memorable Frank Zane in the 79&#13;
Mr. Olympia contest). His routine&#13;
consists of perhaps three gut&#13;
busting exercises of two sets&#13;
apiece. He is an exclusively&#13;
scientific bodybuilder. The guy&#13;
has no mercy for himself, and he&#13;
does not want to spend half his day&#13;
in the gym training, or overtraining.&#13;
&#13;
His training methods are intensely&#13;
brutal. He employs forced,&#13;
cheat and negative reps to the&#13;
point of d isbelief. Every set is all&#13;
out, beyond failure, though he&#13;
admits that the tendons and joints&#13;
take a severe beating from his&#13;
"heavy duty" methods. He&#13;
believes in getting the most from&#13;
the least. For Mike, training is an&#13;
investment.&#13;
While Mike claims that his ideas&#13;
are the most effective, Arnold&#13;
says they're preposterous. Arnold&#13;
argues that Mike doesn't do&#13;
enough sets or exercises to effectively&#13;
activate growth in all of&#13;
the muscles of a particular region.&#13;
He cites the back as a prime&#13;
example, saying that four to six&#13;
sets of two or three exercises&#13;
would be inadequate for&#13;
proportionate development, since&#13;
the back is comprised of many&#13;
muscle groups.&#13;
As Arnold swears on twenty sets&#13;
for his biceps, Mike may do so on&#13;
only three or four. Mike is very big&#13;
and muscular to be sure. So is&#13;
Arnold. Who is right? Arnold?&#13;
Mike?&#13;
Many factors come into play&#13;
here. Do you have the determination,&#13;
persistence, physical&#13;
structure, training methods,&#13;
equipment, nutrition, and time?&#13;
Do you have the guts? And even&#13;
then, you may end up only half an&#13;
Arnold.&#13;
Know thyself, to be sure.&#13;
ACADEMY OF BATON &amp; DANCE&#13;
headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits, g&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — T ap Shoes —&#13;
All Dancing Supplies &#13;
8 Thursday, October 16,1980 Ranger&#13;
Volleyball hopes to visit Sweden&#13;
by Dan Fiore&#13;
The current women's volleyball&#13;
team has the opportunity to travel&#13;
to Sweden this winter break and&#13;
further not only their athletic&#13;
skills but also enrich themselves&#13;
to the Swedish culture.&#13;
The volleyball team needs to&#13;
raise $10,000 by December 26. In&#13;
hopes of raising this money the&#13;
team plans on sponsoring an All&#13;
Parkside Roller Skating Night at&#13;
Red's Roller Rink in Kenosha&#13;
from 7-9:30 p.m. Tickets for the&#13;
October 27th event are $1.50 i n&#13;
advance and $2.00 at the door.&#13;
The team members are also&#13;
selling raffle tickets to raise&#13;
money. The team is sponsoring a&#13;
Merchant raffle and the tickets&#13;
cost one dollar a piece. The&#13;
winning ticket will be drawn&#13;
November 10th. The women are&#13;
also sponsoring a Turkey raffle.&#13;
The turkey raffle tickets cost fifty&#13;
cents a piece.&#13;
If anyone wants to buy tickets&#13;
for these events, tickets can be&#13;
purchased from any team&#13;
member or from Dave Cramer in&#13;
the Ranger office.&#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;
Enclosed is $1.00.&#13;
Please rush the catalog.&#13;
Name!&#13;
Address&#13;
Citv&#13;
State Zip&#13;
We Understand&#13;
Your Needs&#13;
That's Why We Offer&#13;
STUDENT&#13;
LAMPS&#13;
Starting At&#13;
Student Prices&#13;
We Also Have&#13;
LUXO BRAND&#13;
DESK LAMPS&#13;
(Pictured) which come&#13;
in ten color choices&#13;
with an easily attachable&#13;
clamp&#13;
Starting At ONLY&#13;
Scandinavian Design&#13;
Da,ly2&#13;
ioto6&#13;
OSEVELT&#13;
F&#13;
RD&#13;
H KEN0SHA. WIS. 652-0034&#13;
10 to 6 Friday 10 f09 SundayltoS&#13;
PHYSICAL CONTACT was prevelent throughout the Rangers'1-&#13;
0 v ictory over Marquette.&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Women crushed&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
travelled to East Lansing,&#13;
Michigan last week and played in&#13;
the Michigan State Tournament.&#13;
For Coach Linda Henderson it was&#13;
a reunion with her alma-mater.&#13;
She received her Masters degree&#13;
from Michigan State in 1977 and&#13;
after graduation immediately&#13;
accepted a teaching position at&#13;
Parkside. Unfortunately for her&#13;
and the team it was an unhappy&#13;
reunion.&#13;
The Rangers had a 13-8 match&#13;
record going into the tournament&#13;
and promptly dropped five of&#13;
seven matches. The Rangers&#13;
began the tournament by losing to&#13;
Dayton in three games. They got&#13;
untracked against their next&#13;
opponent, Waterloo (Canada) and&#13;
defeated them in two straight&#13;
games. The Rangers kept things&#13;
going against their third opponent,&#13;
Marquette University and&#13;
defeated the Warriors 15-11, 9-15,&#13;
15-4. They should have packed up&#13;
and departed after those three&#13;
matches because they lost their&#13;
remaining four matches.&#13;
Parkside lost their remaining&#13;
matches to Iowa, Eastern Illinois,&#13;
Central Michigan and to host&#13;
Michigan State. In the second&#13;
game against the host school, the&#13;
Rangers built a 12-3 lead after&#13;
losing the first game. Parkside&#13;
squandered the almost insurmountable&#13;
lead and wound up&#13;
losing the game 15-13.&#13;
After losing the matches a&#13;
distraught Henderson offered no&#13;
excuses but did point out her&#13;
team's shortcomings. "We make&#13;
too many mental errors. We've&#13;
also stopped doing the things that&#13;
made us win. When we do get&#13;
ahead we can't put them away.&#13;
We don't have the killer instinct."&#13;
Although the Rangers had a&#13;
disappointing weekend in the winloss&#13;
column, Henderson did find a&#13;
few bright spots in her team's&#13;
play. "We got good efforts from a&#13;
few players. I was especially&#13;
please with the way Laurie Hess&#13;
played. She's come off the bench&#13;
and has done a fine job of setting.&#13;
She d id a nice job all weekend."&#13;
A few more people are going to&#13;
have to come through if the&#13;
Rangers are to win the state&#13;
tournament this year. Parkside is&#13;
coming up to a very important&#13;
part of their schedule where eight&#13;
of their next 15 opponents are&#13;
conference opponents. How the&#13;
Rangers do the next two weeks&#13;
will determine their seeding for&#13;
the upcoming WWIAC Division II&#13;
Tournament. The Rangers must&#13;
win the state event to advance to&#13;
Regional play because their&#13;
chances of earning an at-large&#13;
berth are almost nonexistent due&#13;
to their current play.&#13;
SPORTS CALENDAR&#13;
Thursday - Friday, Oct. 16 - 17: Tennis at WWIAC Championships&#13;
(Appleton)&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 18: Cross - Country (men and women) at Carthage Invitational&#13;
(11 a. m.); Soccer at Illinois Institute of Technology&#13;
Chicago &amp;J&#13;
'&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 21: Volleyball at North Central College&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 22: Soccer at Purdue - Calumet, Hammond, Indiana&#13;
—\ ^LEADER*]&#13;
Downtown /Kenosha&#13;
Elmwood Plaza Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear /&#13;
Wins two&#13;
Soccer has big weekend&#13;
Photo by Brian Passino&#13;
came out and the top three teams&#13;
in order were Green Bay,&#13;
Milwaukee and Marquette. The&#13;
Marquette Warriors put that&#13;
ranking on the line last Friday&#13;
when they invaded Parkside. In a&#13;
very rough game Parkside&#13;
defeated Marquette 1-0. Freshman&#13;
Jeff Dennehy scored the only&#13;
goal of the game. "I wanted it,"&#13;
Dennehy said of his score. He&#13;
continued, "We outplayed them.&#13;
We played as a team and we&#13;
played good defense. We made a&#13;
name for ourselves with this win."&#13;
If they did make a name for&#13;
themselves, Western Michigan&#13;
didn't hear about it. Parkside lost&#13;
3-0. It was their third game in five&#13;
days and the team may have been&#13;
tired. Team captain Mike Kiefer&#13;
attributed the loss to something&#13;
different. "Our midfield broke&#13;
down due to a lack of concentration.&#13;
We were inconsistent&#13;
in our play. We made stupid&#13;
defensive errors and our stupid&#13;
mistakes led to their goals."&#13;
Kiefer expects the team to jell&#13;
the remainder of the season. "We&#13;
should win the rest of our games&#13;
this year. We just have to get&#13;
consistency and control the&#13;
midfield."&#13;
What Kiefer forgot to mention&#13;
was they needed continued excellence&#13;
in the goalkeeping. Dan&#13;
Opferman, a freshman from&#13;
Quigley South High School in&#13;
Chicago, has done an outstanding&#13;
job in the net. Opferman has&#13;
allowed a stingy 1.5 goals per&#13;
game. Of the eight Ranger victories&#13;
this year, four have been by&#13;
shut-out. A modest Opferman&#13;
would prefer to give credit to his&#13;
teammates. "Our defense shuts&#13;
down our opponents. Our&#13;
fullbacks have done a great job&#13;
and that makes my job all the&#13;
more easy."&#13;
Parkside travels to Chicago this&#13;
weekend to tangle with Illinois&#13;
Institute of Technology.&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The men's soccer team won two&#13;
out of three games last week and&#13;
boosted their season record to 8-4.&#13;
The eight victories ties the&#13;
previous record for the most&#13;
victories in a single season. With&#13;
five games remaining in the&#13;
regular season the Rangers will&#13;
invariably set a new record.&#13;
The Rangers found themselves&#13;
playing an inexperienced&#13;
Lawrence team last week but only&#13;
managed a 2-1 victory. Scoring for&#13;
Parkside was Ralph DeGraff, his&#13;
third of the year, and Bob&#13;
Newstrom. Newstrom's goal was&#13;
his first of the year. He drilled a 25&#13;
yard shot into the upper left hand&#13;
corner of the net and easily beat&#13;
the diving Lawrence goalkeeper,&#13;
bne possible reason the Rangers&#13;
only managed two goals could be&#13;
the abhorable field conditions.&#13;
The cement-hard field didn't allow&#13;
the players to control the ball.&#13;
The state soccer polls recently&#13;
SCOTT GERHARTZ races a Marquette player for possession of the ball.&#13;
Photo by Brian Passino </text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69574">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 9, issue 7, October 16, 1980</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69575">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69576">
              <text>1980-10-16</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69579">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="69580">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="69581">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69582">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69583">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69584">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69585">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69586">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69587">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="222">
      <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1996">
      <name>presidential election</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2482">
      <name>segregated university fee allocation committee (SUFAC)</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
