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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Anderson hopeful</text>
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            <text>tHf University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Photo by Brian Passino&#13;
JOHN ANDERSON, independent candidate for president,&#13;
shakes hands during a primary stop at Parkside, last March.&#13;
Nelson runs on record&#13;
by Susan J. Aluise&#13;
"The most important issue that&#13;
affects the state of Wisconsin and&#13;
the country is the question of&#13;
inflation and jobs. I have been&#13;
arguing for several years and&#13;
introduced legislation on accelerated&#13;
depreciation. It is very&#13;
important that we modernize the&#13;
productive machinery of&#13;
America."&#13;
That is what incumbent Gaylord&#13;
Nelson sees as the priority issue in&#13;
the 1980 race for United States&#13;
Senate in the state of Wisconsin.&#13;
Nelson, who is 64, is almost an&#13;
institution in the U.S. Senate. A&#13;
former two term governor who&#13;
has spent the last 18 years&#13;
representing the State of&#13;
Wisconsin in the U.S. Senate,&#13;
Nelson is engaged in a close race&#13;
for re-election. Recently, his&#13;
challenger, Robert. Hasten,&#13;
charged that there is a 'Nelson&#13;
Gap' between what the senator&#13;
says and how he votes, as&#13;
evidenced by Nelson's vote&#13;
against his own 10-5-3 depreciation&#13;
biU.&#13;
In a recent interview, Nelson&#13;
explained his vote against the bill&#13;
which he had authored and&#13;
outlined several of his positions on&#13;
critical issues facing the state and&#13;
the nation.&#13;
Regarding his vote against 10-5-&#13;
3, Nelson said, "Mr. Hasten knows&#13;
that is a phony argument .&#13;
Before there were any hearings on&#13;
the biU a t all, Senator Schweiker&#13;
picked up my biU, offered it off the&#13;
top of h is head as an amendment&#13;
to another bill on the floor of the&#13;
Senate. There were no hearings,&#13;
maybe 60 minutes of discussion&#13;
... The part that Mr. Hasten&#13;
neglects to tell you it it was offered&#13;
to help auto, and the auto&#13;
industry, both union and&#13;
management, called and said, 'for&#13;
heaven's sake don't accept 10-5-3,&#13;
it will hurt us. Fifty percent of a ll&#13;
our productive machnery now has&#13;
a three year depreciation.' I voted&#13;
against it on two counts. One, you&#13;
shouldn't be offering complicated&#13;
amendments to the tax code on the&#13;
floor of t he Senate without having&#13;
the authorizing committees&#13;
conduct hearings so that the&#13;
public can be heard . . . Also, I&#13;
actually favor something stronger&#13;
than 10-5-3. I favor a three year&#13;
straight line depreciation on&#13;
productive machinery and&#13;
equipment rather than five&#13;
years."&#13;
Two other areas which Nelson&#13;
feels will stimulate growth and&#13;
help the economy are inducing&#13;
savings and reducing taxes for&#13;
small business. "We've got to&#13;
design a program for inducing&#13;
savings in this country," Nelson&#13;
said. "There are a number of&#13;
ways to do it and I've introduced&#13;
legislation on it. We've made&#13;
some modest steps forward by&#13;
exempting a certain amount of&#13;
interest income from taxes. I&#13;
would significantly want to expand&#13;
that inducement. The one&#13;
segment that is overlooked by all&#13;
economists on their dealings with&#13;
the question of p roductivity, jobs,&#13;
and the econony is the small&#13;
business sector. I have induced&#13;
legislation and gotten it passed&#13;
reducing taxes on small business&#13;
on the first $100,000 of income to&#13;
allow them to get capital formation."&#13;
&#13;
On the controversial issue of&#13;
national defense, Nelson sees a&#13;
priority in maintaining a qualified&#13;
volunteer army with adequate&#13;
equipment. "Secretary Brown&#13;
and many of the generals get up&#13;
and say that we have tremendous&#13;
Continued On Page Six&#13;
Anderson hopeful&#13;
by Susan J. Aluise&#13;
Independent presidential&#13;
candidate John B. Ajiderson made&#13;
a last minute campaign shuttle&#13;
between Madison and Milwaukee&#13;
Monday, looking as confident of&#13;
victory as if he were leading in the&#13;
polls.&#13;
But he is not. With the latest&#13;
Milwaukee Journal poll showing&#13;
Anderson with 8 per cent of the&#13;
vote in the state of Wisconsin,&#13;
realistic hopes of victory would&#13;
seem rather slim. At a Madison&#13;
press conferrence, however,&#13;
Anderson became irritated at a&#13;
question relating to his low&#13;
standing in the polls. "Forty-three&#13;
per cent of Gov. Reagan's supporters&#13;
are voting against Carter&#13;
and almost an equal number, 37%,&#13;
of C arter's supporters are voting&#13;
against Reagan," Anderson said.&#13;
"I need to convince these people&#13;
that a vote for Anderson and&#13;
Lucey is a way of repressing&#13;
dissatisfaction with both of these&#13;
candidates and at the same time&#13;
casting a positive vote for a ticket&#13;
that has a better program for&#13;
foreign affairs and domestic affairs&#13;
in this country."&#13;
The high point in the Madison&#13;
visit was a 30 minute rally on the&#13;
south steps of the Capitol. Anderson&#13;
was heckled by antinuclear&#13;
demonstrators but the&#13;
heckling was offset by vocal&#13;
Anderson supporters chanting&#13;
"JBA."&#13;
Speaking to a crowd of about&#13;
1100, Anderson again praised&#13;
running mate Patrick Lucey as&#13;
"an asset to the campaign and a&#13;
fine man."&#13;
Anderson also told reporters&#13;
that he had received a briefing&#13;
from the White House on the&#13;
Iranian hostage issue, but that&#13;
there were currently no&#13;
negotiations between&#13;
Washington and Tehran.&#13;
Anderson feels that any&#13;
negotiations, especially concerning&#13;
an arms for hostage&#13;
trade, should be presented to the&#13;
Anderson people and should carry&#13;
specific conditions in order to&#13;
protect other Arab governments&#13;
and U.S. forces in the Persian&#13;
Gulf.&#13;
Anderson is also "optimistic"&#13;
about his scheduled appearance in&#13;
the Carter - Reagan debate&#13;
Tuesday by a way of de layed feed&#13;
through Cable News Network.&#13;
Anderson will be at Constitution&#13;
Hall in Washington giving his&#13;
responses to the questions asked&#13;
to Carter and Reagan.&#13;
From Madison, Anderson flew&#13;
down to Milwaukee, where he&#13;
gave a 30 minute speak to clergy&#13;
and laity at the Summerfield&#13;
United Methodist Church. After&#13;
outlining some of h is positions on&#13;
issues, such as the 50-cent-pergallon&#13;
gasoline tax, Anderson&#13;
slightly miffed his audience by&#13;
emotionally declaring that he was&#13;
opposed to a constitution of&#13;
abortion. "I am in favor of free&#13;
choice." Anderson said. "And&#13;
however unpopular my position&#13;
may be, I cannot agree with an&#13;
amendment which would inflect&#13;
motherhood on half of our&#13;
population."&#13;
Anderson also spoke out against&#13;
the "Moral Majority" and other&#13;
groups that only certain candidates&#13;
are "biblically favorable"&#13;
and in favor of gun control...&#13;
From Summerfield, Anderson&#13;
travelled to Marquette University&#13;
for a speech and a question and&#13;
answer session.&#13;
Anderson was incensed at the&#13;
question by a Marquette law&#13;
student which referred to Anderson's&#13;
many switchbacks and&#13;
reversals on the issues over the&#13;
last few years, citing the KempRoth&#13;
tax bill and National Health&#13;
Insurance as examples. "I&#13;
haven't submitted three economic&#13;
programs to Congress in eight&#13;
months as Jimmy Carter did,"&#13;
Anderson said, "Don't talk to me&#13;
about change or flip-flop on the&#13;
part of a candidate who has&#13;
established a world's record for&#13;
that goal."&#13;
In another question, questioning&#13;
the Trilateral Commission, Anderson&#13;
explained, "I was invited&#13;
to join the Trilateral Commission&#13;
at the same time others in the&#13;
House and Senate were asked to&#13;
join. I participated in a number of&#13;
those sessions and very frankly, I&#13;
could never understand the basis&#13;
of the arguement that this&#13;
represented a secret conspiratorial&#13;
effort to change the&#13;
World Of to change hiatory. There&#13;
were never any resolutions&#13;
adopted. There were never any&#13;
formal actions taken that were in&#13;
any way binding on any of the&#13;
people who went to those&#13;
meetings. All of the documents&#13;
are freely available over the&#13;
counter...I don't know how influential&#13;
thay could have been in&#13;
carrying out a conspiracy if indeed&#13;
there was one."&#13;
Bush attacks Carter&#13;
by Susan J. Aluise&#13;
Republican vice presidential&#13;
nominee George Bush gave a&#13;
rousing speech Friday at a $100 a&#13;
plate dinner at Milwaukee's&#13;
Mecca.&#13;
Bush, who was speaking to an&#13;
audience of about 1,500&#13;
Republicans, went on the attack&#13;
against Jimmy Carter's economic&#13;
policies. "We've tried it their&#13;
way," said Bush. "They've had&#13;
their chance. Jimmy Carter&#13;
controls both houses of Congress.&#13;
He has had five separate&#13;
economic programs and he has&#13;
miserably failed the American&#13;
people."&#13;
Supporting the statement that&#13;
Carter's economic policy has&#13;
floundered, Bush cited the 1% rise&#13;
in the Consumer Price Index&#13;
reported Friday. "In terms of&#13;
economic statistics", Bush said,&#13;
"Carter and Mondale have been&#13;
insisting that things are better.&#13;
Now today, we have new statistics&#13;
which show the CPI is up again&#13;
and people are discouraged again.&#13;
And in view of Carter's inept&#13;
handling of the economy, (Press&#13;
Secretary) Jody Powell, who has&#13;
no experience in economic&#13;
matters, tries to tell us that&#13;
Ronald Reagan will not be a good&#13;
president."&#13;
"I do concede this," Bush&#13;
continued, "that the Carter people&#13;
do have a great deal of experience&#13;
in recognizing what an inept&#13;
president is."&#13;
Speaking of t he sluggishness of&#13;
the Wisconsin rail freight&#13;
business, Bush observed that "in&#13;
Wisconsin, more people are&#13;
getting loaded than freight cars."&#13;
Bush also turned one of Carter's&#13;
own phrases against him; the&#13;
"misery index," which is the&#13;
combination of both inflation and&#13;
unemployment. "When Jimmy&#13;
Carter was running for president&#13;
in 1976, he promised to reduce the&#13;
so-called "misery index to 8%.&#13;
When Gerald Ford was in office it&#13;
was 12.5%. In March of 1980, it&#13;
was 24%. That is equivilent to the&#13;
debts during the great&#13;
depression."&#13;
On t axes, Bush maintaned that&#13;
the U.S. "has got to start&#13;
producing. The tax burden now is&#13;
21.9% of total productivity. That is&#13;
far too much. We need to&#13;
stimulate investment, reduce&#13;
individual taxes and limit federal&#13;
spending. There are no quick fix&#13;
solutions."&#13;
Bush proposes creating&#13;
Economic Zones within high&#13;
unemployment, urban areas to&#13;
encourage business to expand in&#13;
those areas. He sees private&#13;
sector jobs as "better able to offer&#13;
hope to people rather than public&#13;
sector, make work jobs that dash&#13;
all hope once the federal funding&#13;
runs out."&#13;
In foreign policy matters, Bush&#13;
sees the critical need for immediately&#13;
abandoning SALT II&#13;
and beginning negotiations on a&#13;
SALT III agreement. "SALT II is&#13;
not the answer," Bush said, "We&#13;
must be prepared to negotiate a&#13;
real agreement, a SALT II, which&#13;
would be a real verifiable&#13;
reduction. This concern will drive&#13;
a Reagan administration, because&#13;
Ronald Reagan feels, as I feel,&#13;
that the United States must not&#13;
enter an agreement which is&#13;
inequitable and unverifiable."&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• From the Parking Lot:&#13;
Trick or treat&#13;
• Cheap, trashy movies&#13;
• Volleyball dominates tourney &#13;
Thursday, October 30,1980 RANGER&#13;
A choice now has to be made&#13;
Tuesday's presidential debate&#13;
between Jimmy Carter and&#13;
Ronald Reagan was, thankfully,&#13;
the beginning of the end of this&#13;
excruciatingly long campaign.&#13;
The reason both candidates&#13;
finally agreed to debate face to&#13;
face was in order to bring their&#13;
messages to the large number of&#13;
undecided voters. Neither Carter&#13;
nor Reagan have strong enough&#13;
support to coast to victory on&#13;
November 4; they have to work&#13;
hard for every vote.&#13;
The Carter-Reagan debate was&#13;
labeled the most decisive confrontation&#13;
of this campaign due to&#13;
the many voters who had yet to&#13;
make up their minds by the time&#13;
of the debate. So did either of them&#13;
gain anything from the debate?&#13;
And if s o, who gained more?&#13;
I believe there was no clear&#13;
winner. Both Carter and Reagan&#13;
gained on certain points. Carter&#13;
improved his standing by finally&#13;
debating, doing a good job of it&#13;
without continuing his 'mean'&#13;
campaign against Reagan, and,&#13;
due to his incumbency, appearing&#13;
to be more knowledgeable than&#13;
his opponent. Reagan, on the other&#13;
hand, gained by not being shot&#13;
down by Carter and by not&#13;
allowing himself appear to be&#13;
made of non-presidential&#13;
material.&#13;
Neither Carter nor Reagan&#13;
made anv maior blunders. They&#13;
both answered the questions as&#13;
they had strategically planned.&#13;
The first question of the debate&#13;
was about the war and peace&#13;
issue. Reagan, speaking first,&#13;
seemed uncharacteristically&#13;
uptight and gave verba tism excerpts&#13;
of past campaign speeches.&#13;
"We've never gotten into war&#13;
because we've been too strong,"&#13;
said Reagan.&#13;
Carter's first response wasn't&#13;
any better. All he did was give the&#13;
same "I'm smarter now" speech.&#13;
He started his first two responses&#13;
by reminding us that he is the&#13;
President of the United States.&#13;
Carter, being the crafty politician&#13;
he has shown himself to be, knows&#13;
how to effectively use his incumbency&#13;
to his best advantage.&#13;
But he was smart enough not to&#13;
overstate himself as President&#13;
throughout the debate.&#13;
Both candidates settled down&#13;
during the second question,&#13;
dealing with economic issues.&#13;
Said Reagan, "We don't have&#13;
inflation because the people live&#13;
too well. "We have inflation&#13;
because the government is living&#13;
too well."&#13;
When asked how he specifically&#13;
plans on massively cutting taxes,&#13;
increasing defense spending and&#13;
balancing the budget, Reagan&#13;
answered, "I've got a task force&#13;
working on it." That, for some&#13;
reason, wasn't specific enough for&#13;
me. (But that type of political&#13;
"answering" was evident on both&#13;
sides throughout the debate.)&#13;
Then Reagan continued. "I know I&#13;
can do it. I did it in California."&#13;
That isn't exactly true. While&#13;
Reagan was governor of&#13;
California, the largest tax increase&#13;
in the state's history was&#13;
instituted. Sure, many millions of&#13;
dollars were returned to the&#13;
taxpayers, as Reagan boasts. But&#13;
the increase was three times as&#13;
much as the taxpayers got back.&#13;
And that same promise of&#13;
returning tax money to the people&#13;
is a stronghold promise of&#13;
Reagan's - it was before he was&#13;
governor, too. So why should we&#13;
believe him this time?&#13;
A column of&#13;
personal opinion&#13;
by&#13;
by Ken Meyer, Editor&#13;
The candidates' responses to the&#13;
third question were memorable&#13;
for two reasons: Reagan&#13;
overacted one of the surprisingly&#13;
few times of t he evening, leaving&#13;
one waiting for background music&#13;
to begin at any second; and Carter&#13;
began a habit that bothered me&#13;
throughout the debate — his eyes&#13;
bugged out whenever he emphasized&#13;
a word or phrase.&#13;
The fourth question posed to the&#13;
candidates, how to stop any future&#13;
terrorism against the United&#13;
States initiated a barrage of&#13;
Carter statements questioning&#13;
Reagan's view of the military.&#13;
&#13;
The topic than became arms&#13;
control. Both Carter and Reagan&#13;
want to end the nuclear arms&#13;
race, but have different ways of&#13;
doing so. Reagan wants to build up&#13;
our strength to the point that&#13;
the Soviets would be induced&#13;
to agree on a treaty&#13;
favorable to the U. S. Carter,&#13;
however, wants to get SALT II&#13;
through the so-far-reluctant&#13;
Congress.&#13;
The candidates also differed on&#13;
the issue of energy. Carter wants&#13;
to increase the use of synthetic&#13;
fuels, solar energy and other&#13;
alternative sources. Reagan,&#13;
though, said America is "energy&#13;
rich" and the major problem is&#13;
the vast number of government&#13;
regulations. I think Reagan made&#13;
a mistake by talking slightly&#13;
positive on the topic of nuclear&#13;
power, complaining that 32 out of&#13;
36 planned nuclear plants never&#13;
opened because of the hindering&#13;
government regulations.&#13;
The closing question to the&#13;
candidates was needlessly included.&#13;
Barbara Walters (of&#13;
course!) asked them why their&#13;
opponent was the worse candidate.&#13;
We've been hearing all of&#13;
those arguments since the&#13;
campaign began, but we got to&#13;
hear it all over again.&#13;
Said Carter: Reagan's approach&#13;
to control of nuclear&#13;
weaponry is his biggest weakness&#13;
Carter worries about Reagan's&#13;
use of American power — the lack&#13;
of diplomatic power and the use of&#13;
force.&#13;
Said Reagan: Carter believes&#13;
that the solutions to the problems&#13;
are found in federal government&#13;
programs. Reagan wants more&#13;
power granted to the state and&#13;
local levels.&#13;
Both Carter and Reagan continued&#13;
their attacks during their&#13;
closing statements. "I've had to&#13;
make thousands of decisions"&#13;
said the presidential-sounding&#13;
President. He then in a&#13;
roundabout way, cast a doubt on&#13;
the assumption that a Reagan&#13;
administration wouldn't be too&#13;
bad because Reagan picks good&#13;
experts to be around him. "Experts&#13;
will be divided 50-50. The&#13;
final decision has to be made by&#13;
the man in the Oval Office." said&#13;
Carter.&#13;
Reagan's closing statements&#13;
were aimed towards the past four&#13;
years of the Carter administration.&#13;
"Are you better off&#13;
than you were four years ago?"&#13;
Reagan asked. "Is America as&#13;
respected throughout the world as&#13;
four years ago?" Reagan then&#13;
pledged "to take the government&#13;
off the backs of th e people and let&#13;
them loose."&#13;
And that was it. Both of the&#13;
candidates expressed their different&#13;
positions on the issues&#13;
without making any serious&#13;
mistakes and left the choice up to&#13;
the voters. So now it's only&#13;
up to everybody to vote foi the&#13;
candidate of their choice on&#13;
November 4. It's important to&#13;
do so.&#13;
Waste di&#13;
by Bill Bobbins&#13;
"They're insane!" said Victor&#13;
Yannacone.&#13;
Yannacone, perhaps the&#13;
nation's foremost legal expert on&#13;
environmental affairs, was&#13;
referring to Racine Land&#13;
Reclamation Ltd.'s procedure for&#13;
disposing of hazardous and toxic&#13;
wastes. Land Reclamation is a&#13;
privately owned landfill site&#13;
located at 2250 S. Green Bay Road.&#13;
It is one of three areas in&#13;
Wisconsin licensed to dispose of&#13;
hazardous materials, substances&#13;
classified as flammable,&#13;
corrosive and toxic.&#13;
Yannacone, 44, gave an informal&#13;
lecture in Kenosha Sept.&#13;
29. The lecture was sponsored by&#13;
Vietnam Veterans Still Suffering&#13;
and Vietnam Veterans Against the&#13;
War, two groups currently united&#13;
in a massive, multi-billion dollar&#13;
lawsuit against at least six major&#13;
chemical corporations.&#13;
The suit charges that the corr&#13;
contamination&#13;
porations knowingly manufactured&#13;
a substance dangerous to&#13;
their health and sold the substance&#13;
to the U.S. government.&#13;
The product: Agent Orange.&#13;
The veterans are claiming they&#13;
suffered, and are suffering, from&#13;
toxic exposure to that highly&#13;
potent herbicide, used in Vietnam&#13;
to destroy foliage which might&#13;
provide comoflage to the enemy.&#13;
Yannacone, a celebrated attorney&#13;
in such cases, is the central force&#13;
behind the "largest litigation of its&#13;
kind in the nation's history."&#13;
One of the extremely toxic&#13;
chemicals found in Agent Orange,&#13;
2, 4, 5-T, has been dumped on at&#13;
least two documented occasions at&#13;
Land Reclamation Ltd. Glenn&#13;
Oakes, owner of the site, "absolutely"&#13;
denies that he ever&#13;
knowingly accepted toxic 2,4,5-T.&#13;
(He received legal authorization&#13;
to do so in 1975.) But five weeks&#13;
ago it was reported that 64 gallons&#13;
of the herbicide was dumped at&#13;
Land Reclamation in May 1979.&#13;
Department of Natural Resources&#13;
(DNR) officials investigating the&#13;
incident attributed the unprecedented&#13;
dumping to "a&#13;
record-keeping error."&#13;
However, James Reyburn, a&#13;
Hazardous Waste Specialist with&#13;
the Wisconsin DNR, provided&#13;
contradictory information.&#13;
According to Reyburn, "Oakes&#13;
has knowingly received 2, 4, 5-T at&#13;
his site." Reyburn said that on&#13;
Jan. 12, 1979 Land Reclamation&#13;
accepted 32 gallons of the toxic 2,&#13;
4, 5-T. The ticket number for the&#13;
dumping is 68664. The ticket is&#13;
signed by Land Reclamation&#13;
officials. When asked who brought&#13;
the chemical to Land Reclamation&#13;
for dumping in the first place,&#13;
Reyburn replied, "The Dept. of&#13;
Natural Resources."&#13;
In an interview, Victor Yannacone&#13;
was informed that&#13;
Wisconsin's DNR had been using&#13;
2,4,5-T. He reacted with astonishment.&#13;
&#13;
"I can't believe the Wisconsin&#13;
DNR has deteriorated to that&#13;
level," he said. "This state's DNR&#13;
was once the best in the country."&#13;
Yannacone was a major force in&#13;
instituting legislation to ban the&#13;
use of DDT in Wisconsin, and&#13;
other states, during the late&#13;
sixties.&#13;
James Reyburn said the DNR&#13;
has used 2, 4, 5-T t o exterminate&#13;
"breadloaf bush," a threat to&#13;
Wisconsin's "desired" forestry&#13;
vegetation. He also indicated that&#13;
"on rare occasions, the DNR has&#13;
taken 2, 4, 5-T to Land&#13;
Reclamation for dumping."&#13;
'The procedure for depositing 2,&#13;
4, 5-T and other hazardous&#13;
materials, is called the codisposal&#13;
method," Reyburn explained.&#13;
"The substance is drained into a&#13;
pit containing a highly dense soilbase&#13;
and other general refuse&#13;
which work to break down the&#13;
components in the toxic substance."&#13;
It takes about 30 days to&#13;
break down 2, 4, 5-T, said&#13;
Reyburn. "The hazards (of&#13;
contaminating water supplies)&#13;
are very slight using the&#13;
codisposal method," he said.&#13;
Yannacone was asked to give&#13;
his opinion of the codisposal&#13;
method. His reply: "Hogwash.&#13;
The oily way to safely dispose of&#13;
2, 4, 5-T or any otter form of&#13;
dioxin (the toxic agent found in 2,&#13;
4, 5-T) is through incineration.&#13;
Burn it and burn it good."&#13;
"The City of Racine should go to&#13;
court immediately and obtain an&#13;
injunction to stop this insanity,"&#13;
he said. "Any disposal practice&#13;
which involves the burial of toxic&#13;
wastes in groundwater recharge&#13;
areas such as Lake Michigan is an&#13;
outrage."&#13;
According to an Environmental&#13;
Protection Agency federal official,&#13;
EPA is currently investigating&#13;
"possible contamination&#13;
of nearby wetland.&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
oWTWWWWW&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
Brian Felland Executive Business Manager&#13;
Dan Galbraith Business Manager&#13;
Sue Michetti News Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Dave Cramer ........ Sports Editor&#13;
Mike Farreil, Bruce Preston ................ Advertising Managers&#13;
STAFF ^ „&#13;
Pete Cramer, Mark Christiansen, Patty DeLuisa, Do"9&#13;
Edenhauser, Ginger Helgeson, Mike Holmdohl, Carol Klees, Gary&#13;
Ledger, Dan McCormack, Lori Meyer, Christine O'Neill, Brian&#13;
Passino, Joe Ripp, Bill Stougaard&#13;
is writ,en and edited by students of UW-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
KXnThiJi its edi,orial policy and content. , holidays,&#13;
R A wr M f&#13;
Ve7 ThursdaV during the academic year except during breaks and ho&#13;
wri«»5^ Printed by the Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wiscons .&#13;
All rnnSr&#13;
1 ss' ion is required for reprintof anyportlonof RANGER. jyj.&#13;
p rkunf P&#13;
,°&#13;
n&lt;!enu&#13;
ce should be addressed to: Parkslde Ranger, WLLC D139,&#13;
Parkslde, Kenosha, Wl 53141, J&#13;
defamatory content privi,e9es in Ousting to print letters which con,a &#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 30,1980 3&#13;
World political economy assessed&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
Donald Emmerson, a Yale&#13;
graduate and political science&#13;
professor at UW - Ma dison, spoke&#13;
on "The U. S. in the World&#13;
Economy: The Empire Strikes&#13;
Back" at the Wisconsin Political&#13;
Science Association Convention&#13;
held here October 10.&#13;
Emmerson stated that there are&#13;
three main challenges in the U. S.&#13;
political economy: recognizing&#13;
interdependence, dealing with the&#13;
problem of politization of interdependence,&#13;
and formulating a&#13;
scholarly analysis of interdependence.&#13;
&#13;
He said that the U. S. needs to&#13;
recognize interdependence with&#13;
the rest of the world. Emmerson&#13;
stressed the importance of the&#13;
sheer force of t he world economy.&#13;
"Interdependence once had&#13;
benign connotations," Emmerson&#13;
stated. This was before chaotic&#13;
economic conditons proved that it&#13;
has implications extending to&#13;
America's gas lines. He continued&#13;
that although Americans once&#13;
made a virtue of is olationism, the&#13;
U. S. is not strong enough to be&#13;
isolationist any longer.&#13;
Emmerson said toe U. S. must&#13;
deal with the problem of&#13;
politization of interdependence.&#13;
He stated that America faces a&#13;
one - country - one - vote&#13;
challenge from developing&#13;
countries directed at the&#13;
American controlling forces of the&#13;
World Bank. This becomes accentuated&#13;
as capital accumulates&#13;
in OPEC countries.&#13;
"The success stories of&#13;
aggregate economic growith . . .&#13;
. (in developing countries) threaten&#13;
American economic interests,"&#13;
Emmerson stated. "Japanese&#13;
production of automobiles will&#13;
exceed that of the U. S. for the&#13;
first time in 1980."&#13;
Emmerson noted increased&#13;
involvement of the Soviet Union in&#13;
the world economy. He stated, "If&#13;
the CIA is right and the Soviet&#13;
Union's energy position&#13;
deteriorates, it will be terribly&#13;
important." He explained that the&#13;
Soviet Union could become an&#13;
economic force to be contended&#13;
with should it be forced to depend&#13;
on raw resources from the third&#13;
world.&#13;
Emmerson pointed out that&#13;
This year's directories cost&#13;
The recent 4.4 % budget cut has&#13;
changed the distribution of&#13;
campus telephone directories this&#13;
year. Even though advertising is&#13;
sold, printing costs for the usual&#13;
unlimited free distribution would&#13;
cost the University more than&#13;
$1,000.&#13;
This year the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association has&#13;
offered to take responsibility for&#13;
printing and distributing the&#13;
Gay&#13;
conference&#13;
to be held&#13;
The Midwest Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Communication Network, an&#13;
organization springing from the&#13;
efforts of last year's national&#13;
march committees, will hold its&#13;
regional conference October 31st,&#13;
November 1-2, at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin in Milwaukee.&#13;
Anyone interested in attending&#13;
or simply wanting more information&#13;
should contact the Gay&#13;
Community at UW-M, Union Box&#13;
251, Milw ., Wi. 53201 or call (414)&#13;
963-6555.&#13;
telephone directories. One free&#13;
copy will be provided for each&#13;
campus phone and for all appropriate&#13;
outside agencies. PSGA&#13;
will make additional copies&#13;
available through the Information&#13;
Center in the Union. These&#13;
directories will cost $1.00 per&#13;
copy.&#13;
PSGA will pay for the cost of&#13;
printing from revenue received&#13;
from the sale of additional&#13;
directories. Once printing costs&#13;
are recovered, all profits will be&#13;
donated to a new student&#13;
emergency loan fund which will&#13;
be administered by the campus&#13;
Financial Aids office. This will&#13;
provide a service to students&#13;
which has been needed for&#13;
sometime.&#13;
SOCIAL 1ST PARTY ~&#13;
. OF WISCONSIN&#13;
VOTE SOCIALIST IN 1980&#13;
Support national health care, public&#13;
ownership of utilities and maior Industries,&#13;
and an end to draft registration&#13;
and military buildup. We've been par&#13;
ticipants in Wisconsin politics since 1900.&#13;
For more information contact:&#13;
SOCIALIST PARTYOF WISCONSIN&#13;
P.O.BOX 9288S&#13;
Milwaukee, WI 53202&#13;
RANGER photo by Sue Michetti&#13;
DONALD EMMERSON&#13;
Poland is deeply in debt and that&#13;
China is starting to follow into&#13;
debt and dependency.&#13;
The main problem Emmerson&#13;
sees in making a scholarly&#13;
analysis is that "the vocabulary of&#13;
American social science is not up&#13;
to the task of a new situation." He&#13;
cites the fact that dependence has&#13;
become a catchword in recent&#13;
works.&#13;
"We must treat the world as a&#13;
system, not just parts. We must&#13;
not ignore the environment outside&#13;
of the parts," Emmerson&#13;
said. "The standard definition of&#13;
the public - private sector&#13;
economies on a national scale&#13;
reflect increased penetration of&#13;
the State into the economy&#13;
regardless of ideology." He said&#13;
that this posed a question of&#13;
control over allocation of&#13;
resources.&#13;
Emmerson asked if Americans&#13;
are making an error of a ssuming&#13;
primacy of individual motives.&#13;
"How bureaucratic does the&#13;
State have to be before we can&#13;
deny the existence of the State?"&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha.&#13;
Elmwood Plaza Racine&#13;
Shop both locations far men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kehosha for women's wear&#13;
Third world aid analyzed&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
Lawrence Gould, a Purdue&#13;
graduate and professor of political&#13;
science at UW-Milwaukee, spoke&#13;
on "The Determinants of&#13;
Multilateral Aid Allocation" at the&#13;
Wisconsin Political Science&#13;
Association Convention held here&#13;
October 10.&#13;
Gould said that both the Soviet&#13;
Union and the U. S. recognize the&#13;
need for cooperation with&#13;
developing countries. He said that&#13;
the influence of third world&#13;
countries might be important for&#13;
the survival of advanced industrial&#13;
societies. However, Gould&#13;
suggested that a problem seems&#13;
to center around economics.&#13;
After the energy crisis of 1973&#13;
and OPEC's newfound power over&#13;
the control of the vital resource of&#13;
oil, Gould said, the third world&#13;
shocked the industrial nations into&#13;
realizing that either transformation&#13;
or reform is needed.&#13;
Since 1974, Gould has noticed that&#13;
negotiations of world affairs seem&#13;
to involve much more: there is a&#13;
call for a new order which will&#13;
permit the less developed countries&#13;
to have more control.&#13;
Gould suggested that at the core&#13;
of this problem is a power struggle&#13;
over how control and apportionment&#13;
will be made in a new&#13;
world order. He said that this is&#13;
not just a plea from the third&#13;
world for economic well - being,&#13;
but a power struggle over the&#13;
control of future economic institutions.&#13;
&#13;
Another problem that Gould&#13;
found involved the extreme&#13;
centralization of the financial&#13;
institutions. The World Bank&#13;
located in Washington, D. C. has&#13;
tremendous power over the fate of&#13;
nations. Gould feels that centralization&#13;
of financial power&#13;
tends to permit less response to&#13;
the needs of dev eloping countries.&#13;
Gould feels that this leads to an&#13;
irresponsible attitude toward the&#13;
needs of underdeveloped countries.&#13;
This attitude may be viewed&#13;
as a design to keep them subordinate.&#13;
&#13;
|po|i&#13;
S^IALKgOHT&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
Earn your&#13;
degree&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
and your&#13;
commission&#13;
at Marquette&#13;
Army ROTC is a leadership development&#13;
program on college campuses&#13;
throughout the country. It prepares&#13;
students for responsible positions&#13;
as officers in the active Army&#13;
and Reserves.&#13;
Even though Army ROTC is not&#13;
available on your campus, you can&#13;
take the courses at ours.&#13;
You'll get the same management&#13;
training and experience that students&#13;
here get. You'll get the same&#13;
opportunities for scholarships and&#13;
the same financial benefits during&#13;
your junior and senior years ($100&#13;
per month, up to 20 months).&#13;
So while you earn your chosen degree&#13;
at your college, you can earn&#13;
your officer's commission at ours.&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
LEARN WHAT IT TAKES TO LEAD&#13;
For details, contact:&#13;
Enrollment Officer&#13;
Military Science Dept.&#13;
Marquette U.&#13;
1-224-7195 &#13;
4 Thursday, October 30,1980 RANGER&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phon* 654-0774&#13;
AU. MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
NUMEROUS guitar players are now evident in the halls of P arkside.&#13;
Review&#13;
Photo by Brian Passino&#13;
'The River" runs smooth&#13;
by Carol Klees&#13;
Bruce Springsteen's new double&#13;
album, "The River" has proven&#13;
itself in my mind to be one of the&#13;
best releases of the season. Not&#13;
only is the music fresh, it is also&#13;
lively and original. Amidst so&#13;
many dime - a - dozen bands,&#13;
Springsteen's grit is a refreshing&#13;
change, and something no one else&#13;
has succeeded in imitating.&#13;
The cuts on "The River" are&#13;
consistently good; I didn't hear a&#13;
song that I didn't like, and that'-a&#13;
rare. It takes a true artist to&#13;
arrange recordings to their best&#13;
advantage in an album. This is&#13;
almost as important as what&#13;
songs are included. The wrong&#13;
songs in the wrong places don't&#13;
sound as good as they could. "The&#13;
River" opens in perfect form with&#13;
a strong, fast-paced number,&#13;
"The Ties That Bind," and winds&#13;
down almost perfectly to a quietly&#13;
emotional finish in "Wreck on the&#13;
Highway."&#13;
On the surface, Springsteen&#13;
sounds like any other rock and roll&#13;
fool singing about fast cars and&#13;
faster girls, but beneath the&#13;
overall tough-guy atmosphere of&#13;
his lyrics lies a certain class that's&#13;
hard to define. He speaks of life in&#13;
working America and the mentality&#13;
of unionized factory&#13;
workers. If you changed Arlo&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654-2932&#13;
Guthrie into a rock musician,&#13;
you'd come pretty close to having&#13;
Springsteen. The people in his&#13;
songs are trying to break from the&#13;
life they know they will fall into.&#13;
He makes resignation to a middle&#13;
class existence a little easier to&#13;
swallow with honest lyrics and&#13;
seemly a good deal of personal&#13;
experience.&#13;
Springsteen's songs aren't as&#13;
bitter as they are bittersweet. He&#13;
appeals mainly to the middle class&#13;
-hefaus^..M&amp;-..mu^„,i§ geared&#13;
towards the middle class working&#13;
man. His tunes aren't catchy or&#13;
supercharged, but they are sincere,&#13;
strong anthems in themselves,&#13;
and filled with a quiet&#13;
strength unlike anything I have&#13;
encountered. His music is intense&#13;
without being depressing. On the&#13;
contrary, the music of "The&#13;
River" is vibrant with life, and&#13;
guaranteed to make some converts&#13;
out of those who don't&#13;
generally listen to Springsteen.&#13;
Arts &amp; crafts&#13;
show sold out&#13;
Exhibition space for the&#13;
Parkside Arts and Crafts Fair to&#13;
be held on campus Dec. 6 has been&#13;
sold out, sponsers announced&#13;
today. Susan Wesley said that the&#13;
capacity of 130 vendor spaces had&#13;
been assigned, with many more on&#13;
the waiting list.&#13;
WIN A PAIR OF RANGER&#13;
SEASON BASKETBALL&#13;
TICKETS&#13;
Name flhe 1981 Winfler Carnival&#13;
1981 WINTER CARNIVAL THEME&#13;
Carnival Theme Name&#13;
Student Name.&#13;
— R UL E S&amp; INFORMATI ON —&#13;
• Winter Carnival will be held Feb. 9 - 1 3,&#13;
1981.&#13;
• Must be a Parkside student to enter.&#13;
• Deadline: Friday noon, Nov. 7&#13;
• In case ot a tie, a drawing will be held.&#13;
• Winner will be announced in the Nov. 20&#13;
issue of RANGER.&#13;
• Decision of Winter Carnival Committee&#13;
is final.&#13;
• Entries may be dropped off in the&#13;
RANGER office, WLLC D139 next to the&#13;
coffee shoppe.&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
On Halloween, my sisters and I&#13;
always had to have store-bought,&#13;
shiny, and highly flammable&#13;
costumes. Home-made ghost&#13;
costumes, which some of t he less&#13;
status-conscious mothers, made&#13;
for their less fortunate children&#13;
out of spotted and yellowed sheets,&#13;
just would not do. My sisters and I&#13;
had to have the kind of c ostumes&#13;
that were too tight to fit over a&#13;
warm coat. We had to have&#13;
costumes that glowed in broad&#13;
daylight, and looked like they&#13;
were made of t in foil at night. We&#13;
had to be cool.&#13;
We alternately begged, whined,&#13;
and demanded that our mother&#13;
buy our costumes weeks before&#13;
the Big Event, and then spent all&#13;
our free time until October 31&#13;
bickering over whose costume&#13;
was the neatest, whose mask fit&#13;
who best, and how we would&#13;
divide up our Halloween candy.&#13;
We could pool our candy and split&#13;
the chocolate bars even-steven&#13;
between the three of us, keep&#13;
individual profits separate, or&#13;
allow our mother to intervene in&#13;
the inevitable disputes and&#13;
allocate our candy as she saw fit.&#13;
Being far-sighted children, we&#13;
usually decided to reserve a&#13;
portion of our net profits for Mom,&#13;
who charged a modest fee for her&#13;
services as arbitrator. I was&#13;
partial to dark chocolate and Mom&#13;
was not, so her fee didn't bother&#13;
me a bit. My sisters were less&#13;
happy about giving up their&#13;
candies after trudging around in&#13;
the dark and begging for them,&#13;
but they were younger than me&#13;
and smaller in stature, so they&#13;
kept quiet.&#13;
Of course, our mother was&#13;
pretty happy with the arbitration&#13;
method because she was too&#13;
grown-up to embarrass herself by&#13;
going around the neighborhood&#13;
and knocking on doors.&#13;
One year, Mom did try to make&#13;
us dump all our candy into one big&#13;
bowl. The plan was to dole it out a&#13;
few pieces at a crack so we&#13;
wouldn't pig it all on November 1,&#13;
but I found the bowl the same&#13;
night she appropriated our bags&#13;
and combined the contents&#13;
against our wills. It was underneath&#13;
the packages she had&#13;
hidden in the basement after an&#13;
early Christmas shopping trip to&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
I got caught the next day. After&#13;
all, I was the only one of the&#13;
children who was sick, and Mom's&#13;
suspicions were confimed when&#13;
she checked the remains of the&#13;
candy she had hidden and found&#13;
all the dark chocolate missing.&#13;
By 6 p.m. on October 31, by&#13;
sisters and I were usually a pretty&#13;
bedraggled and-grumpy set of&#13;
beggars. Our costumes, which&#13;
weren't put together all that well&#13;
to start with, were ripped and&#13;
stained from various battles&#13;
fought while parading around the&#13;
house with them on, and the&#13;
masks were usually bobby-pinned&#13;
to our hair because the rubber&#13;
bands had broken long ago.&#13;
Almost every year, one of us left&#13;
the house crying because her&#13;
sisters had stomped on the nose of&#13;
her mask and it wouldn't pop back&#13;
out anymore.&#13;
Even before we left the house,&#13;
we anticipated the battles we&#13;
would fight over packs of&#13;
Wrigley's and licorice whips when&#13;
we came home. While putting on&#13;
our coats and boots, we whispered&#13;
subtle little threats like, "I'm&#13;
going to take all your gum balls&#13;
before Mom sees your bag, and&#13;
you better not tell or I'll break&#13;
your face."&#13;
We weren't exactly the kind of&#13;
children who trick-or-treat for&#13;
UNICEF. One year, though, one&#13;
of my sisters thought that might&#13;
be a good idea because if you kept&#13;
the money, you could buy candy&#13;
you like instead of taking chances&#13;
on your grown-up neighbors'&#13;
choices.&#13;
It still surprises me that my&#13;
mother had the heart to let us&#13;
loose on the neighborhood like that&#13;
every year. But she always did,&#13;
after fondly lecturing us on&#13;
manners and safety. We were&#13;
supposed to stick together, be&#13;
polite, come home in two hours,&#13;
and not eat anything until we&#13;
showed it to her (so she could&#13;
check our bags for caramel apples&#13;
embedded with razor blades and&#13;
strychnine-laced candy corn).&#13;
As soon as we got to the end of&#13;
the driveway and out of our&#13;
mother's hearing, the Halloween&#13;
spirit got hold of us. After an indepth&#13;
analysis of that poor old&#13;
woman's senile paranoia —&#13;
"She's weird," we comforted&#13;
each other — we promptly did the&#13;
exact opposite of what she had&#13;
told us to do.&#13;
I ditched my sisters at the first&#13;
corner on our block each year. As&#13;
for being polite, I couldn't count&#13;
the number of times I shocked out&#13;
elderly neighbors by singing:&#13;
"Trick or treat, Smell by feet,&#13;
Give me something good to eat." I&#13;
never did anything destructive&#13;
with soap or eggs before I was too&#13;
old for trick-or-treat, but I never&#13;
said, "Thank you," either.&#13;
By the time we got home, our&#13;
mother was usually about ready to&#13;
call the police, which would have&#13;
been the least of our worries if&#13;
anyone had put razor blades or&#13;
strychnine in any of t he treats we&#13;
ate on the way home.&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
Trick or&#13;
treat &#13;
/&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 30,1980&#13;
\LLABOARD... A&#13;
FYOU DARE! J CdKWtTj,&#13;
mm m *»&#13;
THE BOYS&#13;
AND GIRLS&#13;
OF SIGMA PHI.&#13;
SOME&#13;
WILL LIVE.&#13;
SOME&#13;
WILL DIE.&#13;
terror Train&#13;
Cheap, trashy movie report&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
I have always loved a good&#13;
horror movie; ones like "The&#13;
Omen" or "The Other" which can&#13;
hold you spellbound and leave you&#13;
shaking for hours after you leave&#13;
the theatre. There are basically&#13;
two types of horror movies: the&#13;
scary ones which rely mainly on&#13;
shock and suspense and the trashy&#13;
ones wh ich lean more toward the&#13;
gorey side to get a rise out of the&#13;
audience. I'm not saying that all&#13;
scary ones are better ("The&#13;
Changeling" for example) but&#13;
they are usually the ones that are&#13;
worth spending money on.&#13;
A recent group of trashy movies&#13;
more than prove my point. "He&#13;
Knows You're Alone" was about a&#13;
psychopath who went around&#13;
killing brides and members of&#13;
their wedding parties before their&#13;
weddings. It had some good&#13;
suspenseful scenes, but for the&#13;
most part was predictable.&#13;
"Terror Train" told the story of&#13;
a group of Sigma Phi fraternity&#13;
members and their dates who&#13;
were taking a New Year's Eve&#13;
train trip. All members were clad&#13;
in costumes and this provides for&#13;
some (very little but some)&#13;
speculation as to what the killer is&#13;
dressed as (because after he kills&#13;
somebody, he takes and wears&#13;
their costume). So much time is&#13;
spent showing off the talents of&#13;
magician David Copperfield that&#13;
we begin to wonder whether we're&#13;
at a horror movie or a magic&#13;
show. Although the ending is&#13;
unique (it seems to last forever),&#13;
the special effects are terrible and&#13;
the scares too few and far between.&#13;
&#13;
I believe the main poinc of "The&#13;
Exterminator" was to see how&#13;
many people it could repulse&#13;
before it ended. It was about a&#13;
Vietnam vet who, after his buddy&#13;
is mugged and seriously wounded,&#13;
wages his own war on crime in&#13;
New York City. The effects are so&#13;
poorly done (the war scenes at the&#13;
beginning for example) they rate&#13;
more yawns than screams.&#13;
The newest of these, "Motel&#13;
Hell," meets all of the&#13;
qualifications of a trashy movie&#13;
(violence, sex, nudity and bodies,&#13;
either dead or dismembered) but&#13;
has an air of creativity which lifts&#13;
it slightly above the others.&#13;
"Motel Hell" takes place in a&#13;
small rural motel, which is owned&#13;
by Vincent Smith and his grossly&#13;
obese sister Ida. The two also own&#13;
a smoke house wh ere they make&#13;
"the best jerky and hams&#13;
around." The secret ingredient&#13;
that makes these meats so tasty is&#13;
human flesh (ergo the film's logo:&#13;
"it takes all kinds of critters to&#13;
make Farmer Vincent Fritters").&#13;
This movie is chock full of one&#13;
liners (a rock band driving near&#13;
the motel is tired and just as one&#13;
member replies, "better find a&#13;
place to crash" their van drives&#13;
over some carefully placed bear&#13;
traps and crashes in a ditch) and&#13;
humorous inuendos which make it&#13;
a semi-funny, semi-horror movie.&#13;
The "good guy" of this film is&#13;
sheriff Bruce Smith, Vincent and&#13;
Ida's little brother. He falls n i love&#13;
with Terry (a girl Vincent has&#13;
taken in after he disposed of her&#13;
husband) and tries to rescue her&#13;
after he stumbles onto the fact&#13;
that Vincent has killed quite a few&#13;
people. How Bruce could have&#13;
swam and boated in the lake&#13;
where he found 200 submerged&#13;
cars (belonging to people Vincent&#13;
had killed) for the past 30 years,&#13;
and never known about them is&#13;
beyond me.&#13;
One bad part is the scene where&#13;
Ida attempts to drown Terry. The&#13;
music is exciting; the action,&#13;
however, is a little less than&#13;
boring.&#13;
There is a hilarious scene where&#13;
Elaine Joyce and her boyfriend&#13;
check into the motel because it's&#13;
listed in their "hot spots"&#13;
brochure. They are after kinky&#13;
sex so Vincent and Ida tell the&#13;
couple to go to a cabin and they'll&#13;
join them in a few minutes. Joyce&#13;
is funny as she " warms up" with&#13;
her whip (her boyfriend, who is a&#13;
little more submissive, puts on a&#13;
dress and shaves his chest).&#13;
The only thing "Motel Hell"&#13;
doesn't have is a part that has&#13;
become almost ritualistic among&#13;
other trashy movies: just when&#13;
you think the killer is dead, he/she&#13;
comes back to try and finish off&#13;
the "good guy". (The killer in&#13;
"Terror Train" came back three&#13;
times.) But that's O.K., it has a&#13;
chain saw fight. This fight is&#13;
slightly suspenseful, but the&#13;
characters are so foolish (Vincent&#13;
is^ running around with a pig's&#13;
head over his head laughing&#13;
dementedly), you just don't care&#13;
who wins.&#13;
Although there's practically no&#13;
Contact&#13;
United Council exec visits UW-P&#13;
by Tracy Gruber&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association had the pleasure&#13;
of welcoming Kim Kachelmyer,&#13;
President of The United Council of&#13;
Wisconsin Student Governments,&#13;
to Parkside last Monday. The&#13;
main objective of Kachelmyer's&#13;
visit was to discuss United Council&#13;
with the Senate. Kachelmyer was&#13;
also very interested in Parkside's&#13;
basic skills program as a state&#13;
model. .&#13;
Kachelmyer was a guest&#13;
speaker at the Senate meeting.&#13;
She spoke of the value in-system&#13;
wide organization in state and&#13;
campus lobbying efforts. United&#13;
Council was able to organize all&#13;
the schools in the UW system with&#13;
a secure and adequate funding&#13;
base due to the .50 refundable fee&#13;
paid by each student in tuition.&#13;
United Council works diligently&#13;
on student issues such as The&#13;
Higher Education Act, truth in&#13;
testing, and landlord/tenant&#13;
rights. U.C. is also interested in&#13;
helping each campus prevent and&#13;
solve student problems. An&#13;
example of their input will be their&#13;
presentation to the Board of&#13;
Regents on the student view of the&#13;
1981-83 Biannual Operating&#13;
Budget Request.&#13;
As is the case with all student&#13;
organizations, United Council can&#13;
be only as effective as its student&#13;
members. Prior to last year&#13;
Parkside has never participated&#13;
in United Council. Kachelmyer&#13;
was able to explain U.C. to the&#13;
Senators and build enthusiasm for&#13;
the organization. Senators are&#13;
going to explore areas where&#13;
Parkside can work with other&#13;
members of United Council for&#13;
everyone's mutual benefit. If you&#13;
would like more information&#13;
about U.C. or have any&#13;
suggestions about possible&#13;
problems United Council could&#13;
work on, please let P.S.G.A. know&#13;
about your ideas.&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
FOREIGN STUDY&#13;
PROORAMS&#13;
PUEBLA, MEXICO ($1295)&#13;
LONDON/ ENGLAND ($2229)&#13;
AIX-EN-PROVENCE/ FRANCE ($2985)&#13;
SALZBURG, AUSTRIA ($3240)&#13;
COPENHAGEN, DENMARK ($3270)&#13;
Costs are per semester and include: flight, room, board,&#13;
field trips, resident tuition, and fees. Applicants must have&#13;
at least Sophomore standing and 2.5 G.P.A. Application&#13;
deadline, November 30, 1980&#13;
For further information, contact: Institute of International&#13;
Studies, University of Wisconsin - Platteville, Platteville,&#13;
Wisconsin 53818 or telephone (608) 342-1726&#13;
suspense, there is enough blood,&#13;
guts, and dismembered limbs to&#13;
satisfy even the grossest of your&#13;
tastes.&#13;
So when you're out on&#13;
Halloween, half bombed, an&#13;
want to see some crudeness an&#13;
vulgarity, "Motel Hell" is the on&#13;
for you. It may not scare you, bi&#13;
it'll give you a few laughs.&#13;
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6 Thursday, October 30, 1980 RANGER&#13;
Libraries, minorities, and instruction concern students&#13;
The concerns of the 155,000&#13;
• Un iversity of Wisconsin students&#13;
will be expressed in a recommendation&#13;
on the 1981-83 U.W.&#13;
budget to be presented to the&#13;
Regents at the November Board&#13;
meeting.&#13;
The recommendation is being&#13;
prepared by the United Council of&#13;
U.W. Student Governments, the&#13;
state's student association. Advice&#13;
and input on the recommendation&#13;
is coming from&#13;
students at each of the U.W.'s 13&#13;
four year campuses.&#13;
Among major concerns to be&#13;
addressed by the student&#13;
recommendation are protection of&#13;
the quality of instruction, involvement&#13;
of minorities in the&#13;
U.W. system, and restoring the&#13;
position of the universities'&#13;
libraries.&#13;
"This is the first time the&#13;
students have presented a budget&#13;
recommendation to the Regents,&#13;
and it stands to be one of t he more&#13;
significant things we've done,"&#13;
said Kim Kachelmyer, United&#13;
Council President. "After all, 90&#13;
percent of the significant&#13;
decisions on University directions&#13;
are made within the budget&#13;
request. So if we want to have&#13;
effective input, this has to be part&#13;
of it.&#13;
"Our top concern going into the&#13;
budgetary process is the erosion&#13;
of the quality of i nstruction in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System.&#13;
Since 1972, the U.W. System has&#13;
absorbed 20 percent more&#13;
students while its budget has&#13;
declined in real terms. Other state&#13;
spending has been allowed to grow&#13;
at a rate three times faster than&#13;
the U.S. System. The result has&#13;
been high tuition and- declining&#13;
quality of education.&#13;
"The real issue in the budgetary&#13;
deliberation is not whether&#13;
Wisconsin needs a quality&#13;
University system, but how to get&#13;
that. Education is the only&#13;
government expenditure that is an&#13;
investment. Our society faces&#13;
severe challenges over the next 25&#13;
years, and we need to educate our&#13;
people to face and to overcome&#13;
those challenges."&#13;
The students' budgetary&#13;
recommendation will be advanced&#13;
both before the Board of Regents&#13;
and the state Legislature. Expected&#13;
main points of the request&#13;
will include:&#13;
— Increases in funding of&#13;
programs designed to involve&#13;
minorities in the U.W. system.&#13;
"We... seek to involve minorities&#13;
in the U.W.," said Kachelmyer.&#13;
— R eplacement of the current&#13;
enrollment funding formula with&#13;
either a new formula that accounts&#13;
for a higher proportion of&#13;
part time students and increased&#13;
fixed costs, or ideally, with a&#13;
larger nonspecific appropriation&#13;
for instruction to permit the U.W.,&#13;
especially Madison and&#13;
Milwaukee, to set its own&#13;
priorities. Students want the&#13;
Legislature to keep out of&#13;
University affairs. The Regents&#13;
are there to make the important&#13;
decisions about the University,&#13;
and the legislature would be&#13;
better off finding ways to reduce&#13;
local government dependence on&#13;
the state and to trim other&#13;
spending. The U.W. • is not to&#13;
blame for high state taxes, the&#13;
reckless diversion of state&#13;
revenues to unwise open-ended&#13;
Kevin McCarthy tickets still available&#13;
Obie-award winning actor&#13;
Kevin McCarthy will bring the&#13;
most challenging role of his&#13;
career — President Harry S.&#13;
Truman — t o Parkside Saturday&#13;
night (Nov.l) in the popular play,&#13;
"Give 'Em Hell Harry!" This will&#13;
open the 1980-81 Accent on Enrichment&#13;
Series.&#13;
The Samuel Gallu play, which&#13;
was first performed in 1975, is not&#13;
a lecture, a recitation of s peeches&#13;
and writing, or the reminiscences&#13;
of a humorist. It is a drama, a&#13;
vaudeville show, a political&#13;
cabaret-actabouta President who&#13;
was not afraid to shoot from&#13;
hip or the lip.&#13;
Limited tickets ($7) remain and&#13;
can be reserved by calling the&#13;
Union Information Center (553-&#13;
2345). o r purchased at the door&#13;
beginning at 7:30. The performance&#13;
begins at 8 p. m.&#13;
Dr. Suess' cold war liberalism to be talk&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
Social Science Roundtable will&#13;
present a talk on "How the Grinch&#13;
Stole Eastern Europe: The Cold&#13;
War Liberalism of Dr. Seuss" on&#13;
Monday, November 3, at noon in&#13;
Union 106. The presentation will&#13;
be made by Thomas Noer from&#13;
Carthage College's History&#13;
Department. Noer has just&#13;
returned from a year's leave at&#13;
Harvard University.&#13;
Nelson runs on his record&#13;
Continued Prom Page One&#13;
strength, which we do. We have a&#13;
nuclear arsenal which is incredible&#13;
... but we do need to beef&#13;
up conventional forces."&#13;
"They need more equipment,"&#13;
Nelson said. "They need more&#13;
inducements to get people to come&#13;
in. We need additional training&#13;
facilities . . . , additional modern&#13;
equipment, and additional inducements&#13;
for people to sign up&#13;
for the reserve. I think we should&#13;
try to make the volunteer army&#13;
work first and I think it will&#13;
work."&#13;
In the Iranian - Iraqi conflict,&#13;
Nelson feels maintaining a stance&#13;
of neutrality is critical. "I think,"&#13;
he said, "that interference by one&#13;
of the superpowers induces interference&#13;
by the other, and I&#13;
think that would dangerously&#13;
escalate the situation there."&#13;
Nelson, who is personally opposed&#13;
to abortion, favors a constitutional&#13;
amendment to return&#13;
the issue to the states. "I favor&#13;
returning the issue of abortion to&#13;
state jurisdiction. In my own&#13;
view, I think it ought to be settled&#13;
by people in each state, and people&#13;
ought to be able to vjote o n it."&#13;
Another problem which is&#13;
facing the state and the nation is&#13;
that of the Cuban refugees. "All&#13;
the criminals, we have to return,"&#13;
Nelson said. "If Castro won't take&#13;
them, we ship them back in any&#13;
event. We do not have to and&#13;
should not accept anyone with a&#13;
criminal record unless it's a&#13;
political criminal record. The&#13;
United States cannot take&#13;
responsibility for refugees in all&#13;
areas of the world any time some&#13;
dictator decides he wants to ship&#13;
them out of the country. It has to&#13;
be an international responsibility."&#13;
&#13;
program commitments to&#13;
localities, among others, has&#13;
created the current fiscal crisis.&#13;
— M ajor increases in the state&#13;
aid to university libraries. Since&#13;
1972, library funding has fallen to&#13;
63 percent of its peak figure due to&#13;
inflation. No institutions of higher&#13;
learning should be expected to&#13;
operate without a quality library.&#13;
— Tuition stabilization. Since&#13;
1975, tuition has increased by&#13;
better than 70 percent, well ahead&#13;
of the inflation of the dollar in that&#13;
time period. Students have been&#13;
to a large extent substituted as a&#13;
revenue source for the tax dollars&#13;
the U.W. has lost to inflation. We&#13;
regard a turnaround not only&#13;
desireable but necessary. The&#13;
U.W. Administration's proposal&#13;
on the budget would necessitate a&#13;
$60 per year tuition hike under&#13;
current formulae. We propose&#13;
that those formulae be changed to&#13;
ease this burden on students.&#13;
— E stablishment funding for a&#13;
U.W. 2000 commission to set long&#13;
term goals. We'd request about&#13;
$60,000 for staff and materials.&#13;
This commission would be&#13;
composed of faculty, students,&#13;
staff, citizens and administrators.&#13;
It should develop a specific plan&#13;
for meeting the critical heeds of&#13;
Wisconsin in the remainder of this&#13;
century. The goal woulld be to&#13;
provide direction to the U.W.&#13;
while demonstrating its value to&#13;
society.&#13;
the&#13;
Noer authored the book, Briton,&#13;
Boer, and Yankee: the U. S. and&#13;
South Africa 1870-1914, which was&#13;
published by Kent State&#13;
University Press.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 30&#13;
FILM at 12 noon in Union 104. Admission is free for Parkside students, faculty and&#13;
staff. Sponsored by Student Mobilization for Survival.&#13;
RECITAL by students at 1 pm n i the Union Cinema Theatre. The progam is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 31&#13;
FILM at 11 am in MOLN D128. Admission is free for Parkside students, faculty and&#13;
staff. Sponsored by Student Mobilization for Survival.&#13;
MOVIE "Nosferatu" will be shown at 8 pm in the Union Cinema. Admission at the&#13;
door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
DANCE Halloween party at 8 pm in Union Square. Sponsored by the Minority&#13;
Student Union Club. Admission at the door is $1.00 for a MSU member and $2.00 for&#13;
others.&#13;
HALLOWEEN PARTY 8 p. m. Union Square sponsored by MSU. Cover charges - p&#13;
without a costume, $1.00 non-MSU members in costume, $0.50 members in&#13;
costume. Prizes for best costume - $15.00 first prize, $10.00 second prize, pitcher of&#13;
beverage third prize.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 1&#13;
AOE presents Kevin McCarthy in "Give 'em HeU, Harry" at 8 pm in the Com-&#13;
- munication Arts Theatre. Admissivn is $4.00 for Parkside students and $7.00 for&#13;
others. Tickets are available at the Union Information Center.&#13;
«&gt; Sunday, Nov. 2&#13;
CONCERT New Music at Parkside directed by August Wegner and Harry Sturm at&#13;
3:30 pm in the Communication Arts Theatre. Admission at the door is $1.00 for&#13;
students and $2.00 f or others.&#13;
MOVIE "Nosferatu" will be repeated at 7:30 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Nov. 3&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. The program and speaker will be announced&#13;
in the near future. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
SEMINAR Career Planning at 1 pm in MOLN 111. The seminar is free and open to&#13;
Parkside students.&#13;
SLIDE LECTURE at 1 pm in Union 104. Prof. Omar Amin will talk on "Ancient&#13;
Egypt". The program is free and open to Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
VIDEO TAPES "The Outlaws" at 1 pm in Union Square. The program is free for&#13;
Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
LECTURE with Larry Klump at 6:30 pm in GR101. The program is free and open to&#13;
Parkside students, faculty and staff. Sponsored by the Marketing Club.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 4&#13;
MATH SEMINAR at 1 pm in GR 230. The seminar is free and open to the public.&#13;
LECTURE "Sickle Cell Anemia" at 7 pm in Union 104-106. The program is free and&#13;
open to the public. Sponsored by the Parkside Child Care Center and Sickle Cell&#13;
Foundation of Racine.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 5&#13;
SEMINAR Career Planning at 1 pm in MOLN 111. The program is free and open to&#13;
Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
SLIDE LECTURE at 1 pm in Union 106. Prof. Omar Amin will talk on "Islamic and&#13;
Medieval Egypt". The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
VIDEO TAPE "The Outlaws" will be shown at 1 pm in Union Square. Admission is&#13;
free and the program is open to Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
THE WHO'S new album Who's slapped next.&#13;
FON DU LAC JACK smells like PU-Z.&#13;
CHAIN GANG challenges Animal(s) to nerf&#13;
ping - pong.&#13;
UNCLE STEVE, can we play Uncle Goofy&#13;
Photo Session?!?! — Me&#13;
YELLOW BELT, name the time! — Another&#13;
yellow belt.&#13;
JULIE — Seen Rob lately? POUNCE!!&#13;
IBM, UBM, We all BM, for IBM. lOP's&#13;
ANDREA is a Chain Gang member. Andrea&#13;
C.&#13;
NAME a four lettered word for 2nd floor&#13;
library rftSles.&#13;
IF YOU guessed "used" for the name, you're&#13;
right.&#13;
GLEUTEUSMaximus Robustos: Still hungry&#13;
for bamboo?—Super Stud&#13;
ATTENTION: Malibu #5C-3057 I'm In LOVE&#13;
with you!!!—Todd H.&#13;
HAPPY "21" Rory Spears! A secret Admirer&#13;
ALL BUSINESS Management majors are&#13;
inconsiderate, unreliable, illogical,&#13;
Shepaneklike, crazy.&#13;
ATTENTION: 2nd floor library males are&#13;
dull!! Need fresh bodies!!&#13;
'TWAS the DPMA. Made me this way.«6heer&#13;
heart attack.&#13;
I HOPE the Ranger has recovered from the&#13;
"hits" they received last Sunday—Jack&#13;
Tatum&#13;
MH—Yesterday, today, tomorrow — always&#13;
somebody new! .&#13;
JULIE N. — Hey baby's wanta get lucky?&#13;
T.H.&#13;
FON DU LAC JACK eats gopher guts!&#13;
CHAIN GANG challenges Round Table to&#13;
Pillow frisbee.&#13;
VENDETTES: I think I'm turning Japanese.&#13;
I really think so!&#13;
WANTED: Single male, full or part time.&#13;
P.V. 205&#13;
THANK YOU to whomever turned my jacket&#13;
into security.&#13;
GREG — LUV YOU LOTS! Let's go around&#13;
again. Tommy Tyler&#13;
WHAT? Huh?-Why? When? Are you confused?&#13;
Good!—Julie&#13;
HEY BILL, go take the pill! J8.K&#13;
WH EN you're doing nothing, it doesn't matter&#13;
how fast you do it. Chain Gang&#13;
P.V. says death to the thieves!&#13;
KIM, tell Chester I want mine back!! Julie&#13;
ANIMAL MALES wouldn't know what to do&#13;
with fresh women!!&#13;
ROUND TABLE, D3C5D3F1 FOFOF1 F7.&#13;
Look that up!—Chain Gang&#13;
M.J.R. —I love you—Irving and Family.&#13;
AFTER SUNDAY, the Ranger should finally&#13;
realize that they suck.&#13;
lOP'S, CHAIN GANG: need new female&#13;
blood? Animals don't!—Unappreciated&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
ATTENTION HONKERS: Benge 3xt, Getzen&#13;
300 many accessories. Call 637-2274.&#13;
1971 OLDS ROYALE convertible like new!&#13;
Call Jerry. 634-2957&#13;
TEXAS INSTRUMENT (TI-59) Programmable&#13;
Calculator. New, Complete with&#13;
manuals. 694-1239&#13;
HAND TOOLED LEATHER ARTICLES —&#13;
custom designs — made to order. 694-2293&#13;
OLYMPUS—OM2, Vivitar flashes, accessories,&#13;
make offer.—Larry 551-9095&#13;
NEW AM/FM TAPE CAR STEREO $60. 40&#13;
watt Graphic equalizer amp $45. Tri-axial&#13;
speakers $17.50 ea. Call after 6 p. m. 554-&#13;
9003.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
$6.00 PER HOUR —singing telegram service.&#13;
Flexible hours! Larry 551-9095&#13;
LOST&#13;
RAIN AND SHINE COAT beige, hooded&#13;
street-length, call 681-0803 If found.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
IMPROVE your grades! Research catalog —&#13;
306 pages — 10,278 descriptive listings —&#13;
Rush $1.00 (refundable). Box 25097C, Los&#13;
Angeles, 90025. (213) 477-8226.&#13;
LEATHER TOOLING LESSONS. Traditional&#13;
or figure Carving. 694-2293&#13;
THOSE INTERESTED in school at Minneapolis&#13;
— see Moldy, Union Square.&#13;
FREE — 40" white gas stove. Works. Free for&#13;
the hauling. 657-1753.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
| DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!&#13;
for student/ | STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE*&#13;
Student organization 1 Any reg ist ere d UW - P stude n t or stud e nt organi zat ion is qualified&#13;
- 1 Cu kmi i iA r o m. . « ! i ins ert a 1 classified line ad in the R a n g er at no cost if u n d e r or 1. bubmitters must I equ iva len t to 10 w o r d s. (Pho n e n umb e rs e qu a l! w ord.)&#13;
present valid Park- |&#13;
side ID I Classification:&#13;
2. Two free ads — !&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30c will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words &gt;&#13;
or less.&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30c will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words &gt;&#13;
or less.&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30c will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words &gt;&#13;
or less.&#13;
I&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
I&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
L&#13;
Name&#13;
q q M n Ranger SS No. \A/I | r. p-MO &#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 30, 1980 7&#13;
RANGER SPORTS&#13;
Working Out&#13;
Keeping fit isn't easy&#13;
PAULA SANDAHL and the rest of her teammates finished with&#13;
a 5-1 record at last week's Carthage Invitational.&#13;
by Donald Scherrer&#13;
In this day and age, fitness is&#13;
very much a matter of lifestyle.&#13;
Primitive people wandered the&#13;
earth in search of shelter and&#13;
sustenance. Most of these&#13;
nomadic tribes became settled in&#13;
the Agricultural Age. With the&#13;
onslaught of the Industrial&#13;
Revolution, machines began to&#13;
replace manpower. This&#13;
ultimately led to the present&#13;
sedentary lifestyle of many&#13;
Americans.&#13;
There are still jobs that require&#13;
exertion on the part of individual&#13;
workers. Construction workers,&#13;
meat packers, farmers — all&#13;
require a great deal of energy and&#13;
endurance. Even office jobs such&#13;
as news reporting are accompanied&#13;
by physical stress.&#13;
Exercise is stress. So is&#13;
worrying, pain, and cold. Each&#13;
presents its own problems. Even&#13;
lack of exercise is stressful.&#13;
In our industrialized society, the&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Rangers dominate tourney&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
snapped out of it's recent mild&#13;
slump this past weekend at the&#13;
Carthage Invitational. The team&#13;
posted five match victories while&#13;
suffering one defeat. The victories&#13;
upped the team's overall record to&#13;
23-16.&#13;
The Rangers faced Oshkosh,&#13;
Carrol, Milwaukee, Whitewater,&#13;
Stevens Point and Northeastern&#13;
Illinois. The Rangers suffered&#13;
only one defeat and that was at the&#13;
hands of Stevens Point.&#13;
Coach Linda Henderson was&#13;
relieved with her team's performance.&#13;
"We played really well.&#13;
Friday night was the best we've&#13;
looked all season." The Rangers&#13;
beat Oshkosh 17-15, 15- 9 and then&#13;
disposed of Carroll 15-11, 15-12.&#13;
Against Carroll, Henderson&#13;
spelled Roxanne Nelson and Terri&#13;
Bieser with Laurie Pope and&#13;
Callie Lee. The move was made to&#13;
give the two substitutes some&#13;
playing time and they played&#13;
admirably.&#13;
Parkside continued its fine play&#13;
into Saturday as they beat&#13;
Milwaukee 15-11, 13-1 5, 16-14 in a&#13;
three game thriller. Parkside then&#13;
came from behind to dump&#13;
Whitewater 3-15, 15-1, 15-5. The&#13;
Ranger juggernaut then ran&#13;
amuck as it was downed by&#13;
Stevens Point.&#13;
The Pointers controlled the net&#13;
and beat Parkside 15-6, 15-2.&#13;
"Stevens Point was a big team"&#13;
said Henderson. "They blocked&#13;
real well. They're probably the&#13;
best Division III blocking school in&#13;
Wisconsin." Parkside then came&#13;
back and whipped Northeastern&#13;
Illinois 15-11, 15 -13.&#13;
The state playoffs are in&#13;
November and the Rangers are&#13;
preparing for them. "We'll start&#13;
making the practices shorter and&#13;
we'll completely stop the weight&#13;
training a week before state. We&#13;
try to peak for the tournament&#13;
physically as well as mentally."&#13;
Fencing isn't exactly a major&#13;
sport but it is a sport that offers&#13;
people a new experience. The&#13;
fencing team at Parkside is a&#13;
small group, thirteen people to be&#13;
exact. Coach Loren Hein has nine&#13;
returners. Tom Ogle, Dave Wick&#13;
and Bruce Klappauf return for the&#13;
men while Debra Hisle is the only&#13;
woman returner.&#13;
One of the new recruits Hein&#13;
found was 6'8", 210 lbs. Mark&#13;
Spiess. Spiess is a former Illinois&#13;
state high school champion in the&#13;
epee. This past February he&#13;
finished 13th in the U.S. Junior&#13;
Olympics. The former high school&#13;
champion has a lot of potential&#13;
and can be touted as a future AilAmerican.&#13;
&#13;
Other newcomers are Pat Schmidt,&#13;
June Bauer, Sabine Claus,&#13;
John Meyer and Dan Hickey in the&#13;
foil, Tom Schofield in the epee&#13;
with Jeff McKelvie and Andy&#13;
Brhel in the sabre.&#13;
Hein is still looking for more&#13;
people, partically in the sabre.&#13;
C&amp;R A UTO SERVICE&#13;
Quality Auto Work&#13;
Done At&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
10% OFF FOR&#13;
UW-P STUDENTS&#13;
Call 553-9092or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00&#13;
The foil and epee are thrusting&#13;
weapons while the sabre is both a&#13;
cutting and thrusting weapon.&#13;
Parkside hosts both major&#13;
college fencing tournaments this&#13;
year. The Great Lakes Tournament&#13;
will be held on March 14th&#13;
while the National Championship&#13;
will be held the following&#13;
weekend.&#13;
APPLICATIONS ARE&#13;
BEING ACCEPTED&#13;
COPY EDITOR&#13;
JOB REQUIREMENTS&#13;
MUST BE STUDENT ENROLLED WITH 6 CREDITS&#13;
THOROUGH KNOWLEDGE OF ENGLISH GRAMMATICS&#13;
&#13;
MUST KNOW PROOFREADING SYMBOLS&#13;
MUST TAKE PROOFREADING TEST&#13;
THIS IS A PAID POSITION&#13;
Drop Applications Off At The&#13;
RANGER OFFICE, WLLC D139&#13;
NEXTTOTHE COFFEE SHOPPE.&#13;
office worker prefers the elevator&#13;
over the staircase, the automobile&#13;
over a short walk, a snowblower&#13;
over a shovel. From this inactivity&#13;
the person atrophies and weakens.&#13;
Remember the neighborhood&#13;
paperboy who cruised die streets&#13;
on his single speed Schwinn, could&#13;
outrun or outbat most other little&#13;
leaguers, and who eventually&#13;
became a high school football&#13;
star, after which he married and&#13;
became increasingly sedentary,&#13;
and fat?&#13;
This would seem to reinforce the&#13;
belief that later in life muscle&#13;
turns to fat. It only appears that&#13;
way. The deception is caused by a&#13;
lack of exercise (causing muscles&#13;
to atrophy — shrink), and a&#13;
continued high intake of calories&#13;
not accompanied by strenuous&#13;
physical activity to burn the excess&#13;
cal ories.&#13;
Physiologically, muscle can&#13;
never turn to fat. Whereas&#13;
progressive resistence causes a&#13;
muscle to grow (hypertrophy),&#13;
decreased activity, the absence of&#13;
a competent workload, will send&#13;
signals to the body that the&#13;
strength and muscle is no longer&#13;
needed because the work which&#13;
caused the muscle to grow is no&#13;
longer present.&#13;
Taking a break of a week or two&#13;
after a continual and rigorous&#13;
exercise regimen will add new&#13;
zest to fitness by eliminating&#13;
boredom and physical staleness.&#13;
But a prolonged absence from any&#13;
such exertion and physical stress&#13;
will make the body renege on any&#13;
past gains, and set you back&#13;
perhaps as far as when you first&#13;
started.&#13;
Week after week I could&#13;
describe new workout programs&#13;
and exercises for men and&#13;
women, but without emphasizing&#13;
the accompanying philosophy for&#13;
a sound approach to life and&#13;
health would be akin to a karate&#13;
sensei instructing his students in&#13;
defensive and attack skills&#13;
without immersing them in the&#13;
Far Eastern philosophical&#13;
marriage of mind and body that is&#13;
the cornerstone of this practice.&#13;
Publilius Syrus (circa 42 B.C.)&#13;
wisely put it two ways in his&#13;
maxims. "Good health and good&#13;
sense are two of life's greatest&#13;
blessings," and "the bow too&#13;
tensely strung is easily broken."&#13;
Si&#13;
&amp;&#13;
ACADEMY OF BATON* DANCE&#13;
headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits, I&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — Tap Shoes — *|&#13;
- All Dancing Supplies&#13;
Fencing team inexperienced&#13;
^ University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
*3tr SEMESTER BREAK&#13;
FROM&#13;
INCLUDES&#13;
• 7 Nights Lodging Marriot's Autotel Ritz&#13;
• Round Trip Jet Airfare via Mexicana Airlines&#13;
• All Ground Tranters While in Mexico&#13;
• Fiesta Yacht Cruise of Acapulco Bay&#13;
• Tour Escort Throughout&#13;
• Tips and Taxes on All of the Above&#13;
$50 DOWN RESERVES YOUR SPACE&#13;
For information and reservations contact:&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION OFFICE, Rm. 209&#13;
Call: 553-2200 &#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of b eer? Ail you have to do is fill&#13;
out this entry form and pick the most correct winners. F ut a check&#13;
mark by your picks and bring the form down to the Ranger office,&#13;
D139 WLLC.&#13;
Baltimore at Kansas City&#13;
Houston at Denver&#13;
Miami at Oakland&#13;
N. Y. Jets at New England&#13;
San Diego at Cincinnati&#13;
Dallas at St. Louis&#13;
Minnesota at Washington&#13;
New Orleans at Los Angeles&#13;
N. Y. Giants at Tampa Bay&#13;
San Francisco at Detroit&#13;
Atlanta at Buffalo&#13;
Green Bay at Pittsburgh&#13;
Philadelphia at Seattle&#13;
Chicago at Cleveland&#13;
Tie-breaker: will be the total combined points&#13;
socred in the Chicago - Cleveland game.&#13;
Last week's winner: Bruce Duchac, 10 correct, 24 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;
Greekfest&#13;
is sold out&#13;
The ethnic theme dinner of&#13;
Greekfest was sold out in record&#13;
time this year. Fifty minutes after&#13;
the dinner tickets went on sale on&#13;
October 20, all the tickets were&#13;
sold .&#13;
FIRST&#13;
'National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
AAAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phono 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
Thursday, October 30,1980 RANGER&#13;
Look for "Insider"—Ford's&#13;
continuing series of college&#13;
newspaper supplements.&#13;
FORD&#13;
FORD DIVISION&#13;
How to stretch your&#13;
college dollars.&#13;
You don't have to be a math genius to figure it out. Basic money&#13;
management and careful budgeting are two very effective ways to&#13;
keep from feeling the pinch when money gets tight. And we'll tell n Q&#13;
you how to do just that, and more, in our next issue of ^&#13;
"Insider," the free supplement to your college&#13;
newspaper from Ford.&#13;
stick to those budgets.&#13;
With info on where to&#13;
live, and how to get the best&#13;
buys on food, entertainment,&#13;
clothing, travel, textbooks,&#13;
stereos, and more. Then we'll tell&#13;
you how to be sure you're getting what&#13;
you pay for. And how to complain when&#13;
you don't.&#13;
Check it out. You'll find some great tips on how&#13;
to stretch your college dollars. And who knows,&#13;
you may even discover being frugal can be fun!&#13;
Also be sure to check out Ford's exciting new 1981&#13;
lineup, including Escort. The front-wheel drive car that's&#13;
built to take on the world. With Escort you'll find some great&#13;
ways to multiply your fun.&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Soccer hosts playoffs&#13;
We'll explain how to meet the high cost of tuition&#13;
through scholarships and student loans. We'll set&#13;
up guidelines for developing your own&#13;
personal finance system .. . like custom&#13;
tailoring a budget.. . choosing and&#13;
maintaining a checking account&#13;
. . . and obtaining and using&#13;
credit wisely. And we'll&#13;
offer tips on how&#13;
THE SOCCER TEAM faces UW&#13;
at the Parkside Bowl.&#13;
Knoio oy oria n rassino&#13;
- Plattevillethls Saturday at 2:00 p. m. The game will be played&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The men's soccer team finally&#13;
gave Coach Hal Henderson his&#13;
ninth victory in a single season&#13;
when it defeated Purdue-Calumet&#13;
3-1 last week. The ninth victory set&#13;
a team record for most victories&#13;
in a season. The Rangers beat St.&#13;
Norbert 3-0 later in the week.&#13;
Chiedu Okonmah, Ralph&#13;
DeGraff and John Onyiego scored&#13;
the goals for the Rangers in their&#13;
victory over Purdue-Calumet.&#13;
Although the Rangers scored&#13;
three goals Henderson was visibly&#13;
upset with his offense. The&#13;
Rangers played with a one&#13;
man advantage for seventy&#13;
minutes after a Purdue-Calumet&#13;
player was kicked out and&#13;
managed only one score. "It was&#13;
frustrating game, we built well&#13;
but we could'nt finish, we outshot&#13;
them 16-2 but were only ahead 1-0&#13;
at the half."&#13;
Against St. Norbert the team&#13;
had to take advantage of every&#13;
opportunity. It was a cold,&#13;
raining, muddy day and neither&#13;
team could get very good footing.&#13;
The Rangers put the pressure on&#13;
St. Norbert when Parkside scored&#13;
six minutes into the game. Bob&#13;
Newstrom passed to Scott&#13;
Gerhartz who found Okonmah in&#13;
the flat and Okonmah drilled it&#13;
passed the badly beaten St.&#13;
Norbert goalkeeper.&#13;
Mike Kiefer scored the second&#13;
goal of the game on a penalty kick.&#13;
Kiefer is now six for six on penalty&#13;
kicks. Jeff Dennehy scored in the&#13;
second half of the game to finish&#13;
the scoring for the day giving&#13;
Parkside a 3-0 shutout victory.&#13;
The soccer team has set or tied&#13;
several records this season.&#13;
Kiefer's eight goals ties the school&#13;
Cross-Country&#13;
Runners hold race&#13;
record; keeper Dan Opferman has&#13;
five shutouts, a season record as&#13;
well as a career record. Opferman&#13;
is only a freshman. The Rangers&#13;
have also set the record for most&#13;
consecutive wins, five; most wins&#13;
in a season, 10; a 1.31 goals per&#13;
game allowed average by Opferman&#13;
and the combined goals&#13;
per game allowed average, 1.42&#13;
by Opferman and Jeff Medin.&#13;
Medin has allowed only two goals&#13;
this year.&#13;
The Rangers prepare for the&#13;
Diatrict 14 title game against UWPlatteville&#13;
this Saturday. The&#13;
victor of the 2:00 p. m. game&#13;
moves into Area 4 competition.&#13;
Parkside has won the District 14&#13;
title five of the last six years but&#13;
must first defeat the powerful&#13;
Platteville team to advance.&#13;
The Rangers will host the&#13;
District 14 Championship game.&#13;
two weeks later. They include&#13;
Bellarmine, Eastern Illinois,&#13;
Ferris State, Grand Valley State,&#13;
Illinois-Chicago Circle, Indiana&#13;
St ate-Evansvill e, Lewis,&#13;
Michigan Tech, Northern Kentucky,&#13;
Northern Michigan, Northwood&#13;
Institute, Oakland, Southern&#13;
Illinois-Edwardsville, Wayne&#13;
State and Wright State.&#13;
Eastern Illinois, a perennial&#13;
power, is favored for the team&#13;
title.&#13;
UW-Parkside will host the&#13;
NCAA (Division II) Great Lakes&#13;
regional cross- country championship&#13;
at 11 a. m. Saturday on&#13;
the Rangers' course.,&#13;
Sixteen teams, including the&#13;
host Rangers, will be competing in&#13;
the 10,000 meter race over the&#13;
same course that will be the site of&#13;
the national championship run&#13;
UW-Parkside Coach Lucian&#13;
Rosa will enter seven runners as&#13;
the Rangers attempt to advance to&#13;
the nationals. The top four teams&#13;
and top five individuals not on one&#13;
of those squads will qualify for the&#13;
national title meet.&#13;
Parkside runners will be junior&#13;
co-captains Dave Mueller and&#13;
Paul Caiinestra and five freshmen&#13;
— Tom Barrett, Radovan Bursac,&#13;
Steve Brunner, A1 Correa and Dan&#13;
Stublaski.&#13;
UW-P will host the TFA/USA&#13;
Mid-America championship in its&#13;
next meet on Saturday, Nov. 8. </text>
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