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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Soviet defense policies threaten nuclear war</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>University of Wisconsin - Porkside&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
Tina Greenfeldt (left) and Patti&#13;
Cast Casciaro (right) rehearse "Cream in&#13;
the Well" under the direction of&#13;
nnunflme Norman Gano (center). The play&#13;
opens Dec. 3. See cast picture on&#13;
page 3.&#13;
Soviet defense policies&#13;
threaten nuclear war&#13;
by Debby Siegel&#13;
"How many of you have read&#13;
the SALT I and SALT II arms&#13;
limitation agreements?" Peter&#13;
James asked his Parkside&#13;
audience this question October 23.&#13;
He is concerned that very few&#13;
Americans have actually read&#13;
these treaties.&#13;
During the 1960's, James was&#13;
employed by the Pratt and&#13;
Whitney Aircraft Company.&#13;
During this time, he was also&#13;
an informant for the&#13;
C.I.A. and an Air Force Intelligence&#13;
Agent. As an engineer,&#13;
James traveled to world&#13;
aeronautical conferences and&#13;
became acquainted with Soviet&#13;
scientists and diplomats.&#13;
With the help of his wife, who&#13;
posed for photos with Soviet officials,&#13;
he was able to covertly&#13;
gather much information for the&#13;
C.I.A. In this role as a spy, he&#13;
accumulated the data for an 800&#13;
page document that maintained&#13;
that the Soviet Union had an objective&#13;
of world dominance&#13;
through nuclear strength, while&#13;
criticizing the Republicans of&#13;
playing politics with the U.S.&#13;
national defense.&#13;
When James' document was&#13;
publicized, he was prohibited&#13;
from traveling out of the United&#13;
States as an employee of Pratt&#13;
and Whitney. Since then he has&#13;
been lecturing and writing about&#13;
his experiences.&#13;
James said that under the terms&#13;
of t he SALT I Treaty, the number&#13;
of missle launch sites granted to&#13;
the United States and the Soviet&#13;
Union was supposed to be equal.&#13;
However, he said, Americans&#13;
were uninformed about the Soviet&#13;
cold launch technique which uses&#13;
compressed gas which allows reuse&#13;
of one silo. Yet, only one&#13;
missle could be launched from&#13;
each American site due to&#13;
destruction of the silo from the&#13;
intense heat released during&#13;
launch. James accused Nixon of&#13;
hiding this fact for election considerations.&#13;
&#13;
James felt that the United&#13;
States' space shuttle plans should&#13;
not have been given to N.A.S.A. to&#13;
develop. With their Ministry of&#13;
Defense budget and military&#13;
objectives, the Soviet Union&#13;
planned a space shuttle vehicle&#13;
that had a pay load capacity twice&#13;
as large as that of the United'&#13;
States. And could carry nuclear&#13;
war heads as well as have excellent&#13;
maneuverability.&#13;
Meanwhile, N.A.S.A. was&#13;
working on a machine that could only carry men (not nuclear war&#13;
heads), could only set down "like&#13;
a rock," and had poor&#13;
maneuvering capabilities. The&#13;
United States changed the original&#13;
plan to give the vehicle added&#13;
payload capacity, but James still&#13;
does not think it can compare to&#13;
the Soviet shuttle if it were ever&#13;
needed for defense purposes.&#13;
In addition, James' research&#13;
uncovered Soviet experimentation&#13;
with "Buck Rogers" type lazer&#13;
weapons. He said that the&#13;
Soviets were designing&#13;
lazer particle beam weapons&#13;
that would knock&#13;
bombs and their delivery&#13;
vehicles right out&#13;
of space. Recently, James&#13;
said, (after President Carter was&#13;
finally convinced of the&#13;
seriousness of this situation) the&#13;
United States has begun experimenting&#13;
with lazer weapons.&#13;
The Carter Administration,&#13;
James warned, has not solved all&#13;
of the inequalities of the first&#13;
SALT treaty with the SALT II&#13;
Treaty. James claimed that the&#13;
Soviet SS18 is a missle larger than&#13;
any that the United States has,&#13;
and that under the terms of the&#13;
new SALT agreement, we are not&#13;
permitted to build missies with&#13;
more thian &gt;w»If o/ &lt;/»*•&#13;
the SS18. This Soviet missle can&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
Veteran players perform in "The Fourposter"&#13;
"The Fourposter," Jan&#13;
DeHartog's tender comedy about&#13;
a turn of the century marriage,&#13;
will bring two of Milwaukee's&#13;
foremost dramatic talents to&#13;
Parkside's Communication Arts&#13;
Theater on Monday, November 17,&#13;
in the second Accent on Enrichment&#13;
Series program of the&#13;
season.&#13;
Penelope Reed and William&#13;
Leach protray the newlyweds,&#13;
whose 35-year marriage is played&#13;
out around and sometimes on the&#13;
fourposter bed which occupies&#13;
center stage.&#13;
Before the curtain goes up at&#13;
8:15 p.m., ticket holders are invited&#13;
to a champagne punch and&#13;
wedding cake reception beginning&#13;
at 7:15 p.m. in Main Place of&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center.&#13;
A violinist will play wedding&#13;
music and a soloist will serenade&#13;
the bride, before she and her&#13;
bridegroom retire to the stage,&#13;
where the play opens on their&#13;
wedding night.&#13;
Reed and Leach performed&#13;
"Fourposter" to rave reviews&#13;
during a three-week run last&#13;
summer at Milwaukee's Villa&#13;
Terrace under auspices of the&#13;
Festival Theatre, Inc., which has&#13;
Reed as it founding artistic&#13;
director.&#13;
Leach, a veteran player with the&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Theater&#13;
(MRT), is fresh from a triumph in&#13;
the title role of MRT's seasonopener,&#13;
"Cyrano de Bergerac." A&#13;
performance of Cyrano with the&#13;
Asolo State Theater had&#13;
previously won him the South&#13;
Florida Critics Award for Best&#13;
Actor of the Year. In addition to&#13;
his many other roles at MRT,&#13;
Leach also appeared on Broadway&#13;
in "The Trial of Lee Harvey&#13;
Oswald."&#13;
Probably Milwaukee's best&#13;
known actress, Reed was a&#13;
leading actress with MRT for 12&#13;
seasons in addition to scoring&#13;
notable successes with a series of&#13;
one-woman shows. She is the&#13;
founder and original artistic&#13;
director of the highly acclaimed&#13;
Performing Arts Center (PAC)&#13;
Players and the PAC Theater&#13;
School and currently heads the&#13;
theater arts department at&#13;
Alverno College.&#13;
"Fourposter" carries on Reed's&#13;
dedication to "positive" theater.&#13;
"I think many people have grown&#13;
tired of plays that always emphasize&#13;
the negative aspects of&#13;
life," Reed said.&#13;
The Festival Theatre production&#13;
is directed by Norman Gano,&#13;
a director-teacher-actor for 22&#13;
years in New York City, New&#13;
England and now Wisconsin. In&#13;
addition to directoral assignments&#13;
in Milwaukee, Gano is teaching&#13;
acting and directing a studio&#13;
production this fall here at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
ticket price, which includes the&#13;
reception and performance, is $4&#13;
for UW-P students and $7 fo r all&#13;
others. Tickets are available at&#13;
the Parkside Union Information&#13;
Center (553-2345).&#13;
Wanna win a pair of&#13;
season basketball tickets?&#13;
Wanna win a pair of season&#13;
passes to this year's Ranger&#13;
basketball games?&#13;
If so, now's your chance&#13;
because that's what's being offered&#13;
in the 1981 Winter Carnival&#13;
Theme Contest. Winter Carnival&#13;
will take place the week of&#13;
February 9-13, featuring a&#13;
basketball game and entertainment&#13;
on Wednesday and a&#13;
dance on Friday the 13th.&#13;
Activities will be planned&#13;
throughout the week. Some activities&#13;
will be based on or around&#13;
the winning theme.&#13;
Contest entry forms are being&#13;
circulated around campus on&#13;
flyers and can be found in an ad in&#13;
this issue of RANGER. Entries&#13;
can deal with anything, not&#13;
necessarily winter. According to&#13;
the flyer, "Taste or cleverness is&#13;
not a requirement."&#13;
Enter as many times as you&#13;
wish. Deadline is November 19.&#13;
Entries can be dropped off in any&#13;
PSGA suggestion box or the&#13;
RANGER office.&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Fast for needy on Nov. 20&#13;
• Review: "Fade to Black"&#13;
• Volleyball team top seeded&#13;
popular vote&#13;
Alabama&#13;
Reagan Carter Anderson&#13;
Alabama 641,609 627,808 15,855&#13;
Alaska 70,253 33,591 8,564&#13;
Arizona 527,935 245,881 76,604&#13;
Arkansas 402,946 397,919 21,057&#13;
California 4,447,266 3,040,600 727,871&#13;
Colorado 650,786 367,966 130,579&#13;
Connecticut .. 672,648 537,407 168,260&#13;
Delaware 111,631 106,650 16,344&#13;
District of&#13;
Columbia ... 21,765 124,376 14,971&#13;
Florida 1,945,313 1,369,877 178,569&#13;
Georgia 654,696 892,073 35,896&#13;
Hawaii 130,112 135,879 32,021&#13;
Idaho 289,789 109,410 27,142&#13;
Illinois 2,336,391 1,951,544 344,886&#13;
Indiana 1,232,764 832,213 107,729&#13;
Iowa 676,556 508,735 114,589&#13;
Kansas 562,848 324,974 67,535&#13;
Kentucky 630,967 613,389 30,519&#13;
Louisiana 796,240 707,981 26,198&#13;
Maine 238,156 220,387 53,450&#13;
Maryland 656,255 706,327 113,452&#13;
Massachusetts 1,054,562 1,051,104 382,044&#13;
Michigan 1,914,559 1,659,208 272,948&#13;
Minnesota 844,459 924,770 169,960&#13;
Mississippi 440,245 429,713 11,826&#13;
Missouri 1,055,355 917,663 76,488&#13;
Montana&#13;
Nebraska&#13;
Nevada&#13;
New Hampshire&#13;
New Jersey ...&#13;
New Mexico...&#13;
New York .....&#13;
North Carolina&#13;
North Dakota&#13;
Ohio&#13;
Oklahoma&#13;
Oregon&#13;
Pennsylvania&#13;
Rhode Island&#13;
South Carolina&#13;
South Dakota&#13;
Tennessee ...&#13;
Texas&#13;
Utah&#13;
Vermont ......&#13;
Virginia&#13;
Washington ...&#13;
West Virginia ..&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Wyoming&#13;
Reagan&#13;
197,862&#13;
413,401&#13;
154,570&#13;
221,771&#13;
1,506,437&#13;
245,600&#13;
2,803,852&#13;
913,898&#13;
191,273&#13;
2,201,864&#13;
683,807&#13;
559,589&#13;
2,251,937&#13;
145,576&#13;
430,154&#13;
198,102&#13;
787,244&#13;
2,541,519&#13;
436,575&#13;
93,554&#13;
983,311&#13;
767,841&#13;
331,800&#13;
1,089,750&#13;
110,096&#13;
Carter&#13;
112,961&#13;
164,276&#13;
66,468&#13;
109,080&#13;
1,119,576&#13;
165,186&#13;
2,636,963&#13;
875,776&#13;
78,292&#13;
1,743,829&#13;
399,292&#13;
447,806&#13;
1,930,719&#13;
185,319&#13;
422,751&#13;
103,909&#13;
781,512&#13;
1,845,114&#13;
123,691&#13;
81,421&#13;
748,673&#13;
581,941&#13;
365,205&#13;
988,255&#13;
49,123&#13;
Anderson&#13;
28,159&#13;
44,025&#13;
17,580&#13;
49,295&#13;
224,173&#13;
28,404&#13;
441,341&#13;
52,364&#13;
22,921&#13;
255,52.1&#13;
38,051&#13;
109,894&#13;
288,588&#13;
56,213&#13;
14,114&#13;
21,342&#13;
35,921&#13;
109,747&#13;
30,041&#13;
31,671&#13;
93,813&#13;
166,180&#13;
31,156&#13;
159,793&#13;
12,350&#13;
TOTALS 43,267,489 34,964,583 5,588,014&#13;
Note: figures are u nofficial returns, nearly complete, as compied by National Electa Service and distributed by United Press International. &#13;
Thursday, November 13,1980&#13;
Many issues took toll on Carter presidency&#13;
I stood in line to vote for 45&#13;
minutes last Tuesday night. By&#13;
the time I got home, Ronald&#13;
Reagan was already the projected&#13;
winner, so I guess my time and&#13;
my anti-Reagan vote were&#13;
wasted.&#13;
I predicted a Reagan victory&#13;
(against my own wishes, of&#13;
course) but I had no idea that this&#13;
"close" presidential election&#13;
would be over by the time the polls&#13;
in Wisconsin closed. President&#13;
Carter made a big mistake by&#13;
conceding over an hour before the&#13;
polls closed on the West Coast,&#13;
thus enabling the Republicans to&#13;
win more local races, because the&#13;
usually Democratic voters&#13;
stopped coming out.&#13;
But the race really was close&#13;
(until the day or two before the&#13;
election, that is). At that time, the&#13;
pollsters found a 10-percentage&#13;
point drop in Carter's standings in&#13;
the polls. The reasons for this drop&#13;
were many, but the predominant&#13;
issue was the holding of the 52&#13;
American hostages in Iran.&#13;
The hostage situation, I thought,&#13;
would be the October surprise that&#13;
Carter would maneuver to his&#13;
political favor. But his October&#13;
surprise was that there was no&#13;
surprise.&#13;
The American people couldn't&#13;
stand it anymore after the Iranian&#13;
parliament stated that the&#13;
hostages wouldn't be released by&#13;
election day. That took its toll —&#13;
forcing Carter out and ensuring&#13;
Reagan's win by default.&#13;
But it was not only the hostages&#13;
that the American public got fed&#13;
up with. It was also our economic&#13;
A column of&#13;
personal opinion&#13;
by&#13;
by Ken Meyer, Editor&#13;
situation and our prestige (or lack&#13;
of) around the world. Other&#13;
factors in Carter's loss: John&#13;
Anderson's independent candidacy,&#13;
Carter's "mean" campaign&#13;
against Reagan, the debate&#13;
where Reagan appeared to be&#13;
safer than Carter charged, and&#13;
the media scrutiny that&#13;
Presidents now have to go through&#13;
in the post-Watergate era. (Carter&#13;
is the fifth president in a row not to&#13;
be able to serve two full terms.)&#13;
The voters were fed up enough&#13;
with the current situation to give&#13;
the seemingly one-term office of&#13;
the presidency to a 69-year-old&#13;
who has been the traveling&#13;
evangelist of American conservatism&#13;
for the past 16 years&#13;
and including this campaign, gave&#13;
the same basic speech about the&#13;
beauties of America that I&#13;
delicately label "bullshit."&#13;
But I guess the American people&#13;
don't mind trading in an intelligent&#13;
incompetent for a doddering&#13;
old bullshitter who views&#13;
the world in terms of a bygone&#13;
era.&#13;
Reagan wasn't elected by a&#13;
mass of people who suddenly&#13;
found confidence in his ability to&#13;
lead our nation into the&#13;
progressive 1980's. He was elected&#13;
because he made Jimmy Carter&#13;
the issue and the only person left&#13;
for people to support was Reagan.&#13;
One nationwide poll shows that&#13;
almost 80 per cent of the voters&#13;
supported Reagan because of&#13;
Carter's poor performance.&#13;
True, Carter's performance was&#13;
poor; there's no way to argue that.&#13;
But just because the current&#13;
status is poor doesn't mean a&#13;
change will have to be better.&#13;
Things can always get worse —&#13;
just wait.&#13;
Now Reagan and his right-wing&#13;
buddies have their chance. The&#13;
way our political system seems to&#13;
be working, this only gives the&#13;
Democrats a good chance in 1984.&#13;
Reagan, the ex-actor, had better&#13;
be a magician, too, considering&#13;
his promises of cutting taxes 10&#13;
per cent each of the next three&#13;
years, increasing defense spending&#13;
and balancing the budget.&#13;
His promises are a joke to me,&#13;
they always have been. But the&#13;
punchline could be disastrous, so&#13;
be sure to get your laughs in&#13;
before it's too late.&#13;
Solar power is the best energy alternative&#13;
by Deb Elzinga&#13;
A recent Ranger article entitled&#13;
(October 16) was flawed in its&#13;
reliance on centralized forms of&#13;
energy. The authors would have&#13;
us believe that these are our only&#13;
alternatives. However, another&#13;
path exists. This path would be&#13;
decentralized in nature and would&#13;
allow our technical choices to be&#13;
shaped by social needs rather&#13;
than profit.&#13;
In centralized forms of energy,&#13;
it is the large corporations that&#13;
supply the power. These companies&#13;
have shown us time and&#13;
time again that they aren't concerned&#13;
with our best interests, but&#13;
instead with how they can&#13;
maximize profits and that's where&#13;
the problems begin. For example,&#13;
the Ford Company did a study&#13;
which compared the cost of&#13;
repairing the defective Pinto as&#13;
opposed to paying possible insurance&#13;
claims due to injuries and&#13;
deaths. The study concluded that&#13;
it would be more economical to&#13;
deal with possible insurance&#13;
claims rather than repair the&#13;
autos.&#13;
This type of attitude is reflected&#13;
m the nuclear industry as well.&#13;
From the very beginning the&#13;
"experts" were aware of the&#13;
dangers and unanswered&#13;
problems, yet they proceeded with&#13;
this monster technology. This kind&#13;
of a ttitude is stated clearly in a&#13;
1977 report on "Nuclear Power,&#13;
Issues and Choices." Although the&#13;
report doesn't deny the dangers of&#13;
nuclear power, it does argue that&#13;
"the consequences of a major&#13;
disaster would not be out of line&#13;
with other major peacetime&#13;
disasters that our society has been&#13;
able to meet without longterm&#13;
social impact."&#13;
As this example illustrates,&#13;
energy companies have a rather&#13;
callous attitude about our well&#13;
being. These energy companies, if&#13;
given the chance, would emphasize&#13;
high oil prices and a&#13;
reduction of environmental&#13;
safeguards to allow more use of&#13;
coal and nuclear power. The&#13;
corporate program sees government&#13;
intervention as unfavorable&#13;
in these developments. However,&#13;
these same companies would&#13;
stress government subsidies to&#13;
support the private development&#13;
of exotic fuels and technologies.&#13;
Thus, these companies offer us the&#13;
limited choice of centralized&#13;
energy which is produced for&#13;
profit rather than for people.&#13;
Solar energy, on the other hand,&#13;
is a decentralized form of e nergy&#13;
which would allow the community&#13;
to control its energy future. As&#13;
Ray Reece, author of "The Sun&#13;
Betrayed", writes, "Solar energy&#13;
inherently offers the prospect of&#13;
liberation from the 'uncontrollable&#13;
technology' of centralized&#13;
energy institutions. It is&#13;
not so complex, in most of its&#13;
useful applications, that it can't be&#13;
managed by persons other than a&#13;
"technical elite."&#13;
Not only does solar energy offer&#13;
us this unique alternative, but it&#13;
works. You've probably read or&#13;
heard many times that solar&#13;
energy is not in fact feasible and&#13;
won't be an alternative until&#13;
perhaps the year 2000. The&#13;
sources from which this type of&#13;
information comes have many&#13;
ties to the energy conglomerates.&#13;
Exxon, Shell, and many other&#13;
companies who wish to maintain&#13;
the present and future dependence&#13;
on centralized forms of energy are&#13;
quite involved in denouncing solar&#13;
feasibility. Meanwhile, corporations&#13;
such as these are busy&#13;
buying up independent solar&#13;
companies and ideas. Moreover,&#13;
they are now engaged in million&#13;
dollar projects which would&#13;
enable them to meter the sun after&#13;
all fossil fuels are depleted.&#13;
In summary, there are several&#13;
reasons for supporting the solar&#13;
alternative. The most important&#13;
reason is that it is much more&#13;
compatible with the environment&#13;
than the other alternatives.&#13;
Secondly, communities would&#13;
have the opportunity to control&#13;
solar energy. Finally, it is a&#13;
renewable source of energy.&#13;
Amory Lovins, a physicist, clearly&#13;
defines what is at stake in the&#13;
choice between the two paths: "In&#13;
an electrical world your lifeline&#13;
comes not from an understandable&#13;
neighborhood&#13;
technology run by people you&#13;
know who are at your own social&#13;
level, but rather from an alien&#13;
remote, and perhaps&#13;
humiliatingly uncontrollable&#13;
technology run by a faraway,&#13;
bureaucratized, technical elite&#13;
who have probably never heard of&#13;
you."&#13;
Patronize&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Advertisersfc&#13;
Clarification&#13;
RI&#13;
he&#13;
R&#13;
s&#13;
i7 he&#13;
f^ "&#13;
Waste&#13;
^sposal probed for contamination" by&#13;
Bobbins that was in the October 30 issue of RANGER&#13;
originally appeared in the October 2 issue of the Shoreline Leader.&#13;
ganger&#13;
NEEDS, reporters&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
AD REPS&#13;
If you're interested, stop by our office&#13;
(next to the Coffee ShoppeJ or&#13;
Phone 553-2295&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer - Editor&#13;
Brian Fell and Executive Business Manager&#13;
? 2f&#13;
,£&#13;
r&#13;
!2&#13;
h Business Manager&#13;
^Mlchett News Editor&#13;
n»uo r Phal Feature Ed,tor&#13;
Dave Cramer Sports Editor&#13;
?"&#13;
an Fass,&#13;
"0 Photo Editor&#13;
1 e arre&#13;
" Advertising Manager&#13;
p . _ STAFF&#13;
PHanh rame*l'. Mark Christiansen, Patty DeLuisa, Doua&#13;
Ledaer U5a&#13;
rn MTr He,geson&#13;
' Mike "olmdohl, Carol Klees, Gary&#13;
Preston in* o* ??.&#13;
C&#13;
?' Lorl Meyer&#13;
' Christin&#13;
e O'Neill, Bruce Preston, Joe Ripp, Bill Stougaard&#13;
r&#13;
R&#13;
etDon^blp'&#13;
S&#13;
fr,^^l&#13;
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DH-fn&#13;
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,&#13;
ed by stents of UW-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
P.7hii^h~i! '»ieditorial policy and content.&#13;
RANGER isVDriVnted'ht&#13;
&lt;&#13;
thV durlns&#13;
'&#13;
he academic year except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
Parkside.Tenoth" addressed f0: Parkslde Ranger, WLLC D139, UWpap^r&#13;
wlth'one^inrh ac&#13;
".&#13;
p,ed if typewritten, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
eluded for verification letters must be signed and a telephone number inNames&#13;
will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
reserves all" editor^'? nri??&#13;
8y at&#13;
-&#13;
9 a&#13;
'&#13;
m' ,or P&#13;
ublication °n Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
^iefarnatory content p Vlle9es 10 Ousting to print letters which contain false or &#13;
World banking creates problems&#13;
Ranger Thursday, November 13,1980&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
Daniel McGovern, a Parkside&#13;
political science professor, spoke&#13;
on "International Banks as a&#13;
Source of Political Repression in&#13;
Developing Countries" at the&#13;
Wisconsin Political Science&#13;
Convention here October 10&#13;
McGovern stated that international&#13;
banks such as the&#13;
International Monetary Fund&#13;
(IMF) and the Chase Manhattan&#13;
Bank are a source of political&#13;
distortion in developing countries.&#13;
As an example, McGovern said&#13;
that Egypt suffered from financial&#13;
difficulties in January 1977. He&#13;
pointed to Egypt's 25 per cent&#13;
inflation, increasing imports&#13;
decreasing exports, and short&#13;
term loans due. He said that&#13;
Egypt's leader, Sadat, sked the&#13;
IMF for assistance. The IMF&#13;
made an economic analysis,&#13;
stipulated conditions for the loan^&#13;
and arranged for the $250 million&#13;
loan through a consortium of&#13;
multinational banks.&#13;
The IMF's first request asked&#13;
the Egyptian government to&#13;
drastically reduce its deficit by 50&#13;
per cent and virtually eliminate&#13;
government subsidies on food.&#13;
McGovern said that this had an&#13;
immediate impact as the price of&#13;
food skyrocketed up 31 per cent&#13;
ovefnight. Riots broke out all over&#13;
Egypt between January 17-19,&#13;
1977. Seventy-nine people died.&#13;
The army restored order,&#13;
arresting thousands.&#13;
"Sadat blamed the riots on a&#13;
Communist plot. However Sadat&#13;
did say, 'We are living beyond our&#13;
means and have no choice but to&#13;
borrow and to abide by their&#13;
stipulations,' " McGovern said.&#13;
"The international banks provide&#13;
loans but with ramifications&#13;
within the society."&#13;
McGovern saw two problems&#13;
with the interdependency theory&#13;
which examines the relationship&#13;
between the various nations:&#13;
"The problem with the liberal&#13;
framework is that it is concerned&#13;
with the process and not the&#13;
outcome. There is an assumption&#13;
that the outcome will be positive.&#13;
So the focus is on bargaining and&#13;
negotiation, neglecting the outcome."&#13;
&#13;
RANGER photo by Sue Michetti&#13;
DANIEL McGOVERN&#13;
"The second problem is that the&#13;
interdepencency theory is not&#13;
dynamic," said McGovern. "It&#13;
says that we are in interglobal&#13;
interdependence, but the reason&#13;
why is not known. What causes it?&#13;
What did it emerge from?&#13;
Although the Marxist approach&#13;
explains this, it is not accepted by&#13;
many people."&#13;
He said, "We assume there is a&#13;
relationship of dependence of&#13;
developing nations to the&#13;
developed nations. The developing&#13;
nations are trying to move from&#13;
unsophisticated industry to&#13;
developing basic industries, but&#13;
they need technology and vast&#13;
amounts of c apital to do this. So&#13;
they must go to the developed&#13;
nations to receive these things.&#13;
This results in foreign penetration&#13;
into their domestic economy."&#13;
"If developing countries want&#13;
industrialization and technology,&#13;
then it must be done on the terms&#13;
of the developed countries,"&#13;
McGovern stated. "This produces&#13;
economic distortions in the&#13;
developing countries, their total&#13;
economy changes. It becomes&#13;
mobilized. Since the incoming&#13;
international capital is concerned&#13;
about investment, the government&#13;
must guarantee profits and&#13;
stability for them."&#13;
"Since there is a propensity for&#13;
instability, the military tends to&#13;
move in and put down the labor&#13;
unions and takes extraordinary&#13;
measures to guarantee stability,"&#13;
McGovern said. "This causes&#13;
political distortions."&#13;
McGovern pointed to the serious&#13;
problem for developing countries&#13;
in balancing international&#13;
payments. He said developing&#13;
countries traditionally export raw&#13;
materials while importing high&#13;
technological items. This results&#13;
in unequal trade with a negative&#13;
balance in developing countries.&#13;
"There are three ways that&#13;
developing countries adjust to the&#13;
problems" McGovern said. "They&#13;
can reduce imports purchased&#13;
from others or increase exports.&#13;
Since it is hard to increase exports,&#13;
traditionally imports are&#13;
reduced. This presents a dilemma&#13;
when food is an important import."&#13;
&#13;
"As another alternative, they&#13;
can increase capital investment,&#13;
resulting in more foreign money&#13;
being brought in," said&#13;
McGovern. "They may also deal&#13;
with this problem by officially&#13;
devaluing their currency or&#13;
borrowing short term money."&#13;
He said that 34 cases from 1974&#13;
to 1978 were examined for political&#13;
consequences of sh ort term loans&#13;
arranged through the IMF from&#13;
multinational banks. McGovern&#13;
stated that in 34 loans to 16 nations&#13;
a total of 60 distortions in&#13;
government were found which&#13;
related directly to the&#13;
stipulations: 16 instances of&#13;
leadership changes, 21 instances&#13;
of public protest, 10 instances of&#13;
government restrictions on&#13;
popular participation, nine instances&#13;
of widespread police&#13;
coercion, and four military&#13;
takeovers.&#13;
McGovern said that this explained&#13;
the decrease of domestic&#13;
decision making in the economy&#13;
as well as the relationship between&#13;
economic and political&#13;
distortions.&#13;
O'Neill discusses basic skills programs&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
President Robert O'Neil said on&#13;
October 30 t hat he would ask for&#13;
additional funding in the 1981 - 83&#13;
UW budget for basic skills&#13;
programs.&#13;
Speaking to 150 educators from&#13;
UW campuses around the state at&#13;
the Basic Skills Conference held at&#13;
Parkside, O'Neil said that the&#13;
university system should do more&#13;
to meet remedial needs of its&#13;
students. But he rejected what he&#13;
called "the myth that they should&#13;
be funded out of existing&#13;
budgets," because, he said,&#13;
"current budgets don't even meet&#13;
present needs, let alone new&#13;
ones."&#13;
O'Neil said there were other&#13;
myths regarding basic skills&#13;
programs in universities, including&#13;
the view that skills&#13;
cources primarily serve minority&#13;
student needs. "The percentage of&#13;
all students who need help is four&#13;
times the percentage of minority&#13;
student enrollment," he said.&#13;
O'Neil said about 25 per cent of&#13;
students enrolling at UW campuses&#13;
need some remedial work in&#13;
reading, writing and math skills.&#13;
Another myth, according to&#13;
O'Neil, is that basic skills courses&#13;
are designed to "rescue students&#13;
who shouldn't be in college in the&#13;
first place." He said that view&#13;
undermines educational opportunity,&#13;
denies student potential&#13;
for success, and ignores the fact&#13;
that "everyone isn't being admitted&#13;
to the university." He said&#13;
less than 50 per cent of state high&#13;
school graduates currently go on&#13;
to any college or university.&#13;
The "rescue" myth also doesn't&#13;
consider the increasing number of&#13;
older students who are beginning&#13;
UW-SYSTEM PRESIDENT ROBERT O'NEIL&#13;
Women honored in film&#13;
A documentary about "The&#13;
Dinner Party", the ambitious&#13;
multimedia art work by Judy&#13;
Chicago celebrating women's&#13;
achievements through the ages,&#13;
will be shown and discussed at&#13;
Parkside Thursday, Nov. 20 under&#13;
sponsorship of the campus Lecture&#13;
Fine Arts committee. The&#13;
program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
The film, titled "Right Out of&#13;
History - The Making of Judy&#13;
Chicago's 'Dinner Party'," will be&#13;
shown in Greenquist room 101 at&#13;
12:30 and in Molinaro room 107 at&#13;
7. Commentary and discussion led&#13;
by Prof. Carol - Lee Saffioti,&#13;
Humanities, and Barbara Lindquist,&#13;
co - owner of Mother&#13;
Courage book store in Racine, will&#13;
follow the afternoon showing. The&#13;
evening discussion will be led by&#13;
Lindquist and Prof. Carole Vopat,&#13;
English.&#13;
"The Dinner Party" is a 50 - foot&#13;
triangular banquet table, set with&#13;
places for 39 illustrious women of&#13;
mythology and history, ranging&#13;
from the primordial mother&#13;
goddess Gaea to Virginia Woolf&#13;
and Georgia O'Keefe. Thirty - nine&#13;
ceramic plates, each painted by&#13;
west coast artist and feminist&#13;
Chicago, are set on an embroidered&#13;
runner designed to&#13;
evoke the personality and era of&#13;
each woman. Ms. Chicago was&#13;
aided by some 300 p ersons who,&#13;
over a five year period, donated&#13;
their services to create the&#13;
finished work.&#13;
The film, begun by Johanna&#13;
Demetrakas in 1976 three years&#13;
before the first showing of the&#13;
work, takes viewers into the&#13;
studio, interviews the many&#13;
participants and the relationships&#13;
which developed between them&#13;
and explores the contexts from&#13;
which Chicago "derives the&#13;
tradtional 'women's art forms'&#13;
which are then deliberately&#13;
placed in a contemporary feminist&#13;
statement."&#13;
Jazz Ensembles to perform&#13;
Parkside's popular Jazz Ensembles&#13;
I and II will present a fall&#13;
concert under the direction of&#13;
Professor Tim Bell at 8 p. m. on&#13;
Tuesday, November 18 in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission is $1 for students; $2&#13;
for the public.&#13;
The ensembles have been&#13;
consistent crowd pleasers in the&#13;
Kenosha - Racine area as well as&#13;
during tours of Wisconsin and&#13;
Illinois. In 1975, 1978, and 1979,&#13;
Ensemble I received "outstanding&#13;
band" honors in the prestigious&#13;
Midwest Jazz Festival at&#13;
Elmhurst College in Illinois. The&#13;
group released its first recording&#13;
last year.&#13;
Director Bell is a former&#13;
member of the famous One&#13;
O'clock Lab Band at North Texas&#13;
State University, where he earned&#13;
his undergraduate and graduate&#13;
degrees. Bell also has played with&#13;
name bands and top entertainers&#13;
throughout the country and, since&#13;
coming to Parkside in 1975, has&#13;
appeared with the Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony and other classical&#13;
ensembles in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
Cancer research funded her*&#13;
Research by Parkside&#13;
chemistry professor Fred W.&#13;
Clough on synthesis of compounds&#13;
that show promise as anti - cancer&#13;
agents has been funded by a&#13;
$12,165 g rant from the National&#13;
Institutes of Health, which&#13;
previously awarded an initial&#13;
$32,019 grant in support of the&#13;
project.&#13;
The new grant was accepted on&#13;
November 7 by the University&#13;
System Board of Regents.&#13;
The Regents also accepted&#13;
$2,400 in federal support for&#13;
Parkside's Law Enforcement&#13;
Education Program and $100 f or&#13;
scholarship funds.&#13;
Russian military outdoes U S&#13;
or returning to college, he said.&#13;
"We have to recognize that many&#13;
students are raising their&#13;
educational sights later in life."&#13;
O'Neil said that universities and&#13;
school systems must share the&#13;
responsibility for the apparent&#13;
decline of students' skill levels&#13;
and must work together if the&#13;
problem is to be solved. "A major&#13;
goal is to eliminate the need for&#13;
basic skill programs by working&#13;
with the high schools to raise their&#13;
standards and to put greater&#13;
emphasis on teaching basic skills&#13;
in our collegiate training of&#13;
teachers," he said.&#13;
The two-day conference&#13;
featured nearly 50 workshops and&#13;
panels. Parkside has become&#13;
nationally recognized for its&#13;
compre hensive skills&#13;
requirements.&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
carry 10 nuclear warheads and&#13;
they already have 308 of them.&#13;
Yet, American missies can carry&#13;
only one warhead.&#13;
The United States has had to&#13;
count the aging B52 bombers&#13;
among its total number of&#13;
delivery vehicles. Yet, according&#13;
to James, B52's are not comparable&#13;
to the new Soviet "Backfire"&#13;
bomber. Yet, the SALT II&#13;
Treaty does not even count the&#13;
"Backfire" in its total number of&#13;
delivery vehicles, but the Soviets&#13;
already have 200 of these bombers.&#13;
James asserted that the&#13;
Soviets are building "Backfire"&#13;
bombers at the rate of three per&#13;
month. Although Carter&#13;
negotiated for the United States to&#13;
be able to build the Bl bomber,&#13;
when he returned home he&#13;
discarded the plans for the Bl&#13;
bomber because it was not&#13;
economically feasible.&#13;
Under the new terms, the Soviet&#13;
Union is still permitted to have&#13;
reusable missle launch silos, but&#13;
the U.S. is not. Although the&#13;
Soviets said that they would limit&#13;
the number of missies that they&#13;
built, but James is skeptical. He&#13;
said that the Soviets have broken&#13;
90 per cent of their treaties&#13;
because it is in their national&#13;
interest. James defines this policy&#13;
as "What is mine is mine, and&#13;
what is yours is negotiable."&#13;
James concluded that American&#13;
ignorance of Soviet defense&#13;
policies threatens to confront the&#13;
United States with nuclear war&#13;
within the next twenty years.&#13;
Art contest asks for bold logo designs&#13;
World Research, Inc., the San&#13;
Diego, California-based nonprofit,&#13;
non-partisan educational&#13;
and research group, has announced&#13;
that it's sponsoring a&#13;
nationwide art competition among&#13;
high school and college students to&#13;
find a new, bold, indentifiable logo&#13;
design. All entries must be&#13;
received by midnight, December&#13;
30, 1980 to be eligible for the $500&#13;
First Prize.&#13;
Stevens went on to say that "in&#13;
addition to the cash award, there&#13;
will be awards of excellence and&#13;
honorable mentions awarded to&#13;
runners-up in the competition.&#13;
World Research Inc., since its&#13;
inception in 1969, has been&#13;
developing unique and innovative&#13;
educational materials designed to&#13;
stimulate discussion of historical&#13;
and current issues. Its primary&#13;
distribution for these materials&#13;
has been high schools, colleges&#13;
and universities.&#13;
World Research produced the&#13;
best-seller book and award&#13;
winning film — "THE INCREDIBLE&#13;
BREAD&#13;
MACHINE." They have also*&#13;
produced two other award winning&#13;
films: "LIBRA," and more&#13;
recently "THE INFLATION&#13;
FILE." World Research is divided&#13;
into two study areas — The&#13;
Campus Studies Division, which&#13;
researches and produces&#13;
educational materials, and the&#13;
Ocean Studies Division, which is&#13;
presently studying the preservation&#13;
and propagation of the&#13;
endangered abalone species.&#13;
The art competition is open to&#13;
all high school and college&#13;
students. Students interested in&#13;
submitting a logo design should&#13;
write ART CONTEST, World&#13;
Research Institute, San Diego,&#13;
California 92121 for entrant&#13;
requirements and contest details. &#13;
Thursday, November 13,1980&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
Exams may&#13;
cause cancer&#13;
Contact&#13;
SUFAC to allocate segregated fees&#13;
by Kay Mullikin&#13;
There are three committees&#13;
associated with the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association.&#13;
They are Legislative Affairs,&#13;
Student Services and Segregated&#13;
University Fees Allocations&#13;
Committee (SUFAC).&#13;
Legislative Affairs Committee&#13;
is a subcommittee of United&#13;
Council. The primary function of&#13;
Legislative Affairs is to locate,&#13;
feSgSajfeiS Siafco Covernement and&#13;
Executive agencies of the State,&#13;
information to facilitate the&#13;
adoption of informed policy&#13;
recommendations by the committee&#13;
and the Executive Board.&#13;
Legislative Affairs also assists&#13;
United Council in adopting&#13;
campus policy on legislative&#13;
issues and organizes student&#13;
opinion behind these positions.&#13;
Another committee of the&#13;
Student Senate is Student SerC&amp;R&#13;
AUTO 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;
vices. Student Services acts as a&#13;
task force and is involved with&#13;
student body problem solving.&#13;
One of the main ways student&#13;
feedback is brought to the attention&#13;
of Student Services and the&#13;
Senate is through P.S.G.A.&#13;
suggestion boxes.&#13;
SUFAC is a subcommittee of&#13;
P.S.G.A. Its purpose is to review&#13;
budget requests and allocate the&#13;
allocable portion of student tuition&#13;
dollare to campus organizations.&#13;
SUFAC then brings their&#13;
recommendations to the Senate&#13;
for approval. If approved, budgets&#13;
then go to the Chancellor for final&#13;
approval.&#13;
SUFAC will be beginning the&#13;
budgeting process this week. A&#13;
representative of each group will&#13;
be presenting the group's budget&#13;
to the committee. The committee&#13;
then will review each budget and&#13;
ask questions. These meetings are&#13;
open to all students. Attending&#13;
students will have a chance to&#13;
speak or ask questions on any&#13;
budget.&#13;
The order in which the budgets&#13;
will be reviewed can be obtained&#13;
from SUFAC members or through&#13;
the P.S.G.A. office. SUFAC&#13;
members are Tim Hovey, Greg&#13;
Davies, Kathy Slama, Dan Rasch,&#13;
Chuck Neu and Randy Klees. The&#13;
budget meetings will be held on&#13;
Tuesdays from 3:15 to 4:30 p.m.&#13;
and on Fridays from 1:00 to 3:00&#13;
P-m. in Communications Arts,&#13;
room 233.&#13;
If yo u have any questions about&#13;
SUFAC or any of t he committees,&#13;
stop in at the P.S.G.A. office.&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
You are sitting in a desk in a&#13;
white room that contains forty or&#13;
so such desks. Because all seats&#13;
are filled and the room is small,&#13;
you are feeling a bit&#13;
claustrophobic. The bodies occupying&#13;
the seats bother you more&#13;
than the fact that there are so&#13;
many of them crowded together,&#13;
though, because you feel that they&#13;
could be real people or they could&#13;
be manikins — th ey don't speak;&#13;
they don't appear to notice you or&#13;
anyone else in the room.&#13;
Then you look closer. The bodies&#13;
around you appear transfixed, but&#13;
dozens of lips are almost imperceptibally&#13;
moving, though no&#13;
sound is coming out. They all&#13;
seem to be staring at a crack in&#13;
the wall at the front of the room.&#13;
You begin to feel like the only&#13;
human being in the room. You&#13;
begin to panic as you contemplate&#13;
this lonely idea. Then you realize&#13;
that the only way you know you&#13;
are human is by the rivers of&#13;
sweat running from your armpits&#13;
to the place at your waist where&#13;
your belt cinches your shirt tightly&#13;
to your skin (and that place itches).&#13;
"Animals sweat," you&#13;
think to yourself, "but only people&#13;
wear plants chemically and&#13;
physically transformed to soak up&#13;
all that excess water."&#13;
Then it hits you. You have only a&#13;
few minutes left before you will be&#13;
expected — no, forced — to&#13;
mentally throw up all over&#13;
something the automaton at the&#13;
front of the room calls a "blue&#13;
book." Your mind, which has been&#13;
literally stuffed with&#13;
corresponding concepts, relevant&#13;
names, crucial dates, and&#13;
frequently quoted figures, refuses&#13;
to recall anything. You have&#13;
visions of cerebral dry heaves.&#13;
As each minute passes, the&#13;
clock at the back of th e room pops&#13;
a signal to remind you to breathe.&#13;
The automaton enters the doorway&#13;
to the room at the third "pop"&#13;
since you have been sitting there,&#13;
^ and you feel the ~ blankness of your yuur enrollment&#13;
Kinship to hold orientation here&#13;
by Dan Galhraith :&#13;
mind suddenly expand in an explosive&#13;
effort to erase your sensations.&#13;
You begin to lose contact&#13;
with your surroundings.&#13;
The last thing you feel is the&#13;
falling sensation you used to selfinduce&#13;
by jumping on your bed&#13;
before going to sleep when you&#13;
were just a kid. The last thing you&#13;
see is the smooth white surface of&#13;
a wall. You can't remember&#13;
where the cracks used to be, but&#13;
there aren't any there now. The&#13;
last thing you hear is the sound of&#13;
your head clunking to rest on the&#13;
smooth white surface of the desk.&#13;
Your final thought is, "I will have&#13;
to do a make-up exam."&#13;
The above is not a fairy tale. It&#13;
is a true story, one that happens&#13;
all too often to American&#13;
university students. The saddest&#13;
part of th e story is the fact that no&#13;
one has ever lived to tell their&#13;
story in the first person.&#13;
Yes, final exams cause cancer.&#13;
The anxiety created by the thiswill-count-150%-toward-your~&#13;
&#13;
final-grade exam causes the rapid&#13;
growth of a little known type of&#13;
malignant tumor (Tumoris&#13;
Examinitus). This type of tumor&#13;
always strikes unexpectedly,&#13;
mere moments before an exam.&#13;
It's growth rate is phenomenal,&#13;
though, believe it or not, many&#13;
backwards, ignorant physicians,&#13;
professors, and school administrators&#13;
refuse to believe the&#13;
data (despite repeated testing and&#13;
unexplained disappearances of&#13;
college students).&#13;
Like most sudden and fatal&#13;
diseases, Tumoris Examinitus&#13;
knows no prejudices. As of yet,&#13;
there is no known preventive&#13;
measure or cure that will stop this&#13;
black, menacing destroyer of&#13;
America's youth.&#13;
Alert your peers to the dangers&#13;
of final exams before it is too late.&#13;
Tell your teachers about Tumoris&#13;
Examinitus, the next time they&#13;
mention exams. Then ask your&#13;
school administrators what the&#13;
real cause of declining university&#13;
enrollment is.&#13;
by Dan Galbraith&#13;
Kinship of Kenosha is a child&#13;
service agency working with&#13;
children (boys and girls ages 7 to&#13;
17) from single-parent homes, and&#13;
children with special problems&#13;
They match the child with&#13;
mature, stable adult who&#13;
provide regular guidance,&#13;
derstanding and acceptance.&#13;
Kinship is a preventative&#13;
program that is concerned with&#13;
providing the friendship and&#13;
guidance a child needs to avoid&#13;
a&#13;
can&#13;
unmore&#13;
serious problems in&#13;
future. Kinship feels it is&#13;
portant to expose them to different&#13;
environments and give&#13;
them a chance to do some of the&#13;
things they are unable to do&#13;
because of their situation.&#13;
Children are referred to Kinship&#13;
by professional people in the area,&#13;
such as counselors, teachers or&#13;
their&#13;
the&#13;
imWIN&#13;
A PAIR OF RANOER&#13;
SEASON BASKETBALL&#13;
TICKETS&#13;
Nam* the 1981 Winter Carnival&#13;
1981 WINTER CARNIVAL THEME&#13;
Carnival Theme Name&#13;
— RULES &amp; INFORMATION —&#13;
Winter Carnival will be held Feb 9&#13;
1981. 13,&#13;
Student Name,&#13;
SS No.&#13;
L.&#13;
• Must be a Parkside student to enter.&#13;
• In case of a tie, a drawing will be held.&#13;
• Deadline: Wednesday, Nov. 19&#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;
see the pressing need to get&#13;
through to children before they&#13;
get off the track. Volunteers are to&#13;
accept the child as he/she is, be&#13;
the child's special friend and&#13;
maintain once-a-week contact for&#13;
at least a year.&#13;
Several Parkside students are&#13;
currently in the program. All of&#13;
the students see their Kinschildren&#13;
for three to five hours&#13;
once a week. Activities for a&#13;
Kinschild and his/her Kinsperson&#13;
may consist of walking in a park,&#13;
riding a bike, hiking, skating,&#13;
fishing, shopping, cooking,&#13;
swimming, photography or just&#13;
staying home to talk.&#13;
"We usually don't pick many&#13;
things that would cost a lot of&#13;
money," said John Schmidt,&#13;
Parkside student, "like going to&#13;
McDonald's or playing catch. I&#13;
like photography, we try taking&#13;
pictures of things, too. Really,&#13;
nothing we do is extravegant."&#13;
"I'm glad I'm in the program,"&#13;
said Steve. "I intend to stay with it&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
for a while, through this year, and&#13;
if all goes well, longer."&#13;
People who are in the program&#13;
have different experiences. "It's&#13;
unique to be with a seven year&#13;
old," said Sue Stevens, Parkside&#13;
student. "I'm learning a lot about&#13;
myself through a seven year old.&#13;
You learn a lot about yourself, and&#13;
about patience. It's not like it's a&#13;
type of trying thing where you&#13;
have a monster on your hands. It's&#13;
an experience to get to know a&#13;
little kid."&#13;
If you are the kind of person who&#13;
likes being with children, Kinship&#13;
has a child waiting to be your&#13;
''Special Friend." Kinship is&#13;
having an orientation here at&#13;
Parkside, Thursday, November 20&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Union 106. All interested&#13;
students, faculty, and&#13;
staff are welcome to attend. If you&#13;
are unable to attend this orientation,&#13;
please contact Kinship of&#13;
Kenosha Co., Inc., 2001 - 80th St.,&#13;
658-0151 for other orientation&#13;
dates.&#13;
4433-22nd Avenu e Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phoi* 454-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR C REDIT C ARDS A CCEPTED &#13;
Ranger Thursday, November 13,1980&#13;
Fast for needy&#13;
MEMBERS OP TUP r A C T * , ~ RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
production for fall, are left tTrlghTUaSd&#13;
8 Tin^M* D&#13;
K&#13;
ramatic Arts&#13;
' studio&#13;
McKelvie and standing, Vicki KraDD Pat |&#13;
n&#13;
it&#13;
ld,&#13;
'..&#13;
Joh&#13;
^ AAiskuli&#13;
" and Jeff&#13;
Scott Lucareli and Gary LochowFtz Casclar0 and Bobb|&#13;
e Menmear. Not pictured:&#13;
Review&#13;
by Wendy Westphal&#13;
During the course of the day,&#13;
many students stop at the Coffee&#13;
Shoppe for donuts and coffee, the&#13;
Cafeteria for salad or the Union&#13;
for beer and pizza. Hunger pangs&#13;
seldom exist. Unfortunately, this&#13;
situation doesn't hold true around&#13;
the world.&#13;
A major campaign to bring the&#13;
plight of East African refugees to&#13;
the attention of the American&#13;
people has been launched by&#13;
OXFAM-America. In response to&#13;
this campaign, the RANGER will&#13;
sponsor the 2nd Annual Fast for a&#13;
World Harvest.&#13;
This year Oxfam funds will be&#13;
used for emergency and long-term&#13;
developmental assistance for&#13;
East Africans. According to&#13;
United Nation statistics, more&#13;
that 20 million African people are&#13;
threatened by famine. The Horn of&#13;
Africa which includes the countries&#13;
of Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya,&#13;
Uganda and the Southern Sudan is&#13;
severly stricken. Drought combined&#13;
with continuing conflict and&#13;
instability has driven hundreds of&#13;
thousands of people into refugee&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
You know the story (you've seen&#13;
it done too many times before) :&#13;
one of society's misfits has been&#13;
pushed too far (for some reason)&#13;
and is retaliating by killing a lot of&#13;
people. But "Fade to Black" is&#13;
different from the formula&#13;
because it stars one of&#13;
Hollywood's most talented actors,&#13;
Dennis Christopher.&#13;
Christopher plays Eric Binford,&#13;
a wimpy delivery boy whose life is&#13;
obssessed with movies and movie&#13;
trivia. Eric is constantly bullied&#13;
by his aunt (who's confined to a&#13;
wheelchair) at home and his boss&#13;
and co-workers at the company he&#13;
delivers films for. This pressure&#13;
becomes too much when Eric's&#13;
aunt knocks over his projector&#13;
(trying to get his attention) and&#13;
breaks the film he was watching.&#13;
Outraged, Eric pushes her down&#13;
the stairs (the same way Richard&#13;
Widmark did in "Kiss of Death").&#13;
This scene was supposed to be&#13;
suspensful, but came off quite&#13;
comically.&#13;
With the taste of death still fresh&#13;
in his mouth, Eric goes on a killing&#13;
spree, reproducing characters (by&#13;
dressing like them) and murder&#13;
scenes from "White Heat," "The&#13;
Mummy," and "Dracula." He&#13;
even dresses like Hopalong&#13;
Cassidy to finish off those who&#13;
have wronged him. The make-up&#13;
jobs (when he's Dracula and the&#13;
Mummy for example) are&#13;
astonishing, as is Christopher's&#13;
ability to crawl into each of his&#13;
characters and make us believe&#13;
him. Christopher is a versatile&#13;
actor but his abilities are wasted&#13;
in this film. He is extremely good,&#13;
but with the proper script (as&#13;
in "Breaking Away") he could&#13;
camps in search of food and&#13;
safety.&#13;
On November 20, you can share&#13;
the experience of hunger suffered&#13;
by a quarter of the global family.&#13;
The money which is saved from&#13;
not purchasing food that day&#13;
should be brought to the Ranger&#13;
office (next to the Coffee Shoppe).&#13;
Ranger will then send a check&#13;
covering individual contributions&#13;
to OXFAM-America from UWParkside.&#13;
&#13;
You may say you can't go&#13;
without food. Complete fasting is&#13;
not required. You may choose to&#13;
record your food purchases and&#13;
contribute that amount toward the&#13;
Fast.&#13;
No matter which way you&#13;
choose to participate in the Fast&#13;
for a World Harvest, you will&#13;
assist in feeding the poorer people&#13;
of the world. Awakening&#13;
Americans to the fact that not&#13;
everyone has food on the table&#13;
may be a step toward the&#13;
elimination of hunger.&#13;
If you have any questions or&#13;
would like more information on the&#13;
Fast for a World Harvest, stop in&#13;
the RANGER Office.&#13;
Fade to Black' hits, misses I Racine presents opera&#13;
have been much better.&#13;
One example of poor taste in&#13;
this film is the scene in which Eric&#13;
buys some photographs of&#13;
Marilyn Monroe and goes home to&#13;
masturbate while looking at them.&#13;
This is one of the sickest scenes&#13;
I've ever seen on film.&#13;
Each scene that has the&#13;
remotest possibility of being&#13;
scarey is ruined by something&#13;
dopey (sucking a prostitute's&#13;
blood after she gets a picket from&#13;
a picket fence stuck in her neck&#13;
and "moseying off" after he kills&#13;
one of his co-workers for examples).&#13;
The scariest part of "Fade&#13;
to Black" is the scene in which a&#13;
film clip from "Dawn of the&#13;
Dead" is shown.&#13;
However, "Fade to Black" is&#13;
better that most trashy movies&#13;
because it tells the story of the&#13;
killer rather than concentrating&#13;
Continued On Page Seven&#13;
Opera Racine will present&#13;
Mozart's comic opera "Cusi Fan&#13;
Tutte" (Women are like that)&#13;
November 14-16 at the Park High&#13;
School Auditorium, 1901 - 12&#13;
Street, Racine.&#13;
In the opera, a most outlandish&#13;
wager is placed. An older man&#13;
bets two young men that their&#13;
lovers can not remain true to&#13;
them. He says that since the&#13;
beginning of time women never&#13;
remained faithful.&#13;
Wendy Hill, a native of Racine,&#13;
will play the role of Despina the&#13;
maid. Others from Racine participating&#13;
in the performance are&#13;
from the Horiick High School&#13;
chorus, which is under the&#13;
direction of Antonio Pavao.&#13;
Showtime on Friday and&#13;
Saturday is at 8:00 p.m. and&#13;
Sunday at 7:00 p.m. Tickets are&#13;
$6.00 and $9.00 with a $1.00 off if&#13;
student identification is shown.&#13;
Tickets are available at the door&#13;
or through Opera Racine — (639-&#13;
1316).&#13;
immmimiiuiiiuHii&#13;
WHO PUT&#13;
cream&#13;
well?&#13;
Women in advertising discussed&#13;
0&#13;
PcUelUb BAKERY -55^&#13;
"The Naked Truth: Advertising's&#13;
Image of Women," a&#13;
lecture illustrated by slides of&#13;
more than 200 ads from a wide&#13;
variety of magazines, will be&#13;
presented by nationally - known&#13;
media specialist Jean Kilbourne&#13;
on Tuesday, November 18, at 8 p.&#13;
m. in the Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
The program is sponsored by the&#13;
student Parkside Activities&#13;
Board. Admission is $1 and tickets&#13;
will be available at the door.&#13;
Kilbourne's presentation&#13;
examines specific ways in which&#13;
advertisements reinforce&#13;
stereotypes and affect self -&#13;
images of both women and men.&#13;
She cites a recent report by the&#13;
United Nations Commission on the&#13;
Status of Women which claims&#13;
that "advertising is the worst&#13;
offender in perpetuating the&#13;
image of women as sex symbols&#13;
and as an inferior class of human&#13;
beings."&#13;
Kilbourne has presented her&#13;
program to hundreds of college,&#13;
business, and community groups&#13;
and local and national women's&#13;
groups, including the National&#13;
Organization of Women and the&#13;
Association for Women in&#13;
Psychology. She has discussed the&#13;
JEAN KILBOURNE&#13;
topic on radio and television&#13;
programs, including NBC's&#13;
Weekend and Today, and has been&#13;
interviewed by Time and&#13;
Associated Press.&#13;
A former employe of the British&#13;
Broadcasting Corporation in&#13;
Londan and of a French Film&#13;
company, Kilbourne holds a&#13;
bachelor's degreee from&#13;
Wellesley College and currently is&#13;
a doctoral candidate at Boston&#13;
University.&#13;
She recently received a grant&#13;
from the Educational Foundation&#13;
of America for a study of sex role&#13;
stereotyping in television commercials.&#13;
&#13;
Kilbourne is assistant director&#13;
of the New England Screen&#13;
Education Association, an&#13;
associate of the Women's Institute&#13;
for Freedom of the Press, a&#13;
member of the steering committee&#13;
of the National Center for&#13;
Women in the Performing and&#13;
Media Arts, and has taught&#13;
women's studies and media&#13;
studies on the high school and&#13;
college level.&#13;
• DANISH TORTE CAKES&#13;
• KRINGiES v&#13;
• WEDDING CAKES&#13;
• CAKES FOR AU. OCCASIONS&#13;
OPEN • FINE ITALIAN BREAD&#13;
tSUN MM'&amp;! • HARO ROU A BUN SPECIALISTS&#13;
GRADONI 'S&#13;
654-0785&#13;
6020 39TH AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
h To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
Dk 4&amp;l£.&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha.&#13;
Elmwood Plaza Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
r&#13;
52tid street&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
| Now Featuring&#13;
Mini-Service Sit-Down Dining&#13;
plus Carry-Outs&#13;
Open Noon til Midnight&#13;
Sat 4 til 1, Sun 4 til 10&#13;
BOMBERS - LASAGNA - SPAGHETTI&#13;
If you wish — Call ahead&#13;
and your order will be hot and&#13;
ready to eat in our private booths.&#13;
I 3308-52n^St^Kenosha&#13;
VI 654-5068 &#13;
6 Thursday, November 13,1980 Ranger&#13;
1980-81&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
basketball&#13;
SEASON PASS&#13;
Get a FREE UW-P T-shirt with each&#13;
season pass $10 for students&#13;
$18 for all others&#13;
OPENING WEEKEND&#13;
Tickets only $1 in advance at the PE Bldg&#13;
or Info Center after the games enjoy a&#13;
free beer or soda &amp; live entertainment&#13;
'FACULTY/STAFF/STUDENTS&#13;
at Union Square Get a free mug&#13;
MEN'S SCHEDULE J&#13;
Fri Nov 28 St. Xavier&#13;
Sat Nov 29 UW-LaCrosse&#13;
Mon Dec 1 South Alabama&#13;
Thurs Dec 4 Murray State&#13;
Sat Dec 6 Drake University&#13;
Tues Dec 9 UW-Stevens Point&#13;
Sat Dec 13 Kansas State&#13;
Mon Dec 15 UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Mon Dec 29 Ranger Classic&#13;
&amp;TueDec30 Tournament&#13;
(Carthage,&#13;
Ouachita Baptist,&#13;
Minnesota-Duluth&#13;
Sat Jan 3 UW-Green Bay&#13;
Mon Jan 5 Iowa State&#13;
Wed Jan 7 Colorado&#13;
Sat Jan 10 California StateFullerton&#13;
&#13;
Tue Jan 13 Hawaii-Hilo&#13;
Wed Jan 14 Hawaii-Hilo&#13;
Tue Jan 20 UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Sat Jan 24 Quincy College&#13;
Parkside . 7:30PM&#13;
Parkside '7:30PM&#13;
Mobile, Ala. 7:30PM&#13;
Murray, Kentucky 7:30PM&#13;
Des Moines, Iowa 7:30PM&#13;
Stevens Point 7:30PM&#13;
Manhattan, Kans. 7:35PM&#13;
Parkside 7:30PM&#13;
Parkside 7&amp;9PM&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Parkside 7:30PM&#13;
Ames, Iowa 7:35PM&#13;
Boulder, Colo. 7:35PM&#13;
Fullerton, Cal 7:30PM&#13;
Hilo, Hawaii 7:30PM&#13;
Hilo, Hawaii 7:30PM&#13;
Milwaukee 8PM&#13;
Parkside 7:30PM&#13;
Thur Jan 29&#13;
Sat Jan 31&#13;
Tue Feb 3&#13;
Sat Feb 7&#13;
Mon Feb 9&#13;
Wed Feb 11&#13;
Sat Feb 14&#13;
Mon Feb 16&#13;
Thur Feb 19&#13;
Sat Feb 21&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
Chicago State&#13;
UW-Whitewater&#13;
Loras Collebge&#13;
Saginaw Valley St.&#13;
Lakeland College&#13;
St. Norbert College&#13;
Lewis University&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
UW-Green Bay&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Whitewater&#13;
Dubuque, Iowa&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Parkside&#13;
DePere&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Marquette,Mich.&#13;
Green Bay&#13;
..9HJ6J&#13;
'-iniaoq&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
A ¥&#13;
WOMEN'S S CHEDULE&#13;
Tue Dec 2 UW-Oshkosh&#13;
Sat Dec 6 'Marquette&#13;
Tue Dec 9 UW-Whitewater&#13;
Fri Dec 12 UW-Stevens Point&#13;
Fri-Sat College of St. Francis&#13;
Dec 19-20 Tournament (UW-Parkside,&#13;
St. Xavier, Missouri-St. Louis,&#13;
Chicago State, Lewis, Shaw&#13;
College)&#13;
Parkside (7 pm)&#13;
Milw (5:45 pm)&#13;
Whitewater (5 pm)&#13;
Stevens Pt (6 pm)&#13;
Joliet, III.&#13;
Sat Jan 10&#13;
Tue Jan 13&#13;
Fri-Sat&#13;
Jan 16-17&#13;
Tue Jan 20&#13;
Sat Jan 24&#13;
Tue Jan 27&#13;
Thur Jan 29&#13;
Sat Jan 31&#13;
Mon Feb 2&#13;
Sat Feb 7&#13;
Thur Feb 12&#13;
Sat Feb 14&#13;
Wed Feb 18&#13;
Fri Feb 20&#13;
Sat Feb 21&#13;
Mon Feb 23&#13;
Tue Mar 3&#13;
Thur-Sat&#13;
Mar 5-7&#13;
'Carroll&#13;
* UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Parkside Tournament (Loras,&#13;
Milton, St. Xavier, UW-Pkside)&#13;
Chicago State&#13;
* UW-Green Bay&#13;
'Marquette&#13;
Northeastern Illinois&#13;
UW-Platteville&#13;
'Carthage&#13;
North Central&#13;
'Carroll&#13;
Illinois-Chicago Circle&#13;
'UW-Milwaukee&#13;
UW-Oshkosh&#13;
* UW-Green Bay&#13;
'Carthage&#13;
St. Norbert&#13;
WWIAC Division II&#13;
Tournament&#13;
Parkside (5&#13;
Milw (7 pm)&#13;
Parkside&#13;
(5 &amp; 7 pm F&#13;
(1 &amp; 3 pm S&#13;
Chicago (7:3&#13;
Parkside (1:3&#13;
Parkside (7 |&#13;
Chicago (7 p&#13;
Parkside (3 |&#13;
Parkside (7 |&#13;
Parkside (4:3&#13;
Waukesha (;&#13;
Parkside (4:3&#13;
Parkside (7 |&#13;
Oshkosh (7 |&#13;
Grn Bay (1:3&#13;
Kenosha (7 |&#13;
Parkside (7 p&#13;
Milwaukee (I&#13;
* d enotes WWIAC-II game&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside &#13;
KANGER SPORTS&#13;
Ranger Thursday, November 13,1980&#13;
Intra-mural Football&#13;
Stabbin' Cabin&#13;
Tho IIW.Dn,u:j. r .&#13;
rkside Intramural&#13;
Flag Football season ended this&#13;
past week with the Stabbin Cabin&#13;
who dominated play during the&#13;
regular season league action, also&#13;
capturing the Championship Playoffs.&#13;
According to Intramural&#13;
coordinator Loran Hein the&#13;
regular season play consisted of a&#13;
round-robin competition between&#13;
four very competitive football&#13;
teams.&#13;
During the league play, the&#13;
Stabbin Cabin were not only undefeated,&#13;
but unscored upon&#13;
Their victories included a 15-0&#13;
score over Luck's Boys and a 13-0&#13;
win over the Wrestlers. The keys&#13;
to these victories were the pinpoint&#13;
passing of Jame Oberbrunner&#13;
to his top wideouts Dan&#13;
Sykes, Bob Granitz and Rich&#13;
Salisbury, and also the hard&#13;
rushing line charge of the defense&#13;
Luck's Boys posted an impressive&#13;
26-7 w in over the Mean&#13;
Machine with Jon Cuccio, Mike&#13;
Kaesner and Kevin Erwin doing&#13;
most of the damage. Cuccio and&#13;
Kaesner connected on two long&#13;
touchdown passes, and Erwin&#13;
scored two touchdowns, one a 30&#13;
yard pass from Kaesner, and the&#13;
other an 80 yard run, the longest&#13;
?? vP 0f the season&#13;
- The Mean&#13;
Machine's lone score came on a 10&#13;
yard pass from Clark to Rick&#13;
Grisham.&#13;
The most exciting game of the&#13;
season was played between the&#13;
Mean Machine and the Wrestlers,&#13;
with the Mean Machine winning 7-&#13;
6. The Mean Machine opened the&#13;
scoring with a 3 yard touchdown&#13;
plunge by Rick Grisham early in&#13;
the second half. Grisham also&#13;
converted the important point&#13;
after. The Wrestlers mounted a&#13;
late scoring drive with a 40 y ard&#13;
pass to Kevin Casper from Keith&#13;
Reicher, following an interception&#13;
by Casper. The missed extra point&#13;
averted an overtime, and assured&#13;
a victory for the Mean Machine.&#13;
In the Championship Play-offs,&#13;
the Stabbin Cabin was pitted&#13;
claims title&#13;
against Luck's Boys. The Cabin&#13;
was again very impressive as&#13;
Luck's Boys ran out of luck and&#13;
lost 21-0. The big play boys for the&#13;
Cabin were again Jamie Oberbrunner,&#13;
Dan Sykes and Buck&#13;
Granitz. Oberbrunner passed for&#13;
two long touchdowns and returned&#13;
an intercepted pass for a touchdown.&#13;
Sykes and Granitz were&#13;
both recipients of Oberbrunner's&#13;
long touchdown passes, and the&#13;
versatile Sykes added a 35 yard&#13;
field goal to insure him the league&#13;
scoring title with 21 points. Other&#13;
members of Stabbin Cabin's&#13;
Championship team were Scott&#13;
Bullis, Paul Charapata, Jon&#13;
Vucino, Dicky Sykes, Ron Clark,&#13;
Rich Salisbury, Kelly O'Connell&#13;
and Jeff Hollingsworth.&#13;
While the season is over,&#13;
negotiations are continuing to&#13;
match the Stabbin Cabin up&#13;
against Carthage College Intramural&#13;
Flag Football Champions.&#13;
&#13;
Soccer advances to semifinals&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The men's soccer team travels&#13;
to St. Cloud, Minnesota this&#13;
Saturday in a rematch of last&#13;
year's Area 3 semi-final game&#13;
against St. John's University. The&#13;
Rangers will be out to avenge last&#13;
year's 1-0 loss to St. John's.&#13;
Based on statistics, the Rangers&#13;
have the potential to, win. They go&#13;
into the playoffs with a school&#13;
record of U victories, have suffered&#13;
only five losses with one tie,&#13;
possess a tenacious defense, have&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of beer? 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;
Kansas City at San Diego&#13;
Buffalo at Cincinnati&#13;
Cleveland at Pittsburgh&#13;
New York Jets at Denver&#13;
Green Bay at New York Giants&#13;
New Orleans at Atlanta&#13;
Philadelphia at Washington&#13;
St. Louis at Dallas&#13;
Tampa Bay at Minnesota&#13;
Baltimore at Detroit&#13;
Houston at Chicago&#13;
Los Angeles at New England&#13;
San Francisco at Miami&#13;
Oakland at Seattle&#13;
Tie will be the total combined points - breaker:&#13;
scored in the Oakland - Seattle game.&#13;
Last week's winner: John Kuta: 11 correct, 50 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;
a bona-fide All-American candidate&#13;
goalkeeper (Dan Opferman)&#13;
and are riding a three&#13;
game win streak.&#13;
The play-offs are a do-or-die&#13;
situation. A loss means the end to&#13;
a long season, and a win pushes&#13;
the team into the Area 3 Championship&#13;
game against the winner&#13;
of the Illinois - Iowa playoff.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson is impressed&#13;
with the Rangers' opponents:&#13;
"They're big and strong,&#13;
RANGER needs Sports Writers&#13;
Review: "Fade to Black"&#13;
Continued From Page Five&#13;
on the terrorized main character&#13;
while a few detectives dig up clues&#13;
to the killer's identity (which&#13;
usually has little or no relavence&#13;
to the plot.)&#13;
Linda Kerridge plays Marilyn&#13;
O'Connor, a Marilyn Monroe looka-like&#13;
who Eric falls in love with.&#13;
She is drawn into his web of terror&#13;
out of sympathy for him. In an&#13;
intense recreation of a scene from&#13;
the "Prince and the Showgirl"&#13;
(with Christopher portraying&#13;
Laurence Olivier and Kerridge&#13;
posing as Marilyn Monroe) we&#13;
witness one of the film's best&#13;
moments. Christopher and&#13;
Kerridge are absolutely stunning.&#13;
Good suspense music is an asset&#13;
to any horror film. "Tubular&#13;
Bells" held many an "Exorcist"&#13;
audience in awe, and the intense&#13;
orchestrations of "Jaws" have&#13;
come back time and again to&#13;
haunt us. The unique bass and&#13;
rhythem tunes of "Fade to Black"&#13;
gives us yet another type of music&#13;
to fear.&#13;
The director (Vernon Zimmerman)&#13;
seems to feel that&#13;
getting shot is no big deal. When&#13;
psychologist Dr. Moriarty&#13;
(weakly played by Tim&#13;
Thomerson) is shot in the leg it&#13;
hardly stops him from chasing&#13;
Eric all over Hollywood even&#13;
though Eric has been shot many&#13;
times in one scene, he has the&#13;
superhuman strength to come&#13;
back for more.&#13;
The script (also written by&#13;
Zimmerman) is so likewarm in&#13;
some parts and so intense in&#13;
others it's hard to believe the&#13;
same person wrote it.&#13;
At the end of the film, Eric&#13;
quotes his idol, Cody Jarrett&#13;
(James Cagney's role in "White&#13;
Heat") when he yells "Top of the&#13;
World, Ma!" This may describe&#13;
Christopher's acting, but "Fade to&#13;
Black" is the bottom of the barrel.&#13;
WAWV WWiWWWAWJV,'&#13;
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commissions selling top quality, "i&#13;
triple layer, sleeping bags—rec-!1&#13;
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on campus. Ideal as holiday gifts.&#13;
Free info: SLEEPING BAGS UNLIMITED,&#13;
105 Wolf Rd., Albany, f&#13;
| New York 12205.&#13;
AWWWWiWAAWAVA&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
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Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654 2932&#13;
THE BEST SUBS&#13;
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ARE NOW IN KENOSHA&#13;
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251 25*&#13;
bigger then us. They also have a&#13;
fast team that likes to apply&#13;
pressure." Henderson knows it&#13;
won't be ah easy contest. "It&#13;
should be close. The key is that we&#13;
have to score when we have the&#13;
opportunities."&#13;
This is the fourth year the&#13;
Rangers will face St. John's in&#13;
playoff competition. All three&#13;
prior games have found Parkside&#13;
on the short end of the score. In&#13;
last year's game, St. John's&#13;
scored with three minutes left in&#13;
the game to win.&#13;
The Rangers have the incentive,&#13;
ability and desire to win. It's just a&#13;
matter, as Henderson says, "of&#13;
putting the ball in the net."&#13;
ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
for&#13;
SPRING SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are&#13;
seeking a degree at UW-Parkside) should consult their&#13;
academic adviser prior to registration for Spring&#13;
Semester. A Certification of Advising form, signed by the&#13;
adviser, is required for registration.&#13;
Spring Semester Course Schedules will be available on&#13;
November 7. November 10-21 has been designated as an&#13;
academic advising period, and advisers will make every&#13;
effort to meet with you then.&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
fni 11 1 • I ill' I&#13;
CONTACT YOUR ADVISER&#13;
FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
If you have any questions, contact the Office of the Dean&#13;
of Faculty, 348 Wyllie Library-Learning Center, 553-2144.&#13;
NOTE: Non-matriculant students (students not seeking&#13;
a degree at UW-Parkside) are exempt from this&#13;
requirement. b &#13;
Thursday, November 13,1980 Ranger&#13;
Vol&#13;
!^&#13;
b&#13;
!" seed for sta,e Tourney Coming Events&#13;
In Linda Henrier«nn'c thr-a* „ Rangers received their seed Henderson plans on utilizine all&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
In Linda Henderson's three&#13;
years as head coach of the&#13;
women's volleyball team, her&#13;
squad has never been seeded&#13;
number one in the WWIAC State&#13;
Tournament. In this, her fourth&#13;
year, the number one seeding has&#13;
finally been bestowed upon her&#13;
team.&#13;
The seedings have Parkside&#13;
first, followed by Milwaukee,&#13;
Marquette, Carthage and Carroll.&#13;
The Rangers received their seed&#13;
after Jan Stocker, the Commissioner&#13;
of the Conference,&#13;
broke a tie between Parkside and&#13;
Milwaukee. Parkside defeated&#13;
Milwaukee three out of fo ur times&#13;
this year.&#13;
"It feels good," Henderson said&#13;
about the seeding. "We deserve it.&#13;
I think we're the best team there.&#13;
The question is whether we're&#13;
going to beat ourselves with&#13;
mental errors."&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
SADISTS CLUB MEETING. Blansten's&#13;
stabbin cabin's and student militants&#13;
welcome. Moln 270. Wed. at one. Refreshments&#13;
served.&#13;
JOLENE, thanks for spending money on a&#13;
classified — The Villian&#13;
LOOSEY — you better be extra good! —&#13;
Kathy and Kbuck&#13;
MARY — I l ove you, more than could ever be&#13;
imagined — Curtis&#13;
RANGER STAFF: Run away! Run away!&#13;
Run away! Chain Gang&#13;
KM — noticed the improvement in your&#13;
picture last week. — lOP's&#13;
ANIMAL WOMEN — forget Hollywood. Join&#13;
the lOP's. — Chain Gang&#13;
'44 FORD four door four on the floor. Ten&#13;
times fast.&#13;
SEE SUE'S base of operations Moln 118 Chain&#13;
Gang&#13;
ROUND TABLE: Look in the castle aaaarg&#13;
under english literature!&#13;
DON'T START a writing war with an English&#13;
major — Steve&#13;
HOLLYWOOD — Become a priest. Then we&#13;
can fool around. — Nuns&#13;
RANGER STAFF: You Pig-pog English&#13;
(101?) bed wetting types! (French Knight)&#13;
IT'S A PITY that some students Insist on&#13;
writing classifieds that prove their&#13;
ignorance. You should be embarrassed to&#13;
admit that you're a student.&#13;
WE'RE ONES!!!&#13;
ATTENTION all available hunks of male&#13;
flesh: 4th annual "Why I haven't dated&#13;
Chris Hammelev but would love to!"&#13;
contest is up and coming (breathing hard!!!)&#13;
Details next issue of Ranger.&#13;
K.M. wears Pinocchio underwear, but he&#13;
never tells a lie.&#13;
ORGY QUEEN, .the soccer team demands&#13;
equal time! — BJ&#13;
YODA WAS HERE, but now he's gone. He left&#13;
his name to carry on. Those who knew him,&#13;
knew him well. Those who didn't can go to&#13;
hell.&#13;
RON, consumed mass quantities with any&#13;
coneheads lately?!&#13;
JULIE, what happened in aisle 1 at Value&#13;
Village — Coach&#13;
BRAD, HAPPY 18th — have a good one. —&#13;
Renee&#13;
BILL, You know J8.K would kill. . .!&#13;
YELLOW BELT, Couldn't be soon enough!&#13;
Whips 8. chains too?!&#13;
STUD il: Where can we go window shopping?&#13;
Merchandise better be functionable as well&#13;
as "cute".&#13;
ANIMAL WOMEN — leave the zoo. Join the&#13;
Chain Gang. — lOP's&#13;
MY HOUSE (Junie) - d oesn't have a plaque!&#13;
- Little Sister S.&#13;
#SC-3057: How I LOVE Thee: Todd H.&#13;
#sc-3057: Let me Show you the ways! Todd H.&#13;
JEFF: Wide-mouth coke bottles? I'll show&#13;
you what art is. Ferret?&#13;
ANNE ELK is a sniveling little rat - faced&#13;
gift.&#13;
KRATOCHVIL — High school is over — time&#13;
to grow up. Think carefully before acting.&#13;
Feelings are being destroyed. Explanation&#13;
can be obtained. All animals use to party&#13;
hearty. Time to reunite and party up.&#13;
Friends can only take so much, "Steve".&#13;
Tell us — personally, if you want to stay&#13;
friends.&#13;
A DAY with Mary Jo is boring!—Todd H.&#13;
CHUCK, are still an animal?&#13;
A DAY without sunshie ... is like night.&#13;
JULIE — Chicken? oh ya, turkey ...?&#13;
DIRECTOR OF UNION. Wanna shot! Thanks&#13;
for It back. Animals&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
KZ 6 50. 1978, 2000 miles. Excellent. $1500 or&#13;
best. 634-2948&#13;
-TOSW, 1973, good mpg, $500 or best offer.&#13;
LOST &amp; FOUND&#13;
LOS&#13;
7 ~ WALLET, (library or coffee shoppe).&#13;
Please contact Jane 634-6296&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
WALK, TALK, and assist retired (blind)&#13;
college teacher in straightening out his&#13;
library. Earn while you learn. Call 694-2251&#13;
for appointment.&#13;
Henderson plans on utilizing all&#13;
of her team's strengths, strengths&#13;
that the other teams in the tournament&#13;
don't possess. "We have&#13;
good depth and I plan on using my&#13;
bench. We have a stronger bench&#13;
than any other state team. I'm&#13;
going to rotate my players and&#13;
keep the team fresh."&#13;
'Hie Rangers have other positive&#13;
points. Half of the starters are&#13;
seniors and provide that allimportant&#13;
experience, The other&#13;
and perhaps most important point&#13;
is the strength of the regular&#13;
season schedule. Henderson's&#13;
team posted a 24-18 record and&#13;
played perhaps the toughest&#13;
schedule of any state school&#13;
this year.&#13;
Can the team live up to its&#13;
seeding? "We have the seeding&#13;
and we have to prove it. We're&#13;
ready, rested and eager," Henderson&#13;
said. The tournament will&#13;
be at Marquette this weekend.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
"National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phono 658-2331&#13;
MEMIER F.D.I.C.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 14&#13;
COURSE "Defensive Driving" at 7:30 am and 12:30 pm in Union 207. The nnwr.™&#13;
is free for Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
8&#13;
MOVIE "The Rose" will be shown at 8 pm in the Union Cinema. Admission at th*&#13;
door is $1.50for a Parkside student and $1.50for a guest. Sponsored by PAB&#13;
SPEAKER Roberta Rivierva, director of the Center for Latino and Latin&#13;
Affairs at Northern Illinois University, will speak on "The Hidden Currim.bf™&#13;
Education." Union 104, 1 pm. Sponsored by MSU. '&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 15&#13;
BUS TOUR to Chicago's Lyric Opera House. Call ext. 2312 for more details Sn«i&#13;
sored by UW-Extension. '&#13;
X COUNTRY Men's NCAA-H Championship, 10,000 meters at 11 am All am&#13;
welcome. '&#13;
Monday, Nov. 17&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. Prof. Gerald Greenfield will talk on "The&#13;
Latin American City: Present Problems, Future Prospects". The program is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
CONCERT by the Parkside Percussion Ensemble at 1 pm in Upper Main Place The&#13;
concert is free and open to the public. / 6&#13;
LECTURE at 7 pm in GR 101. Henry Plum will talk on "The Legal Rights and&#13;
Responsibilities of Foster Parents". The program is free. Please call Kenosha or&#13;
Racine Dept. of S ocial Services for reservations.&#13;
AOE presents "The Fourposter" at 8pm in the Communication Arts Theatre with a&#13;
champagne and dessert wedding reception at 7:15 pm. Tickets are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center. Admission is $4.00 for Parkside students and $7 00 for&#13;
others.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 18&#13;
CONCERT with Tim Bell directing the Parkside Jazz Ensemble at 8 pm in the it?t^J?oSS.&#13;
t&#13;
if?^LTheatre&#13;
-&#13;
Admission is »-00 for students and $2.00 for others.&#13;
8t 8 P&#13;
/Lin the F&#13;
nlon Cinema&#13;
-&#13;
Jean Kilbourne will talk&#13;
SV&amp; S^oL VpaT me&#13;
° m AdvertIsta«" Adm»»'on at the door&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 19&#13;
DISCUSSION by the Peer Support Program at 7:30 pm in MOLN 111. The program&#13;
is free and open to all.&#13;
B&#13;
RECITAL by Susan Gulick and her guitar at 8 pm in GR 103. The program is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
ACADEMY OF BATON A DANCE&#13;
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TRY OUR FAMOUS PIZZA TURNOVERS&#13;
CARRY-OUT SERVICE - NO EXTRA CHARGE!&#13;
• HAPPY HOURS — BAIL Y 4-7 p.m. •&#13;
• LADIES' NITE — THURSDAY•&#13;
— OLD FASHIONEDS - MARTINIS - MANHATTANS — 75«&#13;
— BAR DRINKS 50' — FREE MUNCHIES!&#13;
PRESENT THIS COUPON&#13;
FOR 50° OFF&#13;
ANY OF OUR&#13;
DELICIOUS SANDWICHES&#13;
SER VING 3:00 p.m. - MIDNIGHT&#13;
Coupon Expires December 31, 1980&#13;
2801 - 30th Avenue&#13;
I&#13;
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CHECK US OUT/&#13;
HAPPY HOURS 4-7 pm/&#13;
DELICIOUS MENU/&#13;
MONDAY NITE FOOTBALL/&#13;
— Big Screen TV&#13;
25° Beer During Game&#13;
Half Price Pan Pizza&#13;
SUPER STEREO SYSTEM/&#13;
GAME ROOM/&#13;
OPEN 3:00 pm -1:00 am/ </text>
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