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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 9, issue 12</text>
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            <text>Elements of society add to racism problem</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>jMT University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, November 20, 1980&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 12&#13;
Food prices to increase 3 percent&#13;
by Janet Wells&#13;
An overall increase of th ree per&#13;
cent in the price of food at&#13;
Parkside is projected for January&#13;
1981, according to Bill Niebuhr&#13;
Director of the Student Union.&#13;
Many food item prices will remain&#13;
the same, while selected items&#13;
will probably be penny - increased.&#13;
&#13;
This method is similar to that&#13;
used last spring, when the overall&#13;
price of food at Parkside was&#13;
adjusted upward by eight per cent.&#13;
Niebuhr and Steve Spencer,&#13;
Manager of the Heritage Food&#13;
Systems operation at Parkside&#13;
since June 1, are currently&#13;
determining those food and&#13;
beverage items whose sale&#13;
volume and comparative prices&#13;
can carry a small price increase&#13;
to offset the general effect of inflation&#13;
«i food costs.&#13;
Comparison pricing helps&#13;
Parkside's food prices to remain&#13;
competitive. Niebuhr and Spencer&#13;
check the cost of a hamburger or&#13;
sandwich, for instance, at fast&#13;
food restaurants popular in the&#13;
local communities, and compare&#13;
that with the cost, convenience,&#13;
and quality of Parkside's food.&#13;
Niebuhr believes that Parkside&#13;
retains the competitive edge in the&#13;
communities and in the UWSystem.&#13;
&#13;
He cites the fact that Parkside's&#13;
food prices are at the approximate&#13;
median when compared with food&#13;
prices throughout the UW-System.&#13;
The food price index published&#13;
quarterly by Madison projects a&#13;
twelve to fifteen per cent increase&#13;
in food prices overall from last&#13;
January to next. In view of that&#13;
and of nation-wide inflation,&#13;
Niebuhr declares that the Union&#13;
and Heritage Foods have done&#13;
well in holding price increases to a&#13;
necessary minimum, though&#13;
Heritage loses money in its day -&#13;
to - day operations.&#13;
Feeding such customers as&#13;
Parkside's summer camp attendees&#13;
and Gen Con participants&#13;
helps to keep Heritage "slightly in&#13;
the black," Niebuhr says.&#13;
Catering meals scheduled in&#13;
Parkside facilities is Heritage's&#13;
main source of revenue, compensating&#13;
for the loss sustained in&#13;
daily operations. Heritage pays&#13;
the Student Union contracted fees&#13;
which vary according to the&#13;
revenue source.&#13;
Sixty-two per cent of the Union's&#13;
current budget is comprised of&#13;
revenues from the food service&#13;
and other Union - sponsored activities,&#13;
such as bowling. The&#13;
budget is charged for most of the&#13;
costs of operating the building,&#13;
including utilities, amortizing the&#13;
building loan, and paying the&#13;
salaries of university employees.&#13;
Heritage employs its own staff.&#13;
Niebuhr is extremely proud of&#13;
the Union budget's reduced&#13;
reliance on student segregated&#13;
fees. Five years ago, fifty per cent&#13;
of the Union's budget was derived&#13;
from segregated fees, fifty per&#13;
cent from revenues. Today,&#13;
despite increased costs, the same&#13;
segregated fee dollars are only&#13;
thirty-eight per cent of the budget,&#13;
with the remainder coming from&#13;
revenue - producing operations&#13;
like the food service.&#13;
RANGER ph&#13;
STUDENTS purchase food at the Coffee Shoppe.&#13;
Elements of society&#13;
add to racism problem&#13;
J. P. STEVENS WORKERS In Roanoke Rapids, N. C., cheer&#13;
after they voted to ratify historic contract on October 19.&#13;
Workers ratify contract&#13;
ACTWU and Stevens, ACTWU has&#13;
terminated the four-year consumer&#13;
boycott of J.P. Stevens&#13;
products and the Corporate&#13;
Campaign in which Stevens'&#13;
various business and financial ties&#13;
were publicized and protested.&#13;
The workers gathered at&#13;
Roanoke Rapids High School to&#13;
ratify the historic 2 1/2-year&#13;
contract with the company, whose&#13;
officials had vowed for almost two&#13;
decades that they would never&#13;
sign a collective bargaining&#13;
agreement. The ratification came&#13;
six years and two months after&#13;
Stevens workers chose the union&#13;
in an NLRB-supervised election at&#13;
the seven plants which were the&#13;
inspiration for last year's awardwinning&#13;
movie, "Norma Rae."&#13;
Under the terms of the&#13;
agreement, workers here won&#13;
more than $3 million in back&#13;
wages unlawfully withheld from&#13;
their pay in the last two years.&#13;
A cheering, jubilant crowd of&#13;
.P. Stevens workers roared their&#13;
pproval of a union contract at&#13;
toanoke Rapids, North Carolina&#13;
)ctober 19. The contract brings&#13;
hem fundamental union&#13;
&gt;rotection and benefits including&#13;
eniority, arbitration, a grievance&#13;
&gt;rocedure, shop stewards, safety&#13;
:ommittees and a 19.35% back&#13;
&gt;ay s ettlement.&#13;
Later the same day, the same&#13;
&gt;asic contract was ratified&#13;
manimously by Stevens workers&#13;
n High Point, North Carolina,&#13;
\llendale, South Carolina, and&#13;
West Boylston (Montgomery)&#13;
\labama, where negotiations on&#13;
specific local issues are under&#13;
way. In all four locations, some&#13;
3,500 Stevens workers in ten plants&#13;
are now covered by Amalgamated&#13;
Clothing and Textile Workers&#13;
Union (ACTWU) contracts.&#13;
As part of the national settlement&#13;
agreement between&#13;
by Gloria Gonzales&#13;
Roberto Rivera, who helped&#13;
establish a state - mandated&#13;
Human Relations Department at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
LaCrosse, spoke on November 14&#13;
at Parkside on "The Hidden&#13;
Curriculum in Education." The&#13;
lecture, sponsored by Minority&#13;
Student Union, examined the&#13;
production of racism in American&#13;
society.&#13;
Rivera introduced concepts and&#13;
dimensions of the problem of&#13;
racism that he stated were helpful&#13;
to all students who will be working&#13;
with people in the fields of communication,&#13;
history, psychology&#13;
and education.&#13;
Racism, according to Rivera, is&#13;
produced by three elements of&#13;
society, each working to reinforce&#13;
the others. "Institutions, the&#13;
dominant culture and individualized&#13;
behavior all contribute&#13;
to the problem of r acism,"&#13;
he said, and to the "inequitable&#13;
distribution of socio - economic&#13;
resources."&#13;
Institutions, according to&#13;
Rivera, "legitimize who gets&#13;
what," while the dominant culture&#13;
provides a pattern for individuals&#13;
They will get a retroactive hourly&#13;
pay increase of 19.35% and will&#13;
receive sums averaging $1,300 per&#13;
full-time worker, payable in&#13;
November.&#13;
AFL-CIO President Lane&#13;
Kirkland hailed the contracts and&#13;
the settlement agreement as "a&#13;
tremendous step forward for the&#13;
textile and apparel workers of the&#13;
south who have been denied,&#13;
through illegal repression and&#13;
coercion, their basic right to be&#13;
represented by a union."&#13;
to base their opinions and beliefs&#13;
on. -&#13;
In addition, American society&#13;
fails to produce "critical&#13;
thinkers," according to Rivera.&#13;
As a result, racists, sexists and&#13;
elitists help form the foundations&#13;
for a class system, he said. One&#13;
example of the lack of critical&#13;
thinking done by the American&#13;
public cited by Rivera was the&#13;
election of Ronald Reagan. Since&#13;
American voters lacked the&#13;
ability to anlyze current problems&#13;
systematically, he said, their&#13;
answer was Reagan. At the same&#13;
time, Rivera pointed out, how&#13;
many voters realized that Puerto&#13;
Ricans on the island were allowed&#13;
to vote, for the first time, but were&#13;
still not allowed an electoral&#13;
college delegate?&#13;
Rivera said that racism is often&#13;
dealt with by blaming the victim&#13;
rather than the victimizers.&#13;
"There are no classes on white&#13;
racism or male sexism," he said.&#13;
"Victim blaming is also revealed&#13;
in statements like 'they won't go&#13;
to school,' and 'they have too&#13;
many children'."&#13;
Denial of the problem is another&#13;
way that racism is dealt with in&#13;
America, according to Rivera. He&#13;
called this "the infamous 'the&#13;
slaves were always happily&#13;
singing on the plantation' myth."&#13;
The rationality approach to&#13;
dealing with racism is what&#13;
Rivera called the "if only we could&#13;
learn to communicate with each&#13;
other" approach.&#13;
According to Rivera, these are&#13;
all ineffective ways of dealing&#13;
with racism. More effective,&#13;
Rivera said, would be the understanding&#13;
of the three reinforcers&#13;
of racism (institutions, the&#13;
dominant culture and individualized&#13;
behavior) and the&#13;
rewriting of history. Rivera asked,&#13;
"Whose history is being taught for&#13;
whom?" To demonstrate his&#13;
point, he asked if Thanksgiving&#13;
should actually be a day of&#13;
mourning for native Americans&#13;
and wondered how Columbus, who&#13;
was "lost," could have "discovered"&#13;
America.&#13;
Rivera also advised would-be&#13;
counselors to develop "authenticity&#13;
techniques" because many&#13;
counselors, he said, unconsciously&#13;
separate what they really believe&#13;
from what they say they believe.&#13;
On the institutional level, Rivera&#13;
said, the term "qualified&#13;
minority", should be dropped&#13;
because it actually asserts that&#13;
most minorities are not qualified.&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Students to tour Russia&#13;
• 'Cream in the Well' opens&#13;
• Women cross country&#13;
take national title &#13;
Thursday, November 20,1980 Ranger&#13;
Article against nuclear energy was misleading&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This letter is in response to the&#13;
article in the November 13&#13;
RANGER in which Deb Elzinga&#13;
attacks a previous RANGER&#13;
article, 'The Case for Nuclear&#13;
Energy", and makes what I&#13;
consider several false or&#13;
misleading statements concerning&#13;
both solar and nuclear&#13;
energy. Since I feel that both solar&#13;
and nuclear energy have a great&#13;
potential for providing environmentally&#13;
benign power, it is&#13;
essential to correct these&#13;
misunderstandings.&#13;
First, she attacks the October 16&#13;
RANGER article as "flawed." I&#13;
found that article to be carefully&#13;
researched and correct in&#13;
essentially every detail.&#13;
Next, she cites the FORD/&#13;
MITRE study, "Nuclear Power —&#13;
Issues and Choices", as&#13;
illustrating that "energy companies&#13;
have a rather callous attitude&#13;
about our well being." The&#13;
facts are that the 21 members of&#13;
this study contained not a single&#13;
representative from an "energy&#13;
company", but rather consisted of&#13;
a most distinguished group,&#13;
almost exclusively academic,&#13;
none of whom had taken a strong&#13;
position for or against nuclear&#13;
power. It included Seymour&#13;
Abrahamson, professor of&#13;
genetics, UW-Madison; Harold&#13;
Brown, then president of Cal&#13;
Tech; Marvin Goldberger,&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
professor of physics, Princeton;&#13;
Wolfgang Panofsky, director of&#13;
Stanford Linear Accelerator; and&#13;
John Sawhill, then president of&#13;
New York University. In the&#13;
course of their study they consulted&#13;
with such stout nuclear&#13;
opponents as Dean Abrahamson,&#13;
Tom Cochran, Gus Speth, and Art&#13;
Tamplin, and their recommendations&#13;
became the basis for&#13;
the Carter Administration nuclear&#13;
policy when a number of the study&#13;
members joined his Administration.&#13;
How this document&#13;
which provided the basis for&#13;
Carter's nonproliferation policy,&#13;
his decision to halt breeder&#13;
reactor development, and his&#13;
decision to stop nuclear fuel&#13;
reprocessing can be considered as&#13;
callous completely escapes me.&#13;
The study did conclude that&#13;
solar, geothermal, and fusion&#13;
energy "cannot compete with&#13;
nuclear, coal, or other fossil fuels&#13;
as major sources of electric power&#13;
until well in the next century." In&#13;
referring to conclij§i,QpsL o f- this&#13;
sort, Ms. Elzinga states "The&#13;
sources from which this type of&#13;
information comes have many&#13;
ties to the energy conglomerates."&#13;
The only conclusion&#13;
I can draw is that she must&#13;
consider the major universities of&#13;
this country as energy&#13;
conglomerates since seven&#13;
members of the study group are&#13;
from Harvard, two from MIT, and&#13;
all but three from other major&#13;
universities.&#13;
Another major study, "Solar&#13;
Photovoltaic Energy Conversion"&#13;
by the American Physical Society,&#13;
concluded, "It is unlikely that&#13;
photovoltaics will contribute more&#13;
than about 1% of the U.S. electrical&#13;
energy produced near the&#13;
end of the century." This study&#13;
group was made up of 7 members&#13;
from major universities and 4&#13;
members representing companies&#13;
with a vested interest in&#13;
promoting solar energy (IBM,&#13;
GE, and two from Bell Labs).&#13;
Again, unless major universities&#13;
and solar cell manufacturers are&#13;
considered energy conglomerates,&#13;
Ms. Elzinga has&#13;
misled you.&#13;
There is no question that solar&#13;
energy has great potential as an&#13;
energy source, particularly for&#13;
space and water heating. But I am&#13;
greatly disturbed by Ms. Elzinga's&#13;
attack on the "experts" and the&#13;
fundamental antiestablishment&#13;
and antiscientific attitudes behind&#13;
such attacks. The underlying&#13;
ideology first clearly presented by&#13;
Amory Lovins is that any centralized&#13;
form of energy such as&#13;
nuclear, coal, or hydroelectric is&#13;
evil and any decentralized, "soft"&#13;
technology such as solar, wind,&#13;
and biomass is intrinsically good,&#13;
primarily because it is decentralized.&#13;
&#13;
What these proponents of soft&#13;
technology fail to consider are the&#13;
lessons of history, and I would like&#13;
to cite two examples. The first is&#13;
that of the American farmer prior&#13;
to the 1930's. This is a perfect case&#13;
study in soft technology. Solar&#13;
energy was used to dry his crops&#13;
and raise fuel (crops) for his&#13;
motive power (horses). Solar&#13;
energy in the form of wind was&#13;
used to pump his water and&#13;
generate his electricity, with&#13;
batteries for storage. But as soon&#13;
as the American farmer had the&#13;
opportunity to switch from this&#13;
soft, decentralized technology&#13;
with all the splendid virtues extolled&#13;
by Amory Lovins to the&#13;
hard technology represented by&#13;
central power station electricity,&#13;
they did so to a man. Why?&#13;
Because centralized electricity&#13;
was cheaper and more dependable.&#13;
This was a clear cut&#13;
referendum on soft vs hard&#13;
technology, and hard technology&#13;
won.&#13;
The second example is that of&#13;
The case for centralized energy sources&#13;
hv KaIIv Starlrc 11 j 1 ». «&#13;
the Chinese Great Leap Forward&#13;
experiment in which the Chinese&#13;
people were urged to develop&#13;
(decentralized) home industries&#13;
and backyard foundries with the&#13;
express goal of overtaking the&#13;
(centralized) Capitalistic mass&#13;
production industry. This&#13;
program couldn't have been&#13;
better designed to fit the ideology&#13;
of "soft technology" had Amory&#13;
Lovins drawn it up himself. Not&#13;
only did it fit the production mode&#13;
advocated by soft technologists,&#13;
but it incorporated their antiestablishment&#13;
attitudes as well,&#13;
as university professors!&#13;
government bureaucrats, and&#13;
intellectuals were humiliated as&#13;
being "socalled experts" and&#13;
"elitist".&#13;
As we all know, this attempt to&#13;
build the perfect soft technology&#13;
society was a massive failure, and&#13;
the Chinese are now seeking&#13;
American help in designing the&#13;
world's largest hydroelectric&#13;
establishment and their first&#13;
nuclear reactor. Apparently the&#13;
American farmer and the Chinese&#13;
people have learned lessons by&#13;
living through (and struggling to&#13;
escape) soft technology which&#13;
have escaped the theoreticians of&#13;
soft technology who mere$ fly&#13;
about the world in jet airplanes&#13;
advocating a return to the simpler&#13;
life.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Morris Firebaugh&#13;
by Kelly Starks&#13;
and Terry Rasmussen "&#13;
The article in the November 13&#13;
Ranger, "Solar power is the best&#13;
energy alternative," had stated&#13;
that our article of October 16 was&#13;
" J'!? ita&#13;
&gt; ",rnl&#13;
'&#13;
nngo."-..on&#13;
centralized forms of energy7We&#13;
are taking this opportunity to&#13;
reply.&#13;
In our previous article we had&#13;
briefly mentioned (due to space&#13;
limitations) alternative energy&#13;
sources, among them solar. We&#13;
had also mentioned the disadvantages&#13;
of decentralized systems&#13;
in their innate expence and inconvenience.&#13;
&#13;
Our society did not go into a&#13;
centralized form of energy&#13;
production due to the whim of&#13;
government or private corporations.&#13;
There are distinct and&#13;
extreme scales of power&#13;
production. Large scale plants&#13;
can take advantage of more&#13;
sophisticated and economical&#13;
power production methods than&#13;
could small scale personal&#13;
systems, resulting in the centralized&#13;
system being more&#13;
economical, by at least a factor of&#13;
10 per kilowatt produced.&#13;
The convenience of centralized&#13;
systems is rather evident when&#13;
you consider that approximately&#13;
200 people per power plant can&#13;
produce electricity for millions, as&#13;
well as industry. On the other&#13;
hand the decentralized systems&#13;
require the owner of the system to&#13;
be continuously supervising and&#13;
maintaining the system personally.&#13;
This is especially&#13;
prevalent with solar systems&#13;
owner '®'lF§Srimmediately&#13;
after a wind or snow&#13;
storm.&#13;
Much has been made of the fact&#13;
that large scale energy production&#13;
is produced by large corporations.&#13;
This is a somewhat deceptive&#13;
argument since the corporations&#13;
producing the decentralized&#13;
systems would be at least as large&#13;
as the corporations now producing&#13;
centralized energy systems.&#13;
Considering the inefficiencies of&#13;
the decentralized systems these&#13;
corporations would probably be&#13;
considerably larger.&#13;
Solar energy has become&#13;
somewhat of a legend among the&#13;
decentralized energy advocates.&#13;
Little, however, has been made of&#13;
its inherent costs and why it has&#13;
never been popular. Solar power&#13;
technology is not a new&#13;
technology; it is over a century&#13;
old for photoelectric cells alone.&#13;
Over this time the cost has been&#13;
greatly reduced, as a result of&#13;
"spin-offs" from new electrical&#13;
technologies, but they are still far&#13;
more expensive than other&#13;
alternatives. Further great&#13;
reductions in the expense of&#13;
conventional solar cells cannot be&#13;
expected since the cost of these&#13;
cells has been reduced almost&#13;
exclusively to the cost of&#13;
producing the silicon base.&#13;
Theoretically, there are less&#13;
expensive procedures for&#13;
producing this silicon base, which&#13;
. ie electronic concerns without&#13;
any notable success.&#13;
Solar energy becomes more&#13;
expensive when it must be&#13;
decentralized and independent.&#13;
This requires that sufficient&#13;
power be generated and stored&#13;
during "sunny" periods to last&#13;
through prolonged inclement&#13;
weather. If the system is incapable&#13;
of this, then it must rely&#13;
upon some centralized source&#13;
during these periods, thus&#13;
negating its "advantage" as a&#13;
decentralized system, greatly&#13;
increasing the cost of the centralized&#13;
systems required to fulfill&#13;
the energy needs of these unpredictable&#13;
periods.&#13;
Solar energy advocates dismiss&#13;
these problems and claim that&#13;
solar energy would have become a&#13;
dominant energy source had it not&#13;
been "bought out" by the large&#13;
centralized energy concerns, such&#13;
as the oil companies. This is&#13;
somewhat ironic considering the&#13;
fact that the major investors and&#13;
producers of solar systems and&#13;
research have been oil companies;&#13;
for example, Exxon is one&#13;
of the largest producers.&#13;
We have in the past noted a&#13;
tendency to discount all of the&#13;
anti-solar facts by claiming that&#13;
they are from the large centralized&#13;
energy interests,&#13;
primarily the oil conglomerates.&#13;
The authors' personal information&#13;
sources consist mainly of&#13;
journals and technical&#13;
publications, as well as training in&#13;
this general background. All such&#13;
information sources are in&#13;
agreement of solar powers'&#13;
present usefulness and estimate&#13;
its full and ultimate potential at&#13;
under 20% of our present total&#13;
energy consumption.&#13;
Mention was made of Amory B.&#13;
Lovins, specifically with his&#13;
background as a "physicist." This&#13;
is incorrect since Mr. Lovins has&#13;
no degree of any kind having to do&#13;
with physics or any other science&#13;
or technology, although he does&#13;
have a degree in fine arts from&#13;
Oxford. Our opinion of Mr. Lovins&#13;
can be best summed up in a quote&#13;
from Hans Bethe (a noted Nobel&#13;
Prize winner in physics): "He&#13;
takes partial results of other&#13;
people's work and leaves behind&#13;
the numbers he doesn't like."&#13;
The statement has been made&#13;
about nuclear and other conventional&#13;
technologies as being&#13;
"uncontrollable" and as being so&#13;
complex as to be beyond the&#13;
comprehension of the average&#13;
•individual. We are baffled by this&#13;
misconception. Technologies are&#13;
developed and "controlled"&#13;
because of the interests and&#13;
desires of the society that creates&#13;
and uses them. Technologies that&#13;
Jo not belong in this category tend&#13;
to quickly disappear due to&#13;
apathy. As to the complexity of&#13;
these systems, the basic principles&#13;
behind these technologies&#13;
are much simpler than most&#13;
conventional technologies, such as&#13;
television sets, automobiles,&#13;
refrigerators, etc. . . . The&#13;
theoretical background needed to&#13;
create such systems are not&#13;
necessary to understand these&#13;
systems and are no more complex&#13;
than the theories behind solar&#13;
cells and electronic technologies&#13;
which require a background in&#13;
quantum physics which is considerably&#13;
more complex than&#13;
nuclear physics and not as well&#13;
understood. Wc agree that solar&#13;
energy techology "works" and&#13;
that it is an energy alternative.&#13;
However, we do note that&#13;
presently it is an expensive&#13;
energy source. It is evident that&#13;
energy sources that are more&#13;
expensive and less reliable than&#13;
conventional systems are hardly&#13;
the "best energy alternative" hnd&#13;
will not be so until considerably&#13;
improved.&#13;
LU u iov.uuiii uu 01 in&#13;
Ranger staff wishes you a&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
THANKSGIVING&#13;
9a1&#13;
Ken Meyer ...i Editor&#13;
Dfin r*fhl«?!h Executive Business Manager&#13;
SuSSfchell! BU&#13;
ni„&#13;
Ms&#13;
aEn&#13;
r&#13;
Wend,Westpha, Feat™ EdUor&#13;
Dave Cramer Sports Editor&#13;
BnanPass.no Photo Editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson _ _ ...&#13;
Mike Farrell *&#13;
v * * C°Py Ed,tor&#13;
6 Farrell Advertising Manager&#13;
Friienha&#13;
Cramer&#13;
/«-.&#13;
Mark Chrlstiansen, Patty DeLuisa, Doug&#13;
Mrrnrmf&#13;
e&#13;
[' . VHolmdohl&#13;
' Caro1 Klees, Gary Ledger, Dan&#13;
Rip^ S!nCSt'o!;g&#13;
0aar?Ver&#13;
' °'&#13;
Nel&#13;
"' Bruce Pr«&#13;
,on&#13;
' Joe&#13;
- - - -*&#13;
All correrDnnriPnr J chq f0r repr,nt 0f any P°&#13;
rtlonof RANGER.&#13;
Parkslde KenoTha fSll 8ddreSSed ,0: Parkslde Ranger&#13;
' WLLC D139&#13;
' Uw"&#13;
pape^wlth'one^inrh aCA?.P.&#13;
te^ " fVPewritten, 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 a°[ ed'i'toru'f nri^&#13;
89 at&#13;
.&#13;
9 a&#13;
'&#13;
m' f0r Publlcation on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content p ivileges ln ref&#13;
"stlng to print letters which contain false or &#13;
Seminar students will tour USSR&#13;
Parkside is sponsoring A frir» fr * a&#13;
Ranger Thursday, November 20,1980&#13;
fhT o 1S sP°&#13;
nsoring a trip to&#13;
the Soviet Union tWs Sng&#13;
semester Students will v7sU&#13;
Moscow, Leningrad, and Tallinn&#13;
paasaassg&#13;
ajffaar23&#13;
&#13;
Wl11 provide the groups&#13;
with the opportunity to observe&#13;
the diversity of Soviet culture and&#13;
wn Et&#13;
1?;™8 the ™&#13;
- O0pportunity to meet&#13;
with their Soviet counterparts.&#13;
SnviS q&#13;
P 1S&#13;
- ^ of a three credit Soviet Seminar which is an interdisciplinary&#13;
survey of Soviet&#13;
^&#13;
or&#13;
y» economics, culture, art&#13;
and politics. The Russian tour will&#13;
Jjf on&#13;
, ^ ro&#13;
ad from March 7&#13;
through March 23, 1981.&#13;
• ^&#13;
e&#13;
. Projected cost of $i 300&#13;
includes all transportation, hotels,&#13;
food and touring from Chicago to&#13;
the Soviet Union and back.&#13;
Financial aid is available. All&#13;
interested individuals should&#13;
C&#13;
?&#13;
n&#13;
cc&#13;
ao&#13;
CLprofessor Dan McGovern&#13;
at 553-2316 or Moln. 125. ipmifes&#13;
American ethnic study funds available&#13;
TKa TTiir n i The UW-System American&#13;
Ethnic Studies Coordinating&#13;
Committee (AESCC), operating&#13;
under the auspices of the Urban&#13;
Corridor Consortium, has grants&#13;
of up to $1000 for a variety of&#13;
projects pertaining to American&#13;
Ethnic Studies. These monies may&#13;
be used for workshops, seminars,&#13;
instructional improvement,&#13;
curriculum development',&#13;
honoraria for guest lecturers,&#13;
travel, research with curricular&#13;
applications, fine arts performances&#13;
and materials&#13;
acquisition. The project's focus&#13;
must fall under the category of&#13;
American Ethnic Studies and it&#13;
must deal primarily with UWSystem&#13;
populations.&#13;
Faculty, staff, and individual&#13;
student organizations are eligible&#13;
to apply. Proposals should include&#13;
a title page, narrative explanation,&#13;
personnel identification&#13;
and a budget breakdown. Applicants&#13;
should be as specific and&#13;
thorough as possible in explaining&#13;
the nature of the proposal.&#13;
Proposals are due in the AESCC&#13;
office no later than Friday&#13;
December 5, 1980. Funding&#13;
decisions will be made by Monday,&#13;
December 15. These monies&#13;
were funded for the 1980-81 fiscal&#13;
year so all proposal activities&#13;
must be completed by June 30&#13;
1981. A final report will be due at&#13;
that time.&#13;
To be considered for the AESCC&#13;
grants, eight copies of the&#13;
proposal should be sent to: UWSystem&#13;
American Ethnic Studies&#13;
Coordinating Committee; c/o&#13;
Thomas V. Tonnesen, Program&#13;
Coordinator; UW-Milwaukee -&#13;
Bolton 840; P.O. Box 413-&#13;
Milwaukee, WI 53201. For further&#13;
information, contact the AESCC&#13;
Office at (414) 963-4700/6701.&#13;
Campus food drive is organizing&#13;
by Craig Dvorak&#13;
Thanksgiving marks a peculiar&#13;
time of year, the onset of the&#13;
Christmas season, engulfing and&#13;
enticing our minds in many ways.&#13;
Final exams are a couple ominous&#13;
weeks ahead, presents must be&#13;
bought, and excited friends are&#13;
traveling home from distant&#13;
campuses for vacation. A lot of&#13;
events are beginning to grab our&#13;
attention.&#13;
Unfortunately, the main event&#13;
in the lives of many local people is&#13;
scarcity - the lack of work and of&#13;
food. Ironically, the Christmas&#13;
season is the most difficult time of&#13;
year for these people. Even if they&#13;
have been fortunate enough to&#13;
have found a job, seasonal&#13;
unemployment and holiday&#13;
layoffs appear.&#13;
As a solution, Inter - Varsity&#13;
Christian Fellowship and Minority&#13;
Student Union are co - sponsoring&#13;
a campus - wide food drive to meet&#13;
these needs in our own area.&#13;
Beginning Monday, December 1,&#13;
students and faculty are urged to&#13;
bring food items to the Book Co-op&#13;
alcove (across from the library)&#13;
from 9a. m. -2p. m. Needed itenis&#13;
are any nonperishables: canned&#13;
vegetables and fruits, cereals,&#13;
potatoes, nuts and snack items.&#13;
Parkside 200&#13;
Mufti this al!&#13;
These goods will then be boxed&#13;
and delivered to needy families in&#13;
Racine, Kenosha, and outlying&#13;
areas.&#13;
Inter - Varsity and Minority&#13;
Student Union challenge everyone&#13;
on campus to practice the real&#13;
spirit of Christmas by supporting&#13;
the hungry December 1 - 12.&#13;
^ o$eph.&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phon* 454-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR C REDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
Students interested in the&#13;
Soviet Seminar and Tour will&#13;
meet on Monday, December 1,&#13;
at 1 p. m. in Union 106. Further&#13;
details of the trip will be&#13;
tour meeting&#13;
discussed, and one of last&#13;
year's seminar participants&#13;
will present a slide show on&#13;
the U.S.S.R.&#13;
Roundtable continues talks&#13;
Two topics remain in the&#13;
current Social Science Roundtable&#13;
series at Parkside.&#13;
"Labor and the Economy in the&#13;
1980s" will be the subject of&#13;
United Auto Workers Region 10&#13;
director Ralph Koenig on&#13;
November 24.&#13;
Peace Corps organizers and&#13;
volunteers Alan Guskin, UW-P&#13;
chancellor, and Judy Guskin&#13;
adjunct associate professor of&#13;
anthropology, will present the&#13;
final program of the semester,&#13;
"The Peace Corps: Past and&#13;
Future, on December l. The&#13;
Guskins recently were featured&#13;
participants in Peace Corps&#13;
rededication ceremonies marking&#13;
the corps' 20th anniversary at the&#13;
University of Michigan where the&#13;
organization was born during&#13;
John F. Kennedy's presidential&#13;
campaign.&#13;
Roundtable sessions are at 12:15&#13;
p.m. in the Parkside Union, Room&#13;
106.&#13;
Library to hold book sale&#13;
The Wyllie Library Learning&#13;
Center will hold a book sale on&#13;
December 2, 3 and 4, from 10 a m&#13;
- 3 p.m. outside the level one&#13;
library entrance.&#13;
Approximately 1400 books&#13;
covering a variety of subjects will&#13;
be sold. Hardcover books will be&#13;
priced at one dollar and paperbacks&#13;
at 25 cents.&#13;
These books consist of&#13;
duplicates, discards, and gift&#13;
items which are not needed for the&#13;
library collection, according to&#13;
Hannelore B. Rader, director of&#13;
the Library learning Center.&#13;
Wind ensemble to perform&#13;
Admission is 50 cents for UW-P&#13;
students; $1 for others.&#13;
rvis.^&#13;
Parkside's Wind Ensemble will&#13;
perform at 8 p.m. tonight in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theater under the&#13;
direction of S cott Mather.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
Patmos, a work by Donald J.&#13;
Young, director of bands at&#13;
William Horlick High School in&#13;
Racine. Patmos was selected as&#13;
winner of the 1975 composition&#13;
contest of the southwest division&#13;
of the College Band Directors&#13;
National Association.&#13;
Also programmed are Darius&#13;
Milhaud's Concerto for Percussion&#13;
with Michael Heberling as&#13;
soloist, as well as works by Harry&#13;
Alford, Aaron Copland, Gordon&#13;
Jacob and Marcel Poot.&#13;
IS IHlltl&#13;
Lift AFTER&#13;
COLLEGE?&#13;
kWHG PLAN&#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;
1)&#13;
2)&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
HAPPY THANKSGIVING&#13;
FREE '• '• FROZEN TURKEYS ( 1 0 lb. a v g . )&#13;
THURS. NOV. 20 &amp; FRI. NOV. 21 WHEN THE ALARM&#13;
SOUNDS AT THE UNION DINING ROOM CHECK-OUT&#13;
THANKSGIVING DINNER SPECIAL&#13;
WED.r NOV. 26&#13;
• Roast Turkey • Sage Dressing • Whipped Potato • Gravy&#13;
• Whole Kernel Corn or Green Peas • Cranberry Sauce&#13;
• Pumpkin Pie • Complimentary Glass of Wine or Cider&#13;
ONLY $2&#13;
49 (&#13;
$3&#13;
19&#13;
v alue) &#13;
4 Thursday, November 20,1980 Ranger&#13;
Gano added to staff&#13;
by Wendy Westphai&#13;
The successful production of&#13;
"The Fourposter," presented for&#13;
Accent on Enrichment, was&#13;
directed by Norman Gano. He is&#13;
currently directing the studio&#13;
production "The Cream in the&#13;
Well."&#13;
Gano has been in professional&#13;
theater for 22 years in New York&#13;
City, Philadelphia, Connecticut&#13;
and now Wisconsin. Here at&#13;
Parkside, he teaches Acting II and&#13;
directs the studio production class.&#13;
During his career he has been in&#13;
stage productions, films and&#13;
television. Some recent films&#13;
which he performed in are "The&#13;
French Connection," "Out-ofTowners"&#13;
and "On a Clear Day&#13;
You Can See Forever." He missed&#13;
performing in "The Godfather"&#13;
because he would not claim to&#13;
have Italian descent.&#13;
In the Milwaukee area, he has&#13;
acted with and directed for the&#13;
Festival Theatre for two years. He&#13;
recently directed a production of&#13;
"Our Town" for the Milwaukee&#13;
Religious Drama Guild.&#13;
The Parkside studio production,&#13;
"The Cream in the Well" is written&#13;
by Lynn Riggs. He is best known&#13;
for his play "Green Grow the&#13;
Lilacs," which formed the basis&#13;
for the musical "Oklahoma."&#13;
This play was chosen for a&#13;
number of reasons. The&#13;
characters have depth and need a&#13;
certain texture. This provides the&#13;
student actors with an opportunity&#13;
to dig inside of themselves for&#13;
character depth.&#13;
Gano says "Cream in the Well"&#13;
is a play of d ark and lights with&#13;
somber tones and struggles within&#13;
shadows. But there is hope and&#13;
light on the horizon.&#13;
"I am pleased with the students'&#13;
development within their roles,"&#13;
said Gano. "Also I am finding&#13;
harmony and cooperation with&#13;
other faculty and students&#13;
associated with my work."&#13;
Next semester, there will be two&#13;
more Dramatic Art productions.&#13;
Gano encourages anyone who is&#13;
interested to audition. Auditions&#13;
will be the first week of the Spring&#13;
Semester.&#13;
"The Cream in the Well," Lynn&#13;
Riggs' slightly Gothic tale of&#13;
passion, romance, fear and&#13;
superstition set in territorial&#13;
Oklahoma, will be the fall&#13;
dramatic arts studio production at'&#13;
Parkside with performances at 8&#13;
p.m., Dec. 3 through 6 and at .1:30&#13;
p.m. on Dec. 7.&#13;
The production will be center -&#13;
staged in the Communication Arts&#13;
Studio with the audience in ranked&#13;
seating on four sides. Because of&#13;
limited seating in the studio&#13;
theater, pre-paid reservations are&#13;
suggested. Tickets are available&#13;
at the Campus Union Information&#13;
Center and information on ticket&#13;
availability can be obtained by&#13;
calling 553-2042 or 553-2345. Admission&#13;
is $1 for students; $1.50 for&#13;
others.&#13;
Contact&#13;
VICKI KNAPP AND BOBBIE MINNIEAR rehearse a scene&#13;
from "The Cream In the Well." Security problem solved&#13;
Course to follow&#13;
'Body in Question'&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
The Science division is offering&#13;
a new course for the Spring&#13;
semester. Allied Health 69-290 is a&#13;
travel through the circulatory&#13;
system; and the final segment&#13;
shows an actual autopsy.&#13;
Throughout the program Miller&#13;
uses his own body for tests (such&#13;
as tying a tourniquet around his&#13;
Body in Question," and will meet&#13;
11 - 12:15 a.m. Tuesdays and&#13;
Thursdays.&#13;
The main objective of the course&#13;
is to create an awareness and&#13;
appreciation of various levels of&#13;
health through a multi - faceted&#13;
analysis of selected disease&#13;
states.&#13;
"The Body in Question" is&#13;
written and hosted by Jonathan&#13;
Miller and will be presented in 13&#13;
segments. The segments cover&#13;
such topics as "Naming of Parts"&#13;
in which Miller asks people on the&#13;
street various questions about&#13;
their internal organs; "Blood&#13;
Relations" where red automobiles&#13;
«i a highway are used to&#13;
demonstrate how red blood cells&#13;
flows in a vein, and depriving&#13;
himself of exygen to the extent&#13;
that he loses consciousness before&#13;
the cameras). He also uses special&#13;
effects, art, literature, and&#13;
laboratory experiments to clarify&#13;
and distill medical knowledge.&#13;
Time magazine calls the series,&#13;
"— alternately informative....&#13;
and provacative. Miller brings&#13;
some of (his) engaging wit and&#13;
lunacy."&#13;
The instructor for the class is&#13;
Professor S.P. Datta, a specialist&#13;
in the areas of genetics and immunology.&#13;
Professor Datta&#13;
received his PhD from UWMadison.&#13;
There are no&#13;
prerequisites required for the&#13;
course.&#13;
by Jim Kreuser&#13;
A Parkside student came to the&#13;
Student Senate with a complaint&#13;
about Campus Security. The&#13;
student said that he felt that the&#13;
ticketing procedure was insufficient&#13;
and arbitrary. He had&#13;
been given a ticket for parking on&#13;
the striped lines (which are&#13;
designated no parking areas) in&#13;
the parking lot. A violation of t his&#13;
type should be given a warning&#13;
ticket. Procedure states: A&#13;
minimum of two warning tickets&#13;
IB issued to any vehicle&#13;
violating any of the following&#13;
parking violations before a&#13;
parking violation ticket is issued:&#13;
A. parking prohibited (posted) B.&#13;
parking in non-designated area C.&#13;
no permit D. parking with improper&#13;
permit for area E. improper&#13;
parking in designated area&#13;
F. parked in physically disabled&#13;
stall G. restricted parking&#13;
(specific time).&#13;
It is then the officers duty to&#13;
check on his computer printout in&#13;
the squad to determine if a vehicle&#13;
has received two or more warnings&#13;
before a ticket is given. In&#13;
this case, it is clear that procedure&#13;
was not followed. The student&#13;
went to Tallent Hall and complained&#13;
to Ron Brinkman,&#13;
Director of Campus Security.&#13;
Brinkman said that, in this case,&#13;
procedure was not followed. He&#13;
was more than glad to clear up the&#13;
problem.&#13;
Any cxie who feels he or she has&#13;
been treated unfairly by Campus&#13;
Security can go over to Tallent&#13;
Hall and check it out with the&#13;
security department. Anyone who&#13;
feels he or she has been treated&#13;
unfairly on ANY campus issue can&#13;
come to Student Senate for&#13;
assistance.&#13;
Kinship orientation today in Union 106&#13;
GRADONI'S&#13;
52nd 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;
3308-52nd St. Kenosha&#13;
654-5068&#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 a child with a mature,&#13;
stable adult who can provide&#13;
regular guidance, understanding&#13;
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;
serious problems in the future.&#13;
Kinship feels it is important to&#13;
expose the children to different&#13;
environments and give them a&#13;
chance to do some of the things&#13;
they are unable to do because of&#13;
their situation.&#13;
The ingredients of Kinship are&#13;
kindness and understanding,&#13;
improving the adult-child&#13;
relationship, never letting a child&#13;
down, sharing a little of yo ur time&#13;
and love, having fun with your&#13;
child, increasing a child's self -&#13;
confidence, and providing stable&#13;
companionship.&#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&#13;
unable to attend, please contact&#13;
Kinship of Kenosha Co., Inc., 2001-&#13;
80th St., 658-0151 for other&#13;
orientation dates.&#13;
Fellowship offers film&#13;
Inte r-Va rsit y Christia n&#13;
Fellowship continues its free&#13;
movie series this year with "Facts&#13;
of F aith" — a Moody Science film&#13;
which examines the relationship&#13;
between objectivity and faith in&#13;
10% DISCOUNT&#13;
To Parkside students and faculty&#13;
members only, on all merchandise&#13;
in our store. Parkside l.D. required&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
JEWELERS&#13;
Rtnoilti't Diamond Contor&#13;
5617 - 6th Avenue&#13;
Phone 656-2525 Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
the field of physical science.&#13;
Among the topics explored by the&#13;
film are the cause of the&#13;
phenomenon of heat and exceptions&#13;
to the Law of Gravity.&#13;
"Facts of Faith" emphasizes&#13;
understanding of the limits of&#13;
faith and objective investigation&#13;
in research and practical living.&#13;
All students are welcome to the&#13;
free color film, to be shown&#13;
Wednesday, November 26, at 1&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
SYNTHETIC OIL. Great part&#13;
time opportunities in this fast&#13;
growing market of synthetic&#13;
lubricants - lubricants that are&#13;
revolutionizing the automotive&#13;
industry. AMS/OIL is the world's&#13;
largest producer of synthetic&#13;
lubricants. You can earn extra&#13;
cash as an independent AMS/OIL&#13;
dealer. A realistic beginner's goal&#13;
is about $25.00 weekly. You will&#13;
also enjoy sizeable tax advantages&#13;
of owning your own&#13;
business. Dealerships cost $27.60.&#13;
Call or write for information.&#13;
Mitmoen Brothers, 6634 - 30th&#13;
Ave., Kenosha, WI, 53142. Phone:&#13;
(414) 652-3399. &#13;
Ranger&#13;
Review&#13;
Thursday, November 20, 1980&#13;
Red Ryder brings live show&#13;
hv byBruce R. PrPreeston ... _&#13;
Professional theatre has finally&#13;
been brought to Kenosha in&#13;
Petretti Productions' Late Live&#13;
Show, "When You Comin Back&#13;
Red Ryder?" playing at the&#13;
Roosevelt Theatre. The Obie and&#13;
Outer Critics Circle Award&#13;
winning play was written by&#13;
Pulitzer prize winner Mark&#13;
Medoff.&#13;
The entire play, which takes&#13;
place in a small roadside diner in&#13;
New Mexico, shows what happens&#13;
when a punk terrorizes the diner's&#13;
patrons and workers. The sets&#13;
have all the elements of a diner,&#13;
but se em a little lacking in atmosphere.&#13;
&#13;
As the play opens, the first two&#13;
characters we meet are Steven&#13;
AmaT rfWM '&#13;
N„&#13;
oel&#13;
,&#13;
G&lt;!nt« and Angel (Cynthia Paplaczyk), the&#13;
dmers two employees. Gentz is&#13;
good but tries a bit too hard in the&#13;
opening scenes to be funny and&#13;
loses it, Had he tried to be mc£e&#13;
^mCdhaveaddedt0his&#13;
Paplaczyk starts a little weak&#13;
bymg to decide what type of&#13;
accent to use, but grows to&#13;
become one of the best components&#13;
of this play. Her naivete is&#13;
realistic; she does a fine job of&#13;
presenting Angel as she really is.&#13;
In the scene where she runs for the&#13;
door, is pushed down and&#13;
M m a k e s y o u P ^ y h e r . Michael Sewes is Lyle Stirker,&#13;
the owner of the gas station and&#13;
motel next door to the diner. He is&#13;
to Kenosha&#13;
talented, but not up to the par of&#13;
the other performers in this play&#13;
He is a good actor, but the others&#13;
are,real characters.&#13;
Richard (David Moon) and&#13;
Clarisse (Joya Del Conte Zamora)&#13;
are a married couple from New&#13;
York on their way to a concert in&#13;
which Clarisse is performing.&#13;
Moon's character is absolutely&#13;
flawless. He does exactly what&#13;
you expect him to do with expert&#13;
realism. Zamora is very good, but&#13;
we've come to expect so much&#13;
more from her, that this small&#13;
role is a disappointment. She only&#13;
gets one scene to really show her&#13;
stuff, but in that scene is bold and&#13;
assertive.&#13;
Jimmy Iaquinta plays the punk,&#13;
Teddy, and Nancee Vaicelunas is&#13;
Oriana Trio to perform&#13;
The pre Dremiere mie performance of Swnn^&#13;
the winning work in the 1980&#13;
Oriana Trio International Composer's&#13;
Competition, which&#13;
carries a $1,500 top prize, will be&#13;
presented by the trio at a 3:30 p.m.&#13;
concert on Sunday, Nov. 23 in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater here&#13;
at Parkside. The trio, composed of&#13;
violinist Eden Vaning, cellist&#13;
Harry Sturm and pianist Carol&#13;
Bell is the resident chamber&#13;
ensemble h ere.&#13;
The p erformance will premiere&#13;
Truman Rex Fisher's Piano Trio,&#13;
a lyrical, contemporary work in&#13;
three movements which won the&#13;
major award, as well as Randall&#13;
Shinn's Forgotten Letters, a&#13;
montage of impressions of&#13;
American historical events, which&#13;
won a special honorable mention&#13;
prize of $300. B oth of the award&#13;
winners will be present for the&#13;
concert, which also will include&#13;
performance of Joaquin Turina's&#13;
Second Trio.&#13;
Fisher, a composition professor&#13;
at Pasadena (Calif.) City College,&#13;
will arnve fresh from a gig with&#13;
the Inkspots m California. He has&#13;
written a number of large scale&#13;
works including "Celebration&#13;
Mass for mixed chorus, soloists&#13;
and orchestra, which won first&#13;
prize in the National Composers'&#13;
Guild Contest and his&#13;
Harlequinade" for concert band&#13;
was a winner in the annual New&#13;
Music for Bands Contest. His&#13;
"Symphony of the Desert" was&#13;
premiered by the Santa Maria&#13;
Symphony and also performed by&#13;
the Santa Barbara Symphony and&#13;
Jus "Lincoln, The Man of the&#13;
People" for chorus and orchestra&#13;
has been commercially recorded&#13;
on CAPRA.&#13;
Shinn, a professor of composition&#13;
and theory at Arizona&#13;
State University, has published a&#13;
number of compositions for&#13;
chorus in addition to his instrumental&#13;
works and has had&#13;
compositions performed at the&#13;
National Conference of the&#13;
American Society of University&#13;
Composers in 1977 and 1978. Prizes&#13;
in the competition,&#13;
established in 1979 to encourage&#13;
modern works for piano trio, are&#13;
funded by private donors.&#13;
The 1981 competition will add a&#13;
new element, soliciting compositions&#13;
for piano trio and&#13;
soprano, contralto or tenor voice,&#13;
incorporating the vocal as a part&#13;
of the chamber ensemble. The&#13;
1980 competition drew from 15&#13;
states as well as Europe and&#13;
Canada.&#13;
Concert-goers are invited to join&#13;
trio members and the awardwinning&#13;
composers at a wine and&#13;
cheese reception immediately&#13;
following the performance. The&#13;
program is free.&#13;
New international club organizing&#13;
by Chris O'Neill&#13;
To the number of student&#13;
organizations existing at Parkside&#13;
(many of them with worthwhile&#13;
goals) there has been added a new&#13;
club, with equally high&#13;
aspirations, and this is the Intern&#13;
atio nal S t u d e n t s'&#13;
Organization. The club was actually&#13;
founded in May of t his year,&#13;
and since then has seen considerable&#13;
growth in membership.&#13;
Currently holding office are&#13;
Sarkis Yoghourtdjian as&#13;
President, Vice - President Sunny&#13;
Wong, Secretary Verika Bojovic,&#13;
Treasurer John Momoima, and&#13;
Activities Advisors Saeid Rahmanpanah&#13;
and Beejan Beheshti.&#13;
The club's counsellor is Esrold&#13;
Nurse.&#13;
In a recent interview; President&#13;
Yoghourtdjian stated that he&#13;
hopes that an International&#13;
students' Organization will create&#13;
an awareness among faculty, staff&#13;
and students of the presence of&#13;
foreign students at Parkside.&#13;
There are sixty - three foreign&#13;
students enrolled in the school,&#13;
and the ISO will serve to help new&#13;
foreign students accommodate&#13;
and get used to the American way&#13;
of life. It will provide a forum for&#13;
contact among foreign students. It&#13;
will also be a means of e xchange&#13;
of cultural experiences and&#13;
backgrounds with American&#13;
students. Hopefully, the club will&#13;
play a role in attracting students&#13;
from all over the world to&#13;
Parkside. The ultimate goal of the&#13;
ISO is to see Parkside become a&#13;
multicultural center of higher&#13;
education.&#13;
The club openly invites the&#13;
participation of American&#13;
students, and has planned a&#13;
number of a ctivities for this year.&#13;
Projected activities include international&#13;
movies, an international&#13;
arts and crafts fair,&#13;
inviting an ethnic dance group to&#13;
perform at the Parkside theatre,&#13;
panel discussions among foreign&#13;
professors at Parkside, and an&#13;
international banquet. To make&#13;
newly - arrived students more&#13;
aware of the American cultural&#13;
heritage there have been proposed&#13;
field trips to museums and so on,&#13;
in various cities.&#13;
The ISO meets every other&#13;
Friday at 1:00 p. m. in DUO of t he&#13;
Wyllie Library - Learning Center.&#13;
For students interested in foreign&#13;
relations (an increasingly crucial&#13;
issue in today's world) the ISO&#13;
provides a forum for interactions.&#13;
All students are invited to take&#13;
part in what is anticipated to be a&#13;
great year.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
"National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN O FFICE&#13;
AUTO B ANK&#13;
24 HOUR T ELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phono 658*2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
The&#13;
Cream in the Well&#13;
Written by Lynn Riggs.. .Directed by Norman Gano&#13;
December 3-6 at 8PM and December 7 at 1:30PM&#13;
Presented by UW-Parkside Dramatic Arts Discipline&#13;
Communication Arts Studio Theatre"&#13;
. .Limited Seating Reserve Early 553-2345..&#13;
Information 553-2042&#13;
Tickets at $1.00 for Students.. .$1.50~for Non-students&#13;
Must be Pre-paid&#13;
Cheryl, his girlfriend. Vaicelunas&#13;
looks the part (a gorgeous blonde)&#13;
but when she speaks, her lines&#13;
sound forced. This appears to be&#13;
her first job on stage and with a&#13;
cast of professionals along side&#13;
her, she really sticks out.&#13;
Iaquinta, however, is stunning.&#13;
He flows naturally across the&#13;
stage, commanding it at every&#13;
turn. He begins by toying with the&#13;
local yokels and then revels in the&#13;
act of human degradation as he&#13;
submits them to fulfill his barbaric&#13;
fantasies. His is an&#13;
extremely demanding role and&#13;
this is definitely his play.&#13;
The fight scene between Teddy&#13;
and Richard at the end of the first&#13;
act is very well choreographed&#13;
and perfectly executed. The music&#13;
used to set the mood does its job as&#13;
it swells and adds to the suspense.&#13;
This act has an intensely dramatic&#13;
ending.&#13;
Music is used throughout the&#13;
play to add to the scenes and a&#13;
very good job was done in accurately&#13;
picking the right song for&#13;
the right scene. Although the&#13;
music was so loud that it became&#13;
distracting opening night, the&#13;
problem was quickly remedied by&#13;
the second performance and it&#13;
became an asset rather than a&#13;
hinderance.&#13;
Producer/dirctor, Patricia&#13;
Petretti has done a wonderful job&#13;
in giving Kenosha something&#13;
Kenoshans have had to travel to&#13;
Chicago and Milwaukee for:&#13;
legitimate theatre. The next two&#13;
performances (Friday and&#13;
Saturday) may be the last. "When&#13;
You Comin Back, Red Ryder?" is&#13;
a play that should not be missed.&#13;
Complete a three-year nursing diploma program&#13;
in two years and one summer session.&#13;
An alternative to the first year nursing course&#13;
is now offered in a seven-week summer program at&#13;
St. Luke s Hospital School of Nursing&#13;
1301 College Avenue&#13;
Racine, Wl 53403&#13;
414/636-2372&#13;
Prerequisites:&#13;
1. Meet admission criteria&#13;
2. Complete university/college&#13;
courses in anatomy and physiology,&#13;
chemistry, English, nutrition,&#13;
psychology and sociology. til!&#13;
Call or write now for admission information.&#13;
STUDENT/FACULTY&#13;
Phone Directories&#13;
On sale now at&#13;
Union Information Kiosk&#13;
$ 1.00&#13;
Proceeds to go toward an&#13;
EMERGENCY LOAN FUND&#13;
For UW-Parkside Students&#13;
Help Yourself &amp; A Friend&#13;
P.S.G.A. &#13;
6&#13;
Coming Events Actual draft feared&#13;
movie&#13;
"&#13;
w°&#13;
men Right&#13;
°&#13;
ut&#13;
°&#13;
f&#13;
History. The Making of J udy Chicago's 'Dinner Party' " will be shown followed&#13;
Coifr?i&#13;
CRSS1wled ?&#13;
y Barbara Lindquist (Racine artist and co - owner of Mother&#13;
nrntrfm Bookstore) and Prof. Carol Lee Saffioti of UWP Women's Studies. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
"• Com""&#13;
micaU°° Arta The program i»&#13;
M?nVd&#13;
r„^f™,hoTblTcm * M0LN 107&#13;
' The ia&#13;
To&#13;
cmlY„„&#13;
a&#13;
it&#13;
8&#13;
th&#13;
pe&#13;
mo&#13;
^z&#13;
n&#13;
ssrt: Wind Eos™ble&#13;
-&#13;
Friday, Nov. 21&#13;
2SS- «Th&#13;
^&#13;
ham|" JS,&#13;
1* shown at8pmin Un»on Cinema. Admission at the&#13;
JAMNITFPIITR A e ^ndent and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB. AAJ?J -J? V pm in Union Square featuring the "Michael Drake Group".&#13;
Admission will be charged at the door. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
„ Saturday,Nov.22&#13;
f&#13;
LICKS "Black Stallion" will be shown at 10 am in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission at the door is $1.00. Children must be accompanied by a Parkside&#13;
student with a current ID card. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
„ Sunday, November 23&#13;
(XJNCERT at 3:30 pm in the Communication Arts Theatre featuring the Oriana&#13;
Trio. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
MOVIE "The Champ" will be repeated at 7:30pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, November 24&#13;
AB«F 12no&#13;
?&#13;
n&#13;
,&#13;
111 Union 106. Ralph Koenig, Director, Region 10 (UAW)&#13;
toUmpublic Economy in the 1980s". The program is free and open&#13;
Arts and crafts fair here&#13;
A record . number of 148&#13;
exhibitors will participate in the&#13;
Sixth Annual Holiday Arts and&#13;
Crafts Fair at Parkside on&#13;
Saturday, December 6, from 10&#13;
a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
The event, sponsored by PAB,&#13;
will take place in the Campus&#13;
Union and on the concourse levels&#13;
of Greenquist and Molinaro Halls.&#13;
There is no admission charge and&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
free parking is available in the&#13;
Union and Communication Arts&#13;
parking lots.&#13;
In conjunction with the fair, the&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center will&#13;
operate a free Kiddie Korner,&#13;
where children will be supervised&#13;
in making gifts to take home.&#13;
Santa also will make an appearance&#13;
in the Kiddie Korner, in&#13;
Union Rooms 104-106.&#13;
Exhibitors will display a wide&#13;
variety of items including&#13;
jewelry, stained glass, decoupage,&#13;
silk flower arrangements,&#13;
macrame, ceramics, copper&#13;
enameling, pine cone arts, wooden&#13;
craft articles, paintings, doll&#13;
clothes, wreaths, ornaments, toys,&#13;
quilts, sculptures, needlework,&#13;
calligraphy, lead crystal&#13;
creations, lapidary, tole painting,&#13;
dough arts, candles and leather&#13;
items.&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
CHIPPER — Played "footsie" under any&#13;
taMas lately? Baby cakes&#13;
LARRY — You sure can hide good, but I'm&#13;
still crazy about yal&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV must be desperate to&#13;
resort to Ranger ads.&#13;
JBPP — Is communication, art? Can I l eam&#13;
ballroom dancing? Ferret&#13;
TOOO H. — I happen to get lucky with&#13;
blondes and new Laredos.&#13;
JULIE — Ron says Carlos is right 11&#13;
SOMEWHERE In the Ranger this week there&#13;
is an.&#13;
AMPRBA: Saved your *485 yet? Rodney&#13;
HOW DO YOU SPELL EEE EKKI THUMM?,&#13;
THE BOO came first. Ranger Insulters suck'&#13;
them and lay chickens.&#13;
SAEINI — Have you gotten lucky with any&#13;
trolls lately?&#13;
DENISE — Find any REALLY concrete&#13;
objects lately?&#13;
HEY, DA VINCI are you afraid of going to Art&#13;
Day?&#13;
NO, MICHELANGELO, I'm brave. When is&#13;
it?&#13;
IT'S ON DEC. 3 in Main Place.&#13;
GREAT, I can't wait.&#13;
EVA — A medium pizza with everything is too&#13;
much! Junie B.&#13;
WHO SHOT H.P.? — lOP's&#13;
PG-HOOKER — Are walls really that exciting&#13;
I? Fat Mouse&#13;
FROM THE PARKING LOT isn't habit&#13;
forming but it causes cancer.&#13;
XENOPHOBIC XAVIER'S Xenon&#13;
xylophone's a xerlc xebec. Ten times fast.&#13;
3 THINGS they never told me when I was&#13;
made: Free sex isn't free, love isn't&#13;
abundant, and loneliness can kill. See ya.&#13;
HOW SAD.&#13;
MY HOUSE (Junie) — invited guys Into&#13;
locker room with her. Ferret?&#13;
ORGY QUEEN, what's an orgy? Can you&#13;
show me? J.C.&#13;
YOU REALLY have a nice... old man.&#13;
BOBBY L.: Bundle up, because you'll never&#13;
be able to hong loose. ^&#13;
HEY BILL — You're really kinky! Arrfff,&#13;
ribbitl K &amp; J&#13;
SABINE — how much did you pay for your&#13;
plaque? Junie&#13;
RODNEY: I have to save more for your&#13;
dinner. Andy&#13;
IF YOU WERE to die tonight — where would&#13;
you go? For info, see the Inter-Varsity book&#13;
table on Mondays.&#13;
WHEN YOU ROTATE the "s" in "skis" you&#13;
get "kiss".&#13;
BABYCAKES: Wanna go play Frlbee with&#13;
cold bonkers? Sweetums&#13;
I'M AT UW(KR)P in Kenosha!&#13;
KMW: I only sleep with the best —Pig&#13;
ALL WOMEN wishing to check out my cute&#13;
and functionable Item leave your name and&#13;
number in the next issue! Stud #1.&#13;
HEY STUD #1, my name is B.J. Farley and&#13;
my phone number is 553-2295. Can you&#13;
match my functionable item? Stud A-l&#13;
CONNIE SIBILSKY: Here it is! Have you&#13;
Samboed all over the world lately? Have a&#13;
Jappy day! — me&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1980 SUZUKI 5S0L black, 553-9262 after 4&#13;
p.m. Low miles.&#13;
UNBELIEVABLE VEHICLEI 1968 Six&#13;
cylinder Dodge van. $1750. Nights 634-0988.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
FEMALE to share apartment with myself. In&#13;
the Racine area. Please call Virginia after&#13;
5:00 p.m. 637-1306.&#13;
ROOMMATE NEEDED: College student&#13;
preferred. Southside Racine. Upper flat.&#13;
637-2274.&#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;
GUYS! Can you pick up girls? Then join the&#13;
UW-P Pep Squad. Work with 12 beautiful&#13;
cheerleaders! Travel to various state&#13;
colleges. If interested, contact Shirley 553-&#13;
2320.&#13;
RIDE URGENTLY NEEDED from Parkside&#13;
to Kenosha, 9:15 p.m. or later, Monday or&#13;
Tuesday or Wednesday or Thursday. Ph.&#13;
657-0581.&#13;
The Central Committee for&#13;
Conscientious Objectors (CCCO),&#13;
the nation's largest draft counseling&#13;
agency, warned this month&#13;
that the start of d raft registration&#13;
has added to the increased&#13;
likelihood of an actual draft.&#13;
"This past summer's draft&#13;
registration of men born in 1960&#13;
and 1961 was just the first step&#13;
toward returning to the draft,"&#13;
said Larry Spears, director of&#13;
CCCO's Youth and Conscientious&#13;
Objection Campaign. "This&#13;
coming January, Selective Service&#13;
plans to register those men&#13;
born in 1962. After January 5, men&#13;
(and perhaps women) born in 1963&#13;
will be required to register as they&#13;
turn 18. It should be noted that the&#13;
U. S. has never had a registration&#13;
without a draft, and rarely a draft&#13;
without a war."&#13;
"The need for young people to&#13;
be informed and to consider going&#13;
on record as a conscientious objector&#13;
to war has never been&#13;
greater than it is this Fall, said&#13;
Spears.&#13;
"The Supreme Court's decision&#13;
on Goldberg vs. Tarr, a sex -&#13;
discrimination case involving the&#13;
draft and registration, will be&#13;
final this winter," commented&#13;
Spears. "It is especially important&#13;
for women to realize that&#13;
they could be ordered to register&#13;
for the draft, and perhaps be&#13;
drafted. They too must consider&#13;
their position on war."&#13;
CCCO has sued Selective Service&#13;
for their draft plans and&#13;
learned that they plan to allow&#13;
registrants to claim hardship,&#13;
medical, and conscientious objector&#13;
status only at the last&#13;
possible moment after induction&#13;
orders are issued.&#13;
"Unless students begin to think&#13;
about, and collect evidence for,&#13;
conscientious objection dlaims&#13;
and other options, they are certain&#13;
to be caught unprepared," said&#13;
Spears.&#13;
"There is also growing sentiment&#13;
within Congress to begin&#13;
debate early next year on whether&#13;
a peace - time draft should be&#13;
started," he said. "It is important&#13;
for young people to realize that&#13;
under the current draft law, all&#13;
men between the ages of 18 and 26&#13;
are eligible to be drafted. Also,&#13;
students should know that there is&#13;
no longer a college student&#13;
deferment under the new draft&#13;
laws."&#13;
"Young Americans must start&#13;
thinking about whether they could&#13;
participate in the military."&#13;
Spears states that CCCO has&#13;
already registered over 20,000&#13;
young people through its conscientious&#13;
objection card. "These&#13;
cards are available, free of&#13;
charge, from CCCO, P. O. Box&#13;
15796, Philadelphia, PA 19103.&#13;
They simply state 'Because of my&#13;
beliefs about war, I am opposed to&#13;
participating in the military.&#13;
1 "&#13;
"The usefulness of this card,"&#13;
says Spears, "is that it provides a&#13;
record of an individual's opposition&#13;
to war and the military.&#13;
This CO card will help to&#13;
demonstrate to the military that&#13;
hundreds of thousands of young&#13;
people will not serve in the&#13;
military. Conscientious objectors,&#13;
along with the large number of&#13;
non - registrants and the vocal&#13;
anti - draft movement may help to&#13;
deter Congress from establishing&#13;
a peace - time draft."&#13;
CCCO was founded in 1948 as the&#13;
Central Committee for Conscientious&#13;
Objectors and is a&#13;
national, non - profit agency&#13;
counseling young Americans&#13;
facing the prospect of military&#13;
service, or those already in the&#13;
military.&#13;
Expeditions recruit students&#13;
Have you ever wanted to sail the&#13;
South Pacific, climb mountains in&#13;
Alaska, study wildlife in Africa,&#13;
dig for pre - historic man in India,&#13;
or trace the route of Marco Polo&#13;
through China? A new firm —&#13;
Expedition Research Inc. — has&#13;
launched a campaign to register&#13;
adventure - minded college&#13;
students who are looking to join&#13;
expeditions.&#13;
Expedition Research, Inc., a&#13;
placement service for adventurers&#13;
and explorers, is now&#13;
accepting applications from&#13;
college students, photographers,&#13;
scuba divers, mountain climbers,&#13;
archaeologists, ocean sailors,&#13;
scientists, and other explorers&#13;
who want to be placed on various&#13;
scientific and exploratory expeditions&#13;
worldwide.&#13;
These projects range from&#13;
archaeological excavations to&#13;
Himalayan mountaineering, from&#13;
oceanographic surveys and cave&#13;
exploration to scientific investigations&#13;
on all six continents.&#13;
Some expeditions award salaries,&#13;
commissions, and royalties to&#13;
team members; others require&#13;
cost sharing. Expeditions last&#13;
from several days to several&#13;
months. College credit and&#13;
scholarships are often available.&#13;
Students, either undergraduate&#13;
or graduate, are in demand. They&#13;
gain field experience by working&#13;
with professors and scientists&#13;
involved in their field of study.&#13;
Expedition Research, the&#13;
brainchild of two experienced&#13;
mountaineers, was formed on the&#13;
premise that there are thousands&#13;
of young scientists and adventurers&#13;
around the world who&#13;
would like to put their talents and&#13;
interests to use in the field, but&#13;
who do not know how to go about&#13;
it. ERI provides a service not only&#13;
to these individuals, but to the&#13;
groups who are looking for them.&#13;
The firm assists leaders of&#13;
expeditions in their search for&#13;
sponsorship, funding, and&#13;
equipment, as well as team&#13;
members.&#13;
Requests for members in the&#13;
last month include an array of&#13;
expeditions open to college&#13;
students:&#13;
• Little Cayman Expedition:&#13;
University of New Hampshire&#13;
professor leads marine botany&#13;
study in the Caribbean, with&#13;
SCUBA instruction;&#13;
• Mapping the Valley of the&#13;
Queens; archaeological survey in&#13;
Egypt, Sponsored by the&#13;
University of California,&#13;
Berkeley;&#13;
• Mountaineering expeditions&#13;
to McKinley and Mt. Aconcagua in&#13;
Argentina;&#13;
• Wildlife studies in Chile; an&#13;
attempt to preserve the rare&#13;
Andean mountain deer (sponsored&#13;
by the Government of Chile);&#13;
• Circumnavigation of the&#13;
Globe; an American team sets out&#13;
to sail around the world; and&#13;
• Nile River Expedition: a&#13;
descent of the world's longest&#13;
river by kayak.&#13;
Expeditions registered with&#13;
ERI have been endorsed by such&#13;
organizations as the Explorers&#13;
Club, National Geographic&#13;
Society, and the Smithsonian&#13;
Institution.&#13;
Chris White, a Princeton&#13;
University biologist, and Jim&#13;
Stout, a geographer from the&#13;
University of Washington, are co -&#13;
directors of the firm.&#13;
Registration with ERI cost $15&#13;
per year for students ($20&#13;
regular). Registrants receive&#13;
monthly issues of EXPLORATION,&#13;
resume forms, and&#13;
a 20% mail order discount on&#13;
outdoor equipment ordered&#13;
through Eastern Mountain Sports.&#13;
Register or write for further&#13;
questions by contacting Expedition&#13;
Research, Inc. P. O. Box&#13;
467R, Cathedral and Franklin Sts.,&#13;
Annapolis, Maryland 21404.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization I&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads — '&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30c will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words &gt;&#13;
or less.&#13;
i&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE^&#13;
t)TincD?tS2&#13;
e&#13;
/rL? V.yv"&#13;
p&#13;
1?&#13;
,uden&#13;
t&#13;
or student organization is qualified&#13;
f . 5- 1 '*ne '&#13;
n the Ranger at no cost if under or&#13;
equivalent to 10 words. (Phone numbers equal 1 word.)&#13;
Classification:&#13;
| Name_&#13;
SS No.&#13;
I&#13;
Ranger&#13;
WLLC D139 &#13;
RANGER SPOPT*&#13;
rmss-Counfry&#13;
Women take national title&#13;
UnWW-P-Par arksksidide e wwoon n ththe e fires* t&#13;
National Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA)&#13;
women's cross - country championship&#13;
Saturday at Salina,&#13;
Kansas.&#13;
Coach Bob Lawson's team&#13;
WENDY BU RMAN&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
miMtel 52 P0ints to&#13;
outdistance second place finisher&#13;
haTS* (KanSas) State&gt; wh&#13;
ich&#13;
Wendy Burman, UW-Parkside&#13;
sophomore from Fond Du Lac&#13;
wo" the individual tide over the&#13;
5,000 m eter course in 17:54 while&#13;
Racine freshman Kellie Benzow&#13;
18:29&#13;
'&#13;
just three&#13;
seconds behind runner-up Kathie&#13;
Daffer of Hastings (Nebr.).&#13;
In addition to Burman and&#13;
Benzow, two other Parkside&#13;
runners earned all-American&#13;
honors by finishing in the top 25&#13;
finishers. Sharon Keller a&#13;
sophomore from Mayville, was&#13;
13th with 19:06 while Dona&#13;
Dnscoll, a sophomore from&#13;
Muskego, placed 17th with 19:31&#13;
Other Ranger finishers were&#13;
Racine freshman Sandy Venne in&#13;
37 th, Kenosha junior Barb&#13;
Osborne in 50th and Racine freshman&#13;
JoAnne Carey in 86th.&#13;
Twelve teams completed the&#13;
field. After Parkside and Emporia,&#13;
they were Midland&#13;
Lutheran (Nebr.) with 115, Berry&#13;
(Ga.) with 124, Fort Hays State&#13;
with 126, Kansas State-Pittsburg&#13;
with 152, Kearney State and&#13;
Jackson State with 172, Park with&#13;
^ Martymount with 259,&#13;
Hillsdale with 263 and Wiley&#13;
College (Tex.) with 279.&#13;
KELLIE BE NZOW&#13;
Season ends on sour note&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
took the number one seed into the&#13;
WWIAC State Tournament last&#13;
weekend after the League&#13;
Commissioner broke a ranking tie&#13;
between Milwaukee and Parkside.&#13;
Last week Coach Linda Henderson&#13;
stated: "We have the seed&#13;
but now we have to live up to its&#13;
ranking, as it was ousted from the&#13;
double elimination tournament&#13;
after three matches. The Rangers&#13;
defeated Carthage, then lost to&#13;
Milwaukee and number three seed&#13;
Marquette. It was a fitting end to&#13;
an up and down season.&#13;
The Rangers took on Carthage&#13;
in their first match and could do&#13;
no wrong, The Rangers gave&#13;
Carthage a lesson in how to play&#13;
successful team volleyball. "We&#13;
played great," Henderson said&#13;
following her team's 15-12, 15-3&#13;
dumping of the Redmen. "It was&#13;
the best I've ever seen this team&#13;
play." Parkside appeared to have&#13;
the momentum necessary to win&#13;
the tournament but couldn't&#13;
sustain it.&#13;
On Saturday morning, the&#13;
Rangers faced Milwaukee in what&#13;
would be Parkside's first tournament&#13;
loss. The Rangers tensed&#13;
up and couldn't get untracked as&#13;
the Panthers easily won the match&#13;
15-9, 16-14. Henderson had no&#13;
excuses for her team's poor&#13;
performance. "We looked scared&#13;
on the court and I don't know why.&#13;
We cou ldn't serve and we didn't&#13;
block." in other words, the&#13;
Rangers didn't deserve to win.&#13;
With their elimination on the&#13;
une, Henderson knew the Rangers&#13;
"®eded a supreme effort to defeat&#13;
their next opponent, Marquette&#13;
University. What the team gave&#13;
Henderson was a severe&#13;
headache. Marquette ousted&#13;
LINDA HENDERSON&#13;
Parkside from the tournament&#13;
with a 15-1, 15-11 victory.&#13;
"It was another case of being&#13;
too tight and not playing well,"&#13;
Henderson said of the Marquette&#13;
loss. "We played like six individuals.&#13;
We were anything but&#13;
the team we looked like on Fridav&#13;
night."&#13;
Parkside suffered through a&#13;
season of peaks and valleys. When&#13;
the Rangers were on, it seemed&#13;
like no one could beat them.&#13;
However, when they were off,&#13;
they couldn't even manage a&#13;
scrimmage victory. Needless to&#13;
say, the Rangers were off this&#13;
tournament. "Milwaukee peaked&#13;
at this tournament and that made&#13;
the difference. They played really&#13;
well and deserved to win,"&#13;
Henderson said. Parkside finished&#13;
their season with a 26-20 r ecord.&#13;
Milwaukee advances to&#13;
Regional play in Chicago this&#13;
weekend. The Panthers will be&#13;
seeded seventh in the eight - team&#13;
playoff. Lewis is ranked first&#13;
followed by Wright State (Ohio),&#13;
Indiana Tech, Lake Superior&#13;
(Michigan), University of Dayton&#13;
(Ohio), Eastern Illinois,&#13;
Milwaukee and West Virginia&#13;
Marshall.&#13;
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Reasonable Rates&#13;
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UW-P STUDENTS&#13;
Call 553-9092or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00&#13;
Applications Are&#13;
Being Accepted&#13;
For&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
JOB REQUIREMENTS&#13;
Must be student enrolled with 6 credits&#13;
Assigns, edits, and writes sports stories.&#13;
Lays out sports pages&#13;
Previous editorial experience.&#13;
This is a paid position&#13;
Pick up Application at the Ranger Office,&#13;
WLLC D139, Next to the Coffee Shoppe&#13;
Deadline: Monday, Decembers&#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;
Baltimore at New England —&#13;
Cincinnati at Cleveland&#13;
Houston at N. Y. Jets&#13;
Pittsburgh at Buffalo&#13;
Seattle at Denver&#13;
Chicago at Atlanta&#13;
Detroit at Tampa Bay&#13;
Green Bay at Minnesota&#13;
N. Y. Giants at San Francisco&#13;
Washington at Dallas&#13;
Kansas City at St. Louis&#13;
Oakland at Philadelphia&#13;
Los Angeles at New Orleans&#13;
Tiebreaker:&#13;
- will be the total combined points&#13;
scored in the Los Angeles - New Orleans game.&#13;
Last week's winner: Robert Cooper; 12 correct, 42 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;
Basketball&#13;
scrimmage&#13;
The men's basketball team is&#13;
ready to showcase their talent to&#13;
the public tonight when it holds its&#13;
annual intra - squad game at 7:30&#13;
p. m. in the Parkside Fieldhouse.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens' team will&#13;
be split into Green and White&#13;
units. The game is open to public&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Table tennis&#13;
tournament&#13;
The Parkside Table Tennis Club&#13;
(PTTC) has accepted Inter -&#13;
Varsity Christian Fellowship's&#13;
(IVCF) challenge to a table tennis&#13;
contest for Friday, November 21&#13;
at 1 p.m.&#13;
All matches are best of three,&#13;
and will be held in the Rec Center&#13;
Table Tennis Room. Everyone is&#13;
welcome to watch.&#13;
C0UE6E?&#13;
Sure. But its quality depends on&#13;
your life during college.&#13;
Your college degree and grades are&#13;
most important. But, in today's competitive&#13;
job market, you may need&#13;
additional credentials to land the job&#13;
you really want.&#13;
As a sophomore, you need to look&#13;
ahead. At what you can offer an&#13;
employer... your education, work&#13;
experience, leadership abilities. And&#13;
at how you can increase these assets&#13;
during your last two years of college.&#13;
While looking ahead, look at the&#13;
Army ROTC two-year program.&#13;
Management training. Leadership&#13;
experience. Financial assistance.&#13;
And new opportunities for your life&#13;
after college as an officer in the&#13;
active Army, Reserve or National&#13;
Guard.&#13;
For details, contact:&#13;
Enrollment Officer&#13;
Military Science Dept.&#13;
Marquette U.&#13;
1-224-7195 &#13;
8 Thursday, November 20,1980 Ranger&#13;
At Parkside&#13;
Humboldt State claims title&#13;
RANGER photo by Kim Schiater&#13;
Garry Henry of Pembroke State&#13;
(N.C.) repeated his 1977 NAIA&#13;
cross-country win at Parkside&#13;
Saturday as he won the individual&#13;
crown in the 23rd annual NCAA-II&#13;
championship meet.&#13;
Henry's time of 29:32 for the&#13;
10,000 meter course, as well as a&#13;
course mark, was the best ever&#13;
recorded in this championship,&#13;
eclipsing the 29:42 run by Ralph&#13;
Serna of California - Irvine in&#13;
1976.&#13;
Humboldt State (Cal.)&#13;
dethroned two-time champion Cal&#13;
Poly San Luis Obispo as it won&#13;
with 115 p oints, five better than&#13;
Pembroke. Cal Poly was third at&#13;
132 followed by Ferris State&#13;
(Mich.) at 153 and Mankato&#13;
(Minn.) State at 176. Twenty - two&#13;
teams filled out the field and 174&#13;
runners finished the race.&#13;
Best season ever but&#13;
Soccer ousted from playoffs&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The men's soccer team ended&#13;
its 1980 sea son last week with a&#13;
heartbreaking 1-0 loss to St.&#13;
John's University of Minnesota in&#13;
the semi - finals of A rea 3 playoff&#13;
competition. It was the fourth&#13;
time in the last seven years&#13;
Parkside lost to the Johnnies in&#13;
the playoffs with each game being&#13;
determined by a single goal.&#13;
Parkside finished their season&#13;
with an 11-6-1 r ecord, by far the&#13;
most successful season the team&#13;
has ever played.&#13;
The Rangers have never advanced&#13;
past Area 3 competition&#13;
and the Johnnies made sure&#13;
Ranger playoff misfortunes&#13;
continued. Before the game,&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson predicted&#13;
that his players would have to&#13;
take advantage of their opportunities&#13;
if they were to win.&#13;
The Rangers had several scoring&#13;
opportunities but couldn't&#13;
capitalize on them.&#13;
Parkside managed 13 shots but&#13;
couldn't find the net. "We played&#13;
well enough to win. We just&#13;
couldn't score any goals," said&#13;
Hederson. "St. John's is an&#13;
aggressive and physical team. We&#13;
knew they were going to be like&#13;
that."&#13;
The Johnnies scored the only&#13;
goal they needed with ten minutes&#13;
left in the first half. "After that&#13;
goal they seemed to have the&#13;
momentum. It took awhile for us&#13;
to reorganize after that." The&#13;
Rangers managed to stay in the&#13;
fame with their usual sparkling&#13;
defensive performance, but never&#13;
got the game equalizer. Henderson&#13;
commented, "We controlled the&#13;
last 30 minutes of the game but&#13;
they dropped back to protect thenlead&#13;
and didn't allow us the goal&#13;
we needed."&#13;
Henderson was disappointed&#13;
with the outcome of the St. John's&#13;
game but was elated about the&#13;
rest of the season. The Rangers&#13;
set four goals before the season&#13;
started and accomplished two of&#13;
them. They wanted to go to the&#13;
Area semi - finals, which they did,&#13;
they wanted to finish above .500,&#13;
and did so (.628), but they fell&#13;
short on their other goals of&#13;
winning 14 games and reaching&#13;
the Area finals.&#13;
With the completion of this&#13;
season, Henderson has his sights&#13;
focused on next year. "We have a&#13;
few holes to fill, but we're already&#13;
recruiting a number of kids. We're&#13;
losing only one starter (senior&#13;
Mike Kiefer, this year's leading&#13;
scorer), so we should be tough. We&#13;
have an extremely strong&#13;
nucleus."&#13;
Kiefer's shoes will be tough to&#13;
fill, but with the returning players&#13;
Henderson has, there is nothing&#13;
but continued success looming in&#13;
the very near future for the&#13;
Parkside soccer team.&#13;
Local ski club plans first meeting&#13;
„!!!f„&#13;
No&#13;
I&#13;
&lt;&#13;
!&#13;
ic&#13;
,&#13;
T™i&#13;
;&#13;
b&#13;
!&#13;
az&#13;
!.&#13;
rs&#13;
'&#13;
a The schedule of this year's ski slides of t he Nordic evmt* 7, The Nordic Trailblazers, a cross&#13;
country ski club of the Kenosha -&#13;
Racine area, will hold their first&#13;
meeting of the season on Tuesday,&#13;
Nov. 25 at 7:30 p.m. in Moln 107.&#13;
The schedule of this year's&#13;
outings will be presented.&#13;
Wilho Knuuti and Archie&#13;
Lowman, officials at the 1980&#13;
Winter Olympics, will present&#13;
slides of t he Nordic events at the&#13;
Olympics. Art Bloxdorf of The&#13;
Pack Shop will give a presentation&#13;
on the various types of cross&#13;
country skiing and equipment. EVEN WITH heads up plays such as this&#13;
cou'dn t avoid a 1-0 loss to St. John's last week&#13;
one, the Rangers&#13;
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Audio Video Magazine asked&#13;
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nationwide to&#13;
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based on professionalism,&#13;
customer service,&#13;
product knowledge-ability,&#13;
and they chose us as one.&#13;
AUDIO SYSTEMS&#13;
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Sunday </text>
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