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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 9, issue 14</text>
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            <text>Workers' struggle creates unique society in Poland</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>W University of Wisconsin - Porkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, December 11, 1980&#13;
Workers' struggle creates&#13;
unique society in Poland&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
"Poland in Crisis: Workers vs&#13;
the State," the public forum held&#13;
Monday night examined the&#13;
current situation in Poland from&#13;
three aspects: the labor&#13;
movement's viewpoint, the&#13;
current historical, political and&#13;
economical status of Poland and&#13;
the Soviet Union viewpoint.&#13;
The labor viewpoint was&#13;
presented by Franklin Wallick,&#13;
editor of U.A.W. Washington&#13;
Report; Adam Przeworski, a&#13;
Poland native and political&#13;
science professor at the&#13;
University of Chicago, commented&#13;
on the current Polish&#13;
society; and Dan McGovern,&#13;
visiting assistant professor at&#13;
Parkside talked about the Soviet&#13;
view of Poland. Kenneth Hoover,&#13;
associate professor of political&#13;
science at Parkside served as&#13;
moderator.&#13;
"What is happening in Poland is&#13;
really an attempt to create a new&#13;
society," said Przeworski, "a kind&#13;
of society that doesn't exist&#13;
anywhere. (It's) an experiment in&#13;
the construction of a society which&#13;
would be at the same time&#13;
socialist and democratic."&#13;
Calling the situation 'labor&#13;
unrest' is a misnomer, according&#13;
to Przeworski. "There is no&#13;
question of unrest," he said. "It's&#13;
a struggle by workers to organize&#13;
independently of their employers.&#13;
This is not a group of workers who&#13;
suddenly became insubordinate,&#13;
irresponsible and restless."&#13;
A strike in Gdansk, a large&#13;
shipyard with about 17,000&#13;
workers, brought about the&#13;
establishment of independent&#13;
unions that are not connected to&#13;
the government. "The unions in&#13;
the past," said Wallick, "have felt&#13;
that their job was to provide&#13;
vacation spas for the members or&#13;
to be cheerleaders to the regime.&#13;
(The new unions) believe in&#13;
negotiating with the powers that&#13;
decide on wages and hours."&#13;
"We must not limit the events in&#13;
Poland to union organization,"&#13;
commented Przeworski,&#13;
"because although the decisive&#13;
breakthrough was indeed a wave&#13;
of strikes that took place during&#13;
the summer and that ended on&#13;
Sept. 1 with the government&#13;
recognizing the right to form free&#13;
and independent unions. As a&#13;
result of that victory by workers,&#13;
the entire society suddenly awoke&#13;
and began to organize itself."&#13;
The newly established unions&#13;
have not succeeded to consolidate&#13;
themselves as an organization,&#13;
according to Przeworski. "The&#13;
hierarchy of leadership is not very&#13;
clear, the leadership is already&#13;
divided and, most importantly,&#13;
the leadership no longer controls&#13;
the rank and file."&#13;
That is one side of the picture;&#13;
the same is true for the other side.&#13;
The communist party has, to a&#13;
great extent, fallen apart during&#13;
the crisis, said Przeworski. "The&#13;
party of revolt within the party is&#13;
so pronounced that the party&#13;
leadership is not able to control&#13;
the followers, to deliver on&#13;
whatever commitments they may&#13;
want to make and to pursue a&#13;
consistent strategy," he said.&#13;
What happens in that type of&#13;
situation, according to Przeworski,&#13;
is that the leaders&#13;
negotiate with each other, but it's&#13;
not clear whether the leaders are&#13;
negotiating on anybody's behalf.&#13;
Przeworski feels the situation has&#13;
become more consolidated over&#13;
the last few days due to the increasing&#13;
threat of a Russian intervention.&#13;
&#13;
The big question mark has been&#13;
the Soviet Union's intentions in the&#13;
Poland crisis. "In the last couple&#13;
of days the Soviet leadership has&#13;
given the Polish leadership some&#13;
breathing space," said&#13;
McGovern, "in which to take&#13;
control of their own nation. But&#13;
still at this time as the Soviet&#13;
leadership watches and waits it's&#13;
not clear, probably to them, what&#13;
they're going to do about Poland."&#13;
"I agree that they haven't yet&#13;
decided," said Przeworski, "or&#13;
that they have decided to make&#13;
their action contingent upon the&#13;
developments."&#13;
McGovern believes that Soviet&#13;
concerns over economic and&#13;
political situations may be influential&#13;
in deciding what type of&#13;
action the Soviets will take. The&#13;
Soviet economy is suffering from&#13;
very slow growth, less than a fifth&#13;
of what they had anticipated.&#13;
The Soviets are having&#13;
problems with labor productivity,&#13;
old machinery and providing their&#13;
people with basic consumer&#13;
goods, said McGovern. This year&#13;
the Soviet leadership hoped to&#13;
obtain 260 million metric tons .of&#13;
grain due to insufficient crops, but&#13;
they fell short of their goal by 100&#13;
million tons. Droughts during&#13;
three of the last five years made it&#13;
impossible to produce enough&#13;
grain to feed their people, thus&#13;
forcing them to turn to the world&#13;
market and to countries such as&#13;
the United States, Canada and&#13;
Australia.&#13;
"Another major problem that&#13;
the Soviet leadership faces," said&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• From the Parking Lot:&#13;
Ranger's letter to Santa&#13;
• Review: "Flash Gordon 99&#13;
• Wrestlers show potential&#13;
McGovern, "is political control&#13;
over their own country.&#13;
Throughout the course of Soviet&#13;
history, they have been willing to&#13;
give up economic efficiency, goals&#13;
we think are important like a&#13;
standard of living, and meeting&#13;
marginal revenue and marginal&#13;
cost. They'd rather throw those&#13;
out the window than lose political&#13;
control over their own country."&#13;
Poland has a mutual defense&#13;
agreement with the Soviet Union&#13;
so that they will come to each&#13;
other's defense should either&#13;
country be attacked. "This will be&#13;
the justification for military intervention&#13;
if one comes," said&#13;
McGovern.&#13;
"What's happening in Poland is&#13;
not a threat to the strategic interests&#13;
of the Soviet Union," said&#13;
Przeworski. "There are no&#13;
political forces organized in&#13;
Poland which see as their goal any&#13;
type of anti-Soviet action or even a&#13;
change of the Polish membership&#13;
in the Warsaw Pact."&#13;
Some British sources indicate&#13;
that the Soviets had as many as&#13;
12,000 casualties in Afghanistan in&#13;
the last year. This kind of loss will&#13;
be weighed heavily when they&#13;
determine what, if any, military&#13;
action they take in Poland, noted&#13;
McGovern.&#13;
Money presents a very serious&#13;
problem to the Soviets and to the&#13;
Poles. The Poles have a $20 billion&#13;
foreign debt with interest&#13;
payments of $7 billion a year.&#13;
"Last month," said McGovern,&#13;
"the Soviets promised about $1.3&#13;
billion to pay off the interest fees.&#13;
The Soviets can't continually help&#13;
bail them out. So there's a&#13;
question about how far they're&#13;
going to go to bail out their Polish&#13;
brothers."&#13;
Przeworski doesn't believe the&#13;
Soviets care about the West, the&#13;
moral opinions of the West and&#13;
economic sanctions. "But I do&#13;
think there's one thing they do&#13;
care about — and that's China.&#13;
The fact that the Chinese just&#13;
offered a warning today to the&#13;
Soviet Union is a significant fact."&#13;
"On all rational grounds, it will&#13;
be irrational for the Soviets to&#13;
intervene," concluded Przeworski.&#13;
"The problem is that&#13;
I'm not persuaded that they'd act&#13;
rationally."&#13;
Tuition now *433&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 14&#13;
ci./aus&#13;
Graphics by Mark Christiansen&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
De&#13;
tLb To£*&#13;
$30 surcharge withdrawn&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
UW System President Robert&#13;
O'Neil last week withdrew his&#13;
request for another $30 tuition&#13;
surcharge for the second&#13;
semester. A similar surcharge&#13;
was initiated last fall after Gov.&#13;
Lee Dreyfus ordered a state - wide&#13;
4.4% budget cut.&#13;
The state's worsening revenue&#13;
situation, inflation and increasing&#13;
enrollment were the reasons&#13;
O'Neil cited to the Board of&#13;
Regents for the revival of the&#13;
surcharge. In his letter to the&#13;
Regents on Nov. 26, O'Neil said&#13;
that the $30 surcharge would&#13;
prevent "further harm to&#13;
educational quality and student&#13;
access."&#13;
The surcharge would have&#13;
needed the approval of the&#13;
Regents, Gov. Dreyfus and the&#13;
. wMk WMLWm&#13;
ASSISTANT CHANCELLOR&#13;
GARY GOETZ&#13;
state legislature's Joint Finance&#13;
Committee. Gov. Dreyfus and the&#13;
chairmen of the committee have&#13;
expressed opposition to the second&#13;
surcharge. The Regents approved&#13;
the first fee by only a close&#13;
margin.&#13;
O'Neil withdrew his request for&#13;
the second surcharge because he&#13;
didn't see any use in advocating&#13;
something that would get shot&#13;
down, according to Gary Goetz,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor of Administration&#13;
and Fiscal Affairs.&#13;
What the request's withdrawl&#13;
means at Parkside is that the fulltime&#13;
undergraduate tuition fee for&#13;
the spring semester is now $433,&#13;
not $463 as was anticipated during&#13;
the registration in November.&#13;
Tuition for part-time students was&#13;
also altered during early&#13;
registration, according to Thomas&#13;
Peltier, Bursar. A fee of two&#13;
dollar-fifty cent per credit was&#13;
added on to part-time tuition&#13;
rates. &#13;
Thursday, December 11,1980&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Surcharge money&#13;
comes in handv&#13;
by Ken Meyer M&#13;
Editor&#13;
com^Theh^Tea^n.'&#13;
5 fina&#13;
"&#13;
y a&#13;
"&#13;
d W"&#13;
h «" s™&#13;
The gloomy economic situation threatening to dampen Christmas&#13;
R^herm-Np^f&#13;
3 turning gloomier when UW System President&#13;
RuSS Sl&#13;
rTl&#13;
Sted&#13;
.&#13;
an0t&#13;
?&#13;
er $3&#13;
° surcharge *&gt;r spring semester.&#13;
But after hearing objections from Governor Lee Dreyfus and the State&#13;
Regents"&#13;
1^' rightfully withdrew his request from the Board of&#13;
writl^nin fh?n&#13;
anS h6re *1 P&#13;
f&#13;
a&#13;
f&#13;
k&#13;
,fde is that the fig&#13;
ure of $463 that was ° the Bursar cards of full-time undergraduate students at early&#13;
!RXi.read $433&#13;
-&#13;
Part&#13;
-time students will not have to&#13;
pay the $2.50 per credit that was added on to their tuition fees because of&#13;
the surcharge Bursar&#13;
's office was only anticipating the return of&#13;
Many students had already planned on paying the $463 (no t quietly&#13;
IhTrSUre&#13;
'i^ payir? 11 ^ ^ same)&gt; so $30 is "extra money," if there really is such a thing.&#13;
J&#13;
What that money should be used for, considering the holiday season&#13;
and all, is to help those who need help. Ideally, the holiday season is the&#13;
time people care about and live in harmony with their fellow human&#13;
beings. I ve always wondered why that spirit is not extended throughout&#13;
the year as it should be.&#13;
It s getting harder to see this caring spirit through the immense&#13;
commercialization of Christmas, but the feeling still remains. And now&#13;
is the perfect opportunity for us students to prove it.&#13;
If yo u want to help those nearby, do so through an organization that&#13;
!r V j^&#13;
needy !" y&#13;
°&#13;
ur local area&#13;
-&#13;
0ne example, and there are many, is&#13;
the food drive that has been organized on campus. Dry goods can be&#13;
brought to the table on the Concourse Bridge through Friday, Dec. 12, to&#13;
help the impoverished in the Kenosha, Racine and outlying areas&#13;
Dotting a few dollars' worth of food for a food drive, or contributing&#13;
time, money or goods to some other worthwhile cause seems feasible for&#13;
many considering the $30 that isn't being taxed onto ourTuTtion&#13;
Of y remember those who aren't having too merry&#13;
?he\?n nnJPt&#13;
aLaP J" 1 ®xpect a Appier New Year. Then remember&#13;
tn? $ I n r vf gr&#13;
tf&#13;
dy ~ keep most of il but contribute what you can if&#13;
you can. Consider the joy you'll bring by giving just a little.&#13;
Warn Bam Singing Telegram!&#13;
"Songs for any Occasion"&#13;
2 FOR 1 SALE&#13;
551-9095 December 3-14&#13;
SANTAS, GORILLAS, BELLY DANCERS&#13;
UNICYCLIST, MARCHING BAND&#13;
for&#13;
Parties, Birthdays, Love Songs,&#13;
_ Apologies, Thank You, Any Occasion At All&#13;
7 Day s A W e e k 8a.m.- 8p,m.&#13;
AUDIO SYSTEMS&#13;
Audio Retailer of 1980&#13;
Audio Video Magazine asked&#13;
1,399 manufacturers and representatives&#13;
nationwide to&#13;
vote for their ten best retailers&#13;
based on professionalism,&#13;
customer service,&#13;
product knowledge-ability,&#13;
and they chose us as one.&#13;
AUDIO SYSTEMS&#13;
7535 Twenty-second Avenue, Kenosha Telephone 658-3796&#13;
'Ranger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
Brian Feliand Executive Business Manager&#13;
h Business Manager&#13;
SueMlchetti News Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Dave Cramer Sports Editor&#13;
Brian Passino Photo Editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson r _&#13;
Mlke *"•« Advertising Manager"&#13;
ST A F p&#13;
Ripp^TsiougTar'T6" ChriS,i"&#13;
e&#13;
°'&#13;
Nei"' F"s.on, Joe&#13;
Nukes pose threats&#13;
by Deb Elzinga&#13;
This is in response to the recent&#13;
articles defending centralized&#13;
forms of energy. It was argued,&#13;
among other things, that my&#13;
article on the solar alternative&#13;
was misleading. I still maintain&#13;
that the soft path based on&#13;
decentralized solar energy and&#13;
conservation is the best answer to&#13;
our energy crisis.&#13;
The claim was made that&#13;
nuclear energy is an environmentally&#13;
benign source of&#13;
power. It is beyond my comprehension&#13;
how anyone can make&#13;
a statement like that when there&#13;
are many facts about nuclear&#13;
power which suggest that it is a&#13;
potentially malignant, rather than&#13;
benign source of power. From the&#13;
beginning of the fuel cycle there&#13;
are serious threats to people and&#13;
the environment. During the&#13;
initial search for uranium though&#13;
drilling there is a risk that ground&#13;
water could be contaminated with&#13;
uranium.&#13;
After the uranium has been&#13;
located it is mined, which poses&#13;
threats. First, there is the danger&#13;
to the miners; radon gas is&#13;
emitted into the air and inhaled by&#13;
the miners greatly increasing&#13;
their chances of lung cancer.&#13;
Secondly, a by-product of mining&#13;
are the tailings which also pose&#13;
potential dangers. As of now there&#13;
are 140 million tons of low - level&#13;
radioactive ore tailings. In areas&#13;
where uranium is mined people,&#13;
unaware that the tailings are&#13;
dangerous, used these seemingly&#13;
neutral piles to build schools,&#13;
churches, and houses. These piles&#13;
are radioactively dangerous,&#13;
consequently there has been an&#13;
abnormal increase in babies with&#13;
congenital defects, and an abnormally&#13;
high rate of leukemia in&#13;
one of these areas.&#13;
In other aspects of th e fuel cycle&#13;
there are also significant dangers&#13;
During the fuel fabrication&#13;
process, for example, there have&#13;
been many incidents of dangers to&#13;
the workers. At the Kerr-McGee&#13;
plant in Oklahoma which made&#13;
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AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
mixed plutonium uranium fuel&#13;
rods, at least 87 workers were&#13;
exposed to excessive levels of&#13;
plutonium.&#13;
Karen Silkwood is one such&#13;
worker who was exposed. When&#13;
she first began at Kerr-McGee she&#13;
had faith if the nuclear promise&#13;
until she learned that many&#13;
workers were frequently exposed&#13;
to airbourne plutonium, which&#13;
cannot be retrieved once it&#13;
escapes into the air. Plutonium is&#13;
a fiercely toxic substance — one&#13;
millionth of a gram has caused&#13;
cancer in animals. Karen eventually&#13;
became involved with the&#13;
union and set out to investigate the&#13;
hazards which existed at the&#13;
plant. During her investigation it&#13;
was found out that plant&#13;
operations were often dangerous.&#13;
Leaking pipes and defective&#13;
equipment regularly contaminated&#13;
workers with&#13;
plutonium, and the company&#13;
sometimes ordered them to&#13;
continue working while leaks went&#13;
unrepaired for days.&#13;
Unfortunately, Karen Silkwood&#13;
was never able to see the case&#13;
brought to court. In 1974 she was&#13;
on her way to meet with a health&#13;
expert for the Oil, Chemical, and&#13;
Atomic Workers International&#13;
Union (OCAW) and a New York&#13;
Times reporter. She had with her&#13;
documentation regarding the&#13;
health hazards at the Kerr-McGee&#13;
plant. However, she died in a car&#13;
accident before she reached her&#13;
destination. There is substantial&#13;
evidence that her car was&#13;
deliberately run off the road. On&#13;
Karen's bumper there were fresh&#13;
dent marks and somehow the&#13;
folder had mysteriously disappeared.&#13;
&#13;
After the uranium has been&#13;
converted into fuel for the dragon,&#13;
the problems which have been&#13;
virtually isolated in the southwestern&#13;
part of the U.S. are now&#13;
extended, thus the danger of&#13;
disasters is increased. The&#13;
nuclear plant itself, poses an&#13;
additional threat. There is always&#13;
a possibility that mistakes will&#13;
occur during construction which&#13;
can lead to later problems. Backup&#13;
systems may break down&#13;
during an emergency. The accident&#13;
at Three Mile Island should&#13;
be another warning to move&#13;
swiftly away from this ominous&#13;
source of power. There are others&#13;
who share this view. In February&#13;
of 1976, three scientists in&#13;
management positions resigned&#13;
from General Electric's nuclear&#13;
research center in San Jose,&#13;
California. Two weeks later in&#13;
introducing their technical&#13;
testimony on reactor safety&#13;
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say Merry Christmas to&#13;
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Doubtful about,&#13;
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We have&#13;
BOB MEYER DICK BELTOYA&#13;
deficiencies, the three said in a&#13;
joint statement: "We resigned our&#13;
jobs to commit ourselves totally to&#13;
the education of the public on all&#13;
aspects and dangers of nuclear&#13;
power as we have learned them&#13;
over our many years of ex&#13;
perience in the industry."&#13;
Still another problem with this&#13;
"benign" source of energy is 0f&#13;
course, the waste. Despite the fact&#13;
that nuclear power plants have&#13;
been operating for some 20 years&#13;
there is still no permanent safe&#13;
medium in which will hold these&#13;
highly lethal wastes. According to&#13;
Sierra Club Bulletin, "approximately&#13;
73 million gallons of&#13;
liquid high-level wastes among&#13;
the most toxic and hazardous&#13;
substances known, are now on&#13;
hand awaiting a permanent&#13;
method of disposal."&#13;
There are many different&#13;
classifications of nuclear waste.&#13;
Equipment used during mining&#13;
and other miscellaneous items&#13;
begin to accumulate through the&#13;
entire fuel cycle. As the fuel cycle&#13;
continues, so does the waste&#13;
Towards the end of the fuel cycle&#13;
there are the spent fuel rods being&#13;
stored at the plant site. Again,&#13;
there is no known permanent&#13;
storage method. Some of the spent&#13;
fuel has been cooling for 20 years&#13;
in pools that were designed for&#13;
five year storage. In addition,&#13;
these rods are now being packed&#13;
closer together which poses still&#13;
another possible threat. It is&#13;
speculated that these spent fuel&#13;
rods could form a critical mass&#13;
producing a small scale melt&#13;
down effect.&#13;
At the very end of the fuel cycle&#13;
there remains the problem of&#13;
decommissioning or dismantling&#13;
the nuclear power plants when it&#13;
becomes obsolete. Dismantling a&#13;
nuclear facility is probably the&#13;
safest in terms of the environment;&#13;
however, it would be&#13;
extremely expensive. Another&#13;
idea is to simply "mothball" the&#13;
facility. This would mean that the&#13;
still dangerous monster would&#13;
have to be guarded for literally&#13;
hundreds of thousands of years.&#13;
There have been theories&#13;
pertaining to how wastes could be&#13;
permanently stored, but none of&#13;
these seem to be viable solutions.&#13;
The two methods which have&#13;
recently been considered are&#13;
storage in granite or salt. Strong&#13;
evidence points to the fact that&#13;
neither one of these proposed&#13;
plans will be the answer to the&#13;
storage problem. Salt is extremely&#13;
water - soluble, is highly&#13;
corrosive and cannot hold&#13;
radionuclides effectively. When&#13;
Continued On P age Three&#13;
Fashions&#13;
Old Market Square&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd. &#13;
RANGER&#13;
National student&#13;
Thursday, December 11,1980&#13;
The 20-year-old University of&#13;
Wisconsin state student&#13;
association, United Council, was&#13;
one of the more than 25 state&#13;
student lobbying organizations&#13;
which met at the University of&#13;
Kansas October 24-26 to create a&#13;
new national student&#13;
organization, The National&#13;
Alliance of State Student&#13;
Nuclear power&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
wastes are stored in this manner&#13;
there is the possibility that radioactive&#13;
materials will leach out&#13;
in months rather than thousands&#13;
of years, as previously assumed.&#13;
When this leaching occurs there is&#13;
also the possibility that the waste&#13;
will escape from the container,&#13;
filter down through the fissures in&#13;
the rock and underground&#13;
aquifiers into rivers and waterways.&#13;
Ultimately they will reach&#13;
the oceans. There are also many&#13;
unforeseen factors which could&#13;
lead to a disaster from the storage&#13;
of these very hazardous wastes&#13;
which are generated from the&#13;
"benign" energy source.&#13;
The accusation is often made&#13;
against anti-nuclear people that&#13;
they are anti - establishment and&#13;
anti - scientific. This is done to&#13;
paint a negative picture of those&#13;
who oppose this type of energy.&#13;
However, can one really be accused&#13;
of being anti - establishment&#13;
for realizing the very grave threat&#13;
that nuclear power poses? There&#13;
are many scientists who were&#13;
once devoted to the nuclear industry&#13;
who left after coming to the&#13;
conclusion that nuclear power is&#13;
not the answer. Are those&#13;
scientists anti - establishment as&#13;
well? Senator John Glenn recently&#13;
expressed similar reservations&#13;
about nuclear power. Does this&#13;
make John Glenn just another anti&#13;
- establishment villain?&#13;
sophomores&#13;
COLLEGE.&#13;
Army ROTC offers you a&#13;
two - year management&#13;
training program during&#13;
college. To give you a head&#13;
start on life after college.&#13;
You'll learn to lead. To&#13;
manage people, money and&#13;
material. You'll also earn a&#13;
commission as an Army officer.&#13;
Credentials which will&#13;
set you apart in the job&#13;
market.&#13;
Whatever you're planning to&#13;
do after college, Army ROTC&#13;
provides career opportunities&#13;
that fit right in . . . part-time&#13;
Reserve service while you're&#13;
employed in the civilian&#13;
community or full - time&#13;
active duty starting at $11,000&#13;
per year.&#13;
Get a head start on life after&#13;
college. Get started in Army&#13;
ROTC. For details, contact:&#13;
Enrollment Officer&#13;
Military Science Dept.&#13;
Marquette U.&#13;
1-224-7195&#13;
THE ARMY ROTC&#13;
TWO-YEAR PR06RAM.&#13;
FOR THE&#13;
SliO LIFE.&#13;
Associations (NASSA). The&#13;
conference, according to United&#13;
Council Administration Director&#13;
Terry Lohr, was held to build&#13;
student lobbying and&#13;
organizational power for student&#13;
governments on the state level.&#13;
Lohr, who was elected to serve&#13;
on the Executive Committee on&#13;
NASSA said the conference was&#13;
"a significant and historic event&#13;
in the national student movement.&#13;
Students as an interest group on&#13;
the state and national level have&#13;
never been more organized."&#13;
United Council, one of the first&#13;
state student associations to&#13;
organize in 1960, is respected&#13;
nationwide, according to Bob&#13;
Bingham, the elected Chairperson&#13;
of NASSA. " If we had the same&#13;
kind of organization nationwide as&#13;
United Council has in Wisconsin,&#13;
students would be one of the most&#13;
powerful interest groups in&#13;
Washington, D.C.," said&#13;
Bingham.&#13;
NASSA is the creation of two&#13;
grows&#13;
national student organizations&#13;
tha t sponsored the conference, the&#13;
United State Student Association,&#13;
(USSA) and the National Student&#13;
Educational Fund (NSEF), according&#13;
to Joe Sweeney, project&#13;
director for NSEF.&#13;
Sweeney said that NSEF&#13;
received a grant of $113, 000 from&#13;
the Carnegie Foundation to&#13;
sponsor the USSA Development&#13;
Fund which helped NASSA get&#13;
organized. "Last summer USSA&#13;
and NSEF voted to form a&#13;
national organization that could&#13;
help give technical assistance to&#13;
state student associations like&#13;
Wisconsin's United Council," said&#13;
Sweeney.&#13;
NASSA is important for several&#13;
reasons, according to Sweeney:&#13;
"Individual student governments&#13;
cannot realistically expect to&#13;
address the increasingly complex&#13;
number of issues facing higher&#13;
education today. By organizing&#13;
collectively to address these&#13;
issues, they will become more&#13;
effective."&#13;
The USSA was formed in 1978&#13;
when the National Student&#13;
Association (formed in 1946)&#13;
merged with the National Student&#13;
Lobby (formed in 1971) at the&#13;
annual national student congress.&#13;
Doug Tuthill, National Chair of&#13;
USSA, believes that state student&#13;
associations will be the key&#13;
building blocks of USSA an d the&#13;
national student movement.&#13;
Racine express stopped&#13;
During finals and registration,&#13;
the Racine express bus will not be&#13;
running. Only one bus will be&#13;
available at 7:20 a. m. and 8:30 a.&#13;
m. The second express will be put&#13;
back on the same schedule when&#13;
spring semester begins.&#13;
If any students experience bus&#13;
overload problems, they should&#13;
contact Ronald Brinkmann at 553-&#13;
2455 immediately so that the&#13;
problem can be rectified.&#13;
Pomazal tenure denied&#13;
Richard Pomazal, assistant&#13;
professor of p sychology, appealed&#13;
his tenure denial to the Board of&#13;
Regents to no avail.&#13;
The Board, during a Nov. 7&#13;
meeting, decided, "that the Board&#13;
of Regents considers the Chancellor's&#13;
decision to be final under&#13;
UWS 3.08 (3), Wisconsin Administrative&#13;
Code, and declines to&#13;
give further consideration to the&#13;
matter referred to in (Pomazel's)&#13;
letter of A ugust 5."&#13;
vJ ACADEMY OF BATON A DANCE&#13;
Headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits, |&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights §&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — T ap Shoes — |&#13;
. All Dancing Supplies&#13;
Christmas—&#13;
H Time for Love and Giving.&#13;
For Something Special:&#13;
Unique Gifts&#13;
uptown&#13;
kenosha Jewelry&#13;
#/HDV39 aiDsnw 33SOO,, Records&#13;
A HOLIDAY TRADITION.&#13;
Be sure to bring some old friends home for the holidays. Look for&#13;
the Budweiser.Clydesdales at your favorite store. They're bringing&#13;
you a convenient way to buy Bud for all your holiday guests!&#13;
THIS BUD'S FOR YOU&#13;
E.F MADRIGRANO&#13;
1831- 55th St&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
658-3553 &#13;
4 Thursday, December 11,1980 RANGER&#13;
Coming Events From the Parking Lot&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 11&#13;
CONCERT at 1 pm in the Union Cinema featuring the Parkside Percussion and&#13;
Guitar Ensembles. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 12&#13;
DANCE featuring "Muscle Beach" at 8 pm in Union Square. In advance, admission&#13;
is $1.50 for students, $2.00 for others, $2.50 at the door. Tickets are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center. ID cards are required.&#13;
MOVIE "Heroes" will be shown at 8 pm in the Union Cinema. Admission at the door&#13;
is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 13&#13;
CONCERT with the Racine Symphony Orchestra at 8 pm in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. Admission will be charged at the door.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 14&#13;
MOVIE "Heroes" will be repeated at 7:30 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Dec. 15&#13;
BASKETBALL vs. UW-Milwaukee at 7:30 pm. In advance, admission is $1.50 for&#13;
Parkside students and $2.00 for others. Tickets are available at the Union Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT at 9:15 pm in Union Square featuring "R &amp; B " Rhythm and&#13;
Blues Band. Admission is free with your basketball ticket. The same ticket entitles&#13;
you to a free beer or soda. Sponsored by Student Life.&#13;
A letter to Santa&#13;
by G. Helgeson and&#13;
Assorted Staff Members&#13;
It's that time of year again, so&#13;
here's our list. We were going to&#13;
ask you for the usual stuff&#13;
(Lamborghinis and Texas instrument&#13;
calculators) but times&#13;
are tough this year and we figured&#13;
it's been no picnic for you, either.&#13;
We know you have to pay all those&#13;
elves and your materials costs&#13;
must be skyrocketing. It's no&#13;
wonder you don't supply batteries!&#13;
&#13;
Anyway, after some deep&#13;
digging into our consciences, we&#13;
shortened our list considerably.&#13;
Here it is:&#13;
Ex-editor Susan Stevens wants&#13;
to be recognized for the beauty of&#13;
her fine mind, not because she's&#13;
cute and a has-been.&#13;
Ken Meyer, Editor, wants a&#13;
meaningful relationship with a&#13;
significant other person of the&#13;
opposite sex of his choice (and&#13;
dreams); he deserves a 12-page&#13;
paper, too.&#13;
Brian Felland, Chairman of the&#13;
Board of Directors, wants a Board&#13;
meeting without jokes, with applause&#13;
at the end and a dramatic&#13;
exit, including a beautiful sunset&#13;
and sad music.&#13;
Dan Galbraith, Business&#13;
Manager, wants a winning entry&#13;
in the Homemaker's Tuna Dessert&#13;
Recipe Contest worth $5,000,000,&#13;
and a bottle of Quaaludes.&#13;
Sue Michetti, News Editor,&#13;
wants a meaningful relationship&#13;
with a significant person of the&#13;
opposite sex who can write "A"&#13;
term papers.&#13;
Wendy Westphal, Feature&#13;
Editor, wants a shadow for Mike&#13;
to make sure he goes to class and&#13;
a stylish movie critic.&#13;
Dave Cramer, Sports Editor,&#13;
wants a new position on Ranger as&#13;
Gossip Columnist.&#13;
Brian Passino, Photo Editor,&#13;
wants another adventure, somone&#13;
to share it with and some&#13;
nuerotransmitter altering&#13;
chemicals. Possibly all the same&#13;
thing.&#13;
Ginger Helgeson, Copy Editor,&#13;
wants a meaningless relationship&#13;
with an insignificant other person&#13;
of the opposite sex or an IBM&#13;
typewriter, whichever is cheaper.&#13;
Mike Farrel, Ad Manager,&#13;
wants all the ads in Happenings&#13;
and a managership at Ponderosa.&#13;
Pete Cramer, "Ace" Sports&#13;
Writer, wants $50,000 a year for&#13;
life and a degree from Parkside.&#13;
That's a lot to ask for, Santa, but&#13;
he promised to put us all in his will&#13;
so we'd really appreciate it.&#13;
Doug Edenhauser, Sports&#13;
Writer, wants the Wreckreator of&#13;
the Year Award. Boy, does he&#13;
deserve it, Santa.&#13;
Lori Meyer, Classified Ad&#13;
Manager, wants readable&#13;
classifieds.&#13;
Mike Holmdohl, Photographer,&#13;
wants a camera motor - drive that&#13;
works and a working internship&#13;
with the National Enquirer.&#13;
Dan McCormack, Photographer,&#13;
wants Laura and&#13;
"total annihilation of the world."&#13;
Yes, Santa, that's what he said.&#13;
Bruce Preston, Feature Writer,&#13;
wants "no more patronizing&#13;
remarks" and How to Defend&#13;
Yourself From Verbal Attacks by&#13;
the Ranger Staff.&#13;
Remember, there's no fireplace&#13;
or even a chimney in the office —&#13;
we'll leave the key taped on the&#13;
door for you. The milk and cookies&#13;
will be on the first desk on the left.&#13;
Have a good Christmas, Santa&#13;
dear.&#13;
Love,&#13;
The Ranger Staff&#13;
Albums contain good to mediocre music&#13;
by Carol Klees&#13;
The Tremblers are the general&#13;
fare you can expect to hear on a&#13;
night out on the town, and never&#13;
seem to rise above that level on&#13;
their first album, "Twice&#13;
Nightly." Their second album, if&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
AAAIN O FFICE&#13;
AUTO B ANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.l.C.&#13;
they ever record it, can only get&#13;
better.&#13;
They seem to muddle their way&#13;
through "Twice Nightly," and&#13;
their hit-and-miss music is mostly&#13;
misses or near-misses. If the&#13;
lyrics are semi-decent, the&#13;
.melody is mundane, and viceversa.&#13;
By rights, this group should&#13;
still be hitting their local bars as&#13;
often as the title suggests, or&#13;
more.&#13;
On the other hand, Steve Forbert&#13;
is about five times better than&#13;
the Tremblers. He's not a great&#13;
musician yet, I doubt that he will&#13;
be, but he is good. In his latest&#13;
effort, "Little Stevie Orbit," he&#13;
attains a middle-of-the-road&#13;
quality, and stays there through&#13;
most of the album's cuts, which&#13;
range in style from country to&#13;
rock to blues.&#13;
There is such great variety in&#13;
his music that something is bound&#13;
to hit on almost anyone's interests.&#13;
Apparently, he has&#13;
decided to elude the reputation of&#13;
being a one-style performer, but&#13;
this hinders the flow of music in&#13;
"Orbit." There's just too much on&#13;
the album to be comfortable to&#13;
any one listener, and nothing&#13;
above average in all that variety.&#13;
Promotion for these albums&#13;
hasn't been very emphasized; it&#13;
will take more than a casual&#13;
glance to find them in the stores.&#13;
Forbert is pleasant at best, The&#13;
Tremblers need to work at their&#13;
music. Unless a taste for the good&#13;
to mediocre has been acquired,&#13;
consider your funds before&#13;
picking up on either of. these.&#13;
OUR EVERYDAY PRICES ARE LOWER&#13;
THAN OTHER'S "DISCOUNT PRICES"&#13;
COME IN &amp; COMPARE&#13;
Christmas Hours&#13;
starting December 6&#13;
MONDAY-FRIDAY9:30to9:00&#13;
SATURDAY 9:30 to 5:15&#13;
SUNDAY 12:00 to4:00&#13;
THE STORE WITH MORE —&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST JEWELER&#13;
• SPECIALS *&#13;
WOMEN'S FRENCH&#13;
CUTTEES-6 COLORS&#13;
J&#13;
l&#13;
0 0 OB&#13;
REGULAR PRICE!&#13;
ADULT NITE TEES&#13;
10% OH&#13;
REGULAR PRICE!&#13;
BRING IN THIS AD&#13;
TO RECEIVE THESE&#13;
SPECIAL PRICES&#13;
VALID UNTIL&#13;
DECEMBER20th ONLY&#13;
HERBERT'S!! Transfer&#13;
CORNER 58th ST. &amp; 7th AVE.&#13;
Fashions&#13;
Old Market Square&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
A&#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;
:£»£ £« £££ ifcsac £££ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
Please Patronize&#13;
Our Advertisers&#13;
For Your&#13;
Christmas Needs&#13;
Academy of Baton &amp; Dance&#13;
Audio Systems&#13;
Bidinger's&#13;
Flowers by Joseph&#13;
C &amp; R Auto Service&#13;
Kenosha Savings &amp; Loan&#13;
Leader Store&#13;
Rec Center&#13;
Union&#13;
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Ruffolo's&#13;
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Jerry Smith's Produce&#13;
&amp; Gifts&#13;
Rainbow&#13;
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assures was &#13;
Review&#13;
RANGER Thursday, December 11,1980&#13;
..£!??!? Gordon' achieves fantasy feeling&#13;
iding outrageous sums of The film'sT" nGXt&#13;
" "Saturday Night Fever" is to * ' "&#13;
r to make a movie nims humor is'at. first « i _ T e /ever is 10 w _&#13;
Spending outrageous sums of&#13;
money to make a movie doesn't&#13;
always insure its success ("1941"&#13;
and more recently "Heaven's&#13;
Gate"), yet some directors still&#13;
insist on spending absurd amounts&#13;
in hopes of drawing large crowds&#13;
at the box. Producer Dino De&#13;
Laurentiis has recently coupled&#13;
this practice with subject matter&#13;
which he feels will be a big draw&#13;
He has already produced such&#13;
forgettable flops as "Orca" and&#13;
the remake of "King Kong." But&#13;
De Laurentiis may have hit upon&#13;
something this time with "Flash&#13;
Gordon".&#13;
The plot is simple. Ming the&#13;
Merciless (Max Van Sydow) is&#13;
destroying the earth, while Flash&#13;
Gordon (Sam Jones) and Dale&#13;
Arden (Melody Anderson) are led&#13;
to Mongo by Dr. Hans Zarkow&#13;
(Ornella Muti) to try and save the&#13;
earth. What makes it interesting is&#13;
that all of the inhabitants of&#13;
Mongo are violently against each&#13;
other and are forced to be loyal to&#13;
Ming. When Flash appeals to the&#13;
Hawkmen for help, you don't&#13;
know whether they are going to&#13;
capture him or aide him, as is the&#13;
case with the Forestmen and&#13;
everybody else or Mongo. This&#13;
type of confusion holds your attention,&#13;
as you try to figure out it seems the trend since&#13;
S ENVIRONMENT PLANT CART&#13;
| IN O LD MARKET SQUARE&#13;
th. r,&#13;
appen next&#13;
-&#13;
lifS S umor is&#13;
"&#13;
at first a&#13;
httle corny (the football - fight&#13;
Pected and becomes&#13;
^expected&#13;
and entertaining. There is&#13;
quite a bfi of sexual innuendo as in&#13;
the rites of passage scene, which&#13;
"Flash? i° thoug&#13;
ht that&#13;
cult fUm may become a&#13;
and&#13;
l&#13;
rfff?&#13;
borate cos&#13;
tumes, sets&#13;
and effects mjx to give a feeling of&#13;
a cross between "The Wizard of&#13;
Uz and "Star Wars". Some&#13;
scenes and music seem to be&#13;
Sr? o f from&#13;
"&#13;
The Empire&#13;
Strikes Back." So many different&#13;
colors and images come your way&#13;
that you get the same fantasy&#13;
feeling achieved when Dorothy&#13;
first stepped from her black - and -&#13;
white house into the vivid colors of&#13;
Munchkinland.&#13;
Although some of the effects are&#13;
elaborate, such as the colors of the&#13;
iJ\!£?&#13;
ny are reminiscent of the&#13;
old Flash Gordon" serial. This&#13;
could have worked, but instead it&#13;
comes across as if De Laurentiis&#13;
was too cheap to hire a good gaffer&#13;
(special effects person) and&#13;
copped out by showing things&#13;
such as space craftlandings as thev&#13;
were done in the primitive days of&#13;
film making when the serial was&#13;
made.&#13;
It seems the trend since&#13;
I We're Saying "Happy Holidays" With A&#13;
I 10% DISCOUNT&#13;
(With This Ad)&#13;
K Come in and see our wide variety of «&#13;
g Desert &amp; Tropical House Plants, Pottery &amp; More! $&#13;
g Open Every Day Until9:30 p. m. g&#13;
W £SS JeS2£ SOI 3£SS S&amp;S £££ JgaS JESS •(£&amp; ESK &amp;B£ &amp;&amp; BS?&#13;
COUNTRY&#13;
STORE&#13;
COMPLETE SELECTOM OF&#13;
•FRUITS ard VEGETABLES*&#13;
r— Now Open &gt;&#13;
Christmas Shop&#13;
| ^ * fruit baskets .&#13;
it poinscttdS&#13;
" I it selection of J&#13;
decorations and gifts&#13;
Take Hwy 31 to Hwy L 1 Mile West on Hwy. L&#13;
OPtM YEAR 'ftoUNO - E*CEPT JAW . R0S€A«A«J &lt; JBUtf, WoPRl€10«5&#13;
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Kenosha&#13;
* * * •••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
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I \\ \\SPRING BREAK&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
UTONA BEACH&#13;
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MARCH&#13;
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FfOR&#13;
FROM&#13;
$219'l&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
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OPTIONAL POPULAR SIDETRIPS&#13;
FOR APPLICATION AND FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
PARKS1DE UNION. ROOM 209 5 53-2200&#13;
•&#13;
"Saturday Night Fever" is to&#13;
have a top vocal group do a&#13;
movie's soundtrack. And although&#13;
Queen's music has a big drawing&#13;
effect for "Flash", many fans will&#13;
be disappointed to hear that they&#13;
only sing one song. They do many&#13;
heavy metal backgrounds, but&#13;
only vocalize at the beginning and&#13;
at the end with the same song.&#13;
All the actors and actresses are&#13;
perfect in their roles. Although a&#13;
few of the characters' personalities&#13;
are slightly altered to fit&#13;
with the '80's (Dale is a more&#13;
modern, more bold woman, and&#13;
Flash is a slightly cocky quarterback&#13;
who has his picture on the&#13;
cover of People) many are held&#13;
true to the old series.&#13;
One thing that differs from the&#13;
old series that is unnecessary is&#13;
the exploitation of Flash's body.&#13;
He appears topless and even in&#13;
leather underwear. This obvious&#13;
"beefcaking" is another of De.&#13;
Laurentiis' ploys to capture an&#13;
audience and it succeeds to the&#13;
squeals of many pre - pubescent&#13;
female fans.&#13;
The ending is full of surprises&#13;
and has a Christmas message of&#13;
peace. But it also contains&#13;
something which taunted many&#13;
Empire Strikes Back" viewers:&#13;
a "to be continued" type ending&#13;
(the words at the close of the film&#13;
read "the end?").&#13;
"Flash Gordon" is a fantasy to&#13;
be enjoyed for what it is: a good&#13;
time for the child in all of us&#13;
(although an obvious attempt at&#13;
making money).&#13;
m&#13;
m&#13;
w •v.v&#13;
Si:*:&#13;
:SSS:&#13;
&gt;$&gt;&gt;&#13;
X-COUNTRY&#13;
SKIING&#13;
TRY I T . . .&#13;
YOU'LL LIKE IT !&#13;
* UNION SKI SHOP HOURS *&#13;
Semester Break 2nd Semester&#13;
SAT. J AN. 3&#13;
SAT. J AN. 10&#13;
SAT. J AN. 17&#13;
S UN. J AN. 4&#13;
S UN. J AN . 11&#13;
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1-5 p .m.&#13;
1 - 5 p .m.&#13;
1 - 5 p .m.&#13;
l - 5 p . m.&#13;
l - 5 p . m.&#13;
l - 5 p . m.&#13;
M ON.&#13;
TUE.&#13;
WE D.&#13;
T HUR&#13;
F RI.&#13;
SAT.&#13;
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11 am - 2 pr&#13;
8:30 am - 9:30 a n&#13;
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8 : 3 0 am -9 : 3 0 an&#13;
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11 am - 6pr&#13;
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Rent Your Ski Package By:&#13;
The % Day,&#13;
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The Weekend,&#13;
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TO RESERVE YOUR SKI EQUIPMENT STOP BY&#13;
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BASEMENT OF THE UNION IN THE REC CENTER&#13;
*&#13;
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*&#13;
*&#13;
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6 Thursday, December 11,1980 RANGER&#13;
II Pot" goes to court I Student values change&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
National Organization for the&#13;
Reform of Marijuana Laws&#13;
(NORML), a non - profit public&#13;
interest group, has several major&#13;
lawsuits currently pending in the&#13;
courts.&#13;
On June 19,1980, NORML filed a&#13;
lawsuit in Federal District Court&#13;
in Washington, D. C. focusing on&#13;
the Sinsemilla Strike Force set up&#13;
by state and federal officials in&#13;
California. Hopefully, the suit will&#13;
stop the U. S. Drug Enforcement&#13;
Administration and other federal&#13;
agencies from aiding eradication&#13;
programs against marijuana&#13;
fields in the U. S.&#13;
The suit states that the U. S.&#13;
Constitution and environmental&#13;
laws are being violated with the&#13;
help of federal money and other&#13;
assistance. The Sinsemilla Strike&#13;
Force uses airplanes, helicopters,&#13;
high - technology aerial surveillance&#13;
systems, and undercover&#13;
agents.&#13;
Peter H. Meyers, NORML's&#13;
chief counsel, said that, "We&#13;
consider this program to be both&#13;
illegal and a waste of tax - payer&#13;
dollars."&#13;
NORML is currently&#13;
challenging the classification of&#13;
marijuana in Schedule I of the&#13;
Federal Controlled Substances&#13;
Act in another pending lawsuit.&#13;
This schedule is the classification&#13;
with the strictest controls, dealing&#13;
with drugs lacking any accepted&#13;
medical use.&#13;
Another lawsuit challenges a 40&#13;
year sentence levied for the sale of&#13;
less than nine ounces of&#13;
marijuana in Virginia. This is the&#13;
Roger Davis Case.&#13;
In an earlier case, the District&#13;
Court ordered the State Department&#13;
to prepare an environmental&#13;
assessment of paraquat spraying.&#13;
NORML currently has an appeal&#13;
in court which challenges the U. S.&#13;
government's assistance in the&#13;
Mexican paraquat spraying above&#13;
marijuana fields.&#13;
Additional information can be&#13;
obtained by writing NORML, 530&#13;
8th Street, S. E., Washington, D.&#13;
C. 20003 or by calling (202) 223-&#13;
3170.&#13;
Education program offered&#13;
Parkside students wishing to&#13;
earn 1-2 credits in Education, plus&#13;
actual classroom type experience,&#13;
will be able to do so during spring&#13;
semester 1981, when selected&#13;
students will administer a&#13;
prepared career development&#13;
program to junior high school&#13;
students in the Racine Unified&#13;
School System.&#13;
The program, under the&#13;
direction of Professor Dwayne&#13;
Olson, is sponsored by the Girl&#13;
Scouts of Racine County, Inc. and&#13;
is being initiated through the&#13;
cooperation of area guidance&#13;
counselors.&#13;
Interested students should&#13;
contact Prof. Dwayne Olson at&#13;
Parkside or call Rusty Smith at&#13;
633-2409 before the end of this&#13;
semester.&#13;
by Mike Pfaffl&#13;
William Boyd, Johnson Foundation&#13;
President and former&#13;
President of the University of&#13;
Oregon, began the new cycle of&#13;
Social Science Roundtable&#13;
programs on Monday, November&#13;
3rd, by discussing "The Post -&#13;
Modern Student: The Berkeley&#13;
Experience."&#13;
In his discussion of changing&#13;
student attitudes during the last&#13;
two decades, Boyd drew on his&#13;
experience at the University of&#13;
California at Berkeley as Vice -&#13;
Chancellor for Student Affairs&#13;
from 1966 to 1968. Boyd opened the&#13;
talk with a view of the traditional&#13;
university before the Sixties&#13;
movement. The university student&#13;
population, he said, was consistently&#13;
traditional and conservative&#13;
during the "silent&#13;
generation" of the Fifties.&#13;
During this period, Boyd said,&#13;
three types of student groups&#13;
existed. The collegiate type, a&#13;
"Greek" sub-culture dominated&#13;
by fraternities and sororities,&#13;
Boyd compared to students&#13;
protrayed in the movie "Animal&#13;
House." The vocational student,&#13;
Boyd said, came into college with&#13;
goals already in mind, and these&#13;
students created few problems for&#13;
school administrators. The intellectual&#13;
students were the&#13;
"Professors' Delights," Boyd&#13;
said, because they craved&#13;
knowledge of all kinds.&#13;
During the late Fifties and early&#13;
Sixties, many issues began to&#13;
erode these traditional student&#13;
groups, according to Boyd. Civil&#13;
rights movements and voter&#13;
registration efforts brought about&#13;
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Ph. 654-6154&#13;
Art faculty wins prizes&#13;
Two Parkside art faculty members&#13;
were among award winners&#13;
in the recent Wisconsin Watercolor&#13;
'80 show at the Wustum&#13;
Museum of Fine Arts in Racine.&#13;
Doug De Vinny won a $75&#13;
Wisconsin Watercolor Society&#13;
award for excellence for his&#13;
Variation on a Landscape - Racine&#13;
#1 and #2. Dennis Bayuzixck&#13;
received an honorable mention for&#13;
his acrylic and ink airbrush,&#13;
Resurrection of Jo - Jo.&#13;
De Vinny also has been&#13;
represented this fall in an exhibit&#13;
C&amp;R 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;
of his prints and drawings at&#13;
Colorado State University, Fort&#13;
Collins.&#13;
a new awareness among the poor&#13;
and disadvantaged, Boyd said,&#13;
that carried over to universities&#13;
during the early Sixties. Student&#13;
awareness, Boyd said, was then&#13;
triggered by the 1964 "free speech&#13;
movement" and the beginning of&#13;
the Vietnam conflict.&#13;
As a result, some students&#13;
became "activists," Boyd said.&#13;
According to him, these students&#13;
had strong intellectual desires,&#13;
valued personal freedom highly,&#13;
did not desire material wealth,&#13;
and felt a high level of anxiety.&#13;
Activists, Boyd said, defined&#13;
themselves as critical, idealistic,&#13;
moody, rebellious, and restless.&#13;
During the development of the&#13;
activist student population in&#13;
America, one half of the student&#13;
population in America was under&#13;
25 y ears old, and activist values&#13;
affected the values of other groups&#13;
of students, Boyd said. Presentmindedness&#13;
became important,&#13;
Boyd said, as students became&#13;
concerned with the quality of life&#13;
rather than long-term material&#13;
goals.&#13;
Personalism also became&#13;
valued during the Sixties, as&#13;
students became concerned with&#13;
the authenticity of personal&#13;
relationships. Today's cliches —&#13;
"I can relate to that " and&#13;
"meaningful relationships" —&#13;
came out of this time, Boyd&#13;
stated. These values, Boyd said,&#13;
conflicted with government&#13;
beaurocracy, which he called,&#13;
"dominated by conflicting individual&#13;
and organizational&#13;
goals."&#13;
Boyd said that sexual permissiveness&#13;
increased on campuses&#13;
as students became more&#13;
pleasure-oriented. He cited&#13;
students' mass consumption of&#13;
drugs.as a cause for the abandonment&#13;
of the work ethic and&#13;
subsequent student hedonism.&#13;
Conversely, Boyd said that&#13;
activist students wanted to get&#13;
involved in every aspect of the&#13;
university and community. This&#13;
trend was the beginning of antiintellectualism,&#13;
according to&#13;
Boyd, a period when effective and&#13;
non-cognitive learning became&#13;
stressed. This was the period that&#13;
started many cult groups, he said,&#13;
and horoscopes were a common&#13;
appearance in student&#13;
newspapers.&#13;
These new values were spread&#13;
by romanticists, Boyd said,&#13;
who were journalists, media&#13;
professionals, professors,&#13;
and Sixties liberals. Popular&#13;
music spread these&#13;
values, according to Boyd.&#13;
Rock music by Jefferson Airplane,&#13;
Janis Joplin, and The&#13;
Doors, and musicals like "Hair"&#13;
and "Jesus Christ Superstar" all&#13;
contributed to the spread of new&#13;
values and awareness into the&#13;
daily lives of Americans, Boyd&#13;
said.&#13;
Boyd said that by the early&#13;
Seventies, blue collar workers&#13;
joined the student activist&#13;
movement, and their children&#13;
were heir to their parents' values.&#13;
Although Boyd is still trying to&#13;
find out how the student&#13;
movements of the Sixties have&#13;
affected today's American&#13;
society, he thinks there has been a&#13;
"dangerously high" level of&#13;
abandonment of the Protestant&#13;
work ethic due to the values&#13;
created by the Sixties and carried&#13;
over into the Seventies. Boyd said&#13;
that problems created by the&#13;
desertion of traditional values&#13;
were first noticed in the&#13;
classrooms of the Sixties, and are&#13;
now evident in the assembly lines&#13;
in Detroit. He stated that the drop&#13;
in productivity that has occurred&#13;
during the last decade can be&#13;
linked to these new values: "We&#13;
have been far more affected than&#13;
we realize and this will be a great&#13;
distress to our lives in the long&#13;
run."&#13;
Sign Up NOW&#13;
For A&#13;
Winter Bowling&#13;
League&#13;
Sunday Mixed League&#13;
— Begins January 31st —&#13;
Every-Other Friday Mixed League&#13;
— Begins January 30th —&#13;
For More Information&#13;
Or To Sign Up&#13;
Stop By The Recreation Desk&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
HARVEY'S going to be sorry he took the&#13;
Diesel back.&#13;
ORGY QUEEN, UCLA doesn't know what&#13;
he's missing!&#13;
FOR UNHEALTHY COBOL KNIGHTS: Get&#13;
into new Greek education routines.&#13;
JEFF MANIAN, have you found your true&#13;
love, again, yet!?&#13;
JEFF — the Ferret has its bounce back.&#13;
Missed you. Ferret.&#13;
ARE THERE any females at Parkside&#13;
Village?—No, just ugly wenches!! TA&#13;
YOU NEVER see MEN at Parkside Village&#13;
because we don't hang around the ugly&#13;
female WENCHES. TA&#13;
HARVEY'S going to be.sorry he took the&#13;
diesel back.&#13;
TEN TELETYPES type ten types of type.&#13;
Ten times fast.&#13;
JEFF AND DAWN, sitting in a tub, k-i-s-s,&#13;
rub-a-dub-dub.&#13;
ANGEL ANKA knobby ankle angle angles&#13;
askew. Ten times fast.&#13;
I'M NOT CHANGING my diaper, or me. I&#13;
hope my jokes really hurt next time, you&#13;
stupid turkey — The Joker&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV, beggers can't be&#13;
choosers! lOP's&#13;
KIM, lubrication and lots of men spell fun.&#13;
Orgy Queen&#13;
JULIE — cute monkey buns, but you still&#13;
have more experience.&#13;
BILL TATMAN, talks easily to girls and guys.&#13;
Dick? Teeth! 634-0989 and ask for piss. Put&#13;
him to bed, too.&#13;
JULIE NEHMER, what do you eat, when you&#13;
eat chicken???&#13;
ORGY QUEEN: You've missed J. C. and the&#13;
rest of us, stop by, we'll be home! TA-216&#13;
KEN MEYER should be sprayed, spayed and&#13;
layed. Chain Gang&#13;
P. G. HOOKER — Twin sons. Nov. 1, 1980 . 9&#13;
lbs, 4 oz. Congratulations!&#13;
HAVING PROBLEMS with your tongue? Call&#13;
Julie 632-2652.&#13;
JEFF Pair-a-dice is a typical SALLY at the&#13;
Lounge.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
HARVEY'S going to be sorry he took the&#13;
Diesel back.&#13;
TWO NIPPLES equal one byte. lOP's&#13;
RANGER challenges Cheerleaders to&#13;
volleyball. See ya on the floor.&#13;
L. HEIN — We'll be careful, aim better,&#13;
O.K.?—The Kids&#13;
IF YOU can't reach Ron Hill at home, call&#13;
Open Pantry on Rapids - 637-8230.&#13;
K. M. wears Pinocchio underwear, but he&#13;
never tells a lie.&#13;
HEY BILL. He'll give what's in his drawers. .&#13;
. KJ&#13;
SUE C. You're a great cheerleader.&#13;
BILL, Tongue, 360 degrees, camera!! Julie&#13;
lOP'S — Dec compatibility. Thanks a lot for a&#13;
fun week. Ferret&#13;
JOHN —Sexy black shorts, ooh! Watch out at&#13;
waterfountain. Twins&#13;
HARVEY'S going to be sorry he took the&#13;
Diesel back.&#13;
ANYONE dumb enought to insult the Joker,&#13;
will also deal with me. The Riddler&#13;
SABINE the teenage witch is too "adventurous"&#13;
for us. lOP's&#13;
THUMPER, was the party in the house or&#13;
car? Bambi&#13;
JUNIE — tired Mondays? Six guys from&#13;
Marquette Friday - Saturday. L.S.S.&#13;
HOW CAN Security shoot us? They have to&#13;
run to Tallent to get their bullets! lOP's&#13;
JEFF, what happened to your true love&#13;
, again?&#13;
RANGER and Security: Don't "tread" on us.&#13;
lOP's&#13;
HARVEY'S going to be sorry he took the&#13;
Diesel back.&#13;
CHUG, Do you always sleep in Beloit cornfields&#13;
waiting for a tequila sunrise? If not,&#13;
try the monastery by the overpass. They&#13;
serve mm-mm good onion rings. PSS&#13;
KATHY N. Help! J.C.&#13;
IF YOU CALLED to help Ron Hill and line&#13;
was busy, go to 2062 Wustem Ave to help in&#13;
person.&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV, there's no accounting&#13;
for taste! Chain Gang&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
-Records—Sheet Music-&#13;
—Instruction MusicLowest&#13;
Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654-293'&gt; »&#13;
THE CHAIN GANG proves that true!!&#13;
BROKEN DECWRITER. Thought it was toy.&#13;
Broke bell. Inquire CA 120&#13;
JEFF —Act I S cene 3 go for it, lunge! Ferret&#13;
MARY, I love you! Me&#13;
GINGER — read the "For Unhealthy ... ad&#13;
very carefully. Chain Groupies&#13;
SEE YA ALL later Ranger gang. It was fun.&#13;
Dave&#13;
MERRY CHRISTMAS EVERYBODY! —&#13;
Ranger staff&#13;
MEETINGS&#13;
RANGER MEMBERS - There will be a&#13;
general membership meeting on Friday,&#13;
January 30, 1981, at 1:00p. m. in the Ranger&#13;
Office.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
OLYMPUS —OM —2, Vivltar 283 flash, 50 m&#13;
1.4 lens, accessories — 551-9095&#13;
1980 SUZUKI 550L, Black, very clean. Call&#13;
553 9262 after 4 p. m.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
WANTED: Anybody interested in modeling&#13;
for a photographer. Call 637-2274,&gt;[ • go&#13;
ROOMMATE NEEDED: To share nice&#13;
furnished apartment in Kenosha area. Age&#13;
preferred 20-35. Please call Jim evenings or&#13;
weekends. 658-3686.&#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;
HELPWANTED&#13;
EARN $1,000 OR MORE for a few evenings&#13;
work. No selling. Just hang posters on your&#13;
campus advertising our half price tours of&#13;
Europe. For details, write: Travel Study&#13;
International, 2030 East 4800 South, Suite&#13;
101, Salt Lake City, Utah 84117.&#13;
MEMBER PRO BOWLERS TOUR&#13;
LOU CELEBRE&#13;
PRO SHOP&#13;
Everything&#13;
Clearance Priced&#13;
For Christmas&#13;
Some Of The&#13;
Lowest Prices&#13;
In Town&#13;
6821 39th Ave.&#13;
Kenosha, Wl 53142&#13;
(414 ) 652-4043 &#13;
Women's basketball&#13;
Team drops season opener&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
Coach Noreen Goggin might be&#13;
in for a long season this year with&#13;
her team of 13 players. Goggin has&#13;
only three letter winners coming&#13;
back; Jeanne Hintz, Debbie Lopez&#13;
and Laurie Pope, all sophomores.&#13;
The remaining ten players are&#13;
freshmen. Simply put, the team&#13;
lacks experience.&#13;
"We may be young," Goggin&#13;
said, "but we're talented. We need&#13;
a little experience. If we get beat&#13;
it may be because of our lack of&#13;
quickness and height, not just our&#13;
inexperience."&#13;
Parkside possesses ju st one s ix&#13;
footer on the team, returning&#13;
center, Laurie Pope. The 6'1" 185 -&#13;
pound center may have the bulk&#13;
required of a center, but she lacks&#13;
the necessary quickness.&#13;
Goggins isn't extremely worried&#13;
about going into the season with&#13;
ten freshmen, and realizes she&#13;
must try to turn this shortcoming&#13;
into an advantage. "Sure, we have&#13;
ten freshmen but I can't do&#13;
anything about that. We'll try to&#13;
do the best we can, and with a&#13;
young, excited team, we should&#13;
be able to make a lot of good&#13;
things happen," she commented.&#13;
The Rangers opened their&#13;
season l ast week against an experienced&#13;
Oshkosh team, and&#13;
there was an evident contrast&#13;
between a veteran team and a new&#13;
team. Oshkosh won 86-68.&#13;
Oshkosh jumped out to a&#13;
commanding 44-30 halftime lead,&#13;
paced by Jodi Eissen's 13 points.&#13;
The timing was right for the young&#13;
Ranger team to fold, but they&#13;
fought back in the second half. Six&#13;
minutes into the second half, the&#13;
women were down by a single&#13;
point, 46-45.&#13;
From that point on, it was a&#13;
matter of Oshkosh forging ahead&#13;
and Parkside fighting back. The&#13;
Rangers came within two points&#13;
Wrestling team&#13;
shows potential&#13;
with four minutes remaining in&#13;
the game, but that was the closest&#13;
they would get. In those last four&#13;
minutes Oshkosh hit nine&#13;
freethrows and scored two&#13;
baskets to run up their lead and&#13;
put the game out of r each.&#13;
Goggin was at a loss for words&#13;
to describe her team's breakdown:&#13;
"In the end, I don't know&#13;
what happened. We made some&#13;
fundamental mistakes, some bad&#13;
passes. They were silly errors."&#13;
Call it a lack of experience.&#13;
The Rangers shot a cool 40%&#13;
from the floor. Cindy Ruffert (8-12&#13;
from the floor) led Parkside with&#13;
18 point s. She was supported by&#13;
Callie Lee with 12 and Robin&#13;
Henschel's 11.&#13;
Oshkosh shot 46% from the floor&#13;
and had balanced scoring with&#13;
four of their starters finishing&#13;
with more than 15 points.&#13;
The Rangers are on the road&#13;
tomorrow against Stevens Point,&#13;
then travel to St. Francis for the&#13;
St. Francis Tourney. The next&#13;
home game is January 10, against&#13;
Carroll College.&#13;
by Dan McCormack&#13;
"Optimistic" is what Jim Koch,&#13;
Parkside's head wrestling coach&#13;
has to say to describe his feelings&#13;
about this years team. And why&#13;
shouldn't he be? He has two&#13;
returning NAIA place winners in&#13;
Dan Winter, a three time all -&#13;
American as a junior who placed&#13;
third the last two years in the&#13;
NAIA and seventh in the NCAA-II&#13;
meet; and Bob Pekarske who&#13;
placed second last year in NAIA&#13;
competition.&#13;
At the 118 pound weight class,&#13;
Koch expects some leadership&#13;
from senior Dean Quam. Junior&#13;
Jeff Debe, who wrestled&#13;
heavyweight last season, is at 190&#13;
this season. Both Quam and Debe&#13;
should be looking to place in&#13;
nationals if they can get over&#13;
early season injuries.&#13;
Sophomores Kevin Casper and&#13;
Dave Fedie and junior transfer&#13;
Ron Perron all vie for the 142&#13;
pound weight class.&#13;
At 126 are freshmen Dave&#13;
Carbajal and Tom Vania. At 158 is&#13;
freshman Mike Muckerheide and&#13;
at 167 are two freshmen, Rus&#13;
Drankiewicz and Keith Reicher.&#13;
At 177 are freshmen Ardell&#13;
Dworak and Brian Irek. Paul&#13;
Roth, who has been out of competition&#13;
for a few years, will&#13;
wrestle at heavyweight.&#13;
Last weekend, five Parkside&#13;
wrestlers placed in the Warhawk&#13;
Open held in Whitewater. Dan&#13;
Winter won the 134 pound weight&#13;
Merry Christmas&#13;
class and also the Outstanding&#13;
Wrestler of the Tournament&#13;
honors. At 126, Tom Vania, who&#13;
comes from Anchorage, Alaska,&#13;
captured second place. At. 158,&#13;
Mike Muckerheide, a freshman&#13;
from Westbend beat two very&#13;
experienced wrestlers for second&#13;
place. Heavyweight Paul Roth&#13;
placed second and also had the&#13;
fastest pin of the tournament in 20&#13;
seconds. At 167, Keith Reicher&#13;
placed third and won the award&#13;
for most pins with 4.&#13;
Coach Koch's goals for the&#13;
season a re to be in the top five&#13;
NAIA and top ten NCAA-II.&#13;
This Saturday Parkside hosts&#13;
the Wisconsin Collegiate Open&#13;
starting at 10 a.m., with finals&#13;
starting at 6:30 p.m.&#13;
Sheridan&#13;
PRE 5MHP&#13;
CHRISTMAS SPECIALS&#13;
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JAN. 5, 12&#13;
JAN. 6, 13&#13;
JAN. 7, 14&#13;
JAN. 8, 15&#13;
JAN. 9, 16&#13;
1-10 p.m.&#13;
1- 5 p.m.&#13;
5-10 p.m.&#13;
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Moonlight Bowling Sat. 8-10 p.m.&#13;
Regular Bowling ONLY 50&#13;
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Good-bye Ranger&#13;
Bowlers&#13;
finish&#13;
season&#13;
The UW-Parkside men's&#13;
bowling team bowled in the&#13;
National Collegiate Matchgame&#13;
Championship bowling tournament&#13;
held in St. Louis, Missouri&#13;
last weekend. Jay Podella led the&#13;
team with a 208 average for nine&#13;
games, with a high game of 257.&#13;
He was followed by John Peterson&#13;
who averaged 201, with a high&#13;
game of 243.&#13;
Other team members for&#13;
Parkside were Jerry Zigner, Rich&#13;
Salisbury and Willy Yee. The&#13;
team finished 17th of 33 competing&#13;
teams.&#13;
Dear Readers,&#13;
I would like to take this opportunity&#13;
to thank everyone who&#13;
helped me while I was Sports&#13;
editor here at RANGER. The list&#13;
would be never ending if I were to&#13;
name each individually, but I feel&#13;
that I have to express my thanks&#13;
to Athletic Director Wayne&#13;
Dannehl, all the coaches, the&#13;
athletes, and Don Kopriva (Public&#13;
Sports Information Director at&#13;
Parkside). I want to thank all the&#13;
people on the RANGER staff, but I&#13;
would particularly like to&#13;
acknowledge the good job the&#13;
editorial staff has done, and the&#13;
time and devotion of the&#13;
photography staff. Without their&#13;
help, I would have been in even&#13;
bigger binds than the ones I often&#13;
found myself in. These are people&#13;
I care about, respect and will&#13;
always have a special place in my&#13;
heart for.&#13;
When I took this job, I set&#13;
several personal goals. Some I&#13;
attained, others I fell short of. It's&#13;
difficult to give each sport equal&#13;
coverage when you have a staff of&#13;
one — yourself. Hopefully, the&#13;
next Sports editor will find some&#13;
writers.&#13;
This job gave me the opportunity&#13;
to experience things I&#13;
otherwise never would have experienced&#13;
had I not been Sports&#13;
editor. I went to several&#13;
Milwaukee Brewer games where I&#13;
conducted on - field personal interviews&#13;
with people like Billy&#13;
Martin, Yogi Berra, and Reggie&#13;
Jackson of the New York&#13;
Yankees; and Sal Bando, Don&#13;
Money, and George Bamberger of&#13;
the Brewers. I also had the opportunity&#13;
to go to Chicago Cub&#13;
games where I spoke with Ivan&#13;
DeJesus, Manny Trillo, and&#13;
Herman Franks of the Cubs.&#13;
But even more than that, this&#13;
job gave me the chance to meet,&#13;
work with and form lifetime&#13;
friendships with other students. Of&#13;
course, I'm talking about other&#13;
student organizations, but mainly&#13;
about RANGER members. These&#13;
people put up with my practical&#13;
jokes, my many moods and my&#13;
victories as well as defeats. I've&#13;
developed friendships that I'll&#13;
cherish for the rest of my life.&#13;
Many of these people have been&#13;
part of my life for the last three&#13;
years and it's hard to leave.&#13;
I know that even though I'll be&#13;
gone, the RANGER will continue&#13;
to produce an enjoyable and&#13;
worthwhile product. I will always&#13;
be proud to have been associated&#13;
with the RANGER.&#13;
^^HEADQUARTERS&#13;
HAIRCARE GIFTS&#13;
Professional Blow Dryer&#13;
Belson 1250 ONLY $22.95&#13;
Professional Curling Irons&#13;
Wonder Wand ONLY $14.95&#13;
GIFT CERTIFICATES FOR:&#13;
• Ear Piercing&#13;
• Hairstyle&#13;
• Perms&#13;
For That Precision&#13;
Cut That Makes&#13;
A Difference, Call&#13;
654-6154&#13;
Mon-Wed 8-5:30&#13;
Tue-Tliur-Fri. 8-9 Sat. 8-4&#13;
lairstudlo&#13;
3519 52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
REDKEN'&#13;
PARKSIDE PLAYERS PRESENT&#13;
MUSCLE BEACH&#13;
PARTY&#13;
Proof of Age Required!&#13;
Friday, Doc. 12&#13;
Union Squaro&#13;
Doors Opon 8 p. m.&#13;
ADVANCE TICKETS&#13;
1.50 Student&#13;
2.00 Non-Student&#13;
AT THE DOOR&#13;
2.50 Student &amp;&#13;
Non-Student&#13;
Tickets Available at&#13;
UNION INFORMATION CENTER &#13;
Parkside Food Service &amp;&#13;
The Parkside Union&#13;
invite you to attend&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE'S ANNUAL&#13;
CHRISTMAS PARTY&#13;
FREE&#13;
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12&#13;
11:00 am-l:00 pm&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
COOKIES, CAKE, COFFEE &amp; PUNCH&#13;
PLUS... A VISIT BY SANTA CLAUS&#13;
SPECIAL CHRISTMAS DINNER&#13;
• Carved, Baked Ham With&#13;
Fruit Sauce&#13;
• Sweet Potato or Escalloped&#13;
Potatoes&#13;
• Asparagus Spears or Buttered&#13;
Cauliflower&#13;
• Spiced Crabapple&#13;
• Ginger Bread With Whipped&#13;
Topping&#13;
• Complimentary Glass of&#13;
Wine or Holiday Punch&#13;
149&#13;
Thursday, December 11,1980 RANGER </text>
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