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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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            <text>Volume 9, issue 15</text>
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            <text>SUFAC OKs final budget</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>l&#13;
IP University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
SUFAC OKs final budget&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
The Segregated University Fees&#13;
Allocations Committee (SUFAC)&#13;
has approved the final auxiliary&#13;
budget for the 1981-82 academic&#13;
year. The final figure, as approved&#13;
by P.S.G.A. Senate's&#13;
emergency meeting held on&#13;
December 22 a nd reaffirmed on&#13;
January 19, is $583,441. This figure&#13;
represents a 4.55% i ncrease over&#13;
the 1980-81 final allocations&#13;
($556,893). Alan Guskin, Chancellor,&#13;
is expected to approve this&#13;
auxiliary budget within the next&#13;
few days.&#13;
Greg Davies, chairman of&#13;
SUFAC, estimated that each fulltime&#13;
student at Parkside will be&#13;
paying about $144 in segregated&#13;
fees for the 1981-82 academic year.&#13;
The segregated fees plus the 50&#13;
cent United Council fee should not&#13;
increase in cost over the 1980-81&#13;
fees if the projected student&#13;
enrollment is correctly estimated.&#13;
Student Health was granted a&#13;
budget increased by $8637. K athy&#13;
Slama, PSGA assistant President&#13;
Pro Tempore, reports that this&#13;
increase will provide another&#13;
nurse, increase typist hours, and&#13;
permit TB testing for both nursing&#13;
and education students. Last year,&#13;
Student Health received the major&#13;
budget hike, which amounted to&#13;
$14,129.&#13;
Budget increases ranging&#13;
around $3000 were granted to&#13;
Union Operations, Athletics,&#13;
Intramurals and Recreation,&#13;
,PAB, Student Activities Office,&#13;
and Housing. SOC received an&#13;
increase of $2,250. PS GA, Student&#13;
Activities Building and Ranger&#13;
received increases of $450, $650,&#13;
and $976, respectively. Central&#13;
Administration suggested that an&#13;
8% increase in all budgets would&#13;
be reasonable, considering&#13;
current inflation.&#13;
SUFAC and Child Care Center&#13;
received budget decreases of $100&#13;
and $425 respectively.&#13;
Cooperative Services Collective&#13;
(CSC) was dropped from the&#13;
budget. Slama said that CSC is no&#13;
longer considered a student&#13;
organization because CSC would&#13;
not sign a rental agreement with&#13;
the university.&#13;
Business Services for auxiliary&#13;
accounting costs was added to the&#13;
budget for the first time. This&#13;
represents a charge made by&#13;
Central Administration for&#13;
computer time.&#13;
Winter Carnival was also added&#13;
to the budget. Entertainment&#13;
from Bad Boy and Sierra will cost&#13;
$1550. Publicity will cost about&#13;
$700. The remaining expenditures&#13;
will be used for prizes, the Blood&#13;
Drive and miscellaneous expenses.&#13;
&#13;
Any further information&#13;
regarding SUFAC's budget&#13;
allocations can be obtained from&#13;
the PSGA Office or by calling&#13;
extension 2244.&#13;
FINAL REQUEST PRELIM. FINAL&#13;
NAME&#13;
Union&#13;
1980/81&#13;
Operations 194,857&#13;
Union&#13;
Debt Service 105,500&#13;
Athletics 48,790&#13;
Intramurals/&#13;
48,790&#13;
Recreation 35,000&#13;
Health 49,685&#13;
Parkside&#13;
49,685&#13;
Activities Board 33,460&#13;
Performing Arts&#13;
33,460&#13;
&amp; L ectures&#13;
Student Organization&#13;
Council 22,320&#13;
Student Activities&#13;
22,320&#13;
Office 14,793&#13;
Ranger 14,286&#13;
Housing 10,448&#13;
Child Care&#13;
Center 6,931&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. 6,300&#13;
Student Activities&#13;
6,300&#13;
Building 2,400&#13;
SUFAC 300&#13;
Co-operative Services&#13;
Collective 8,823&#13;
Business Services -&#13;
8,823&#13;
Aux. Accounting Costs&#13;
Winter&#13;
Carnival&#13;
TOTALS $556,893&#13;
1981-82 1981-82 1981-82&#13;
194,857 197,857 197,857&#13;
105,500&#13;
51,585&#13;
105,500&#13;
51,585&#13;
105,500&#13;
51,585&#13;
37,605&#13;
58,322&#13;
37,605&#13;
58,322&#13;
37,605&#13;
58,322&#13;
25,210 27,227*&#13;
8,910 8,910&#13;
26,920 24,570 24,570&#13;
15,976&#13;
15,261.60&#13;
13,789&#13;
17,586&#13;
15,261.60&#13;
13,789&#13;
15,976&#13;
15,261.60&#13;
13,789&#13;
17,586&#13;
15,261.60&#13;
13,789&#13;
17,586&#13;
15,262*&#13;
13,789&#13;
6,506&#13;
6,750&#13;
6,506&#13;
6,750&#13;
6,506&#13;
6,750&#13;
3,050&#13;
200&#13;
3,050&#13;
200&#13;
5,722 5,722&#13;
3,000 3,000 3,000&#13;
$581,423.60 $583,441&#13;
•Changed during finals&#13;
Workers^ HAGGLUND (left), Director of the School for&#13;
Labor Studies program&#13;
to begin this spring&#13;
University of Wisconsin officials&#13;
and state labor leaders outlined&#13;
plans here Jan. 14 for a Labor&#13;
Studies program; the first of its&#13;
kind in the state, to be offered&#13;
jointly by UW-Parkside and&#13;
University Extension's School for&#13;
Workers.&#13;
The new program, scheduled to&#13;
begin in September, 1981, will lead&#13;
either to a bachelor's degree in&#13;
Labor and Industrial Relations or&#13;
to a two - year certificate in Labor&#13;
Studies. Neither option previously&#13;
has been available in a&#13;
collaborative program between a&#13;
UW campus and the School for&#13;
Workers.&#13;
A recent survey of 59 unions&#13;
representing about 50,000 union&#13;
members in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin and northern Illinois&#13;
determined overwhelming support&#13;
for a structured Labor&#13;
Studies program. The survey,&#13;
conducted jointly by UW-Parkside&#13;
and Gateway Technical Institute,&#13;
also revealed that programs run&#13;
by the School for Workers are the&#13;
most frequently used source of&#13;
labor education by both large and&#13;
small unions.&#13;
A director for the new program&#13;
will be jointly selected and funded&#13;
by UW-Parkside and the School&#13;
for Workers, and faculty from&#13;
both units will teach courses in the&#13;
program, according to UW-P&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin and&#13;
School for Workers Director&#13;
George Hagglund.&#13;
At Wednesday's meeting,&#13;
Guskin, Hagglund and other&#13;
university officials discussed the&#13;
program with a number of labor&#13;
leaders including Ralph Koenig,&#13;
director of United Auto Workers'&#13;
Region 10, and other UAW officials&#13;
including Jack Rice, international&#13;
representative, Ralph&#13;
Amerling, education director,&#13;
Tony Valeo, former international&#13;
representative; John Schmitt,&#13;
president of the Wisconsin AFLCIO;&#13;
Bert McNamara, director of&#13;
United Steelworkers District 32,&#13;
and Don Marzec, Steelworkers'&#13;
international representative; and&#13;
Arnie Potthast, chief supervisor,&#13;
state Vocational - Techinical&#13;
Education Board.&#13;
A primary goal of t he program,&#13;
planners say, is to provide the&#13;
education necessary for union&#13;
members to assume leadership&#13;
positions within their unions. In&#13;
addition to providing specialized&#13;
labor courses, the program will&#13;
offer courses emphasizing the&#13;
economic, social, political and&#13;
cultural contributions of labor.&#13;
General university degree&#13;
requirements also will have to be&#13;
met.&#13;
The specialized labor courses&#13;
which will be part of t he program&#13;
reflect the interests of the labor&#13;
unions which responded to the&#13;
needs assessment Survey. These&#13;
courses include Labor&#13;
Management Relations, Labor&#13;
History, Protective Labor&#13;
Legislation, Grievance Handling&#13;
and Arbitration, Collective&#13;
Bargaining, Union Administration,&#13;
Production Standards&#13;
/ Job Evaluation / Wage&#13;
Incentive, and Comparative&#13;
Labor Movements.&#13;
Students who complete the two -&#13;
year certificate will have satisfied&#13;
about 60 percent of the&#13;
requirements for a B.S. degree in&#13;
Labor and Industrial Relations&#13;
and half of the university's&#13;
general degree requirements.&#13;
Scheduling of courses in the&#13;
program will be geared to the&#13;
needs of part - time students.&#13;
Many students will find that&#13;
employers will reimburse their&#13;
tuition costs. Such reimbursement,&#13;
for example, is part of&#13;
the new labor contract between&#13;
the UAW and American Motors&#13;
Corp.&#13;
Mourning in&#13;
Main Place&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
Parkside students participated in a silent vigil Tuesday afternoon&#13;
"to protest the inauguration of Reagan and to say we&#13;
will stand together for the next four years."&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• From the Parking Lot: John Lennon&#13;
• Movie reviews: Christmas's big&#13;
moneymakers&#13;
• Basketball improves record &#13;
2 Thursday, January 22, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Student clarifies parking problem, policy&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In the November 20, 1980 iss ue&#13;
of the Ranger there was, what I&#13;
would call, an inaccurate&#13;
statement in he t Contact section of&#13;
the paper. I am the Parkside&#13;
student who brought the Security&#13;
situation to the attention of PSGA.&#13;
The article contained the&#13;
following statement: "Brinkman&#13;
said that, in this case procedure&#13;
was not followed. He was more&#13;
than glad to clear up the&#13;
problem." This is the statement&#13;
which I have written about earlier&#13;
in this editorial reply.&#13;
Mr. Brinkman was much less&#13;
than helpful, in fact, he was rude.&#13;
Extremely rude. I would just like&#13;
to clear up this statement. Mr.&#13;
Brinkman also was not glad to&#13;
clear up the problem at hand. Mr.&#13;
Brinkman would not listen to my&#13;
problem until after I had spoken&#13;
with Mr. Goetz, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Administration and&#13;
Fiscal Affairs. It was not until&#13;
after I had told Mr. Goetz how&#13;
Brinkman had treated me that&#13;
Mr. Brinkman would listen to and&#13;
take care of this problem.&#13;
I would also like to take this&#13;
chance to remind the student body&#13;
of policy for parking tickets.&#13;
Procedure states: A minimum of&#13;
two warning tickets will be issued&#13;
to any vehicle violating any of the&#13;
following parking violations&#13;
before a parking violation ticket is&#13;
issued: A. parking prohibited&#13;
(posted) B. parking in non -&#13;
designated area C. no permit D&#13;
parking with improper permit for&#13;
area E. improper parking in&#13;
designated area F. parked in&#13;
physically disabled stall G.&#13;
restricted parking (specific time)!&#13;
Thank you for this chance to&#13;
express my feelings and clear up&#13;
something that has been bothering&#13;
me. c. Sincerely,&#13;
Mike Loos&#13;
Refutes article on nuclear power's 'malignant' nature&#13;
by Kelly Starks&#13;
Ms. Elzinga wrote an article in&#13;
the last 1980 issue of the Ranger in&#13;
which she disagrees with the&#13;
previous article by Terry&#13;
Rasmussen and myself, and lists&#13;
what she believes to be proof of&#13;
nuclear power's "malignant"&#13;
nature, although she doesn't&#13;
argue any of our points. I will&#13;
attempt to prove that her&#13;
statements are inaccurate and&#13;
strongly biased by her personal&#13;
beliefs rather than by any&#13;
research she has done.&#13;
Ms. Elzinga expresses her belief&#13;
that uranium miners who are&#13;
subjected to radon gas have&#13;
greatly increased chances of lung&#13;
cancer. Radon is common in all&#13;
deep rock mines, although not to&#13;
the same extent as in uranium&#13;
mines. Even before ventilating&#13;
systems were required, the lung&#13;
cancer rates were about average&#13;
for deep - rock miners with the&#13;
exception of the rates for coal&#13;
miners, which were far higher.&#13;
With the new ventilation systems,&#13;
the lung cancer rates for uranium&#13;
miners are among the lowest for&#13;
the mining industry.&#13;
Mention is made of the ore&#13;
tailings which now constitute&#13;
approximately 140 million tons.&#13;
These tailings still contain&#13;
uranium, but in concentrations too&#13;
low to be presently economically&#13;
recoverable. Previous to 1976 the&#13;
federal government had no&#13;
regulations regarding disposal, so&#13;
many companies dumped them&#13;
into piles. Some of these tailings&#13;
were even used in making concrete&#13;
for the foundations of local&#13;
homes. Since its formation, the&#13;
Nuclear Regulatory Commission&#13;
has been attempting to regulate&#13;
this, and is now in the process of&#13;
properly disposing of these&#13;
tailings. The federal government&#13;
is also removing the contaminated&#13;
concrete. Although it is important,&#13;
Ms. Elzinga greatly exaggerates&#13;
the danger to public health,&#13;
claiming ". . . an abnormal increase&#13;
in babies with congenital&#13;
defects, and an abnormally high&#13;
rate of leukemia in one of these&#13;
areas." This conflicts with the&#13;
statistics from over the last fifty&#13;
years, which have shown no increase&#13;
in the cancer rates of the&#13;
occupants of these homes, and no&#13;
increase in the birth defect rates.&#13;
The particular incident Ms.&#13;
Elzinga notes pertaining to fuel&#13;
fabrication is that of the Kerr -&#13;
McGee plant which became&#13;
famous due to the case of Karen&#13;
Silkwood. Since this, is the only&#13;
example she cites, it seems fair to&#13;
point out that not only is it not an&#13;
average standard for processing&#13;
plants, this plant only produced&#13;
fuel elements for experimental&#13;
reactors. The Kerr - McGee plant&#13;
was noted for its poor performance,&#13;
and eventually went&#13;
out of business due to poor workmanship.&#13;
There has never been&#13;
any documented claim of safety&#13;
violations in this plant, and no&#13;
workers are known to have been&#13;
contaminated. Ms. Elzinga's&#13;
article flatly states that 87&#13;
workers at the Kerr - McGee plant&#13;
had been contaminated with&#13;
plutonium.&#13;
The case of Karen Silkwood has&#13;
been stated as being a classic&#13;
example of the nuclear industry's&#13;
inhumanity in the interests of&#13;
profit. Ms. Silkwood had&#13;
originally charged Kerr - McGee&#13;
with safety violations and was&#13;
attempting to prosecute through&#13;
the union. She was then found to&#13;
be contaminated with plutonium&#13;
and died shortly thereafter in an&#13;
automobile accident while driving&#13;
to a meeting with union&#13;
representatives and a New York&#13;
Times reporter. Supposedly she&#13;
was bringing documentation to&#13;
prove her charges of safety&#13;
violations at the plant.&#13;
Immediately claims arose that&#13;
she had been deliberately contaminated,&#13;
and later run off the&#13;
road and killed by Kerr - McGee&#13;
as part of the a cover - up effort.&#13;
The investigation showed no&#13;
evidence of foul play in the car&#13;
accident, and her autopsy&#13;
revealed excessive amounts of&#13;
tranquilizers and alcohol in her&#13;
blood. There is no evidence&#13;
supporting the existance of the file&#13;
she was reportedly carrying.&#13;
The idea that the company had&#13;
contaminated her is somewhat&#13;
ridiculous when you consider that&#13;
her contamination with plutonium&#13;
is the last thing the company&#13;
would want, since it would lend&#13;
credence to her claims of the plant&#13;
contaminating personnel. It&#13;
seems probable that Ms. Silkwood&#13;
inadvertently contaminated&#13;
herself while trying to doctor&#13;
urine samples that were going to&#13;
be used to test her for contamination,&#13;
especially since there&#13;
were irregularities in these&#13;
samples. In any event, Kerr -&#13;
McGee was never charged with&#13;
contaminating her, they were&#13;
instead charged with lax security&#13;
procedures which allowed&#13;
someone to smuggle out tiny&#13;
quantities of plutonium which&#13;
were then used to contaminate her&#13;
(sources for this are the New York&#13;
Times, and Time and Science&#13;
magazines).&#13;
Ms. Elzinga then goes from fuel&#13;
fabrication to its use in reactors&#13;
with the statement ". . . the&#13;
uranium has been converted into&#13;
fuel for for the dragon ...," which&#13;
seems to represent a somewhat&#13;
biased attitude. She mentions that&#13;
Three Mile Island (TMI) serves as&#13;
a warning "to move swiftly away&#13;
from this ominous source of&#13;
power."&#13;
The TMI accident has served to&#13;
greatly reassure all those connected&#13;
with nuclear power of the&#13;
resiliency and failsafe nature of&#13;
the design of the safety systems&#13;
and reactors used commercially&#13;
in this country. As more evidence&#13;
and test results on the TMI&#13;
reactor and the area surrounding&#13;
it has come in, it has been proven&#13;
that no member of the public or&#13;
public property has in any way&#13;
been harmed, with the exception&#13;
of economic and psychological&#13;
effects. These psychological effects&#13;
are due'mainly to the incredibly&#13;
inaccurate and sensationalized&#13;
news reporting&#13;
surrounding the accident. Horror&#13;
stories of deformed fetuses&#13;
conflict strongly with the drop in&#13;
miscarriages and pre - natal&#13;
abnormalities in the area after the&#13;
accident, and the fears of long -&#13;
term damage from radiation&#13;
conflict with the total lack of&#13;
detectable radiation contamination.&#13;
&#13;
The reactor, despite rather than&#13;
because of the actions of the&#13;
control room personnel,&#13;
automatically shut itself down&#13;
safety. All safety systems and&#13;
structures performed perfectly,&#13;
and in many instances far exRanger&#13;
wants&#13;
to hear from you!&#13;
Got a gripe, a question, a startling revelation,&#13;
a compliment, a rebuttal, or something on your&#13;
mind that you want to share? Write a letter to&#13;
the editor! Just follow the guidelines printed in&#13;
the masthead (to the right).&#13;
ceeded their design performance.&#13;
The TMI accident — although&#13;
important — can hardly be used&#13;
as a prophetic warning against&#13;
nuclear power since it proved that&#13;
the designed reactor safety&#13;
systems do perform as expected&#13;
in actual reactor accidents.&#13;
Ms. Elzinga mentions three&#13;
scientists from General Electric&#13;
who resigned their management&#13;
positions in order to ". . . commit&#13;
(themselves) totally to the&#13;
education of the public on all&#13;
aspects and dangers of nuclear&#13;
power ..." There are about 50,000&#13;
scientists and engineers working&#13;
in the nuclear power industry,&#13;
30,000 of which recently signed&#13;
and sent to the president a petition&#13;
advocating the immediate, accelerated&#13;
development of the&#13;
nuclear power industry. Along&#13;
with this came the strong endorsement&#13;
of nuclear power by&#13;
professional societies ranging&#13;
from the American Association of&#13;
Engineering Societies to the&#13;
American Medical Association.&#13;
The recent international meeting&#13;
in Europe of the heads of all major&#13;
world governments in regard to&#13;
possible solutions to the energy&#13;
crisis strongly and unanimously&#13;
advocated the expansion of&#13;
nuclear power. If one is attempting&#13;
to decide the issue of&#13;
nuclear power on the basis of the&#13;
reputations and numbers of advocates&#13;
of the particular points of&#13;
view, three G. E. scientists can&#13;
hardly be considered a decisive&#13;
edge.&#13;
Mention is also made of the&#13;
"problem" of nuclear wastes, that&#13;
there "... is no known permanent&#13;
storage method." There are actually&#13;
several known methods.&#13;
The two Ms. Elzinga lists; granite&#13;
and salt burial, are either in&#13;
commercial operation or are&#13;
under construction internationally.&#13;
The chief problem&#13;
that stands in the way of a permanent&#13;
disposal site in the United&#13;
States is political, not technical.&#13;
Fortunately the political climate&#13;
has changed drastically in the last&#13;
year, resulting in a dramatic&#13;
increase in effort and funding to&#13;
resolve the issue.&#13;
It is important to remember&#13;
that most nuclear wastes are not&#13;
in any way a product of nuclear&#13;
power. Under one - tenth of high -&#13;
level nuclear waste is a result of&#13;
nuclear power; some is medical&#13;
waste, and 90% of the total is&#13;
from the military.&#13;
Ms. Elzinga's statement that&#13;
salt is unsuitable because it's&#13;
water - soluble is based on&#13;
ignorance. The main reason for&#13;
choosing salt formations is that&#13;
there can't be ground water if&#13;
there's salt, otherwise the salt&#13;
wouldn't still be there. If ground&#13;
water were suddenly introduced,&#13;
it would take thousands to tens of&#13;
thousands of years to dissolve the&#13;
salt surrounding the wastes and&#13;
expose the wastes to ground&#13;
water. Since the wastes are sealed&#13;
in glass, which is immune to&#13;
water, they would have to be&#13;
crushed, and the uranium&#13;
dissolved. After about seven&#13;
centuries the wastes are less toxic&#13;
than the original uranium ore.&#13;
After the thousands of years that&#13;
it would take to dissolve the salt,&#13;
the wastes would be effectively&#13;
harmless.&#13;
If Ms. Elzinga had bothered to&#13;
attend the guest lecture put on by&#13;
the Geology Club, or the&#13;
discussion by the Students for&#13;
Nuclear Rationality on nuclear&#13;
waste disposal (not to mention&#13;
doing a little research on the&#13;
topic), she might have realized&#13;
this. Considering the fact that Mr.&#13;
Rasmussen and I stated this all in&#13;
a previous article for the Ranger,&#13;
she might have become curious&#13;
enough to check it out.&#13;
Ms. Elizinga's articles usually&#13;
paint a picture of her as a town&#13;
crier alerting the public to an as -&#13;
yet unperceived danger that she&#13;
has discovered, and that the pro -&#13;
nuclear faction is trying to conceal.&#13;
I and most others who have&#13;
investigated Ms. Elzinga's&#13;
statements have found them to be&#13;
more of her misunderstanding of&#13;
the facts and technologies than&#13;
any actual danger. We've also&#13;
found that most of her new and&#13;
alarming information is old information&#13;
that others, rather than&#13;
concealing, had already investigated&#13;
and discredited years&#13;
ago.&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Q™3&#13;
" Business Manager&#13;
¥&#13;
ICii, 4* I News Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
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n ^ STAFF&#13;
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Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
All corrKDonrinnr J Wi* ,0r reprint any portion of RANGER.&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha wl 53141 addressed ,0: parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UWpapeTwIth'one6&#13;
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RANGER&#13;
Writes book&#13;
Thursday, January 22, 1981&#13;
Kubly probes Swiss psyche&#13;
f\f Annma TV. 1&#13;
Sabbatical leaves approved!&#13;
Parkside Professor Herbert&#13;
Kubly dates the beginning of work&#13;
on his new book, "Native's&#13;
Return," to a 1951 v isit to Switzerland.&#13;
But in a special sense this&#13;
11th volume by the Wisconsin -&#13;
born author and National Book&#13;
Award winner has been a lifetime&#13;
in the making.&#13;
"An American of Swiss descent&#13;
unmasks an enigmatic land and&#13;
people," the book's dust jacket&#13;
trumpets beneath the title. Stein&#13;
and Day, the New York publishing&#13;
firm, will issue the book in mid -&#13;
April. &lt;&#13;
Though Kubly's home port is&#13;
Wisconsin — he has taught&#13;
creative writing at Parkside since&#13;
1969 and maintains a farm home&#13;
at New Glarus, a Wisconsin&#13;
community founded by Swiss&#13;
immigrants — his literary log&#13;
carries entries from moorings&#13;
across the face of Europe,&#13;
amassed in years as a traveler,&#13;
humanist and author.&#13;
Kubly's first book, "An&#13;
American in Italy," won a&#13;
National Book Award and was&#13;
followed by a number of sharply&#13;
observant reports from other&#13;
European locales including&#13;
"Easter in Sicily" and "Gods and&#13;
Heroes", a book on Greece in the&#13;
year before the military coup&#13;
which toppled King Constantine.&#13;
"Gods and Heroes" won a first&#13;
place award for non - fict ion from&#13;
the Council for Wisconsin Writers&#13;
and his latest fictional work, "The&#13;
Duchess of Glover" which is set&#13;
both in the U. S. and in a variety of&#13;
European countries, won the&#13;
council's fiction award.&#13;
Now, Kubly adds a new&#13;
dimension, probing what he calls&#13;
the "psychological human landscape"&#13;
of Switzerland. The book is&#13;
both "deeper" than its&#13;
predecessors and closer to his&#13;
heart, Kubly says, for he speaks&#13;
both as an observer and an insider&#13;
of the Swiss psyche.&#13;
A descendant of the Swiss who&#13;
settled in New Glarus more than&#13;
100 years ago, Kubly retains&#13;
hereditary Swiss citizenship in&#13;
addition to U. S. citizenship. He&#13;
has kept in touch with his Swiss&#13;
roots through frequent visits and&#13;
residences including a teaching&#13;
assignment at the University of&#13;
Zurich and, most recently, a 1977&#13;
summer stay.&#13;
'The Swiss are a very complex&#13;
people psychologically," says&#13;
Kubly. "They live in the oldest&#13;
democracy in the world. They are&#13;
intensely individualisti c;&#13;
traditional fighters for liberty;&#13;
each so aware of his own rights."&#13;
Yet, says Kubly, Switzerland is&#13;
an "artificial" country embracing&#13;
two religions, four languages and&#13;
three national groups, German,&#13;
French, and Italian, all crowded&#13;
together and forced into dialogue&#13;
by the omnipresent Alps.&#13;
"Jung (the psychologist) could&#13;
only happen in Switzerland," says&#13;
Kubly.&#13;
The turbulent alpine landscape,&#13;
subject to. avalanches, fierce&#13;
winter storms and spring floods&#13;
profoundly influences the Swiss&#13;
psyche, Kubly says.&#13;
Although the country is rapidly&#13;
becoming industrialized and&#13;
urbanized, each Swiss is only one&#13;
or two generations removed from&#13;
his parochial mountain village,&#13;
says Kubly. The isolated village&#13;
life led to intermarriage and inbreeding,&#13;
mental illness and a&#13;
profound depression rooted in the&#13;
oppression of the mountains, he&#13;
says.&#13;
A sort of national schizophrenia&#13;
prevails. Switzerland is the&#13;
richest nation in the world on a per&#13;
capita basis, has produced the&#13;
world's most sophisticated&#13;
bankers and boasts some of the&#13;
globe's best private art collections,&#13;
yet "emotionally, the people&#13;
still are subject to demonology,"&#13;
the heritage of v illage life, Kubly&#13;
says.&#13;
Survival in the modern world, a&#13;
persistent theme in both Kubly's&#13;
fiction and non - fiction, is evident&#13;
PROFESSOR HERBERT KUBLY&#13;
in the latest volume as well. The&#13;
Swiss are survivors. "They&#13;
squabble, but they manage well,"&#13;
says Kubly.&#13;
"I have been aware through the&#13;
years of social and political,&#13;
changes," Kubly writes in a&#13;
forward to the book. "But the&#13;
Swiss psyche and character are&#13;
slow in changing and my attention&#13;
has been focused on an introverted&#13;
and troubled people that&#13;
most of the world has met but few&#13;
have understood."&#13;
Kubly hopes his new book will&#13;
shed some light on the dark night&#13;
of the Swiss soul.&#13;
Though the critical notices&#13;
aren't in yet for "Native's&#13;
Return," his previous "travel&#13;
books" (Kubly abhors the term)&#13;
have received rave reviews with&#13;
critics who place them on a par&#13;
with such well - known "travel&#13;
writers" as D. H. Lawrence and&#13;
E. M. Forester.&#13;
Already embarked on yet&#13;
another new book, Kubly also is&#13;
immersed in classroom activities.&#13;
This spring, he will teach a&#13;
creative writing course for both&#13;
graduate and undergraduate&#13;
students at Parkside. The course&#13;
will take the form of a working&#13;
seminar with students working on&#13;
short stories, a novel or&#13;
playwriting.&#13;
"Emphasis will be on the&#13;
recognition and use of personal&#13;
experiences as source and&#13;
character as well as the substance&#13;
of both fiction and drama," he&#13;
said.&#13;
If the students master the&#13;
principal, they may be on their&#13;
way to careers as writers. It's&#13;
worked well for their teacher.&#13;
Sabbatical leave during the&#13;
1981-82 ac ademic year has been&#13;
approved for two Parkside faculty&#13;
members, Prof. Alan Grossberg,&#13;
physics and engineering science,&#13;
and Prof. John D. Buenker,&#13;
history.&#13;
A total of 60 UW System faculty&#13;
members was selected to participate&#13;
in the 1981-82 sabbatical&#13;
program, which is designed both&#13;
to provide opportunity for&#13;
professional growth and to bring&#13;
contemporary work in the participants'&#13;
academic areas into the&#13;
classroom. Each UW System&#13;
campus is awarded roughly one&#13;
sabbatical for each 100 tenured&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
Grossberg has been a member,&#13;
of the UW-Parkside faculty since&#13;
the campus opened in 1968 and&#13;
previously taught at the university's&#13;
Racine and Kenosha&#13;
campuses. He will use his sabbatical&#13;
to update two laboratory&#13;
manuals in engineering physics,&#13;
which he authored in the early&#13;
1970's using FORTRAN comp uter&#13;
language, to BASIC, a more easily&#13;
- learned introductory computer&#13;
language which has come into&#13;
increased usage with the advent of&#13;
inexpensive microcomputer&#13;
equipment.&#13;
Grossberg, who will be on leave&#13;
for both the fall and spring&#13;
semesters, also will develop a new&#13;
general introductory physics&#13;
course for science, engineering&#13;
and pre - medical students at UWP&#13;
and will be working in the field&#13;
of advanced digital electronics&#13;
with emphasis on the study of&#13;
microprocessors.&#13;
Buenker, a UW-P faculty&#13;
member since 1970 and director of&#13;
its Center for Multi - cultural&#13;
Studies since 1977, will use his&#13;
sabbatical for studies in U.S.&#13;
urban history.&#13;
Buenker plans to develop a&#13;
series of sample research projects&#13;
using resources of the Area&#13;
Research Center at UW-P to investigate&#13;
the course of urban&#13;
development in Rac ine and&#13;
Kenosha and to prepare a source&#13;
book adaptable to any city with&#13;
similar research materials. Die&#13;
research approach, designed to&#13;
heighten student appreciation of&#13;
the processes of urban development,&#13;
would be incorporated into&#13;
urban history courses at Parkside&#13;
and also would be available to&#13;
historians on other campuses.&#13;
Buenker, author of a number of&#13;
books and articles on urban&#13;
history, urban reform and immigration,&#13;
will be on sabbatical&#13;
during the s pring, 1982, s emester.&#13;
Career planning offered&#13;
A six session Career Planning&#13;
Seminar will be offered by&#13;
Community Student Services and&#13;
Student Development February 9,&#13;
11, 16, 18, 23, an d 25, 1981, from&#13;
1:00 p.m. to 1:50 p.m. Participants&#13;
will analyze their skills, values,&#13;
and interests, and learn different&#13;
ways of using the Career&#13;
Resource Center and how to&#13;
research a career. If you are&#13;
uncertain about your chosen&#13;
career, or would like some&#13;
assistance in making a career&#13;
choice, plan to attend this&#13;
seminar. Call Barbara Larson at&#13;
553-2122 or Wendi Schneider at 553-&#13;
2496 for more information or to&#13;
sign up. Deadline is Febraury 4.&#13;
Women abuse class given&#13;
"How to Counsel Men Who&#13;
Batter Their Wives/Women" is&#13;
the focus of an all-day educational&#13;
course and training program at&#13;
Parkside, in Tallent Hall, on&#13;
Friday, January 23, 8:30 a .m. to&#13;
3:45 p. m.&#13;
The course is directed at&#13;
professional counselors, social&#13;
workers, human service personnel,&#13;
and clergy, who have&#13;
initial and on-going contacts with&#13;
men who are known to have&#13;
physically abused their wives or&#13;
girl friends. The goal of the&#13;
program is to teach counselors&#13;
how to "deprogram" these men so&#13;
that wife/woman battery will be&#13;
eliminated from the couple's&#13;
relationship.&#13;
Faculty for the course include&#13;
Samuel D. Stellman, Professor of&#13;
Criminal Justice for the UWExtension&#13;
Criminal Justice Institute,&#13;
and Ralph A. Magnus,&#13;
A.C.S.W.&#13;
Registration will be accepted at&#13;
UW-Extension at Parkside. Call&#13;
Professor Kim Baugrud at 553-&#13;
2312. Fee for the all-day course is&#13;
$20.00.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
"National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO B ANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SONNE RS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F .D.I.C.&#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 9&#13;
Rec Center&#13;
Winter Specials&#13;
Vi PRICE X-COUNTRY SKI RENTAL: M,W,F 1-2 pm&#13;
RED PIN BOWLING: 507GAME (M 9 am-noon F 3-6 pm)&#13;
BILLIARDS FOR A BUCK: $1.00 per HOUR M,W,F 1-2 pm&#13;
TABLE TENNIS: FREE M,W,F 1-2 pm &#13;
Thursday, January 22, 1981 RANGER&#13;
AOE series offers historical&#13;
theater piece with music&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
John Lennon&#13;
"Brahms and Clara," a fully&#13;
staged and costumed historical&#13;
theater piece with music featuring&#13;
Robert Guralnik as Johannes&#13;
Brahms and Sandra Jennings as&#13;
Clara Schumann, is the next offering&#13;
in the Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series at Parkside.&#13;
Curtain time is 8 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 29, in the Comm.&#13;
Arts Theater. Tickets are $7 a nd&#13;
are available at the Campus&#13;
Union Information Center (phone&#13;
553-2345). UW-P student tickets&#13;
are $4.&#13;
Written and directed by Harold&#13;
Guskin, "Brahms and Clara" tells&#13;
the poignant triangular love story&#13;
of the young Brahms, a self -&#13;
taught pianist who supported&#13;
himself by playing in brothels;&#13;
Robert Schumann, the immensely&#13;
talented composer who sank into&#13;
madness; and Clara Schumann,&#13;
the woman who gave up a&#13;
promising concert career to&#13;
marry Robert and, on his death,&#13;
continued her relationship with&#13;
Robert's protegee, Brahms.&#13;
Much of the dialogue in the&#13;
production is "imagined," but is&#13;
based on Guskin's extensive&#13;
research into the period and the&#13;
lives of the principals.&#13;
The music is an important part&#13;
of their story and includes&#13;
selections from the great song&#13;
cycles of Brahms and Robert&#13;
Schumann, piano works of Brahms&#13;
such as the G minor Rhapsody&#13;
and selections from his Intermezzi,&#13;
Cappriccios and&#13;
Ballades, as well as parts of&#13;
Robert Schumann's "Scenes from&#13;
Childhood" and Fantasy Pieces.&#13;
This is a return engagement for&#13;
Pianist Guralnik, whose 1979&#13;
WANTED:&#13;
PEOPLE&#13;
LOOKING FOR&#13;
ADVENTURE.&#13;
The Navy is looking for people&#13;
to work on submarines,&#13;
jets, and surface ships. Tbp&#13;
benefits. Career training.&#13;
Great future. For more information&#13;
see:&#13;
Rick Gallaher&#13;
(Old Market Square)&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140&#13;
Ph. 694-6994&#13;
show, "Chopin Lives," was&#13;
warmly received by Accent&#13;
audiences. A v eteran of C arnegie&#13;
Hall recitals and widely acclaimed&#13;
American and European&#13;
concert tours, Guralnik has&#13;
pioneered the concert / theater&#13;
form typified by "Brahms and&#13;
Clara" which combines great&#13;
music with dramatic dialogue to&#13;
create a new "double category" of&#13;
entertainment. This is his third&#13;
such collaboration with Guskin, a&#13;
New York director, who&#13;
previously worked with him to&#13;
create programs featuring Chopin&#13;
and Liszt.&#13;
Ms. Jennings also displays&#13;
multiple talents, as singer, actress&#13;
and author. She studied&#13;
voice and opera at Indiana&#13;
University's School of Music and&#13;
on graduation was awarded a&#13;
fellowship to sing with the Opera&#13;
Theater at the Philadelphia&#13;
Musical Academy. As a&#13;
professional actress, she has&#13;
appeared in leading roles off -&#13;
Broadway and has completed a&#13;
second play under a National&#13;
Endowment Grant for videotape&#13;
performance. She also has&#13;
completed a novel and composed&#13;
a number of a rt songs.&#13;
Guskin recently directed a new&#13;
jazz, poetry and dance piece,&#13;
"Life Dance of Is," performed at&#13;
the New York Shakespeare&#13;
Festival and the Lenox Art Center&#13;
and directed Ms. Jennings' play&#13;
"Beware of the Jubjub Bird" and&#13;
Brecht's "Jungle of Cities." He&#13;
directed the New York City Opera&#13;
Theatre production "Opera&#13;
Americana" and was associate&#13;
artistic director of opera at the&#13;
Philadelphia Musical Academy&#13;
before coming to New York. He&#13;
also has been on the faculties of&#13;
New York University and Illinois&#13;
Wesleyan University and has&#13;
written several screenplays.&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Where were you the day John&#13;
Lennon was supposedly shot and&#13;
killed by a slimy worm who&#13;
identified so closely with Lennon,&#13;
his idol, that he couldn't stand to&#13;
see Him suffer through the pain of&#13;
mortal existence another second?&#13;
Yes, it says "supposedly" in&#13;
that last paragraph. He's not&#13;
really dead, you know. He's&#13;
recording an album in Brooklyn.&#13;
It's called "Double Pharmacy."&#13;
There's going to be a movie,&#13;
maybe a couple of them: Pharmacies&#13;
I and II.&#13;
Yoko has already begun work on&#13;
the screenplay. Brian Eno and&#13;
Stevie Wonder and Paul McCartney&#13;
and Neil Young are&#13;
battling for the lead role. It's a&#13;
very multi - dimensional role.&#13;
Special effects are to be handled&#13;
by the entire "Star Wars" crew.&#13;
Filming will be on location in&#13;
Cambodia — w here "Apocolypse&#13;
Now" sets and props are waiting&#13;
for further use.&#13;
The movie is going to cost over&#13;
$500,000,000,000 to make.&#13;
Then there will be a book.&#13;
Lennon and Yoko are writing it&#13;
together. The first four chapters&#13;
have been distributed to major&#13;
literary minds all over the world.&#13;
In the first four chapters alone, it&#13;
has been said that "the entire&#13;
mind and soul of modern man and&#13;
woman, with all the inherent&#13;
human primal longings for peace&#13;
and conflicting urges toward&#13;
annihilation of the species is&#13;
contained in these 29 pages of&#13;
beautiful prose - poetry. It rivals&#13;
the Bible in scope, and the combined&#13;
works of e very great artist&#13;
known to humankind for depth."&#13;
Lennon says the central idea of&#13;
his latest endeavor is "the interaction&#13;
between two very&#13;
human, fragile people. It's about&#13;
their attempts to transcend&#13;
identity. And it's about chance,&#13;
too, you know? Which is mostly&#13;
what life is about."&#13;
Students prepare&#13;
dinner theatre&#13;
Parkside Players cordially&#13;
invites you to attend the first&#13;
annual dinner theatre party in the&#13;
cafeteria on January 23.&#13;
Cocktails will begin at 6 p.m.,&#13;
followed by a sit - down dinner at 7&#13;
p.m. You may select either the&#13;
turkey dinner or the sea - food&#13;
platter when you place your ticket&#13;
order.&#13;
For your entertainment,&#13;
Parkside Players will present&#13;
three segments of student&#13;
directed, student designed, and&#13;
student performed drama.&#13;
The first segment includes&#13;
Elaine May's charming rendition&#13;
of th e game of life, "Adaptation."&#13;
The second segment will consist of&#13;
four short Harold Pinter sketches&#13;
from the "Dwarfs." Finally, we&#13;
will bring you our production of&#13;
the notable Off - Broadway success,&#13;
"Next", by Terrence McNally.&#13;
&#13;
Tickets will be available at $8.00&#13;
per person from the Parkside&#13;
Union Information Center (553-&#13;
2345) today only. They ask that&#13;
you have the following information&#13;
available at the time of&#13;
purchase: One name under which&#13;
your party may be listed for&#13;
seating, the number of p ersons in&#13;
your party, and their choices of&#13;
turkey or sea-food platter. _ « mi RKy ui sea-iooa ]&#13;
Parsons' Project still creates classical rock&#13;
by Carol Klees&#13;
Classical rock bands are&#13;
becoming harder and harder to&#13;
find nowadays with the return of&#13;
more simplistic music as&#13;
evidenced by the popularity of&#13;
New Wave groups. The general&#13;
taste towards rock music slides&#13;
between the hard rock groups, the&#13;
rock balladeers, and the newer&#13;
slice as presented by talents as&#13;
diverse as Pat Benatar, Elvis&#13;
Costello and Gary Newman.&#13;
One of the extremely few groups&#13;
left creating classical - flavored&#13;
"'"/^University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
IYTONA BEACH&#13;
SPRING BREAK&#13;
'81&#13;
J / \J MARCH&#13;
/ y r 13-22&#13;
FtOR&#13;
rock music is the Alan Parsons'&#13;
Project. Their newest effort, "The&#13;
Turn of a Friendly Card," is a&#13;
smooth, classy album which&#13;
fluctuates between classical,&#13;
bluesy and ballad'ish.' It's&#13;
definitely APP in tonal flavor,&#13;
blending feelings which were&#13;
successful on earlier albums into&#13;
the sometimes - ethereal style of&#13;
music which is their trademark,&#13;
and yet easily succeeding in&#13;
avoiding the creation of a carbon -&#13;
copy of their earlier work. The&#13;
Project always manages to give a&#13;
fresh performance, and on&#13;
"Turn" they triumph.&#13;
After the free-for-all composition&#13;
of " Eve," Eric Woolfson&#13;
and Alan Parsons are back at the&#13;
reins, composing all eight tracks&#13;
so that every piece fits smoothly.&#13;
Each melody surges cleanly with&#13;
the next so that there are quiet&#13;
shallows and swift rapids. Alan&#13;
Parsons, who also produced and&#13;
engineered the album, knows how&#13;
to arrange the tracks extremely&#13;
well. The placement of a song on&#13;
an album is very important; it can&#13;
mean the difference between&#13;
monotony and excellence. This&#13;
quality is especially important on&#13;
classic - rock albums. The mixing&#13;
and placement must be clean,&#13;
fluid and masterfully handled, or&#13;
else it can turn out bad.&#13;
"The Turn of a Friendly Card"&#13;
never lags in the story it tells. Oh&#13;
yes. As usual, there is a theme&#13;
involved, and this time APP enters&#13;
the world of the gambler with&#13;
songs such as the pulsing, rhythmic&#13;
"Snake Eyes," the quiet&#13;
ballad "Nothing Left to Lose,"&#13;
and the title cut, where "There&#13;
are unsmiling faces in fetters and&#13;
chains/On a wheel of perpetual&#13;
motion/Who belong to all races&#13;
and answer all names/With no&#13;
show of an outward emotion."&#13;
"Turn" is a lyrical success for&#13;
the Project. The group has never&#13;
suffered backsliding other than&#13;
minimal lapses on "Pyramid"&#13;
and "Eve." Their style continues&#13;
to evolve, and hasn't yet suffered&#13;
from stagnation. Perhaps it is the&#13;
contact of all tracks conforming to&#13;
a central theme which is to account&#13;
for it. Still, a musical story&#13;
can die more easily than a conventional&#13;
hodgepodge album.&#13;
The Alan Parsons' Project has&#13;
come a long way from "Tales of&#13;
Mystery and Imagination." The&#13;
creative leaders, Parsons and&#13;
Woolfson, continue to create&#13;
beauty even when the message&#13;
they relate is bitter, as evidenced&#13;
by "Turn's" central statement:&#13;
— And they think it will make&#13;
their lives easier / But the doorway&#13;
before them is barred / And&#13;
FROM INCLUDES:&#13;
EA ^ #GREYHOUNDTYPE BUS&#13;
10®7NIGHTSLODGINGOCEANSIDEHOTEL Z&#13;
* MM • OPTIONAL POPULAR SIDETRTPS 1&#13;
FOR APPLICATION AND FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: S&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION. R OOM 209 553-2200 !&#13;
A&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha.&#13;
Elmwood Plaza Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kehosha for women's wear&#13;
^ r&#13;
the game never ends when&#13;
your whole world depends / On the&#13;
turn of a friendly card."&#13;
* * *&#13;
When I first listened to the&#13;
Photos' debut album I thought oh,&#13;
hell. I have to review that? I let it&#13;
sit and indulged in procrastination&#13;
until I realized the origin of&#13;
several of the tunes which kept&#13;
running through my head.&#13;
There's something quaint in the&#13;
lyrics and something just this side&#13;
of repetitious in the melodies.&#13;
They're good enough to be catchy,&#13;
if you listen several times. I really&#13;
don't know what the Photos were&#13;
shooting for (no pun intended).&#13;
Maybe they like silliness. "She's&#13;
So Attractive," for example,&#13;
sports such profound lyrical&#13;
passages as * "I could be a&#13;
covergirl / So demure and divine /&#13;
My clothes are so heavenly / Da&#13;
da da da da." You can't get much&#13;
worse than that.&#13;
Such silliness could be intended,&#13;
or at least I hope so. This also goes&#13;
for Wendy Wu's vocals. She does&#13;
Blondie's Debbie Harry's flat -&#13;
toned vocals one better by singing&#13;
flatly through her nose. The other&#13;
three band members create a&#13;
solid foundation for Wu's vocals,&#13;
and Wu's quirky voice lends&#13;
strange accents to the instrumentals.&#13;
&#13;
In most of the album's tracks,&#13;
the refrains are the liveliest&#13;
sections — t he verses, accept in&#13;
"Loss of Contact," "Irene," and&#13;
"All I Want" are rather sleepy&#13;
musically. "All I Want" is so&#13;
damned fast I thought someone&#13;
kicked the speed up on my turntable.&#13;
Here, Steve Eagles is&#13;
finally given the chance to let his&#13;
guitar sing. He's the best edge the&#13;
group has, and it's good to hear&#13;
him get in at least one solo riff.&#13;
The Photos are somewhat like&#13;
mold. They grow on you. &#13;
Member P arkside 2 00&#13;
Mentisa t his a d!&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phon* *54-0774&#13;
ALL M AJOR C REDIT C ARDS A CCEPTED&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, January 22,1981&#13;
®°™"'&#13;
ce X-mas hits not all worth the money&#13;
„ by Ke by Ken " Me Meyeyer r old Erands„n) . M&#13;
The Christmas season has&#13;
always been the biggest money -&#13;
making time of the year for the&#13;
movie industry, and this past&#13;
holiday season set a new record.&#13;
The top four box - office hits ("Stir&#13;
Crazy," "Any Which Way You&#13;
Can," "Popeye" and "9 to 5")&#13;
brought in a total of $142 million&#13;
by the first week of January.&#13;
All four films have some things&#13;
in common: all are comedies of&#13;
some sort and none of them are&#13;
completely successful. "Popeye"&#13;
and "9 to 5" are about three -&#13;
fourths successful while "Stir&#13;
Crazy" and "Any Which Way You&#13;
Can" are as bad as they are good.&#13;
"Popeye"&#13;
The best of the four, I feel, is&#13;
"Popeye," which has received&#13;
very mixed reactions. Many&#13;
people complain that there is too&#13;
much music and too little comedy&#13;
in this musical - comedy.&#13;
True, there are too many songs&#13;
and they are all forgettable, but it&#13;
is the originality of the film and&#13;
the people involved that make the&#13;
music less of an irritation.&#13;
Director Robert Altman&#13;
("M*A*S*H," "Nashville") is in&#13;
fine form, Robin Williams is&#13;
totally convincing as Popeye, and&#13;
Shelley Duvall found her ideal role&#13;
in Olive Oyl.&#13;
The film opens with Popeye the&#13;
sailor rowing into the port of&#13;
shantytown Sweethaven in search&#13;
of hi s pappy. It's hard at first to&#13;
understand Williams' muttering,&#13;
but one has to adapt to it, just like&#13;
one has to adjust to Sweethaven&#13;
and its residents. An entire&#13;
shantytown was constructed on&#13;
the Mediterranean island of Malta&#13;
for the movie. The town and its&#13;
people look like they are from a&#13;
cartoon, not in a silly way but in a&#13;
realistic way.&#13;
Popeye rents a room at Nana&#13;
Oyl's house and meets the constantly&#13;
complaining Olive Oyl,&#13;
who is engaged to the much -&#13;
feared Bluto. While Bluto destroys&#13;
the Oyl house waiting for Olive,&#13;
she and Popeye discover a baby&#13;
left in a basket. Popeye becomes&#13;
the baby's mother, as he says, and&#13;
calls him Swee'pea. "What you&#13;
want me to call him?" he asks&#13;
Olive. "Baby Oyl?"&#13;
The baby (Altman's one - year -&#13;
grandson) will win&#13;
SEW ^&#13;
r t&#13;
'&#13;
a n d A" ™-&#13;
uses the baby's cuteness extensively.&#13;
&#13;
The major distinction between&#13;
r. ?&#13;
nd the other three&#13;
Christmas hits is that "Popeye" is&#13;
T?e only one not to lose its&#13;
direction or momentum halfway&#13;
through the picture. The film&#13;
opens leisurely, showing the&#13;
unique people of Sweethaven and&#13;
then moves into Popeye's&#13;
relationship with Olive and&#13;
Swee pea. Bluto kidnaps&#13;
Swee pea so Popeye searches for&#13;
both his baby and pappy.&#13;
f:„K?&#13;
pey?L only Sets into three&#13;
fights m the movie, but the special&#13;
effects in each are well done&#13;
cartoon - style. One major change&#13;
is that Williams' Popeye hates&#13;
spinach, the source of his great&#13;
strength.&#13;
Put simply, "Popeye" brings&#13;
the cartoon to life, quite an accomplishment&#13;
considering the&#13;
unique characters. Sure it would&#13;
have been better without so much&#13;
music, but this adaptation is&#13;
entertaining because one gets the&#13;
feeling of being in a completely&#13;
different environment. The&#13;
cartoon characters seemed real&#13;
and the fun was just beginning&#13;
when the movie ended.&#13;
"9 to 5"&#13;
"9 to 5" is good overall, but not&#13;
as good as "Popeye" because the&#13;
story turns too ridiculous at about&#13;
the midway point.&#13;
The premise is promising: Lily&#13;
Tomlin, Dolly Parton and Jane&#13;
Fonda play three secretaries who&#13;
get fed up with their male&#13;
chauvinistic boss and want&#13;
to get even.&#13;
Each of them has a good reason.&#13;
Tomlin has repeatedly lost&#13;
promotions to less - deserving&#13;
men, Parton was shunned by her&#13;
co-workers because the boss&#13;
spread rumors that they were&#13;
having an affair, and Fonda's exhusband&#13;
left her after having an&#13;
affair with his secretary. And&#13;
besides, he's a man who deserves&#13;
to be hated.&#13;
The film reaches its highest&#13;
point (no pun intended) when the&#13;
ladies smoke a joint of Maui-Waui.&#13;
During all their giggling, they&#13;
each tell their fantasy of how to&#13;
kill the boss. Fonda's and Parton's&#13;
fantasies are good, but Tomlin's is&#13;
one of the best scenes, in the&#13;
movie. She becomes Snow White&#13;
and dispenses death with a happy&#13;
smile and song.&#13;
Tomlin's fantasy also marks the&#13;
point of whe n a good examination&#13;
of wo men in the work force turns&#13;
into a harmless, silly piece of fluff.&#13;
Tomlin accidentally puts rat&#13;
poison in the boss's coffee and&#13;
after a few mishaps, believes that&#13;
she really killed him. Tomlin&#13;
steals a body from the hospital&#13;
and speeds around the city, not&#13;
realizing she has the wrong&#13;
corpse. The ladies soon discover&#13;
the boss isn't dead, but he finds&#13;
out about the near - poisoning and&#13;
threatens to turn Tomlin in. So&#13;
they kidnap him until they find&#13;
evidence to blackmail him.&#13;
They finally find something —&#13;
but they have to wait six weeks for&#13;
the incriminating invoices to&#13;
arrive. The secretaries pretend&#13;
their boss is in his office working,&#13;
making changes as they see fit (an&#13;
in-house day care center, flexible&#13;
hours, job sharing and completely&#13;
refurnishing the office). What&#13;
started as a funny, biting look at&#13;
the working woman turns into a&#13;
lame - brained comedy with an&#13;
intricate kidnapping plot. It's not&#13;
a disaster, not by a long shot. It&#13;
just changes its focus in the&#13;
middle of the picture and takes the&#13;
easy way out.&#13;
The actresses are in fine form,&#13;
overall. Tomlin's quiet humor&#13;
steals many scenes, as does&#13;
Parton's screen charm. Fonda,&#13;
however, is lackluster in a&#13;
lackluster role.&#13;
The only problem lies in the&#13;
script. If "9 to 5" had continued&#13;
as it began, it would&#13;
have been a fruitful workday.&#13;
But here the filmmakers took&#13;
a lunchbreak and never came&#13;
back, or they had a liquid&#13;
lunch.&#13;
"Any Which Way&#13;
You Can"&#13;
"Any Which Way You Can" is&#13;
very easy to describe. Clint&#13;
Eastwood fights and Clyde, his&#13;
orangutan, monkeys around. If&#13;
that's your idea of a fun movie,&#13;
you'll love this sequel to "Every&#13;
Which Way But Loose," because&#13;
x YAM&#13;
WHAT&#13;
YAM&#13;
mm.&#13;
mm&#13;
that's all there is to it.&#13;
The bare plot has Eastwood&#13;
retired from his successful bare -&#13;
knuckled fighting career, but&#13;
some big thugs put up some big&#13;
money and persuade him to fight.&#13;
But he changes his mind so the&#13;
thugs kidnap his girlfriend to&#13;
persuade him again.&#13;
So he agrees to fight. The catch&#13;
is (there's always a catch) that&#13;
the man he is to fight is the same&#13;
man who owes his life to Eastwood&#13;
after cool Clint saved his life. But&#13;
then that favor was returned&#13;
during a bar fight, and&#13;
then.... .who really cares?&#13;
The only hit of the movie is&#13;
Clyde. The orangutan handles&#13;
Eastwood's finances, scraps cars,&#13;
drinks beer, punches people and&#13;
(everybody's favorite) leaves a&#13;
mess in every police car he&#13;
manages to sit in. The monkey is&#13;
the real second banana to Eastwood,&#13;
none of the other characters&#13;
are given as much screen time.&#13;
Clyde is a full - fledged character&#13;
who contributes to the film's&#13;
actions.&#13;
Need any more be said about the&#13;
film's actions?&#13;
"Stir Crazy"&#13;
The teaming of Gene Wilder and&#13;
Richard Pryor worked well in&#13;
"Silver Streak" and now they're&#13;
reunited in "Stir Crazy." The&#13;
same is true for both movies:&#13;
Richard Pryor is the only good&#13;
thing.&#13;
In "Stir Crazy" they are&#13;
mistakenly arrested for robbing a&#13;
bank and get sentenced to 125&#13;
years in prison. The prison&#13;
warden's pet project is a prison&#13;
rodeo, and he discovers that&#13;
Wilder can ride a bucking bronco&#13;
exceptionally well. The warden&#13;
tries to force Wilder into competing,&#13;
but Wilder holds out until&#13;
he gets what he wants — to be able&#13;
to bring his own crew. Why? So&#13;
they can escape, of c ourse.&#13;
That's where "Stir Crazy" loses&#13;
the little comic thrust it had&#13;
managed to pick up despite&#13;
Wilder's obnoxiousness overshadowing&#13;
Pryor's wonderful&#13;
underplaying. When the escape&#13;
plan is launched, the humor gets&#13;
away. The film doesn't even tiy to&#13;
be funny; the comedy that&#13;
everybody came to see becomes a&#13;
prison escape drama.&#13;
But the first half is what people&#13;
will remember because of P ryor.&#13;
He gets almost all the laughs&#13;
while Wilder repeatedly spouts off&#13;
about how people only need to be&#13;
talked to gently. This is the only&#13;
film in which I didn't care for a&#13;
Wilder performance, but this time&#13;
he was too much.&#13;
If an ything does, it's Pryor who&#13;
makes "Stir Crazy" worthwhile.&#13;
His task now is to find a comedy&#13;
suitable for his talents because&#13;
•"Stir Crazy" isn't it. It's a&#13;
schizophrenic film with a costar&#13;
and a prison escape that get in the&#13;
way of t he film's real funny man.&#13;
TRANSFERS&#13;
Photograph or Your Artwork&#13;
NO MINIMUM!&#13;
$2&#13;
00 each&#13;
CUSTOM LETTERING&#13;
ALSO AVAILABLE&#13;
Old Market Square&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd. &#13;
Thursday, January 22, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Students applaud surcharge withdrawal&#13;
Pr PrpessiHont H'Moil'c . . . ident O'Neil's decision to&#13;
withdraw a request for a second&#13;
$30 surcharge on University of&#13;
Wisconsin student tuition will&#13;
avoid the problem of harming&#13;
access to the U.W. system for the&#13;
students, but creates new&#13;
problems of determining where&#13;
the budget axe will fall, said Kim&#13;
Kachlemyer, President of United&#13;
Council, the statewide U.W.&#13;
student lobby.&#13;
"While it is certainly positive&#13;
that students' ability to afford an&#13;
education will not be $30 f urther&#13;
eroded next semester," said&#13;
Kachelmyer, "we fully realize&#13;
that this is a pyrhhic victory in&#13;
that it means the U.W. will have to&#13;
trim $3.75 million from some&#13;
portion of its budget."&#13;
The students are prepared to&#13;
assist the administration in&#13;
planning the necessary cuts, said&#13;
Kachelmyer. "In a sense, the&#13;
U.W. is going to be a laboratory&#13;
testing whether it is possible, as&#13;
Governor Dreyfus insists, to trim&#13;
spending without seriously harming&#13;
education. We don't believe&#13;
the Governor is correct, and we&#13;
see what will happen as the&#13;
Governor's policies backfiring on&#13;
him."&#13;
The students do not blame the&#13;
Regents or administration for&#13;
trying to avoid cutting spending,&#13;
said Kachelmyer, but do not&#13;
believe that another surcharge&#13;
would have been fair to the&#13;
students, who already accepted 20&#13;
percent of the burden of the&#13;
cutback with a first semester&#13;
surcharge. "We blame a&#13;
politically gutless state government&#13;
which found it politically&#13;
easy to give away $942 million in&#13;
tax revenue and now can't find $10&#13;
million to save its own university,"&#13;
said Kachelmyer.&#13;
The request for the second&#13;
surcharge was probably withdrawn&#13;
because it had become&#13;
increasingly evident that the&#13;
Legislatures Joint Finance&#13;
Committee, which would have had&#13;
to approve the expenditure of&#13;
another surcharge, was not likely&#13;
to do that. "Our lobbyist has&#13;
coordinated a low key campaign&#13;
against the surcharge in Joint&#13;
Finance," said Kachelmyer, "and&#13;
we feel a great deal of the&#13;
reasoning behind O'Neil's&#13;
reversal on the surcharge was the&#13;
realization that the votes on Joint&#13;
Finance weren't there. No one&#13;
wants to take the heat the Regents&#13;
would for adopting another surcharge&#13;
only to lose the whole thing&#13;
in the Legislature."&#13;
Students do believe the fiscal&#13;
Kidney Foundation rebuts rumor&#13;
There is no truth to the rumor&#13;
that collecting empty cigarette&#13;
packages, tea bag tags, yogurt&#13;
tops, universal price codes found&#13;
on frozen food packages or&#13;
anything of the sort can lead to the&#13;
purchase of dialysis equipment or&#13;
to pay for time on a dialysis&#13;
machine.&#13;
According to the National&#13;
Kidney Foundation, these rumors&#13;
have sprung up periodically&#13;
throughout the nation for the past&#13;
30 years. No one knows how the&#13;
rumors were started or how they&#13;
are perpetuated.&#13;
Persons interested in helping&#13;
the fight against kidney disease&#13;
should contact their local Kidney&#13;
Foundation or write to the&#13;
National Kidney Foundation, 2&#13;
Park Avenue, New York, New&#13;
York, 10016, for information.&#13;
There are many ways to help.&#13;
Unfortunately, collecting tea bag&#13;
tags is not one of them.&#13;
Group counseling programs offered here&#13;
Do you want help to develop&#13;
assertive skills? dating skills? To&#13;
overcome public speaking&#13;
anxiety? To overcome&#13;
depression? To overcome fear of&#13;
heights, snakes, water activities,&#13;
or some other specific nonsocial&#13;
fear?&#13;
Special group counseling&#13;
programs are being offered this&#13;
semester to Parkside students&#13;
(and other interested persons)&#13;
concerned with any of these&#13;
problems. The programs are&#13;
sponsored by professor of&#13;
psychology William Morrow and&#13;
| ACADEMY OF BATON &amp; DANCE&#13;
| Headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits, 1&#13;
Gymnastic Suits; Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — Tap Shoes —&#13;
| All Dancing Supplies&#13;
|6204 22nd Avenue. Kenosha 658-2498&#13;
students in his class in Behavioral&#13;
Counseling. Students will conduct&#13;
the counseling under his supervision&#13;
as part of the course&#13;
requirements.&#13;
The programs will employ&#13;
structured counseling and&#13;
training procedures which have&#13;
been found in controlled outcome&#13;
studies to be relatively effective&#13;
for the particular problem. Each&#13;
program will involve about six to&#13;
eight scheduled counseling&#13;
sessions, plus homework activities.&#13;
&#13;
Sign-up cards to register for any&#13;
of these programs are available at&#13;
the following locations:&#13;
Behavioral Science Division&#13;
Office, Molinaro 275; Main Place&#13;
Information Kiosk; Union Information&#13;
Kiosk. Those interested&#13;
are asked to sign up by not later&#13;
than Friday, February 6.&#13;
problems of the U.W. are real and&#13;
serious. "We intend to pursue two&#13;
main avenues of involvement.&#13;
First, we will insist on having a&#13;
voice in the determination of what&#13;
services and programs are cut.&#13;
Second, we will further intensify&#13;
our campaign to persuade the&#13;
Legislature to help out the U.W. in&#13;
January when it meets to review&#13;
Dreyfus' cutback order, and the&#13;
regular session debate over the&#13;
biennial budget. We've seen the&#13;
U.W. lose more than $140 per&#13;
student in real dollar funding&#13;
since 1972, and we're determined&#13;
to reverse that trend."&#13;
Arguing that the U.W. is not to&#13;
blame for state tax problems,&#13;
Kachelmyer pointed out that the&#13;
U.W. has added only 100 positions&#13;
since 1972 while the rest of state&#13;
government has added more than&#13;
5,000 p ositions. U.W. funding has&#13;
climbed by about 60 percent since&#13;
1972 while other state spending&#13;
has climbed by 153 percent. The&#13;
U.W. spent 1.32 percent of&#13;
Wisconsin personal income in&#13;
1970; today, it spends barely more&#13;
than one percent.&#13;
"Students will fight to maintain&#13;
education as a right for all people&#13;
in the state, and a major element&#13;
of that battle will be fighting for&#13;
more state money next year."&#13;
Soviet trip offered&#13;
Parkside will sponsor a 15 - day&#13;
trip to the Soviet Union in March.&#13;
The trip will include guided tours&#13;
of Moscow, Leningrad and Tallin,&#13;
visits to state farms, schools,&#13;
factories and museums and an&#13;
evening at the Bolshoi ballet.&#13;
The trip is being offered in&#13;
conjunction with a series of lectures&#13;
by UW - Parkside faculty on&#13;
Soviet history, economics,&#13;
culture, politics and philosophy.&#13;
The lecture series and trip can be&#13;
taken for 1 to 3 credits or on a&#13;
noncredit audit basis.&#13;
Cost of the trip including&#13;
transportation, meals, lodging&#13;
and registration for one credit is&#13;
$1,345. Registration deadline is&#13;
Jan. 30. Additional information is&#13;
available from Prof. Daniel&#13;
McGovern at 553-2316 or 637-8402.&#13;
Prof. McGovern, who will lead&#13;
the Parkside group, said they will&#13;
join students from ll other UW&#13;
campuses on the tour March 8 to&#13;
23. Twelve UW - P students participated&#13;
in a similar tour last&#13;
year. McGovern said participants&#13;
will stay at the best Soviet hotels,&#13;
eat authentic Russian food and&#13;
visit English - speaking students&#13;
at Soviet friendship houses.&#13;
New nurse on campus&#13;
Nancy Kachel Wild recently&#13;
joined the staff at the Campus&#13;
Health Office.&#13;
Nan is originally from Minneapolis,&#13;
Minnesota, attended&#13;
Augustana College in Sioux Falls,&#13;
South Dakota from 1970 to 1974,&#13;
and graduated with a Bachelor of&#13;
Science in nursing. She first&#13;
practiced as a Medical - Surgical&#13;
staff nurse at Lutheran Deaconess&#13;
Hospital in Minneapolis. In 1975,&#13;
she became a public health nurse&#13;
in the Twin Cities, making home&#13;
visits and working on a research&#13;
project in child abuse prevention.&#13;
In 1978, she moved to Anchorage,&#13;
Alaska, and worked in physical&#13;
rehabilitation.&#13;
Uttech's art displayed here&#13;
and&#13;
by&#13;
An exhibition of oil&#13;
watercolor paintings&#13;
Milwaukee artist Tom Uttech will&#13;
be on display in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery from&#13;
Jan. 14 through Feb. 10. The one -&#13;
man show will consist mainly of&#13;
figurative landscapes inspired by&#13;
the northern Wisconsin wilderness&#13;
and treated in a unique symbolic -&#13;
visionary stylistic approach.&#13;
Uttech is an associate professor&#13;
of art at UW - Milwaukee, where&#13;
he has taught since 1969. He&#13;
received his Master of Fine Arts&#13;
degree in painting from the&#13;
University of Cincinnati in 1967.&#13;
During his career Uttech has&#13;
exhibited in many major juried&#13;
and invitational shows throughout&#13;
the mid - west and the nation,&#13;
including the Whitney Museum&#13;
Biennial in New York City and the&#13;
Chicago &amp; Vicinty Show at the&#13;
Chicago Art Institute, both in 1975.&#13;
In 1977 he was featured in a major&#13;
two - man show, with artist&#13;
Jerome Krause, at the Milwaukee&#13;
Art Center. He recently received a&#13;
grant from the Wisconsin Arts&#13;
Board to pursue his painting and&#13;
photography of the landscape&#13;
theme.&#13;
Regular gallery hours at the&#13;
Communications Arts Gallery are&#13;
Monday through Thursday from&#13;
12:30 to 5:30 p. m. and Tuesday&#13;
and Wednesday from 7 to 10 p. m&#13;
In conjunction with the&#13;
exhibition, a free public slide -&#13;
lecture will be presented by the&#13;
artist on Tuesday, Jan. 27, at 4 p.&#13;
m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Building.&#13;
Nominate students for award&#13;
Parkside students have been&#13;
nominated as Truman Scholars&#13;
under the Harry S. Truman&#13;
S c h o l a r s h i p F o u n d a t i on&#13;
established by Congress in 1974 to&#13;
honor the 33rd U. S. President and&#13;
encourage young people to&#13;
prepare for careers in public&#13;
service.&#13;
The nominees are Shelly Zavala&#13;
and Brian Ebener, both of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The foundation awards one&#13;
scholarship per state each&#13;
academic year on the basis of&#13;
merit as shown by academic&#13;
performance and potential for a&#13;
career in public service. Students&#13;
are nominated by their faculty.&#13;
Awards are made to college&#13;
juniors and may be renewed for&#13;
up to four years, through a&#13;
master's degree program. Names&#13;
of scholarship winners will be&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
ANYONE picking on Jeff Manian will be&#13;
exterminated. The Joker&#13;
MARY! Be nice to your brother for a change.&#13;
Me&#13;
RORY SPEARS is a woosy. M.E.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1980 SUZUKI S50L black, very clean. Call 553&#13;
9262 a fter 4 p . m.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
A G ENETICS TEXT BOOK by Jenkins, used&#13;
spring 1980 — 654-7598.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
EARN UP TO $1000 or more for a&#13;
evenings work. No selling. Just&#13;
posters on your campus advertising our&#13;
half price tours of Europe. For details,&#13;
write: TRAVEL STUDY INTERNATIONAL,&#13;
2030 East 4800 South,&#13;
Suite 101, Salt Lake City, UT 84117&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED: To assist group&#13;
home Staff in providing tutoring and&#13;
recreational services for adolescents.&#13;
Schedule is flexible, five hours per week&#13;
and mileage reimbursment. Some college&#13;
background In human service field or&#13;
education. Training in group home model&#13;
w.li be provided. Contact Michael Angeli,&#13;
657-7188.&#13;
few&#13;
hang&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
r~&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads —&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30$ will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words &lt;&#13;
or less.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE.&#13;
Any registered UW-P student or student organization is qualified&#13;
to insert a classified line ad in the Ranger at no cost if under or&#13;
equivalent to 10 words. (Phone numbers equal 1 word.)&#13;
Classification:&#13;
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Fashions&#13;
Old Market Square&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd. &#13;
Coming Events&#13;
are available at the Union Information CeJtPr RS W®dmissio—n Price. —Tickets -&#13;
MOVIE "Kramer vs. Kramer" wSMEt ®{&gt;^&#13;
180re&#13;
^&#13;
d by the Parkside Players.&#13;
at the Coor U a&#13;
MOVIE "Kramer vs. Kramer" «• , will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
VIDEO TAPES "Football Follies"wffl h^S" ** * ,&#13;
miSSi0h iS free tor Par^e K£35®£&#13;
- ext. *3. tor&#13;
==frSt"SS • — aot a&#13;
=&#13;
e&#13;
«St'ST&amp;V&#13;
and the&#13;
RANGER Thursday, January 22, 1981&#13;
Photo by Brian Passino&#13;
Women win&#13;
tournament&#13;
Parkside's women's basketball&#13;
team took its own tournament&#13;
here last weekend with wins over&#13;
St. Xavier 76-67, and Milton&#13;
College 73-65 in the championship&#13;
game.&#13;
Parkside beat an outmanned St.&#13;
Xavier squad Friday night with a&#13;
balanced scoring attack and good&#13;
shooting. Freshman Robin&#13;
Henschal led all scorers with 17&#13;
points followed by five women&#13;
with eight points a piece; Cindy&#13;
Ruffert, Julie Leszczynski,&#13;
Jeanne Hintz, Debbie Lopez and&#13;
Laurie Pope. Parkside shot 49 per&#13;
cent from the field compared to 43&#13;
per cent for St. Xavier.&#13;
In the championship game&#13;
Parkside used its height advantage,&#13;
along with a little help&#13;
from Milton's coach in the form of&#13;
three technical fouls, to win the&#13;
tourney.&#13;
Parkside led the entire way and&#13;
again outshot their opponents&#13;
from the field 40 to 31 per cent.&#13;
The Rangers totally outclassed&#13;
their opponents on the boards,&#13;
taking a 45-23 rebounding edge.&#13;
The big difference came on&#13;
Milton's offensive rebounds.&#13;
Milton managed just one offensive&#13;
rebound while the Rangers pulled&#13;
down 32 defensive rebounds, led&#13;
by Laurie Pope's nine and 14&#13;
overall. She also led the team with&#13;
26 po ints and four blocked shots.&#13;
Parkside, now 4-7, will host UW -&#13;
Green Bay Saturday afternoon at&#13;
1:30 and Marquette Tuesday night&#13;
at 7 p. m.&#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;
Wrestlers compete over break&#13;
by Dan McCormack&#13;
The UW-P wrestling team was&#13;
active in two tournaments over&#13;
semester break. The first was on&#13;
Jan. 10th at Carthage and the&#13;
second took place this past&#13;
weekend at the Midwest Classic,&#13;
Anderson, Ind.&#13;
At Carthage, the Ranger&#13;
matmen piaced first with nine&#13;
place - winners. Dan Winter,&#13;
undefeated at 134, placed first&#13;
along with Bob Pekarske at 158&#13;
and Freshman Brian Irek who&#13;
won the 177 weight class with&#13;
three pins. Placing second were&#13;
Dean Quam at 118, Tom Vania at&#13;
126 and Kevin Casper at 142.&#13;
Placing third were Ron Perron at&#13;
150, Rus Drankiewicz at 167 an d&#13;
Paul Roth at HWT.&#13;
Last weekend, in the twenty&#13;
team Midwest Classic, the&#13;
Rangers placed fourth. Bob&#13;
Pekarske was the Rangers only&#13;
champion with Dan Winter losing&#13;
his first match of the season in&#13;
overtime, placing second. Dean&#13;
Quam, who lost his semi - final&#13;
match in overtime came back to&#13;
win third place. Mike&#13;
Muckerheide -158 and Paul Roth&#13;
both placed fourth.&#13;
The UW-Parkside matmen&#13;
meet UW-LaCrosse&#13;
here, Friday at 4 p.m.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
r^KSIDE assistant coach Bob Gruner pins opponent in finals&#13;
winte^bSak&#13;
Sm e9&#13;
'&#13;
ate wre&#13;
stling tournament held over&#13;
Mudwrestling takes hold&#13;
Colleges and universities&#13;
usually attract the best in cultural&#13;
events — concerts, speakers, rock&#13;
stars, road shows, mud wrestling.&#13;
Mud wrestling?&#13;
That's right, the new entertainment&#13;
craze that's showing&#13;
up in bars from coast to coast is&#13;
now coming to campuses as well.&#13;
Regency Artists is beginning a&#13;
national tour of a mud wrestling&#13;
show with a few test dates in&#13;
November and a limited tour this&#13;
winter. By next year, says&#13;
Regency's David Snyder, the&#13;
show will be going coast to coast.&#13;
Snyder is quick to point out that&#13;
the only thing the Regency show&#13;
has in common with what's seen in&#13;
bars is the mud. "The bar show is&#13;
a real sexist thing —you've got a&#13;
bunch of sc antily dressed women&#13;
jumping around in the mud while&#13;
the men watch," says Snyder.&#13;
"Ours will be more like pro&#13;
wrestling." That means bringing&#13;
"celebrity" mud wrestlers on the&#13;
tour, letting both men and women&#13;
wrestle and using some real&#13;
wrestling technique.&#13;
On each campus, fraternities,&#13;
sororities and other groups will be&#13;
encouraged to challenge each&#13;
other, with the winners facing the&#13;
"celebrity wrestlers." The shov&#13;
comes complete with music&#13;
costumes and more, he promises&#13;
"It'll be sheer buffoonery, pie-in&#13;
the-face stuff."&#13;
Thus far, a direct mai!&#13;
promotion has produced "mostlj&#13;
total shock," says Snyder. "II&#13;
ranges from people laughing sc&#13;
hard they can't talk to those whc&#13;
call me up and say it's the mosl&#13;
obscene thing they've evei&#13;
heard." One women's college sem&#13;
the material back unopened, says&#13;
Snyder, although he later admits,&#13;
"That was probably because it&#13;
was addressed wrong."&#13;
Ranger needs sports writers&#13;
Inquire at Ranger office&#13;
WLLC D 139&#13;
(Next to Coffee Shoppe)&#13;
Rati Centex&#13;
Bottling Special's&#13;
MmMk Ming: Sat, 8 pm-Midnite&#13;
Cash prizes awarded&#13;
% bow&amp;wj: M, 9 am-Noon&#13;
Fri, 3 pm-6 pm&#13;
towftwj: Sat, 1-6 pm, Sun, 1-6 pm&#13;
all yo u can bowl $3.00/hr.&#13;
Hcb Fwc-Bcui£! &#13;
8 Thursday, January 22,1981 RANGER&#13;
Rangers improve on worst season start ever&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
at Kansas State, Dec. 13&#13;
The Parkside men's basketball&#13;
team lost it's seventh straight&#13;
game that Saturday to Kansas&#13;
State 72-58 for the worst start in&#13;
the team's 12 year history.&#13;
The Rangers led the Wildcats&#13;
27-24 with just over five minutes&#13;
left in the first half before the Big&#13;
Eight conference favorite took&#13;
over for good.&#13;
Parkside trailed only 36-31 at&#13;
half time, but couldn't stay with&#13;
their major college foes, who&#13;
outscored Parkside 8-2 in the&#13;
opening 7-1/2 minutes of the&#13;
second half. Curtis Green led the&#13;
Rangers with 19 points and freshman&#13;
guard Chucky Perry added&#13;
17. Ed Nealy led Kansas State&#13;
with 16 points and 17 rebounds,&#13;
vs UW-Milwaukee, Dec 15&#13;
The Rangers finally got that&#13;
much needed and deserved first&#13;
win of the year by outclassing&#13;
Milwaukee 83-67 at home.&#13;
Parkside jumped out to a huge&#13;
27-6 lead midway through the first&#13;
half and utilized its quickness,&#13;
both on offense and defense, to&#13;
maintain that margin for a 42-22&#13;
halftime lead.&#13;
The Panthers outscored&#13;
Parkside 45-41 in the second half&#13;
as coach Steve Stephens used his&#13;
bench at will. Milwaukee couldn't&#13;
outrun the somewhat tired&#13;
Rangers to overcome such a large&#13;
deficit.&#13;
Senior forward Reggie Anderson&#13;
led the Rangers in scoring&#13;
with 19 points and Chucky Perry&#13;
added 18. Perry also had seven&#13;
steals, five of which he turned into&#13;
baskets. Curtis Green added 13&#13;
points and reserve John Herndon&#13;
added 12. Ricky Trotter of UW-M&#13;
led all scorers with 20 p oints.&#13;
Ranger Classic, Dec 29-30&#13;
First round&#13;
The Rangers began their fourth&#13;
annual Ranger Classic by beating&#13;
Kenosha rival Carthage College&#13;
80-62 in the second game of the&#13;
first round. Ouachita Baptist of&#13;
Arkansas beat Minnesota - Duluth&#13;
69-58 in the opening game.&#13;
Parkside jumped on Carthage&#13;
quickly to gain a 10-0 lead in the&#13;
opening three minutes. The&#13;
Redmen called a timeout and&#13;
settled down to cut the Ranger&#13;
lead to 18-11. The Rangers then&#13;
went to their inside game to&#13;
maintain a 36-30 h alftime lead.&#13;
At the start of the second half&#13;
the Rangers pulled away to a 49-32&#13;
lead that they never relinquished.&#13;
Center - forward Curtis Green&#13;
led all scorers with 19 points while&#13;
Reggie Anderson and guard&#13;
Walter Greene added 18 each.&#13;
Gordie Zastrow led Carthage with&#13;
18 points.&#13;
Second round&#13;
Parkside won its fourth successive&#13;
Ranger Classic with a 76-&#13;
58 win over Ouachita Baptist in&#13;
the championship game.&#13;
Ouachita kept pace with a&#13;
healthy Ranger club in the first&#13;
eleven minutes of the game to stay&#13;
tied at 19. The Rangers then&#13;
switched to their tough zone&#13;
defense to shut down Ouachita's&#13;
quick guard Willie Hall and forward&#13;
Terry Woods and take a 38-&#13;
26 lea d.&#13;
Ranger coach Stephens used his&#13;
bench in the second half to outlast&#13;
Ouachita, whose players were in&#13;
constant foul trouble the entire&#13;
second half.&#13;
Reggie Anderson paced the&#13;
Rangers in scoring with 18 points,&#13;
Walter Greene added 14 and&#13;
Curtis Green scored 10 points and&#13;
grabbed six rebounds. John&#13;
Herndon came off the bench again&#13;
for a fine performance with eight&#13;
points and seven rebounds.&#13;
Wilbert 'Buster' Webb, playing in&#13;
only his second game for the&#13;
Rangers, added eight points and&#13;
four rebounds.&#13;
The last-second shot for&#13;
Parkside typified the whole&#13;
tourney, as Bobby Burns gunned&#13;
in a 35-footer with one second left.&#13;
Parkside dominated the all -&#13;
tournament team placing Walter&#13;
Greene, Curtis Green and most&#13;
valuable player Reggie Anderson.&#13;
Willie Hall of Ouachita Baptist,&#13;
Chris Neumann of Minnesota -&#13;
Duluth and Gordie Zastrow of&#13;
Carthage rounded out the team,&#13;
vs UW-Green Bay, Jan 3&#13;
The Rangers ran their winning&#13;
streak to four games with a tough&#13;
74-66 win over a strong Green Bay&#13;
team. The Phoenix recently took&#13;
the Wisconsin Badgers into two&#13;
overtimes before losing by a&#13;
basket.&#13;
Parkside dominated the game&#13;
throughout most of the first half&#13;
until Green Bay took the lead at&#13;
33-31 with less than a minute to&#13;
play in the half. Parkside tied the&#13;
score at 35 just before the intermission.&#13;
&#13;
The lead seesawed back and&#13;
forth throughout most of the&#13;
second half until Green Bay got&#13;
into foul trouble. Parkside's final&#13;
10 points came on the foul line to&#13;
put the game away.&#13;
Parkside forward Arthur Bright&#13;
had possibly his best game as a&#13;
Ranger by leading the team with&#13;
19 points and eight rebounds.&#13;
Walter Greene added 16 points&#13;
and Curtis Green 13. Green Bay's&#13;
6-8 center Nathan Barnes took&#13;
game honors in both scoring, with&#13;
21 points, and rebounds, with 12.&#13;
at Iowa State, Jan 5&#13;
Parkside started their third&#13;
major college road trip of the&#13;
season by throwing a scare into&#13;
Iowa State before yielding 67-58.&#13;
The Rangers held the lead&#13;
throughout most of the game&#13;
behind hot shooting from freshman&#13;
star Chucky Perry and All -&#13;
American Reggie Anderson. The&#13;
Rangers led 25-21 at the half.&#13;
Iowa State too^ it's first lead of&#13;
the game midway through the&#13;
second half at 40-39, but the&#13;
Rangers came back to lead 47-42&#13;
with 9:24 left to play. Iowa State&#13;
then went on a 12-4 scoring binge&#13;
to take the lead and the game over&#13;
for good.&#13;
Parkside's downfall was the&#13;
poor shooting of Walter Greene&#13;
and Curtis Green, who between&#13;
them scored just seven points.&#13;
Chucky Perry led the Rangers&#13;
with 20 points and Reggie Anderson&#13;
had 18.&#13;
Ron Harris of Iow a " ate led all&#13;
scorers with 21 points along with&#13;
10 r ebounds,&#13;
at Colorado, Jan 7&#13;
Parkside played its worst game&#13;
of the season that Wednesday&#13;
night as they were totally outclassed&#13;
by Colorado 91-51.&#13;
The Rangers shot a horrid 31&#13;
percent from the field compared&#13;
to 50 p ercent for Colorado. Coach&#13;
Stephens said that it lr ked like&#13;
his team "had their feei nailed to&#13;
the floor."&#13;
Parkside trailed 44-21 t halftime&#13;
and was never in the game.&#13;
None of the Rangers scored more&#13;
than eight points, while Wilbert&#13;
Webb led all rebounders with 11.&#13;
at Cal State - Fullerton, Jan 10&#13;
The Rangers first victory over a&#13;
major college opponent this&#13;
season came mainly from the hot&#13;
shooting of senior guard Walter&#13;
Greene, who led all scorers with a&#13;
season high 25 points.&#13;
The lead went back and forth&#13;
between the two teams all&#13;
throughout regulation play. The&#13;
score was tied at the end of the&#13;
first half 22-22 and again at the end&#13;
of the second half 54-54. Buster&#13;
Webb scored on a free throw to tie&#13;
the game with six seconds left on&#13;
the clock. He could have sealed&#13;
the victory but missed the second&#13;
free throw and sent the game into&#13;
overtime.&#13;
The Rangers scored 11 of their&#13;
15 overtime points from the free&#13;
throw line to take a 69-61 win.&#13;
Along with Greene's 25 points,&#13;
Reggie Anderson had 16 and&#13;
Chucky Perry 12. Center Dave&#13;
Wear led Fullerton with 19 points&#13;
and 10 rebounds,&#13;
at Hawaii - Hilo, Jan 13-14&#13;
The Rangers ended their west&#13;
coast road trip with back - to -&#13;
back games in the harsh climate&#13;
of Ha waii. The tough opponent on&#13;
this, the teams first ever trip to&#13;
the islands, was NAIA power&#13;
Hawaii - Hilo, which at the time&#13;
was ranked in the top 20 in the&#13;
NAIA with a record of 12-3.&#13;
The first game was well played&#13;
with the score close all the way.&#13;
Hilo led 38-35 at the half and beat&#13;
the Rangers by that same margin&#13;
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
PARKSIDE'S Curtis 'Tree' Green goes up for a rebound over&#13;
Ouchita Baptist's Charles Dilworth in the championship game of&#13;
the Fourth Annual Ranger Classic basketball tournament.&#13;
74-71. The Rangers lost the game&#13;
at the free throw line, where they&#13;
were outscored 18-7.&#13;
Parkside was led by Chucky&#13;
Perry with 17 points and a Ranger&#13;
season high 10 assists. Reggie&#13;
Anderson added 16 points. Ia&#13;
Saipaia led all scorers for Hilo&#13;
with 24 po ints.&#13;
The second game wasn't nearly&#13;
as close as Hilo outgunned&#13;
Parkside 8(F68. T he Rangers got&#13;
into foul trouble in this game, as&#13;
their whole starting front line,&#13;
Anderson, Webb and Green fouled&#13;
out.&#13;
Parkside was tired and couldn't&#13;
keep up with the hot shooting Hilo&#13;
team. Parkside trailed 36-30 at&#13;
halftime.&#13;
Anderson led Parkside with 16&#13;
points while Walter Greene added&#13;
14. Ia Saipaia again led all scorers&#13;
with 20 points.&#13;
The Rangers ended up the break&#13;
with a 5-11 record, not a bad start&#13;
considering the caliber of teams&#13;
Parkside has played thus far. /&#13;
"instant justice" for rowdy fans&#13;
Rowdy football fans at Clemson&#13;
University don't have to fear&#13;
being taken across town to jail if&#13;
picked up by police. Thanks to an&#13;
"instant justice" court set up&#13;
during games in a building right&#13;
Awards announced at Fall Sports Banquet&#13;
Most valuable nlavers rantains PlwoknfK i : i„ rr„n r^._&#13;
next to the stadium, those picked&#13;
up for drunken or disorderly&#13;
behavior can appear before a&#13;
magistrate, have bond set, pay it&#13;
and return to the game without&#13;
missing many of the big plays.&#13;
Most valuable players, captains&#13;
and letterwinners from UWParkside&#13;
fall sports teams were&#13;
honored December 10, 1980 at the&#13;
annual fall sports awards banquet&#13;
at the Parkside Union.&#13;
Most valuables included NAIA&#13;
national champion Wendy Burman,&#13;
a sophomore from Fond&#13;
du Lac (Gaxirich), for women's&#13;
cross-country; Paul Cannestra,&#13;
a junior from Milwaukee (Messmer),&#13;
for men's cross-country;&#13;
Todd Schalinske, a junior from&#13;
Racine (Horlick) for men's golf;&#13;
Mike Kiefer, a senior from&#13;
Cudahy, for men's soccer ; Kathy&#13;
Thomas, a senior from Kenosha&#13;
(Bradford) for women's tennis;&#13;
and Terri Rieser, a senior from&#13;
Wauwatosa (West), for women's&#13;
volleyball.&#13;
Captains honored at the banquet&#13;
were Cannestra and Dave&#13;
Mueller, a junior from New Berlin&#13;
(West Allis Hale), for men's crosscountry;&#13;
Burman for women's&#13;
cross - country; Brian Graham, a&#13;
junior from Racine (Horlick), for&#13;
men's golf; Kiefer for soccer;&#13;
Thomas for women's tennis; and&#13;
Elizabeth Venci and Linda Zeihen,&#13;
both seniors from Kenosha&#13;
(Bradford), for women's&#13;
volleyball.&#13;
Mark Peterson, a sophomore&#13;
from Oak Creek, was named 1981&#13;
men's golf captain while three&#13;
players will captain the soccer&#13;
squad. They are Racine&#13;
(Lutheran) sophomore Alan&#13;
Gibson, St. Paul, Minn. (Hill -&#13;
Murray) sophomore John McNulty&#13;
and Minneapolis (Robbindale)&#13;
sophomore Bob&#13;
Newstrom.&#13;
Awards for "most improved"&#13;
went to Kimberly freshman Jeff&#13;
Bolwerk for men's soccer and to&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper) freshman A1&#13;
Correa for men's cross - country.&#13;
Letterwinners, by sport, follow:&#13;
Men's Cross - Country&#13;
Tom Barrett, freshman,'&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper); Steve&#13;
Brunner, freshman, Kenosha (St.&#13;
Joseph); Paul Cannestra, junior,&#13;
Milwaukee (Messmer); A1&#13;
Correa, freshman, Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper); Dave Mueller, junior,&#13;
New Berlin (West Allis Hale);&#13;
Dan Stublaski, freshman, Racine&#13;
(Park).&#13;
Women's Cross - Country&#13;
Kelli Benzow, freshman, Racine&#13;
(Case); Wendy Burman,&#13;
sophomore, Fond du Lac&#13;
(Goodrich); JoAnne Carey, freshman,&#13;
Racine (Case); Dona&#13;
Driscoll, sophomore, Muskego;&#13;
Linda Pfeilstifter, freshman,&#13;
Racine (Case); and Sandra&#13;
Venne, freshman, Racine&#13;
(Horlick).&#13;
Men's Golf&#13;
Brian Graham, junior, Racine&#13;
(Horlick); Jeff MuzertSki, freshman,&#13;
Racine (Horlick); Mark&#13;
Peterson, sophomore, Oak Creek:&#13;
Mike Redfearn, senior, Racine&#13;
(Green Bay West); Todd&#13;
Schalinske, junior, Racine&#13;
(Horlick); John Schneider, freshman,&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper).&#13;
Men's Soccer&#13;
John Bieser, freshman,&#13;
Wauwatosa (West); Jeff Bolwerk,&#13;
freshman, Kimberly; Don Cops,&#13;
freshman, Appleton (Xavier);&#13;
Jim Cops, freshman, Kimberly;&#13;
Ralph DeGraff, freshman,&#13;
Chicago, 111. (Qui gley South); Jeff&#13;
Dennehy, freshman, Minneapolis,&#13;
Minn. (Irondale); Brad Faust,&#13;
sophomore, White Bear Lake,&#13;
Minn. (Mariner); Scott Gerhartz,&#13;
freshman, Kimberly; Alan&#13;
Gibson, sophomore, Racine&#13;
(Lutheran); Mike Kiefer, senior,&#13;
Cudahy; Jeff King, freshman,&#13;
Kimberly; Ignacio Marchena,&#13;
freshman, Panama (Subiaco&#13;
Academy, Art.); John McNulty,&#13;
sophomore, St. Paul, Minn. (Hill -&#13;
Murray); Jeff Medin, freshman,&#13;
New Brighton, Minn. (Mounds&#13;
View); John Monks, freshman,&#13;
Chicago, 111. (Qui gley South); Bob&#13;
Newstrom, sophomore, Minneapolis,&#13;
Minn. (Robbinsdale);&#13;
Chiedu Okomah, freshman,&#13;
Chicago, 111. (Quigley South); Dan&#13;
Opferman, freshman, Chicago,&#13;
111. (Quigley South); Dave Schwartz,&#13;
freshman, Kenosha&#13;
(Shoreland Lutheran); Todd&#13;
Wenslaff, sophomore Milwaukee&#13;
(Juneau); Paul Wieland, freshman,&#13;
Milwaukee (Tech).&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
Laura Bianco, junior, Kenosha&#13;
(St. Joseph); Laura Bleashka,&#13;
sophomore, Kenosha (Bradford);&#13;
Nancy Kivi, junior, Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper); Lisa Lindsay, freshman,&#13;
Racine (Horlick); Emily&#13;
Modiz, senior, Albert Lea, Minn.&#13;
(Central); Pam Sumi,&#13;
sophomore, Racine (Horlick);&#13;
Kathy Thomas, senior, Kenosha&#13;
(Bradford).&#13;
Women's Volleyball&#13;
Terri Bieser, senior,&#13;
Wauwatosa (West); Chris&#13;
Dament, freshman, Racine (St.&#13;
Catherine's); Sally Heiring,&#13;
freshman, Kenosha (Bradford);&#13;
Robin Henschel, freshman,&#13;
Hartland (Arrowhead); Laurie&#13;
Hess, freshman, Neenah; Jeanne&#13;
Jacobs, freshman, Milwaukee (St.&#13;
Mary's Academy); Callie Lee,&#13;
freshman, Sterling, 111.; Roxanne&#13;
Nelson, senior, West Allis (Hale) ;&#13;
Laurie Pope, sophomore, Omro;&#13;
Jane Prissel, freshman, Durand;&#13;
Paula Sandahl, freshman,&#13;
Waukegan, 111. (East); Elizabeth&#13;
Venci, senior, Kenosha (Bradford);&#13;
Linda Zeihen, senior,&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford). </text>
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