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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Guskin interviewing for presidency of Temple University</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>jy University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Have a nice Thanksgiving!&#13;
— the Ranger staff&#13;
PSGA Senate&#13;
Meeting r esults in stands&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Nov. 18 Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, Inc.&#13;
Senate meeting was the most&#13;
event - filled Senate meeting of&#13;
this year. It contained the&#13;
resignation of the PSGA Vice -&#13;
President; stands against three&#13;
issues: the proposed tuition&#13;
surcharge, raising the state&#13;
drinking age from 18 to 19, and&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin's actions&#13;
concerning the Teaching Excellence&#13;
Awards; and adoption of&#13;
Student Life eligibility criteria.&#13;
Kathy Bambrough PSGA Vice -&#13;
President, offered her resignation&#13;
the day of the meeting and was not&#13;
present. Kathy Slama, President&#13;
Pro Tempore and now acting Vice&#13;
- President began the meeting by&#13;
reading Bambrough's letter of&#13;
resignation. (See other story for&#13;
details.)&#13;
Mike Pfaffl moved and&#13;
Margaret Rodriguez seconded, to&#13;
take a stand against the proposed&#13;
tuition surcharge which the UW&#13;
Board of Regents approved. The&#13;
surcharge must also be approved&#13;
by the Department of Administration&#13;
and the Joint&#13;
Finance Committee.&#13;
The Pfaffl / Rodriguez&#13;
resolution states, "While it is&#13;
almost certain the DOA will approve&#13;
the Regents' request for the&#13;
surcharge, Joint Finnce might be&#13;
persuaded to deny the request. We&#13;
must urge all members of the&#13;
Joint Finance Committee to oppose&#13;
the surcharge."&#13;
The resolution gives five reasons&#13;
why Joint Finance members may&#13;
oppose the surcharge: the UW&#13;
system received a much smaller&#13;
reduction in state appropriations&#13;
than most other state agencies,&#13;
making the need for a surcharge&#13;
questionable; enrollments are&#13;
higher than projected so the UW&#13;
system will receive $4 million&#13;
more than expected; a surcharge&#13;
does not solve the long term&#13;
problem for the university of&#13;
adjusting to an era of shrinking&#13;
financial resources; although the&#13;
Chancellors have committed&#13;
themselves to using the money&#13;
generated by the surcharge for&#13;
educational purposes, the plans&#13;
are extremely vague; and with&#13;
the country in a recession and&#13;
unemployment hitting 8%,&#13;
families and working students can&#13;
not affort tuition increases.&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Educational Services Carla&#13;
Stoffle asked the Senate, "Are you&#13;
going to take a stand in&#13;
ignorance?" referring to the&#13;
Senate not knowing how Chancellor&#13;
Guskin plans to spend the&#13;
surcharge generated money at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"I don't feel it's a matter of&#13;
ignorance," answered Pfaffl. "I&#13;
just feel that we do not need this&#13;
tuition surcharge. The fact is that&#13;
the $3 million out of such a large&#13;
budget that the UW system has is&#13;
not going to solve anything. It's&#13;
just going to keep coming and&#13;
coming and they're going to want&#13;
more and more. I just feel that it's&#13;
a very dangerous precedent."&#13;
The resolutuion to approve the&#13;
surcharge passed 8-0-3, with&#13;
Randy Klees, John Peterson and&#13;
Luis Valldejuli abstaining.&#13;
After the resolution passed,&#13;
Stoffle told the Senate that $50,000&#13;
of the surcharge - generated&#13;
money is earmarked for the&#13;
library to purchase books that&#13;
couldn't previously be afforded.&#13;
Another Pfaffl / Rodriguez&#13;
resolution concerned raising&#13;
Wisconsin's drinking age from 18&#13;
to 19. The resolution offered many&#13;
reasons for not raising the age: if&#13;
the drinking age is raised, draft&#13;
and voting ages should, in principle,&#13;
also be raised; there are&#13;
many 18 year olds at Parkside and&#13;
would therefore create identification&#13;
problems in the&#13;
Parkside Union; it would increase&#13;
unnecessary bureaucratization of&#13;
our government; the $3 million&#13;
produced by the tuition surcharge&#13;
could instead come from the&#13;
savings of not raising the age; and&#13;
young people, no matter what age,&#13;
whether it is prohibited or not, will&#13;
drink liquor.&#13;
The motion to oppose raising the&#13;
drinking age passed 9-0-2.&#13;
Valldejuli moved and Rodriguez&#13;
seconded, to approve an addition&#13;
to the Senate rules concerning&#13;
criteria for some students in&#13;
student organizations. "To hold&#13;
office in student government or&#13;
any campus club or&#13;
organization," reads the addition,&#13;
"a student must carry a minimum&#13;
of six non - audit credits. Students&#13;
must also have and maintain a 2.0&#13;
cumulative grade point average&#13;
during his or her term in office.&#13;
Students who have not attended U.&#13;
W. Parkside for more than two&#13;
calendar years / and who have&#13;
enrolled again may have their&#13;
grade point eligibility computed&#13;
from the date at which they&#13;
returned to school."&#13;
The motion to approve the&#13;
criteria passed 9-1-0, with Joe&#13;
Ripp voting "no." The implementation&#13;
date for the criteria&#13;
is Jan. 1, 1982.&#13;
The final resolution of the&#13;
meeting concerned the Teaching&#13;
Excellence Award. It was the&#13;
fourth version of t he resolution ; in&#13;
the last month. The first motion&#13;
was rescinded; the fourth is a&#13;
rewritten version of the second&#13;
and third.&#13;
The major difference between&#13;
this resolution and the last two&#13;
before it is the wording. The last&#13;
one "demanded" that Chancellor&#13;
Guskin change his mind and give&#13;
Shirley Kersey the award and the&#13;
money. This resolution says that&#13;
Guskin "should change his&#13;
decision" and give Kersey the&#13;
award "publically and the $500&#13;
award money even though it is&#13;
university money, she did earn it&#13;
while employed at Parkside."&#13;
The Teaching Excellence&#13;
Awards stand was vetoed by&#13;
PSGA President Jim Kreuser. At&#13;
Monday's meeting, an unsuccessful&#13;
attempt was made to&#13;
reintroduce the issue to the&#13;
senate. See next week's Ranger&#13;
for details.&#13;
PSGA vice president resigns&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Editor&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. Vice President&#13;
Kathy Bambrough resigned her&#13;
position along with all appointments&#13;
to faculty committees&#13;
as of November 18 in an open&#13;
letter to PSGA President Jim&#13;
Kreuser and all Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
Kreuser's response to Bambrough's&#13;
resignation was: "I was&#13;
a little disinheartened. You gotta&#13;
keep your studies up. If it interferes&#13;
too much, I gotta accept it&#13;
on those grounds."&#13;
The open position must be filled&#13;
by Kreuser's appointment, with&#13;
the approval of the senate. Kathy&#13;
Slama, presently pro tempore, is&#13;
currently acting as vice president.&#13;
Kreuser said that he had two&#13;
senators in mind for appointment&#13;
to the position of vice president. "I&#13;
have to talk to them yet and I have&#13;
to talk to the senate. I want&#13;
someone who can work well with&#13;
the senate," he said. "The senate&#13;
can ok or reject my appointment,"&#13;
Kreuser said, "but I&#13;
can bring the same person again&#13;
the next time. It's really totally&#13;
my decision. Last year Tracy&#13;
(Gruber, then PSGA President)&#13;
appointed Kay (Mullikin to the&#13;
position) and there was&#13;
resistance, but eventually it&#13;
went."&#13;
Parkside administrators expressed&#13;
surprise and sadness at&#13;
Bambrough's resignation. "Any&#13;
time I see a student resign from a&#13;
responsible position, it's a sad&#13;
event," said Dave Pedersen, Dean&#13;
of Student Life. Pedersen called&#13;
the vice presidency "the toughest&#13;
job in the senate."&#13;
"Maybe this will make all&#13;
senators look at their role and the&#13;
Continued On Page Five&#13;
Guskin interviewing for presidency of Temple University&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Alan E.&#13;
Guskin is a finalist for the&#13;
presidency of Temple University&#13;
in Philadelphia. In the course of&#13;
Temple conducting its&#13;
presidential search process, this&#13;
fact has become generally known&#13;
in the past day or two at Parkside&#13;
and in Philadelphia. To clarify the&#13;
situation, Guskin is issuing the&#13;
following statement:&#13;
"Several months ago I was&#13;
contacted by the presidential&#13;
search group at Temple. They&#13;
said my name had been brought to&#13;
their attention and asked if I&#13;
would be a candidate for their&#13;
presidency. What happened in this&#13;
situation is what typically happens&#13;
in filling top university&#13;
positions; you are nominated by&#13;
one or more of your colleagues in&#13;
higher education and, if the institution&#13;
is interested in you, you&#13;
are then invited to become a&#13;
candidate. Given the size and&#13;
stature of Temple as one of the&#13;
leading urban universities in the&#13;
country, I was flattered to be&#13;
asked and professionally, of&#13;
course, could hardly refuse. I&#13;
have met with the search group&#13;
and others at Temple and will be&#13;
meeting with them at least once&#13;
again in the near future. Their&#13;
timetable calls for the new&#13;
president to begin duties in time&#13;
for the 1982-83 a cademic year. I&#13;
am not at liberty to discuss the&#13;
position beyond that.&#13;
"My candidacy should in no way&#13;
be interpreted as being&#13;
dissatisfied at UW-Parkside.&#13;
Although the challenge of heading&#13;
an institution like Temple is very&#13;
appealing, leaving Parkside . . .&#13;
leaving Wisconsin . . . would be a&#13;
most difficult personal and&#13;
ALAN GUSKIN&#13;
professional decision. I believe in&#13;
this university, I have the very&#13;
highest regard for the University&#13;
of Wisconsin System, and I love&#13;
my job. I'm optimistic about&#13;
Parkside's future and anxious to&#13;
continue building on our accomplishments&#13;
of the last six&#13;
years. At this point, I'm not sure&#13;
what my decision would be if I&#13;
were offered the position."&#13;
Temple University is among the&#13;
country's largest and most&#13;
comprehensive urban universities,&#13;
offering several hundred&#13;
different graduate and undergraduate&#13;
degrees, including 61&#13;
doctoral programs and&#13;
professional schools of medicine,&#13;
law, dentistry and pharmacy at&#13;
six campuses in the Philadelphia&#13;
area and in Rome, Italy.&#13;
Enrollment is about 34,000, including&#13;
12,000 graduate students.&#13;
Founded in 1884, Temple is a&#13;
combination public and private&#13;
university with a current budget&#13;
of more than $250 million.&#13;
Guskin assumed the chancellorship&#13;
of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside September&#13;
1, 1975. He came to Parkside from&#13;
Clark University in Worcester,&#13;
Mass., where he had served,&#13;
successfully, as provost and acting&#13;
president.&#13;
Guskin had been a professor of&#13;
education and sociology at Clark,&#13;
and held a professoral position at&#13;
the University of Michigan, where&#13;
he earned his Ph.D. in social&#13;
psychology. At Michigan he also&#13;
was a project director in the Institute&#13;
for Social Research and&#13;
assistant director of the Institute's&#13;
Center for Research on the&#13;
Utilization of Scientific&#13;
Knowledge.&#13;
As graduate students, Guskin&#13;
and his wife Judy, also a Michigan&#13;
Ph.D., organized the student&#13;
movement at Michigan which was&#13;
widely credited with inspiring&#13;
John F. Kennedy to found the&#13;
Peace Corps. The Guskins later&#13;
went on to become among the first&#13;
Peace Corps volunteers to&#13;
Thailand. After their return to the&#13;
U.S., Guskin helped establish&#13;
VISTA as a member of the&#13;
President's Task Force on the&#13;
War Against Poverty and as&#13;
director of VISTA's selection&#13;
division. Judy, now a university&#13;
researcher and consultant in&#13;
bilingual education, also was one&#13;
of the founders of VISTA. The&#13;
Guskins' role in the establishment&#13;
of the Peace Corps was&#13;
acknowledged in October, 1980,&#13;
when they were invited to be&#13;
featured participants in the 20th&#13;
anniversity of t he Corps' founding&#13;
in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Parkside's accomplishments&#13;
under Guskin's leadership have&#13;
been significant.&#13;
Immediately upon assuming the&#13;
Chancellorship at UW-Parkside,&#13;
Guskin initiated a broad institutional&#13;
self - study involving&#13;
scores of faculty, staff, students&#13;
and community groups and individuals.&#13;
Through this process,&#13;
Parkside quickly made significant&#13;
strides in clarifying its identity&#13;
and establishing the three&#13;
priorities which chart the&#13;
direction of the University under&#13;
Guskin: commitments to&#13;
academic excellence in programs,&#13;
faculty, and standards; extensive&#13;
community outreach; and the&#13;
strengthening and focusing of its&#13;
special education mission to serve&#13;
the needs of an urban, industrial&#13;
society.&#13;
\&#13;
Guskin's achievements at UWParkside&#13;
have earned him&#13;
recognition as a national leader in&#13;
higher education.&#13;
INSIDE&#13;
• Victor Reuther interview&#13;
• Non-smokers demand rights&#13;
• Review: Al Stewart's 'Indian Summer'&#13;
• UW-P hosts NAIA championships &#13;
Wednesday, November 25,1981&#13;
Editorials&#13;
RANGER&#13;
JOOOCO! WCOOSO! «occcooccoocooooooo&lt;&#13;
ft&#13;
n&#13;
^&#13;
r f_&#13;
dUorials re&#13;
flect the opinion of the majority of the editorial&#13;
•j S students ma&#13;
y submit editorial ideas to the editor for&#13;
consideration. Editorial ideas need not be typed to be considered.&#13;
OF COUR SE OUR. PROGRAM&#13;
HAS HAD NO&#13;
EFFECT. IT DOESN'T&#13;
START&#13;
UNTIL ,&#13;
OCT. 1.&#13;
YOU CAN'T REVERSE /...CAN'T REVERSE AO\ t|0 YEARS OF MISMAM&#13;
46 YEARS OF MISMAN- [YEARS OF ^&#13;
,S&#13;
^AN{GE-) AGEMENT IN AO WEEfc&#13;
AGEMENT IN Kl IN ^MONTHS.&#13;
«oooooo&amp;scca&#13;
Resignation unsettling&#13;
pJr^iH^Snt r °&#13;
f Kathy ®amb&#13;
r&#13;
ouSh. former vice president of&#13;
I Government Association, inc., marks at the least the&#13;
cpiti o -^9 P0 n&#13;
^&#13;
uickl&#13;
y vacated mid - term. Un-&#13;
^ciuing, isn t it.&#13;
Usually, resignations of elected officials are interpreted by the public&#13;
as instances of personality clashes or voluntary dismissals. In this case&#13;
however, the resignation points to another issue.&#13;
Sure, there are personality clashes and other problems within PSGA.&#13;
But the role of vice president is one that is especially hard for a person&#13;
who has many good ideas and desires to remain active while in the&#13;
position. The vice president chairs all senate meetings — is in fact&#13;
president of the senate. This role, as it now exists, gives the v p little&#13;
room to voice opinions or initiate action.&#13;
Strangely enough, no one has recommended changes in the duties or&#13;
powers of the office to alleviate the pressure. Are we waiting for some&#13;
Superman or Wonder Woman to take the position or is it possible that&#13;
the job could be remade to suit human beings?&#13;
Forum scheduled&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin has scheduled the second of his "open&#13;
forums for the 1981-82 school year for Wednesday, Dec. 2. All students,&#13;
faculty and staff are invited to the forum between 1- and 2 p.m. in Union&#13;
The Ranger will be there. Will you?&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
Bookstore rally planned&#13;
'N FIVE .&#13;
IT CAN'T BE DONE&#13;
BY ONE MAN&#13;
E~D6nE\ Of Course ou r program&#13;
fet"fefTs •£»&#13;
of mismanagement in..&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
For quite some time students at&#13;
Parkside University have&#13;
tolerated a most unbearable&#13;
situation. We now feel that the&#13;
time has come to make some&#13;
drastic changes. To quote the&#13;
Declaration of Independence,&#13;
"Whenever any form of Government&#13;
(University Bookstore)&#13;
becomes destructive of these&#13;
ends, it is the right of the people&#13;
(students) to alter or to abolish it&#13;
... it is their right, it is their duty,&#13;
to throw off such Government."&#13;
Everyone agrees in principle&#13;
that the University bookstore,&#13;
which is run by Follett Corporation,&#13;
is not really serving&#13;
and/or meeting the needs of the&#13;
Parkside student body. Why?&#13;
Agreed, the fault or blame cannot&#13;
always be cast unilaterally on the&#13;
bookstore. The responsibility&#13;
must be shared by the entire&#13;
University community including&#13;
students, faculty, and administration.&#13;
&#13;
Why does Parkside seem to&#13;
have more than its share of&#13;
problems in this area? The answer&#13;
to their question is very&#13;
complex, to say the least, and any&#13;
solution will require the&#13;
cooperation of the entire campus&#13;
community. We have attempted to&#13;
solve the question by researching&#13;
the matter, but the more we dug&#13;
into the matter the more complicated&#13;
it became. The following&#13;
facts have been uncovered and&#13;
are important in helping other&#13;
students understand why we feel&#13;
that the University should&#13;
strongly consider other alternatives&#13;
to the present bookstore&#13;
situation. We believe that the&#13;
University should assume control&#13;
of the campus bookstore. Our&#13;
investigation has disclosed the&#13;
following information: l. UWParkside&#13;
is the only school, in the&#13;
UW system, which has a privately&#13;
contracted company to run the&#13;
bookstore. 2. During the ten years&#13;
which Follett has bid on this&#13;
control, they have been the sole&#13;
bidder. 3. The University can&#13;
dictate to the contractor through&#13;
the contract exactly what they&#13;
wish to have as services. 4&#13;
Because of Parkside's high book&#13;
return rate or non - purchase rate&#13;
the contract allows the company&#13;
to charge the students 5% above&#13;
the manufacturers suggested&#13;
retail price. 5. The University has&#13;
no control over the used book&#13;
system, only the contract&#13;
specifies that books will be&#13;
repurcha sable.&#13;
These factors as well as student&#13;
concern for poor service and high&#13;
prices has prompted us to call for&#13;
a rally, to be announced at a later&#13;
date, to show the administration&#13;
how we as students feel about the&#13;
situation and to put some pressure&#13;
on them to change the current&#13;
status quo. The current contract&#13;
- for the bookstore will be expiring&#13;
very shortly and the bidding&#13;
procedure will begin to take place..&#13;
However, if history repeats itself,&#13;
there will possibly be only one&#13;
bidder, and should the University&#13;
ask for more than Follett feels&#13;
they can profitably provide, there&#13;
may be no bidders. This would&#13;
leave the University with very few&#13;
alternatives, the best of which we&#13;
feel, is University control.&#13;
At present there are several&#13;
committee's studying the&#13;
situation for the University. It is&#13;
important that they know how we&#13;
as students feel. We are asking all&#13;
students to help affect a change by&#13;
doing one or all of the following:&#13;
1. Sign the petition of the&#13;
alternative to the bookstore.&#13;
2. Attend the rally in support of&#13;
University control.&#13;
3. Write to one of the following&#13;
with your experience with the&#13;
bookstore and what you feel&#13;
should be done to solve the&#13;
problem. Alan E. Guskin, Lorman&#13;
A. Ratner, Nicholas C. Burckel&#13;
From the Files&#13;
10 years ago —&#13;
"Luomos wins PSGA&#13;
Presidency," by Ken Konkol of&#13;
the Newscope staff&#13;
In an election that saw only 17&#13;
percent of the student body&#13;
casting votes, the Concerned&#13;
Students Coalition scored a solid&#13;
victory by capturing three of the&#13;
top offices from more moderate&#13;
candidates. Amid rumors of&#13;
alleged ballot box stuffing .&#13;
Dean Luomos won the presidency&#13;
over Dennis Cashion by 29 votes&#13;
while his running mate, Bruce&#13;
Volpentesta, easily defeated his&#13;
nearest challenger, Frank&#13;
Chiappetta. Rounding out the CSC&#13;
victory, Canny Trotter pulled 458&#13;
votes in winning the treasurer's&#13;
office.&#13;
Jeanette Dremel ran uncontested&#13;
for recording secretary&#13;
and received 498 v otes, tops for&#13;
any of the candidates.&#13;
—Newscope, Nov. 29, 1971, vo l. 5,&#13;
no. 13&#13;
5 years ago —&#13;
"Classical Honors Proposed"&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
There is interest in reshaping&#13;
the format of the diplomas given&#13;
to graduating seniors, according&#13;
to a report given to the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee at its brief&#13;
meeting last Tuesday.&#13;
This reshaping would include&#13;
adding honors for students surpassing&#13;
a certain gradepoint&#13;
average. According to Carol-Lee&#13;
Saffioti, assistant professor of&#13;
English, this might include what&#13;
is now known as "classical"&#13;
honors.&#13;
Classical honors is where&#13;
students getting above a certain&#13;
GPA, such as 3.25, would have&#13;
added to their diploma "cum&#13;
laude." Translated from Latin,&#13;
this means "with praise."&#13;
A person getting higher than 3.5&#13;
or 3.75 would receive a magna or a&#13;
summa cum laude . . .&#13;
Saffioti told the committee that&#13;
a proposal had come before the&#13;
Faculty Senate in 1970 but failed&#13;
because of its conflict with the&#13;
Parkside catalogue.&#13;
—Ranger, Dec. 1, 1976, vo l. v, no.&#13;
12&#13;
I year ago —&#13;
"Feminist health worker to&#13;
speak on women's health" by G.&#13;
Helgeson&#13;
Barbara Federlin, a health&#13;
worker at Milwaukee's Bread and&#13;
Roses Women's Health Center,&#13;
will speak on Women's Health this&#13;
Friday at 10 a.m. in Parkside's&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre. Federlin's&#13;
appearance is sponsored by&#13;
Parkside Concourse.&#13;
Bread and Roses, a women's&#13;
health center designed by women&#13;
for women, is "committed to&#13;
women having knowledge of their&#13;
bodies and control over their&#13;
reproductive lives."&#13;
Federlin . . . has worked at&#13;
Bread and Roses since it opened.&#13;
Currently, she is coordinator of&#13;
Bread and Roses' cervical cap&#13;
program.&#13;
The cervical cap is a thimble -&#13;
shaped diaphragm - like birth&#13;
control device that has recently&#13;
been reintroduced to the United&#13;
States. It has since been&#13;
categorized by the Food and Drug&#13;
Administration as a "significant&#13;
risk device," since it has not been&#13;
tested in the U.S. to FDA&#13;
satisfaction.&#13;
According to Federlin, "The cap&#13;
has been in use for more than a&#13;
century (mostly in European&#13;
countries) and clearly does not&#13;
threaten its user with the toxicity&#13;
of a drug or an implant in the&#13;
body.&#13;
"There's clearly a lot of interest&#13;
in the cap," according to Federlin.&#13;
"However, the cap is not available&#13;
everywhere. Bread and Roses&#13;
appears-to be the only provider of&#13;
caps in Wisconsin at this time."&#13;
—Ranger, Dec. 4, 1980, v ol. 9, no&#13;
13&#13;
David A. Pedersen, or Thomas S.&#13;
Moore.&#13;
4. Support any organization&#13;
working for a change in bookstore&#13;
policy.&#13;
If every student who has a&#13;
complaint will voice his feelings,&#13;
positive changes will have to take&#13;
place.&#13;
Ron Griffin&#13;
Marta Schaefer&#13;
Ranger missed review&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
We, the Dramatic Arts students&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside, found the last issue of&#13;
the Ranger very interesting&#13;
(November 12, 1981). It was very&#13;
comforting to knew how well&#13;
student activities are supported&#13;
by the Ranger. In case you forgot,&#13;
the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside Dramatic Arts students&#13;
did a play on campus. A good play&#13;
called The Runner Stumbles. We&#13;
were told the Ranger would be&#13;
sending someone to see and&#13;
review the show. We don't believe&#13;
you know how much that meant to&#13;
us. At last, the Ranger was taking&#13;
an interest in our efforts. An interest&#13;
other than the paid advertisements&#13;
they so cheerfully&#13;
accept. We even gave the editor&#13;
two free tickets to a performance.&#13;
The review, however, did not&#13;
appear when promised. We were&#13;
told it was because of a lack of&#13;
space. We understood and were&#13;
somewhat appeased when we&#13;
were assured that the review&#13;
would be run in the following&#13;
week's issue — the Thursday after&#13;
the show closed. This, of course,&#13;
would do nothing to bolster the&#13;
number of students who may have&#13;
come to see the show but we still&#13;
looked forward to seeing what our&#13;
fellow students thought of our&#13;
endeavor. Well, the anticipated&#13;
issue arrived with no review in&#13;
sight.&#13;
Thank you, Ranger, once again&#13;
for all the wonderful publicity,&#13;
enthusiasm, and general interest&#13;
We feel a great disservice has&#13;
been done. Although you had&#13;
given us preliminary articles we&#13;
still believe a promise was made&#13;
and trust broken. It is important&#13;
for us to let you know how we feel.&#13;
The Cast and Crew of&#13;
The Runner Stumbles&#13;
Editor's Note:&#13;
Regarding the review of The&#13;
Runner Stumbles: The Ranger&#13;
does not at this time have a&#13;
reviewer on staff who is qualified&#13;
to write on theatrical performances.&#13;
We had one at the&#13;
beginning of this semester, but he&#13;
has not been working for us as of&#13;
late. Since he was involved with&#13;
the performance at Parkside, he&#13;
told me he felt the review should&#13;
be handled by someone else. I&#13;
quite agree.&#13;
Since he was the only person on&#13;
staff I felt could be called on to do&#13;
the work, I decided to do it myself.&#13;
Once I made that decision, I was&#13;
confronted by several people who&#13;
asked me to "say good things&#13;
about the play because they&#13;
worked so hard on it."&#13;
I felt that what was really important&#13;
at this stage was to give&#13;
the play space, which we did.&#13;
Almost a full page of our feature&#13;
section was devoted to the play&#13;
that week. We also planned to use&#13;
a pictorial developed from photos&#13;
taken at dress rehearsals the&#13;
second week (thinking that this&#13;
along with a short piece of copy&#13;
would show our readers how much&#13;
time and work the cast and crew&#13;
had put in) but the person who had&#13;
taken the photos told me they had&#13;
not turned out.&#13;
If you were "promised" that the&#13;
review would appear at any time&#13;
at all, I apologize. We make it a&#13;
point never to promise that any&#13;
material will appear in the&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
Ginger Helgeson&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Dan McCormack&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
Frank Falduto&#13;
ganger&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Advisoi&#13;
AMyn ^^mark^ Jeff^ran^™ Pat^H^ Ed&#13;
*&#13;
nt??&#13;
user&#13;
' Zachr&gt;&#13;
Jim Kreuser, Pat McDonald i- £ ' Mary Kaddatz&#13;
Mark Sanders Kim Srhhf* c™ ^&#13;
ert,ns&#13;
' steve Myers,&#13;
Jeff Wicks. ' Schlater, Sue Stevens, Dan Werbie,&#13;
UWParkside and ,hev are sole&#13;
"&#13;
Written^ * Prin,ed by the Union Co^e/al i ™ v pjbr^&#13;
6&#13;
/ during breaks and holidays&#13;
Wntten permission is required for reprint of Lv, . '"&#13;
9 Co&#13;
" Ken&#13;
°sha, Wisconsin.&#13;
pl/°&#13;
r&#13;
.&#13;
reSb&#13;
°&#13;
ndence shoult&#13;
' be address^ to&#13;
VPo&#13;
rt&#13;
'.&#13;
0n0f RANGER.&#13;
l ette t' *&#13;
enosha&#13;
- Wl 53141. Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UW &#13;
RANGER&#13;
Public forum&#13;
Wednesday, November 25, 1981&#13;
Unions face 80's challenges&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
We will not survive the&#13;
challenges of the 80's if the labor&#13;
ri£n PaSSive and does not&#13;
to challenge the threat to its&#13;
very existence!" Such was the&#13;
^75 l.&#13;
V,&#13;
lctor Reuther, the&#13;
"We have an administration&#13;
that wants to teach those&#13;
arrogant workers a lesson."&#13;
In the 1940's the American trade&#13;
movement proved that the&#13;
revolution was not a Roosevelt&#13;
revolution, but had sunk its roots&#13;
deep in American life. In the&#13;
1950's, that American revolution,&#13;
keynote speaker at J» CnA™™* dedespspitite e ththe e fafacct t ththat at it it dedemmonon--&#13;
November 17 public forum ^ grated the fact that it was here to&#13;
iSS?™ p"&#13;
d&#13;
-2* C&#13;
^&#13;
Uenges of the&#13;
1980 s. Besides Reuther, a former&#13;
assistant to the President and&#13;
Director of International Affairs&#13;
(IIAWWh Aut0 Wooers (UAW), the other panelists of the&#13;
W^&#13;
re Jack Barbash,&#13;
Catherine Conroy and Jim Foster&#13;
The program was moderated by&#13;
Lhe Director of Public Forums,&#13;
Reuther said. "There is a growing&#13;
militancy on the part of unions&#13;
which is the source of some encouragement&#13;
that they are not&#13;
going to take this lying down," he&#13;
said.&#13;
"The awakening of the trade&#13;
union movement in the United&#13;
Kenneth Hoover States to its political respon- ' ™e&#13;
f.&#13;
t0 u&#13;
f political responabilities&#13;
is only the beginning," he&#13;
said. Reuther pointed out that&#13;
"I hope we no longer have&#13;
to solve labor relations by&#13;
the laws of the jungle ."&#13;
— Victor Reuther&#13;
Reuther spoke first, stressing&#13;
that although unions have "come&#13;
a long way" from conditions of the&#13;
20's and 30's, today's current&#13;
social and economic problems are&#13;
cause for a more active union&#13;
movement. "I would hope&#13;
American democracy has&#13;
matured to the point where we no&#13;
longer have to solve labor&#13;
relations by the laws of the jungle,&#13;
although I must say it becomes&#13;
increasingly clear each day that&#13;
the Reagan Administration intends&#13;
to leave no other alternative&#13;
for the trade union movement,"&#13;
comalthougn&#13;
there is "no clear&#13;
political philosophy" to unite&#13;
trade unions, big business and&#13;
recent economic conditions would&#13;
bring the unions together&#13;
politically.&#13;
Reuther went on to criticize the&#13;
big auto makers (GM, Ford, and&#13;
Chrysler) for shoddy business&#13;
practices concerned with the&#13;
union, which he called "a code of&#13;
ethics which can only be&#13;
pared with the Mafia."&#13;
Jack Barbash, Bascom&#13;
Professor of Economics and Industrial&#13;
Relations (Emeritus) at&#13;
UW-Madison, and recent&#13;
president of the Industrial&#13;
Relations Research Association,&#13;
said the "Polish Uprising" we are&#13;
witnessing in Poland right now is&#13;
what American labor unions got 50&#13;
years ago; the right to organize&#13;
and bargain collectively. "The&#13;
1930's .. . was a period of upsurge.&#13;
stay, experienced a stagnation in&#13;
growth. In the 1960's, we had ... a&#13;
replacation of the 1930 revolution,&#13;
but this time in the public sector.&#13;
In the 1970's and now the 80's, we&#13;
are confronted with the counter -&#13;
revolution," Barbash said.&#13;
"The fact that they (the Reagan&#13;
Administration) believe in this&#13;
counter - revolution, and in good&#13;
faith, simply goes to prove that the&#13;
road to hell is paved with good&#13;
intentions," he said.&#13;
The next speaker in the&#13;
Continued On Page Four&#13;
VICTOR REUTHER Photo by Steve Myers&#13;
Reuther discusses labor movement&#13;
Outward Bound offers courses&#13;
For students wishing a total&#13;
break from the classroom&#13;
situation, Outward Bound offers 5&#13;
to 23-day courses throughout the&#13;
winter months. Designed so that&#13;
students will meet challenging&#13;
experiences in wilderness&#13;
situations, Outward Bound winter&#13;
courses take place in ten different&#13;
U.S. locations, offering both warm&#13;
and cold weather environments.&#13;
Students travel&#13;
cheap with AYHA&#13;
Students planning to travel&#13;
anywhere in the world during&#13;
semester break can cut down on&#13;
their expenses by joining the&#13;
American Youth Hostel&#13;
Association. For a $14 annual&#13;
membership fee, hostelers get a&#13;
pass which entitles them to stay at&#13;
any of over 5,000 hostels in the&#13;
United States or abroad. More&#13;
than 250 hostels are in this&#13;
country, with eight being in&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
Bargain rates of $3 to $5 for&#13;
overnight accomodations,&#13;
discounts on ski lift tickets in the&#13;
Alps and some reduced admission&#13;
charges are available to hostelers.&#13;
In addition, local hostel groups&#13;
sponsor outdoor activities such as&#13;
skiing, bicycling and canoeing.&#13;
Hostel memberships may be&#13;
purchased at the Wisconsin&#13;
Council AYH Office, 1417&#13;
Wauwatosa Avenue, #102,&#13;
Wauwatosa, phone 257-2323. Office&#13;
hours are Tuesday, Thursday and&#13;
Saturday from 9 a.m. to 12 noon,&#13;
and Monday from 5 to 7 p.m.&#13;
Passes purchased now will expire&#13;
December 31,1982. Please enclose&#13;
a large self addressed stamped&#13;
envelope if you request written&#13;
information.&#13;
Correction&#13;
The reception planned for&#13;
Shirley Kersey, recipient of a 1980-&#13;
81 Teaching Excellence Award, is,&#13;
planned for Thursday, Dec. 3 at&#13;
8:30 p.m. in Union 207. All&#13;
Parkside students are invited to&#13;
attend.&#13;
While many come to Outward&#13;
Bound seeking a shot at high&#13;
adventure — and they'll probably&#13;
get it — most will leave with a new&#13;
understanding of themselves after&#13;
discovering they are capable of&#13;
doing things they might&#13;
previously have thought "impossible."&#13;
&#13;
Outward Bound winter courses&#13;
are part of a year - round program&#13;
which includes courses lasting&#13;
from 5 to 26 days. Semester&#13;
courses with Outward Bound are&#13;
also available for two and three -&#13;
month periods. For information,&#13;
write Outward Bound, Inc., 384&#13;
Field Point Road, Greenwich, CT.&#13;
06830, or call toll free 800-243-8520.&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
Recently, I had a chance to talk&#13;
with Victor Reuther, one of the&#13;
"Grand old men" of labor, while&#13;
he was here at Parkside. Reuther,&#13;
who retired from his positions&#13;
with the UAW in 1972, was at one&#13;
time Administrative Assistant to&#13;
the President, and Director of the&#13;
Department for International&#13;
Affairs, to name a few. Mr.&#13;
Reuther first came to the public's&#13;
attention in 1935 as a young man in&#13;
his middle twenties when he&#13;
achieved leadership and national&#13;
prominence as a strike leader&#13;
during the first general&#13;
automobile strikes in Michigan.&#13;
Since that time, he has been&#13;
closely identified with the&#13;
dynamic growth of industrial&#13;
unionism not only in the&#13;
automobile industry, but&#13;
throughout America's basic industries,&#13;
organized by the CIO.&#13;
In light of recent developments&#13;
in the labor movement, I asked&#13;
him to speculate on the role of&#13;
unions today.&#13;
RANGER: You have seen the&#13;
labor movement grow, and as you&#13;
have said yourself, it has come a&#13;
long way since 1937. But do you&#13;
see union membership as a whole&#13;
declining? If so, what must unions&#13;
do to reverse the decline in&#13;
membership?&#13;
REUTHER: Well, let's get one&#13;
thing clear: there is an actual&#13;
increase in union membership&#13;
occurring, but that increase in&#13;
membership is not keeping pace&#13;
with an increase in population.&#13;
Hence, the labor movement today&#13;
represents a smaller percentage&#13;
of t he work force than it did in past&#13;
years. Now there are several&#13;
reasons for that. The trade union&#13;
movement was organized&#13;
primarily around manual workers&#13;
we call blue collar workers. The&#13;
impact of the new technology&#13;
requires a smaller percentage of&#13;
blue collar workers and a higher&#13;
percentage of white collar&#13;
workers and technicians, so the&#13;
labor movement's structure&#13;
hasn't kept pace. Now we are&#13;
finding more white collar workers&#13;
being unionized: nurses, school&#13;
teachers, office and professional&#13;
workers, state, county and&#13;
municipal workers, etc.&#13;
The other point I want to make&#13;
is that before the merger of the&#13;
CIO and the AFL, the CIO, which&#13;
represented the industrial unions,&#13;
accepted the responsibility&#13;
nationally of launching big&#13;
organizing drives and helping the&#13;
weak unions finance them. This&#13;
was not the tradition of the AFL,&#13;
which left to each single union the&#13;
responsibility of organizing the&#13;
people in their own industry. And I&#13;
think with the merger, and with&#13;
the feeling that the central&#13;
federation has to do something to&#13;
counter this, you are going to see&#13;
an increase in union membership.&#13;
Furthermore, every time there is&#13;
a deterioration in the general&#13;
economic situation, unemployment&#13;
rising, interest rates&#13;
becoming a problem, people find&#13;
they have to struggle to make&#13;
progress and they turn to the only&#13;
institution that can help them,&#13;
which is the trade union.&#13;
RANGER: Do you see labor&#13;
forming a political party? (A third&#13;
party?)&#13;
REUTHER: No, certainly not in&#13;
the forseeable future. I see it&#13;
becoming much more actively&#13;
involved as a participant in the&#13;
political process, but while the&#13;
trade unions are strong enough to&#13;
successfully carry out their&#13;
programs on the economic front,&#13;
they can strike General Motors&#13;
and win, but when you move into&#13;
the political field, your base must&#13;
be much broader. You have to&#13;
have farm votes, you have to have&#13;
white collar votes, you have to&#13;
build a coalition much broader&#13;
than the trade union movement.&#13;
That is being done. And I think you&#13;
will see the trade unions becoming&#13;
involved much more during the&#13;
primary process, and all the way&#13;
through.&#13;
RANGER: What do you see as&#13;
labor's most effective tool now?&#13;
REUTHER: I think its most&#13;
effective weapon now must be its&#13;
ability to build a broad coalition&#13;
around specific issues and to work&#13;
for that in the legislative and&#13;
political field. The time for relying&#13;
solely upon strike action to win its&#13;
gains has served the major, initial&#13;
purpose. There will still be some&#13;
Continued On Page Five&#13;
JOHN MORRELL DIDN'T&#13;
BECOME A TRAINEE AFTER COLLEGE.&#13;
HE BECAME A MANAGER.&#13;
"As Executive Officer of the&#13;
Army's Defense Language Institute at&#13;
Monterey, California, I'm responsible&#13;
for the housing, feeding and wellbeing&#13;
of 500 students. And that's no&#13;
small task. I manage an annual food&#13;
budget of over a million and a half&#13;
dollars. And I'm accountable for five&#13;
million dollars worth of property.&#13;
"On top of managing money,&#13;
I a lso supervise a staff of 24 people.&#13;
And each one has unique problems&#13;
that I have to handle on a daily basis.&#13;
You better believe the leadership&#13;
and management training I received&#13;
in Army ROTC is paying off."&#13;
There are other good reasons&#13;
for taking ROTC, too. Like scholarship&#13;
opportunities. And financial&#13;
assistance - up to $1,000 a year for&#13;
your last two years of RCTC.&#13;
If you want a job after college&#13;
that offers real challenge and real&#13;
responsibility, do what John Morrell&#13;
did. Take Army RCTC.&#13;
And begin your future as an&#13;
officer.&#13;
Army ROTC at UW-Parkside&#13;
Call Captain Fred Herron&#13;
Marquette University&#13;
Collect - 224-7195, 7229&#13;
1st Lt. John Morrell was a business major at&#13;
the University of Iowa and a member of Army&#13;
ROTC. ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BE ALL YOU CAN &#13;
4 Wednesday, November 25,1981 RANGER&#13;
Physicist Kaku denounces nuclear power&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
News Editor&#13;
When nuclear physicist Dr.&#13;
Michio Kaku was growing up in&#13;
the 1950's, he (along with most&#13;
Americans), believed nuclear&#13;
power was the way of the future.&#13;
In 1966, however, while he was at&#13;
Harvard, Kaku began to seriously&#13;
doubt the benefits of nuclear&#13;
power.&#13;
Kaku spoke to about 175 people&#13;
at Parkside last week in a lecture&#13;
/ slide presentation called&#13;
"Nuclear Power . . . The Unfin&#13;
ish e d , U n f o r g i v i ng&#13;
Technology." The event was&#13;
sponsored by Mobilization for&#13;
Survival.&#13;
Kaku, currently teaching&#13;
physics at City College, New&#13;
York, has recently been in&#13;
California taking action against&#13;
the Diablo Canyon nuclear power&#13;
plant. Diablo Canyon is a $2 billion&#13;
twin reactor plant located between&#13;
San Francisco and Los&#13;
Angeles and less than three miles&#13;
from an earthquake fault.&#13;
"The people of California have&#13;
nicknamed that reactor," Kaku&#13;
said. "They call it the Shake - n -&#13;
Bake reactor."&#13;
Kaku once debated a senior&#13;
nuclear engineer of the construction&#13;
company for Diablo&#13;
Canyon. The engineer admitted&#13;
that there were construction&#13;
problems. "The engineers accidently&#13;
reversed the blueprints of&#13;
this nuclear power plant — the&#13;
plastic overlay (between) units 1&#13;
and 2 was misplaced, so parts of&#13;
unit 2 go t placed into unit 1 and&#13;
vice-a-versa." The floor supports&#13;
which support the entire floor of&#13;
the reactor were also installed&#13;
backwards.&#13;
The same construction firm was&#13;
the first to install a nuclear&#13;
reactor vessel 180 degrees backwards,&#13;
and it took them seven&#13;
months to realize it. Their solution&#13;
was to load the fuel rods from the&#13;
other end and change all the&#13;
computer programs to read backwards.&#13;
&#13;
"Well," said Kaku, "I hin t k that&#13;
some of the nuclear engineers&#13;
have their heads screwed on backwards&#13;
... I think the priorities of&#13;
the nuclear industry also are&#13;
backwards, putting profits before&#13;
the interests of the American&#13;
people."&#13;
During the debate, the engineer&#13;
said that high School graduates&#13;
operate nuclear power plants. "In&#13;
fact," he said, "we prefer high&#13;
school graduates because (they)&#13;
don't think. We had college&#13;
graduates last year taking&#13;
training at Diablo Canyon and&#13;
they think too much — they get all&#13;
confused."&#13;
Kaku said, "I think the people&#13;
who really don't think are the ones&#13;
who build them, not the ones who&#13;
operate them. Well, if the high&#13;
school graduates operate our&#13;
nuclear power program, just&#13;
remember that high school&#13;
dropouts operate our weapons&#13;
program. Just remember that the&#13;
butterfingers in the Air Force&#13;
have accidently dropped 27&#13;
atomic and hydrogen bombs on&#13;
the United States."&#13;
A new "launch on warning"&#13;
system consists of a satellite that&#13;
will have the capability of&#13;
initiating an all-out nuclear war,&#13;
said Kaku. In such a case, he said,&#13;
nuclear war will be "unleashed by&#13;
a machine, not by man, and&#13;
machines fail quite frequently.&#13;
This is the kind of nuclear&#13;
program that we have today.&#13;
Many physicists have begun to&#13;
sour on the idea of nuclear power.&#13;
But I once believed in nuclear&#13;
power."&#13;
Kaku once thought nuclear&#13;
power was the way of the future —&#13;
safe, clean and too cheap to&#13;
meter. He believed in nuclear&#13;
power until he went to college and,&#13;
on Oct. 5, 1966,. there was a near -&#13;
core meltdown at the Fermi&#13;
reactor just outside Detroit. He&#13;
was a junior at Harvard at the&#13;
time and remembers that his&#13;
professor was so upset that he&#13;
cancelled class.&#13;
Authorities hushed up the incident&#13;
and it has only been in the&#13;
last few years that the American&#13;
people have realized the serious&#13;
implications of nuclear power.&#13;
The same type of cover-up occurred&#13;
at Three Mile Island but a&#13;
local radio station immediately&#13;
uncovered the story.&#13;
Kaku pointed out that actions&#13;
taken during the Three Mile&#13;
Island incident were poorly&#13;
conceived. The only correct&#13;
decision within the first 24 hours,&#13;
said Kaku, was to shut off the&#13;
pressurizing valve.&#13;
According to Kaku, nuclear&#13;
power is "a bloated, gigantic $200&#13;
billion beached whale ... We are&#13;
witnessing the beginning of the&#13;
end — total economic collapse of&#13;
the nuclear industry."&#13;
Unions face challenges&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
program was Catherine Conroy, a&#13;
staff representative of the&#13;
Communication Workers of&#13;
America, AFL-CIO; formerly a&#13;
member of President Carter's&#13;
Advisory Commission for Women,&#13;
and past president of the first&#13;
Milwaukee chapter of the&#13;
Coalition of Labor Union Women.&#13;
Conroy spoke mostly about the&#13;
exploitation of women in our&#13;
society and "token women" as she&#13;
described herself, rather than a&#13;
role model. But she feels women&#13;
should be more active in this&#13;
country. "My goal is to make&#13;
union women realize that they&#13;
have an important role in the&#13;
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labor movement," she said.&#13;
Conroy said that the cheapest&#13;
labor movement, females, should&#13;
unite and share the responsibility&#13;
of running the labor movement&#13;
also.&#13;
"I believe that we have an&#13;
administration that wants to teach&#13;
those arrogant, pompous workers&#13;
a lesson. And make them sweat.&#13;
And make them suffer so they are&#13;
grateful for their job, and the boss&#13;
is king again. So that they don't&#13;
have any rights that they can&#13;
demand," she said.&#13;
The last panelist to speak was&#13;
Jim Foster, the Coordinator of&#13;
Labor Studies and Associate&#13;
Professor of Labor and Industrial&#13;
Relations at Parkside and UWEX&#13;
School for Workers. Foster&#13;
outlined briefly the 100 years of&#13;
the labor movement up to today,&#13;
and he said that the time was&#13;
coming for a revival of labor. He&#13;
described labor in this country in&#13;
1881, and what came out of it.&#13;
"Nobody supported labor and&#13;
what came out of that decade?&#13;
What came out of that decade was&#13;
a lot of men and women who&#13;
together realized there was&#13;
something called collective&#13;
bargaining. Something called&#13;
trade unionism. Something that&#13;
they could do together that could&#13;
change the world," Foster said.&#13;
Foster went on to explain the&#13;
1930's, and what came out of that&#13;
era. "But where does that put us&#13;
today?" he asked. Foster said.the&#13;
country was due for a more active&#13;
labor movement.&#13;
The near - capacity crowd was&#13;
clearly impressed by the speakers&#13;
of the evening. Perhaps this was&#13;
evidenced most by Reuthers'&#13;
speech, which was interrupted&#13;
five times by applause and&#13;
received a standing ovation. His&#13;
view of the future of the labor&#13;
movement was encouraging.&#13;
"I've been an optimist all my&#13;
life, and I remain an optimist&#13;
today because everywhere I go, in&#13;
this country and Canada, I meet&#13;
young people who have got stars&#13;
in their eyes. They are not&#13;
satisfied with the old talk&#13;
anymore. They're looking for&#13;
answers and they've got the&#13;
courage and the guts to search for&#13;
them," Reuther said.&#13;
"They are the hope of this&#13;
country. I remain an optimist&#13;
because I know," he said. "Back&#13;
in the 30's we had nothing, really.&#13;
We had no strike fund, we had a&#13;
small membership, but we took on&#13;
the world's largest corporations&#13;
and brought them to their knees.&#13;
This generation of union&#13;
leadership . . . will bring new&#13;
dedication in the political&#13;
struggles, as well. And this&#13;
country will dedicate its energies&#13;
and its resources towards a new&#13;
beginning, and a new generation&#13;
that can bring hope, and not just&#13;
words."&#13;
College Rep&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Mr. D. DeMuth&#13;
District Director&#13;
Campus Service/Time Inc.&#13;
4337 W. Indian School Rd.&#13;
"C"&#13;
Phoenix, Az. 85031 &#13;
Non-smokers demand rights&#13;
hv by fCaarnl Rut-no m... W rol Burns&#13;
Last Thursday's Great&#13;
American Smoke - Out was certainly&#13;
a relief for those of u s with&#13;
respiratory systems. One could&#13;
even breathe comfortably in the&#13;
Union cafeteria and in the coffee&#13;
shop!&#13;
Strategically located tables, set&#13;
up by Parkside's health office to&#13;
distribute anti - smoking pamphlets,&#13;
helped to intimidate&#13;
smokers. Naturally, it was too&#13;
much to expect that all smokers&#13;
would join the American Cancer&#13;
Society's one day annual campaign,&#13;
but it's safe to say their&#13;
numbers were diminished greatly&#13;
on Thursday.&#13;
Huge glass jars containing the&#13;
remains of cigarettes smoked in&#13;
one week in designated areas&#13;
were displayed. Students were&#13;
asked to guess how many butts&#13;
were in those jars. Did somebody&#13;
really count that filth?&#13;
Right now the smokers are&#13;
probably thinking about how self -&#13;
righteous the non - smokers are.&#13;
Nonsense. Non - smokers just like&#13;
to breathe. They have a thing&#13;
about fresh air.&#13;
Smoke is a funny creature. It&#13;
seems to know who despises it&#13;
most, and heads right for that&#13;
person. It has an affinity for&#13;
freshly - shampooed hair. It can&#13;
permeate clothes with such&#13;
thoroughness that extensive&#13;
fumigation is required.&#13;
Non - smokers should think of&#13;
smokers' rights, too. After all, this&#13;
is America. If someone wants&#13;
emphysema or cancer, is it really&#13;
fair to foil such ambition?&#13;
Smokers aren't all bad. Look at&#13;
how hard they work at keeping the&#13;
tobacco companies in business.&#13;
Think of all the health care&#13;
workers who have jobs because of&#13;
smokers. And where would&#13;
sanitary landfill sites be without&#13;
disposable lighters?&#13;
Besides, it's got to be hard to&#13;
maintain such an expensive habit.&#13;
Things have gotten so bad for&#13;
some smokers that they have to&#13;
share cigarettes. These shared&#13;
brands are often hand - rolled&#13;
after all join in to pick seeds from&#13;
the dried leaves. (Shoddy&#13;
processing methods?)&#13;
Reuther challenges youth&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
strikes, but having established&#13;
ourselves as the collective&#13;
bargaining agency, having won&#13;
the legal right to bargain with&#13;
employers, I would hope we could&#13;
substitute the law of the jungle&#13;
with the law of rea son, and that we&#13;
can settle them by negotiations.&#13;
RANGER: But do you think the&#13;
"strike" has lost its effectiveness?&#13;
&#13;
REUTHER: No. I don't think it&#13;
has lost its effectiveness, although&#13;
I think trade union leadership&#13;
knows that they must resort to&#13;
strike action with greater caution&#13;
than perhaps was the case in&#13;
previous years, and they must&#13;
have discipline in their own ranks&#13;
to know when to strike and when&#13;
not to.&#13;
RANGER: Do you think labor&#13;
has changed, as far as public&#13;
relations is concerned? It seems&#13;
like labor at times has a public - be&#13;
- damned attitude. Do you agree?&#13;
REUTHER: I think what you&#13;
are getting at is a very serious&#13;
problem. But you see, when the&#13;
unions began, we were the underdog.&#13;
And we got a lot of&#13;
sympathy from folks who said,&#13;
"Yeah, they're right. We're gonna&#13;
give them a chance." Now the&#13;
tendency is to look upon unions as&#13;
huge and powerful and hence&#13;
arrogant, like the corporations.&#13;
The tendency is to say, "Well,&#13;
they're not democratic anymore,&#13;
they're big shots," and so on. This&#13;
is not accurate. I know, there are&#13;
some unions that are not&#13;
democratic. There are some that&#13;
have been penetrated by&#13;
corruption. And I might add that&#13;
most of that corruption came from&#13;
the employers, because wherever&#13;
you find a corrupt union official&#13;
who will take a bribe, you've got&#13;
an employer who offers the bribe.&#13;
And I think they both ought to go&#13;
to jail. The public relations image&#13;
of the trade unions is not good&#13;
today. And I think one of the&#13;
reasons why it isn't is that when&#13;
the trade unions take strike action,&#13;
they are not mindful always&#13;
of the impact on people who are&#13;
not involved. Hence, they must&#13;
prepare the community to understand&#13;
the issues and the trade&#13;
unions should be fighting the&#13;
battle of the consumers because&#13;
workers are not only wage earners,&#13;
they are consumers. And&#13;
sometimes, while they may favor&#13;
what their own union does, they&#13;
resent what another union does&#13;
because it might cause higher&#13;
taxes for them. So you have to&#13;
constantly keep before the public&#13;
and your own members not only&#13;
their roles as union members, but&#13;
also their role as consumers and&#13;
citizens."&#13;
MOONLITE&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
Sat.&#13;
8 pm - 1 am&#13;
"I wonder why it's so dark in the Rec Center, exclaims&#13;
Stroll in' Bowlin'. "I'll just turn on a light and . . . Hey,&#13;
what are you doing?" cries a voice from the bowling area.&#13;
Don't you know every Saturday nite from 8 p. m. - 1 a. m. is&#13;
Moonlite Bowling where all the lights are turned off and you&#13;
can win special prizes?" Why don't YOU join the fun every&#13;
Saturday - but don't turn on the lights.&#13;
Smokers are not inconsiderate&#13;
slobs, they just don't understand&#13;
how difficult breathing can be for&#13;
a person with asthma. Anyone&#13;
who doubles as a chimney can't be&#13;
very sensitive to air quality levels.&#13;
Think of it this way: Burning&#13;
leaves in a yard smell great.&#13;
Cigarettes are nothing more than&#13;
burning leaves with a few&#13;
chemicals added. Therefore,&#13;
cigarettes smell great. Right?&#13;
Wrong. Dead wrong.&#13;
Vice pres. resigns&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
function of the student senate,"&#13;
said Buddy Couvion, coordinator&#13;
of Student Activities. "Everyone&#13;
should get involved instead of&#13;
relying on just a few to get things&#13;
done."&#13;
Carla Stoffle, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor of Educational Services,&#13;
said that Bambrough's&#13;
resignation came as a surprise.&#13;
In her letter, Bambrough expressed&#13;
several concerns she had&#13;
about PSGA and student&#13;
organizations at Parkside in&#13;
general. "I feel that student&#13;
leaders should follow the rules,"&#13;
the letter stated. "Unfortunately,&#13;
I have found this is not the case."&#13;
Bambrough said she was&#13;
concerned about a lack of respect&#13;
for other members of student&#13;
groups, along with "a serious lack&#13;
of professionalism."&#13;
"I disagree with some of the&#13;
means administration uses to&#13;
obtain "inside" information on&#13;
Student Government discussions,&#13;
plans and viewpoints of its'&#13;
members," the letter stated.&#13;
Bambrough said that the&#13;
position of vice president is&#13;
"overlooked" by the administration&#13;
and other members&#13;
of PSGA. "If given the chance this&#13;
position could be the mainstay of&#13;
Student Government," the letter&#13;
stated.&#13;
She also said that "the majority&#13;
of the advancements of the&#13;
organization are made by a small&#13;
core group" within PSGA.&#13;
Bambrough said that she&#13;
regards "the concept behind the&#13;
organization as being vital to the&#13;
effective functioning of&#13;
Parkside," despite her concerns.&#13;
"There's really nothing going on&#13;
that hasn't gone on before. I don't&#13;
know if she's bitter or not,"&#13;
Kreuser responded.&#13;
"As chair, the vice president&#13;
has no voice," Slama said. "There&#13;
are no definite guidelines for the&#13;
vice president's position in&#13;
relation to the administration.&#13;
And its not clear how t he senators&#13;
should relate to the vice president&#13;
instead of to the president."&#13;
"I think everyone is aware that&#13;
Kathy and Jim have been working&#13;
on establishing a working&#13;
relationship for a long time,"&#13;
Slama said. "Whether or not they&#13;
were successful, I don't know."&#13;
Photo by Z achry A llyn Ed mark&#13;
TAMMY MILLAGER received a Thanksgiving turkey last week&#13;
when she purchased her lunch at the Union dining room and the&#13;
alarm went off. She is shown here with Pat Nora, manager of&#13;
Heritage Food Service, sponsors of the free turkeys.&#13;
Dobyns to lecture at Parkside&#13;
A major authority on Indians of&#13;
the western hemisphere, Dr.&#13;
Henry Dobyns, will describe a&#13;
landmark case in applied anthropology&#13;
in a film - lecture at&#13;
Parkside at 1 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 25, in Molinaro Hall Room D137.&#13;
The free public program is&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Anthropology&#13;
Club.&#13;
Dobyns will describe the involvement&#13;
of a Columbia&#13;
University team, of whic h he was&#13;
a member, in reversing feudal -&#13;
style control of lands and people in&#13;
Vicos, Peru, in the 1950s. The&#13;
team's work has become a classic&#13;
case study in applied anthropology&#13;
because it marked the&#13;
first time that anthropologists&#13;
became directly involved in&#13;
planning and implementing a&#13;
change in a specific area rather&#13;
than acting as passive observers.&#13;
Dobyns, a Columbia PhD, is&#13;
director of the North American&#13;
History Demography Project at&#13;
the Newberry Library Center for&#13;
the History of the American Indian.&#13;
He has done extensive field&#13;
research on many Indian groups&#13;
of North and South America and is&#13;
the author if 11 books, the latest&#13;
"From Fire to Flood" published&#13;
this year. He served as scientific&#13;
editor of the 38-volume Indian&#13;
Tribal Series and has been a&#13;
consultant to the U.S. government&#13;
in a number of cases involving&#13;
Indian affairs.&#13;
In 1974-75, he was a visiting&#13;
professor of anthropology at UWParkside&#13;
and has returned&#13;
several times as a guest lecturer.&#13;
Dictionary presented to WLLC&#13;
A contemporary edition of one&#13;
of the most famous English dictionaries,&#13;
Samuel Johnson's "A&#13;
Dictionary of the English&#13;
Language," has been presented to&#13;
the Parkside library by Racine&#13;
industrialist Fred M. Young,&#13;
president of Young Radiator&#13;
Company.&#13;
The two - volume work will be&#13;
housed in the library's special&#13;
collections section in the&#13;
University Archives and Area&#13;
Research Center.&#13;
First published in 1798, Johnson's&#13;
dictionary of about 40,000&#13;
words is both scientific and&#13;
literary, and is considered the&#13;
first "general" English dictionary&#13;
designed, according to its author,&#13;
"not merely for critics, but for&#13;
popular use." It was the first to&#13;
use quotations extensively to&#13;
illustrate meanings. This edition,&#13;
the eighth, is the first to incorporate&#13;
pronunciation.&#13;
Lexicographer, he defined as&#13;
"A writer of dictionaries, a&#13;
harmless drudge . . . ."&#13;
Oats, he defined as "A grain&#13;
which in England is generally&#13;
given to horses, but in Scotland&#13;
supports the people." Later&#13;
Johnson admitted "I own that by&#13;
my definition of oats I meant to&#13;
vex (the Scots)."&#13;
Johnson, a major literary figure&#13;
of 18th century England, had at&#13;
least one of his definitions return&#13;
to haunt him. A pension, he&#13;
decreed, is "An allowance made&#13;
to anyone without an entitlement.&#13;
In England it is generally understood&#13;
to mean pay given to a&#13;
state hireling for treason to his&#13;
country." His critics had a field&#13;
day when later he accepted a&#13;
government pension of 300 pound s&#13;
a year, but he declined to alter the&#13;
original definition in subsequent&#13;
editions of the dictionary.&#13;
'CRACKING A TOUGH JOB MARKET&#13;
IN THE 80's*&#13;
A seminar by&#13;
RODGER L. DE ROSE&#13;
Manger, U. S. New Products, S C JOHNSON &amp; SON, INC.&#13;
(UW-PARKSIDE GRADUATE '72)&#13;
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION,&#13;
ROOM 106 — 8-10 P.M.&#13;
• Campus Recruiting Techniques&#13;
• The "In the Door" Interview&#13;
• Now That You've Got the Job,&#13;
"Plot a Route to the Top"&#13;
Reservations requested by Dec. 1 call&#13;
553-2452&#13;
or&#13;
Stop in the Alumni &amp; Placement Services&#13;
Office, WLLC D173 &#13;
6 Wednesday, November 25, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Indian Summer" a hot album&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
A1 Stewart is not to be confused&#13;
with Rod Stewart. They are not&#13;
brothers, cousins, or any relation&#13;
at all, and while Rod has been&#13;
spewing out trashy, disco-ish&#13;
albums as of late, A1 has turned&#13;
out an excellent new album entitled&#13;
"Indian Summer."&#13;
"Indian Summer" is unique in&#13;
its concept and design. The album&#13;
is a double - record set, the first&#13;
side consisting of all new songs by&#13;
Stewart, recorded in the studio,&#13;
and the last three sides are some&#13;
of Stewart's greatest hits,&#13;
recorded live at the Roxy theater&#13;
in Los Angeles. This was&#13;
somewhat disappointing as I had&#13;
hoped to hear more new songs&#13;
from Stewart, but the quality of&#13;
the album as a whole, both in the&#13;
studio and live recordings, more&#13;
than made up for this.&#13;
Stewart's new songs are&#13;
refreshingly light and lyrical. The&#13;
melodies are often complex,&#13;
sometimes elusive. Stewart's&#13;
lyrics, although a bit talky at&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selection&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10:00 a m - 4:00 p m&#13;
• SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
• JUBE JELLS&#13;
• CARAMELS&#13;
CARAMEL BULLIES&#13;
ROYALS&#13;
TOFFEES&#13;
JOTS&#13;
BRIDGE MIX&#13;
MALTED MILK BALLS&#13;
CHOC. CREME DROPS&#13;
CHOC. RAISINS&#13;
CHOC. PEANUTS&#13;
PEANUT BUTTER CUPS&#13;
STARS&#13;
YOGURT PEANUTS&#13;
CAROB MALTED MILK&#13;
BALLS&#13;
CAROB PEANUTS&#13;
SUNFLOWER SEEDS&#13;
CARIBBEAN DELICACY&#13;
CALIFORNIA MIX&#13;
STUDENT FOOD&#13;
GIANT CASHEWS&#13;
NATURAL PISTACHIOS&#13;
SPANISH PEANUTS&#13;
BLANCHED PEANUTS&#13;
YOGURT RAISINS&#13;
YOG URT SES AME&#13;
BRITTLE&#13;
RED SKIN PEANUTS&#13;
MINT COOLERS&#13;
STARLIGHT MINTS&#13;
SOUR BALLS&#13;
CINNAMON DISKS&#13;
COFFEE&#13;
BUTTERSCOTCH DISKS&#13;
ROOT BEER BARRELS&#13;
POPS&#13;
P E A N UT B U T T ER&#13;
KISSES&#13;
PEPPERMINT KISSES&#13;
LICORICE BULLIES&#13;
JELLY BEANS&#13;
ASSORTED PERKYS&#13;
ORANGE SLICES&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Til Dec. 4th&#13;
Spanish Burnt&#13;
PEANUTS&#13;
40% O FF&#13;
times, are intelligent and poetic.&#13;
The new tracks continue Stewart's&#13;
move towards more polished&#13;
songs, but his original style is&#13;
retained. Acoustic guitars are&#13;
intermixed well with electric,&#13;
especially in the album's title&#13;
track. But the live tracks are the&#13;
definite highlight of the album.&#13;
I must admit that I was surprised&#13;
to hear Steward doing a&#13;
live album. He isn't a hard - core&#13;
rock - and - roller, and I knew that&#13;
the complexity of his songs would&#13;
be difficult to translate accurately&#13;
into a live recording. But on&#13;
"Indian Summer," Stewart and&#13;
his back-up band "Shot in the&#13;
Dark" have faithfully performed&#13;
some of Stewart's most popular&#13;
songs, including "Time&#13;
Passages," "On The Border,"&#13;
"Nostradamus" and "Year of the&#13;
Cat." The quality of these tracks&#13;
approaches that of a studio&#13;
recording, and several of the&#13;
songs were so w ell polished that I&#13;
found it hard to believe that I was&#13;
listening to a live album. But the&#13;
album is definitely live, and&#13;
Stewart makes a few interesting&#13;
changes in some of the songs. For&#13;
instance, in the middle of&#13;
"Nostradamus" Stewart inserts&#13;
another one of his compositions,&#13;
"The World Goes To Riyadh." The&#13;
two songs mix together well, and&#13;
the end result is quite interesting.&#13;
All in all, "Indian Summer" is a&#13;
terrific album for die-hard A1&#13;
Stewart fans as well as those not&#13;
formerly acquainted with his&#13;
music. The combination of new&#13;
material as well as his best songs&#13;
from the past makes it well worthwhile.&#13;
&#13;
UW-P freshmen&#13;
win scholarships&#13;
Two Parkside freshmen have&#13;
been awarded music faculty&#13;
scholarships of $100 each. The&#13;
awards are based on auditions.&#13;
Winners are Jane Oertel of 3431&#13;
Taylor Ave., Racine, a clarinetist&#13;
and member of the Parkside Wind&#13;
Ensemble, and William Nelson,&#13;
510 14th St., Racine, who plays&#13;
tenor saxophone and is a member&#13;
of the Wind Ensemble and the&#13;
Jazz Ensemble.&#13;
Breakfast seminars to&#13;
begin next month&#13;
A series of five "Breakfast&#13;
Seminars in Public Management"&#13;
will begin next month at Parkside,&#13;
which is sponsoring the program&#13;
in cooperation with the University&#13;
Extension Department of&#13;
Governmental Affairs.&#13;
First of the monthly sessions&#13;
will feature Prof. James J.&#13;
Polczynski of the UW-P business&#13;
management faculty speaking on&#13;
"Managing Stress in the Work&#13;
Environment" Dec. 3.&#13;
Other topics are:&#13;
"Budgeting Techniques for&#13;
Human Service Agencies" by&#13;
Prof. James R. Kuperberg of&#13;
UWEX Continuing Education in&#13;
Administration and UWMilwaukee's&#13;
Program in Urban&#13;
Institutions, Feb. 18;&#13;
"Co-Determination Models in&#13;
Public Sector and Social Service&#13;
Agencies" by Prof. James C.&#13;
Foster, UW-P Labor and Industrial&#13;
Relations Program /&#13;
UWEX School for Workers, March&#13;
u;&#13;
"Contracting as a Way of&#13;
Managing Budget Cutbacks" by&#13;
Prof. William Murin, Director of&#13;
the UW-P Master of Public Service&#13;
Administration Program,&#13;
April 22;&#13;
And, "Styles of Administrative&#13;
Leadership" by Prof. A. Clarke&#13;
Hagensick, UWEX Department of&#13;
Governmental Affairs / UWMilwaukee&#13;
political science&#13;
faculty.&#13;
Topics for the seminars were&#13;
chosen in response to preferences&#13;
indicated by persons who attended&#13;
a trial program last spring, which&#13;
had an overflow registration.&#13;
Each program will begin with a&#13;
breakfast at 7:45 a.m. followed by&#13;
a seminar session from 8:15 to&#13;
9:45 in Union 104-106.&#13;
Participation in the series&#13;
counts toward the Certificate in&#13;
Public Administration offered by&#13;
the UWEX Department of&#13;
Governmental Affairs. Additional&#13;
work toward the certificate can be&#13;
taken through Parkside's Master&#13;
of Public Service Administration&#13;
program. Continuing Education&#13;
Units (CEUs) also are available.&#13;
Registration for the series is&#13;
$75. Registration for single&#13;
seminars is $20 each on a space -&#13;
available basis. Enrollment is&#13;
limited to 30 perso ns. Additional&#13;
information is available from&#13;
Prof. Kenneth Hoover at UW-P&#13;
(Phone 553-2518).&#13;
Distributed by E. F. MA DRIGRANO 1831 - 55th St. Kenosha, Wise. 658-3553&#13;
§!rohi NEW ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE &#13;
RANGER Wednesday, November 25, 1981&#13;
Cross Countru&#13;
Women host NAIA nationals&#13;
ALTHOUGH the first snowfall at Parkside may be beautiful&#13;
(above), it can also signal the start of another season of cold, wet&#13;
weather and more use of campus shuttle buses (below).&#13;
Photos by Zachry Allyn Edmark&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
Peer Support will be sponsoring&#13;
"Test Taking Tips" by Susan&#13;
Taylor just in time for semester&#13;
finals. The seminar will be held on&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 2 at 7 p.m. in the&#13;
Library Learning Lab. Bring your&#13;
class notes to organize.&#13;
IVCF&#13;
On Wednesday, Nov. 25 in Union&#13;
106, Inter - Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship will host a social. It&#13;
will be an enjoyable time of&#13;
games, singing and sharing so all&#13;
students should feel welcome.&#13;
IVCF also hosts its booktable in&#13;
the bookstore alcove to discuss&#13;
issues pertinent to Christianity.&#13;
IVCF will hold its large group&#13;
meeting on Wednesday, Dec. 2 at 1&#13;
p.m. in Union 207. Curt Foss of&#13;
Kenosha Bible Church will be&#13;
speaking on what the Bible says&#13;
about Christ's return to earth to&#13;
restore order . . . "this same&#13;
Jesus which is taken up from you&#13;
into Heaven shall so come (again)&#13;
in like manner as ye have seen&#13;
him go." (Acts 1:11) All students&#13;
are welcome. Bring your lunch&#13;
and a friend.&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
The Art Addicts will be sponsoring&#13;
Student Art Day on Wednesday,&#13;
Dec. 9 from 9 to 6 p.m. in&#13;
Mid - Main Place. The event is&#13;
free and open to the public. Any&#13;
student may enter works as long&#13;
as they have been completed in&#13;
the last two years at Parkside.&#13;
Entries may be in painting,&#13;
d r a w i n g, p r i n t m a k i n g,&#13;
photography, ceramics, sculpture,&#13;
textiles and art metals.&#13;
Entry blanks are on the Art Addicts&#13;
bulletin board on the D-l&#13;
level of Comm. Arts.&#13;
The Art Addicts will also be&#13;
sponsoring demonstrations on Art&#13;
Day in the Main Concourse,&#13;
featuring several types of media.&#13;
This will be next to the Book Store&#13;
and the Student Book Exchange.&#13;
by Patty DeLuisa&#13;
"We did a good job." That was&#13;
how Parkside cross country coach&#13;
Mike DeWitt described his team's&#13;
third place finish in the NAIA&#13;
Women's National Cross Country&#13;
Championships, held at Parkside&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
His expectations of his harriers&#13;
faring well in the 5000 meter event&#13;
were realized when "everyone&#13;
came together and combined for a&#13;
team effort," said Senior Bard&#13;
Osborne. Junior Debbie Spino&#13;
strided through the wet snow to a&#13;
fantastic fourth place finish out of&#13;
105 runners. For her super performance,&#13;
Debbie earned allAmerican&#13;
honors. Her time was&#13;
18:50.&#13;
Junior Dona Driscoll received&#13;
all-American honors in cross&#13;
country for the second time as she&#13;
placed 14th with a time of 19:29.&#13;
Sue Meyer, a freshman, also&#13;
became an all-American for her&#13;
17th place effort. Meyer was&#13;
clocked at 19:36.&#13;
Senior Barb Osborne ran 31st&#13;
with a time of 20:20. Sophomore&#13;
Sandy Venne finished 64th, senior&#13;
Lowrie Melotik ran 81st, and&#13;
sophomore Linda Pfeilstifter was&#13;
104th.&#13;
Mary Jaqua of Adams State&#13;
(Colorado) won the race with a&#13;
remarkable time of 18:34 to pace&#13;
her team to the national title. They&#13;
won with a low score of 25 points.&#13;
Berry College of Georgia placed&#13;
second with 71 points, and&#13;
Parkside was third with 100&#13;
poiiits.&#13;
Emporia State (Kansas) was&#13;
fourth, Midland Lutheran&#13;
(Nebraska) fifth, Northern State&#13;
(South Dakota) sixth, Fort Hays&#13;
State (Kansas) seventh, Doane&#13;
College (Nebraska) eighth,&#13;
Kearney State (Nebraska) ninth,&#13;
Park College (Missouri) tenth,&#13;
Hillsdale College (Michigan)&#13;
eleventh, Harding College&#13;
(Arkansas) twelfth, and Concordia&#13;
College (Nebraska)&#13;
thirteenth.&#13;
When asked how it felt to be&#13;
named an all-American, Dona&#13;
Driscoll said, "It's such a great&#13;
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!&#13;
THURSDAY, NOV. 26&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
WEEKLY SPECIALS&#13;
Nov. 30 - Dec. 5&#13;
RED PIN&#13;
$3.00 Nite&#13;
Moon life Bowl&#13;
607game&#13;
All you can bowl&#13;
or play pool&#13;
90Vgame&#13;
AAON. 9 a.m. 'til Noon&#13;
TUE. Noon 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 3 p.m. 'til 6 p.m.&#13;
THUR. 7 p.m. 'til 10 p.m.&#13;
FRI. 10 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
SAT. 8 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
PAT PORTER of Adams State finishes first for men's division.&#13;
honor. It wasn't easy to achieve&#13;
but all the work was worth it."&#13;
In the men's competition,&#13;
Adams State was also a winner&#13;
with 76 points. Pat Porter, who&#13;
won last year's five - mile event at&#13;
Salina, Kansas, captured this&#13;
year's 8000 meters with a clocking&#13;
of 24:55. His teammate, Sam&#13;
Montoya, was second with a time&#13;
of 25:09. The Parkside men did not&#13;
qualify for nationals but several&#13;
Wisconsin schools competed in the&#13;
meet.&#13;
Paul Voss of LaCrosse was the&#13;
first University of Wisconsin&#13;
runner to cross the finish line with&#13;
a good time of 25:36 for 10th place.&#13;
Teammate Nick Decola took 18th&#13;
place with a time of 25:46. Also&#13;
from the LaCrosse team was&#13;
Jerry Husz, who immediately&#13;
followed Decola with a clocking of&#13;
25:47. These three men were the&#13;
only Wisconsin harriers to receive&#13;
all-American honors. Decola&#13;
celebrated twice Saturday as he&#13;
was also given all-American&#13;
Scholastic honors in recognition of&#13;
his outstanding academic&#13;
achievements.&#13;
The meet wasn't without&#13;
mishaps. Several members of the&#13;
Saginaw Valley (Michigan) team&#13;
were spiked on their feet and legs&#13;
at the beginning of the race. One&#13;
runner, Paul Peterson, was&#13;
rushed to the hospital for treatment.&#13;
&#13;
Once again, Adams State won&#13;
the team championship. LaCrosse&#13;
was second, Saginaw Valley&#13;
(Michigan) third, Molone College&#13;
(Ohio) fourth, Simon Fraser&#13;
(British Columbia, Canada) fifth,&#13;
Indiana (Pennsylvania) sixth,&#13;
Central Washington State&#13;
seventh, New Mexico Highlands&#13;
eighth, Central State Oklahoma&#13;
ninth, UW-Eau Claire tenth, UWStevens&#13;
eleventh, and Point Loma&#13;
(California) twelfth. Thirty - six&#13;
teams competed in the national&#13;
meet.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
ADS&#13;
SERVICES OFFERED&#13;
FORMER TEACHER with two masters&#13;
degrees will edit, critique and type term&#13;
papers for $2 per page. Will not write term&#13;
paper for you. Consultant only. 632-9798.&#13;
TYPING. Resumes, term papers, theses,&#13;
manuscripts, etc. 14 years experience.&#13;
Reasonable rates. 694-1825 or 652 6599.&#13;
TYPING in my home — term papers,&#13;
manuscripts, essays, resumes, letters,&#13;
reports, etc. Professional results. Call 639-&#13;
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PERSONALS .&#13;
SINGLETARIANS: Small group discussion in&#13;
a relaxed home atmosphere. Meets every&#13;
Friday night, 8:15 p.m., 412 9th Street,&#13;
Racine. November 27 topic: Enjoying the&#13;
Single Life.&#13;
TWO YOUNG MEN (25 and 30) with exceptional&#13;
taste and qualities looking for&#13;
female companionship with someone who&#13;
appreciates the finer things in life and who&#13;
respects themselves, others and natural&#13;
beauty. Address correspondence to: Ron&#13;
(25) or Bob (30) P.O. Box 167, Winthrop&#13;
Harbor, III. 60096-0167.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 25&#13;
LECTURE at 1:00 p.m. in MOLN D137. The speaker is Dr. Henry Dobyns of the Newberry&#13;
Library. The program is free and open to the public. Sponsored by the Anthropology Club.&#13;
DANCE/CONCERT at9:00 p.m. in Union Square featuring "Shimmer." Admission at the door is&#13;
$1.00 for a Parkside stndent and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
SUNDAY, NOV. 29&#13;
CONCERT at 3:30 p.m. in GR 103 with Susan Gulick performing on the guitar. The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
MONDAY, NOV. 30&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12:15 in Union 106. Jim Foster of UW-P Labor and Industrial Relations will&#13;
talk on "Models of Co-Determination in the Management of Public Agencies." The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
TUESDAY, DEC. 1&#13;
BLOOD PRESSURE at 10:30 a.m. • 2:0 0 p.m. in Alcove 103. Free to UW-P students, faculty and&#13;
staff.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 2&#13;
BLOOD PRESSURE at 10:30 a.m. - 2: 00 p.m. in Alcove 103. Free to UW-P students, faculty and&#13;
staff.&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE at 12 noon in Upper Main Place featuring the music of Scott Jones. The&#13;
program is free to UW-P students, faculty and staff. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
j&amp;te&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Elm wood Plaza/Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
THE DOCTOR'S FARCES&#13;
An Evening wifh Anton Chekhov&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PARKSIDE&#13;
COMMUNICATION ARTS STUDIO THEATRE&#13;
December 3,4,5,11,12 at 8:OOp.m.&#13;
December 6 at 2:OOp.m.&#13;
$2.00 students, faculty, senior citizens&#13;
$3.00 general public&#13;
Limited seating: 553-2042 or 553-2345 &#13;
8 Wednesday, November 25, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Inside UW P S ports&#13;
Looking at Packer diehards&#13;
by Greg Bonofiglio&#13;
This week INSIDE UW-P&#13;
SPORTS takes a look outward at&#13;
pro football in Wisconsin.&#13;
There's excitement brewing in&#13;
Titletown, USA these days. Green&#13;
Bay's three game winning streak&#13;
has the Packer diehards envisioning&#13;
a possible wild card&#13;
playoff berth. And who knows?&#13;
Maybe they'll even take the&#13;
division title! Well maybe, but&#13;
don't count on it.&#13;
With five games remaining in&#13;
the regular season, the Green Bay&#13;
Packers find themselves two&#13;
games behind the Minnesota&#13;
Vikings in the NFC Central&#13;
Division and one of seven teams in&#13;
contention for the second wild&#13;
card playoff spot. Tied with Green&#13;
Bay at 5-6 are: Tampa Bay&#13;
Bucaneers, Detroit Lions, Los&#13;
Angeles Rams, Atlanta Falcons,&#13;
New York Giants, and the&#13;
Washington Redskins.&#13;
Green Bay was in a similar spot&#13;
a year ago when they were 5-6-1.&#13;
After a horrendous start, Green&#13;
Bay had fought itself back into&#13;
contention. They had just beaten&#13;
the Vikings for the second time&#13;
and were in a position to take the&#13;
division title. "The Pack was&#13;
back," proclaimed the faithful.&#13;
Their season ended with the&#13;
"Pack" dropping four consecutive&#13;
games, including that infamous&#13;
61-7 debacle to the Bears. So much&#13;
for the playoffs . . .&#13;
"O.K.," says the ever optimistic&#13;
diehard, "so Green Bay blew it.&#13;
Pro Picks&#13;
winner!&#13;
This week's winner was&#13;
Joe Sykora with 11 correct,&#13;
41 total combined points!&#13;
But this year we have the league's&#13;
easiest schedule (teams with a&#13;
combined .417 winning percentage&#13;
last year). What's more, we've got&#13;
John Jefferson. Remember, he's&#13;
an All-Pro!"&#13;
Not with Green Bay he isn't. As&#13;
of the eleventh week, Jefferson&#13;
has caught a mere 21 passes. And&#13;
the prospects don't look much&#13;
better for J.J. with David&#13;
Whitehurst at quarterback.&#13;
Whitehurst seems inept at&#13;
throwing to his wide receivers.&#13;
Especially with passes thrown&#13;
over the middle. Aside from the 41&#13;
yarder to Jefferson in the Giants&#13;
game, the pass attack under&#13;
Whitehurst consists of sideline&#13;
patterns, flip passes to a back out&#13;
in the flat, or short passes to Paul&#13;
Coffman. I don't buy that "double&#13;
coverage" excuse that Starr feeds&#13;
us for not going more to Lofton&#13;
and Jefferson. Lofton was double&#13;
covered all last year yet he&#13;
somehow managed to grab over 70&#13;
passes. I doubt J.J. has ever&#13;
known single coverage.&#13;
In response to the other point&#13;
about Green Bay having the&#13;
easiest schedule, just how far has&#13;
it gotten them this year? They're&#13;
not even a .500 team against a&#13;
schedule made up of last year's&#13;
patsies.&#13;
"Well maybe so," says the&#13;
diehard, "but we've got&#13;
momentum going now. We've won&#13;
three in a row!" Sure, except all&#13;
three were home games against&#13;
opponents with less than .500&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
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JEWELRY&#13;
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kenosha&#13;
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ALBUM OR TAPE&#13;
records. In fact, of their six losses&#13;
this year, only two of them have&#13;
been to teams with above .500&#13;
records (Minnesota and San&#13;
Francisco).&#13;
"Aha," says the diehard, "but&#13;
those are first place teams! We've&#13;
still got a shot at a wild card&#13;
spot." True, but we've already&#13;
lost to four of the six other teams&#13;
still in contention for that&#13;
remaining spot.&#13;
It b quite possible that the&#13;
Packers' most formidable&#13;
opponent this year&#13;
has been themselues.&#13;
Yeah, but in each of the last&#13;
three wins the Packer defense has&#13;
come up with the big play, says&#13;
the diehard. Also, they now have&#13;
the best defense in the division,&#13;
third best in the NFC, and fifth&#13;
best in the entire N.F.L. It has&#13;
really been doing the job! Well, I&#13;
can't argue with that. Against sub&#13;
- .500 teams, the defense has been&#13;
tough. The trouble is the "sack&#13;
pack" still hasn't found a way to&#13;
stop their own offense from&#13;
scoring points for the other team.&#13;
It is quite possible that their most&#13;
formidable opponent this year has&#13;
been themselves.&#13;
"Well, look at the special teams&#13;
play," quips the diehard. "We've&#13;
1 Coupon per Album or Tape Good thru Dec. 10th, 1981&#13;
got the best defense on kick - off&#13;
coverage in football. And Jan&#13;
Stenerud has been awesome all&#13;
year!" True. The kick - off team&#13;
has been excellent all year and&#13;
Stenerud has hit an impressive 19&#13;
of 21 field goal attempts. Too bad&#13;
you can't say the same about&#13;
punter Ray Stachowicz. He hasn't&#13;
hit two solid punts in a row all&#13;
season! And remember, this isn't&#13;
a free agent here. He's the&#13;
Packer's third round draft pick&#13;
this year; we're talking about the&#13;
64th player taken in the draft! As&#13;
far as net average is concerned,&#13;
David Beverly was out - booting&#13;
him. And Beverly stunk!&#13;
This brings up another interesting&#13;
point: the Packer draft.&#13;
For brevity, let's only look at their&#13;
first four picks this year. In the&#13;
first round they took quarterback&#13;
Rich Campbell. As of this writing,&#13;
the highly touted rookie has yet to&#13;
play a single down in the regular&#13;
season. Sure, you don't want to&#13;
rush a rookie quarterback and&#13;
that it's best to bring him along&#13;
slowly and let him earn the job,&#13;
but he'll never earn the job sitting&#13;
on the bench. Is the guy that much&#13;
of a bust that they don't want to&#13;
risk playing him even one series of&#13;
downs in eleven weeks?&#13;
While on the topic of busts, let's&#13;
take a look at Green Bay's second&#13;
round pick: tight end Gary Lewis&#13;
of Texas - Arlington. In Starr's&#13;
eyes the 34th "finest player&#13;
available in the draft." In case&#13;
you don't know it, Lewis is the guy&#13;
who wears number 81 and plays on&#13;
obvious passing downs. But I've&#13;
never been quite sure why. Only&#13;
now has it occured to me what his&#13;
role on the field must be. I'll bet&#13;
he's Green Bay's "offensive&#13;
safety" (a new position).&#13;
Whenever Lynn Dickey or David&#13;
Whitehurst throws an interception,&#13;
it is Lewis' job to&#13;
tackle the player who intercepts&#13;
the pass. By making him an&#13;
eligible receiver, he can roam the&#13;
field at will and just dare someone&#13;
to intercept a pass. What's that?&#13;
There is no such thing as an offensive&#13;
safety? And that Lewis is&#13;
the second tight end when the&#13;
Pack uses their two tight end&#13;
offense? Now wait a minute,&#13;
diehard, that can't be true! The&#13;
guy has only caught two passes all&#13;
year. No, he must be in there to&#13;
make tackles. I'm "sure of it.&#13;
I've already mentioned their&#13;
third round pick, Ray Stachowicz,&#13;
so l et's go to their fourth round&#13;
selection: defensive tackle&#13;
Richard Turner. Here's another&#13;
familiar name for you. Since he&#13;
plays on the bomb squad maybe&#13;
that is wh&gt; Starr drafted him.&#13;
After all, a 5-6-1 team needs all the&#13;
special team players they can get,&#13;
right?&#13;
On Sunday, Green Bay played at&#13;
Tampa Bay in a game that was&#13;
important to both teams. The&#13;
Packer loss might start another&#13;
season ending collapse like last&#13;
year. We Packer diehards will&#13;
never give up hope.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN AS SOCIATION&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414-248-9141&#13;
24726 - 75th Street - Rt. 50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wis.&#13;
414-843-2388&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5Vi% Interest Iff Your Daily&#13;
Balance is $500.00 or More!&#13;
E5HC&#13;
WE'RE HERE 10 HELP YOU GROW! </text>
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    </tag>
    <tag tagId="149">
      <name>peace corps</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1441">
      <name>VISTA</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
