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              <text>Guskin to speak at Peace Corps anniversary</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Presidential rnnrlirt^&#13;
Socialist McReynolds offers new choices&#13;
hv by Sue Slip MinkaHi M « _ _ ichetti&#13;
David McReynolds, the&#13;
Socialist Party candidate for&#13;
president, visited Parkside on&#13;
September 23. Ken Meyer and&#13;
Ginger Helgeson from the Ranger&#13;
interviewed McReynolds while&#13;
WNET-TV from New York&#13;
recorded it for Bill Moyers&#13;
Journal' the interview is expected&#13;
to be aired nationally by the PBS&#13;
on October 10.&#13;
McReynolds started his day at&#13;
Parkside in Prof. Dan&#13;
McGovern's "Politics of Advanced&#13;
Industrial Societies"&#13;
class.&#13;
He said that the collectivization&#13;
debate can no longer focus on the&#13;
free market economy because&#13;
there has not been a free market&#13;
economy for the last 30 years.&#13;
Free market economy means the&#13;
free entrance of capital and a wide&#13;
range of competition in the&#13;
market place. However, he felt&#13;
that nobody could go out and start&#13;
a new mill or industry today. He&#13;
said that Reagan is talking about&#13;
a past that no longer operates.&#13;
McReynolds asked, "Are we&#13;
going to have democratic control&#13;
over what is already collectivized?"&#13;
He continued by stating&#13;
that there was a clear market&#13;
demand for small cars in the late&#13;
1950's, but that Detroit would not&#13;
produce small cars because it was&#13;
not as profitable as large cars.&#13;
McReynolds asserted that only on&#13;
the basis of penetration of the&#13;
economy by foreign imports, has&#13;
the American auto industry&#13;
shifted to more fuel efficient&#13;
models.&#13;
Since McReynolds is a Socialist&#13;
- Marxist, he asks if t he whole of&#13;
society is making a profit, not only&#13;
industry.&#13;
"Capitalism severely limits the&#13;
economy because an industry is&#13;
not profitable enough. Four&#13;
percent profits is not acceptable&#13;
when capitalists can get 6% interest&#13;
without any risks."&#13;
His Socialistic stance calls for&#13;
the reindustrialization of&#13;
America. "Socialism is prepared&#13;
to take a loss in one given sector,"&#13;
McReynolds stated, \"to bring&#13;
about an overall profit in all&#13;
sectors, while capitalism must&#13;
profit in all sectors."&#13;
"Socialism is willing to lose&#13;
money in the construction of mass&#13;
transit connecting all big cities&#13;
with a rail system," McReynolds&#13;
said. "A rail system is the most&#13;
fuel - efficient way to move goods&#13;
and people. It is the most cost&#13;
efficient."&#13;
McReynolds continued that this&#13;
would lower foreign oil imports.&#13;
The entire economy would profit&#13;
from not importing oi.! and the&#13;
balance of trade would improve.&#13;
Larger numbers of riders on mass&#13;
transit systems would result in&#13;
Student response to McReynolds&#13;
by Sue Michetti&#13;
When some Parkside students&#13;
who had heard McReynold speak&#13;
were asked what their impressions&#13;
were regarding what he&#13;
said, they responded with the&#13;
following remarks:&#13;
"He sidestepped a lot. I think in&#13;
the remarks that he made that he&#13;
treated us like we were far below&#13;
his level of thinking, like we&#13;
couldn't understand what he&#13;
meant," said Mike Sullivan, a&#13;
senior classman here.&#13;
"I think that he needed too many&#13;
advisors or experts to carry out&#13;
any programs that he might want&#13;
to implement. He is primarily&#13;
theory oriented," Carla Thomas&#13;
said.&#13;
Orin K. Taylor, a senior who is&#13;
majoring in political science,&#13;
remarked, "McReynolds has&#13;
some good ideas, but they won't&#13;
work. Socialism is something this&#13;
country won't readily accept,&#13;
which is why McReynolds feels he&#13;
will lose the election. Also,&#13;
America won't accept a gay&#13;
President either."&#13;
Unionism series&#13;
decreased fares. This is the way to&#13;
deal with the overuse of scarce&#13;
resources while creating a safer&#13;
environment.&#13;
Since oil is a rare commodity in&#13;
the world, McReynolds doesn't&#13;
feel we should be using it. He said&#13;
that between 2400-2600 A. D. all&#13;
fossil fuels in the world, including&#13;
wood, would be depleted. He said&#13;
that nuclear power is stupid. He&#13;
begged that the American people&#13;
listen to the physics community&#13;
regarding the dangers of&#13;
Plutonium. He prefers that&#13;
Americans turn to a combination&#13;
of hydro - electric, solar energy,&#13;
and a back-up of fossil fuel.&#13;
McReynolds believes in&#13;
peaceful transfer of ownership of&#13;
all large industries through&#13;
legitimate means to the community&#13;
as a whole. Representatives&#13;
of community industries&#13;
could meet at the national level to&#13;
look at market surveys and&#13;
respond to the demand in such a&#13;
way that no community would&#13;
overproduce its products. He said&#13;
that production for a given market&#13;
could result in possible minor&#13;
shortages. However, he said that&#13;
there should be no protection for&#13;
inadequate or sloppy work when&#13;
other communities produce a&#13;
better product. He said that this is&#13;
a lesson that Yugoslavia has&#13;
learned.&#13;
"I can't prove socialism will&#13;
work," McReynolds said. "The&#13;
burden of Barry Commoner, John&#13;
Anderson, Ronald Reagan, and&#13;
Jimmy Carter is that capitalism&#13;
can prove in 1981 t hat it can do&#13;
what it has never done, and that is&#13;
to provide full employment&#13;
without war."&#13;
McReynolds said, "Socialism is&#13;
able to proved sustained full&#13;
employment, but one of the&#13;
byproducts is that it is hard to get&#13;
good help."&#13;
He said that there would be&#13;
some dynamic unemployment&#13;
caused by the disemployment of&#13;
older skills in any industrial&#13;
society. He said that capitalism&#13;
deals with this by unemployment&#13;
compensation and hopes that the&#13;
P^siife^September&#13;
D23.&#13;
SOCialiSt candiclate for Presidentrwasat&#13;
market will create new jobs that&#13;
the displaced will be able to find;&#13;
socialism would deal with these&#13;
shifts through planning.&#13;
Next, at the Ranger office,&#13;
McReynolds was interviewed by&#13;
Ranger editor, Ken Meyer and&#13;
columnist Ginger Helgeson.&#13;
Meyer asked, "Do you hope John&#13;
Anderson's independent campaign&#13;
will lessen the impact of the&#13;
two - party system?"&#13;
"John Anderson's camp is a&#13;
creation of the media in large part&#13;
to offer you other than something&#13;
than a real substantial change,"&#13;
said McReynolds. "Anderson is&#13;
given to you so that you won't ask&#13;
for a real change. You say 'Gee, I&#13;
don't want to vote for Carter or&#13;
Reagan. They're pretty bad guys.'&#13;
and along comes ... (someone) ..&#13;
. who says 'You don't have to.&#13;
We'll give you someone who is not&#13;
a threat to the system. He&#13;
promises not to start a new party,&#13;
but he's a nice man. He was wrong&#13;
all the issues up until five years&#13;
ago, but he's sorry now and he has&#13;
integrity.' "&#13;
C/IO&#13;
viability of Anderson as starting a&#13;
third party movement.&#13;
McReynolds answered, "To the&#13;
degree that Anderson gets you to&#13;
thinking about the possibility of&#13;
not voting for one of the major&#13;
parties, that's good. To the degree&#13;
that you really think that he is an&#13;
alternative, it traps you into the&#13;
worst of all possible paths .. . The&#13;
job of the Socialist movement... is&#13;
to generate a movement that&#13;
liberates, that actually makes&#13;
new choices possible."&#13;
"What is your position on a tax -&#13;
cut and what is your program for&#13;
economic recovery?" asked&#13;
Meyers.&#13;
"Well, there are two things that&#13;
the Socialist candidate is not going&#13;
to do," said McReynolds. "One of&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
Ron Kent speaks on 'How Our Union Began'&#13;
by Leslie J. Thompson&#13;
The Wisconsin Humanities&#13;
Committee started its fall series&#13;
entitled "Unionism Today and&#13;
Yesterday" on Sept. 25 with a talk&#13;
by Ron Kent of the American&#13;
Federation of State, County and&#13;
Municipal Employees International&#13;
(AFSCME) on "How&#13;
Our Union Began."&#13;
"The labor movement is part of&#13;
the American fabric," Kent said.&#13;
"It always has been, and probably&#13;
represents the more democratic&#13;
side of the American character."&#13;
During his historical portrayal of&#13;
the American Labor Movement&#13;
Kent stated that, "Unions grew&#13;
out of the conditions of people to&#13;
better not only their economic&#13;
conditions, but also their political&#13;
conditions."&#13;
The labor movement didn't&#13;
come out of the 1930's, its&#13;
beginning dates back to colonial&#13;
times, Kent said. "The first strike&#13;
occurred in 1684 when the New&#13;
York sanitation workers went on&#13;
strike as a result of a wage cut,"&#13;
he said. "At that time public&#13;
employees had no right under law&#13;
to organize or form unions," Kent&#13;
said. "In colonial America&#13;
working people didn't have the&#13;
right to vote. You had to be a&#13;
property owner to vote," he said.&#13;
"It wasn't until the 1830's and&#13;
1840's that citizens acquired the&#13;
right to vote, regardless of their&#13;
stature in the community," said&#13;
Kent. "This came about in part by&#13;
the efforts of the labor movement&#13;
and in part by the struggle of&#13;
working people in general," he&#13;
said.&#13;
The 1800's also brought a&#13;
blossoming of unions among small&#13;
craft societies, Kent said,&#13;
"especially amongst those of&#13;
European heritage who met with&#13;
oppressive conditions here and&#13;
who learned that* c ollective actions&#13;
were necessary to preserve&#13;
their rights." He said that two of&#13;
the rights that they struggled for&#13;
were the democratization of the&#13;
work place and the existence of&#13;
the ten hour work day, because an&#13;
eight hour day was unheard of in&#13;
the 1800's.&#13;
"Wisconsin has always had a&#13;
strong labor movement in both the&#13;
private and public sector," said&#13;
Kent. This became increasingly&#13;
apparent in the 1900's with the&#13;
growth of industrial unionism.&#13;
"Wisconsin is one of 23 states that&#13;
have collective bargaining laws&#13;
for the public employees. State&#13;
employees in the other states have&#13;
no right to sit down with their&#13;
employers as an equal," he said.&#13;
"In 1969 Wisconsin state employees&#13;
were given the same&#13;
rights that the private sector has&#13;
had since 1935. This Statute for&#13;
Public Employees, passed by then&#13;
Governor Gaylord Nelson,&#13;
granted the workers fair treatment,&#13;
eight hours of work,&#13;
medical care, sick leave, humane&#13;
treatment on the job through&#13;
safety and health and the&#13;
democratization of the. work&#13;
place," said Kent. "When workers&#13;
have a say in their working&#13;
conditions, they will gladly give of&#13;
themselves," he said.&#13;
"The American Labor&#13;
Movement has befen a value to the&#13;
American life insofar as social&#13;
security, the Occupational Safety&#13;
and Health Act, better working&#13;
conditions for all, the end of chi ld&#13;
labor in industry, and the end of&#13;
many oppressive conditions that&#13;
have appeared in our industrial&#13;
society," Kent said.&#13;
The next talk in this series will&#13;
be given on October 9, in the&#13;
Union, room 106. Michael J.&#13;
Stancato, Kenosha City Councilman&#13;
- 18th District will speak on&#13;
"The Interaction of City Council&#13;
Business and Unionism."&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• From the Parking Lot:&#13;
Cubans for sale?&#13;
• Review: "Coast to Coast"&#13;
• Volleyball team&#13;
spikes opponents &#13;
2 Thursday, October 2,1980 Ranger&#13;
Panel to di&#13;
A panel discussion on the upcoming&#13;
1980 elections and an&#13;
address by Samuel Day Jr.,&#13;
managing editor of The&#13;
Progressive magazine and former&#13;
editor of "The Bulletin of the&#13;
Atomic Scientists", will highlight&#13;
the 15th annual meeting of the&#13;
Wisconsin Political Science&#13;
Association on Friday, Oct. 10, in&#13;
the Parkside Union.&#13;
Participants in the 3:30 p. m&gt;&#13;
elections panel will be Cong. Les&#13;
Aspin (D-East Troy); Martin&#13;
Gruberg of UW - Oshkosh; John&#13;
Maclver, co - chairman of the&#13;
(t • M&#13;
Iilj % J&#13;
C&#13;
A /ik '&#13;
1980 elections&#13;
Classes&#13;
offered&#13;
Wisconsi Reagan - Bus campaign;&#13;
David Wegge of St. Norbert's&#13;
College; and Frank Zeidler,&#13;
former Milwaukee mayor and&#13;
representatives of the Socialist&#13;
Party USA.&#13;
Topics to be covered by the&#13;
panel include women in the&#13;
election, the importance of g rass&#13;
roots voluntary organization and&#13;
preliminary Wisconsin voter&#13;
survey results.&#13;
Day's talk, at a 6:30 p. m.&#13;
dinner, is titled "The Power of a&#13;
Secret: The Bomb and the First&#13;
Amendment" and will detail the&#13;
Progressive's court battle over&#13;
publication of an article pertaining&#13;
to construction of the&#13;
bomb.&#13;
Simultaneous conference&#13;
sessions at 1:30 p. m. will deal&#13;
with international political&#13;
economy and political science and&#13;
political education outreach&#13;
programs.&#13;
• The sessions are open to the&#13;
public. There is a $1 conference&#13;
registration fee and a $7.50 fee for&#13;
dinner. Additional information is&#13;
available from Prof. Kenneth&#13;
Hoover, president - elect of the&#13;
association and program chairman&#13;
for the annual meeting.&#13;
"Becoming an Askable Parent"&#13;
is a four week course for parents&#13;
who want to be their chUdrens'&#13;
primary sex educators. Instructor&#13;
Judy Loizzo, Planned Parenthood&#13;
of K enosha, will teach the course&#13;
on Thursdays, beginning Oct. 9,&#13;
9:30-11:30 a. m. Fee is $15. Pre -&#13;
register by calling 553-2312.&#13;
Vaudeville act here Tuesday&#13;
Loco-motion Vaudeville will&#13;
bring its unique combination of&#13;
circus and theater to the&#13;
Inmarsity .nf,&#13;
the juggling of flaming torches,&#13;
balls and cigar boxes;&#13;
Chaplinesque slapstick comedy;&#13;
taught by Peter Martin, English&#13;
professor, on Thursday evenings,&#13;
beginning Oct. 2, 7:30 - 9:00 p. m.&#13;
Fee is $15. Contact 553-2312 for&#13;
further info or registration.&#13;
"Sharpen Your Communication&#13;
Skills" is a noncredit six week&#13;
course taught by Margaret Davis,&#13;
Community Relations Dept. at&#13;
Johnson Wax, on Tuesdays, Sept.&#13;
30 thro ugh Nov. 4 starting at 7 p.&#13;
m. Fee is $20. To register call 553-&#13;
2312.&#13;
"Identify Edible Mushrooms"&#13;
will be taught by Eugene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, Life Science&#13;
professor, in three Thursday&#13;
evening sessions and three&#13;
Saturday morning field trips.&#13;
Class will begin on Oct. 9, 7:30 p.&#13;
m. Fee is $18. Call 553-2312 to pre -&#13;
register.&#13;
"Relationships: How to Live&#13;
and Survive One" will be taught&#13;
by Thomas Bierdz, a marriage&#13;
counselor from Racine, from 7 - 9&#13;
p. m. for eight Tuesdays beginning&#13;
Sept. 30. For further info&#13;
call: 553-2312.&#13;
Oct. 7, in the Commumcation Arts&#13;
Theater under sponsorship of the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
Tickets are $1.50 for UW-P&#13;
students and $2 for public and will&#13;
be available at the door.&#13;
Loco-motion, with a cast of fo ur&#13;
multi-talented young men,&#13;
presents a program including two&#13;
and three man adagio hand-body&#13;
balancing and acrobatics; piano&#13;
and accordian accompaniment to&#13;
size puppet character^'; a&#13;
choreographed unicycle ballet; a&#13;
straight jacket escape; and&#13;
original songs and music.&#13;
Loco - motion has been featured&#13;
on an ABC Wide World of S ports&#13;
special and its members have&#13;
acted as instructors at Ringling&#13;
Bros, and Barnum and Bailey's&#13;
Clown College. In the last three&#13;
years they have performed&#13;
more than 225 colleges&#13;
universities.&#13;
at&#13;
and&#13;
Handicapped Awareness Day&#13;
Parkside's Campus Health&#13;
Office, in Cooperation with&#13;
Society's Assets, ABLE and DVR,'&#13;
is sponsoring the 4th Annual&#13;
Handicapped Awareness Day on&#13;
October 8, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.&#13;
in the Union.&#13;
A wheelchair obstacle course&#13;
will be held in the Union. From&#13;
noon to 1 p.m. entertainment by&#13;
the Sign Singers from Mitchell&#13;
Junior High School will be held in&#13;
the Union Cafeteria. From 1-2&#13;
p.m. DVR will have an adaptive&#13;
equipment display and demonstration,&#13;
followed by. a panel&#13;
discussion entitled "1980 —&#13;
Emerge from Prejudice" in Union&#13;
106.&#13;
Anyone interested in experiencing&#13;
what it is like to be in a&#13;
wheelchair can contact the Health&#13;
Office and check out a wheelchair&#13;
for an hour or all day.&#13;
ganger&#13;
NEEDS, reporters&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
AD REPS&#13;
If you're interested, stop by our office&#13;
(next to the Coffee ShoppeJ or&#13;
Phone 553-2295&#13;
Viewpoint&#13;
"Do you feel the benefits of nuclear power outweight the risks*&gt;&#13;
^ Why or why not?&#13;
Alan Padlock, senior&#13;
"Yes, definitely. We don't&#13;
have much of a choice at this&#13;
time if we want to continue our&#13;
present standard of living."&#13;
Stan Lemberger, junior&#13;
"No. The risks are far too&#13;
great — too many people will&#13;
get killed if there are accidents."&#13;
&#13;
Mary Ade, freshman&#13;
"No. Nobody knows what&#13;
the long term effects can be."&#13;
Kenneth Brown, sophomore&#13;
"Yes. You don't really know&#13;
because nobody knows the&#13;
facts about it."&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
K Farrell^Bruce Preston . . . Ad.ertlslngTnag^&#13;
Po. _ STAFF&#13;
DeLuisa&#13;
am£uo&#13;
ShpH0n h&#13;
Charl»&#13;
on&lt; Thomas Delany, Patty&#13;
Helaeson n«an Edenhauser, Ken Eschmann, Ginger&#13;
McCormick Caro&#13;
! K,ees&#13;
' Gary Ledger, Dan&#13;
Schneiderm'an rsii «?/&#13;
er# Brian Passino, Joe Ripp, Art&#13;
Vollmer. ' st&#13;
°ugaard, Leslie Thompson, Dave&#13;
S™ -&#13;
they are sole,y:&#13;
AH correspondence shou H hi H? m,0,any RANGER.&#13;
Parkside, Kenoshai Wl S3141 addresse&#13;
d *&gt;: Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UWpaper&#13;
with one-^ch°marq!ns&#13;
e&#13;
/u??ittled&#13;
'&#13;
f ,ypevvri,,en&#13;
' doublespaced on standard size&#13;
•or verification. letters must be signed and a telephone number includecf&#13;
Deadline for letters'?^'''&#13;
d&#13;
. !!&#13;
easons&#13;
- Maximum length accepted is 500 words.i&#13;
reserves all editorial Drivii«f~&#13;
at 9 a m- 'or publication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content. ,n re,usm9 'o print letters which contain false or &#13;
Ranger&#13;
- Thursday, October 2,1980 3&#13;
Acapulco trip offered&#13;
accSted&#13;
3&#13;
^ iSwJSk n^Ltr&#13;
i&#13;
P Will depart&#13;
„&#13;
C.&#13;
hicag° Taxco&#13;
' the silver city, are&#13;
Reservations are now being&#13;
accepted for a one-week trip in&#13;
January to the world's tropical&#13;
playground, Acapulco, Mexico,&#13;
the sponsoring UW-Parkside&#13;
Campus Travel Center has announced.&#13;
&#13;
Parkside Union Director&#13;
William Niebuhr said the trip&#13;
Jan 4-11, is open to current and&#13;
past UW-Parkside students,&#13;
employees and others affiliated&#13;
with the university, as well as&#13;
their families and guests who are&#13;
traveling with them. Over 2 000&#13;
people have traveled under 'the&#13;
Parkside banner over the past ten&#13;
years to such diverse vacation&#13;
spots as Athens, Paris, London,&#13;
Hawau, Jamaica, Spain, Rome,&#13;
Germany, Austria, Switzerland&#13;
and Puerto Vllarta. Three&#13;
previous UW-P tours have been to&#13;
Acapulco.&#13;
The trip will depart Chicago&#13;
O'Hare the morning of Jan. 4,&#13;
arrive that afternoon in Acapulco&#13;
and return to Chicago the evening&#13;
of J an. 11. Travel will be aboard a&#13;
regularly-scheduled Mexicana&#13;
Airlines jet.&#13;
The trip includes seven nights&#13;
lodging in the first-class Mariott&#13;
Autotel Ritz, within walking&#13;
distance of many of Acapulco's&#13;
finest shops, restaurants, discos&#13;
and beaches.&#13;
Also included in the cost of the&#13;
trip are round trip ground transfers&#13;
in Acapulco including&#13;
porterage of luggage at the airport&#13;
and hotel, group escort&#13;
service throughout the trip and a&#13;
yacht cruise of Acapulco Bay with&#13;
complimentary cocktails.&#13;
Such popular Acapulco options&#13;
as the La Quebrada cliff divers,&#13;
bull fights and day-long trips to&#13;
Taxco, the silver city,&#13;
available at extra charge.&#13;
Complete cost of the trip is $485&#13;
per person for triple occupancy&#13;
•and $519 f or twin occupancy.&#13;
Noting that Mexico is girding&#13;
for another record tourist season,&#13;
with rooms at some ocean resort&#13;
cities already in short supply,&#13;
Niebuhr said that the trip is&#13;
limited to the first 40 applicants&#13;
and urged those interested to act&#13;
quickly.&#13;
"Despite increasing air fares&#13;
and fluctuations in the relative&#13;
value of the U.S. dollar to foreign&#13;
currencies, Mexico remains one of&#13;
the great travel bargains&#13;
available," Niebuhr said.&#13;
Information about all travel&#13;
programs, including questions of&#13;
eligibility, should be directed to&#13;
Niebuhr at the Parkside Union,&#13;
553-2200.&#13;
Photo by Brian Passino&#13;
Criminal insanity discussed I Socialist McReynolds&#13;
• CftfltinilpH Frnm Parro Ana « . . , _ _&#13;
by Patty DeLuisa&#13;
Aaron Snyder, Professor of&#13;
Philosophy at Parkside, was the&#13;
Social Science. Roundtable guest&#13;
speaker on Monday, September&#13;
22. The topic that he presented&#13;
was "Criminal Insanity: Moral&#13;
Soundness, Conceptual Confusion."&#13;
&#13;
Snyder began the discussion&#13;
with contrasting the difference&#13;
between criminal codes of the&#13;
fourteenth century and those of&#13;
contemporary times in Great&#13;
Britain and the United States. He&#13;
said that a man, Henry&#13;
DeBraxton, devised the first&#13;
written synthesis of insanity&#13;
called "The Wild Beast Insanity&#13;
Test." This basically stated that a&#13;
person was not to be found guilty&#13;
of a felony if he had no more&#13;
reason than a wild beast. Fourteenth&#13;
century English juries&#13;
were expected to determine a&#13;
person's insanity by employing&#13;
the standard literally.&#13;
He next introduced the&#13;
"Irresistable Impulse" test of&#13;
insanity. This test is just what the&#13;
name implies it is. It is a situation&#13;
in which a person "just can't help&#13;
himself" from performing an&#13;
illegal act. Many juries, including&#13;
today's, do not accept this test as a&#13;
legitimate means of determining&#13;
insanity.&#13;
Snyder stated that there are&#13;
three serious objections to insanity&#13;
tests in general. The first&#13;
basic objection is that dangerous&#13;
persons who are acquitted of&#13;
serious crimes such as murder&#13;
and rape, by virtue of insanity,&#13;
are "let loose" on society to "do&#13;
their evil deeds" again. When a&#13;
situation arises where a prisoner&#13;
is released early from custody&#13;
rather than serving an entire&#13;
sentence,, he, too, is able to&#13;
commit more serious crimes.&#13;
Snyder cited John Wayne Gacy as&#13;
such a case. A second basic objection&#13;
is that the medical and&#13;
legal professions do not always&#13;
agree on "criminal insanity"&#13;
when the definition of insanity is&#13;
concerned. They often argue&#13;
about the subject because individual&#13;
states have had different&#13;
criminal insanity definitions in&#13;
past years. The third basic objection&#13;
is the question of how the&#13;
accused is to be declared "insane"&#13;
by the present legal&#13;
process: which test should be&#13;
administered?&#13;
Snyder said that there are three&#13;
types of insanity tests that are&#13;
employed in legal processes&#13;
today. The first one deals with the&#13;
accused's state of mi nd during the&#13;
time in which the crime was&#13;
committted. The second one is&#13;
concerned with a test of&#13;
behavioral control. The&#13;
"irresistable impulse" was cited&#13;
as such an example. The third one&#13;
is called a "casual connection"&#13;
insanity test. The test makes no&#13;
attempt to discover what "insanity"&#13;
consists of, but rather&#13;
states that a person is not to be&#13;
found guilty of a felony if his&#13;
behavior results from a mental&#13;
disorder. The judgement of the&#13;
type of disorder is left up to the&#13;
jury for decision on the basis of&#13;
expert testimony.&#13;
Snyder believes that the insanity&#13;
tests encounter many&#13;
problems. He said, "One of the&#13;
things that makes the insanity&#13;
defense so problematic, especially&#13;
in American legal history, is that&#13;
there have been so many different&#13;
tests of insanity, so many different&#13;
sorts of instructions that&#13;
judges have to read to juries, and,&#13;
not surprisingly, so many varying&#13;
results on what might be essentially&#13;
the same set of facts." He&#13;
also remarked that in murder&#13;
cases the insanity tests were so&#13;
different from each other that&#13;
under the same set of circumstances,&#13;
a person might be&#13;
convicted of firstc degree murder&#13;
in one state, manslaughter in&#13;
another, and be acquitted in yet&#13;
another state.&#13;
He also explained that the more&#13;
liberal members of the legal&#13;
community have argued for&#13;
complete abolition of anything&#13;
that resembles the insanity&#13;
defense. They want to remove&#13;
from our legal system any&#13;
reference to the mental state&#13;
when the question of guilt or innocence&#13;
is to be decided. They&#13;
content that certain acts should be&#13;
declared "felonious", regardless&#13;
of wh at someone's mental state is&#13;
at the time of the act. A murderer,&#13;
in the liberal's view, should be&#13;
charged with homicide and the&#13;
question of the defendent's&#13;
mensrea (mental state) should be&#13;
determined separately. The&#13;
mensrea is important in deciding&#13;
the propriety of r esponding to the&#13;
person who has been found guilty&#13;
on the basis of a n act stripped of&#13;
any mental components. The&#13;
general consensus among contemporary&#13;
legal leaders is that&#13;
removing mensrea from the&#13;
guilt/innocence process is "the&#13;
way to go" in the future. Snyder&#13;
disagrees with their belief. He&#13;
said, "I think the removal of&#13;
mensrea from the definition of&#13;
crimes could be far worse than the&#13;
current state." He believes that it&#13;
is highly desirable from the&#13;
viewpoint of s ocial policy that we&#13;
maintain as much connection as&#13;
we possibly can, between the&#13;
concept of criminality and law&#13;
and the concept of moral&#13;
wrongfulness. We must consider&#13;
the mental state, he believes, to&#13;
appropriately assess the future of&#13;
the accused.&#13;
Snyder said that he believes that&#13;
there are two different aspects of&#13;
a theory of punishment. The first&#13;
aspect of his theory is the&#13;
question, "Why punish at all?"&#13;
Generally, people are punished to&#13;
help maintain the social order. He&#13;
thinks thai this is the general&#13;
rationale of the whole system. The&#13;
second aspect of h is theory is the&#13;
question of whom we should&#13;
punish and why we should punish&#13;
them. According to Snyder, this is&#13;
part of the individual rationale of&#13;
the system. He believes that the&#13;
insane have the right to receive&#13;
treatment for their disorders and&#13;
that they should not be treated like&#13;
criminals.&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
Improve your&#13;
grades! j&#13;
Send $1.00 for your&#13;
306-page, research paper&#13;
catalog. All academic&#13;
subjects.&#13;
Collegiate Research&#13;
P.O. Box 25097H&#13;
Los Angeles, Ca. 90025&#13;
Enclosed is $1.00.&#13;
Please rush the catalog.&#13;
Name l_&#13;
Address,&#13;
City,&#13;
State -Zip,&#13;
V.V.W.W.. • • — ........v.v.%v;v.%%s^v.".v.v.v.'.v.v.v.v.». :.y.w:vx.x.:.x*:.?:.x&lt;&lt;*x&lt;##&lt;c«*x&lt;&lt;tt&lt;4f&gt;:*x,x&lt;,x*:&#13;
,&gt;&gt;x&#13;
,&gt;#.v&gt;.v.v:\v.v.v.v.v.v.v.w.vx*iw&gt;&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
them is that I'm not going to visit&#13;
the Middle East and consult with&#13;
Menachem Begin and Sadat . . .&#13;
Second, I'm not going to promise a&#13;
tax cut. I am going to suggest that&#13;
if there is a Socialist administration&#13;
that your taxes&#13;
would be more... effectively used&#13;
— that instead of a MX missile&#13;
system wiping out Utah and&#13;
Nevada, you'd have a rail system,&#13;
that instead of a military budget&#13;
you'd see mass transit, you'd have&#13;
a system of effective medical&#13;
coverage for all Americans, but I&#13;
won't promise you lower taxes."&#13;
Ginger Helgeson asked, "What&#13;
advice do you have right now for&#13;
war resistors?"&#13;
"Resist. I think the main advice&#13;
is to not to accept tne return or trie&#13;
draft, but to fight it at every turn&#13;
along the way. Carter has already&#13;
betrayed promises he had made to&#13;
us by even introducing&#13;
registration — one of the most&#13;
dishonest and contemptible things&#13;
that Carter did," McReynolds&#13;
stated.&#13;
"I would confront the Justice&#13;
Department with the largest&#13;
number of people it has ever&#13;
seen," he continued. "So that if&#13;
the Justice Dept. moves against&#13;
any American men for refusing&#13;
induction, they would have to&#13;
move against a great many people&#13;
... You do not conscript American&#13;
youth to fight for Exxon. You do&#13;
not take them to the Middle East&#13;
to fight for Shell."&#13;
Next, McReynolds commented&#13;
on Ford, but meant Reagan. "I'm&#13;
building a Socialist movement&#13;
that is going to give you new&#13;
choices down the line. In 1964&#13;
people said 'how did we get&#13;
trapped into a choice between&#13;
Johnson and Goldwater?' Now it's&#13;
i»&lt;ki ana propt, uoniiig nUW&#13;
did we get trapped into a choice&#13;
between Carter and Ford.' When&#13;
do you stop asking those stupid&#13;
questions and begin to say that we&#13;
should build a political party that&#13;
represents our interests."&#13;
ACADEMY OF BATON A DANCE&#13;
| Headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits, |&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights |j&#13;
| — Ballet Shoes — T ap Shoes— |&#13;
All Dancing Supplies&#13;
|6204 22nd Avenue, Kenosha 658-24981&#13;
MM 50-IVmMUTES-PLUS"&#13;
THE FOLLOWING 50-MINUTE&#13;
TOPICS WILL BE OFFERED TO&#13;
STUDENTS UNABLE TO ATTEND THE&#13;
SESSIONS SCHEDULED DURING THE&#13;
ACTIVITY PERIOD.&#13;
I SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18,1980&#13;
-BEFORE DOING IT YOUR WAY, TRY OUR WAY.&#13;
-STUDY SKILLS AND TIME MANAGEMENT.&#13;
-HANGING ON TO YOUR MONEY.&#13;
II SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25,1980&#13;
-THE OTHER PART OF YOUR EDUCATION.&#13;
-SELECTING A MAJOR.&#13;
-TEST TAKING TIPS.&#13;
TIME:9:00 AM TO 12:00 NOON&#13;
PLACE:MOLINARO III&#13;
CALL 553-2610 OR 553-2573&#13;
IR S TOP BY LIBRA RY CI RCULATION RISK&#13;
TO RESERVE A SPACE&#13;
IN THESE SESSIONS. &#13;
Thursday, October 2,1980 Ranger&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
Cubans&#13;
for sale?&#13;
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
Chi-rho center reactivated&#13;
Pat and Tom Wade, newly&#13;
appointed Catholic campus&#13;
ministers, are re-activating Chirho&#13;
center for campus ministry&#13;
located at the corner of JR and E.&#13;
Pat and Tom describe themselves&#13;
as* spiritual seekers who&#13;
appreciate opportunities to share&#13;
questions, reflections, dreams&#13;
with fellow searchers whatever&#13;
their religious belief.&#13;
The Chi-rho center will sponsor&#13;
discussion groups on current&#13;
issues, and provide social,&#13;
educational, and religious&#13;
programs. Check future issues of&#13;
Ranger for calendar listings of&#13;
these events. Pat and Tom will&#13;
also be available on campus and&#13;
at the center for counseling.&#13;
The Wades extend a welcome to&#13;
all who might wish to visit the&#13;
center. They offer themselves as&#13;
resource persons to student&#13;
groups and faculty members, and&#13;
they look forward to becoming&#13;
actively involved in the Parkside&#13;
community.&#13;
Contact&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
If you weren't here last fall&#13;
semester, or you didn't read&#13;
Ranger, or you just plain don't&#13;
remember Parking Lot, you&#13;
missed "Cambodians for Sale"&#13;
just before Christmas.&#13;
Lay-out for the column followed&#13;
advertisement format. There was&#13;
even a coupon. The company&#13;
supposedly behind the ad&#13;
presented its product in the same&#13;
manner that any real advertiser&#13;
does: by appealing to self - interest&#13;
by offering a product intended&#13;
to make life easier for the&#13;
buyer at someone else's expense.&#13;
In short, the column "ad" attempted&#13;
to sell Cambodian "boat&#13;
people" to Americans to use as&#13;
servants, Christmas gifts, pets, or&#13;
whatever other uses clever rich&#13;
people could put them to. There&#13;
were package discounts, early&#13;
order incentives, and even instruction&#13;
manuals. All the ad&#13;
really lacked in authenticity was a&#13;
toll - free number.&#13;
Of course, no "boat people"&#13;
were really sold. The column, in&#13;
fact, was a lemon because most of&#13;
my readers misunderstood my&#13;
intent. In some of the letters&#13;
Ranger received in the weeks&#13;
following the appearance of&#13;
"Cambodians for Sale," I was&#13;
accused of being unkind to the&#13;
"boat people." In a couple of&#13;
letters, my personal character&#13;
was questioned. One letter&#13;
How to break into&#13;
PSGA and like it&#13;
St. Mark's Parish Presents&#13;
SHOWS A POPPIN&#13;
October 3, 4 and 10, 11&#13;
Entertainment Extravaganza&#13;
Shows • Music • Dancing • Refreshments&#13;
Tickets&#13;
Advance - $6.°°/Person • At Door - $7.°°/Person&#13;
Sat., October 11th - All tickets $7.°°/Person&#13;
Ticket Outlets&#13;
Carnfey's Menswear „ Angelo's Florist&#13;
6304-22nd Avenue 7534 Sheridan Road&#13;
St. Mark's Auditorium&#13;
Sheridan Road and 73rd St.&#13;
Doors open at 5:00 PM • Shows start at 7:00 PM&#13;
- "PyPtrrM-naweggw- m ' •'&#13;
Hi, my name is David&#13;
Habegger, and I am a new senator&#13;
in Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA).&#13;
Getting involved in the&#13;
"political" life at Parkside is&#13;
fairly easy. I got involved because&#13;
I didn't know enough about the&#13;
decisions being made on my&#13;
"behalf." I filled out a short form,&#13;
I was nominated, and then approved&#13;
(I was appointed because&#13;
there were vacant senate seats).&#13;
The longer I stay with PSGA the&#13;
more I get involved. Student&#13;
government has given me a&#13;
greater outlook on the&#13;
bureaucracy we have for a&#13;
government — but in no way am I&#13;
implying whether it is good or&#13;
bad. By looking at my long range&#13;
work in the senate, I see that it has&#13;
given me experience in handling&#13;
people, and understanding the&#13;
procedures needed to accomplish&#13;
different projects.&#13;
My personal feelings about&#13;
being involved in PSGA has&#13;
changed from my first senate&#13;
meeting to present. When I attended&#13;
my first meeting back in&#13;
the summer I didn't know what to&#13;
expect. It was very difficult not&#13;
knowing my boundaries (as a&#13;
senator), but by attending the&#13;
senate meetings I have learned&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
A Night of Juggling,&#13;
Acrobatics, Slapstick,&#13;
Comedy, &amp;&#13;
Audience Participation&#13;
lOCO-MDTIOjJ&#13;
wmu&#13;
TUESDAY, OCTOBER !&#13;
8:00 P. M.&#13;
COMM ARTS THEATRE&#13;
AnillfflAll TICKETS AT DOOR, GENERAL SEATING&#13;
ADM.SS.ON 51.50 UWP STUDENT FREE TEASER WEDNESDAY NOON&#13;
$2.00 GENERAL&#13;
MAIN PLACE&#13;
more than I would have thought.&#13;
I had the impression that in&#13;
government, everything was a&#13;
mess and nothing constructive&#13;
could ever get done — but this&#13;
isn't necessarily true. For instance,&#13;
I tried to get an express&#13;
from Racine to Parkside. It took&#13;
only two weeks to accomplish this,&#13;
from first contact, a letter, the&#13;
final go-ahead.&#13;
It seems to me that most of the&#13;
administrators and students have&#13;
the same goal — high quality&#13;
education at a reasonable price. I&#13;
have also the opinion that when a&#13;
project is "held-up" it is not&#13;
necessarily because of the&#13;
Parkside administration, but&#13;
because of the UW System, state&#13;
or federal policies or laws.&#13;
I have also learned tha t students&#13;
have more of an imput in&#13;
decisions than I believed existed&#13;
as illustrated by faculty/student&#13;
committees. A concern of mine is,&#13;
do you realize that there are seats&#13;
for students on faculty committees&#13;
or don't you want to be&#13;
involved or don't you know how to&#13;
take advantage of this? By taking&#13;
advantage of this you would be&#13;
able to give your opinions, and&#13;
have a vote in any issue brought&#13;
up by the committee.&#13;
Anyone interested in being a&#13;
member on one of the&#13;
faculty/student committees&#13;
please stop into the PSGA office&#13;
next to the Coffee Shoppe.&#13;
I am very happy with my new&#13;
role as a representative for the&#13;
students, and I urge anyone inproposed&#13;
that some pretty awful&#13;
things be done to my body.&#13;
To be honest, I questioned my&#13;
judgment after reading those&#13;
letters. I thought I had, at the very&#13;
least, written an unreasonably&#13;
outrageous column that week. At&#13;
most, I figured some of my more&#13;
disagreeable psychopathic traits&#13;
had surfaced and vomited all over&#13;
my copy.&#13;
Just recently, however, I've&#13;
begun to trust my judgment&#13;
again. No, I didn't take any&#13;
writing courses, and I didn't have&#13;
to see a therapist. I'd become&#13;
involved in sponsoring one of the&#13;
Cuban refugees who are being&#13;
detained at Fort McCoy right here&#13;
in Wisconsin.&#13;
To complete the necessary&#13;
paperwork to release Manuel&#13;
from Fort McCoy, I worked with&#13;
Catholic Social Services (CSS) of&#13;
Milwaukee, a group responsible&#13;
for matching Cuban refugees with&#13;
American sponsoring individuals&#13;
and families in the eastern half of&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
When I first spoke to CSS, th ey&#13;
weren't exactly overjoyed that I&#13;
was willing to sponsor Manuel. It&#13;
was only after I had told them that&#13;
Manuel would be living in his own&#13;
apartment and working at a job in&#13;
the community as soon as possible&#13;
that the people at CSS were&#13;
friendly. To explain her initial&#13;
coldness, the woman I spoke to&#13;
(who asked to remain&#13;
anonymous), said, "So many&#13;
people have called us, but all they&#13;
want are servants. One of the&#13;
many people we had to turn down&#13;
was a man who began the conversation&#13;
with, 'My wife is an&#13;
invalid and I really could use&#13;
some help with her.' "&#13;
This type of relationship with a&#13;
sponsoring family, according to&#13;
CSS, "sets up a dependency&#13;
relationship which can become&#13;
ugly, resulting in lowered self -&#13;
esteem for the refugee, and&#13;
possibly leading to criminal and/or&#13;
emotional instability."&#13;
Manuel, for example, was a diesel&#13;
mechanic in Cuba. What if he had&#13;
been sponsored by a man who&#13;
needed his attic cleaned? According&#13;
to CSS, many of the&#13;
Americans who are willing to&#13;
sponsor people like Manuel are&#13;
actually looking for a "product"&#13;
to make their lives easier. They&#13;
haven't thought too hard about&#13;
whether there will be a cost or&#13;
who will pay it.&#13;
Anybody want a Cuban&#13;
7&#13;
They're free for the asking.&#13;
terested to get involved.&#13;
If you are interested in running&#13;
for a senate position this fall you&#13;
should make note that there are&#13;
only a few rules that must be&#13;
followed, and they are: (1) You&#13;
must have a minimum of 6&#13;
credits, (2) your GPA must be at&#13;
or above 2.0, (3) you are not on&#13;
final academic probation, and (4)&#13;
a petition with 25 signatures must&#13;
be in, on or before noon Oct. 3,&#13;
1980. Stop in our office for more&#13;
information.&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Elmwood Plaza Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
^ — r &#13;
Ranger Thursday, October 2,1980&#13;
Dyke. mmunication Arts Theater under the direction of Prof.' Leon Van&#13;
Review&#13;
'Coast' leaves good feeling&#13;
bv by Br Brucuce e RR. . Prp Presstnton n l—:&#13;
The way that movies are being&#13;
made now, they're either very&#13;
good or very bad. It is seldom that&#13;
we see one that is just plain good.&#13;
"Coast to Coast" is this happy&#13;
medium.&#13;
It tells the tale of a flighty&#13;
woman who is being declared&#13;
insane by one of her husband's&#13;
colleagues because he decided it&#13;
would be cheaper than divorcing&#13;
her. She learns of this plot against&#13;
her, escapes from the sanitarium,&#13;
and hitches a truck ride to&#13;
California to confront her&#13;
husband.&#13;
Dyan Cannon is very lovable as&#13;
the air - headed wife, Madine&#13;
Levington. She m akes you smile&#13;
inside with her silly antics. While&#13;
in the sanitarium, Madine was&#13;
told she was having a nervous&#13;
breakdown, was given drugs to&#13;
pacify her, and was scheduled for&#13;
"shock therapy" before her&#13;
escape. Outside of it, however, she&#13;
becomes a vibrant woman who's&#13;
in love with life as she marvels&#13;
over the little things she was&#13;
deprived of inside (i.e. peanut&#13;
butter, wild flowers, and snow).&#13;
Cannon brings us a Madine who is&#13;
very real and believeable.&#13;
Robert Blake portrays Charlie&#13;
Callahan, the frustrated truck&#13;
driver who picks up Madine and&#13;
consents to drive her to&#13;
California. He has his usual&#13;
rough exterior and the only thing&#13;
that keeps his character from&#13;
becoming Barretta - turned - truck&#13;
- driver is the absence of his street&#13;
- wise bounciness.&#13;
Madine and Charlie don't&#13;
exactly hit it off at first and&#13;
therefore predictably become the&#13;
type of couple who will fight,&#13;
become friends and inevitably fall&#13;
in love. Which, of course, they do.&#13;
But life on the road isn't all fun&#13;
and games. They are being chased&#13;
by a man who wants to repossess&#13;
Charlie's truck and a female&#13;
private investigator (in her forties)&#13;
and her partner who were&#13;
hired by Madine's husband to&#13;
bring her back to the sanitarium.&#13;
This brings rise to some very&#13;
funny scenes in which they meet&#13;
up with their pursuers; the scenes&#13;
are not hilarious but they are very&#13;
funny. One such encounter takes&#13;
place in a feed yard with everyone&#13;
fighting each other while trying to&#13;
avoid a loose bull.&#13;
Some of the scenes in "Coast to&#13;
Coast" are predictable, but not so&#13;
much as to be annoying.&#13;
Towards the end of the film,&#13;
Cannon's character is expanded&#13;
as she becomes hurt after&#13;
allowing herself to fall in love.&#13;
Blake also becomes a little better&#13;
in the final scenes, but it is sheerly&#13;
Dyan Cannon and her expressive&#13;
talent which makes this film&#13;
happen. She is becoming a versitile&#13;
actress and is definitely&#13;
someone to watch in the future.&#13;
The end scene should satisfy&#13;
the public's insatiable need to see&#13;
destruction on the silver screen.&#13;
The absurdity of it just has to&#13;
make you laugh.&#13;
Possibly the best thing about&#13;
"Coast to Coast" is something&#13;
that is rarely seen but always&#13;
welcome in this type of film : the&#13;
fact that it leaves you with a good&#13;
feeling inside.&#13;
I doubt that "Coast to Coast"&#13;
will play to sell - out crowds, but it&#13;
is a nice film that will give you&#13;
something good to do on a Sunday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
Concourse raises women's issues&#13;
by Wendy Westphal&#13;
Parkside Concourse is a new&#13;
student group this year at&#13;
Parkside. Co-coordinators for the&#13;
group are Ginger Helgeson, Ann&#13;
Salerno and Debbie Chiapetta.&#13;
"We are a core group of women&#13;
and men interested in supporting&#13;
societal, educational, vocational&#13;
and personal changes in women's&#13;
status," said Salerno.&#13;
Meetings for Parkside Concourse&#13;
will be held on the first&#13;
and third Friday of each month&#13;
during the activity period (1-2&#13;
p.m.) in the SOC office (by the&#13;
Coffee Slfoppe). Tentative&#13;
speakers for the semester will&#13;
be representatives from the&#13;
Women's Resource Center of&#13;
Racine, Bread and Roses&#13;
Women's Health Clinic, and Birth&#13;
Right.&#13;
The main event will be on&#13;
March 14. An evening performance&#13;
will be presented of&#13;
'The Woodhull' — a one person&#13;
drama based on the life of 19th&#13;
century activist, stockbroker,&#13;
publisher and first woman to run&#13;
for the Presidency of the United&#13;
States (against Grant in 1872),&#13;
Victoria C. Woodhull. Starring in&#13;
the performance will be Elizabeth&#13;
Garry, winner of Chicago's 1979&#13;
'Pick of the Program Award for&#13;
Best Theatre Production'. She&#13;
was awarded for writing and&#13;
starring in 'Portrait of Emily' — a&#13;
psychological profile of 19th&#13;
century poet, Emily Dickinson.&#13;
Ticket proceeds will go toward a&#13;
scholarship fund for an outstanding&#13;
woman Parkside&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
THURSDAY, OCT. 2&#13;
DISCUSSION - at 7:30 p.m. in MOLN 111 by Peer Support&#13;
Organization. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
FRIDAY, OCT. 3&#13;
LECTURE— at 10 a.m. in the Union Cinema. Michael Harrington the&#13;
founder of the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee will talk&#13;
ope&#13;
^to&#13;
sr^r&#13;
da for 1116 Eighties"-&#13;
The progra^&#13;
s&#13;
'&#13;
MOVIE — Monty Python's "Life of Brian" will be shown at 8 p.m. n i the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission at the door is $1.50 for a Parkside student&#13;
and $1.50 for a guest. ID cards are required. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
CONCERT — by Racine Sweet Adelines at 8:15 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Tickets are available at the Union Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 4&#13;
SWAP MEET— by Tri-County Model Railroad Club starting at 9 a.m in&#13;
foe °" Buildmg&#13;
" Admission is $1.00 fo r adults and children are&#13;
MCi^ema~ °&#13;
f Brian&#13;
" wil1 be rePeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
MONDAY, OCT. 6&#13;
R"Tht&#13;
DR^f^&#13;
EiT 3t £&#13;
n&#13;
°Pn i5"h*&#13;
011 106&#13;
-&#13;
Prof&#13;
• Don Walter will talk on&#13;
J&#13;
be d Perceptual and Semantic Elaboration in the Recall of&#13;
the public Imagery Sentences." The program is free and open to&#13;
WORKSHOP — "First Hand Conversations" at 1 p.m. in the ChanS°I&#13;
S area&#13;
^&#13;
StUdT&#13;
tS are encouraged to attend and ask questions of&#13;
the senior administrative staff.&#13;
W?5,&#13;
KS"°P ~ at 1 pmin&#13;
CA D157A. Jim Maguire will talk on&#13;
w p £&#13;
mS ?&#13;
S5&#13;
: D° You Realize the Potential?". Admission is free for Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8&#13;
WORKSHOP — "Math Anxiety" at 1 p.m. in MOLN 223 The program is&#13;
open to anyone, and admission is free Program is&#13;
W!i™Pat&#13;
(I&#13;
1&#13;
TP n?-&#13;
in WLLC 0117 (Self Production LAB). Evelyn&#13;
Ru&#13;
! ^ telk on Rhotos&#13;
• How to Copy and Mount". Admission is free&#13;
and the program is open to Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
IVr fib bitty _Su«« / /o . . . YOU&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
• DANISH TORTE CAKES *1^&#13;
• KRINGtES&#13;
• WEDDING CAKES&#13;
• CAKES FOR All OCCASIONS&#13;
o™ fEN • FI NE ITALIAN BREAD CCi A70C •HA*°*OU4 IltPZf&#13;
UNCLE&#13;
MUNCHIES&#13;
2423 52ND ST.&#13;
656-0020&#13;
26 different sandwiches&#13;
including:&#13;
Reuben&#13;
Hot Beef Stuffer&#13;
Bar-B-Q Stuff er&#13;
Polish Sausage Stuffer&#13;
Italian Sausage Stuffer&#13;
Italian Meatball Stuffer&#13;
8 different subs&#13;
Free delivery on&#13;
purchases over$10&#13;
student.&#13;
"This year, we will really&#13;
appreciate ideas and support from&#13;
students interested in raising the&#13;
consciousness of this campus on&#13;
what are usually called 'women's&#13;
issues' (issues concerning fa'ffiily&#13;
and individual changes) but what&#13;
really affect our whole society. We&#13;
are interested in discovering&#13;
alternatives to women's and&#13;
men's traditional roles and in&#13;
rediscovering women of the past,"&#13;
said Helgeson.&#13;
Watch RANGER for further&#13;
information.&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK IN&#13;
Acapulco&#13;
MEXICO&#13;
JAN. 4-11,1981&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
|» 7 N ights First Class Hotel&#13;
• Round Trip Jet Transportation&#13;
• Ground Transfers&#13;
• Yacht Cruise of Acapulco Bay&#13;
• Tour Escort Throughout&#13;
Student Organizational Council&#13;
FAIR&#13;
OCTOBER 8 S 9&#13;
11:30 a. m. - 2:00 p. m.&#13;
5 p. m. - - 7:30 p. m.&#13;
ON UNION CONCOURSE&#13;
Come see whot Parkside&#13;
Organizations have to offer&#13;
hfc 'Vt: _&#13;
$50 RESERVES YOUR SPACE — LIMITED NUMBERS&#13;
FOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS CONTACTPARKSIDE&#13;
UNION OFFICES RM. 209- Call 553-2200 &#13;
Thursday, October 2,1980 Ranger&#13;
paid advertisement&#13;
paid advertisement&#13;
P.S.G.A. Constitution&#13;
We, the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside do hereby organize&#13;
°&#13;
ur&#13;
*?'&#13;
v&#13;
*&#13;
s Pursuant to Wisconsin Statute&#13;
36.09(5) and the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. Constitution Art 4-1 in&#13;
the manner set forth in this constitution and&#13;
K\?&#13;
Ur ["&#13;
epresen,atives to participate in&#13;
institutional governance in the manner set&#13;
l! »-» »®W- We invest ,ha powers of this&#13;
constitution in the Parkside Student'&#13;
Government Association Inc. All previous&#13;
Parks de Student Government Association&#13;
constitutions shall be null and void upon&#13;
ratification of this constitution on March 5&#13;
and 6, 1980. This constitution shall be the sole&#13;
constitution of Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. and the student body and&#13;
subject only to amendments.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. shall be responsible to the&#13;
students of the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. shall have the power to enforce&#13;
and protect the following articles by&#13;
passing motions, resolutions or taking legal&#13;
action to insure that no student's rights are&#13;
violated.&#13;
Those students seeking positions in the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc. (P.S.G.A., Inc.) must fulfill all&#13;
requirements of that office in accordance&#13;
with Student Life Eligibility Criteria specified&#13;
In the Senate Rules.&#13;
ARTICLE I&#13;
Section l. All legislative powers granted&#13;
herein shall be vested in the Senate of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Section 2. The Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
shall consist of 18 student members, half of&#13;
which will be elected in the spring and half in&#13;
the fall, whose term shall be for one year.&#13;
Section 3. The Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc&#13;
shall choose their own officers and also a&#13;
President Pro Tempore.&#13;
Section 4. in the absence of the VicePresident&#13;
of P.S.G.A., Inc. who shall be the&#13;
president of the Senate, the President Pro&#13;
Tempore shall be the President of the Senate.&#13;
The President Pro Tempore shall be a&#13;
Senator and shall be a member of all Senate&#13;
Committees.&#13;
When vacancies happen in the representation&#13;
from any at large seat, the PresidentPro&#13;
Tempore shall fill such vacancies with&#13;
the concurrence of a simple majority of the&#13;
entire legislative branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc&#13;
Section 5. A simple majority of the total&#13;
Senate shall constitute a quorum to do&#13;
business.&#13;
Section 6. The Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
shall have the power to determine the rules of&#13;
its proceedings, censure its members for&#13;
disorderly conduct and, with the concurrence&#13;
of two thirds of the entire Senate, expel a&#13;
member. The Senate shall keep a journal of&#13;
its proceedings, and publish the same monthiy&#13;
at the minimum, a copy of the journal&#13;
L&#13;
ha&#13;
'Lb&#13;
,&#13;
e&#13;
^&#13;
vailable for review by the public in&#13;
the P.S.G.A., Inc. offices.&#13;
The Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall meet&#13;
at an established place and time no less than&#13;
once a week during the fall and spring&#13;
semesters, and no less than once a month&#13;
during the summer session.&#13;
Upon presentation of a petition by a simple&#13;
majority of the entire Senate a meeting shall&#13;
be called by the Vice-President or in the case&#13;
of the Vice-President's absence the President&#13;
Pro Tempore shall have the responsibility to&#13;
call a meeting within 48 hours.&#13;
Section 7. Bills may either originate in the&#13;
Senate or be sent to the Senate from the&#13;
executive branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Every&#13;
bill, order, resolution, or vote on which the&#13;
concurrence of the Senate is necessary shall&#13;
A^Iech&#13;
an&#13;
Sif&#13;
d ,he Sena,e bV a simple majority&#13;
and shall be presented to the President of the&#13;
Pr!c™,'&#13;
nc&#13;
-&#13;
be,ore if ,akes ®ff6Ct. If the&#13;
President does not approve, he/she shall send&#13;
it back to the Senate for reconsidertion with&#13;
his/her reasons for rejection.&#13;
If, after such reconsideration, a simple&#13;
maiority of the entire Senate shall agree to&#13;
pass the bill, it shall become law. But in all&#13;
such cases the votes of Senate shall be&#13;
determined by a roll call vote, and the names&#13;
of persons voting for and against the bill shall&#13;
be entered in the journal of the Senate. If any&#13;
bill shall not be returned by the President&#13;
within ten school days after it has been&#13;
presented to him/her, the same shall become&#13;
law, in the manner as if he/she had signed it.&#13;
Alt proceedings of the Senate of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. shall be sent to the executive branch for&#13;
incorporation purposes. If the President&#13;
vetoes the legislation, he/she shall send it&#13;
back to the Senate. A two-thirds vote of the&#13;
entire Senate shall be required to override the&#13;
veto.&#13;
Section 8. The Senate shall have the power&#13;
to make motions, resolutions, or take legal&#13;
actions which shall be necessary and proper&#13;
for carrying into execution the foregoing&#13;
powers, and all other powers vested by this&#13;
constitution in the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Section 9. The Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
shall have the power to amend this constitution&#13;
by a two-thirds vote of the entire&#13;
Senate. In the event of an amendment being&#13;
passed by the Senate, said amendment shall&#13;
be placed on the ballot of the next election. If&#13;
the students confirm the amendment by a&#13;
simple majority vote, it shall be added to the&#13;
Constitution. If the students vote against it,&#13;
the amendment will be deleted. In the event&#13;
the Senate does not confirm the proposed&#13;
amendment, said amendment will not appear&#13;
on the ballot. The proponent of an amendment&#13;
that is turned down may, if he or she so&#13;
chooses, follow the procedures set UD in Article&#13;
V, Section 2.&#13;
When amendments are up for approval they&#13;
shall appear on the October and March&#13;
ballots. In cases of urgency, a special&#13;
referendum may be held at any time.&#13;
Section 10. The Senate shall have the sole&#13;
power of impeachment and the power to try&#13;
all impeachments. When sitting for that&#13;
purpose they shall be.of oath or affirmation.&#13;
When the President of the P.S.G.A., Inc is&#13;
tried the Chief Justice of the Judicial court&#13;
shall preside, and no person shall be convicted&#13;
without the concurrence of two-thirds&#13;
of the entire Senate. Judgement in cases of&#13;
impeachment shall not extend further than&#13;
removal from office and disqualification to&#13;
hold and enjoy any office or position that the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. has jurisdiction over, appointment&#13;
to, or election for. Impeachment&#13;
shall not begin until two-thirds of the entire&#13;
Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc. have voted to hold&#13;
an impeachment hearing.&#13;
Section u. Roberts Rules of Order shall&#13;
govern the proceedings of all Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association, Inc&#13;
meetings except when inconsistent with the&#13;
Constitution of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
ARTICLE II&#13;
Section 1. All executive powers, within this&#13;
article, shall be vested in the President of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Section 2. The President shall hold office&#13;
during the term of one year together with the&#13;
Vice-President who will be chosen for the&#13;
same term. They shall be eligible for reelection&#13;
and shall not serve more than 2&#13;
consecutive terms.&#13;
Before the President and the VicePresident&#13;
elect enters on the execution of the&#13;
office of the Presidency or Vice-Presidency,&#13;
he or she shall take the following oath:&#13;
"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will&#13;
faithfully execute the office of President (or&#13;
Vice-President) of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. and will to the&#13;
best of my ability preserve, protect and&#13;
flStePPXf. SSnst-IMIon and actions of the&#13;
rarKsiae Student Government Association&#13;
Inc."&#13;
The President of the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall&#13;
also be able to draw compensation while in&#13;
office, the amount of which shall be determined&#13;
by a majority vote of the entire&#13;
Legislative branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc This&#13;
compensation can be suspended by the Senate&#13;
while the President is on trial for purposes of&#13;
impeachment. If, however, after impeachment&#13;
proceedings the President is&#13;
found to be innocent, all benefits will be paid&#13;
to him/her retroactive from the date of&#13;
suspension. Increases in compensation will&#13;
not be awarded to a President while in office&#13;
unless he/she is re-elected to another term of&#13;
office or to his/[ier immediate successor, at&#13;
which time such benefits would begin to be&#13;
implemented. All increases must be approved&#13;
by a majority of the entire Senate.&#13;
Upon resignation or removal from office or&#13;
inability to discharge power and duties of the&#13;
Presidency, the Vice-.President shall assume&#13;
the office of President of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
and shall meet the constitutional&#13;
requirements of the Presidency of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Section 3. The President shall have the&#13;
power by and with the advice and consent of&#13;
the maiority of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate to&#13;
nominate and appoint the treasurer,&#13;
corresponding secretary and all other officers&#13;
of the executive branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
and all student judges with the consent of two!&#13;
thirds of the entire Senate.&#13;
The President shall have the power ^o lineitem&#13;
veto specific portions of Senate bills.&#13;
He/she may line-item veto the P.S.G.A , Inc&#13;
budget, but shall not line-item veto the&#13;
Segregated Fee Budget. The President may&#13;
not veto legislation or any portion of it, passed&#13;
by the Senate which deals with the Senate&#13;
Procedural Rules, Regulations or Senate&#13;
appointments.&#13;
The President shall have the power to&#13;
require written reports from all standing or&#13;
special committees and individuals .to whom&#13;
responsibilities have been delegated within&#13;
the P.S.G.A., Inc. and shall be required to&#13;
furnish written reports on his/her executive&#13;
activities to the legislative branch of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. by a majority vote of the&#13;
Senate. Any required written reports shall'be&#13;
requested in writing and shall be received&#13;
within one week of the presentation of such&#13;
request to the P.S.G.A,, Inc. member being&#13;
required to furnish the report.&#13;
The President shall have the power, by and&#13;
with the advice and consent of the Legislative&#13;
branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc. to sign contracts,&#13;
provided that a majority of the entire Senate&#13;
concurs.&#13;
The President shall draw up the P.S.G A ,&#13;
Inc. budget and send it to the Legislative&#13;
branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc. for approval.&#13;
The President shall take care that the&#13;
constitution of the P.S.G.A., Inc. and its bylaws&#13;
be faithfully executed.&#13;
The President, Vice-President and all officers&#13;
of the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be removed&#13;
from office for dereliction of duty or failure to&#13;
take care that the constitution of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. and its by-laws be faithfully executed.&#13;
Section 4. The President of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. shall nominate student appointees to all&#13;
faculty codified committees with a simple&#13;
majority of the entire Senate needed for&#13;
approval and shall publish such vacancies in&#13;
the student newspaper.&#13;
Section 5. The treasurer of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. shall keep records and recipts on all&#13;
expenditures of all P.S.G.A., Inc. monies and&#13;
shall make such records public.&#13;
ARTICLE III&#13;
Section 1. All judicial powers of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be vested in judiciary&#13;
court, and in lower courts that the Senate of&#13;
the P.S.G.A., Inc. may establish. The judges,&#13;
of all courts, shall maintain good behavior&#13;
and character during their terms of office.&#13;
Section 2. The judicial court shall consist of&#13;
four judges and one Chief Justice. Student&#13;
members of the judicial branch of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be University of&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside students, and must be&#13;
confirmed by the Chancellor of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin • Parkside after a two-thirds&#13;
approval by the entire Senate of the P.S.G.A ,&#13;
Inc. Appointments to the judicial branch of&#13;
the P.S.G.A., Inc., shall be for three years.&#13;
Section 3. In the case of deciding the constitutionality&#13;
of the actions of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. the decisions shall be binding on ail&#13;
parties involved, and shall be forwarded to&#13;
the designated disciplinary head of the administrative&#13;
branch of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside on to the appropriate&#13;
authorities for implementation.&#13;
ARTICLE IV&#13;
Section 1. The P.S.G.A,, Inc., subject to the&#13;
responsibilities and powers of the Board of&#13;
Regents, the President of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin system, the Chancellor of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside, and the&#13;
faculty of the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside shall be active participants in the&#13;
immediate governance of and policy&#13;
development for such institutions. As such,&#13;
the P.S.G.A. shall have primary responsibility&#13;
for the formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student life, services, and&#13;
interests. As such, the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be&#13;
the sole representative student group of the&#13;
students of the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside allowed to participate in institutional&#13;
governance.&#13;
*t&#13;
SUB—ARTICLE I&#13;
Section i. The P.S.G.A., Inc., in-consultation&#13;
with the Chancellor of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside and subject to the&#13;
final confirmation of the Board of Regents&#13;
shall have the responsibility for the&#13;
disposition of those student fees which constitute&#13;
substantial support for campus&#13;
student activities.&#13;
Section 2. An Allocation Committee shall be&#13;
established as a subcommittee of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate. The committee shall&#13;
review requests for program support and&#13;
budget allocations of the allocable portion of&#13;
the segregated University fee. All action of&#13;
said committee shall be subject to the final&#13;
aPProYal&#13;
°' ,he P.S.G.A., Inc. in conjunction&#13;
with the Chancellor of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside.&#13;
A. MEMBERSHIP. The Allocations&#13;
Committee shall consist of 8 voting members,&#13;
6 of whom shall be P.S.G.A., Inc. Senators&#13;
The remaining 2 shall be chosen by the&#13;
student body of the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside, one elected in the spring, one&#13;
elected in the fall. Three P.S.G.A., inc&#13;
Senators shall be chosen in the spring and&#13;
three shall be chosen in the fall by blind&#13;
drawing of interested P.S.G.A., Inc. Senators.&#13;
The drawing shall be conducted by the&#13;
Judicial Branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc. The&#13;
term of office shall be one year. The committee&#13;
shall elect its own chairperson after&#13;
each spring election. In addition, the&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Educational Services,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Administration&#13;
and Fiscal Affairs, and the&#13;
Campus Controller shall sit with the committee&#13;
as non-voting members. Should a&#13;
vacancy occur on the Allocations Committee&#13;
the following procedures shall be used:&#13;
1. The President Pro Tempore of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate, in consultation with the&#13;
Chancellor or designee, will fill any unoccupied&#13;
Senatorial seat with the confirmation&#13;
of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate.&#13;
2. The President of the P.S.G.A., Inc., in&#13;
consultation with the Chancellor or designee,&#13;
shall appoint to any at-large seat on the&#13;
Allocations Committee. The P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Senate does not need to approve the&#13;
President's appointment.&#13;
B. PROCEDURES. Upon the call of the&#13;
Chancellor and the President of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. the Committee shall annually prepare&#13;
recommendations on the disbursal of the&#13;
Segregated University Fee. Should the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc, concur in the recommendation,&#13;
the President of P.S.G.A., Inc. shall so advise&#13;
the Chancellor and Chairperson of the&#13;
Allocations Committee. Should the Chancellor&#13;
concur in the P.S.G.A., Inc. recommendation,&#13;
he/she shall arrange for its implementation.&#13;
Should the Chancellor not&#13;
concur, the provisions under negotiations&#13;
shall be used. The Senate may not amend the&#13;
Allocations Committee recommendation.&#13;
Rejection of the Committees' recommendation&#13;
takes a 2/3 vote of the entire&#13;
Senate. In the case of rejection by the Senate,&#13;
the reasons for rejection shall be agreed to&#13;
and forwarded to the Chairperson of the&#13;
Allocations Committee. The Allocations&#13;
Committee shall reconsider its recommendation&#13;
and again forward it to the Senate.&#13;
C. NEGOTIATIONS. The President of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc., the Chairperson of S.U.F.A.C.&#13;
and the President Pro Tempore of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate or their designees (who&#13;
must be members of the P.S.G.A., Inc.) shall&#13;
be representatives of the P.S.G.A., Inc. in any&#13;
consultation with the Chancellor or his/her&#13;
designee in dealing with the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Allocations Committee. If the President Pro&#13;
Tempore of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate is a&#13;
member of S.U.F.A.C. then the Senator with&#13;
the rriostseniority of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate&#13;
will assume the duties of the Pro Tempore in&#13;
negotiations with the Chancellor.&#13;
If the P.S.G.A., Inc. and the Chancellor&#13;
cannot reconcile their differences in the&#13;
allocation of the allocable portion of&#13;
Segregated University Fees, each will submit&#13;
a set of recommendations to the Board of&#13;
Regents for final disposition.&#13;
D. DUTIES. The Allocations Committee&#13;
shall have primary responsibility in setting&#13;
the allocable portion of the auxiliary budget&#13;
and to insure proper monetary expenditures&#13;
in total and within budgetary categories. The&#13;
Allocations Committee shall meet year round&#13;
to review the allocable portion of the&#13;
Segregated Fees Budget according to the&#13;
procedures set up in the Senate Rules.&#13;
SUB ARTICLE II&#13;
*&#13;
e?'&#13;
on '• A standing Senate Committee,&#13;
the Student Organization Council, shall be&#13;
established consisting of the Presidents (or&#13;
their designees) of all student organizations&#13;
who choose to participate.&#13;
Section 2. No student shall be denied&#13;
membership to any on-campus organization&#13;
for reasons of race, color, religious creed,&#13;
national origin, sex, past criminal record,&#13;
political belief, political action, or sexual&#13;
preference.&#13;
Section 3. Students shall be free to&#13;
assemble, to demonstrate, to communicate,&#13;
and to protest individually or through a&#13;
student organization so long as no federal,&#13;
state, or municipal law is violated.&#13;
Section 4. Students shall be free to use&#13;
campus facilities for meetings of student&#13;
organizations, subject to uniform regulations&#13;
to time and manner governing the facility.&#13;
Section 5. Students shall have the right to&#13;
invite and hear speakers of their choice and&#13;
approval shall not be witheld by the P S G A&#13;
Inc. or university authorities for purposes of&#13;
censorship.&#13;
Section 6. Affiliation with an extramural&#13;
organization shall not in itself disqualify a&#13;
student organization from student government&#13;
recognition or institutional recognition&#13;
Section 7. The student press shall be free of&#13;
censorship and advance approval of copy,&#13;
and its editors shall be free to develop their&#13;
own editorial policies and news coverage.&#13;
Section 8. The student press shall be accorded&#13;
all those rights as stated in the United&#13;
States Constitution.&#13;
Section 9. Students shall have the right to&#13;
distribute or sell information of a printed&#13;
nature that does not conflict with University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside binding contracts.&#13;
c ARTICLE V&#13;
Section 1. Fall elections for the P.S.G.A ,&#13;
Inc. shall be held the third week of October&#13;
frnmtL iT6&#13;
-' ?".? half 0f ,he representatives&#13;
from the legislative branch as well as one at -&#13;
large S.U.F.A.C. seat shall be elected. Spring&#13;
elections for the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be held&#13;
during the eighth- week of the spring&#13;
semester. At that time the President, Vice&#13;
President, remaining legislative seats, one at&#13;
large S.U.F.A.C. seat and five Union&#13;
Operating Board seats shall be elected.&#13;
Section 2. The students, upon requesting a&#13;
petition with 10 percent of the signatures of&#13;
the entire student body, shall have the right to&#13;
request a constitutional referendum to amend&#13;
this constitution, or to request an advisory&#13;
referendum. The petition shall be presented&#13;
to both the President and the Vice-President&#13;
and the President Pro Tempore of P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Section 3.&#13;
1) For recall against a Senator or officer of&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc., any University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside student may start the petition and&#13;
any University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
student may sign it. Fifteen percent of the&#13;
Parkside student body must sign the petition.&#13;
2) The recall petition must have a&#13;
statement of the reason(s) for removal from&#13;
office. This must deal with actions committed&#13;
in the present term of office.&#13;
3) The student(s) shall present the petition&#13;
to the Senate. Upon receiving verification of&#13;
the petition, the Senate must immediately&#13;
notify the school paper that a recall is in&#13;
progress and a special election will take&#13;
place. There must be an election within 15&#13;
school days after notification of the valid&#13;
petition is received by the Senate.&#13;
4) Upon receiving the recall petition the&#13;
Senate must immediately turn it over to the&#13;
election committee. The election committee&#13;
shall have five days to verify the names on the&#13;
petition. In the event that there is no election&#13;
committee, the Senate must appoint one&#13;
within five days.&#13;
If illegal names are found on the petition,&#13;
and the number of legal names drop to less&#13;
than 15%, the election committee must notify&#13;
the student(s) who presented the petition.&#13;
Upon notification, the students have five&#13;
school days to get the required number of&#13;
names. If they fail to do so, their recall&#13;
petition shall be declared null. At the request&#13;
of the student(s) who presented the petition,&#13;
the election committee must show that the&#13;
names are illegal.&#13;
No legal name can be removed from the&#13;
petition after filing. Once the petition is&#13;
presented to the Senate, it cannot be withdrawn.&#13;
A person can be recalled only once per&#13;
offense during his/her term in office. The&#13;
person who is cited in the recall petition shall&#13;
have his/her name placed on the ballot&#13;
automatically unless he/she resigns. Students&#13;
who wish to run for the position shall follow&#13;
rtormal election procedure.&#13;
5) If a Senator or Officer resigns and is&#13;
reappointed to a position within the term of&#13;
office he/she last held, it shall be considered&#13;
only a continuation of his term.&#13;
ARTICLE VI&#13;
Section 1. An applicant shall not be denied&#13;
admission to the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside for reasons of race, color, national&#13;
origin, religious creed, sex, previous criminal&#13;
record, political beliefs, political action, or&#13;
sexual preference.&#13;
Section 2. Financial aid shall not be denied&#13;
for reasons of race, color, national origin,&#13;
religious creed, sex, previous criminal&#13;
record, political beliefs, political action, or&#13;
sexual preference.&#13;
Section 3. Students are free to take exception&#13;
to the data presented or views offered&#13;
in any course of study and may advocate&#13;
alternative opinions to those presented within&#13;
the classroom. „&#13;
Section 4. All Student Disciplinary matters&#13;
will be processed through the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside Student Disciplinary&#13;
Procedures Chapter UWS 17.&#13;
Section 5. Students shall be evaluated only&#13;
on their knowledge of the subject and&#13;
academic performance and in turn are&#13;
responsible to maintain standards of&#13;
academic performance established for each&#13;
course they have enrolled in.&#13;
Section 6. Disclosure of students political or&#13;
personal beliefs in connection with course&#13;
work shall not be made public without express&#13;
permission of the student.&#13;
Section 7. Student records on academic&#13;
performance and disciplinary actions shall be&#13;
separate.&#13;
..^&#13;
e&#13;
.&#13;
c&#13;
*'.on&#13;
'"formation from counseling and&#13;
disciplinary files shall not be made available&#13;
to persons on or off campus without the express&#13;
consent of the student involved, except&#13;
under legal compulsion.&#13;
Section 9. All records and information kept&#13;
on file shall be readily accesible to the student&#13;
to whom they pertain.&#13;
Section 10. Students shall have the right to&#13;
be present at all committee meetings directly&#13;
affecting the students.&#13;
Section 11. The constitutional rights of any&#13;
student, as stated in the United States Constitution,&#13;
shall not be denied anyone, at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside.&#13;
VOTE&#13;
FALL ELECTIONS&#13;
OCT. 15 &amp; 16 &#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Rangers spike&#13;
opposition&#13;
Ranger Thursday, October 2,1980&#13;
"We won the close games," was&#13;
the way women's volleyball coach&#13;
Linda Henderson described the&#13;
formula for winning their own&#13;
invitational last weekend&#13;
Parkside played host to Carthage,&#13;
St. Xavier, St. Francis and&#13;
Valparaiso in a round robbin&#13;
tournament.&#13;
The Rangers opened play&#13;
Friday evening by taking two&#13;
straight games from St. Xavier of&#13;
Chicago. They defeated the&#13;
visitors 15-13 and 16-14. It was the&#13;
only match in the tournament that&#13;
didn't go all three games.&#13;
The second game of the St.&#13;
Xavier match saw the Rangers&#13;
make a fierce comeback from a&#13;
13-10 deficit. They tied the score at&#13;
13, allowed one point against them&#13;
and then scored the next three&#13;
points in a row to win the game.&#13;
The Rangerp were plagued with&#13;
numerous errors in the St. Xavier&#13;
match. "We weren't communicating&#13;
on the court," explained&#13;
Henderson.&#13;
The Carthage Redmen were the&#13;
next Ranger opponents. By&#13;
controlling the net and&#13;
capitalizing on poor Ranger shots,&#13;
Carthage embarrassed Parkside&#13;
15-2.&#13;
The second game saw the&#13;
Rangers jump off to a commanding&#13;
5-0 lead. Aided by more&#13;
Ranger errors, Carthage tied the&#13;
score at 6. Carthage took a two&#13;
point lead at 8-6 but then watched&#13;
as Parkside won the next nine&#13;
points to win 15-8, t hus forcing the&#13;
rubber game.&#13;
Parkside jumped to an insurmountable&#13;
9-0 lead and coasted&#13;
the rest of the way to win the game&#13;
15-5, and the match 2-1. The&#13;
Rangers come from behind victory&#13;
was attributed to the drubbing&#13;
they received in the first&#13;
game according to Henderson.&#13;
"They were angry. It seems like&#13;
they have to lose big before they&#13;
play well." After the Carthage&#13;
victory the Rangers seemed to&#13;
play inspired ball as they controlled&#13;
the net and won some key&#13;
points.&#13;
The Rangers took their 2-0&#13;
record into action on Saturday&#13;
morning against Valparaiso. The&#13;
Rangers waltzed through them&#13;
and waited for a rematch with St.&#13;
Xavier in the semi-finals. St.&#13;
Xavier won the first game 15-10&#13;
and had a slight advantage in the&#13;
second game before Parkside&#13;
woke up and won 15-12. The rubber&#13;
game was a see saw affair with&#13;
each team taking leads and going&#13;
through dry spells. Parkside&#13;
notched the victory in another&#13;
come from behind effort by&#13;
stopping St. Xavier 15-13 and&#13;
advanced to the finals.&#13;
Parkside saved their best for&#13;
last. The Rangers won the first&#13;
game 15-2. They did it against the&#13;
taller opponents by controlling the&#13;
net and team play. Laurie Pope&#13;
keyed the effort by making&#13;
several spectacular saves.&#13;
The Rangers didn't fare well in&#13;
the second game as St. Francis'&#13;
6'3" centerblocker controlled t he&#13;
net and the game. St. Francis&#13;
evened the match at 1-1 with a 15-4&#13;
victory.&#13;
In the final game of the final&#13;
match in the tournament, Pope&#13;
once again played a big part in the&#13;
Ranger victory by making several&#13;
more crucial diving saves, saving&#13;
not only the game but the entire&#13;
tournament. The Rangers won the&#13;
final game 15-8.&#13;
A happy Henderson&#13;
philosophised the championship&#13;
victory. "We made less errors."&#13;
Perhaps the important thing was&#13;
the way they won the tournament.&#13;
"We won the close games. We won&#13;
points when we had to, we got&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND I X)AN /ASSOCIATION&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
VOTE FOR KVP in 1996, 2000, 1996. Ann Elk.&#13;
PAVAROTTI SINGS UFO "a sparkling&#13;
Crystal Light" — the IOP Times&#13;
MARY — I Love You — C.J.&#13;
RAY C. Act and Look-alike contest. Inquire&#13;
MOLN 141&#13;
THE ANIMALS aren't dead; we're awaiting&#13;
intelligent competition.&#13;
TODD H. — You look tired, go rest in my&#13;
room.&#13;
NAME THE lOP'S Contest. Submit entries to&#13;
Classified Ads. lOP's.&#13;
DOES ANYONE KNOW the 800 or 900 codes.&#13;
M.G.A. RIDES&#13;
DDT DDT DDT ddt-t ddt ddt dt Nestea Iced&#13;
Tea&#13;
IF l-AH TOLL-YA once, l-Ah-Toll-Ya a&#13;
thousand times; Yes. "Student Militants"&#13;
VAN PATTEN for President 1996. A&#13;
squirrel in every teapot.&#13;
KAY — Congratulations!&#13;
TONIGHT ON ETHYL THE FROG Eric&#13;
Njorl's penguin will explode.&#13;
ROUND TABLE! You seek the Holy Grail.&#13;
Directions next week.&#13;
ARE THE ANIMALS so drunk they can't&#13;
write ads? lOP's&#13;
RANGER STAFF writes illogical classifieds.&#13;
Take discrete structures! Chain Gang.&#13;
FREDDY FAIRY, PeePee CaCa is more your&#13;
type. Chain Gang&#13;
CALLOUSED FARMER uses fuzzy Handy&#13;
Andy's. Gives a good tug (subliminal).&#13;
BOMBA TAKE ANYONE to dinner if catch&#13;
me eating banana.&#13;
CHRISSY — You know we love you!&#13;
CHAIN GANG: It's nice to know your&#13;
groupies miss you when you're on vacation&#13;
and they're chained to their work. Ginger.&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY Yesterday Mike. Do you&#13;
feel older? Love, Wendy&#13;
DOUG E. — Meet me in the women's room.&#13;
Jan from the Bookstore&#13;
MARGE IS GONE — HURRAH!!!&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1969 VOLKSWAGEN. Ph. 694-8527.&#13;
1969 CAMARO. 307 auto., ps/pb, radials,&#13;
Rusty Jones. $1500? Don 652-9849.&#13;
PIANO - R.S. Howard. Needs work. Call 694-&#13;
4730.&#13;
TWO GOODYEAR TIRES6.40X 15. Like new,&#13;
$15. 694-4730.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
AMERICAN MARKETING CO. is looking for&#13;
marketers. Objective: Advertise to&#13;
promote the sales of quality products. Join&#13;
the team. Ph. 694-1799.&#13;
WALK, TALK AND ASSIST retired (blind)&#13;
college teachers in straightening out his&#13;
library. Earn while you learn. Mature&#13;
Liberal Arts major preferred. Call 694-2551&#13;
for appointment.&#13;
CUSTODIAN NEEDED: Flexible hours.&#13;
Salary negotiable. Child Care Center, 553-&#13;
2227.&#13;
ROOMMATE WANTED —Carol Beach area.&#13;
Beautiful home. 697-0234 or 694-8922.&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
ENTERTAINING? Will cook, serve, cleanup.&#13;
Children's parties. Call Melanie 633-&#13;
9141.&#13;
NEED AFTER-SCHOOL, weekend high&#13;
school help? Call Melanie 633-9141.&#13;
WANTED TO BUY&#13;
PLAYER PIANO with rolls. Call 632-5928 ask&#13;
for Don.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Research&#13;
catalog — 306 pages — 10,278 descriptive&#13;
listings — Rush $1.00 (refundable). Box&#13;
25097C, Los Angeles, 90025. (213) 477 8226.&#13;
MEETINGS&#13;
BIBLE STUDY (Inter-Varsity) All interested&#13;
welcome. Mondays 1:00, MOLN 217.&#13;
COACH LINDA HENDERSON&#13;
Carthage.&#13;
ahead and stayed ahead when we&#13;
had to."&#13;
The six game sweep improved&#13;
the Rangers' record to 12-4&#13;
overall. Things don't get any&#13;
easier as they travel to Iowa this&#13;
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
confers with her team during a timeout in a tough match against&#13;
weekend to play in the Iowa&#13;
Tournament. The injury-riddled&#13;
Parkside team faces Iowa, Lewis&#13;
and Northern Illinois.&#13;
Lewis placed third last year in&#13;
the national finals and once again&#13;
is a national power. Parkside has&#13;
never beaten them. The Rangers&#13;
played -Northern Illinois at the&#13;
Northern Illinois Tournament and&#13;
ousted the host school from their&#13;
own tournament.&#13;
IN UNION SQUARE&#13;
CHAR&#13;
BROILED&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
Steak Fries &amp; Co le Slaw&#13;
$ 0 0 9&#13;
UNION SQUARE GRILL&#13;
AFTER 4:00 PM. DAILY&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
stu dent 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&#13;
or less.&#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;
^nsert 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;
Name&#13;
SS No..&#13;
Ranger&#13;
WLLCD139 &#13;
8 Thursday, October 2,1980&#13;
*&#13;
Ranger&#13;
** 4 «&#13;
J&amp;%* M; * " ii&#13;
*vr ' "&#13;
v "%i,-;*&#13;
bV.\r t;&gt;&#13;
^ •• V ^ ' -*•• ,&#13;
- ill m&#13;
RANGER photo by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
CAPTAIN MIKE KIEFER snakes his way through the Whitewater defense.&#13;
Men whitewash Whitewater&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
"We're beginning to'put it all&#13;
together, and I think it shows in&#13;
our play." This was a statement&#13;
from soccer coach Hal Henderson&#13;
as his young Rangers extended&#13;
their present winning streak to&#13;
four games last week. Parkside&#13;
beat a tough Aurora College squad&#13;
3-1 last Tuesday and then&#13;
demolished UW-Whitewater 8-0&#13;
last Friday.&#13;
Aside from the winning streak,&#13;
which at four is the longest in&#13;
Parkside soccer history, the&#13;
Aurora game was important to the&#13;
Rangers in another way. "This&#13;
was a highly emotional game.&#13;
We've never beaten Aurora while&#13;
Rich Kilps, former Parkside&#13;
soccer standout, has been coach&#13;
there," said Henderson. "I felt&#13;
that the game was a tossup when&#13;
we went in. I was extremely&#13;
impressed with our goalkeeping&#13;
that day." And well he should be.&#13;
Parkside was outshot that game&#13;
by Aurora 19-13. Freshman Dan&#13;
Opferman played goal until 27&#13;
minutes into the second half. With&#13;
the score 3-1 and 18 minutes left in&#13;
the game freshman Jeff Medin&#13;
kept Aurora scoreless the rest of&#13;
the way while making five good&#13;
saves.&#13;
Parkside's goals were scored by&#13;
Dave Schwartz, with an assist&#13;
going to Jeff Dennehy; Mike&#13;
Kiefer and Scott Gerhartz.&#13;
Kiefer's goal was scored on a&#13;
penalty kick while Gerhartz&#13;
scored on a breakaway.&#13;
Last Friday the Rangers had a&#13;
much easier time with an 8-0 win&#13;
over Whitewater. The real story of&#13;
the game wasn't really the way&#13;
Parkside outran Whitewater, that&#13;
was expected, it was the story of&#13;
scoring sensation Scott Gerhartz,&#13;
a freshman from Kimberly. After&#13;
his three goals and an assist&#13;
against Whitewater, he now has&#13;
six goals and one assist for seven&#13;
points after just seven games.&#13;
Other goals for Parkside in that&#13;
game were by Dennehy, with&#13;
assists going to Brad Faust and&#13;
Gerhartz; John Monks with an&#13;
assist to Dennehy; Mike Kiefer on&#13;
a penalty shot; Schwartz on a&#13;
breakaway; and Jeff King on a&#13;
head shot off a corner kick by Don&#13;
Cops.&#13;
Gerhartz is not the only player&#13;
doing the scoring for the Rangers.&#13;
For the season Brad Faust has&#13;
two goals and three assists for five&#13;
points. Mike Kiefer has four goals,&#13;
all on penalty kicks. Overall&#13;
Parkside has outscored its opponents&#13;
18-7 in seven games.&#13;
Coach Henderson was obviously&#13;
pleased with the way his team&#13;
played against Whitewater, but&#13;
not for the obvious reasons. "Our&#13;
kids felt that we should be able to&#13;
handle them going into the game,&#13;
because they were only 1-4.&#13;
Because of this I was pleased that&#13;
there wasn't a letdown. We got&#13;
three goals in the first half, and&#13;
then it got easier."&#13;
Parkside travels to Green Bay&#13;
on Friday and Saturday to take&#13;
part in the Wisconsin Chancellors&#13;
Cup Tournament. Their first&#13;
game Friday will be against UWMadison,&#13;
a game which Henderson&#13;
says is a must win game.&#13;
"If we lose to Madison, there's a&#13;
good chance we won't be in the&#13;
tournament next year." If the&#13;
Rangers lose to Madison, they will&#13;
play the loser of the UW-Green&#13;
Bay - Milwaukee game, both of&#13;
which could probably give the&#13;
Rangers more than they could&#13;
handle.. "We must not lose to&#13;
anybody in the state other than the&#13;
big three, Green Bay, Milwaukee&#13;
and Marquette. It's a must game&#13;
for us, for recruiting, image and&#13;
staying in the Cup tournament."&#13;
Every year the last place team out&#13;
of the four is dropped from the&#13;
tournament for at least a year. A&#13;
win for Parkside against Madison&#13;
would assure Parkside of at least&#13;
a second place finish and&#13;
assurance of a spot in next year's&#13;
tournament.&#13;
Burman paces Ranger runners&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Parkside's men's and women's&#13;
cross country teams took part in&#13;
the Track and Field&#13;
Association/USA Mid-American&#13;
Collegiate Championships with 22&#13;
other men's and 14 other women's&#13;
teams. The men placed 17th and&#13;
the women 10th.&#13;
In the three mile women's race,&#13;
Wendy Burman took top honors&#13;
for the Rangers placing fifth&#13;
overall with a time of 17 minutes&#13;
and 40 seconds , just 14 seconds&#13;
behind the winner Dianne Bussa&#13;
of Purdue. Kellie Benzow finished&#13;
19th for Parkside followed by&#13;
Dona Driscoll in 71st place,&#13;
Sandra Venne in 83rd, and Joanne&#13;
Carey in 89th. Ninety-four team&#13;
runners took part and 126 runners&#13;
overall.&#13;
Purdue University took the&#13;
women's team title followed by&#13;
Drake and UW-Madison.&#13;
On the men's side, Eastern&#13;
Illinois took the team title,&#13;
followed by Missouri Columbia&#13;
and South Dakota State. Gordon&#13;
Sanders of Hillsdale College,&#13;
Michigan took the individual title&#13;
over the five mile course with a&#13;
time of 25:43.5. He finished eight&#13;
and a half seconds over second&#13;
place finisher, Joel Brandt of&#13;
South D akota State.&#13;
The top Parkside finisher was&#13;
Paul Cannastra in 88th place.&#13;
Other finishers for the Rangers&#13;
were Dan Stublaski 96th, Tom&#13;
Barrett 107th, Allen Correa 108th,&#13;
Steve Bruner 124th, Dave Mueller&#13;
126th, and Radovan Bursac 127th.&#13;
Rich Swolles and Bruce Klappauf&#13;
also finished the race, but out of&#13;
the scoring for Parkside. 160&#13;
runners scored out of a total of 223.&#13;
Who is the&#13;
Absent (J&#13;
Friend /&#13;
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Baltimore at Miami&#13;
Buffalo at San Diego&#13;
Denver at Cleveland&#13;
Kansas City at Oakland —&#13;
New England at N. Y. Jets&#13;
Seattle at Houston&#13;
Detroit at Atlanta&#13;
N. Y. Giants at Dallas&#13;
St. Louis at New Orleans —&#13;
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Washington at Philadelphia —&#13;
Cincinnati at Green Bay&#13;
Pittsburgh at Minnesota&#13;
Tampa Bay at Chicago&#13;
Tie - breaker: will be the total combined points scored in&#13;
the Seattle - Houston game.&#13;
Last week's winner: Pat Weber, 12 correct, 54 points.&#13;
Name: : —&#13;
S.S. No.&#13;
Rules:&#13;
1) One entry per person&#13;
2) Must be a student at UW-Parkside&#13;
3) Person with most correct picks win (in case of tie, the total&#13;
points will be used as a tie - breaker)&#13;
4) Entry must be clipped from Ranger issue&#13;
5) Ranger members ineligible&#13;
6) Entries must be turned into Ranger office by noon cm the&#13;
Friday preceeding the games&#13;
7) Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks.&#13;
Come to Ranger office to collect winnings.&#13;
8) All entries must be legible to be considered&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
IN THE SQUARE&#13;
7' SCREEN&#13;
• BEER • SODA • WINE&#13;
• POPCORN&#13;
THE PARKSIDE UNION </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 9, issue 6, October 9, 1980</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Mullikin takes over P.S.G.A. vice-presidency</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, October 16, 1980&#13;
Mullikin takes over P.S.G.A. vice-presidency&#13;
Kflv VniMw?1 !?if&#13;
h _. ..&#13;
sa&#13;
"? Gruber. "Kay's got ex- "We're trvino in not&#13;
by Jim Pugh&#13;
Kay Mullikin will serve the&#13;
remainder of the term of Vice&#13;
President of th e Parkside Student&#13;
Government Assocation, Inc.&#13;
(P-S.G.A.), which was left open by&#13;
the resignation of Claire Tostyga.&#13;
Mullikin was nominated by&#13;
President Tracy Gruber on&#13;
September 22. The senate approved&#13;
the nomination, but&#13;
because of the nature of th e secret&#13;
ballot the exact count of the vote&#13;
can not be disclosed, according to&#13;
Gruber.&#13;
The new vice president was&#13;
approved unanimously following a&#13;
motion from the senate. An earlier&#13;
attempt to appoint Mullikin was&#13;
defeated. Mullikin took the oath of&#13;
office October 6.&#13;
"She is an intelligent person,"&#13;
P.S.G.A. election today&#13;
said Gruber. "Kay's got experience&#13;
in life. She analyzes&#13;
problems and keeps an even level&#13;
on emotions."&#13;
"There are many people who&#13;
would be good vice presidents",&#13;
according to Gruber. "I needed&#13;
someone who can work with me.&#13;
Since the Vice President is&#13;
President of the Senate, she must&#13;
have a good rapport with the&#13;
senators".&#13;
Mullikin has been involved with&#13;
PSGA since her appointment last&#13;
January. She was elected a&#13;
Senator in the spring. Mullikin has&#13;
been a member of SU FAC.&#13;
"I would like to keep the Senate&#13;
going, working on projects, keep&#13;
the Senate organized and keep&#13;
conflicts to a minimum," Mullikin&#13;
stated.&#13;
"We're trying to get the&#13;
students to come too", said&#13;
Mullikin. "The main concern is&#13;
the benefit of students as a whole.&#13;
If students come to us, we can help&#13;
solve the problems they do have."&#13;
Mullikin is from Burlington. She&#13;
has been a student at Parkside for&#13;
two years and is majoring in&#13;
Business.&#13;
"Claire Tostyga who was&#13;
elected in the spring decided she&#13;
was no longer interested in&#13;
business as a major", according&#13;
to Mullikin. "She was more interested&#13;
in education of retarded&#13;
children and is going to Carthage."&#13;
&#13;
Mullikin said that she is undecided&#13;
as to whether or not she&#13;
will seek the office again. "It&#13;
depends on how everything goes&#13;
this year."&#13;
i/«Y AAlll I i i/ i ki / - 1 . x , . RANGER photo by Dan Galbraith&#13;
KAY MULLIKIN (right, background) runs a Senate meeting as&#13;
the new vice - president of P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senate candidates express views&#13;
Kathy (athy Bambroug Bambrough h the way that it should be man already in pen A ...U„ . .. -&#13;
Kathy Bambrough, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is a freshman&#13;
majoring in organizational&#13;
communications.&#13;
Bambrough said, "I am a&#13;
graduate of St. Joseph High&#13;
School, and have not yet had the&#13;
chance to be in a student government&#13;
organization. I have much&#13;
free time which I am willing to&#13;
devote working at the position of&#13;
Senator if I am elected. I feel that&#13;
I am hard working, open minded,&#13;
and perfect for the job."&#13;
Jdmes Doucette&#13;
James Doucette, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is a freshman&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
"I've been interested in&#13;
government for many years, and&#13;
with the experience that I have&#13;
acquired in government, I think&#13;
that I should be able to represent&#13;
our school and our government&#13;
the way that it should&#13;
represented," Doucette said.&#13;
Renee Giilmore&#13;
Renee Giilmore, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is a freshman&#13;
majoring in business&#13;
management.&#13;
Giilmore said, "I would like to&#13;
be elected senator to improve the&#13;
university life of the students. ?&#13;
feel I could do this since I have&#13;
held leadership positions in the&#13;
past, including president of a&#13;
Junior Achievement Company. I&#13;
know that to get ideas across and&#13;
accomplished that I must be involved.&#13;
I am ready and willing to&#13;
become involved. The best way to&#13;
accomplish this is by being involved&#13;
in student government as a&#13;
senator."&#13;
Dave Habegger&#13;
David Habegger, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is a freshman&#13;
already in P.S.G.A. who&#13;
belongs to S.U.F.A.C., Night&#13;
Transportation Committee, Big&#13;
Brothers, and Academic Policies&#13;
Committee.&#13;
Habbegger said, "I would like to&#13;
see night bus service to Parkside&#13;
from both communities."&#13;
"I believe that the bookstore&#13;
charges too much," said Habbegger.&#13;
He feels that this is the&#13;
result of the lack of competition.&#13;
He also thinks that somehow&#13;
faculty should be persuaded to get&#13;
their book orders in on time.&#13;
Habbegger thinks that&#13;
programs and activities should be&#13;
examined for need and benefits&#13;
before money is appropriated for&#13;
them.&#13;
Chris Hammelev&#13;
Chris Hammelev, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is a&#13;
sophomore majoring in&#13;
Accent on Enrichment&#13;
offers student discount&#13;
Parkside students will get a half&#13;
- price break this year on the&#13;
university's Accent on Enrichment&#13;
(AOE) entertainment&#13;
series.&#13;
"In the past most students found&#13;
ticket prices a bit high for their&#13;
means," according to Walt Shirer,&#13;
public information director. "This&#13;
year we are making a limited&#13;
block of season tickets available&#13;
to students at $20 for six performances.&#13;
That's an average of&#13;
just $3.33 a performance for some&#13;
of the best entertainment in AOE&#13;
history. Everybody else will pay&#13;
$39.50 for the series."&#13;
Students also can save more&#13;
than $3 a ticket on individual&#13;
performances, but Shirer said&#13;
that single event availability will&#13;
depend on how many tickets&#13;
remain. "Season ticket orders will&#13;
be filled first," he said, and added&#13;
that season ticket renewal sales&#13;
have passed the 65 per cent mark,&#13;
which is the best rate in series&#13;
history. AOE season ticket sales&#13;
have ranged from 80 to 100 per&#13;
cent sell - outs in recent seasons.&#13;
"The important thing is that&#13;
students now have an affordable&#13;
opportunity to enjoy the series&#13;
which has established the highest&#13;
standard of excellence and entertainment&#13;
value for Kenosha&#13;
and Racine audiences," Shirer&#13;
said.&#13;
Student orders will be filled only&#13;
at the Union Information Center,&#13;
and on a first - come basis. I. D.&#13;
cards must be shown, there is a&#13;
limit of two season tickets per&#13;
student and tickets are not&#13;
transferable to non - students.&#13;
Payment is by check, cash or&#13;
Master Charge.&#13;
Internationally - acclaimed&#13;
French pianist Philippe Entremont,&#13;
appearing with the 100 -&#13;
piece L'Orchestre du Capitole de&#13;
Toulouse under the baton of&#13;
Michel Plasson, will headline the&#13;
1980 81 A OE Series.&#13;
The series will open on Nov. 1&#13;
with stage, film and TV star Kevin&#13;
McCarthy in an election eve&#13;
performance of "Give 'Em Hell,&#13;
Harry," a one - man tour de force&#13;
Continued On Page Sixpsychology.&#13;
She also is a member&#13;
of P.A.B.&#13;
Hammelev said, "I have been&#13;
involved with P.S.G.A. for a year&#13;
now and havo&#13;
President Pro Tempore of&#13;
the Senate. Many inter -&#13;
organizational changes will have&#13;
to be made in order to improve our&#13;
efficiency. These changes deal&#13;
with the structure and Constitution&#13;
of P.S.G.A. — both of&#13;
which are too easily manipulated&#13;
for personal benefits."&#13;
"Parking, tenure, and minority&#13;
student issues should all be dealt&#13;
with as well," said Hammelev. "I&#13;
believe that P.S.G.A. has finally&#13;
got the potential to compete with&#13;
the credibility of some of the other&#13;
major organizations on campus."&#13;
Randy K lees&#13;
Randy Klees, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is a freshman&#13;
who already belongs to&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
"I have always been a hard&#13;
worker," said Klees. "When I&#13;
came to Parkside I was interested&#13;
in the way the university operated&#13;
and how decisions were made.&#13;
When elected, I will try to do a&#13;
good job and will hopefully be able&#13;
to make significant contributions&#13;
to Parkside's student government."&#13;
&#13;
Todd Laszewski&#13;
Todd Laszewski, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is a freshman&#13;
who considers himself a pre -&#13;
law student.&#13;
"I've been involved in student&#13;
government in the past, so I know&#13;
how to get people motivated,"&#13;
said Laszewski. "And that's what&#13;
I think this school needs —&#13;
motivation and more student&#13;
involvement."&#13;
Laszewski said, "My goal is to&#13;
create and promote more activities&#13;
that the students will&#13;
really want to get involved in. I&#13;
also plan to emphasize school&#13;
spirit so everyone can have more&#13;
reason to be proud of P arkside."&#13;
Charles Perce&#13;
Charles Perce, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is currently&#13;
a freshman at Parkside.&#13;
Perce said, "In my six years of&#13;
student congress during junior&#13;
and senior high school, almost all&#13;
of th e propositions were passed. I&#13;
have only voted for the items that&#13;
my peers were for. I worked hard&#13;
on getting those items passed."&#13;
"I would like to see the price of&#13;
parking reduced," Perce continued.&#13;
"I would also like to see&#13;
more of the 450 Minutes' programs&#13;
created on a wider variety of&#13;
subjects. I would like to see more&#13;
clubs on the interests of a bigger&#13;
cross - section of the student&#13;
body."&#13;
Luis Valldejuli&#13;
Luis Valldejuli, a P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senatorial candidate, is a freshman&#13;
at Parkside majoring in&#13;
political sciences.&#13;
Valldejuli said that if he is&#13;
elected he will view the position of&#13;
Senator as an opportunity to help&#13;
Parkside as a school. "I've lived&#13;
in Puerto Rico most of my life/'&#13;
Valldejuli said. "I look forward to&#13;
learning at and helping Parkside&#13;
by bringing different ideas and&#13;
opinions to the school as a&#13;
Senator. I believe I should be&#13;
elected because I do have many&#13;
new ideas from having experienced&#13;
different lifestyles "&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Women in government&#13;
• Review: 'Ordinary People'&#13;
• Volleyball team to Sweden? &#13;
To the Editor I Case for nuclear power&#13;
University acts&#13;
unfair to co-op&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
We feel that it was irresponsible&#13;
of the Ranger to give&#13;
credibility to the unsubstantiated&#13;
claims written by A1 Pisula about&#13;
the book co-op by labeling his&#13;
editorial 'Co-op Unfair To&#13;
Members' in the 10-9-80 Ranger.&#13;
None of the assertions in A1&#13;
Pisula's letter were correct.&#13;
To clear up some of the&#13;
misconceptions and felonious&#13;
information presented:&#13;
The rental agreement. We did&#13;
not refuse to sign one. We submitted&#13;
a compromise agreement&#13;
which included all the demands of&#13;
the University. They responded to&#13;
it by sending us an eviction notice&#13;
on June 5th. (Not a very convenient&#13;
time for students to express&#13;
their disapproval.) For a&#13;
copy of their letter, and our&#13;
response, stop at the food co-op&#13;
and ask for our June newsletter.&#13;
Restructuring. The University&#13;
administration has refused to&#13;
accept the structure students have&#13;
set up for C.S.C., which is the&#13;
student organization that includes&#13;
the food and book co-ops, and a&#13;
Learning Center. They will only&#13;
accept the organization if the 550&#13;
students (10% of the Parkside&#13;
student population) are organized&#13;
in a way that they can dominate&#13;
all of their policies.&#13;
C.S.C. has been operating for&#13;
the last 5 years with its present&#13;
structure. The organization includes&#13;
more than 1/2 students who&#13;
have operated and determined&#13;
policy and direction for the group.&#13;
The Parkside administration's&#13;
to witnnoid—o&#13;
segregated fees allocation.&#13;
Segregated Fees. The administration&#13;
has withdrawn the&#13;
already allocated $8,800&#13;
previously approved by them, the&#13;
P.S.G.A., and the Student&#13;
Segregated Fee Committee (the&#13;
responsible student committee for&#13;
allocating this funding). This&#13;
allocation was the basis of the&#13;
budgeting and planning for all of&#13;
our projects, except the food coop.&#13;
The food co-op has received no&#13;
segregated fees since 1978.&#13;
Book Co-op price increase. As a&#13;
result of this segregated fee loss&#13;
we have had to increase membership&#13;
fees and markups in the&#13;
food and book co-ops. This price&#13;
increase in the book co-op only&#13;
amounts to 40 cents on an $8 book.&#13;
We felt that co-op members would&#13;
be willing to pay this nominal fee&#13;
to support this service which is&#13;
still competitive with the book&#13;
store.&#13;
The Book Co-op will remain&#13;
open. C.S.C. has not abandoned its&#13;
commitment to serve students at&#13;
the book co-op. It will be open&#13;
every Tuesday 12:30-4, Wednesday&#13;
2-4, and Thursday 4-6 with&#13;
financial help from the food co-op.&#13;
Regular meetings with the&#13;
administration. A representative&#13;
from C.S.C. has met regularly&#13;
with the University. Between&#13;
biweekly meetings and our faculty&#13;
advisors' availability we have&#13;
been responsible for informing&#13;
them of any major policy changes&#13;
within the organization.&#13;
A1 Pisula's personal interest in&#13;
taking over the book co-op has&#13;
obviously obscured his perception&#13;
of these facts. Instead of coming&#13;
to the board of directors or the&#13;
staff to clarify his misunderstandings,&#13;
A1 opted to go to the&#13;
University with unfounded&#13;
claims, and to try to cause distrust&#13;
for the co-op and alienate the&#13;
membership by his article in last&#13;
week's Ranger. We feel he has&#13;
been encouraged by the administration&#13;
to misrepresent the&#13;
intentions of C .S.C.&#13;
But, besides this short-lived&#13;
controversy, we as students interested&#13;
and concerned for this&#13;
campus feel this eviction will have&#13;
a profound effect on Parkside.&#13;
Co-ops are a synthesis of&#13;
principles, ideals and member&#13;
involvement. At the Chiwaukee&#13;
Prairie Co-op Parkside students&#13;
have always gotten preferential&#13;
treatment. Lower membership&#13;
rates, guaranteed representation&#13;
on the board of directors, and&#13;
staffing primarily through work&#13;
study.&#13;
As the only co-op in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha our group became a&#13;
tor for, rmnejati.&#13;
communities: People from a..&#13;
walks of life were inspired by&#13;
what was happening at Parkside.&#13;
Seniors and students, often one in&#13;
the same, lent their expertise.&#13;
We felt it was invaluable&#13;
community outreach to engage&#13;
folks in activity on our campus&#13;
that we were all proud of.&#13;
We're not just a store that sells&#13;
nutritional food. We're a&#13;
movement providing a necessary&#13;
alternative to a fragmenting&#13;
system of food for profit — not&#13;
people.&#13;
We're sorry if our intentions&#13;
have been misunderstood in&#13;
trying to bring cooperation to this&#13;
campus. In this environment of&#13;
learning and growth there should&#13;
be more room for the diversity&#13;
that higher education claims to&#13;
promote.&#13;
In June, Parkside will be a&#13;
lesser place without the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie Co-op.&#13;
Cooperatively submitted,&#13;
Joan Barten, Jeff Myers,&#13;
and Victoria Wellens&#13;
C.S.C. Board Members&#13;
by Kelly Starks&#13;
and Terry R. Rasmussen&#13;
In the October 9 issue of the&#13;
Ranger, there was an article&#13;
entitled the "Case against nuclear&#13;
power" by Deb Elzinga who&#13;
stated her strong personal views&#13;
against nuclear power. We applaud&#13;
the defense of one's beliefs,&#13;
however, as history has shown,&#13;
strong beliefs are no substitute for&#13;
the facts. We are now taking this&#13;
opportunity to argue the case for&#13;
nuclear power.&#13;
It was stated that there are&#13;
dangers from the very beginning&#13;
of the fuel cycle. It is quite true&#13;
that there are dangers involved to&#13;
people and the environment with&#13;
any fuel cycle. However, the&#13;
nuclear fuel cycle has proven to be&#13;
the safest of any of the alternative&#13;
fuel cycles.&#13;
There was also a mention of&#13;
lung cancer rates among uranium&#13;
miners being 20%. The actual rate&#13;
over the past 60 years was 3%,&#13;
about the same as other forms of&#13;
deep mining, with the exception of&#13;
coal mining which is far higher.&#13;
As to the randon gas, most forms&#13;
of r ock emit this radioactive gas.&#13;
For instance the bricks and&#13;
concrete of Parkside, other&#13;
sources are natural gas, oil, coal,&#13;
as well as most mining and&#13;
milling operations.&#13;
There are many myths about&#13;
nuclear waste disposal, among&#13;
these is the idea that nuclear&#13;
Wastes need to be vigorously&#13;
guarded for thousands of years.&#13;
Due to the nature of radioactive&#13;
decay the more toxic radioactive&#13;
compounds disintegrate rapidly.&#13;
Within three to eight centuries the&#13;
remaining wastes are less toxic&#13;
than the original uranium ore. The&#13;
original ore, however, was not&#13;
fused into ceramic nonleachable&#13;
blocks and sealed in thick walled&#13;
stainless steel canisters buried a&#13;
mile underground in stable, dry&#13;
gpnlopirfl], form at,ions.&#13;
radiation detection and&#13;
measurement devices and crosschecks&#13;
by unexposed&#13;
photographic film taken from&#13;
residences and stores in the area&#13;
around Three Mile Island&#13;
(sources such as EPRI Journal,&#13;
the Atomic Industrial Forum were&#13;
used as references). The article&#13;
had specifically stated, ". . .&#13;
conflicting reports as to just how&#13;
much radiation and other carcinogenic&#13;
and potentially&#13;
genetically damaging substances&#13;
these people were exposed to."&#13;
The authors know of no&#13;
documented conflicting reports,&#13;
concerning this subject.&#13;
One effect of TMI is a great&#13;
increase in confidence among&#13;
nuclear engineers and scientists&#13;
in the resiliency of reactor&#13;
structures and safety systems.&#13;
The reactor core did not melt&#13;
down after several hours without&#13;
any coolant. It is now questioned&#13;
whether or not it is physically&#13;
possible for a reactor core to melt&#13;
down. Since the reactors were&#13;
designed to assure environmental&#13;
safety in case of such accidents as&#13;
meltdowns, this lowers the&#13;
potential danger to the public even&#13;
further. Since nuclear power was&#13;
already the second safest method&#13;
of ge nerating electricity (the first&#13;
is natural gas), this considerably&#13;
reassured the nuclear power&#13;
industry.&#13;
We are at present experiencing&#13;
an "Energy Crisis" caused by an&#13;
overdependence on oil, especially&#13;
foreign sources. This is not&#13;
directly applicable to the&#13;
generation of electricity since well&#13;
under 15% of our electricity was&#13;
generated with oil, by 1979&#13;
statistics. However the solution to&#13;
the energy crisis will require a&#13;
relatively cheap and reliable&#13;
source and/or sources of e nergy.&#13;
This does not require a decentralized&#13;
source of energy, since&#13;
its&#13;
ensterilizing&#13;
many lakes in the&#13;
Northern United States, as well as&#13;
the cancer from coal exhausts&#13;
The cancer from coal exhausts&#13;
are reported as being contracted&#13;
by as many as 40 to 70 people nS&#13;
plant-year. y **&#13;
We feel that the slight monetarv&#13;
savings and abundance of coal&#13;
does not compensate for&#13;
degratory effect on our&#13;
vironment and public health&#13;
Nuclear power, by contrast is&#13;
insulated from the environment&#13;
with the exception of the cooling&#13;
system, which is also inherent in&#13;
other conventional generating&#13;
methods. There are sufficient&#13;
known uranium reserves within&#13;
this country to supply our present&#13;
total electrical demands for over&#13;
60 y ears using conventional light&#13;
water reactors, or for the next&#13;
6,000 years if we were to use&#13;
breeder reactors (based on&#13;
numbers from the United States&#13;
Energy Data Book 1980, an industry&#13;
reference standard)&#13;
Although the breeder reactor is&#13;
being superceded by the fusion&#13;
reactor, which is capable of being&#13;
brought "on-line" within the next&#13;
20 years, the breeder is presently&#13;
commercially available internationally.&#13;
&#13;
Much has been made of the risks&#13;
of the breeder reactor; such as the&#13;
fact that it produces plutonium&#13;
This is correct since it is the&#13;
purpose of t he breeder to produce&#13;
plutonium (i.e., nuclear fuel), all&#13;
normally operating reactors&#13;
produce plutonium, along with&#13;
most every other element in the&#13;
periodic table. A breeder&#13;
produces plutonium much more&#13;
efficiently, thus allowing it to&#13;
refuel other reactors as well.&#13;
Although it is true that plutonium&#13;
is used to make nuclear bombs,&#13;
the grade of plutonium produced&#13;
by commercial breeder reactors&#13;
not usable for weapons&#13;
troduced, it would have virtually&#13;
no effect on the canister, much&#13;
less the ceramic.&#13;
As to the radiation from other&#13;
stages in the nuclear fuel cycle,&#13;
they are trivial when compared&#13;
with other fuel cycles; for&#13;
example it is 1/40 that of coal&#13;
(from randon gas) or the normal&#13;
radiation changes due to location&#13;
or environment.&#13;
Mention was made of the Three&#13;
Mile Island accident, referred to&#13;
as "the accident that wasn't&#13;
supposed to happen," which incidentally&#13;
was statistically&#13;
forecasted by the WASH 1400&#13;
report. Also mentioned was the&#13;
unknown radiation releases and&#13;
long term effects from TMI, actually&#13;
these values are well&#13;
documented and known. In fact,&#13;
these values have been listed as&#13;
less than seven millirems. This&#13;
exposure is approximately&#13;
equivalent to a coast to coast jet&#13;
flight's exposure to radiation.&#13;
These values were measured and&#13;
documented by the various on-site&#13;
jHo wev er, s i n c e i h e&#13;
unreliable in practice. Our&#13;
present North American continental&#13;
energy network is extremely&#13;
reliable considering the&#13;
fact that electricity generated at&#13;
one site on the continent can be&#13;
routed to any other site on the&#13;
continent. At present our&#13;
generating capacity is marginally&#13;
capable of producing the electricity&#13;
required at peak load&#13;
periods. This is caused by the lack&#13;
of generating capacity not fuel.&#13;
Additional generating facilities&#13;
are needed to satisfy the growing&#13;
need for electricity. The presently&#13;
available systems are nuclear&#13;
fission, coal, oil and gas, the latter&#13;
two of which are presently being&#13;
phased out, since these two&#13;
resources are quickly becoming&#13;
rare and expensive. Coal,&#13;
although relatively cheap and&#13;
abundant, is rather harmful to the&#13;
environment, such as in the form&#13;
of ac id rains, which are presently&#13;
tere have been breeder&#13;
reactors that have been&#13;
specifically designed to produce&#13;
weapons grade plutonium, by and&#13;
for the military. As it can be seen,&#13;
breeder technology is a relatively&#13;
old technology. We would rather&#13;
this technology were to be used for&#13;
the benefit of all in the peaceful&#13;
use in the production of nuclear&#13;
fuel.&#13;
Incidentally, in the article it was&#13;
mentioned, ". .. had the potential&#13;
of killing hundreds of thousands of&#13;
people." There is no known&#13;
scenario where any plant accident&#13;
which would kill hundreds of&#13;
thousands, let alone the Fermi&#13;
reactor which was totally incapable&#13;
of a melt down.&#13;
It was stated in the article "...&#13;
we need a solution to the energy&#13;
crisis immediately." Unfortunately,&#13;
since she discounts&#13;
the conventional sources, such as&#13;
nuclear power, she has chosen&#13;
Continued On Page Six&#13;
NEEDS, reporters&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
AD REPS&#13;
If you're interested stop by our office&#13;
(next to the Coffee Shoppe) or&#13;
Phone 553-2295&#13;
ganger&#13;
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Mike Farre,., Bruce Preston"!!.!. .*.!!. Advertisi^S&#13;
Paf r STAFF&#13;
Lei ni«r&#13;
aK?&#13;
r/ ^ 5&#13;
aron Charlton, Thomas Delany, Patty&#13;
Garv i I h 9 Edenhauser, Ginger Helgeson, Carol Klees,&#13;
O'Neill 2&#13;
ef/ J McCormack, Lori Meyer, Christiir&#13;
sSrd&#13;
Brs„e&#13;
p^rpsor pugh&#13;
-&#13;
joe Ripp&#13;
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Bi&#13;
resporraIbIe'&#13;
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for"!ts oditor?af n',!^ by&#13;
_J&#13;
s,uden,s&#13;
°&#13;
f UW-Parkside and they are&#13;
Published everv Thur^ J.&#13;
P&#13;
?"&#13;
CLand con,e&#13;
"fRANGER&#13;
is printed by the Union acad&#13;
fmic year except during breaks and hoi&#13;
Written permission is required for Pub,ishi&#13;
"9 Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
AH correspondence £ h.12Trmto,any Portion of RANGER.&#13;
PaOrslde, Kenosha, Wl 53141 addr&#13;
essed to: Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139.&#13;
paper with one inch°maroint&#13;
eAa&#13;
ii&#13;
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?fS,ed " 'VPewrltten, doublespaced on standar&#13;
for verification. otters must be signed and a telephone number in!&#13;
Deadline for^etterT i*s'°Tuesda^''at q&#13;
easons Maximum length accepted is 500 v&#13;
reserves all Editorial priviK in AT1&#13;
" .'&#13;
or Publication on Thursday. The RAI&#13;
defamatory content. refusing, to print letters which contain la &#13;
Women assessed in '80 campaign&#13;
by Susan Michetti • ^&#13;
Martin Gruberg, a Columbia&#13;
graduate and UW - Oshkosh&#13;
political science professor, spoke&#13;
on Women in the 1980 Ele ction&#13;
Campjngn'' at the Wisconsin&#13;
Political Science Association&#13;
Convention held here October 10&#13;
"Since 1964, I have been&#13;
assessing the role of women in our&#13;
elections," Gruberg said, "and&#13;
my preliminary examination of&#13;
races around the country gives&#13;
some reason for optimism. There&#13;
are 55 female candidates for&#13;
Congress: 27 Democrats, 26&#13;
Republicans, one Liberal, and one&#13;
independent. Compare this with&#13;
two years ago when only 48&#13;
women were- candidates and four&#13;
years ago when 52 were. In 1980&#13;
women constitute a ridiculously&#13;
low 17 out of 535 members of&#13;
Congress."&#13;
Gruberg explained that in 1974&#13;
and 1978 there were 16 wo men in&#13;
the House: five Republicans and&#13;
11 Democrats. There was only one&#13;
woman in the Senate.&#13;
Since the 1960's more women&#13;
have been voting than men according&#13;
to Gruberg. In 1976, only&#13;
41 million men went to the polls&#13;
while 45.6 million women voted. So&#13;
in 1980, Gruberg expects that&#13;
there will be four to five million&#13;
more women voting than men.&#13;
Looking at the Senate races this&#13;
year, Gruberg sees that New York&#13;
has a Congresswoman leading the&#13;
field with a fair chance of winning&#13;
the seat that Jacob Javits has&#13;
now. It is possible that a&#13;
Republican woman running for&#13;
M A R T IN G R U B E R G,&#13;
professor at Oshkosh.&#13;
Senate from Florida might also&#13;
win a seat.&#13;
Gruberg does not anticipate a&#13;
win by the women running for&#13;
Senate from Kentucky, Nevada,&#13;
or Colorado.&#13;
"As far as the House races, we&#13;
have quite a few candidates who&#13;
are women," Gruberg stated.&#13;
"Now, we're at the point where we&#13;
have a number of women who are&#13;
climbing the political ladder.&#13;
They are not beginners. They are&#13;
people who have some visibility&#13;
from having run in other elections."&#13;
&#13;
"Maryland is an interesting&#13;
state," Gruber remarked. "Of the&#13;
sixteen women in the House, four&#13;
of them come from just that one&#13;
state."&#13;
Women running for House seats&#13;
from California, Colorado,&#13;
Illinois, New Jersey, New York,&#13;
and Rhode Island, also, have a&#13;
good chance to win a seat according&#13;
to Gruberg.&#13;
"We may have more than 20&#13;
women in the House — an all time&#13;
record — if things work according&#13;
to my assessment one month&#13;
before the polls," Gruberg&#13;
predicted.&#13;
"Since most of the incumbents&#13;
in the national and state elections&#13;
are Democrats, most of the&#13;
women who are challenging are&#13;
Republicans," Gruberg explained.&#13;
"Looking at the House&#13;
races, the G.O.P. has had a more&#13;
extensive program to groom&#13;
candidates — male or female — in&#13;
campaign skills and also to&#13;
provide them with financial and&#13;
other assistance and that is likely&#13;
to have a pay - off not only in&#13;
Congressional races but in state&#13;
races."&#13;
"At present in the whole United&#13;
States, there are just 32 state&#13;
elected officials who are female,&#13;
but again this is an all - time&#13;
record," Gruberg explained.&#13;
There are two female governors,&#13;
and six lieutenant governors.&#13;
There are 770 (10.3%) female&#13;
state legislators which is double&#13;
the figure a decade ago;&#13;
Gruberg stated that in 1976,&#13;
there were 7,944 female elected&#13;
officials on all levels — national,&#13;
state, and local. Today, there are&#13;
16,529. So there is growth in the&#13;
number of females in elected&#13;
offices in the United States.&#13;
Presidential candidates' views on pot&#13;
by Sue Michetti&#13;
Although not publicized by the&#13;
national media, the opinions of&#13;
President Carter, Ronald Reagan,&#13;
Rep. John Anderson, and Ed&#13;
Clark — all Presidential candidates&#13;
— are quite varied&#13;
regarding marijuana.&#13;
Carter has been silent on the&#13;
marijuana issue since 1978, when&#13;
the press reported that some of his&#13;
top aides used 'pot'. Although&#13;
elected in 1976 on a&#13;
decriminalization platform,&#13;
Carter's only stand on the issue&#13;
while President was to defend&#13;
spraying paraquat on Mexican&#13;
marijuana fields.&#13;
Reagan, the Republican candidate&#13;
for President, is strongly&#13;
against marijuana. When he was&#13;
governor of California, Reagan&#13;
vetoed several bills in favor of&#13;
reducing penalties for simple&#13;
possession. He also spoke out in&#13;
favor of strict law enforcement of&#13;
marijuana laws.&#13;
Anderson, the independent&#13;
candidate from Illionis, has not&#13;
co-sponsored any of the&#13;
decriminalization bills introduced&#13;
in the U.S. House of Representatives.&#13;
However, now that he is&#13;
on the campaign trail, he supports&#13;
decriminalization of marijuana.&#13;
Clark, the Libertarian Party&#13;
candidate, supports full&#13;
legalization of marijuana for&#13;
adults, which includes repeal of&#13;
all marijuana laws as well as legal&#13;
cultivation and sale of marijuana&#13;
without governmental regulation.&#13;
Philip Morris Incorporated has&#13;
announced its Twelfth Annual&#13;
Marketing / Communications&#13;
Competition for Students which&#13;
will award a total of $4,000 to&#13;
students. The competition is&#13;
designed to provide an opportunity&#13;
for students nationwide&#13;
to sharpen their marketing and&#13;
communications skills.&#13;
A first place award of $2,000, a&#13;
second place award of $1,000, and&#13;
a third place award of $500 will be&#13;
presented to the winning entries in&#13;
both the graduate and undergraduate&#13;
categories. In addition,&#13;
student representatives&#13;
and faculty advisors will be invited&#13;
to corporate headquarters in&#13;
New York City to discuss their&#13;
projects with Philip Morris&#13;
executives.&#13;
Students are invited to develop&#13;
marketing / communications&#13;
projects related to Philip Morris&#13;
Incorporated or any of its nontobacco&#13;
products and operations.&#13;
The competition is divided into&#13;
graduate and undergraduate&#13;
categories, and is open to students&#13;
Space satellite probes global weather&#13;
Creation of a research institute&#13;
using space satellite information&#13;
to probe the workings of weather&#13;
was jointly approved in late&#13;
August by the National Oceanic&#13;
and Atmospheric Administration&#13;
and UW - Madison. The&#13;
Cooperative Institute for&#13;
Meteoroligical Satellite Studies&#13;
(CIMSS) will support research&#13;
scientists from NOAA's National&#13;
Environmental Satellite Service,&#13;
the university's Space Science and&#13;
Engineering Center and the&#13;
meteorology department, and&#13;
perhaps later, other universities&#13;
and agencies from inside and&#13;
outside the U.S.A.&#13;
Research already earmarked&#13;
for CIMSS includes mations and a&#13;
project named AgRISTARS, a six&#13;
- year effort which includes global&#13;
rain - fall estimates and predictions&#13;
of weather conditions affecting&#13;
major farm crops. Plans&#13;
also call for some work on the&#13;
concept of regional weather&#13;
forecasting.&#13;
Including the transfer erf present&#13;
research and new projects, the&#13;
institute's budget is expected to&#13;
top $1 million within a year. It will&#13;
be one of only six such cooperative&#13;
NOAA institutes in the nation, and&#13;
Member P arkside 2 00&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phon* 654-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
Arnheim will speak on art&#13;
currently enrolled in any accredited&#13;
college or university.&#13;
Undergraduate students must&#13;
work in groups of three or more,&#13;
and graduate students in groups of&#13;
two or more, both under the&#13;
counsel of a full-time faculty&#13;
member.&#13;
For additional information,&#13;
please contact Gerry Rizzo,&#13;
Competition Coordinator, Philip&#13;
Morris Incorporated, 100 Park&#13;
Avenue, New York, New York&#13;
10017.&#13;
Rudolph Arnheim, Harvard&#13;
University's distinguished&#13;
psychologist of art, will speak on&#13;
the creative process in visual art&#13;
at a free public lecture to be held&#13;
at Parkside on Thursday, Oct. 23,&#13;
at 4 p. m. in Greenquist Hall 103.&#13;
His slide - lecture is entitled&#13;
Picasso's "Guernica": Genesis of&#13;
a Painting, and it will focus on the&#13;
psychological dynamics involved&#13;
in the creation of this famous&#13;
artwork that depicts the theme of&#13;
war and tragedy. ("Guernica"&#13;
was painted in commemoration of&#13;
the Basque town that was completely&#13;
destroyed by bombs at the&#13;
start of the Spanish Civil War).&#13;
Arnheim has written eight&#13;
major books and numerous articles&#13;
on the psychology of art. His&#13;
most influential publicantion is&#13;
'Art and Visual Perception',&#13;
which has had great impact on the&#13;
fields of aesthetic psychology and&#13;
art education. In 1976 Arnheim&#13;
received the Distinguished Service&#13;
Award from the National Art&#13;
Education Association for his&#13;
contributions to the world of art&#13;
scholarship.&#13;
Molinaro to be acclaimed&#13;
"The Founding Father: George&#13;
Molinaro of Kenosha" will be the&#13;
topic of a Social Science Roundtable&#13;
talk by University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside history&#13;
professor John D. Buenker at noon&#13;
on Monday, Oct. 20, in the&#13;
Parkside Union.&#13;
An assembly line worker who&#13;
became a bank president, a union&#13;
organizer who became a board&#13;
chairman, a county board&#13;
supervisor who became the dean&#13;
of Wisconsin legislators serving&#13;
both as speaker of the state&#13;
assembly and chairman of the&#13;
joint finance committee, Molinaro&#13;
is credited with many contributions&#13;
to the community..&#13;
Among his proudest accomplishments&#13;
was shepherding&#13;
of the enabling legislation for&#13;
Parkside through the state&#13;
legislature and protection of the&#13;
institution's interests in its formative&#13;
years. Last October, the&#13;
university named a building in his&#13;
honor.&#13;
Learn how to select major&#13;
On Monday, October 20, the&#13;
sixth program from the 50-Minute&#13;
series for new, re-entry and&#13;
transfer students will be offered&#13;
on "Selecting a Major." This&#13;
session from 1:00-2*00 p.m. in&#13;
Union 104-106, is designed to help&#13;
students learn how to make&#13;
decisions regarding their choice of&#13;
majors. Factors which influence&#13;
tVioao dooiaiona w ill Ka&#13;
Students will be taught how to&#13;
investigate majors, their&#13;
requirements and what they have,&#13;
to offer. The session will also&#13;
include information on the&#13;
necessary procedures to declare&#13;
and change majors.&#13;
Students who have questions or&#13;
who have not registered for this&#13;
session may do so by calling 553-&#13;
Student charged with fraud&#13;
Marketing-communications awards offered&#13;
Patrick McCafferty (age 24),&#13;
2421 Chinchilla Lane, Springfield,&#13;
Illinois pled guilty to a one coun t&#13;
criminal charge on August 21,1980&#13;
in the U.S. District Court, Central&#13;
District of Illinois (Springfield).&#13;
The defendent, Patrick McCafferty,&#13;
was granted a&#13;
suspended sentence (maximum&#13;
sentence would be imprisonment&#13;
of one year and a $1,000 fine) and&#13;
placed on probation for five years.&#13;
He was ordered to repay the&#13;
Social Security Administration&#13;
$6,780.90 in student benefits&#13;
illegally obtained (according to an&#13;
agreed upon schedule) by August,&#13;
1985.&#13;
McCafferty on four separate&#13;
occasions had made false&#13;
statement claiming to be a fulltime&#13;
student when he was not.&#13;
Now, this young man has an&#13;
arrest record for the rest of his&#13;
life.&#13;
Young people who are drawing&#13;
student benefits under Title II of&#13;
the Social Security Act are hereby&#13;
reminded of their obligation to&#13;
report cessation of full-time attendance&#13;
to their local Social&#13;
Security District Office. Failure to&#13;
do so could result in criminal&#13;
prosecution.&#13;
the only one dealing with satellite&#13;
information. Prof. Verner E.&#13;
Suomi (MSN-Science Sci/CIMSS)&#13;
was named director of the institute.&#13;
A NOAA official said,&#13;
"The creation of CIMSS&#13;
recognizes one of the most&#13;
productive research capacities in&#13;
the country."&#13;
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4 Thursday, October 16,1980 Ranger&#13;
rDm. , e—— RANGER photo by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Absent Friends CaSh&#13;
' Sc&#13;
°&#13;
tt Relchelsdorf&#13;
' and Leon Van Dyke, director of&#13;
Play reveals trite reactions&#13;
by Wendy Westphal&#13;
Last week in Chicago Leon Van&#13;
Dyke directed original music&#13;
material showcased for playhouse&#13;
owners and agents. This week&#13;
here at Parkside he will be&#13;
directing Alan Ayckbourn's&#13;
Absent Friends. You may ask&#13;
why?&#13;
Leon Van Dyke is the new coordinator&#13;
of the Dramatic Arts&#13;
discipline. He instructs Beginning&#13;
Acting, Theatre Backgrounds,&#13;
and Advance Acting Styles (an&#13;
Independent Study). Van Dyke&#13;
earned his PhD at Wayne State&#13;
University in Detroit, Michigan.&#13;
At the same time, he was a&#13;
member of the Repertory&#13;
Hillberry Classic Theatre. This&#13;
affiliation allowed for the application&#13;
of ac ademic skills to the&#13;
insight of acting.&#13;
Scattered in Van Dyke's office&#13;
"Cwmrer&#13;
are foils and daggers. Even&#13;
though I was alarmed, I later&#13;
found out that they were only a&#13;
special interest. He directs&#13;
workshops on how to safely&#13;
perform stage violence and is a&#13;
member of the Society of&#13;
American Fight Directors.&#13;
Absent Friends was chosen for a&#13;
number of reasons. It is a&#13;
delightful, modern play. The stage&#13;
characters are young and so are&#13;
the actors at Parkside. Character&#13;
reaches can be made with&#13;
realism. Comedy is always appreciated.&#13;
"All people&#13;
everywhere even in Kenosha and&#13;
Racine have a crying need to&#13;
laugh," said Van Dyke.&#13;
The play demonstrates our&#13;
society's use of trite phrases.&#13;
When Colin's fiancee has&#13;
drowned, what can be said by his&#13;
old friends to comfort him? Our&#13;
constant use of "I'm sorry" has&#13;
taken its meaning away. Complicating&#13;
our language even more&#13;
is the oppostion between what we&#13;
say and how we mean it. This is&#13;
revealed in Paul's wife. She knows&#13;
he is having an affair with one of&#13;
the guests yet she can't come right&#13;
out and ask who it is.&#13;
Absent Friends deals with old&#13;
friends. "Renewing old friendships&#13;
always forces us to rose -&#13;
color our memories," responded&#13;
Van Dyke. What do you do when&#13;
you see old friends? The guests all&#13;
taint their once awful times to be&#13;
remembered as wonderful&#13;
memories.&#13;
Under the direction of Leon Van&#13;
Dyke, Alan Ayckbourn's Absent&#13;
Friends will open Thursday,&#13;
October 23 in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Satisfy your crying&#13;
need to laugh.&#13;
Youth committee promise fulfilled&#13;
by Kathy Slama&#13;
One of the major campaign&#13;
promises of Kenosha's Mayor&#13;
John D. Bilotti was to establish a&#13;
youth committee comprised of&#13;
students. These students were to&#13;
be from Kenosha's junior and&#13;
senior high schools and from area&#13;
colleges and universities. School&#13;
leaders were to recommend&#13;
candidates for the committee to&#13;
the mayor. This promise was&#13;
realized on August 29 when the&#13;
committee held its first meeting.&#13;
The goal of the committee is&#13;
twofold. Primarily it is to open the&#13;
doors for dialogue between the&#13;
mayor's office and area youths. It&#13;
also gives the student a direct&#13;
voice in the governmental&#13;
decisions which concern them.&#13;
Organizations in the area such&#13;
as Special Olympics and the Senior&#13;
Citizens Center can use this&#13;
° covui.mmiiiuitte vwv eas a «veh VC1UL1C icle1Ufor I in- lit&#13;
i *&#13;
The Swinging Sounds of the&#13;
Late '40s and early '50s&#13;
• Jitterbug Contest* Costume Contest*&#13;
• PRIZES*&#13;
off for anyone wearing a costume of the 1940's&#13;
Admission:&#13;
Mixed Drinks Available&#13;
2 ID's Required&#13;
•l&#13;
50 for UW-P Students&#13;
*2°° for Guests&#13;
Friday, October 24, 1980&#13;
9:00 p.m. Union Square j&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
STAMP your&#13;
way to success&#13;
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by G. Helgeson&#13;
This is "Book Review Week"&#13;
here in the Parking Lot. After&#13;
reading last year's reviews,&#13;
literally thousands of major&#13;
foreign and domestic publishers&#13;
have sent hundreds of thousands&#13;
of best-selling and not-so-bestselling-but-hopeful&#13;
books to&#13;
Parking Lot, hoping for that&#13;
famous PL Seal of Approval.&#13;
Some publishers even sent money&#13;
oVer the summer, and I've been&#13;
meaning to send it back, but they&#13;
didn't enclose self-addressed,&#13;
stamped envelopes. Besides, most&#13;
of the tens and twenties have been&#13;
spent.&#13;
Out of those books that were&#13;
sent, one in the category of nonfiction&#13;
was selected to be&#13;
reviewed. Coincidentally, the&#13;
publisher of the book sent me so&#13;
much money that it would have&#13;
been downright embarrassing to&#13;
ignore James A. Sleezy's STAMP&#13;
Your Way to Success: How to Get&#13;
Everything You Always Wanted&#13;
But Didn't Know How to Get&#13;
Because of Moral Inhibitions&#13;
(Knopf, $69.99, hardcover edition&#13;
only).&#13;
In his preface, Sleezy writes,&#13;
"Most people simply don't know&#13;
how to get what they want because&#13;
when they were children, their&#13;
parents forced them to view&#13;
themselves as undeserving of&#13;
almost everything they wanted,&#13;
and they subsequently blocked out&#13;
their desires. People are so busy&#13;
trying to be 'good', 'mature' and&#13;
'moral', that they end up leading&#13;
their lives in an unhappy state&#13;
Thoreau once aptly termed 'quiet&#13;
desperation'. Their desires are&#13;
unfulfilled; even their natural&#13;
desires is the cause of most of&#13;
America's problems. He writes,&#13;
"Society is plauged by many ills,&#13;
but the Black Death of today is&#13;
forming youth in the area of activities&#13;
and programs which can&#13;
directly involve them.&#13;
Some of the ideas which were&#13;
brought forth at the first two&#13;
meetings were finding jobs, bus&#13;
service to the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside campus,&#13;
moving books to the new library,&#13;
and volunteer programs.&#13;
The representative from&#13;
Parkside is Kathy Slama. If&#13;
anyone has suggestions or ideas&#13;
for this committee, contact her in&#13;
the P.S.G.A. office.&#13;
television. Why T.V.? Because&#13;
television teaches you to view an&#13;
enormously attractive product for&#13;
30 to 60 seconds, initiating in you&#13;
an insatiable desire to possess&#13;
that product in truck-load&#13;
quantities, and then it's 'Back to&#13;
our story'. This can be very&#13;
frustrating. Studies show that&#13;
most suicides and homicides that&#13;
occur while the television is on are&#13;
committed at that frustrating&#13;
moment of d isappointment at the&#13;
end of the commercial break."&#13;
Sleezy is not optimistic about&#13;
the future. "The only progress&#13;
that has been made in alleviating&#13;
the public's pain over the past 20&#13;
years has been the toll-free credit&#13;
card telephone number," he&#13;
notes.&#13;
Without STAMP, Sleezy (and,,&#13;
obviously his publisher) wouldn't&#13;
recommend televison-watching to&#13;
anyone. Sleezy also recommends&#13;
the book to anyone who is worried&#13;
about nuclear warfare, writing&#13;
"STAMP-ing will effectively&#13;
replace bombing, if the book sells&#13;
well."&#13;
The balance of STAMP is given&#13;
to an easy-to-follow program that&#13;
guides the reader away from&#13;
inhibited, self-abusive behavior&#13;
like over-eating during commercial&#13;
breaks (an avoidance&#13;
behavior Sleezy calls "directly&#13;
related to the inability to procure&#13;
things like lawn mowers, designer&#13;
jeans and tampons" and steers&#13;
the reader toward open, healthy&#13;
expressions of greed.&#13;
Some of Sleezy's suggestions&#13;
include what he terms a "level&#13;
analysis" of the problem. The&#13;
reader is told to "work through"&#13;
his/her inhibitions by gradually&#13;
becoming, more and more open to&#13;
the desire. Level one is called&#13;
"Screaming", level two is devoted&#13;
to full-fledged "Tantrums", level&#13;
three includes "Agressiveness"&#13;
(not assertiveness, which Sleezy&#13;
calls "wishy-washy") and on&#13;
levels four and five are "Murder"&#13;
and "Psychotic Behavior",&#13;
respectively. Most things can be&#13;
had by the time the STAMP-er has&#13;
reached level three, according to&#13;
Sleezy, but the other two levels&#13;
come in handy at times.&#13;
"If you want it," writes Sleezy,&#13;
"STAMP to get it." STAMP is a&#13;
refreshingly honest guide, and&#13;
you'll have fun using it to acquire&#13;
whatever you set your heart on. If&#13;
you only plan to purchase one&#13;
"How To" book this year, make it&#13;
STAMP.&#13;
ADVERTISING&#13;
REPRESENTATIVES&#13;
NEEDED&#13;
Will receive&#13;
15% Commission&#13;
on every Display Ad you sell&#13;
Applicants must be dependable and&#13;
have some type of transportation.&#13;
No experience is necessary&#13;
but would be beneficial.&#13;
Mike Farrell or Bruce Preslon&#13;
,n the Ranger Office&#13;
WLLC D 139 — 553-2295 &#13;
Review&#13;
'Ordinary People'&#13;
extraordinary&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
"Ordinary People" excellently&#13;
paints a tableau of how a real&#13;
crisis can actually cause a family&#13;
to fall apart. It mixes a host of&#13;
emotions with a wealth of ta lent to&#13;
produce one of this year's most&#13;
profound motion pictures.&#13;
It takes place in lush Lake&#13;
Forest, Illinois and shows what&#13;
happens to a family after one of its&#13;
two sons is killed in a boating&#13;
accident.&#13;
Timothy Hutton is magnificent&#13;
as Conrad, the surviving son, who&#13;
after his brother's death, tried to&#13;
commit suicide and was sent to a&#13;
mental hospital. Conrad is a&#13;
complex,, multi - dimensional&#13;
character who at times is withdrawn,&#13;
slightly insane, or slightly&#13;
incoherent and at others is just a&#13;
ROBERT REDFORD&#13;
high school student trying to put&#13;
the pieces of his life back together.&#13;
Hutton never fails to portray&#13;
Conrad perfectly in each of his&#13;
different moods.&#13;
Mary Tyler Moore plays Beth, a&#13;
mother who is more worried about&#13;
appearances than the feelings of&#13;
her family. It may sound like she's&#13;
a shallow character, but the way&#13;
that Moore presents her, Beth&#13;
becomes both appalling and intriguing.&#13;
&#13;
Beth loved her first son (Buck)&#13;
so much that she blames Conrad&#13;
for his death. She can't bring&#13;
herself to love Conrad because it&#13;
brings back the painful memories&#13;
of Buck. This feeling sets the&#13;
background for some confrontations&#13;
between mother and&#13;
son. In these dramatic scenes, one&#13;
becomes awed at the fact that&#13;
they talk like two strangers, with&#13;
Hutton in another world and&#13;
Moore just going through the&#13;
motions. The excellence of these&#13;
two actors is exemplified here and&#13;
becomes a maintained par&#13;
throughout the movie.&#13;
Donald Sutherland is very good&#13;
as Calvin, the father trying to hold&#13;
his family together but not seeing&#13;
things exactly as they are between&#13;
Beth and Conrad. He tries to keep&#13;
both happy any way he can. He&#13;
becomes elated over the fact that&#13;
his son decides to seek help from a&#13;
psychiatrist but Beth is ashamed&#13;
of it and this type of emotional&#13;
see - saw" eventually becomes&#13;
too much for him.&#13;
Sutherland is effectively&#13;
dramatic in the end scenes when&#13;
he confronts his wife with little&#13;
things that he has been wondering&#13;
about her (why she was so worried&#13;
about what he wore the day of t he&#13;
funeral for example) and with the&#13;
fact that possibly they don't love&#13;
each other any more, He shows&#13;
another side of men when he, a&#13;
successful father and&#13;
businessman, cries.&#13;
Judd Hirsch is Dr. T. C. Berger,&#13;
Conrad's psychiatrist. His&#13;
character is like a new pair of&#13;
jeans; uncomfortable at first, but&#13;
with time they become smoother&#13;
and you grow to like them. He&#13;
helps Conrad to gain insight into&#13;
himself and helps him to experience&#13;
emotions.&#13;
In the scene where Conrad's big&#13;
breakthrough comes, it is so&#13;
dramatic that it will leave you&#13;
tingling. Hirsch and Hutton are&#13;
wonderfully feeling here.&#13;
At school, many students find it&#13;
hard to accept Conrad and one of&#13;
them is Stillman(Adam Baldwin).&#13;
This is a totally differeent&#13;
character from the one Baldwin&#13;
played in "My Bodyguard" and he&#13;
is very good as the "BMOC" who&#13;
gives Conrad a hard time.&#13;
There are some happy scenes&#13;
put in to show that life is not all&#13;
tragedy, and one of the best is&#13;
when Conrad asks a girl at school&#13;
for a date. Again Hutton is good as&#13;
he tries to think of w hat to say to&#13;
her and how low of a voice he&#13;
should use. This scene is real and&#13;
has happened to every high school&#13;
or junior high school boy who has&#13;
ever called a girl and asked her&#13;
for his first date.&#13;
The ending is neither a happy&#13;
Hollywood ending nor is it a&#13;
holocaustal tragic ending, but&#13;
rather a believable one.&#13;
This film marks actor Robert&#13;
Redford's directorial debut and&#13;
except for a few flaws (the weak&#13;
flash - backs where Mary Tyler&#13;
Moore is supposed to be young) he&#13;
has done an excellent job.&#13;
"Ordinary People" is accurately&#13;
titled because all of the&#13;
characters are ordinary. You may&#13;
not find yourself in this film, but&#13;
there is someone in there whom&#13;
you can recognize because you&#13;
have met them at one time or&#13;
another.&#13;
In this day and age when fantasies&#13;
and comedies are over -&#13;
populating our television sets,&#13;
literature, and theatres, "Ordinary&#13;
People" is a fresh breath of&#13;
reality. You must go see it.&#13;
Cancer researcher to speak&#13;
Elizabeth Cavert Miller, one of&#13;
the nation's most distinguished&#13;
cancer researchers, will speak at&#13;
UW-Parkside Friday, Oct. 17, at 1&#13;
p.m. on "Chemical Carcinogens in&#13;
Human and Experimental&#13;
Animals." The talk, sponsored by&#13;
the UW-P Life Science -&#13;
Chemistry Colloquium, will be&#13;
held in Molinaro Hall room 105&#13;
and is free and open to the public.&#13;
Dr. Miller is the WARF&#13;
Professor of Oncology at the&#13;
McArdle Laboratory for Cancer&#13;
Research in Madison. She also has&#13;
served as acting director and&#13;
associate director of the McArdle&#13;
Laboratory and, with Dr. J.A.&#13;
Miller, has recently received&#13;
major cancer research awards&#13;
from the Gardner Foundation,&#13;
Bristol-Myers Co. and General&#13;
Motors Research Foundation.&#13;
During the past decade she has&#13;
received seven other major&#13;
research awards, as well as&#13;
serving as past president of the&#13;
DR. ELIZABETH CAVERT&#13;
MILLER&#13;
American Association for Cancer&#13;
Research board of directors and&#13;
as a member of the National&#13;
Academy of Sciences.&#13;
Review&#13;
ELVIS COSTELLO AND THE ATTRACTIONS&#13;
'Liberties' worth the money&#13;
by Carol Klees&#13;
Usually when a musician is hard&#13;
- up for new album material, the&#13;
consumer gets a live album of&#13;
older songs which is always either&#13;
one of two things: all good, or only&#13;
fit for frisbee practice.&#13;
None of the tracks on Elvis&#13;
Costello's new album, "Taking&#13;
Liberties," are new or live&#13;
recordings, they are never -&#13;
releaseds and flipsides of 45's; but&#13;
that doesn't immediately tag it a&#13;
"bad album." On the contrary,&#13;
"Liberties" is worth the money,&#13;
but be certain you like Costello&#13;
before you buy it, because there&#13;
are twenty (count them, 20) songs&#13;
on the album. Most of the cuts are&#13;
fast - paced, and they are all fairly&#13;
short (never running over 3:30 or&#13;
so), so the opportunity to bog the&#13;
listener down never arises.&#13;
Since its futile and useless&#13;
enumerating what I liked about&#13;
the album, I'll stick to those things&#13;
I didn't like first. 'Stranger in the&#13;
House', mistake number one,&#13;
doesn't try to be anything other&#13;
than it is, a country western tune&#13;
— and hooray for Costello's&#13;
versatility — but it fits in&#13;
"Liberties" like a duck in the&#13;
desert.&#13;
Costello gives that goof - up&#13;
company by sticking his rendition&#13;
of Rogers &amp; Hart's 'My Funny&#13;
Valentine' in towards the end of&#13;
side two. Such a stunt should be&#13;
expected of Costello, he prides&#13;
himself in being belligerently&#13;
deviant. He's smart enough to&#13;
hold it to a minimum in "Liberties,"&#13;
though, and that saves the&#13;
lp.&#13;
Aside from those petty grumblings,&#13;
"Taking Liberties" contains&#13;
some of Costello's better&#13;
work. He's fairly successful in&#13;
doing what I've been waiting for&#13;
new wave rockers to do; this is the&#13;
first "new wave" of the "old&#13;
wave" I have heard which&#13;
transports the music of the 50's60's&#13;
to the present intact. Modern&#13;
musicians seem to have a hard&#13;
time writing "old fashioned"&#13;
music without the styles and&#13;
opinions of the '70's infringing in&#13;
some way upon their work.&#13;
In "Liberties," Costello doesn't&#13;
do a bad job of sticking to&#13;
business; much of the sarcasm&#13;
and bitterness evident in his&#13;
earlier albums is missing, and&#13;
when his sourness makes itself&#13;
known, it's easy to tune him out&#13;
and listen to the melody instead.&#13;
The first time I listened to&#13;
"Liberties" I thought, hey, isn't&#13;
that — Herman's Hermits Paul&#13;
Revere and the Raiders Jan and&#13;
Dean Derekand the Dominoes the&#13;
Purple Pteradactyls Mr Bill and&#13;
the Playdohs? It's rather pleasant&#13;
not being able to distinguish who -&#13;
did - what. The only dead&#13;
giveaway on the album is&#13;
Costello's voice, and he mellows&#13;
out in several of the songs so much&#13;
that it would be hard to recognize&#13;
him on the radio.&#13;
I have a difficult time trying to&#13;
figure out why Costello sat on so&#13;
much of this stuff, too much of it is&#13;
too good to leave around collecting&#13;
dust. Once I was indifferent to&#13;
Costello's music, but "Taking&#13;
Liberties" has caught my interest.&#13;
It's not a bad album, it's&#13;
pretty good. If you enjoy new&#13;
wave, pick up a copy, by all&#13;
means. If you don't like new wave,&#13;
or Costello, you won't be thinking&#13;
of bu ying it in the first place, and&#13;
it's a wonder you're reading this&#13;
review. To those who are curious,&#13;
"Taking Liberties" is a nostalgia&#13;
trip, and not at all a wasted investment.&#13;
&#13;
5'- • Jr&#13;
THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
announces:&#13;
OR^Ki^ST&#13;
"AN EVENING OF FINE FOOD AND FUN."&#13;
NSOATV. . 8, 1980&#13;
6-OOpm - VOOam&#13;
#15. OO&#13;
INCLUDES: * Wine Punch Reception * Five Course Gourmet Greek Dinner *&#13;
Costumed Greek Folk Dancers * Authentic Greek Band * Mediterranean Bellv&#13;
Dancers '&#13;
Tickets on sale beginning Monday, October 20, 1980&#13;
UNION INFORMATION CENTER&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside &#13;
Thursday, October 16,1980 Ranger&#13;
Democracy looks promising&#13;
Latin American nations discussed&#13;
by Sue Michetti&#13;
Thomas G. Sanders, a member&#13;
of the American University Field&#13;
Staff with a Ph.D. in religion from&#13;
Columbia University, visited&#13;
Parkside October 9, and spoke on&#13;
the relationship of industrializing&#13;
Latin American nations to&#13;
democracy.&#13;
"Democracy is an exceptional&#13;
thing. In Latin America, Africa,&#13;
and Asia a lot of authoritarian&#13;
governments can be found which&#13;
oscillate back and forth between&#13;
dem ocr acy and&#13;
authoritarianism," Sanders&#13;
began.&#13;
Sanders explained that the&#13;
Latin American nations contain a&#13;
philospophic basis for democracy&#13;
which dates back to the inspiration&#13;
drawn from the North&#13;
American and French models in&#13;
the e arly 19th ce ntury. Although&#13;
democracy has failed in Latin&#13;
America, the ideals still remain&#13;
along with the sentiment of&#13;
moving toward a democratic&#13;
system.&#13;
"Intervention by the military in&#13;
Latin America is preceived as a&#13;
temporary thing, and somehow&#13;
the idea to restore deomcracy is&#13;
seen as the no rm." Sanders cited&#13;
Argentina which has had 50 years&#13;
of democracy.&#13;
Sanders listed free and open&#13;
elections and constitutionalism as&#13;
some fundamental characteristics&#13;
of liberal democracies as he&#13;
compared Latin American nations&#13;
with those of Southern Europe.&#13;
"Other countries have also&#13;
oscillated between democracies&#13;
and authoritarianism," Sanders&#13;
stated. Sanders said that there has&#13;
been oscillation between the&#13;
military government and&#13;
democracy in both Greece and&#13;
Turkey.&#13;
Sanders said that these nations&#13;
all are only partly developed and&#13;
industrialized, and yet they have&#13;
great aspirations to join the world&#13;
markets of highly technological&#13;
specialization. This attitude&#13;
reflects problems which show why&#13;
authoritarian governments are&#13;
the rule.&#13;
First, economic crises are&#13;
created from the development&#13;
aspirations within the national&#13;
ideology, social pressure from&#13;
groups, and the government&#13;
spending too much money.&#13;
Although certain sectors are&#13;
comfortable, they recognize the&#13;
need to develop more because the&#13;
demands of the underprivileged&#13;
sectors are so great and serious.&#13;
"The argument is that the&#13;
government can't cut expenses,"&#13;
said Sanders, "so they get into&#13;
inflation by printing more money.&#13;
This is used to import raw&#13;
materials which results in balance&#13;
of payment deficits."&#13;
Second, Sanders said, "There is&#13;
the problem of incorporating new&#13;
social groups into society." He&#13;
stated that after the upper class&#13;
and the middle class become well&#13;
off, strong unions develop good&#13;
benefits for their workers&#13;
However, this leaves out a large&#13;
portion of the population, perhaps&#13;
even half of it. "This creates&#13;
dissatisfaction among the lower&#13;
class segments who do n't live as&#13;
well and places a strain on&#13;
society," said Sanders. "This&#13;
creates relatively strong Marxist&#13;
parties which don't dominate '&#13;
government, but gain support&#13;
because of the unequal and only&#13;
partial development in these&#13;
societies."&#13;
Third, he said, "There is a&#13;
histopr of absolutists political&#13;
conflict which is based on strong&#13;
ideologies from which contending&#13;
ideologies view winning by the&#13;
opposition as disaster." Italy is a&#13;
European nation with this type of&#13;
attitude. This polarization of&#13;
society tends to bring charismatic&#13;
leaders to power, as it did in&#13;
Argentina and Chile.&#13;
"There is a tradition of military&#13;
involvement where the military&#13;
becomes the key factor," Sanders&#13;
said. Functioning as an institution,&#13;
the military become&#13;
oriented toward authoritarianism,&#13;
discipline, and a sense of being the&#13;
guardian of the nation when the&#13;
country is viewed as falling apart.&#13;
Last, Sanders said that there is&#13;
a tradition where a strong man as&#13;
the leader becomes the way out.&#13;
People fr om all parties will vote&#13;
enmasse for a strong charismatic&#13;
man. This stems partially from&#13;
paternalistic classs attitudes and&#13;
partially from a military&#13;
government which looks unattractive.&#13;
&#13;
Sanders said that changes can&#13;
be expected to occur. "There is a&#13;
tentativeness of military commitment&#13;
to be in power, mainly to&#13;
rationalize intervention. As time&#13;
goes on and the military power&#13;
develops, some factions within the&#13;
military get the feeling it is time&#13;
to move out. This often leads to a&#13;
split within the military."&#13;
"The country tends to get into,&#13;
severe problems that the military&#13;
can't deal with. This is bad for the&#13;
public image of the military"&#13;
stated Sanders.&#13;
He said that changes can also&#13;
occur from opposition activity&#13;
which is never completely&#13;
eliminated.&#13;
Continued From Page 1&#13;
depicting the presidency of Harry&#13;
S. Truman.&#13;
No stranger to plays about&#13;
politics, McCarthy has appeared&#13;
on the New York stage in such&#13;
varied vehicles as "Best Men&#13;
1976," "Advise and Consent," and&#13;
"Abe Lincoln in Illinois," as well&#13;
as "Cactus Flower," "Two for the&#13;
Seesaw," "Loves Labor's Lost,"&#13;
"Anna Christie" and "Harry&#13;
Outside," for which he won a 1975&#13;
Obie Award for distinguished&#13;
acting. His film credits include&#13;
"Death of a Salesman," "The&#13;
Prize," "The Best Man," "Hotel"&#13;
and many others.&#13;
On Nov. 17 Penelope Reed, long&#13;
- time leading lady of the&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Theater,&#13;
and current Rep star William&#13;
Leach star in the Festival Theater&#13;
production of Jan de Hartog's&#13;
classic comedy of married life,&#13;
"The Fourposter." At that event&#13;
AOE subscribers are incited to a&#13;
pre - performance champagne&#13;
and dessert wedding reception for&#13;
Agnes and Michael, the play's&#13;
principals.&#13;
After a holiday break, the series&#13;
resumes Jan. 29 for an evening&#13;
combining great music and&#13;
moving drama as pianist Robert&#13;
Guralnik and singer Sandra&#13;
Jennings star in "Brahms and&#13;
Clara", bringing to life the story&#13;
of Johannes Brahms and his&#13;
beloved Clara Schumann. This is a&#13;
return to the AOE stage for&#13;
Guralnik, whose 1979 show,&#13;
"Chopin Lives," was warmly&#13;
received by area concert - goers.&#13;
"1000 Years of Jazz" featuring&#13;
"The Legends of Jazz," "The&#13;
Original Hoofers" and jazz vocal&#13;
stylists will perform on Feb. 18 in&#13;
a cabaret - style musical revue&#13;
combining blues, Dixieland, swing&#13;
and Gershwin. Some of the&#13;
musicians in Legends of Jazz&#13;
started performing in New&#13;
Orleans more than 60 years ago.&#13;
Some of the Original Hoofers were&#13;
tapping 40 years ago in Harlem's&#13;
Cotton Club.&#13;
Entremont and the Toulouse&#13;
Orchestra appear March 26.&#13;
Acclaimed on two continents,&#13;
Entremont studied at the Paris&#13;
Conservatoire where he won three&#13;
first prizes by the age of 15. In&#13;
1951, he won the Belgian State&#13;
Competition in Brussels. That&#13;
triumph was followed by his first&#13;
Europen concert tour and a U. S.&#13;
debut with the National Orchestral&#13;
Association in New York&#13;
in 1953.&#13;
An international directory of&#13;
musicians describes him as a&#13;
"brilliant but also highly sensitive&#13;
and intelligent artist (with) great&#13;
popularity on both continents."&#13;
The season finale will be a&#13;
performance by the Erick&#13;
Hawkins Dance Company with&#13;
orchestral ensemble presenting&#13;
its uniquely American dance&#13;
motifs set to the works of&#13;
American composers on April 11.&#13;
All performances are at 8 p. m.&#13;
in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Friday, Oct. 17&#13;
COURSE "Defensive Driving" at 7:30 am and 12:30 pm in Union 207.&#13;
Please call ext. 2455 for registration.&#13;
MOVIE "The Main Event" will be shown at 8 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission at the door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a&#13;
guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 18&#13;
CPR CLASS at 9 am in Union 104-106. Admission is free for Parkside&#13;
students, faculty and staff. Sponsored by the Parkside Health Office.&#13;
WORKSHOP by Peer Support Organization at 9 pm in MOLN in.&#13;
Discussion will be on money management, financial aids, study skils&#13;
and UW policies. All are welcome.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 22&#13;
BLOOD DRIVE from 9 am to 2:30 pm in Union 104-106. All are welcofrie.&#13;
Sponsored by the Parkside Health Office.&#13;
BROWN BAG LECTURE Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will be&#13;
holding their weekly brown bag lecture. Come and join a relaxing and&#13;
friendly atmosphere. The meeting will be held in Union 207 at 1 pm.&#13;
SLIDE LECTURE "The New Germany" by Harry Walbruck, Emeritus&#13;
Professor of German, at 7:30 pm in Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312 for&#13;
more details. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
WORKSHOP "Energy and Our Way of Life" at 7:30 pm in Tallent Hall&#13;
Registration information at ext. 2312. Sponsored by UW - Extension.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 23&#13;
BROWN BAG LUNCH Dr. Margo Smith of Northeastern Illinois&#13;
University will speak about "Job Opportunities in Anthropology and&#13;
Related fields", in Moln. Ill (the Faculty Lounge) at 12 noon.&#13;
Everyone is welcome, bring your lunch and come and listen! Sponsored&#13;
by the Anthropology Club.&#13;
LECTURE Oct 23,&#13;
1980 at 2:00 - I n Moln. 105, Dr. Margo Smith of&#13;
Northeastern Dliniois Univ., will present a lecture entitled; Women in&#13;
Latin America: Migrants in Lima, Peru at 2 pm. The lecture is free&#13;
and open to the public. Sponsored by the Anthropology Club.&#13;
Case for nuclear power&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
solar power, which by no stretch&#13;
of the imagination is a competitive,&#13;
available and reliable&#13;
source of electricity, this is&#13;
especially true in the case of&#13;
decentralized solar power&#13;
systems.&#13;
The article also mentioned wind&#13;
and water power. Wind power has&#13;
been known to be un reliable and&#13;
unpredictable, followed by high&#13;
maintenance costs. Of the various&#13;
forms of water power, hydroelectric&#13;
generating facilities have&#13;
reached a saturation level in this&#13;
country. As for other water power&#13;
alternatives, such as wave and&#13;
tidal, they tend to disrupt the&#13;
environment and have a short&#13;
service life, being situated in&#13;
highly corrosive saltwater. There&#13;
is one system which could be&#13;
considered water power, that&#13;
being OTEC (Oceanic Thermal&#13;
Energy Converters). This system&#13;
taps the oceans' thermal temperature&#13;
gradient and utilizes this&#13;
temperature difference to&#13;
generate electricity. At present&#13;
there is a research OTEC facility&#13;
situated just off the coast of&#13;
California.&#13;
In closing it is our belief that&#13;
nuclear power is the most&#13;
desirable interim source of&#13;
electrical power between the time&#13;
of fossil fuels until fusion. By the&#13;
way, those of you interested in&#13;
signing and/or promoting a&#13;
petition concerning the&#13;
ratification of the fusion energy&#13;
bill before Congress now, please&#13;
come to the October 24 meeting of&#13;
the Students for Nuclear&#13;
Rationality in the SOC room in D-l&#13;
WLLC, by the Coffee Shoppe at 1&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Black hole to be analyzed&#13;
Michael L. Frame, assistant public talk on "Black Holes, Time&#13;
professor of mathematics at Machines and Demons'" on&#13;
Parkside, will present a free MoS^Hairr^ommP'&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
MICHAELYN (TINY), A nice guv is looking&#13;
for you!&#13;
THE CHAIN GANG doesn't think as a group.&#13;
Chain Gang&#13;
TOM MONOCUS: Next time get penicillin&#13;
first. Dr. B. Kept&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY Dawn Baby — Fry Eyes&#13;
AL I - my hovercraft is full of eels.&#13;
ROUND TABLE, Look inside .'Latin' tree&#13;
bark. Not Anthrax. lOP's&#13;
INDUSTRIAL HYGIENE Majors have&#13;
higher TLV's. "The Student Militants"&#13;
THE CHAIN GANGdoes not think as a group.&#13;
lOP's&#13;
PHIL MARRY and Paul LeRose: Springsteen&#13;
Lives! — Peter&#13;
DPMA — Get back. Write an ad. lOP's&#13;
J, B, &amp; Kwejiave the baseball bats for K.D. Is&#13;
it all really true? — 2nd fl. lib.&#13;
ANIMALS range from Eau Claire to Chicago&#13;
to lowa. Bet that!&#13;
BOUNCE, BOUNCE, Name your place!! —&#13;
Todd H.&#13;
MARY ROLE — Thank you for all that you&#13;
have done for me. Chipmunk&#13;
THE CHAIN GANG doesn't think as a group.&#13;
Chain Gang&#13;
TERRY — After 9 months, I'm still impressed.&#13;
— Tom&#13;
LYNNIE LOOPERS I love you, your Tuna&#13;
Face Fry Eyes.&#13;
NEED PENICILLIN? See Thomas Monacus.&#13;
FOR SALE: PDP-11 time. See Ray Cameron&#13;
take the plunge! LISA, you're a Gem&#13;
Sincerely, Santa.&#13;
GINGER "SHADOW" HELGESON, we love&#13;
you. Chain Groupies&#13;
G.H. Is not the Shadow... guess again!&#13;
B.J. LARSON — We know what B.j! stands&#13;
for. lOP's&#13;
GANG doesn't think as a group.&#13;
ANIMALS ARE ALIVE —You have to search&#13;
for the best!&#13;
SHOOT, reload, then shoot again. Anne Elk&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
GlBSON ES33S guitar, good condition, cherry&#13;
red. Rick 634-8516 evenings.&#13;
'65 OLDS 98 - runs good, am/fm/8 track, $100&#13;
Call 551-9544 after 5:00.&#13;
1975 O PEL 1900 - am/fm, air, new radials.&#13;
Gerry 654-1765.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
WALK, TALK, and assist retired (blind)&#13;
college teacher In straightening out his&#13;
I'brar-y. Earn while you learn. Mature&#13;
Liberal Arts major preferred. Call 694-2251&#13;
for appointment.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
ErT,Vo&#13;
D'f ,&#13;
BIBLICOe&#13;
" Espanil. Jueves. Moln&#13;
D128. A la una.&#13;
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Research&#13;
catalog - 306 pages - 10,278 descriptive&#13;
51,00 (FUNDABLE) BOX&#13;
25097C, Los Angeles, 90025. (213) 477-8226.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization I&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads —&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30$ will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words i&#13;
or less.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE.&#13;
"Saniiation is qualifies&#13;
eX11%1?o&#13;
S^&#13;
PreSr„&#13;
,&#13;
„^^&#13;
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9e&#13;
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ru&#13;
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i W °&#13;
r&#13;
Classification:&#13;
Name.&#13;
I SS No. Ranger&#13;
WLLCD139 &#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of b eer? All you have to do is fill&#13;
out this entry form and pick the most correct winners. Put a check&#13;
mark by your picks and bring the form down to the Ranger office,&#13;
D139 WLLC.&#13;
Buffalo at Miami&#13;
Kansas City at Denver&#13;
New England at Baltimore&#13;
Seattle at N. Y. Jets&#13;
Atlanta at New Orleans&#13;
Dallas at Philadelphia&#13;
Detroit at Chicago&#13;
Los Angeles at San Francisco&#13;
St. Louis at Washington&#13;
Green Bay at Cleveland&#13;
Minnesota at Cincinnati ,&#13;
N. Y. Giants at San Diego&#13;
Tampa Bay at Houston&#13;
Oakland at Pittsburgh ,&#13;
Tie - breaker: will be the total combined points&#13;
scored in the Oakland - Pittsburgh game.&#13;
Last week's winner: Dave Schmierer, 11 correct, 28 points&#13;
Name:——&#13;
S.S. No.&#13;
Rules:&#13;
1) One entry per person&#13;
2) Must be a student at UW-Parkside&#13;
3) Person with most correct picks win (in case of tie, the total&#13;
points will be used as a tie - breaker)&#13;
4) Entry must be clipped from Ranger issue&#13;
5) Ranger members ineligible&#13;
6) Entries must be turned into Ranger office by noon on the&#13;
Friday preceeding the games&#13;
7) Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks&#13;
8) Entries must be legible to be considered&#13;
[ RANGER SPORTS&#13;
Working Out&#13;
Know your limitations&#13;
Tennis awaits state tourney&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The women's tennis team has&#13;
been preparing for their state&#13;
tournament since early September.&#13;
Tournament time has&#13;
finally arrived and the team is&#13;
ready for action against their&#13;
respected Division II opponents&#13;
Carthage, Carroll, Green Bay,&#13;
Milwaukee and Marquette.&#13;
Coach Noreen Goggin plans to&#13;
stick with the line-up that helped&#13;
the team post an 8-6 r ecord. Lisa&#13;
Lindsay, undefeated in Conference&#13;
singles play with a 7-0&#13;
record will play number one&#13;
singles. Kathy Thomas (5-2)&#13;
remains as the number two seed.&#13;
Pam Sumi (3-4) will play as the&#13;
third seed, Nancy Kivi (3-3) will&#13;
play fourth singles, Lori Bleashka&#13;
(3-4) will play at fifth singles with&#13;
either Barb Pruett (1-0) o r Laura&#13;
Bianco (1-3) as the sixth&#13;
singles player.&#13;
Thomas-Kivi (5-1) will again&#13;
play number one doubles with&#13;
Sumi-Lindsay (4-2) p laying as the&#13;
second seeded doubles team.&#13;
Bianco-Bleashka will probably&#13;
compromise the third doubles&#13;
team.&#13;
Goggin expects her team to&#13;
finish high in the standings. "We&#13;
should do pretty good if ev eryone&#13;
plays well. Marquette is expected&#13;
to win with us second. But between&#13;
us and Milwaukee,&#13;
Marquette could be upset. If we&#13;
don't finish first we shouldn't do&#13;
any worse than second." -&#13;
The Rangers finished tuning up&#13;
for state play with victories over&#13;
Oshkosh, River Falls and&#13;
Milwaukee last week. The state&#13;
tournament will be played at&#13;
Appleton today and tomorrow.&#13;
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
BARB PRUETT returns a shot against a River Falls opponent.&#13;
Pruett and the rest of the team play in the state tournament&#13;
Thursday and Friday.&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
by Donald Scherrer&#13;
No man has yet known his&#13;
limitations without first reaching&#13;
his potential.&#13;
In bodybuilding, as in all sports,&#13;
there are physical and mental&#13;
barriers, preset by the mind or&#13;
body. Few people perhaps could&#13;
or would want to match Serge&#13;
Nubret's chest routine, 40 sets of&#13;
20 reps of b ench presses, with 210&#13;
pounds (a total of 800 tim es every&#13;
other day), and a metabolism&#13;
exploding diet of 9 pounds of meat,&#13;
400 grams of protein supplement,&#13;
and 32 glasses of water daily! as&#13;
described in the bodybuilding&#13;
classic Pumping Iron.&#13;
Nor could few people match the&#13;
physical potential of Arnold Schwarzenegger&#13;
at 26 years of age. At&#13;
240 pou nds .he boasted a 57 inch&#13;
chest, 22 inch arms, 28 inch thighs,&#13;
20 inch calves, and an ungodly 31&#13;
inch waist. But then, Arnold's life&#13;
at the time was bodybuilding.&#13;
Whether a person squats until&#13;
he can't walk or does standing calf&#13;
raises until his veins explode will&#13;
not guarantee muscular&#13;
development. Nubret's chest&#13;
routine will not in all probability&#13;
land the 140 pound fellow a chest&#13;
in excess of 50 i nches.&#13;
Modern bodybuilding is increasingly&#13;
becoming more&#13;
scientific. Steroids are monitored&#13;
for their effectiveness, and&#13;
dangers, while mega-vitamin&#13;
therapy is believed to be an&#13;
essential part of training. And&#13;
progressive resistance exercise,&#13;
in all of its many phases, is&#13;
presenting unique results.&#13;
Take Mike Mentzer, for&#13;
example. He claims to be&#13;
currently engaged in a weight&#13;
training regimen of a maximum&#13;
of a bout 6 sets per bodypart. The&#13;
guy looks fantastic to be sure.&#13;
(Remember, he took second to the&#13;
memorable Frank Zane in the 79&#13;
Mr. Olympia contest). His routine&#13;
consists of perhaps three gut&#13;
busting exercises of two sets&#13;
apiece. He is an exclusively&#13;
scientific bodybuilder. The guy&#13;
has no mercy for himself, and he&#13;
does not want to spend half his day&#13;
in the gym training, or overtraining.&#13;
&#13;
His training methods are intensely&#13;
brutal. He employs forced,&#13;
cheat and negative reps to the&#13;
point of d isbelief. Every set is all&#13;
out, beyond failure, though he&#13;
admits that the tendons and joints&#13;
take a severe beating from his&#13;
"heavy duty" methods. He&#13;
believes in getting the most from&#13;
the least. For Mike, training is an&#13;
investment.&#13;
While Mike claims that his ideas&#13;
are the most effective, Arnold&#13;
says they're preposterous. Arnold&#13;
argues that Mike doesn't do&#13;
enough sets or exercises to effectively&#13;
activate growth in all of&#13;
the muscles of a particular region.&#13;
He cites the back as a prime&#13;
example, saying that four to six&#13;
sets of two or three exercises&#13;
would be inadequate for&#13;
proportionate development, since&#13;
the back is comprised of many&#13;
muscle groups.&#13;
As Arnold swears on twenty sets&#13;
for his biceps, Mike may do so on&#13;
only three or four. Mike is very big&#13;
and muscular to be sure. So is&#13;
Arnold. Who is right? Arnold?&#13;
Mike?&#13;
Many factors come into play&#13;
here. Do you have the determination,&#13;
persistence, physical&#13;
structure, training methods,&#13;
equipment, nutrition, and time?&#13;
Do you have the guts? And even&#13;
then, you may end up only half an&#13;
Arnold.&#13;
Know thyself, to be sure.&#13;
ACADEMY OF BATON &amp; DANCE&#13;
headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits, g&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — T ap Shoes —&#13;
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8 Thursday, October 16,1980 Ranger&#13;
Volleyball hopes to visit Sweden&#13;
by Dan Fiore&#13;
The current women's volleyball&#13;
team has the opportunity to travel&#13;
to Sweden this winter break and&#13;
further not only their athletic&#13;
skills but also enrich themselves&#13;
to the Swedish culture.&#13;
The volleyball team needs to&#13;
raise $10,000 by December 26. In&#13;
hopes of raising this money the&#13;
team plans on sponsoring an All&#13;
Parkside Roller Skating Night at&#13;
Red's Roller Rink in Kenosha&#13;
from 7-9:30 p.m. Tickets for the&#13;
October 27th event are $1.50 i n&#13;
advance and $2.00 at the door.&#13;
The team members are also&#13;
selling raffle tickets to raise&#13;
money. The team is sponsoring a&#13;
Merchant raffle and the tickets&#13;
cost one dollar a piece. The&#13;
winning ticket will be drawn&#13;
November 10th. The women are&#13;
also sponsoring a Turkey raffle.&#13;
The turkey raffle tickets cost fifty&#13;
cents a piece.&#13;
If anyone wants to buy tickets&#13;
for these events, tickets can be&#13;
purchased from any team&#13;
member or from Dave Cramer in&#13;
the Ranger office.&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
Improve your&#13;
grades!&#13;
Send $1.00 for your&#13;
306-page, research paper&#13;
catalog. All academic&#13;
subjects.&#13;
Collegiate Research&#13;
P.O. Box 25097H&#13;
Los Angeles, Ca. 90025&#13;
Enclosed is $1.00.&#13;
Please rush the catalog.&#13;
Name!&#13;
Address&#13;
Citv&#13;
State Zip&#13;
We Understand&#13;
Your Needs&#13;
That's Why We Offer&#13;
STUDENT&#13;
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Starting At&#13;
Student Prices&#13;
We Also Have&#13;
LUXO BRAND&#13;
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10 to 6 Friday 10 f09 SundayltoS&#13;
PHYSICAL CONTACT was prevelent throughout the Rangers'1-&#13;
0 v ictory over Marquette.&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Women crushed&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
travelled to East Lansing,&#13;
Michigan last week and played in&#13;
the Michigan State Tournament.&#13;
For Coach Linda Henderson it was&#13;
a reunion with her alma-mater.&#13;
She received her Masters degree&#13;
from Michigan State in 1977 and&#13;
after graduation immediately&#13;
accepted a teaching position at&#13;
Parkside. Unfortunately for her&#13;
and the team it was an unhappy&#13;
reunion.&#13;
The Rangers had a 13-8 match&#13;
record going into the tournament&#13;
and promptly dropped five of&#13;
seven matches. The Rangers&#13;
began the tournament by losing to&#13;
Dayton in three games. They got&#13;
untracked against their next&#13;
opponent, Waterloo (Canada) and&#13;
defeated them in two straight&#13;
games. The Rangers kept things&#13;
going against their third opponent,&#13;
Marquette University and&#13;
defeated the Warriors 15-11, 9-15,&#13;
15-4. They should have packed up&#13;
and departed after those three&#13;
matches because they lost their&#13;
remaining four matches.&#13;
Parkside lost their remaining&#13;
matches to Iowa, Eastern Illinois,&#13;
Central Michigan and to host&#13;
Michigan State. In the second&#13;
game against the host school, the&#13;
Rangers built a 12-3 lead after&#13;
losing the first game. Parkside&#13;
squandered the almost insurmountable&#13;
lead and wound up&#13;
losing the game 15-13.&#13;
After losing the matches a&#13;
distraught Henderson offered no&#13;
excuses but did point out her&#13;
team's shortcomings. "We make&#13;
too many mental errors. We've&#13;
also stopped doing the things that&#13;
made us win. When we do get&#13;
ahead we can't put them away.&#13;
We don't have the killer instinct."&#13;
Although the Rangers had a&#13;
disappointing weekend in the winloss&#13;
column, Henderson did find a&#13;
few bright spots in her team's&#13;
play. "We got good efforts from a&#13;
few players. I was especially&#13;
please with the way Laurie Hess&#13;
played. She's come off the bench&#13;
and has done a fine job of setting.&#13;
She d id a nice job all weekend."&#13;
A few more people are going to&#13;
have to come through if the&#13;
Rangers are to win the state&#13;
tournament this year. Parkside is&#13;
coming up to a very important&#13;
part of their schedule where eight&#13;
of their next 15 opponents are&#13;
conference opponents. How the&#13;
Rangers do the next two weeks&#13;
will determine their seeding for&#13;
the upcoming WWIAC Division II&#13;
Tournament. The Rangers must&#13;
win the state event to advance to&#13;
Regional play because their&#13;
chances of earning an at-large&#13;
berth are almost nonexistent due&#13;
to their current play.&#13;
SPORTS CALENDAR&#13;
Thursday - Friday, Oct. 16 - 17: Tennis at WWIAC Championships&#13;
(Appleton)&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 18: Cross - Country (men and women) at Carthage Invitational&#13;
(11 a. m.); Soccer at Illinois Institute of Technology&#13;
Chicago &amp;J&#13;
'&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 21: Volleyball at North Central College&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 22: Soccer at Purdue - Calumet, Hammond, Indiana&#13;
—\ ^LEADER*]&#13;
Downtown /Kenosha&#13;
Elmwood Plaza Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear /&#13;
Wins two&#13;
Soccer has big weekend&#13;
Photo by Brian Passino&#13;
came out and the top three teams&#13;
in order were Green Bay,&#13;
Milwaukee and Marquette. The&#13;
Marquette Warriors put that&#13;
ranking on the line last Friday&#13;
when they invaded Parkside. In a&#13;
very rough game Parkside&#13;
defeated Marquette 1-0. Freshman&#13;
Jeff Dennehy scored the only&#13;
goal of the game. "I wanted it,"&#13;
Dennehy said of his score. He&#13;
continued, "We outplayed them.&#13;
We played as a team and we&#13;
played good defense. We made a&#13;
name for ourselves with this win."&#13;
If they did make a name for&#13;
themselves, Western Michigan&#13;
didn't hear about it. Parkside lost&#13;
3-0. It was their third game in five&#13;
days and the team may have been&#13;
tired. Team captain Mike Kiefer&#13;
attributed the loss to something&#13;
different. "Our midfield broke&#13;
down due to a lack of concentration.&#13;
We were inconsistent&#13;
in our play. We made stupid&#13;
defensive errors and our stupid&#13;
mistakes led to their goals."&#13;
Kiefer expects the team to jell&#13;
the remainder of the season. "We&#13;
should win the rest of our games&#13;
this year. We just have to get&#13;
consistency and control the&#13;
midfield."&#13;
What Kiefer forgot to mention&#13;
was they needed continued excellence&#13;
in the goalkeeping. Dan&#13;
Opferman, a freshman from&#13;
Quigley South High School in&#13;
Chicago, has done an outstanding&#13;
job in the net. Opferman has&#13;
allowed a stingy 1.5 goals per&#13;
game. Of the eight Ranger victories&#13;
this year, four have been by&#13;
shut-out. A modest Opferman&#13;
would prefer to give credit to his&#13;
teammates. "Our defense shuts&#13;
down our opponents. Our&#13;
fullbacks have done a great job&#13;
and that makes my job all the&#13;
more easy."&#13;
Parkside travels to Chicago this&#13;
weekend to tangle with Illinois&#13;
Institute of Technology.&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The men's soccer team won two&#13;
out of three games last week and&#13;
boosted their season record to 8-4.&#13;
The eight victories ties the&#13;
previous record for the most&#13;
victories in a single season. With&#13;
five games remaining in the&#13;
regular season the Rangers will&#13;
invariably set a new record.&#13;
The Rangers found themselves&#13;
playing an inexperienced&#13;
Lawrence team last week but only&#13;
managed a 2-1 victory. Scoring for&#13;
Parkside was Ralph DeGraff, his&#13;
third of the year, and Bob&#13;
Newstrom. Newstrom's goal was&#13;
his first of the year. He drilled a 25&#13;
yard shot into the upper left hand&#13;
corner of the net and easily beat&#13;
the diving Lawrence goalkeeper,&#13;
bne possible reason the Rangers&#13;
only managed two goals could be&#13;
the abhorable field conditions.&#13;
The cement-hard field didn't allow&#13;
the players to control the ball.&#13;
The state soccer polls recently&#13;
SCOTT GERHARTZ races a Marquette player for possession of the ball.&#13;
Photo by Brian Passino </text>
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              <text>Anderson hopeful</text>
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              <text>tHf University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Photo by Brian Passino&#13;
JOHN ANDERSON, independent candidate for president,&#13;
shakes hands during a primary stop at Parkside, last March.&#13;
Nelson runs on record&#13;
by Susan J. Aluise&#13;
"The most important issue that&#13;
affects the state of Wisconsin and&#13;
the country is the question of&#13;
inflation and jobs. I have been&#13;
arguing for several years and&#13;
introduced legislation on accelerated&#13;
depreciation. It is very&#13;
important that we modernize the&#13;
productive machinery of&#13;
America."&#13;
That is what incumbent Gaylord&#13;
Nelson sees as the priority issue in&#13;
the 1980 race for United States&#13;
Senate in the state of Wisconsin.&#13;
Nelson, who is 64, is almost an&#13;
institution in the U.S. Senate. A&#13;
former two term governor who&#13;
has spent the last 18 years&#13;
representing the State of&#13;
Wisconsin in the U.S. Senate,&#13;
Nelson is engaged in a close race&#13;
for re-election. Recently, his&#13;
challenger, Robert. Hasten,&#13;
charged that there is a 'Nelson&#13;
Gap' between what the senator&#13;
says and how he votes, as&#13;
evidenced by Nelson's vote&#13;
against his own 10-5-3 depreciation&#13;
biU.&#13;
In a recent interview, Nelson&#13;
explained his vote against the bill&#13;
which he had authored and&#13;
outlined several of his positions on&#13;
critical issues facing the state and&#13;
the nation.&#13;
Regarding his vote against 10-5-&#13;
3, Nelson said, "Mr. Hasten knows&#13;
that is a phony argument .&#13;
Before there were any hearings on&#13;
the biU a t all, Senator Schweiker&#13;
picked up my biU, offered it off the&#13;
top of h is head as an amendment&#13;
to another bill on the floor of the&#13;
Senate. There were no hearings,&#13;
maybe 60 minutes of discussion&#13;
... The part that Mr. Hasten&#13;
neglects to tell you it it was offered&#13;
to help auto, and the auto&#13;
industry, both union and&#13;
management, called and said, 'for&#13;
heaven's sake don't accept 10-5-3,&#13;
it will hurt us. Fifty percent of a ll&#13;
our productive machnery now has&#13;
a three year depreciation.' I voted&#13;
against it on two counts. One, you&#13;
shouldn't be offering complicated&#13;
amendments to the tax code on the&#13;
floor of t he Senate without having&#13;
the authorizing committees&#13;
conduct hearings so that the&#13;
public can be heard . . . Also, I&#13;
actually favor something stronger&#13;
than 10-5-3. I favor a three year&#13;
straight line depreciation on&#13;
productive machinery and&#13;
equipment rather than five&#13;
years."&#13;
Two other areas which Nelson&#13;
feels will stimulate growth and&#13;
help the economy are inducing&#13;
savings and reducing taxes for&#13;
small business. "We've got to&#13;
design a program for inducing&#13;
savings in this country," Nelson&#13;
said. "There are a number of&#13;
ways to do it and I've introduced&#13;
legislation on it. We've made&#13;
some modest steps forward by&#13;
exempting a certain amount of&#13;
interest income from taxes. I&#13;
would significantly want to expand&#13;
that inducement. The one&#13;
segment that is overlooked by all&#13;
economists on their dealings with&#13;
the question of p roductivity, jobs,&#13;
and the econony is the small&#13;
business sector. I have induced&#13;
legislation and gotten it passed&#13;
reducing taxes on small business&#13;
on the first $100,000 of income to&#13;
allow them to get capital formation."&#13;
&#13;
On the controversial issue of&#13;
national defense, Nelson sees a&#13;
priority in maintaining a qualified&#13;
volunteer army with adequate&#13;
equipment. "Secretary Brown&#13;
and many of the generals get up&#13;
and say that we have tremendous&#13;
Continued On Page Six&#13;
Anderson hopeful&#13;
by Susan J. Aluise&#13;
Independent presidential&#13;
candidate John B. Ajiderson made&#13;
a last minute campaign shuttle&#13;
between Madison and Milwaukee&#13;
Monday, looking as confident of&#13;
victory as if he were leading in the&#13;
polls.&#13;
But he is not. With the latest&#13;
Milwaukee Journal poll showing&#13;
Anderson with 8 per cent of the&#13;
vote in the state of Wisconsin,&#13;
realistic hopes of victory would&#13;
seem rather slim. At a Madison&#13;
press conferrence, however,&#13;
Anderson became irritated at a&#13;
question relating to his low&#13;
standing in the polls. "Forty-three&#13;
per cent of Gov. Reagan's supporters&#13;
are voting against Carter&#13;
and almost an equal number, 37%,&#13;
of C arter's supporters are voting&#13;
against Reagan," Anderson said.&#13;
"I need to convince these people&#13;
that a vote for Anderson and&#13;
Lucey is a way of repressing&#13;
dissatisfaction with both of these&#13;
candidates and at the same time&#13;
casting a positive vote for a ticket&#13;
that has a better program for&#13;
foreign affairs and domestic affairs&#13;
in this country."&#13;
The high point in the Madison&#13;
visit was a 30 minute rally on the&#13;
south steps of the Capitol. Anderson&#13;
was heckled by antinuclear&#13;
demonstrators but the&#13;
heckling was offset by vocal&#13;
Anderson supporters chanting&#13;
"JBA."&#13;
Speaking to a crowd of about&#13;
1100, Anderson again praised&#13;
running mate Patrick Lucey as&#13;
"an asset to the campaign and a&#13;
fine man."&#13;
Anderson also told reporters&#13;
that he had received a briefing&#13;
from the White House on the&#13;
Iranian hostage issue, but that&#13;
there were currently no&#13;
negotiations between&#13;
Washington and Tehran.&#13;
Anderson feels that any&#13;
negotiations, especially concerning&#13;
an arms for hostage&#13;
trade, should be presented to the&#13;
Anderson people and should carry&#13;
specific conditions in order to&#13;
protect other Arab governments&#13;
and U.S. forces in the Persian&#13;
Gulf.&#13;
Anderson is also "optimistic"&#13;
about his scheduled appearance in&#13;
the Carter - Reagan debate&#13;
Tuesday by a way of de layed feed&#13;
through Cable News Network.&#13;
Anderson will be at Constitution&#13;
Hall in Washington giving his&#13;
responses to the questions asked&#13;
to Carter and Reagan.&#13;
From Madison, Anderson flew&#13;
down to Milwaukee, where he&#13;
gave a 30 minute speak to clergy&#13;
and laity at the Summerfield&#13;
United Methodist Church. After&#13;
outlining some of h is positions on&#13;
issues, such as the 50-cent-pergallon&#13;
gasoline tax, Anderson&#13;
slightly miffed his audience by&#13;
emotionally declaring that he was&#13;
opposed to a constitution of&#13;
abortion. "I am in favor of free&#13;
choice." Anderson said. "And&#13;
however unpopular my position&#13;
may be, I cannot agree with an&#13;
amendment which would inflect&#13;
motherhood on half of our&#13;
population."&#13;
Anderson also spoke out against&#13;
the "Moral Majority" and other&#13;
groups that only certain candidates&#13;
are "biblically favorable"&#13;
and in favor of gun control...&#13;
From Summerfield, Anderson&#13;
travelled to Marquette University&#13;
for a speech and a question and&#13;
answer session.&#13;
Anderson was incensed at the&#13;
question by a Marquette law&#13;
student which referred to Anderson's&#13;
many switchbacks and&#13;
reversals on the issues over the&#13;
last few years, citing the KempRoth&#13;
tax bill and National Health&#13;
Insurance as examples. "I&#13;
haven't submitted three economic&#13;
programs to Congress in eight&#13;
months as Jimmy Carter did,"&#13;
Anderson said, "Don't talk to me&#13;
about change or flip-flop on the&#13;
part of a candidate who has&#13;
established a world's record for&#13;
that goal."&#13;
In another question, questioning&#13;
the Trilateral Commission, Anderson&#13;
explained, "I was invited&#13;
to join the Trilateral Commission&#13;
at the same time others in the&#13;
House and Senate were asked to&#13;
join. I participated in a number of&#13;
those sessions and very frankly, I&#13;
could never understand the basis&#13;
of the arguement that this&#13;
represented a secret conspiratorial&#13;
effort to change the&#13;
World Of to change hiatory. There&#13;
were never any resolutions&#13;
adopted. There were never any&#13;
formal actions taken that were in&#13;
any way binding on any of the&#13;
people who went to those&#13;
meetings. All of the documents&#13;
are freely available over the&#13;
counter...I don't know how influential&#13;
thay could have been in&#13;
carrying out a conspiracy if indeed&#13;
there was one."&#13;
Bush attacks Carter&#13;
by Susan J. Aluise&#13;
Republican vice presidential&#13;
nominee George Bush gave a&#13;
rousing speech Friday at a $100 a&#13;
plate dinner at Milwaukee's&#13;
Mecca.&#13;
Bush, who was speaking to an&#13;
audience of about 1,500&#13;
Republicans, went on the attack&#13;
against Jimmy Carter's economic&#13;
policies. "We've tried it their&#13;
way," said Bush. "They've had&#13;
their chance. Jimmy Carter&#13;
controls both houses of Congress.&#13;
He has had five separate&#13;
economic programs and he has&#13;
miserably failed the American&#13;
people."&#13;
Supporting the statement that&#13;
Carter's economic policy has&#13;
floundered, Bush cited the 1% rise&#13;
in the Consumer Price Index&#13;
reported Friday. "In terms of&#13;
economic statistics", Bush said,&#13;
"Carter and Mondale have been&#13;
insisting that things are better.&#13;
Now today, we have new statistics&#13;
which show the CPI is up again&#13;
and people are discouraged again.&#13;
And in view of Carter's inept&#13;
handling of the economy, (Press&#13;
Secretary) Jody Powell, who has&#13;
no experience in economic&#13;
matters, tries to tell us that&#13;
Ronald Reagan will not be a good&#13;
president."&#13;
"I do concede this," Bush&#13;
continued, "that the Carter people&#13;
do have a great deal of experience&#13;
in recognizing what an inept&#13;
president is."&#13;
Speaking of t he sluggishness of&#13;
the Wisconsin rail freight&#13;
business, Bush observed that "in&#13;
Wisconsin, more people are&#13;
getting loaded than freight cars."&#13;
Bush also turned one of Carter's&#13;
own phrases against him; the&#13;
"misery index," which is the&#13;
combination of both inflation and&#13;
unemployment. "When Jimmy&#13;
Carter was running for president&#13;
in 1976, he promised to reduce the&#13;
so-called "misery index to 8%.&#13;
When Gerald Ford was in office it&#13;
was 12.5%. In March of 1980, it&#13;
was 24%. That is equivilent to the&#13;
debts during the great&#13;
depression."&#13;
On t axes, Bush maintaned that&#13;
the U.S. "has got to start&#13;
producing. The tax burden now is&#13;
21.9% of total productivity. That is&#13;
far too much. We need to&#13;
stimulate investment, reduce&#13;
individual taxes and limit federal&#13;
spending. There are no quick fix&#13;
solutions."&#13;
Bush proposes creating&#13;
Economic Zones within high&#13;
unemployment, urban areas to&#13;
encourage business to expand in&#13;
those areas. He sees private&#13;
sector jobs as "better able to offer&#13;
hope to people rather than public&#13;
sector, make work jobs that dash&#13;
all hope once the federal funding&#13;
runs out."&#13;
In foreign policy matters, Bush&#13;
sees the critical need for immediately&#13;
abandoning SALT II&#13;
and beginning negotiations on a&#13;
SALT III agreement. "SALT II is&#13;
not the answer," Bush said, "We&#13;
must be prepared to negotiate a&#13;
real agreement, a SALT II, which&#13;
would be a real verifiable&#13;
reduction. This concern will drive&#13;
a Reagan administration, because&#13;
Ronald Reagan feels, as I feel,&#13;
that the United States must not&#13;
enter an agreement which is&#13;
inequitable and unverifiable."&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• From the Parking Lot:&#13;
Trick or treat&#13;
• Cheap, trashy movies&#13;
• Volleyball dominates tourney &#13;
Thursday, October 30,1980 RANGER&#13;
A choice now has to be made&#13;
Tuesday's presidential debate&#13;
between Jimmy Carter and&#13;
Ronald Reagan was, thankfully,&#13;
the beginning of the end of this&#13;
excruciatingly long campaign.&#13;
The reason both candidates&#13;
finally agreed to debate face to&#13;
face was in order to bring their&#13;
messages to the large number of&#13;
undecided voters. Neither Carter&#13;
nor Reagan have strong enough&#13;
support to coast to victory on&#13;
November 4; they have to work&#13;
hard for every vote.&#13;
The Carter-Reagan debate was&#13;
labeled the most decisive confrontation&#13;
of this campaign due to&#13;
the many voters who had yet to&#13;
make up their minds by the time&#13;
of the debate. So did either of them&#13;
gain anything from the debate?&#13;
And if s o, who gained more?&#13;
I believe there was no clear&#13;
winner. Both Carter and Reagan&#13;
gained on certain points. Carter&#13;
improved his standing by finally&#13;
debating, doing a good job of it&#13;
without continuing his 'mean'&#13;
campaign against Reagan, and,&#13;
due to his incumbency, appearing&#13;
to be more knowledgeable than&#13;
his opponent. Reagan, on the other&#13;
hand, gained by not being shot&#13;
down by Carter and by not&#13;
allowing himself appear to be&#13;
made of non-presidential&#13;
material.&#13;
Neither Carter nor Reagan&#13;
made anv maior blunders. They&#13;
both answered the questions as&#13;
they had strategically planned.&#13;
The first question of the debate&#13;
was about the war and peace&#13;
issue. Reagan, speaking first,&#13;
seemed uncharacteristically&#13;
uptight and gave verba tism excerpts&#13;
of past campaign speeches.&#13;
"We've never gotten into war&#13;
because we've been too strong,"&#13;
said Reagan.&#13;
Carter's first response wasn't&#13;
any better. All he did was give the&#13;
same "I'm smarter now" speech.&#13;
He started his first two responses&#13;
by reminding us that he is the&#13;
President of the United States.&#13;
Carter, being the crafty politician&#13;
he has shown himself to be, knows&#13;
how to effectively use his incumbency&#13;
to his best advantage.&#13;
But he was smart enough not to&#13;
overstate himself as President&#13;
throughout the debate.&#13;
Both candidates settled down&#13;
during the second question,&#13;
dealing with economic issues.&#13;
Said Reagan, "We don't have&#13;
inflation because the people live&#13;
too well. "We have inflation&#13;
because the government is living&#13;
too well."&#13;
When asked how he specifically&#13;
plans on massively cutting taxes,&#13;
increasing defense spending and&#13;
balancing the budget, Reagan&#13;
answered, "I've got a task force&#13;
working on it." That, for some&#13;
reason, wasn't specific enough for&#13;
me. (But that type of political&#13;
"answering" was evident on both&#13;
sides throughout the debate.)&#13;
Then Reagan continued. "I know I&#13;
can do it. I did it in California."&#13;
That isn't exactly true. While&#13;
Reagan was governor of&#13;
California, the largest tax increase&#13;
in the state's history was&#13;
instituted. Sure, many millions of&#13;
dollars were returned to the&#13;
taxpayers, as Reagan boasts. But&#13;
the increase was three times as&#13;
much as the taxpayers got back.&#13;
And that same promise of&#13;
returning tax money to the people&#13;
is a stronghold promise of&#13;
Reagan's - it was before he was&#13;
governor, too. So why should we&#13;
believe him this time?&#13;
A column of&#13;
personal opinion&#13;
by&#13;
by Ken Meyer, Editor&#13;
The candidates' responses to the&#13;
third question were memorable&#13;
for two reasons: Reagan&#13;
overacted one of the surprisingly&#13;
few times of t he evening, leaving&#13;
one waiting for background music&#13;
to begin at any second; and Carter&#13;
began a habit that bothered me&#13;
throughout the debate — his eyes&#13;
bugged out whenever he emphasized&#13;
a word or phrase.&#13;
The fourth question posed to the&#13;
candidates, how to stop any future&#13;
terrorism against the United&#13;
States initiated a barrage of&#13;
Carter statements questioning&#13;
Reagan's view of the military.&#13;
&#13;
The topic than became arms&#13;
control. Both Carter and Reagan&#13;
want to end the nuclear arms&#13;
race, but have different ways of&#13;
doing so. Reagan wants to build up&#13;
our strength to the point that&#13;
the Soviets would be induced&#13;
to agree on a treaty&#13;
favorable to the U. S. Carter,&#13;
however, wants to get SALT II&#13;
through the so-far-reluctant&#13;
Congress.&#13;
The candidates also differed on&#13;
the issue of energy. Carter wants&#13;
to increase the use of synthetic&#13;
fuels, solar energy and other&#13;
alternative sources. Reagan,&#13;
though, said America is "energy&#13;
rich" and the major problem is&#13;
the vast number of government&#13;
regulations. I think Reagan made&#13;
a mistake by talking slightly&#13;
positive on the topic of nuclear&#13;
power, complaining that 32 out of&#13;
36 planned nuclear plants never&#13;
opened because of the hindering&#13;
government regulations.&#13;
The closing question to the&#13;
candidates was needlessly included.&#13;
Barbara Walters (of&#13;
course!) asked them why their&#13;
opponent was the worse candidate.&#13;
We've been hearing all of&#13;
those arguments since the&#13;
campaign began, but we got to&#13;
hear it all over again.&#13;
Said Carter: Reagan's approach&#13;
to control of nuclear&#13;
weaponry is his biggest weakness&#13;
Carter worries about Reagan's&#13;
use of American power — the lack&#13;
of diplomatic power and the use of&#13;
force.&#13;
Said Reagan: Carter believes&#13;
that the solutions to the problems&#13;
are found in federal government&#13;
programs. Reagan wants more&#13;
power granted to the state and&#13;
local levels.&#13;
Both Carter and Reagan continued&#13;
their attacks during their&#13;
closing statements. "I've had to&#13;
make thousands of decisions"&#13;
said the presidential-sounding&#13;
President. He then in a&#13;
roundabout way, cast a doubt on&#13;
the assumption that a Reagan&#13;
administration wouldn't be too&#13;
bad because Reagan picks good&#13;
experts to be around him. "Experts&#13;
will be divided 50-50. The&#13;
final decision has to be made by&#13;
the man in the Oval Office." said&#13;
Carter.&#13;
Reagan's closing statements&#13;
were aimed towards the past four&#13;
years of the Carter administration.&#13;
"Are you better off&#13;
than you were four years ago?"&#13;
Reagan asked. "Is America as&#13;
respected throughout the world as&#13;
four years ago?" Reagan then&#13;
pledged "to take the government&#13;
off the backs of th e people and let&#13;
them loose."&#13;
And that was it. Both of the&#13;
candidates expressed their different&#13;
positions on the issues&#13;
without making any serious&#13;
mistakes and left the choice up to&#13;
the voters. So now it's only&#13;
up to everybody to vote foi the&#13;
candidate of their choice on&#13;
November 4. It's important to&#13;
do so.&#13;
Waste di&#13;
by Bill Bobbins&#13;
"They're insane!" said Victor&#13;
Yannacone.&#13;
Yannacone, perhaps the&#13;
nation's foremost legal expert on&#13;
environmental affairs, was&#13;
referring to Racine Land&#13;
Reclamation Ltd.'s procedure for&#13;
disposing of hazardous and toxic&#13;
wastes. Land Reclamation is a&#13;
privately owned landfill site&#13;
located at 2250 S. Green Bay Road.&#13;
It is one of three areas in&#13;
Wisconsin licensed to dispose of&#13;
hazardous materials, substances&#13;
classified as flammable,&#13;
corrosive and toxic.&#13;
Yannacone, 44, gave an informal&#13;
lecture in Kenosha Sept.&#13;
29. The lecture was sponsored by&#13;
Vietnam Veterans Still Suffering&#13;
and Vietnam Veterans Against the&#13;
War, two groups currently united&#13;
in a massive, multi-billion dollar&#13;
lawsuit against at least six major&#13;
chemical corporations.&#13;
The suit charges that the corr&#13;
contamination&#13;
porations knowingly manufactured&#13;
a substance dangerous to&#13;
their health and sold the substance&#13;
to the U.S. government.&#13;
The product: Agent Orange.&#13;
The veterans are claiming they&#13;
suffered, and are suffering, from&#13;
toxic exposure to that highly&#13;
potent herbicide, used in Vietnam&#13;
to destroy foliage which might&#13;
provide comoflage to the enemy.&#13;
Yannacone, a celebrated attorney&#13;
in such cases, is the central force&#13;
behind the "largest litigation of its&#13;
kind in the nation's history."&#13;
One of the extremely toxic&#13;
chemicals found in Agent Orange,&#13;
2, 4, 5-T, has been dumped on at&#13;
least two documented occasions at&#13;
Land Reclamation Ltd. Glenn&#13;
Oakes, owner of the site, "absolutely"&#13;
denies that he ever&#13;
knowingly accepted toxic 2,4,5-T.&#13;
(He received legal authorization&#13;
to do so in 1975.) But five weeks&#13;
ago it was reported that 64 gallons&#13;
of the herbicide was dumped at&#13;
Land Reclamation in May 1979.&#13;
Department of Natural Resources&#13;
(DNR) officials investigating the&#13;
incident attributed the unprecedented&#13;
dumping to "a&#13;
record-keeping error."&#13;
However, James Reyburn, a&#13;
Hazardous Waste Specialist with&#13;
the Wisconsin DNR, provided&#13;
contradictory information.&#13;
According to Reyburn, "Oakes&#13;
has knowingly received 2, 4, 5-T at&#13;
his site." Reyburn said that on&#13;
Jan. 12, 1979 Land Reclamation&#13;
accepted 32 gallons of the toxic 2,&#13;
4, 5-T. The ticket number for the&#13;
dumping is 68664. The ticket is&#13;
signed by Land Reclamation&#13;
officials. When asked who brought&#13;
the chemical to Land Reclamation&#13;
for dumping in the first place,&#13;
Reyburn replied, "The Dept. of&#13;
Natural Resources."&#13;
In an interview, Victor Yannacone&#13;
was informed that&#13;
Wisconsin's DNR had been using&#13;
2,4,5-T. He reacted with astonishment.&#13;
&#13;
"I can't believe the Wisconsin&#13;
DNR has deteriorated to that&#13;
level," he said. "This state's DNR&#13;
was once the best in the country."&#13;
Yannacone was a major force in&#13;
instituting legislation to ban the&#13;
use of DDT in Wisconsin, and&#13;
other states, during the late&#13;
sixties.&#13;
James Reyburn said the DNR&#13;
has used 2, 4, 5-T t o exterminate&#13;
"breadloaf bush," a threat to&#13;
Wisconsin's "desired" forestry&#13;
vegetation. He also indicated that&#13;
"on rare occasions, the DNR has&#13;
taken 2, 4, 5-T to Land&#13;
Reclamation for dumping."&#13;
'The procedure for depositing 2,&#13;
4, 5-T and other hazardous&#13;
materials, is called the codisposal&#13;
method," Reyburn explained.&#13;
"The substance is drained into a&#13;
pit containing a highly dense soilbase&#13;
and other general refuse&#13;
which work to break down the&#13;
components in the toxic substance."&#13;
It takes about 30 days to&#13;
break down 2, 4, 5-T, said&#13;
Reyburn. "The hazards (of&#13;
contaminating water supplies)&#13;
are very slight using the&#13;
codisposal method," he said.&#13;
Yannacone was asked to give&#13;
his opinion of the codisposal&#13;
method. His reply: "Hogwash.&#13;
The oily way to safely dispose of&#13;
2, 4, 5-T or any otter form of&#13;
dioxin (the toxic agent found in 2,&#13;
4, 5-T) is through incineration.&#13;
Burn it and burn it good."&#13;
"The City of Racine should go to&#13;
court immediately and obtain an&#13;
injunction to stop this insanity,"&#13;
he said. "Any disposal practice&#13;
which involves the burial of toxic&#13;
wastes in groundwater recharge&#13;
areas such as Lake Michigan is an&#13;
outrage."&#13;
According to an Environmental&#13;
Protection Agency federal official,&#13;
EPA is currently investigating&#13;
"possible contamination&#13;
of nearby wetland.&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
oWTWWWWW&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
Brian Felland Executive Business Manager&#13;
Dan Galbraith Business Manager&#13;
Sue Michetti News Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Dave Cramer ........ Sports Editor&#13;
Mike Farreil, Bruce Preston ................ Advertising Managers&#13;
STAFF ^ „&#13;
Pete Cramer, Mark Christiansen, Patty DeLuisa, Do"9&#13;
Edenhauser, Ginger Helgeson, Mike Holmdohl, Carol Klees, Gary&#13;
Ledger, Dan McCormack, Lori Meyer, Christine O'Neill, Brian&#13;
Passino, Joe Ripp, Bill Stougaard&#13;
is writ,en and edited by students of UW-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
KXnThiJi its edi,orial policy and content. , holidays,&#13;
R A wr M f&#13;
Ve7 ThursdaV during the academic year except during breaks and ho&#13;
wri«»5^ Printed by the Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wiscons .&#13;
All rnnSr&#13;
1 ss' ion is required for reprintof anyportlonof RANGER. jyj.&#13;
p rkunf P&#13;
,°&#13;
n&lt;!enu&#13;
ce should be addressed to: Parkslde Ranger, WLLC D139,&#13;
Parkslde, Kenosha, Wl 53141, J&#13;
defamatory content privi,e9es in Ousting to print letters which con,a &#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 30,1980 3&#13;
World political economy assessed&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
Donald Emmerson, a Yale&#13;
graduate and political science&#13;
professor at UW - Ma dison, spoke&#13;
on "The U. S. in the World&#13;
Economy: The Empire Strikes&#13;
Back" at the Wisconsin Political&#13;
Science Association Convention&#13;
held here October 10.&#13;
Emmerson stated that there are&#13;
three main challenges in the U. S.&#13;
political economy: recognizing&#13;
interdependence, dealing with the&#13;
problem of politization of interdependence,&#13;
and formulating a&#13;
scholarly analysis of interdependence.&#13;
&#13;
He said that the U. S. needs to&#13;
recognize interdependence with&#13;
the rest of the world. Emmerson&#13;
stressed the importance of the&#13;
sheer force of t he world economy.&#13;
"Interdependence once had&#13;
benign connotations," Emmerson&#13;
stated. This was before chaotic&#13;
economic conditons proved that it&#13;
has implications extending to&#13;
America's gas lines. He continued&#13;
that although Americans once&#13;
made a virtue of is olationism, the&#13;
U. S. is not strong enough to be&#13;
isolationist any longer.&#13;
Emmerson said toe U. S. must&#13;
deal with the problem of&#13;
politization of interdependence.&#13;
He stated that America faces a&#13;
one - country - one - vote&#13;
challenge from developing&#13;
countries directed at the&#13;
American controlling forces of the&#13;
World Bank. This becomes accentuated&#13;
as capital accumulates&#13;
in OPEC countries.&#13;
"The success stories of&#13;
aggregate economic growith . . .&#13;
. (in developing countries) threaten&#13;
American economic interests,"&#13;
Emmerson stated. "Japanese&#13;
production of automobiles will&#13;
exceed that of the U. S. for the&#13;
first time in 1980."&#13;
Emmerson noted increased&#13;
involvement of the Soviet Union in&#13;
the world economy. He stated, "If&#13;
the CIA is right and the Soviet&#13;
Union's energy position&#13;
deteriorates, it will be terribly&#13;
important." He explained that the&#13;
Soviet Union could become an&#13;
economic force to be contended&#13;
with should it be forced to depend&#13;
on raw resources from the third&#13;
world.&#13;
Emmerson pointed out that&#13;
This year's directories cost&#13;
The recent 4.4 % budget cut has&#13;
changed the distribution of&#13;
campus telephone directories this&#13;
year. Even though advertising is&#13;
sold, printing costs for the usual&#13;
unlimited free distribution would&#13;
cost the University more than&#13;
$1,000.&#13;
This year the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association has&#13;
offered to take responsibility for&#13;
printing and distributing the&#13;
Gay&#13;
conference&#13;
to be held&#13;
The Midwest Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Communication Network, an&#13;
organization springing from the&#13;
efforts of last year's national&#13;
march committees, will hold its&#13;
regional conference October 31st,&#13;
November 1-2, at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin in Milwaukee.&#13;
Anyone interested in attending&#13;
or simply wanting more information&#13;
should contact the Gay&#13;
Community at UW-M, Union Box&#13;
251, Milw ., Wi. 53201 or call (414)&#13;
963-6555.&#13;
telephone directories. One free&#13;
copy will be provided for each&#13;
campus phone and for all appropriate&#13;
outside agencies. PSGA&#13;
will make additional copies&#13;
available through the Information&#13;
Center in the Union. These&#13;
directories will cost $1.00 per&#13;
copy.&#13;
PSGA will pay for the cost of&#13;
printing from revenue received&#13;
from the sale of additional&#13;
directories. Once printing costs&#13;
are recovered, all profits will be&#13;
donated to a new student&#13;
emergency loan fund which will&#13;
be administered by the campus&#13;
Financial Aids office. This will&#13;
provide a service to students&#13;
which has been needed for&#13;
sometime.&#13;
SOCIAL 1ST PARTY ~&#13;
. OF WISCONSIN&#13;
VOTE SOCIALIST IN 1980&#13;
Support national health care, public&#13;
ownership of utilities and maior Industries,&#13;
and an end to draft registration&#13;
and military buildup. We've been par&#13;
ticipants in Wisconsin politics since 1900.&#13;
For more information contact:&#13;
SOCIALIST PARTYOF WISCONSIN&#13;
P.O.BOX 9288S&#13;
Milwaukee, WI 53202&#13;
RANGER photo by Sue Michetti&#13;
DONALD EMMERSON&#13;
Poland is deeply in debt and that&#13;
China is starting to follow into&#13;
debt and dependency.&#13;
The main problem Emmerson&#13;
sees in making a scholarly&#13;
analysis is that "the vocabulary of&#13;
American social science is not up&#13;
to the task of a new situation." He&#13;
cites the fact that dependence has&#13;
become a catchword in recent&#13;
works.&#13;
"We must treat the world as a&#13;
system, not just parts. We must&#13;
not ignore the environment outside&#13;
of the parts," Emmerson&#13;
said. "The standard definition of&#13;
the public - private sector&#13;
economies on a national scale&#13;
reflect increased penetration of&#13;
the State into the economy&#13;
regardless of ideology." He said&#13;
that this posed a question of&#13;
control over allocation of&#13;
resources.&#13;
Emmerson asked if Americans&#13;
are making an error of a ssuming&#13;
primacy of individual motives.&#13;
"How bureaucratic does the&#13;
State have to be before we can&#13;
deny the existence of the State?"&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha.&#13;
Elmwood Plaza Racine&#13;
Shop both locations far men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kehosha for women's wear&#13;
Third world aid analyzed&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
Lawrence Gould, a Purdue&#13;
graduate and professor of political&#13;
science at UW-Milwaukee, spoke&#13;
on "The Determinants of&#13;
Multilateral Aid Allocation" at the&#13;
Wisconsin Political Science&#13;
Association Convention held here&#13;
October 10.&#13;
Gould said that both the Soviet&#13;
Union and the U. S. recognize the&#13;
need for cooperation with&#13;
developing countries. He said that&#13;
the influence of third world&#13;
countries might be important for&#13;
the survival of advanced industrial&#13;
societies. However, Gould&#13;
suggested that a problem seems&#13;
to center around economics.&#13;
After the energy crisis of 1973&#13;
and OPEC's newfound power over&#13;
the control of the vital resource of&#13;
oil, Gould said, the third world&#13;
shocked the industrial nations into&#13;
realizing that either transformation&#13;
or reform is needed.&#13;
Since 1974, Gould has noticed that&#13;
negotiations of world affairs seem&#13;
to involve much more: there is a&#13;
call for a new order which will&#13;
permit the less developed countries&#13;
to have more control.&#13;
Gould suggested that at the core&#13;
of this problem is a power struggle&#13;
over how control and apportionment&#13;
will be made in a new&#13;
world order. He said that this is&#13;
not just a plea from the third&#13;
world for economic well - being,&#13;
but a power struggle over the&#13;
control of future economic institutions.&#13;
&#13;
Another problem that Gould&#13;
found involved the extreme&#13;
centralization of the financial&#13;
institutions. The World Bank&#13;
located in Washington, D. C. has&#13;
tremendous power over the fate of&#13;
nations. Gould feels that centralization&#13;
of financial power&#13;
tends to permit less response to&#13;
the needs of dev eloping countries.&#13;
Gould feels that this leads to an&#13;
irresponsible attitude toward the&#13;
needs of underdeveloped countries.&#13;
This attitude may be viewed&#13;
as a design to keep them subordinate.&#13;
&#13;
|po|i&#13;
S^IALKgOHT&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
Earn your&#13;
degree&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
and your&#13;
commission&#13;
at Marquette&#13;
Army ROTC is a leadership development&#13;
program on college campuses&#13;
throughout the country. It prepares&#13;
students for responsible positions&#13;
as officers in the active Army&#13;
and Reserves.&#13;
Even though Army ROTC is not&#13;
available on your campus, you can&#13;
take the courses at ours.&#13;
You'll get the same management&#13;
training and experience that students&#13;
here get. You'll get the same&#13;
opportunities for scholarships and&#13;
the same financial benefits during&#13;
your junior and senior years ($100&#13;
per month, up to 20 months).&#13;
So while you earn your chosen degree&#13;
at your college, you can earn&#13;
your officer's commission at ours.&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
LEARN WHAT IT TAKES TO LEAD&#13;
For details, contact:&#13;
Enrollment Officer&#13;
Military Science Dept.&#13;
Marquette U.&#13;
1-224-7195 &#13;
4 Thursday, October 30,1980 RANGER&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phon* 654-0774&#13;
AU. MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
NUMEROUS guitar players are now evident in the halls of P arkside.&#13;
Review&#13;
Photo by Brian Passino&#13;
'The River" runs smooth&#13;
by Carol Klees&#13;
Bruce Springsteen's new double&#13;
album, "The River" has proven&#13;
itself in my mind to be one of the&#13;
best releases of the season. Not&#13;
only is the music fresh, it is also&#13;
lively and original. Amidst so&#13;
many dime - a - dozen bands,&#13;
Springsteen's grit is a refreshing&#13;
change, and something no one else&#13;
has succeeded in imitating.&#13;
The cuts on "The River" are&#13;
consistently good; I didn't hear a&#13;
song that I didn't like, and that'-a&#13;
rare. It takes a true artist to&#13;
arrange recordings to their best&#13;
advantage in an album. This is&#13;
almost as important as what&#13;
songs are included. The wrong&#13;
songs in the wrong places don't&#13;
sound as good as they could. "The&#13;
River" opens in perfect form with&#13;
a strong, fast-paced number,&#13;
"The Ties That Bind," and winds&#13;
down almost perfectly to a quietly&#13;
emotional finish in "Wreck on the&#13;
Highway."&#13;
On the surface, Springsteen&#13;
sounds like any other rock and roll&#13;
fool singing about fast cars and&#13;
faster girls, but beneath the&#13;
overall tough-guy atmosphere of&#13;
his lyrics lies a certain class that's&#13;
hard to define. He speaks of life in&#13;
working America and the mentality&#13;
of unionized factory&#13;
workers. If you changed Arlo&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654-2932&#13;
Guthrie into a rock musician,&#13;
you'd come pretty close to having&#13;
Springsteen. The people in his&#13;
songs are trying to break from the&#13;
life they know they will fall into.&#13;
He makes resignation to a middle&#13;
class existence a little easier to&#13;
swallow with honest lyrics and&#13;
seemly a good deal of personal&#13;
experience.&#13;
Springsteen's songs aren't as&#13;
bitter as they are bittersweet. He&#13;
appeals mainly to the middle class&#13;
-hefaus^..M&amp;-..mu^„,i§ geared&#13;
towards the middle class working&#13;
man. His tunes aren't catchy or&#13;
supercharged, but they are sincere,&#13;
strong anthems in themselves,&#13;
and filled with a quiet&#13;
strength unlike anything I have&#13;
encountered. His music is intense&#13;
without being depressing. On the&#13;
contrary, the music of "The&#13;
River" is vibrant with life, and&#13;
guaranteed to make some converts&#13;
out of those who don't&#13;
generally listen to Springsteen.&#13;
Arts &amp; crafts&#13;
show sold out&#13;
Exhibition space for the&#13;
Parkside Arts and Crafts Fair to&#13;
be held on campus Dec. 6 has been&#13;
sold out, sponsers announced&#13;
today. Susan Wesley said that the&#13;
capacity of 130 vendor spaces had&#13;
been assigned, with many more on&#13;
the waiting list.&#13;
WIN A PAIR OF RANGER&#13;
SEASON BASKETBALL&#13;
TICKETS&#13;
Name flhe 1981 Winfler Carnival&#13;
1981 WINTER CARNIVAL THEME&#13;
Carnival Theme Name&#13;
Student Name.&#13;
— R UL E S&amp; INFORMATI ON —&#13;
• Winter Carnival will be held Feb. 9 - 1 3,&#13;
1981.&#13;
• Must be a Parkside student to enter.&#13;
• Deadline: Friday noon, Nov. 7&#13;
• In case ot a tie, a drawing will be held.&#13;
• Winner will be announced in the Nov. 20&#13;
issue of RANGER.&#13;
• Decision of Winter Carnival Committee&#13;
is final.&#13;
• Entries may be dropped off in the&#13;
RANGER office, WLLC D139 next to the&#13;
coffee shoppe.&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
On Halloween, my sisters and I&#13;
always had to have store-bought,&#13;
shiny, and highly flammable&#13;
costumes. Home-made ghost&#13;
costumes, which some of t he less&#13;
status-conscious mothers, made&#13;
for their less fortunate children&#13;
out of spotted and yellowed sheets,&#13;
just would not do. My sisters and I&#13;
had to have the kind of c ostumes&#13;
that were too tight to fit over a&#13;
warm coat. We had to have&#13;
costumes that glowed in broad&#13;
daylight, and looked like they&#13;
were made of t in foil at night. We&#13;
had to be cool.&#13;
We alternately begged, whined,&#13;
and demanded that our mother&#13;
buy our costumes weeks before&#13;
the Big Event, and then spent all&#13;
our free time until October 31&#13;
bickering over whose costume&#13;
was the neatest, whose mask fit&#13;
who best, and how we would&#13;
divide up our Halloween candy.&#13;
We could pool our candy and split&#13;
the chocolate bars even-steven&#13;
between the three of us, keep&#13;
individual profits separate, or&#13;
allow our mother to intervene in&#13;
the inevitable disputes and&#13;
allocate our candy as she saw fit.&#13;
Being far-sighted children, we&#13;
usually decided to reserve a&#13;
portion of our net profits for Mom,&#13;
who charged a modest fee for her&#13;
services as arbitrator. I was&#13;
partial to dark chocolate and Mom&#13;
was not, so her fee didn't bother&#13;
me a bit. My sisters were less&#13;
happy about giving up their&#13;
candies after trudging around in&#13;
the dark and begging for them,&#13;
but they were younger than me&#13;
and smaller in stature, so they&#13;
kept quiet.&#13;
Of course, our mother was&#13;
pretty happy with the arbitration&#13;
method because she was too&#13;
grown-up to embarrass herself by&#13;
going around the neighborhood&#13;
and knocking on doors.&#13;
One year, Mom did try to make&#13;
us dump all our candy into one big&#13;
bowl. The plan was to dole it out a&#13;
few pieces at a crack so we&#13;
wouldn't pig it all on November 1,&#13;
but I found the bowl the same&#13;
night she appropriated our bags&#13;
and combined the contents&#13;
against our wills. It was underneath&#13;
the packages she had&#13;
hidden in the basement after an&#13;
early Christmas shopping trip to&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
I got caught the next day. After&#13;
all, I was the only one of the&#13;
children who was sick, and Mom's&#13;
suspicions were confimed when&#13;
she checked the remains of the&#13;
candy she had hidden and found&#13;
all the dark chocolate missing.&#13;
By 6 p.m. on October 31, by&#13;
sisters and I were usually a pretty&#13;
bedraggled and-grumpy set of&#13;
beggars. Our costumes, which&#13;
weren't put together all that well&#13;
to start with, were ripped and&#13;
stained from various battles&#13;
fought while parading around the&#13;
house with them on, and the&#13;
masks were usually bobby-pinned&#13;
to our hair because the rubber&#13;
bands had broken long ago.&#13;
Almost every year, one of us left&#13;
the house crying because her&#13;
sisters had stomped on the nose of&#13;
her mask and it wouldn't pop back&#13;
out anymore.&#13;
Even before we left the house,&#13;
we anticipated the battles we&#13;
would fight over packs of&#13;
Wrigley's and licorice whips when&#13;
we came home. While putting on&#13;
our coats and boots, we whispered&#13;
subtle little threats like, "I'm&#13;
going to take all your gum balls&#13;
before Mom sees your bag, and&#13;
you better not tell or I'll break&#13;
your face."&#13;
We weren't exactly the kind of&#13;
children who trick-or-treat for&#13;
UNICEF. One year, though, one&#13;
of my sisters thought that might&#13;
be a good idea because if you kept&#13;
the money, you could buy candy&#13;
you like instead of taking chances&#13;
on your grown-up neighbors'&#13;
choices.&#13;
It still surprises me that my&#13;
mother had the heart to let us&#13;
loose on the neighborhood like that&#13;
every year. But she always did,&#13;
after fondly lecturing us on&#13;
manners and safety. We were&#13;
supposed to stick together, be&#13;
polite, come home in two hours,&#13;
and not eat anything until we&#13;
showed it to her (so she could&#13;
check our bags for caramel apples&#13;
embedded with razor blades and&#13;
strychnine-laced candy corn).&#13;
As soon as we got to the end of&#13;
the driveway and out of our&#13;
mother's hearing, the Halloween&#13;
spirit got hold of us. After an indepth&#13;
analysis of that poor old&#13;
woman's senile paranoia —&#13;
"She's weird," we comforted&#13;
each other — we promptly did the&#13;
exact opposite of what she had&#13;
told us to do.&#13;
I ditched my sisters at the first&#13;
corner on our block each year. As&#13;
for being polite, I couldn't count&#13;
the number of times I shocked out&#13;
elderly neighbors by singing:&#13;
"Trick or treat, Smell by feet,&#13;
Give me something good to eat." I&#13;
never did anything destructive&#13;
with soap or eggs before I was too&#13;
old for trick-or-treat, but I never&#13;
said, "Thank you," either.&#13;
By the time we got home, our&#13;
mother was usually about ready to&#13;
call the police, which would have&#13;
been the least of our worries if&#13;
anyone had put razor blades or&#13;
strychnine in any of t he treats we&#13;
ate on the way home.&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
Trick or&#13;
treat &#13;
/&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 30,1980&#13;
\LLABOARD... A&#13;
FYOU DARE! J CdKWtTj,&#13;
mm m *»&#13;
THE BOYS&#13;
AND GIRLS&#13;
OF SIGMA PHI.&#13;
SOME&#13;
WILL LIVE.&#13;
SOME&#13;
WILL DIE.&#13;
terror Train&#13;
Cheap, trashy movie report&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
I have always loved a good&#13;
horror movie; ones like "The&#13;
Omen" or "The Other" which can&#13;
hold you spellbound and leave you&#13;
shaking for hours after you leave&#13;
the theatre. There are basically&#13;
two types of horror movies: the&#13;
scary ones which rely mainly on&#13;
shock and suspense and the trashy&#13;
ones wh ich lean more toward the&#13;
gorey side to get a rise out of the&#13;
audience. I'm not saying that all&#13;
scary ones are better ("The&#13;
Changeling" for example) but&#13;
they are usually the ones that are&#13;
worth spending money on.&#13;
A recent group of trashy movies&#13;
more than prove my point. "He&#13;
Knows You're Alone" was about a&#13;
psychopath who went around&#13;
killing brides and members of&#13;
their wedding parties before their&#13;
weddings. It had some good&#13;
suspenseful scenes, but for the&#13;
most part was predictable.&#13;
"Terror Train" told the story of&#13;
a group of Sigma Phi fraternity&#13;
members and their dates who&#13;
were taking a New Year's Eve&#13;
train trip. All members were clad&#13;
in costumes and this provides for&#13;
some (very little but some)&#13;
speculation as to what the killer is&#13;
dressed as (because after he kills&#13;
somebody, he takes and wears&#13;
their costume). So much time is&#13;
spent showing off the talents of&#13;
magician David Copperfield that&#13;
we begin to wonder whether we're&#13;
at a horror movie or a magic&#13;
show. Although the ending is&#13;
unique (it seems to last forever),&#13;
the special effects are terrible and&#13;
the scares too few and far between.&#13;
&#13;
I believe the main poinc of "The&#13;
Exterminator" was to see how&#13;
many people it could repulse&#13;
before it ended. It was about a&#13;
Vietnam vet who, after his buddy&#13;
is mugged and seriously wounded,&#13;
wages his own war on crime in&#13;
New York City. The effects are so&#13;
poorly done (the war scenes at the&#13;
beginning for example) they rate&#13;
more yawns than screams.&#13;
The newest of these, "Motel&#13;
Hell," meets all of the&#13;
qualifications of a trashy movie&#13;
(violence, sex, nudity and bodies,&#13;
either dead or dismembered) but&#13;
has an air of creativity which lifts&#13;
it slightly above the others.&#13;
"Motel Hell" takes place in a&#13;
small rural motel, which is owned&#13;
by Vincent Smith and his grossly&#13;
obese sister Ida. The two also own&#13;
a smoke house wh ere they make&#13;
"the best jerky and hams&#13;
around." The secret ingredient&#13;
that makes these meats so tasty is&#13;
human flesh (ergo the film's logo:&#13;
"it takes all kinds of critters to&#13;
make Farmer Vincent Fritters").&#13;
This movie is chock full of one&#13;
liners (a rock band driving near&#13;
the motel is tired and just as one&#13;
member replies, "better find a&#13;
place to crash" their van drives&#13;
over some carefully placed bear&#13;
traps and crashes in a ditch) and&#13;
humorous inuendos which make it&#13;
a semi-funny, semi-horror movie.&#13;
The "good guy" of this film is&#13;
sheriff Bruce Smith, Vincent and&#13;
Ida's little brother. He falls n i love&#13;
with Terry (a girl Vincent has&#13;
taken in after he disposed of her&#13;
husband) and tries to rescue her&#13;
after he stumbles onto the fact&#13;
that Vincent has killed quite a few&#13;
people. How Bruce could have&#13;
swam and boated in the lake&#13;
where he found 200 submerged&#13;
cars (belonging to people Vincent&#13;
had killed) for the past 30 years,&#13;
and never known about them is&#13;
beyond me.&#13;
One bad part is the scene where&#13;
Ida attempts to drown Terry. The&#13;
music is exciting; the action,&#13;
however, is a little less than&#13;
boring.&#13;
There is a hilarious scene where&#13;
Elaine Joyce and her boyfriend&#13;
check into the motel because it's&#13;
listed in their "hot spots"&#13;
brochure. They are after kinky&#13;
sex so Vincent and Ida tell the&#13;
couple to go to a cabin and they'll&#13;
join them in a few minutes. Joyce&#13;
is funny as she " warms up" with&#13;
her whip (her boyfriend, who is a&#13;
little more submissive, puts on a&#13;
dress and shaves his chest).&#13;
The only thing "Motel Hell"&#13;
doesn't have is a part that has&#13;
become almost ritualistic among&#13;
other trashy movies: just when&#13;
you think the killer is dead, he/she&#13;
comes back to try and finish off&#13;
the "good guy". (The killer in&#13;
"Terror Train" came back three&#13;
times.) But that's O.K., it has a&#13;
chain saw fight. This fight is&#13;
slightly suspenseful, but the&#13;
characters are so foolish (Vincent&#13;
is^ running around with a pig's&#13;
head over his head laughing&#13;
dementedly), you just don't care&#13;
who wins.&#13;
Although there's practically no&#13;
Contact&#13;
United Council exec visits UW-P&#13;
by Tracy Gruber&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association had the pleasure&#13;
of welcoming Kim Kachelmyer,&#13;
President of The United Council of&#13;
Wisconsin Student Governments,&#13;
to Parkside last Monday. The&#13;
main objective of Kachelmyer's&#13;
visit was to discuss United Council&#13;
with the Senate. Kachelmyer was&#13;
also very interested in Parkside's&#13;
basic skills program as a state&#13;
model. .&#13;
Kachelmyer was a guest&#13;
speaker at the Senate meeting.&#13;
She spoke of the value in-system&#13;
wide organization in state and&#13;
campus lobbying efforts. United&#13;
Council was able to organize all&#13;
the schools in the UW system with&#13;
a secure and adequate funding&#13;
base due to the .50 refundable fee&#13;
paid by each student in tuition.&#13;
United Council works diligently&#13;
on student issues such as The&#13;
Higher Education Act, truth in&#13;
testing, and landlord/tenant&#13;
rights. U.C. is also interested in&#13;
helping each campus prevent and&#13;
solve student problems. An&#13;
example of their input will be their&#13;
presentation to the Board of&#13;
Regents on the student view of the&#13;
1981-83 Biannual Operating&#13;
Budget Request.&#13;
As is the case with all student&#13;
organizations, United Council can&#13;
be only as effective as its student&#13;
members. Prior to last year&#13;
Parkside has never participated&#13;
in United Council. Kachelmyer&#13;
was able to explain U.C. to the&#13;
Senators and build enthusiasm for&#13;
the organization. Senators are&#13;
going to explore areas where&#13;
Parkside can work with other&#13;
members of United Council for&#13;
everyone's mutual benefit. If you&#13;
would like more information&#13;
about U.C. or have any&#13;
suggestions about possible&#13;
problems United Council could&#13;
work on, please let P.S.G.A. know&#13;
about your ideas.&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
FOREIGN STUDY&#13;
PROORAMS&#13;
PUEBLA, MEXICO ($1295)&#13;
LONDON/ ENGLAND ($2229)&#13;
AIX-EN-PROVENCE/ FRANCE ($2985)&#13;
SALZBURG, AUSTRIA ($3240)&#13;
COPENHAGEN, DENMARK ($3270)&#13;
Costs are per semester and include: flight, room, board,&#13;
field trips, resident tuition, and fees. Applicants must have&#13;
at least Sophomore standing and 2.5 G.P.A. Application&#13;
deadline, November 30, 1980&#13;
For further information, contact: Institute of International&#13;
Studies, University of Wisconsin - Platteville, Platteville,&#13;
Wisconsin 53818 or telephone (608) 342-1726&#13;
suspense, there is enough blood,&#13;
guts, and dismembered limbs to&#13;
satisfy even the grossest of your&#13;
tastes.&#13;
So when you're out on&#13;
Halloween, half bombed, an&#13;
want to see some crudeness an&#13;
vulgarity, "Motel Hell" is the on&#13;
for you. It may not scare you, bi&#13;
it'll give you a few laughs.&#13;
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6 Thursday, October 30, 1980 RANGER&#13;
Libraries, minorities, and instruction concern students&#13;
The concerns of the 155,000&#13;
• Un iversity of Wisconsin students&#13;
will be expressed in a recommendation&#13;
on the 1981-83 U.W.&#13;
budget to be presented to the&#13;
Regents at the November Board&#13;
meeting.&#13;
The recommendation is being&#13;
prepared by the United Council of&#13;
U.W. Student Governments, the&#13;
state's student association. Advice&#13;
and input on the recommendation&#13;
is coming from&#13;
students at each of the U.W.'s 13&#13;
four year campuses.&#13;
Among major concerns to be&#13;
addressed by the student&#13;
recommendation are protection of&#13;
the quality of instruction, involvement&#13;
of minorities in the&#13;
U.W. system, and restoring the&#13;
position of the universities'&#13;
libraries.&#13;
"This is the first time the&#13;
students have presented a budget&#13;
recommendation to the Regents,&#13;
and it stands to be one of t he more&#13;
significant things we've done,"&#13;
said Kim Kachelmyer, United&#13;
Council President. "After all, 90&#13;
percent of the significant&#13;
decisions on University directions&#13;
are made within the budget&#13;
request. So if we want to have&#13;
effective input, this has to be part&#13;
of it.&#13;
"Our top concern going into the&#13;
budgetary process is the erosion&#13;
of the quality of i nstruction in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System.&#13;
Since 1972, the U.W. System has&#13;
absorbed 20 percent more&#13;
students while its budget has&#13;
declined in real terms. Other state&#13;
spending has been allowed to grow&#13;
at a rate three times faster than&#13;
the U.S. System. The result has&#13;
been high tuition and- declining&#13;
quality of education.&#13;
"The real issue in the budgetary&#13;
deliberation is not whether&#13;
Wisconsin needs a quality&#13;
University system, but how to get&#13;
that. Education is the only&#13;
government expenditure that is an&#13;
investment. Our society faces&#13;
severe challenges over the next 25&#13;
years, and we need to educate our&#13;
people to face and to overcome&#13;
those challenges."&#13;
The students' budgetary&#13;
recommendation will be advanced&#13;
both before the Board of Regents&#13;
and the state Legislature. Expected&#13;
main points of the request&#13;
will include:&#13;
— Increases in funding of&#13;
programs designed to involve&#13;
minorities in the U.W. system.&#13;
"We... seek to involve minorities&#13;
in the U.W.," said Kachelmyer.&#13;
— R eplacement of the current&#13;
enrollment funding formula with&#13;
either a new formula that accounts&#13;
for a higher proportion of&#13;
part time students and increased&#13;
fixed costs, or ideally, with a&#13;
larger nonspecific appropriation&#13;
for instruction to permit the U.W.,&#13;
especially Madison and&#13;
Milwaukee, to set its own&#13;
priorities. Students want the&#13;
Legislature to keep out of&#13;
University affairs. The Regents&#13;
are there to make the important&#13;
decisions about the University,&#13;
and the legislature would be&#13;
better off finding ways to reduce&#13;
local government dependence on&#13;
the state and to trim other&#13;
spending. The U.W. • is not to&#13;
blame for high state taxes, the&#13;
reckless diversion of state&#13;
revenues to unwise open-ended&#13;
Kevin McCarthy tickets still available&#13;
Obie-award winning actor&#13;
Kevin McCarthy will bring the&#13;
most challenging role of his&#13;
career — President Harry S.&#13;
Truman — t o Parkside Saturday&#13;
night (Nov.l) in the popular play,&#13;
"Give 'Em Hell Harry!" This will&#13;
open the 1980-81 Accent on Enrichment&#13;
Series.&#13;
The Samuel Gallu play, which&#13;
was first performed in 1975, is not&#13;
a lecture, a recitation of s peeches&#13;
and writing, or the reminiscences&#13;
of a humorist. It is a drama, a&#13;
vaudeville show, a political&#13;
cabaret-actabouta President who&#13;
was not afraid to shoot from&#13;
hip or the lip.&#13;
Limited tickets ($7) remain and&#13;
can be reserved by calling the&#13;
Union Information Center (553-&#13;
2345). o r purchased at the door&#13;
beginning at 7:30. The performance&#13;
begins at 8 p. m.&#13;
Dr. Suess' cold war liberalism to be talk&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
Social Science Roundtable will&#13;
present a talk on "How the Grinch&#13;
Stole Eastern Europe: The Cold&#13;
War Liberalism of Dr. Seuss" on&#13;
Monday, November 3, at noon in&#13;
Union 106. The presentation will&#13;
be made by Thomas Noer from&#13;
Carthage College's History&#13;
Department. Noer has just&#13;
returned from a year's leave at&#13;
Harvard University.&#13;
Nelson runs on his record&#13;
Continued Prom Page One&#13;
strength, which we do. We have a&#13;
nuclear arsenal which is incredible&#13;
... but we do need to beef&#13;
up conventional forces."&#13;
"They need more equipment,"&#13;
Nelson said. "They need more&#13;
inducements to get people to come&#13;
in. We need additional training&#13;
facilities . . . , additional modern&#13;
equipment, and additional inducements&#13;
for people to sign up&#13;
for the reserve. I think we should&#13;
try to make the volunteer army&#13;
work first and I think it will&#13;
work."&#13;
In the Iranian - Iraqi conflict,&#13;
Nelson feels maintaining a stance&#13;
of neutrality is critical. "I think,"&#13;
he said, "that interference by one&#13;
of the superpowers induces interference&#13;
by the other, and I&#13;
think that would dangerously&#13;
escalate the situation there."&#13;
Nelson, who is personally opposed&#13;
to abortion, favors a constitutional&#13;
amendment to return&#13;
the issue to the states. "I favor&#13;
returning the issue of abortion to&#13;
state jurisdiction. In my own&#13;
view, I think it ought to be settled&#13;
by people in each state, and people&#13;
ought to be able to vjote o n it."&#13;
Another problem which is&#13;
facing the state and the nation is&#13;
that of the Cuban refugees. "All&#13;
the criminals, we have to return,"&#13;
Nelson said. "If Castro won't take&#13;
them, we ship them back in any&#13;
event. We do not have to and&#13;
should not accept anyone with a&#13;
criminal record unless it's a&#13;
political criminal record. The&#13;
United States cannot take&#13;
responsibility for refugees in all&#13;
areas of the world any time some&#13;
dictator decides he wants to ship&#13;
them out of the country. It has to&#13;
be an international responsibility."&#13;
&#13;
program commitments to&#13;
localities, among others, has&#13;
created the current fiscal crisis.&#13;
— M ajor increases in the state&#13;
aid to university libraries. Since&#13;
1972, library funding has fallen to&#13;
63 percent of its peak figure due to&#13;
inflation. No institutions of higher&#13;
learning should be expected to&#13;
operate without a quality library.&#13;
— Tuition stabilization. Since&#13;
1975, tuition has increased by&#13;
better than 70 percent, well ahead&#13;
of the inflation of the dollar in that&#13;
time period. Students have been&#13;
to a large extent substituted as a&#13;
revenue source for the tax dollars&#13;
the U.W. has lost to inflation. We&#13;
regard a turnaround not only&#13;
desireable but necessary. The&#13;
U.W. Administration's proposal&#13;
on the budget would necessitate a&#13;
$60 per year tuition hike under&#13;
current formulae. We propose&#13;
that those formulae be changed to&#13;
ease this burden on students.&#13;
— E stablishment funding for a&#13;
U.W. 2000 commission to set long&#13;
term goals. We'd request about&#13;
$60,000 for staff and materials.&#13;
This commission would be&#13;
composed of faculty, students,&#13;
staff, citizens and administrators.&#13;
It should develop a specific plan&#13;
for meeting the critical heeds of&#13;
Wisconsin in the remainder of this&#13;
century. The goal woulld be to&#13;
provide direction to the U.W.&#13;
while demonstrating its value to&#13;
society.&#13;
the&#13;
Noer authored the book, Briton,&#13;
Boer, and Yankee: the U. S. and&#13;
South Africa 1870-1914, which was&#13;
published by Kent State&#13;
University Press.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 30&#13;
FILM at 12 noon in Union 104. Admission is free for Parkside students, faculty and&#13;
staff. Sponsored by Student Mobilization for Survival.&#13;
RECITAL by students at 1 pm n i the Union Cinema Theatre. The progam is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 31&#13;
FILM at 11 am in MOLN D128. Admission is free for Parkside students, faculty and&#13;
staff. Sponsored by Student Mobilization for Survival.&#13;
MOVIE "Nosferatu" will be shown at 8 pm in the Union Cinema. Admission at the&#13;
door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
DANCE Halloween party at 8 pm in Union Square. Sponsored by the Minority&#13;
Student Union Club. Admission at the door is $1.00 for a MSU member and $2.00 for&#13;
others.&#13;
HALLOWEEN PARTY 8 p. m. Union Square sponsored by MSU. Cover charges - p&#13;
without a costume, $1.00 non-MSU members in costume, $0.50 members in&#13;
costume. Prizes for best costume - $15.00 first prize, $10.00 second prize, pitcher of&#13;
beverage third prize.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 1&#13;
AOE presents Kevin McCarthy in "Give 'em HeU, Harry" at 8 pm in the Com-&#13;
- munication Arts Theatre. Admissivn is $4.00 for Parkside students and $7.00 for&#13;
others. Tickets are available at the Union Information Center.&#13;
«&gt; Sunday, Nov. 2&#13;
CONCERT New Music at Parkside directed by August Wegner and Harry Sturm at&#13;
3:30 pm in the Communication Arts Theatre. Admission at the door is $1.00 for&#13;
students and $2.00 f or others.&#13;
MOVIE "Nosferatu" will be repeated at 7:30 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Nov. 3&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. The program and speaker will be announced&#13;
in the near future. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
SEMINAR Career Planning at 1 pm in MOLN 111. The seminar is free and open to&#13;
Parkside students.&#13;
SLIDE LECTURE at 1 pm in Union 104. Prof. Omar Amin will talk on "Ancient&#13;
Egypt". The program is free and open to Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
VIDEO TAPES "The Outlaws" at 1 pm in Union Square. The program is free for&#13;
Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
LECTURE with Larry Klump at 6:30 pm in GR101. The program is free and open to&#13;
Parkside students, faculty and staff. Sponsored by the Marketing Club.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 4&#13;
MATH SEMINAR at 1 pm in GR 230. The seminar is free and open to the public.&#13;
LECTURE "Sickle Cell Anemia" at 7 pm in Union 104-106. The program is free and&#13;
open to the public. Sponsored by the Parkside Child Care Center and Sickle Cell&#13;
Foundation of Racine.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 5&#13;
SEMINAR Career Planning at 1 pm in MOLN 111. The program is free and open to&#13;
Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
SLIDE LECTURE at 1 pm in Union 106. Prof. Omar Amin will talk on "Islamic and&#13;
Medieval Egypt". The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
VIDEO TAPE "The Outlaws" will be shown at 1 pm in Union Square. Admission is&#13;
free and the program is open to Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
THE WHO'S new album Who's slapped next.&#13;
FON DU LAC JACK smells like PU-Z.&#13;
CHAIN GANG challenges Animal(s) to nerf&#13;
ping - pong.&#13;
UNCLE STEVE, can we play Uncle Goofy&#13;
Photo Session?!?! — Me&#13;
YELLOW BELT, name the time! — Another&#13;
yellow belt.&#13;
JULIE — Seen Rob lately? POUNCE!!&#13;
IBM, UBM, We all BM, for IBM. lOP's&#13;
ANDREA is a Chain Gang member. Andrea&#13;
C.&#13;
NAME a four lettered word for 2nd floor&#13;
library rftSles.&#13;
IF YOU guessed "used" for the name, you're&#13;
right.&#13;
GLEUTEUSMaximus Robustos: Still hungry&#13;
for bamboo?—Super Stud&#13;
ATTENTION: Malibu #5C-3057 I'm In LOVE&#13;
with you!!!—Todd H.&#13;
HAPPY "21" Rory Spears! A secret Admirer&#13;
ALL BUSINESS Management majors are&#13;
inconsiderate, unreliable, illogical,&#13;
Shepaneklike, crazy.&#13;
ATTENTION: 2nd floor library males are&#13;
dull!! Need fresh bodies!!&#13;
'TWAS the DPMA. Made me this way.«6heer&#13;
heart attack.&#13;
I HOPE the Ranger has recovered from the&#13;
"hits" they received last Sunday—Jack&#13;
Tatum&#13;
MH—Yesterday, today, tomorrow — always&#13;
somebody new! .&#13;
JULIE N. — Hey baby's wanta get lucky?&#13;
T.H.&#13;
FON DU LAC JACK eats gopher guts!&#13;
CHAIN GANG challenges Round Table to&#13;
Pillow frisbee.&#13;
VENDETTES: I think I'm turning Japanese.&#13;
I really think so!&#13;
WANTED: Single male, full or part time.&#13;
P.V. 205&#13;
THANK YOU to whomever turned my jacket&#13;
into security.&#13;
GREG — LUV YOU LOTS! Let's go around&#13;
again. Tommy Tyler&#13;
WHAT? Huh?-Why? When? Are you confused?&#13;
Good!—Julie&#13;
HEY BILL, go take the pill! J8.K&#13;
WH EN you're doing nothing, it doesn't matter&#13;
how fast you do it. Chain Gang&#13;
P.V. says death to the thieves!&#13;
KIM, tell Chester I want mine back!! Julie&#13;
ANIMAL MALES wouldn't know what to do&#13;
with fresh women!!&#13;
ROUND TABLE, D3C5D3F1 FOFOF1 F7.&#13;
Look that up!—Chain Gang&#13;
M.J.R. —I love you—Irving and Family.&#13;
AFTER SUNDAY, the Ranger should finally&#13;
realize that they suck.&#13;
lOP'S, CHAIN GANG: need new female&#13;
blood? Animals don't!—Unappreciated&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
ATTENTION HONKERS: Benge 3xt, Getzen&#13;
300 many accessories. Call 637-2274.&#13;
1971 OLDS ROYALE convertible like new!&#13;
Call Jerry. 634-2957&#13;
TEXAS INSTRUMENT (TI-59) Programmable&#13;
Calculator. New, Complete with&#13;
manuals. 694-1239&#13;
HAND TOOLED LEATHER ARTICLES —&#13;
custom designs — made to order. 694-2293&#13;
OLYMPUS—OM2, Vivitar flashes, accessories,&#13;
make offer.—Larry 551-9095&#13;
NEW AM/FM TAPE CAR STEREO $60. 40&#13;
watt Graphic equalizer amp $45. Tri-axial&#13;
speakers $17.50 ea. Call after 6 p. m. 554-&#13;
9003.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
$6.00 PER HOUR —singing telegram service.&#13;
Flexible hours! Larry 551-9095&#13;
LOST&#13;
RAIN AND SHINE COAT beige, hooded&#13;
street-length, call 681-0803 If found.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
IMPROVE your grades! Research catalog —&#13;
306 pages — 10,278 descriptive listings —&#13;
Rush $1.00 (refundable). Box 25097C, Los&#13;
Angeles, 90025. (213) 477-8226.&#13;
LEATHER TOOLING LESSONS. Traditional&#13;
or figure Carving. 694-2293&#13;
THOSE INTERESTED in school at Minneapolis&#13;
— see Moldy, Union Square.&#13;
FREE — 40" white gas stove. Works. Free for&#13;
the hauling. 657-1753.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
| DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!&#13;
for student/ | STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE*&#13;
Student organization 1 Any reg ist ere d UW - P stude n t or stud e nt organi zat ion is qualified&#13;
- 1 Cu kmi i iA r o m. . « ! i ins ert a 1 classified line ad in the R a n g er at no cost if u n d e r or 1. bubmitters must I equ iva len t to 10 w o r d s. (Pho n e n umb e rs e qu a l! w ord.)&#13;
present valid Park- |&#13;
side ID I Classification:&#13;
2. Two free ads — !&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30c will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words &gt;&#13;
or less.&#13;
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charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words &gt;&#13;
or less.&#13;
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3. 30c will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words &gt;&#13;
or less.&#13;
I&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
I&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
L&#13;
Name&#13;
q q M n Ranger SS No. \A/I | r. p-MO &#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 30, 1980 7&#13;
RANGER SPORTS&#13;
Working Out&#13;
Keeping fit isn't easy&#13;
PAULA SANDAHL and the rest of her teammates finished with&#13;
a 5-1 record at last week's Carthage Invitational.&#13;
by Donald Scherrer&#13;
In this day and age, fitness is&#13;
very much a matter of lifestyle.&#13;
Primitive people wandered the&#13;
earth in search of shelter and&#13;
sustenance. Most of these&#13;
nomadic tribes became settled in&#13;
the Agricultural Age. With the&#13;
onslaught of the Industrial&#13;
Revolution, machines began to&#13;
replace manpower. This&#13;
ultimately led to the present&#13;
sedentary lifestyle of many&#13;
Americans.&#13;
There are still jobs that require&#13;
exertion on the part of individual&#13;
workers. Construction workers,&#13;
meat packers, farmers — all&#13;
require a great deal of energy and&#13;
endurance. Even office jobs such&#13;
as news reporting are accompanied&#13;
by physical stress.&#13;
Exercise is stress. So is&#13;
worrying, pain, and cold. Each&#13;
presents its own problems. Even&#13;
lack of exercise is stressful.&#13;
In our industrialized society, the&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Rangers dominate tourney&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
snapped out of it's recent mild&#13;
slump this past weekend at the&#13;
Carthage Invitational. The team&#13;
posted five match victories while&#13;
suffering one defeat. The victories&#13;
upped the team's overall record to&#13;
23-16.&#13;
The Rangers faced Oshkosh,&#13;
Carrol, Milwaukee, Whitewater,&#13;
Stevens Point and Northeastern&#13;
Illinois. The Rangers suffered&#13;
only one defeat and that was at the&#13;
hands of Stevens Point.&#13;
Coach Linda Henderson was&#13;
relieved with her team's performance.&#13;
"We played really well.&#13;
Friday night was the best we've&#13;
looked all season." The Rangers&#13;
beat Oshkosh 17-15, 15- 9 and then&#13;
disposed of Carroll 15-11, 15-12.&#13;
Against Carroll, Henderson&#13;
spelled Roxanne Nelson and Terri&#13;
Bieser with Laurie Pope and&#13;
Callie Lee. The move was made to&#13;
give the two substitutes some&#13;
playing time and they played&#13;
admirably.&#13;
Parkside continued its fine play&#13;
into Saturday as they beat&#13;
Milwaukee 15-11, 13-1 5, 16-14 in a&#13;
three game thriller. Parkside then&#13;
came from behind to dump&#13;
Whitewater 3-15, 15-1, 15-5. The&#13;
Ranger juggernaut then ran&#13;
amuck as it was downed by&#13;
Stevens Point.&#13;
The Pointers controlled the net&#13;
and beat Parkside 15-6, 15-2.&#13;
"Stevens Point was a big team"&#13;
said Henderson. "They blocked&#13;
real well. They're probably the&#13;
best Division III blocking school in&#13;
Wisconsin." Parkside then came&#13;
back and whipped Northeastern&#13;
Illinois 15-11, 15 -13.&#13;
The state playoffs are in&#13;
November and the Rangers are&#13;
preparing for them. "We'll start&#13;
making the practices shorter and&#13;
we'll completely stop the weight&#13;
training a week before state. We&#13;
try to peak for the tournament&#13;
physically as well as mentally."&#13;
Fencing isn't exactly a major&#13;
sport but it is a sport that offers&#13;
people a new experience. The&#13;
fencing team at Parkside is a&#13;
small group, thirteen people to be&#13;
exact. Coach Loren Hein has nine&#13;
returners. Tom Ogle, Dave Wick&#13;
and Bruce Klappauf return for the&#13;
men while Debra Hisle is the only&#13;
woman returner.&#13;
One of the new recruits Hein&#13;
found was 6'8", 210 lbs. Mark&#13;
Spiess. Spiess is a former Illinois&#13;
state high school champion in the&#13;
epee. This past February he&#13;
finished 13th in the U.S. Junior&#13;
Olympics. The former high school&#13;
champion has a lot of potential&#13;
and can be touted as a future AilAmerican.&#13;
&#13;
Other newcomers are Pat Schmidt,&#13;
June Bauer, Sabine Claus,&#13;
John Meyer and Dan Hickey in the&#13;
foil, Tom Schofield in the epee&#13;
with Jeff McKelvie and Andy&#13;
Brhel in the sabre.&#13;
Hein is still looking for more&#13;
people, partically in the sabre.&#13;
C&amp;R A UTO 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;
The foil and epee are thrusting&#13;
weapons while the sabre is both a&#13;
cutting and thrusting weapon.&#13;
Parkside hosts both major&#13;
college fencing tournaments this&#13;
year. The Great Lakes Tournament&#13;
will be held on March 14th&#13;
while the National Championship&#13;
will be held the following&#13;
weekend.&#13;
APPLICATIONS ARE&#13;
BEING ACCEPTED&#13;
COPY EDITOR&#13;
JOB REQUIREMENTS&#13;
MUST BE STUDENT ENROLLED WITH 6 CREDITS&#13;
THOROUGH KNOWLEDGE OF ENGLISH GRAMMATICS&#13;
&#13;
MUST KNOW PROOFREADING SYMBOLS&#13;
MUST TAKE PROOFREADING TEST&#13;
THIS IS A PAID POSITION&#13;
Drop Applications Off At The&#13;
RANGER OFFICE, WLLC D139&#13;
NEXTTOTHE COFFEE SHOPPE.&#13;
office worker prefers the elevator&#13;
over the staircase, the automobile&#13;
over a short walk, a snowblower&#13;
over a shovel. From this inactivity&#13;
the person atrophies and weakens.&#13;
Remember the neighborhood&#13;
paperboy who cruised die streets&#13;
on his single speed Schwinn, could&#13;
outrun or outbat most other little&#13;
leaguers, and who eventually&#13;
became a high school football&#13;
star, after which he married and&#13;
became increasingly sedentary,&#13;
and fat?&#13;
This would seem to reinforce the&#13;
belief that later in life muscle&#13;
turns to fat. It only appears that&#13;
way. The deception is caused by a&#13;
lack of exercise (causing muscles&#13;
to atrophy — shrink), and a&#13;
continued high intake of calories&#13;
not accompanied by strenuous&#13;
physical activity to burn the excess&#13;
cal ories.&#13;
Physiologically, muscle can&#13;
never turn to fat. Whereas&#13;
progressive resistence causes a&#13;
muscle to grow (hypertrophy),&#13;
decreased activity, the absence of&#13;
a competent workload, will send&#13;
signals to the body that the&#13;
strength and muscle is no longer&#13;
needed because the work which&#13;
caused the muscle to grow is no&#13;
longer present.&#13;
Taking a break of a week or two&#13;
after a continual and rigorous&#13;
exercise regimen will add new&#13;
zest to fitness by eliminating&#13;
boredom and physical staleness.&#13;
But a prolonged absence from any&#13;
such exertion and physical stress&#13;
will make the body renege on any&#13;
past gains, and set you back&#13;
perhaps as far as when you first&#13;
started.&#13;
Week after week I could&#13;
describe new workout programs&#13;
and exercises for men and&#13;
women, but without emphasizing&#13;
the accompanying philosophy for&#13;
a sound approach to life and&#13;
health would be akin to a karate&#13;
sensei instructing his students in&#13;
defensive and attack skills&#13;
without immersing them in the&#13;
Far Eastern philosophical&#13;
marriage of mind and body that is&#13;
the cornerstone of this practice.&#13;
Publilius Syrus (circa 42 B.C.)&#13;
wisely put it two ways in his&#13;
maxims. "Good health and good&#13;
sense are two of life's greatest&#13;
blessings," and "the bow too&#13;
tensely strung is easily broken."&#13;
Si&#13;
&amp;&#13;
ACADEMY OF BATON* DANCE&#13;
headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits, I&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — Tap Shoes — *|&#13;
- All Dancing Supplies&#13;
Fencing team inexperienced&#13;
^ University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
*3tr SEMESTER BREAK&#13;
FROM&#13;
INCLUDES&#13;
• 7 Nights Lodging Marriot's Autotel Ritz&#13;
• Round Trip Jet Airfare via Mexicana Airlines&#13;
• All Ground Tranters While in Mexico&#13;
• Fiesta Yacht Cruise of Acapulco Bay&#13;
• Tour Escort Throughout&#13;
• Tips and Taxes on All of the Above&#13;
$50 DOWN RESERVES YOUR SPACE&#13;
For information and reservations contact:&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION OFFICE, Rm. 209&#13;
Call: 553-2200 &#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of b eer? Ail you have to do is fill&#13;
out this entry form and pick the most correct winners. F ut a check&#13;
mark by your picks and bring the form down to the Ranger office,&#13;
D139 WLLC.&#13;
Baltimore at Kansas City&#13;
Houston at Denver&#13;
Miami at Oakland&#13;
N. Y. Jets at New England&#13;
San Diego at Cincinnati&#13;
Dallas at St. Louis&#13;
Minnesota at Washington&#13;
New Orleans at Los Angeles&#13;
N. Y. Giants at Tampa Bay&#13;
San Francisco at Detroit&#13;
Atlanta at Buffalo&#13;
Green Bay at Pittsburgh&#13;
Philadelphia at Seattle&#13;
Chicago at Cleveland&#13;
Tie-breaker: will be the total combined points&#13;
socred in the Chicago - Cleveland game.&#13;
Last week's winner: Bruce Duchac, 10 correct, 24 points&#13;
Name:&#13;
S.S. No.&#13;
Rules:&#13;
1) One entry per person&#13;
2) Must be a student at UW-Parkside&#13;
3) Person with most correct picks win (in case of tie, the total&#13;
points will be used as a tie - breaker)&#13;
4) Entry must be clipped from Ranger issue&#13;
5) Ranger members ineligible&#13;
6) Entries must be turned into Ranger office by noon on the&#13;
Friday preceeding the games&#13;
7) Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks&#13;
8) Entries must be legible to be considered&#13;
Greekfest&#13;
is sold out&#13;
The ethnic theme dinner of&#13;
Greekfest was sold out in record&#13;
time this year. Fifty minutes after&#13;
the dinner tickets went on sale on&#13;
October 20, all the tickets were&#13;
sold .&#13;
FIRST&#13;
'National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
AAAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phono 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
Thursday, October 30,1980 RANGER&#13;
Look for "Insider"—Ford's&#13;
continuing series of college&#13;
newspaper supplements.&#13;
FORD&#13;
FORD DIVISION&#13;
How to stretch your&#13;
college dollars.&#13;
You don't have to be a math genius to figure it out. Basic money&#13;
management and careful budgeting are two very effective ways to&#13;
keep from feeling the pinch when money gets tight. And we'll tell n Q&#13;
you how to do just that, and more, in our next issue of ^&#13;
"Insider," the free supplement to your college&#13;
newspaper from Ford.&#13;
stick to those budgets.&#13;
With info on where to&#13;
live, and how to get the best&#13;
buys on food, entertainment,&#13;
clothing, travel, textbooks,&#13;
stereos, and more. Then we'll tell&#13;
you how to be sure you're getting what&#13;
you pay for. And how to complain when&#13;
you don't.&#13;
Check it out. You'll find some great tips on how&#13;
to stretch your college dollars. And who knows,&#13;
you may even discover being frugal can be fun!&#13;
Also be sure to check out Ford's exciting new 1981&#13;
lineup, including Escort. The front-wheel drive car that's&#13;
built to take on the world. With Escort you'll find some great&#13;
ways to multiply your fun.&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Soccer hosts playoffs&#13;
We'll explain how to meet the high cost of tuition&#13;
through scholarships and student loans. We'll set&#13;
up guidelines for developing your own&#13;
personal finance system .. . like custom&#13;
tailoring a budget.. . choosing and&#13;
maintaining a checking account&#13;
. . . and obtaining and using&#13;
credit wisely. And we'll&#13;
offer tips on how&#13;
THE SOCCER TEAM faces UW&#13;
at the Parkside Bowl.&#13;
Knoio oy oria n rassino&#13;
- Plattevillethls Saturday at 2:00 p. m. The game will be played&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The men's soccer team finally&#13;
gave Coach Hal Henderson his&#13;
ninth victory in a single season&#13;
when it defeated Purdue-Calumet&#13;
3-1 last week. The ninth victory set&#13;
a team record for most victories&#13;
in a season. The Rangers beat St.&#13;
Norbert 3-0 later in the week.&#13;
Chiedu Okonmah, Ralph&#13;
DeGraff and John Onyiego scored&#13;
the goals for the Rangers in their&#13;
victory over Purdue-Calumet.&#13;
Although the Rangers scored&#13;
three goals Henderson was visibly&#13;
upset with his offense. The&#13;
Rangers played with a one&#13;
man advantage for seventy&#13;
minutes after a Purdue-Calumet&#13;
player was kicked out and&#13;
managed only one score. "It was&#13;
frustrating game, we built well&#13;
but we could'nt finish, we outshot&#13;
them 16-2 but were only ahead 1-0&#13;
at the half."&#13;
Against St. Norbert the team&#13;
had to take advantage of every&#13;
opportunity. It was a cold,&#13;
raining, muddy day and neither&#13;
team could get very good footing.&#13;
The Rangers put the pressure on&#13;
St. Norbert when Parkside scored&#13;
six minutes into the game. Bob&#13;
Newstrom passed to Scott&#13;
Gerhartz who found Okonmah in&#13;
the flat and Okonmah drilled it&#13;
passed the badly beaten St.&#13;
Norbert goalkeeper.&#13;
Mike Kiefer scored the second&#13;
goal of the game on a penalty kick.&#13;
Kiefer is now six for six on penalty&#13;
kicks. Jeff Dennehy scored in the&#13;
second half of the game to finish&#13;
the scoring for the day giving&#13;
Parkside a 3-0 shutout victory.&#13;
The soccer team has set or tied&#13;
several records this season.&#13;
Kiefer's eight goals ties the school&#13;
Cross-Country&#13;
Runners hold race&#13;
record; keeper Dan Opferman has&#13;
five shutouts, a season record as&#13;
well as a career record. Opferman&#13;
is only a freshman. The Rangers&#13;
have also set the record for most&#13;
consecutive wins, five; most wins&#13;
in a season, 10; a 1.31 goals per&#13;
game allowed average by Opferman&#13;
and the combined goals&#13;
per game allowed average, 1.42&#13;
by Opferman and Jeff Medin.&#13;
Medin has allowed only two goals&#13;
this year.&#13;
The Rangers prepare for the&#13;
Diatrict 14 title game against UWPlatteville&#13;
this Saturday. The&#13;
victor of the 2:00 p. m. game&#13;
moves into Area 4 competition.&#13;
Parkside has won the District 14&#13;
title five of the last six years but&#13;
must first defeat the powerful&#13;
Platteville team to advance.&#13;
The Rangers will host the&#13;
District 14 Championship game.&#13;
two weeks later. They include&#13;
Bellarmine, Eastern Illinois,&#13;
Ferris State, Grand Valley State,&#13;
Illinois-Chicago Circle, Indiana&#13;
St ate-Evansvill e, Lewis,&#13;
Michigan Tech, Northern Kentucky,&#13;
Northern Michigan, Northwood&#13;
Institute, Oakland, Southern&#13;
Illinois-Edwardsville, Wayne&#13;
State and Wright State.&#13;
Eastern Illinois, a perennial&#13;
power, is favored for the team&#13;
title.&#13;
UW-Parkside will host the&#13;
NCAA (Division II) Great Lakes&#13;
regional cross- country championship&#13;
at 11 a. m. Saturday on&#13;
the Rangers' course.,&#13;
Sixteen teams, including the&#13;
host Rangers, will be competing in&#13;
the 10,000 meter race over the&#13;
same course that will be the site of&#13;
the national championship run&#13;
UW-Parkside Coach Lucian&#13;
Rosa will enter seven runners as&#13;
the Rangers attempt to advance to&#13;
the nationals. The top four teams&#13;
and top five individuals not on one&#13;
of those squads will qualify for the&#13;
national title meet.&#13;
Parkside runners will be junior&#13;
co-captains Dave Mueller and&#13;
Paul Caiinestra and five freshmen&#13;
— Tom Barrett, Radovan Bursac,&#13;
Steve Brunner, A1 Correa and Dan&#13;
Stublaski.&#13;
UW-P will host the TFA/USA&#13;
Mid-America championship in its&#13;
next meet on Saturday, Nov. 8. </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 9, issue 9, October 30, 1980</text>
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              <text>Hostage release - hopeful signs again</text>
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              <text>MT University of Wisconsin - Porkside&#13;
Hostage release&#13;
Hopeful signs again&#13;
by Susan J. Aluise&#13;
Into the darkness thundered Air&#13;
Force One, at an hour which at&#13;
best could be described as grim&#13;
and felt by most to be down'right&#13;
ungodly.&#13;
After receiving word from&#13;
Deputy Secretary of State Warren&#13;
Christopher just before 4 a. m.&#13;
that the Iranian Majlis&#13;
(Parliament) had handed down a&#13;
decision regarding conditions for&#13;
the hostages' release, President&#13;
Carter cancelled his Chicago&#13;
camj&amp;ign schedule and returned&#13;
to Washington. Upon arrival at the&#13;
White House, the President&#13;
discussed the situation with&#13;
diplomatic advisors ancf the&#13;
Congressional leadership.&#13;
In this, the most recent scene in&#13;
the hostage situation, there are&#13;
once again encouraging signs&#13;
from Tehran regarding the&#13;
release of the 52 Americans who&#13;
have been in captivity for one&#13;
year.&#13;
On Sunday morning, White&#13;
House Press Secretary Jody&#13;
Powell told reporters at the Hyatt&#13;
Regency O'Hare that he was&#13;
"encouraged" by the new&#13;
developments. Five minutes later&#13;
at the airport, Powell did not&#13;
recall the statement. Instead he&#13;
said "it remains to be seen what&#13;
will develop from this, if&#13;
anything." This display of c aution&#13;
is not unique to the White House.&#13;
Monday, Secretary of State&#13;
Edmund Muskie said, "We have&#13;
seen in the last 12 h ours several&#13;
signs from the Iranian government.&#13;
These signs should be&#13;
viewed as the initial steps which&#13;
could lead to the eventual release&#13;
of th e hostages. It is necessary to&#13;
use time, patience, and diplomacy&#13;
in our interpretation of these&#13;
signs."&#13;
The substance of the Majlis&#13;
decision was to uphold the four&#13;
basic conditions set by the&#13;
Ayatollah Khomeni for the release&#13;
of th e hostages: the unfreezing of&#13;
all Iranian assets in U. S. banks,&#13;
adoption of a policy of non - intervention&#13;
in Iranian affairs,&#13;
dropping all claims against Iran&#13;
in the World Court, and the return&#13;
of t he late shah's wealth to Iran.&#13;
In an interview late Monday,&#13;
State Department spokesperson&#13;
Anita Stockman confirmed that&#13;
the transcript of the Majlis'&#13;
conditions had been received by&#13;
the President and that the U. S.&#13;
decision regarding those conditions&#13;
could be made within 24 to&#13;
48 ho urs.&#13;
"There have been two particularly&#13;
positive signs," said&#13;
Stockman. "One, the Algerian&#13;
government has become the official&#13;
representative for Iran in&#13;
the hostage matter and&#13;
negotiations are currently going&#13;
on. Secondly, and perhaps most&#13;
significant, the Iranian militants&#13;
have turned over responsibility&#13;
for the hostages to the government.&#13;
They are reassembled at&#13;
the embassy and we see this as&#13;
significant."&#13;
"However, in view of the conditions&#13;
and the absence of a clear&#13;
interpretation of t hese conditions,&#13;
it is necessary to refrain from&#13;
characterizing the mood of the&#13;
situation and imperative that we&#13;
exercise caution in our perceptions."&#13;
&#13;
The real reason for caution at&#13;
this point is quite clear; while two&#13;
of the conditions can be met&#13;
relatively easily, the other two&#13;
may prove to be stumbling blocks.&#13;
The policy of non - intervention, in&#13;
the eyes of government and&#13;
diplomatic observers, has already&#13;
been adopted. The unfreezing of&#13;
Iranian assets as a government&#13;
action is also relatively easy.&#13;
Dropping all claims against Iran&#13;
in the courts is much more difficult.&#13;
While the government could&#13;
perhaps agree to accept financial&#13;
responsibilty for the claims, it&#13;
cannot force individuals and&#13;
corporations to drop them.&#13;
Also, returning the wealth of the&#13;
late shah is a problem for two&#13;
reasons: the majority of that&#13;
wealth is believed to be held&#13;
outside the United States and the&#13;
United States would have no&#13;
power to return that wealth even if&#13;
it were located, as it is most likely&#13;
being held by the shah's heirs.&#13;
So while the President's&#13;
dramatic exit Sunday morning&#13;
and the State Department communications&#13;
Monday afternoon&#13;
might indicate that a quick&#13;
release of the hostages is now&#13;
imminent, there is, at this point,&#13;
no evidence that these new hopes&#13;
are not the same old words put&#13;
into a different tune.&#13;
Veteran's Day commemorated&#13;
November 11 is Veterans Day.&#13;
In his proclamation, President&#13;
Carter said that on that day "we&#13;
pay tribute to 30 million living and&#13;
14 m illion deceased patriots who&#13;
served in our Armed Forces so&#13;
that you and I might live&#13;
freedom."&#13;
in&#13;
The President called upon all&#13;
Americans to support the&#13;
Veterans Day theme, "A Grateful&#13;
Nation Remembers." He urged&#13;
"families, friends, neighbors and&#13;
fellow citizens to show their&#13;
gratitude" by visiting ill and&#13;
disabled veterans in Veterans&#13;
Administration medical centers&#13;
across the counrty.&#13;
The Veterans Administration&#13;
released the following summary&#13;
showing citizen participation in all&#13;
of th e nation's wars and conflicts:&#13;
America's Wars . . .&#13;
AMERICAN REVOLUTION (1775-1784)&#13;
Participants 290,000&#13;
Deaths in Service 4,000&#13;
Last Veteran, Daniel F. Blakeman,&#13;
died 4/5/1869, age 109&#13;
WAR OF 1812 (181 2-1815)&#13;
Participants 287,000&#13;
Deaths in Service 2,000&#13;
Last Veteran, Hiram Cronk, died&#13;
5/13/05, age 105&#13;
MEXICAN WAR (1846-1848)&#13;
Participants • 79,000&#13;
Deaths in Service 13,000&#13;
Last Veteran, Owen Thomas Edgar,&#13;
died 9/3/29, age 98&#13;
INDIAN WARS (Approx. 1817-1898)&#13;
Participants 106,000&#13;
Deaths in Service 1,000&#13;
Last Veteran, Fredrak Fraske, died&#13;
6/18/73, age 101&#13;
CIVIL WAR (1861-1865)&#13;
Participants (Union) 2,213,000&#13;
Deaths in Service (Union) 364,000&#13;
Participants (Confederate) 1,000,000*&#13;
Deaths in Service (Confederate) 133,821*&#13;
SPANISH - AMERICAN WAR (1898-1902)&#13;
Participants 392,000&#13;
Dea ths in Service 11,000&#13;
Living Veterans 'i63&#13;
WORLD WAR I (1917-1918)&#13;
Participants&#13;
Deaths in Service&#13;
Living Veterans&#13;
4,744,000&#13;
116,000&#13;
556,000&#13;
WORLD WAR II (9/16/40 thru 7/25/47)&#13;
Participants 16,535,000&#13;
Deaths in Service 406,000&#13;
Living Veterans 12,547,000&#13;
KOREAN CONFLICT (6/27/50 thru 1/31/55)&#13;
Participants 6,807,000&#13;
Deaths in Service 55,000&#13;
Living Veterans 5,845,000&#13;
VIETNAM ERA (8/5/64 thru 5/7/75)&#13;
Participants •&#13;
Deaths in Service&#13;
Living Veterans&#13;
9,834,000&#13;
47,000&#13;
8,957,000&#13;
•Authoritative statistics for Confederate Forces&#13;
are not available. Estimated 28,000 Confederate&#13;
personnel died in Union prisons.&#13;
Mondale&#13;
visits&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan Galbraith&#13;
VICE-PRESIDENT Walter&#13;
Mondale visited Kenosha&#13;
Friday, Oct. 31 for a press&#13;
conference and rally at the&#13;
UAW Local 72.&#13;
Reagan wins&#13;
Electoral College votes (270 needed);&#13;
Reagan — 483 Carter — 49&#13;
Anderson — 0&#13;
Popular vote:&#13;
Reagan — 51 % Carter — 41 %&#13;
Anderson — 7%&#13;
U.S. Senate:&#13;
Robert Kasten — 1,184,279 (51%)&#13;
Gay lord Nelson — 1,131,507 (49%)&#13;
U.S. House off Representatives:&#13;
Les Aspin — 126,329 (59.5%)&#13;
Kathy Canary — 85,957 (40.5%)&#13;
AMERICA'S WARS TOTAL&#13;
War Participants 38,924,000 Living War Veterans 26,180 000&#13;
Deaths in Service 1,081,000 Living Ex-Servicemembers 30,074,000&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• From the Parking Lot&#13;
Miss Politeness&#13;
• . Review: "Loving Couples&#13;
• Soccer wins title &#13;
Thursday, November 6,1980&#13;
OPINION&#13;
Student questions closing of Union&#13;
Square for non-student activities&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
I received a call last Friday&#13;
from a student complaining about&#13;
the Union Square being closed the&#13;
night before because of the Basic&#13;
Skills Conference.&#13;
The student wondered what the&#13;
policy was about closing the&#13;
student Union for non - student&#13;
activities, such as Basic Skills.&#13;
"The policy," says Bill Niebuhr,&#13;
, director of the Union, "is that we&#13;
make every effort not to do it."&#13;
"In a year," said Niebuhr, "it&#13;
may happen a couple of times.&#13;
The decision on doing it is&#13;
basically an administrative&#13;
decision based on the importance&#13;
of t he other activity or if there is a&#13;
conflict of scheduling that forces&#13;
us into it.""&#13;
Nieburh said the basic policy is&#13;
that the Square is a public student&#13;
space and it will not be closed&#13;
during the school week unless it's&#13;
for a closed activity that is for&#13;
students, such as a dance.&#13;
The Basic Skills Conference was&#13;
obviously not a student activity. It&#13;
was something for the state of&#13;
Wisconsin, the UW system. There&#13;
were some scheduling conflicts on&#13;
that particular evening and, said&#13;
Nieburh, "There were a lot of&#13;
fairly important people on the&#13;
campus — in fluential in terms of&#13;
the UW system."&#13;
This was the second time this&#13;
year that the Union Square was&#13;
closed. The first time was for a&#13;
Carthage College activity when&#13;
there weren't other facilities&#13;
available in the community.&#13;
"Being a sister school," said&#13;
Niebuhr, "we helped them out of a&#13;
predicament."&#13;
Niebuhr said closing the Union&#13;
Square is a kind of thing that isn't&#13;
going to happen very often. "The&#13;
reason might change from time to&#13;
time, but once in a while it comes&#13;
up where we find ourselves in a&#13;
situation where we decide we have&#13;
to go with it for one night and hope&#13;
that doesn't upset too many&#13;
people."&#13;
(Editor's Note: See article on&#13;
page 3 to see what Jlle Basic Skills&#13;
Conference was all about).&#13;
Vandalism immature&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
Unfortunately, this year&#13;
there are some juvenile people&#13;
at Parkside who appear to&#13;
enjoy vandalism. Perhaps&#13;
these people do not realize&#13;
that their actions will result in&#13;
higher tuition costs for the&#13;
entire student body.&#13;
For example, last week&#13;
three coin - operated feminine&#13;
product machines were ripped&#13;
off the walls of the worn ens'&#13;
restrooms - just in Greenquist&#13;
Hall alone.&#13;
Graffiti, marked on&#13;
restroom walls, becomes quite&#13;
and expense to maintain.&#13;
Paint is not the only cost.&#13;
Manhours, diverted away&#13;
from other work, must be&#13;
included. Repainting just one&#13;
restroom is estimated to cost&#13;
at least $100. So when the total&#13;
facilities are considered, the&#13;
expense mounts.&#13;
Theft of tissue paper is&#13;
occurring from both the&#13;
women's and men's restrooms&#13;
around Parkside. The perpetrators&#13;
of these thefts seem&#13;
quite unconcerned about the&#13;
inconveniences of other&#13;
people.&#13;
Although there were a few&#13;
isolated incidents of this sort&#13;
occurring last year, this is the&#13;
first time that this sort of&#13;
illegal behavior has become&#13;
widespread. Students are&#13;
complaining. The accusations&#13;
need to be directed against&#13;
those committing the crime&#13;
and creating the problem.&#13;
Ronald Brinkmann, director&#13;
of Parkside Security, said that&#13;
damage to state property is&#13;
illegal: The Administrative&#13;
Code says that no person may&#13;
deface, damage, or destroy in&#13;
any way any property within&#13;
the boundaries of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin land&#13;
unless authorized to do so. The&#13;
penalty for vandalism is not&#13;
more than $500 or imprisonment&#13;
of not more than&#13;
90 days or both.&#13;
Brinkmann said that theft&#13;
was considered a&#13;
misdemeanor when the value&#13;
of the property is under $500.&#13;
The fine is not to exceed&#13;
$10,000 or imprisonment not to&#13;
exceed nine months or both.&#13;
Censorship is bad but occasionally necessary&#13;
nir Giicon ] tr n . ... . by Susan Michetti&#13;
My attitude toward censorship&#13;
is that it is basically not good;&#13;
however, there are exceptions&#13;
where censorship seems valuable&#13;
in dealing with national security,&#13;
slander, sedition and the right to&#13;
privacy.&#13;
Wartime and crisis situations&#13;
may justify censorship on the&#13;
grounds of strategic reasons of&#13;
State. For example, censoring of a&#13;
strategically timed departure of&#13;
war planes, missiles, or troops&#13;
could be justified.&#13;
I would tend to accept decisions&#13;
identified as strategic reasons by&#13;
the political leaders, as long as&#13;
explanations are provided shortly&#13;
after the information no longer is&#13;
strategic.&#13;
All political systems — including&#13;
the U.S. — have certain&#13;
underlying ethics of g ood and evil&#13;
built into them. Strategic reasons&#13;
for national security may be&#13;
valuable to insure the safety,&#13;
protection, and continuance of the&#13;
system. The evil here may be that&#13;
the definition of national security&#13;
may not be agreed upon once the&#13;
facts are know. I may interpret&#13;
national security as only involving&#13;
defense and the rulers may interpret&#13;
it as an offensive to insure&#13;
Mid-Eastern oil flow into the U.S.&#13;
Slanderous materials justify&#13;
censorship on the grounds of&#13;
defaming and damaging a person's&#13;
or institution's reputation&#13;
through misrepresentations or&#13;
lies. A dispatch that a judge was&#13;
acquitted of a criminal charge&#13;
when he was acquitted of&#13;
misconduct in office should be&#13;
censored. If the news is libelous&#13;
and cannot be positively proven&#13;
true, then it should be considered&#13;
-slander and should be censored,&#13;
as defined by the American&#13;
political legal system.&#13;
Slander infringes on the rights&#13;
of the persons or institutions by&#13;
exposing them to public hatred,&#13;
shame, disgrace, ridicule, and ill&#13;
opinions. I accept censorship of&#13;
slander because falsehoods are&#13;
not acceptable, especially those&#13;
that harm.&#13;
-Sedition mav justify censorship&#13;
to insure the safety, protection,&#13;
and continuance of the government&#13;
and its society. For&#13;
example, censoring Communist&#13;
propaganda calling for workers to&#13;
raise arms against the capitalist&#13;
system and its government might&#13;
be justified.&#13;
All political systems have an&#13;
inherent desire to protect and&#13;
maintain themselves. Incitement&#13;
and encouragement of resistance&#13;
or revolt against civil government&#13;
and its institutions can threaten&#13;
the system and its people. I would&#13;
accept censorship of sedition also&#13;
on the basis of the greatest good&#13;
for the greatest number of people&#13;
— by preventing possible large&#13;
scale death.&#13;
However, censorship of s edition&#13;
could become evil if the existing&#13;
government is concerned only&#13;
with the control over its people&#13;
and not concerned about their&#13;
perceptions. In a dictatorial&#13;
government, sedition itself may&#13;
bring the greatest good for the&#13;
greatest number of people — by&#13;
removing widespread human&#13;
misery and frustration. An&#13;
example would be if the government&#13;
became controlled by&#13;
capitalists who pay subsistence&#13;
wages to workers because the&#13;
demand for jobs is high due to&#13;
unemployment at the same time&#13;
as the abolishment of effective&#13;
social service programs.&#13;
Censorship of the race riots of&#13;
the 1960's could have prevented&#13;
further extension of resistance to&#13;
authority, but they were not&#13;
censored. This led to a movement&#13;
which brought increased civil&#13;
rights to blacks and minorities. If&#13;
the media becomes controlled and&#13;
the nation's policies infringe on&#13;
the civil rights (unalienable&#13;
natural rights) of a given segment&#13;
of the society, then the power of&#13;
confrontation — termed sedition&#13;
by the system's authorities — may&#13;
be perceived as the only alternative&#13;
to regain human dignity.&#13;
Censorship seems justified to&#13;
avoid invasion of the right of&#13;
privacy because it may interfere&#13;
with the human pursuit of happiness.&#13;
For example, censoring&#13;
the story of a 15-year-old unwed&#13;
mother who gave birth to triplets&#13;
seems justified. Throwing a&#13;
person's private and intimate&#13;
beliefs, thoughts, emotions, or&#13;
sensations into the public eye can&#13;
destroy his dignity and&#13;
satisfaction with life as a whole.&#13;
Censorship of private affairs is&#13;
justified on the basis of protecting&#13;
the inherent worth of human&#13;
beings and their inherent rights —&#13;
among which is the pursuit of&#13;
happiness. The right to privacy is&#13;
even protected by some state&#13;
statutes.&#13;
However, I think that there is an&#13;
overlap between justifiable news&#13;
and the right to privacy. It is hard&#13;
to distinguish sensationalism and&#13;
exploitation from interesting news ,&#13;
of public concern. Censorship&#13;
should not prevent expression of&#13;
interesting news of p ublic concern&#13;
because this would prevent free&#13;
access to information.&#13;
Since the Supreme Court ruled&#13;
in favor of granting local communities&#13;
the right to determine&#13;
when a public communication&#13;
medium should be censored for&#13;
appealing to "purient interests", I&#13;
feel that my behavior should&#13;
conform to local rulings. I feel&#13;
that the good aspect of this ruling&#13;
is that communities can censor&#13;
immorality away from the access&#13;
of juveniles; the bad aspect is&#13;
that it prevents members of the&#13;
adult community from access to&#13;
information that they may enjoy&#13;
or perhaps have a psychological&#13;
need which must remain unfulfilled.&#13;
&#13;
Censorship interferes with&#13;
important individual rights and&#13;
civil liberties of freedom of speech&#13;
and freedom of the press granted&#13;
through the First Amendment of&#13;
the Constitution.&#13;
Censorship prevents freedom to&#13;
create and disseminate information&#13;
as well as free access to&#13;
information. This deprives&#13;
mankind of the right to form independent&#13;
judgments by&#13;
preventing scrutinization of the&#13;
facts or lack of facts.&#13;
The potential of censorship to&#13;
become the tool of abuse seems&#13;
ganger&#13;
NEEDS. REPORTERS&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
AD R EPS&#13;
If you're interested, stop by our office&#13;
(next to the Coffee ShoppeJ or&#13;
Phone 553-2295&#13;
threatening to society. Censors&#13;
are able to place their own conduct&#13;
beyond scrutiny — an&#13;
assumption of infallibility. By&#13;
declaring certain subjects off&#13;
limits, censors prevent&#13;
judgements by informed people as&#13;
well as freedom to choose. It&#13;
becomes possible that censorship&#13;
could be used to the advantage of&#13;
those who would wield power&#13;
unchecked to evade their own&#13;
responsibility to society. Add the&#13;
tendency that power seems to&#13;
porrupt, and censorship could&#13;
endanger more inherent freedoms&#13;
or legally granted civil rights than&#13;
freedom of speech.&#13;
Censorship could inhibit and&#13;
discourage participation in free&#13;
speech and communication, with&#13;
ramifications extending into the&#13;
psychological world of men and&#13;
their intra personal, interpersonal,&#13;
and social relationships.&#13;
It could silence dissent,&#13;
depriving others of a clearer&#13;
perception produced by the&#13;
collision of truth with error. The&#13;
more approaches by every angle,&#13;
the closer the perception gets to&#13;
the truth. The power and value of&#13;
judgment is the ability to correct&#13;
itself when wrong. Without the&#13;
collision of counter opinions, the&#13;
whole truth risks being lost,&#13;
weakened, and deprived of its&#13;
vitality.&#13;
I think society has less to fear&#13;
from knowing than from not&#13;
knowing. What it does with the&#13;
information may be vital for the&#13;
opportunity to realize the best&#13;
potention of self as well as being&#13;
vital to survival.&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer ....&#13;
Dan Gafbraith Executive Business Manager&#13;
Sue Michetti Business Manager&#13;
Wendy Westphal ..&#13;
N.&#13;
ews Edi&#13;
!&#13;
or&#13;
Dave Cramer ' F®atu&#13;
[&#13;
e&#13;
!&#13;
d&#13;
! or&#13;
Brian Passino ' ds°«&#13;
Mike Farrell | ] ] • .v ; " Pho&#13;
'° Ed,tor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
p„to r STAFF&#13;
EdenhauTerGingeraHe,ge&#13;
Cso?MTeM' . °&#13;
eLuiSa&#13;
' *&gt;«*&#13;
Ledger, Dan McCnrml?k , 1 Ho,mdohl&#13;
' Carol Klees, Gary&#13;
Preston, Joe Ripp,&#13;
ChriStlnG BrUC6&#13;
uw"&#13;
parkside and ,hey are so,ely&#13;
RANGER is printed by the Union fmnorat o&#13;
V!,&#13;
8r except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
Written permission is requir^ for r?nr!nf'«&#13;
Ve Publishin&#13;
9 Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
AM correspondence sh^uld bl address^ TP&#13;
B&#13;
0rtL0&#13;
"&#13;
0f RANGER&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wl 53141. ddre&#13;
ssed to. Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UW-&#13;
Pres. O'Neil speaks at conference&#13;
_&#13;
lhe Second Annual jw™ -&#13;
Ranger Thursday, November 6,1980&#13;
^Second Annual System&#13;
Wide Basic Skills Conference was&#13;
held at Parkside Thursday and&#13;
Friday (Oct. 30-31) fea turing UWSystem&#13;
President Robert O'Neil&#13;
e&#13;
, keynote speaker. The&#13;
theme of the conference was "The&#13;
f&#13;
1&#13;
- Rs: Reading, 'riting&#13;
nthmetic, retention, and&#13;
reasoning."&#13;
O'Neill keynoted the connlahT&#13;
6^-&#13;
lowing a Thursday&#13;
mght dinner,. He spoke on&#13;
Basic Skills; Conerstone of&#13;
Collegiate Education."&#13;
Nearly so different workshops&#13;
were held during the two - day&#13;
conference, attracting more&#13;
than 10° educators from throughout&#13;
the state.&#13;
Thursday's panel discussion was&#13;
entitled Retention in the '80's&#13;
and included UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Chancellor Frank Horton&#13;
(Chairman of the UW-System&#13;
Task Force on Minorities),&#13;
Rodolfo Cortina of UW-M and&#13;
Sarah Harder of UW-Eau Claire&#13;
Friday's panel was on the theme&#13;
Funding for Basic Skills and&#13;
Minority - Disadvantaged"&#13;
featuring Regent David Beckwith&#13;
of Milwaukee, State Representative.&#13;
Ronald Lingren and UWSystem&#13;
Administrator E. Nelson&#13;
Swinerton.&#13;
UW-SYSTEM PRESIDENT ROBERT O'NEIL&#13;
The conference was sponsored&#13;
by Parkside's Office of&#13;
Educational Program Support&#13;
and the UW-System-wide Center&#13;
for the Study of Minorities and the&#13;
Disadvantaged.&#13;
Feminist Ehrenreich to speak Friday&#13;
"Undermining Women's&#13;
Creativity: Healers, Invalids and&#13;
Incompetents" is the title of a free&#13;
public talk by New York&#13;
University lecturer and free lance&#13;
writer Barbara Ehrenreich at 10&#13;
a.m. Friday, Nov. 7 in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theater.&#13;
A life scientist with a PhD&#13;
degree from Rockefeller&#13;
University", Ehrenreich is coauthor&#13;
of two books, "The&#13;
American Health Empire" and&#13;
"For Her Own Good: 150 Years of&#13;
Experts' Advice to Women." She&#13;
also is .the author of articles in&#13;
New York Review of Books, Social&#13;
Policy and MS magazine.&#13;
In her talk, Ehrenreich will&#13;
trace the evolution of women's&#13;
historical roles from healer, to&#13;
invalid to incompetent relating&#13;
those changes to health care as&#13;
well as other areas of life including&#13;
homemaking and childrearing.&#13;
&#13;
Ehrenreich's talk is sponsored&#13;
by the campus Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee and three student&#13;
troups, the Women's Concourse,&#13;
History Club and Pre-Medical&#13;
Club.&#13;
Prizewinning art display here&#13;
A one-man exhibition of constructed&#13;
paintings and prints by&#13;
Joseph Rozman will be on display&#13;
in the Communication Arts&#13;
Gallery through Nov. 20.&#13;
The show of 30 pieces, five being&#13;
exhibited for the first time, includes&#13;
acrylic on lucite watercolor&#13;
and ink constructions and hand&#13;
colored etchings.&#13;
A Racine resident and a&#13;
member of the Mount Mary&#13;
College art faculty in Milwaukee,&#13;
Rozman won major prizes in the&#13;
Watercolor Wisconsin shows in&#13;
1977 and 1980 and a Boston&#13;
Printmakers' purchase award in&#13;
1971.&#13;
He has had one-man shows at&#13;
the Joy Horwich Gallery in&#13;
Chicago, Wustum Museum and&#13;
the Milwaukee Arts Center and&#13;
recently was represented in Art&#13;
1980, the Chicago International&#13;
Art Exhibition.&#13;
Gallery hours are 12:30 - 5:30&#13;
p.m. Monday through Thursday&#13;
and 7 - 10 p.m. Tuesday and&#13;
Wednesday. The gallery also is&#13;
open when special events are&#13;
scheduled in the adjoining&#13;
Communications Arts Theater.&#13;
Miller presents free music recital&#13;
Trombonist Steve Miller, a&#13;
Racine student at Parkside, will&#13;
pr^sept a senior recital at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Monday, Nov. 10 in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theater.&#13;
The program is free and open to&#13;
the public and includes works by&#13;
Saint-Saens, Albrechtsberger,&#13;
Riegger, Poulenc, Larsson and&#13;
Fillmore.&#13;
Miller will be assisted by faculty&#13;
members August Wegner (piano)&#13;
and Scott Mather (trumpet) and&#13;
by Nicholas Drozdoff (trumpet)&#13;
and John E. Haun (horn).&#13;
IMPORTANT NOTICE&#13;
FOR ALL STUDENTS&#13;
AVAILABLE BEGINNING Friday, November 7, 1980&#13;
AT THE INFORMATION DESK, LOWER MAIN PLACE, WLLC&#13;
1. Registration packets for SPRING 1981.&#13;
2. You can also pick up a list of the classes you are officially&#13;
enrolled in for Fall 1980. This should be used to&#13;
check the accuracy of the courses. Questions regarding&#13;
this listing shuld be directed to the Records Office in D!91,&#13;
WLLC. Remember all semester program changes must&#13;
be accomplished prior to November 21, 1980. Module&#13;
program change deadlines differ and can be found in the&#13;
Fall 1980 course schedule.&#13;
PLEASE NOTE: Neither of these items will be mailed&#13;
this year!!&#13;
3. A DROP and ADD DAY on January 13 has been added&#13;
to Final Spring 1981 registration for all students who&#13;
registered early so that program changes can be made&#13;
prior to the start of classes. See the Spring 1981 course&#13;
schedule for details.&#13;
Office of Institutional Analysis 8c Registration&#13;
Barb Maris to present&#13;
music program&#13;
Pianist Barbara English Maris&#13;
of the Parkside music faculty will&#13;
present a program on "20 Century&#13;
Contemporary Piano Techniques"&#13;
under sponsorship of the&#13;
Milwaukee Music Teachers&#13;
Association from 7:30 to 9 p.m. on&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 16, at Alverno&#13;
College in Alphonsa Hall, 3401 S.&#13;
39th St., Milwaukee.&#13;
She has performed extensively&#13;
both in the U.S. and Europe and&#13;
has been concerto soloist with&#13;
major orchestras. She currently is&#13;
president of the College Music&#13;
Society, a professional&#13;
organization that includes more&#13;
than 4,000 college and university&#13;
music teachers.&#13;
Persons wishing to attend her&#13;
Milwaukee program should*&#13;
register with the Milwaukee&#13;
Music Teachers Association, c/o&#13;
Barbara E. Bunge, 4066 S. Troy&#13;
Ave., St. Francis, WI. 53207. Fees&#13;
are $1 for students, $3 for members&#13;
and $5 for nonmembers.&#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;
U.S. AIR FORCE&#13;
JAZZ BAND&#13;
THIS FRIDA Y — NOVEMBER 7&#13;
ACTIVITIES PERIOD&#13;
1: 00 - 2:00 P.M.&#13;
LIVE IN UNION SQUARE&#13;
UN C AMPUS I NTERVIEWS&#13;
Operations Management&#13;
ALL MAJORS For males and females. Moves you Into&#13;
responsibility immediately. 16 weeks of intensive&#13;
leadership training at OCS prepares you for an&#13;
assignment as a leader and manager.&#13;
Aviation&#13;
All Majors. Get your career off the ground with our pilot&#13;
or flight officer training program. Ask about the intelligence&#13;
and aeronautical maintenance programs.&#13;
Sophomores may apply for the Aviation Reserve Officer&#13;
Candidate (AVROC) Program.&#13;
Business Management&#13;
Bus. Admin., Math, Economics Majors. Males and&#13;
females. Six months advanced business management&#13;
course starts you as a Navy Management Officer.&#13;
Medical S tudents&#13;
Receive the cost of your tuition, books, fees, equipment,&#13;
and a $400 a month stipend from the Armed Forces&#13;
Health Professions Scholarship Program. Awards&#13;
based on ability, not financial need.&#13;
Other O pportunities I nclude: C ryptology, R eactor&#13;
Management, In structnr, E ngineer.&#13;
Interviews Conducted in Placement&#13;
on 10-11 November 1 980&#13;
NAVY&#13;
iAN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYERS &#13;
Thursday, November 6,1980 Ranger&#13;
Coming Events From the Parkinq Lot&#13;
x Thursday, Nov. 6&#13;
LECTURE at 11:45 am in Union 106. John Serpe will talk on "The Relationahin&#13;
Between Unionlem and City Adminlatretlon". The program i, free and ope to Ste&#13;
Lb"toc&#13;
RLto0Mtogy Club. Tt&#13;
"&#13;
!&#13;
"&#13;
r0gram and 0pen 10 lhe pubUc&#13;
- Sponaored&#13;
Miss Politeness&#13;
Friday, NOT. 7&#13;
1&#13;
PE.'^3&#13;
he&#13;
J&#13;
),&#13;
i&#13;
tla*&#13;
8&#13;
" w,&#13;
m ** shown at 1 pm in Union Square. Admission is&#13;
Parkside students, staff and faculty. Sponsored by PAB&#13;
I&#13;
f°"&#13;
em»&#13;
n&#13;
" wlu ^ shown at 8 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
wrS by PAB a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Spon-&#13;
^ Square featuring "Rumorz". Admission at the door is $1.50&#13;
for a Parkside student and $2.00 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB&#13;
2£&#13;
E A sUde 1?&#13;
CtP&#13;
lre talk on Modern Egypt by Prof. Omar Amin, Union 407,1&#13;
« e program 15 free and open to students, staff and faculty.&#13;
wic ?&#13;
UI&#13;
,&#13;
UIV? "&#13;
Radip&#13;
ac&#13;
tive Waste Concerns in Wisconsin." Dr. Michael Mudrey,&#13;
room Natural History Survey. See announcements for time and&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 8&#13;
ext 2312 f nr °c Scandai&#13;
i&#13;
av&#13;
ia&#13;
" starts at 9:30 am in TaUent HaU. Call&#13;
ext. 2312 for more details. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 9&#13;
°&#13;
P m i D G R - ^ ^ S u s a n G u l i c k d i r e c t i n g t h e P a r k s i d e G u i t a r Ensemble. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Monday, Nov. 10&#13;
Vnnr pfnf^ £&#13;
m ta P® ^C^eS area&#13;
-&#13;
Nick Burckel wm taUt on "How to Search&#13;
Sty Geneal0gy • 711(5 program is free for Parkside students, staff and&#13;
SEto™A* "&#13;
Career Planning&#13;
" atlpmin M0LN ln&#13;
- Tbe program is free and open&#13;
C Tho nrnlfi.o'S.&#13;
at U5&#13;
per Main Place wRh the Parkside Percussion Ensemble. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
_ Wednesday, Nov. 12&#13;
WLLC Ove&#13;
Erfo?J^n3&#13;
Ue^&#13;
thC by Beecham Robinson at 1 pm in the&#13;
«, 2 ui I^ungie. The reading is free and open to the public.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
1&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records**&#13;
626 56th St. 654 2932 8&#13;
TEACHERS WANTED&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Dear Miss Politeness:&#13;
This year, my husband and I&#13;
gave an Election Day party for&#13;
7,000 of our closest friends. Of&#13;
course, we bought each of our&#13;
guests a portable television party&#13;
favor so that everyone could get&#13;
into the festive mood, we installed&#13;
voting booths on the premises of&#13;
our home to accommodate our&#13;
guests (thanks to the League of&#13;
Women Voters), and we all played&#13;
fun party games like "Pin the Tail&#13;
on the President" and "Spin the&#13;
Voter".&#13;
However, parties don't always&#13;
go smoothly, as you may know.&#13;
So, just to break"the ice, we added&#13;
a few novel and personal touches&#13;
to our little gathering that you&#13;
might want to pass on to your&#13;
readers.&#13;
For those of our guests who&#13;
campaigned so hard for Ronald&#13;
Reagan, we held a private&#13;
showing of some of his movies,&#13;
overvoiced with recordings of&#13;
various speeches he has made&#13;
during his Presidential campaign,&#13;
and my husband had a face-lift.&#13;
For those of o ur guests who have&#13;
been rooting all along for Jimmy&#13;
Carter, we installed a peanut bar&#13;
(featuring Billy Beer on tap), and&#13;
my son learned to crunch empty&#13;
cans between his rather large and&#13;
luminescent teeth while jumping&#13;
out of a helicopter onto a flat roof.&#13;
For those of our guests who&#13;
supported John Anderson, both&#13;
my husband and myself dyed our&#13;
hair white and had our scalps&#13;
implanted with tiny lights that&#13;
gave us that "Marcus Welby"&#13;
halo effect.&#13;
We found that our guests&#13;
responded to these meaningful&#13;
gestures very favorably, and we&#13;
hope your readers can take a tip&#13;
from us and really get into the&#13;
spirit of things in four more years'&#13;
Dr. and Mrs. Richard M. Bazarre&#13;
Boston, Mass.&#13;
Positions available&#13;
this fall and spring&#13;
for college seniors&#13;
with bachelors or&#13;
graduate degree in&#13;
Mat h , P h y s ics ,&#13;
C h e m i s t r y o r&#13;
Engineering (U.S.&#13;
Citizenship unde r t he&#13;
age of 29)&#13;
to teach graduate level courses at the&#13;
Navy Nuclear Power School in Orlando,&#13;
Florida.&#13;
Teaching Experience Not Required&#13;
NO Family Separation&#13;
Sign up for an&#13;
interview at:&#13;
Placement Office&#13;
10-11 Nov.&#13;
or call&#13;
(414) 291-3055&#13;
(Collect)&#13;
Positions in&#13;
Reactor Management, Research and&#13;
Development are also available.&#13;
Dear Dr. and Mrs.:&#13;
I think it is perfectly lovely that&#13;
you two are so considerate of your&#13;
guest's feelings. It is only too bad&#13;
that Mr. Kennedy couldn't be&#13;
included in your plans. You could&#13;
have incorporated a lovely game&#13;
of "Bobbing for Volkswagens"&#13;
into your festivities!&#13;
P.S. I'd love to meet your son.&#13;
How old is he? Can you send a&#13;
photo?&#13;
Dear Miss Politeness:&#13;
I am writing to you with great&#13;
sadness and desperation. I wrote&#13;
to Dear Abby and Ann Landers&#13;
already, so please don't refer me&#13;
to them. They referred me to you.&#13;
My problem is my husband. We&#13;
have been married for 25 years&#13;
and our sex life, until the past few&#13;
months, has been very rewarding.&#13;
However, since my husband (I'll&#13;
call him Harry) has started&#13;
reading your column every night,&#13;
things have changed. Now, instead&#13;
of t he gentle and satisfying&#13;
lovemaking we used to have, we&#13;
have something completely different.&#13;
.&#13;
Now, every night before we go&#13;
to sleep, Harry makes me go&#13;
outside so he can open doors for&#13;
me, and then he carries packages&#13;
around the house and write thankyou&#13;
notes to me. Then, Harry&#13;
makes me recite from your&#13;
booklet, "The Do's and Don'ts:&#13;
Teen-age Dating Etiquette" until&#13;
my head spins. But when we&#13;
finally get into bed, he ties me up&#13;
with nylon rope and whips me&#13;
until I scream. What can I do tp&#13;
end this nightmare?&#13;
All Tied Up In Knots&#13;
Dear All Tied Up:&#13;
I think it is perfectly lovely that&#13;
after all those years your husband&#13;
still feels the kind of respect and&#13;
love for you that is reflected in the&#13;
courteous behavior he exhibits. I&#13;
would suggest you return his&#13;
favors and show him your&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
GRADONI'S&#13;
52nd street&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
Now Featuring&#13;
Mini-Service Sit-Down Dining&#13;
plus Carry-Outs&#13;
Open Noon til M idnight&#13;
Sat 4 til 1, Sun 4 til 10&#13;
BOMBERS - LASAGNA - SPAGHETTI&#13;
If you wish — Call ahead&#13;
and your order will be hot and&#13;
ready to eat in our private booths.&#13;
3308-52nd St. Kenosha&#13;
654-5068&#13;
gratitude by saying "Thank you"&#13;
when he ungags you or finishes&#13;
whichever comes first.&#13;
Dear Miss Politeness:&#13;
With all the fuss that's going on&#13;
now about the unfairness of giving&#13;
women titles that designate their&#13;
marital status, while men&#13;
married or un-, are all called by&#13;
"Mr.," why do you still call&#13;
yourself "Miss?" Wouldn't "Ms."&#13;
be better, or maybe you could use&#13;
your real name or something. Oh,&#13;
well. I just wondered about that!&#13;
What do you think?&#13;
Just A Suggestion&#13;
New York, N.Y.&#13;
Dear Just A:&#13;
Shut up. You are a rude person,&#13;
probably some kind of lesbian&#13;
dyke and I refuse to take your&#13;
trivial bitching seriously. As a&#13;
matter of f act, if you every write&#13;
to me again, I will find out who&#13;
you are and give you a face lift&#13;
with a nylon rope. Or how would&#13;
you like to be tied up and forced to&#13;
watch Ronald Reagan movies&#13;
overvoiced with recordings of&#13;
various speeches he has made&#13;
during his Presidential campaign?&#13;
Huh?! You will never&#13;
know what hit you.&#13;
To order Miss Politeness' new&#13;
booklet, "The Genteel Window&#13;
Peeper", send 50&lt;f c/o your local&#13;
paper.&#13;
Miss Politeness regrets to inform&#13;
her readers that she cannot&#13;
make personal replies to readers'&#13;
queries unless letters are accompanied&#13;
by obscene&#13;
photographs.&#13;
New service&#13;
offers aid&#13;
According to Steve Danz,&#13;
Program Director, the new service&#13;
by The Scholarship Bank will&#13;
give each student a print-out of the&#13;
scholarships, loans, grants and&#13;
work-study sources available to&#13;
him or her in that student's&#13;
specific field.&#13;
Students apply by writing for&#13;
and filling out a questionnaire&#13;
which is then used- as the key to&#13;
the data bank. The questionnaire&#13;
is like a mini-profile of each&#13;
student, seeking information on&#13;
year in school, major, occupational&#13;
objectives, sex,&#13;
religion, parent's union, employer&#13;
and military service &amp; s tudent's&#13;
outstanding abilities, such as&#13;
leadership experience or sports.&#13;
The director also indicated that&#13;
each student will receive at least&#13;
$100 in aid, or the service fee of $35&#13;
will be refunded. Danz indicated&#13;
that students unable to pay the $35&#13;
fee may receive a "basic" printout&#13;
of at least 15 scholarship&#13;
sources for $35. T he $25 fee will&#13;
give students up to 50 sources of&#13;
possible aid.&#13;
The service will also send each&#13;
applicant a publication on "How&#13;
to Play Grantmanship,"&#13;
Write to Scholarship Bank, 10100&#13;
Santa Monica #750, L.A. 90067 (or&#13;
call toll free 800-327-9191 ext. 397).&#13;
FIRST&#13;
"National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
AAAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phono 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C. &#13;
Review&#13;
'Loving Couples'&#13;
a waste of time&#13;
Directories finance emergency loans&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
I find it extremely hard to&#13;
classify "Loving Couples", it's&#13;
hardly a comedy and it's not quite&#13;
a love story. It's just plain bad.&#13;
The plot is almost more confusing&#13;
than, anything I've ever&#13;
seen on "All My Children" or&#13;
"General Hospital" or any other&#13;
soap opera. Dr. Walter Kirby&#13;
(James Coburn) and his wife&#13;
Evelyn (Shirley Mac Laine) have&#13;
a failing marriage. Evelyn, who is&#13;
also a doctor, starts to have an&#13;
affair with Gregg Plunket&#13;
(Stephen Collins), a real estate&#13;
agent, after she performs&#13;
emergency first aid on him (he got&#13;
into a car accident while staring&#13;
at her). Gregg's live-in girlfriend&#13;
Stefanie (Susan Sarandon) soon&#13;
discovers the affair and confronts&#13;
Walter with it. She and Walter&#13;
have an affair to spite Evelyn and&#13;
Gregg. All of this happens within&#13;
the first 15 minutes.&#13;
James Coburn is absolutely&#13;
terrible as the shallow husband&#13;
whose vocabulary seems to only&#13;
consist of "I'm late" and "I'm&#13;
sorry." His acting is reminiscent&#13;
of high school dramatics.&#13;
Susan Sarandon, on the other&#13;
hand, is fun and bright; she saves&#13;
many a scene from Coburn's bad&#13;
acting. She was lucky to be cast&#13;
opposite him because he makes&#13;
her look like a good actress rather&#13;
that an OK one.&#13;
Shirley Mac Claine does some&#13;
good serious acting as well as&#13;
some comic (she even gets a small&#13;
chance to dance) but even her&#13;
talents aren't enough to save this&#13;
film.&#13;
Stephen Collins is the kind of&#13;
actor who looks as though he can&#13;
charm his way through anything&#13;
(except this film); he turns in&#13;
some good performances. One&#13;
main fault of this film is that&#13;
Collins is young, good looking and&#13;
has an attractive girlfriend, so&#13;
why is he having an affair with&#13;
Mac Laine?&#13;
There is one funny scene where&#13;
Collins must go to bed with Sally&#13;
Kellerman (a sex crazed, middleaged&#13;
woman) in the house he is&#13;
trying to sell her. The-owner who&#13;
was supposed to be out all morning&#13;
suddenly returns and&#13;
Kellerman insists on taking a&#13;
shower. Collins is very funny as he&#13;
tries to explain thd situation to the&#13;
owner.&#13;
A big point of the film is that the&#13;
solution to every sticky situation&#13;
is to have a drink (whenever all&#13;
the couples are together for&#13;
example).&#13;
The main thing I disliked about&#13;
"Loving Couples" is the sexist&#13;
way the characters are portrayed.&#13;
Walter is insensitive to his wife's&#13;
needs and Gregg never gives two&#13;
thoughts about jumping ,in bed&#13;
with another woman. Whereas the&#13;
women have deep personalities. It&#13;
is the women who kick the men out&#13;
of their houses at the beginning&#13;
and the women make the decision&#13;
to break up at the end." I'm sick&#13;
and tired of films about women&#13;
"growing" and "finding themselves&#13;
and dumping the men who&#13;
helped them to "grow" because&#13;
they no longer fit into their lives. I&#13;
think the public is ready for a&#13;
relationship between two mature&#13;
people who know what they want&#13;
o So here we've got two veteran&#13;
fp^Ki I&#13;
0&#13;
"&#13;
6&#13;
, 7&#13;
ery sood and one&#13;
terrible) and two newcomers (one&#13;
OK and one good) in one lousey&#13;
turn. Save your money on this&#13;
one; stay home and watch TV.&#13;
by Randy Klees&#13;
P.S.G.A. would like to take this&#13;
time to tell students that the new&#13;
Student/Faculty telephone&#13;
directories are now on sale. These&#13;
directories are selling for the low&#13;
price of one dollar and may be&#13;
purchased at the Union Information&#13;
Counter. The&#13;
directories contain the home&#13;
phone numbers of all faculty&#13;
members and a complete listing of&#13;
all students at Parkside.&#13;
Proceeds from this sale will go&#13;
toward an Emergency Loan Fund.&#13;
All Parkside students will be&#13;
eligible to take advantage of this&#13;
service.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
Members &amp; other Business students&#13;
interested in attending the 2nd Annual&#13;
Financial Managers Dinnerv Sign up &amp; pay&#13;
to Wendy Schwandt, Brian Felland, Sara&#13;
Walker, Bill Maurer or Mr. Coulter. Local&#13;
executives will be at this dinner on Wed.&#13;
Nov. 12.&#13;
These student loans will have a&#13;
maximum limit of $200.00. The&#13;
length of each loan term may be&#13;
30,60, or 90 days. An interest rate&#13;
of 6% will be imposed on all loans.&#13;
All payments and monetary exchanges&#13;
will be handled through&#13;
the Bursar's office.&#13;
Applications for loans will be&#13;
made to Dave Pedersen, Dean of&#13;
Student Life. Pedersen will then&#13;
interview the applicant. Two&#13;
senators will be elected by a&#13;
majority vote of the Senate to&#13;
serve on a review committee.&#13;
. This committee will then meet&#13;
to discuss the eligibility of the&#13;
candidate and decide on the terms&#13;
of the loan. The application will&#13;
submit a legal Promisory note to&#13;
the Bursar's office. In the event of&#13;
default loans, all student records&#13;
will be withheld until the loan has&#13;
been repayed.&#13;
All information regarding these&#13;
loans will be held in strict confidence.&#13;
However, the Senate will&#13;
receive a monthly report as to the&#13;
status of the account. When the&#13;
account runs out, applicants will&#13;
be put on a waiting list.&#13;
If there are any questions&#13;
concerning the Student Loan&#13;
Fund, contact Tracy Gruber in the&#13;
P.S.G.A. office WLLC D-137.&#13;
SOPHOMORES — JUNIORS — SENIORS&#13;
Is Your Future Up In The Air?&#13;
If So: ID LIKE TO MEET YOU&#13;
And explain why being a pilot or flight officer in the Navy is fun&#13;
and adventurous, and just one of the many exciting careers we&#13;
offer. If you'll take time to take our OFFICER test, I'll take the&#13;
time to fly you in our fully acrobatic NAVY T-34. If you qualify&#13;
you 11 e xperience a wingover, loop, barrel roll, spin, inverted&#13;
flight, and G-loads on your body. A MIND BOGGLING EXPERIENCE&#13;
! If you have never flown before, now is your chance.&#13;
Testing and flying are conducted on an individual basis.&#13;
Eric Binford&#13;
lives for the&#13;
movies...&#13;
Sometimes&#13;
he kills&#13;
for them,&#13;
too!&#13;
DENNIS CHRISTOPHER&#13;
Opening Soon At A Theatre Near You&#13;
IRWIN YABLANS AND SYLVIO TABET PRESENI&#13;
A LEISURE INVESTMENT COMPANY &amp; MOVIE VENTURERS LTD. PRODUCTION&#13;
DENNIS CHRISTOPHER ,N "FADE TO BLACK"&#13;
siarrinc TIM TH0MERS0N, N0 RMANN BURTON, M ORGAN PAULL, G WYNNE GILFORD, E VE BRENT A SHE AND JAMES LUISI&#13;
AND INTRODUCING LINDA K ERRIDGE DIRECTOR Of PHOTOGRAPHY ALEX PHILLIPS, J R. ah m uskby CRAIG SAFAN&#13;
txtcurivF PRODUCERS IR WIN YABLANS AND SY LVIO TABET PRODUCEDBY G EORGE G. B RAUNSTEIN AND RON HAMADY&#13;
ASSOCIATE PRO DUCER J OSEPH WOLF WR ITTEN AND DIR ECTED BY VERNON ZIMMERMAN&#13;
p j Rf-STPiCTro :: 1 - A&#13;
W— - ; '-'""I AN AMERICAN CINEMA RELEASE 1980 American Communications Industries, Inc. All rights reserved&#13;
Patronize&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter. &#13;
6 Thursday, November 6,1980 Ranger&#13;
1980-81&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
basketball&#13;
SEASON PASS&#13;
Get a FREE UW-P T-shirt with each&#13;
season pass $10 for students&#13;
$18 for all others&#13;
OPENING WEEKEND&#13;
Tickets only $1 in advance at the PE Bldg&#13;
or Info Center...... after the games enjoy a&#13;
free beer or soda &amp; live entertainment&#13;
Get a free mug&#13;
1 ,9TJ.'&#13;
&gt;um &lt;&#13;
FACULTY/STAFF/STUDENTS&#13;
at Union Square&#13;
MEN'S SCHEDULE •&#13;
Fri Nov 28 St. Xavier&#13;
Sat Nov 29 UW-LaCrosse&#13;
Mon Dec 1 South Alabama&#13;
Thurs Dec 4Murray State&#13;
Sat Dec 6 Drake University&#13;
Tues Dec 9 UW-Stevens Point&#13;
Sat Dec 13 Kansas State&#13;
Mon Dec 15 UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Mon Dec 29 Ranger Classic&#13;
&amp;TueDec30 Tournament&#13;
(Carthage,&#13;
Ouachita Baptist,&#13;
Minnesota-Duluth&#13;
Sat Jan 3 UW-Green Bay&#13;
Mon Jan 5 Iowa State&#13;
Wed Jan 7 Colorado&#13;
Sat Jan 10 California StateFullerton&#13;
&#13;
Tue Jan 13 Hawaii-Hilo&#13;
Wed Jan 14 Hawaii-Hilo&#13;
Tue Jan 20 UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Sat Jan 24 Quincy College&#13;
Parkside 7:30PM&#13;
Parkside 7:30PM&#13;
Mobile, Ala. 7:30PM&#13;
Murray, Kentucky 7:30PM&#13;
Des Moines, Iowa 7:30PM&#13;
Stevens Point 7:30PM&#13;
Manhattan, Kans. 7:35PM&#13;
Parkside 7:30PM&#13;
Parkside 7&amp;9PM&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Parkside 7:30PM&#13;
Ames, Iowa 7:35PM&#13;
Boulder, Colo. 7:35PM&#13;
Fullerton, Cal 7:30PM&#13;
Hilo, Hawaii 7:30PM&#13;
Hilo, Hawaii 7:30PM&#13;
Milwaukee 8PM&#13;
Parkside 7:30PM&#13;
Thur Jan 29&#13;
Sat Jan 31&#13;
Tue Feb 3&#13;
Sat Feb 7&#13;
Mon Feb 9&#13;
Wed Feb 11&#13;
Sat Feb 14&#13;
Mon Feb 16&#13;
Thur Feb 19&#13;
Sat Feb 21&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
Chicago State&#13;
UW-Whitewater&#13;
Loras Collebge&#13;
Saginaw Valley St.&#13;
Lakeland College&#13;
St. Norbert College&#13;
Lewis University&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
UW-Green Bay&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Whitewater&#13;
Dubuque, Iowa&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Parkside&#13;
DePere&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Marquette,Mich.&#13;
Green Bay&#13;
7:30PM&#13;
7:30PM&#13;
7:30PM&#13;
7:30PM&#13;
7:30PM&#13;
7:30PM&#13;
7:30PM&#13;
7:30PM&#13;
7:30PM&#13;
7:30PM&#13;
WOMEN'S S CHEDULE&#13;
.V r&#13;
Tue Dec 2 UW-Oshkosh Parkside (7 pm)&#13;
Sat Dec 6 'Marquette Milw (5:45 pm)&#13;
Tue Dec 9 • UW-W hitewater Whitewater(5pm)&#13;
Fri Dec12 UW-Stevens Point Stevens Pt (6 pm)&#13;
Fri-Sat College of St. Francis Joliet, III.&#13;
Dec 19-20 Tournament (UW-Parkside,&#13;
St. Xavier, Missouri-St. Louis,&#13;
Chicago State, Lewis, Shaw&#13;
College)&#13;
Sat Jan 10 'Carroll&#13;
Tue Jan 13 'UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Fri-Sat Parkside Tournament (Loras,&#13;
Jan 16-17 Milton, St. Xavier, UW-Pkside)&#13;
Tue Jan 20 Chicago State&#13;
Sat Jan 24 * UW-Green Bay&#13;
Tue Jan 27 'Marquette&#13;
Thur Jan 29 Northeastern Illinois&#13;
Sat Jan 31 UW-Platteville&#13;
Mon Feb 2 'Carthage&#13;
Sat Feb 7 North Central&#13;
Thur Feb 12 'Carroll&#13;
Sat Feb 14 Illinois-Chicago Circle&#13;
Wed Feb 18 'UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Fri Feb 20 UW-Oshkosh&#13;
Sat Feb 21 * UW-Green Bay&#13;
Mon Feb 23 'Carthage&#13;
Tue Mar 3 St. Norbert&#13;
Thur-Sat WWIAC Division II&#13;
Mar 5-7 Tournament&#13;
* denotes WWIAC-II game&#13;
Parkside (5 pm)&#13;
Milw (7 pm)&#13;
Parkside&#13;
(5 &amp; 7 pm Fri)&#13;
(1 &amp; 3 pm Sat)&#13;
Chicago (7:30 pm)&#13;
Parkside (1:30 pm)&#13;
Parkside (7 pm)&#13;
Chicago (7 pm)&#13;
Parkside (3 pm)&#13;
Parkside (7 pm)&#13;
Parkside (4:30 pm)&#13;
Waukesha (7 pm)&#13;
Parkside (4:30 pm)&#13;
Parkside (7 pm)&#13;
Oshkosh (7 pm)&#13;
Grn Bay (1:30 pm)&#13;
Kenosha (7 pm)&#13;
Parkside (7 pm)&#13;
Milwaukee (UWM)&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside &#13;
Burman X-country champ&#13;
by Peter A. Cramer r. . . _&#13;
Ranger Thursday, November 6,1980&#13;
by Peter A. Cramer&#13;
Wendy Burman fought off 64&#13;
runners and poor weather conditions&#13;
to capture first place in the&#13;
1980 WWIAC cross-country&#13;
Championships last weekend in&#13;
River Falls.&#13;
Burman set a new course record&#13;
with her first place finish in a time&#13;
of 18 minutes and 2 s econds. She&#13;
beat second place finisher Cheryl&#13;
Konkol of Milwaukee by 18&#13;
seconds.&#13;
La Crosse, Marquette,&#13;
Parkside, Milwaukee, Stevens&#13;
k !!! J .u&#13;
11 aire and River F&#13;
aUs battled the 35 degree temperature&#13;
and northwesterly winds of 20-25&#13;
^&#13;
ow at the River Falls&#13;
GoIlClub. La Crosse won the meet&#13;
with 51 points followed by&#13;
Marquette, Parkside, Milwaukee,&#13;
Stevens Point, Eau Claire and&#13;
River Falls.&#13;
^ Other scoring for Parkside was&#13;
Kellie Benzow in 15th, Sharon&#13;
Keller (18th), Dona Driscoll&#13;
(37th), and Barb Osborne (41st)&#13;
Sandy Venne (45th), JoAnne&#13;
Carey (54th), and Linda&#13;
Pfeil&amp;tifter rounded out the&#13;
remainder of the team.&#13;
Soccer team captures title&#13;
Volleyball loses 2 of 3&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
saw its record drop to 24-18 l ast&#13;
week as it defeated Chicago-Circle&#13;
then lost to George Williams and&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
The Rangers looked extremely&#13;
sharp against Chicago-Circle and&#13;
won in straight games. The scores&#13;
were 17-15, 15-9, 15-8. "W e played&#13;
very well" said Coach Linda&#13;
Henderdon. "It was boring out&#13;
there. They were no competition.&#13;
We must have caught them on an&#13;
off nig ht because they didn't play&#13;
very well."&#13;
The match was just the opposite&#13;
for Parkside. "We were relaxed.&#13;
We maintained a good level even&#13;
considering their play." Henderson&#13;
was afforded the&#13;
luxury to play a lot of&#13;
people in their cakewalk&#13;
over Chicago - Circle and&#13;
everyone contributed.&#13;
Things were different when&#13;
Milwaukee and George Williams&#13;
ventured into the Parkside&#13;
Fieldhouse on Saturday. George&#13;
Williams defeated the Rangers 15-&#13;
3, 2-15, 17-15, 6-15, 15-4. It was a&#13;
lackluster performance by a&#13;
lackadaisical Parkside team. The&#13;
Rangers were crushed in the&#13;
deciding fifth game "because of a&#13;
lack of mental concentration" as&#13;
Henderson put it. "We beat&#13;
ourselves again."&#13;
Parkside couldn't turn things&#13;
around against Milwaukee and&#13;
lost to the Panthers for&#13;
the first time in four&#13;
matches held this season.&#13;
Milwaukee won 16-14, 15- 12, 15-17,&#13;
17-15. The sluggish Rangers&#13;
couldn't get untracked and saw its&#13;
possible number one seeding for&#13;
the upcoming state tournament&#13;
slip away. The Rangers are now&#13;
preparing for the state tournament&#13;
on November 14 and 15 at&#13;
Marquette. Parkside, Milwaukee,&#13;
Marquette, Northland and Carroll&#13;
will try to unseat defending&#13;
champion Carthage.&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
For the sixth time in the last&#13;
seven years the men's soccer&#13;
team has captured the Division 14&#13;
Championship and earned the&#13;
right to compete in Area 4 competition.&#13;
The Rangers defeated&#13;
Platteville 2-1 last Saturday in the&#13;
District Championship game.&#13;
The Rangers advance to Area 4&#13;
play against a yet undertermined&#13;
opponent because other district&#13;
play won't conclude until&#13;
November l)th. Area competition&#13;
begins on the 15th.&#13;
Against the vaunted Platteville&#13;
defense the Rangers managed 19&#13;
shots but scored a meager two&#13;
goals. The two teams battled to a&#13;
0-0 halftime tie in a rugged and&#13;
physical first half. "We missed&#13;
four sure goals that first half"&#13;
lamented Coach Hal Henderson.&#13;
"It was a physical half but we&#13;
were dominating them." The&#13;
Rangers were called for ten offside&#13;
penalties in the initial half&#13;
which also stymied the Rangers&#13;
offense. Henderson had an explanation&#13;
for the off-side&#13;
penalties. "It was frustration on&#13;
our part. We were overanxious to&#13;
score. We were pressing too hard;&#13;
we wanted to blow them out."&#13;
Captain Mike Kiefer finally put&#13;
the Rangers on the scoreboard at&#13;
the 57 minute mark on a penalty&#13;
kick. It was Kiefer's seventh goal&#13;
on a penalty kick and ninth goal of&#13;
the year, both Parkside records.&#13;
The Rangers extended their lead&#13;
to 2-0 when Ralph DeGraff scored&#13;
his fifth goal of the year at the 73&#13;
minute mark. Chiedu Okonmah&#13;
earned an assist on the play.&#13;
Platteville scored their only goal&#13;
at the 78 minute mark on a penalty&#13;
kick.&#13;
The Rangers are now 11-5-1 on&#13;
the season and are ranked fourth&#13;
in the Midwest soccer polls.&#13;
i o% DISCOUNT&#13;
r^&#13;
,&#13;
° Parkside students and faculty&#13;
members only, on all merchandise&#13;
in our store. Parkside I.D. required&#13;
"&#13;
x; ' '.&gt;v. •' ; /&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
&lt;%Ve/rt(juOuv &amp; S&amp;tvl&#13;
JEWELERS&#13;
Kanothi'i Diamond Cantar&#13;
S617 - 6th Avenue&#13;
Phone 658-2525 Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
RANGER&#13;
NEEDS&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of b eer? All you have to do is fill&#13;
out this entry form and pick the most correct winners. Put a check&#13;
mark by your picks and bring theform down to the Ranger office,&#13;
D139 WLLC.&#13;
Buffalo at N. Y. Jets -&#13;
Cincinnati at Oakland -&#13;
Cleveland at Baltimore&#13;
Denver at San Diego —&#13;
Kansas City at Seattle -&#13;
Atlanta at St. Louis —&#13;
Dallas at N. Y. Giants&#13;
Detroit at Minnesota&#13;
Philadelphia at New Orleans •&#13;
San Francisco vs. Green Bay&#13;
Washington at Chicago&#13;
Miami at Los Angeles&#13;
Pittsburgh at Tampa Bay&#13;
New England at Houston J&#13;
Tie - breaker: • will be the total combined points&#13;
scored in the New England - Houston game.&#13;
Last week's winner: Ed Heinisch, 13 correct, 42 points&#13;
Name:&#13;
S.S. No -&#13;
Rules:&#13;
1) One entry per person&#13;
2) Must be a student at UW-Parkside&#13;
3) Person with most correct picks win (in case of tie, the total&#13;
points will be used as a tie - breaker)&#13;
4) Entry must be clipped from Ranger issue&#13;
5) Ranger members ineligible&#13;
6) Entries must be turned into Ranger office by noon on the&#13;
Friday preceeding the games J&#13;
7) Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks&#13;
8) Entries must be legible to be considered&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
MY WATCH says All - American and not&#13;
12:30. Otis Blansten&#13;
lOP's, Animals, Chain Gang, you're all dead.&#13;
Blanstens will cripple.&#13;
EDDIE — were you in Milwaukee last night?&#13;
Sweet Dreams!&#13;
SEE SABINE'S sabre seize Caesar's scepter.&#13;
Ten times fast.&#13;
IF ANYONE takes my chair, I'll sit on your&#13;
lap.&#13;
PEOPLE NOT VOTING for John Anderson&#13;
deserve what they get!&#13;
ZORRO — Caminas much? Muy&#13;
rapidamente, verdad?!Gringo y Grlngas&#13;
HEY, we know we're sick — and strange! —&#13;
Animals&#13;
TODD H.: Prove it! —Malibu #SC - 3057&#13;
C. WISHAU, look in the mirror to see who's&#13;
dull.&#13;
SHORT STOP, are they just a fantaxy, or is&#13;
Bamboo needed? K &amp; B&#13;
BUHL, Idaho meet me on the Perine Bridge.&#13;
Twin Falls&#13;
VISIT THE ZOO and never leave the library.&#13;
Chain Gang&#13;
BUC, the way your teeth extend, make me&#13;
wet!!—Loosey&#13;
Kp&#13;
- — Constantly wearing suits won't get&#13;
vou a job! lOP's&#13;
NOREEN, We thought the sights were rather&#13;
trifle. You seem to think you got an eyeful!&#13;
Could you think of anywhere better to meet&#13;
to make your birthday seem complete? —&#13;
The 2 S oftball L's&#13;
GIRLS — Forgive my stupid statements. I&#13;
didn't know you cared so much. ALL my&#13;
love Steve K.&#13;
WHAT GOES good with animal sandwiches?&#13;
"Fresh" women salad.&#13;
DULL, USED — don't talk gruesome&#13;
threesome. — All animal men.&#13;
STA8BIN CABIN live up to your name: We&#13;
want action. t&#13;
THE RANGER STAFF are honorary Chain&#13;
Gang members, — Chain Gang&#13;
PLEASE — don't every think of us as on your&#13;
level again. How degrading!&#13;
BUCK — you give great eye messages — puss&#13;
eye! — Loosey&#13;
ROUND TABLE: Go to the zoo and look!&#13;
(Grail)! — lOP's&#13;
ANIMAL WOMEN: All dogs have their day.&#13;
— Hollywood&#13;
JULIE buys girdles at Goodwill!!!&#13;
KEN MEYER Isn't an IOP.&#13;
THANK YOU for the compliment. — K.M.&#13;
WHO GAVE us treats at Halloween?—lOP's&#13;
BRIAN: Did you get a plaque? If not, see me!&#13;
Guess Who . . .&#13;
AMIL ABENDROTH is a rip off!&#13;
H- — I only get lucky with brunettes! —&#13;
Julie N.&#13;
WE ARE the Chain Gang of the world! lOP's&#13;
&amp; Queen&#13;
JEFF: Soda no - i ce is gone too fast. Keep in&#13;
touch! — Ferret?&#13;
THERE IS HOPE for all animal women.&#13;
Become nuns — Hollywood&#13;
0SC-3O57, Let's go OFF-ROADING in my&#13;
eagle! Todd H.&#13;
THE MONTREAL CANADIANS died last&#13;
week, survived by Paul Mlssurelli.&#13;
KEN MEYER makes sense in months with no&#13;
Wednesdays. — lOP's&#13;
BUCK — please put your bucks between my&#13;
thighs? Loosey&#13;
HEY BILL, Be careful of U.D.!&#13;
TO ALL Organic students, Polar Aprotic Sect,&#13;
Pray to the god Alkane; Show us the way , .&#13;
. Back side attack! — GGBBCS&#13;
TWO'S COMPANY, three's a crowd. Get off&#13;
the couch!&#13;
ELLEN S. I l ove to be DOMINATED — Your&#13;
Fuzzy Bear&#13;
JOLENE "used" is one thing but hard-up is&#13;
another.&#13;
CHARLIE BROWN: you like your "name" as&#13;
much as I like mine — Sex Kitten.&#13;
RON, drive much?!—Brown Eyes&#13;
CUTE? yellow belt — soon as possible — kick&#13;
me please!! Ya.&#13;
SUE AND DEBBIE: How ya hangin'?? —&#13;
Jeff and Bryan&#13;
ORGY QUEEN, Is it true le billion have been&#13;
served?!—BJ&#13;
THE ANIMALS have femaleblood. Dr. Renee&#13;
Richards and lOP's&#13;
MY HOUSE (Junie) —Congratulations, 3rd!&#13;
— Little Sister S.&#13;
DEAR WORLD: Please leave me alone. My&#13;
schizophrenia and lower intestinal tract&#13;
infection are coming along quite nicely; so&#13;
suck rocks!'&#13;
BUC, you make my nips get up and dance! —&#13;
Loosey&#13;
JULIE, eye, different other, list . . . Rock&#13;
group me!! Shy?&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
ON SALE!! SeaSon passes (Basketball)&#13;
Cbntact: The UWP Cheerleaders. 553-2320&#13;
1968 CADILLAC Coupe deVille. Runs well.&#13;
$350. 637-2582 after 5:00,&#13;
'74 PONTIAC Grand Am. Custm. paint and&#13;
interior —new tires and wheels — Reblt. Hi&#13;
pert 455, Pw. wnds, tilt, reclining seats,&#13;
AM/FM stereo/8 track. Extra clean $3600.&#13;
553-9351.&#13;
INDOOR/OUTDOOR rollerskates..Used&#13;
twice. $35. 554-2817.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Seven room upper.&#13;
Racine, on P.U. busline. 637-2274&#13;
ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
for&#13;
SPRING SEMESTER&#13;
Aa2&#13;
v&#13;
'*?xr&#13;
-&#13;
p&#13;
Ar&#13;
,or to registration for Spring&#13;
Semester. A Certification of Advising form, signed by the&#13;
adviser, is required for regisration.&#13;
Spring Semester Course Schedules will be available on&#13;
November 7 November 10-21 has been designated as an&#13;
advlSir&#13;
)9 Period, and advisers will make every effort to meet with you then. every&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
$ '&#13;
^ CONTACT YOUR ADVISER&#13;
FOR AN APPOINTMENT r"&#13;
if you have any questions, contact the Office of the Dean&#13;
of Faculty, 348 Wyllie Library-Learning Center, 553-2144.&#13;
NOTE: Non-matriculent students (students not seekino&#13;
a degree at UW-Parkside) are exempt from this&#13;
requirement. K um Tms &#13;
SPORTS ACTION&#13;
Parkside's soccer team defeated UW-Platteville 2-1 in the&#13;
division championship Saturday, while men's cross country&#13;
hosted the NCAA II Great Lakes Championship.&#13;
Photos by Brian Passino&#13;
November 6,1980 </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 9, issue 10, November 6, 1980</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin - Porkside&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
Tina Greenfeldt (left) and Patti&#13;
Cast Casciaro (right) rehearse "Cream in&#13;
the Well" under the direction of&#13;
nnunflme Norman Gano (center). The play&#13;
opens Dec. 3. See cast picture on&#13;
page 3.&#13;
Soviet defense policies&#13;
threaten nuclear war&#13;
by Debby Siegel&#13;
"How many of you have read&#13;
the SALT I and SALT II arms&#13;
limitation agreements?" Peter&#13;
James asked his Parkside&#13;
audience this question October 23.&#13;
He is concerned that very few&#13;
Americans have actually read&#13;
these treaties.&#13;
During the 1960's, James was&#13;
employed by the Pratt and&#13;
Whitney Aircraft Company.&#13;
During this time, he was also&#13;
an informant for the&#13;
C.I.A. and an Air Force Intelligence&#13;
Agent. As an engineer,&#13;
James traveled to world&#13;
aeronautical conferences and&#13;
became acquainted with Soviet&#13;
scientists and diplomats.&#13;
With the help of his wife, who&#13;
posed for photos with Soviet officials,&#13;
he was able to covertly&#13;
gather much information for the&#13;
C.I.A. In this role as a spy, he&#13;
accumulated the data for an 800&#13;
page document that maintained&#13;
that the Soviet Union had an objective&#13;
of world dominance&#13;
through nuclear strength, while&#13;
criticizing the Republicans of&#13;
playing politics with the U.S.&#13;
national defense.&#13;
When James' document was&#13;
publicized, he was prohibited&#13;
from traveling out of the United&#13;
States as an employee of Pratt&#13;
and Whitney. Since then he has&#13;
been lecturing and writing about&#13;
his experiences.&#13;
James said that under the terms&#13;
of t he SALT I Treaty, the number&#13;
of missle launch sites granted to&#13;
the United States and the Soviet&#13;
Union was supposed to be equal.&#13;
However, he said, Americans&#13;
were uninformed about the Soviet&#13;
cold launch technique which uses&#13;
compressed gas which allows reuse&#13;
of one silo. Yet, only one&#13;
missle could be launched from&#13;
each American site due to&#13;
destruction of the silo from the&#13;
intense heat released during&#13;
launch. James accused Nixon of&#13;
hiding this fact for election considerations.&#13;
&#13;
James felt that the United&#13;
States' space shuttle plans should&#13;
not have been given to N.A.S.A. to&#13;
develop. With their Ministry of&#13;
Defense budget and military&#13;
objectives, the Soviet Union&#13;
planned a space shuttle vehicle&#13;
that had a pay load capacity twice&#13;
as large as that of the United'&#13;
States. And could carry nuclear&#13;
war heads as well as have excellent&#13;
maneuverability.&#13;
Meanwhile, N.A.S.A. was&#13;
working on a machine that could only carry men (not nuclear war&#13;
heads), could only set down "like&#13;
a rock," and had poor&#13;
maneuvering capabilities. The&#13;
United States changed the original&#13;
plan to give the vehicle added&#13;
payload capacity, but James still&#13;
does not think it can compare to&#13;
the Soviet shuttle if it were ever&#13;
needed for defense purposes.&#13;
In addition, James' research&#13;
uncovered Soviet experimentation&#13;
with "Buck Rogers" type lazer&#13;
weapons. He said that the&#13;
Soviets were designing&#13;
lazer particle beam weapons&#13;
that would knock&#13;
bombs and their delivery&#13;
vehicles right out&#13;
of space. Recently, James&#13;
said, (after President Carter was&#13;
finally convinced of the&#13;
seriousness of this situation) the&#13;
United States has begun experimenting&#13;
with lazer weapons.&#13;
The Carter Administration,&#13;
James warned, has not solved all&#13;
of the inequalities of the first&#13;
SALT treaty with the SALT II&#13;
Treaty. James claimed that the&#13;
Soviet SS18 is a missle larger than&#13;
any that the United States has,&#13;
and that under the terms of the&#13;
new SALT agreement, we are not&#13;
permitted to build missies with&#13;
more thian &gt;w»If o/ &lt;/»*•&#13;
the SS18. This Soviet missle can&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
Veteran players perform in "The Fourposter"&#13;
"The Fourposter," Jan&#13;
DeHartog's tender comedy about&#13;
a turn of the century marriage,&#13;
will bring two of Milwaukee's&#13;
foremost dramatic talents to&#13;
Parkside's Communication Arts&#13;
Theater on Monday, November 17,&#13;
in the second Accent on Enrichment&#13;
Series program of the&#13;
season.&#13;
Penelope Reed and William&#13;
Leach protray the newlyweds,&#13;
whose 35-year marriage is played&#13;
out around and sometimes on the&#13;
fourposter bed which occupies&#13;
center stage.&#13;
Before the curtain goes up at&#13;
8:15 p.m., ticket holders are invited&#13;
to a champagne punch and&#13;
wedding cake reception beginning&#13;
at 7:15 p.m. in Main Place of&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center.&#13;
A violinist will play wedding&#13;
music and a soloist will serenade&#13;
the bride, before she and her&#13;
bridegroom retire to the stage,&#13;
where the play opens on their&#13;
wedding night.&#13;
Reed and Leach performed&#13;
"Fourposter" to rave reviews&#13;
during a three-week run last&#13;
summer at Milwaukee's Villa&#13;
Terrace under auspices of the&#13;
Festival Theatre, Inc., which has&#13;
Reed as it founding artistic&#13;
director.&#13;
Leach, a veteran player with the&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Theater&#13;
(MRT), is fresh from a triumph in&#13;
the title role of MRT's seasonopener,&#13;
"Cyrano de Bergerac." A&#13;
performance of Cyrano with the&#13;
Asolo State Theater had&#13;
previously won him the South&#13;
Florida Critics Award for Best&#13;
Actor of the Year. In addition to&#13;
his many other roles at MRT,&#13;
Leach also appeared on Broadway&#13;
in "The Trial of Lee Harvey&#13;
Oswald."&#13;
Probably Milwaukee's best&#13;
known actress, Reed was a&#13;
leading actress with MRT for 12&#13;
seasons in addition to scoring&#13;
notable successes with a series of&#13;
one-woman shows. She is the&#13;
founder and original artistic&#13;
director of the highly acclaimed&#13;
Performing Arts Center (PAC)&#13;
Players and the PAC Theater&#13;
School and currently heads the&#13;
theater arts department at&#13;
Alverno College.&#13;
"Fourposter" carries on Reed's&#13;
dedication to "positive" theater.&#13;
"I think many people have grown&#13;
tired of plays that always emphasize&#13;
the negative aspects of&#13;
life," Reed said.&#13;
The Festival Theatre production&#13;
is directed by Norman Gano,&#13;
a director-teacher-actor for 22&#13;
years in New York City, New&#13;
England and now Wisconsin. In&#13;
addition to directoral assignments&#13;
in Milwaukee, Gano is teaching&#13;
acting and directing a studio&#13;
production this fall here at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
ticket price, which includes the&#13;
reception and performance, is $4&#13;
for UW-P students and $7 fo r all&#13;
others. Tickets are available at&#13;
the Parkside Union Information&#13;
Center (553-2345).&#13;
Wanna win a pair of&#13;
season basketball tickets?&#13;
Wanna win a pair of season&#13;
passes to this year's Ranger&#13;
basketball games?&#13;
If so, now's your chance&#13;
because that's what's being offered&#13;
in the 1981 Winter Carnival&#13;
Theme Contest. Winter Carnival&#13;
will take place the week of&#13;
February 9-13, featuring a&#13;
basketball game and entertainment&#13;
on Wednesday and a&#13;
dance on Friday the 13th.&#13;
Activities will be planned&#13;
throughout the week. Some activities&#13;
will be based on or around&#13;
the winning theme.&#13;
Contest entry forms are being&#13;
circulated around campus on&#13;
flyers and can be found in an ad in&#13;
this issue of RANGER. Entries&#13;
can deal with anything, not&#13;
necessarily winter. According to&#13;
the flyer, "Taste or cleverness is&#13;
not a requirement."&#13;
Enter as many times as you&#13;
wish. Deadline is November 19.&#13;
Entries can be dropped off in any&#13;
PSGA suggestion box or the&#13;
RANGER office.&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Fast for needy on Nov. 20&#13;
• Review: "Fade to Black"&#13;
• Volleyball team top seeded&#13;
popular vote&#13;
Alabama&#13;
Reagan Carter Anderson&#13;
Alabama 641,609 627,808 15,855&#13;
Alaska 70,253 33,591 8,564&#13;
Arizona 527,935 245,881 76,604&#13;
Arkansas 402,946 397,919 21,057&#13;
California 4,447,266 3,040,600 727,871&#13;
Colorado 650,786 367,966 130,579&#13;
Connecticut .. 672,648 537,407 168,260&#13;
Delaware 111,631 106,650 16,344&#13;
District of&#13;
Columbia ... 21,765 124,376 14,971&#13;
Florida 1,945,313 1,369,877 178,569&#13;
Georgia 654,696 892,073 35,896&#13;
Hawaii 130,112 135,879 32,021&#13;
Idaho 289,789 109,410 27,142&#13;
Illinois 2,336,391 1,951,544 344,886&#13;
Indiana 1,232,764 832,213 107,729&#13;
Iowa 676,556 508,735 114,589&#13;
Kansas 562,848 324,974 67,535&#13;
Kentucky 630,967 613,389 30,519&#13;
Louisiana 796,240 707,981 26,198&#13;
Maine 238,156 220,387 53,450&#13;
Maryland 656,255 706,327 113,452&#13;
Massachusetts 1,054,562 1,051,104 382,044&#13;
Michigan 1,914,559 1,659,208 272,948&#13;
Minnesota 844,459 924,770 169,960&#13;
Mississippi 440,245 429,713 11,826&#13;
Missouri 1,055,355 917,663 76,488&#13;
Montana&#13;
Nebraska&#13;
Nevada&#13;
New Hampshire&#13;
New Jersey ...&#13;
New Mexico...&#13;
New York .....&#13;
North Carolina&#13;
North Dakota&#13;
Ohio&#13;
Oklahoma&#13;
Oregon&#13;
Pennsylvania&#13;
Rhode Island&#13;
South Carolina&#13;
South Dakota&#13;
Tennessee ...&#13;
Texas&#13;
Utah&#13;
Vermont ......&#13;
Virginia&#13;
Washington ...&#13;
West Virginia ..&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Wyoming&#13;
Reagan&#13;
197,862&#13;
413,401&#13;
154,570&#13;
221,771&#13;
1,506,437&#13;
245,600&#13;
2,803,852&#13;
913,898&#13;
191,273&#13;
2,201,864&#13;
683,807&#13;
559,589&#13;
2,251,937&#13;
145,576&#13;
430,154&#13;
198,102&#13;
787,244&#13;
2,541,519&#13;
436,575&#13;
93,554&#13;
983,311&#13;
767,841&#13;
331,800&#13;
1,089,750&#13;
110,096&#13;
Carter&#13;
112,961&#13;
164,276&#13;
66,468&#13;
109,080&#13;
1,119,576&#13;
165,186&#13;
2,636,963&#13;
875,776&#13;
78,292&#13;
1,743,829&#13;
399,292&#13;
447,806&#13;
1,930,719&#13;
185,319&#13;
422,751&#13;
103,909&#13;
781,512&#13;
1,845,114&#13;
123,691&#13;
81,421&#13;
748,673&#13;
581,941&#13;
365,205&#13;
988,255&#13;
49,123&#13;
Anderson&#13;
28,159&#13;
44,025&#13;
17,580&#13;
49,295&#13;
224,173&#13;
28,404&#13;
441,341&#13;
52,364&#13;
22,921&#13;
255,52.1&#13;
38,051&#13;
109,894&#13;
288,588&#13;
56,213&#13;
14,114&#13;
21,342&#13;
35,921&#13;
109,747&#13;
30,041&#13;
31,671&#13;
93,813&#13;
166,180&#13;
31,156&#13;
159,793&#13;
12,350&#13;
TOTALS 43,267,489 34,964,583 5,588,014&#13;
Note: figures are u nofficial returns, nearly complete, as compied by National Electa Service and distributed by United Press International. &#13;
Thursday, November 13,1980&#13;
Many issues took toll on Carter presidency&#13;
I stood in line to vote for 45&#13;
minutes last Tuesday night. By&#13;
the time I got home, Ronald&#13;
Reagan was already the projected&#13;
winner, so I guess my time and&#13;
my anti-Reagan vote were&#13;
wasted.&#13;
I predicted a Reagan victory&#13;
(against my own wishes, of&#13;
course) but I had no idea that this&#13;
"close" presidential election&#13;
would be over by the time the polls&#13;
in Wisconsin closed. President&#13;
Carter made a big mistake by&#13;
conceding over an hour before the&#13;
polls closed on the West Coast,&#13;
thus enabling the Republicans to&#13;
win more local races, because the&#13;
usually Democratic voters&#13;
stopped coming out.&#13;
But the race really was close&#13;
(until the day or two before the&#13;
election, that is). At that time, the&#13;
pollsters found a 10-percentage&#13;
point drop in Carter's standings in&#13;
the polls. The reasons for this drop&#13;
were many, but the predominant&#13;
issue was the holding of the 52&#13;
American hostages in Iran.&#13;
The hostage situation, I thought,&#13;
would be the October surprise that&#13;
Carter would maneuver to his&#13;
political favor. But his October&#13;
surprise was that there was no&#13;
surprise.&#13;
The American people couldn't&#13;
stand it anymore after the Iranian&#13;
parliament stated that the&#13;
hostages wouldn't be released by&#13;
election day. That took its toll —&#13;
forcing Carter out and ensuring&#13;
Reagan's win by default.&#13;
But it was not only the hostages&#13;
that the American public got fed&#13;
up with. It was also our economic&#13;
A column of&#13;
personal opinion&#13;
by&#13;
by Ken Meyer, Editor&#13;
situation and our prestige (or lack&#13;
of) around the world. Other&#13;
factors in Carter's loss: John&#13;
Anderson's independent candidacy,&#13;
Carter's "mean" campaign&#13;
against Reagan, the debate&#13;
where Reagan appeared to be&#13;
safer than Carter charged, and&#13;
the media scrutiny that&#13;
Presidents now have to go through&#13;
in the post-Watergate era. (Carter&#13;
is the fifth president in a row not to&#13;
be able to serve two full terms.)&#13;
The voters were fed up enough&#13;
with the current situation to give&#13;
the seemingly one-term office of&#13;
the presidency to a 69-year-old&#13;
who has been the traveling&#13;
evangelist of American conservatism&#13;
for the past 16 years&#13;
and including this campaign, gave&#13;
the same basic speech about the&#13;
beauties of America that I&#13;
delicately label "bullshit."&#13;
But I guess the American people&#13;
don't mind trading in an intelligent&#13;
incompetent for a doddering&#13;
old bullshitter who views&#13;
the world in terms of a bygone&#13;
era.&#13;
Reagan wasn't elected by a&#13;
mass of people who suddenly&#13;
found confidence in his ability to&#13;
lead our nation into the&#13;
progressive 1980's. He was elected&#13;
because he made Jimmy Carter&#13;
the issue and the only person left&#13;
for people to support was Reagan.&#13;
One nationwide poll shows that&#13;
almost 80 per cent of the voters&#13;
supported Reagan because of&#13;
Carter's poor performance.&#13;
True, Carter's performance was&#13;
poor; there's no way to argue that.&#13;
But just because the current&#13;
status is poor doesn't mean a&#13;
change will have to be better.&#13;
Things can always get worse —&#13;
just wait.&#13;
Now Reagan and his right-wing&#13;
buddies have their chance. The&#13;
way our political system seems to&#13;
be working, this only gives the&#13;
Democrats a good chance in 1984.&#13;
Reagan, the ex-actor, had better&#13;
be a magician, too, considering&#13;
his promises of cutting taxes 10&#13;
per cent each of the next three&#13;
years, increasing defense spending&#13;
and balancing the budget.&#13;
His promises are a joke to me,&#13;
they always have been. But the&#13;
punchline could be disastrous, so&#13;
be sure to get your laughs in&#13;
before it's too late.&#13;
Solar power is the best energy alternative&#13;
by Deb Elzinga&#13;
A recent Ranger article entitled&#13;
(October 16) was flawed in its&#13;
reliance on centralized forms of&#13;
energy. The authors would have&#13;
us believe that these are our only&#13;
alternatives. However, another&#13;
path exists. This path would be&#13;
decentralized in nature and would&#13;
allow our technical choices to be&#13;
shaped by social needs rather&#13;
than profit.&#13;
In centralized forms of energy,&#13;
it is the large corporations that&#13;
supply the power. These companies&#13;
have shown us time and&#13;
time again that they aren't concerned&#13;
with our best interests, but&#13;
instead with how they can&#13;
maximize profits and that's where&#13;
the problems begin. For example,&#13;
the Ford Company did a study&#13;
which compared the cost of&#13;
repairing the defective Pinto as&#13;
opposed to paying possible insurance&#13;
claims due to injuries and&#13;
deaths. The study concluded that&#13;
it would be more economical to&#13;
deal with possible insurance&#13;
claims rather than repair the&#13;
autos.&#13;
This type of attitude is reflected&#13;
m the nuclear industry as well.&#13;
From the very beginning the&#13;
"experts" were aware of the&#13;
dangers and unanswered&#13;
problems, yet they proceeded with&#13;
this monster technology. This kind&#13;
of a ttitude is stated clearly in a&#13;
1977 report on "Nuclear Power,&#13;
Issues and Choices." Although the&#13;
report doesn't deny the dangers of&#13;
nuclear power, it does argue that&#13;
"the consequences of a major&#13;
disaster would not be out of line&#13;
with other major peacetime&#13;
disasters that our society has been&#13;
able to meet without longterm&#13;
social impact."&#13;
As this example illustrates,&#13;
energy companies have a rather&#13;
callous attitude about our well&#13;
being. These energy companies, if&#13;
given the chance, would emphasize&#13;
high oil prices and a&#13;
reduction of environmental&#13;
safeguards to allow more use of&#13;
coal and nuclear power. The&#13;
corporate program sees government&#13;
intervention as unfavorable&#13;
in these developments. However,&#13;
these same companies would&#13;
stress government subsidies to&#13;
support the private development&#13;
of exotic fuels and technologies.&#13;
Thus, these companies offer us the&#13;
limited choice of centralized&#13;
energy which is produced for&#13;
profit rather than for people.&#13;
Solar energy, on the other hand,&#13;
is a decentralized form of e nergy&#13;
which would allow the community&#13;
to control its energy future. As&#13;
Ray Reece, author of "The Sun&#13;
Betrayed", writes, "Solar energy&#13;
inherently offers the prospect of&#13;
liberation from the 'uncontrollable&#13;
technology' of centralized&#13;
energy institutions. It is&#13;
not so complex, in most of its&#13;
useful applications, that it can't be&#13;
managed by persons other than a&#13;
"technical elite."&#13;
Not only does solar energy offer&#13;
us this unique alternative, but it&#13;
works. You've probably read or&#13;
heard many times that solar&#13;
energy is not in fact feasible and&#13;
won't be an alternative until&#13;
perhaps the year 2000. The&#13;
sources from which this type of&#13;
information comes have many&#13;
ties to the energy conglomerates.&#13;
Exxon, Shell, and many other&#13;
companies who wish to maintain&#13;
the present and future dependence&#13;
on centralized forms of energy are&#13;
quite involved in denouncing solar&#13;
feasibility. Meanwhile, corporations&#13;
such as these are busy&#13;
buying up independent solar&#13;
companies and ideas. Moreover,&#13;
they are now engaged in million&#13;
dollar projects which would&#13;
enable them to meter the sun after&#13;
all fossil fuels are depleted.&#13;
In summary, there are several&#13;
reasons for supporting the solar&#13;
alternative. The most important&#13;
reason is that it is much more&#13;
compatible with the environment&#13;
than the other alternatives.&#13;
Secondly, communities would&#13;
have the opportunity to control&#13;
solar energy. Finally, it is a&#13;
renewable source of energy.&#13;
Amory Lovins, a physicist, clearly&#13;
defines what is at stake in the&#13;
choice between the two paths: "In&#13;
an electrical world your lifeline&#13;
comes not from an understandable&#13;
neighborhood&#13;
technology run by people you&#13;
know who are at your own social&#13;
level, but rather from an alien&#13;
remote, and perhaps&#13;
humiliatingly uncontrollable&#13;
technology run by a faraway,&#13;
bureaucratized, technical elite&#13;
who have probably never heard of&#13;
you."&#13;
Patronize&#13;
RANGER&#13;
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he&#13;
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i7 he&#13;
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etDon^blp'&#13;
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RANGER isVDriVnted'ht&#13;
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he academic year except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
Parkside.Tenoth" addressed f0: Parkslde Ranger, WLLC D139, UWpap^r&#13;
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reserves all" editor^'? nri??&#13;
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^iefarnatory content p Vlle9es 10 Ousting to print letters which contain false or &#13;
World banking creates problems&#13;
Ranger Thursday, November 13,1980&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
Daniel McGovern, a Parkside&#13;
political science professor, spoke&#13;
on "International Banks as a&#13;
Source of Political Repression in&#13;
Developing Countries" at the&#13;
Wisconsin Political Science&#13;
Convention here October 10&#13;
McGovern stated that international&#13;
banks such as the&#13;
International Monetary Fund&#13;
(IMF) and the Chase Manhattan&#13;
Bank are a source of political&#13;
distortion in developing countries.&#13;
As an example, McGovern said&#13;
that Egypt suffered from financial&#13;
difficulties in January 1977. He&#13;
pointed to Egypt's 25 per cent&#13;
inflation, increasing imports&#13;
decreasing exports, and short&#13;
term loans due. He said that&#13;
Egypt's leader, Sadat, sked the&#13;
IMF for assistance. The IMF&#13;
made an economic analysis,&#13;
stipulated conditions for the loan^&#13;
and arranged for the $250 million&#13;
loan through a consortium of&#13;
multinational banks.&#13;
The IMF's first request asked&#13;
the Egyptian government to&#13;
drastically reduce its deficit by 50&#13;
per cent and virtually eliminate&#13;
government subsidies on food.&#13;
McGovern said that this had an&#13;
immediate impact as the price of&#13;
food skyrocketed up 31 per cent&#13;
ovefnight. Riots broke out all over&#13;
Egypt between January 17-19,&#13;
1977. Seventy-nine people died.&#13;
The army restored order,&#13;
arresting thousands.&#13;
"Sadat blamed the riots on a&#13;
Communist plot. However Sadat&#13;
did say, 'We are living beyond our&#13;
means and have no choice but to&#13;
borrow and to abide by their&#13;
stipulations,' " McGovern said.&#13;
"The international banks provide&#13;
loans but with ramifications&#13;
within the society."&#13;
McGovern saw two problems&#13;
with the interdependency theory&#13;
which examines the relationship&#13;
between the various nations:&#13;
"The problem with the liberal&#13;
framework is that it is concerned&#13;
with the process and not the&#13;
outcome. There is an assumption&#13;
that the outcome will be positive.&#13;
So the focus is on bargaining and&#13;
negotiation, neglecting the outcome."&#13;
&#13;
RANGER photo by Sue Michetti&#13;
DANIEL McGOVERN&#13;
"The second problem is that the&#13;
interdepencency theory is not&#13;
dynamic," said McGovern. "It&#13;
says that we are in interglobal&#13;
interdependence, but the reason&#13;
why is not known. What causes it?&#13;
What did it emerge from?&#13;
Although the Marxist approach&#13;
explains this, it is not accepted by&#13;
many people."&#13;
He said, "We assume there is a&#13;
relationship of dependence of&#13;
developing nations to the&#13;
developed nations. The developing&#13;
nations are trying to move from&#13;
unsophisticated industry to&#13;
developing basic industries, but&#13;
they need technology and vast&#13;
amounts of c apital to do this. So&#13;
they must go to the developed&#13;
nations to receive these things.&#13;
This results in foreign penetration&#13;
into their domestic economy."&#13;
"If developing countries want&#13;
industrialization and technology,&#13;
then it must be done on the terms&#13;
of the developed countries,"&#13;
McGovern stated. "This produces&#13;
economic distortions in the&#13;
developing countries, their total&#13;
economy changes. It becomes&#13;
mobilized. Since the incoming&#13;
international capital is concerned&#13;
about investment, the government&#13;
must guarantee profits and&#13;
stability for them."&#13;
"Since there is a propensity for&#13;
instability, the military tends to&#13;
move in and put down the labor&#13;
unions and takes extraordinary&#13;
measures to guarantee stability,"&#13;
McGovern said. "This causes&#13;
political distortions."&#13;
McGovern pointed to the serious&#13;
problem for developing countries&#13;
in balancing international&#13;
payments. He said developing&#13;
countries traditionally export raw&#13;
materials while importing high&#13;
technological items. This results&#13;
in unequal trade with a negative&#13;
balance in developing countries.&#13;
"There are three ways that&#13;
developing countries adjust to the&#13;
problems" McGovern said. "They&#13;
can reduce imports purchased&#13;
from others or increase exports.&#13;
Since it is hard to increase exports,&#13;
traditionally imports are&#13;
reduced. This presents a dilemma&#13;
when food is an important import."&#13;
&#13;
"As another alternative, they&#13;
can increase capital investment,&#13;
resulting in more foreign money&#13;
being brought in," said&#13;
McGovern. "They may also deal&#13;
with this problem by officially&#13;
devaluing their currency or&#13;
borrowing short term money."&#13;
He said that 34 cases from 1974&#13;
to 1978 were examined for political&#13;
consequences of sh ort term loans&#13;
arranged through the IMF from&#13;
multinational banks. McGovern&#13;
stated that in 34 loans to 16 nations&#13;
a total of 60 distortions in&#13;
government were found which&#13;
related directly to the&#13;
stipulations: 16 instances of&#13;
leadership changes, 21 instances&#13;
of public protest, 10 instances of&#13;
government restrictions on&#13;
popular participation, nine instances&#13;
of widespread police&#13;
coercion, and four military&#13;
takeovers.&#13;
McGovern said that this explained&#13;
the decrease of domestic&#13;
decision making in the economy&#13;
as well as the relationship between&#13;
economic and political&#13;
distortions.&#13;
O'Neill discusses basic skills programs&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
President Robert O'Neil said on&#13;
October 30 t hat he would ask for&#13;
additional funding in the 1981 - 83&#13;
UW budget for basic skills&#13;
programs.&#13;
Speaking to 150 educators from&#13;
UW campuses around the state at&#13;
the Basic Skills Conference held at&#13;
Parkside, O'Neil said that the&#13;
university system should do more&#13;
to meet remedial needs of its&#13;
students. But he rejected what he&#13;
called "the myth that they should&#13;
be funded out of existing&#13;
budgets," because, he said,&#13;
"current budgets don't even meet&#13;
present needs, let alone new&#13;
ones."&#13;
O'Neil said there were other&#13;
myths regarding basic skills&#13;
programs in universities, including&#13;
the view that skills&#13;
cources primarily serve minority&#13;
student needs. "The percentage of&#13;
all students who need help is four&#13;
times the percentage of minority&#13;
student enrollment," he said.&#13;
O'Neil said about 25 per cent of&#13;
students enrolling at UW campuses&#13;
need some remedial work in&#13;
reading, writing and math skills.&#13;
Another myth, according to&#13;
O'Neil, is that basic skills courses&#13;
are designed to "rescue students&#13;
who shouldn't be in college in the&#13;
first place." He said that view&#13;
undermines educational opportunity,&#13;
denies student potential&#13;
for success, and ignores the fact&#13;
that "everyone isn't being admitted&#13;
to the university." He said&#13;
less than 50 per cent of state high&#13;
school graduates currently go on&#13;
to any college or university.&#13;
The "rescue" myth also doesn't&#13;
consider the increasing number of&#13;
older students who are beginning&#13;
UW-SYSTEM PRESIDENT ROBERT O'NEIL&#13;
Women honored in film&#13;
A documentary about "The&#13;
Dinner Party", the ambitious&#13;
multimedia art work by Judy&#13;
Chicago celebrating women's&#13;
achievements through the ages,&#13;
will be shown and discussed at&#13;
Parkside Thursday, Nov. 20 under&#13;
sponsorship of the campus Lecture&#13;
Fine Arts committee. The&#13;
program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
The film, titled "Right Out of&#13;
History - The Making of Judy&#13;
Chicago's 'Dinner Party'," will be&#13;
shown in Greenquist room 101 at&#13;
12:30 and in Molinaro room 107 at&#13;
7. Commentary and discussion led&#13;
by Prof. Carol - Lee Saffioti,&#13;
Humanities, and Barbara Lindquist,&#13;
co - owner of Mother&#13;
Courage book store in Racine, will&#13;
follow the afternoon showing. The&#13;
evening discussion will be led by&#13;
Lindquist and Prof. Carole Vopat,&#13;
English.&#13;
"The Dinner Party" is a 50 - foot&#13;
triangular banquet table, set with&#13;
places for 39 illustrious women of&#13;
mythology and history, ranging&#13;
from the primordial mother&#13;
goddess Gaea to Virginia Woolf&#13;
and Georgia O'Keefe. Thirty - nine&#13;
ceramic plates, each painted by&#13;
west coast artist and feminist&#13;
Chicago, are set on an embroidered&#13;
runner designed to&#13;
evoke the personality and era of&#13;
each woman. Ms. Chicago was&#13;
aided by some 300 p ersons who,&#13;
over a five year period, donated&#13;
their services to create the&#13;
finished work.&#13;
The film, begun by Johanna&#13;
Demetrakas in 1976 three years&#13;
before the first showing of the&#13;
work, takes viewers into the&#13;
studio, interviews the many&#13;
participants and the relationships&#13;
which developed between them&#13;
and explores the contexts from&#13;
which Chicago "derives the&#13;
tradtional 'women's art forms'&#13;
which are then deliberately&#13;
placed in a contemporary feminist&#13;
statement."&#13;
Jazz Ensembles to perform&#13;
Parkside's popular Jazz Ensembles&#13;
I and II will present a fall&#13;
concert under the direction of&#13;
Professor Tim Bell at 8 p. m. on&#13;
Tuesday, November 18 in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission is $1 for students; $2&#13;
for the public.&#13;
The ensembles have been&#13;
consistent crowd pleasers in the&#13;
Kenosha - Racine area as well as&#13;
during tours of Wisconsin and&#13;
Illinois. In 1975, 1978, and 1979,&#13;
Ensemble I received "outstanding&#13;
band" honors in the prestigious&#13;
Midwest Jazz Festival at&#13;
Elmhurst College in Illinois. The&#13;
group released its first recording&#13;
last year.&#13;
Director Bell is a former&#13;
member of the famous One&#13;
O'clock Lab Band at North Texas&#13;
State University, where he earned&#13;
his undergraduate and graduate&#13;
degrees. Bell also has played with&#13;
name bands and top entertainers&#13;
throughout the country and, since&#13;
coming to Parkside in 1975, has&#13;
appeared with the Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony and other classical&#13;
ensembles in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
Cancer research funded her*&#13;
Research by Parkside&#13;
chemistry professor Fred W.&#13;
Clough on synthesis of compounds&#13;
that show promise as anti - cancer&#13;
agents has been funded by a&#13;
$12,165 g rant from the National&#13;
Institutes of Health, which&#13;
previously awarded an initial&#13;
$32,019 grant in support of the&#13;
project.&#13;
The new grant was accepted on&#13;
November 7 by the University&#13;
System Board of Regents.&#13;
The Regents also accepted&#13;
$2,400 in federal support for&#13;
Parkside's Law Enforcement&#13;
Education Program and $100 f or&#13;
scholarship funds.&#13;
Russian military outdoes U S&#13;
or returning to college, he said.&#13;
"We have to recognize that many&#13;
students are raising their&#13;
educational sights later in life."&#13;
O'Neil said that universities and&#13;
school systems must share the&#13;
responsibility for the apparent&#13;
decline of students' skill levels&#13;
and must work together if the&#13;
problem is to be solved. "A major&#13;
goal is to eliminate the need for&#13;
basic skill programs by working&#13;
with the high schools to raise their&#13;
standards and to put greater&#13;
emphasis on teaching basic skills&#13;
in our collegiate training of&#13;
teachers," he said.&#13;
The two-day conference&#13;
featured nearly 50 workshops and&#13;
panels. Parkside has become&#13;
nationally recognized for its&#13;
compre hensive skills&#13;
requirements.&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
carry 10 nuclear warheads and&#13;
they already have 308 of them.&#13;
Yet, American missies can carry&#13;
only one warhead.&#13;
The United States has had to&#13;
count the aging B52 bombers&#13;
among its total number of&#13;
delivery vehicles. Yet, according&#13;
to James, B52's are not comparable&#13;
to the new Soviet "Backfire"&#13;
bomber. Yet, the SALT II&#13;
Treaty does not even count the&#13;
"Backfire" in its total number of&#13;
delivery vehicles, but the Soviets&#13;
already have 200 of these bombers.&#13;
James asserted that the&#13;
Soviets are building "Backfire"&#13;
bombers at the rate of three per&#13;
month. Although Carter&#13;
negotiated for the United States to&#13;
be able to build the Bl bomber,&#13;
when he returned home he&#13;
discarded the plans for the Bl&#13;
bomber because it was not&#13;
economically feasible.&#13;
Under the new terms, the Soviet&#13;
Union is still permitted to have&#13;
reusable missle launch silos, but&#13;
the U.S. is not. Although the&#13;
Soviets said that they would limit&#13;
the number of missies that they&#13;
built, but James is skeptical. He&#13;
said that the Soviets have broken&#13;
90 per cent of their treaties&#13;
because it is in their national&#13;
interest. James defines this policy&#13;
as "What is mine is mine, and&#13;
what is yours is negotiable."&#13;
James concluded that American&#13;
ignorance of Soviet defense&#13;
policies threatens to confront the&#13;
United States with nuclear war&#13;
within the next twenty years.&#13;
Art contest asks for bold logo designs&#13;
World Research, Inc., the San&#13;
Diego, California-based nonprofit,&#13;
non-partisan educational&#13;
and research group, has announced&#13;
that it's sponsoring a&#13;
nationwide art competition among&#13;
high school and college students to&#13;
find a new, bold, indentifiable logo&#13;
design. All entries must be&#13;
received by midnight, December&#13;
30, 1980 to be eligible for the $500&#13;
First Prize.&#13;
Stevens went on to say that "in&#13;
addition to the cash award, there&#13;
will be awards of excellence and&#13;
honorable mentions awarded to&#13;
runners-up in the competition.&#13;
World Research Inc., since its&#13;
inception in 1969, has been&#13;
developing unique and innovative&#13;
educational materials designed to&#13;
stimulate discussion of historical&#13;
and current issues. Its primary&#13;
distribution for these materials&#13;
has been high schools, colleges&#13;
and universities.&#13;
World Research produced the&#13;
best-seller book and award&#13;
winning film — "THE INCREDIBLE&#13;
BREAD&#13;
MACHINE." They have also*&#13;
produced two other award winning&#13;
films: "LIBRA," and more&#13;
recently "THE INFLATION&#13;
FILE." World Research is divided&#13;
into two study areas — The&#13;
Campus Studies Division, which&#13;
researches and produces&#13;
educational materials, and the&#13;
Ocean Studies Division, which is&#13;
presently studying the preservation&#13;
and propagation of the&#13;
endangered abalone species.&#13;
The art competition is open to&#13;
all high school and college&#13;
students. Students interested in&#13;
submitting a logo design should&#13;
write ART CONTEST, World&#13;
Research Institute, San Diego,&#13;
California 92121 for entrant&#13;
requirements and contest details. &#13;
Thursday, November 13,1980&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
Exams may&#13;
cause cancer&#13;
Contact&#13;
SUFAC to allocate segregated fees&#13;
by Kay Mullikin&#13;
There are three committees&#13;
associated with the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association.&#13;
They are Legislative Affairs,&#13;
Student Services and Segregated&#13;
University Fees Allocations&#13;
Committee (SUFAC).&#13;
Legislative Affairs Committee&#13;
is a subcommittee of United&#13;
Council. The primary function of&#13;
Legislative Affairs is to locate,&#13;
feSgSajfeiS Siafco Covernement and&#13;
Executive agencies of the State,&#13;
information to facilitate the&#13;
adoption of informed policy&#13;
recommendations by the committee&#13;
and the Executive Board.&#13;
Legislative Affairs also assists&#13;
United Council in adopting&#13;
campus policy on legislative&#13;
issues and organizes student&#13;
opinion behind these positions.&#13;
Another committee of the&#13;
Student Senate is Student SerC&amp;R&#13;
AUTO SERVICE&#13;
Quality Auto Work&#13;
Done At&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
10% OFF FOR&#13;
UW-P STUDENTS&#13;
Call 553-9092or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00&#13;
vices. Student Services acts as a&#13;
task force and is involved with&#13;
student body problem solving.&#13;
One of the main ways student&#13;
feedback is brought to the attention&#13;
of Student Services and the&#13;
Senate is through P.S.G.A.&#13;
suggestion boxes.&#13;
SUFAC is a subcommittee of&#13;
P.S.G.A. Its purpose is to review&#13;
budget requests and allocate the&#13;
allocable portion of student tuition&#13;
dollare to campus organizations.&#13;
SUFAC then brings their&#13;
recommendations to the Senate&#13;
for approval. If approved, budgets&#13;
then go to the Chancellor for final&#13;
approval.&#13;
SUFAC will be beginning the&#13;
budgeting process this week. A&#13;
representative of each group will&#13;
be presenting the group's budget&#13;
to the committee. The committee&#13;
then will review each budget and&#13;
ask questions. These meetings are&#13;
open to all students. Attending&#13;
students will have a chance to&#13;
speak or ask questions on any&#13;
budget.&#13;
The order in which the budgets&#13;
will be reviewed can be obtained&#13;
from SUFAC members or through&#13;
the P.S.G.A. office. SUFAC&#13;
members are Tim Hovey, Greg&#13;
Davies, Kathy Slama, Dan Rasch,&#13;
Chuck Neu and Randy Klees. The&#13;
budget meetings will be held on&#13;
Tuesdays from 3:15 to 4:30 p.m.&#13;
and on Fridays from 1:00 to 3:00&#13;
P-m. in Communications Arts,&#13;
room 233.&#13;
If yo u have any questions about&#13;
SUFAC or any of t he committees,&#13;
stop in at the P.S.G.A. office.&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
You are sitting in a desk in a&#13;
white room that contains forty or&#13;
so such desks. Because all seats&#13;
are filled and the room is small,&#13;
you are feeling a bit&#13;
claustrophobic. The bodies occupying&#13;
the seats bother you more&#13;
than the fact that there are so&#13;
many of them crowded together,&#13;
though, because you feel that they&#13;
could be real people or they could&#13;
be manikins — th ey don't speak;&#13;
they don't appear to notice you or&#13;
anyone else in the room.&#13;
Then you look closer. The bodies&#13;
around you appear transfixed, but&#13;
dozens of lips are almost imperceptibally&#13;
moving, though no&#13;
sound is coming out. They all&#13;
seem to be staring at a crack in&#13;
the wall at the front of the room.&#13;
You begin to feel like the only&#13;
human being in the room. You&#13;
begin to panic as you contemplate&#13;
this lonely idea. Then you realize&#13;
that the only way you know you&#13;
are human is by the rivers of&#13;
sweat running from your armpits&#13;
to the place at your waist where&#13;
your belt cinches your shirt tightly&#13;
to your skin (and that place itches).&#13;
"Animals sweat," you&#13;
think to yourself, "but only people&#13;
wear plants chemically and&#13;
physically transformed to soak up&#13;
all that excess water."&#13;
Then it hits you. You have only a&#13;
few minutes left before you will be&#13;
expected — no, forced — to&#13;
mentally throw up all over&#13;
something the automaton at the&#13;
front of the room calls a "blue&#13;
book." Your mind, which has been&#13;
literally stuffed with&#13;
corresponding concepts, relevant&#13;
names, crucial dates, and&#13;
frequently quoted figures, refuses&#13;
to recall anything. You have&#13;
visions of cerebral dry heaves.&#13;
As each minute passes, the&#13;
clock at the back of th e room pops&#13;
a signal to remind you to breathe.&#13;
The automaton enters the doorway&#13;
to the room at the third "pop"&#13;
since you have been sitting there,&#13;
^ and you feel the ~ blankness of your yuur enrollment&#13;
Kinship to hold orientation here&#13;
by Dan Galhraith :&#13;
mind suddenly expand in an explosive&#13;
effort to erase your sensations.&#13;
You begin to lose contact&#13;
with your surroundings.&#13;
The last thing you feel is the&#13;
falling sensation you used to selfinduce&#13;
by jumping on your bed&#13;
before going to sleep when you&#13;
were just a kid. The last thing you&#13;
see is the smooth white surface of&#13;
a wall. You can't remember&#13;
where the cracks used to be, but&#13;
there aren't any there now. The&#13;
last thing you hear is the sound of&#13;
your head clunking to rest on the&#13;
smooth white surface of the desk.&#13;
Your final thought is, "I will have&#13;
to do a make-up exam."&#13;
The above is not a fairy tale. It&#13;
is a true story, one that happens&#13;
all too often to American&#13;
university students. The saddest&#13;
part of th e story is the fact that no&#13;
one has ever lived to tell their&#13;
story in the first person.&#13;
Yes, final exams cause cancer.&#13;
The anxiety created by the thiswill-count-150%-toward-your~&#13;
&#13;
final-grade exam causes the rapid&#13;
growth of a little known type of&#13;
malignant tumor (Tumoris&#13;
Examinitus). This type of tumor&#13;
always strikes unexpectedly,&#13;
mere moments before an exam.&#13;
It's growth rate is phenomenal,&#13;
though, believe it or not, many&#13;
backwards, ignorant physicians,&#13;
professors, and school administrators&#13;
refuse to believe the&#13;
data (despite repeated testing and&#13;
unexplained disappearances of&#13;
college students).&#13;
Like most sudden and fatal&#13;
diseases, Tumoris Examinitus&#13;
knows no prejudices. As of yet,&#13;
there is no known preventive&#13;
measure or cure that will stop this&#13;
black, menacing destroyer of&#13;
America's youth.&#13;
Alert your peers to the dangers&#13;
of final exams before it is too late.&#13;
Tell your teachers about Tumoris&#13;
Examinitus, the next time they&#13;
mention exams. Then ask your&#13;
school administrators what the&#13;
real cause of declining university&#13;
enrollment is.&#13;
by Dan Galbraith&#13;
Kinship of Kenosha is a child&#13;
service agency working with&#13;
children (boys and girls ages 7 to&#13;
17) from single-parent homes, and&#13;
children with special problems&#13;
They match the child with&#13;
mature, stable adult who&#13;
provide regular guidance,&#13;
derstanding and acceptance.&#13;
Kinship is a preventative&#13;
program that is concerned with&#13;
providing the friendship and&#13;
guidance a child needs to avoid&#13;
a&#13;
can&#13;
unmore&#13;
serious problems in&#13;
future. Kinship feels it is&#13;
portant to expose them to different&#13;
environments and give&#13;
them a chance to do some of the&#13;
things they are unable to do&#13;
because of their situation.&#13;
Children are referred to Kinship&#13;
by professional people in the area,&#13;
such as counselors, teachers or&#13;
their&#13;
the&#13;
imWIN&#13;
A PAIR OF RANOER&#13;
SEASON BASKETBALL&#13;
TICKETS&#13;
Nam* the 1981 Winter Carnival&#13;
1981 WINTER CARNIVAL THEME&#13;
Carnival Theme Name&#13;
— RULES &amp; INFORMATION —&#13;
Winter Carnival will be held Feb 9&#13;
1981. 13,&#13;
Student Name,&#13;
SS No.&#13;
L.&#13;
• Must be a Parkside student to enter.&#13;
• In case of a tie, a drawing will be held.&#13;
• Deadline: Wednesday, Nov. 19&#13;
• Decision of Winter Carnival Committee&#13;
is final.&#13;
• Entries may be dropped off in the&#13;
RANGER office, WLLC D139 next to the&#13;
coffee shoppe.&#13;
see the pressing need to get&#13;
through to children before they&#13;
get off the track. Volunteers are to&#13;
accept the child as he/she is, be&#13;
the child's special friend and&#13;
maintain once-a-week contact for&#13;
at least a year.&#13;
Several Parkside students are&#13;
currently in the program. All of&#13;
the students see their Kinschildren&#13;
for three to five hours&#13;
once a week. Activities for a&#13;
Kinschild and his/her Kinsperson&#13;
may consist of walking in a park,&#13;
riding a bike, hiking, skating,&#13;
fishing, shopping, cooking,&#13;
swimming, photography or just&#13;
staying home to talk.&#13;
"We usually don't pick many&#13;
things that would cost a lot of&#13;
money," said John Schmidt,&#13;
Parkside student, "like going to&#13;
McDonald's or playing catch. I&#13;
like photography, we try taking&#13;
pictures of things, too. Really,&#13;
nothing we do is extravegant."&#13;
"I'm glad I'm in the program,"&#13;
said Steve. "I intend to stay with it&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
for a while, through this year, and&#13;
if all goes well, longer."&#13;
People who are in the program&#13;
have different experiences. "It's&#13;
unique to be with a seven year&#13;
old," said Sue Stevens, Parkside&#13;
student. "I'm learning a lot about&#13;
myself through a seven year old.&#13;
You learn a lot about yourself, and&#13;
about patience. It's not like it's a&#13;
type of trying thing where you&#13;
have a monster on your hands. It's&#13;
an experience to get to know a&#13;
little kid."&#13;
If you are the kind of person who&#13;
likes being with children, Kinship&#13;
has a child waiting to be your&#13;
''Special Friend." Kinship is&#13;
having an orientation here at&#13;
Parkside, Thursday, November 20&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Union 106. All interested&#13;
students, faculty, and&#13;
staff are welcome to attend. If you&#13;
are unable to attend this orientation,&#13;
please contact Kinship of&#13;
Kenosha Co., Inc., 2001 - 80th St.,&#13;
658-0151 for other orientation&#13;
dates.&#13;
4433-22nd Avenu e Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phoi* 454-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR C REDIT C ARDS A CCEPTED &#13;
Ranger Thursday, November 13,1980&#13;
Fast for needy&#13;
MEMBERS OP TUP r A C T * , ~ RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
production for fall, are left tTrlghTUaSd&#13;
8 Tin^M* D&#13;
K&#13;
ramatic Arts&#13;
' studio&#13;
McKelvie and standing, Vicki KraDD Pat |&#13;
n&#13;
it&#13;
ld,&#13;
'..&#13;
Joh&#13;
^ AAiskuli&#13;
" and Jeff&#13;
Scott Lucareli and Gary LochowFtz Casclar0 and Bobb|&#13;
e Menmear. Not pictured:&#13;
Review&#13;
by Wendy Westphal&#13;
During the course of the day,&#13;
many students stop at the Coffee&#13;
Shoppe for donuts and coffee, the&#13;
Cafeteria for salad or the Union&#13;
for beer and pizza. Hunger pangs&#13;
seldom exist. Unfortunately, this&#13;
situation doesn't hold true around&#13;
the world.&#13;
A major campaign to bring the&#13;
plight of East African refugees to&#13;
the attention of the American&#13;
people has been launched by&#13;
OXFAM-America. In response to&#13;
this campaign, the RANGER will&#13;
sponsor the 2nd Annual Fast for a&#13;
World Harvest.&#13;
This year Oxfam funds will be&#13;
used for emergency and long-term&#13;
developmental assistance for&#13;
East Africans. According to&#13;
United Nation statistics, more&#13;
that 20 million African people are&#13;
threatened by famine. The Horn of&#13;
Africa which includes the countries&#13;
of Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya,&#13;
Uganda and the Southern Sudan is&#13;
severly stricken. Drought combined&#13;
with continuing conflict and&#13;
instability has driven hundreds of&#13;
thousands of people into refugee&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
You know the story (you've seen&#13;
it done too many times before) :&#13;
one of society's misfits has been&#13;
pushed too far (for some reason)&#13;
and is retaliating by killing a lot of&#13;
people. But "Fade to Black" is&#13;
different from the formula&#13;
because it stars one of&#13;
Hollywood's most talented actors,&#13;
Dennis Christopher.&#13;
Christopher plays Eric Binford,&#13;
a wimpy delivery boy whose life is&#13;
obssessed with movies and movie&#13;
trivia. Eric is constantly bullied&#13;
by his aunt (who's confined to a&#13;
wheelchair) at home and his boss&#13;
and co-workers at the company he&#13;
delivers films for. This pressure&#13;
becomes too much when Eric's&#13;
aunt knocks over his projector&#13;
(trying to get his attention) and&#13;
breaks the film he was watching.&#13;
Outraged, Eric pushes her down&#13;
the stairs (the same way Richard&#13;
Widmark did in "Kiss of Death").&#13;
This scene was supposed to be&#13;
suspensful, but came off quite&#13;
comically.&#13;
With the taste of death still fresh&#13;
in his mouth, Eric goes on a killing&#13;
spree, reproducing characters (by&#13;
dressing like them) and murder&#13;
scenes from "White Heat," "The&#13;
Mummy," and "Dracula." He&#13;
even dresses like Hopalong&#13;
Cassidy to finish off those who&#13;
have wronged him. The make-up&#13;
jobs (when he's Dracula and the&#13;
Mummy for example) are&#13;
astonishing, as is Christopher's&#13;
ability to crawl into each of his&#13;
characters and make us believe&#13;
him. Christopher is a versatile&#13;
actor but his abilities are wasted&#13;
in this film. He is extremely good,&#13;
but with the proper script (as&#13;
in "Breaking Away") he could&#13;
camps in search of food and&#13;
safety.&#13;
On November 20, you can share&#13;
the experience of hunger suffered&#13;
by a quarter of the global family.&#13;
The money which is saved from&#13;
not purchasing food that day&#13;
should be brought to the Ranger&#13;
office (next to the Coffee Shoppe).&#13;
Ranger will then send a check&#13;
covering individual contributions&#13;
to OXFAM-America from UWParkside.&#13;
&#13;
You may say you can't go&#13;
without food. Complete fasting is&#13;
not required. You may choose to&#13;
record your food purchases and&#13;
contribute that amount toward the&#13;
Fast.&#13;
No matter which way you&#13;
choose to participate in the Fast&#13;
for a World Harvest, you will&#13;
assist in feeding the poorer people&#13;
of the world. Awakening&#13;
Americans to the fact that not&#13;
everyone has food on the table&#13;
may be a step toward the&#13;
elimination of hunger.&#13;
If you have any questions or&#13;
would like more information on the&#13;
Fast for a World Harvest, stop in&#13;
the RANGER Office.&#13;
Fade to Black' hits, misses I Racine presents opera&#13;
have been much better.&#13;
One example of poor taste in&#13;
this film is the scene in which Eric&#13;
buys some photographs of&#13;
Marilyn Monroe and goes home to&#13;
masturbate while looking at them.&#13;
This is one of the sickest scenes&#13;
I've ever seen on film.&#13;
Each scene that has the&#13;
remotest possibility of being&#13;
scarey is ruined by something&#13;
dopey (sucking a prostitute's&#13;
blood after she gets a picket from&#13;
a picket fence stuck in her neck&#13;
and "moseying off" after he kills&#13;
one of his co-workers for examples).&#13;
The scariest part of "Fade&#13;
to Black" is the scene in which a&#13;
film clip from "Dawn of the&#13;
Dead" is shown.&#13;
However, "Fade to Black" is&#13;
better that most trashy movies&#13;
because it tells the story of the&#13;
killer rather than concentrating&#13;
Continued On Page Seven&#13;
Opera Racine will present&#13;
Mozart's comic opera "Cusi Fan&#13;
Tutte" (Women are like that)&#13;
November 14-16 at the Park High&#13;
School Auditorium, 1901 - 12&#13;
Street, Racine.&#13;
In the opera, a most outlandish&#13;
wager is placed. An older man&#13;
bets two young men that their&#13;
lovers can not remain true to&#13;
them. He says that since the&#13;
beginning of time women never&#13;
remained faithful.&#13;
Wendy Hill, a native of Racine,&#13;
will play the role of Despina the&#13;
maid. Others from Racine participating&#13;
in the performance are&#13;
from the Horiick High School&#13;
chorus, which is under the&#13;
direction of Antonio Pavao.&#13;
Showtime on Friday and&#13;
Saturday is at 8:00 p.m. and&#13;
Sunday at 7:00 p.m. Tickets are&#13;
$6.00 and $9.00 with a $1.00 off if&#13;
student identification is shown.&#13;
Tickets are available at the door&#13;
or through Opera Racine — (639-&#13;
1316).&#13;
immmimiiuiiiuHii&#13;
WHO PUT&#13;
cream&#13;
well?&#13;
Women in advertising discussed&#13;
0&#13;
PcUelUb BAKERY -55^&#13;
"The Naked Truth: Advertising's&#13;
Image of Women," a&#13;
lecture illustrated by slides of&#13;
more than 200 ads from a wide&#13;
variety of magazines, will be&#13;
presented by nationally - known&#13;
media specialist Jean Kilbourne&#13;
on Tuesday, November 18, at 8 p.&#13;
m. in the Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
The program is sponsored by the&#13;
student Parkside Activities&#13;
Board. Admission is $1 and tickets&#13;
will be available at the door.&#13;
Kilbourne's presentation&#13;
examines specific ways in which&#13;
advertisements reinforce&#13;
stereotypes and affect self -&#13;
images of both women and men.&#13;
She cites a recent report by the&#13;
United Nations Commission on the&#13;
Status of Women which claims&#13;
that "advertising is the worst&#13;
offender in perpetuating the&#13;
image of women as sex symbols&#13;
and as an inferior class of human&#13;
beings."&#13;
Kilbourne has presented her&#13;
program to hundreds of college,&#13;
business, and community groups&#13;
and local and national women's&#13;
groups, including the National&#13;
Organization of Women and the&#13;
Association for Women in&#13;
Psychology. She has discussed the&#13;
JEAN KILBOURNE&#13;
topic on radio and television&#13;
programs, including NBC's&#13;
Weekend and Today, and has been&#13;
interviewed by Time and&#13;
Associated Press.&#13;
A former employe of the British&#13;
Broadcasting Corporation in&#13;
Londan and of a French Film&#13;
company, Kilbourne holds a&#13;
bachelor's degreee from&#13;
Wellesley College and currently is&#13;
a doctoral candidate at Boston&#13;
University.&#13;
She recently received a grant&#13;
from the Educational Foundation&#13;
of America for a study of sex role&#13;
stereotyping in television commercials.&#13;
&#13;
Kilbourne is assistant director&#13;
of the New England Screen&#13;
Education Association, an&#13;
associate of the Women's Institute&#13;
for Freedom of the Press, a&#13;
member of the steering committee&#13;
of the National Center for&#13;
Women in the Performing and&#13;
Media Arts, and has taught&#13;
women's studies and media&#13;
studies on the high school and&#13;
college level.&#13;
• DANISH TORTE CAKES&#13;
• KRINGiES v&#13;
• WEDDING CAKES&#13;
• CAKES FOR AU. OCCASIONS&#13;
OPEN • FINE ITALIAN BREAD&#13;
tSUN MM'&amp;! • HARO ROU A BUN SPECIALISTS&#13;
GRADONI 'S&#13;
654-0785&#13;
6020 39TH AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
h To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
Dk 4&amp;l£.&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha.&#13;
Elmwood Plaza Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
r&#13;
52tid street&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
| Now Featuring&#13;
Mini-Service Sit-Down Dining&#13;
plus Carry-Outs&#13;
Open Noon til Midnight&#13;
Sat 4 til 1, Sun 4 til 10&#13;
BOMBERS - LASAGNA - SPAGHETTI&#13;
If you wish — Call ahead&#13;
and your order will be hot and&#13;
ready to eat in our private booths.&#13;
I 3308-52n^St^Kenosha&#13;
VI 654-5068 &#13;
6 Thursday, November 13,1980 Ranger&#13;
1980-81&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
basketball&#13;
SEASON PASS&#13;
Get a FREE UW-P T-shirt with each&#13;
season pass $10 for students&#13;
$18 for all others&#13;
OPENING WEEKEND&#13;
Tickets only $1 in advance at the PE Bldg&#13;
or Info Center after the games enjoy a&#13;
free beer or soda &amp; live entertainment&#13;
'FACULTY/STAFF/STUDENTS&#13;
at Union Square Get a free mug&#13;
MEN'S SCHEDULE J&#13;
Fri Nov 28 St. Xavier&#13;
Sat Nov 29 UW-LaCrosse&#13;
Mon Dec 1 South Alabama&#13;
Thurs Dec 4 Murray State&#13;
Sat Dec 6 Drake University&#13;
Tues Dec 9 UW-Stevens Point&#13;
Sat Dec 13 Kansas State&#13;
Mon Dec 15 UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Mon Dec 29 Ranger Classic&#13;
&amp;TueDec30 Tournament&#13;
(Carthage,&#13;
Ouachita Baptist,&#13;
Minnesota-Duluth&#13;
Sat Jan 3 UW-Green Bay&#13;
Mon Jan 5 Iowa State&#13;
Wed Jan 7 Colorado&#13;
Sat Jan 10 California StateFullerton&#13;
&#13;
Tue Jan 13 Hawaii-Hilo&#13;
Wed Jan 14 Hawaii-Hilo&#13;
Tue Jan 20 UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Sat Jan 24 Quincy College&#13;
Parkside . 7:30PM&#13;
Parkside '7:30PM&#13;
Mobile, Ala. 7:30PM&#13;
Murray, Kentucky 7:30PM&#13;
Des Moines, Iowa 7:30PM&#13;
Stevens Point 7:30PM&#13;
Manhattan, Kans. 7:35PM&#13;
Parkside 7:30PM&#13;
Parkside 7&amp;9PM&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Parkside 7:30PM&#13;
Ames, Iowa 7:35PM&#13;
Boulder, Colo. 7:35PM&#13;
Fullerton, Cal 7:30PM&#13;
Hilo, Hawaii 7:30PM&#13;
Hilo, Hawaii 7:30PM&#13;
Milwaukee 8PM&#13;
Parkside 7:30PM&#13;
Thur Jan 29&#13;
Sat Jan 31&#13;
Tue Feb 3&#13;
Sat Feb 7&#13;
Mon Feb 9&#13;
Wed Feb 11&#13;
Sat Feb 14&#13;
Mon Feb 16&#13;
Thur Feb 19&#13;
Sat Feb 21&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
Chicago State&#13;
UW-Whitewater&#13;
Loras Collebge&#13;
Saginaw Valley St.&#13;
Lakeland College&#13;
St. Norbert College&#13;
Lewis University&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
UW-Green Bay&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Whitewater&#13;
Dubuque, Iowa&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Parkside&#13;
DePere&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Marquette,Mich.&#13;
Green Bay&#13;
..9HJ6J&#13;
'-iniaoq&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
30PM&#13;
A ¥&#13;
WOMEN'S S CHEDULE&#13;
Tue Dec 2 UW-Oshkosh&#13;
Sat Dec 6 'Marquette&#13;
Tue Dec 9 UW-Whitewater&#13;
Fri Dec 12 UW-Stevens Point&#13;
Fri-Sat College of St. Francis&#13;
Dec 19-20 Tournament (UW-Parkside,&#13;
St. Xavier, Missouri-St. Louis,&#13;
Chicago State, Lewis, Shaw&#13;
College)&#13;
Parkside (7 pm)&#13;
Milw (5:45 pm)&#13;
Whitewater (5 pm)&#13;
Stevens Pt (6 pm)&#13;
Joliet, III.&#13;
Sat Jan 10&#13;
Tue Jan 13&#13;
Fri-Sat&#13;
Jan 16-17&#13;
Tue Jan 20&#13;
Sat Jan 24&#13;
Tue Jan 27&#13;
Thur Jan 29&#13;
Sat Jan 31&#13;
Mon Feb 2&#13;
Sat Feb 7&#13;
Thur Feb 12&#13;
Sat Feb 14&#13;
Wed Feb 18&#13;
Fri Feb 20&#13;
Sat Feb 21&#13;
Mon Feb 23&#13;
Tue Mar 3&#13;
Thur-Sat&#13;
Mar 5-7&#13;
'Carroll&#13;
* UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Parkside Tournament (Loras,&#13;
Milton, St. Xavier, UW-Pkside)&#13;
Chicago State&#13;
* UW-Green Bay&#13;
'Marquette&#13;
Northeastern Illinois&#13;
UW-Platteville&#13;
'Carthage&#13;
North Central&#13;
'Carroll&#13;
Illinois-Chicago Circle&#13;
'UW-Milwaukee&#13;
UW-Oshkosh&#13;
* UW-Green Bay&#13;
'Carthage&#13;
St. Norbert&#13;
WWIAC Division II&#13;
Tournament&#13;
Parkside (5&#13;
Milw (7 pm)&#13;
Parkside&#13;
(5 &amp; 7 pm F&#13;
(1 &amp; 3 pm S&#13;
Chicago (7:3&#13;
Parkside (1:3&#13;
Parkside (7 |&#13;
Chicago (7 p&#13;
Parkside (3 |&#13;
Parkside (7 |&#13;
Parkside (4:3&#13;
Waukesha (;&#13;
Parkside (4:3&#13;
Parkside (7 |&#13;
Oshkosh (7 |&#13;
Grn Bay (1:3&#13;
Kenosha (7 |&#13;
Parkside (7 p&#13;
Milwaukee (I&#13;
* d enotes WWIAC-II game&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside &#13;
KANGER SPORTS&#13;
Ranger Thursday, November 13,1980&#13;
Intra-mural Football&#13;
Stabbin' Cabin&#13;
Tho IIW.Dn,u:j. r .&#13;
rkside Intramural&#13;
Flag Football season ended this&#13;
past week with the Stabbin Cabin&#13;
who dominated play during the&#13;
regular season league action, also&#13;
capturing the Championship Playoffs.&#13;
According to Intramural&#13;
coordinator Loran Hein the&#13;
regular season play consisted of a&#13;
round-robin competition between&#13;
four very competitive football&#13;
teams.&#13;
During the league play, the&#13;
Stabbin Cabin were not only undefeated,&#13;
but unscored upon&#13;
Their victories included a 15-0&#13;
score over Luck's Boys and a 13-0&#13;
win over the Wrestlers. The keys&#13;
to these victories were the pinpoint&#13;
passing of Jame Oberbrunner&#13;
to his top wideouts Dan&#13;
Sykes, Bob Granitz and Rich&#13;
Salisbury, and also the hard&#13;
rushing line charge of the defense&#13;
Luck's Boys posted an impressive&#13;
26-7 w in over the Mean&#13;
Machine with Jon Cuccio, Mike&#13;
Kaesner and Kevin Erwin doing&#13;
most of the damage. Cuccio and&#13;
Kaesner connected on two long&#13;
touchdown passes, and Erwin&#13;
scored two touchdowns, one a 30&#13;
yard pass from Kaesner, and the&#13;
other an 80 yard run, the longest&#13;
?? vP 0f the season&#13;
- The Mean&#13;
Machine's lone score came on a 10&#13;
yard pass from Clark to Rick&#13;
Grisham.&#13;
The most exciting game of the&#13;
season was played between the&#13;
Mean Machine and the Wrestlers,&#13;
with the Mean Machine winning 7-&#13;
6. The Mean Machine opened the&#13;
scoring with a 3 yard touchdown&#13;
plunge by Rick Grisham early in&#13;
the second half. Grisham also&#13;
converted the important point&#13;
after. The Wrestlers mounted a&#13;
late scoring drive with a 40 y ard&#13;
pass to Kevin Casper from Keith&#13;
Reicher, following an interception&#13;
by Casper. The missed extra point&#13;
averted an overtime, and assured&#13;
a victory for the Mean Machine.&#13;
In the Championship Play-offs,&#13;
the Stabbin Cabin was pitted&#13;
claims title&#13;
against Luck's Boys. The Cabin&#13;
was again very impressive as&#13;
Luck's Boys ran out of luck and&#13;
lost 21-0. The big play boys for the&#13;
Cabin were again Jamie Oberbrunner,&#13;
Dan Sykes and Buck&#13;
Granitz. Oberbrunner passed for&#13;
two long touchdowns and returned&#13;
an intercepted pass for a touchdown.&#13;
Sykes and Granitz were&#13;
both recipients of Oberbrunner's&#13;
long touchdown passes, and the&#13;
versatile Sykes added a 35 yard&#13;
field goal to insure him the league&#13;
scoring title with 21 points. Other&#13;
members of Stabbin Cabin's&#13;
Championship team were Scott&#13;
Bullis, Paul Charapata, Jon&#13;
Vucino, Dicky Sykes, Ron Clark,&#13;
Rich Salisbury, Kelly O'Connell&#13;
and Jeff Hollingsworth.&#13;
While the season is over,&#13;
negotiations are continuing to&#13;
match the Stabbin Cabin up&#13;
against Carthage College Intramural&#13;
Flag Football Champions.&#13;
&#13;
Soccer advances to semifinals&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The men's soccer team travels&#13;
to St. Cloud, Minnesota this&#13;
Saturday in a rematch of last&#13;
year's Area 3 semi-final game&#13;
against St. John's University. The&#13;
Rangers will be out to avenge last&#13;
year's 1-0 loss to St. John's.&#13;
Based on statistics, the Rangers&#13;
have the potential to, win. They go&#13;
into the playoffs with a school&#13;
record of U victories, have suffered&#13;
only five losses with one tie,&#13;
possess a tenacious defense, have&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of beer? All you have to do is fill&#13;
out this entry form and pick the most correct winners. Put a check&#13;
mark by your picks and bring the form down to the Ranger office,&#13;
D139 WLLC.&#13;
Kansas City at San Diego&#13;
Buffalo at Cincinnati&#13;
Cleveland at Pittsburgh&#13;
New York Jets at Denver&#13;
Green Bay at New York Giants&#13;
New Orleans at Atlanta&#13;
Philadelphia at Washington&#13;
St. Louis at Dallas&#13;
Tampa Bay at Minnesota&#13;
Baltimore at Detroit&#13;
Houston at Chicago&#13;
Los Angeles at New England&#13;
San Francisco at Miami&#13;
Oakland at Seattle&#13;
Tie will be the total combined points - breaker:&#13;
scored in the Oakland - Seattle game.&#13;
Last week's winner: John Kuta: 11 correct, 50 points&#13;
Name:-&#13;
S.S. No.-&#13;
Rules:&#13;
1) One entry per person&#13;
2) Must be a student at UW-Parkside&#13;
3) Person with most correct picks win (in case of tie, the total&#13;
points will be used as a tie - breaker)&#13;
4) Entry must be clipped from Ranger issue&#13;
5) Ranger members ineligible&#13;
6) Entries must be turned into Ranger office by noon on the&#13;
Friday preceeding the games&#13;
7) Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks&#13;
8) Entries must be legible to be considered&#13;
a bona-fide All-American candidate&#13;
goalkeeper (Dan Opferman)&#13;
and are riding a three&#13;
game win streak.&#13;
The play-offs are a do-or-die&#13;
situation. A loss means the end to&#13;
a long season, and a win pushes&#13;
the team into the Area 3 Championship&#13;
game against the winner&#13;
of the Illinois - Iowa playoff.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson is impressed&#13;
with the Rangers' opponents:&#13;
"They're big and strong,&#13;
RANGER needs Sports Writers&#13;
Review: "Fade to Black"&#13;
Continued From Page Five&#13;
on the terrorized main character&#13;
while a few detectives dig up clues&#13;
to the killer's identity (which&#13;
usually has little or no relavence&#13;
to the plot.)&#13;
Linda Kerridge plays Marilyn&#13;
O'Connor, a Marilyn Monroe looka-like&#13;
who Eric falls in love with.&#13;
She is drawn into his web of terror&#13;
out of sympathy for him. In an&#13;
intense recreation of a scene from&#13;
the "Prince and the Showgirl"&#13;
(with Christopher portraying&#13;
Laurence Olivier and Kerridge&#13;
posing as Marilyn Monroe) we&#13;
witness one of the film's best&#13;
moments. Christopher and&#13;
Kerridge are absolutely stunning.&#13;
Good suspense music is an asset&#13;
to any horror film. "Tubular&#13;
Bells" held many an "Exorcist"&#13;
audience in awe, and the intense&#13;
orchestrations of "Jaws" have&#13;
come back time and again to&#13;
haunt us. The unique bass and&#13;
rhythem tunes of "Fade to Black"&#13;
gives us yet another type of music&#13;
to fear.&#13;
The director (Vernon Zimmerman)&#13;
seems to feel that&#13;
getting shot is no big deal. When&#13;
psychologist Dr. Moriarty&#13;
(weakly played by Tim&#13;
Thomerson) is shot in the leg it&#13;
hardly stops him from chasing&#13;
Eric all over Hollywood even&#13;
though Eric has been shot many&#13;
times in one scene, he has the&#13;
superhuman strength to come&#13;
back for more.&#13;
The script (also written by&#13;
Zimmerman) is so likewarm in&#13;
some parts and so intense in&#13;
others it's hard to believe the&#13;
same person wrote it.&#13;
At the end of the film, Eric&#13;
quotes his idol, Cody Jarrett&#13;
(James Cagney's role in "White&#13;
Heat") when he yells "Top of the&#13;
World, Ma!" This may describe&#13;
Christopher's acting, but "Fade to&#13;
Black" is the bottom of the barrel.&#13;
WAWV WWiWWWAWJV,'&#13;
SLEEPING BAG SALES: Good&#13;
commissions selling top quality, "i&#13;
triple layer, sleeping bags—rec-!1&#13;
tangular, backpacker, &amp; mummy.&#13;
,» Sell at half the retail cost. Great&#13;
on campus. Ideal as holiday gifts.&#13;
Free info: SLEEPING BAGS UNLIMITED,&#13;
105 Wolf Rd., Albany, f&#13;
| New York 12205.&#13;
AWWWWiWAAWAVA&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654 2932&#13;
THE BEST SUBS&#13;
IN RACINE&#13;
ARE NOW IN KENOSHA&#13;
25* 25*&#13;
PRESENT&#13;
THIS COUPON&#13;
FOR&#13;
25&lt; OFF&#13;
AT&#13;
ibeSew&lt;Utpt Stop&#13;
3009 Roosevelt Rd. 654-2392&#13;
ANY SIZE&#13;
SUB ~&#13;
251 25*&#13;
bigger then us. They also have a&#13;
fast team that likes to apply&#13;
pressure." Henderson knows it&#13;
won't be ah easy contest. "It&#13;
should be close. The key is that we&#13;
have to score when we have the&#13;
opportunities."&#13;
This is the fourth year the&#13;
Rangers will face St. John's in&#13;
playoff competition. All three&#13;
prior games have found Parkside&#13;
on the short end of the score. In&#13;
last year's game, St. John's&#13;
scored with three minutes left in&#13;
the game to win.&#13;
The Rangers have the incentive,&#13;
ability and desire to win. It's just a&#13;
matter, as Henderson says, "of&#13;
putting the ball in the net."&#13;
ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
for&#13;
SPRING SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are&#13;
seeking a degree at UW-Parkside) should consult their&#13;
academic adviser prior to registration for Spring&#13;
Semester. A Certification of Advising form, signed by the&#13;
adviser, is required for registration.&#13;
Spring Semester Course Schedules will be available on&#13;
November 7. November 10-21 has been designated as an&#13;
academic advising period, and advisers will make every&#13;
effort to meet with you then.&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
fni 11 1 • I ill' I&#13;
CONTACT YOUR ADVISER&#13;
FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
If you have any questions, contact the Office of the Dean&#13;
of Faculty, 348 Wyllie Library-Learning Center, 553-2144.&#13;
NOTE: Non-matriculant students (students not seeking&#13;
a degree at UW-Parkside) are exempt from this&#13;
requirement. b &#13;
Thursday, November 13,1980 Ranger&#13;
Vol&#13;
!^&#13;
b&#13;
!" seed for sta,e Tourney Coming Events&#13;
In Linda Henrier«nn'c thr-a* „ Rangers received their seed Henderson plans on utilizine all&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
In Linda Henderson's three&#13;
years as head coach of the&#13;
women's volleyball team, her&#13;
squad has never been seeded&#13;
number one in the WWIAC State&#13;
Tournament. In this, her fourth&#13;
year, the number one seeding has&#13;
finally been bestowed upon her&#13;
team.&#13;
The seedings have Parkside&#13;
first, followed by Milwaukee,&#13;
Marquette, Carthage and Carroll.&#13;
The Rangers received their seed&#13;
after Jan Stocker, the Commissioner&#13;
of the Conference,&#13;
broke a tie between Parkside and&#13;
Milwaukee. Parkside defeated&#13;
Milwaukee three out of fo ur times&#13;
this year.&#13;
"It feels good," Henderson said&#13;
about the seeding. "We deserve it.&#13;
I think we're the best team there.&#13;
The question is whether we're&#13;
going to beat ourselves with&#13;
mental errors."&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
SADISTS CLUB MEETING. Blansten's&#13;
stabbin cabin's and student militants&#13;
welcome. Moln 270. Wed. at one. Refreshments&#13;
served.&#13;
JOLENE, thanks for spending money on a&#13;
classified — The Villian&#13;
LOOSEY — you better be extra good! —&#13;
Kathy and Kbuck&#13;
MARY — I l ove you, more than could ever be&#13;
imagined — Curtis&#13;
RANGER STAFF: Run away! Run away!&#13;
Run away! Chain Gang&#13;
KM — noticed the improvement in your&#13;
picture last week. — lOP's&#13;
ANIMAL WOMEN — forget Hollywood. Join&#13;
the lOP's. — Chain Gang&#13;
'44 FORD four door four on the floor. Ten&#13;
times fast.&#13;
SEE SUE'S base of operations Moln 118 Chain&#13;
Gang&#13;
ROUND TABLE: Look in the castle aaaarg&#13;
under english literature!&#13;
DON'T START a writing war with an English&#13;
major — Steve&#13;
HOLLYWOOD — Become a priest. Then we&#13;
can fool around. — Nuns&#13;
RANGER STAFF: You Pig-pog English&#13;
(101?) bed wetting types! (French Knight)&#13;
IT'S A PITY that some students Insist on&#13;
writing classifieds that prove their&#13;
ignorance. You should be embarrassed to&#13;
admit that you're a student.&#13;
WE'RE ONES!!!&#13;
ATTENTION all available hunks of male&#13;
flesh: 4th annual "Why I haven't dated&#13;
Chris Hammelev but would love to!"&#13;
contest is up and coming (breathing hard!!!)&#13;
Details next issue of Ranger.&#13;
K.M. wears Pinocchio underwear, but he&#13;
never tells a lie.&#13;
ORGY QUEEN, .the soccer team demands&#13;
equal time! — BJ&#13;
YODA WAS HERE, but now he's gone. He left&#13;
his name to carry on. Those who knew him,&#13;
knew him well. Those who didn't can go to&#13;
hell.&#13;
RON, consumed mass quantities with any&#13;
coneheads lately?!&#13;
JULIE, what happened in aisle 1 at Value&#13;
Village — Coach&#13;
BRAD, HAPPY 18th — have a good one. —&#13;
Renee&#13;
BILL, You know J8.K would kill. . .!&#13;
YELLOW BELT, Couldn't be soon enough!&#13;
Whips 8. chains too?!&#13;
STUD il: Where can we go window shopping?&#13;
Merchandise better be functionable as well&#13;
as "cute".&#13;
ANIMAL WOMEN — leave the zoo. Join the&#13;
Chain Gang. — lOP's&#13;
MY HOUSE (Junie) - d oesn't have a plaque!&#13;
- Little Sister S.&#13;
#SC-3057: How I LOVE Thee: Todd H.&#13;
#sc-3057: Let me Show you the ways! Todd H.&#13;
JEFF: Wide-mouth coke bottles? I'll show&#13;
you what art is. Ferret?&#13;
ANNE ELK is a sniveling little rat - faced&#13;
gift.&#13;
KRATOCHVIL — High school is over — time&#13;
to grow up. Think carefully before acting.&#13;
Feelings are being destroyed. Explanation&#13;
can be obtained. All animals use to party&#13;
hearty. Time to reunite and party up.&#13;
Friends can only take so much, "Steve".&#13;
Tell us — personally, if you want to stay&#13;
friends.&#13;
A DAY with Mary Jo is boring!—Todd H.&#13;
CHUCK, are still an animal?&#13;
A DAY without sunshie ... is like night.&#13;
JULIE — Chicken? oh ya, turkey ...?&#13;
DIRECTOR OF UNION. Wanna shot! Thanks&#13;
for It back. Animals&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
KZ 6 50. 1978, 2000 miles. Excellent. $1500 or&#13;
best. 634-2948&#13;
-TOSW, 1973, good mpg, $500 or best offer.&#13;
LOST &amp; FOUND&#13;
LOS&#13;
7 ~ WALLET, (library or coffee shoppe).&#13;
Please contact Jane 634-6296&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
WALK, TALK, and assist retired (blind)&#13;
college teacher in straightening out his&#13;
library. Earn while you learn. Call 694-2251&#13;
for appointment.&#13;
Henderson plans on utilizing all&#13;
of her team's strengths, strengths&#13;
that the other teams in the tournament&#13;
don't possess. "We have&#13;
good depth and I plan on using my&#13;
bench. We have a stronger bench&#13;
than any other state team. I'm&#13;
going to rotate my players and&#13;
keep the team fresh."&#13;
'Hie Rangers have other positive&#13;
points. Half of the starters are&#13;
seniors and provide that allimportant&#13;
experience, The other&#13;
and perhaps most important point&#13;
is the strength of the regular&#13;
season schedule. Henderson's&#13;
team posted a 24-18 record and&#13;
played perhaps the toughest&#13;
schedule of any state school&#13;
this year.&#13;
Can the team live up to its&#13;
seeding? "We have the seeding&#13;
and we have to prove it. We're&#13;
ready, rested and eager," Henderson&#13;
said. The tournament will&#13;
be at Marquette this weekend.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
"National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phono 658-2331&#13;
MEMIER F.D.I.C.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 14&#13;
COURSE "Defensive Driving" at 7:30 am and 12:30 pm in Union 207. The nnwr.™&#13;
is free for Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
8&#13;
MOVIE "The Rose" will be shown at 8 pm in the Union Cinema. Admission at th*&#13;
door is $1.50for a Parkside student and $1.50for a guest. Sponsored by PAB&#13;
SPEAKER Roberta Rivierva, director of the Center for Latino and Latin&#13;
Affairs at Northern Illinois University, will speak on "The Hidden Currim.bf™&#13;
Education." Union 104, 1 pm. Sponsored by MSU. '&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 15&#13;
BUS TOUR to Chicago's Lyric Opera House. Call ext. 2312 for more details Sn«i&#13;
sored by UW-Extension. '&#13;
X COUNTRY Men's NCAA-H Championship, 10,000 meters at 11 am All am&#13;
welcome. '&#13;
Monday, Nov. 17&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. Prof. Gerald Greenfield will talk on "The&#13;
Latin American City: Present Problems, Future Prospects". The program is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
CONCERT by the Parkside Percussion Ensemble at 1 pm in Upper Main Place The&#13;
concert is free and open to the public. / 6&#13;
LECTURE at 7 pm in GR 101. Henry Plum will talk on "The Legal Rights and&#13;
Responsibilities of Foster Parents". The program is free. Please call Kenosha or&#13;
Racine Dept. of S ocial Services for reservations.&#13;
AOE presents "The Fourposter" at 8pm in the Communication Arts Theatre with a&#13;
champagne and dessert wedding reception at 7:15 pm. Tickets are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center. Admission is $4.00 for Parkside students and $7 00 for&#13;
others.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 18&#13;
CONCERT with Tim Bell directing the Parkside Jazz Ensemble at 8 pm in the it?t^J?oSS.&#13;
t&#13;
if?^LTheatre&#13;
-&#13;
Admission is »-00 for students and $2.00 for others.&#13;
8t 8 P&#13;
/Lin the F&#13;
nlon Cinema&#13;
-&#13;
Jean Kilbourne will talk&#13;
SV&amp; S^oL VpaT me&#13;
° m AdvertIsta«" Adm»»'on at the door&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 19&#13;
DISCUSSION by the Peer Support Program at 7:30 pm in MOLN 111. The program&#13;
is free and open to all.&#13;
B&#13;
RECITAL by Susan Gulick and her guitar at 8 pm in GR 103. The program is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
ACADEMY OF BATON A DANCE&#13;
| Headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits, |&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights&#13;
| — Ballet Shoes — T ap Shoes —&#13;
| All Dancing Supplies&#13;
SPEAKEASY&#13;
TRY OUR FAMOUS PIZZA TURNOVERS&#13;
CARRY-OUT SERVICE - NO EXTRA CHARGE!&#13;
• HAPPY HOURS — BAIL Y 4-7 p.m. •&#13;
• LADIES' NITE — THURSDAY•&#13;
— OLD FASHIONEDS - MARTINIS - MANHATTANS — 75«&#13;
— BAR DRINKS 50' — FREE MUNCHIES!&#13;
PRESENT THIS COUPON&#13;
FOR 50° OFF&#13;
ANY OF OUR&#13;
DELICIOUS SANDWICHES&#13;
SER VING 3:00 p.m. - MIDNIGHT&#13;
Coupon Expires December 31, 1980&#13;
2801 - 30th Avenue&#13;
I&#13;
551-8004 l&#13;
CHECK US OUT/&#13;
HAPPY HOURS 4-7 pm/&#13;
DELICIOUS MENU/&#13;
MONDAY NITE FOOTBALL/&#13;
— Big Screen TV&#13;
25° Beer During Game&#13;
Half Price Pan Pizza&#13;
SUPER STEREO SYSTEM/&#13;
GAME ROOM/&#13;
OPEN 3:00 pm -1:00 am/ </text>
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              <text>jMT University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, November 20, 1980&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 12&#13;
Food prices to increase 3 percent&#13;
by Janet Wells&#13;
An overall increase of th ree per&#13;
cent in the price of food at&#13;
Parkside is projected for January&#13;
1981, according to Bill Niebuhr&#13;
Director of the Student Union.&#13;
Many food item prices will remain&#13;
the same, while selected items&#13;
will probably be penny - increased.&#13;
&#13;
This method is similar to that&#13;
used last spring, when the overall&#13;
price of food at Parkside was&#13;
adjusted upward by eight per cent.&#13;
Niebuhr and Steve Spencer,&#13;
Manager of the Heritage Food&#13;
Systems operation at Parkside&#13;
since June 1, are currently&#13;
determining those food and&#13;
beverage items whose sale&#13;
volume and comparative prices&#13;
can carry a small price increase&#13;
to offset the general effect of inflation&#13;
«i food costs.&#13;
Comparison pricing helps&#13;
Parkside's food prices to remain&#13;
competitive. Niebuhr and Spencer&#13;
check the cost of a hamburger or&#13;
sandwich, for instance, at fast&#13;
food restaurants popular in the&#13;
local communities, and compare&#13;
that with the cost, convenience,&#13;
and quality of Parkside's food.&#13;
Niebuhr believes that Parkside&#13;
retains the competitive edge in the&#13;
communities and in the UWSystem.&#13;
&#13;
He cites the fact that Parkside's&#13;
food prices are at the approximate&#13;
median when compared with food&#13;
prices throughout the UW-System.&#13;
The food price index published&#13;
quarterly by Madison projects a&#13;
twelve to fifteen per cent increase&#13;
in food prices overall from last&#13;
January to next. In view of that&#13;
and of nation-wide inflation,&#13;
Niebuhr declares that the Union&#13;
and Heritage Foods have done&#13;
well in holding price increases to a&#13;
necessary minimum, though&#13;
Heritage loses money in its day -&#13;
to - day operations.&#13;
Feeding such customers as&#13;
Parkside's summer camp attendees&#13;
and Gen Con participants&#13;
helps to keep Heritage "slightly in&#13;
the black," Niebuhr says.&#13;
Catering meals scheduled in&#13;
Parkside facilities is Heritage's&#13;
main source of revenue, compensating&#13;
for the loss sustained in&#13;
daily operations. Heritage pays&#13;
the Student Union contracted fees&#13;
which vary according to the&#13;
revenue source.&#13;
Sixty-two per cent of the Union's&#13;
current budget is comprised of&#13;
revenues from the food service&#13;
and other Union - sponsored activities,&#13;
such as bowling. The&#13;
budget is charged for most of the&#13;
costs of operating the building,&#13;
including utilities, amortizing the&#13;
building loan, and paying the&#13;
salaries of university employees.&#13;
Heritage employs its own staff.&#13;
Niebuhr is extremely proud of&#13;
the Union budget's reduced&#13;
reliance on student segregated&#13;
fees. Five years ago, fifty per cent&#13;
of the Union's budget was derived&#13;
from segregated fees, fifty per&#13;
cent from revenues. Today,&#13;
despite increased costs, the same&#13;
segregated fee dollars are only&#13;
thirty-eight per cent of the budget,&#13;
with the remainder coming from&#13;
revenue - producing operations&#13;
like the food service.&#13;
RANGER ph&#13;
STUDENTS purchase food at the Coffee Shoppe.&#13;
Elements of society&#13;
add to racism problem&#13;
J. P. STEVENS WORKERS In Roanoke Rapids, N. C., cheer&#13;
after they voted to ratify historic contract on October 19.&#13;
Workers ratify contract&#13;
ACTWU and Stevens, ACTWU has&#13;
terminated the four-year consumer&#13;
boycott of J.P. Stevens&#13;
products and the Corporate&#13;
Campaign in which Stevens'&#13;
various business and financial ties&#13;
were publicized and protested.&#13;
The workers gathered at&#13;
Roanoke Rapids High School to&#13;
ratify the historic 2 1/2-year&#13;
contract with the company, whose&#13;
officials had vowed for almost two&#13;
decades that they would never&#13;
sign a collective bargaining&#13;
agreement. The ratification came&#13;
six years and two months after&#13;
Stevens workers chose the union&#13;
in an NLRB-supervised election at&#13;
the seven plants which were the&#13;
inspiration for last year's awardwinning&#13;
movie, "Norma Rae."&#13;
Under the terms of the&#13;
agreement, workers here won&#13;
more than $3 million in back&#13;
wages unlawfully withheld from&#13;
their pay in the last two years.&#13;
A cheering, jubilant crowd of&#13;
.P. Stevens workers roared their&#13;
pproval of a union contract at&#13;
toanoke Rapids, North Carolina&#13;
)ctober 19. The contract brings&#13;
hem fundamental union&#13;
&gt;rotection and benefits including&#13;
eniority, arbitration, a grievance&#13;
&gt;rocedure, shop stewards, safety&#13;
:ommittees and a 19.35% back&#13;
&gt;ay s ettlement.&#13;
Later the same day, the same&#13;
&gt;asic contract was ratified&#13;
manimously by Stevens workers&#13;
n High Point, North Carolina,&#13;
\llendale, South Carolina, and&#13;
West Boylston (Montgomery)&#13;
\labama, where negotiations on&#13;
specific local issues are under&#13;
way. In all four locations, some&#13;
3,500 Stevens workers in ten plants&#13;
are now covered by Amalgamated&#13;
Clothing and Textile Workers&#13;
Union (ACTWU) contracts.&#13;
As part of the national settlement&#13;
agreement between&#13;
by Gloria Gonzales&#13;
Roberto Rivera, who helped&#13;
establish a state - mandated&#13;
Human Relations Department at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
LaCrosse, spoke on November 14&#13;
at Parkside on "The Hidden&#13;
Curriculum in Education." The&#13;
lecture, sponsored by Minority&#13;
Student Union, examined the&#13;
production of racism in American&#13;
society.&#13;
Rivera introduced concepts and&#13;
dimensions of the problem of&#13;
racism that he stated were helpful&#13;
to all students who will be working&#13;
with people in the fields of communication,&#13;
history, psychology&#13;
and education.&#13;
Racism, according to Rivera, is&#13;
produced by three elements of&#13;
society, each working to reinforce&#13;
the others. "Institutions, the&#13;
dominant culture and individualized&#13;
behavior all contribute&#13;
to the problem of r acism,"&#13;
he said, and to the "inequitable&#13;
distribution of socio - economic&#13;
resources."&#13;
Institutions, according to&#13;
Rivera, "legitimize who gets&#13;
what," while the dominant culture&#13;
provides a pattern for individuals&#13;
They will get a retroactive hourly&#13;
pay increase of 19.35% and will&#13;
receive sums averaging $1,300 per&#13;
full-time worker, payable in&#13;
November.&#13;
AFL-CIO President Lane&#13;
Kirkland hailed the contracts and&#13;
the settlement agreement as "a&#13;
tremendous step forward for the&#13;
textile and apparel workers of the&#13;
south who have been denied,&#13;
through illegal repression and&#13;
coercion, their basic right to be&#13;
represented by a union."&#13;
to base their opinions and beliefs&#13;
on. -&#13;
In addition, American society&#13;
fails to produce "critical&#13;
thinkers," according to Rivera.&#13;
As a result, racists, sexists and&#13;
elitists help form the foundations&#13;
for a class system, he said. One&#13;
example of the lack of critical&#13;
thinking done by the American&#13;
public cited by Rivera was the&#13;
election of Ronald Reagan. Since&#13;
American voters lacked the&#13;
ability to anlyze current problems&#13;
systematically, he said, their&#13;
answer was Reagan. At the same&#13;
time, Rivera pointed out, how&#13;
many voters realized that Puerto&#13;
Ricans on the island were allowed&#13;
to vote, for the first time, but were&#13;
still not allowed an electoral&#13;
college delegate?&#13;
Rivera said that racism is often&#13;
dealt with by blaming the victim&#13;
rather than the victimizers.&#13;
"There are no classes on white&#13;
racism or male sexism," he said.&#13;
"Victim blaming is also revealed&#13;
in statements like 'they won't go&#13;
to school,' and 'they have too&#13;
many children'."&#13;
Denial of the problem is another&#13;
way that racism is dealt with in&#13;
America, according to Rivera. He&#13;
called this "the infamous 'the&#13;
slaves were always happily&#13;
singing on the plantation' myth."&#13;
The rationality approach to&#13;
dealing with racism is what&#13;
Rivera called the "if only we could&#13;
learn to communicate with each&#13;
other" approach.&#13;
According to Rivera, these are&#13;
all ineffective ways of dealing&#13;
with racism. More effective,&#13;
Rivera said, would be the understanding&#13;
of the three reinforcers&#13;
of racism (institutions, the&#13;
dominant culture and individualized&#13;
behavior) and the&#13;
rewriting of history. Rivera asked,&#13;
"Whose history is being taught for&#13;
whom?" To demonstrate his&#13;
point, he asked if Thanksgiving&#13;
should actually be a day of&#13;
mourning for native Americans&#13;
and wondered how Columbus, who&#13;
was "lost," could have "discovered"&#13;
America.&#13;
Rivera also advised would-be&#13;
counselors to develop "authenticity&#13;
techniques" because many&#13;
counselors, he said, unconsciously&#13;
separate what they really believe&#13;
from what they say they believe.&#13;
On the institutional level, Rivera&#13;
said, the term "qualified&#13;
minority", should be dropped&#13;
because it actually asserts that&#13;
most minorities are not qualified.&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Students to tour Russia&#13;
• 'Cream in the Well' opens&#13;
• Women cross country&#13;
take national title &#13;
Thursday, November 20,1980 Ranger&#13;
Article against nuclear energy was misleading&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This letter is in response to the&#13;
article in the November 13&#13;
RANGER in which Deb Elzinga&#13;
attacks a previous RANGER&#13;
article, 'The Case for Nuclear&#13;
Energy", and makes what I&#13;
consider several false or&#13;
misleading statements concerning&#13;
both solar and nuclear&#13;
energy. Since I feel that both solar&#13;
and nuclear energy have a great&#13;
potential for providing environmentally&#13;
benign power, it is&#13;
essential to correct these&#13;
misunderstandings.&#13;
First, she attacks the October 16&#13;
RANGER article as "flawed." I&#13;
found that article to be carefully&#13;
researched and correct in&#13;
essentially every detail.&#13;
Next, she cites the FORD/&#13;
MITRE study, "Nuclear Power —&#13;
Issues and Choices", as&#13;
illustrating that "energy companies&#13;
have a rather callous attitude&#13;
about our well being." The&#13;
facts are that the 21 members of&#13;
this study contained not a single&#13;
representative from an "energy&#13;
company", but rather consisted of&#13;
a most distinguished group,&#13;
almost exclusively academic,&#13;
none of whom had taken a strong&#13;
position for or against nuclear&#13;
power. It included Seymour&#13;
Abrahamson, professor of&#13;
genetics, UW-Madison; Harold&#13;
Brown, then president of Cal&#13;
Tech; Marvin Goldberger,&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
professor of physics, Princeton;&#13;
Wolfgang Panofsky, director of&#13;
Stanford Linear Accelerator; and&#13;
John Sawhill, then president of&#13;
New York University. In the&#13;
course of their study they consulted&#13;
with such stout nuclear&#13;
opponents as Dean Abrahamson,&#13;
Tom Cochran, Gus Speth, and Art&#13;
Tamplin, and their recommendations&#13;
became the basis for&#13;
the Carter Administration nuclear&#13;
policy when a number of the study&#13;
members joined his Administration.&#13;
How this document&#13;
which provided the basis for&#13;
Carter's nonproliferation policy,&#13;
his decision to halt breeder&#13;
reactor development, and his&#13;
decision to stop nuclear fuel&#13;
reprocessing can be considered as&#13;
callous completely escapes me.&#13;
The study did conclude that&#13;
solar, geothermal, and fusion&#13;
energy "cannot compete with&#13;
nuclear, coal, or other fossil fuels&#13;
as major sources of electric power&#13;
until well in the next century." In&#13;
referring to conclij§i,QpsL o f- this&#13;
sort, Ms. Elzinga states "The&#13;
sources from which this type of&#13;
information comes have many&#13;
ties to the energy conglomerates."&#13;
The only conclusion&#13;
I can draw is that she must&#13;
consider the major universities of&#13;
this country as energy&#13;
conglomerates since seven&#13;
members of the study group are&#13;
from Harvard, two from MIT, and&#13;
all but three from other major&#13;
universities.&#13;
Another major study, "Solar&#13;
Photovoltaic Energy Conversion"&#13;
by the American Physical Society,&#13;
concluded, "It is unlikely that&#13;
photovoltaics will contribute more&#13;
than about 1% of the U.S. electrical&#13;
energy produced near the&#13;
end of the century." This study&#13;
group was made up of 7 members&#13;
from major universities and 4&#13;
members representing companies&#13;
with a vested interest in&#13;
promoting solar energy (IBM,&#13;
GE, and two from Bell Labs).&#13;
Again, unless major universities&#13;
and solar cell manufacturers are&#13;
considered energy conglomerates,&#13;
Ms. Elzinga has&#13;
misled you.&#13;
There is no question that solar&#13;
energy has great potential as an&#13;
energy source, particularly for&#13;
space and water heating. But I am&#13;
greatly disturbed by Ms. Elzinga's&#13;
attack on the "experts" and the&#13;
fundamental antiestablishment&#13;
and antiscientific attitudes behind&#13;
such attacks. The underlying&#13;
ideology first clearly presented by&#13;
Amory Lovins is that any centralized&#13;
form of energy such as&#13;
nuclear, coal, or hydroelectric is&#13;
evil and any decentralized, "soft"&#13;
technology such as solar, wind,&#13;
and biomass is intrinsically good,&#13;
primarily because it is decentralized.&#13;
&#13;
What these proponents of soft&#13;
technology fail to consider are the&#13;
lessons of history, and I would like&#13;
to cite two examples. The first is&#13;
that of the American farmer prior&#13;
to the 1930's. This is a perfect case&#13;
study in soft technology. Solar&#13;
energy was used to dry his crops&#13;
and raise fuel (crops) for his&#13;
motive power (horses). Solar&#13;
energy in the form of wind was&#13;
used to pump his water and&#13;
generate his electricity, with&#13;
batteries for storage. But as soon&#13;
as the American farmer had the&#13;
opportunity to switch from this&#13;
soft, decentralized technology&#13;
with all the splendid virtues extolled&#13;
by Amory Lovins to the&#13;
hard technology represented by&#13;
central power station electricity,&#13;
they did so to a man. Why?&#13;
Because centralized electricity&#13;
was cheaper and more dependable.&#13;
This was a clear cut&#13;
referendum on soft vs hard&#13;
technology, and hard technology&#13;
won.&#13;
The second example is that of&#13;
The case for centralized energy sources&#13;
hv KaIIv Starlrc 11 j 1 ». «&#13;
the Chinese Great Leap Forward&#13;
experiment in which the Chinese&#13;
people were urged to develop&#13;
(decentralized) home industries&#13;
and backyard foundries with the&#13;
express goal of overtaking the&#13;
(centralized) Capitalistic mass&#13;
production industry. This&#13;
program couldn't have been&#13;
better designed to fit the ideology&#13;
of "soft technology" had Amory&#13;
Lovins drawn it up himself. Not&#13;
only did it fit the production mode&#13;
advocated by soft technologists,&#13;
but it incorporated their antiestablishment&#13;
attitudes as well,&#13;
as university professors!&#13;
government bureaucrats, and&#13;
intellectuals were humiliated as&#13;
being "socalled experts" and&#13;
"elitist".&#13;
As we all know, this attempt to&#13;
build the perfect soft technology&#13;
society was a massive failure, and&#13;
the Chinese are now seeking&#13;
American help in designing the&#13;
world's largest hydroelectric&#13;
establishment and their first&#13;
nuclear reactor. Apparently the&#13;
American farmer and the Chinese&#13;
people have learned lessons by&#13;
living through (and struggling to&#13;
escape) soft technology which&#13;
have escaped the theoreticians of&#13;
soft technology who mere$ fly&#13;
about the world in jet airplanes&#13;
advocating a return to the simpler&#13;
life.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Morris Firebaugh&#13;
by Kelly Starks&#13;
and Terry Rasmussen "&#13;
The article in the November 13&#13;
Ranger, "Solar power is the best&#13;
energy alternative," had stated&#13;
that our article of October 16 was&#13;
" J'!? ita&#13;
&gt; ",rnl&#13;
'&#13;
nngo."-..on&#13;
centralized forms of energy7We&#13;
are taking this opportunity to&#13;
reply.&#13;
In our previous article we had&#13;
briefly mentioned (due to space&#13;
limitations) alternative energy&#13;
sources, among them solar. We&#13;
had also mentioned the disadvantages&#13;
of decentralized systems&#13;
in their innate expence and inconvenience.&#13;
&#13;
Our society did not go into a&#13;
centralized form of energy&#13;
production due to the whim of&#13;
government or private corporations.&#13;
There are distinct and&#13;
extreme scales of power&#13;
production. Large scale plants&#13;
can take advantage of more&#13;
sophisticated and economical&#13;
power production methods than&#13;
could small scale personal&#13;
systems, resulting in the centralized&#13;
system being more&#13;
economical, by at least a factor of&#13;
10 per kilowatt produced.&#13;
The convenience of centralized&#13;
systems is rather evident when&#13;
you consider that approximately&#13;
200 people per power plant can&#13;
produce electricity for millions, as&#13;
well as industry. On the other&#13;
hand the decentralized systems&#13;
require the owner of the system to&#13;
be continuously supervising and&#13;
maintaining the system personally.&#13;
This is especially&#13;
prevalent with solar systems&#13;
owner '®'lF§Srimmediately&#13;
after a wind or snow&#13;
storm.&#13;
Much has been made of the fact&#13;
that large scale energy production&#13;
is produced by large corporations.&#13;
This is a somewhat deceptive&#13;
argument since the corporations&#13;
producing the decentralized&#13;
systems would be at least as large&#13;
as the corporations now producing&#13;
centralized energy systems.&#13;
Considering the inefficiencies of&#13;
the decentralized systems these&#13;
corporations would probably be&#13;
considerably larger.&#13;
Solar energy has become&#13;
somewhat of a legend among the&#13;
decentralized energy advocates.&#13;
Little, however, has been made of&#13;
its inherent costs and why it has&#13;
never been popular. Solar power&#13;
technology is not a new&#13;
technology; it is over a century&#13;
old for photoelectric cells alone.&#13;
Over this time the cost has been&#13;
greatly reduced, as a result of&#13;
"spin-offs" from new electrical&#13;
technologies, but they are still far&#13;
more expensive than other&#13;
alternatives. Further great&#13;
reductions in the expense of&#13;
conventional solar cells cannot be&#13;
expected since the cost of these&#13;
cells has been reduced almost&#13;
exclusively to the cost of&#13;
producing the silicon base.&#13;
Theoretically, there are less&#13;
expensive procedures for&#13;
producing this silicon base, which&#13;
. ie electronic concerns without&#13;
any notable success.&#13;
Solar energy becomes more&#13;
expensive when it must be&#13;
decentralized and independent.&#13;
This requires that sufficient&#13;
power be generated and stored&#13;
during "sunny" periods to last&#13;
through prolonged inclement&#13;
weather. If the system is incapable&#13;
of this, then it must rely&#13;
upon some centralized source&#13;
during these periods, thus&#13;
negating its "advantage" as a&#13;
decentralized system, greatly&#13;
increasing the cost of the centralized&#13;
systems required to fulfill&#13;
the energy needs of these unpredictable&#13;
periods.&#13;
Solar energy advocates dismiss&#13;
these problems and claim that&#13;
solar energy would have become a&#13;
dominant energy source had it not&#13;
been "bought out" by the large&#13;
centralized energy concerns, such&#13;
as the oil companies. This is&#13;
somewhat ironic considering the&#13;
fact that the major investors and&#13;
producers of solar systems and&#13;
research have been oil companies;&#13;
for example, Exxon is one&#13;
of the largest producers.&#13;
We have in the past noted a&#13;
tendency to discount all of the&#13;
anti-solar facts by claiming that&#13;
they are from the large centralized&#13;
energy interests,&#13;
primarily the oil conglomerates.&#13;
The authors' personal information&#13;
sources consist mainly of&#13;
journals and technical&#13;
publications, as well as training in&#13;
this general background. All such&#13;
information sources are in&#13;
agreement of solar powers'&#13;
present usefulness and estimate&#13;
its full and ultimate potential at&#13;
under 20% of our present total&#13;
energy consumption.&#13;
Mention was made of Amory B.&#13;
Lovins, specifically with his&#13;
background as a "physicist." This&#13;
is incorrect since Mr. Lovins has&#13;
no degree of any kind having to do&#13;
with physics or any other science&#13;
or technology, although he does&#13;
have a degree in fine arts from&#13;
Oxford. Our opinion of Mr. Lovins&#13;
can be best summed up in a quote&#13;
from Hans Bethe (a noted Nobel&#13;
Prize winner in physics): "He&#13;
takes partial results of other&#13;
people's work and leaves behind&#13;
the numbers he doesn't like."&#13;
The statement has been made&#13;
about nuclear and other conventional&#13;
technologies as being&#13;
"uncontrollable" and as being so&#13;
complex as to be beyond the&#13;
comprehension of the average&#13;
•individual. We are baffled by this&#13;
misconception. Technologies are&#13;
developed and "controlled"&#13;
because of the interests and&#13;
desires of the society that creates&#13;
and uses them. Technologies that&#13;
Jo not belong in this category tend&#13;
to quickly disappear due to&#13;
apathy. As to the complexity of&#13;
these systems, the basic principles&#13;
behind these technologies&#13;
are much simpler than most&#13;
conventional technologies, such as&#13;
television sets, automobiles,&#13;
refrigerators, etc. . . . The&#13;
theoretical background needed to&#13;
create such systems are not&#13;
necessary to understand these&#13;
systems and are no more complex&#13;
than the theories behind solar&#13;
cells and electronic technologies&#13;
which require a background in&#13;
quantum physics which is considerably&#13;
more complex than&#13;
nuclear physics and not as well&#13;
understood. Wc agree that solar&#13;
energy techology "works" and&#13;
that it is an energy alternative.&#13;
However, we do note that&#13;
presently it is an expensive&#13;
energy source. It is evident that&#13;
energy sources that are more&#13;
expensive and less reliable than&#13;
conventional systems are hardly&#13;
the "best energy alternative" hnd&#13;
will not be so until considerably&#13;
improved.&#13;
LU u iov.uuiii uu 01 in&#13;
Ranger staff wishes you a&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
THANKSGIVING&#13;
9a1&#13;
Ken Meyer ...i Editor&#13;
Dfin r*fhl«?!h Executive Business Manager&#13;
SuSSfchell! BU&#13;
ni„&#13;
Ms&#13;
aEn&#13;
r&#13;
Wend,Westpha, Feat™ EdUor&#13;
Dave Cramer Sports Editor&#13;
BnanPass.no Photo Editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson _ _ ...&#13;
Mike Farrell *&#13;
v * * C°Py Ed,tor&#13;
6 Farrell Advertising Manager&#13;
Friienha&#13;
Cramer&#13;
/«-.&#13;
Mark Chrlstiansen, Patty DeLuisa, Doug&#13;
Mrrnrmf&#13;
e&#13;
[' . VHolmdohl&#13;
' Caro1 Klees, Gary Ledger, Dan&#13;
Rip^ S!nCSt'o!;g&#13;
0aar?Ver&#13;
' °'&#13;
Nel&#13;
"' Bruce Pr«&#13;
,on&#13;
' Joe&#13;
- - - -*&#13;
All correrDnnriPnr J chq f0r repr,nt 0f any P°&#13;
rtlonof RANGER.&#13;
Parkslde KenoTha fSll 8ddreSSed ,0: Parkslde Ranger&#13;
' WLLC D139&#13;
' Uw"&#13;
pape^wlth'one^inrh aCA?.P.&#13;
te^ " fVPewritten, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
eluded for verification. letters must be signed and a telephone number InNames&#13;
will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
reserves a°[ ed'i'toru'f nri^&#13;
89 at&#13;
.&#13;
9 a&#13;
'&#13;
m' f0r Publlcation on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content p ivileges ln ref&#13;
"stlng to print letters which contain false or &#13;
Seminar students will tour USSR&#13;
Parkside is sponsoring A frir» fr * a&#13;
Ranger Thursday, November 20,1980&#13;
fhT o 1S sP°&#13;
nsoring a trip to&#13;
the Soviet Union tWs Sng&#13;
semester Students will v7sU&#13;
Moscow, Leningrad, and Tallinn&#13;
paasaassg&#13;
ajffaar23&#13;
&#13;
Wl11 provide the groups&#13;
with the opportunity to observe&#13;
the diversity of Soviet culture and&#13;
wn Et&#13;
1?;™8 the ™&#13;
- O0pportunity to meet&#13;
with their Soviet counterparts.&#13;
SnviS q&#13;
P 1S&#13;
- ^ of a three credit Soviet Seminar which is an interdisciplinary&#13;
survey of Soviet&#13;
^&#13;
or&#13;
y» economics, culture, art&#13;
and politics. The Russian tour will&#13;
Jjf on&#13;
, ^ ro&#13;
ad from March 7&#13;
through March 23, 1981.&#13;
• ^&#13;
e&#13;
. Projected cost of $i 300&#13;
includes all transportation, hotels,&#13;
food and touring from Chicago to&#13;
the Soviet Union and back.&#13;
Financial aid is available. All&#13;
interested individuals should&#13;
C&#13;
?&#13;
n&#13;
cc&#13;
ao&#13;
CLprofessor Dan McGovern&#13;
at 553-2316 or Moln. 125. ipmifes&#13;
American ethnic study funds available&#13;
TKa TTiir n i The UW-System American&#13;
Ethnic Studies Coordinating&#13;
Committee (AESCC), operating&#13;
under the auspices of the Urban&#13;
Corridor Consortium, has grants&#13;
of up to $1000 for a variety of&#13;
projects pertaining to American&#13;
Ethnic Studies. These monies may&#13;
be used for workshops, seminars,&#13;
instructional improvement,&#13;
curriculum development',&#13;
honoraria for guest lecturers,&#13;
travel, research with curricular&#13;
applications, fine arts performances&#13;
and materials&#13;
acquisition. The project's focus&#13;
must fall under the category of&#13;
American Ethnic Studies and it&#13;
must deal primarily with UWSystem&#13;
populations.&#13;
Faculty, staff, and individual&#13;
student organizations are eligible&#13;
to apply. Proposals should include&#13;
a title page, narrative explanation,&#13;
personnel identification&#13;
and a budget breakdown. Applicants&#13;
should be as specific and&#13;
thorough as possible in explaining&#13;
the nature of the proposal.&#13;
Proposals are due in the AESCC&#13;
office no later than Friday&#13;
December 5, 1980. Funding&#13;
decisions will be made by Monday,&#13;
December 15. These monies&#13;
were funded for the 1980-81 fiscal&#13;
year so all proposal activities&#13;
must be completed by June 30&#13;
1981. A final report will be due at&#13;
that time.&#13;
To be considered for the AESCC&#13;
grants, eight copies of the&#13;
proposal should be sent to: UWSystem&#13;
American Ethnic Studies&#13;
Coordinating Committee; c/o&#13;
Thomas V. Tonnesen, Program&#13;
Coordinator; UW-Milwaukee -&#13;
Bolton 840; P.O. Box 413-&#13;
Milwaukee, WI 53201. For further&#13;
information, contact the AESCC&#13;
Office at (414) 963-4700/6701.&#13;
Campus food drive is organizing&#13;
by Craig Dvorak&#13;
Thanksgiving marks a peculiar&#13;
time of year, the onset of the&#13;
Christmas season, engulfing and&#13;
enticing our minds in many ways.&#13;
Final exams are a couple ominous&#13;
weeks ahead, presents must be&#13;
bought, and excited friends are&#13;
traveling home from distant&#13;
campuses for vacation. A lot of&#13;
events are beginning to grab our&#13;
attention.&#13;
Unfortunately, the main event&#13;
in the lives of many local people is&#13;
scarcity - the lack of work and of&#13;
food. Ironically, the Christmas&#13;
season is the most difficult time of&#13;
year for these people. Even if they&#13;
have been fortunate enough to&#13;
have found a job, seasonal&#13;
unemployment and holiday&#13;
layoffs appear.&#13;
As a solution, Inter - Varsity&#13;
Christian Fellowship and Minority&#13;
Student Union are co - sponsoring&#13;
a campus - wide food drive to meet&#13;
these needs in our own area.&#13;
Beginning Monday, December 1,&#13;
students and faculty are urged to&#13;
bring food items to the Book Co-op&#13;
alcove (across from the library)&#13;
from 9a. m. -2p. m. Needed itenis&#13;
are any nonperishables: canned&#13;
vegetables and fruits, cereals,&#13;
potatoes, nuts and snack items.&#13;
Parkside 200&#13;
Mufti this al!&#13;
These goods will then be boxed&#13;
and delivered to needy families in&#13;
Racine, Kenosha, and outlying&#13;
areas.&#13;
Inter - Varsity and Minority&#13;
Student Union challenge everyone&#13;
on campus to practice the real&#13;
spirit of Christmas by supporting&#13;
the hungry December 1 - 12.&#13;
^ o$eph.&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phon* 454-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR C REDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
Students interested in the&#13;
Soviet Seminar and Tour will&#13;
meet on Monday, December 1,&#13;
at 1 p. m. in Union 106. Further&#13;
details of the trip will be&#13;
tour meeting&#13;
discussed, and one of last&#13;
year's seminar participants&#13;
will present a slide show on&#13;
the U.S.S.R.&#13;
Roundtable continues talks&#13;
Two topics remain in the&#13;
current Social Science Roundtable&#13;
series at Parkside.&#13;
"Labor and the Economy in the&#13;
1980s" will be the subject of&#13;
United Auto Workers Region 10&#13;
director Ralph Koenig on&#13;
November 24.&#13;
Peace Corps organizers and&#13;
volunteers Alan Guskin, UW-P&#13;
chancellor, and Judy Guskin&#13;
adjunct associate professor of&#13;
anthropology, will present the&#13;
final program of the semester,&#13;
"The Peace Corps: Past and&#13;
Future, on December l. The&#13;
Guskins recently were featured&#13;
participants in Peace Corps&#13;
rededication ceremonies marking&#13;
the corps' 20th anniversary at the&#13;
University of Michigan where the&#13;
organization was born during&#13;
John F. Kennedy's presidential&#13;
campaign.&#13;
Roundtable sessions are at 12:15&#13;
p.m. in the Parkside Union, Room&#13;
106.&#13;
Library to hold book sale&#13;
The Wyllie Library Learning&#13;
Center will hold a book sale on&#13;
December 2, 3 and 4, from 10 a m&#13;
- 3 p.m. outside the level one&#13;
library entrance.&#13;
Approximately 1400 books&#13;
covering a variety of subjects will&#13;
be sold. Hardcover books will be&#13;
priced at one dollar and paperbacks&#13;
at 25 cents.&#13;
These books consist of&#13;
duplicates, discards, and gift&#13;
items which are not needed for the&#13;
library collection, according to&#13;
Hannelore B. Rader, director of&#13;
the Library learning Center.&#13;
Wind ensemble to perform&#13;
Admission is 50 cents for UW-P&#13;
students; $1 for others.&#13;
rvis.^&#13;
Parkside's Wind Ensemble will&#13;
perform at 8 p.m. tonight in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theater under the&#13;
direction of S cott Mather.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
Patmos, a work by Donald J.&#13;
Young, director of bands at&#13;
William Horlick High School in&#13;
Racine. Patmos was selected as&#13;
winner of the 1975 composition&#13;
contest of the southwest division&#13;
of the College Band Directors&#13;
National Association.&#13;
Also programmed are Darius&#13;
Milhaud's Concerto for Percussion&#13;
with Michael Heberling as&#13;
soloist, as well as works by Harry&#13;
Alford, Aaron Copland, Gordon&#13;
Jacob and Marcel Poot.&#13;
IS IHlltl&#13;
Lift AFTER&#13;
COLLEGE?&#13;
kWHG PLAN&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654-2932&#13;
1)&#13;
2)&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
HAPPY THANKSGIVING&#13;
FREE '• '• FROZEN TURKEYS ( 1 0 lb. a v g . )&#13;
THURS. NOV. 20 &amp; FRI. NOV. 21 WHEN THE ALARM&#13;
SOUNDS AT THE UNION DINING ROOM CHECK-OUT&#13;
THANKSGIVING DINNER SPECIAL&#13;
WED.r NOV. 26&#13;
• Roast Turkey • Sage Dressing • Whipped Potato • Gravy&#13;
• Whole Kernel Corn or Green Peas • Cranberry Sauce&#13;
• Pumpkin Pie • Complimentary Glass of Wine or Cider&#13;
ONLY $2&#13;
49 (&#13;
$3&#13;
19&#13;
v alue) &#13;
4 Thursday, November 20,1980 Ranger&#13;
Gano added to staff&#13;
by Wendy Westphai&#13;
The successful production of&#13;
"The Fourposter," presented for&#13;
Accent on Enrichment, was&#13;
directed by Norman Gano. He is&#13;
currently directing the studio&#13;
production "The Cream in the&#13;
Well."&#13;
Gano has been in professional&#13;
theater for 22 years in New York&#13;
City, Philadelphia, Connecticut&#13;
and now Wisconsin. Here at&#13;
Parkside, he teaches Acting II and&#13;
directs the studio production class.&#13;
During his career he has been in&#13;
stage productions, films and&#13;
television. Some recent films&#13;
which he performed in are "The&#13;
French Connection," "Out-ofTowners"&#13;
and "On a Clear Day&#13;
You Can See Forever." He missed&#13;
performing in "The Godfather"&#13;
because he would not claim to&#13;
have Italian descent.&#13;
In the Milwaukee area, he has&#13;
acted with and directed for the&#13;
Festival Theatre for two years. He&#13;
recently directed a production of&#13;
"Our Town" for the Milwaukee&#13;
Religious Drama Guild.&#13;
The Parkside studio production,&#13;
"The Cream in the Well" is written&#13;
by Lynn Riggs. He is best known&#13;
for his play "Green Grow the&#13;
Lilacs," which formed the basis&#13;
for the musical "Oklahoma."&#13;
This play was chosen for a&#13;
number of reasons. The&#13;
characters have depth and need a&#13;
certain texture. This provides the&#13;
student actors with an opportunity&#13;
to dig inside of themselves for&#13;
character depth.&#13;
Gano says "Cream in the Well"&#13;
is a play of d ark and lights with&#13;
somber tones and struggles within&#13;
shadows. But there is hope and&#13;
light on the horizon.&#13;
"I am pleased with the students'&#13;
development within their roles,"&#13;
said Gano. "Also I am finding&#13;
harmony and cooperation with&#13;
other faculty and students&#13;
associated with my work."&#13;
Next semester, there will be two&#13;
more Dramatic Art productions.&#13;
Gano encourages anyone who is&#13;
interested to audition. Auditions&#13;
will be the first week of the Spring&#13;
Semester.&#13;
"The Cream in the Well," Lynn&#13;
Riggs' slightly Gothic tale of&#13;
passion, romance, fear and&#13;
superstition set in territorial&#13;
Oklahoma, will be the fall&#13;
dramatic arts studio production at'&#13;
Parkside with performances at 8&#13;
p.m., Dec. 3 through 6 and at .1:30&#13;
p.m. on Dec. 7.&#13;
The production will be center -&#13;
staged in the Communication Arts&#13;
Studio with the audience in ranked&#13;
seating on four sides. Because of&#13;
limited seating in the studio&#13;
theater, pre-paid reservations are&#13;
suggested. Tickets are available&#13;
at the Campus Union Information&#13;
Center and information on ticket&#13;
availability can be obtained by&#13;
calling 553-2042 or 553-2345. Admission&#13;
is $1 for students; $1.50 for&#13;
others.&#13;
Contact&#13;
VICKI KNAPP AND BOBBIE MINNIEAR rehearse a scene&#13;
from "The Cream In the Well." Security problem solved&#13;
Course to follow&#13;
'Body in Question'&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
The Science division is offering&#13;
a new course for the Spring&#13;
semester. Allied Health 69-290 is a&#13;
travel through the circulatory&#13;
system; and the final segment&#13;
shows an actual autopsy.&#13;
Throughout the program Miller&#13;
uses his own body for tests (such&#13;
as tying a tourniquet around his&#13;
Body in Question," and will meet&#13;
11 - 12:15 a.m. Tuesdays and&#13;
Thursdays.&#13;
The main objective of the course&#13;
is to create an awareness and&#13;
appreciation of various levels of&#13;
health through a multi - faceted&#13;
analysis of selected disease&#13;
states.&#13;
"The Body in Question" is&#13;
written and hosted by Jonathan&#13;
Miller and will be presented in 13&#13;
segments. The segments cover&#13;
such topics as "Naming of Parts"&#13;
in which Miller asks people on the&#13;
street various questions about&#13;
their internal organs; "Blood&#13;
Relations" where red automobiles&#13;
«i a highway are used to&#13;
demonstrate how red blood cells&#13;
flows in a vein, and depriving&#13;
himself of exygen to the extent&#13;
that he loses consciousness before&#13;
the cameras). He also uses special&#13;
effects, art, literature, and&#13;
laboratory experiments to clarify&#13;
and distill medical knowledge.&#13;
Time magazine calls the series,&#13;
"— alternately informative....&#13;
and provacative. Miller brings&#13;
some of (his) engaging wit and&#13;
lunacy."&#13;
The instructor for the class is&#13;
Professor S.P. Datta, a specialist&#13;
in the areas of genetics and immunology.&#13;
Professor Datta&#13;
received his PhD from UWMadison.&#13;
There are no&#13;
prerequisites required for the&#13;
course.&#13;
by Jim Kreuser&#13;
A Parkside student came to the&#13;
Student Senate with a complaint&#13;
about Campus Security. The&#13;
student said that he felt that the&#13;
ticketing procedure was insufficient&#13;
and arbitrary. He had&#13;
been given a ticket for parking on&#13;
the striped lines (which are&#13;
designated no parking areas) in&#13;
the parking lot. A violation of t his&#13;
type should be given a warning&#13;
ticket. Procedure states: A&#13;
minimum of two warning tickets&#13;
IB issued to any vehicle&#13;
violating any of the following&#13;
parking violations before a&#13;
parking violation ticket is issued:&#13;
A. parking prohibited (posted) B.&#13;
parking in non-designated area C.&#13;
no permit D. parking with improper&#13;
permit for area E. improper&#13;
parking in designated area&#13;
F. parked in physically disabled&#13;
stall G. restricted parking&#13;
(specific time).&#13;
It is then the officers duty to&#13;
check on his computer printout in&#13;
the squad to determine if a vehicle&#13;
has received two or more warnings&#13;
before a ticket is given. In&#13;
this case, it is clear that procedure&#13;
was not followed. The student&#13;
went to Tallent Hall and complained&#13;
to Ron Brinkman,&#13;
Director of Campus Security.&#13;
Brinkman said that, in this case,&#13;
procedure was not followed. He&#13;
was more than glad to clear up the&#13;
problem.&#13;
Any cxie who feels he or she has&#13;
been treated unfairly by Campus&#13;
Security can go over to Tallent&#13;
Hall and check it out with the&#13;
security department. Anyone who&#13;
feels he or she has been treated&#13;
unfairly on ANY campus issue can&#13;
come to Student Senate for&#13;
assistance.&#13;
Kinship orientation today in Union 106&#13;
GRADONI'S&#13;
52nd street&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
Now Featuring&#13;
Mini-Service Sit-Down Dining&#13;
plus Carry-Outs&#13;
Open Noon til Midnight&#13;
Sat 4 til 1, Sun 4 til 10&#13;
BOMBERS - LASAGNA- SPAGHETTI&#13;
If you wish — Call ahead&#13;
and your order will be hot and&#13;
ready to eat in our private booths.&#13;
3308-52nd St. Kenosha&#13;
654-5068&#13;
Kinship of Kenosha is a child&#13;
service agency working with&#13;
children (boys and girls ages 7 to&#13;
17) from single-parent homes and&#13;
children with special problems.&#13;
They match a child with a mature,&#13;
stable adult who can provide&#13;
regular guidance, understanding&#13;
and acceptance.&#13;
Kinship is a preventative&#13;
program that is concerned with&#13;
providing the friendship and&#13;
guidance a child needs to avoid&#13;
serious problems in the future.&#13;
Kinship feels it is important to&#13;
expose the children to different&#13;
environments and give them a&#13;
chance to do some of the things&#13;
they are unable to do because of&#13;
their situation.&#13;
The ingredients of Kinship are&#13;
kindness and understanding,&#13;
improving the adult-child&#13;
relationship, never letting a child&#13;
down, sharing a little of yo ur time&#13;
and love, having fun with your&#13;
child, increasing a child's self -&#13;
confidence, and providing stable&#13;
companionship.&#13;
If you are the kind of person who&#13;
likes being with children, Kinship&#13;
has a child waiting to be your&#13;
"Special Friend." Kinship is&#13;
having an orientation here at&#13;
Parkside, Thursday, November 20&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Union 106. All interested&#13;
students, faculty, and&#13;
staff are welcome to attend. If&#13;
unable to attend, please contact&#13;
Kinship of Kenosha Co., Inc., 2001-&#13;
80th St., 658-0151 for other&#13;
orientation dates.&#13;
Fellowship offers film&#13;
Inte r-Va rsit y Christia n&#13;
Fellowship continues its free&#13;
movie series this year with "Facts&#13;
of F aith" — a Moody Science film&#13;
which examines the relationship&#13;
between objectivity and faith in&#13;
10% DISCOUNT&#13;
To Parkside students and faculty&#13;
members only, on all merchandise&#13;
in our store. Parkside l.D. required&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
JEWELERS&#13;
Rtnoilti't Diamond Contor&#13;
5617 - 6th Avenue&#13;
Phone 656-2525 Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
the field of physical science.&#13;
Among the topics explored by the&#13;
film are the cause of the&#13;
phenomenon of heat and exceptions&#13;
to the Law of Gravity.&#13;
"Facts of Faith" emphasizes&#13;
understanding of the limits of&#13;
faith and objective investigation&#13;
in research and practical living.&#13;
All students are welcome to the&#13;
free color film, to be shown&#13;
Wednesday, November 26, at 1&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
SYNTHETIC OIL. Great part&#13;
time opportunities in this fast&#13;
growing market of synthetic&#13;
lubricants - lubricants that are&#13;
revolutionizing the automotive&#13;
industry. AMS/OIL is the world's&#13;
largest producer of synthetic&#13;
lubricants. You can earn extra&#13;
cash as an independent AMS/OIL&#13;
dealer. A realistic beginner's goal&#13;
is about $25.00 weekly. You will&#13;
also enjoy sizeable tax advantages&#13;
of owning your own&#13;
business. Dealerships cost $27.60.&#13;
Call or write for information.&#13;
Mitmoen Brothers, 6634 - 30th&#13;
Ave., Kenosha, WI, 53142. Phone:&#13;
(414) 652-3399. &#13;
Ranger&#13;
Review&#13;
Thursday, November 20, 1980&#13;
Red Ryder brings live show&#13;
hv byBruce R. PrPreeston ... _&#13;
Professional theatre has finally&#13;
been brought to Kenosha in&#13;
Petretti Productions' Late Live&#13;
Show, "When You Comin Back&#13;
Red Ryder?" playing at the&#13;
Roosevelt Theatre. The Obie and&#13;
Outer Critics Circle Award&#13;
winning play was written by&#13;
Pulitzer prize winner Mark&#13;
Medoff.&#13;
The entire play, which takes&#13;
place in a small roadside diner in&#13;
New Mexico, shows what happens&#13;
when a punk terrorizes the diner's&#13;
patrons and workers. The sets&#13;
have all the elements of a diner,&#13;
but se em a little lacking in atmosphere.&#13;
&#13;
As the play opens, the first two&#13;
characters we meet are Steven&#13;
AmaT rfWM '&#13;
N„&#13;
oel&#13;
,&#13;
G&lt;!nt« and Angel (Cynthia Paplaczyk), the&#13;
dmers two employees. Gentz is&#13;
good but tries a bit too hard in the&#13;
opening scenes to be funny and&#13;
loses it, Had he tried to be mc£e&#13;
^mCdhaveaddedt0his&#13;
Paplaczyk starts a little weak&#13;
bymg to decide what type of&#13;
accent to use, but grows to&#13;
become one of the best components&#13;
of this play. Her naivete is&#13;
realistic; she does a fine job of&#13;
presenting Angel as she really is.&#13;
In the scene where she runs for the&#13;
door, is pushed down and&#13;
M m a k e s y o u P ^ y h e r . Michael Sewes is Lyle Stirker,&#13;
the owner of the gas station and&#13;
motel next door to the diner. He is&#13;
to Kenosha&#13;
talented, but not up to the par of&#13;
the other performers in this play&#13;
He is a good actor, but the others&#13;
are,real characters.&#13;
Richard (David Moon) and&#13;
Clarisse (Joya Del Conte Zamora)&#13;
are a married couple from New&#13;
York on their way to a concert in&#13;
which Clarisse is performing.&#13;
Moon's character is absolutely&#13;
flawless. He does exactly what&#13;
you expect him to do with expert&#13;
realism. Zamora is very good, but&#13;
we've come to expect so much&#13;
more from her, that this small&#13;
role is a disappointment. She only&#13;
gets one scene to really show her&#13;
stuff, but in that scene is bold and&#13;
assertive.&#13;
Jimmy Iaquinta plays the punk,&#13;
Teddy, and Nancee Vaicelunas is&#13;
Oriana Trio to perform&#13;
The pre Dremiere mie performance of Swnn^&#13;
the winning work in the 1980&#13;
Oriana Trio International Composer's&#13;
Competition, which&#13;
carries a $1,500 top prize, will be&#13;
presented by the trio at a 3:30 p.m.&#13;
concert on Sunday, Nov. 23 in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater here&#13;
at Parkside. The trio, composed of&#13;
violinist Eden Vaning, cellist&#13;
Harry Sturm and pianist Carol&#13;
Bell is the resident chamber&#13;
ensemble h ere.&#13;
The p erformance will premiere&#13;
Truman Rex Fisher's Piano Trio,&#13;
a lyrical, contemporary work in&#13;
three movements which won the&#13;
major award, as well as Randall&#13;
Shinn's Forgotten Letters, a&#13;
montage of impressions of&#13;
American historical events, which&#13;
won a special honorable mention&#13;
prize of $300. B oth of the award&#13;
winners will be present for the&#13;
concert, which also will include&#13;
performance of Joaquin Turina's&#13;
Second Trio.&#13;
Fisher, a composition professor&#13;
at Pasadena (Calif.) City College,&#13;
will arnve fresh from a gig with&#13;
the Inkspots m California. He has&#13;
written a number of large scale&#13;
works including "Celebration&#13;
Mass for mixed chorus, soloists&#13;
and orchestra, which won first&#13;
prize in the National Composers'&#13;
Guild Contest and his&#13;
Harlequinade" for concert band&#13;
was a winner in the annual New&#13;
Music for Bands Contest. His&#13;
"Symphony of the Desert" was&#13;
premiered by the Santa Maria&#13;
Symphony and also performed by&#13;
the Santa Barbara Symphony and&#13;
Jus "Lincoln, The Man of the&#13;
People" for chorus and orchestra&#13;
has been commercially recorded&#13;
on CAPRA.&#13;
Shinn, a professor of composition&#13;
and theory at Arizona&#13;
State University, has published a&#13;
number of compositions for&#13;
chorus in addition to his instrumental&#13;
works and has had&#13;
compositions performed at the&#13;
National Conference of the&#13;
American Society of University&#13;
Composers in 1977 and 1978. Prizes&#13;
in the competition,&#13;
established in 1979 to encourage&#13;
modern works for piano trio, are&#13;
funded by private donors.&#13;
The 1981 competition will add a&#13;
new element, soliciting compositions&#13;
for piano trio and&#13;
soprano, contralto or tenor voice,&#13;
incorporating the vocal as a part&#13;
of the chamber ensemble. The&#13;
1980 competition drew from 15&#13;
states as well as Europe and&#13;
Canada.&#13;
Concert-goers are invited to join&#13;
trio members and the awardwinning&#13;
composers at a wine and&#13;
cheese reception immediately&#13;
following the performance. The&#13;
program is free.&#13;
New international club organizing&#13;
by Chris O'Neill&#13;
To the number of student&#13;
organizations existing at Parkside&#13;
(many of them with worthwhile&#13;
goals) there has been added a new&#13;
club, with equally high&#13;
aspirations, and this is the Intern&#13;
atio nal S t u d e n t s'&#13;
Organization. The club was actually&#13;
founded in May of t his year,&#13;
and since then has seen considerable&#13;
growth in membership.&#13;
Currently holding office are&#13;
Sarkis Yoghourtdjian as&#13;
President, Vice - President Sunny&#13;
Wong, Secretary Verika Bojovic,&#13;
Treasurer John Momoima, and&#13;
Activities Advisors Saeid Rahmanpanah&#13;
and Beejan Beheshti.&#13;
The club's counsellor is Esrold&#13;
Nurse.&#13;
In a recent interview; President&#13;
Yoghourtdjian stated that he&#13;
hopes that an International&#13;
students' Organization will create&#13;
an awareness among faculty, staff&#13;
and students of the presence of&#13;
foreign students at Parkside.&#13;
There are sixty - three foreign&#13;
students enrolled in the school,&#13;
and the ISO will serve to help new&#13;
foreign students accommodate&#13;
and get used to the American way&#13;
of life. It will provide a forum for&#13;
contact among foreign students. It&#13;
will also be a means of e xchange&#13;
of cultural experiences and&#13;
backgrounds with American&#13;
students. Hopefully, the club will&#13;
play a role in attracting students&#13;
from all over the world to&#13;
Parkside. The ultimate goal of the&#13;
ISO is to see Parkside become a&#13;
multicultural center of higher&#13;
education.&#13;
The club openly invites the&#13;
participation of American&#13;
students, and has planned a&#13;
number of a ctivities for this year.&#13;
Projected activities include international&#13;
movies, an international&#13;
arts and crafts fair,&#13;
inviting an ethnic dance group to&#13;
perform at the Parkside theatre,&#13;
panel discussions among foreign&#13;
professors at Parkside, and an&#13;
international banquet. To make&#13;
newly - arrived students more&#13;
aware of the American cultural&#13;
heritage there have been proposed&#13;
field trips to museums and so on,&#13;
in various cities.&#13;
The ISO meets every other&#13;
Friday at 1:00 p. m. in DUO of t he&#13;
Wyllie Library - Learning Center.&#13;
For students interested in foreign&#13;
relations (an increasingly crucial&#13;
issue in today's world) the ISO&#13;
provides a forum for interactions.&#13;
All students are invited to take&#13;
part in what is anticipated to be a&#13;
great year.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
"National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN O FFICE&#13;
AUTO B ANK&#13;
24 HOUR T ELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phono 658*2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
The&#13;
Cream in the Well&#13;
Written by Lynn Riggs.. .Directed by Norman Gano&#13;
December 3-6 at 8PM and December 7 at 1:30PM&#13;
Presented by UW-Parkside Dramatic Arts Discipline&#13;
Communication Arts Studio Theatre"&#13;
. .Limited Seating Reserve Early 553-2345..&#13;
Information 553-2042&#13;
Tickets at $1.00 for Students.. .$1.50~for Non-students&#13;
Must be Pre-paid&#13;
Cheryl, his girlfriend. Vaicelunas&#13;
looks the part (a gorgeous blonde)&#13;
but when she speaks, her lines&#13;
sound forced. This appears to be&#13;
her first job on stage and with a&#13;
cast of professionals along side&#13;
her, she really sticks out.&#13;
Iaquinta, however, is stunning.&#13;
He flows naturally across the&#13;
stage, commanding it at every&#13;
turn. He begins by toying with the&#13;
local yokels and then revels in the&#13;
act of human degradation as he&#13;
submits them to fulfill his barbaric&#13;
fantasies. His is an&#13;
extremely demanding role and&#13;
this is definitely his play.&#13;
The fight scene between Teddy&#13;
and Richard at the end of the first&#13;
act is very well choreographed&#13;
and perfectly executed. The music&#13;
used to set the mood does its job as&#13;
it swells and adds to the suspense.&#13;
This act has an intensely dramatic&#13;
ending.&#13;
Music is used throughout the&#13;
play to add to the scenes and a&#13;
very good job was done in accurately&#13;
picking the right song for&#13;
the right scene. Although the&#13;
music was so loud that it became&#13;
distracting opening night, the&#13;
problem was quickly remedied by&#13;
the second performance and it&#13;
became an asset rather than a&#13;
hinderance.&#13;
Producer/dirctor, Patricia&#13;
Petretti has done a wonderful job&#13;
in giving Kenosha something&#13;
Kenoshans have had to travel to&#13;
Chicago and Milwaukee for:&#13;
legitimate theatre. The next two&#13;
performances (Friday and&#13;
Saturday) may be the last. "When&#13;
You Comin Back, Red Ryder?" is&#13;
a play that should not be missed.&#13;
Complete a three-year nursing diploma program&#13;
in two years and one summer session.&#13;
An alternative to the first year nursing course&#13;
is now offered in a seven-week summer program at&#13;
St. Luke s Hospital School of Nursing&#13;
1301 College Avenue&#13;
Racine, Wl 53403&#13;
414/636-2372&#13;
Prerequisites:&#13;
1. Meet admission criteria&#13;
2. Complete university/college&#13;
courses in anatomy and physiology,&#13;
chemistry, English, nutrition,&#13;
psychology and sociology. til!&#13;
Call or write now for admission information.&#13;
STUDENT/FACULTY&#13;
Phone Directories&#13;
On sale now at&#13;
Union Information Kiosk&#13;
$ 1.00&#13;
Proceeds to go toward an&#13;
EMERGENCY LOAN FUND&#13;
For UW-Parkside Students&#13;
Help Yourself &amp; A Friend&#13;
P.S.G.A. &#13;
6&#13;
Coming Events Actual draft feared&#13;
movie&#13;
"&#13;
w°&#13;
men Right&#13;
°&#13;
ut&#13;
°&#13;
f&#13;
History. The Making of J udy Chicago's 'Dinner Party' " will be shown followed&#13;
Coifr?i&#13;
CRSS1wled ?&#13;
y Barbara Lindquist (Racine artist and co - owner of Mother&#13;
nrntrfm Bookstore) and Prof. Carol Lee Saffioti of UWP Women's Studies. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
"• Com""&#13;
micaU°° Arta The program i»&#13;
M?nVd&#13;
r„^f™,hoTblTcm * M0LN 107&#13;
' The ia&#13;
To&#13;
cmlY„„&#13;
a&#13;
it&#13;
8&#13;
th&#13;
pe&#13;
mo&#13;
^z&#13;
n&#13;
ssrt: Wind Eos™ble&#13;
-&#13;
Friday, Nov. 21&#13;
2SS- «Th&#13;
^&#13;
ham|" JS,&#13;
1* shown at8pmin Un»on Cinema. Admission at the&#13;
JAMNITFPIITR A e ^ndent and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB. AAJ?J -J? V pm in Union Square featuring the "Michael Drake Group".&#13;
Admission will be charged at the door. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
„ Saturday,Nov.22&#13;
f&#13;
LICKS "Black Stallion" will be shown at 10 am in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission at the door is $1.00. Children must be accompanied by a Parkside&#13;
student with a current ID card. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
„ Sunday, November 23&#13;
(XJNCERT at 3:30 pm in the Communication Arts Theatre featuring the Oriana&#13;
Trio. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
MOVIE "The Champ" will be repeated at 7:30pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, November 24&#13;
AB«F 12no&#13;
?&#13;
n&#13;
,&#13;
111 Union 106. Ralph Koenig, Director, Region 10 (UAW)&#13;
toUmpublic Economy in the 1980s". The program is free and open&#13;
Arts and crafts fair here&#13;
A record . number of 148&#13;
exhibitors will participate in the&#13;
Sixth Annual Holiday Arts and&#13;
Crafts Fair at Parkside on&#13;
Saturday, December 6, from 10&#13;
a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
The event, sponsored by PAB,&#13;
will take place in the Campus&#13;
Union and on the concourse levels&#13;
of Greenquist and Molinaro Halls.&#13;
There is no admission charge and&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
free parking is available in the&#13;
Union and Communication Arts&#13;
parking lots.&#13;
In conjunction with the fair, the&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center will&#13;
operate a free Kiddie Korner,&#13;
where children will be supervised&#13;
in making gifts to take home.&#13;
Santa also will make an appearance&#13;
in the Kiddie Korner, in&#13;
Union Rooms 104-106.&#13;
Exhibitors will display a wide&#13;
variety of items including&#13;
jewelry, stained glass, decoupage,&#13;
silk flower arrangements,&#13;
macrame, ceramics, copper&#13;
enameling, pine cone arts, wooden&#13;
craft articles, paintings, doll&#13;
clothes, wreaths, ornaments, toys,&#13;
quilts, sculptures, needlework,&#13;
calligraphy, lead crystal&#13;
creations, lapidary, tole painting,&#13;
dough arts, candles and leather&#13;
items.&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
CHIPPER — Played "footsie" under any&#13;
taMas lately? Baby cakes&#13;
LARRY — You sure can hide good, but I'm&#13;
still crazy about yal&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV must be desperate to&#13;
resort to Ranger ads.&#13;
JBPP — Is communication, art? Can I l eam&#13;
ballroom dancing? Ferret&#13;
TOOO H. — I happen to get lucky with&#13;
blondes and new Laredos.&#13;
JULIE — Ron says Carlos is right 11&#13;
SOMEWHERE In the Ranger this week there&#13;
is an.&#13;
AMPRBA: Saved your *485 yet? Rodney&#13;
HOW DO YOU SPELL EEE EKKI THUMM?,&#13;
THE BOO came first. Ranger Insulters suck'&#13;
them and lay chickens.&#13;
SAEINI — Have you gotten lucky with any&#13;
trolls lately?&#13;
DENISE — Find any REALLY concrete&#13;
objects lately?&#13;
HEY, DA VINCI are you afraid of going to Art&#13;
Day?&#13;
NO, MICHELANGELO, I'm brave. When is&#13;
it?&#13;
IT'S ON DEC. 3 in Main Place.&#13;
GREAT, I can't wait.&#13;
EVA — A medium pizza with everything is too&#13;
much! Junie B.&#13;
WHO SHOT H.P.? — lOP's&#13;
PG-HOOKER — Are walls really that exciting&#13;
I? Fat Mouse&#13;
FROM THE PARKING LOT isn't habit&#13;
forming but it causes cancer.&#13;
XENOPHOBIC XAVIER'S Xenon&#13;
xylophone's a xerlc xebec. Ten times fast.&#13;
3 THINGS they never told me when I was&#13;
made: Free sex isn't free, love isn't&#13;
abundant, and loneliness can kill. See ya.&#13;
HOW SAD.&#13;
MY HOUSE (Junie) — invited guys Into&#13;
locker room with her. Ferret?&#13;
ORGY QUEEN, what's an orgy? Can you&#13;
show me? J.C.&#13;
YOU REALLY have a nice... old man.&#13;
BOBBY L.: Bundle up, because you'll never&#13;
be able to hong loose. ^&#13;
HEY BILL — You're really kinky! Arrfff,&#13;
ribbitl K &amp; J&#13;
SABINE — how much did you pay for your&#13;
plaque? Junie&#13;
RODNEY: I have to save more for your&#13;
dinner. Andy&#13;
IF YOU WERE to die tonight — where would&#13;
you go? For info, see the Inter-Varsity book&#13;
table on Mondays.&#13;
WHEN YOU ROTATE the "s" in "skis" you&#13;
get "kiss".&#13;
BABYCAKES: Wanna go play Frlbee with&#13;
cold bonkers? Sweetums&#13;
I'M AT UW(KR)P in Kenosha!&#13;
KMW: I only sleep with the best —Pig&#13;
ALL WOMEN wishing to check out my cute&#13;
and functionable Item leave your name and&#13;
number in the next issue! Stud #1.&#13;
HEY STUD #1, my name is B.J. Farley and&#13;
my phone number is 553-2295. Can you&#13;
match my functionable item? Stud A-l&#13;
CONNIE SIBILSKY: Here it is! Have you&#13;
Samboed all over the world lately? Have a&#13;
Jappy day! — me&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1980 SUZUKI 5S0L black, 553-9262 after 4&#13;
p.m. Low miles.&#13;
UNBELIEVABLE VEHICLEI 1968 Six&#13;
cylinder Dodge van. $1750. Nights 634-0988.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
FEMALE to share apartment with myself. In&#13;
the Racine area. Please call Virginia after&#13;
5:00 p.m. 637-1306.&#13;
ROOMMATE NEEDED: College student&#13;
preferred. Southside Racine. Upper flat.&#13;
637-2274.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
WALK, TALK AND ASSIST retired (blind)&#13;
college teacher In straightening out his&#13;
library. Earn while you learn. Call 694-2251&#13;
for appointment.&#13;
GUYS! Can you pick up girls? Then join the&#13;
UW-P Pep Squad. Work with 12 beautiful&#13;
cheerleaders! Travel to various state&#13;
colleges. If interested, contact Shirley 553-&#13;
2320.&#13;
RIDE URGENTLY NEEDED from Parkside&#13;
to Kenosha, 9:15 p.m. or later, Monday or&#13;
Tuesday or Wednesday or Thursday. Ph.&#13;
657-0581.&#13;
The Central Committee for&#13;
Conscientious Objectors (CCCO),&#13;
the nation's largest draft counseling&#13;
agency, warned this month&#13;
that the start of d raft registration&#13;
has added to the increased&#13;
likelihood of an actual draft.&#13;
"This past summer's draft&#13;
registration of men born in 1960&#13;
and 1961 was just the first step&#13;
toward returning to the draft,"&#13;
said Larry Spears, director of&#13;
CCCO's Youth and Conscientious&#13;
Objection Campaign. "This&#13;
coming January, Selective Service&#13;
plans to register those men&#13;
born in 1962. After January 5, men&#13;
(and perhaps women) born in 1963&#13;
will be required to register as they&#13;
turn 18. It should be noted that the&#13;
U. S. has never had a registration&#13;
without a draft, and rarely a draft&#13;
without a war."&#13;
"The need for young people to&#13;
be informed and to consider going&#13;
on record as a conscientious objector&#13;
to war has never been&#13;
greater than it is this Fall, said&#13;
Spears.&#13;
"The Supreme Court's decision&#13;
on Goldberg vs. Tarr, a sex -&#13;
discrimination case involving the&#13;
draft and registration, will be&#13;
final this winter," commented&#13;
Spears. "It is especially important&#13;
for women to realize that&#13;
they could be ordered to register&#13;
for the draft, and perhaps be&#13;
drafted. They too must consider&#13;
their position on war."&#13;
CCCO has sued Selective Service&#13;
for their draft plans and&#13;
learned that they plan to allow&#13;
registrants to claim hardship,&#13;
medical, and conscientious objector&#13;
status only at the last&#13;
possible moment after induction&#13;
orders are issued.&#13;
"Unless students begin to think&#13;
about, and collect evidence for,&#13;
conscientious objection dlaims&#13;
and other options, they are certain&#13;
to be caught unprepared," said&#13;
Spears.&#13;
"There is also growing sentiment&#13;
within Congress to begin&#13;
debate early next year on whether&#13;
a peace - time draft should be&#13;
started," he said. "It is important&#13;
for young people to realize that&#13;
under the current draft law, all&#13;
men between the ages of 18 and 26&#13;
are eligible to be drafted. Also,&#13;
students should know that there is&#13;
no longer a college student&#13;
deferment under the new draft&#13;
laws."&#13;
"Young Americans must start&#13;
thinking about whether they could&#13;
participate in the military."&#13;
Spears states that CCCO has&#13;
already registered over 20,000&#13;
young people through its conscientious&#13;
objection card. "These&#13;
cards are available, free of&#13;
charge, from CCCO, P. O. Box&#13;
15796, Philadelphia, PA 19103.&#13;
They simply state 'Because of my&#13;
beliefs about war, I am opposed to&#13;
participating in the military.&#13;
1 "&#13;
"The usefulness of this card,"&#13;
says Spears, "is that it provides a&#13;
record of an individual's opposition&#13;
to war and the military.&#13;
This CO card will help to&#13;
demonstrate to the military that&#13;
hundreds of thousands of young&#13;
people will not serve in the&#13;
military. Conscientious objectors,&#13;
along with the large number of&#13;
non - registrants and the vocal&#13;
anti - draft movement may help to&#13;
deter Congress from establishing&#13;
a peace - time draft."&#13;
CCCO was founded in 1948 as the&#13;
Central Committee for Conscientious&#13;
Objectors and is a&#13;
national, non - profit agency&#13;
counseling young Americans&#13;
facing the prospect of military&#13;
service, or those already in the&#13;
military.&#13;
Expeditions recruit students&#13;
Have you ever wanted to sail the&#13;
South Pacific, climb mountains in&#13;
Alaska, study wildlife in Africa,&#13;
dig for pre - historic man in India,&#13;
or trace the route of Marco Polo&#13;
through China? A new firm —&#13;
Expedition Research Inc. — has&#13;
launched a campaign to register&#13;
adventure - minded college&#13;
students who are looking to join&#13;
expeditions.&#13;
Expedition Research, Inc., a&#13;
placement service for adventurers&#13;
and explorers, is now&#13;
accepting applications from&#13;
college students, photographers,&#13;
scuba divers, mountain climbers,&#13;
archaeologists, ocean sailors,&#13;
scientists, and other explorers&#13;
who want to be placed on various&#13;
scientific and exploratory expeditions&#13;
worldwide.&#13;
These projects range from&#13;
archaeological excavations to&#13;
Himalayan mountaineering, from&#13;
oceanographic surveys and cave&#13;
exploration to scientific investigations&#13;
on all six continents.&#13;
Some expeditions award salaries,&#13;
commissions, and royalties to&#13;
team members; others require&#13;
cost sharing. Expeditions last&#13;
from several days to several&#13;
months. College credit and&#13;
scholarships are often available.&#13;
Students, either undergraduate&#13;
or graduate, are in demand. They&#13;
gain field experience by working&#13;
with professors and scientists&#13;
involved in their field of study.&#13;
Expedition Research, the&#13;
brainchild of two experienced&#13;
mountaineers, was formed on the&#13;
premise that there are thousands&#13;
of young scientists and adventurers&#13;
around the world who&#13;
would like to put their talents and&#13;
interests to use in the field, but&#13;
who do not know how to go about&#13;
it. ERI provides a service not only&#13;
to these individuals, but to the&#13;
groups who are looking for them.&#13;
The firm assists leaders of&#13;
expeditions in their search for&#13;
sponsorship, funding, and&#13;
equipment, as well as team&#13;
members.&#13;
Requests for members in the&#13;
last month include an array of&#13;
expeditions open to college&#13;
students:&#13;
• Little Cayman Expedition:&#13;
University of New Hampshire&#13;
professor leads marine botany&#13;
study in the Caribbean, with&#13;
SCUBA instruction;&#13;
• Mapping the Valley of the&#13;
Queens; archaeological survey in&#13;
Egypt, Sponsored by the&#13;
University of California,&#13;
Berkeley;&#13;
• Mountaineering expeditions&#13;
to McKinley and Mt. Aconcagua in&#13;
Argentina;&#13;
• Wildlife studies in Chile; an&#13;
attempt to preserve the rare&#13;
Andean mountain deer (sponsored&#13;
by the Government of Chile);&#13;
• Circumnavigation of the&#13;
Globe; an American team sets out&#13;
to sail around the world; and&#13;
• Nile River Expedition: a&#13;
descent of the world's longest&#13;
river by kayak.&#13;
Expeditions registered with&#13;
ERI have been endorsed by such&#13;
organizations as the Explorers&#13;
Club, National Geographic&#13;
Society, and the Smithsonian&#13;
Institution.&#13;
Chris White, a Princeton&#13;
University biologist, and Jim&#13;
Stout, a geographer from the&#13;
University of Washington, are co -&#13;
directors of the firm.&#13;
Registration with ERI cost $15&#13;
per year for students ($20&#13;
regular). Registrants receive&#13;
monthly issues of EXPLORATION,&#13;
resume forms, and&#13;
a 20% mail order discount on&#13;
outdoor equipment ordered&#13;
through Eastern Mountain Sports.&#13;
Register or write for further&#13;
questions by contacting Expedition&#13;
Research, Inc. P. O. Box&#13;
467R, Cathedral and Franklin Sts.,&#13;
Annapolis, Maryland 21404.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization I&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads — '&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30c will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words &gt;&#13;
or less.&#13;
i&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE^&#13;
t)TincD?tS2&#13;
e&#13;
/rL? V.yv"&#13;
p&#13;
1?&#13;
,uden&#13;
t&#13;
or student organization is qualified&#13;
f . 5- 1 '*ne '&#13;
n the Ranger at no cost if under or&#13;
equivalent to 10 words. (Phone numbers equal 1 word.)&#13;
Classification:&#13;
| Name_&#13;
SS No.&#13;
I&#13;
Ranger&#13;
WLLC D139 &#13;
RANGER SPOPT*&#13;
rmss-Counfry&#13;
Women take national title&#13;
UnWW-P-Par arksksidide e wwoon n ththe e fires* t&#13;
National Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA)&#13;
women's cross - country championship&#13;
Saturday at Salina,&#13;
Kansas.&#13;
Coach Bob Lawson's team&#13;
WENDY BU RMAN&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
miMtel 52 P0ints to&#13;
outdistance second place finisher&#13;
haTS* (KanSas) State&gt; wh&#13;
ich&#13;
Wendy Burman, UW-Parkside&#13;
sophomore from Fond Du Lac&#13;
wo" the individual tide over the&#13;
5,000 m eter course in 17:54 while&#13;
Racine freshman Kellie Benzow&#13;
18:29&#13;
'&#13;
just three&#13;
seconds behind runner-up Kathie&#13;
Daffer of Hastings (Nebr.).&#13;
In addition to Burman and&#13;
Benzow, two other Parkside&#13;
runners earned all-American&#13;
honors by finishing in the top 25&#13;
finishers. Sharon Keller a&#13;
sophomore from Mayville, was&#13;
13th with 19:06 while Dona&#13;
Dnscoll, a sophomore from&#13;
Muskego, placed 17th with 19:31&#13;
Other Ranger finishers were&#13;
Racine freshman Sandy Venne in&#13;
37 th, Kenosha junior Barb&#13;
Osborne in 50th and Racine freshman&#13;
JoAnne Carey in 86th.&#13;
Twelve teams completed the&#13;
field. After Parkside and Emporia,&#13;
they were Midland&#13;
Lutheran (Nebr.) with 115, Berry&#13;
(Ga.) with 124, Fort Hays State&#13;
with 126, Kansas State-Pittsburg&#13;
with 152, Kearney State and&#13;
Jackson State with 172, Park with&#13;
^ Martymount with 259,&#13;
Hillsdale with 263 and Wiley&#13;
College (Tex.) with 279.&#13;
KELLIE BE NZOW&#13;
Season ends on sour note&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
took the number one seed into the&#13;
WWIAC State Tournament last&#13;
weekend after the League&#13;
Commissioner broke a ranking tie&#13;
between Milwaukee and Parkside.&#13;
Last week Coach Linda Henderson&#13;
stated: "We have the seed&#13;
but now we have to live up to its&#13;
ranking, as it was ousted from the&#13;
double elimination tournament&#13;
after three matches. The Rangers&#13;
defeated Carthage, then lost to&#13;
Milwaukee and number three seed&#13;
Marquette. It was a fitting end to&#13;
an up and down season.&#13;
The Rangers took on Carthage&#13;
in their first match and could do&#13;
no wrong, The Rangers gave&#13;
Carthage a lesson in how to play&#13;
successful team volleyball. "We&#13;
played great," Henderson said&#13;
following her team's 15-12, 15-3&#13;
dumping of the Redmen. "It was&#13;
the best I've ever seen this team&#13;
play." Parkside appeared to have&#13;
the momentum necessary to win&#13;
the tournament but couldn't&#13;
sustain it.&#13;
On Saturday morning, the&#13;
Rangers faced Milwaukee in what&#13;
would be Parkside's first tournament&#13;
loss. The Rangers tensed&#13;
up and couldn't get untracked as&#13;
the Panthers easily won the match&#13;
15-9, 16-14. Henderson had no&#13;
excuses for her team's poor&#13;
performance. "We looked scared&#13;
on the court and I don't know why.&#13;
We cou ldn't serve and we didn't&#13;
block." in other words, the&#13;
Rangers didn't deserve to win.&#13;
With their elimination on the&#13;
une, Henderson knew the Rangers&#13;
"®eded a supreme effort to defeat&#13;
their next opponent, Marquette&#13;
University. What the team gave&#13;
Henderson was a severe&#13;
headache. Marquette ousted&#13;
LINDA HENDERSON&#13;
Parkside from the tournament&#13;
with a 15-1, 15-11 victory.&#13;
"It was another case of being&#13;
too tight and not playing well,"&#13;
Henderson said of the Marquette&#13;
loss. "We played like six individuals.&#13;
We were anything but&#13;
the team we looked like on Fridav&#13;
night."&#13;
Parkside suffered through a&#13;
season of peaks and valleys. When&#13;
the Rangers were on, it seemed&#13;
like no one could beat them.&#13;
However, when they were off,&#13;
they couldn't even manage a&#13;
scrimmage victory. Needless to&#13;
say, the Rangers were off this&#13;
tournament. "Milwaukee peaked&#13;
at this tournament and that made&#13;
the difference. They played really&#13;
well and deserved to win,"&#13;
Henderson said. Parkside finished&#13;
their season with a 26-20 r ecord.&#13;
Milwaukee advances to&#13;
Regional play in Chicago this&#13;
weekend. The Panthers will be&#13;
seeded seventh in the eight - team&#13;
playoff. Lewis is ranked first&#13;
followed by Wright State (Ohio),&#13;
Indiana Tech, Lake Superior&#13;
(Michigan), University of Dayton&#13;
(Ohio), Eastern Illinois,&#13;
Milwaukee and West Virginia&#13;
Marshall.&#13;
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;
Applications Are&#13;
Being Accepted&#13;
For&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
JOB REQUIREMENTS&#13;
Must be student enrolled with 6 credits&#13;
Assigns, edits, and writes sports stories.&#13;
Lays out sports pages&#13;
Previous editorial experience.&#13;
This is a paid position&#13;
Pick up Application at the Ranger Office,&#13;
WLLC D139, Next to the Coffee Shoppe&#13;
Deadline: Monday, Decembers&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of beer? All you have to do is fill&#13;
out this entry form and pick the most correct winners. Put a check&#13;
mark by your picks and bring the form down to the Ranger office,&#13;
D139 WLLC.&#13;
Baltimore at New England —&#13;
Cincinnati at Cleveland&#13;
Houston at N. Y. Jets&#13;
Pittsburgh at Buffalo&#13;
Seattle at Denver&#13;
Chicago at Atlanta&#13;
Detroit at Tampa Bay&#13;
Green Bay at Minnesota&#13;
N. Y. Giants at San Francisco&#13;
Washington at Dallas&#13;
Kansas City at St. Louis&#13;
Oakland at Philadelphia&#13;
Los Angeles at New Orleans&#13;
Tiebreaker:&#13;
- will be the total combined points&#13;
scored in the Los Angeles - New Orleans game.&#13;
Last week's winner: Robert Cooper; 12 correct, 42 points&#13;
Name:-&#13;
S.S. No.&#13;
Rules: /&#13;
1) One entry per person&#13;
2) Must be a student at UW-Parkside&#13;
3) Person with most correct picks win (in case of tie, the total&#13;
points will be used as a tie - breaker)&#13;
4) Entry must be clipped from Ranger issue&#13;
5) Ranger members ineligible&#13;
6) Entries must be turned into Ranger office by noon on the&#13;
Friday preceeding the games&#13;
7) Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks&#13;
8) Entries must be legible to be considered&#13;
Basketball&#13;
scrimmage&#13;
The men's basketball team is&#13;
ready to showcase their talent to&#13;
the public tonight when it holds its&#13;
annual intra - squad game at 7:30&#13;
p. m. in the Parkside Fieldhouse.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens' team will&#13;
be split into Green and White&#13;
units. The game is open to public&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Table tennis&#13;
tournament&#13;
The Parkside Table Tennis Club&#13;
(PTTC) has accepted Inter -&#13;
Varsity Christian Fellowship's&#13;
(IVCF) challenge to a table tennis&#13;
contest for Friday, November 21&#13;
at 1 p.m.&#13;
All matches are best of three,&#13;
and will be held in the Rec Center&#13;
Table Tennis Room. Everyone is&#13;
welcome to watch.&#13;
C0UE6E?&#13;
Sure. But its quality depends on&#13;
your life during college.&#13;
Your college degree and grades are&#13;
most important. But, in today's competitive&#13;
job market, you may need&#13;
additional credentials to land the job&#13;
you really want.&#13;
As a sophomore, you need to look&#13;
ahead. At what you can offer an&#13;
employer... your education, work&#13;
experience, leadership abilities. And&#13;
at how you can increase these assets&#13;
during your last two years of college.&#13;
While looking ahead, look at the&#13;
Army ROTC two-year program.&#13;
Management training. Leadership&#13;
experience. Financial assistance.&#13;
And new opportunities for your life&#13;
after college as an officer in the&#13;
active Army, Reserve or National&#13;
Guard.&#13;
For details, contact:&#13;
Enrollment Officer&#13;
Military Science Dept.&#13;
Marquette U.&#13;
1-224-7195 &#13;
8 Thursday, November 20,1980 Ranger&#13;
At Parkside&#13;
Humboldt State claims title&#13;
RANGER photo by Kim Schiater&#13;
Garry Henry of Pembroke State&#13;
(N.C.) repeated his 1977 NAIA&#13;
cross-country win at Parkside&#13;
Saturday as he won the individual&#13;
crown in the 23rd annual NCAA-II&#13;
championship meet.&#13;
Henry's time of 29:32 for the&#13;
10,000 meter course, as well as a&#13;
course mark, was the best ever&#13;
recorded in this championship,&#13;
eclipsing the 29:42 run by Ralph&#13;
Serna of California - Irvine in&#13;
1976.&#13;
Humboldt State (Cal.)&#13;
dethroned two-time champion Cal&#13;
Poly San Luis Obispo as it won&#13;
with 115 p oints, five better than&#13;
Pembroke. Cal Poly was third at&#13;
132 followed by Ferris State&#13;
(Mich.) at 153 and Mankato&#13;
(Minn.) State at 176. Twenty - two&#13;
teams filled out the field and 174&#13;
runners finished the race.&#13;
Best season ever but&#13;
Soccer ousted from playoffs&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The men's soccer team ended&#13;
its 1980 sea son last week with a&#13;
heartbreaking 1-0 loss to St.&#13;
John's University of Minnesota in&#13;
the semi - finals of A rea 3 playoff&#13;
competition. It was the fourth&#13;
time in the last seven years&#13;
Parkside lost to the Johnnies in&#13;
the playoffs with each game being&#13;
determined by a single goal.&#13;
Parkside finished their season&#13;
with an 11-6-1 r ecord, by far the&#13;
most successful season the team&#13;
has ever played.&#13;
The Rangers have never advanced&#13;
past Area 3 competition&#13;
and the Johnnies made sure&#13;
Ranger playoff misfortunes&#13;
continued. Before the game,&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson predicted&#13;
that his players would have to&#13;
take advantage of their opportunities&#13;
if they were to win.&#13;
The Rangers had several scoring&#13;
opportunities but couldn't&#13;
capitalize on them.&#13;
Parkside managed 13 shots but&#13;
couldn't find the net. "We played&#13;
well enough to win. We just&#13;
couldn't score any goals," said&#13;
Hederson. "St. John's is an&#13;
aggressive and physical team. We&#13;
knew they were going to be like&#13;
that."&#13;
The Johnnies scored the only&#13;
goal they needed with ten minutes&#13;
left in the first half. "After that&#13;
goal they seemed to have the&#13;
momentum. It took awhile for us&#13;
to reorganize after that." The&#13;
Rangers managed to stay in the&#13;
fame with their usual sparkling&#13;
defensive performance, but never&#13;
got the game equalizer. Henderson&#13;
commented, "We controlled the&#13;
last 30 minutes of the game but&#13;
they dropped back to protect thenlead&#13;
and didn't allow us the goal&#13;
we needed."&#13;
Henderson was disappointed&#13;
with the outcome of the St. John's&#13;
game but was elated about the&#13;
rest of the season. The Rangers&#13;
set four goals before the season&#13;
started and accomplished two of&#13;
them. They wanted to go to the&#13;
Area semi - finals, which they did,&#13;
they wanted to finish above .500,&#13;
and did so (.628), but they fell&#13;
short on their other goals of&#13;
winning 14 games and reaching&#13;
the Area finals.&#13;
With the completion of this&#13;
season, Henderson has his sights&#13;
focused on next year. "We have a&#13;
few holes to fill, but we're already&#13;
recruiting a number of kids. We're&#13;
losing only one starter (senior&#13;
Mike Kiefer, this year's leading&#13;
scorer), so we should be tough. We&#13;
have an extremely strong&#13;
nucleus."&#13;
Kiefer's shoes will be tough to&#13;
fill, but with the returning players&#13;
Henderson has, there is nothing&#13;
but continued success looming in&#13;
the very near future for the&#13;
Parkside soccer team.&#13;
Local ski club plans first meeting&#13;
„!!!f„&#13;
No&#13;
I&#13;
&lt;&#13;
!&#13;
ic&#13;
,&#13;
T™i&#13;
;&#13;
b&#13;
!&#13;
az&#13;
!.&#13;
rs&#13;
'&#13;
a The schedule of this year's ski slides of t he Nordic evmt* 7, The Nordic Trailblazers, a cross&#13;
country ski club of the Kenosha -&#13;
Racine area, will hold their first&#13;
meeting of the season on Tuesday,&#13;
Nov. 25 at 7:30 p.m. in Moln 107.&#13;
The schedule of this year's&#13;
outings will be presented.&#13;
Wilho Knuuti and Archie&#13;
Lowman, officials at the 1980&#13;
Winter Olympics, will present&#13;
slides of t he Nordic events at the&#13;
Olympics. Art Bloxdorf of The&#13;
Pack Shop will give a presentation&#13;
on the various types of cross&#13;
country skiing and equipment. EVEN WITH heads up plays such as this&#13;
cou'dn t avoid a 1-0 loss to St. John's last week&#13;
one, the Rangers&#13;
AUDIO SYSTEMS&#13;
Audio Retailer of 1980&#13;
Audio Video Magazine asked&#13;
1,399 manufacturers and representatives&#13;
nationwide to&#13;
vote for their ten best retailers&#13;
based on professionalism,&#13;
customer service,&#13;
product knowledge-ability,&#13;
and they chose us as one.&#13;
AUDIO SYSTEMS&#13;
7535 Twenty-second Avenue, Kenosha Telephone 658-3796&#13;
ERRITT'S RUNNING&#13;
CENTER&#13;
Specialists in Athletic Footwear&#13;
and Running Clothing&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue • 632-4699&#13;
CLOSE OUT SPECIAL ON SELECTED ITEMS&#13;
SHOES &amp; CLOTHING 10-50% OFF&#13;
ADIDAS • PONEY • NIKE • COBRA&#13;
JOGGING • RACING • TENNIS&#13;
SOCCER • COURT SHOES&#13;
"All Reduced"&#13;
Shorts • Singlets • Books • Bags&#13;
HOURS&#13;
Monday - Friday io.g&#13;
Saturday . 10-5&#13;
Sunday </text>
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              <text>Forum to examine "Poland in Crisis'</text>
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              <text>anger&#13;
Thursday, December 4, 1980 Vol. 9 - No. 13&#13;
Forum to examine 'Poland in Crisis'&#13;
"Poland in Crisis: Workers and&#13;
the State" will be the topic of a&#13;
Parkside public forum at 7:30&#13;
p.m. on Monday, December 8, in&#13;
the Union Cinema Theater. The&#13;
program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Panelists will be Adam Przeworski,&#13;
professor of political&#13;
science at the University of&#13;
Chicago; Franklin Wallick, editor&#13;
of the United Auto Workers&#13;
Washington Report and a board&#13;
member of Amnesty International;&#13;
and Daniel&#13;
McGovern, visiting professor of&#13;
political science at Parkside and a&#13;
specialist in Communist political&#13;
systems.&#13;
Kenneth Hoover, director of the&#13;
public forum program and&#13;
professor of political science for&#13;
UW-Parkside and the University&#13;
Extension Department of&#13;
Governmental Affairs, will&#13;
moderate.&#13;
Both Przeworski and Wallick&#13;
have recently returned from&#13;
Poland.&#13;
A Polish native, Przeworski is&#13;
the author of an article, "Promise&#13;
and Progress in Poland" in the&#13;
current issue of In These Times&#13;
magazine. He also is the author of&#13;
Local Politics in Poland,&#13;
published by the Polish Academy&#13;
of Sciences and a number of oth er&#13;
studies on socialism and social&#13;
structure. He holds an MA degree&#13;
in philosophy and sociology from&#13;
the University of Warsaw and the&#13;
PhD degree in political science&#13;
from Northwestern University.&#13;
Wallick is the author of The&#13;
American Worker: An Endangered&#13;
Species, a popularized&#13;
book on occupational health and&#13;
the workplace environment which&#13;
The Washington Post ranked with&#13;
Ralph Nader's "Unsafe At Any&#13;
Speed" and Rachel Carson's&#13;
"Silent Spring." He currently is&#13;
involved in efforts by the international&#13;
labor movement to&#13;
assist Polish workers. Wallick&#13;
lived in China from 1946 to 1948&#13;
and since 1950 h as been a labor&#13;
writer, editor and publicist, with&#13;
20 years of s eniority in the UAW.&#13;
The forum is co-sponsored by&#13;
the Extension Department of&#13;
Governmental Affairs and is&#13;
made possible with the assistance&#13;
of the Johnson Foundation of&#13;
Racine.&#13;
The Parkside Public Forum is a&#13;
continuing series devoted to exploration&#13;
of timely and significant&#13;
issues. Previous forums have&#13;
dealt with such issues as nuclear&#13;
power in the aftermath of T hree&#13;
Mile Island, the SALT II treaty&#13;
and the arms race, the draft and&#13;
the Reagan-Carter debate.&#13;
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
Rangers open season with two home losses&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
See story&#13;
on back page &#13;
Thursday, December 4,1980&#13;
Sing-a-long concert Sunday&#13;
Invites sent&#13;
to graduates&#13;
Students who are planning to&#13;
graduate at the end of this&#13;
semester should have received a&#13;
letter of invitation to the&#13;
graduation reception to be held 2 -&#13;
4 p.m. Dec. 21 in WLLC 363.&#13;
Any graduating student who did&#13;
not receive an invitation should&#13;
inquire at Student Records, 553-&#13;
2284.&#13;
Choral ensembles of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside will present a sing-along&#13;
carol concert at 4 p.m. on Sunday,&#13;
Dec. 7 in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater under the direction of&#13;
Frank Mueller and Glenda&#13;
Mossman.&#13;
Participating groups are the&#13;
chorale, chorus, chamber singers&#13;
and a brass ensemble.&#13;
The audience will be invited to&#13;
join with the combined choirs of&#13;
some 70 voices in such familiar&#13;
carols as Deck the Hall, Silent&#13;
Night, Joy to the World, Hark the&#13;
Herald Angels Sing and 0 Come&#13;
All Y e Faithful.&#13;
The choral groups will present&#13;
songs of the seasons ranging from&#13;
Pachelbel's Magnificat and&#13;
Praetorius' Sing't Ihr Lieben&#13;
Christen All to Benjamin Britten's&#13;
The Sycamore Tree and Alice&#13;
Parker — R obert Shaw arrangement&#13;
of Master's in This Hall.&#13;
Scott Tench, Kenosha, will be&#13;
soloist in the latter work.&#13;
Admission is 50* for students&#13;
and senior citizens and $1 for&#13;
others.&#13;
Feminist health worker&#13;
to speak on womens' health&#13;
sophomores&#13;
You're working for a college&#13;
degree to get started&#13;
in life. You can reinforce&#13;
that degree and get a&#13;
better start through the&#13;
Army ROTC two-year&#13;
program.&#13;
Army ROTC offers you&#13;
••|P.9Q§fl6iTjeQt.. |rtraininQ.&#13;
Leadership experience.&#13;
And a commission as an&#13;
Army officer. Extra credentials&#13;
that will set you&#13;
apart in the job market.&#13;
Army ROTC also offers&#13;
you new opportunities in&#13;
life after college — parttime&#13;
leadership in Reserve&#13;
while employed in the civilian&#13;
community or full-time&#13;
active duty starting at&#13;
$11,000 per year.&#13;
For details, contact:&#13;
IKE ARMY ROTC&#13;
TWO-YEAR PROGRAM.&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Barbara Federlin, a healthworker&#13;
at Milwaukee's Bread and&#13;
Roses Women's Health Center,&#13;
will speak on "Women's Health"&#13;
this Friday at 10 a.m. in&#13;
Parkside's Union Cinema&#13;
Theater. Federlin's appearance at&#13;
Parkside is sponsored by&#13;
Parkside Concourse. There will be&#13;
no admission charge.&#13;
Bread and Roses, "a women's&#13;
health center designed for women&#13;
by women," is "committed to&#13;
women having knowledge of their&#13;
bodies and control over their&#13;
reproductive lives."&#13;
Federlin holds degrees in&#13;
psychology and religion from UWMilwaukee,&#13;
is a member of the&#13;
Milwaukee Women's Health&#13;
Collective and 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 thimbleshaped,&#13;
diaphram - 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 (FDA) as a&#13;
"significant risk device," since it&#13;
has not been tested in the U.S. to&#13;
FDA satisfaction.&#13;
According to Federlin and&#13;
Executive Director Fran Kaplan,&#13;
"other FDA-approved contraceptives,&#13;
such as the birth&#13;
control pill and intrauterine&#13;
devices present additional risks to&#13;
the health of women in ways&#13;
which the cap does not. 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 used with the toxicity&#13;
of a drug or an implant in the&#13;
body."&#13;
"There's clearly a lot of i nterest&#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;
Bread and Roses also offers&#13;
pregnancy testing and counWarn&#13;
Bam Singing Telegram!&#13;
"Songs for any Occasion"&#13;
2 FOR 1 SALE&#13;
December 3-14&#13;
SANTAS, GORILLAS, BELLY DANCERS&#13;
UNICYCLIST, COSTUMED SINGERS '&#13;
for&#13;
Parties, Birthdays, Love Songs,&#13;
Apologies, Thank You, Any Occasion At All&#13;
7 D a ys A W e e k 8 a . r n .- 8 D . r n .&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer . _ Editor&#13;
Dan Qafbra?th Executive Business Manager ESSSS":::::::::::: Busln&#13;
rS **£ SE&#13;
Rri?no!«!I ...Sports Editor&#13;
Brian Passmo _ Photo Editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson . _J„&#13;
Mike Farrell Copy Editor Mike Farrell Advertising Manager&#13;
c?&#13;
e u&#13;
Cramer&#13;
' Mark Christiansen, Patty DeLuisa Doua&#13;
Edenhauser, Mike Holmdohl, Carol Klees, Gary Ledoer.^aS&#13;
Rip^'BIH'stoujaard&#13;
61&#13;
'&#13;
6&#13;
'' Chr&#13;
'&#13;
S,ine&#13;
°'&#13;
NS&#13;
"&#13;
1&#13;
' Bru&#13;
" Pres,&#13;
°"' J&lt;*&#13;
•« •" —v&#13;
RANGER MUr&#13;
,&#13;
inVhe academlc Vear during breaks and holidays,&#13;
zsssessssr&amp;fr addressed tor parkside ^ w Dw. uw.&#13;
plie&#13;
r&#13;
rw!?h one&#13;
Ed&#13;
|nch if d0&#13;
"&#13;
bl«paced on standard size&#13;
Ktr v^lficKn * mUSt be S&#13;
'°&#13;
ned and a tal*PhP"« ™mber&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 9 a. m. for publication on Thursday The rancpd&#13;
defamatory cmtent?' priVi,efles in refus,ln* ,0 P&#13;
rlnt leMer&#13;
s which contain false or&#13;
McCormack&#13;
REHEARSING "Cream in the Well", the studio production&#13;
being presented through Dec. 7, are (from left to right) Bobbie&#13;
Menniear, Jeff McKelvie and Vicki Knapp.&#13;
seling; abortion counseling and eluding routine exams and inprocedure&#13;
through the 14th week struction for self - examination;&#13;
of pregnancy ; reproductive health and support, problem - solving&#13;
care for women and men, in- and therapy groups.&#13;
Workshop on Slovak culture&#13;
The history and culture of the&#13;
Slovak Community in the United&#13;
States will be the topic of a daylong&#13;
workshop on Saturday,&#13;
December 6, sponsored by&#13;
Parkside's Center for&#13;
Multicultural Studies. Sessions&#13;
will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 4&#13;
p.m. at St. Anthony Catholic&#13;
Church, 2223 51st St., Kenosha.&#13;
Speakers will include Northwestern&#13;
University history&#13;
professor Josef Barton, author of&#13;
a book on immigrants titled&#13;
Peasants and Strangers, who will&#13;
talk on Slovaks in America; UWMilwaukee&#13;
geography professor&#13;
Karel Bayer, on the history and&#13;
geography of Slovak immigration;&#13;
and Kenosha Unified&#13;
School Superintendent John J.&#13;
Hosmanek, who will give a slide&#13;
presentation.&#13;
The program also will include a&#13;
performance by the Tatra Slovak&#13;
Dancers of Milwaukee, a&#13;
demonstration of Slovak folk art&#13;
and an ethnic luncheon.&#13;
Advance registration is&#13;
required for the workshop, which&#13;
carries one UW-Parkside undergraduate&#13;
credit. The fee is&#13;
$52.50 for the workshop and $6 for&#13;
the luncheon. Registration can be&#13;
made by calling the Social Science&#13;
Division at 553-2316.&#13;
Powntown/Konoshq&#13;
Elm wood Plaza Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear;&#13;
Do You Hove&#13;
HOUSING NEEDS?&#13;
CAMPUS HOUSING OFFICE&#13;
CAN HELP YOU&#13;
WITH:&#13;
1. LOCATING SUITABLE HOUSING&#13;
2. ROOMMATES.&#13;
3. LOW COST HOUSING.&#13;
4. TRANSPORTATION INFORMATION.&#13;
5. BUDGET PLANNING.&#13;
6. LEASE INFORMATION.&#13;
7. INSURANCE INFORMATION SHIRLEY&#13;
SCHMERLING.&#13;
UT&#13;
CALL 553-2320&#13;
Or Stop in at Room 284 Tallent Hall&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#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;
—•————— Thursday, December 4,1980&#13;
M,nority education explored Coming Events&#13;
ur/u-lr harH anH oii/u&lt;n«J i_ , . ® UTimigrflntS.'' 8 nprpontinn n.j it , .. . -5^&#13;
•Why can't minorities today&#13;
work hard and succeed in school&#13;
like the white ethnic groups of&#13;
Wisconsin's past?" This is not&#13;
Archie Bunker asking a question&#13;
that's been edited by an English&#13;
teacher.&#13;
It is among questions about&#13;
intercultural education in urban&#13;
communities that will be explored&#13;
in three courses being developed&#13;
for both adult citizens and&#13;
professional educators by an&#13;
interdisciplinary team of four&#13;
University of Wisconsin faculty&#13;
members.&#13;
Participating faculty are Prof.&#13;
Ronald L. Podeschi and Prof.&#13;
Frank C. Nelsen of the UWMilwaukee&#13;
education department,&#13;
Prof. John D. Buenker, UWParkside&#13;
history faculty member&#13;
and director of the UW-P Center&#13;
for Multicultural Studies and&#13;
Nicholas C. Burckel, historian and&#13;
Director of Archives and the Area&#13;
Research Center at UW-P.&#13;
Members of the interdisciplinary&#13;
team developing&#13;
the course point out that there is&#13;
controversy among educators&#13;
about the past effects of schooling&#13;
on European immigrants just as&#13;
there is about present effects of&#13;
schooling on racial minorities.&#13;
Educational historians during&#13;
the 1970s have questioned the&#13;
popular belief that all European&#13;
immigrants succeeded in and&#13;
through schooling, the teams say.&#13;
Another popular misconception,&#13;
they add, is the view of the current&#13;
racial minorities as "the last of&#13;
Pvksi*2U&#13;
the immigrants," a perception&#13;
that assumes the present&#13;
sociological situation of racial&#13;
minorities parallels that of past&#13;
European immigrants.&#13;
The goal of the courses, the&#13;
team says, is to place such&#13;
questions about contemporary&#13;
urban education in an interdisciplinary&#13;
framework to&#13;
allow educators and other adult&#13;
citizens to explore them in a broad&#13;
humanities context as opposed to&#13;
the more common educational&#13;
focusi on skills or methods courses.&#13;
All three courses will explore a&#13;
common question: "What are&#13;
significant similarities and&#13;
contrasts between the school&#13;
experience of European immigrant&#13;
groups in Wisconsin's&#13;
past and the experience of&#13;
minority groups in Wisconsin's&#13;
present?"&#13;
Students will be exposed to such&#13;
primary sources as immigrant&#13;
diaries in addition to scholarly&#13;
literature. They also will be involved&#13;
in an oral history project in&#13;
which they will interview 19th&#13;
century European immigrants&#13;
and their children as well as&#13;
members of current minority&#13;
groups.&#13;
The faculty team itself reflects&#13;
the broad-spectrum nature of t his&#13;
project, drawing its Milwaukee&#13;
members from the ranks of&#13;
professional teacher trainers and&#13;
its Parkside component from&#13;
among social historians concerned&#13;
with the urban past and&#13;
present.&#13;
4433-22ftd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
AU. MAJOR C REDIT C ARDS A CCEPTED&#13;
PATRICK DEWAERE&#13;
n u Coup de Tete&#13;
SUNDAY, DEC.7-5 P.M.&#13;
MARKET SQUARE — 8600 Sheridan Road&#13;
$3.50 Donation&#13;
"Zesty comedy about a soccer player ... a critique of&#13;
French society." N. Y. Times&#13;
AUDIO SYSTEMS&#13;
Audio Retailer of 1980&#13;
Audio Video Magazine a deed&#13;
1,399 manufacturers and representatives&#13;
nationwide to&#13;
vote for their^ten best retailers&#13;
based on professionalism,&#13;
customer service,&#13;
product knowledge-ability,&#13;
and they chose us as one.&#13;
AUDIO SYSTEMS&#13;
7535 Twenty-second Avenue, Kenosha Telephone 658-3796&#13;
Both Podeschi and Nelsen of&#13;
Milwaukee have personal as well&#13;
as professional ties to the study of&#13;
schooling and minority groups:&#13;
Podeschi grew up as the son of an&#13;
Italian immigrant and Nelsen was&#13;
a child immigrant from Norway.&#13;
Much of t heir recent research has&#13;
focused on urban education.&#13;
Buenker and Burckel of&#13;
Parkside bring to the project both&#13;
teaching and research activities&#13;
in ethnicity and the Progressive&#13;
era with its emphasis on&#13;
humanizing urbanization and&#13;
industrialization through social&#13;
legislation. They have already&#13;
collaborated on three books and&#13;
are at work on a fourth.&#13;
University administrators cite&#13;
the project as an example of interinstitutional&#13;
cooperation and&#13;
sharing of resources among the&#13;
system's urban campuses. The&#13;
project has been funded by the&#13;
National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities with a grant of&#13;
$48,849.&#13;
The first of the three courses,&#13;
"Research in Cultural Foundations&#13;
of Education: Urban&#13;
,Education and Social History,"&#13;
will be offered for graduate&#13;
students at UW-Milwaukee during&#13;
the spring semester, 1981.&#13;
The second, "Workshop in&#13;
Foundations of Human Relations:&#13;
Immigrants, Minorities and&#13;
Schools," will be offered as a oneweek&#13;
intensive course for 75 to 100&#13;
elementary and secondary school&#13;
, r^nriini, Thursday, Dec. 4&#13;
wSSfrSUIi&#13;
5 am ta Prof&#13;
-&#13;
Ken Hoover wiU ta,k on "Marxism and&#13;
bptita?iP&#13;
a&#13;
! Movements . The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
ttie publkf at 1 pm in 1,16 Union Cinema&#13;
- The program is free and open to&#13;
P st^dPnt&#13;
C«r»nH " J*® ufU" at l&#13;
pm ** CA Studi0&#13;
"&#13;
B"- Admission is $1.00 for&#13;
c£Kr •&#13;
1&#13;
'&#13;
50 for ot her&#13;
'&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
Tickets ar e a"&#13;
aiiai&gt;ie a t&#13;
Friday, Dec. 5&#13;
,&#13;
Two&#13;
" wil&#13;
J ^ at 8 pm in the Union Cinema. Admission at&#13;
PLAY "Tiin m w awSSt ! a&#13;
°&#13;
d SL50 for a «&#13;
ues&#13;
t- Sponsored by PAB. PLAY Cream in the Well" will be repeated at 8pm in Studio "B".&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 6&#13;
FAIBfr&#13;
?&#13;
m 10 am to 4 pm in the Union, Molinaro and Greenquist&#13;
».&#13;
event is free and&#13;
°P&#13;
en 10 the public. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
PLAY Cream in the Well" will be repeated at 8 pm.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 7 ,&#13;
""A®® Wel1&#13;
" wiU he repeated at 1:30 pm in CA Studio "B".&#13;
^ h S U C h&#13;
f ? i C °&#13;
n c e r t " a t 3 : 3 0 p m i n t h e C o m m u n i c a t i o n A r t s&#13;
Theatre directed by Frank Mueller. Admission at the door is 50t for students and&#13;
senior citizens and $1.00 for others. ana&#13;
MOVIE "Chapter Two" will be repeated at 7:30 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Dec. 8&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. The program will consist of a discussion of&#13;
programs for second semester. The event is free and open to the public.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 9&#13;
VIDEO TAPES "Genesis", "Black Sabbath" and "Jimmy Hendrix" will be shown&#13;
PABPm Square&#13;
- Admission is free for Parkside students. Sponsored by&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 10&#13;
CONCERT at 12:30 pm in Main Place, with the Parkside Wind and Choral Ensembles.&#13;
The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
teachers and administrators from&#13;
throughout the state during the&#13;
summer at UWM.&#13;
The third, "Foundations of&#13;
Human Relations in Education:&#13;
Childhood and Youth Experiences&#13;
Through Oral History," will be&#13;
offered for a target population of&#13;
adult citizens of all ages and&#13;
backgrounds at three locations in&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin during&#13;
fall semester, 1981. Sites selected&#13;
will be in Kenosha, Waukesha and&#13;
Mequon.&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
(S&amp;ee* *&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654-2932&#13;
FIRST&#13;
'National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
member f.d.i.c.&#13;
Cream in the Well&#13;
Written by Lynn Riggs.. .Directed by Norman Gano&#13;
— Decem— ber 3-6 — at 8PM and December 7 at 1:30PM • mwi i at i.ouriVI&#13;
Presented by UW-Parkside Dramatic Arts Discipline&#13;
Communicat ion Arts Studio Theatre*&#13;
,.. Limited Seating Reserve Early 553-2345.&#13;
Information 553-2042&#13;
Tickets at $1.00 for Students.. .$1.50 forNon-sturtem^&#13;
Must be Pre-paid&#13;
MERRITTS&#13;
RUNNING&#13;
CENTER&#13;
Footwear for&#13;
Jogger&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
Racquetball&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Tennis&#13;
Running&#13;
Footwear by&#13;
Nike&#13;
Brooks&#13;
New Balance&#13;
Etonic&#13;
Adidas&#13;
Pony&#13;
Tiger&#13;
Osaga&#13;
Mon.- Fri. 10-8&#13;
S a t u r d ay 10-5&#13;
S u n d ay 12-4&#13;
Call: 632-4699&#13;
MERRIII'S&#13;
RUNNING&#13;
CENTER&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
(Washington Square)&#13;
Racine &#13;
Thursday, December 4,1980&#13;
Rangers off to bad start&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
It's been a long time since the&#13;
men's basketball team has&#13;
dropped two home games in one&#13;
year, and it's been even longer&#13;
since it dropped back-to-back&#13;
home games. But that's what&#13;
happened when the Rangers&#13;
opened their season last week&#13;
against St. Xavier and LaCrosse.&#13;
On Friday, the Rangers were&#13;
upset by the St. Xavier Cougars&#13;
70-64 and on Saturday they were&#13;
dumped by LaCrosse 63-60.&#13;
On Friday, Parkside jumped out&#13;
to a quick 13-4 lead and it appeared&#13;
to be a rerun of last year's&#13;
79-62 Ranger rout of the Cougars.&#13;
However, after the first six&#13;
minutes the Cougars settled down&#13;
and started to run their offense.&#13;
Meanwhile, the Ranger's head&#13;
coach, Steve Stephens, was forced&#13;
to bench 6'8" center Curtis Green,&#13;
who was suffering from a virus.&#13;
The Cougars exploited the&#13;
smaller Ranger team and were&#13;
able to penetrate and get the ball&#13;
inside for high - percentage shots.&#13;
They also began to box out on&#13;
defense and limit the Rangers to&#13;
one shot at the basket. St. Xavier&#13;
led 35-31 at halftime.&#13;
It wasn't a typical first half for a&#13;
Parkside team. They were being&#13;
beaten in every phase of the&#13;
game. It should be noted that&#13;
because of Green's illness,&#13;
Stephens was forced to substitute&#13;
and used several combinations,&#13;
none that were overly successful.&#13;
The second half was more of the&#13;
same. The Rangers battled back&#13;
within a basket and then either&#13;
committed a costly turnover or&#13;
took a bad shot. "We had our&#13;
opportunities but we would&#13;
panic," said Stephens. "We&#13;
played silly. We'd get within one&#13;
or two (points) and one guy tried&#13;
to do it by himself."&#13;
The Rangers were plagued with&#13;
costly and untimely turnovers the&#13;
entire evening. "We had too many&#13;
turnovers. I was not pleased with&#13;
the play of our guards. I wasn't&#13;
happy with anyone," Stephens&#13;
said.&#13;
Parkside shot a respectable 48%&#13;
from the floor but was outshot by&#13;
St. Xavier's 50%. The Rangers&#13;
were hurt at the freethrow line&#13;
where they converted four of&#13;
seven while the Cougars hit 18 of&#13;
27.&#13;
"We need a lot of help and work&#13;
with our defense," Stephens said&#13;
following the game. "We can't&#13;
beat anyone when we give ud 70&#13;
points."&#13;
The following evening Parkside&#13;
faced LaCrosse and gave up 63&#13;
points but still found themselves&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
BJ: Too bad! Soccer players are all losers!&#13;
too' V°&#13;
U really h8ve 8 nice&#13;
''' Dick says 50&#13;
ARE THERE any MEN living at Parkside&#13;
Village? Maybe not.&#13;
LOREN: I know about Kathy; what about the&#13;
hots? Rubber band&#13;
MOLDY AND MARY sitting in a tree, k-i-s-si-n-g;&#13;
next comes?&#13;
°KVp&#13;
S°&#13;
ft L&#13;
'&#13;
PS Sue&#13;
" S'°&#13;
n for S8le&#13;
" Con,ac,&#13;
DENISEI I have cravings for a lasagna'&#13;
dinner — Casa Kid&#13;
JULIE, what do small cars and radios have in&#13;
common?&#13;
MEYERS &lt;*'«=) is one of those filthy&#13;
little crustaceans — lOP's&#13;
CAN YOU SAY mmm-mmm good and&#13;
mushroom in the mirror? Ron Hill can't! If'&#13;
you can help him, call 637-3802.&#13;
COFFEE SHOPPE chalr-klcklng contest, 10&#13;
a.m. Fridays I Sponsor: Chain Gang&#13;
SU2Y, SALLY, ETHYL - HI sweet I -&#13;
Oscar, Arnold, Irving.&#13;
KATHY AND SABINE, teach me arts, I'll&#13;
teach crafts. KBUCK.&#13;
"ADVENTURE II" coming to a theater or&#13;
drive-In near you.&#13;
ADIDAS SHIRT and shoe wearers: You do?&#13;
Chain Gang&#13;
LUCKY — submit offer. Include name,&#13;
telephone, time, place, etc. Todd H.&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV, where Is your ad?l&#13;
We're desperate! Chain Gang&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV would have been more&#13;
desperate had she gone to lOP's and Chain&#13;
Gang. (Ranger staff you were wonderful.)&#13;
STUDSI We know your functional Items are&#13;
your belly buttons. lOP's&#13;
lOP's at least we all know that your functional&#13;
Items are not your brains.&#13;
CLAIRE — sorry about hockey bruises. Can I&#13;
make it up?&#13;
SIR RODNEY — but why a knight without a&#13;
horse? — Andy&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS Parkslde's women's&#13;
cross country team — NAIA champions!&#13;
ORGY QUEEN, J.c. must be the only one&#13;
you've missed!!&#13;
SYNTHETIC OIL. Great part&#13;
time opportunities in this fast&#13;
growing market of synthetic&#13;
lubricants - lubricants that are&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
on the short end of the 63-60 score.&#13;
The Rangers controlled the&#13;
boards (34-31) but shot an anemic&#13;
39% from the floor. LaCrosse shot&#13;
a blistering 64% from the floor and&#13;
hit 17 of 21 freethrows. The&#13;
Rangers managed but four of ten&#13;
from the foul line. Senior Arthur&#13;
Bright led Parkside in scoring&#13;
with 14 points while Reggie Anderson&#13;
(6-22 from the floor) had&#13;
13. Dave McLeish was the only&#13;
other player in double figures for&#13;
Parkside with 10 points. Green&#13;
was still suffering from the virus&#13;
and didn't suit up for the game.&#13;
The team is now on the road for&#13;
their next five games as they face&#13;
South Alabama, Murray State,&#13;
Drake, Stevens Point and Kansas&#13;
State. The Ranger's next home&#13;
game is December 15th against&#13;
UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
IMPEACH K.M.! Restore Sue Stevens to the&#13;
throne! Chain Gang&#13;
DO SOCCER PLAYERS know what men are!&#13;
I BET NOT!&#13;
RS: Get your diaper changed! You and your&#13;
iokes STINK!&#13;
LUT2Y, what's going on between you and&#13;
Buck that your nipples, are dancing and&#13;
your crotch Is wet?&#13;
MARY — Happy Birthday, a week late. —&#13;
Curtis&#13;
JUNIE — no, but do you want to? — Chipper&#13;
THE ANIMALS need "Neu" Blood. Chain&#13;
Gang&#13;
"Elk'&#13;
8 UP' ,h6n d0Wn&#13;
' thBn UP 898in&#13;
' Anne&#13;
PLUSH BOTTOM — Sorry I hit you In the&#13;
nose. The Klutz&#13;
LUCKY — My Laredo and I accept&#13;
reasonable offers! Todd H.&#13;
MELODY — Are you piss ... ed off at Tiny?&#13;
Fencer&#13;
IS K.M.'s middle name really Nessman?&#13;
lOP's&#13;
ERADICATE microorganism Erica iensenlca&#13;
from Parkside Village Parties&#13;
Thanks turkey!&#13;
SEBINI gives out to trolls, for details contact&#13;
"the Wall".&#13;
GINGER: Noticed the Improvement In last&#13;
Parking Lot again. It didn't even have any&#13;
errors! Chain Groupies&#13;
WE ALWAYS KNEW the Ranger staff were a&#13;
bunch of turkeys! (page 2, 11/20/80) lOP's&#13;
AT LEAST we're In season.&#13;
BILL, how could you grill your manhood to&#13;
well done.&#13;
ANNETTE (ALI) GAPINSKI has a mean left&#13;
foot.&#13;
ANDY: I.L.Y.A.H.L. - Rodney&#13;
THE lOP's are really the AOP's&#13;
Wt'L&#13;
L&#13;
*&#13;
EC,VR'T,&#13;
Y GUARDS start shooting trres on illegally parked cars?&#13;
HOPEFULLY, they'll shoot the lOP's&#13;
RON, growl, stage, tequila, Belolt, waitress,&#13;
overpass, monestary, cornfield, remember?&#13;
&#13;
sort of like, it's like, really man."&#13;
DO-JA — Buying out Milwaukee? O.K. Fine'&#13;
How's M's closet? Deb&#13;
HEY GUYS) Don't forget Sheryl's Birthday I&#13;
• December 7th! y&#13;
SHERYL —When ya bringing M.E. and M E&#13;
over again? Phone! Deb&#13;
CAROL S. has a bun In the oven.&#13;
ri2S.&#13;
L&#13;
' went wrono (or was lf right)? CAROL, It s people like you and Paul who&#13;
™ake «)ls a year 'round |ob. The Stork&#13;
CAROL AND PAUL — Congratulations on&#13;
your wonderful news. May it always be&#13;
healthy and bring you nothing but iov —&#13;
Ranger 1 '&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOUR RIVIERA, good condition, sport&#13;
wheels with hubs and two mounted. Low&#13;
$190 *633 4879 15&#13;
^&#13;
,e&#13;
*' be&#13;
"&#13;
ed radlals. Lot&#13;
TOASTER OVEN/BROILER $25, C apehart&#13;
stereo, am/fm/8 track, 2 speakers, $75;&#13;
high chair, $15; antique buffet, mirrored&#13;
back, $175. Ph. 657-1805.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FREE - mild-mannered, male cat; neutered,&#13;
black. Call Rosemary, 636-9177.&#13;
WALK, TALK, AND ASSIST retired (blind)&#13;
college teacher in straightening out his&#13;
library. Earn while you learn. Call 694-2251&#13;
for appointment.&#13;
revolutionizing the automotive&#13;
industry. AMS/OIL is the world's&#13;
largest producer of synthetic&#13;
Inhnnanto Vai. A... .&#13;
1 U ' Vi OJ 1U11CUL&#13;
lubricants. You can earn extra&#13;
cash as an independent AMS/OIL&#13;
dealer. A realistic beginner's goal&#13;
is about $25.00 weekly. You will&#13;
also enjoy sizeable tax advantages&#13;
of owning your own&#13;
business. Dealerships cost $27.60.&#13;
Call or write for information.&#13;
Mitmoen Brothers, 6634 - 30th&#13;
Ave., Kenosha, WI, 53142. Phone:&#13;
(414) 652-3399.&#13;
10% DISCOUNT&#13;
To Parkside students and faculty&#13;
members only, on all merchandise&#13;
in our store. Parkside I.D. required&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
Vwih'ka&amp;Sani&#13;
JEWELERS&#13;
Itonotha's Oiomond Center&#13;
5617 • 6th Avenue&#13;
^hone 658-2525 Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of beer? All you have to do is fill&#13;
out this entry form and pick the most correct winners. Put a check&#13;
mark by your picks and bring the form down to the Ranger office&#13;
D139 WLLC.&#13;
Baltimore at Cincinnati&#13;
Denver at Kansas City -&#13;
N. Y. Jets at Cleveland&#13;
Atlanta at Philadelphia&#13;
Detroit at St. Louis&#13;
Green Bay at Chicago&#13;
Minnesota at Tampa Bay&#13;
New Orleans at San Francisco&#13;
Dallas at Oakland&#13;
Los Angeles at Buffalo —-—&#13;
New York Giants at Seattle —&#13;
San Diego at Washington&#13;
New England at Miami&#13;
Tie - breaker: will be the total combined&#13;
points scored in the New England - Miami game.&#13;
Last week's winner: Stephen E. Hansen; 11 correct, 48points&#13;
Name:-&#13;
S.S. No. —&#13;
Rules: /&#13;
1) One entry per person&#13;
2) Must be a student at UW-Parkside&#13;
3) Person with most correct picks win (in case of tie, the total&#13;
points will be used as a tie - breaker)&#13;
4) Entry must be clipped from Ranger issue&#13;
5) Ranger members ineligible&#13;
6) Entries must be turned into Ranger office by noon on the&#13;
Friday proceeding the games&#13;
7) Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks&#13;
8) Entries must be legible to be considered&#13;
PRELIMINARY JURYING&#13;
Saturday, January 10, entries due before 10 a. m.&#13;
®™.Vm&#13;
P;f&#13;
es ,0: or mail 10 slides to: Wustum Museum ooq Ath c. .&#13;
2519 Northwestern Ave. Racine WI SWM&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin C Wl 53403&#13;
19th ANNUAL&#13;
Monument Square Art Fair&#13;
June 13-14,1980&#13;
For more information call:&#13;
^&#13;
414&#13;
) 637-7706 or 633-3215&#13;
i* v.j&#13;
I ACADEMY OF BATON A DANCE&#13;
f&#13;
is&#13;
X;&#13;
Headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits, §&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights |&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — Tap Shoes —&#13;
All Dancing Supplies&#13;
Applications Aro&#13;
Being Accepted&#13;
For&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
A AAiic+ JOB REQUIREMENTS&#13;
| S ** st&#13;
^&#13;
ent enrolled with 6 credits&#13;
Assigns, edits, and writes sports stories.&#13;
® Lays out sports pages&#13;
® Previous editorial experience.&#13;
This is a paid position&#13;
.&#13;
UE. ^PP,ica^°&#13;
n at the Ranger Office,&#13;
WLLC D139, Next to the Coffee Shoppe&#13;
Deadline: Monday, Decembers </text>
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              <text>Workers' struggle creates unique society in Poland</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Porkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, December 11, 1980&#13;
Workers' struggle creates&#13;
unique society in Poland&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
"Poland in Crisis: Workers vs&#13;
the State," the public forum held&#13;
Monday night examined the&#13;
current situation in Poland from&#13;
three aspects: the labor&#13;
movement's viewpoint, the&#13;
current historical, political and&#13;
economical status of Poland and&#13;
the Soviet Union viewpoint.&#13;
The labor viewpoint was&#13;
presented by Franklin Wallick,&#13;
editor of U.A.W. Washington&#13;
Report; Adam Przeworski, a&#13;
Poland native and political&#13;
science professor at the&#13;
University of Chicago, commented&#13;
on the current Polish&#13;
society; and Dan McGovern,&#13;
visiting assistant professor at&#13;
Parkside talked about the Soviet&#13;
view of Poland. Kenneth Hoover,&#13;
associate professor of political&#13;
science at Parkside served as&#13;
moderator.&#13;
"What is happening in Poland is&#13;
really an attempt to create a new&#13;
society," said Przeworski, "a kind&#13;
of society that doesn't exist&#13;
anywhere. (It's) an experiment in&#13;
the construction of a society which&#13;
would be at the same time&#13;
socialist and democratic."&#13;
Calling the situation 'labor&#13;
unrest' is a misnomer, according&#13;
to Przeworski. "There is no&#13;
question of unrest," he said. "It's&#13;
a struggle by workers to organize&#13;
independently of their employers.&#13;
This is not a group of workers who&#13;
suddenly became insubordinate,&#13;
irresponsible and restless."&#13;
A strike in Gdansk, a large&#13;
shipyard with about 17,000&#13;
workers, brought about the&#13;
establishment of independent&#13;
unions that are not connected to&#13;
the government. "The unions in&#13;
the past," said Wallick, "have felt&#13;
that their job was to provide&#13;
vacation spas for the members or&#13;
to be cheerleaders to the regime.&#13;
(The new unions) believe in&#13;
negotiating with the powers that&#13;
decide on wages and hours."&#13;
"We must not limit the events in&#13;
Poland to union organization,"&#13;
commented Przeworski,&#13;
"because although the decisive&#13;
breakthrough was indeed a wave&#13;
of strikes that took place during&#13;
the summer and that ended on&#13;
Sept. 1 with the government&#13;
recognizing the right to form free&#13;
and independent unions. As a&#13;
result of that victory by workers,&#13;
the entire society suddenly awoke&#13;
and began to organize itself."&#13;
The newly established unions&#13;
have not succeeded to consolidate&#13;
themselves as an organization,&#13;
according to Przeworski. "The&#13;
hierarchy of leadership is not very&#13;
clear, the leadership is already&#13;
divided and, most importantly,&#13;
the leadership no longer controls&#13;
the rank and file."&#13;
That is one side of the picture;&#13;
the same is true for the other side.&#13;
The communist party has, to a&#13;
great extent, fallen apart during&#13;
the crisis, said Przeworski. "The&#13;
party of revolt within the party is&#13;
so pronounced that the party&#13;
leadership is not able to control&#13;
the followers, to deliver on&#13;
whatever commitments they may&#13;
want to make and to pursue a&#13;
consistent strategy," he said.&#13;
What happens in that type of&#13;
situation, according to Przeworski,&#13;
is that the leaders&#13;
negotiate with each other, but it's&#13;
not clear whether the leaders are&#13;
negotiating on anybody's behalf.&#13;
Przeworski feels the situation has&#13;
become more consolidated over&#13;
the last few days due to the increasing&#13;
threat of a Russian intervention.&#13;
&#13;
The big question mark has been&#13;
the Soviet Union's intentions in the&#13;
Poland crisis. "In the last couple&#13;
of days the Soviet leadership has&#13;
given the Polish leadership some&#13;
breathing space," said&#13;
McGovern, "in which to take&#13;
control of their own nation. But&#13;
still at this time as the Soviet&#13;
leadership watches and waits it's&#13;
not clear, probably to them, what&#13;
they're going to do about Poland."&#13;
"I agree that they haven't yet&#13;
decided," said Przeworski, "or&#13;
that they have decided to make&#13;
their action contingent upon the&#13;
developments."&#13;
McGovern believes that Soviet&#13;
concerns over economic and&#13;
political situations may be influential&#13;
in deciding what type of&#13;
action the Soviets will take. The&#13;
Soviet economy is suffering from&#13;
very slow growth, less than a fifth&#13;
of what they had anticipated.&#13;
The Soviets are having&#13;
problems with labor productivity,&#13;
old machinery and providing their&#13;
people with basic consumer&#13;
goods, said McGovern. This year&#13;
the Soviet leadership hoped to&#13;
obtain 260 million metric tons .of&#13;
grain due to insufficient crops, but&#13;
they fell short of their goal by 100&#13;
million tons. Droughts during&#13;
three of the last five years made it&#13;
impossible to produce enough&#13;
grain to feed their people, thus&#13;
forcing them to turn to the world&#13;
market and to countries such as&#13;
the United States, Canada and&#13;
Australia.&#13;
"Another major problem that&#13;
the Soviet leadership faces," said&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• From the Parking Lot:&#13;
Ranger's letter to Santa&#13;
• Review: "Flash Gordon 99&#13;
• Wrestlers show potential&#13;
McGovern, "is political control&#13;
over their own country.&#13;
Throughout the course of Soviet&#13;
history, they have been willing to&#13;
give up economic efficiency, goals&#13;
we think are important like a&#13;
standard of living, and meeting&#13;
marginal revenue and marginal&#13;
cost. They'd rather throw those&#13;
out the window than lose political&#13;
control over their own country."&#13;
Poland has a mutual defense&#13;
agreement with the Soviet Union&#13;
so that they will come to each&#13;
other's defense should either&#13;
country be attacked. "This will be&#13;
the justification for military intervention&#13;
if one comes," said&#13;
McGovern.&#13;
"What's happening in Poland is&#13;
not a threat to the strategic interests&#13;
of the Soviet Union," said&#13;
Przeworski. "There are no&#13;
political forces organized in&#13;
Poland which see as their goal any&#13;
type of anti-Soviet action or even a&#13;
change of the Polish membership&#13;
in the Warsaw Pact."&#13;
Some British sources indicate&#13;
that the Soviets had as many as&#13;
12,000 casualties in Afghanistan in&#13;
the last year. This kind of loss will&#13;
be weighed heavily when they&#13;
determine what, if any, military&#13;
action they take in Poland, noted&#13;
McGovern.&#13;
Money presents a very serious&#13;
problem to the Soviets and to the&#13;
Poles. The Poles have a $20 billion&#13;
foreign debt with interest&#13;
payments of $7 billion a year.&#13;
"Last month," said McGovern,&#13;
"the Soviets promised about $1.3&#13;
billion to pay off the interest fees.&#13;
The Soviets can't continually help&#13;
bail them out. So there's a&#13;
question about how far they're&#13;
going to go to bail out their Polish&#13;
brothers."&#13;
Przeworski doesn't believe the&#13;
Soviets care about the West, the&#13;
moral opinions of the West and&#13;
economic sanctions. "But I do&#13;
think there's one thing they do&#13;
care about — and that's China.&#13;
The fact that the Chinese just&#13;
offered a warning today to the&#13;
Soviet Union is a significant fact."&#13;
"On all rational grounds, it will&#13;
be irrational for the Soviets to&#13;
intervene," concluded Przeworski.&#13;
"The problem is that&#13;
I'm not persuaded that they'd act&#13;
rationally."&#13;
Tuition now *433&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 14&#13;
ci./aus&#13;
Graphics by Mark Christiansen&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
De&#13;
tLb To£*&#13;
$30 surcharge withdrawn&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
UW System President Robert&#13;
O'Neil last week withdrew his&#13;
request for another $30 tuition&#13;
surcharge for the second&#13;
semester. A similar surcharge&#13;
was initiated last fall after Gov.&#13;
Lee Dreyfus ordered a state - wide&#13;
4.4% budget cut.&#13;
The state's worsening revenue&#13;
situation, inflation and increasing&#13;
enrollment were the reasons&#13;
O'Neil cited to the Board of&#13;
Regents for the revival of the&#13;
surcharge. In his letter to the&#13;
Regents on Nov. 26, O'Neil said&#13;
that the $30 surcharge would&#13;
prevent "further harm to&#13;
educational quality and student&#13;
access."&#13;
The surcharge would have&#13;
needed the approval of the&#13;
Regents, Gov. Dreyfus and the&#13;
. wMk WMLWm&#13;
ASSISTANT CHANCELLOR&#13;
GARY GOETZ&#13;
state legislature's Joint Finance&#13;
Committee. Gov. Dreyfus and the&#13;
chairmen of the committee have&#13;
expressed opposition to the second&#13;
surcharge. The Regents approved&#13;
the first fee by only a close&#13;
margin.&#13;
O'Neil withdrew his request for&#13;
the second surcharge because he&#13;
didn't see any use in advocating&#13;
something that would get shot&#13;
down, according to Gary Goetz,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor of Administration&#13;
and Fiscal Affairs.&#13;
What the request's withdrawl&#13;
means at Parkside is that the fulltime&#13;
undergraduate tuition fee for&#13;
the spring semester is now $433,&#13;
not $463 as was anticipated during&#13;
the registration in November.&#13;
Tuition for part-time students was&#13;
also altered during early&#13;
registration, according to Thomas&#13;
Peltier, Bursar. A fee of two&#13;
dollar-fifty cent per credit was&#13;
added on to part-time tuition&#13;
rates. &#13;
Thursday, December 11,1980&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Surcharge money&#13;
comes in handv&#13;
by Ken Meyer M&#13;
Editor&#13;
com^Theh^Tea^n.'&#13;
5 fina&#13;
"&#13;
y a&#13;
"&#13;
d W"&#13;
h «" s™&#13;
The gloomy economic situation threatening to dampen Christmas&#13;
R^herm-Np^f&#13;
3 turning gloomier when UW System President&#13;
RuSS Sl&#13;
rTl&#13;
Sted&#13;
.&#13;
an0t&#13;
?&#13;
er $3&#13;
° surcharge *&gt;r spring semester.&#13;
But after hearing objections from Governor Lee Dreyfus and the State&#13;
Regents"&#13;
1^' rightfully withdrew his request from the Board of&#13;
writl^nin fh?n&#13;
anS h6re *1 P&#13;
f&#13;
a&#13;
f&#13;
k&#13;
,fde is that the fig&#13;
ure of $463 that was ° the Bursar cards of full-time undergraduate students at early&#13;
!RXi.read $433&#13;
-&#13;
Part&#13;
-time students will not have to&#13;
pay the $2.50 per credit that was added on to their tuition fees because of&#13;
the surcharge Bursar&#13;
's office was only anticipating the return of&#13;
Many students had already planned on paying the $463 (no t quietly&#13;
IhTrSUre&#13;
'i^ payir? 11 ^ ^ same)&gt; so $30 is "extra money," if there really is such a thing.&#13;
J&#13;
What that money should be used for, considering the holiday season&#13;
and all, is to help those who need help. Ideally, the holiday season is the&#13;
time people care about and live in harmony with their fellow human&#13;
beings. I ve always wondered why that spirit is not extended throughout&#13;
the year as it should be.&#13;
It s getting harder to see this caring spirit through the immense&#13;
commercialization of Christmas, but the feeling still remains. And now&#13;
is the perfect opportunity for us students to prove it.&#13;
If yo u want to help those nearby, do so through an organization that&#13;
!r V j^&#13;
needy !" y&#13;
°&#13;
ur local area&#13;
-&#13;
0ne example, and there are many, is&#13;
the food drive that has been organized on campus. Dry goods can be&#13;
brought to the table on the Concourse Bridge through Friday, Dec. 12, to&#13;
help the impoverished in the Kenosha, Racine and outlying areas&#13;
Dotting a few dollars' worth of food for a food drive, or contributing&#13;
time, money or goods to some other worthwhile cause seems feasible for&#13;
many considering the $30 that isn't being taxed onto ourTuTtion&#13;
Of y remember those who aren't having too merry&#13;
?he\?n nnJPt&#13;
aLaP J" 1 ®xpect a Appier New Year. Then remember&#13;
tn? $ I n r vf gr&#13;
tf&#13;
dy ~ keep most of il but contribute what you can if&#13;
you can. Consider the joy you'll bring by giving just a little.&#13;
Warn Bam Singing Telegram!&#13;
"Songs for any Occasion"&#13;
2 FOR 1 SALE&#13;
551-9095 December 3-14&#13;
SANTAS, GORILLAS, BELLY DANCERS&#13;
UNICYCLIST, MARCHING BAND&#13;
for&#13;
Parties, Birthdays, Love Songs,&#13;
_ Apologies, Thank You, Any Occasion At All&#13;
7 Day s A W e e k 8a.m.- 8p,m.&#13;
AUDIO SYSTEMS&#13;
Audio Retailer of 1980&#13;
Audio Video Magazine asked&#13;
1,399 manufacturers and representatives&#13;
nationwide to&#13;
vote for their ten best retailers&#13;
based on professionalism,&#13;
customer service,&#13;
product knowledge-ability,&#13;
and they chose us as one.&#13;
AUDIO SYSTEMS&#13;
7535 Twenty-second Avenue, Kenosha Telephone 658-3796&#13;
'Ranger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
Brian Feliand Executive Business Manager&#13;
h Business Manager&#13;
SueMlchetti News Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Dave Cramer Sports Editor&#13;
Brian Passino Photo Editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson r _&#13;
Mlke *"•« Advertising Manager"&#13;
ST A F p&#13;
Ripp^TsiougTar'T6" ChriS,i"&#13;
e&#13;
°'&#13;
Nei"' F"s.on, Joe&#13;
Nukes pose threats&#13;
by Deb Elzinga&#13;
This is in response to the recent&#13;
articles defending centralized&#13;
forms of energy. It was argued,&#13;
among other things, that my&#13;
article on the solar alternative&#13;
was misleading. I still maintain&#13;
that the soft path based on&#13;
decentralized solar energy and&#13;
conservation is the best answer to&#13;
our energy crisis.&#13;
The claim was made that&#13;
nuclear energy is an environmentally&#13;
benign source of&#13;
power. It is beyond my comprehension&#13;
how anyone can make&#13;
a statement like that when there&#13;
are many facts about nuclear&#13;
power which suggest that it is a&#13;
potentially malignant, rather than&#13;
benign source of power. From the&#13;
beginning of the fuel cycle there&#13;
are serious threats to people and&#13;
the environment. During the&#13;
initial search for uranium though&#13;
drilling there is a risk that ground&#13;
water could be contaminated with&#13;
uranium.&#13;
After the uranium has been&#13;
located it is mined, which poses&#13;
threats. First, there is the danger&#13;
to the miners; radon gas is&#13;
emitted into the air and inhaled by&#13;
the miners greatly increasing&#13;
their chances of lung cancer.&#13;
Secondly, a by-product of mining&#13;
are the tailings which also pose&#13;
potential dangers. As of now there&#13;
are 140 million tons of low - level&#13;
radioactive ore tailings. In areas&#13;
where uranium is mined people,&#13;
unaware that the tailings are&#13;
dangerous, used these seemingly&#13;
neutral piles to build schools,&#13;
churches, and houses. These piles&#13;
are radioactively dangerous,&#13;
consequently there has been an&#13;
abnormal increase in babies with&#13;
congenital defects, and an abnormally&#13;
high rate of leukemia in&#13;
one of these areas.&#13;
In other aspects of th e fuel cycle&#13;
there are also significant dangers&#13;
During the fuel fabrication&#13;
process, for example, there have&#13;
been many incidents of dangers to&#13;
the workers. At the Kerr-McGee&#13;
plant in Oklahoma which made&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
mixed plutonium uranium fuel&#13;
rods, at least 87 workers were&#13;
exposed to excessive levels of&#13;
plutonium.&#13;
Karen Silkwood is one such&#13;
worker who was exposed. When&#13;
she first began at Kerr-McGee she&#13;
had faith if the nuclear promise&#13;
until she learned that many&#13;
workers were frequently exposed&#13;
to airbourne plutonium, which&#13;
cannot be retrieved once it&#13;
escapes into the air. Plutonium is&#13;
a fiercely toxic substance — one&#13;
millionth of a gram has caused&#13;
cancer in animals. Karen eventually&#13;
became involved with the&#13;
union and set out to investigate the&#13;
hazards which existed at the&#13;
plant. During her investigation it&#13;
was found out that plant&#13;
operations were often dangerous.&#13;
Leaking pipes and defective&#13;
equipment regularly contaminated&#13;
workers with&#13;
plutonium, and the company&#13;
sometimes ordered them to&#13;
continue working while leaks went&#13;
unrepaired for days.&#13;
Unfortunately, Karen Silkwood&#13;
was never able to see the case&#13;
brought to court. In 1974 she was&#13;
on her way to meet with a health&#13;
expert for the Oil, Chemical, and&#13;
Atomic Workers International&#13;
Union (OCAW) and a New York&#13;
Times reporter. She had with her&#13;
documentation regarding the&#13;
health hazards at the Kerr-McGee&#13;
plant. However, she died in a car&#13;
accident before she reached her&#13;
destination. There is substantial&#13;
evidence that her car was&#13;
deliberately run off the road. On&#13;
Karen's bumper there were fresh&#13;
dent marks and somehow the&#13;
folder had mysteriously disappeared.&#13;
&#13;
After the uranium has been&#13;
converted into fuel for the dragon,&#13;
the problems which have been&#13;
virtually isolated in the southwestern&#13;
part of the U.S. are now&#13;
extended, thus the danger of&#13;
disasters is increased. The&#13;
nuclear plant itself, poses an&#13;
additional threat. There is always&#13;
a possibility that mistakes will&#13;
occur during construction which&#13;
can lead to later problems. Backup&#13;
systems may break down&#13;
during an emergency. The accident&#13;
at Three Mile Island should&#13;
be another warning to move&#13;
swiftly away from this ominous&#13;
source of power. There are others&#13;
who share this view. In February&#13;
of 1976, three scientists in&#13;
management positions resigned&#13;
from General Electric's nuclear&#13;
research center in San Jose,&#13;
California. Two weeks later in&#13;
introducing their technical&#13;
testimony on reactor safety&#13;
GUTTORMSEN'S&#13;
_ v PRO SHOP&#13;
_ 5160 6th Avenue&#13;
Has a perfect way to&#13;
say Merry Christmas to&#13;
\ the bowler on your list.&#13;
Balls from $29'&#13;
5&#13;
Bags from&#13;
Shoes from $20&#13;
95&#13;
Doubtful about,&#13;
weight, size&#13;
or style?&#13;
We have&#13;
BOB MEYER DICK BELTOYA&#13;
deficiencies, the three said in a&#13;
joint statement: "We resigned our&#13;
jobs to commit ourselves totally to&#13;
the education of the public on all&#13;
aspects and dangers of nuclear&#13;
power as we have learned them&#13;
over our many years of ex&#13;
perience in the industry."&#13;
Still another problem with this&#13;
"benign" source of energy is 0f&#13;
course, the waste. Despite the fact&#13;
that nuclear power plants have&#13;
been operating for some 20 years&#13;
there is still no permanent safe&#13;
medium in which will hold these&#13;
highly lethal wastes. According to&#13;
Sierra Club Bulletin, "approximately&#13;
73 million gallons of&#13;
liquid high-level wastes among&#13;
the most toxic and hazardous&#13;
substances known, are now on&#13;
hand awaiting a permanent&#13;
method of disposal."&#13;
There are many different&#13;
classifications of nuclear waste.&#13;
Equipment used during mining&#13;
and other miscellaneous items&#13;
begin to accumulate through the&#13;
entire fuel cycle. As the fuel cycle&#13;
continues, so does the waste&#13;
Towards the end of the fuel cycle&#13;
there are the spent fuel rods being&#13;
stored at the plant site. Again,&#13;
there is no known permanent&#13;
storage method. Some of the spent&#13;
fuel has been cooling for 20 years&#13;
in pools that were designed for&#13;
five year storage. In addition,&#13;
these rods are now being packed&#13;
closer together which poses still&#13;
another possible threat. It is&#13;
speculated that these spent fuel&#13;
rods could form a critical mass&#13;
producing a small scale melt&#13;
down effect.&#13;
At the very end of the fuel cycle&#13;
there remains the problem of&#13;
decommissioning or dismantling&#13;
the nuclear power plants when it&#13;
becomes obsolete. Dismantling a&#13;
nuclear facility is probably the&#13;
safest in terms of the environment;&#13;
however, it would be&#13;
extremely expensive. Another&#13;
idea is to simply "mothball" the&#13;
facility. This would mean that the&#13;
still dangerous monster would&#13;
have to be guarded for literally&#13;
hundreds of thousands of years.&#13;
There have been theories&#13;
pertaining to how wastes could be&#13;
permanently stored, but none of&#13;
these seem to be viable solutions.&#13;
The two methods which have&#13;
recently been considered are&#13;
storage in granite or salt. Strong&#13;
evidence points to the fact that&#13;
neither one of these proposed&#13;
plans will be the answer to the&#13;
storage problem. Salt is extremely&#13;
water - soluble, is highly&#13;
corrosive and cannot hold&#13;
radionuclides effectively. When&#13;
Continued On P age Three&#13;
Fashions&#13;
Old Market Square&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd. &#13;
RANGER&#13;
National student&#13;
Thursday, December 11,1980&#13;
The 20-year-old University of&#13;
Wisconsin state student&#13;
association, United Council, was&#13;
one of the more than 25 state&#13;
student lobbying organizations&#13;
which met at the University of&#13;
Kansas October 24-26 to create a&#13;
new national student&#13;
organization, The National&#13;
Alliance of State Student&#13;
Nuclear power&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
wastes are stored in this manner&#13;
there is the possibility that radioactive&#13;
materials will leach out&#13;
in months rather than thousands&#13;
of years, as previously assumed.&#13;
When this leaching occurs there is&#13;
also the possibility that the waste&#13;
will escape from the container,&#13;
filter down through the fissures in&#13;
the rock and underground&#13;
aquifiers into rivers and waterways.&#13;
Ultimately they will reach&#13;
the oceans. There are also many&#13;
unforeseen factors which could&#13;
lead to a disaster from the storage&#13;
of these very hazardous wastes&#13;
which are generated from the&#13;
"benign" energy source.&#13;
The accusation is often made&#13;
against anti-nuclear people that&#13;
they are anti - establishment and&#13;
anti - scientific. This is done to&#13;
paint a negative picture of those&#13;
who oppose this type of energy.&#13;
However, can one really be accused&#13;
of being anti - establishment&#13;
for realizing the very grave threat&#13;
that nuclear power poses? There&#13;
are many scientists who were&#13;
once devoted to the nuclear industry&#13;
who left after coming to the&#13;
conclusion that nuclear power is&#13;
not the answer. Are those&#13;
scientists anti - establishment as&#13;
well? Senator John Glenn recently&#13;
expressed similar reservations&#13;
about nuclear power. Does this&#13;
make John Glenn just another anti&#13;
- establishment villain?&#13;
sophomores&#13;
COLLEGE.&#13;
Army ROTC offers you a&#13;
two - year management&#13;
training program during&#13;
college. To give you a head&#13;
start on life after college.&#13;
You'll learn to lead. To&#13;
manage people, money and&#13;
material. You'll also earn a&#13;
commission as an Army officer.&#13;
Credentials which will&#13;
set you apart in the job&#13;
market.&#13;
Whatever you're planning to&#13;
do after college, Army ROTC&#13;
provides career opportunities&#13;
that fit right in . . . part-time&#13;
Reserve service while you're&#13;
employed in the civilian&#13;
community or full - time&#13;
active duty starting at $11,000&#13;
per year.&#13;
Get a head start on life after&#13;
college. Get started in Army&#13;
ROTC. For details, contact:&#13;
Enrollment Officer&#13;
Military Science Dept.&#13;
Marquette U.&#13;
1-224-7195&#13;
THE ARMY ROTC&#13;
TWO-YEAR PR06RAM.&#13;
FOR THE&#13;
SliO LIFE.&#13;
Associations (NASSA). The&#13;
conference, according to United&#13;
Council Administration Director&#13;
Terry Lohr, was held to build&#13;
student lobbying and&#13;
organizational power for student&#13;
governments on the state level.&#13;
Lohr, who was elected to serve&#13;
on the Executive Committee on&#13;
NASSA said the conference was&#13;
"a significant and historic event&#13;
in the national student movement.&#13;
Students as an interest group on&#13;
the state and national level have&#13;
never been more organized."&#13;
United Council, one of the first&#13;
state student associations to&#13;
organize in 1960, is respected&#13;
nationwide, according to Bob&#13;
Bingham, the elected Chairperson&#13;
of NASSA. " If we had the same&#13;
kind of organization nationwide as&#13;
United Council has in Wisconsin,&#13;
students would be one of the most&#13;
powerful interest groups in&#13;
Washington, D.C.," said&#13;
Bingham.&#13;
NASSA is the creation of two&#13;
grows&#13;
national student organizations&#13;
tha t sponsored the conference, the&#13;
United State Student Association,&#13;
(USSA) and the National Student&#13;
Educational Fund (NSEF), according&#13;
to Joe Sweeney, project&#13;
director for NSEF.&#13;
Sweeney said that NSEF&#13;
received a grant of $113, 000 from&#13;
the Carnegie Foundation to&#13;
sponsor the USSA Development&#13;
Fund which helped NASSA get&#13;
organized. "Last summer USSA&#13;
and NSEF voted to form a&#13;
national organization that could&#13;
help give technical assistance to&#13;
state student associations like&#13;
Wisconsin's United Council," said&#13;
Sweeney.&#13;
NASSA is important for several&#13;
reasons, according to Sweeney:&#13;
"Individual student governments&#13;
cannot realistically expect to&#13;
address the increasingly complex&#13;
number of issues facing higher&#13;
education today. By organizing&#13;
collectively to address these&#13;
issues, they will become more&#13;
effective."&#13;
The USSA was formed in 1978&#13;
when the National Student&#13;
Association (formed in 1946)&#13;
merged with the National Student&#13;
Lobby (formed in 1971) at the&#13;
annual national student congress.&#13;
Doug Tuthill, National Chair of&#13;
USSA, believes that state student&#13;
associations will be the key&#13;
building blocks of USSA an d the&#13;
national student movement.&#13;
Racine express stopped&#13;
During finals and registration,&#13;
the Racine express bus will not be&#13;
running. Only one bus will be&#13;
available at 7:20 a. m. and 8:30 a.&#13;
m. The second express will be put&#13;
back on the same schedule when&#13;
spring semester begins.&#13;
If any students experience bus&#13;
overload problems, they should&#13;
contact Ronald Brinkmann at 553-&#13;
2455 immediately so that the&#13;
problem can be rectified.&#13;
Pomazal tenure denied&#13;
Richard Pomazal, assistant&#13;
professor of p sychology, appealed&#13;
his tenure denial to the Board of&#13;
Regents to no avail.&#13;
The Board, during a Nov. 7&#13;
meeting, decided, "that the Board&#13;
of Regents considers the Chancellor's&#13;
decision to be final under&#13;
UWS 3.08 (3), Wisconsin Administrative&#13;
Code, and declines to&#13;
give further consideration to the&#13;
matter referred to in (Pomazel's)&#13;
letter of A ugust 5."&#13;
vJ ACADEMY OF BATON A DANCE&#13;
Headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits, |&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights §&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — T ap Shoes — |&#13;
. All Dancing Supplies&#13;
Christmas—&#13;
H Time for Love and Giving.&#13;
For Something Special:&#13;
Unique Gifts&#13;
uptown&#13;
kenosha Jewelry&#13;
#/HDV39 aiDsnw 33SOO,, Records&#13;
A HOLIDAY TRADITION.&#13;
Be sure to bring some old friends home for the holidays. Look for&#13;
the Budweiser.Clydesdales at your favorite store. They're bringing&#13;
you a convenient way to buy Bud for all your holiday guests!&#13;
THIS BUD'S FOR YOU&#13;
E.F MADRIGRANO&#13;
1831- 55th St&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
658-3553 &#13;
4 Thursday, December 11,1980 RANGER&#13;
Coming Events From the Parking Lot&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 11&#13;
CONCERT at 1 pm in the Union Cinema featuring the Parkside Percussion and&#13;
Guitar Ensembles. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 12&#13;
DANCE featuring "Muscle Beach" at 8 pm in Union Square. In advance, admission&#13;
is $1.50 for students, $2.00 for others, $2.50 at the door. Tickets are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center. ID cards are required.&#13;
MOVIE "Heroes" will be shown at 8 pm in the Union Cinema. Admission at the door&#13;
is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 13&#13;
CONCERT with the Racine Symphony Orchestra at 8 pm in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. Admission will be charged at the door.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 14&#13;
MOVIE "Heroes" will be repeated at 7:30 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Dec. 15&#13;
BASKETBALL vs. UW-Milwaukee at 7:30 pm. In advance, admission is $1.50 for&#13;
Parkside students and $2.00 for others. Tickets are available at the Union Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT at 9:15 pm in Union Square featuring "R &amp; B " Rhythm and&#13;
Blues Band. Admission is free with your basketball ticket. The same ticket entitles&#13;
you to a free beer or soda. Sponsored by Student Life.&#13;
A letter to Santa&#13;
by G. Helgeson and&#13;
Assorted Staff Members&#13;
It's that time of year again, so&#13;
here's our list. We were going to&#13;
ask you for the usual stuff&#13;
(Lamborghinis and Texas instrument&#13;
calculators) but times&#13;
are tough this year and we figured&#13;
it's been no picnic for you, either.&#13;
We know you have to pay all those&#13;
elves and your materials costs&#13;
must be skyrocketing. It's no&#13;
wonder you don't supply batteries!&#13;
&#13;
Anyway, after some deep&#13;
digging into our consciences, we&#13;
shortened our list considerably.&#13;
Here it is:&#13;
Ex-editor Susan Stevens wants&#13;
to be recognized for the beauty of&#13;
her fine mind, not because she's&#13;
cute and a has-been.&#13;
Ken Meyer, Editor, wants a&#13;
meaningful relationship with a&#13;
significant other person of the&#13;
opposite sex of his choice (and&#13;
dreams); he deserves a 12-page&#13;
paper, too.&#13;
Brian Felland, Chairman of the&#13;
Board of Directors, wants a Board&#13;
meeting without jokes, with applause&#13;
at the end and a dramatic&#13;
exit, including a beautiful sunset&#13;
and sad music.&#13;
Dan Galbraith, Business&#13;
Manager, wants a winning entry&#13;
in the Homemaker's Tuna Dessert&#13;
Recipe Contest worth $5,000,000,&#13;
and a bottle of Quaaludes.&#13;
Sue Michetti, News Editor,&#13;
wants a meaningful relationship&#13;
with a significant person of the&#13;
opposite sex who can write "A"&#13;
term papers.&#13;
Wendy Westphal, Feature&#13;
Editor, wants a shadow for Mike&#13;
to make sure he goes to class and&#13;
a stylish movie critic.&#13;
Dave Cramer, Sports Editor,&#13;
wants a new position on Ranger as&#13;
Gossip Columnist.&#13;
Brian Passino, Photo Editor,&#13;
wants another adventure, somone&#13;
to share it with and some&#13;
nuerotransmitter altering&#13;
chemicals. Possibly all the same&#13;
thing.&#13;
Ginger Helgeson, Copy Editor,&#13;
wants a meaningless relationship&#13;
with an insignificant other person&#13;
of the opposite sex or an IBM&#13;
typewriter, whichever is cheaper.&#13;
Mike Farrel, Ad Manager,&#13;
wants all the ads in Happenings&#13;
and a managership at Ponderosa.&#13;
Pete Cramer, "Ace" Sports&#13;
Writer, wants $50,000 a year for&#13;
life and a degree from Parkside.&#13;
That's a lot to ask for, Santa, but&#13;
he promised to put us all in his will&#13;
so we'd really appreciate it.&#13;
Doug Edenhauser, Sports&#13;
Writer, wants the Wreckreator of&#13;
the Year Award. Boy, does he&#13;
deserve it, Santa.&#13;
Lori Meyer, Classified Ad&#13;
Manager, wants readable&#13;
classifieds.&#13;
Mike Holmdohl, Photographer,&#13;
wants a camera motor - drive that&#13;
works and a working internship&#13;
with the National Enquirer.&#13;
Dan McCormack, Photographer,&#13;
wants Laura and&#13;
"total annihilation of the world."&#13;
Yes, Santa, that's what he said.&#13;
Bruce Preston, Feature Writer,&#13;
wants "no more patronizing&#13;
remarks" and How to Defend&#13;
Yourself From Verbal Attacks by&#13;
the Ranger Staff.&#13;
Remember, there's no fireplace&#13;
or even a chimney in the office —&#13;
we'll leave the key taped on the&#13;
door for you. The milk and cookies&#13;
will be on the first desk on the left.&#13;
Have a good Christmas, Santa&#13;
dear.&#13;
Love,&#13;
The Ranger Staff&#13;
Albums contain good to mediocre music&#13;
by Carol Klees&#13;
The Tremblers are the general&#13;
fare you can expect to hear on a&#13;
night out on the town, and never&#13;
seem to rise above that level on&#13;
their first album, "Twice&#13;
Nightly." Their second album, if&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
AAAIN O FFICE&#13;
AUTO B ANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.l.C.&#13;
they ever record it, can only get&#13;
better.&#13;
They seem to muddle their way&#13;
through "Twice Nightly," and&#13;
their hit-and-miss music is mostly&#13;
misses or near-misses. If the&#13;
lyrics are semi-decent, the&#13;
.melody is mundane, and viceversa.&#13;
By rights, this group should&#13;
still be hitting their local bars as&#13;
often as the title suggests, or&#13;
more.&#13;
On the other hand, Steve Forbert&#13;
is about five times better than&#13;
the Tremblers. He's not a great&#13;
musician yet, I doubt that he will&#13;
be, but he is good. In his latest&#13;
effort, "Little Stevie Orbit," he&#13;
attains a middle-of-the-road&#13;
quality, and stays there through&#13;
most of the album's cuts, which&#13;
range in style from country to&#13;
rock to blues.&#13;
There is such great variety in&#13;
his music that something is bound&#13;
to hit on almost anyone's interests.&#13;
Apparently, he has&#13;
decided to elude the reputation of&#13;
being a one-style performer, but&#13;
this hinders the flow of music in&#13;
"Orbit." There's just too much on&#13;
the album to be comfortable to&#13;
any one listener, and nothing&#13;
above average in all that variety.&#13;
Promotion for these albums&#13;
hasn't been very emphasized; it&#13;
will take more than a casual&#13;
glance to find them in the stores.&#13;
Forbert is pleasant at best, The&#13;
Tremblers need to work at their&#13;
music. Unless a taste for the good&#13;
to mediocre has been acquired,&#13;
consider your funds before&#13;
picking up on either of. these.&#13;
OUR EVERYDAY PRICES ARE LOWER&#13;
THAN OTHER'S "DISCOUNT PRICES"&#13;
COME IN &amp; COMPARE&#13;
Christmas Hours&#13;
starting December 6&#13;
MONDAY-FRIDAY9:30to9:00&#13;
SATURDAY 9:30 to 5:15&#13;
SUNDAY 12:00 to4:00&#13;
THE STORE WITH MORE —&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST JEWELER&#13;
• SPECIALS *&#13;
WOMEN'S FRENCH&#13;
CUTTEES-6 COLORS&#13;
J&#13;
l&#13;
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BRING IN THIS AD&#13;
TO RECEIVE THESE&#13;
SPECIAL PRICES&#13;
VALID UNTIL&#13;
DECEMBER20th ONLY&#13;
HERBERT'S!! Transfer&#13;
CORNER 58th ST. &amp; 7th AVE.&#13;
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Old Market Square&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
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Elmwood Plaza Racine&#13;
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• Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
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For Your&#13;
Christmas Needs&#13;
Academy of Baton &amp; Dance&#13;
Audio Systems&#13;
Bidinger's&#13;
Flowers by Joseph&#13;
C &amp; R Auto Service&#13;
Kenosha Savings &amp; Loan&#13;
Leader Store&#13;
Rec Center&#13;
Union&#13;
Herbert's&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
Ruffolo's&#13;
Sheridan Pro Shop&#13;
Madrigrano's&#13;
Guttormsen's Pro Shop&#13;
Warn Bam Singing Telegram&#13;
Celebre's Pro Shop&#13;
Transfer Fashions&#13;
Jerry Smith's Produce&#13;
&amp; Gifts&#13;
Rainbow&#13;
May Beverage&#13;
assures was &#13;
Review&#13;
RANGER Thursday, December 11,1980&#13;
..£!??!? Gordon' achieves fantasy feeling&#13;
iding outrageous sums of The film'sT" nGXt&#13;
" "Saturday Night Fever" is to * ' "&#13;
r to make a movie nims humor is'at. first « i _ T e /ever is 10 w _&#13;
Spending outrageous sums of&#13;
money to make a movie doesn't&#13;
always insure its success ("1941"&#13;
and more recently "Heaven's&#13;
Gate"), yet some directors still&#13;
insist on spending absurd amounts&#13;
in hopes of drawing large crowds&#13;
at the box. Producer Dino De&#13;
Laurentiis has recently coupled&#13;
this practice with subject matter&#13;
which he feels will be a big draw&#13;
He has already produced such&#13;
forgettable flops as "Orca" and&#13;
the remake of "King Kong." But&#13;
De Laurentiis may have hit upon&#13;
something this time with "Flash&#13;
Gordon".&#13;
The plot is simple. Ming the&#13;
Merciless (Max Van Sydow) is&#13;
destroying the earth, while Flash&#13;
Gordon (Sam Jones) and Dale&#13;
Arden (Melody Anderson) are led&#13;
to Mongo by Dr. Hans Zarkow&#13;
(Ornella Muti) to try and save the&#13;
earth. What makes it interesting is&#13;
that all of the inhabitants of&#13;
Mongo are violently against each&#13;
other and are forced to be loyal to&#13;
Ming. When Flash appeals to the&#13;
Hawkmen for help, you don't&#13;
know whether they are going to&#13;
capture him or aide him, as is the&#13;
case with the Forestmen and&#13;
everybody else or Mongo. This&#13;
type of confusion holds your attention,&#13;
as you try to figure out it seems the trend since&#13;
S ENVIRONMENT PLANT CART&#13;
| IN O LD MARKET SQUARE&#13;
th. r,&#13;
appen next&#13;
-&#13;
lifS S umor is&#13;
"&#13;
at first a&#13;
httle corny (the football - fight&#13;
Pected and becomes&#13;
^expected&#13;
and entertaining. There is&#13;
quite a bfi of sexual innuendo as in&#13;
the rites of passage scene, which&#13;
"Flash? i° thoug&#13;
ht that&#13;
cult fUm may become a&#13;
and&#13;
l&#13;
rfff?&#13;
borate cos&#13;
tumes, sets&#13;
and effects mjx to give a feeling of&#13;
a cross between "The Wizard of&#13;
Uz and "Star Wars". Some&#13;
scenes and music seem to be&#13;
Sr? o f from&#13;
"&#13;
The Empire&#13;
Strikes Back." So many different&#13;
colors and images come your way&#13;
that you get the same fantasy&#13;
feeling achieved when Dorothy&#13;
first stepped from her black - and -&#13;
white house into the vivid colors of&#13;
Munchkinland.&#13;
Although some of the effects are&#13;
elaborate, such as the colors of the&#13;
iJ\!£?&#13;
ny are reminiscent of the&#13;
old Flash Gordon" serial. This&#13;
could have worked, but instead it&#13;
comes across as if De Laurentiis&#13;
was too cheap to hire a good gaffer&#13;
(special effects person) and&#13;
copped out by showing things&#13;
such as space craftlandings as thev&#13;
were done in the primitive days of&#13;
film making when the serial was&#13;
made.&#13;
It seems the trend since&#13;
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•&#13;
"Saturday Night Fever" is to&#13;
have a top vocal group do a&#13;
movie's soundtrack. And although&#13;
Queen's music has a big drawing&#13;
effect for "Flash", many fans will&#13;
be disappointed to hear that they&#13;
only sing one song. They do many&#13;
heavy metal backgrounds, but&#13;
only vocalize at the beginning and&#13;
at the end with the same song.&#13;
All the actors and actresses are&#13;
perfect in their roles. Although a&#13;
few of the characters' personalities&#13;
are slightly altered to fit&#13;
with the '80's (Dale is a more&#13;
modern, more bold woman, and&#13;
Flash is a slightly cocky quarterback&#13;
who has his picture on the&#13;
cover of People) many are held&#13;
true to the old series.&#13;
One thing that differs from the&#13;
old series that is unnecessary is&#13;
the exploitation of Flash's body.&#13;
He appears topless and even in&#13;
leather underwear. This obvious&#13;
"beefcaking" is another of De.&#13;
Laurentiis' ploys to capture an&#13;
audience and it succeeds to the&#13;
squeals of many pre - pubescent&#13;
female fans.&#13;
The ending is full of surprises&#13;
and has a Christmas message of&#13;
peace. But it also contains&#13;
something which taunted many&#13;
Empire Strikes Back" viewers:&#13;
a "to be continued" type ending&#13;
(the words at the close of the film&#13;
read "the end?").&#13;
"Flash Gordon" is a fantasy to&#13;
be enjoyed for what it is: a good&#13;
time for the child in all of us&#13;
(although an obvious attempt at&#13;
making money).&#13;
m&#13;
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6 Thursday, December 11,1980 RANGER&#13;
II Pot" goes to court I Student values change&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
National Organization for the&#13;
Reform of Marijuana Laws&#13;
(NORML), a non - profit public&#13;
interest group, has several major&#13;
lawsuits currently pending in the&#13;
courts.&#13;
On June 19,1980, NORML filed a&#13;
lawsuit in Federal District Court&#13;
in Washington, D. C. focusing on&#13;
the Sinsemilla Strike Force set up&#13;
by state and federal officials in&#13;
California. Hopefully, the suit will&#13;
stop the U. S. Drug Enforcement&#13;
Administration and other federal&#13;
agencies from aiding eradication&#13;
programs against marijuana&#13;
fields in the U. S.&#13;
The suit states that the U. S.&#13;
Constitution and environmental&#13;
laws are being violated with the&#13;
help of federal money and other&#13;
assistance. The Sinsemilla Strike&#13;
Force uses airplanes, helicopters,&#13;
high - technology aerial surveillance&#13;
systems, and undercover&#13;
agents.&#13;
Peter H. Meyers, NORML's&#13;
chief counsel, said that, "We&#13;
consider this program to be both&#13;
illegal and a waste of tax - payer&#13;
dollars."&#13;
NORML is currently&#13;
challenging the classification of&#13;
marijuana in Schedule I of the&#13;
Federal Controlled Substances&#13;
Act in another pending lawsuit.&#13;
This schedule is the classification&#13;
with the strictest controls, dealing&#13;
with drugs lacking any accepted&#13;
medical use.&#13;
Another lawsuit challenges a 40&#13;
year sentence levied for the sale of&#13;
less than nine ounces of&#13;
marijuana in Virginia. This is the&#13;
Roger Davis Case.&#13;
In an earlier case, the District&#13;
Court ordered the State Department&#13;
to prepare an environmental&#13;
assessment of paraquat spraying.&#13;
NORML currently has an appeal&#13;
in court which challenges the U. S.&#13;
government's assistance in the&#13;
Mexican paraquat spraying above&#13;
marijuana fields.&#13;
Additional information can be&#13;
obtained by writing NORML, 530&#13;
8th Street, S. E., Washington, D.&#13;
C. 20003 or by calling (202) 223-&#13;
3170.&#13;
Education program offered&#13;
Parkside students wishing to&#13;
earn 1-2 credits in Education, plus&#13;
actual classroom type experience,&#13;
will be able to do so during spring&#13;
semester 1981, when selected&#13;
students will administer a&#13;
prepared career development&#13;
program to junior high school&#13;
students in the Racine Unified&#13;
School System.&#13;
The program, under the&#13;
direction of Professor Dwayne&#13;
Olson, is sponsored by the Girl&#13;
Scouts of Racine County, Inc. and&#13;
is being initiated through the&#13;
cooperation of area guidance&#13;
counselors.&#13;
Interested students should&#13;
contact Prof. Dwayne Olson at&#13;
Parkside or call Rusty Smith at&#13;
633-2409 before the end of this&#13;
semester.&#13;
by Mike Pfaffl&#13;
William Boyd, Johnson Foundation&#13;
President and former&#13;
President of the University of&#13;
Oregon, began the new cycle of&#13;
Social Science Roundtable&#13;
programs on Monday, November&#13;
3rd, by discussing "The Post -&#13;
Modern Student: The Berkeley&#13;
Experience."&#13;
In his discussion of changing&#13;
student attitudes during the last&#13;
two decades, Boyd drew on his&#13;
experience at the University of&#13;
California at Berkeley as Vice -&#13;
Chancellor for Student Affairs&#13;
from 1966 to 1968. Boyd opened the&#13;
talk with a view of the traditional&#13;
university before the Sixties&#13;
movement. The university student&#13;
population, he said, was consistently&#13;
traditional and conservative&#13;
during the "silent&#13;
generation" of the Fifties.&#13;
During this period, Boyd said,&#13;
three types of student groups&#13;
existed. The collegiate type, a&#13;
"Greek" sub-culture dominated&#13;
by fraternities and sororities,&#13;
Boyd compared to students&#13;
protrayed in the movie "Animal&#13;
House." The vocational student,&#13;
Boyd said, came into college with&#13;
goals already in mind, and these&#13;
students created few problems for&#13;
school administrators. The intellectual&#13;
students were the&#13;
"Professors' Delights," Boyd&#13;
said, because they craved&#13;
knowledge of all kinds.&#13;
During the late Fifties and early&#13;
Sixties, many issues began to&#13;
erode these traditional student&#13;
groups, according to Boyd. Civil&#13;
rights movements and voter&#13;
registration efforts brought about&#13;
v v j r PRECISION&#13;
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FEEL GREAT&#13;
LOOK YOUR&#13;
E ST FOR THE&#13;
HOLIDAYS&#13;
GUYS&amp;GIRLS&#13;
Ph. 654-6154&#13;
Art faculty wins prizes&#13;
Two Parkside art faculty members&#13;
were among award winners&#13;
in the recent Wisconsin Watercolor&#13;
'80 show at the Wustum&#13;
Museum of Fine Arts in Racine.&#13;
Doug De Vinny won a $75&#13;
Wisconsin Watercolor Society&#13;
award for excellence for his&#13;
Variation on a Landscape - Racine&#13;
#1 and #2. Dennis Bayuzixck&#13;
received an honorable mention for&#13;
his acrylic and ink airbrush,&#13;
Resurrection of Jo - Jo.&#13;
De Vinny also has been&#13;
represented this fall in an exhibit&#13;
C&amp;R AUTO SERVICE&#13;
Quality Auto Work&#13;
Done At&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
10% OFF FOR&#13;
UW-P STUDENTS&#13;
Call 553-9092or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00&#13;
of his prints and drawings at&#13;
Colorado State University, Fort&#13;
Collins.&#13;
a new awareness among the poor&#13;
and disadvantaged, Boyd said,&#13;
that carried over to universities&#13;
during the early Sixties. Student&#13;
awareness, Boyd said, was then&#13;
triggered by the 1964 "free speech&#13;
movement" and the beginning of&#13;
the Vietnam conflict.&#13;
As a result, some students&#13;
became "activists," Boyd said.&#13;
According to him, these students&#13;
had strong intellectual desires,&#13;
valued personal freedom highly,&#13;
did not desire material wealth,&#13;
and felt a high level of anxiety.&#13;
Activists, Boyd said, defined&#13;
themselves as critical, idealistic,&#13;
moody, rebellious, and restless.&#13;
During the development of the&#13;
activist student population in&#13;
America, one half of the student&#13;
population in America was under&#13;
25 y ears old, and activist values&#13;
affected the values of other groups&#13;
of students, Boyd said. Presentmindedness&#13;
became important,&#13;
Boyd said, as students became&#13;
concerned with the quality of life&#13;
rather than long-term material&#13;
goals.&#13;
Personalism also became&#13;
valued during the Sixties, as&#13;
students became concerned with&#13;
the authenticity of personal&#13;
relationships. Today's cliches —&#13;
"I can relate to that " and&#13;
"meaningful relationships" —&#13;
came out of this time, Boyd&#13;
stated. These values, Boyd said,&#13;
conflicted with government&#13;
beaurocracy, which he called,&#13;
"dominated by conflicting individual&#13;
and organizational&#13;
goals."&#13;
Boyd said that sexual permissiveness&#13;
increased on campuses&#13;
as students became more&#13;
pleasure-oriented. He cited&#13;
students' mass consumption of&#13;
drugs.as a cause for the abandonment&#13;
of the work ethic and&#13;
subsequent student hedonism.&#13;
Conversely, Boyd said that&#13;
activist students wanted to get&#13;
involved in every aspect of the&#13;
university and community. This&#13;
trend was the beginning of antiintellectualism,&#13;
according to&#13;
Boyd, a period when effective and&#13;
non-cognitive learning became&#13;
stressed. This was the period that&#13;
started many cult groups, he said,&#13;
and horoscopes were a common&#13;
appearance in student&#13;
newspapers.&#13;
These new values were spread&#13;
by romanticists, Boyd said,&#13;
who were journalists, media&#13;
professionals, professors,&#13;
and Sixties liberals. Popular&#13;
music spread these&#13;
values, according to Boyd.&#13;
Rock music by Jefferson Airplane,&#13;
Janis Joplin, and The&#13;
Doors, and musicals like "Hair"&#13;
and "Jesus Christ Superstar" all&#13;
contributed to the spread of new&#13;
values and awareness into the&#13;
daily lives of Americans, Boyd&#13;
said.&#13;
Boyd said that by the early&#13;
Seventies, blue collar workers&#13;
joined the student activist&#13;
movement, and their children&#13;
were heir to their parents' values.&#13;
Although Boyd is still trying to&#13;
find out how the student&#13;
movements of the Sixties have&#13;
affected today's American&#13;
society, he thinks there has been a&#13;
"dangerously high" level of&#13;
abandonment of the Protestant&#13;
work ethic due to the values&#13;
created by the Sixties and carried&#13;
over into the Seventies. Boyd said&#13;
that problems created by the&#13;
desertion of traditional values&#13;
were first noticed in the&#13;
classrooms of the Sixties, and are&#13;
now evident in the assembly lines&#13;
in Detroit. He stated that the drop&#13;
in productivity that has occurred&#13;
during the last decade can be&#13;
linked to these new values: "We&#13;
have been far more affected than&#13;
we realize and this will be a great&#13;
distress to our lives in the long&#13;
run."&#13;
Sign Up NOW&#13;
For A&#13;
Winter Bowling&#13;
League&#13;
Sunday Mixed League&#13;
— Begins January 31st —&#13;
Every-Other Friday Mixed League&#13;
— Begins January 30th —&#13;
For More Information&#13;
Or To Sign Up&#13;
Stop By The Recreation Desk&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
HARVEY'S going to be sorry he took the&#13;
Diesel back.&#13;
ORGY QUEEN, UCLA doesn't know what&#13;
he's missing!&#13;
FOR UNHEALTHY COBOL KNIGHTS: Get&#13;
into new Greek education routines.&#13;
JEFF MANIAN, have you found your true&#13;
love, again, yet!?&#13;
JEFF — the Ferret has its bounce back.&#13;
Missed you. Ferret.&#13;
ARE THERE any females at Parkside&#13;
Village?—No, just ugly wenches!! TA&#13;
YOU NEVER see MEN at Parkside Village&#13;
because we don't hang around the ugly&#13;
female WENCHES. TA&#13;
HARVEY'S going to be.sorry he took the&#13;
diesel back.&#13;
TEN TELETYPES type ten types of type.&#13;
Ten times fast.&#13;
JEFF AND DAWN, sitting in a tub, k-i-s-s,&#13;
rub-a-dub-dub.&#13;
ANGEL ANKA knobby ankle angle angles&#13;
askew. Ten times fast.&#13;
I'M NOT CHANGING my diaper, or me. I&#13;
hope my jokes really hurt next time, you&#13;
stupid turkey — The Joker&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV, beggers can't be&#13;
choosers! lOP's&#13;
KIM, lubrication and lots of men spell fun.&#13;
Orgy Queen&#13;
JULIE — cute monkey buns, but you still&#13;
have more experience.&#13;
BILL TATMAN, talks easily to girls and guys.&#13;
Dick? Teeth! 634-0989 and ask for piss. Put&#13;
him to bed, too.&#13;
JULIE NEHMER, what do you eat, when you&#13;
eat chicken???&#13;
ORGY QUEEN: You've missed J. C. and the&#13;
rest of us, stop by, we'll be home! TA-216&#13;
KEN MEYER should be sprayed, spayed and&#13;
layed. Chain Gang&#13;
P. G. HOOKER — Twin sons. Nov. 1, 1980 . 9&#13;
lbs, 4 oz. Congratulations!&#13;
HAVING PROBLEMS with your tongue? Call&#13;
Julie 632-2652.&#13;
JEFF Pair-a-dice is a typical SALLY at the&#13;
Lounge.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
HARVEY'S going to be sorry he took the&#13;
Diesel back.&#13;
TWO NIPPLES equal one byte. lOP's&#13;
RANGER challenges Cheerleaders to&#13;
volleyball. See ya on the floor.&#13;
L. HEIN — We'll be careful, aim better,&#13;
O.K.?—The Kids&#13;
IF YOU can't reach Ron Hill at home, call&#13;
Open Pantry on Rapids - 637-8230.&#13;
K. M. wears Pinocchio underwear, but he&#13;
never tells a lie.&#13;
HEY BILL. He'll give what's in his drawers. .&#13;
. KJ&#13;
SUE C. You're a great cheerleader.&#13;
BILL, Tongue, 360 degrees, camera!! Julie&#13;
lOP'S — Dec compatibility. Thanks a lot for a&#13;
fun week. Ferret&#13;
JOHN —Sexy black shorts, ooh! Watch out at&#13;
waterfountain. Twins&#13;
HARVEY'S going to be sorry he took the&#13;
Diesel back.&#13;
ANYONE dumb enought to insult the Joker,&#13;
will also deal with me. The Riddler&#13;
SABINE the teenage witch is too "adventurous"&#13;
for us. lOP's&#13;
THUMPER, was the party in the house or&#13;
car? Bambi&#13;
JUNIE — tired Mondays? Six guys from&#13;
Marquette Friday - Saturday. L.S.S.&#13;
HOW CAN Security shoot us? They have to&#13;
run to Tallent to get their bullets! lOP's&#13;
JEFF, what happened to your true love&#13;
, again?&#13;
RANGER and Security: Don't "tread" on us.&#13;
lOP's&#13;
HARVEY'S going to be sorry he took the&#13;
Diesel back.&#13;
CHUG, Do you always sleep in Beloit cornfields&#13;
waiting for a tequila sunrise? If not,&#13;
try the monastery by the overpass. They&#13;
serve mm-mm good onion rings. PSS&#13;
KATHY N. Help! J.C.&#13;
IF YOU CALLED to help Ron Hill and line&#13;
was busy, go to 2062 Wustem Ave to help in&#13;
person.&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV, there's no accounting&#13;
for taste! Chain Gang&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
-Records—Sheet Music-&#13;
—Instruction MusicLowest&#13;
Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654-293'&gt; »&#13;
THE CHAIN GANG proves that true!!&#13;
BROKEN DECWRITER. Thought it was toy.&#13;
Broke bell. Inquire CA 120&#13;
JEFF —Act I S cene 3 go for it, lunge! Ferret&#13;
MARY, I love you! Me&#13;
GINGER — read the "For Unhealthy ... ad&#13;
very carefully. Chain Groupies&#13;
SEE YA ALL later Ranger gang. It was fun.&#13;
Dave&#13;
MERRY CHRISTMAS EVERYBODY! —&#13;
Ranger staff&#13;
MEETINGS&#13;
RANGER MEMBERS - There will be a&#13;
general membership meeting on Friday,&#13;
January 30, 1981, at 1:00p. m. in the Ranger&#13;
Office.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
OLYMPUS —OM —2, Vivltar 283 flash, 50 m&#13;
1.4 lens, accessories — 551-9095&#13;
1980 SUZUKI 550L, Black, very clean. Call&#13;
553 9262 after 4 p. m.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
WANTED: Anybody interested in modeling&#13;
for a photographer. Call 637-2274,&gt;[ • go&#13;
ROOMMATE NEEDED: To share nice&#13;
furnished apartment in Kenosha area. Age&#13;
preferred 20-35. Please call Jim evenings or&#13;
weekends. 658-3686.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
WALK, TALK AND ASSIST retired (blind)&#13;
college teacher in straightening out his&#13;
library. Earn while you learn. Call 694-2251&#13;
for appointment.&#13;
HELPWANTED&#13;
EARN $1,000 OR MORE for a few evenings&#13;
work. No selling. Just hang posters on your&#13;
campus advertising our half price tours of&#13;
Europe. For details, write: Travel Study&#13;
International, 2030 East 4800 South, Suite&#13;
101, Salt Lake City, Utah 84117.&#13;
MEMBER PRO BOWLERS TOUR&#13;
LOU CELEBRE&#13;
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Everything&#13;
Clearance Priced&#13;
For Christmas&#13;
Some Of The&#13;
Lowest Prices&#13;
In Town&#13;
6821 39th Ave.&#13;
Kenosha, Wl 53142&#13;
(414 ) 652-4043 &#13;
Women's basketball&#13;
Team drops season opener&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
Coach Noreen Goggin might be&#13;
in for a long season this year with&#13;
her team of 13 players. Goggin has&#13;
only three letter winners coming&#13;
back; Jeanne Hintz, Debbie Lopez&#13;
and Laurie Pope, all sophomores.&#13;
The remaining ten players are&#13;
freshmen. Simply put, the team&#13;
lacks experience.&#13;
"We may be young," Goggin&#13;
said, "but we're talented. We need&#13;
a little experience. If we get beat&#13;
it may be because of our lack of&#13;
quickness and height, not just our&#13;
inexperience."&#13;
Parkside possesses ju st one s ix&#13;
footer on the team, returning&#13;
center, Laurie Pope. The 6'1" 185 -&#13;
pound center may have the bulk&#13;
required of a center, but she lacks&#13;
the necessary quickness.&#13;
Goggins isn't extremely worried&#13;
about going into the season with&#13;
ten freshmen, and realizes she&#13;
must try to turn this shortcoming&#13;
into an advantage. "Sure, we have&#13;
ten freshmen but I can't do&#13;
anything about that. We'll try to&#13;
do the best we can, and with a&#13;
young, excited team, we should&#13;
be able to make a lot of good&#13;
things happen," she commented.&#13;
The Rangers opened their&#13;
season l ast week against an experienced&#13;
Oshkosh team, and&#13;
there was an evident contrast&#13;
between a veteran team and a new&#13;
team. Oshkosh won 86-68.&#13;
Oshkosh jumped out to a&#13;
commanding 44-30 halftime lead,&#13;
paced by Jodi Eissen's 13 points.&#13;
The timing was right for the young&#13;
Ranger team to fold, but they&#13;
fought back in the second half. Six&#13;
minutes into the second half, the&#13;
women were down by a single&#13;
point, 46-45.&#13;
From that point on, it was a&#13;
matter of Oshkosh forging ahead&#13;
and Parkside fighting back. The&#13;
Rangers came within two points&#13;
Wrestling team&#13;
shows potential&#13;
with four minutes remaining in&#13;
the game, but that was the closest&#13;
they would get. In those last four&#13;
minutes Oshkosh hit nine&#13;
freethrows and scored two&#13;
baskets to run up their lead and&#13;
put the game out of r each.&#13;
Goggin was at a loss for words&#13;
to describe her team's breakdown:&#13;
"In the end, I don't know&#13;
what happened. We made some&#13;
fundamental mistakes, some bad&#13;
passes. They were silly errors."&#13;
Call it a lack of experience.&#13;
The Rangers shot a cool 40%&#13;
from the floor. Cindy Ruffert (8-12&#13;
from the floor) led Parkside with&#13;
18 point s. She was supported by&#13;
Callie Lee with 12 and Robin&#13;
Henschel's 11.&#13;
Oshkosh shot 46% from the floor&#13;
and had balanced scoring with&#13;
four of their starters finishing&#13;
with more than 15 points.&#13;
The Rangers are on the road&#13;
tomorrow against Stevens Point,&#13;
then travel to St. Francis for the&#13;
St. Francis Tourney. The next&#13;
home game is January 10, against&#13;
Carroll College.&#13;
by Dan McCormack&#13;
"Optimistic" is what Jim Koch,&#13;
Parkside's head wrestling coach&#13;
has to say to describe his feelings&#13;
about this years team. And why&#13;
shouldn't he be? He has two&#13;
returning NAIA place winners in&#13;
Dan Winter, a three time all -&#13;
American as a junior who placed&#13;
third the last two years in the&#13;
NAIA and seventh in the NCAA-II&#13;
meet; and Bob Pekarske who&#13;
placed second last year in NAIA&#13;
competition.&#13;
At the 118 pound weight class,&#13;
Koch expects some leadership&#13;
from senior Dean Quam. Junior&#13;
Jeff Debe, who wrestled&#13;
heavyweight last season, is at 190&#13;
this season. Both Quam and Debe&#13;
should be looking to place in&#13;
nationals if they can get over&#13;
early season injuries.&#13;
Sophomores Kevin Casper and&#13;
Dave Fedie and junior transfer&#13;
Ron Perron all vie for the 142&#13;
pound weight class.&#13;
At 126 are freshmen Dave&#13;
Carbajal and Tom Vania. At 158 is&#13;
freshman Mike Muckerheide and&#13;
at 167 are two freshmen, Rus&#13;
Drankiewicz and Keith Reicher.&#13;
At 177 are freshmen Ardell&#13;
Dworak and Brian Irek. Paul&#13;
Roth, who has been out of competition&#13;
for a few years, will&#13;
wrestle at heavyweight.&#13;
Last weekend, five Parkside&#13;
wrestlers placed in the Warhawk&#13;
Open held in Whitewater. Dan&#13;
Winter won the 134 pound weight&#13;
Merry Christmas&#13;
class and also the Outstanding&#13;
Wrestler of the Tournament&#13;
honors. At 126, Tom Vania, who&#13;
comes from Anchorage, Alaska,&#13;
captured second place. At. 158,&#13;
Mike Muckerheide, a freshman&#13;
from Westbend beat two very&#13;
experienced wrestlers for second&#13;
place. Heavyweight Paul Roth&#13;
placed second and also had the&#13;
fastest pin of the tournament in 20&#13;
seconds. At 167, Keith Reicher&#13;
placed third and won the award&#13;
for most pins with 4.&#13;
Coach Koch's goals for the&#13;
season a re to be in the top five&#13;
NAIA and top ten NCAA-II.&#13;
This Saturday Parkside hosts&#13;
the Wisconsin Collegiate Open&#13;
starting at 10 a.m., with finals&#13;
starting at 6:30 p.m.&#13;
Sheridan&#13;
PRE 5MHP&#13;
CHRISTMAS SPECIALS&#13;
CROWN JEWEL Reg. 42.95&#13;
NOW 36.95&#13;
"BRIEFCASE" Reg. 59.95&#13;
Double-bag NOW 49.95&#13;
20% off any single&#13;
Bag with purchase&#13;
of new ball&#13;
(Our bags carry a 3 year&#13;
guarantee)&#13;
GIFT CERTIFICATES&#13;
AVAILABLE&#13;
Precision Fitting&#13;
And Drilling&#13;
For The&#13;
Professional Edge&#13;
{The bowling ball&#13;
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Member of&#13;
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IN STOCK REG. 69.95&#13;
OUR PRICE 64.95&#13;
80th &amp; Sheridan -- Kenosha&#13;
(at Sheridan Lanes)&#13;
654-5999&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK HOURS&#13;
FOR THE RECCENTER&#13;
SAT.&#13;
SUN.&#13;
MON.&#13;
TUE.&#13;
WED.&#13;
THUR.&#13;
FRI.&#13;
JAN. 3, 10, 1 7&#13;
JAN. 4, 11, 18&#13;
JAN. 5, 12&#13;
JAN. 6, 13&#13;
JAN. 7, 14&#13;
JAN. 8, 15&#13;
JAN. 9, 16&#13;
1-10 p.m.&#13;
1- 5 p.m.&#13;
5-10 p.m.&#13;
5-10 p.m.&#13;
5-10 p.m.&#13;
5-10 p.m.&#13;
5-10 p.m&#13;
Semester Break Specials&#13;
Moonlight Bowling Sat. 8-10 p.m.&#13;
Regular Bowling ONLY 50&#13;
c Per Gomel&#13;
Cramer's Comer&#13;
Good-bye Ranger&#13;
Bowlers&#13;
finish&#13;
season&#13;
The UW-Parkside men's&#13;
bowling team bowled in the&#13;
National Collegiate Matchgame&#13;
Championship bowling tournament&#13;
held in St. Louis, Missouri&#13;
last weekend. Jay Podella led the&#13;
team with a 208 average for nine&#13;
games, with a high game of 257.&#13;
He was followed by John Peterson&#13;
who averaged 201, with a high&#13;
game of 243.&#13;
Other team members for&#13;
Parkside were Jerry Zigner, Rich&#13;
Salisbury and Willy Yee. The&#13;
team finished 17th of 33 competing&#13;
teams.&#13;
Dear Readers,&#13;
I would like to take this opportunity&#13;
to thank everyone who&#13;
helped me while I was Sports&#13;
editor here at RANGER. The list&#13;
would be never ending if I were to&#13;
name each individually, but I feel&#13;
that I have to express my thanks&#13;
to Athletic Director Wayne&#13;
Dannehl, all the coaches, the&#13;
athletes, and Don Kopriva (Public&#13;
Sports Information Director at&#13;
Parkside). I want to thank all the&#13;
people on the RANGER staff, but I&#13;
would particularly like to&#13;
acknowledge the good job the&#13;
editorial staff has done, and the&#13;
time and devotion of the&#13;
photography staff. Without their&#13;
help, I would have been in even&#13;
bigger binds than the ones I often&#13;
found myself in. These are people&#13;
I care about, respect and will&#13;
always have a special place in my&#13;
heart for.&#13;
When I took this job, I set&#13;
several personal goals. Some I&#13;
attained, others I fell short of. It's&#13;
difficult to give each sport equal&#13;
coverage when you have a staff of&#13;
one — yourself. Hopefully, the&#13;
next Sports editor will find some&#13;
writers.&#13;
This job gave me the opportunity&#13;
to experience things I&#13;
otherwise never would have experienced&#13;
had I not been Sports&#13;
editor. I went to several&#13;
Milwaukee Brewer games where I&#13;
conducted on - field personal interviews&#13;
with people like Billy&#13;
Martin, Yogi Berra, and Reggie&#13;
Jackson of the New York&#13;
Yankees; and Sal Bando, Don&#13;
Money, and George Bamberger of&#13;
the Brewers. I also had the opportunity&#13;
to go to Chicago Cub&#13;
games where I spoke with Ivan&#13;
DeJesus, Manny Trillo, and&#13;
Herman Franks of the Cubs.&#13;
But even more than that, this&#13;
job gave me the chance to meet,&#13;
work with and form lifetime&#13;
friendships with other students. Of&#13;
course, I'm talking about other&#13;
student organizations, but mainly&#13;
about RANGER members. These&#13;
people put up with my practical&#13;
jokes, my many moods and my&#13;
victories as well as defeats. I've&#13;
developed friendships that I'll&#13;
cherish for the rest of my life.&#13;
Many of these people have been&#13;
part of my life for the last three&#13;
years and it's hard to leave.&#13;
I know that even though I'll be&#13;
gone, the RANGER will continue&#13;
to produce an enjoyable and&#13;
worthwhile product. I will always&#13;
be proud to have been associated&#13;
with the RANGER.&#13;
^^HEADQUARTERS&#13;
HAIRCARE GIFTS&#13;
Professional Blow Dryer&#13;
Belson 1250 ONLY $22.95&#13;
Professional Curling Irons&#13;
Wonder Wand ONLY $14.95&#13;
GIFT CERTIFICATES FOR:&#13;
• Ear Piercing&#13;
• Hairstyle&#13;
• Perms&#13;
For That Precision&#13;
Cut That Makes&#13;
A Difference, Call&#13;
654-6154&#13;
Mon-Wed 8-5:30&#13;
Tue-Tliur-Fri. 8-9 Sat. 8-4&#13;
lairstudlo&#13;
3519 52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
REDKEN'&#13;
PARKSIDE PLAYERS PRESENT&#13;
MUSCLE BEACH&#13;
PARTY&#13;
Proof of Age Required!&#13;
Friday, Doc. 12&#13;
Union Squaro&#13;
Doors Opon 8 p. m.&#13;
ADVANCE TICKETS&#13;
1.50 Student&#13;
2.00 Non-Student&#13;
AT THE DOOR&#13;
2.50 Student &amp;&#13;
Non-Student&#13;
Tickets Available at&#13;
UNION INFORMATION CENTER &#13;
Parkside Food Service &amp;&#13;
The Parkside Union&#13;
invite you to attend&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE'S ANNUAL&#13;
CHRISTMAS PARTY&#13;
FREE&#13;
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12&#13;
11:00 am-l:00 pm&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
COOKIES, CAKE, COFFEE &amp; PUNCH&#13;
PLUS... A VISIT BY SANTA CLAUS&#13;
SPECIAL CHRISTMAS DINNER&#13;
• Carved, Baked Ham With&#13;
Fruit Sauce&#13;
• Sweet Potato or Escalloped&#13;
Potatoes&#13;
• Asparagus Spears or Buttered&#13;
Cauliflower&#13;
• Spiced Crabapple&#13;
• Ginger Bread With Whipped&#13;
Topping&#13;
• Complimentary Glass of&#13;
Wine or Holiday Punch&#13;
149&#13;
Thursday, December 11,1980 RANGER </text>
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              <text>SUFAC OKs final budget</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;
Doug Edenhauser Edit0r&#13;
Brian Passino photo Edit0r&#13;
Ginger Helgeson Editor&#13;
n ^ STAFF&#13;
5:&#13;
amer&#13;
' M,ke Farrell# Dan Galbraith, Mike Holmdohl,&#13;
LhlJter "m Wick&#13;
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"""&#13;
RANGER fsVprinted&#13;
Uhv&#13;
CthA?,Ur&#13;
.&#13;
in9&#13;
(t&#13;
he academic year except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
Written oermisTin!?ic the&#13;
.&#13;
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;
Wk Wi&#13;
" be accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
eluded for verification"^&#13;
9&#13;
'"&#13;
5&#13;
' A" let,ers musf be signed and a telephone number inwi"&#13;
be withheld for valid reasons&#13;
reserves a°f editortaf Tues?&#13;
ay at 9 a.m. for publication on Thursday. The R&#13;
defamatory content privile9es 10 refusing to print letters which contain &#13;
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;
Name&#13;
SS No.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
WLLC D139&#13;
nietUs&#13;
CAN&#13;
YburGift&#13;
Birthday&#13;
I ivr&#13;
Transfer&#13;
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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              <text>Winter carnival ready to roll</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Feb. 9-13&#13;
Winter Carnival ready to roll&#13;
1 Galbraith M U U&#13;
iQfixr fA 11?&#13;
by Dan Galbraith&#13;
Things are ready to start rolling&#13;
for the 1981 Winter Carnival,&#13;
"Laughter Has A Snowball Effect."&#13;
For all groups and individuals&#13;
interested in participating&#13;
in any of the events,&#13;
contest entry forms and rules are&#13;
available at the information&#13;
centers and Student Life office,&#13;
Union 209. F orms must be filled&#13;
out for each event and must be&#13;
submitted to the Student Life&#13;
office by Friday, Feb. 6. The&#13;
following is a list of some of the&#13;
activities and what they involve:&#13;
"FREEZE FANTASIA" -&#13;
Window painting can be done by&#13;
anyone interested in painting any&#13;
wintery theme. Taste and&#13;
discretion should be used and only&#13;
designated windows can be&#13;
painted. Windows available for&#13;
painting are located at the&#13;
Ranger, SOC and PSGA offices&#13;
and lower and upper Main Place.&#13;
The paints used must be those&#13;
supplied by the Winter Carnival&#13;
Committee and must be mixed&#13;
with a soap base. Idividuals or&#13;
groups who paint windows will be&#13;
responsible for cleaning their&#13;
windows within one week after&#13;
Winter Carnival.&#13;
"SNOW BEAST" - Snow&#13;
sculpturing may be done by any&#13;
group or individual. A snow&#13;
creature must be constructed that&#13;
either relates to Parkside or the&#13;
Winter Carnival theme,&#13;
"Laughter Has a Snowball Effect."&#13;
The Beast must be constructed&#13;
in the area north of the&#13;
Comm. Arts Building and west of&#13;
the Bookstore. Upon completion of&#13;
the Beast, a picture should be&#13;
taken and submitted to Student&#13;
Life by Feb. 13 at 4 p .m.&#13;
"LAUGHTER HAS A&#13;
SNOWBALL EFFECT" Indoor&#13;
Parade. Floats and entries should&#13;
be designed to follow any&#13;
humorous or wintery theme.&#13;
Taste and discretion should be&#13;
used. More information is&#13;
available during sign - ups. Sign -&#13;
up by Friday, Feb. 6.&#13;
T-SHIRTS with the Winter&#13;
Carnival theme on them are&#13;
available at the Union Information&#13;
Desk for $2.00.&#13;
BEER MUGS will go on sale&#13;
Monday, Feb. 9 in the Union&#13;
Square for a cost of $1.50. The&#13;
mugs will be filled with 32 oz. of&#13;
beer with the initial purchase.&#13;
Refills will be available the whole&#13;
week for $1. The sale is being co -&#13;
sponsored by the Union, Pabst,&#13;
and the Alumni Association.&#13;
BLOOD DRIVE. The Campus&#13;
Health Office, in cooperation with&#13;
the Blood Center of Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin, will sponsor the Blood&#13;
Drive (Mi Tuesday, Feb. 10 from 9&#13;
a.m. to 2:30 p.m. in Union 104 and&#13;
106.&#13;
A c ompetition will be held and&#13;
prizes given to the student&#13;
Luu^icr Has&#13;
Featuring:&#13;
8pm&#13;
9pm&#13;
organization which donates the&#13;
most blood. The Blood Center of&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin will&#13;
award a plaque to the&#13;
organization with the most blood&#13;
donors. Cash prizes of $100 for&#13;
first, $50 for second, $25 for third,&#13;
$15 for fourth, and $10 for fifth will&#13;
be awarded. Individuals who wish&#13;
to donate blood can ask that credit&#13;
be given to their favorite student&#13;
organization.&#13;
Student organizations will also&#13;
receive credit for student hours in&#13;
assisting with the set up and&#13;
canteen.&#13;
Pledge cards may be filled out&#13;
before the Blood Drive or on the&#13;
same day and may be obtained&#13;
from any student organization or&#13;
the Campus Health Office. Just&#13;
walk in; no appointment is&#13;
necessary to donate blood.&#13;
VOLLEYBALL TOURNAMENT&#13;
will be Tuesday, Feb.&#13;
10 and Thursday, Feb. 12 at 12:00&#13;
p.m. Entrants will need six people&#13;
per team. Rules will be flexible.&#13;
There is an entry fee of $6 and&#13;
cash prizes as well as points will&#13;
be awarded. The more teams&#13;
participating, the more prizes.&#13;
The cash prizes are $20 for first&#13;
and $10 for second, so far.&#13;
CHARADES will be held in the&#13;
Union Square, Tuesday, Feb. 10.&#13;
See the rules for this competition&#13;
because they are just a little to&#13;
long to reprint.&#13;
HAYRIDE to run Tuesday, Feb.&#13;
10. Bring your favorite body to&#13;
snuggle up to.&#13;
"CHEERLEADERS'&#13;
ORIGINAL CHEER CONTEST"&#13;
will be held Wednesday, Feb. 11.&#13;
Cheers should not contain foul&#13;
language, but should be short (4-5&#13;
lines) and creative!&#13;
"MIDWAY MADNESS" -&#13;
(Almost Anything Goes) The night&#13;
will feature such contests as joke&#13;
telling, which consists of at least 3&#13;
jokes or a monologue, no longer&#13;
than 2 minutes in length, 1 person&#13;
per club; beer drinking relays of 4&#13;
member teams, 1 team per club;&#13;
nerf basketball games, 3 member&#13;
teams, 1 team per club; "Family&#13;
Feud", 5 member teams, 1 team&#13;
per club; Popcorn Toss, 2 member&#13;
teams, 2 teams per club; Tug - a -&#13;
war, 5 member team, l team per&#13;
club; Egg toss, 2 member teams, 2&#13;
teams per club; "Watch Out&#13;
Where the Huskies Go" dog&#13;
sledding, 5 member teams, 1 team&#13;
per club. Rules for the above&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
Editorial-SOC budget review&#13;
system unjust&#13;
Review: "Incredible Shrinking&#13;
Woman"&#13;
Basketball streak reaches four&#13;
Winter&#13;
Cornivol8l&#13;
Fefcx9-I3&#13;
\&#13;
cr&#13;
3&#13;
contests and maybe even a few&#13;
surprises will be given prior to the&#13;
competitions.&#13;
"DON'T EAT YELLOW&#13;
SNOW" - The pie eating contest&#13;
must consist of 2 member teams&#13;
of UW -Parkside students, faculty,&#13;
staff, administration, or alumni.&#13;
Partners will sit at tables in the&#13;
Union Dining Room, facing each&#13;
other. Each person must sit on&#13;
their hands during the contest.&#13;
The contest will be done in relay&#13;
style; the first partner ihust finish&#13;
his / her pie before the second&#13;
partner will be allowed to start.&#13;
The winner is the first pair to&#13;
finish their pies and in unison&#13;
shout "I ate yellow snow."&#13;
"FREE HOT LUNCH" will be&#13;
playing at the P.A.B. Coffeehouse&#13;
in the Union Square Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 11. Last week's Ranger&#13;
reported that there was to be a&#13;
free hot lunch. There will be no&#13;
free hot lunches unless you want&#13;
to eat a band.&#13;
The schedule is set and the&#13;
snowball is ready to start rolling.&#13;
The only way to get this year's&#13;
Winter Carnival to really have a&#13;
"snowball effect" is for all&#13;
Parkside students, faculty, staff&#13;
and alumni to actively participate&#13;
in the events the Winter Carnival&#13;
Committee and the sponsoring&#13;
organizations are providing.&#13;
Schedule of events&#13;
Thursday &amp; Friday, Feb. 5&amp; 6&#13;
All D ay Freeze Fantasia" window painting&#13;
Monday, Feb. 9&#13;
All Day Snow Beast" snow sculpturing&#13;
1:00 p.m. "Laughter Has A Snowball Effect" Indoor Parade&#13;
1:00 p.m. Video Games Tournament in Union Rec Center&#13;
7:30 p.m. Parkside Ranger basketball game vs. Saginaw Valley State&#13;
9:00 p.m. Rhythm &amp; Blues Cadets" in Union Square&#13;
Tuesday, Feb. 10&#13;
9:30 - 2:30 p.m. Blood Drive in Union 104 &amp; 106&#13;
All D ay "Snow Beast" continued&#13;
!&#13;
2&#13;
^&#13;
P&#13;
-&#13;
m^&#13;
V0ll7&#13;
baI1TT0&#13;
Urnent&#13;
,&#13;
sP°&#13;
n&#13;
sored by Volleyball Club&#13;
l. 00 p.m. Charades in Union Square, sponsored by Parkside Players&#13;
7:30 p.m. Hayride under Union Bridge&#13;
8&#13;
'square' "&#13;
Sn&#13;
°&#13;
W BlaS&#13;
'" " °&#13;
ld Style Nite featuring&#13;
"&#13;
Sierra&#13;
" in Uni&#13;
°&#13;
n&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 11&#13;
All D ay "Snow Beast" continued&#13;
» m P&#13;
'&#13;
m'«F&#13;
a&#13;
ee&#13;
t&#13;
IS&#13;
&gt;t LunCh&#13;
'" a PAB&#13;
^chouse in the Union Square&#13;
12.00 p.m. Student Organization Fair on the Union Bridge&#13;
1:00 p.m. Video Games Tournament in Union Rec Center&#13;
1:00 p.m. Softball Tournament, sponsored by Marketing Club&#13;
1.00 p.m. Original Cheer Contest, sponsored by Cheerleaders&#13;
7:30 p.m. Parkside Ranger basketball game vs. Lakeland College&#13;
9:00 p.m. Another Beginning" in Union Square&#13;
Thursday Feb. 12&#13;
All D ay "Snow Beast" continued&#13;
11:00 a.m. Indoor Picnic in Union Cafeteria&#13;
12pi°k'&#13;
m' V0lleybail Tournament continues, sponsored by Volleyball&#13;
viUu&#13;
12:00 p.m. "Bullwinkle" &amp; "Underdog" cartoons in Union Square&#13;
sponsored by PAB Video&#13;
2 Club™*' Cr&#13;
°&#13;
SS Country Ski Race&#13;
' sP°&#13;
nsored by Parkside Nordic Ski&#13;
7:00 p.m "Midway Madness" Almost Anything Goes Competition in the&#13;
Umon Square&#13;
Friday, Feb. 13&#13;
All D ay "Snow Beast" continued&#13;
11:00 a.m. Indoor Picnic in Union Cafeteria&#13;
12:00 p.m. Carnival in Union Square sponsored by Minority Student&#13;
Union&#13;
1:00 p.m. "Don't Eat Yellow Snow" Pie Eating Contest&#13;
1:00 p.m. Video Games Tournament in Union Rec Center&#13;
8:00 p.m. "Warriors" in Union Cinema, sponsored by PAB Film&#13;
9:00 p.m. "Bad Boy" in Union Square&#13;
PAB presents "Porter, Please"&#13;
"Porter, Please," a musical&#13;
tribute to composer Cole Porter,&#13;
will be presented by Theatre&#13;
Three of Dallas, currently on a&#13;
25th anniversary national tour, at&#13;
Parkside's Communication Arts&#13;
Theater at 8 p.m. on Thursday,&#13;
Feb. 19.&#13;
Tickets for the event, sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Activities Board,&#13;
are $3 for UW-P students and $5&#13;
for others and are available at the&#13;
Campus Union Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
"Porter, Please," is an entertaining&#13;
glimpse at an artist&#13;
whose sophisticated lyrics and&#13;
sassy melodies spiced the&#13;
American musical scene for more&#13;
than three decades.&#13;
During that period, Porter&#13;
provided the music to more than&#13;
twenth - five Broadway musicals&#13;
and numerous films featuring&#13;
such stars as Fred Astaire, Ethel&#13;
Merman, Rita Hayworth, Judy&#13;
Garland, Gene Kelly and Bert&#13;
Lahr. He is remembered for such&#13;
classic tunes as "I Get A Kick Out&#13;
Of You," "You're The Top," "It's&#13;
All Right With Me," "Begin the&#13;
Beguine," "Anything Goes" and&#13;
"Don't Fence Me In."&#13;
As a member of the international&#13;
social set, Cole lived a&#13;
dazzling lifestyle, trotting around&#13;
MEMBERS of the&#13;
"Porter, Please."&#13;
the globe with the "beautiful&#13;
people" of his era. He wrote songs&#13;
while sunning on the Riviera,&#13;
drinking espresso in Venice and&#13;
cruising up the Nile. To capture&#13;
Theatre Three troupe scene from&#13;
the glamour of Porter's world,&#13;
"Porter, Please" is staged as a&#13;
dazzling penthouse soiree hosted&#13;
by five elegantly contumed&#13;
Continued On Page Six &#13;
Thursday, February 5,1981 RANGER&#13;
SOC President Oechler's Zophy challenges reductions&#13;
letter on budget cuts&#13;
T0 January 19,1981&#13;
FROM: Jan Oechler, Chairperson SOC&#13;
With the beginning of the spring semester things are renewed&#13;
and reviewed, one of which is the club accounts. Some of you will&#13;
be receiving letters pertaining to your absence from meetings in&#13;
addition to this letter.&#13;
During break I looked over the accounts and was amazed to see&#13;
the balances in these accounts. This could be due to a couple of&#13;
things. In any event, those clubs that haven't been making good&#13;
use of their funds have had some deducted. The amount deducted&#13;
from your account is $ .&#13;
If you have any questions regarding this amount, please contact&#13;
me at 2594 or leave a message in the Student Life Office.&#13;
We hope to see you at the next SOC meeting on January 28, 1981&#13;
at 1:00 p.m. in the SOC office.&#13;
JO.sw&#13;
SOC needs legislation:&#13;
review system unjust&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
On Wednesday, January 28, the&#13;
spring semester's first Student&#13;
Organizations Council meeting&#13;
was held.&#13;
It was an interesting meeting, to&#13;
say the least. Someone had stolen&#13;
the wall clock in the SOC o ffice&#13;
and hardly anyone of the 45 or so&#13;
club members and officers attending&#13;
noticed as the "50&#13;
Minutes" period drew to a close. I&#13;
didn't even see many people&#13;
checking their watches and only a&#13;
few left early. It was that interesting.&#13;
&#13;
What could have pre - empted&#13;
the expected discusssion of Winter&#13;
Carnival? Money. Quite a few&#13;
clubs have received unannounced&#13;
letters in the mail the previous&#13;
week that informed them that&#13;
their club's budget had been&#13;
reviewed and had been docked a&#13;
percentage of previously&#13;
allocated funds because they&#13;
hadn't spent enough money by the&#13;
end of last semester, (see letter)&#13;
At the meeting, Jan Oechler,&#13;
SOC Chairperson, and Chavez&#13;
Epps, SOC vice - chairperson,&#13;
defended their action to a large&#13;
percentage of openly angry&#13;
student group representatives and&#13;
a small percentage of supporters.&#13;
SUFAC, Oechler said, will not&#13;
put up with the yearly rising&#13;
return of unused SOC funds&#13;
anymore. Last year's return&#13;
figure, she reported, was around&#13;
$8,000 out of an original SOC&#13;
budget of $24,000. Oechler and&#13;
Epps expected this May's return&#13;
figure to rise, she said, and so they&#13;
deducted funds accordingly.&#13;
"Next year," Oechler warned,&#13;
"maybe SUFAC will only be&#13;
willing to give SOC $16,000 to work&#13;
with if the return figure stays so&#13;
high."&#13;
To students who protested that&#13;
the action was without precedent&#13;
and was not backed by legislation,&#13;
Oechler said that if she and Epps&#13;
could not have the power to make&#13;
decisions regarding funding,&#13;
individual groups would have to&#13;
face going to SOC them selves or&#13;
working with PSGA.&#13;
When asked whether the "SOC&#13;
Constitution or by-laws" provided&#13;
for this type of funding review&#13;
procedure, Oechler produced a&#13;
one - page list of rules and pointed&#13;
out that "SOC falls, in part, under&#13;
the PSGA Constitution, too."&#13;
Rule ten of the SOC "Rules"&#13;
sheet states: "The first SOC&#13;
meeting in January will be to&#13;
review all club budgets to check&#13;
for inactive clubs."&#13;
According to PSGA vice -&#13;
president Kay Mullikin, "SOC is a&#13;
Senate sub - committee, covered&#13;
under the nine sections of Article&#13;
II of the PSGA Constitution. It's&#13;
really kind of a vague article.&#13;
"As a standing sub - committee&#13;
the Senate, that's all SOC needs,"&#13;
said Tim Zimmer, PSGA Constitution&#13;
Justice. Zimmer is one of&#13;
the authors of Article II. He said&#13;
that any by - laws SOC makes&#13;
must be ok'd by the Senate. In&#13;
addition, Zimmer said, they must&#13;
follow all Senate rules.&#13;
"As a standing sub - committee&#13;
of the Senate, SOC s hould be attending&#13;
all Senate meetings and&#13;
filing reports," Zimmer said,&#13;
adding: "Whether or not they are,&#13;
I can't comment."&#13;
"They were at our last meeting&#13;
and made a report," Mullikin&#13;
said.&#13;
None of the existing legislation&#13;
pertinent to SOC specifies the type&#13;
of budget reviews that are to be&#13;
conducted. Similarly none of the&#13;
existing legislation pertinent to&#13;
SOC gives SOC officers, or anyone&#13;
else, the power to remove funds&#13;
from student group accounts as a&#13;
result of an unfavorable budget&#13;
Editor's note: The following is a&#13;
letter written by Angela Howard&#13;
Zophy, Parkside Concourse advisor,&#13;
to Jan Oechler, SOC&#13;
President, concerning .recent&#13;
budget reductions.)&#13;
Jan. 27,1981&#13;
Dear Ms. Oechler,&#13;
As advisor to the Parkside&#13;
Concourse, I challenge your&#13;
recent arbitrary reduction of&#13;
Concourse budget by two - thirds.&#13;
This action on your part as&#13;
President of the Student&#13;
Organization Committee lacks&#13;
either justice or due process&#13;
toward this group. I have long&#13;
been appalled at the irrational&#13;
process by which S.O.C. conreview.&#13;
&#13;
On Monday of this .week,&#13;
Oechler said that out of a total of&#13;
38 SOC - budgeted student groups,&#13;
17 groups were docked for non - or&#13;
under - usage of funds, for an&#13;
original total of $2,738.48 in funds&#13;
deducted from Student Life accounts.&#13;
&#13;
For individual groups, the range&#13;
was between $233 deduc ted from&#13;
an original budget of $641 and $50&#13;
deducted from an original budget&#13;
of $750.: Some newer clubs, according&#13;
to Oechler, are to be&#13;
reviewed again in February or&#13;
March, since they have not had a&#13;
lot of time to use their funds.&#13;
As of Monday, $1,346.69 was still&#13;
deducted from accounts. Oechler&#13;
said, "If nobody from these clubs&#13;
comes and contacts me, these&#13;
funds will be voted cm as t o re -&#13;
allocation to new clubs and to&#13;
clubs who ask for additional&#13;
funding."&#13;
"Some funds won't be given&#13;
back even if a group representative&#13;
comes and talks to me&#13;
because at least one club has&#13;
probably folded," Oechler said.&#13;
by Bill Haight&#13;
(NOCR) When Arthur Levine&#13;
set out to research a book about&#13;
today's college students, he expected&#13;
to find "a return to the&#13;
'50s." He admits he is depressed&#13;
about what he did find:&#13;
pessimism, cynicism and "meism."&#13;
&#13;
The Kennedy and King&#13;
assassinations, urban riots,&#13;
Vietnam and Watergate have&#13;
helped breed an attitude that "The&#13;
world about me is going to hell but&#13;
I'm going to do OK," according to&#13;
Levine. He calls this the Titanic&#13;
Ethic — scrapping for personal&#13;
survival in the midst of a bleak&#13;
situation.&#13;
Levine is senior fellow at the&#13;
Carnegie Foundation for the&#13;
Advancement of Teaching in&#13;
Washington D.C. His book, "When&#13;
Dreams and Heroes Died: A&#13;
portrait of Today's College&#13;
Student," makes use of numerous&#13;
Carnegie surveys as well as&#13;
Levine's own interviews of&#13;
students on 26 campuses.&#13;
Survey after survey confirms&#13;
Levine's findings: students are&#13;
ducted its meetings and its vital&#13;
business. My concerns center now&#13;
upon the ex post facto nature of&#13;
your notification of the budget&#13;
reductions. I submit that this&#13;
action of your is a breach of the&#13;
democratic process so cherished&#13;
at all levels of administration at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
I protest the two - thirds budget&#13;
reduction both on procedural and&#13;
substantive grounds. As a student&#13;
group advisor, I have yet to&#13;
receive anything in writing from&#13;
S.O.C. which explains either its&#13;
process or its purpose in this&#13;
matter. Our group received no&#13;
written notice of any spending&#13;
deadline at the time our budget&#13;
was finally given last fall. Such an&#13;
important proviso cannot be&#13;
conveyed verbally or just inhouse;&#13;
it must be publicized&#13;
widely, as should S.O.C. meeting&#13;
times and dates, so the general&#13;
student body may be advised and&#13;
possibly observe how S.O.C.&#13;
student monies are spent. The&#13;
lack of proper procedure in this&#13;
action echoes the chaotic atmosphere&#13;
that has pervaded&#13;
"One club had an amount&#13;
deducted that wasn't supposed to&#13;
be," she said. "The accountant&#13;
transposed the figures and the&#13;
amount deducted came to almost&#13;
the group's total budget."&#13;
Quite a few clubs, according to&#13;
Oechler, "have shown me that&#13;
they will use their funds. Those&#13;
should have been debited back&#13;
into their Student Life accounts as&#13;
of last Thursday."&#13;
According to Oechler, the&#13;
money had been credited out of&#13;
the accounts, but no one can use it&#13;
until it is re - allocated by SOC.&#13;
"These funds are sitting in a kind&#13;
of limbo," Oechler said.&#13;
"The only reason we are doing&#13;
this is because the rules say that&#13;
there will be a review process,"&#13;
Oechler said. This year, we had to&#13;
get started somehow. SUFAC is&#13;
putting pressure on SOC. They&#13;
wanted us to be more accountable.&#13;
We're just trying to make SOC&#13;
more accountable.&#13;
optimistic about their personal&#13;
futures, while rapidly losing&#13;
confidence in society's institutions.&#13;
&#13;
Is there apathy on campus? No,&#13;
but methods and issues have&#13;
changed, according to Levine.&#13;
Professional student lobbyists fill&#13;
the role of yesterday's protesters,&#13;
he says. "Unseen activity is being&#13;
confused with nonexistent activity,"&#13;
he says. "It is interesting&#13;
to speculate whether other&#13;
historical periods which have&#13;
been labeled quiet or non - activist&#13;
such as the 1940s and '50s were, in&#13;
fact, simply periods of unobserved&#13;
protest."&#13;
In keeping with the me-ism&#13;
Levine found, campus protest&#13;
issues have moved from broad&#13;
social causes to more personal&#13;
gripes, he says. A 1978 Carn egie&#13;
study showed, for instance, that&#13;
the proportion of campuses&#13;
having minority affairs protests&#13;
dropped from 35% to 12% between&#13;
1969 and 1978, and Vietnam&#13;
protests, of course, dropped from&#13;
68% to zero. At the same time, the&#13;
study showed that&#13;
S.O.C. meetings since last SeDtember.&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
As to my substantive challenge&#13;
of your action, I submit that&#13;
responsible scheduling of major&#13;
events within one month of&#13;
receiving budget approval is not&#13;
possible. It seems to me that this&#13;
reduction harms most of the&#13;
groups which are putting the most&#13;
preparation into their scheduling&#13;
of events. One cannot get a big&#13;
name speaker on a few days&#13;
notice nor can one engage such a&#13;
speaker without absolute&#13;
knowledge of the funds available&#13;
Thus, your action is as ill - conceived&#13;
as it is reprehensible.&#13;
Finally I request, in duplicate,&#13;
copies of all budget reductions&#13;
sustained by all the student&#13;
organizations as soon as possible.&#13;
I also request immediately&#13;
complete copies of the policy&#13;
statement under which the budget&#13;
reductions were initiated. I further&#13;
require written notice of your&#13;
regularly scheduled Spring 1981&#13;
meetings and any other meetings&#13;
called for the duration of this&#13;
semester.&#13;
Angela Howard Zophy&#13;
During last week's meeting, two&#13;
motions were made toward&#13;
change. A motion was made, and&#13;
passed unanimously, that the one&#13;
page list of SOC "Rules" (and any&#13;
additions to them) be posted in the&#13;
SOC office. A motion was also&#13;
made, and also passed, to form a&#13;
volunteer committee of SOC&#13;
members to set up guidelines for&#13;
future funding reviews.&#13;
It is doubtful that these motions&#13;
toward change will be enough.&#13;
The problem of left - over funds is&#13;
a big one but hopefully, this&#13;
problem can be solved without the&#13;
use of further scare tactics..&#13;
But a larger problem facing&#13;
SOC is the lack of some sort of&#13;
binding legislation, designed to&#13;
designate and limit the duties and&#13;
powers of SOC officers and&#13;
members.&#13;
During last week's meeting,&#13;
Oechler said, "There's nothing&#13;
wrong with the system; it's just&#13;
that you won't let it work." I&#13;
disagree.&#13;
having student unrest over&#13;
student fees and financial aid&#13;
2% t o 20%.&#13;
It doesn't help that the public&#13;
wants to hang a label on each&#13;
generation of students. These&#13;
images are only caricatures, says&#13;
Levine, pointing out that students&#13;
of the late '60s have become&#13;
bigger than life. Levine says he&#13;
was "shocked and surprised at the&#13;
extent to which today's college&#13;
students compare themselves to&#13;
the mythical creature who walked&#13;
our campuses a decade ago. I was&#13;
1&#13;
told with sadness more times than&#13;
I care to ran ember, 'We're not&#13;
real college kids like the people&#13;
who went to school in the 1960s'."&#13;
Levine pulls out a survey to&#13;
remind us that in 1969 only 28% of&#13;
college students had ever participated&#13;
in a demonstration of&#13;
any type.&#13;
Written in a popular, not&#13;
academic style, "When Dreams&#13;
and Heroes Died" should be top&#13;
priority reading for any serious&#13;
student - watcher. It is published&#13;
by Jossey - Bass and can be organger&#13;
&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
SulMich"?^&#13;
Wendy Westphal '.'.V.'.'.V.'.'.Feature Idllor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser ts Edjtor&#13;
®r^&#13;
nP2"&#13;
,no Photo Editor Ginger Helgeson Edi,or&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Dave Cramer, Mike Farrell, Dan Galbraith, Mike Holmdohl,&#13;
Carol Klees, Dan McCormack, Lori Meyer, Bruce Preston, Kim&#13;
Schlater, Jim Wick&#13;
RR™FIH,JS,^&#13;
RI&#13;
T,EN.-FND&#13;
,&#13;
EDITED BY S,UDENTS OF UW-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
RANCFR ^ring the academic year except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
RANGER is printed by the Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER&#13;
ParSTenosh" ^ WLLC D139&lt; UW'&#13;
ns&#13;
enp&#13;
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pted If typewritten, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
cfudedfor^ver1ficTtion&#13;
mar9mS- " *&#13;
mUS&gt; S'&#13;
9ned 3nd 3 ,elePh&#13;
°ne number inNames&#13;
will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 9 a.m. for publication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory extent'3&#13;
' prlv&#13;
"&#13;
e9es in refusin9 to print letters which contain false or&#13;
vu uu uugu iucai uuuivoiuico.&#13;
Ranger wants to hear from you!&#13;
Got o gripe, a question, o startling revelation, a compliment,&#13;
a rebuttal, or something on your mind that you want to shore?&#13;
Write a letter to the editor! Just follow the guidelines printed in&#13;
the masthead (to the left).&#13;
Today's college students a new breed &#13;
Eastern media trip planned&#13;
Valter Graffin, professor of&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 5,1981&#13;
o&#13;
GJ&#13;
a&#13;
T&#13;
ffin&#13;
' P&#13;
rofessOr of&#13;
English, and Jim Maguire head&#13;
of Media Services, are ' coo*&#13;
dmatmg a drama, art, and&#13;
communications practicum trip to&#13;
Washington, D.C. and New York&#13;
City. The cost of the trip, tentatively&#13;
set for March 12-21 will&#13;
be approximately $450, including&#13;
airfare, lodging, and most activities.&#13;
&#13;
The objectives of t he trip are to:&#13;
tour facilities; engage in dialogue&#13;
with people who are in the arts&#13;
and communication field; actual&#13;
observation of dailty activities in&#13;
T V., radio, print, art and dramaincrease&#13;
students' geographic and&#13;
cultural knowledge of the Eastern&#13;
U.S. .urban corridor; and give&#13;
students insight into employment&#13;
possibilities upon graduation or as&#13;
summer interns.&#13;
Tentative arrangements are&#13;
being made to visit many media&#13;
related areas such as National&#13;
Public Radio, the Senate and&#13;
House Recording Studios, the&#13;
National Press Gallery with&#13;
dinner at the National Press Club,&#13;
the National Broadcasting Corporation,&#13;
the Associated Press&#13;
the New York Times, the United&#13;
National Office of Telecommunications&#13;
and People&#13;
Magazine.&#13;
Art and Drama participants&#13;
may be treated to Broadway&#13;
Theater, the Metropolitan&#13;
Museum, the Museum of Modern&#13;
Art, the Smithsonian, the&#13;
Guggenheim, Kennedy Center and&#13;
CHARLES JONES, Director of U. S. Senate and House TV and&#13;
!?&#13;
c&#13;
,?&#13;
rdin9 s*&#13;
udios, talks with Parkside students in Sprinq,&#13;
1980: Xleft to right) Jan Parenteau, Henrietta Hanson (hidden),&#13;
Kim Scarf, Mary McDonald, Ruth Ann Wojtak, Rachel King,&#13;
Vivian De Hahn (hidden), Andy Parenteau, and Blake Howe.&#13;
off - Broadway productions.&#13;
An informational meeting will&#13;
be held on Wednesday, February&#13;
11 at 3:30 p.m. in Television Studio&#13;
A, CA D157. Slides will also be&#13;
shown of last year's trip.&#13;
Credit is available for this trip.&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
Jim Maguire at 553-2622 o r Walt&#13;
Graffin at 553-2424.&#13;
Draft dodgers' college records checked?&#13;
If the Selective Service System&#13;
(SSS) decides to use college and&#13;
university records to track down&#13;
men who didn't register for the&#13;
draft, each school will have to&#13;
decide for itself if records can be&#13;
released, according to an SSS&#13;
spokesperson.&#13;
Estimates of the percentage of&#13;
non - registration range from the&#13;
Selective Service's 5-7% guess, to&#13;
anti - draft and media reports of&#13;
25% noncompliance.&#13;
"Using student records is a&#13;
possibility we're considering,"&#13;
said Betty Alexander, public&#13;
information officer for the SSS.&#13;
Alexander says the SSS doesn't&#13;
believe the federal privacy law&#13;
would protect directory information&#13;
contained in college&#13;
records, but says each school&#13;
would determine its own privacy&#13;
standards. "If they (school officials)&#13;
believe it would be a&#13;
violation of a student's privacy,&#13;
then those would be the records&#13;
we couldn't use," said Alexander.&#13;
"It's up to them to decide."&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin said that the SSS has made&#13;
no contact with UW-P and if they&#13;
did, the only information they&#13;
would have access to is the&#13;
student directory. No other information&#13;
concerning students&#13;
would be given out, according to&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Some students aren't waiting&#13;
until Selective Service acts to find&#13;
out what their school's decision&#13;
will be. At the U. of California -&#13;
Santa Barbara, over 300 students&#13;
marched on the chancellor's office&#13;
demanding that personal information&#13;
in their university files&#13;
not be turned over to any outside&#13;
authorities.&#13;
Students outside California&#13;
don't seem to be too concerned&#13;
about a possible on - campus&#13;
record hunt. Doug Tuthill,&#13;
president of the United States&#13;
Student Association, admits he's&#13;
heard little discussion of the&#13;
records release issue in his travels&#13;
around the country. "I think most&#13;
students don't think the government&#13;
will go as far as finding&#13;
people who didn't register," says&#13;
Tuthill. "I think students also feel&#13;
that they're protected through the&#13;
Buckley Amendment (privacy&#13;
law)."&#13;
Alexander said, however, that if&#13;
the Selective Service System&#13;
doesn't seek student records, it&#13;
won't be for political reasons but&#13;
practical ones. "Most of the&#13;
people eligible for the draft aren't&#13;
in college," she said, "so those&#13;
records would only help us find a&#13;
small percentage of those who&#13;
didn't register."&#13;
Sfyei&amp;fuim'&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
"Plaza Suite" promises laughter&#13;
A dinner theater production of&#13;
Neil Simon's triple barreled&#13;
comedy "Plaza Suite" will be&#13;
presented by the Alpha Omega&#13;
Players, performing arm of the&#13;
Repertory Theater of America, at&#13;
6 p.m. on Sunday, Feb. 22, in the&#13;
Union dining room.&#13;
Admission is $8 and includes a&#13;
dinner of soup, a "deluxe deli&#13;
buffet," dessert and a glass of&#13;
wine. Cocktails will be available.&#13;
Tickets for the event, sponsored&#13;
by PAB, are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center.&#13;
Deadline is Feb. 18 for reservations,&#13;
which can be made by&#13;
calling 553-2345.&#13;
"Plaza Suite," which ran for&#13;
1,097 performances on Broadway,&#13;
consists of three playlets all set, at&#13;
different times, in the same suite&#13;
of New York's Plaza Hotel. All&#13;
concern a man and a woman who&#13;
are at the end of something rather&#13;
than the beginning of anything.&#13;
In the first segment, a wealthy&#13;
suburban couple comes to the&#13;
Plaza for a night commemorating&#13;
their honeymoon in the same suite&#13;
22 years earlier. In the second, a&#13;
Hollywood film producer cagily&#13;
plots the seduction of an old high&#13;
school flame, now a housewife&#13;
awed by his fame.&#13;
The third play is a witty farce&#13;
about a wealthy couple's attempts&#13;
to get their daughter to emerge&#13;
from behind a locked door, where&#13;
she has fled in panic — and in&#13;
bridal attire — while hundreds of&#13;
wedding guests await her appearance&#13;
in the hotel ballroom.&#13;
"What you laugh at so hard,"&#13;
one critic commented, "is&#13;
recognizable situations stretched&#13;
to ludricrous lengths without&#13;
losing their identity."&#13;
"Plaza Suite" is the seventh in&#13;
order of production of Simon's&#13;
phenomenal series of stage hits.&#13;
Others include "Come Blow Your&#13;
Horn," "Barefoot in the Park,"&#13;
"The Odd Couple," "Promises&#13;
Promises" and "The Last of the&#13;
Red Hot Lovers."&#13;
American "New Music" featured here&#13;
Works by living American&#13;
composers will be featured in the&#13;
New Music at Parkside series&#13;
program on Sunday, Feb. 8, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater at&#13;
3:30 p.m.&#13;
Ned Rorem's Trio will be&#13;
performed by Frank Suetholz&#13;
(flutist), Harry Sturm (cellist),&#13;
and Carol Bell (pianist).&#13;
Also on the program of chamber&#13;
music are William Bergsma's&#13;
Clandestine Dialogues, performed&#13;
by Sturm and Linda Raymond&#13;
(percussion); Will Gay Bottje's&#13;
Sonata by the Bedford Duo&#13;
comprised of Monte Bedford&#13;
(oboe), and Frances Bedford&#13;
(harpsichord); and Paul Bowies'&#13;
Sonata performed by the Parkside&#13;
Piano Duo of Carol Bell and&#13;
August Wegner.&#13;
Admission for the program,&#13;
which will precede a wine and&#13;
chesse reception for concert -&#13;
goers, is $2 for the public and $1&#13;
for students. The new music series&#13;
is directed by Sturm and Wegner.&#13;
Parkside's music discipline&#13;
recently won national recognition&#13;
for performance and promotion of&#13;
new music. The National&#13;
Federation of Music Clubs&#13;
awarded its 1980 prize for encouragement&#13;
of new music to&#13;
Parkside in the public educational&#13;
division and to the prestigious&#13;
Eastman School of Music in the&#13;
private education division.&#13;
UW-P was cited for the New&#13;
Music at Parkside series, its&#13;
Oriana Trio international composition&#13;
contest, its composer - in -&#13;
residence program and other&#13;
faculty and student programs&#13;
featuring contemporary works.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records"&#13;
626 56th St. 654-2932&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
lYTONA BE;&#13;
LAST CHANCE TO SIGN UP FOR&#13;
FUN IN THE SUN I&#13;
(Already Half Filled)&#13;
FROM&#13;
$ 219&#13;
FLOP&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• GREYHOUND TYPE BUS&#13;
• 7 NIGHT'S LODGING OCEANSIDE HOTEL&#13;
• OPTIONAL POPULAR SIDETRIPS&#13;
FOR APPLICATION AND FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION, ROOM 209 - 553-2200 &#13;
4 Thursday, Februarys, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Prof. Pollack visits husband&#13;
and wife film producers&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
STUDENT gladly donates blood. Give blood during the Winter&#13;
Carnival blood donor drive.&#13;
Donate blood during drive&#13;
Everybody is invited to participate&#13;
in a blood donor drive on&#13;
Tuesday, Feb. 10 from 9 a.m. to 4&#13;
p m. in Union 104. The drive will&#13;
be conducted by the Blood Center&#13;
of So utheastern Wisconsin and is&#13;
sponsored by the Campus Health&#13;
Office. Campus nurse Edith&#13;
Isenberg said no appointments&#13;
are necessary.&#13;
Research doesn't always involve&#13;
sophisticated scientific&#13;
equipment. Sometimes a simple&#13;
tape recorder will do and the&#13;
results when the research reaches&#13;
the classroom can be equally&#13;
effective.&#13;
So, a tape recorder accompanied&#13;
Parkside's dramatic&#13;
arts professor Rhoda Gale Pollack&#13;
on a recent trip to Hollywood to&#13;
track down background information&#13;
on Ely and Edythe&#13;
Landau, an innovative husband&#13;
and wife team of f ilm producers.&#13;
The Landaus' projects include&#13;
the American Film Theatre&#13;
(AFT) series of 13 plays, mostly&#13;
representative of the theater of&#13;
the absurd. The unique feature of&#13;
the series, Pollack says, is that the&#13;
Landaus' film versions are&#13;
remarkably faithful to the&#13;
original playscripts. While&#13;
cinema techniques rather than&#13;
stage techniques were used in&#13;
shooting the films, in most cases&#13;
there was no screenplay adaptation,&#13;
so that the films fully&#13;
reflect the playwrights' intent, she&#13;
notes.&#13;
Since six of the films are the&#13;
subject matter of a course Pollack&#13;
is teaching this semester, she set&#13;
about tracking down information&#13;
about their creators. Because the&#13;
Landaus' work has been largely&#13;
non - commercial, aimed at select&#13;
rather than mass audiences,&#13;
Pollack found little material in&#13;
standard reference sources. Still,&#13;
she felt information on the Landaus&#13;
and their pioneering work on&#13;
film as literature would add a&#13;
significant dimension to the&#13;
course.&#13;
So Pollack -got her "chutzpah"&#13;
together, called the Landaus and&#13;
outlined her project. The result&#13;
was two hectic days of taping&#13;
interviews with the pair in their&#13;
Holly wood p r o d u c tio n&#13;
headquarters.&#13;
Pollack found the Landaus' idea&#13;
for American Film Theater grew&#13;
out of th eir experience in the late&#13;
'50s and 60s when they were&#13;
producing a "Play of the Week"&#13;
series emphasizing high artistic&#13;
standards for a non - commercial&#13;
television station in New York&#13;
City.&#13;
Following that experience, the&#13;
pair hit upon the idea of p roducing&#13;
LILY TOMLIN IN AN EPIC COMEDY&#13;
(GIVE OR TAKE w&#13;
SHRINKING sill:&#13;
• « &gt;' P O M L IN • CHAMGS GKOOs M G 8 5 GGGrGG r A G | 1 : A s-' G w y&#13;
: :&#13;
Written by JANE WAGNER Musk: by SUZANNE CtANI Produced bv HANK MOONJEAN&#13;
Executive Producer JANE WAGNER • D irected by JOEL SCHUMACHER • A UNIVERSAL PICTURE&#13;
* MATCH'*! WAY MOT OS SUltAfiif «)H CHAOItt*&#13;
NOW PLAYING AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU&#13;
film versions of plays, again insisting&#13;
on high standards of excellence,&#13;
but giving them&#13;
simultaneous nationwide exposure&#13;
by developing a chain of&#13;
theaters to show the films on a&#13;
pre-paid basis. That concept grew&#13;
into American Film Theater,&#13;
which eventually had almost 700&#13;
theaters showing its film plays.&#13;
AFT productions include stars&#13;
like Katharine Hepburn,&#13;
Maximillian Schell, Alan Bates,&#13;
Sir Laurence Olivier, Glenda&#13;
Jackson, Robert Ryan, Fredric&#13;
March, Lee Marvin, Gene Wilder,&#13;
Karen Black and Zero Mostel&#13;
under the direction of Lindsay&#13;
Anderson, Arthur Hiller, John&#13;
Frankenheimer, Tony Richardson,&#13;
Joseph Losey and other&#13;
greats of the directing world.&#13;
The six films from the series&#13;
which Pollack has selected for her&#13;
course are "A Delicate Balance,"&#13;
"The Homecoming," "In&#13;
Celebration," "Jacques Brel is&#13;
Alive and Well and Living in&#13;
Paris," "Luther" and&#13;
"Rhinoceros." The films will be&#13;
shown at the Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theater beginning Feb. 25 and can&#13;
be viewed by the public by&#13;
reservation, taken at the Rondelle&#13;
two weeks in advance.&#13;
The lecture portion of the&#13;
course, which can be taken either&#13;
for dramatic arts or English&#13;
credit, is offered on the Parkside&#13;
campus. Pollack said she plans to&#13;
use her taped interviews with the&#13;
Landaus both as background in&#13;
the lectures and, in some cases, to&#13;
play portions of the tapes letting&#13;
the Landaus tell their story in&#13;
their own words providing an oral&#13;
history of their unusual careers.&#13;
Valentine's&#13;
Day*&#13;
Lovely Gifts&#13;
from Andrea's ...&#13;
to be treasured&#13;
long after the&#13;
14th. For every&#13;
special person&#13;
on y o u r l i s t . . .&#13;
And gift wrapped&#13;
to make it&#13;
extra special.&#13;
* Trifari Jewelry&#13;
* Go r h am L e ad&#13;
Crystal&#13;
* Fancy Hearts with&#13;
Russell Stover or&#13;
F a n n ie May&#13;
Chocolate&#13;
&gt; Delicious Jelly Belly&#13;
G o urm et Jel ly&#13;
Beans&#13;
) Unusua l and&#13;
delightful Valentine&#13;
Cards&#13;
OPEN DAILY&#13;
9a.m. til 5:30 p.m.&#13;
Friday til 8 p.m.&#13;
Saturday til 5 p.m.&#13;
ArKjra&amp;&#13;
2401 -60th Street, Kenosha &#13;
S^&#13;
n9Woman" not incredibly funny&#13;
It's been a long time sinre J?_° a serum which will Pn«hi» _&#13;
# *&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
It's been a long time since&#13;
Disney has released any new&#13;
films, but "The Incredible&#13;
Shrinking Woman" brings back&#13;
fond memories of Sunday&#13;
matinees the whole family could&#13;
enjoy. Although it won't appeal to&#13;
everyone, it's definitely one you&#13;
can feel safe about bringing the&#13;
children to.&#13;
Pat Kramer (Lily Tomlin) is a&#13;
wife and a mother of two. She&#13;
leads the normal life of a suburban&#13;
wife until one day, as a result&#13;
of too much perfume, hygiene&#13;
spray, face cream, deodorant,&#13;
etc., she starts to shrink. At first&#13;
it's hardly noticeable but she soon&#13;
becomes small enough to live in&#13;
her daughter's doll house.&#13;
Some cute scenes show how Pat&#13;
lives from day to day, still trying&#13;
to perform her motherly duties at&#13;
a height of just over six inches.&#13;
The storyline, however, becomes&#13;
downright silly when she is kidnapped&#13;
by the Organization For&#13;
World Management (OWFM).&#13;
The OWFM wants to collect a&#13;
sample of h er blood and make it&#13;
auditions&#13;
Wisconsin theatre producers&#13;
will audition actors, dancers,&#13;
singers, designers, technicians&#13;
and managers at the Fifth Annual&#13;
Statewide Theatre Auditions on&#13;
February 7-8 in Madison at the&#13;
UW-Extension Wisconsin Center.&#13;
The auditions, which are cosponsored&#13;
by the UW-Extension&#13;
Arts Development and the&#13;
Wisconsin Theatre Association&#13;
(WTA), are open to theatre enthusiasts&#13;
of all ages.&#13;
Twenty-four producing&#13;
organizations will be represented&#13;
at the auditions, including The&#13;
Fireside Playhouse (Fort&#13;
Atkinson), Peninsula Players&#13;
(Green Bay), Heritage Ensemble&#13;
(State parks), Friends Mime&#13;
Theatre (Milwaukee), Northern&#13;
Lights Summer Playhouse&#13;
(Tomahawk), Wilson Street East&#13;
Dinner Playhouse (Madison) and&#13;
various University of Wisconsin&#13;
theatres.&#13;
Singers and actors should&#13;
prepare musical and spoken&#13;
material of t heir choice. A pianist&#13;
will be available. Dancers will&#13;
work out with a choreographer&#13;
while producers observe. Dance&#13;
auditions will only be held on&#13;
Saturday, February 7. Interviews&#13;
will be scheduled on Saturday for&#13;
those participants seeking offstage&#13;
positions. All participants&#13;
should be prepared to supply&#13;
photos and resumes for callbacks.&#13;
A 1981 P roducers Catalogue is&#13;
available to all registered&#13;
auditionees. The catalogue&#13;
describes the individual needs of&#13;
participating theatres.&#13;
Registration fees are $2.00 for&#13;
WTA members and $5.00 for nonmembers.&#13;
Registration forms are&#13;
available from the Wisconsin&#13;
Theatre Association, 610 Langdon&#13;
St., Room 723, Madison, 53706.&#13;
Phone registration will not be&#13;
accepted and on site registration,&#13;
u space is available, will be on a&#13;
hrst come, first served basis. Call&#13;
Sheila Hilke at 608/263-6945 for&#13;
more information.&#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;
them fn&#13;
GrT- YWch wiU enable&#13;
°.&#13;
shrink the world bv&#13;
S a « 8 r&#13;
i n to e a c h c o u n t r y 's&#13;
fiPnScWl&#13;
les&#13;
-&#13;
Pat&#13;
.learns of this fiendish plot and calls upon the aid&#13;
aP&#13;
e who knows sign&#13;
language, but the bumbling lab&#13;
attendant finds them out and&#13;
who cares? You know it just has to&#13;
have a happy ending.&#13;
best qhf&#13;
ml&#13;
-&#13;
n&#13;
'&#13;
38 alway&#13;
s»» at her&#13;
oest. She mixes a little of each of&#13;
her characters to produce a&#13;
we* rii ?ff,&#13;
erm\&#13;
ned woman whom&#13;
Tif J u, m love with- Tomlin&#13;
also doubles as Pat's best - friend -&#13;
and - neighbor, Judith Beasley.&#13;
Some interesting camera work is&#13;
t25 y&#13;
°&#13;
u never suspect any&#13;
who arG 118 play&#13;
ed on you when you see both ladies together EJ? S&#13;
?&#13;
me ;°°&#13;
mAs&#13;
a sPecial&#13;
treat Ernestine the telephone&#13;
operator (also played bv Tomlin)&#13;
makes a cameo appearance.&#13;
Charies Crodin plays Vance,&#13;
Pat s husband. Again, Grodin has&#13;
a mediocre part (he was last seen&#13;
f«! &lt;Sol&#13;
?.f Hawn's spouse in&#13;
Seems Like Old Times"). Grodin&#13;
is an actor with quite a bit of&#13;
talent, both comical and&#13;
dramatic, but he is constantly&#13;
given second and third banana&#13;
roles. What the man really needs&#13;
is a starring role in which he can&#13;
extent show us&#13;
abilities.&#13;
Ned Beatty's performance is&#13;
also disappointing. He is Dan&#13;
Beame, Vance's boss, who turns&#13;
Pat over to the OFWM. Beatty has&#13;
proved himself competent in films&#13;
like "Deliverance" and "Network"&#13;
and the impressive TV&#13;
movie "Friendly Fire," so why&#13;
does he play these silly roles? One&#13;
would have thought he'd have&#13;
learned his lesson in "Superman"&#13;
and "Hopscotch." His character&#13;
has no substance and is predictable&#13;
from the moment he first&#13;
appears.&#13;
Predictability is a disease which&#13;
infectiously spreads to the plot. It&#13;
runs rampant from the opening to&#13;
the "surprise" ending (which was&#13;
obvious, so it really wasn't a&#13;
surprise) and is present in every&#13;
scene in between.&#13;
"The Incredible Shrinking&#13;
Woman" falls short of fulfilling&#13;
high viewer expectations (caused&#13;
because it has so much potential&#13;
but if it is taken as a light - hearted&#13;
comedy for children, it could be&#13;
enjoyed.&#13;
"Come Blow Your Horn" in Kenosha&#13;
Lakeside Players, Inc. debuts&#13;
the second production of their&#13;
season, "Come Blow Your Horn,"&#13;
at the Kemper gymnasium, 124' -&#13;
66th St., Kenosha, on Friday, Feb.&#13;
6. This delightful comedy is about&#13;
two brothers — one a playboy and&#13;
sophisticated man-about-town,&#13;
the other a young and inexperienced&#13;
kid trying to emulate&#13;
his older brother. Their antics&#13;
panic their par aits, but provide&#13;
an evening of laughter for the&#13;
audience.&#13;
Directing this production is Noel&#13;
Gentz, who has appeared on&#13;
Lakeside's stage in "The Good&#13;
Doctor," "Dracula," and most&#13;
recently, "The Man Who Came to&#13;
Dinner." He also appeared in&#13;
Petretti Productions first play,&#13;
"When You Coming Home Red&#13;
Rider?"&#13;
Gentz' assistant director, Wally&#13;
Christofferson, is also a familiar&#13;
face on the Lakeside stage. He has&#13;
appeared in "Wait Until Dark,"&#13;
"John Loves Mary," "Dracula"&#13;
and "The Good Doctor."&#13;
Christofferson is doubling his&#13;
duties during this production by&#13;
portraying Alan Baker and&#13;
assisting with the direction. Other&#13;
performers include Barb Guttormsen&#13;
as Peggy Evens, Rick&#13;
Vacarello as Buddy Baker, Fred&#13;
Batassa as Mr. Baker, Lori&#13;
Oatsvall as Mrs. Baker and&#13;
Debbie Bruckner as a guest.&#13;
Performance dates are Feb. 6,&#13;
7,8,13,14,15,20 and 21. Curtain is&#13;
at 8 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays,&#13;
7:30 p.m. Sunday Feb. 8 and&#13;
3 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 15.&#13;
Tickets may be purchased at the&#13;
door before all performances or&#13;
by calling the Lakeside hotline,&#13;
652-5999.&#13;
§ Member Parkside 2 00&#13;
t Mention this ad!&#13;
y^oieph&#13;
443322nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
Z Wm 44jj /ma avi&#13;
W § ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION&#13;
HAS ALWAYS BEEN IMPORTANT&#13;
Man learned at a very early age that good ideas have to be&#13;
heard to be effective. So he devised his own method of&#13;
getting those ideas across. Today, on ht e job ... or in&#13;
school, communication remains a vital part of our world.&#13;
Which is exactly what we'll be talking about in the upcoming&#13;
issue of "Insider" — the free supplement to your college&#13;
newspaper from Ford.&#13;
We'll tell you how to improve your communication skills&#13;
.. from writing term papers and doing oral presentations&#13;
to communicating with friends, parents and persons of&#13;
authority. And whether you're looking for an internship or&#13;
a full-time job, we've got loads of info to help you get there.&#13;
With tips on how to write a persuasive resume, handle an&#13;
interview gracefully, use the telephone effectively, and&#13;
much more.&#13;
Check out the next issue of "Insider," and while you're looking,&#13;
be sure to check out Ford's great new lineup for 1981&#13;
Including Escort, the new world car that's built in America&#13;
to take on the world.&#13;
FORD &#13;
Thursday, February 5,1981 RANGER&#13;
Gold risks to be discussed I Computer expert to speak here&#13;
Opp innAtiiniftAo • • n . • otunities and risks in investing&#13;
in gold will be the subject&#13;
of a public seminar at Parkside on&#13;
Tuesday, February 10, at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union, Room 104.&#13;
The seminar will explain and&#13;
compare the various means of&#13;
investing in gold (including coins&#13;
and bullion), gold futures and gold&#13;
stocks, according to Richard&#13;
Keehn, professor of e conomics at&#13;
Parkside and director of its&#13;
Economic Education and&#13;
Research Institute, the sponsor of&#13;
the seminar.&#13;
Other seminar panelists will be&#13;
Marsha Stewart of E.F. Hutton&#13;
Co., Inc.; Peter Foerster of&#13;
Foerster Derizon Investment Co.;&#13;
and Ayse Somersan, UW Extension&#13;
professor of economics.&#13;
Keehn said the panel will cover&#13;
the risks and returns of the&#13;
various forms of gold investments,&#13;
mechanics of investing&#13;
in gold and the pros and&#13;
cons of gold as compared to investing&#13;
in other financial assets&#13;
and commodities. There will be&#13;
opportunity for a question and&#13;
answer session, according to&#13;
Keehn.&#13;
A $5 fee will be collected at the&#13;
door which will open at 7 p.m:&#13;
Concert to be presented&#13;
Percussion ensembles of&#13;
Parkside and UW - Milwaukee will&#13;
present a joint concert at UW-P on&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 15, at 3 p.m. in the&#13;
Comm. Arts Theater. The&#13;
program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
The UW-P ensemble will open&#13;
the program with Alan&#13;
Hovhaness' Sextet, featuring&#13;
Eden Vaning as violin soloist, and&#13;
Thomas A. Lacina's Three Poems&#13;
to Handicapped Children with&#13;
Frank Mueller as narrator. Both&#13;
Vaning and Mueller are members&#13;
of the UW-P faculty. Linda&#13;
Raymond, a Milwaukee Symphony&#13;
percussionist, directs the&#13;
UW-P group.&#13;
The post - intermission program&#13;
will be presented by the UWM&#13;
Music With Percussion Ensemble&#13;
directed by Pavel Burda. The&#13;
UWM percussionists will be&#13;
assisted by Sigmund Snowpeck III&#13;
and Group and members of&#13;
Milwaukee's 20th Century Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
They will perform Carlos&#13;
Chavez' Toccata, Leonard&#13;
Salzedo's Concerto for Percussion&#13;
and Snowpeck's Roy Rogers&#13;
Meets Albert Einstein. The&#13;
Snowpeck work, recently&#13;
premiered in Milwaukee, combines&#13;
percussion, rock music,&#13;
special lighting effects and acting,&#13;
with Louise Arrata in the role of&#13;
Albert Einstein and Jim Butchart&#13;
as Roy Rogers.&#13;
"Porter, Please"&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
performers who present over fifty&#13;
of Cole's magnificent tunes.&#13;
Theatre Three, one of Dallas'&#13;
finest professional theatres, has&#13;
earned high praise from&#13;
audiences and critics alike for its&#13;
annual composer salutes.&#13;
"Porter, Please," first presented&#13;
during the theatre's '77-78 season,&#13;
is the creation of T heatre Three's&#13;
Producer - Director Jac Alder,&#13;
who has also devised musical&#13;
revues showcasing the works of&#13;
the Gershwin brothers, movie&#13;
composer Harry Warren and&#13;
"The Wizard of Oz " lyricist, E.Y.&#13;
"Yip" Harburg.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
FALINE, cut out any good stag pictures&#13;
lately? Brick Maker&#13;
BLACK SILK: Sharp heels, whips, foils. Good&#13;
punishment? Lovingly Tinfoil&#13;
IN NEED of underexposed young women:&#13;
exposure guaranteed, "Student Militants".&#13;
lOP'S AND CHAIN GANG want to paint&#13;
Ranger's window.&#13;
WHEN WILL the cowbells chime again?&#13;
Dead - Ringer&#13;
NOWBODY KNOWS what goes on behind&#13;
closed doors. — MOLN 118&#13;
BLACK SILK: How long beforethe bed stops?&#13;
Silk Moth&#13;
JIM KASTEN loves Derby Queens.&#13;
Cheerleader.&#13;
A PRODUGIOUS GROUP of vociferous artisans&#13;
attempted to castigate their heinous&#13;
employer through ominous&#13;
prognostications of his ephemeral life?&#13;
Voltar&#13;
ANYONE anti - |oker is also antl - Ranger&#13;
Bear. Ranger Bear&#13;
KENNY, write anything compelling and&#13;
thought provoking lately?&#13;
K.M. — Never mind.&#13;
GRITS— Happy (Belated) Birthday!.. .Just&#13;
wait. Grey Sweater&#13;
ANITA RAASCH, Happy Birthday I Welcome&#13;
home, John! Ranger Bear.&#13;
KEN MEYER isn't old enough to wear&#13;
Plnnochlo underwear! lOP's&#13;
COME ON you guys can't you be a little more&#13;
original? This Is the third time you've used&#13;
that Plnnochlo bit, and this Is the third time&#13;
it's failed.&#13;
CHRISI? Kind of a knothole sounding word!&#13;
Up yours.&#13;
WHO HAS an I .Q. of 3? Anyone who picks on&#13;
J.M., R.S., or the Joker!&#13;
TO THE KAMICAZI GIRLS at OMS. Whip It.&#13;
Whip it good! And remember don't try&#13;
suicide! I c an't wait to scan you fr„om nine&#13;
to five! — Your FAVORITE UsherMIKE&#13;
H., Becky G. has gone peroxide. Give&#13;
her a hug,&#13;
KEN MEYER salivates at the sight of mittens.&#13;
Chain Gang&#13;
HP is a terminal case. lOP's&#13;
BEGGARS can't be choosers about colors,&#13;
Chain Gang&#13;
DOES Sabine play the part of the hound? Play&#13;
Watcher&#13;
FOR SALE: Parkside Girls Tennis Outfits —&#13;
contact Cheerleaders. (Pretty bad, aren't&#13;
they?)&#13;
MUGSY — next time don't catch me in my&#13;
morning routine.&#13;
MINI-CAR PARKERS keep your doors and&#13;
bumpers to yourself 1111 Dented&#13;
JEFF, give me liberty or give me hell. The&#13;
Phantom&#13;
HEY! Leave our shit alone — The Enema&#13;
Band&#13;
NOW I KNOW why they call It "Elementary&#13;
Logic".&#13;
BILL: Porka chops and mashed potatoes —&#13;
come and get It.&#13;
SALLY — How about breakfast; Dick. Paula&#13;
— keep on smiling.&#13;
COLLEGIATE SKILLS is like a vacuum&#13;
cleaner, it sucks.&#13;
WRONG. Collegiate skills Is like a&#13;
cheerleader . . .&#13;
WRONG AGAIN. Collegiate Skills Is a bunch&#13;
of horseshit.&#13;
HEY! Let's leave me out of thlsl Jeff&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV is a real stud!!—From&#13;
her Ranger admirers.&#13;
WHOEVER insults the Joker doesn't know&#13;
what they're In for.&#13;
B-A-C-K-D-O-O-R11 Backdoor I Pow!l&#13;
JOE, traveling incognito as an amiable&#13;
buffoon, is not only a lackadaisical and&#13;
licentious person, but he Is also a narcissist.&#13;
Voltar&#13;
ANDY — I don't want to sleep, I lust&#13;
Rodney&#13;
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: For three&#13;
years, we, the official Parkside Pep Band,&#13;
have been taken hostage by a group of&#13;
militant musicians. Please tell Bonzo we're&#13;
here because we're here.&#13;
WANTED: Conductor with sense of humor to&#13;
lead group of wholesome, clean cut band&#13;
members. Apply at shlthouse.&#13;
OUR MUSIC speaks for itself — The Enema&#13;
Band&#13;
SO . . . ou y f i n a l l y adm it it! !!&#13;
KIDSI Let's score at Notre Dame! My House&#13;
(Junle)&#13;
BLACK SILK: Poor Fish try again I W e know&#13;
you aren't harmless ... Hot Stuff&#13;
BLACK SILK: Death and pain really turns&#13;
you on? Sick! M.J. (J)&#13;
JEFF — skin comes in pastel color,&#13;
especially mine. — Black Silk&#13;
FOR ROLL on vibrating bed with Junle, she&#13;
can be reached at Coffeey Shop at 8:00, take&#13;
a number.&#13;
MY HOUSE (JUNIE) — Sauna's make you&#13;
sweat? Try S.E.X.I—L.S.S.&#13;
TINFOIL — since bondage gets you hot try&#13;
discipline!—Black Silk&#13;
CHIPPER — Why not kinky? Open zippers&#13;
get you hot. Black Silk&#13;
DAWN — Painted in rainbow colors to have&#13;
sex? Black Silk&#13;
BRIAN — Vibrating bed? See me at Holiday&#13;
Inn. Guess Who&#13;
WANTED: One pair of used panties for&#13;
chewing on. Call 634-0915.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
HOST FAMfLlESfor American Field Service&#13;
foreign exchange students. Contact: Amy&#13;
Petersen at 554-6865.&#13;
TWO PASSENGERS to fly to Houston. Call&#13;
Mark 681-1773&#13;
ROOMMATE: $120/month Including heat, 20&#13;
minutes. 878-4504, Tuesday, Thursday.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
COLLEGE REP wanted to distribute&#13;
"Student Rate" subscription cards at this&#13;
campus. Good income, no selling involved.&#13;
For Information and application write to :&#13;
TIME, INC. College Bureau, 4337 W Indian&#13;
School Rd., Phoenix, AZ. 85031.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE. Kenosha&#13;
country setting. 634-8562 weekdays, 862-2883&#13;
weekends.&#13;
GIRLS: rooms, Racine, near bus route. 634-&#13;
8562 weekdays, 862-2883 weekends.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1980 SUZUKI 550L black. Call 553-9362 after 4&#13;
p. m.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
AUTOMOBILE REPAIR. Engine and Body.&#13;
UWP students 10% discount. 654-0876&#13;
"Trends in Microprocessors"&#13;
will be the topic of a free public&#13;
lecture by Dr. Bernard L. Peuto,&#13;
director of computer design&#13;
engineering for Zilog, Inc., an&#13;
Exxon subsidiary, at 3 p.m. on&#13;
Friday, February 6, at Parkside&#13;
in Greenquist Hall, Room-103.&#13;
Peuto previously was manager&#13;
of computer architecture for Zilog&#13;
and held a similar position at&#13;
Amdahl Corp. where he worked in&#13;
the areas of computer architecture,&#13;
operating systems and&#13;
performance measurements.&#13;
He received an electrical&#13;
engineering degree and a computer&#13;
science degree from&#13;
L'Ecole Superieure D'Electricite&#13;
in France and MA and PhD&#13;
degrees in computer science from&#13;
the University of California at&#13;
Berkeley.&#13;
The program is aimed at&#13;
engineers and professionals in&#13;
computer sciences as well as&#13;
hobbyists. It is sponsored by the&#13;
campus Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee, the Applied Computer&#13;
Science discipline and the&#13;
Parkside Computer Club.&#13;
Pabst promotes college sweepstakes&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer is&#13;
promoting a sweepstakes for&#13;
college students that will pay&#13;
more than $13,000 in tuition fees.&#13;
The theme of the promotion,&#13;
"Give That Student a Blue Ribbon,"&#13;
is geared toward the&#13;
nation's eleven million college&#13;
students.&#13;
Pabst College Marketing&#13;
Manager Janice Blankenburg&#13;
said, "Students today are more&#13;
concerned than ever before about&#13;
the spiraling costs of going to&#13;
college. For some lucky students,&#13;
the Blue Ribbon Sweepstakes will&#13;
serve as a vehicle to alleviate&#13;
some of those concerns."&#13;
Several prizes will be awarded.&#13;
The grand prize is a $5,000 tui tion&#13;
check. First prize is a $2,500&#13;
tuition check; second prize is a&#13;
$1,000 tuition check; 50 third place&#13;
prizes of $100 tuition checks will be&#13;
given; 1,000 fourth prizes of "Give&#13;
That Student a Blue Ribbon" Tshirts&#13;
will also be awarded.&#13;
Entry forms may be obtained in&#13;
most places where Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon Beer is sold. The Pabst&#13;
Blue Ribbon Tuition Sweepstakes&#13;
ends March 15, 1981. All entries&#13;
must be received by March 22,&#13;
1981.&#13;
Sign up for employment interviews&#13;
February is the big month for&#13;
employers looking for candidates&#13;
to fill job openings. May and&#13;
August 1981 graduates and alumni&#13;
may sign up for employment&#13;
interviews if they have a completed&#13;
personal data sheet on file&#13;
with the Alumni and Placement&#13;
Office.&#13;
Sometimes students are so&#13;
eager to obtain their ideal position&#13;
that they don't realize that the&#13;
position is possible, but not&#13;
probably, attainable as the first&#13;
step (Mi a graduate's career ladder.&#13;
The practical approach is to&#13;
investigate any position for which&#13;
one qualifies, even though it may&#13;
not be related to the student&#13;
major.&#13;
Sales and retailing employers&#13;
are looking for all majors. These&#13;
two areas are the most available&#13;
starting points in today's&#13;
economy. Many sales opportunities&#13;
involve more than just&#13;
selling a product or service. They&#13;
offer additional opportunities for&#13;
business analysis, management&#13;
training and marketing; these&#13;
positions often progress to the&#13;
executive level. One out of every&#13;
four U. S. presidents started in&#13;
sales. The range of e xperience in&#13;
these fields is invaluable.&#13;
In addition to campus interviews,&#13;
job openings are either&#13;
telephoned or mailed to the&#13;
Alumni and Placement Office.&#13;
Postings of all openings are&#13;
placed in notebooks on a table in&#13;
WLLC D173.&#13;
Job Service is also affiliated&#13;
with the Placement Office. Job&#13;
Service offers opportunities for&#13;
summer and part - time positions&#13;
for students. Mike Plate (553-2656)&#13;
is responsible for that part of the&#13;
operation.&#13;
For further information about&#13;
placement services, call 553-2452&#13;
between 8 a. m. and 4:30 p. m.&#13;
weekdays and until 7 p. m.&#13;
Monday and Wednesday evenings.&#13;
Product expert explains test history&#13;
by Janet Wells&#13;
Roger L. DeRose, New Products&#13;
Manager for S.C. Johnson &amp; Son,&#13;
Inc., of Racine, shared the&#13;
development of Agree, a leading&#13;
personal care product, with an&#13;
audience of about 55 persons on&#13;
Monday evening, January 26, in&#13;
the Student Union. Presented&#13;
under the auspices of the&#13;
Marketing Club, DeRose traced&#13;
Agree from 1970, when&#13;
preliminary market and chemical&#13;
research began, to its 1976 introduction&#13;
to the nation's consumers.&#13;
&#13;
Films of early trial commercials&#13;
and slides of test and&#13;
survey results illustrated the&#13;
stages of product formulation and&#13;
the professional care devoted to&#13;
discovering consumer needs and&#13;
preferences. According to&#13;
DeRose, consumer comments led&#13;
to the selection of a young target&#13;
market and a product concept —&#13;
"the greasies" — which is&#13;
reserved to Johnson's use. An&#13;
"honest" package shape with a&#13;
"hang-tag" history around its&#13;
neck was launched first in a&#13;
simulated test market, using the&#13;
assessor technique. After controlled&#13;
store tests and media&#13;
promotions, followed by measures&#13;
of consumer response to product&#13;
trials and product awareness, the&#13;
company introduced Agree to its&#13;
national sales force in November&#13;
1976. DeRose said that the&#13;
product, which represented a $24&#13;
million investment, set company&#13;
sales records in its first year of&#13;
national sales.&#13;
DeRose, a 1972 graduate of&#13;
Parkside with a Masters Degree&#13;
from Marquette University,&#13;
responded to a series of a udience&#13;
questions after the presentation.&#13;
Kai Kazarian of the Marketing&#13;
Club closed the program.&#13;
Regular meetings of Parkside's&#13;
Marketing Club are held in the&#13;
Molinaro faculty lounge on&#13;
Monday afternoons at 5 p.m.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads —&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30$ will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words&#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;
Name.&#13;
SS No..&#13;
Ranger&#13;
WLLCD139 &#13;
Coining Events&#13;
C^^a^nt^^&#13;
0rCau!B^^i2^or^^ree&#13;
ndrtaQs&#13;
VSp&#13;
CerS&#13;
'' %£**t0Dight at 7:30 pm"&#13;
MEETING Inter-Varsity Rough eXsS5r&#13;
P&#13;
°&#13;
nSOredbyuw-Extension.&#13;
Main D1S1. O pen to aU i nterested Gr&#13;
°&#13;
UP meeting 12:30&#13;
"&#13;
1:30 P ™- in&#13;
FILM "The Black Woman" will&#13;
MSU. The program is free and own to SenuhLP'm' Uni°&#13;
n 20 7&#13;
' SP°&#13;
nsored &amp;X&#13;
LECTURE at 3p.m. in GR103 D BpImS, !&#13;
C' ™&#13;
Zilog, Inc., will talk on "Trends ^£0^^- ^&#13;
t&#13;
2I&#13;
of ComP&#13;
uter Design of&#13;
open to the public. oprocessers. The program is free and&#13;
MOVIE "Coal Miner's Daughter" will he «hnum „» 0 . .. tSSSS £ fab"&#13;
0" is «•" ?—£&#13;
'&#13;
PeM,r&#13;
*&#13;
tor&#13;
'' AdmlMi&#13;
°° »'&#13;
n a&#13;
-«&#13;
$1.00 for students and |S for others ParksIde&#13;
- Admission at the door is&#13;
MSma&#13;
C°&#13;
al Miner&#13;
'&#13;
S Daughter&#13;
" '*• repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
•ssasssssttsraM:&#13;
Monday. Feb. 9&#13;
ROUNDTARLEat 12 noon in Union 106. Prof. Florence Shipek will talk on&#13;
Economic and Social Impacts of W ater Rights Issues of Native Americans "&#13;
The program is free and open to the public. Americans.&#13;
COURSE "Effective Leadership, Motivating Employees and rnm&#13;
UW^Extension t&#13;
°&#13;
day&#13;
' CaU ®Xt 2312 for more detafls&#13;
- Sponsored by&#13;
Corinthians Smau Group meeUng&#13;
'&#13;
Tuesday, Feb. 10&#13;
BLOOD DR IVE from 9 a.m. 'til 2:30 p.m. in Union 104-106. All are welcome&#13;
Sponsored by the ParksIde Health Office. welcome.&#13;
S&#13;
^™*il5°&#13;
ld: ?,&#13;
PP&#13;
°^&#13;
tles and Risks&#13;
" at 7:30 p.m. in Union 104. Call ext. 2259&#13;
for more information. The program is open to the public.&#13;
DANCE " Old Style Night" featuring "Sierra" at 9 p.m. in Union Square. Admission&#13;
is free. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
MEETING Peer Support meeting at 1 p.m. in Moln. 111. S ubject: study tips.&#13;
Refreshments served. .&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 11&#13;
COFFEE HOUSE at 12 noon in Union Square featuring "Free Hot Lunch " Admission&#13;
is free. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
FILM "Wilmington 10" will be shown at 1 p.m. in Union 207. The program is free&#13;
and open to the public. Sponsored by the Minority Student Union.&#13;
MEETING Peer Support meeting at 7:30 p.m. in Moln. 111. Subject: study tips.&#13;
Refreshments served.&#13;
BROWN BAG LUNCH/LECTURE Inter-Varsity Brown Bag Lunch Lecture, 1-2&#13;
p.m., Union 106. Everyone is welcome.&#13;
MEETING Medical technology freshmen and sophomores are requested to attend&#13;
an important meeting at 1 p.m. in Union 104. D iscussion will be the Medical&#13;
Technology curriculum by the Med. Tech. faculty.&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
MEN'S BOWLING TEAM MEMBERS (back row, left to right)&#13;
Jerry Zlgner, Andy Slkorskl, (front row, left to right) Jay&#13;
Podella and John Peterson.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
Meatmen take Invitational&#13;
by Dan McCormack&#13;
The Parkside wrestling team&#13;
travelled last weekend to the&#13;
Windy City to take part in the&#13;
Chicago State Invitational&#13;
wrestling meet. Parkside came&#13;
back with a good first place finish.&#13;
AH ten of the Rangers entered in&#13;
the various weight classes scored&#13;
points toward the overall team&#13;
championship.&#13;
Parkside's only first place&#13;
finisher at the meet was Ron&#13;
Perron in the 142 pound weight&#13;
class. Second place finishers for&#13;
coach Jim Koch's team were&#13;
Dean Quam at 118 pounds, Brian&#13;
Bowling team&#13;
wins tourney&#13;
The Parkside men's bowling&#13;
team won it's first invitational&#13;
tournament of the year at Northern&#13;
Illinois University at&#13;
DeKalb. John Peterson, Jay&#13;
Podella, Andy Sikorski, and Jerry&#13;
Zigner represented Parkside as&#13;
they rolled a 2570 3 -game series&#13;
and defeated the host school by&#13;
one pin.&#13;
Over semester break the&#13;
Parkside men's and women's&#13;
teams competed in the collegiate&#13;
spectacular in Las Vegas against&#13;
over 100 colleges and universities&#13;
from all over the country. The&#13;
Parkside men made the best&#13;
showing with a 44th place total for&#13;
all events (team, doubles and&#13;
singles combined). Haig Derderian&#13;
and John Peterson led the&#13;
way as both bowled at a 200&#13;
average clip for the entire tournament.&#13;
A highlight for the&#13;
Parkside men was when they met&#13;
and defeated Wichita State&#13;
University, the number one&#13;
ranked team in the country, in an&#13;
individual team match. The&#13;
Parkside women showed consistent&#13;
form throughout the&#13;
tournament. While not placing&#13;
high in the overall competition,&#13;
the women's team of Lisa Peckus,&#13;
Sharon Murphy, Ellie Becwar and&#13;
Jan Oechler rolled games consistently&#13;
in the 150 - 160 range.&#13;
Table tennis&#13;
winners&#13;
Khai Luc, Tom Webers and&#13;
Brian Walley placed 1st, 2nd, and&#13;
3rd respectively among 11 competitors&#13;
in Parkside's ACU-I&#13;
qualifying table tennis tourney&#13;
held Jan. 26. Luc and Walley will&#13;
advance to the ACU-I Regional&#13;
Tournament in Milwaukee on Feb.&#13;
12-14, playing both singles and&#13;
doubles matches.&#13;
The other eight competitors&#13;
were Tom Barrett, Colin Cronin,&#13;
Marcello Greco, Tod Harding,&#13;
Dave Koenen, Gary Ledger and&#13;
Gary Neu.&#13;
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Irek at 190 and Paul Roth at&#13;
heavyweight.&#13;
Third place finishers were Tom&#13;
Vania at 126, Bob Pekarske at 150,&#13;
Russ Drankiewicz at 167 and Kieth&#13;
Reicher at 177 pounds.&#13;
Finishing fourth for the Rangers&#13;
in the eight - team event were&#13;
Mike Muckerheide at 158 and Kieth&#13;
Olson, who is filling in for the&#13;
injured Dan Winter at 134. Winter&#13;
injured his knee in practice. At&#13;
this time, it is not known what the&#13;
extent of the injury is and whether&#13;
or not it will keep him out of the&#13;
national tournaments, which are&#13;
less than a month away.&#13;
This Saturday the Rangers&#13;
travel to Marquette, Michigan to&#13;
take on a tough Northern&#13;
Michigan team which, like the&#13;
Rangers, is ranked among the top&#13;
ten NCAA Division II schools in&#13;
the country.&#13;
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Thursday, Februarys, 1981 RANGER&#13;
ssrer «•=-&gt;.&#13;
Rangers streak reaches four&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Despite Parkside's losing&#13;
record, men's basketball coach&#13;
Steve Stephens' tough early&#13;
season scheduling for his team&#13;
seems to be paying off right now&#13;
against some very tough opponents&#13;
in their own division.&#13;
After losing the year's first seven&#13;
games, the Rangers improved&#13;
their season record to 9-11 with&#13;
wins over two strong opponents&#13;
last week. On Thursday, they&#13;
overpowered Northern Michigan&#13;
78-63. They beat Chicago State&#13;
Saturday on a last second shot 60-&#13;
58 to run their present winning&#13;
streak to four games.&#13;
Northern Michigan had a rare&#13;
height advantage over Parkside&#13;
and gave the Rangers a little&#13;
trouble in the first half, at times&#13;
holding a 10 point lead. With four&#13;
and a half minutes left in the first&#13;
half, Northern Michigan called a&#13;
time-out and the Rangers used&#13;
that time-out to regroup and rally&#13;
to close the gap to two points at&#13;
half time, 33-31.&#13;
The two teams played evenly for&#13;
the opening 3 1/2 minutes of the&#13;
second half before the Rangers&#13;
put together an 18-6 scoring spurt&#13;
to take a 59-46 lead with 10:35 left&#13;
to play. Try as they may, Northern&#13;
Michigan couldn't get&#13;
together to overcome Parkside's&#13;
quickness. "I knew that if we got a&#13;
good lead and forced them into a&#13;
man-to-man defense, it was our&#13;
game," commented coach&#13;
Stephens.&#13;
Stephens started 6-5 John&#13;
Herndon at center in place of&#13;
Curtis Green. "Curtis is a little&#13;
rusty from his absence," said&#13;
Stephens. "John (Herndon)&#13;
played very well inside for us." On&#13;
Herndon's starting assignment&#13;
Stephens said, "I don't decide who&#13;
plays; the players do."&#13;
"Our defense was the key to the&#13;
game," Stephens said. "Chuckie&#13;
Perry put pressure on their point&#13;
guard and that let the rest of the&#13;
team anticipate better."&#13;
Parkside may have to pay some&#13;
dues to Northern Michigan later in&#13;
the season in Marquette. With the&#13;
reputation and record that Northern&#13;
Michigan has built up,&#13;
which is now 14-5, the Rangers&#13;
better not get overconfident when&#13;
they visit them.&#13;
If there ever was a game that&#13;
could really be termed' as a nail&#13;
biter, Parkside's game Saturday&#13;
night against Chicago State would&#13;
go down in nail biter history. For&#13;
such a small crowd, the noise that&#13;
followed Curtis Green's tip-in at&#13;
the buzzer was impressive to say&#13;
the least. The opposing coach&#13;
complained to the officials about&#13;
the noise, stating that it was&#13;
impossible to hear the buzzer over&#13;
the crowd. All of the Parkside fans&#13;
that I talked to after the game&#13;
swore that they were sure they&#13;
heard the buzzer that ends the&#13;
game after the ball went through&#13;
the net, although admittedly with&#13;
some bias.&#13;
About the tip-in that the fans&#13;
that were at the game will&#13;
remember for awhile, coach&#13;
Stephens commented, "I don't&#13;
know how he did it."&#13;
Parkside and Chicago State&#13;
played evenly during most of the&#13;
first half until Chicago State put&#13;
on a scoring spurt in the last four&#13;
RANGER photo by Mark Anderson&#13;
BUSTER WEBB pulls down defensive rebound In Ranger's win&#13;
over Chicago State last Saturday.&#13;
minutes of the first half, outscoring&#13;
the Rangers 12-4, to take a&#13;
six point lead at the intermission,&#13;
33-27.&#13;
Parkside trailed most of the&#13;
second half, if only by a few&#13;
points, until John Herndon scored&#13;
on a short jumper to tie the score&#13;
for the final time at 58. Chicago&#13;
State committed a fatal turnover&#13;
shortly thereafter to allow&#13;
Parkside to run a successful stall&#13;
to set up a last shot. A Parkside&#13;
time-out with 15 seconds left on&#13;
the clock was called to set up for&#13;
the winning shot.&#13;
"We were debating about going&#13;
for an out of bo unds play last shot&#13;
or a set up play last shot. They&#13;
made it tough to get the ball to&#13;
Chuckie, so Blue (Reggie Anderson)&#13;
took over at that point,"&#13;
Stephens said.&#13;
Anderson, one of Parkside's two&#13;
ail-Americans last year, took the&#13;
ball inside and handed it off to&#13;
Green, who missed his first lay up&#13;
attempt but went up for the game&#13;
tip-in as the buzzer sounded.&#13;
Stephens has nothing but praise&#13;
after the game for all of his&#13;
players. "Reggie is an ailAmerican&#13;
and he's playing like&#13;
it," he said. As for Herndon, who&#13;
led the Rangers with 15 points and&#13;
contributed six rebounds,&#13;
Stephens said, "John's playing the&#13;
hell out of it right now. He's&#13;
playing the game like it's supposed&#13;
to be played."&#13;
"The teams were tight in the&#13;
first half," said Stephens. "A lot of&#13;
the guys (from both teams) grew&#13;
up together in Chicago and&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
PARKSIDE'S John Herndon goes up to take ball away from&#13;
Northern Michigan opponent.&#13;
everybody was trying to feel each&#13;
other out. Both teams have&#13;
respect for each other."&#13;
Both teams play much the same&#13;
style. Many balls were tipped&#13;
around a few times before either&#13;
team gained control. "It got a&#13;
little ragged and rough out there&#13;
at times," said Stephens, "but&#13;
that's how we play and that's how&#13;
they play. That's the kind of game&#13;
I like."&#13;
The Rangers are on the road&#13;
this week, travelling to UWWhitewater&#13;
on Tuesday and to&#13;
Dubuque, Iowa to battle Loras&#13;
College this Saturday. On Monday&#13;
night, the Rangers will be home to&#13;
battle a tough team from Saginaw&#13;
Valley State, and then will host&#13;
Lakeland College on Wednesday&#13;
For a small fee of $2 students can&#13;
come and see a hell of a good&#13;
basketball game on either one of&#13;
those nights.&#13;
RESULTS&#13;
Tuesday, Feb. 3&#13;
Parkside - 66&#13;
Whitewater - 48&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
Eric Posey&#13;
Matthew Johnson&#13;
M. Mindeman&#13;
Bruce Lamb&#13;
Gregg Upton&#13;
E. Montgomery&#13;
Andy Kaufman&#13;
Pete Marana&#13;
Jeff Buelow&#13;
J. Sobolewski&#13;
Box Scores&#13;
FG-FGA FT REB TP UW-Parkside&#13;
TOTALS&#13;
2 8 0 3 4&#13;
4 9 7 6 15&#13;
4 13 6 5 14&#13;
1 1 0 2 2&#13;
4 7 0 8 8&#13;
2 6 4 3 8&#13;
1 2 0 2 2&#13;
0 1 4 1 4&#13;
0 0 2 0 2&#13;
2 2 0 0 4&#13;
20 49 23 35 63&#13;
Arthur Bright&#13;
Reggie Anderson&#13;
John Herndon&#13;
Walter Greene&#13;
Charles Perry&#13;
Don Blythe&#13;
Curtis Green&#13;
WilbertWebb&#13;
Dave McLiesh&#13;
Tom Trotter&#13;
Darrell Space&#13;
Peril Hood&#13;
UW-Parkside FG-FGA FT REB TP&#13;
Arthur Bright&#13;
Reggie Anderson&#13;
John Herndon&#13;
Walter Greene&#13;
Charles Perry&#13;
WilbertWebb&#13;
Curtis Green&#13;
Tom Trotter&#13;
Dave McLeish&#13;
Don Blythe&#13;
TOTALS&#13;
FG-FGA FT REB TP&#13;
2 8 2 8 6&#13;
10 18 2 7 22&#13;
10 14 0 5 20&#13;
6 12 3 4 15&#13;
4 12 0 4 8&#13;
0 1 0 1 0&#13;
2 4 1 2 5&#13;
0 2 0 0 0&#13;
1 2 0 0 2&#13;
0 0 1 0 0 0&#13;
0 0 0 0 0&#13;
o 0 0 0 0&#13;
0&#13;
o&#13;
35 73 8 39 78&#13;
TOTALS&#13;
2 6 0 1 4&#13;
6 10 1 11 13&#13;
V 12 1 6 15&#13;
4 10 0 2 8&#13;
4 10 2 4 10&#13;
1 3 0 2 2&#13;
1 5 2 5 4&#13;
0 3 0 1 0&#13;
2 5 0 2 4&#13;
0 0 0 0 0&#13;
27 64 6 38 60&#13;
Chicago State FG-FGA FT REB TP&#13;
Ray Coleman&#13;
Ron Collum&#13;
Larry Lowe&#13;
James Stephens&#13;
Percy Leonard&#13;
Curtis Tillman&#13;
Jim Linn&#13;
17&#13;
2&#13;
12&#13;
11&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
1&#13;
17&#13;
6&#13;
10&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
8&#13;
0&#13;
TOTALS 27 60 35 58 </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 9, issue 17, February 5, 1981</text>
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