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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside a nger&#13;
Thursday, April 16, 1981 Vol. 9 - No. 26&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
Students concerned&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
An April 10 student forum&#13;
dealing with the proposed revision&#13;
of the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
requirements expressed much&#13;
student concern about the&#13;
proposal being considered by the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee&#13;
(APC).&#13;
Students stated concern that the&#13;
proposal, if implemented, would&#13;
result in: extending the student's&#13;
stay at Parkside, causing additional&#13;
financial burdens; time&#13;
conflicts in scheduling courses;&#13;
losing academic freedom because&#13;
students wouldn't be able to work&#13;
directly .in their major, thus&#13;
possibly hurting their grade point&#13;
average; bigger classes or more&#13;
sections of courses which will&#13;
create staffing problems; and&#13;
making Parkside unattractive to&#13;
non - traditional students.&#13;
Donella Elsen, a non -&#13;
traditional business student, said,&#13;
"To me, looking at what you're&#13;
proposing right now, were I to&#13;
consider coming to Parkside&#13;
under this proposal, I would be&#13;
overwhelmed. I would not come to&#13;
Parkside." Elsen commented that&#13;
the requirements would keep&#13;
students here longer.&#13;
Assoc. Professor of Physics Ben&#13;
Greenebaum, a member of APC's&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge subcommittee,&#13;
said, "It's not a&#13;
question of whether we're keeping&#13;
you here longer or whether we are&#13;
removing an elective so you can&#13;
put (a requirement) in its place."&#13;
Asst. Professor of Mathematics&#13;
Leo Comerford, another subcommittee&#13;
member said,&#13;
"Nobody's talking about keeping&#13;
students here longer. The number&#13;
of c redits required for graduation&#13;
is 120, p eriod. As far as concerns&#13;
that changing the requirements&#13;
might diminish the number of&#13;
students, those are real concerns.&#13;
But I think they were much more&#13;
serious concerns with the&#13;
Collegiate Skills program, and I&#13;
think the effects of that program&#13;
have proved to be positive. I think&#13;
it hasn't significantly harmed the&#13;
enrollment and I think it's good&#13;
for the (reputation) of the institution.&#13;
So I don't perceive any&#13;
serious negative effects (with the&#13;
proposal)."&#13;
Some students expressed the&#13;
feeling that the Collegiate Skills&#13;
and current Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge requirements are&#13;
adequate. Others agree with the&#13;
subcommittee that the Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge needs revision, but&#13;
that the current proposal isn't the&#13;
right way to go about changing it.&#13;
Said Life Science Professor&#13;
Surinder Datta: "I believe we&#13;
ought to very seriously go back&#13;
and (say), 'Yes, the requirements&#13;
were wrong, there were some&#13;
loopholes.' Find ways of fixing&#13;
those loopholes rather than increasing&#13;
the requirements.&#13;
Comerford answered, "We&#13;
anticipate we'll have roughly the&#13;
same number of students taking&#13;
roughly the same number of&#13;
credits. People will come here and&#13;
take 120 credits. I don't understand&#13;
how people see this&#13;
enormous strain on resources in&#13;
attending classes."&#13;
Many students, however, do see&#13;
the strains that the proposed&#13;
requirements might have on&#13;
students.&#13;
There are many courses that&#13;
are required for majors that are&#13;
not offered every semester or&#13;
every year, said PSGA Senator&#13;
Bill Morrone, "If I had to fulfill&#13;
the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
requirement, I would either be&#13;
putting the requirement off,&#13;
trying to squeeze these (major)&#13;
courses in, or fulfilling the&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge and losing&#13;
in my area of concentration&#13;
because of course availability."&#13;
"You can answer that by saying&#13;
courses will be available," continued&#13;
Morrone. "Well, if they're&#13;
going to be available, you have to&#13;
make them available more often&#13;
or go outside of that area of&#13;
concentration to get an ad-hoc&#13;
professor who will not be&#13;
proficient to teach these courses."&#13;
Greenebaum answered, "It was&#13;
recognized that there would be&#13;
fewer non - required electives at&#13;
the upper - levels, either in or out&#13;
of your field. We figured that&#13;
rather than analyze every single&#13;
major ourselves, we would go&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
BEECHAM ROBINSON (left), chairperson of the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee addresses students during an April 10&#13;
forum.&#13;
around to the divisions and&#13;
probably catch most of the&#13;
problems from the division&#13;
faculties themselves."&#13;
The Science and Humanities&#13;
divisions have expressed concern&#13;
about staffing, but have come up&#13;
with alternatives, according to&#13;
Beecham Robinson, APC&#13;
chairperson.&#13;
"How much money is this going&#13;
to cost students?" asked A1&#13;
Holzman, a business student.&#13;
"It's going to cost you nothing&#13;
extra," said Comerford. "For&#13;
almost everybody there's loads of&#13;
room to complete (the Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge requirements) and&#13;
major requirements and still have&#13;
flexibility. It's only for a very few&#13;
programs with a very large&#13;
number of credits required for the&#13;
major, double - major programs&#13;
... that there might be some&#13;
relatively small increase in the&#13;
number of c redits."&#13;
"It is not the intention to pull&#13;
money out of th e student's pocket&#13;
(or) to pad the number of&#13;
credits," said Greenebaum. "If&#13;
anything the faculty, if it's going&#13;
to fear something, is going to fear&#13;
a loss in enrollment because&#13;
people will decide to go someplace&#13;
else."&#13;
Academic freedom was mentioned&#13;
by many students. "I don't&#13;
think I need you to tell me (what&#13;
Continued On Page Six&#13;
Student demonstration results in dialogue&#13;
by G. Helgeston&#13;
A student protest in front of t he&#13;
UW - Parkside Bookstore on April&#13;
10 resulted in a dialogue between&#13;
protestors and Assistant Chancellor&#13;
for Educational Services&#13;
Carla Stoffle.&#13;
Visiting assistant professor of&#13;
political science Dan McGovern&#13;
and a small group of students&#13;
conducted the protest, which&#13;
raised the issue of student&#13;
ownership of the bookstore and&#13;
coincided with the 111th anniversary&#13;
of Lenin's birthday.&#13;
Parkside's bookstore is currently&#13;
managed and supplied by Follett,&#13;
Inc. of Milwaukee.&#13;
Protestors said they felt that the&#13;
bookstore, as it is currently&#13;
managed, is a "rip-off" because of&#13;
"high prices" and "inefficiency"&#13;
which leads to what protestors&#13;
said they considered to be a lack&#13;
of variety in books and shortages&#13;
of supplies. Student cooperative&#13;
ownership of the bookstore,&#13;
students said, would be&#13;
preferable.&#13;
At a few minutes after 11 a. m.,&#13;
students began the protest, which&#13;
attracted little attention from&#13;
passing students until Parkside&#13;
security officer Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
appeared from the direction of the&#13;
Union. Gigliotti asked the students&#13;
to disburse, stating that they were&#13;
violating campus regulations&#13;
forbidding "demonstrations&#13;
within the campus buildings."&#13;
Students, however, refused to&#13;
disburse and the officer began to&#13;
collect student I. D.'s.&#13;
At this point two students indicated&#13;
that they felt that the&#13;
administration should know about&#13;
the demonstration and, despite&#13;
Gigliotti's attempts to stop them&#13;
RANGER photo b y Dan McCormack&#13;
STUDENTS HELD A DEMONSTRATION outside the bookstore&#13;
on April 10.&#13;
they broke from the group and ran&#13;
to administrative offices on the&#13;
third floor of WLLC.&#13;
A few minutes later, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor Stoffle was also in&#13;
front of the bookstore. After&#13;
reading placards the protestors&#13;
were carrying, she asked, "What&#13;
else do you want to own?"&#13;
Follet, she said, does have&#13;
definite problems on this campus.&#13;
"They have the highest return&#13;
rate of any campus they currently&#13;
service," she said. "Also, they&#13;
only made $1500 on us last year.&#13;
They're only with us because they&#13;
think in the long term a profit will&#13;
be made."&#13;
"But students are right about&#13;
needing a variety of things outside&#13;
of texts," Stoffle said. "We've&#13;
been pushing Follett to do that."&#13;
Follet, Stoffle said, was the sole&#13;
bidder for and received the&#13;
University contract four years&#13;
ago, and comes up for a renewal&#13;
decision next January.&#13;
Stoffle had several arguments&#13;
against the concept of a student&#13;
owned and run bookstore. "Some&#13;
campuses do own their own&#13;
bookstores," she said, "but it's a&#13;
drag on resources and students&#13;
pay for it."&#13;
Students answered by noting&#13;
that they currently pay about $100&#13;
per semester to buy books that,&#13;
they said, they often have trouble&#13;
reselling at the end of the&#13;
semester. One protestor said, "I&#13;
spend so much money on books&#13;
and then at the end of the&#13;
semester they (the bookstore)&#13;
gives me a lousy 5% for the book,&#13;
which they resell."&#13;
"It would save some of your cost&#13;
(to operate the bookstore on a&#13;
rental basis), but not all," Stoffle&#13;
said. "On this campus, we're&#13;
paying the lowest segregated fee&#13;
in the system, and that doesn't&#13;
include rental. Seg. fees would go&#13;
up."&#13;
"Also, a text book rental system&#13;
restricts academic freedom,"&#13;
Stoffle said. "Once a faculty&#13;
member orders a book cm that&#13;
system, he or she must live with it&#13;
for five years. Faculty like to be&#13;
up on the latest in a field and be&#13;
able to make a choice."&#13;
Kathy Slama, a member of&#13;
Parkside's Student Government&#13;
Assocation (PSGA), told&#13;
protestors, "We didn't know&#13;
people were interested (in the&#13;
management of the bookstore)."&#13;
Slama said there is a PSGA&#13;
committee working on the&#13;
problem and that committee&#13;
meetings are open to student&#13;
participation.. "The bookstore&#13;
committee sets policy," she said.&#13;
On Monday, Stoffle said that&#13;
campus bookstores are "never as&#13;
good as you want them to be.&#13;
There are places that are a whole&#13;
lot better. We've been constantly&#13;
working to improve ours."&#13;
The campus owned bookstores&#13;
in the UW - System, Stoffle said,&#13;
add a per - student fee of b etween&#13;
$30 and $45. But, Stoffle said,&#13;
"That doesn't mean students at&#13;
these schools cover all their expenses&#13;
through that fee — some&#13;
faculty, no doubt, require books&#13;
that are not available through the&#13;
campus bookstore."&#13;
Stoffle said that there are also&#13;
outside problems surfacing at&#13;
Parkside, as they are on every&#13;
campus this year. This year, she&#13;
said, student enrollments are up.&#13;
Also, a new IRS ruling has ended&#13;
tax write - offs for unused books,&#13;
and so publishers are printing in&#13;
smaller runs, she said. Both these&#13;
factors result in shortages that&#13;
are not controllable on the level of&#13;
the campus bookstore, she said.&#13;
"What you're paying for is not&#13;
entirely the bookstore's fault,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
The Parkside bookstore, Stoffle&#13;
said, pays a rental fee every&#13;
month of $600 plus 6% of gross&#13;
sales. Last year's university profit&#13;
on rental came to $25,000, Stoffle&#13;
said. This money was used for&#13;
various student functions, like&#13;
Winter Carnival and High School&#13;
Night, she said. Until two years&#13;
ago, these funds were used to&#13;
"keep the Union out of the red,"&#13;
Stoffle said.&#13;
On Monday, Parkside Security&#13;
Chief Ron Brinkman said that no&#13;
report had been filed and no action&#13;
was being taken against student&#13;
protestors involved in the incident.&#13;
Brinkman said that&#13;
demonstrations are allowed inside&#13;
Parkside buildings, but that&#13;
protestors may not obstruct access&#13;
to University lands,&#13;
buildings, or rooms. Protestors&#13;
also may not carry signs supported&#13;
by standards or sticks,&#13;
make excessive noise or threaten&#13;
or attempt to use force or violence&#13;
against members of th e university&#13;
community or university&#13;
property.&#13;
"These things happen so seldom&#13;
here that my officer had no experience&#13;
in dealing with it (the&#13;
protest)," Brinkman said. "Now&#13;
that the officers know the rulings,&#13;
it won't happen again."&#13;
Thursday, April 16,1981&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge:&#13;
revise the revision&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Revising the Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge requirements will not&#13;
affect students currently at&#13;
Parkside, but it is a matter of such&#13;
importance that we must not act&#13;
selfishly and uncaringly about the&#13;
proposed change.&#13;
Requirements are the essence&#13;
of a university. They reveal how&#13;
an institution feels about the way&#13;
higher education should be conducted.&#13;
If the requirements are&#13;
weak and unstructured, the&#13;
university looks like a failure. If&#13;
the requirements are overly rigid&#13;
and extreme, the university will&#13;
suffer by appearing unattractive&#13;
to prospective students.&#13;
On that scale, the current&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
requirements are more the former&#13;
and the proposed changes&#13;
propel the requirements completely&#13;
across the spectrum to the&#13;
latter.&#13;
What we need now is a&#13;
satisfactory median.&#13;
Many problems and concerns&#13;
were brought out last Friday at a&#13;
student forum in which students&#13;
gave their opinions on how the&#13;
proposed revisions would affect&#13;
them and their majors.&#13;
Among the students' complaints:&#13;
financial burdens caused&#13;
by students having to stay at&#13;
Parkside an extra semester or&#13;
two; staffing problems caused by&#13;
offering more sections of r equired&#13;
courses (either that or have&#13;
bigger class sizes); too much&#13;
diluting from a student's work in&#13;
his or her particular field of study.&#13;
Some people don't see the difference&#13;
between the current and&#13;
the proposed requirements&#13;
because a student would still need&#13;
120 credits to graduate. The&#13;
average requirements for a major&#13;
are 40 credits; add on the current&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge it becomes&#13;
78 credits (counting foreign&#13;
language). So that leaves roughly&#13;
40. credits of electives a student&#13;
can take.&#13;
That seems adequate.&#13;
But the proposal would raise the&#13;
number of Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
requirements by 10, thereby&#13;
lowering the number of e lectives.&#13;
Also, the proposed requirements&#13;
go from the current broad and&#13;
inconclusive requirements to a set&#13;
of requirements that contain&#13;
questionable areas. They are&#13;
proposing too many required&#13;
credits.&#13;
Not only would the proposal&#13;
reduce the number of ele ctives, it&#13;
would, as students said at the&#13;
forum, create financial burdens,&#13;
staffing problems and scheduling&#13;
conflicts. The APC should fix the&#13;
loopholes of the Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge without adding to the&#13;
number of credits. Fix the&#13;
problems but don't create additional&#13;
ones.&#13;
It's commendable that the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee&#13;
wants the best for Parkside's&#13;
requirements by reviewing&#13;
existing standards to see if they&#13;
are doing what they were intended&#13;
to do. Revisions are needed, and&#13;
the Breadth of Knowledge subcommittee&#13;
saw that.&#13;
But the bottom line is, their&#13;
revision needs to be revised.&#13;
New SOC officers should&#13;
clean up election process&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
At the last bi-weekly meeting of&#13;
the Student Organizations Council&#13;
(SOC), next year's chairperson&#13;
and vice-chairperson were&#13;
elected. Sort of. On April 7, Sarkis&#13;
Yoghourtdjian, who is currently&#13;
president of International&#13;
Students, became SOC's new&#13;
chair. Chuck Neu was elected&#13;
vice-chair.&#13;
I have absolutely no quarrel&#13;
with the persons who are in these&#13;
positions. Becuase of my work for&#13;
Ranger, I am familiar with both&#13;
Neu and Yoghourtdjian, who seem&#13;
to be very concerned, capable&#13;
people. They have convinced me&#13;
they are committed to solving&#13;
SOC's current problems&#13;
responsibly. And they seem to be&#13;
very aware of their joint ties to the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) and to individual&#13;
student groups.&#13;
During the voting process last&#13;
week, however, I did notice&#13;
certain inadequacies that I&#13;
challenge these new leaders to&#13;
correct as their first project in&#13;
office.&#13;
As soon as club presidents&#13;
entered the room last week, they&#13;
were handed ballots with a list of&#13;
names on them and told to vote..&#13;
Many voters seated around me&#13;
were confused — and understandably&#13;
so. They had hever&#13;
heard those candidates running&#13;
against the incumbents speak.&#13;
Many of them had not even been&#13;
present two weeks prior when the&#13;
candidates had been pointed out to&#13;
the group by SOC chair Jan&#13;
Oechler, who was running for reelection.&#13;
Many of them had never&#13;
met the non-incumbent candidates.&#13;
Yoghourtdjian also noticed the&#13;
confusion. He tried to correct that&#13;
situation by making a motion&#13;
before the other members to&#13;
provide a few minutes before the&#13;
voting process was completed for&#13;
all the candidates to introduce&#13;
themselves and to address the&#13;
pertinant issues. A vote was taken&#13;
and failed 10-8-2. None of the other&#13;
candidates then spoke, except&#13;
Oechler, who was chairing the&#13;
meeting.&#13;
When the official vote was&#13;
tallied, it was discovered that&#13;
Yoghourtdjian had won by one&#13;
vote, and Neu had won by four&#13;
votes, making the election a very&#13;
close one. Even more surprising&#13;
than the vote, however, was the&#13;
number of persons who voted. In&#13;
the vote to decide whether or not&#13;
members would hear from their&#13;
candidates, 20 persons voted. In&#13;
the election itself, 33 persons&#13;
voted.&#13;
There is truly something wrong&#13;
when so many out of a voting body&#13;
do not register even an abstention&#13;
to show their preference on an&#13;
issue as important as whether or&#13;
not candidates for leadership&#13;
positions will speak to them before&#13;
an election.&#13;
Moreover, there is something&#13;
drastically wrong when the chair&#13;
of that body accepts a vote that&#13;
nowhere near represents the&#13;
wishes of the group as a whole.&#13;
This is especially true when a&#13;
simple command for order from&#13;
Oechler would have increased the&#13;
vote and lessened everyone's&#13;
confusion.&#13;
Yoghourtdjian and Neu won by&#13;
only a slim margin; that means&#13;
they will be under some pressure&#13;
to prove themselves during the&#13;
coming year. One of the ways in&#13;
which they can gain more support&#13;
from SOC members (and a lot of&#13;
other people around here) is to get&#13;
to work on the sort of proglems&#13;
that were ironically reflected in&#13;
the process that Yoghourtdjian&#13;
and Neu got their positions&#13;
through. I challenge them to do so.&#13;
Happy&#13;
Easter&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer FHitnr&#13;
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5 "" p*"ln0 Ginger Helgeson Photo Editor Edjtor&#13;
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To the Editor:&#13;
Concerned over proposed&#13;
change in r equirements&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Recently I attended an open&#13;
forum put on by PSGA. The&#13;
forum's agenda was the proposal&#13;
of the Breadth of Knowledge as&#13;
stated on February 25, 1981. T his&#13;
proposal was published in the&#13;
April 2nd issue of the Ranger. This&#13;
proposal would change the&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge from the&#13;
current 30-38 cr. to approximately&#13;
48 cr. A fairly strong student&#13;
turnout was evident due to the&#13;
sensitive issue and the promotion&#13;
by the current president, Jim&#13;
Kreuser. Beecham Robinson,&#13;
chair of the Academic Policy&#13;
Committee, was pleased at the&#13;
opportunity to exchange ideas&#13;
with the student body. He said that&#13;
this was the first time in his nine&#13;
years at Parkside that he had the&#13;
opportunity to participate in a&#13;
forum with students. With the&#13;
support of Prof. Datta and Prof.&#13;
Carmen the students expressed&#13;
their deep concern over th~&#13;
present proposal. Many valid&#13;
points were brought up and it is&#13;
hoped that this attempt to show&#13;
the Committee the flaws in their&#13;
proposal will be met with an open&#13;
mind.&#13;
I, along with members of the&#13;
student body that I have talked to,&#13;
express our deep concern over&#13;
this change in policy. I feel that&#13;
the present Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
is more than adequate and major&#13;
change to it would lower the&#13;
quality of education. If the&#13;
changes were to be implemented&#13;
most, if not all, special interest&#13;
classes would be eliminated.&#13;
Higher level courses in all areas&#13;
would be offered less frequently&#13;
because the staff would have an&#13;
increased number of introductory&#13;
classes. Persons majoring in Med.&#13;
Tech., Pre Med, Pre Law, IEH,&#13;
and some education majors would&#13;
find it impossible to graduate in&#13;
four years unless they took&#13;
summer school.&#13;
More importantly, more money&#13;
is going to be spent, both by the&#13;
student and the school. The school&#13;
is going to have to offer more&#13;
classes at more times and add ad&#13;
hoc instructors to meet this load;&#13;
which will increase costs and&#13;
lower the quality of education.&#13;
Many students will be at school for&#13;
longer times during the day andor&#13;
evenings; some will have to&#13;
stay an extra semester. Where is&#13;
this money to come from when&#13;
financial aid is being reduced and&#13;
Parkside's operating budget being&#13;
cut back?&#13;
I ask you, the students and&#13;
faculty, to speak out against this&#13;
change in the Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge. We should have the&#13;
right to an individualized&#13;
education and not to be&#13;
"universally cloned."&#13;
John Alan Kemper&#13;
ganger&#13;
is now accepting applications for&#13;
Editor and&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
for the 1981-82 academic year.&#13;
Applicants must be registered UWParkside&#13;
students planning to take&#13;
at least 6 credits each semester.&#13;
Deadline for applications:&#13;
April 24, 1981&#13;
Send application ^Lcom&#13;
&amp; resume to : UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141&#13;
UW System produces blueprint for equality&#13;
MADISON - The UW-System&#13;
has reviewed its 1970's progress&#13;
toward equal opportunity in&#13;
education and produced a&#13;
blueprint for successfully completing&#13;
the effort in the 1980's.&#13;
A UW System task force report&#13;
mailed last week to members of&#13;
the board of regents contains 33&#13;
recommendations for attaining&#13;
equal opportunity for women in&#13;
this decade.&#13;
"This report appropriately&#13;
stresses what remains to be done&#13;
rather than emphasizing the often&#13;
significant progress that has been&#13;
made by our institutions,"&#13;
President Robert M. O'Neil said in&#13;
a covering letter.&#13;
"It is a blueprint designed to&#13;
give guidance to the entire system&#13;
in Working toward achieving its&#13;
commitment to equal opportunity&#13;
in education and employment," he&#13;
added.&#13;
The regents, meeting in&#13;
Madison today and tomorrow&#13;
(April 9-10), will be asked to approve&#13;
a time schedule for institutional&#13;
review of the task force&#13;
recommendations. They also will&#13;
be asked to adopt recommendations&#13;
to establish a system&#13;
advisory council on the report and&#13;
give funding for the academic and&#13;
non - academic needs of women a&#13;
top priority in the next several&#13;
biennial budgets.&#13;
The Regents' Task Force on the&#13;
Status of Women was chaired by&#13;
Board President Joyce Erdman of&#13;
Madison. It began its work in&#13;
December, 1979 and last year held&#13;
a system - wide series of hearings.&#13;
The resulting report, said Erd-&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Stoffle&#13;
replies to Task Force optimism&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
"I guess I would be a bit&#13;
skeptical," Carla Stoffle commented&#13;
on the UW-System&#13;
projection of changes in the status&#13;
of women in Wisconsin higher&#13;
education during the 1980's.&#13;
Stoffle chaired UW-Parkside's&#13;
Institutional Resource Committee&#13;
for the Task Force on the Status of&#13;
Women last spring. She is also one&#13;
of the highest ranking women in&#13;
the UW-System campus administration.&#13;
One of her foremost&#13;
concerns is about the status of&#13;
women and minorities in&#13;
education.&#13;
Stoffle feels that it is "naive" to&#13;
believe that making recommendations&#13;
about women's status&#13;
in education is enough to solve&#13;
their problems. "One of the&#13;
criticisms I have heard is that all&#13;
the Task Force did was make&#13;
recommendations," she said. "No&#13;
way of enforcing them is the&#13;
problem. A few years ago, it was&#13;
the same for the minority Task&#13;
Force."&#13;
However, Stoffle does feel that&#13;
the Task Force accomplished&#13;
some goals. "They did a good,&#13;
thorough job of laying out the&#13;
problem areas," she said, "and&#13;
the position of Woman Council to&#13;
the President of the System&#13;
means that women will have more&#13;
direct influence than they have in&#13;
the past. Reporting directly to the&#13;
President is a way of keeping&#13;
problems on the front burner."&#13;
The only way that women can&#13;
make significant progress, according&#13;
to Stoffle, is by making it&#13;
possible for women to move into&#13;
non - traditional fields in the&#13;
university, by actively seeking&#13;
women for faculty positions and&#13;
by making visible those women&#13;
who are already qualified for&#13;
administrative positions in&#13;
education. "Once you have&#13;
significant numbers of women in&#13;
these areas," Stoffle said, "you'll&#13;
begin to see more women hired for&#13;
non - traditional positions, as&#13;
faculty, in administrative&#13;
positions at a higher level."&#13;
"We've got to get women out of&#13;
the idea that there are 'women's&#13;
majors' with no alternatives," she&#13;
said, adding, "It's OK if women&#13;
want to major in college in a&#13;
traditional field, but we've got to&#13;
begin identifying women who need&#13;
alternatives."&#13;
One of the ways to help women&#13;
open career choices, Stoffle said,&#13;
is to reach them at the high school&#13;
level. "A woman is still in high&#13;
school when she decides not to&#13;
take math, but her occupational&#13;
choices are cut by 3/4 without it,"&#13;
she noted.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
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future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
In the areas of women in faculty&#13;
and administrative positions,&#13;
Stoffle said the main tasks ahead&#13;
are in identifying^ and recommending&#13;
women who are capable.&#13;
"Many women are qualified for&#13;
positions in higher education&#13;
now," she said, "but they need to&#13;
be recommended initially by&#13;
someone important, to get a step&#13;
ahead "of everyone else. That's the&#13;
way the system works."&#13;
Women who are already in these&#13;
positions need to help other&#13;
women, Stoffle said. "Women are&#13;
going to have to be a little more&#13;
tolerant of other women, more&#13;
supportive," she said. "Women in&#13;
administration cannot be 'queen&#13;
bees' and hope to help other&#13;
women. They cannot remain&#13;
unique and different."&#13;
"Even with men who get ahead,&#13;
if you are different, you are&#13;
subject to all kinds of gossip.&#13;
Women must learn to be less&#13;
sensitive to it, not to be afraid to&#13;
be themselves. Women administrators&#13;
have certain&#13;
qualities, as do successful men,&#13;
that make them aware and sensitive&#13;
to people's problems. This is&#13;
a much more humane way to go.&#13;
This is an androgynous quality."&#13;
Also, Stoffle sees the Task Force&#13;
recommendations as "pointing&#13;
out some unique needs of women,&#13;
like the recommendation for&#13;
better child care facilities. I hope&#13;
it goes through, but eight or ten&#13;
years ago, you wouldn't have even&#13;
seen the recommendation."&#13;
"But you can't relax," Stoffle&#13;
said. "I worry about the Reagan&#13;
administration. Now what we're&#13;
going to see across the country is&#13;
how many people are really for&#13;
affirmative action when much of&#13;
the social legislation is removed."&#13;
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ASSISTANT CHANCELLOR&#13;
CARLASTOFFLE&#13;
"I think there are different&#13;
times ahead," Stoffle said. "The&#13;
most dangerous thing for women&#13;
and minorities is the belief that&#13;
'We've made it'. Some things&#13;
have been achieved, but we&#13;
haven't made it. The Task Force&#13;
report has shown that after a&#13;
decade of legal fighting, not much&#13;
progress has been made."&#13;
. I Like to Jog!&#13;
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man, "represents a pioneering&#13;
effort, not only for the University&#13;
of Wisconsin System, but for all of&#13;
higher education in this country as&#13;
well."&#13;
"By this deliberate and careful&#13;
process we have now evolved a&#13;
sound analysis of the present&#13;
status of women, an analysis on&#13;
which we have built pragmatic&#13;
recommendations for attaining&#13;
the needed goals of equal opportunity&#13;
in the present decade,"&#13;
said Erdman.&#13;
In its review, the task force&#13;
found:&#13;
Regent policy providing equal&#13;
opportunities in education and&#13;
eliminating discrimination based&#13;
on sex had not been fully carried&#13;
out.&#13;
Women students still are&#13;
clustered in such traditional areas&#13;
of study as education, the arts,&#13;
home economics and library&#13;
sciences.&#13;
Regent policies in the area of&#13;
equal opportunity and affirmative&#13;
action have not had a substantial&#13;
impact on improving the status of&#13;
women.&#13;
Women employees remain in&#13;
lower status and lower pay&#13;
positions in the system.&#13;
Current budget priorities offer&#13;
no incentive to improve women's&#13;
employment status.&#13;
Sexual harassment is a serious&#13;
issue facing students and employees.&#13;
Campus protection and security&#13;
is an area of continuing concern.&#13;
The task force recommendations&#13;
urged these actions in&#13;
prescribed areas:&#13;
STUDENTS — programs to&#13;
encourage women to enter fields&#13;
in which they have been&#13;
traditionally underrepresented,&#13;
reallocation of student service&#13;
resources to meet the special&#13;
needs of women, evaluation of&#13;
campus security and health&#13;
services available to women, and&#13;
exploration of ways to provide&#13;
more adequate child care.&#13;
FACULTY — improve institutional&#13;
records on recruiting,&#13;
hiring, retention and promotion of&#13;
faculty women; correct salary&#13;
inequities between males and&#13;
females; re - examine personnel&#13;
rules to assure that women and&#13;
minorities would not be&#13;
disproportionately affected by&#13;
layoffs.&#13;
WOMEN'S STUDIES — ask&#13;
faculty to incorporate material&#13;
about women into the curriculum,&#13;
introduce classroom materials&#13;
reflecting the diversity of&#13;
women's roles and experiences,&#13;
seek every means to sustain&#13;
women's studies programs in&#13;
periods of funding decline.&#13;
ACADEMIC STAFF — review&#13;
personnel rules, procedures and&#13;
practices to determine if they&#13;
adversely affect the institutional&#13;
participation and professional&#13;
pursuits of women; support salary&#13;
equity for women and programs to&#13;
further their professional&#13;
development.&#13;
CLASSIFIED STAFF — support&#13;
and strengthen equal pay policy;&#13;
make training and development&#13;
programs more accessible to&#13;
clerical staff; support flexible&#13;
work hours, job sharing and&#13;
permanent part time positions;&#13;
make a more equitable&#13;
distribution of clerical positions&#13;
within pay ranges.&#13;
WOMEN IN ADMINISTRATION&#13;
— reaffirm regent&#13;
policy that search and&#13;
screen committees agressively&#13;
seek women candidates; strongly&#13;
encourage internal promotion at&#13;
the middle management level;&#13;
introduce administrative internship&#13;
programs for women at&#13;
each institution in the system.&#13;
The task force also asked the&#13;
regents to adopt a series of&#13;
changes in equal opportunity&#13;
policy to strengthen affirmative&#13;
action efforts. These include&#13;
annual reports to the regents&#13;
which assess institutional&#13;
progress toward affirmative&#13;
action goals; periodic&#13;
examination of all employment&#13;
policies, practices and procedures&#13;
to assure none discriminate, and&#13;
adequate financial support for&#13;
affirmative action offices.&#13;
You Don't Have to&#13;
Invest Your Entire Summer&#13;
to Earn Credits at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Oshkosh&#13;
&gt; i i&#13;
OSHKOSH&#13;
* one 8-week session June 15 - August 7&#13;
* two 4-week sessions «£une 15 - July 10&#13;
July 13 - A ugust 7&#13;
* 4-day class week&#13;
* early morning classes&#13;
* evening classes&#13;
For information, clip and mail the form below to:&#13;
Summer Semester&#13;
University of Wisconsin Oshkosh&#13;
Oshkosh, Wisconsin 54901&#13;
Please send me a Summer Class Schedule&#13;
Name.&#13;
Address.&#13;
City .State. .Zip.&#13;
4 Thursday, April 16,1981 RANGER&#13;
Student " M0C2U'eWSki' ^&#13;
National premiere&#13;
UW-P hosts "See What I Sa y"&#13;
by G. Heigeson&#13;
UW - Parkside will host the&#13;
premiere of "See What I Say," a&#13;
film that speaks to the important&#13;
shared concerns of advocates of&#13;
deaf awareness and the feminist&#13;
community, on May 9. The Union&#13;
Cinema premiere will begin at&#13;
Coupon&#13;
V2 Off&#13;
on the second buffet&#13;
Eat All You&#13;
Want Buffet&#13;
Lunch Buffet $4.35&#13;
Dinner Buffet $6.55&#13;
10% Discount&#13;
with UW-P I.D.&#13;
Villa Capri&#13;
Shopping Center&#13;
2116-20th Place&#13;
551-7883&#13;
2:30 p. m., with a wine and cheese&#13;
reception to follow in the Bazaar&#13;
area.&#13;
Currently a finalist in the&#13;
American Film Festival in New&#13;
York, the film has been purchased&#13;
by WGBH public television in&#13;
Boston for a Holiday Special&#13;
airing nationally this summer.&#13;
Sponsors for "See What I Say"&#13;
at Parkside are the Educational&#13;
Outreach Office and&#13;
Parkside Women's Concourse.&#13;
Interviews with four deaf&#13;
women and with feminist&#13;
songwriter Holly Near, whose&#13;
filmed concert is interpreted for&#13;
the deaf, combine to reveal the&#13;
frustrations of the deaf, who have&#13;
limited access to cultural and&#13;
political events. The film also&#13;
captures the excitement that a&#13;
live performance brings to the&#13;
deaf community, while a hearing&#13;
audience experiences a new&#13;
language. Near's music is interpreted&#13;
by Susan Freundlich,&#13;
who incorporated mime and&#13;
dance into American Sign&#13;
Language.&#13;
The film is a 25 minute, 16 mm&#13;
documentary that was produced&#13;
and directed by Michigan Women&#13;
Filmmakers. Project directors for&#13;
the film were Freddi Stevens, a&#13;
special education instructor at&#13;
Reuther Alternative High School&#13;
in Kenosha, and Linda Chapman&#13;
and Pam Le Blanc, both from&#13;
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Select from red, navy, kelly&#13;
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choice of monogram color white,&#13;
navy, yellow, red or oyster. The&#13;
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Financial support for the&#13;
making of the film was provided&#13;
by the Michigan Council of the&#13;
Arts, the Polaroid Foundation and&#13;
through grass - roots fund -&#13;
raising.&#13;
"See What I Say" will premiere&#13;
at Parkside in a non - captioned&#13;
version, and will be interpreted&#13;
for the deaf by Eleanor Collins, an&#13;
instructor at Gateway Technical&#13;
Institute.&#13;
All proceeds from the premiere&#13;
will be used as completion funds to&#13;
provide captioning for deaf&#13;
audiences. "The film won't be&#13;
completed until it is captioned,"&#13;
Stevens said. "One of the major&#13;
goals of this film is to show people&#13;
how films and other cultural&#13;
events can be made accessible&#13;
to the deaf audience."&#13;
"Our work on the film really&#13;
started two years ago when all&#13;
three of us attended the Michigan&#13;
Women's Musical Festival,"&#13;
Stevens said. Everything was&#13;
interpreted. Now that we're&#13;
almost finished with captioning,&#13;
we're really excited about the&#13;
product we have to share. While&#13;
working on "See What I Say," we&#13;
learned not only more about film,&#13;
but about the problems of the&#13;
hearing impaired. We feel we&#13;
have created a model of what can&#13;
be done to include them in cultural&#13;
activities."&#13;
Student tickets for the Union&#13;
Cinema premiere of "See What I&#13;
Say" can be purchased at the&#13;
Union Information Desk. The&#13;
public can also obtain tickets from&#13;
the Kenosha Achievement Center,&#13;
Society's Assets of Racine or&#13;
Developmental Disabilities Information&#13;
Service of Racine.&#13;
Tickets are priced at $3 for&#13;
students and $6 for the public.&#13;
Volunteers needed&#13;
for conference&#13;
by G. Heigeson&#13;
Volunteer workers are needed&#13;
for the week before and the days&#13;
of UW - Parkside's womens&#13;
conference, according to Esther&#13;
Letvin, on - campus organizer for&#13;
the conference. A training session&#13;
will be held for volunteers at 1 p.&#13;
m. on Monday in Greenquist 210,&#13;
she said. At that time, volunteers&#13;
will be able to work with the&#13;
conference coordinators on&#13;
publicity planning and can sign up&#13;
to work during the conference.&#13;
"Some volunteers will be able to&#13;
attend the conference free if they&#13;
donate enough of their time,"&#13;
Letvin said. She encourages&#13;
students to volunteer.&#13;
The conference, entitled "Accent&#13;
on Women," will feature a&#13;
one - woman dramatization of the&#13;
life of 19th century feminist&#13;
Margaret Fuller, a lecture on&#13;
"Women in the Work Force" by&#13;
feminist commentator Caroline&#13;
Bird, an organizational fair&#13;
featuring community agencies&#13;
from Kenosha and Racine and a&#13;
full day series of workshops. It&#13;
will be held at Parkside on Friday&#13;
night through Saturday, April 24 -&#13;
25.&#13;
Childcare for the first 50&#13;
registered conference goers and&#13;
volunteers will be supplied by&#13;
Parkside's Child Care Center free&#13;
of charge. Reservations must be&#13;
made by April 15. For more information,&#13;
call Maureen Budowle&#13;
at ext. 2227.&#13;
Brochures and registration&#13;
forms for the conference are&#13;
available at the Union Information&#13;
Desk, at the Main Place&#13;
Kiosk and at the Child Care&#13;
Center. For more informaton call&#13;
ext. 2351 between 1 and 5 p. m.&#13;
weekdays.&#13;
The conference fee, which includes&#13;
all the events and a luncheon&#13;
in the Union Dining Room,&#13;
is $6.50 for students and $10.50 for&#13;
the public.&#13;
MDA summer camp&#13;
requests recruits&#13;
The Muscular Dystrophy&#13;
Association (MDA) is recruiting&#13;
student volunteers for an 8-day&#13;
residential summer camp for&#13;
children and teens, ages 8 to 18,&#13;
with muscular dystrophy. The&#13;
camp will be held June 13 - 20,1981&#13;
at the YMCA Camp Minikani on&#13;
Amy Belle Lake in Hubertus,&#13;
Wisconsin approximately a 30&#13;
minute drive northwest of&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
The main purpose of the camp is&#13;
to provide a release for the&#13;
camper, a chance to get away and&#13;
a chance to communicate with&#13;
others sharing common interests&#13;
and mutual problems. While at&#13;
camp, the campers and volunteers&#13;
participate in a most&#13;
diversified program of activities.&#13;
There is swimming, boating,&#13;
fishing, horseback riding, riflery,&#13;
modified forms of baseball,&#13;
hockey and other activities including&#13;
art and crafts. Because&#13;
the campers are physically&#13;
handicapped and almost all are in&#13;
wheelchairs, volunteer attendants&#13;
are necessary. The MDA policy&#13;
states that there will be one&#13;
volunteer for each and every&#13;
camper that attends. Without&#13;
volunteers such a camp could not&#13;
exist.&#13;
The attendant is someone&#13;
outside the home with whom the&#13;
camper can talk with, depend on&#13;
and confide in. He or she assists&#13;
the camper whenever he or she&#13;
needs help, actually becoming the&#13;
campers arms and legs. The attendant&#13;
is available to the camper&#13;
24 hours a day when necessary.&#13;
Volunteers are required to arrive&#13;
at camp Saturday morning, June&#13;
13th. Campers arrive on June&#13;
14th. This gives the volunteers a&#13;
full day and evening for staff&#13;
training and orientation. Room&#13;
and board will be furnished. The&#13;
only expense for the attendant is&#13;
transportation to and from camp.&#13;
The MDA is always in need of&#13;
good volunteers. They believe that&#13;
the program provides an excellent&#13;
experience for students, both&#13;
personally and professionally. For&#13;
this reason, the MDA Summer&#13;
Camp has been used as a field&#13;
replacement for student credit or&#13;
as a partial requirement in an&#13;
independent studies program.&#13;
If you wish to attend the MDA&#13;
camp, send for an application to:&#13;
MDA Summer Camp, 5918 W.&#13;
North Avenue, Milwaukee, WI&#13;
53208 or phone (414) 453-7600.&#13;
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RANGER Thursday , April 16,1981&#13;
James recreates Fuller's&#13;
life in one-woman show&#13;
Margaret Fuller was America's&#13;
"first feminist." She started the&#13;
first "rap" sessions in Boston,&#13;
was the first to speak out for&#13;
women's rights, authored the first&#13;
book on the condition of women,&#13;
was the New York Tribune's first&#13;
female reporter and its first&#13;
foreign correspondent, and was a&#13;
leading light in 19th century&#13;
Transcendentalism.&#13;
New York actress Laurie James&#13;
recreates that remarkable life in&#13;
her one - woman show "Still Beat&#13;
Noble Hearts," to be presented at&#13;
Parkside's Communication Arts&#13;
Theater at 7:30 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
April 24, in conjunction with an&#13;
"Accent on Women" conference&#13;
the following day on campus.&#13;
Fuller's book, "Women in the&#13;
19th Century," laid the ground&#13;
work for feminism in the United&#13;
States in the 1840s, forming the&#13;
first written statement on&#13;
women's issues. The book was&#13;
widely criticized as immoral for&#13;
its advocacy of women's rights.&#13;
Born in 1810, t he eldest of e ight&#13;
children, Fuller was given a&#13;
classical education rare for girls&#13;
of her era. She also early formed&#13;
friendships with such giants of&#13;
Transcendentalism as Emerson&#13;
and Thoreau.&#13;
Forced by her father's death to&#13;
support her family, she launched&#13;
intellectual discussion groups for&#13;
women in Boston and shared the&#13;
editorship of Dial magazine. At&#13;
Horace Greeley's invitation, she&#13;
joined his New York Tribune&#13;
where her articles called for a new&#13;
American literature and art, for&#13;
2n reform and for women's&#13;
nghts. She went to Europe as a&#13;
joreign correspondent in 1846&#13;
became a supporter of&#13;
revolutionary movement in Rome&#13;
fhl n?arruied a young nob,eman,&#13;
the Marchese Giovanni Ossoli.&#13;
duller, her husband and young&#13;
&amp;on were killed in a shipwreck&#13;
aunng a voyage to America in&#13;
1850.&#13;
James' dramatic presentation,&#13;
interlaced with slides showing&#13;
historic locations in Fuller's saga,&#13;
deals with the American period of&#13;
her life and career. James wrote&#13;
me show based on several years of&#13;
research and currently is at work&#13;
on a sequel dealing with Fuller's&#13;
European years.&#13;
James launched her show&#13;
before NOW chapters in New&#13;
York, later performed it at&#13;
Harvard University where&#13;
Margaret Fuller Day" was&#13;
proclaimed and has just completed&#13;
a west coast tour.&#13;
Writer-actress James follows in&#13;
the Fuller tradition in her own life,&#13;
combining professional activity&#13;
with marriage and five children&#13;
Both husband and kids, she says,&#13;
are supportive of her efforts to&#13;
bring Fuller's story to wider&#13;
public attention.&#13;
Admission to her performance&#13;
is included in the registration fee&#13;
for the "Accent on Women"&#13;
program. Individual tickets are&#13;
$2.50 and may be purchased at the&#13;
door. A wine reception will follow&#13;
the performance.&#13;
Honor society now&#13;
accepting applications&#13;
The Scholastic All - American&#13;
Selection Committee is now accepting&#13;
applications for the 1981&#13;
Spring Semester. Students who&#13;
are active in scholastic&#13;
organizations and who perform&#13;
well in class are asked to join.&#13;
The Scholastic All - American is&#13;
an honor society founded to&#13;
recognize this country's top undergraduate&#13;
and graduate&#13;
students. Five thousand students&#13;
are selected from over 1,280&#13;
schools covering all 50 states.&#13;
Members participate in various&#13;
nationally organized service&#13;
projects each year.&#13;
Students are selected for con-&#13;
Discussion&#13;
on wellness&#13;
During the Activity Hour on&#13;
Wednesday, April 22, 1981, the&#13;
Campus Health Office and the&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Milwaukee School of Nursing&#13;
Consortial Nursing Program at&#13;
Parkside will present a panel&#13;
discussion on Health and Wellness&#13;
in Union Room 106, from 1 p.m. to&#13;
3 p.m.&#13;
The nurse participants will be&#13;
Esther Alexanian, Administrator,&#13;
Community and Family Health&#13;
Services of Kenosha County;&#13;
LuAnn Wells, Community Health&#13;
Educator, St. Luke's Hospital,&#13;
Racine; Carol Jacobs, Director of&#13;
Nursing, Schoop Memorial Home,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
sideration based on the extent of&#13;
their academic and scholastic&#13;
performance both in and out of th e&#13;
classroom. No one factor is&#13;
weighed heaviest when a new&#13;
member is considered. A&#13;
student's best asset must be his or&#13;
her "well roundedness."&#13;
Interested students are asked to&#13;
send a stamped, self - addressed&#13;
envelope to "Applications,"&#13;
Scholastic All - American, Administrative&#13;
Offices, P. O. Box&#13;
237, Clinton, New York, 13324.&#13;
Application deadline is May 30.&#13;
All students are encouraged to&#13;
submit an application regardless&#13;
of their grade point average.&#13;
LEITCH&#13;
PRINTING&#13;
CORPORATION&#13;
For The Very Best&#13;
in Resume Printing&#13;
1619 - 52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wl&#13;
652-1837&#13;
Conference explores issues&#13;
facing women in the '80's&#13;
Author and social researcher&#13;
Caroline Bird, who has won a&#13;
reputation as a "centerist" in the&#13;
women's right's movement, will&#13;
keynote a major conference exploring&#13;
55 different issues facing&#13;
women in the '80s on Saturday,&#13;
April 25, a t UW - Parkside.&#13;
Bird, who will open the Saturday&#13;
sessions at 9 a. m., following&#13;
8:30 a. m. registration in Wyllie&#13;
Library - Learning Center Main&#13;
Place, is widely known for her&#13;
books, "Born Female: The High&#13;
Cost of Keeping Women Down,"&#13;
'^Everything a Woman Needs to&#13;
Know to Get Paid What She's&#13;
Worth," and "The Two Paycheck&#13;
Marriage." Her knowledge of&#13;
trends in both business and&#13;
education has resulted in guest&#13;
appearances on several national&#13;
TV shows including "The Today&#13;
Show," "Good Morning&#13;
America," and "Sixty Minutes."&#13;
Between 10:45a. m. and 4 p. m.,&#13;
conference participants will be&#13;
offered choices from among 43&#13;
seventy - five minute sessions and&#13;
12 two and one - half hour sessions&#13;
dealing with a variety of topics&#13;
i n c l u d i n g i n t e r p e r s o n a l&#13;
relationships, career and work&#13;
life, health and female sexuality,&#13;
stereotyping, marital property&#13;
reform, education and re - entry to&#13;
the work world, combining home&#13;
and job responsibilities, life styles&#13;
and life stages, women and&#13;
unions, volunteerism, coping&#13;
mechanisms and women's support&#13;
services and networking.&#13;
In conjunction with the conference,&#13;
a number of local&#13;
women's organizations and&#13;
agencies will participate in a fair&#13;
at which they will distribute&#13;
literature and other information&#13;
on their services.&#13;
The "Accent on Women"&#13;
ACCENT on&#13;
WOMEN..&#13;
April 24-25, 1981&#13;
program is sponsored by UW -&#13;
Parkside, University Extension&#13;
and the Wo/Men's Bureau of&#13;
Gateway Technical Institute.&#13;
Student group co - sponsor's are&#13;
Political Science Club, Parkside&#13;
Women s Concourse and Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Advance registration is required&#13;
by April 20.&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Bud. is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does make a difference.)&#13;
When you say Budweiser., you've said it all!&#13;
ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC, • ST. LOUIS&#13;
Thursday, April 16,1981&#13;
Problem-solving&#13;
workshop offered i tmi V-* . . _ . "The Bottom Line," an&#13;
organization of Parkside communication&#13;
students, will present&#13;
a workshop entitled "Problem&#13;
Solving — Thinking Hard Doesn't&#13;
Always Work" on April 23, in&#13;
union 207 from 8-9:15 p.m.&#13;
Since everyone can "own" at&#13;
least one problem — related to&#13;
job, school, or home, "The Bottom&#13;
Line" intends to aid workshop&#13;
participants to focus on real&#13;
problems as opposed to a&#13;
problem's symptoms. The&#13;
workshop will first show a film&#13;
strip: "Using Your Head&#13;
Creatively." Participants will&#13;
Mexican immigration discussed&#13;
then form groups of three to four&#13;
people, using cooperative problem&#13;
solving techniques while aided by&#13;
consultants.&#13;
Each participant will receive a&#13;
workshop folder, containing&#13;
helpful articles, brain teasers, and&#13;
a problem solving bibliography.&#13;
Refreshments will be served.&#13;
Door prizes will be drawn at the&#13;
end of the session.&#13;
The workshop is free and open&#13;
to students, staff, and faculty. For&#13;
further information, interested&#13;
persons may contact Jan Brown&#13;
at 554-1200 or Terri Londre at 636-&#13;
7666.&#13;
I McGovern to discuss USSR Professor Dan McGovern of the&#13;
Political Science Discipline will&#13;
present a slide/lecture program&#13;
on the Soviet Union, Wednesday,&#13;
April 22 in Union 104 from 1-2 p.m.&#13;
The talk, entitled "Inside the&#13;
Soviet Union Today," will&#13;
describe the recent trip taken by&#13;
Prof. McGovern and 10 Parkside&#13;
students during spring break. It&#13;
will focus on Moscow, Leningrad,&#13;
and Tallin with special emphasis&#13;
on the Kremlin and political&#13;
control, Soviet cultural highlights,&#13;
the educational system, and the&#13;
current standard of living in the&#13;
USSR.&#13;
The program is being sponsored&#13;
by the Library/Learning Center&#13;
for Activity Period and is free and&#13;
open to students, faculty and staff.&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
"Mexico — U. S. Relations:&#13;
Immigration and the Labor&#13;
Market" was the subject of the&#13;
March 31 public forum held at&#13;
Parkside. The program,&#13;
moderated by Behavioral Science&#13;
Professor Lionel Maldonado,&#13;
featured guest speakers Patrick&#13;
Lucey, former Wisconsin&#13;
Governor who served as U. S.&#13;
Ambassador to Mexico during the&#13;
Carter Administration; Dr. Paul&#13;
Storing, formerly on the Bureau of&#13;
Inter - American Affairs; and Dr.&#13;
Richard Perlman, labor&#13;
economist and Latin American&#13;
specialist at UW - Milwaukee. Dr.&#13;
Storing was asked to speak when&#13;
the scheduled speaker, Everett&#13;
Ellis Briggs was unable to appear.&#13;
Lucey stated that the current&#13;
program concerning illegal aliens&#13;
from Mexico is ineffective. He&#13;
said that although temporary&#13;
immigration to the United States&#13;
is frequently dicussed, permanent&#13;
immigration is not. Lucey said&#13;
that two - thirds of the illegal&#13;
immigrants who cross the border&#13;
into the U. S. r eturn home.&#13;
Lucey also pointed out that U. S.&#13;
money made by "undocumented&#13;
workers," as they are officially&#13;
called, is sent back home to&#13;
support family and friends still&#13;
living in Mexico. The former&#13;
ambassador stated that although&#13;
illegal alien labor is used all over&#13;
the U. S. unscrupulous&#13;
businessmen in the border states&#13;
thrive on cheap foreign labor.&#13;
The "undocumented workers"&#13;
do not complain about very low&#13;
usages and terrible working&#13;
conditions because their employers&#13;
will report them to the&#13;
Immigration and Naturalization&#13;
Service. "I think we should grant&#13;
amnesty for everybody who has&#13;
been here since January 1, 1980. I&#13;
think that the most reprehensible&#13;
part of the bulk of Immigration&#13;
and Naturalization is to try to&#13;
sneak out and send back ... the&#13;
most reproductive people to&#13;
Mexico."&#13;
Dr. Storing pointed out that&#13;
although many Americans are&#13;
upset aboqt the aliens working in&#13;
the U. S., they do not realize that&#13;
prices are lower on food and&#13;
clothing products when Mexican&#13;
labor is used because it is cheap.&#13;
"The Mexican government&#13;
seems content with the status quo,&#13;
as it allows an escape valve for a&#13;
large per cent of the people, 40 or&#13;
50% of the workforce," Storing&#13;
said. He said that the Reagan&#13;
Administration is looking at the&#13;
Select Commissions' recom-&#13;
British Labor Party crisis contains political realignment vehicle&#13;
hv Stisnn Mirhotti " Thn f,..n n.:u.L . .. ... ^&#13;
mendations. Storing said that&#13;
progress has been made by both&#13;
countries' administrations.&#13;
Perlman gave some statistics on&#13;
what he called "the numbers&#13;
game" concerning Mexican&#13;
immigrants, life expectancy in&#13;
Mexico and the Mexican workforce.&#13;
Perlman said that 20 years&#13;
ago the 1960 census reported 35&#13;
million Mexicans. In 1980, there&#13;
were 70 million. "If that rate were&#13;
to continue for the next 40 y ears,&#13;
there would be as many Mexicans&#13;
as there are Americans — about&#13;
280 million," said Perlman.&#13;
"There aren't more people&#13;
being born in Mexico. There are&#13;
fewer people dying; so that&#13;
children live to adulthood, adults&#13;
live to middle age. Twenty years&#13;
ago the average life span in&#13;
Mexico was 47. Now it's 64,"&#13;
Perlamn said.&#13;
"Only 18 million are working out&#13;
of 70 million. The rest are children&#13;
— 16 i s the average age," said&#13;
Perlman.&#13;
He pointed out that Mexico still&#13;
does not have an economy with&#13;
much industry.&#13;
A video tape of the forum is on&#13;
reserve in the library under Prof.&#13;
Kenneth Hoover's name and may&#13;
be viewed during library hours.&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
"The End of the Broad Church?&#13;
Fundamentalism in the British&#13;
Labour Party"- was discussed at&#13;
Parkside's Roundtable on March&#13;
30 by Colin Hargrave, a Labour&#13;
Council Member from the London&#13;
Borough of Bexley.&#13;
The Labor Party in Great&#13;
Britain is now facing its most&#13;
serious crisis in history and could&#13;
possibly result in a fundamental&#13;
realignment in the British Party&#13;
system, according to Hargrave.&#13;
The two major British Parties,&#13;
the Labour Party and the Conservative&#13;
Party, are relatively&#13;
•evenly matched in their national&#13;
electoral appeal. Yet election&#13;
results create the semblence of&#13;
big political changes because a&#13;
three percent swing can change&#13;
control of government between&#13;
the Labour Party and the Conservative&#13;
Party. Currently, the&#13;
Labour Party is only 12 seats&#13;
away from winning control of the&#13;
Parliamentary government.&#13;
Students concerned&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
courses to take)," said student&#13;
Gary Strathman. "You're forcing&#13;
me into things I don't think I&#13;
need."&#13;
Another student commented&#13;
that it is the job of advisors to&#13;
inform students about which&#13;
courses would be beneficial in&#13;
their particular fields.&#13;
Luis Valldejuli, PSGA Senator,&#13;
said, "High school is where they&#13;
ask you to take all these courses&#13;
and see what you want to do in life.&#13;
I don't think we need- to do all this&#13;
in a university. I'm an adult. I can&#13;
decide what I want to do now."&#13;
Visiting Assoc. Professor John&#13;
Carman suggested that a research&#13;
project on the importance and&#13;
implementation of the Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge be undertaken to&#13;
determine if the requirements&#13;
need revision. "One of the main&#13;
issues here is whether there&#13;
should be any requirements. And&#13;
for sure, we should not impose&#13;
new requirements until the old&#13;
ones are shown where they are&#13;
wrong."&#13;
Professor Datta said that the&#13;
APC should "mend the problems,&#13;
solve what you've got rather than&#13;
create a whole bunch of problems&#13;
that the students are not going to&#13;
be able to solve."&#13;
The issues and comments&#13;
brought up at the student forum&#13;
will be submitted to the APC along&#13;
with all additinal input from other&#13;
areas.&#13;
Announcements of division&#13;
meetings pertaining to the&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge will be&#13;
posted on the PSGA office window,&#13;
next to the Coffee Shoppe.&#13;
The Science division will meet&#13;
Friday, April 17 at 1p .m. in GRNQ&#13;
D-lll.&#13;
Hargrave said that a new&#13;
British party called the Social&#13;
Democratic Party was launched&#13;
in March by a dissatisfied group&#13;
withing the Labur Party, which is&#13;
unhappy with the left wing of the&#13;
Labour Party.&#13;
The growth of the left wing in&#13;
England predates Margaret&#13;
Thatcher's right wing government,&#13;
according to Hargrave.&#13;
Factional strife is nothing new in&#13;
the British Labour Party, but the&#13;
change is contained between "the&#13;
decent left of the fifties and the&#13;
indecent left of today," Hargrave&#13;
said. He explained that most of the&#13;
new left are young people who are&#13;
not especially well - educated.&#13;
"Some are sincere, but others are&#13;
motivated by the savage ... Their&#13;
understanding of Marx consists of&#13;
cliches when you try to pin them&#13;
down," Hargrave said.&#13;
He said that Harold Wilson has&#13;
reminded the British people that&#13;
the Labour Party was always a&#13;
broad church and that a split&#13;
could create a threatening new&#13;
situation.&#13;
The Labour Party has been&#13;
more tolerant of Trotskyites and&#13;
Soviet sympathizers which have&#13;
only been permitted to join the&#13;
Labour Party recently; yet this&#13;
new left, in turn, is not very&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
Silly&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
DO YOU WANT SILLY RULES?&#13;
politicians? Do you want control of this silly&#13;
Institution? Then vote silly party in the next&#13;
PSGA election. The Larch&#13;
VOLTAR is a necrophiliac and his mother is a&#13;
pedophile. The Larch&#13;
HOPE ya have a good Easter Cocoa Puffs!&#13;
Love, Me!&#13;
GOOD LUCK this season baseball players.&#13;
The Cheerleaders&#13;
THE PEP SQUAD NEEDS YOU!&#13;
Cheerleaders&#13;
TEN CHEERLEADERS are in need of a lift!&#13;
Join squad&#13;
MALES NEEDED for mounting.&#13;
IF YOU'RE ANY GOOD in picking girls up.&#13;
Join us.&#13;
ASERE T! You are a very special person,&#13;
especially to me. Darb&#13;
BECOME AN AD REP. FOR RANGER.&#13;
Make 15% commission on what you sell.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
THREE ROOM APARTMENT: Available 4-&#13;
22-81 $175 monthly, escrow includes all&#13;
utilities, stove, refrigerator, and kitchen&#13;
table set. No children or pets. Near bus&#13;
stop. 654-0595&#13;
SUBLET: Clean, cozy one bedroom apartment&#13;
near university. June 1st. Call Denise&#13;
553-9435. Negotiable.&#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, 862-8562 weekends.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
SPORTS CAR. 1973 MGB. $2000. Evenings.&#13;
Douglas 843-3504.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
BASS PLAYER, vocal abilities required. For&#13;
audition call Mike 637-6461&#13;
AD REPRESENTATIVES FOR RANGER.&#13;
15% commission on what you sell.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
PAPER TYPED. 50« per page for graphics&#13;
and charts. 42t per page — I furnish paper.&#13;
40c per page — you furnish paper. Work&#13;
guaranteed I It will be ready when you need&#13;
it. References available. Donna 857-7502.&#13;
EARN WHILE YOU LEARN. Assist retired&#13;
college teacher with correspondence&#13;
reading and organization of his library.&#13;
Hours can be arranged to suit your&#13;
schedule. Call 694-2251 for appointment.&#13;
BEWILDER YOUR OPPONENTS. Impress&#13;
your friends. Learn expert BACKGAM&#13;
MON from lop - ranking Milwaukee&#13;
professional. All levels taught. Call Jim at&#13;
551-7404 f or reasonable rates.&#13;
BACKPACKERS: Earn $1200 mth. en&#13;
loyably! Information $3. Wilderness Expeditions,&#13;
97 Spadina Rd„ 306, Toronto,&#13;
Canada M5R 2T1&#13;
tolerant in return, according to&#13;
Hargrave.&#13;
Hargrave said that the nature of&#13;
the victories on the left contains&#13;
changes from the past. Hargrave&#13;
said that in the past, the Labour&#13;
Party has always behaved in a&#13;
Constituational way and that the&#13;
members have been representatives,&#13;
not delegates.&#13;
Yet, the Labour Party's&#13;
program is socialistic, Hargrave&#13;
explained. He said that perhaps&#13;
this movement to radical policies&#13;
is not so bad because now the&#13;
complacent Labour members are&#13;
being called upon to be more&#13;
accountable. Hargrave said that&#13;
old cliches and dogmatics are&#13;
abundant, creating disillusionment&#13;
with policies.&#13;
"In a democratic system,&#13;
government should be conducted&#13;
by intelligence," Hargrave said.&#13;
The wide change in the traditional&#13;
Labour vote, caused by massive&#13;
disaffection of voters who are not&#13;
just abstainers but actually voting&#13;
conservative, is disturbing to&#13;
Hargrave. Yet, Hargrave finds&#13;
that the members of the radical&#13;
left are strangely unconcerned.&#13;
"Pleasing a small group of&#13;
Labour Party activists is not&#13;
democracy," Hargrave said.&#13;
Instead, Hargrave pointed out&#13;
that the Labour Party should seek&#13;
the opinions of the people that it&#13;
wishes to represent rather than&#13;
the members squabbling amongst&#13;
themselves.&#13;
Hargrave said that the novelty&#13;
of a new party may be a sufficiently&#13;
serious force that could&#13;
bring about relignment. The&#13;
Social Democratic Party, comprised&#13;
of the break - away&#13;
members of the right wing of the&#13;
Labour Party, hopes to eitiist the&#13;
support of the Liberal party&#13;
through some sort of an issue&#13;
pact, according to Hargrave.&#13;
Considering that the Liberal&#13;
Party generally carries 15 - 20% of&#13;
the vote, three possibilities for&#13;
major realignment are possible.&#13;
The Social Democratic Party&#13;
could gain Parliamentary power&#13;
only if it could enlist the entire&#13;
Liberal Party and about one - half&#13;
of the Labour Party. Otherwise&#13;
the Social Democratic Party may&#13;
prevent the Labour Party from&#13;
gaining control in the next election.&#13;
Meanwhile, this movement&#13;
could force the Labour Party to&#13;
become more accountable.&#13;
"For the press and the&#13;
academics, these are exciting&#13;
times; for the Labour Party, it is&#13;
not clear where we are going,"&#13;
Hargrave said.&#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 &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;
I&#13;
| Classification:&#13;
Name&#13;
SS No. Ranger&#13;
WLLCD139&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 16,1981&#13;
RANGER photo by Kim Schlater&#13;
Erick Hawkins&#13;
Dance Co.&#13;
f*'C* haWK|Ns DANCE COMPANY concluded the 1980-81&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series. The program ended with the&#13;
performance of "Agathlon" which features the entire company.&#13;
Business management areas&#13;
to be focus of sessions A "Professional Development&#13;
Day" focusing on the future of&#13;
Wisconsin business and industry&#13;
and trends in four specific&#13;
business management functional&#13;
areas will be held at Parkside on&#13;
Saturday, April 25, beginning at&#13;
8:30 a.m. with registration in the&#13;
Campus Union.&#13;
A morning general session in&#13;
Greenquist Hall room 103 will&#13;
include presentations on "The&#13;
Business Outlook for Wisconsin in&#13;
the '80s and '90s" by Dale A.&#13;
Landgren, project specialist for&#13;
forecasting and economics,&#13;
Wisconsin Electric Power Co.,&#13;
Milwaukee; "Interest Rates and&#13;
Inflation - Short Term and Long&#13;
Term Expectations" by Russell&#13;
Kafka, first vice president,&#13;
Heritage Bank, Milwaukee; and&#13;
"Prospects for Business Growth&#13;
in Southeastern Wisconsin" by&#13;
Ettore Barbatelli, chairman,&#13;
Valuation Research Corp.,&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Concurrent sessions will be held&#13;
from 1:15 to 4 p.m. in four specific&#13;
management areas:&#13;
Developments in Accounting&#13;
and Financial Reporting:&#13;
Speakers will be William J.&#13;
Chernelich, CPA, senior manager,&#13;
Price-Waterhouse &amp; Co.,&#13;
Milwaukee, on "Trends in&#13;
Financial Reporting - FASB and&#13;
SEC"; Charles Baker, CPA,&#13;
manager, Ernst &amp; Whinney,&#13;
Cleveland, on "Inflation Accounting";&#13;
and Don W. Elleman,&#13;
pianager of internal accounting,&#13;
Clark Oil &amp; Refining Corp.,&#13;
Milwaukee, on "The Changing&#13;
Role and Responsibilities of the&#13;
Internal Auditor."&#13;
Developments in Management&#13;
Information Systems: Mary&#13;
Aschauer, office systems&#13;
specialist, IBM, Milwaukee,&#13;
"Office Systems Overview"; and&#13;
Gregory A. LaFond, manager,&#13;
management services department,&#13;
Arthur Young and Co.,&#13;
Milwaukee, "Feasibility and Cost-&#13;
Benefit Analysis of Word&#13;
Processing Systems."&#13;
Developments in Management&#13;
Planning: Allan Kauth, vice&#13;
president, Forum Ltd.,&#13;
Milwaukee, "MRP (Materials&#13;
Requirement Planning) to BRP&#13;
(Business Requirements Planning):&#13;
Journey Through the '80s";&#13;
and Duane E. Lakin, PhD,&#13;
president, Lakin Associates,&#13;
Milwaukee, "HRP (Human&#13;
Requirements Planning): Key to&#13;
Running a Business."&#13;
Managing Stress in the Work&#13;
Environment: Prof. James J.&#13;
Polczynski, PhD, assistant&#13;
professor, business and administrative&#13;
science, UWParkside,&#13;
"Coping with Stress:&#13;
The Manager's Dilemma."&#13;
Parkside business management&#13;
alumni who will chair the sessions&#13;
are Rex Brown, 1971, vice&#13;
president of human relations, St.&#13;
Luke's Hospital, Racine; Thomas&#13;
Garner, 1972, controller, Aetna&#13;
Bank, Chicago; Kenneth Van&#13;
Kammen, 1972, senior systems&#13;
analyst, Abbott Laboratories,&#13;
Chicago; Thomas Baur, 1980, vice&#13;
president of manufacturing,&#13;
Dremel Division of Emerson&#13;
Electric Company, Racine; and&#13;
William G. Ferko, 1975, 1980,&#13;
manager, finance office accounting,&#13;
J.I. Case Credit Corp.,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
The program is sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Division of B usiness&#13;
and Administrative Science, the&#13;
Small Business Development&#13;
Center Management Assistance&#13;
Center and the UW Extension&#13;
Division of Business Outreach.&#13;
The program carries .6 Continuing&#13;
Education Units (CEUs).&#13;
Advance registration is&#13;
required and can be made by&#13;
contacting the Parkside Division&#13;
of Business and Administrative&#13;
Science in Molinaro Hall, Room&#13;
326 B, o r 553-2280 or 553-2 047. The&#13;
fee, which includes luncheon, is&#13;
$15 for an individual or $20 for an&#13;
individual and spouse.&#13;
Alumni College offers classes&#13;
for graduates and their spouses&#13;
The second annual Alumni&#13;
College, for Parkside graduates&#13;
and their spouses, will be held&#13;
Saturday, April 25, beginning at&#13;
8:30 a.m. in the Campus Union&#13;
Bazaar. The program also is open&#13;
to graduates of other UW System&#13;
campuses.&#13;
Thomas Krimmel, Director of&#13;
Alumni and Placement Services,&#13;
said Parkside has about 4,400&#13;
alumni, some 80 p ercent of them&#13;
in the Southeastern Wisconsin /&#13;
Northern Illinois area.&#13;
The day-long Alumni College&#13;
includes 14 cl asses.&#13;
Morning class topics, from 9:15-&#13;
noon, include buying a home in the&#13;
'80s, calligraphy, personal&#13;
computers, the economy under&#13;
the Reagan administration,&#13;
classical music and record&#13;
collecting, biofeedback for fun&#13;
and recreation, and 35 mm&#13;
photography.&#13;
Afternoon topics, from 1-3:45&#13;
p.m., include the home darkroom,&#13;
starting a small business, the&#13;
Soviet Union today, home energy&#13;
conservation, a follow-up&#13;
biofeedback session, prevention of&#13;
job burn-out, and investment&#13;
opportunities.&#13;
Instructors will include&#13;
Parkside faculty members,&#13;
alumni and community resource&#13;
persons.&#13;
Class sessions have been&#13;
scheduled so that participants will&#13;
be able to select one course during&#13;
the morning session and one&#13;
during the afternoon. The&#13;
program, which includes luncheon,&#13;
will conclude with a&#13;
cocktail reception at 3:45 p.m.&#13;
Deadline for registration is&#13;
April 21. The fee is $15 per person&#13;
or $20 for an alumnus and spouse.&#13;
More information can be obtained&#13;
by contacting the Alumni and&#13;
Placement Services office, D-173&#13;
Wyllie Library - Learning Center,&#13;
Kenosha, 53141, phone 553-2452.&#13;
Percussion, Wind Ensembles to perform&#13;
A joint spring concert will be&#13;
presented by the Parkside Percussion&#13;
and Wind Ensembles at 8&#13;
p.m. on Monday, April 20, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Tickets are $1 for adults and 50&#13;
cents for students and senior&#13;
citizens and are available at the&#13;
door.&#13;
The Percussion Ensemble,&#13;
directed by Linda Raymond, will&#13;
present John Beck's Jazz&#13;
Variants, Michael Colgrass' The&#13;
Three Brothers and Gardner&#13;
Read's The Aztec Gods.&#13;
The Wind Ensemble, under the&#13;
direction of Scott Mather, will&#13;
perform Franz Joseph Haydn's&#13;
Octet, Gordon Jacob's William&#13;
Byrd Suite, Morton Gould's Ballad&#13;
and Kenneth Alford's The Mad&#13;
Major March.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thursday, April 16&#13;
RECITAL by students at 1 p. m. in the Union Cinema. The program is free and open&#13;
to the public. r&#13;
Monday, April 20&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. Prof. Linda Kamens will talk on "Social&#13;
Program Evaluation: A Feminist Perspective". The program is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
VIDEO CONCERT at lp. m. in Union Square with Roger Daltrey, Isaac Hayes, Pat&#13;
Travers, Peter Gabriel and "Kool &amp; t he Gang". Admission is free for Parkside&#13;
students, staff and faculty. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
CONCERT at 8 p. m. in the Communication Arts Theatre with Scott Mather&#13;
directing the Parkside Percussion and Wind Ensembles. Admission at the door is&#13;
50% for students and senior citizens and $1.00 for others.&#13;
Tuesday, April 21&#13;
CONCERT MENC student compositions at 8 p. m. in the Union Cinema. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Wednesday, April 22&#13;
PANEL DISCUSSION "Wellness and Health Promotional Strategies" by a panel of&#13;
three nurses and the UWP Health Office at 12:30 p. m. in Union 106. The program&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
SLIDE/LECTURE at 1 p. m. in Union 104. Prof. Dan McGovern will talk on "Inside&#13;
Russia Today". Admission is free for Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
Sponsored by the Library Learning Center.&#13;
SENIOR RECITAL at 8 p. m. in the Communication Arts Theatre with Monica&#13;
Scholz, piano; Lynn Ruud, piano; and Tim Fox, trumpet. The program is free&#13;
and open to the public,&#13;
Thursday, April 23&#13;
FACULTY RECITAL at 1 p. m. in the Union Cinema with Martha Dodds, soprano.&#13;
The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
VIDEO TAPE will be repeated at 1 p. m. in Union Square. -&#13;
Library hours during Easter&#13;
Library hours on Good Friday,&#13;
April 17, are 7:45 a. m. -12 noon.&#13;
The library will be open as usual,&#13;
8:30a. m. -4:30 p. m., on Saturday&#13;
and will be dosed on Easter&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Senior recital to be held&#13;
Monica Scholz, a piano student&#13;
of Barbara English Maris, will&#13;
present a senior recital at 8 p. m.&#13;
on Wednesday, April 22, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater. She&#13;
will be assisted by Tim Fox,&#13;
trumpet, and Lynn Ruud, piano, in&#13;
the free public program.&#13;
Scholz will perform Six Piano&#13;
Pieces Op 118 by B rahms, Sonata&#13;
in B-flat Mayor for Two Pianos by&#13;
Clementi, Sonatine pour Trompette&#13;
Ut et Piano by Casterede, a&#13;
contemporary composer, and&#13;
Sonata in F Major by Haydn.&#13;
After her graduation in May,&#13;
Scholz plans to open a studio for&#13;
piano instruction in her home in&#13;
Somers.&#13;
Paddling Council formed&#13;
The Parkside Area Paddling&#13;
Council is a newly formed&#13;
organziation for people interested&#13;
in canoeing and kayaking. The&#13;
dub will highlight several aspects&#13;
of paddling, including safety,&#13;
cruising (river touring), and&#13;
competition, through workshops,&#13;
clinics, and on the water experience.&#13;
They will be holding&#13;
their first meeting Thursday,&#13;
April 23 at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside at 7:30 p. m.&#13;
in room 107 of Molinaro Hall.&#13;
Activities planned for the near&#13;
future are a pool clinic on&#13;
Saturday, April 25 at the Parkside&#13;
pool from 2:004:00 p. m. There&#13;
will be a variety of canoes and&#13;
kayaks available for people to try,&#13;
with demonstrations of the eskimo&#13;
roll and canoeing skills. The&#13;
following weekend there will be a&#13;
Sunday afternoon cruise through&#13;
the Horicon Marsh area on May 3.&#13;
It will be a leisurely paddle down&#13;
the Rock River with a break for a&#13;
shore lunch. Saturday, May 16 the&#13;
Pole, Paddle, Portage, and Push&#13;
Canoe Race will be revived. The&#13;
location of the race will be&#13;
determined pending water conditions.&#13;
Membership is open to anyone&#13;
interested in paddling. If you have&#13;
a favorite cruise or any special&#13;
interests or talents there will be&#13;
time to discuss them at the&#13;
meeting. There will also be some&#13;
paddling films shown at the&#13;
meeting. For further information&#13;
contact Steve Kaufman at 654-&#13;
0645, or Dave Vollmer at 553-5359.&#13;
~&#13;
Htntfa^arai&#13;
SALES - PARTS&#13;
552-7070&#13;
County Hwy. "H" At Hwy, II,&#13;
Stvrtouant, Wn.&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Elm wood Plaza/Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear r&#13;
Softball team keeps winning&#13;
RANGER photo by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
during a game againft tht Colteje oTLak^Co^nt^ ^ +h'rd ^&#13;
Pep Squad needs men&#13;
This past basketball season was&#13;
the first time that the Parkside&#13;
cheerleaders have used men on&#13;
the Pep squad during the games.&#13;
Hopefully it was the start of a&#13;
trend that will continue here at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
In an effort to perpetuate the&#13;
trend, the Pep squad has&#13;
organized two clinics and a tryout&#13;
later this month in order to put&#13;
together a group of men to accompany&#13;
the women at a&#13;
cheerleading camp to be held at&#13;
the end of August at either&#13;
Memphis State or the University&#13;
of Michigan. For those who make&#13;
the team the cost of t he camp will&#13;
be paid.&#13;
The first clinic will be held&#13;
Wednesday, April 22nd at 6 p.m. in&#13;
the gym. The second one will be&#13;
held on Sunday, April 26th, also at&#13;
6 p.m. and also in the gym. If you&#13;
are interested you should try to&#13;
attend both of the clinics. Those&#13;
who are unable to attend one or&#13;
both of the clinics should contact&#13;
Melanie at 552-8631 or Shirley Schmerling&#13;
at 553-2320.&#13;
The tryouts for the men will be&#13;
held Monday, April 27th at 6 p.m.&#13;
in the gym. There are many advantages&#13;
for those who make the&#13;
squad. Along with the paid trip to&#13;
the cheerleading camp, the team&#13;
will travel to all of the away&#13;
basketball games in the state,&#13;
with some of those being overnight&#13;
stays. Not to mention the&#13;
fun.&#13;
Table Tennis Club Parkside students took advantage&#13;
of the opportunity to play&#13;
and watch table tennis in Main&#13;
Place on Wednesday, April 1st.&#13;
The purpose of the exhibition,&#13;
sponsored by Parkside Table&#13;
Tennis Club, was to prove that&#13;
table tennis is for everyone. "We&#13;
want people to realize that the&#13;
club is for everyone of all skill&#13;
levels," explained Gary Ledger,&#13;
PTTC President. "In fact, the club&#13;
right now is composed of players&#13;
of a wide variety of table tennis&#13;
skills. This is why we can&#13;
guarantee anyone who joins the&#13;
club that there is another club&#13;
member of comparable table&#13;
tennis skill."&#13;
One exhibition table featured&#13;
two pairs of members. Brian&#13;
Walley played Hak Jun Kim and&#13;
Brian Langenbach played Matt&#13;
Giovanelli. This attracted interest&#13;
from the people passing by.&#13;
The other table, an open play&#13;
table, was for spectators to play.&#13;
These players experienced first -&#13;
hand that you don't have to be a&#13;
good player to have fun — which is&#13;
the idea behind the club. Certificates&#13;
were presented by PTTC&#13;
member Joan Mandli to all who&#13;
participated, which included both&#13;
students and staff.&#13;
Variety was added to the&#13;
exhibition with three special&#13;
guests. Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Carla Stoffle played PTTC&#13;
member Patty DeLuisa. Patty&#13;
edged out Asst. Chancellor Stoffle&#13;
11-8.&#13;
Student body President Jim&#13;
Kreuser then battled it out with&#13;
his Vice - President, Kathy&#13;
Bambrough. The two were equally&#13;
matched. Kreuser won all three&#13;
games 21-14, 21-1 8, 21-19.&#13;
The club gained a new member&#13;
during the event, with another&#13;
dozen potential members that&#13;
signed up at the open play table.&#13;
"Our club is mainly a social&#13;
club, to meet people and have fun.&#13;
Thats why the club is for&#13;
everyone - of all skill levels "&#13;
Ledger said.&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Parkside's women's softball&#13;
team continued its winning ways&#13;
this past week by running its&#13;
record to 9-1, with five victories in&#13;
six games.&#13;
April 7th, the women hosted the&#13;
College of Lake County and took&#13;
both games, the first one by a 7-4&#13;
score and the second one 12-11.&#13;
Freshman Laura Laurenzi&#13;
pitched the first game and got the&#13;
win giving up only five hits.&#13;
Although Parkside managed just&#13;
two hits in this game the real story&#13;
was the defense, or lack of it. Lake&#13;
County committed six errors and&#13;
the Rangers capitalized on them.&#13;
The second game was more&#13;
exciting as Parkside came from&#13;
behind to win the game 12-11 on a&#13;
home run by Debbie Lopez in the&#13;
top of t he ninth inning. Freshman&#13;
Paula Sandahl pitched the last&#13;
five innings and got the win.&#13;
Last Saturday the women&#13;
travelled to Chicago to battle&#13;
DePaul and lost their first game of&#13;
the season, 3-1 in the first contest&#13;
of a doubleheader. All the games&#13;
that the women play are&#13;
doubleheaders except for the&#13;
tournament games.&#13;
The games were played in the&#13;
mud, eliminating Parkside's&#13;
speed on the basepaths. The first&#13;
game was won by DePaul, 3-1.&#13;
Coach Linda Henderson said, "We&#13;
shouldn't have lost that game. The&#13;
field was terrible. We let them&#13;
have two runs in the fourth." In&#13;
that inning, the first woman up got&#13;
a double, then Parkside retired&#13;
the next two batters and it looked&#13;
like they would get out of the inning.&#13;
Pitcher Lynn Barth hit the&#13;
next batter and then walked two&#13;
more to force in a run. An error by&#13;
Debbie Lopez gave up the second&#13;
run in the inning and that was all&#13;
DePaul needed. They scored an&#13;
insurance run in the sixth inning&#13;
to seal the victory and hand the&#13;
Rangers their only loss to date.&#13;
Lynn Barth pitched the whole&#13;
game for the Rangers and got&#13;
stuck with the loss.&#13;
The Rangers took the second&#13;
game 3-0 as Paula Sandahl pitched&#13;
another complete game&#13;
victory. Debbie Lopez got three&#13;
hits in four times up to the plate&#13;
hitting in the fourth spot in the&#13;
batting order. Lead-off hitter&#13;
Laura Laurenzi went 2 for 3.&#13;
"She's getting on base and that's&#13;
her job," Henderson said.&#13;
April 6th, the Rangers took on&#13;
conference foe Carthage and had&#13;
to battle their own lack of def ense&#13;
before winning the first game 6-5.&#13;
"The game shouldn't have been&#13;
that close, but we made seven&#13;
errors. Fortunately they made&#13;
five errors," Henderson said.&#13;
Jeanne Hintz and Kathy Tobin&#13;
both went three for four at the&#13;
plate as Parkside knocked Carthage&#13;
pitching for 14 hits. Lynn&#13;
Barth got the win, running her&#13;
season record to 3-1.&#13;
Paula Sandahl again proved to&#13;
be the Ranger's ace pitcher as she&#13;
ran her season record to 5-0 with a&#13;
two hitter. The difference in the&#13;
two games was the defense. Hintz&#13;
made a great catch early in the&#13;
game and Laurenzi made another&#13;
one later in the game. Both hits&#13;
prevented possible runs by&#13;
Carthage. Parkside played&#13;
flawless defense in this game,&#13;
while the opponents only committed&#13;
one error.&#13;
Parkside's next home game is&#13;
Thursday against Northwestern&#13;
Illinois at 3 p.m. on the Pets&#13;
diamond.&#13;
Sharp breaks another record&#13;
Trudging 25 times around a&#13;
track with a 20 m.p.h. wind&#13;
blowing, Parkside's Ray Sharp&#13;
turned in another awesome&#13;
performance by winning the 10,000&#13;
meter walk at the Parkside Invitational&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
Sharp's time of 42:12.2 set an&#13;
American record for the distance,&#13;
thus eclipsing the old mark by an&#13;
astonishing fifteen seconds!&#13;
Sharp said, "I may have brought&#13;
my time down under forty - two&#13;
minutes if th e wind hadn't been so&#13;
strong." The rest of the five man&#13;
field was dominated by Parkside&#13;
Freshman Will Preischel took&#13;
third with a PR of 48:34, and Tim&#13;
Houden took fifth with a time of&#13;
54:59. All - American walker Steve&#13;
Ball, who took fourth in this year's&#13;
NAIA national indoor meet, will&#13;
be out for the rest of the season&#13;
due to a fractured vertebrae.&#13;
The rest of the men's track team&#13;
showed vast improvement&#13;
compared to earlier indoor performances.&#13;
In the field events,&#13;
John Anderson flung himself to a&#13;
first place finish by jumping 13'6"&#13;
in the pole vault. Chicago freshman&#13;
Greg Sanders leaped 42'3/4"&#13;
in the triple jump to capture&#13;
second place. Lewis Adams took&#13;
fifth in the hammer throw and&#13;
fifth in the discus.&#13;
Ed Thomas took fourth in the&#13;
hammer throw.&#13;
In the sprints, Harold&#13;
Seligmiller bounded his way to&#13;
first place in the 400 meter hurdles&#13;
with a time of 57.4. He also took&#13;
fifth in the 400 meter run, as well&#13;
as running on the winning mile&#13;
relay team.&#13;
The distance events were&#13;
dominated by Parkside. In one of&#13;
the top events of the day, Parkside&#13;
slammed the 1500 meter run by&#13;
going 1-2-3. Freshman Bruce Schmierer&#13;
was Parkside's only&#13;
double winner. He won the 1500&#13;
meter run with a time of 3:57.8,&#13;
and the 800 meter run in 1:55.4.&#13;
Dan Stublaski turned in a good&#13;
effort by placing second in the 1500&#13;
and second in the 5000 meter run.&#13;
Paul Cannestra captured a second&#13;
in the 800 meter run and a third in&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormac&#13;
P°HE:V^ULTER J0HN ANDERSON competes durina tra.&#13;
meet held at Parkside last Saturday. 9&#13;
the 1500. In the 10,000 meter run&#13;
Dave Mueller outkicked an opponent&#13;
from Beloit College to win&#13;
m a time of 32:45. Radavan&#13;
Bursac placed fourth in the 10,000&#13;
and fifth in the 5000. In the 3000&#13;
meter steeplechase Steve Brunner&#13;
placed second and Tom Barrett&#13;
took fourth.&#13;
No team scores were kept. Tt&#13;
Ranger track squad travels i&#13;
North Central College tti&#13;
weekend for an Invitational mee&#13;
The following Tuesday they travi&#13;
to Whitewater for the Warhaw&#13;
Invite.&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
•©REDREW r&#13;
&gt; 1&#13;
4 %&#13;
hair&#13;
styles&#13;
for men&#13;
and women&#13;
^0/i»)iii))i\i,))\iiuiii uvjijiHmnn.&#13;
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              <text>Volume 9, issue 26</text>
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                <text>1981-04-16</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, April 23, 1981&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 27&#13;
College student tenants&#13;
have duties and rights&#13;
College students* are reminded&#13;
that if they rent a house or&#13;
apartment they, as tenants, have&#13;
certain duties and rights.&#13;
According to Mary K. Ryan,&#13;
consumer protection division&#13;
administrator with the Wisconsin&#13;
Department of Agriculture, Trade&#13;
and Consumer Protection, it is&#13;
important for tenants to know&#13;
what their duties and rights are.&#13;
As a tenant, students must pay&#13;
rent and hold up their end of the&#13;
rental agreement. At the end of&#13;
the term, the property must be&#13;
returned in the same condition as&#13;
received, excepting for normal&#13;
wear and tear. Tenants are&#13;
responsible for any damages&#13;
which they or their guests have&#13;
caused. Unless otherwise agreed,&#13;
tenants are also responsible for&#13;
routine minor repairs, such as the&#13;
replacement of faucet washers&#13;
and light bulbs, which can be&#13;
handled at a minimum cost.&#13;
As a tenant, students have&#13;
certain important rights, such as&#13;
the right of peaceful possession.&#13;
The concept that "one's home is&#13;
one's castle" applies here.&#13;
Tenants have the right of&#13;
privacy. No one may invade their&#13;
"home" without legally specified&#13;
authority. Even the landlord, who&#13;
has the right to repair, inspect and&#13;
show the premises at reasonable&#13;
times, may enter only after 12&#13;
hours advance notice, or with the&#13;
tenant's specific permission&#13;
except in emergencies.&#13;
The dwelling must be safe am.&#13;
sanitary and "habitable." It&#13;
should be free of pests and&#13;
structural defects. There should&#13;
be proper wiring, plumbing and&#13;
heating and adequate locks. A&#13;
landlord must tell tenants about&#13;
any serious defects before rental&#13;
of the property.&#13;
If the property is unsafe or&#13;
unsanitary, and the landlord&#13;
refuses to make the necessary&#13;
repairs, the landlord should be&#13;
notified in writing about any intention&#13;
to move out without further&#13;
obligation to pay rent. This&#13;
does not necessarily mean that&#13;
rent can be withheld, while continuing&#13;
to live in the property. In&#13;
Madison and Milwaukee, rent&#13;
may be paid into a city escrow&#13;
fund until the landlord corrects&#13;
housing code violations. Only then&#13;
is the money released to the&#13;
landlord.&#13;
Before a tenant agrees to rent,&#13;
he or she should insist that all&#13;
repair promises be made . in&#13;
writing and that a completion date&#13;
is specified. This is a tenant's&#13;
right under the law.&#13;
If a security deposit is paid, the&#13;
landlord must return it within 21&#13;
days after the property is left.&#13;
Unpaid rent and actual physical&#13;
damages which the tenant caused&#13;
may be deducted from the&#13;
security deposit, but the landlord&#13;
must provide a written, itemized&#13;
explanation.&#13;
If the property is not rented for&#13;
a specific period of t ime or until a&#13;
specific date, this is a month - to -&#13;
month tenancy, which the landlord&#13;
may terminate at any time,&#13;
by giving written notice at least 28&#13;
days before the next rent date.&#13;
The tenant may terminate a&#13;
month - to - month tenancy the&#13;
same way. The landlord may also&#13;
raise the rent by giving at least 28&#13;
days notice before the next rent&#13;
date. If the rent is not paid, the&#13;
property recklessly damaged, or&#13;
the rental agreement broken, the&#13;
landlord can terminate the&#13;
tenancy on short notice, either&#13;
five or 14 days.&#13;
If the rental agreement is for a&#13;
specific time (one year lease, for&#13;
example), the rent may not ordinarily&#13;
be raised during that&#13;
period. The landlord may not&#13;
terminate the tenancy during the&#13;
lease period, unless the rent is not&#13;
paid, the property recklessly&#13;
damaged, or the rental agreement&#13;
broken. Meanwhile, the tenant has&#13;
an obligation to rent for the full&#13;
lease period. If the lease is broken&#13;
by moving out early, the landlord&#13;
theoretically has the option of&#13;
going to court to recover lost&#13;
rents. However, the landlord must&#13;
try to minimize these losses by rerenting&#13;
the property. If no rents&#13;
are lost, the landlord may have no&#13;
legal claim. Some landlords may&#13;
voluntarily release tenants from&#13;
the lease, and most will allow&#13;
subleasing to a new tenant. If&#13;
tenants refuse to leave the&#13;
property after their tenancy has&#13;
been terminated by the landlord,&#13;
the landlord may start eviction&#13;
action in small claims court. The&#13;
tenants must be properly served&#13;
with all notices, including notice&#13;
of t he court hearing. At the court&#13;
hearing, the landlord's request&#13;
may be challenged. Until a court&#13;
Easter&#13;
Treat&#13;
RANGER Photo by Steve Myers&#13;
UW-Parkside's Child Care Center was&#13;
treated to an Easter egg hunt by&#13;
Marketing Club and Marvey the&#13;
Heritage Hare From Heritage Banks of&#13;
Racine on April 15.&#13;
eviction notice is carried out by&#13;
the sheriff, the landlord may not&#13;
"take the law into his own hands"&#13;
by confiscating or "locking in"&#13;
your personal belongings, or by&#13;
using deception or force. If the&#13;
landlord has suffered rental&#13;
losses, the tenant may be required&#13;
to pay twice the amount of those&#13;
losses.&#13;
Information and assistance for&#13;
landlord problems may be&#13;
available from local groups and&#13;
agencies, including housing code&#13;
officials, landlord and tenant&#13;
associations, university housing&#13;
officials, city rental relations&#13;
boards, and perhaps an attorney.&#13;
In small claims court, tenants&#13;
should be prepared with facts,&#13;
witnesses and documentation to&#13;
support their claim. To start a&#13;
small claims action, tenants&#13;
should contact the clerk of the&#13;
small claims court in the county.&#13;
Small claims procedures are&#13;
simple and informal. An attorney&#13;
is not required, although it may be&#13;
a good idea.&#13;
If the landlord violates certain&#13;
state rules, for example, by&#13;
refusing to return or account for&#13;
the security deposit, the tenant&#13;
may be able to start an action in&#13;
small claims court.&#13;
A copy of the state rules may be&#13;
obtained from the Wisconsin&#13;
Department of Agriculture, Trade&#13;
and Consumer Protection, P.O.&#13;
Box 8911, Madison, Wisconsin&#13;
53708, or from department&#13;
regional offices in Altoona, Green&#13;
Bay and Milwaukee.&#13;
Nuclear waste dumping in Wis. is possibility&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
On March 26, Robert Litzau, a&#13;
representative from the Black&#13;
Hills Alliance, spoke at Parkside&#13;
about a bill, which is currently&#13;
being discussed, that could result&#13;
in Waupaca, Waushara, and&#13;
Shawano counties becoming a&#13;
high level nuclear waste dump.&#13;
The biggest political problem in&#13;
the world is high level radioactive&#13;
waste disposal, according to&#13;
Litzau. He said that the fuel pools&#13;
are all full and that the waste has&#13;
to be disposed someplace.&#13;
Litzau said that the granite&#13;
bedrock, contained in the&#13;
Canadian Shield which extends&#13;
down across Wisconsin, is high on&#13;
the list for waste disposal. He&#13;
said, "Minnesota and Michigan&#13;
have publicly stated, through&#13;
their government, that they do not&#13;
want any radioactive waste."&#13;
Litzau said, "Last summer the&#13;
DOE (Department of Energy)&#13;
came into Wisconsin and had a&#13;
meeting with Governor Dreyfus&#13;
because Governor Dreyfus invited&#13;
them here. The meeting was held&#13;
in Madison, and was supposed to&#13;
be a public meeting, but they tried&#13;
to make it a private meeting.&#13;
Eighty people went and pounded&#13;
on the door, and they had to open&#13;
it."&#13;
A committee, "The Ad Hoc&#13;
Committee on Radioactive&#13;
Waste," composed of Joseph&#13;
Strohl from Racine, Democratic&#13;
State Senator and Chairman of the&#13;
Wisconsin Senate Energy Committee,&#13;
and Mary Lou Muntz from&#13;
Madison, State Democratic&#13;
Representative and Chairperson&#13;
of the Wisconsin Environmental&#13;
Resources Committee, formed to&#13;
review waste disposal policy,&#13;
according to Litzau.&#13;
Litzau said that Bill WLCS:&#13;
146/3, written by the Strohl -&#13;
Muntz committee on 3-4-81, woul d&#13;
provide for the establishment of a&#13;
Radioactive Waste Review Board,&#13;
having a policy advisory committee&#13;
composed of various local&#13;
representatives and a technical&#13;
advisory committee made up of&#13;
representatives from various&#13;
state agencies, such as Department&#13;
of Natural Resources,&#13;
Health and Social Services, and&#13;
Department of Transportation.&#13;
Litzau said that this bill will go&#13;
to the Senate Energy Committee&#13;
and the Assembly Environmental&#13;
Resources Committee for&#13;
hearings, and perhaps amendments&#13;
and a public hearing.&#13;
Litzau said that after the bill&#13;
passes through the committees, it&#13;
will be voted on by the legislature,&#13;
and then signed by the governor&#13;
into law.&#13;
"The Radioactive Waste&#13;
Review Board will negotiate with&#13;
the DOE," Litzau said. "If they&#13;
agree about a plan for the site of&#13;
investigation for radioactive&#13;
waste in Wisconsin, then the&#13;
agreement would become a&#13;
contract in the form of a bill."&#13;
Litzau explained that, next, this&#13;
bill would seek approval by a vote&#13;
in the Wisconsin Legislature. "If&#13;
they voted "no" that they did not&#13;
like the plan, then the bill would go&#13;
back to negotiations until they&#13;
came up with a new plan," Litzau&#13;
said. "It's like a labor negotiation,&#13;
you keep on doing it until you&#13;
agree."&#13;
"So, essentially, we're being&#13;
locked into a process," Litzau&#13;
warned.&#13;
"Several reports about&#13;
radioactive waste storage consider&#13;
the granite in Wisconsin's&#13;
geology very good, but the main&#13;
thing that they are looking for is&#13;
favorable public opinion," Litzau&#13;
stated. "They want people to say&#13;
'Yes, we need it. We want it. It will&#13;
be good for the economy and&#13;
national security'."&#13;
"One of the interesting&#13;
provisions of this Bill 146 is that&#13;
the DOE would have to obey all&#13;
state laws, county resolutions,&#13;
town board resolutions, and Indian&#13;
Reservation laws," Litzau&#13;
said. "The problem is that the&#13;
, federal government has not yet&#13;
written any legislation for dealing&#13;
with commercial nuclear waste,"&#13;
he warned.&#13;
Litzau said that during the last&#13;
Congressional session just before^&#13;
Carter left office, a flurry of a ction&#13;
was taken on nuclear waste.&#13;
However, Litzau pointed out that&#13;
during the last day of th e session,&#13;
high level waste was deleted from&#13;
the bills, while low level waste&#13;
remained.&#13;
He said that although there is&#13;
not any federal legislation dealing&#13;
with high level waste, the state of&#13;
Wisconsin is still in the process of&#13;
writing contracts and negotiating&#13;
with the DOE. "It is presumed&#13;
that when the DOE finally gets&#13;
federal legislation that it will over&#13;
- ride all state, local, municipal,&#13;
and town board resolutions,"&#13;
Litzau commented.&#13;
According to Litzau, the Reagan&#13;
plan is to consolidate the DOE and&#13;
the DOD (Department of&#13;
Defense), having the DOD administer&#13;
the functions currently&#13;
managed by the DOE. "So very&#13;
likely," said Litzau, "the military&#13;
will take over the transportation&#13;
of high level nuclear waste, and&#13;
Wisconsin will be locked in by&#13;
virtue of signing a contract. Then&#13;
we will not have any knowledge&#13;
about nuclear waste, except what&#13;
comes through the military as&#13;
unclassified."&#13;
Six days before Carter left office,&#13;
the federal Department of&#13;
Transportation (DOT) finalized'&#13;
some rules for the transportation&#13;
of high level nuclear waste, according&#13;
to Litzau. He said that&#13;
"all military wastes are exempt&#13;
from the rules."&#13;
"In the Appendix to these rules,&#13;
which were dated about 1-6-81, an&#13;
interesting thing is that they are&#13;
not to be finalized and&#13;
promulgated until February of&#13;
1982," Litzau said. "This is by&#13;
Carter's, not Reagan's,&#13;
deregulation. That creates the&#13;
question: Why are they being&#13;
delayed?"&#13;
"In the Appendix, the DOT rules&#13;
on transportation say that the&#13;
states, first, will not be notified of&#13;
when shipments are coming&#13;
through. Second, all rules and&#13;
laws on state, local, township, and&#13;
county board levels are null and&#13;
void. Three, the states have no&#13;
control over routes, times of&#13;
shipments, or anything else,"&#13;
Litzau said.&#13;
Litzau said that in the last year&#13;
about eight counties, eleven&#13;
townships, and five Indian&#13;
reservations in Wisconsin have&#13;
put bans on storing and transporting&#13;
nuclear wastes within&#13;
their boundaries.&#13;
"It is suspected that the reasons&#13;
that the feds haven't written any&#13;
laws about the management and&#13;
storage of nuclear waste, is&#13;
because they want everything else&#13;
to be in place, to have some state&#13;
signed contracts, before they pass&#13;
the laws which say 'Nothing that&#13;
you folks want counts. None of&#13;
your rules will hold any water&#13;
because we are going to make&#13;
them all null and void'," Litzau&#13;
said.&#13;
"Why is Wisconsin involved&#13;
with the DOE when there are no&#13;
laws about what is going to&#13;
happen?" Litzau asked.&#13;
He concluded, "We are being&#13;
sold a bill of goods and the bill of&#13;
goods is going to leave us with no&#13;
strings attached through the&#13;
process."&#13;
Ranger is in contact with state&#13;
officials and will be reporting&#13;
additional information about Bill&#13;
146/3 in the near future. &#13;
2 Thursday, April 23,1981 RANGER&#13;
Remembrance of holocausts&#13;
"Days of Remembrance,"&#13;
memorializing the Jewish&#13;
holocaust in Nazi Germany and&#13;
the genocide of the Armenian&#13;
people at the hands of invading&#13;
Turks will be marked in a series of&#13;
programs at UW-Parkside under&#13;
sponsorship of the Center for&#13;
Multicultural Studies.&#13;
The "Days of Remembrance"&#13;
are being observed nationally&#13;
under auspices of the Holocaust&#13;
Memorial Council, established by&#13;
federal legislation last October.&#13;
Events at Parkside will begin&#13;
with free screening of the feature&#13;
film "Voyage of the Damned" at 8&#13;
p.m. on Tuesday, April 28, in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
The film is based on the story of&#13;
937 Jewish refugees who fled Nazi&#13;
Germany on an ocean liner in 1939&#13;
believing they had been granted&#13;
asylum in Cuba only to learn&#13;
Germany had secretly arranged&#13;
for Cuba to deny them entry and&#13;
force their return to Germany and&#13;
certain death. The film stars Faye&#13;
I Like to Jog!&#13;
Dunaway, Max von Sydow, Orson&#13;
Welles, James Mason, Lee Grant,&#13;
Malcolm McDowell and&#13;
Katharine Ross.&#13;
A State Historical Society of&#13;
Wisconsin slide tape, "A Story of&#13;
Renewed Lives," recounting the&#13;
experiences of Wisconsin survivors&#13;
of the holocaust, will be&#13;
shown at a special Social Science&#13;
Roundtable at noon on Wednesday,&#13;
April 29 in the Campus&#13;
Union, Room 107. Philosophy&#13;
Professor David Levin will&#13;
provide a commentary.&#13;
The slide tape will be repeated&#13;
with a commentary by Walter&#13;
Pelz, one of the Wisconsin survivors,&#13;
following a kosher - style&#13;
dinner at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
April 29, in the Campus Union,&#13;
Room 104. The menu will include&#13;
matzo ball soup, cole slaw,&#13;
braised brisket of beef, farfel (egg&#13;
barley), challah (egg bread) and&#13;
apple strudel.&#13;
The event is co-sponsored by&#13;
Beth Israel Sinai Congregation,&#13;
Racine, and Beth Hillel&#13;
Congregation, Kenosha. Advance&#13;
reservations, at $5.95 each, are&#13;
required and can be made in&#13;
person or by phone with the&#13;
Campus Union Information&#13;
Center (553-2345) by noon A pril 27.&#13;
Wine will be available by the&#13;
carafe.&#13;
A free program on Thursday,&#13;
April 30, at 8 p.m. will present two&#13;
short films, "Night and Fog," in&#13;
French with English subtitles,&#13;
which examines the world of the&#13;
Nazi concentration camps, and&#13;
"Where Are My People," which&#13;
traces the history of Armenia&#13;
from its origins to the massacre of&#13;
1-1/2 million people and subsequent&#13;
resurrection of the nation&#13;
by the survivors. The films are co&#13;
- sponsored by St. Mesrob and St.&#13;
Hagop Armenian Apostolic&#13;
Churches of Racine.&#13;
The program will conclude with&#13;
a free public talk on "The Armenian&#13;
Genocide in Historical&#13;
Perspective" by Marjorie&#13;
Housepian Dobkin, associate dean&#13;
of st udies at Barnard College and&#13;
a descendant of survivors erf the&#13;
massacre, at 4 p.m. on Saturday,&#13;
May 2, at St. Hagop's Church.&#13;
Dobkin has traveled extensively&#13;
in Armenia and Turkey and is the&#13;
author of a book "The Smyrna&#13;
Affair." She is married to Machbi&#13;
Dobkin, a Jew, giving her a unique&#13;
perspective on the history of bo th&#13;
the Armenian and the Jewish&#13;
people.&#13;
Beginning April 24, a display of&#13;
materials relating to the Jewish&#13;
holocaust and the Armenian&#13;
genocide will be on display in the&#13;
Parkside Library.&#13;
MORE THAN 400 arrowheads and other Indian artifacts including&#13;
spear points and fish hooks from 29 states and Mexico&#13;
and Canada have a new home at UW-Parkside. The collection is&#13;
the result of a "lifetime" hobby of collecting relics began by Otto&#13;
C. Otteson of 1109 Orchard St., Racine, wfien he found an&#13;
arrowhead in a plowed field near the Root River.&#13;
Reception honors Esser&#13;
But I Also&#13;
Enjoy Other&#13;
Things In Life&#13;
STOP IN AND&#13;
PICK UP SOME&#13;
NEW TOYS.&#13;
Special Of&#13;
The Week&#13;
ADULT MUGS&#13;
Chorus plans&#13;
spring concert&#13;
A** ajft v *&gt;&#13;
*654-9663&#13;
• •&#13;
2410 52nd St. Kenosha&#13;
The lyrical, light - hearted world&#13;
of o peretta will form the musical&#13;
setting for the spring concert of&#13;
the UW - Parkside chorus and&#13;
choral under the direction of Prof.&#13;
Frank Mueller at 3:30 p. m. on&#13;
Sunday, April 26, in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theater. Admission is&#13;
$1.50 at the door.&#13;
The singers will present&#13;
choruses from "LaBelle Helene"&#13;
by Offenbach and from the&#13;
"Yeomen of the Guard" by&#13;
Gilbert and Sullivan and selections&#13;
from "The Merry Widow" by&#13;
Lehar and "The Red Mill" by&#13;
Herbert.&#13;
The 55 voice combined chorus&#13;
and chorale will be accompanied&#13;
by pianists Laura Frisk and&#13;
Patricia Pedersen.&#13;
Dr. Robert Esser, an associate&#13;
professor of life science at&#13;
Parkside who is retiring at the end&#13;
of th e school year, will be honored&#13;
at an informal reception from 2 to&#13;
5 p. m. on Sunday, April 26, in the&#13;
Parkside Union. He has taught in&#13;
the UW System for 36 y ears.&#13;
His colleagues in the life science&#13;
faculty, who are arranging the&#13;
event, said Esser's friends and&#13;
current and former students are&#13;
invited to attend.&#13;
Esser, 65, began his teaching&#13;
career at Marquette University,&#13;
where he earned his PhD degree.&#13;
In 1945, he joined the UW&#13;
System as an instructor at the&#13;
Racine Extension Center, then&#13;
housed in the McMynn Building&#13;
which was located at 7th St. and&#13;
Lake Ave., and then at the Racine&#13;
Center Campus on Main St.&#13;
With the establishment of&#13;
Parkside, which incorporated the&#13;
former two - year campuses in&#13;
Racine and Kenosha, Esser&#13;
became one of the first faculty&#13;
members at the new four year&#13;
institution aiding in development&#13;
of the academic program and&#13;
recruiting in the life sciences.&#13;
Twice, in 1968 an d 1980, Esser&#13;
has been awarded distinguished&#13;
teaching awards based on student&#13;
nominations. During his career,&#13;
he had developed a number of&#13;
health - related courses and many&#13;
of his former students are&#13;
now health professionals in&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin. He also&#13;
developed such specialized and&#13;
innovative courses as organic&#13;
gardening and physiology of&#13;
vitamins.&#13;
Mystery opens in studio&#13;
"The Real Inspector Hound,"&#13;
Tom Stoppard's looking glass&#13;
comedy of m ystery and suspense,&#13;
j ACADEMY OF BATON &amp; DANCE&#13;
iHeadquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits,&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — Tap Shoes —&#13;
All Dancing Supplies&#13;
|6204-22nd Avenue, Kenosha 658-2498&#13;
ganger&#13;
is now accepting applications for&#13;
Editor and&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
for the 1981-82 academic year.&#13;
Applicants must be registered UWParkside&#13;
students planning to take&#13;
at least 6 credits each semester.&#13;
Deadline for applications:&#13;
April 24, 1981&#13;
Send application&#13;
&amp; resume to:&#13;
Ranger&#13;
WLLC D139&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141&#13;
Written by Tom Stoppard _JDirectedby Norman Gano"&#13;
April29^30~ at 8:00 PM.., May 1, 2 at 8:00 PM.. . M^^T^Tp^&#13;
Presented by UW-Parkside Dramatic Arts Discipline&#13;
Communication Arts Studio Theatre. .Limited Seating Reserve Earlv&#13;
IjgkgigllljOJo^S^dents^^^ljOJor Non-sludentrri^to^l^-^^&#13;
will be performed by Parkside's&#13;
dramatic arts students April 29&#13;
through May 2 at 8 p.m. and May 3&#13;
at 2 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Studio Theater. Tickets are&#13;
$1 for students and senior citizens&#13;
and $1.50 f or others and can be&#13;
reserved by calling 553-2345 or 553-&#13;
2042&amp;&#13;
Director Norman Gano says&#13;
"The Real Inspector Hound" is&#13;
a mystery - comedy in which the&#13;
audience views the production of a&#13;
play and at the same time watches&#13;
and listens to two drama critics&#13;
who have come to review the&#13;
performance as the critics&#13;
become involved when both their&#13;
personal and professional lives&#13;
intertwine with the movement of&#13;
the play."&#13;
"The play within a play is set in&#13;
'Muldoon Manor', a strangely&#13;
inaccessible house from which no&#13;
roads lead, though there are ways&#13;
of getting to it, weather permitting,"&#13;
Gano says. "There are&#13;
disappearances, mysterious&#13;
strangers, enigmatic radio&#13;
reports, confusions of identity and&#13;
at least one dead body. Inspector&#13;
Hound must put the pieces of this&#13;
puzzle together to solve the&#13;
mystery," Gano says.&#13;
Jeff McKelvie of Cudahy plays&#13;
Inspector Hound. Others in the&#13;
cast are Richard O'Brien,&#13;
Richard Horton and Rebecca&#13;
Julich of Racine, Ron Schneider&#13;
and John Scenters of Kenosha,&#13;
Kathy Orschel of Powers Lake&#13;
and Pamela Tenuta of S omers.&#13;
Gano, who joined the dramatic&#13;
arts staff last fall, previously was&#13;
a director, actor and teacher in&#13;
New York and New England.&#13;
Since moving to the Milwaukee&#13;
area, he has directed productions&#13;
for the Festival Theater and the&#13;
Milwaukee Religious Drama&#13;
Guild and worked with the Performing&#13;
Arts Center Theater&#13;
School and the PAC Players. &#13;
Sternglass speaks&#13;
about radiation&#13;
Ernest Sternglass, a professor&#13;
of radiation at the University of&#13;
Pittsburgh School of Medicine&#13;
will present two talks at Parkside&#13;
on Wednesday, April 29, under&#13;
sponsorship of Mobilization for&#13;
Survival, a student organization&#13;
Sternglass will speak about&#13;
"Bomb Testing in the Southwest"&#13;
at 3 p. m. in Molinaro Hall, Room&#13;
111, and on "Effects of&#13;
Radiation," including health dat*&#13;
from the Three Mile Island ac-&#13;
?ic&#13;
ent&#13;
' at 7:30 p" m&lt; *&#13;
n Molinaro 1U5.&#13;
Sternglass is the author of more&#13;
than 100 articles on radiation&#13;
physics and related topics and of&#13;
two books, "Low Level&#13;
Radiation" and "Secret Fallout."&#13;
In addition to his Pittsburgh post,&#13;
he is an adjunct professor of&#13;
history and philosophy of s cience&#13;
at Indiana University at&#13;
Bloomington and a fellow of the&#13;
American Physics Society.&#13;
Arterberry presents&#13;
mime in "Silent Moves"&#13;
Trent Arterberry, billed as&#13;
"The Mick Jagger of M ime," will&#13;
bring his one man show "Silent&#13;
Moves" to the UW-Parkside&#13;
campus under sponsorship of the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board at 8&#13;
p.m. on Tuesday, April 28, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Tickets are $2.50 for UW-P&#13;
students and $3 for others and are&#13;
available at the Campus Union&#13;
Information Center or at the door.&#13;
A performer for the past ten&#13;
years, Arterberry, a native of Los&#13;
Angeles, first served a two-year&#13;
apprenticeship with a local mime&#13;
company before putting on his&#13;
own show. After touring in&#13;
California, he moved to Boston in&#13;
1973 and for the next three years&#13;
performed with Kenyon Martin's&#13;
National Mime Theatre.&#13;
He then teamed with producer&#13;
Mark Flashen to produce "Silent&#13;
Moves," which combines mime,&#13;
music and movement, and has&#13;
been presented at more than 250&#13;
theaters, art centers and&#13;
universities, including a critically&#13;
- acclaimed month - long&#13;
engagement at Boston's Music&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
Personals&#13;
TO BEE-KEEPER, my hive or yours?&#13;
Stinger&#13;
TO BEE-KEEPER, mine.&#13;
BEWARE of Big T's blood thirsty rodents!&#13;
DEBBIE who taught you how to park,&#13;
anyway? H's "wife"&#13;
NARIZt Give me that profile one more time!&#13;
Diego&#13;
LUSH AND BAD GIRL. Been to Chem.&#13;
lately? A. Banana&#13;
TO BEE-KEEPER (Pat M.) Let's pollenate&#13;
together — Stinger&#13;
ATTEND Aerobic dance classes, 2nd floor&#13;
library — Lori Maez instructor.&#13;
BRENDA PETERSON Happy 20th Birthday.&#13;
Hope it's special, just like you! Love,&#13;
Mary&#13;
BIG T - we love ya — R and J&#13;
ATTEND Aerobic exercise class - Human&#13;
Physiology and Reproduction Lab, Moln&#13;
515. Sat. evens. Penicillin included.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
SPORTS CAR. 1973 MGB. $2000. Evenings,&#13;
Douglas 843-3504.&#13;
TWO MEN'S SWEATSUITS. One small, one&#13;
large, like new. Used by Men's&#13;
Cheerleading Team. Contact Shirley Schmerling&#13;
553-2320.&#13;
Miscellaneous&#13;
BEWILDER your opponents. Impress your&#13;
friends. Learn expert BACKGAMMON&#13;
from top ranking Milwaukee professional.&#13;
All levels taught. Call Jim at 551-7404 for&#13;
reasonable rates.&#13;
EARN WHILE YOU LEARN. Assist retired&#13;
college teacher with correspondence&#13;
reading and organization of his library.&#13;
Hours can be arranged to suit your&#13;
schedule. Call 694-2251 for appointment.&#13;
BACKPACKERS, earn $1200 mth. enjoyably!&#13;
Information $3. Wilderness Expeditions, 97&#13;
Spadina Rd., 306, Toronto, Canada M5R&#13;
2T1.&#13;
He recently became the first&#13;
performing artist - in - residence&#13;
at Carnegie Institute's Three&#13;
Rivers Arts Festival and his&#13;
television appearances include a&#13;
feature which received an Emmy&#13;
nomination.&#13;
He has opened concerts for such&#13;
well - known artists as Buddy&#13;
Rich, Jean LucPonty and Billy&#13;
Preston.&#13;
Pre-Med elects&#13;
new officers&#13;
Earnest P. Celebre, vice -&#13;
president of St. Catherine's&#13;
Hospital, Kenosha, presented a&#13;
talk to Pre - Med Club, Monday,&#13;
April 20.&#13;
Celebre's presentation, entitled&#13;
"The Southeastern Family&#13;
Practice Clinic and its&#13;
Relationship to Parkside,"&#13;
focused on a nutshell explanation&#13;
of the clinic's first conceptions to&#13;
practices and procedures now&#13;
employed by the clinic.&#13;
Pre - Med students also took a&#13;
tour of the health care facility.&#13;
Club elections were also held.&#13;
Next year's officers are:&#13;
President, Kevin O'Hora; Vice -&#13;
President, Frank Cairo; and&#13;
Secretary, Chris Sartori.&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
FIRST&#13;
nauonai Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
Brian Felland Business Manager&#13;
Sue Michetti News Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Sports Editor&#13;
Brian Passino Photo Editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson Copy Editor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Dave Cramer, Dan Galbraith, Dan McCormack, Lori Meyer,&#13;
Steve Myers, Bruce Preston, Kim Schlater, Janet Well, Jeff Wicks&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of UW-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
Published every Thursday during 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;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UWParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wl 53141.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
paper with one inch margins. All letters must be signed and a telephone number in&#13;
eluded for verification.&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 9 a.m. for publication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
reserves all editorial privileges in refusing to print letters which contain false or&#13;
L defamatory content. .&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 23, 1981&#13;
Club&#13;
News&#13;
ew members join&#13;
~i AAu E psilon&#13;
Meetings to&#13;
Remember&#13;
Dr. Kelly Conrad, from Humber,&#13;
Mundie, and McClary, will&#13;
speak Wed. April 29 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
Moln. ill to the Industrial&#13;
Psychology Group about his work&#13;
as a psychological consultant to&#13;
management. He will also discuss&#13;
what possibilities graduates with&#13;
an industrial psychology concentration&#13;
might have in today's&#13;
job market.&#13;
Minority Student Union will be&#13;
holding their MSU Awards Day&#13;
for academic achievement as well&#13;
as service participation on April&#13;
29 f rom 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. in&#13;
Moln 107. All members are invited.&#13;
&#13;
The Parkside chapter of Pi Mu&#13;
Epsilon, national honorary&#13;
mathematics fraternity, initiated&#13;
18 new student members at its&#13;
spring meeting on April 13, in the&#13;
Campus Union.&#13;
Speaker for the event was&#13;
Professor Renzo Piccinini of&#13;
Memorial University, St. John's,&#13;
Newfoundland, whose topic was&#13;
"Some Examples of&#13;
Mathematical Research."&#13;
Piccinini is vice president of t he&#13;
Canadian Mathematical Society&#13;
and editor of the Canadian&#13;
Mathematical Bulletin and former&#13;
secretary - general of the&#13;
Brazilian Mathematical Society&#13;
as well as Dean of Arts and&#13;
Sciences at the University of&#13;
Brazilia. He also has taught at the&#13;
University of Sao Paolo and the&#13;
Swiss Federal Institute of&#13;
Technology in Zurich and in the&#13;
UW System.&#13;
Author of two books and 29 other&#13;
publications, he received his&#13;
undergraduate degree from the&#13;
University of S ao Paolo, the MS&#13;
from Harvard University and the&#13;
PhD from UW-Madison.&#13;
UW-P arksid e's Gam ma&#13;
Chapter of Pi Mu Epsilon is one of&#13;
6nly three in Wisconsin. The&#13;
organization is devoted to the&#13;
promotion of sc holarly activity in&#13;
mathematics.&#13;
Students initiated into the&#13;
fraternity are:&#13;
From Kenosha: James Andrea,&#13;
Natalie Bredek, Dino Druding,&#13;
Jeff Jurvis, Bernadette Kessler,&#13;
Valerie Vorel, and Kevin&#13;
Zuehlsdorf.&#13;
From 'Racine: Kenneth C.&#13;
Clark, Rhonda Dederich, Bonnie&#13;
Ertl, Bruce Klappauf, Robert Oik,&#13;
Sandra Pellegrino, and Robert&#13;
Quadracci.&#13;
From Great Lakes, 111.: Andres&#13;
C. Castillo.&#13;
From Caledonia: Todd&#13;
Laszewski.&#13;
From Neenah: Thomas Manteufel.&#13;
&#13;
POSTAL INSTANT PRESS&#13;
WILL GIVE g&#13;
THE BEARER&#13;
ON DEMAND&#13;
$1.00 TOWARD&#13;
ANY RESUME&#13;
PRINTING BUCK WHILE-YOU-WAIT&#13;
to a Customer&#13;
ONE FAST BUCK &#13;
4 Thursday, April 23, 1981 RANGER&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thursday, April 23&#13;
VIDEO TAPE at 1 p.m. in Union Square featuring "Kool and the Gang," Roger&#13;
Daltrey, Isaac Hayes, Pat Travers and Peter Gabriel. Admission is free.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
F&lt;&#13;
tf&#13;
ULTY RECITAL a* 1 P-m. in the Union Cinema with Martha Dodds, soprano.&#13;
The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, April 24&#13;
VIDEO TAPE will be repeated at 1 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
PLAY "Still Beat Noble Hearts" at 7:30 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
featuring Laurie James. Tickets are available at the Union Information Center.&#13;
Admission is $2.50.&#13;
MOVIES "Singing in the Rain" and "Shall We Dance" will be shown at 8 n m in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission at the door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1 50 for&#13;
a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, April 25&#13;
CT^&#13;
R&#13;
?&#13;
NCE&#13;
"&#13;
AACe&#13;
°L0&#13;
°&#13;
Wr,&#13;
en&#13;
" starts at 8:30 amCaU&#13;
ext&#13;
- 2351 for more&#13;
Ai mrSt fSSItVZQ' Z UW"&#13;
Parkside&#13;
- UW-Extension and GTI's Wo/Men's Bureau.&#13;
ALUMNI COLLEGE starts at 8:30 a.m. Call ext. 2515 for more information.&#13;
Sunday, April 26&#13;
C n&#13;
NCJ?S.&#13;
T a* 3:30 p nV the Union Cinema with Prof. Frank Mueller directing the&#13;
Parkside chorus and chorale. Admission at the door is $1.50.&#13;
MOVIES "Singing in the Rain" and "Shall We Dance" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m&#13;
in the Umon Cinema. F&#13;
Monday, April 27&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. Prof. Herb Kubly will talk on "Native's&#13;
Return: Switzerland s Turbulent March Into the 20th Century." The program is&#13;
free and open to the public. 8&#13;
"&#13;
Study SkiUs&#13;
" at 1 p.m. in CA142. All students are welcome.&#13;
CONCERT at 8 p.m. in GR 103 featuring the Parkside Guitar Ensemble. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Tuesday, April 28&#13;
FILM "Voyage of the Damned" will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema. The&#13;
film is free and open to the public.&#13;
MIME with Trent Arterberry at 8p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre. Tickets&#13;
are available at the Union Information Center. Admission is $2.50 for Parkside&#13;
students and $3.00 for others. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Wednesday, April 29&#13;
ROUND TABLE/SLIDE TAPE at 12 noon in Union 207. P rof. David Levin will&#13;
comment after the showing of "A Story of Renewed Lives." The program is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
9®^&#13;
EERT by the Parkside Band at 2 p.m. in Main Place. All are welcome.&#13;
PuTJi. nw1?,' m 11L Dr&#13;
- Ernest Sternglass of the University of&#13;
Pittsburgh will talk on Bomb Testing in the Southwest." The program is free&#13;
a™0P®nk&gt; the public. Sponsored by Student Mobilization for Survival.&#13;
KOSHER DINNER/SLIDE TAPE at 6:30 p.m. After the dinner the slide tape "A&#13;
Story of Renewed Lives" will be repeated with a commentary by Walter Peltz,&#13;
i pr-Tirnif ™sc&#13;
°&#13;
nsin TY1™" of the Holocaust. CaU ext. 2345 for information,&#13;
n Vr£° p,m' M0LN105, Dr&#13;
-&#13;
Ernest Sternglass wiU talk on "Effects of&#13;
Radiation. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
COURSES "Women and Practical Financial Planning" and "Financial&#13;
Management and Marketing for Recreation Businesses" at 7 p.m. in Tallent&#13;
"&#13;
aU_Call ext. 2312 for more information. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
$LW sJoM^fed by PAB0 SqUarC featuring&#13;
"&#13;
Bermuda Triangle". Admission is&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
Joseph.&#13;
4433 22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
Women take fifth at NIU&#13;
The women's track team ended&#13;
up fifth in the Northern Illinois&#13;
Invitational last Saturday behind&#13;
the Northern Illinois squad, Northern&#13;
Iowa, Marquette, and UW -&#13;
Milwaukee. However, individual&#13;
performances were good, keyed&#13;
by the warm temperatures and&#13;
the lack of wind.&#13;
Wendy Burman started the&#13;
running events off by winning the&#13;
10,000 meter run in 35:58.9, her&#13;
best time this year. Kellie Benzow&#13;
followed by winning the 5000&#13;
meters in 17:42.5, good enough to&#13;
qualify for the nationals. They&#13;
both later doubled, Kellie taking&#13;
fifth in the 800 and Wendy taking&#13;
fourth in the 3000. Cindy Spaciel&#13;
tied for second in the 200 and took&#13;
third in the 100. Dona Driscoll&#13;
lowered her own school record in&#13;
the 400 me ter hurdles to 1:07.9 in&#13;
taking fifth place.&#13;
The 800 medley relay team of&#13;
JoAnne Carey, Pam Carey, Rose&#13;
Martin and Dona Driscoll took&#13;
third place with a time only four -&#13;
tenths of a second off their time of&#13;
last week. The 4x100 meter relay&#13;
team of JoAnne Carey, Spaciel,&#13;
Driscoll, and Martin were contending&#13;
for the lead until a&#13;
dropped baton slowed their efforts,&#13;
and as a result they placed&#13;
fifth with a time of 53.2 seconds.&#13;
In the field events, Denise&#13;
Schreiber upped her team record&#13;
in the discus by six feet to 122 feet&#13;
1 inch, good enough for third&#13;
place. JoAnne and Cindy placed&#13;
third and fifth in the long jump&#13;
with leaps of 17'6" and 17'4"&#13;
respectively.&#13;
This weekend the team travels&#13;
to Platteville for a triangular&#13;
meet with Luther College and UW&#13;
- Platteville as a tuneup to the&#13;
WWIAC Championships on May 1 -&#13;
2.&#13;
Wargames played with USA walkers&#13;
by Steve Brunner&#13;
One of the biggest athletic&#13;
events ever to be harvested at&#13;
Parkside will take place on the&#13;
inner loop road on May 3. Walkers&#13;
from around the country will&#13;
compete at Parkside in the 20&#13;
kilometer championship starting&#13;
at 11 a .m.&#13;
Lack of funds for the event,&#13;
which is sponsored strictly by&#13;
Parkside, have hindered it from&#13;
becoming a formal national race.&#13;
$1500 is needed for the event.&#13;
Parkside has produced only $700&#13;
thus far. The majority of this&#13;
money was donated by the&#13;
Parkside Wargames Club.&#13;
Coordinator of the event Bob&#13;
Lawson said, "It's a great gesture&#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;
of this club to help out another&#13;
school function which is in&#13;
desperate need. Their funds will&#13;
help pay for the banquet."&#13;
An event such as this is usually&#13;
ceremonial. The past winners are&#13;
flown in, and the judges are paid.&#13;
However, this will not be the case&#13;
at this race. "The event could&#13;
havfe been cited somewhere else&#13;
which could have been funded&#13;
better, but many of the walkers,&#13;
as well as the officials, wanted it&#13;
at Parkside because of its&#13;
facilities and association as being&#13;
one of the top race walking&#13;
schools."&#13;
The last racewalking championship&#13;
was held in 1979. The top&#13;
two finishers of this race will&#13;
represent the United States at the&#13;
Laguno Cup in Valencia, Spain in&#13;
October. The Laguno Cup is the&#13;
biggest event for race walkers&#13;
outside &lt;rf th e Olympics. The last&#13;
U.S. team consisted of Jim&#13;
Hiering, Chris Hanson, both&#13;
Parkside alumni, and Maro&#13;
Evonuik of Longmont, Colorado.&#13;
Hiering is favored to repeat as&#13;
champion, but Parkside's&#13;
awesome freshman Ray Sharp&#13;
should give Hiering all he can&#13;
handle.&#13;
Students and faculty are asked&#13;
to help with funds if they can. One&#13;
may donate by making out his/her&#13;
check to: "Parkside Walking&#13;
Fund"; and drop it off at the&#13;
Physical Education offices on the&#13;
second floor by May 1.&#13;
L I N S fvT- LIN G&#13;
CkMn.&#13;
Coupon&#13;
% Off&#13;
on the second buffe t&#13;
Eat All You&#13;
Want Buffet&#13;
Lunch Buffet $4.35&#13;
Dinner Buffet $6.55&#13;
10% Discount&#13;
with UW-P I.D.&#13;
*41 Villa Capri&#13;
1 Shopping Center&#13;
I 2116-20th Place&#13;
551-7883&#13;
The&#13;
IMlfH&#13;
SALES - PARTS&#13;
552-7070&#13;
County Hwy. "H" At Hwy. 11,&#13;
Stvrtovant, Wit.&#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;
MAMA MIA!&#13;
PARKSIDE F OOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
ITALIAN&#13;
ETHNIC FRIDAY&#13;
COMBINATION PLATE SPECIAL&#13;
FRI. APRIL 24 —&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
• HOMEMADE LASAGNA&#13;
• FRESH ITALIAN SAUSAGE&#13;
• FETTUCINI ALFREDO&#13;
• ZUCHINNI OR G REEN BEANS&#13;
• GARLIC BREAD&#13;
• COMPLIMENTARY GLASS OF&#13;
CHIANTI WIN E&#13;
ALL FOR ONLY $2.49&#13;
ALSO: ITALIAN BOMBERS &amp; MINESTROb </text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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                <text>1981-04-23</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Loop&#13;
500&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
Marketing Club is sponsoring Loop 500, a&#13;
bike race around Inner Loop Road on&#13;
Wednesday, May 6 from 1-2 p.m. Teams&#13;
must consist of two males and two females&#13;
and there is a $5 entry fee. Prizes are a&#13;
pitcher of beer, T-shirts and champagne.&#13;
"Inside Russia Today"&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
A s lide presentation sponsored&#13;
by the Library Learning Center&#13;
"Inside Russia Today," was&#13;
shown by visiting Professor Dan&#13;
McGovern on April 22. The slides&#13;
were taken during a recent tour by&#13;
McGovern and 10 Parkside&#13;
students between March 8 and&#13;
March 24.&#13;
McGovern commented that the&#13;
tour quite visibly "showed various&#13;
aspects of Russian life." Among&#13;
the various places the group&#13;
visited in the Soviet Union were&#13;
Moscow, Leningrad and Tallinn.&#13;
The presentation provided an in -&#13;
depth look inside the Iron Curtain&#13;
and gave insight to little - known&#13;
places and inhabitants of the&#13;
USSR.&#13;
The group entered the USSR&#13;
from Finland and traveled to the&#13;
Kremlin (which means fortress)&#13;
and was amazed at the architecture&#13;
of the buildings, some&#13;
of which dated back to the 15th&#13;
century. McGovern pointed out&#13;
that Russians enjoy very large&#13;
statues and monuments and, as a&#13;
result, there are many in Moscow.&#13;
McGovern said that Moscow&#13;
was drab mostly due to the old&#13;
buildings and cathedrals of w hich&#13;
there are many, as compared to&#13;
Leningrad, which has white, more&#13;
modern buildings and open space.&#13;
The people in Moscow are&#13;
"rude," according to McGovern,&#13;
but this could be attributed to the&#13;
long lines of people who must wait&#13;
for food and merchandise goods.&#13;
McGovern said that the Soviet&#13;
people are generally friendly to&#13;
foreigners and often curious about&#13;
the Western world.&#13;
The people there talk little about&#13;
the military and only are dimly&#13;
aware about their involvement in&#13;
Afghanistan, although soldiers&#13;
and police of a ll kinds are present&#13;
in Moscow, according to&#13;
McGovern.&#13;
Although there are many&#13;
cathedrals in the USSR, they are&#13;
only preserved because of their&#13;
design and age since religion is&#13;
rigidly controlled by the government.&#13;
As McGovern put it, there&#13;
are 250 discoes in Moscow, a city&#13;
of 8 million, but only 6 active&#13;
churches. Since belief in any kind&#13;
of God is frowned upon, cases&#13;
have been known to happen when&#13;
mothers teaching children about&#13;
God are declared mentally ill and&#13;
placed in institutions, and the&#13;
children put up for adoption.&#13;
McGovern feels that the Soviet&#13;
Union's biggest problem in&#13;
domestic affairs is an acute&#13;
housing, food and merchandise&#13;
shortage, which is not due to&#13;
money, but rather to not enough&#13;
growth in the field of construction,&#13;
agriculture, and goods. He stated&#13;
that the Soviet government is not&#13;
allocating enough supplies to&#13;
these resources.&#13;
McGovern said these problems&#13;
are obvious with extremely long&#13;
waits for such basic items as&#13;
bread and t-shirts, items which&#13;
Americans usually take for&#13;
granted. "We don't know how&#13;
lucky we are when we go to the&#13;
grocery store," he said. Also,&#13;
apartments are overcrowded, and&#13;
housing is scarce according to&#13;
McGovern. The group was able to&#13;
experience this firsthand during&#13;
their trip.&#13;
McGovern said that there is "no&#13;
economic incentive" to produce&#13;
quality and quantity things like&#13;
construction, especially in&#13;
comparison to Western standards.&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Joint orchestra concert&#13;
• Women's Softball to nationals.&#13;
Delay action on revising&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
The Academic Policies Committee&#13;
(APC) decided Thursday,&#13;
April 23, to slow down the&#13;
timetable for the proposed&#13;
revision of the Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge requirement.&#13;
The implementation of the&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge proposal is&#13;
being planned for new students&#13;
beginning in the fall of 1983 a nd&#13;
the APC is scheduling action by&#13;
the Faculty Senate for the fall of&#13;
1981.&#13;
The proposal had previously&#13;
been planned to take effect in the&#13;
fall of 1982 after Faculty Senate&#13;
action during this spring&#13;
semester.&#13;
The time between now and fall&#13;
1981 will be spent considering the&#13;
input from various campus&#13;
parties and revising the proposal.&#13;
The Committee will meet in a day&#13;
- long session Monday, May 18 in&#13;
the Galbraith Conference Room,&#13;
WLLC, to discuss possible&#13;
alternatives to revise the&#13;
proposal.&#13;
The APC has received input&#13;
from many areas including&#13;
students, each of the eight&#13;
academic divisions and&#13;
Educational Support.&#13;
Students expressed their concerns&#13;
in an April 10 student forum.&#13;
The two predominant comments&#13;
were that the Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge requirement is a good&#13;
idea, but the present program is&#13;
good enough and that students&#13;
need more courses in their&#13;
majors, not in the Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge.&#13;
The current proposal, wrote&#13;
Prof. Robert Canary in his submission&#13;
to the APC, "would have&#13;
required about 10 credit hours&#13;
more than present requirements&#13;
for the average student — less for&#13;
some, more for others. The issue&#13;
here is the advantages of&#13;
strengthening general .education&#13;
versus the disadvantages of&#13;
reducing further the students'&#13;
freedom of choice and of making it&#13;
difficult for students in a few pre -&#13;
professional majors to graduate&#13;
within 120 credits."&#13;
Other issues the APC received&#13;
comments on include: maintaining&#13;
a "magic list" of approved&#13;
courses; redefining certain&#13;
phrasing of the proposal; making&#13;
options consist of the same&#13;
number of credits; the specific&#13;
requirements in the areas of&#13;
foreign language, studio / practicum&#13;
courses, and laboratory&#13;
experience; and the lack of a&#13;
physical education requirement.&#13;
GOV• An ex-educator talks&#13;
Dreyfus: a^out uw system&#13;
Lee Sherman Dreyfus became&#13;
governor of Wisconsin after&#13;
serving as chancellor at UWStevens&#13;
Point from 1967-78. He&#13;
came to UW-SP from UWMadison&#13;
where he was a professor&#13;
of speech and radio-television&#13;
education. Gov. Dreyfus holds&#13;
three degrees from the UW: a&#13;
B.A. in speech (1949), an M.A. in&#13;
Radio/Television (1952), and a&#13;
Ph.D. in Rhetoric, Propaganda&#13;
and Persuasion (1957).&#13;
In September of 1978, he&#13;
defeated Robert Kasten, the&#13;
party-endorsed candidate, in the&#13;
Republican gubernatorial&#13;
primary. In November of that&#13;
year, he unseated Acting&#13;
Governor Martin Schreiber,&#13;
carrying 53 of the state's 72&#13;
counties.&#13;
This interview took place in the&#13;
Governor's office on .Friday,&#13;
March 13. The transcript is&#13;
unedited except where insertions&#13;
and deletions would aid continuity.&#13;
Brackets and elipses&#13;
mark any changes in the text.&#13;
Initials (MW) for Mark Wurl and&#13;
(LSD) for Lee Sherman Dreyfus&#13;
are used throughout.&#13;
Mark Wurl, from Tomahawk,&#13;
WI., is a senior Communications&#13;
major at UW-SP.&#13;
MW: Governor, my first&#13;
question is about the transition&#13;
that took place from being an&#13;
educator and then going on to be&#13;
governor. What a major change.&#13;
LSD: Well, in my case it was&#13;
something that wasn't unique. I&#13;
was the second person to leave the&#13;
university presidency to run for&#13;
governor. Woodrow Wilson had&#13;
done it in 1910 at Princeton, except&#13;
his was a private school, and this&#13;
was a public institution. So I had&#13;
the initial problem of trying to get&#13;
where I was with regents. Some&#13;
wanted me to, and some wanted to&#13;
not allow me to. So the first&#13;
problem was the initial transition&#13;
of simply going unemployed for&#13;
nine months and borrowing the&#13;
money out of my insurances to&#13;
live. Then the movement to the&#13;
campaign I don't see as all that&#13;
different from the manner and&#13;
style from which I operated on&#13;
that campus.&#13;
MW: As far as special interests&#13;
go, do you consider the UW&#13;
system a special interest?&#13;
LSD: Sure. Of course. Why not?&#13;
They have a single factor agenda.&#13;
They don't have any responsibility&#13;
for the whole state, they have a&#13;
responsibility for the University of&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
MW: I'd like to focus on the&#13;
university a little bit. It's&#13;
becoming less a priority in the&#13;
state's budget.&#13;
LSD: It has been continuously&#13;
since, I suppose one could say, the&#13;
sixties.&#13;
MW: You're sympathetic as far&#13;
as being an educator for 28 years.&#13;
Where does this deprioritization&#13;
stop? What is the appropriate&#13;
level of funding?&#13;
LSD: Well, I'm not sure. First of&#13;
all, I guess I won't really say that&#13;
it was a matter of deprioritization,&#13;
Continued On Page Two&#13;
Photo by Gary LeBouton&#13;
GOV. LEE DREYFUS&#13;
2 Thursday, April 30,1981 RANGER&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
if that term is applicable. What&#13;
has happened since the midsixties,&#13;
other priorities have&#13;
begun to gain in ascendance in&#13;
human services other than higher&#13;
education. One of them is clearly&#13;
in the area of the elderly, and they&#13;
are increasing in number. And&#13;
medical care. One is the care of&#13;
children, and particularly&#13;
children where they are dependent.&#13;
And j ust start down the line&#13;
and say "where is the money&#13;
going?" But the key one, the key&#13;
shift was that the state take on the&#13;
responsibility of raising taxes and&#13;
sending it back to local governments.&#13;
And now that priority has&#13;
absolutely mushroomed, and all&#13;
those have grown at such a rate&#13;
that they have come around and&#13;
by-passed the university.&#13;
MW: Recent articles state that&#13;
faculty in the UW system have lost&#13;
substantial buying power. We&#13;
stand in danger of losing good&#13;
faculty to the private sector.&#13;
LSD: I'm not sure that is true. I&#13;
hear that all the time. This last go&#13;
around, the last bi-ennium, I was&#13;
able to give the faculty what&#13;
amounts to the biggest slug&#13;
they've had in some time in terms&#13;
of dollars totally going in. I can't&#13;
make up a whole decade, obviously,&#13;
and while the state had it,&#13;
I tried to share it. Right now, the&#13;
state doesn't have it.&#13;
The movement of faculty into&#13;
the private sector; may be true,&#13;
except maybe they haven't taken&#13;
a good look at the private sector.&#13;
Some very capable, experienced,&#13;
skilled people right not are in&#13;
jeopardy in their jobs. We've got&#13;
over a hundred thousand more&#13;
people unemployed than we had&#13;
here a year and a half ago. So any&#13;
notion that there is a place for the&#13;
faculty to go in the private sector,&#13;
and start at the level they're at,&#13;
simply is not realistic. I think that&#13;
is not the case. And as faculty&#13;
begin to look genuinely at the&#13;
private sector, I think they're&#13;
going to find out that it isn't there,&#13;
either. This thing is hitting&#13;
everybody.&#13;
MW: The image of the&#13;
university system has obviously&#13;
declined. What can you do to&#13;
improve this image?&#13;
LSD: Tell me what you mean by&#13;
that, because I don't think the&#13;
image of the University system&#13;
has obviously declined. In fact, I&#13;
think it has increased.&#13;
MW: There has been some bad&#13;
press, well, the article explaining&#13;
the 300 faculty members that were&#13;
making over $45,000; that's not&#13;
really good.&#13;
LSD: That's at odds with the&#13;
faculty that claim they're all&#13;
going to jump into the private&#13;
sector, when the biggest number&#13;
of people who make more than&#13;
$40,000 are all housed in the&#13;
university.&#13;
MW: This is as far as the taxpayers'&#13;
perspective.&#13;
LSD: Oh, I see.&#13;
MW: And they will look at the&#13;
Chancellor at Milwaukee, and the&#13;
problems over there.&#13;
LSD: Oh, I see. Alright. I&#13;
thought you meant its academic&#13;
quality image. I hear all of that,&#13;
but I do not really see that around&#13;
the country. What you're talking&#13;
about is that while the University&#13;
sees itself as being shorted in&#13;
funds, and not getting enough&#13;
money from the government,&#13;
there are aspects of public stories&#13;
that suggest to the average&#13;
worker and taxpayer that the&#13;
University has plenty of money&#13;
because of the salaries paid to the&#13;
highest paid faculty and administrators.&#13;
MW: There have been some&#13;
accusations that, not knowing&#13;
what your background was before&#13;
you became governor, that they'd&#13;
never know it was in education.&#13;
They think that you might be&#13;
afraid to say more for education&#13;
for fear of favoritism, cr&#13;
(maintaining) impartiality.&#13;
Dreyfus talks about UW System&#13;
Photo by Gary LeBouton&#13;
GOV. LEE DREYFUS&#13;
LSD: I've tried not to do that. In&#13;
fact, I get a mixed bag. I've had&#13;
some people say that you favor&#13;
education. Well, as a matter of&#13;
fact, when I first put the cuts&#13;
through, 4.4%, I tried to do it&#13;
across the board. I tried to tag&#13;
education just as hard as the&#13;
schools and every other program.&#13;
That was first denied; that the&#13;
authority given to me by the&#13;
legislature was not upheld in the&#13;
courts. Then I went to the&#13;
legislature and said here again, do&#13;
it equally, keep the priorities the&#13;
same. The legislature said no, that&#13;
we're going to cut the University&#13;
4.4, but we won't cut the schools&#13;
3.0 — in that case — and we won't&#13;
cut the cities as much. Now I wind&#13;
up having to make that up.&#13;
Therefore, where do I cut? State&#13;
government, what's left? Half of&#13;
the state op's is the University.&#13;
And since I don't have the option&#13;
of a balanced budget. . . So in one&#13;
sense, for a while they were&#13;
saying "Ah ha," look what's&#13;
happened. I had Senator Risser&#13;
saying here's the worst administration&#13;
for the University in&#13;
the history of the University. Then&#13;
a week later, when it turns out&#13;
that the Secretary of Administration&#13;
had, in fact, pointed&#13;
out that the University didn't take&#13;
4.4, they charged the students a&#13;
$30 su rcharge, which meant they&#13;
really took about a 3.3. Then when&#13;
the next cut came through,&#13;
(Department of Administration&#13;
Secretary Kenneth) Lindner&#13;
found and said 'Look, here's&#13;
federal money, or here's money in&#13;
an account for fringe benefits&#13;
where you had over budgeted.&#13;
Instead of taking that money&#13;
away from you, we'll let you keep&#13;
that, and that will help mitigate&#13;
this.' The I got charged with&#13;
favoritism, and by the same&#13;
senators in the same parties. And&#13;
that I tend to look on as political&#13;
rhetoric, once I hear two different&#13;
points of view and charges coming&#13;
out of the same political party.&#13;
MW: Hindsight is 20/20 and not&#13;
always good. Giving back the&#13;
surplus was a decision you made.&#13;
LSD: Yes.&#13;
MW: In retrospect, was that a&#13;
wise move?&#13;
LSD: Absolutely. In fact I'm&#13;
amazed now at legislators who&#13;
say he gave it back. As I&#13;
remember, the Vote to give back&#13;
the surplus was four votes short of&#13;
unanimity in both houses! It was&#13;
unanimous in the Senate, and it&#13;
was minus four in the Assembly.&#13;
There's no question in my mind&#13;
that if that surplus had been there,&#13;
we'd have thrown money around&#13;
in a pile of favorite programs. We&#13;
would have created programs,&#13;
had greater expectations than we&#13;
have now, that we would now be&#13;
faced with cutting back. We would&#13;
now be faced with cutting the very&#13;
expectations we set in motion.&#13;
They question my mind about it.&#13;
There is no way in which you could&#13;
have a cookie jar with a lid on it&#13;
that's strong enough that would&#13;
have saved it. Secondly, I think&#13;
that with the ravages of inflation,&#13;
the people themselves needed that&#13;
money to offset inflation. So at&#13;
least for a year, Wisconsin&#13;
citizens didn't feel inflation like&#13;
anybody else. And it created 6,700&#13;
jobs in this state, which was pretty&#13;
handy. You put that whole run&#13;
together, that becomes absolutely&#13;
critical. The last point is this:&#13;
every time I hear some bleeding&#13;
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legislator saying it's gone forever,&#13;
and we shouldn't have given it&#13;
back, they can have it back. I&#13;
don't know why they think it's&#13;
gone forever. Absolutely not! It&#13;
can be taken back from the&#13;
people, but this time if they want&#13;
to put that tax back to get it, this&#13;
time they must vote for it. They&#13;
don't get the free ride they got&#13;
from inflation with nobody voting&#13;
for it. I've got the Senate majority&#13;
leader (William) Bablitch who, in&#13;
the tenure he's been in this Senate,&#13;
has never had to vote for a tax&#13;
increase on the people. That's&#13;
very handy. This time I've got it&#13;
back to where we're talking about&#13;
taxation by representation, not&#13;
inflation. If he wants the money&#13;
back, all he's got to do (is) put in a&#13;
bill, raise the tax rates and reraise&#13;
the taxes of the people, and&#13;
you can get the money back.&#13;
MW: As an educator, or rather,&#13;
as Chancellor, you should know&#13;
where some of the fat might lie&#13;
within the system. Where . . . can&#13;
the budget be trimmed?&#13;
LSD: Well, I haven't been that&#13;
close to the budgets, and as I&#13;
remember my own budgets at&#13;
Stevens Point, I really question&#13;
the word "fat." In some cases, I&#13;
think it is now at a point because&#13;
erf the so-called savings, it isn't&#13;
"fat" we're looking for really. It's&#13;
a matter of saying 'Find out what&#13;
is quite not as important and&#13;
make the priority decision.' Every&#13;
time, for example, when the&#13;
University came in with a&#13;
program — let's say minority&#13;
access money, and I denied that —&#13;
what I'm saying to them is don't&#13;
tell me that we must add money&#13;
for minority access, because to&#13;
tell me that is to tell me that every&#13;
single program in the University&#13;
is of a higher priority than serving&#13;
minority students. If they're going&#13;
to say that, I want them to say it&#13;
up front and publicly, and they'll&#13;
hear what the public reaction is.&#13;
So when I deny that, I'm saying I&#13;
assume you'll do that, because&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
that a very high priority. Now you&#13;
decide what is it you've been doing&#13;
that's been nice, but it is not that&#13;
essential, and what are we going&#13;
to back off of. The only place I&#13;
suspect that you get fat in any&#13;
kind of a system of civil service&#13;
and tenure is that you do get some&#13;
people that once they're in a&#13;
permanently protected status&#13;
become non-productive. Not a lot&#13;
Not as much as I think the general&#13;
public believes, but you do get&#13;
some, and they really aren't&#13;
working all that hard, and they&#13;
aren't doing all that much work&#13;
They're not as easily followed as&#13;
our garbage trucks in Milwaukee,&#13;
but if they were, I'm sure there&#13;
would be similar kinds of articles.&#13;
MW: From Governor, do you go&#13;
back into education?&#13;
LSD: That's my goal. I miss my&#13;
teaching, I miss the campus. I will&#13;
teach some things differently. I've&#13;
done some teaching out here on&#13;
the hill. Every so often I get a shot&#13;
at it, and I really, absolutely still&#13;
enjoy it. And my goal, ultimately,&#13;
is to return to Stevens Point. I&#13;
have my home there, I still vote&#13;
there, and technically, I still have&#13;
tenure there. If I run for another&#13;
term, well, that's another matter.&#13;
MW: Is that your decision then&#13;
that you're going to run?&#13;
LSD: No, that is a decision I&#13;
wouldn't make probably until&#13;
close to a year from now.&#13;
MW: Or, you really beat&#13;
Kasten, and Kasten beat Nelson.&#13;
Are you going to go after Proxmire?&#13;
LSD: Ha, ha, ha. You know, I&#13;
finally got to a point where I said&#13;
so often that I wasn't going to find&#13;
a good answer ... My intention is&#13;
to come back to Stevens Point&#13;
after doing what I came down&#13;
here to do, and it's an intention&#13;
that's mutually held by the&#13;
Democrats who would like to send&#13;
me back just as soon as they&#13;
possibly can.&#13;
Don't forget your&#13;
PSGA President&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This letter is to the students more&#13;
than the editor. It deals with that&#13;
person whose name couldn't have&#13;
been forgotten a month ago;&#13;
mainly because it was plastered on&#13;
most of the walls on campus. Yes,&#13;
that's right. It is none other than&#13;
your PSGA President whose name&#13;
is? I hope you didn't forget&#13;
already. That's not because I want&#13;
to be remembered by all of&#13;
Parkside BUT I do want to be&#13;
remembered by those on campus&#13;
who have problems or difficult&#13;
situations.&#13;
I am paid to be President and I&#13;
am willing to stand up for student&#13;
rights. If you have a grievance&#13;
about the happenings with administration&#13;
or student groups&#13;
(PAB, SOC, PSGA or Ranger) you&#13;
have at least one person to go to for&#13;
assistance. I'm not a 4.0, but I do&#13;
know how to cut through&#13;
bureaucratic B.S. a little faster and&#13;
can try to limit a student's grief to&#13;
as little as possible.&#13;
The main point is that I won't be&#13;
hurting when a problem arises (I&#13;
hope) but I'll sure try to solve it if I&#13;
can — but I can't solve problems&#13;
t h a t I d on ' t kno w e x i s t . . . .&#13;
Jim Kreuser&#13;
PSGA President&#13;
P S. - My office hours are 12-1&#13;
every day of the week in Union&#13;
Square.&#13;
Phone (414)652-3398&#13;
...one stop for all your printing needs J&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
waMirh"f»"&lt;' Business Manager&#13;
.U News Editor&#13;
: r!&#13;
Sirs":- Ginger Helgeson :::v////.vS 11Ed |,£or&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Dan Ga,braith' Dan McCormack, Lori Meyer,&#13;
e Myers, Bruce Preston, Kim Schlater, Janet Well, Jeff Wicks&#13;
p'br"h'I?^ ^^POl^y^nd^cont^t °f UWParkside and they are solely&#13;
RANGEeR fsVpr^nfecTby^he LJnioi?Cooper^f^'p ' dUri"9 brCakS and holidays'&#13;
Written permission is required for reDrint nf blisbin9 Co - Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed RANGER&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wl 53141. Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UW&#13;
paper with one inch marg ins**"fu liters musThi16?' doublespaced on standard size&#13;
eluded for verification. letters must be signed and a telephone number in&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid reasons&#13;
D eadline for letters ,s Tuesday at 9 aml„r k,- .&#13;
reserves all editorial privileges in refusion b"bl'ca,,(0n on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content. ' ^fusing to print letters which contain false or&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 30,1981&#13;
International dimension&#13;
added to computer fair&#13;
Telecommunication networks&#13;
for personal computer users,&#13;
offering access to services&#13;
ranging from electronic mail&#13;
delivery to comparison shopping&#13;
in your own living room, are&#13;
among "Information Age" facets&#13;
of microcomputer technology&#13;
which will be demonstrated at&#13;
Parkside's Fifth Computer Fair&#13;
on Saturday, May 2, from 10 a. m.&#13;
to 4 p. m. in Molinaro Hall.&#13;
Focus of the fair is on uses of&#13;
microcomputers, the small,&#13;
relatively inexpensive personal&#13;
computers which can be&#13;
programmed for tasks ranging&#13;
from helping kids with homework&#13;
and keeping track of your bank&#13;
balance to performing a variety of&#13;
jobs in business and industry.&#13;
Previous fairs have drawn&#13;
thousands of microcomputer buffs&#13;
from throughout the Upper&#13;
Midwest.&#13;
This year's fair will add an&#13;
international dimension, according&#13;
to Prof. Donald Piele, who&#13;
is coordinating the event.&#13;
Programming contests for&#13;
junior and senior high school&#13;
students have been a feature of&#13;
the fair since its beginning. This&#13;
year, through Creative Computing&#13;
magazine, Piele issued an invitation&#13;
for sponsors in other&#13;
locations to run simultaneous&#13;
contests using the same problems&#13;
that will be given participants at&#13;
the Parkside contest.&#13;
More than 400 responses have&#13;
rolled in from the U. S., Canada,&#13;
England, Australia, Germany and&#13;
Ecuador.&#13;
Winners of the contest at&#13;
Parkside will be tabulated during&#13;
the fair and presented at an&#13;
awards address beginning at 3 p.&#13;
m. in Molinaro Hall, Room 105.&#13;
Winners of the international&#13;
competition will be tabulated&#13;
when returns are complete from&#13;
the various contest locations.&#13;
The awards address will be&#13;
given by Jim Rutt, a representative&#13;
of "The Source," a&#13;
telecommunication network&#13;
which lets owners of personal&#13;
computers or terminals with a&#13;
special telephone hook - up device&#13;
obtain access to a wide variety of&#13;
information including stock&#13;
quotations, a restaurant guide,&#13;
weather and travel data and a&#13;
buyers service as well as a variety&#13;
of business, scientific, home&#13;
management and educational&#13;
programs.&#13;
Originally conceived as an&#13;
information system for commercial&#13;
users, "The Source" is&#13;
made available to "non-primetime"&#13;
personal computer users&#13;
from 6 p. m. to 8 p. m. at non -&#13;
commercial rates.&#13;
The system, which will transmit&#13;
person - to - person letters,&#13;
already has been installed in the&#13;
offices of 150 congressmen, according&#13;
to its parent company,&#13;
Telecomputing Corporation of&#13;
America. The firm says there also&#13;
are plans to install the system in&#13;
the White House.&#13;
A variety of microcomputer&#13;
hardware and software displays&#13;
will be on exhibit throughout the&#13;
day and a series of talks on&#13;
computer developments and&#13;
applications will be presented&#13;
beginning at 10 a. m.&#13;
"Creative Programming for&#13;
Young Minds," a K - 12 instructional&#13;
program in logic and&#13;
thinking skills, will be presented&#13;
by Dr. Henry Taitt and Marilyn&#13;
Buxton of Creative Creations&#13;
(Charleston, 111.), in Molinaro&#13;
Hall, Room 105, and "Micros in&#13;
Industry" will be presented by&#13;
Thomas Hayek (Racine), in&#13;
Molinaro 107, both at 10 a. m.&#13;
"The Apple II Computer as a&#13;
Teachers' Aid" will be discussed&#13;
by Jim Hamilton of Gilmore&#13;
Junior High (Racine), in Union&#13;
Room 104, and "The FOURTH&#13;
(Computer) Language" will be&#13;
discussed by Bruce Langenbach&#13;
of the Parkside Computer Club, in&#13;
Molinaro 107, bot h at 11 a. m.&#13;
"VISICALC (Electronic&#13;
Worksheet) - Software Hit of the&#13;
80s" by Bob Pinkerton of M&amp;I&#13;
Bank, and Jeff Preston of S. C.&#13;
Johnson &amp; Son, Inc., Racine, will&#13;
be presented in Molinaro 105 at&#13;
noon.&#13;
"Regent - A Multiple PET&#13;
System" by Dennis Woitekaitis of&#13;
PETTED Microsystems of&#13;
Milwaukee in Molinaro 105, and&#13;
"The Development of Computer&#13;
Languages" by Loren Buchanan&#13;
of the Parkside Computer Club&#13;
will be presented in Molinaro 107,&#13;
both at 1p . m., and "The Apple II"&#13;
by Lance Evans of Colortron&#13;
Computer Division of Racine will&#13;
be discussed in Union 104 at 2 p. m.&#13;
The fair is sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Computer Club. Admission&#13;
is $1.&#13;
El Salvador rally on Saturday&#13;
On May 3rd, a rally will be held&#13;
in Racine for all interested people.&#13;
The demands are to stop U. S.&#13;
intervention in El Salvador, fund&#13;
human needs, stop the draft, and&#13;
stop all forms of racism and&#13;
bigotry.&#13;
The rally is being put on by the&#13;
Student Mobilization at Parkside,&#13;
but is also being sponsored by&#13;
Kenosha - Racine Political Actions&#13;
Committee. Kenosha -&#13;
Racine CISPES (Coalition in&#13;
Solidarity with the Peoples of El&#13;
Salvador), Sisters of St. Dominic,&#13;
Father Don Richards, Rev. Tony&#13;
Larsen, and many others.&#13;
The rally begins at 1 p. m. in&#13;
front of the Racine Post Office.&#13;
The march will proceed to the City&#13;
Hall where speakers and music&#13;
will be provided.&#13;
An organizational meeting will&#13;
be held Wednesday, April 29, at 1&#13;
p.m. in MOLN D128. All interested&#13;
people may attend.&#13;
Energy research lab toured&#13;
On Saturday, April 4, about 20&#13;
UW - Parkside students, members&#13;
of the Physics Club toured&#13;
Argonne National Laboratory.&#13;
Argonne is a national research&#13;
facility located on 1700 acres, 25&#13;
miles southwest of Chicago. The&#13;
lab deals primarily in energy&#13;
research and is under the U. S.&#13;
Department of Energy.&#13;
Most students found that the&#13;
term laboratory was somewhat&#13;
misleading. Due to the large scale&#13;
of most of their projects the areas&#13;
toured resembled an industrial&#13;
complex more than a conventional&#13;
laborartory. Many of the projects&#13;
that were toured seemed to have&#13;
uncertain futures due to budget&#13;
cuts.&#13;
The tour consisted of a brief&#13;
orientation and overview of the&#13;
whole facility, and a guided walk&#13;
through some of the projects. The&#13;
group visited the proton accelerator&#13;
project which is one of&#13;
the only accelerators in the world&#13;
that will provide a polarized&#13;
beam, a beam where the majority&#13;
of the protons have the same spin&#13;
orientation.&#13;
Students also saw the construction&#13;
of an MHD magnet. This&#13;
is a new energy process using&#13;
coal. Magnetohydrodynamics&#13;
(MHD) converts heat directly into&#13;
electricity by passing a hot ionized&#13;
gas or liquid through a magnetic&#13;
field. This type of electrical&#13;
generation could increase plant&#13;
efficiences while reducing thermal&#13;
and particulate pollution.&#13;
Another type of energy conversion&#13;
viewed was Ocean&#13;
Thermal Energy Conversion&#13;
(OTEC). This process uses the&#13;
temperature gradient in the ocean&#13;
to heat a liquid with a low boiling&#13;
point (like amonia) into steam in&#13;
order to run turbines to generate&#13;
electricity. Then the steam runs&#13;
downward to the cooler water,&#13;
where it condenses, and the cycle&#13;
continues.&#13;
Project Hearthfire is a design&#13;
for a nuclear fusion reactor.&#13;
Fusion looks like a promising&#13;
energy form, but as yet, has not&#13;
been successful. Project Hearthfire&#13;
is a commercially feasible&#13;
Tokamak type reactor to determine&#13;
the engineering&#13;
requirements of a fusition reactor.&#13;
The Physics Club is open to&#13;
anyone interested in physics. The&#13;
next Physics Club meeting will be&#13;
Friday, April 17, when club&#13;
elections will be held and a film&#13;
shown. The meeting will be at&#13;
noon in Greenquist room 230.&#13;
DNR Secretary to speak&#13;
C.D. "Buzz" Besadny,&#13;
Secretary of Wisconsin's&#13;
Department of Natural&#13;
Resources, will discuss current&#13;
environmental issues that&#13;
affect Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
on Wednesday, May 6, at 7 p.m.&#13;
in Molinaro Hall 105. The&#13;
meeting was arranged by UWExtension.&#13;
The audience will have the&#13;
opportunity to ask questions&#13;
and make concerns known.&#13;
There is no fee, but phone&#13;
reservations by May 1 are&#13;
requested. Interested individuals&#13;
may ?all U.W.-&#13;
Extension at 553-2312.&#13;
Law workshop offered&#13;
The UW - System American&#13;
Ethnic Studies Coordinating&#13;
Committee (AESCC), operated&#13;
under the auspices of the Urban&#13;
Corridor Consortium, is holding&#13;
its 2nd Annual Green Bay&#13;
Colloquim on Ethnicity and Public&#13;
Policy on Friday, May 29, and&#13;
Saturday, May 30, 1981.&#13;
The Colloquium, being held on&#13;
the campus of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Green Bay, will focus&#13;
on the theme "The Law: Ethnic&#13;
Group Interests and the Social&#13;
Good."&#13;
Eight papers will be presented&#13;
and discussed by such&#13;
distinguished scholars as Raoul&#13;
Berger, Nathan Glazer, Manning&#13;
Marable and Robert O'Neil,&#13;
President of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System. Under the&#13;
general theme, two papers will be&#13;
presented and discussed in the&#13;
following categories: (i) The&#13;
Law: Foundations of Public&#13;
Policy; (ii) The Law: Education;&#13;
(iii) The Law: Employment; and&#13;
(iv) The Law: Race, Class and&#13;
Ethnic Neighborhoods.&#13;
Attendance is free and open to&#13;
all. For information on lodging,&#13;
meals, attendance, the agenda,&#13;
contact Thomas V. Tennesen,&#13;
AESCC Program Coordinator, c/o&#13;
UW - Milwaukee - Bolton 840, P. O.&#13;
Box 413, Milwaukee, WI53201 or at&#13;
(414) 963-4700/6701.&#13;
Yfa. Real fosfKcfor-jbtthd/&#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;
Written by Tom Stoppard... Directed by Norman Gano&#13;
April 29, 30 at 8:00 PM.. . May 1, 2 at 8:00 PM... May 3 at 2:00 PM&#13;
Presented by UW-Parkside Dramatic Arts Discipline&#13;
Communication Arts Studio Theatre. .Limited Seating Reserve Early 553-2345&#13;
Tickets: $1.00 for Students.. .$1.50 for Non-students.. .Information 553-2042&#13;
YASOU!&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
GREEK&#13;
ETHNIC FRIDAY&#13;
FRI. MAY 1&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
COMBINATION PLATE SPECIAL:&#13;
• MOUSAKA&#13;
• PASTICCIO&#13;
• GYROS &amp; ONIONS&#13;
• EGGPLANT OR GREEN BEANS&#13;
• RICE PILAF&#13;
• COMPL IMEN TARY&#13;
GLASS OF WINE&#13;
ALL FOR ONLY $2.49&#13;
4 Thursday, April 30,1981 RANGER&#13;
Joint orchestra concert features guest pianist Pianist Ralph VVoottaaDpeekk,. the oonnllyv - P infnrmatinn tu„&#13;
American ever to win the grand&#13;
prize in the Van Cliburn International&#13;
Piano Competition,&#13;
will be guest soloist when the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine Symphony&#13;
Orchestras combine to present&#13;
their fourth joint concert at the&#13;
UW - Parkside at 8 p. m. on&#13;
Saturday, May 2 i n the Physical&#13;
Education Building.&#13;
David H. Schripsema, music&#13;
director and conductor of the&#13;
Kenosha orchestra, will direct.&#13;
The joint concert is sponsored&#13;
by UW - Parkside and the two&#13;
community orchestras and tickets&#13;
at $5 each are available at the UW&#13;
TypiNG&#13;
professional, fast&#13;
dissertations, books, etc.&#13;
-editing service&#13;
•brochures &amp; posters designed&#13;
• charts &amp; graphs&#13;
PHONE 681 0931&#13;
(if no answer, 634-7976)&#13;
this ad will run only once -&#13;
please save.&#13;
- P Information Center, the&#13;
Kenosha Orchestra office at 2717 -&#13;
67th St., and the Racine Orchestra&#13;
Office at 744 Main St.&#13;
Votapek will perform&#13;
Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No.&#13;
1 in B-flat minor Op 23. The orchestra&#13;
also will present Mahler's&#13;
Symphony No. 1 in D Major (The&#13;
Titan).&#13;
The program will open with&#13;
Fanfare for a Festive Occasion by&#13;
Wisconsin - born Otto Luening,&#13;
who will be present for the concert&#13;
and will be composer - in -&#13;
residence at UW - Parkside during&#13;
the f ollowing week.&#13;
Votapek also has Wisconsin ties.&#13;
Born in Milwaukee in 1939, he&#13;
began his musical studies at the&#13;
age of 9 at the Wisconsin Conservatory,&#13;
an institution which RALPH VOTAPEK&#13;
has evolved from a school founded&#13;
by Luening's father in Milwaukee.&#13;
Votapek later studied at Northwestern&#13;
University, the&#13;
Manhattan School of Music and&#13;
the Julliard School. His principal&#13;
teachers were Rosina Lhevinne&#13;
and Robert Goldsand.&#13;
He made his New York debut in&#13;
1959 as a result of the prestigious&#13;
Naumburg award which he won&#13;
that year. He won the Van Cliburn&#13;
Competition in 1962 and rocketed&#13;
into international prominence.&#13;
His appearances with major U.&#13;
S. orchestras include a number of&#13;
engagements with the Chicago&#13;
Symphony. His annual tours of&#13;
South and Central America include&#13;
many engagements during&#13;
each trip. U. S. audiences hear&#13;
him frequently on the PBS-TV&#13;
network.&#13;
Votapek recently toured the&#13;
USSR on the invitation of the&#13;
Russian government performing&#13;
in recital and as soloist with orchestras&#13;
in Leningrad and other&#13;
major cities, where his concerts&#13;
were sell - outs.&#13;
Votapek lives in East Lancing,&#13;
Mich., where he is artist - in -&#13;
residence at Michigan State&#13;
University. His wife Albertine&#13;
also is a pianist.&#13;
A London Times critic has&#13;
called Votapek "a pianist of&#13;
imagination and style" and a&#13;
Buenos Aires critic hailed him as&#13;
"a star of the first magnitude."&#13;
Washington Post critic Paul&#13;
Hume said "In the years since&#13;
1962 when he won first place in the&#13;
first Cliburn Competition ... he&#13;
has solidified the assets of complete&#13;
technical assurance and&#13;
wide ranging musical interests&#13;
which gained him that prize."&#13;
Luening visits campus&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
Wisconsin - born composer Otto&#13;
Luening will begin his third visit&#13;
to the Parkside campus as&#13;
composer - in - residence with a&#13;
concert of "Music by Otto Luening&#13;
and friends" at 3:30 p. m. on&#13;
Sunday, May 3, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. All of&#13;
the composers are Wisconsinites&#13;
either by birth or residence. The&#13;
A&#13;
EVEN IN SPACE'&#13;
THE ULTIMATE ENEMY IS STILL MAN&#13;
concert is part of the New Music&#13;
at Parkside Series. Admission is&#13;
$2 for adults; $1 for students and&#13;
senior citizens.&#13;
Three Luening works are&#13;
programmed: Sextet, conducted&#13;
by Scott Mather and performed by&#13;
Frank Suethoz, flute; Timothy&#13;
Bell, clarinet; Cynthia Crump,&#13;
horn; Cynthia Cernak Devan,&#13;
violin; Patience Balcom, viola;&#13;
and Harry Sturm, cello; his&#13;
Bassoon Sonata, performed by&#13;
Daryl Durran, bassoon, and&#13;
August Wegner, piano; and a&#13;
group of his songs, performed by&#13;
Martha Dodds, soprano, and&#13;
Barbara English Maris, piano.&#13;
Also on the program are John&#13;
Downey's Eastlake Terrace and&#13;
Edges with the composer at the&#13;
piano; Chester Biscardi's Tartini&#13;
performed by Ms. Devan, violin;&#13;
Carol Bell, piano; and Wegner's&#13;
Encore Piece: A Little Minor&#13;
Blues with the composer at the&#13;
piano.&#13;
Wegner is a Parkside faculty&#13;
member, Downey is a UW -&#13;
Milwaukee faculty member and&#13;
Biscardi is a Kenosha native, who&#13;
teaches at Sarah Lawrence&#13;
College.&#13;
Luening also will give a public&#13;
talk (Mi his long and lively career&#13;
as a musician on Monday, May 4,&#13;
at 2 p. m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Building, Room D-118.&#13;
On Wednesday, May 6, the&#13;
Bradford High School Orchestra&#13;
will perform his Wisconsin Suite&#13;
at 7:30 p. m. in Reuther Alternative&#13;
High School (Old Bradford)&#13;
in Kenosha. There is an admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
Luening's Wisconsin visit also&#13;
will include a talk at the 16th&#13;
annual Milwaukee Bookfellows'&#13;
book and author dinner at 7 p. m.&#13;
on May 5 at the Pfister Hotel in&#13;
Milwaukee. Luening, 80, recently&#13;
completed his autobiography,&#13;
"The Odyssey of an American&#13;
Composer."&#13;
SEAN CONNERY in&#13;
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Produced by RICHARD A. ROTH E xecutive Producer STANLEY O'TOOLE&#13;
Music by JERRY GOLDSMITH W ritten and Directed by PETER HYAMS&#13;
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on the second buffet&#13;
Eat All You&#13;
Want Buffet&#13;
Lunch Buffet $4.35&#13;
Dinner Buffet $6.55&#13;
10% Discount&#13;
with UW-PI.D.&#13;
™ Villa Capri&#13;
Shopping Center&#13;
2116 -20th Place&#13;
551-7883&#13;
LAA illtiitttttllpel effiicshh fnaimsed hPo ecmilia ake waves&#13;
formosa — a relative of the&#13;
humble guppie — may make big&#13;
waves in scientific circles as a&#13;
result of research by UWParkside&#13;
life scientist Joseph&#13;
Balsa no, who has been studying&#13;
the unusual fish since his graduate&#13;
student days at Marquette&#13;
University.&#13;
Balsano has just received a&#13;
$44,631 gr ant from the National&#13;
Science Foundation to continue&#13;
his studies.&#13;
Recent discoveries about the&#13;
reproduction of Poecilia formosa&#13;
by Balsano and colleague Ellen M.&#13;
Rasch of East Tennessee State&#13;
Medical School may mean rewriting&#13;
one part of classical&#13;
evolution theory, re-examination&#13;
and possibly re-interpretation of&#13;
some cancer research data and&#13;
the finding of a key to better&#13;
fisheries management.&#13;
Poecilia formosa made its first&#13;
big splash two years ago when&#13;
Balsano provided the "first&#13;
reported evidence of paternal&#13;
inheritance in a fish thought to&#13;
reproduce asexually" at the&#13;
annual meeting of the American&#13;
Society of Ichthyologists (who&#13;
study fish) and Herpotologists&#13;
(who study reptiles). The&#13;
evidence was obtained from&#13;
transplantation of spleen tissue,&#13;
electrophoresis of several&#13;
proteins and measurements of the&#13;
is no question that this same&#13;
mechanism also disrupts adaptive&#13;
gene complexes and, consequently,&#13;
a variety of&#13;
mechanisms have evolved to&#13;
counteract the reshuffling of the&#13;
genetic deck.&#13;
"I postulate that Poecilia formosa&#13;
has evolved to the stage of&#13;
taking advantage of the best of&#13;
two reproductive strategies: by&#13;
reproducing most often by&#13;
gynogenesis, adaptive genes are&#13;
preserved and perpetuated&#13;
clonally ; by occasionally allowing&#13;
male inheritance to contribute to&#13;
the offspring, new pre-adapted&#13;
genes are incorporated into&#13;
unisexual clones," Balsano said.&#13;
Thus, the discovery of paternal&#13;
inheritance in some Poecilia&#13;
formosa may indicate how the fish&#13;
escaped extinction. But Balsano&#13;
and Rasch's research poses&#13;
potential problems for cancer&#13;
researchers, who have used the&#13;
fish for studies of tumor induction&#13;
and for screening certain kinds of&#13;
chemotherapeutic agents&#13;
precisely because they believed&#13;
that Poecilia formosa ALWAYS&#13;
reproduced by gynogenesis,&#13;
providing a pure genetic strain.&#13;
The importance of a pure&#13;
genetic strain in animal research&#13;
is that it allows researchers to&#13;
repeat experiments and re-test&#13;
drugs using many different individuals&#13;
without considering&#13;
PROF. JOSEPH BALSANO with aquariums housing breeding&#13;
colony of Poecilia in UW-Parkside laboratory.&#13;
DNA in blood cells to indicate a&#13;
chromosome number.&#13;
For years scientists viewed&#13;
Poecilia formosa as a unisexual&#13;
species which is also&#13;
"gynogenetic," a term signifying&#13;
that all the offspring inherit only&#13;
the mother's chromosomes and all&#13;
daughters are clones of the&#13;
mother.&#13;
Poecilia formosa reproduces by&#13;
mating with males of two other&#13;
species of Poecilia — sperm from&#13;
those bisexual species is&#13;
necessary to trigger development&#13;
of the Poecilia formosa egg — but&#13;
inheritance is in most cases&#13;
strictly maternal.&#13;
When male inheritance is added&#13;
to female inheritance, the offspring&#13;
are hybrids with a genetic&#13;
abnormality called triplody in&#13;
which three genetically separate&#13;
sets of c hromosomes occur in the&#13;
cells of a single organism rather&#13;
than the usual two sets.&#13;
"In classical theory,&#13;
unisexuality is thought to be an&#13;
evolutionary dead end," Balsano&#13;
explained. "This is due to the&#13;
absence of genetic recombination&#13;
— combined inheritance from the&#13;
male and the female lines — found&#13;
in unisexual organisms.&#13;
Recombination is thought to&#13;
provide living things, plant and&#13;
animal, simple or complex, with&#13;
the ability to adapt to environmental&#13;
changes.&#13;
"High levels of genetic&#13;
variability have become intimately&#13;
associated with the&#13;
concepts of species survival,"&#13;
Balsano said. "In higher&#13;
organisms including humans,&#13;
sexual reproduction is perhaps the&#13;
most often cited mechanism to&#13;
insure species survival. Yet there&#13;
offspring are genetically identical.&#13;
"Our current studies clearly&#13;
indicate that paternal inheritance&#13;
heredity as a factor to account for&#13;
variations in results since all&#13;
must be considered in interpretation&#13;
of experimental&#13;
data from Poecilia formosa. Some&#13;
clones may be more likely to allow&#13;
paternal inheritance than others,"&#13;
Balsano said.&#13;
That means that some previous&#13;
results of cancer research may be&#13;
suspect and some studies may&#13;
need to be repeated or reevaluated&#13;
in light of the new information,&#13;
he added.&#13;
Under the new NSF grant&#13;
Balsano will be attempting to&#13;
produce genetically defined&#13;
clones from known lineages of&#13;
Poecilia formosa. He will&#13;
determine which clones are stable&#13;
and which permit paternal&#13;
inheritance. Such fish would be&#13;
made available to cancer&#13;
researchers and other investigators.&#13;
"Our continuing studies of&#13;
Poecilia formosa as a model&#13;
unisexual species originating in&#13;
nature will provide an opportunity&#13;
to examine some of the underlying&#13;
premises and long range consequences&#13;
of current use of&#13;
hybridization, radiation, temperature&#13;
shocking or hormonal&#13;
treatments to obtain nonreproducing&#13;
populations of game&#13;
fish, non-breeding herbivorous&#13;
fish such as grass carp, or to&#13;
obtain self-eliminating predator&#13;
populations," Balsano said.&#13;
"Similarly, our work to clarify&#13;
factors responsible for the&#13;
production and maintenance of&#13;
triploid forms of Poecilia may&#13;
have significant implications for&#13;
improving fishery production&#13;
through the selective culture of&#13;
polyploid fishes with improved&#13;
potentials for efficient channeling&#13;
of energy intake into useable&#13;
produce."&#13;
RANGER photo by Kim Schlater&#13;
REHEAaSEo f?n The«RS?1 'nspector Hound" Performances will continue through&#13;
May 2at 8p.m. and May 3 at 2 p.m. in the Communication Arts Studio Theater.&#13;
Contact&#13;
PSGA works&#13;
for you&#13;
by Jim Kreuser&#13;
PSGA President&#13;
Well, now that I am in office I'm&#13;
sure that you have noticed all those&#13;
radical changes happening that&#13;
were rumored about me in the&#13;
election. Don't worry; I don't see&#13;
them either. But I do see the outside&#13;
pad, west of Union Square&#13;
being enlarged and the physical&#13;
plant working on the fence to encompass&#13;
the outside recreational&#13;
area. Putting this plan into reality&#13;
was my first goal as President of&#13;
your student government. It has&#13;
been a long while since the students&#13;
of Parkside received something&#13;
tangible for their segregated&#13;
university fees.&#13;
Another item that the Senate and&#13;
I have been working on is the new&#13;
proposal of the Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge (BOK). The BOK that&#13;
might have been voted on in May&#13;
by the Faculty Senate was&#13;
delayed until next fall. This was&#13;
done with the cooperation of the&#13;
faculty and with the success of the&#13;
Student Forum staged by PSGA. I&#13;
was against the new proposal&#13;
BOK as it stood and will be&#13;
working with administration over&#13;
the summer to arrive at an effective&#13;
and worthwhile Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge for Parkside.&#13;
Those were just two of the&#13;
projects that PSGA has worked on&#13;
this month. Some individual needs&#13;
were also met in these past few&#13;
weeks. This is what student&#13;
government is all about. I only&#13;
wish more people would take&#13;
advantage of the services&#13;
provided by PSGA.&#13;
Meeting set&#13;
A general information meeting&#13;
for those persons interested in&#13;
volunteering in the Kinship&#13;
Program will be held Thursday,&#13;
April 30 at 7 p.m. at the Kinship&#13;
office, 2001-80th Stre et, Kenosha.&#13;
The Kinship Program is&#13;
designed to befriend and help&#13;
children from single parent&#13;
families by matching them with&#13;
mature adults with good&#13;
character. Those adults interested&#13;
in becoming Kinspersons and&#13;
their spouses or special friends&#13;
are encouraged to attend this&#13;
meeting.&#13;
For further information, call the&#13;
Kinship office, 658-0151.&#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;
Jazz Ensembles&#13;
prepare concert&#13;
University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside Jazz Ensemble will&#13;
present their spring concert under&#13;
the direction of Prof. Tim Bell,&#13;
and the Bradford High School Jazz&#13;
Ensemble will provide a guest&#13;
program segment, at 8 p. m. on&#13;
Tuesday, May 5, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
The award - winning UW-P&#13;
Ensemble I will perform such well&#13;
- known favorites as Count Basie's&#13;
"Shiny Stockings", Woody Herman's&#13;
"Reunion at Newport",&#13;
"Old Man River" and "Won't You&#13;
Please Come Home, Bill Bailey".&#13;
Tim Fox will be soloist for Jack&#13;
Cortner's "Secret Love," Tom&#13;
Allsage will solo on Mark Taylor's&#13;
"Lonely Tears" and Allsage and&#13;
Pat Odell will be soloists for Billy&#13;
Byers' "Doodle Doodle."&#13;
Jazz Ensemble II will perform&#13;
works by Duke Ellington, Don&#13;
Dimick, Bob Lowder and Bill&#13;
Holman and the Bradford Ensemble&#13;
will draw its repertoire&#13;
from works by Rich Shanklin,&#13;
Robert Curnow, Taylor and&#13;
Sammy Nestico.&#13;
The Bradford Ensemble,&#13;
directed by Alex Sabo, won first&#13;
place among 48 compe ting bands&#13;
at this year's Green Bay Jazz&#13;
Festival and also took top honors&#13;
in the LaCrosse Jazz Festival&#13;
where bands from Wisconsin,&#13;
Minnesota and Illinois were in&#13;
competition. The Bradford group&#13;
also is one of two bands selected to&#13;
perform with Woody Herman's&#13;
Thundering Herd in concert at&#13;
UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
Admission is $1 for students and&#13;
senior citizens; $2 for others.&#13;
W FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
The&#13;
4Ma4mi&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND U)AN ASSOCIATION&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
SALES - PARTS&#13;
552-7070&#13;
County Hwy. "H" At Hwy. 11,&#13;
Sturtovant, Wi».&#13;
LIMITED FINANCIAL AID&#13;
SUMMER SESSION 1981&#13;
Aid For Summer 1981 Will Be Restricted To:&#13;
National Direct Student Loans (NDSL)&#13;
Guaranteed Student Loans (GSL)&#13;
Wisconsin Direct Loans (WDL)&#13;
College Work Study (CWS)&#13;
No grant monies are available. Also, NDSL awards will&#13;
be limited to $300.00 and CWS awards to $1000. GSL/WDL&#13;
ionHJ but subiect to the maximums of $2500-&#13;
$3000 INCLUDING amounts received for last summer, fall&#13;
and spring terms (1980-81).&#13;
NO APPLICATION FOR SUMMER AID INCLUDING&#13;
GSL/WDL LOANS WILL BE ACCEPTED OR&#13;
PROCESSED AFTER JULY 3, 1981.&#13;
6 Thursday, April 30,1981 RANGER&#13;
Coming Events | Armenian workshop offered Thurcdav A I * O A ArmPfl lflM Hicfni*\7 onH r»iilfuThursday, April 30 »*n xr . • vr i • • r Tr I • . . . . . _&#13;
P P^3he ?!f1 Ifspe^t0r Hound" at 8 P- m-in CA Studio "B". Admission is *1 for&#13;
Parkside students and senior citizens and $1.50 for others. Tickets are available&#13;
at the Umon Information Center.&#13;
Friday, May 1&#13;
DANH1HRiS tUde . nr ^Ct,ivlties Awards Banquet at 5 p. m. in the Union Dining Room. ..J? $5. Tickets are available at the Union Information Center.&#13;
Sir Caddyshack will be shown at 8 p. m. in the Union Cinema. Admission is&#13;
J,,°r ® Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
InsPector Hound" will be repeated at 8 p. m. in Studio "B".&#13;
AN&lt;r|E at 8 P- m.- in Union Square featuring "Arroyo". Admission at&#13;
the door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $2 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, May 2&#13;
COMPUTER FAIR starts at 9 a. m. in the Union Building. Call ext. 2231 for more&#13;
information.&#13;
PLAY "The Real Inspector Hound" will be repeated at 8 p. m.&#13;
CONCERT at 8 p. m. in the Physical Education Building with the combined&#13;
Kenosha and Racine Symphonies and featuring Ralph Votapek, at the piano.&#13;
Admission is $3 for students and senior citizens and $5 for others. Tickets are&#13;
available at the Union Information Center.&#13;
Sunday, May 3&#13;
PROGRAM "Honors Day Awards" at 1 p. m. in the Union Cinema. The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
^'3!je Real Inspector Hound" will be repeated at 2 p. m. in Studio "B".&#13;
CONCERT at 3:30 p. m. in the Communication Arts Theatre with Otto Luening a&#13;
Wisconsin born composer. Admission at the door is $1.00 for students and senior&#13;
citizens and $2.00 for others.&#13;
MOVIE "Caddyshack" will be repeated at 7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, May 4&#13;
h!? cEA?' 3°^.m'111 Main Place with the Parkside Wind Ensemble directed&#13;
by Scott Mather. The program is free and open to everyone&#13;
pubHcRE ^ °tt0 Luening flt 2 p. m. in CA D118. The lecture is free and open to the&#13;
Tuesday, May 5&#13;
TSRTiSth th? Pa,*?ide Jazz Ensemble at 8 p. m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Tbeatre Admission is $1 for students, faculty, staff and senior citizens and $2 for&#13;
others. Tickets are available at the Union Information Center.&#13;
Armenian history and culture&#13;
will be the topic of a workshop&#13;
sponsored by Parkside's Center&#13;
for Multicultural Studies and&#13;
I n t e r n a t i o n a l S t u d e n t s&#13;
Organization from 8:30 a.m. to 5&#13;
p.m. on S aturday, May 2, at St.&#13;
Hagop's Armenian Apostolic&#13;
Church, Racine.&#13;
Speakers will include Marjorie&#13;
Housepian Dobkin, associate dean&#13;
of stu dies at Barnard College and&#13;
the author of two books, "A&#13;
Houseful of Love" and "The&#13;
Smyrna Affair," who will talk on&#13;
the Armenian genocide, and&#13;
Karlan Mooradian, a visiting&#13;
professor of journalism and mass&#13;
communication at the University&#13;
of Oklahoma, whose research&#13;
interests include the history of&#13;
ancient mass communication,&#13;
history of art and the USSR and&#13;
the Near East.&#13;
Other speakers will include&#13;
Arpine Khatchadourian, a lecturer&#13;
in linguistics at UW -&#13;
Milwaukee, who will talk about&#13;
Armenian - American literature,&#13;
and Mitchell Kehetian, editor of&#13;
the Macomb Daily, a Mount&#13;
Clemens, (Mich.) newspaper.&#13;
Panelists for a disussion on the&#13;
Armenian community in&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin will be&#13;
Racine Attorney Jack Harvey,&#13;
Milwaukee Judge Victor Manian,&#13;
Naomi Kalvonjian of Kenosha,&#13;
and Sarkis Yoghourtjian and&#13;
Steve Stapanian, two UW -&#13;
Parkside students.&#13;
The program also will include&#13;
films on Armenian history, a folk&#13;
dance demonstration and an&#13;
ethnic luncheon.&#13;
Advance registration is&#13;
required for the program, which&#13;
carries one UW - Parkside undergraduate&#13;
credit, and for the&#13;
luncheon. Registration and fee&#13;
information is available from the&#13;
UW - P Social Science Division at&#13;
553-2316.&#13;
In conjunction with the&#13;
workshop, a display of materials&#13;
relating to the Armenian genocide&#13;
is on display in the UW-P Library&#13;
Managing group conflict&#13;
workshop to be held tonight&#13;
POSTAL INSTANT PRESS&#13;
A workshop entitled "Managing&#13;
Conflict Within The Organization"&#13;
will be presented on Thursday,&#13;
April 30, from 8-9 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist D-105. The workshop&#13;
will be presented by Kristie&#13;
Kadziauskas, Manager of Employee&#13;
Relations at Gettys Mfg. in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Within organizations, conflict of&#13;
interest arises from time to time&#13;
between departments or individuals.&#13;
These conflicts can&#13;
have either a creative or a&#13;
destructive outcome, depending&#13;
on how they are managed.&#13;
Without the knowledge or&#13;
awareness of how to turn a conflict&#13;
situation into a creative one&#13;
for generating new solutions to&#13;
problems, the destructive outcome&#13;
will generally prevail, one in&#13;
which neither party's problem is&#13;
resolved and a deterioration of the&#13;
communicative relationship&#13;
occurs.&#13;
The workshop will focus on the&#13;
communication skills and concepts&#13;
necessary for a manager to&#13;
handle these situations so that&#13;
they can have a positive, creative&#13;
outcome, which will improve the&#13;
quality of the working relationships&#13;
through more effective&#13;
communication.&#13;
The workshop is being sponsored&#13;
by Source Communication&#13;
Consultants, one of th e simulation&#13;
groups from Professor Lee&#13;
Thayer's Introduction to&#13;
Organizational Communication&#13;
class.&#13;
Only&#13;
BUCK&#13;
to a Customer&#13;
WILL GIVE&#13;
THE BEARER&#13;
ON DEMAND&#13;
$1.00 TOWARD&#13;
ANY RESUME&#13;
PRINTING&#13;
WHILE-YOU-WAIT&#13;
Coates to represent UW-P&#13;
ONE FAST BUCKi&#13;
Christie Coates, a junior&#13;
political science major, has been&#13;
selected to represent Parkside at&#13;
a special United Nations seminar&#13;
this summer. Selection was made&#13;
by a faculty committee on the&#13;
basis of co mpetitive applications.&#13;
Coates will attend a two - week&#13;
intensive course on international&#13;
organizations June 15 through 27&#13;
at the Institute for World Affairs&#13;
at UW-Milwaukee and then go to&#13;
New York for a four - week study&#13;
Premiere Screening&#13;
SEE WHAT I SAY&#13;
SEE WHAT I S AY has been selected&#13;
as a Finalist in the 1981 American&#13;
Film Festival, New York&#13;
Sat. May 9, 3 pm&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
SEE WHAT I SAY WINE AND CHEESE RECEPTION FOLLOWING&#13;
IMA. *•-..&lt; .mm&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE: $3 UW-P Students; Union Info Desk&#13;
$6 Public; Kenosha Achievement Center&#13;
Society's Assets of Racine&#13;
Developmental Disabilities Info Services&#13;
of Racine&#13;
PROCEEDS WIL L BE US ED FOR CAPTIONING THE FILM&#13;
Co-sponsored by Parkside Women's Concourse and Educational Outreach&#13;
Interpreted for the Hearing Impaired&#13;
program through July 25.&#13;
In New York, Coates and other&#13;
participants will meet with&#13;
diplomatic representatives from&#13;
various nations, attend special&#13;
briefings by UN officials and take&#13;
classes staffed by UN personnel&#13;
on current international&#13;
problems.&#13;
Coates is the daughter of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Glenn Coates, 2830&#13;
Michigan Ave., Racine. After&#13;
completing work for her undergraduate&#13;
degree, she plans to&#13;
attend law school, specializing in&#13;
international law.&#13;
Scholarships&#13;
to be awarded&#13;
A number of scholarships and&#13;
other awards for academic excellence&#13;
will be presented at the&#13;
Parkside Scholarship Day&#13;
program at 1 p. m. on Sunday,&#13;
May 3, in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin will&#13;
present the awards and Prof.&#13;
Bonnie Smith, history, will give&#13;
the awards address. The event is&#13;
sponsored by the Campus Awards&#13;
and Ceremonies Committee.&#13;
More than 60 students will be&#13;
cited for academic achievement.&#13;
The program, which will&#13;
precede a reception in the Union&#13;
Bazaar, will include entertainment&#13;
by a student flute&#13;
ensemble and a saxophone&#13;
quartet. The event is open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
DOLL FACE, I hope you don' t catch whatever&#13;
we have. The Aliens&#13;
WHOEVER IS MESSING AROUND with&#13;
Brenda had better watch out for us —&#13;
206,210 and a host of others.&#13;
GATITA: Te quiero cual quier cantidad?&#13;
Gatsbo II&#13;
KREUSER, will your supporters be attending&#13;
UW-P next fall?&#13;
YOU SURE ARE SNOTTY, snotty, nast y,&#13;
nasty, aren't you? Let' s hope your children&#13;
don't grow up that way.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
SPORTS CAR: 1973 M.G.B. $2000. Evenings.&#13;
Douglas 843-3504.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
LOST: Black pouch, please return. Call 859&#13;
2011 a sk for Pam&#13;
PART TIME OPPORTUNITY in jewelry&#13;
sales 6 9 hours weekly, 2 or 3 evenings per&#13;
week. High earnings. Cal l 886-0621.&#13;
EARN WHILE YOU LEARN. Assist retired&#13;
col lege teacher wi th correspondence&#13;
reading and organization of his library.&#13;
Hours can be arranged to sui t your&#13;
schedule. Cal l 694-2251 for appointment .&#13;
BEWILDER YOUR OPPONENTS. Impress&#13;
your friends . Learn exper t BACKGAMMON&#13;
from top ranking Milwaukee&#13;
professional . All levels taught. Call Jim at&#13;
551 7404 for reasonable rates .&#13;
Softball team to nationals nv Do VTA Pfo&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 30,1981&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The women's softball team will&#13;
venture to Sam Houston&#13;
University (Texas) after the&#13;
semester is over to play in the&#13;
NAIA National Championships&#13;
The Rangers earned the right to&#13;
play in the nationals by advancing&#13;
through state and regional&#13;
competition.&#13;
This year's current 15-6 r ecord&#13;
is a remarkable turnaround from&#13;
last year's abysmal 7-12 mark.&#13;
With her team loaded with freshmen&#13;
and sophomores, fourth year&#13;
coach Linda Henderson will be&#13;
coaching in her first national&#13;
meet. "I'm just as excited as the&#13;
players are. It's my first taste of&#13;
championship play at Parkside."&#13;
Although the Rangers have&#13;
worked their way to the national&#13;
tournament, Henderson still sees&#13;
room for improvement in the&#13;
team's play. "We still make too&#13;
many errors, both physical and&#13;
mfetaS1' 1 gUeSS U'S youth&#13;
perienwfj' m'Stakes trom inexluxn!^&#13;
luxury idoeff WOmna'tk 1i5n6g a ffmordisetda k^es&#13;
bwausc only the top 16 t eams in&#13;
tthhee CdZoutbyle Well1lIi mbien acotimoPne ticnhga min-&#13;
5fulp tournament. "I think&#13;
we 11 be ready," Henderson said.&#13;
We ve come a long way since thp&#13;
beginning of the season. We've got&#13;
some pretty good players and&#13;
we're in pretty good shape con&#13;
sidenng our injuries."&#13;
hllA*»rt fr?m . the usual minor&#13;
bumps and bruises sustained over&#13;
a season catcher / pitcher Jessica&#13;
Bamke has suffered the worst&#13;
injury, a badly sprained ankle, in&#13;
the team s recent loss in the&#13;
Chicago Circle Tournament. She&#13;
may miss the national tournament.&#13;
i»»The„cbamPionship series begins&#13;
May 21 and ends May 24.&#13;
Sharp wins at Drake&#13;
Parkside again proved itself to&#13;
be the dominant school in&#13;
collegiate race - walking last&#13;
weekend as Ranger entries took&#13;
three of the first six place finishes&#13;
last Sunday at the Drake Relays,&#13;
held in Des Moines, Iowa.&#13;
Ray Sharp, freshman, won the&#13;
10,000 kilometer race - walking&#13;
event by more than three minutes,&#13;
with a time of 43:51.5, 20 seconds&#13;
faster than Parkside's Chris&#13;
Hansen's finish a year ago in the&#13;
first Drake race - walking event.&#13;
Parkside graduate Mike DeWitt&#13;
placed third, followed by Ranger&#13;
Mfke Rummelhart. Freshman&#13;
Will Preischal placed sixth in the&#13;
held of 15. Gateway student Jerrv&#13;
Young placed fifth.&#13;
Jim Heiring, former Parkside&#13;
walker, was expected to challenge&#13;
Sharp for the lead but was forced&#13;
to drop out because of a sore knee.&#13;
Parkside will hold the National&#13;
race - walking championship this&#13;
Sunday on inner loop road.&#13;
Anyone interested in watching&#13;
this funny looking event is&#13;
welcome.&#13;
WnMCki'c r«PTr, . . RANGER p hoto b y D an McCormack&#13;
strategy in recent gameTEAM huddles 00 mour|d around Coach Linda Henderson to discuss&#13;
Race dates announced&#13;
Rangers take second&#13;
In a triangular meet at Platteville&#13;
on Saturday, the women's&#13;
track team placed second behind&#13;
Luther College of Iowa. However,&#13;
the tracksters won seven out of t he&#13;
17 events and several school&#13;
records were set. The meet was&#13;
scored with six places counting so&#13;
the final results were Luther 180,&#13;
Parkside 139, and Platteville 118.&#13;
Karen Krause tossed the&#13;
Javelin 33.28 meters to break the&#13;
old record of 32.90 and to take first&#13;
in the event. Three relays ran to&#13;
first place and two set team&#13;
records: the 440 Relay of Cindy&#13;
Spaciel, JoAnne Carey, Dona&#13;
Driscoll, and Rose Martin&#13;
recorded a :50.9 and the Mile&#13;
Relay of Martin, Kellie Benzow,&#13;
Wendy Burman and Carey&#13;
dropped nine seconds to a 4:22.4&#13;
clocking. This was the first time&#13;
the Rangers had run the 4 x 440&#13;
since the Indoor Conference&#13;
Championships. The 880 Medley&#13;
Relay of Carey, Pam Carey,&#13;
Martin and Driscoll was also&#13;
victorious.&#13;
Individually, Burman won the&#13;
800 and Mile, Benzow won the 2&#13;
Mile while seconds were recorded&#13;
by Driscoll in the 400, Sp aciel in&#13;
the 100 and 220, and Denise&#13;
Schreiber in the Discus. Driscoll&#13;
also ran to a personal best in the&#13;
220 as did JoAnne Carey in her leg&#13;
of th e Mile Relay.&#13;
This weekend ends the regular&#13;
track season with the WWIAC&#13;
Outdoor Championships at UWEau&#13;
Claire. According to Coach&#13;
Barb Lawson, "Again UWLaCrosse&#13;
has the depth and relays&#13;
to win the overall title, but second&#13;
place will be interesting competition.&#13;
Between Parkside,&#13;
Milwaukee, and Eau Claire, we all&#13;
have some athletes who will place&#13;
high, but our relays are pretty&#13;
close all the way around.&#13;
Marquette has one or two individuals&#13;
but not enough depth to&#13;
contend for second. Right now&#13;
we're not where we should be&#13;
mentally, but if we come around,&#13;
we can be right up there fighting&#13;
for the second place trophy."&#13;
Competition starts at 12:30 on&#13;
Friday with the 10,000 meter&#13;
finals, most of the qualifying&#13;
rounds on the track, the Discus&#13;
and Long Jump finals and the 880&#13;
Medley Relay finals. On Saturday&#13;
the finals start at 11:00 a.m. with&#13;
the Javelin and continue until&#13;
2:30.&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
UW - P arkside will sponsor the&#13;
first of a series of spring and&#13;
simimer road races this Sunday&#13;
with a 10,000 meter run at 1:30 p.&#13;
m. and a two mile race at 2:30.&#13;
Similar races are slated for&#13;
Sunday, May 10; Saturday, June&#13;
20; Saturday, Aug. 15; Sunday,&#13;
Sept. 20; and Sunday, Oct. 18.&#13;
Advance registration, prior to&#13;
race day, is $5. The entry fee is $6&#13;
on race day, beginning at 12 noon&#13;
Sunday on the first floor of the UW&#13;
- P Physical Education Building.&#13;
Age groups for both men and&#13;
women in the 10,000 meter run&#13;
/&#13;
include 15 and under, 16 -18,19-24&#13;
25 - 29, 30 - 34, 35 - 39, 30 - 44, 45 - 49&#13;
and 50 an d over. In the two mile&#13;
run, age groups are for those 8 and&#13;
under, 9-11,12-14,15-18,19-24,&#13;
25 - 29, 30 - 39, 40 - 49 a nd 50 and&#13;
over. There's also a special&#13;
joggers' (over 16 minutes)&#13;
category in the two mile and a&#13;
weight category, instead of age,&#13;
for men.&#13;
Medals will be presented to the&#13;
top 15 runners and to the first&#13;
three in each age group, with one&#13;
medal per runner, in the 10,000.&#13;
Medals will go to the top three&#13;
finishers in each age group in the&#13;
two mile and to the top three&#13;
joggers over 16 minutes.&#13;
For more information on this&#13;
race or future runs, telephone 414 -&#13;
553-2245.&#13;
I Like to Jog!&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Elm wood Plaza/Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear /&#13;
But I A lso STOP IN AND&#13;
Enjoy Other PICK UP SOME&#13;
Things In Life NEW TOYS.&#13;
Special Of&#13;
The Week&#13;
ADULT MUGS&#13;
^UuUGift&#13;
2410 52nd St. Kenosha&#13;
^SGOOC 03CCOS iCOOCCCCCCCCC'2«CCCCCCCGOOCOCOOOOGCOOCq 1&#13;
to \&gt; \ vim mwwwt' • \&#13;
-&amp;REDKEN*&#13;
^,3# hajr&#13;
styles&#13;
for men&#13;
and women&#13;
) i u» n/i »mmi&lt; Mmmit&#13;
THE I&#13;
END&#13;
is Coming&#13;
May 16 &amp; May 17&#13;
Thursday , Ap r i l 30, 1981 RANGER&#13;
By joining the Army for certain specialties, you can now&#13;
get part of your college debt forgiven.&#13;
Here's how it works.&#13;
If you ve attended college on a National Direct Student&#13;
loan or a Guaranteed Student Loan made after October 1,&#13;
i 1? qualify&gt; t^ie government can absolve you from&#13;
1/3 of your debt (or $ 1,500, whichever is greater) for each&#13;
year you serve.&#13;
inooP^Vi°Usly' a t^ree;Year enlistment would eliminate&#13;
100% of your debt. But if you want a shorter tour of duty, you&#13;
can still receive 2/3 loan forgiveness with our two-year&#13;
enlistment. (Only the Army can make this offer.)&#13;
Or you might consider serving in the&#13;
Army Reserve. If you qualify* as a Reservist&#13;
you can stay home, get paid&#13;
for your active duty, and receive&#13;
15% loan forgiveness (or $500,&#13;
whichever is greater) for&#13;
each year of service.&#13;
iitMi&#13;
And if you ever want to go back to school, your Army&#13;
enlistment will qualify you for thousands of dollars for educational&#13;
assistance. On top of that, you might even qualify&#13;
for a generous Army educational incentive. (And you'll still&#13;
receive loan forgiveness.)&#13;
So if your dream is to go to grad school, today's Army&#13;
can help you get out of debt and into grad school in just a&#13;
few years.&#13;
Of course, with your education, you can probably&#13;
qualify to start at a higher rank and pay grade. (And, later,&#13;
ere may ke opportunities for promotion.)&#13;
Remember, only the Army can offer you such comprehensive&#13;
benefits for such a brief enlistment.&#13;
To find out how you can serve your&#13;
country as you serve yourself in just&#13;
two years, call 800-421-4422. In&#13;
California, 800-252-0011. Alaska&#13;
and Hawaii 800-423-2244. Ask&#13;
for the name of the Army's&#13;
college representative&#13;
nearest you.&#13;
</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Ginger Helgeson elected new editor of Ranger</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Ginger Helgeson&#13;
elected new editor&#13;
of Ranger&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson was elected&#13;
Ranger Editor for the 1981-82&#13;
academic year. Helgeson has&#13;
previously been a columnist and&#13;
copy editor for Ranger and editor&#13;
of Parkside Arts Review.&#13;
"Since I've been on the Ranger&#13;
staff for the past two years," said&#13;
Helgeson, "I've had some time to&#13;
learn about our operations and the&#13;
options we have access to in order&#13;
to improve our quality."&#13;
Helgeson is concerned with the&#13;
role Ranger currently plays on&#13;
campus. "I feel we have a long&#13;
way to go toward providing&#13;
Parkside students with news on&#13;
issues concerning them," she&#13;
said. "That's where my goals for&#13;
the next year are: I will do&#13;
everything I possibly can to report&#13;
to students on events and people&#13;
that affect students.'&#13;
advertising. "There's no question&#13;
about it," said Helgeson. "The&#13;
Ranger cannot be expected to do a&#13;
professional news reporting job&#13;
with the small (but hard working)&#13;
staff we have."&#13;
Helgeson plans to recruit staff&#13;
members in the Basic Reporting&#13;
class this fall, and also among&#13;
people who are interested in&#13;
writing and editing of any sort.&#13;
"I've found that journalistic&#13;
writing has been a great way to&#13;
improve my writing in other&#13;
areas," she said. "I hope more&#13;
people will catch on to that."&#13;
Helgeson has been surprised&#13;
that more people haven't taken&#13;
advantage of the opportunity to&#13;
sell advertising for Ranger. "Not&#13;
only because of the 15% commission,"&#13;
she explained, "but also&#13;
because it's such a great way for&#13;
students to learn about business&#13;
and to start making contracts in&#13;
surrounding communities."&#13;
GINGER HELGESON JEFF SCHOOR&#13;
RANGER Photos by Brian Passino&#13;
SARKIS YOGHOURTDJIAN&#13;
PAB President Jeff Schoor sworn in&#13;
by G. Helgeson thev'rp nnmnlotoH »» tu onM o„i . .&#13;
I am going to expect a lot of&#13;
myself," she continued. "I am&#13;
going to expect a lot of my staff Helgeson will be working over&#13;
also. It will be a challenge, the summer. She said, "I'll be in&#13;
though, that will be very&#13;
satisfying for all of us to undertake&#13;
together."&#13;
The biggest problems that&#13;
Helgeson noticed at Ranger have&#13;
been the small staff and the low&#13;
amount of revenue collected by&#13;
and glad to talk to anyone who&#13;
comes in with constructive&#13;
suggestions about Ranger or with&#13;
a story idea, or just to sit and talk.&#13;
That's kind of the way (PSGA&#13;
President) Jim Kreuser does it,&#13;
too, but I won't be in the Union."&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
On Tuesday, Jeff Schoor was&#13;
sworn in by out - going president&#13;
Tom Shulak as the new president&#13;
of the Parkside Activities Board, a&#13;
student organization designed to&#13;
coordinate and sponsor cultural&#13;
and social activities for Parkside&#13;
students. Jackie Jensen was also&#13;
swqrn was vice President. Both&#13;
new officers' terms will last&#13;
through the 1981-82 school year.&#13;
Schoor said he had a strong&#13;
background in PAB, with 4 years&#13;
of experience on the board and 3&#13;
past experiences as chairs of&#13;
various PAB committees. "I&#13;
already have a basic feeling for&#13;
the objectives of PAB and how&#13;
they're completed," he said.&#13;
"Increasing attendance at our&#13;
events has been a major goal of&#13;
PAB all along," Schoor said. "I'd&#13;
like to make students aware that&#13;
they have a voice in what's going&#13;
on here at Parkside — students&#13;
with no experience in planning&#13;
can join PAG and learn, and that&#13;
^25®, nearly everyone can have&#13;
Schoor also is looking forward to&#13;
seeing "The End" platform&#13;
completed west of the Union. He&#13;
said it will be a permanently&#13;
fenced, blacktopped area, with&#13;
outdoor basketball and volleyball&#13;
courts for students.&#13;
With PAB advisor Tony Totero&#13;
leaving this year (for a career in&#13;
real estate), Schoor said that one&#13;
of his most important jobs this&#13;
coming year will be in providing a&#13;
good transition between advisors.&#13;
Schoor said that the new advisor&#13;
hasn't been chosen yet.&#13;
Schoor said that he and PAB&#13;
will continue to offer Parkside&#13;
students programming appealing&#13;
to a wide range of tastes. He&#13;
pointed out that PAB offers&#13;
students more than weekend films&#13;
— they also offer lectures, special&#13;
programs ranging from forums on&#13;
I - :&#13;
theatre, coffee house activities,&#13;
dances, ski trips and afternoon&#13;
shows in the Union Square.&#13;
"Besides planning these activities,"&#13;
Schoor said, "PAB&#13;
provides technical crews for the&#13;
events. Lighting and sound for&#13;
bands, for example, are provided&#13;
by PAB people, not roadies."&#13;
Schoor also said that he would&#13;
like students "to get involved in&#13;
all the clubs on campus, as well as&#13;
PAB."&#13;
Sarkis Yoghourtdjian&#13;
is new SOC chairperson&#13;
by Wendy Westphal&#13;
The new S.O.C. chairperson for&#13;
the 1981-82 school year is Sarkis&#13;
Yoghourtdjian, who succeeds Jan&#13;
Oechler. He is a junior and is&#13;
aspiring toward a degree in&#13;
Business Management. Sarkis is&#13;
the former President of the Int&#13;
e r n a t i o n a l S t u d e n t s '&#13;
Organization which was&#13;
established this past year. They&#13;
made great strides for a newly&#13;
organized club in its first year.&#13;
Sarkis based his campaign on&#13;
student involvement. He says&#13;
there are about 40 clubs at&#13;
Parkside, all of which have&#13;
trouble attracting and retaining&#13;
members. With the student&#13;
enrollment at Parkside, there&#13;
should be plenty of members in&#13;
every club, Sarkis noted, but there&#13;
is a lack of i nterest he is going to&#13;
try to correct.&#13;
"I'll try to work personally with&#13;
each club president and work out&#13;
problems in planning activities&#13;
2nd Annual&#13;
Awards&#13;
Banquet&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
Ten students were awarded outstanding achievement awards&#13;
last Friday night at the Second Annual Student Activities&#13;
Awards Banquet. Approximately 180 people attended the&#13;
banquet. The four major student groups chose the two outstanding&#13;
members within their organization and the four group&#13;
presidents presented two Presidents' Awards. The award&#13;
winners are, from left to right: back row, Chavez Epps&#13;
(Presidents Award), Dan Rasch (SOC), Tracy Gruber (PSGA),&#13;
Tom Shulak (PAB), Jackie Jensen (PAB); front row, Brian&#13;
Felland (Ranger), Ken Meyer (Ranger), Jan Oechler (SOC),&#13;
Kay Mullikin (PSGA) and Chris Hammelev (Presidents&#13;
Award).&#13;
which will attract students," said&#13;
Sarkis.&#13;
He also encourages inter - club&#13;
activity. Sarkis feels if two clubs&#13;
share a common interest then&#13;
they can plan an activity together&#13;
sharing costs. Also he would like&#13;
to check up on clubs to make sure&#13;
they are using their allocation for&#13;
club activities.&#13;
Sarkis plans to work closely&#13;
with PAB and PSGA. He is excited&#13;
to work with Jim Kreuser, PSGA&#13;
President, because of Kreuser's&#13;
enthusiasm for promoting student&#13;
involvement.&#13;
One major change which will&#13;
affect all members of S.O.C. may&#13;
be a meeting room change. Sarkis&#13;
feels a room without distractions&#13;
like the noises from the Coffee&#13;
Shoppe will allow better participation&#13;
of club presidents and&#13;
less misunderstandings. He hopes&#13;
this will eliminate the&#13;
disorganization of the S.O.C.&#13;
meetings.&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Editor's and Parking Lot's Farewells&#13;
• Strange (r) things&#13;
• Baseball readies for playoffs &#13;
Thursday, May 7,1981&#13;
Editor's Farewell&#13;
So long, not goodbye&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Well, this is it. Now's the time I&#13;
advocate my throne (really a&#13;
squeaky chair in a dinky office&#13;
with ugly - colored walls) and say&#13;
goodbye.&#13;
Sorry to disappoint you (maybe&#13;
many of you), but I'm not leaving.&#13;
Or at least not as far away as&#13;
some editors in the past have&#13;
moved after their editorship. I'm&#13;
only moving to the news editor's&#13;
desk which is only a move of about&#13;
10 or 20 feet, depending on where I&#13;
set up shop.&#13;
So, I guess this is a "so long"&#13;
editorial rather than a "goodbye"&#13;
editorial.&#13;
I'm looking forward to next year&#13;
— n ot only because I won't have&#13;
this job, either. It's not that I don't&#13;
like it because, in fact, I thrive on&#13;
it, but the demands are&#13;
exhaustive. Overwhelming is a&#13;
nice understatement.&#13;
I'm looking forward to the fall&#13;
(after a relaxing summer with 6&#13;
credits) because of the direction&#13;
student organizations seem to be,&#13;
or hopefully will be, moving.&#13;
I hope I'm not too optimistic&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
about students becoming more&#13;
involved in affairs and activities&#13;
that affect them or offer direct&#13;
student input. Looking at&#13;
Parkside's past, using old&#13;
Rangers, I noticed similar optimism&#13;
after starts at improving&#13;
the lagging student attitude. But&#13;
these improvements never&#13;
materialized in a permanent&#13;
fashion; they always faded fast.&#13;
I setsome goals for myself at the&#13;
beginning of my editorship. Some&#13;
I met, on others I didn't even come&#13;
close to scratching the surface,&#13;
mainly because some of the goals&#13;
were so outlandish that I didn't&#13;
expect to accomplish them. I set&#13;
them so I'd have something to&#13;
strive for, otherwise giving up or&#13;
slackening off after accomplishing&#13;
something minor&#13;
might seem attractive.&#13;
But I didn't give up. I'm still&#13;
aching to get back into things. It&#13;
might be my masochistic tendencies&#13;
that make me look forward&#13;
to working next year, but&#13;
there are many reasons for being&#13;
anxious about next year: namely&#13;
the four newly - elected club&#13;
presidents.&#13;
Starting close to home, Ranger&#13;
will have as its editor a most&#13;
talented and devoted person who I&#13;
know will succeed in some areas&#13;
in which I have failed. Ginger&#13;
Helgeson is perfect for the job of&#13;
editor (take that as a compliment).&#13;
&#13;
Jeff Schoor, a four year&#13;
member of PAB and previous&#13;
chairman of three PAB committees,&#13;
will give experienced&#13;
leadership as PAB President.&#13;
Sarkis Yoghourtdjian, former&#13;
president of the International&#13;
Students' Organization, a club&#13;
which made great strides in its&#13;
first year, should help SOC into&#13;
becoming a better - organized&#13;
group. PSGA President Jim&#13;
Kreuser appears to be leading&#13;
PSGA into an eventful, and&#13;
colorful, year for a change.&#13;
These four student leaders have&#13;
a lot of work cut out for them. It'd&#13;
be a great help if the rest of the&#13;
student body would become involved.&#13;
I know some will get involved,&#13;
but will enough? We'll&#13;
have to wait until the fall to find&#13;
out.&#13;
Until then ... so long.&#13;
Parkside architecture&#13;
is treacherous&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
There's something about&#13;
mind: It's impossible to get out of&#13;
here! No, not just academically,&#13;
but physically.&#13;
The architects who designed&#13;
this school did a fantastic job of&#13;
blending textures, open spaces,&#13;
and skylights into very pleasant&#13;
and workable buildings, making it&#13;
one of the most beautiful campuses&#13;
in Southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
They certainly deserve a lot of&#13;
recognition for their efforts.&#13;
But enough is enough! Anyone&#13;
even the slightest bit absentminded&#13;
can recall the frustration&#13;
of constantly pushing on the&#13;
wrong side of the library doors.&#13;
More alert individuals probably&#13;
begin studying the doors as they&#13;
approach them, so as not to push&#13;
on the wrong side in front of all the&#13;
from behind their books. (What&#13;
are they really taking notes on?)&#13;
Notice sometime the different&#13;
ways students react to the failure&#13;
of this simple feat. There are&#13;
those who quickly do an about -&#13;
face — they weren't really done&#13;
studying or whatever, anyway.&#13;
(There's so much to do in the&#13;
library.) Then there are the diehards&#13;
who will keep trying till&#13;
they get results, no matter how&#13;
long it takes. Others simply&#13;
memorize one certain pathway&#13;
and do not stray from it. (Note the&#13;
wearing of the carpeting.) And let&#13;
us not forget those who will never&#13;
enter the first floor of the library&#13;
for any reason.&#13;
Now, on to the Union. Along the&#13;
south side, many a bus has been&#13;
Accuse of tho trick doors.&#13;
Not only are these portals just as&#13;
treacherous as those in the&#13;
library, they have the added&#13;
danger of sticking! Yes, and&#13;
anyone trying to leave Union&#13;
Square can testify to the&#13;
numerous attempts made in&#13;
varying states of consciousness&#13;
only to be foiled by the double set&#13;
of villians silently awaiting.&#13;
But Students, take heart. There&#13;
is at least one faculty member&#13;
who knows the secret of leaving&#13;
Parkside. Hopefully, the rest of us&#13;
will eventually learn the proper&#13;
way to get out when we finally get&#13;
out. If not, becoming a "lifer" is a&#13;
distinct possibility.&#13;
Carol Ryback&#13;
I I&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
Parting shots&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
There are many issues that I'd&#13;
like to comment on before the&#13;
year comes to a close. Some are&#13;
topics I wanted to write editorials&#13;
on but never had the time and&#13;
others are thoughts of an outgoing&#13;
editor.&#13;
I don't want to say that&#13;
President Reagan was "lucky" to&#13;
get shot in the March 30&#13;
assassination attempt, but the&#13;
event, being unsuccessful, worked&#13;
out to Reagan's advantage.&#13;
Sympathy for the 70 year old&#13;
President who survived and acted&#13;
through a crisis showing him to be&#13;
a strong - willed individual will not&#13;
die off right away.&#13;
I'm not saying I'm happy he was&#13;
shot; I was deeply saddened. I'm&#13;
just saying that, by the way it&#13;
worked out, it'll help him&#13;
politically.&#13;
A related topic is gun control,&#13;
which was resounded loudly after&#13;
John Lennon was murdered and&#13;
again after March 30. Lennon's&#13;
death garnered a lot of attention,&#13;
but Lennon was only one of 30&#13;
Americans to be shot dead during&#13;
that day. Nationwide, 20,000&#13;
Americans were murdered in&#13;
1979 over half of them with&#13;
handguns. Someone in America is&#13;
killed with a handgun every 48&#13;
minutes.&#13;
More than half of gun victims&#13;
died as a result of an argument or&#13;
accident, not a premeditated&#13;
crime. The American public, as&#13;
far back as 1938, has favored&#13;
stricter control of handguns. The&#13;
latest Gallup figure is 62%.&#13;
But thanks to the influential&#13;
National Rifle Association, little is&#13;
done in Congress. Looking at the&#13;
sickening statistics, I can't see&#13;
how someone could not agree that&#13;
something has to be done. I'm not&#13;
in favor of outlawing all types of&#13;
firearms. Rifles and shotguns&#13;
serve a valid sporting and hunting&#13;
purpose; handguns don't.&#13;
The ineffectiveness of city and&#13;
state laws concerning handguns is&#13;
an argument for national&#13;
legislation, not against it.&#13;
Something has to be done. Now!&#13;
* * *&#13;
The situation in El Salvador&#13;
worries me. The comparison is&#13;
now a cliche but . . . here we go&#13;
again with another Vietnam.&#13;
Military advisors were sent to&#13;
Vietnam in Feb. 1962 for the same&#13;
reason and with the same&#13;
statement Reagan is using:&#13;
they're only there in an "advisory&#13;
role."&#13;
Well, I'm not too sure about&#13;
that, given how much the Reagan&#13;
administration wants to show up&#13;
the Soviets. The presence of&#13;
Alexander Haig doesn't help much&#13;
either.&#13;
I wanted to write an editorial&#13;
about the infamous Moral&#13;
Majority after the Rev. Jerry&#13;
Falwell made a big stink about his&#13;
interview in Penthouse.&#13;
My main point was to be how&#13;
overly - righteous it was of those&#13;
"moral" people to inflict their&#13;
morals on others. My favorite part&#13;
was my planned concluding&#13;
statement, "As far as I'm concerned,&#13;
the Moral Majority can go&#13;
to hell."&#13;
At one point during the year&#13;
(last September to be exact)&#13;
Ranger's masthead listed 27 staff&#13;
members. That soon wore away&#13;
with many of those people contributing&#13;
nothing. There are&#13;
currently 16 students on Ranger&#13;
staff. .&#13;
If there is one particular area in&#13;
which I'm disappointed in, it is&#13;
business. Having only a couple&#13;
students make up the entire&#13;
Ranger business staff is&#13;
ridiculous. I truly wonder what&#13;
the hell is wrong with the large&#13;
number of business students at&#13;
Parkside. Ranger is one of the&#13;
best places for business students&#13;
to receive hands - on - experience&#13;
while still making that ever -&#13;
important green stuff (yes,&#13;
money).&#13;
End of the&#13;
semester tension&#13;
RANGER Photo hy Steve Myers&#13;
Has anybody noticed that college&#13;
students get highly strung and very&#13;
tense before finals?&#13;
For more strange things turn to page 8.&#13;
&lt;Ranger&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Brian Felland.... •••".• Editor&#13;
Sue Michetti Business Manager&#13;
Wendy Westphal Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser.".' Feature Editor&#13;
Brian Passino..&#13;
Editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
rt ^ STAFF&#13;
S t e v e&#13;
D a&#13;
" G a&#13;
'&#13;
b r a i , h - D a " M c C o r m a c k , L o r i M e y e r ,&#13;
RANGER is '„&#13;
rUCe on&#13;
' Klm Schla,&#13;
er. Janet Well, Jeff Wicks&#13;
U"~ - - - «r&#13;
All correspondence should be a dd^pS TV P&#13;
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' RANGER.&#13;
Titter's to t&#13;
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£* ma'rgins^AM^etters'mustf'hiT6?' doublespac&lt;* standard size&#13;
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"»»"»• &#13;
Thursday, May 7,1981&#13;
Academic awards presented I Honors graduates named&#13;
The annual Scholarship Day at&#13;
Parkside on Sunday, May 3,&#13;
resulted in awards and honors for&#13;
more than 60 students. The&#13;
program, sponsored by the&#13;
Campus Awards and Ceremonies&#13;
Committee, included an address&#13;
by Prof. Bonnie Smith, history.&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin&#13;
presented the awards.&#13;
Joanne M. Esser Scholarships&#13;
of $400 each, for students interested&#13;
in ecology, went to Mary&#13;
Ann Perozzo, 2619-23rd Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha, and Suzanne Marie&#13;
Weisner, 914-7th St., Kenosha.&#13;
Kenneth L. Greenquist*&#13;
Scholarships of $200 each, named&#13;
for the former University regent&#13;
and Racine attorney and civic&#13;
leader, were awarded to Sung&#13;
Hyok Choe, 8067 Sheridan Rd.,&#13;
Kenosha; Beverly Jean&#13;
Derouchey, 1426-83rd St.,&#13;
Kenosha; and Susan Elizabeth&#13;
Willms, 3008 Sante Fe Trail,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie Scholarships of&#13;
$250 each, named for Parkside's&#13;
founding chancellor, went to&#13;
James Edward Lewis, 3329 Honey&#13;
Creek Road, Burlington, and&#13;
Christopher Robert Sartori, 4526-&#13;
18th St., Kenosha.&#13;
Bernard C. Tallent Scholarships&#13;
of $200 each, which memorialize&#13;
the former dean of the university's&#13;
Kenosha campus, went to&#13;
Frank Charles Cairo, 8955-43rd&#13;
Ave., Kenosha; Mary Jo&#13;
Dagenbach, 3540-16th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; Ginger Ellen Hanks,&#13;
11711-60th St., Bristol; Ginger A.&#13;
Helgeson, 4321-18th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; Kathleen M. Kierzek,&#13;
1509-48th Ave., Kenosha; and&#13;
Scott Xavier Stevens, 8075-48th&#13;
Ave., Kenosha.&#13;
The Johnson Wax Award in&#13;
science went to Michael Mullane,&#13;
4910-19th Ave., Kenosha; the Sam&#13;
Poerio Award in education to&#13;
Francesca Morrone, 3105-55th St.,&#13;
Kenosha; the Economics Award&#13;
to Sara Jane Walker, 607-73rd St.,&#13;
Kenosha; and William W. Petrie&#13;
Awards in Labor and Industrial&#13;
Relations to Carla Wilks, 2424&#13;
Virginia St., Racine, and Faye&#13;
Haubrich, 7537-34th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha. Those awards carry&#13;
trophy and/or monetary prizes.&#13;
Certificates of merit,&#13;
recognizing outstanding academic&#13;
work in their major fields of&#13;
study, went to 46 students:&#13;
From Kenosha: Judith L. Wirtz,&#13;
Gary A. Lea, and Maureen R.&#13;
Funk in History; Gino Salituro in&#13;
Chemistry; Stephanie Savas&#13;
Slamar in Art; Susan Michetti in&#13;
Political Science; Francesca&#13;
Morrone in Mathematics; Marjorie&#13;
Ann Roth and Laura Jean&#13;
Frisk in Music; Christopher&#13;
Sartori in Life Science; Ginger&#13;
Helgeson and Lyn Johanson in&#13;
English; Patricia Heller and&#13;
Beverly Salituro in Teacher&#13;
Education; Clare Missurelli in&#13;
Communication; Beverly J.&#13;
DeRouchey in Finance; Janet&#13;
Iverson and Keith Manna in&#13;
Medical Technology; and Gary&#13;
Morrison in Production&#13;
Management.&#13;
From Racine: Catherine&#13;
Worden, Glenn Lampark, and&#13;
Lori DeGroot in Geography;&#13;
Dennis M. Wilson in Chemistry;&#13;
Daniel Ingebrigtson in Art; Carole&#13;
Mae Trolle, Patricia Richter, and&#13;
Sharon Lee Johnson in Sociology /&#13;
Anthropology; Christie Coates in&#13;
Political Science; Carol Ann&#13;
Kestell in Music; Jim Wynstra&#13;
and Jim Simonds in Life Science;&#13;
John Brien in English; Barbara&#13;
Wemmert in Teacher Education;&#13;
Alane Andresen in Communication;&#13;
Joan Barten in&#13;
Marketing; Jonathon S. Massey in&#13;
Management Science; Rose Ann&#13;
M. Andresen in Management&#13;
Information Systems; Debra J.&#13;
Krismanich in Accounting; Mary&#13;
Udulutch in Medical Technology;&#13;
and Kevin Grice in Industrial /&#13;
Environmental Hygiene.&#13;
From Antioch, Illinois: Michael&#13;
Ware in Industrial / Environmental&#13;
Hygiene; and Rosina&#13;
Hellstern in Administrative&#13;
Management.&#13;
From other areas: Margaret&#13;
Crawford (South Milwaukee) in&#13;
Personnel Management; Curtis&#13;
LaMack (Union Grove) in&#13;
Mathematics; Peter Selander&#13;
(Somers) in Political Science; and&#13;
Timothy Swiateck (Salem) in&#13;
Chemistry.&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
Students to graduate&#13;
on Sunday, May 17&#13;
William B. Boyd, president of&#13;
The Johnson Foundation, will give&#13;
the commencement address at&#13;
graduation exercises for about 400&#13;
members of the 1980-81 December,&#13;
May and August classes at&#13;
Parkside at 2 p. m. on Sunday,&#13;
May 17, in the Physical Education&#13;
Building.&#13;
Boyd assumed presidency of the&#13;
foundation last July 1. He had&#13;
been president of the University of&#13;
Oregon since 1975 and previously&#13;
served as president of Central&#13;
Michigan University, vice&#13;
chancellor of the University of&#13;
California - Berkeley and in a&#13;
number of other university administrative&#13;
positions.&#13;
Bachelor's and master's&#13;
degrees will be conferred by&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin with&#13;
Vice Chancellor/Dean of Faculty&#13;
Lorman Ratner and Regent&#13;
Thomas P. Fox of Madison, who&#13;
will represent the UW System&#13;
Board. Guskin also will present&#13;
awards for outstanding academic&#13;
achievement to graduates&#13;
selected by divisional faculties&#13;
and to the overall outstanding&#13;
student selected by the campus&#13;
awards and ceremonies committee.&#13;
&#13;
Marshals for the academic&#13;
procession will be Prof. Robert&#13;
Esser, chief marshal; Prof.&#13;
Ronald Singer, faculty marshal;&#13;
Prof. Arthur Dudycha, graduate&#13;
marshal; Prof. B. S. Samimi,&#13;
bachelor of sc ience marshal; and&#13;
Prof. Frank Mueller, bachelor of&#13;
arts marshal.&#13;
A university reception for&#13;
graduates and their guests in&#13;
Main Place of Wyllie Library -&#13;
Learning Center will follow the&#13;
ceremonies.&#13;
MAS title changed to MBA&#13;
The title of th e master's degree&#13;
program in business at Parkside&#13;
has been changed from its original&#13;
designation as a Master of Administrative&#13;
Science (MAS) to a&#13;
Master of Business Administration&#13;
(MBA).&#13;
The change to MBA "better&#13;
reflects the actual nature and&#13;
scope of the curriculum," according&#13;
to Arthur L. Dudycha,&#13;
chairman of the Division of&#13;
Business and Administrative&#13;
Science.&#13;
The change, effective immediately,&#13;
will affect about 18&#13;
students who will receive MBA&#13;
degrees in commencement&#13;
exercises on May 17 and all&#13;
subsequent candidates in the&#13;
program. It has been approved by&#13;
the UW System and various UW -&#13;
Parkside faculty goverance&#13;
bodies.&#13;
Dudycha said the new program&#13;
title will not involve any changes&#13;
in curriculum. "The program we&#13;
offer is in fact an MBA and titling&#13;
it that will facilitate communication&#13;
and promote a better&#13;
understanding of i t with potential&#13;
students, the business community&#13;
and other publics."&#13;
The Parkside MBA program is&#13;
designed to meet the needs of&#13;
employed professionals who want&#13;
to advance careers already underway&#13;
and wish to take&#13;
graduate studies on a part - time&#13;
basis as well as the full - time&#13;
graduate student. Some "special"&#13;
students seeking information&#13;
related to immediate professional&#13;
employment also are admitted.&#13;
Persons applying for admission&#13;
to the MBA degree program are&#13;
required to take the Graduate&#13;
Management Admissions Test&#13;
(GMAT). Information on GMAT&#13;
test dates and other application&#13;
procedures is available from the&#13;
Division of Business and Administrative&#13;
Science in Molinaro&#13;
Hall (Phone 553-2280).&#13;
On May 17, about 400 candidates&#13;
for graduation at UW - Parkside&#13;
will proceed through graduation&#13;
exercises for the 1980 - 81 classes.&#13;
Many students will be graduating&#13;
with distinction.&#13;
These students have been&#13;
honored for their continued&#13;
successful work at Parkside. The&#13;
distinctions are as follows:&#13;
Summa cum laude (with highest&#13;
honors), 3.9-4.0 GPA; Magna cum&#13;
laude (with high owners), 3.7 - 3.89&#13;
GPA; and Cum laude (with&#13;
honors), 3.5 - 3.69 GPA.&#13;
The candidates for the Bachelor&#13;
of Science Degree who will be&#13;
graduating with distinction from&#13;
December 1980 and May 1981&#13;
classes include:&#13;
Summa cum laude: Kathleen J.&#13;
Brudney, Hannecristl C. Fruhauf,&#13;
Debra J. Krismanich, Keith A.&#13;
Manna, Francesca Morrone,&#13;
Michael P. Mullane and Jeffrey L.&#13;
Sorensen.&#13;
Magna cum laude: Margaret M.&#13;
Crawford, John T. Drigot, Mary&#13;
C. Flanagan, Curtis J. La Mack,&#13;
Scott M. Lesnier, Alan M.&#13;
Padlock, Lisa A. Rasmussen -&#13;
Zanin, James E. Rubach, Timothy&#13;
P. Swiateck, Keith W. Van Patten,&#13;
Alan J. Walton, Carla Wilks,&#13;
James H. Wynstra and Cynthia A.&#13;
Ziegler.&#13;
Cum laude: Pamela I. Bahr,&#13;
Julie A. Colclaser, Lorilee E.&#13;
Fort, Janice E. Hamelink, Judith&#13;
A. Herr, Timothy D. Hovey,&#13;
Rhanda J. Jensen, Thomas M.&#13;
Lenz, Anna M. Miller, Thomas K.&#13;
Pella, William S. Pocan, Jr.,&#13;
Beverly J. Salituro, Wendy A.&#13;
Scheider, James M. Schoening,&#13;
Jessica G. Sheridan, Thomas E.&#13;
Simon, Jim D. Simonds, Jacques&#13;
R. Thebert, Sue A. Veselik and&#13;
Sara J. Walker.&#13;
The candidates for the Bachelor&#13;
of Arts Degree who will be&#13;
Business&#13;
internships&#13;
available&#13;
The Private Industry Council of&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin, Inc. has&#13;
a limited number of Business&#13;
Intern summer jobs available for&#13;
current post high school students&#13;
who will be returning to school&#13;
this fall. These jobs are for a&#13;
maximum of 320 hours over&#13;
summer. Pay is set by the employer,&#13;
not to exceed $5.00 per&#13;
hour. All jobs will be in the private&#13;
sector and will correlate with the&#13;
student's academic or vocational&#13;
interests. Interested summer job&#13;
seekers will need to visit the local&#13;
Job Service office to be certified&#13;
for the Private Industry Council's&#13;
programs and send a resume,&#13;
attention: William Matelski,&#13;
Private Industry Council of&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin, Inc., 1648&#13;
Washington Avenue, Racine,&#13;
Wisconsin, 53403.&#13;
graduating with distinction from&#13;
December 1980 and May 1981&#13;
classes include:&#13;
Summa cum laude: John M.&#13;
Brien, Marjorie A. Roth, and&#13;
Janet H. Wells.&#13;
Magna cum laude: Lori A.&#13;
DeGroot, Patricia A. Heller,&#13;
Debra A. Henningfeld, Roxanne&#13;
P. Larson and Monica M. Scholz.&#13;
Cum laude: Candis D. Anderson,&#13;
James J. Brichacek, Jr.,&#13;
Ronald O. Davey, Anita M.&#13;
Duschak, Maureen R. Funk,&#13;
Eileen M. Hanson, Daniel G.&#13;
Kachikis, Carol A. Kestell, Susan&#13;
J. Michetti, Patricia Morrone and&#13;
Susan Schultz - Rollins.&#13;
The candidates for the Bachelor&#13;
of Science Degree who will be&#13;
graduating with distinction from&#13;
August 1981 classes include:&#13;
Cum laude: Rebecca L.&#13;
Grabher, Cathy K. Lawlis, and&#13;
Lyle L. Walter.&#13;
The candidates for the Bachelor&#13;
of Arts Degree who will be&#13;
graduting with distinction from&#13;
August 1981 classes is Lyn J.&#13;
Johanson.&#13;
All distinctions designations will&#13;
be considered tentative until final&#13;
semester grades are recorded.&#13;
Have&#13;
a Happy&#13;
Summer!&#13;
CLOISSONNE'&#13;
for Mother's Day&#13;
medium pendant — 7.50&#13;
large pendant on&#13;
silk cord — 16.00&#13;
SCHOOLHOUSE&#13;
GIFT SHOP&#13;
3516 Rapids Ct.&#13;
Racine 634-3764&#13;
ACADEMY O F B ATON A D ANCE \&#13;
;Headquarters for "Gym Kin"Body Suits,:&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — Tap Shoes —&#13;
All Dancing Supplies&#13;
; 6204-22nd Avenue, Kenosha 658-2498&#13;
ALOHA!&#13;
Parksldo Feed Sonrki&#13;
Amovikos&#13;
POLYNESIAN&#13;
LIIAU&#13;
EIHNK FRIDAY&#13;
FRI.f MAY 8&#13;
UNION DININC ROOM&#13;
Combination Pinto&#13;
Spoclal:&#13;
O CHICK EN T ERIY AKI&#13;
O S WEET /SO UR POR K&#13;
O M AHI M A HI ( F R I ED DOL PHIN )&#13;
O ST E A M ED RICE&#13;
O F R I E D BANANA OR F R E S H P I N E A P P LE&#13;
O COMBINATI ON MAI TAI P U N CH&#13;
ALL FOR ONLY &#13;
Thursday, May 7,1981&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
Goodbye Parking Lot&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
A REPRESENTATIVE of t he Legislative Audit Bureau (second&#13;
from right) distributes the Bureau's report on its audit of&#13;
Gateway Technical Institute to the local press outside the Union&#13;
Tuesday morning.&#13;
Audit criticizes GTI&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
The State Legislative Audit&#13;
Bureau released a critical report&#13;
on its recent audit of Gateway&#13;
Technical Institute. (GTI).&#13;
The audit reveals that GTI's&#13;
involvement in foreign projects&#13;
has resulted in substantial personal&#13;
gain for select GTI staff and&#13;
questions whether state statutes&#13;
were complied with.&#13;
The Bureau's review of GTI&#13;
administration's management&#13;
practices indicates "a pattern of&#13;
questionable management&#13;
practices and, in some cases,&#13;
expenditures of public funds&#13;
which are inappropriate for public&#13;
officials."&#13;
Among the practices identified:&#13;
• Board members and administrators&#13;
received travel&#13;
payments to conventions in excess&#13;
of f irst class air fares;&#13;
• Some travel costs ior the&#13;
wife of GTI director Keith Stoehr&#13;
were paid for by the district; and&#13;
• The District Activity Fund,&#13;
funded by vending machine&#13;
commissions generated primarily&#13;
by students, has been used to pay&#13;
for staff parties, flowers and&#13;
meals.&#13;
GTI director Stoehr responded&#13;
to the audit in a written&#13;
statement:&#13;
"The report is subjective and&#13;
urges the unsupported opinions of&#13;
its author, or authors, against the&#13;
expression of the GTI district&#13;
board and a former state VTAE&#13;
director. It seems as though the&#13;
authors of the report 'aimed' to&#13;
discredit me and others with a&#13;
broad brush of accusation by&#13;
innuendo."&#13;
"I view the report as destructive&#13;
of many well - intentioned&#13;
efforts to improve the quality of&#13;
the delivery of vocational&#13;
education by a dedicated GTI&#13;
board and staff."&#13;
or picking those little nubs of&#13;
gristle from the hamburger you&#13;
ate for lunch out of your teeth? Or,&#13;
have you ever felt kind of crawly&#13;
when you're sqeezing that nasty&#13;
little pimple that always appears&#13;
just before you have to make your&#13;
presentation in Communication&#13;
Theory? Like someone was&#13;
looking (and not over your&#13;
shoulder)?&#13;
Well, someone is watching you.&#13;
Both Chancellor Alan Guskin and&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Carla Stoffle&#13;
regularly stand (and sometimes&#13;
sit) sentry inside the walls of the&#13;
bathrooms here. They're right&#13;
there inside the mirrors most&#13;
school days. And they are watching&#13;
you.&#13;
"We really are personally&#13;
committed to getting to know our&#13;
students here at Parkside,"&#13;
Stoffle told Ranger in an exclusive&#13;
interview, "but the Chancellor&#13;
and I have found students here to&#13;
be so shy. Can you believe they're&#13;
afraid to come up to our offices&#13;
just because of all the plush carpet&#13;
Kuo to work with NASA&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Since this is the very last time&#13;
you will ever see a "Parking Lot"&#13;
in this newspaper, this is the&#13;
Farewell Sweet Parking Lot&#13;
column:&#13;
— more fun than "The End",&#13;
but not as sloppy;&#13;
— ea sier on the eyes than the&#13;
Holy Bible, and less guilt -&#13;
provoking;&#13;
— cleaner than "The Waltons,"&#13;
without the bitter aftertaste.&#13;
So this is it, dear readers. The&#13;
jig is jogged. This columnist has&#13;
been promoted to a position in&#13;
which she can do no harm. So&#13;
before I get so busy that I can't&#13;
possibly take the time to notice&#13;
anything .. . there are a few&#13;
things I have already noticed that&#13;
I think students ought to know&#13;
about.&#13;
Have any of you noticed the way&#13;
some of the mirrors in the&#13;
bathrooms here at Parkside make&#13;
you feel kind of funny while you're&#13;
combing your hair in the morning&#13;
Parkside Prof. Ming Kuo is one&#13;
of 20 university faculty members&#13;
selected to participate as a fellow&#13;
in the 1981 NASA Summer Faculty&#13;
Fellowship Program sponsored by&#13;
the NASA G oddard Space Flight&#13;
Center at Greenbelt, Md.&#13;
Kuo is chairman of the Parkside&#13;
Engineering Science Division and&#13;
associate professor of computer&#13;
and engineering science.&#13;
The 11-week NASA program will&#13;
focus on evaluating the future of&#13;
machine intelligence in space&#13;
operation and on the feasibility of&#13;
robotics and machine intelligence.&#13;
Kuo is an electrical engineer&#13;
who has specialized in digital&#13;
computers and circuits. His&#13;
recent work also has involved uses&#13;
of microcomputers and their&#13;
applications in robotics. Participants&#13;
in the NASA program&#13;
include faculty with expertise in&#13;
information systems, artificial&#13;
intelligence, automation and large&#13;
- scale system theory.&#13;
and crystal chandeliers&#13;
servants?"&#13;
Guskin commented, "We came&#13;
up with this idea last year. We&#13;
needed some means of findi ng out&#13;
what sort of human beings we&#13;
have here in our little community."&#13;
&#13;
The two-way mirror system was&#13;
suggested to the Administration&#13;
by Ron Brinkman, Chief of&#13;
Parkside Security, according to&#13;
Guskin. "Ron assured us that the&#13;
idea was an effective one. I didn't&#13;
even know it, but the facilities, the&#13;
secret doors behind the&#13;
bathrooms, the mirrors, the&#13;
stools, were already in place,"&#13;
Guskin said.&#13;
Stoffle said, "We've done some&#13;
good research as a result of our&#13;
observations. I don't have the data&#13;
compiled yet, but for example, we&#13;
know we should be selling acne&#13;
medicine in the bookstore. We&#13;
didn'tknow that before. These are&#13;
the kinds of things we need to&#13;
know in order to make students&#13;
feel at home here among the rest&#13;
of the Parkside family."&#13;
Guskin said the two of them&#13;
have a rotating system for the&#13;
Bathroom Surveillance Feed -&#13;
Back Mission, as they call it.&#13;
"We're just glad to be here,&#13;
doing our jobs as a service to&#13;
students," Stoffle said. "I think&#13;
the chancellor and myself are&#13;
planning to stay here a long, long&#13;
time."&#13;
Guskin added, "We're planning&#13;
to have mirrors installed in the&#13;
SOC, PAB, Ranger and PSGA&#13;
offices over the summer, using the&#13;
funds we've collected from people&#13;
who drop their change out of their&#13;
pockets and purses and into the&#13;
sinks." &#13;
PAB sponsors&#13;
"The End"&#13;
RANGER Thursday, May 7,1981&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
The 12th Annual "The End,"&#13;
Parkside's longest standing&#13;
tradition, will be held Saturday&#13;
and Sunday, May 16-17.&#13;
The weekend starts with two&#13;
activities on Saturday morning, a&#13;
softball tournament at 10:00 and a&#13;
Pike River canoe race at 10:30&#13;
Oa/fictro fmn noorlllnA fn.&#13;
five ivivw vatiw late (XI 1U:3D. COntP«*t will fr*i»&gt; 1&#13;
Registration deadline for the and in "The End" J!?? °^&#13;
00rs&#13;
so'ftftbbaall ll tournament is Friday, outaide the UnL^!^&#13;
Just tournament is Friday,&#13;
May 8 at 2 p.m. Teams must&#13;
consist of six males and five&#13;
females and only two of the&#13;
players may be members of&#13;
Parkside softball or baseball&#13;
teams. Prizes will be awarded to&#13;
the first and second place-teams.&#13;
Sign up for the canoe race in&#13;
Union 209 by Friday,. May 15.&#13;
Teams must consist of two&#13;
members. The race will start at&#13;
the main concession stand at&#13;
Petrifying Springs.&#13;
Saturday night is Country Rock&#13;
Night in the Union Square. Texas&#13;
Red will play from 6:30-9 p.m. and&#13;
tafeP&#13;
fh»&lt;f°.rmer&#13;
i&#13;
y Night 0wl) wi»&#13;
a» age from 9:30 " 12:30&#13;
After a night of rest, "Anything&#13;
(starHno°&#13;
n&#13;
t .&#13;
unday afternoon&#13;
six PVPI P m ) wU1 feature&#13;
Dass nffi a tug&#13;
"&#13;
a&#13;
-&#13;
war&gt; water&#13;
K It ?uer pass with t00th"&#13;
Sarr'h °&#13;
W raCeS&gt; Shoe&#13;
search and a water balloon tossing&#13;
outdoors&#13;
outside the Union Building&#13;
In the Umon Square from 14&#13;
FRF'F^ wUl ^ a free (yes&#13;
r REE) concert presented by&#13;
Marvin and the Dogs Blues Band&#13;
Sunday night is Rock N Roll&#13;
RiSt ? 6 Hnion S(&#13;
?&#13;
uare&#13;
. with&#13;
Bu&#13;
J? P&#13;
laying from 6:30 - 9 p.m.&#13;
and White Lie closing "The End"&#13;
from 9:30 - 12:30.&#13;
Tickets are available only at the&#13;
door Admission each night is $3&#13;
for Parkside students and $4 for&#13;
guests. Guests must be accompanied&#13;
by a UW-P student and&#13;
each student can only bring one&#13;
guest.&#13;
Film series begins&#13;
TV»n ITAM/IPKO DiIV\1 In T !L.. .. The Kenosha Public Library&#13;
will offer an American Short Story&#13;
Film Series on Thursday evenings&#13;
in May at the Southwest Library,&#13;
7979 - 38 Avenue. All programs will&#13;
begin at 7:30 p. m. Films based on&#13;
a variety of short stories will be&#13;
shown and a discussion following&#13;
each film will be led by Peter&#13;
Martin, Associate Professor of&#13;
English at UW - Parkside.&#13;
Films scheduled are:&#13;
On May 7, "Barn Burning" by&#13;
William Faulkner: A tale of&#13;
revenge involving a proud, poor&#13;
Southern tenant farmer who takes&#13;
justice into his own hands.&#13;
On May 14, "The Jilting of&#13;
Granny Weather all" by Katherine&#13;
Anne Porter: A spunky eighty -&#13;
year - old woman realizes that all&#13;
of her accomplishments cannot&#13;
compensate for having been left&#13;
standing at the altar.&#13;
On May 21, "The Greatest Man&#13;
in the World" by James Thurber:&#13;
Admiral Byrd and Lucky Lindy&#13;
were great heroes ... but what&#13;
would happen if the next aviator -&#13;
hero turned out to be a thug.&#13;
On May 28, "Paul's Case" by&#13;
Willa Cather: Paul lives out a&#13;
tragedy of youthful passion and&#13;
foolishness when his sensitivity&#13;
comes face to face with reality.&#13;
The American Short Story Film&#13;
Series is offered by the Kenosha&#13;
Public Library with a grant from&#13;
the Wisconsin Humanities&#13;
Committee. The free programs&#13;
are open to the general public and&#13;
are geared to out - of - school&#13;
adults. Copies of the short stories,&#13;
on which the films are based, are&#13;
available at the library. For more&#13;
information call 656-6034.&#13;
Meet a challenge&#13;
fOve Wov Q AHA man nn/1 «« u. . i • , . r 8,000 men and women,&#13;
both adults and students, will take&#13;
part in a unique program called&#13;
"Outward Bound" this year.&#13;
Designed so that participants will&#13;
meet challenging experiences in&#13;
wilderness settings at all times of&#13;
the year, Outward Bound courses&#13;
take place in sixteen states and&#13;
can go as far afield as Canada or&#13;
Nepal. While many come to&#13;
Outward Bound seeking a taste of&#13;
high adventure — and they'll&#13;
probably get it — most will leave&#13;
with a new understanding of&#13;
themselves after discovering they&#13;
are capable of doing things they&#13;
might previously have thought&#13;
"impossible." Outward Bound&#13;
believes many limits are self -&#13;
imposed.&#13;
Backpacking, mountaineering,&#13;
canoeing, skiing, snowshoeing,&#13;
sailing, cycling, rafting and&#13;
caving form the core of the Outward&#13;
Bound experience, depending&#13;
on the environment in which&#13;
the courses takes place. Previous&#13;
outdoor skills are unnecessary, as&#13;
is special equipment other than&#13;
personal clothing and boots. Each&#13;
small group of students has one or&#13;
more expert instructors and&#13;
specialists who help them develop&#13;
outdoor and interpersonal skills,&#13;
culminating in a "final expedition,"&#13;
with minimal instructor&#13;
supervision, relying on&#13;
what they have learned during the&#13;
course. Academic credit is often&#13;
available, as is financial aid based&#13;
on need. In addition, several&#13;
Outward Bound schools offer no -&#13;
interest tuition loan plans, some&#13;
for up to three years.&#13;
Outward Bound courses are&#13;
offered year - round and last from&#13;
5 to 26 days. For information,&#13;
write Outward Bound, Inc., 384&#13;
Field Point Road, Greenwich, CT&#13;
06830, or call toll free 800-243-8520&#13;
(except in Connecticut).&#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;
Member Parkside 2 00&#13;
Mention this a d! (f y Joseph&#13;
4433 22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
RANGER Photo by Steve Myers&#13;
Pllrem aaI&#13;
N?«&#13;
ENSE*?&#13;
B#-&#13;
LE' u&#13;
1?&#13;
erthe dlrectlon of Scott Mather, performed in Main&#13;
riace on Monday, May 4for people s noontime pleasure.&#13;
Meeting held|&#13;
A pilot "Access Program"&#13;
which will begin next fall at&#13;
Parkside to provide an opportunity&#13;
for adults to complete&#13;
junior and senior level work for a&#13;
degree largely outside the&#13;
classroom will be explained by a&#13;
member of the program staff at a&#13;
series of informational meetings&#13;
at area public libraries.&#13;
Angela Howard Zophy will be at&#13;
the public meeting room of the&#13;
Racine Public Library, 75-7th St.,&#13;
at 7:30 p. m. on May 12, at the&#13;
Kenosha Public Library Southwest,&#13;
7979-38th Ave., at 7:30 p.m. on&#13;
May 13 and at the Burlington&#13;
Public Library, 310 N. Pine St., at&#13;
7:30 p. m. on May 19.&#13;
The competency - based&#13;
program is interdisciplinary,&#13;
focusing on the humanities and&#13;
social sciences, and leads to a&#13;
bachelor of arts degree. It is intended&#13;
for adults who already&#13;
have completed the equivalent of&#13;
the first two years of university&#13;
work.&#13;
Faculty planners for the&#13;
program say potential students&#13;
typically would be those who have&#13;
been out of school for a long period&#13;
of time and those with employment,&#13;
family, or other factors&#13;
such as health or distance from&#13;
campus, which make it difficult to&#13;
attend classes on a regular basis.&#13;
Persons unable to attend one of&#13;
the library sessions can obtain&#13;
additional information from&#13;
Zophy at the UW - Parkside&#13;
Center for Teaching Excellence&#13;
(Phone 553-2483).&#13;
552-8784&#13;
• T da^s a "Week&#13;
.Sings ai\d delivers&#13;
P.S....Perfect for Mother's Day!&#13;
. I Like to Jog!&#13;
But I Also STOP IN AND&#13;
Enjoy Other PICK UP SOME&#13;
Things In Lite NEW TOYS.&#13;
Special Of&#13;
The Week&#13;
ADULT MUGS&#13;
Adult Gift 9&#13;
2410 5 2nd St. Kenosha&#13;
UW-Parkside Security&#13;
QUESTIONNAIRE&#13;
The UW-Parkside Security Department is going to implement a Crime&#13;
Deterrence Program. We would like your help in determining in what areas we&#13;
should aim our concern. Please fill out this questionnaire and return to the&#13;
Library or Union Kiosk by May 15, 1981.&#13;
If y ou have any further questions, please contact Officer Barsuli at 553-2455.&#13;
1. Do you feel our campus is safer than other&#13;
campuses? Yes No&#13;
2. Is your fear of theft more concentrated in which parking lot:&#13;
Union Comm/Arts Phy Ed Tailent&#13;
3. Are you fearful of thefts in the:&#13;
Library Comm/Arts MOLN Greenquist Union&#13;
Why?&#13;
4. What are your concerns while on campus:&#13;
Theft of your belongings?&#13;
Harm to your person?&#13;
Other ?____&#13;
5. Where on campus do you feel the lighting is inadequate?&#13;
6. Are you afraid while in the washrooms?&#13;
Why?&#13;
Yes No&#13;
7. Do you feel that the Security officers raider services courteously&#13;
and indiscriminately? Yes No&#13;
If no, why not?&#13;
8. Are there exact areas on campus (such as bushes or tall grass too&#13;
close to the sidewalk) where you feel unsafe? Yes No&#13;
If yes, where?&#13;
9. As a resident of Parkside Village or other apartment complex, would you&#13;
attend a program on locks and apartment safety? Yes No&#13;
10. Would you attend a program on: Self Defense Rape&#13;
U. What are some specific things you would like to see the Security&#13;
officers do to make your campus safer? &#13;
6 Thursday, May 7,1981 RANGER&#13;
m -fflmmm&#13;
Ki9l m&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
Offer overseas grants&#13;
552-7070&#13;
County Hwy. "H" At Hwy. 11,&#13;
Sturtovant, Wit.&#13;
The Institute of International&#13;
Education has announced that the&#13;
official opening of the 1982-83&#13;
competition for grants for&#13;
graduate study or research&#13;
abroad in academic fields and for&#13;
professional training in the&#13;
creative and performing arts is&#13;
scheduled for May 1, 1981. It is&#13;
expected that approximately 516&#13;
awards to 50 countries will be&#13;
available.&#13;
The purpose of these grants is to&#13;
increase mutual understanding&#13;
between the people of the United&#13;
States and other countries through&#13;
the exchange of persons,&#13;
knowledge and skills. They are&#13;
provided under the terms of the&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
YEAl It's the end!! K.M.&#13;
RECORD CLOSEOUT SALE: "Frlsbee&#13;
Love," by W. Hung and the Prophylactics.&#13;
SLIGHTLY USED .44 Magnum, 2 weeks old.&#13;
Inquire at Security.&#13;
PARKSIDE Isn't a University. It Isn't special.&#13;
It's iust like a toenail: Ingrown.&#13;
NEWS FLASH: IOP member found fondling&#13;
in an intimate manner an IBM 340. Film at&#13;
11.&#13;
HITLER YOUTH armbands. Cheap. Inquire&#13;
at Security,. Ext. 2455.&#13;
WILL the last person leaving Parkslde please&#13;
turn out the lights?&#13;
I'M IN LOVE and she doesn't even know it.&#13;
Oh well . . . it's her loss.&#13;
AND THEN, there was light ... F II @250th&#13;
sec.&#13;
YEA! It's the end 11 K.M.&#13;
HELP) Why am I s till here???? The EX-EX&#13;
Boss.&#13;
BECAUSE you have yet to learn what you&#13;
should. Smarten up. Ex-boss.&#13;
GET TO WORK Ginger! Have fun ... ha ha&#13;
ha.&#13;
WELL KENNY, welcome to the crowd . ..&#13;
Zimmer syndrome meeting Is next Friday.&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS Student Activities&#13;
Awards Winners, from Sue 8, Tim.&#13;
ATTN. FORMER 4.0's: Suicide booklet.&#13;
Cheap. Inquire at P.U. Mental Health Office.&#13;
&#13;
GOODBYE. Thank God. I'm gone.&#13;
YE At It's the end! I K.M.&#13;
TO "nose me is to love me. The Nose "Nose".&#13;
BLUE FEET: Your ballet tutoo Is showing.&#13;
2nd Floor Ballerinas.&#13;
LOOKING for a cure for Zimmer Syndrome&#13;
— TRANSFER.&#13;
ALONG with 5,000 Parkslde students.&#13;
PEOPLE WHO write on napkins are&#13;
IDIOTS!!!!!&#13;
YEA! It's the end!! K.M.&#13;
WE'LL NEVER TELL what happened at the&#13;
awards banquet.&#13;
WHO'D want to?&#13;
U.W.-MILWAUKEE will vote U.W.-Parkside&#13;
out of U.C.-Z.S.U.&#13;
WHY NOT? UW-Eau Claire dropped out.&#13;
Z.S.U. is soliciting OLD worn out members.&#13;
YEAl It's the end!! K.M.&#13;
UNCLE BOB: I love you! — Kim.&#13;
WAY TO GO three-year guinea pigs. Signed,&#13;
AMW.&#13;
THE LAST WORDS from U.U.C.S. — We&#13;
must reduce inventories Immediately&#13;
(upcoming graduation). Must sell (or give&#13;
away): Goggles, 67-202 computer&#13;
programs, lab books, old notes, tests,&#13;
burets, pipettes and various lab equipment,&#13;
old strains of B. cereus and T. palldum, and&#13;
cracked dessicators. See U.U.C.S. members&#13;
for yours now 11&#13;
HALLUCINOGENS for sale. Inquire at&#13;
Editor's office, Ranger, WLLC D139E.&#13;
THE RAMBUNCTIOUS Ranger Rowdies&#13;
have returned!&#13;
SEE MOLDY or Pete Cramer for details for&#13;
Ranger Rowdies.&#13;
YEA! It's the end! K.M.&#13;
Mutual Educational and Cultural&#13;
Exchange Act of 1961 (F ulbright -&#13;
Hays Act) and by foreign&#13;
governments, universities and&#13;
private donors.&#13;
Applicants must be U.S. citizens&#13;
at the time of application, who will&#13;
generally hold a bachelor's degree&#13;
or its equivalent before the&#13;
beginning date of the grant and, in&#13;
most cases, will be proficient in&#13;
the language of the host country.&#13;
Except for certain specific&#13;
awards, candidates may not hold&#13;
the Ph.D. at the time of application.&#13;
Candidates for 1982-83&#13;
are ineligible for a grant to a&#13;
country if they have been doing&#13;
graduate work or conducting&#13;
research in that country for six&#13;
months or more during the&#13;
academic year 1981-82.&#13;
Creative and performing artists&#13;
are not required to have a&#13;
bachelor's degree, but they must&#13;
have four years of professional&#13;
study or equivalent experience.&#13;
Social work applicants must have&#13;
at least two years of professional&#13;
experience after the Master of&#13;
Social Work degree; candidates in&#13;
medicine must have an M.D. at&#13;
the time of application.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thursday, May 7&#13;
w^i i&#13;
AST SRMINAR at 8 a. m. in Union 207. Prof. Donald Vogel, of UW -&#13;
Milwaukee, will talk on "Performance Evaluation, Productivity, Cut - Back&#13;
Management . Reservations, please, at ext. 2518.&#13;
by 8111(161118 at lp&#13;
'&#13;
m in CA D118&#13;
-&#13;
The program is free and open to the&#13;
SEw°*?&#13;
ECIT&#13;
^&#13;
L&#13;
1&#13;
bu&#13;
y ^ ,&#13;
Roland at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema. The program is iree ana open to the public.&#13;
SEf^&#13;
I™."^&#13;
ing&#13;
°c^ Eld®rly&#13;
" startJaUp.^. in Molinaro Hall. Call ext. 2312&#13;
for reservations. Sponsored by UW - Extension.&#13;
Saturday, May 9&#13;
toeS,S1FI&#13;
J,fCRi&#13;
E&#13;
K&#13;
NING What I Say" will be ahown at 3 p. m. m&#13;
tirJitS U fol&#13;
.&#13;
lowf&#13;
d by a wine and cheese reception. The film is in-&#13;
!fim mSf? hearing impaired and proceeds will be used for captioning the&#13;
ThAH^&#13;
ket® areava;ilalble at the Union Information Center and will be available&#13;
at the door. Admission is $3.00 for Parkside students and $6.00 for others.&#13;
SE&#13;
"**&#13;
AR"?&#13;
n Surviving Divorce" at^m.ta Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312 for&#13;
more details. Sponsored by UW - Extension.&#13;
CONFERENCE "Institute of Lifetime Learning" at 9 a. m. at the Siena Center of&#13;
Racine. Call ext. 2312 for information. Sponsored by UW - Extension.&#13;
Sunday, May 17&#13;
pSi™PhySiC"&#13;
E&lt;h,Ca"°&#13;
nBuilang&#13;
' «&#13;
Bayuzick wins third prize&#13;
Parkside art professor Dennis&#13;
Bayuzick has been awarded third&#13;
prize for the acrylic airbrush&#13;
painting "No Exit Escape" in the&#13;
1981 Galex XV National Art&#13;
Competition at the Galesburg&#13;
(111.) C ivic Art Center. The show&#13;
was judged by Robert Midoaugh,&#13;
a Chicago artist of national&#13;
reputation.&#13;
Application forms and further&#13;
information for students currently&#13;
enrolled at UW-Parkside may be&#13;
obtained from the Fulbright&#13;
Program Advisor Andrew&#13;
McLean, in Comm. Arts 270. The&#13;
deadline for filing applications on&#13;
this campus is October 15, 1981.&#13;
Bayuzick also recently&#13;
exhibited in the Rockford International&#13;
Print and Drawing&#13;
Exhibit at Rockford College (111.)&#13;
the Chicago Alternative Vicinity&#13;
Show at the Paul Waggoner&#13;
Gallery in Chicago and the Upstairs&#13;
- Downstairs Gallery in&#13;
Kenosha. He received his MFA&#13;
degree in painting from the Ohio&#13;
University School of Art in 1975&#13;
and joined the Parkside faculty in&#13;
1977.&#13;
InHELPWANTED&#13;
&#13;
WANTED: Secretary tor P.S.G.A.I ,,,-&#13;
terested? Contact Kathy Bambrough, ext.&#13;
(553)-2244.&#13;
UNITED COUNCIL of University Wisconsin&#13;
Student Government is currently accepting&#13;
applications for full-time staff members.&#13;
Positions include legislative affairs&#13;
director, academic affairs director,&#13;
executive director, and executive&#13;
secretary. For more Information contact&#13;
Robert Kranz 414-424-3202.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
BEWILDER your opponents. Impress your&#13;
friends. Leam expert BACKGAMMON&#13;
from top-ranking Milwaukee professional&#13;
All levels taught. Call Jim at 551-7404 for&#13;
reasonable rates.&#13;
HOW TO WIN at anything using astrology and&#13;
numerology and how you can trace your&#13;
family roots. These books now on sale for&#13;
only $3.95 each or both $7. Send check, cash&#13;
or money order to A.A. Wilson, 6412-5th&#13;
Ave., Kenosha, Wl 53140.&#13;
NATURAL Aloe Vera Products for skin&#13;
health care. Mother's Day special. Ph. 654&#13;
5969, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. for demonstration or&#13;
further information.&#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.&#13;
K30006369C36363636363636368SX3£^^&#13;
654 2932&#13;
Coupon&#13;
y2 off&#13;
on the second buffet&#13;
Eat All You&#13;
Want Buffet&#13;
Lunch Buffet $4.35&#13;
Dinner Buffet $6.55&#13;
10% Discount&#13;
with UW-PI.D.&#13;
Villa Capri&#13;
Shopping Center&#13;
2116-20th Place&#13;
551-7883&#13;
Baseball team readies for playoffs&#13;
Parkside's men's baseball team&#13;
readied itself for the upcoming&#13;
conference playoffs with a&#13;
doubleheader sweep of U niversity&#13;
of Illinois - Chicago Circle on&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Senior pitcher Jamie Oberbruner&#13;
won the opener to run his&#13;
season record to 6-2 as the Ranger&#13;
bats exploded to take an ll-i&#13;
victory. The game was stopped&#13;
after five innings as the teams&#13;
were following the ten run rule.&#13;
Anytime one of the teams attains&#13;
a ten run lead the game is stopped.&#13;
Sophomores Rich Salisbury and&#13;
John Hyatt each homered in the&#13;
first game.&#13;
Parkside was almost the victim&#13;
of the ten run rule in the second&#13;
game as Circle got a 9-1 lead and&#13;
had two men on. One good hit&#13;
would have ended the game.&#13;
Parkside fought back, and with&#13;
the score 9-6, junior shortstop&#13;
Kevin Bytnar hit a three-run&#13;
homer to tie the game at nine.&#13;
Sophomore Kelly O'Connell&#13;
knocked in the winning run with a&#13;
double to give the Rangers a 10-9&#13;
victory. Freshman Bob Czarny&#13;
pitched the last three innings to&#13;
get his first victory of the year.&#13;
Parkside begins its second&#13;
season this Friday as they host the&#13;
Milwaukee School of E ngineering&#13;
in the first round of Wisconsin&#13;
Independent College Association&#13;
playoffs. Coach Ken Oberbruner&#13;
is looking forward to this second&#13;
season. "I hope we're peaking at&#13;
the right time. Our hitting is&#13;
coming along right now." &#13;
FIRST&#13;
liauonai Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
50 copies printed on&#13;
our finest quality paper&#13;
with&#13;
matching envelopes&#13;
(while you wait)&#13;
$7.55&#13;
5036-6th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
654-1500&#13;
(on the harbor)&#13;
RAY SHARP helps Parkside take the team championship, again&#13;
dominating this year's collegiate walking competition.&#13;
Heiring dominates walk&#13;
TAKE YOUR&#13;
CAMERA-READY&#13;
RESUME&#13;
TO THE&#13;
COPY CENTER&#13;
EXPORT&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
POSTAL INSTANT PRESS&#13;
by Steve Brunner&#13;
Hammered by winds of 18&#13;
m.p.h., ex - Parkside walker Jim&#13;
Heiring cruised to first place in&#13;
the United States Laguano Cup&#13;
Trails held on inner loop road last&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
The native Kenoshan toured the&#13;
20 kilome ter course in 1 hour 30&#13;
minutes and 31 seconds. But he&#13;
felt pressure most of the race&#13;
from 1980 Olympian Dan&#13;
O'Conner of Westminster,&#13;
California. The duo led the 35 man&#13;
field throughout the whole race.&#13;
By the end of 10 kilometers it was&#13;
apparent that Heiring and&#13;
O'Conner would go one - two&#13;
because of the 75 meter lead they&#13;
had established. But as the race&#13;
progressed, Heiring built up a 50&#13;
meter lead which was never&#13;
relinquished. The small partisan&#13;
crowd erupted into cheers as the&#13;
hometown favorite finished with&#13;
an overwhelming 200 meter lead.&#13;
The rest of the four man U. S.&#13;
team, which will compete in the&#13;
world championships in Valencia,&#13;
Spain next October, will comprise&#13;
of th ird and fourth place finishers&#13;
Marco Evoniuk of Longmont,&#13;
Colorado and Todd Scully of&#13;
Blacksburg, Virginia.&#13;
Parkside's thoroughbred Ray&#13;
Sharp finished in a distant seventh&#13;
place. Sharp, disappointed in his&#13;
race, bluntly said, "I have no&#13;
excuses. It sucked."&#13;
Mike DeWitt, who originally&#13;
spurred on the event of walking&#13;
while going to school at Parkside&#13;
in the early seventies, produced&#13;
one of h is finest performances by&#13;
taking eighth, just two meters&#13;
behind Sharp.&#13;
Another ex - Parkside walker,&#13;
Mike Rummelhart, finished a&#13;
respectable 12th place. The&#13;
combination of Rummelhart,&#13;
DeWitt, and Sharp helped the&#13;
Parkside team to a team championship&#13;
trophy.&#13;
As expected, the Parkside&#13;
tradition of good walkers was&#13;
shown. Four out of the top 12&#13;
places were captured by walkers&#13;
associated with Parkside. Most of&#13;
all the first place by Heiring. The&#13;
tall, slender 25 year old hopes he&#13;
can produce something out of t he&#13;
ordinary this July as he competes&#13;
against the ever - so - awesome&#13;
Russian walkers in the United&#13;
States versus the Soviet Union&#13;
dual track meet in Moscow.&#13;
Other walkers, including the&#13;
participants in the 20K race last&#13;
Sunday, will gather again in early&#13;
June in the rainy city of Seattle in&#13;
attempts to qualify for the U. S.&#13;
team in the 50 kilometer race&#13;
which will also compete in the&#13;
Laguano Cup.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, May 7,1981&#13;
&gt;ONE FAST BUCKi&#13;
BUCK&#13;
to a Customer&#13;
WILL GIVE&#13;
THE BEARER&#13;
ON DEMAND&#13;
$1.00 TOWARD&#13;
ANY RESUME&#13;
PRINTING&#13;
WHILE-YOU-WAIT&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
NATIONAL Race - Walking champion Jim Heiring displays&#13;
winning form on Parkside's inner loop road.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
photos&#13;
by&#13;
Brian&#13;
Passlno &#13;
ttf Utellum Correspondence School&#13;
Nothing that is contained in this issue&#13;
of the Stranger is intended to be factual.&#13;
All names, pictures, and&#13;
references to real people are purposely&#13;
coincidental. However, if you wish to&#13;
take anything in this issue seriously&#13;
that is your own damn problem and&#13;
since we are printing this disclaimer&#13;
you ugly people out there can't do a&#13;
thing to us, you bunch of morons ranger&#13;
Day 108 of Iranian Hostages' Freedom&#13;
New kind of dual&#13;
degrees to be given&#13;
In an attempt to increase&#13;
Parkside's enrollment, a new&#13;
system of dual degrees given to&#13;
two students will be available.&#13;
If one student only wants the B.&#13;
of a B.A. degree, he or she only&#13;
has to find a student who wants an&#13;
A. degree. If their combined&#13;
school records enable eligibility, a&#13;
B.A. will be given.&#13;
"It's a new kind of part - time&#13;
student," said one administrator&#13;
who wished to remain anonymous&#13;
just to sound more influential. "It&#13;
will be yet another innovation&#13;
Parkside will be famous for."&#13;
The exact details have not yet&#13;
been worked out, but the tentative&#13;
plan will limit the ratio of c redits&#13;
to 80-40. "There isn't any good&#13;
reason for it," said Anonymous,&#13;
"but requirements, especially&#13;
ones involving numbers, ratios&#13;
and things like that sound real&#13;
intelligent."&#13;
One problem is that the degree&#13;
recipients are required to share&#13;
each job opportunity that may&#13;
come along. Either one may fill&#13;
out the job application, but the&#13;
other graduate has to take the&#13;
personal interview, The working&#13;
of the job is up for discussion.&#13;
It has not yet been determined&#13;
which degree will be given to&#13;
which of the two students&#13;
receiving degrees. "Logically, the&#13;
A. degree should be the larger&#13;
number of credits because it&#13;
comes first in the alphabet, if I'm&#13;
not mistaken. And it has a more&#13;
appealing connotative meaning,"&#13;
said Anonymous. "But then again,&#13;
when does logic ever come into&#13;
our planning?"&#13;
!siht&#13;
daeR&#13;
.rorrim a ot pu ti dloh t'nac uoy&#13;
dnA. sdrawkcab t'nera yeht&#13;
esuaceb siht daer t'nac elpoep&#13;
enas, lamroN. krow seod taht&#13;
niarb ruoy fo edis eht no ehcadaeh&#13;
a uoy gnivig ro seye sdrawkcab&#13;
diputs rouy gniniarts tuohtiw daer&#13;
nac uoy gnihtemos ereht tuo&#13;
elpoep dednahtfel uoy 11a evig ot&#13;
sdrawkcab yrots siht gnitirw ma&#13;
Stranger photo by Corrupt Danger sP&#13;
aCe&#13;
T H E PLEASANT PRAIRIE POWER PLANT (above) has been&#13;
Ho/hE®? m3ke clouds, due to the mysterious disappearance of&#13;
are st ITh tk Earth&#13;
'&#13;
S ?&#13;
tmosP&#13;
here&#13;
- Meteorologies as usual&#13;
fn wIsconTin.&#13;
P&#13;
°&#13;
Wer P IS&#13;
°&#13;
ne&#13;
°&#13;
f 67 cloud " makin9 P&#13;
|ants&#13;
*&gt;VS&#13;
Parkside's latest poop scoop&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Being one given to repeating&#13;
mindless and totally unfounded&#13;
gossip, I thought those out there in&#13;
Parksideland would like to take&#13;
notice of a few unusual things&#13;
overheard in darkened corridors&#13;
and through the Chancellor's&#13;
keyhole:&#13;
1) Plans are currently underway&#13;
to produce a third Ranger&#13;
Bear for home games; hushed&#13;
reports indicate the original two&#13;
are working hard and expect&#13;
results within 4 - 6 months.&#13;
2) Revisions are planned for the&#13;
Cheerleader's new uniforms;&#13;
possible changes: side slits to the&#13;
navel and hopefully the armpit.&#13;
Toilet paper trains and sun hats&#13;
are also under consideration.&#13;
3) Security finalized the purchase&#13;
of a slightly used Panzer&#13;
•••••••••&#13;
Yea! It's&#13;
The End!&#13;
•••••••••&#13;
tank. Proposed uses: insolent&#13;
parking offenders and speed&#13;
traps. Armor, anyone? The real&#13;
news is that Security officers&#13;
burned out three clutches trying&#13;
wheelies.&#13;
4) Plans for the sale of various&#13;
controlled substances for increased&#13;
revenue were scrapped&#13;
by the Athletic Department.&#13;
Seems they have enough trouble&#13;
now with their beverage mixing at&#13;
home games, and they feel that&#13;
logistics and supply problems&#13;
between here and Columbia would&#13;
be like, shit man, bitchin' rad.&#13;
Taking this acquisition of dirt&#13;
and smut quite seriously, this&#13;
reporter anywhere and with&#13;
anyone would lie? lay? layed?&#13;
have lain? Never could remember&#13;
that one, having failed Remedial&#13;
English.&#13;
Tune in next time to this same&#13;
hot channel.&#13;
Robin&#13;
Letters are influential&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Are you aware of how influential&#13;
those three little words can be?&#13;
("To the editor" not "I love you"&#13;
you silly romantics out there.)&#13;
Remember when you printed&#13;
that letter to the editor complaining&#13;
about the "dirty"&#13;
magazines being displayed in&#13;
front of t he bookstore's windows?&#13;
Yes, I'm sure you remember it.&#13;
Well, within two hours after the&#13;
Ranger with that letter came out,&#13;
the chicken bookstore moved the&#13;
magazines. What clout!&#13;
If that clout works for some&#13;
people, I figure I might as well&#13;
give it a try. Here goes ... I think&#13;
Stranger photo by Disrupt Danger&#13;
EVER SINCE Parkside started offering a major in Egyptian&#13;
culture, some strange students have been spotted. Above is a&#13;
pyramid trying to enter the L-l doorway of the library in order to&#13;
study.&#13;
the bookstore should move their&#13;
textbook prices, too — into a&#13;
realm of reasonableness. And how&#13;
about lowering tuition and&#13;
abolishing the Collegiate Skills&#13;
and Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
requirements?&#13;
Boy! I can't wait for this letter&#13;
to be published and have these&#13;
things corrected.&#13;
Thanks much.&#13;
Volunteers&#13;
are suckers&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Could you please tell me what&#13;
the hell your newspaper is supposed&#13;
to be for? You don't write&#13;
about anything interesting that I&#13;
can't find anywhere else.&#13;
You people (staff members)&#13;
have an obligation (because you&#13;
volunteered your time and effort)&#13;
to work your asses off, thus&#13;
carrying either one or three&#13;
credits per semester and work on&#13;
the paper. You have to, because&#13;
you volunteered.&#13;
Are you suckers!! It's okay if&#13;
you just sit on your lazy asses&#13;
(like me and my friends do) and&#13;
complain about things and don't&#13;
do anything about anything.&#13;
That's what we're here for.&#13;
And YOU'RE here, because you&#13;
volunteered your time by joining a&#13;
student organization, to work for&#13;
EVERY student here. Yes, including&#13;
us lazy people. You&#13;
students actively participating in&#13;
activities and the such are to be&#13;
held responsible, and therefore to&#13;
blame.&#13;
Signed,&#13;
Nobody important&#13;
(and never will be)&#13;
OUTSIDE ...&#13;
• Grass&#13;
• Trees ...&#13;
- they pollute&#13;
• Parking in Pets&#13;
Class Evaluation&#13;
by Second Floor&#13;
Library Group&#13;
Which of the following best&#13;
describes this course for you?&#13;
1) Major requirement&#13;
2) Major elective&#13;
3) Major mistake&#13;
4) Minor mistake&#13;
5) None of the above&#13;
Which of the following best&#13;
describes your reason for taking&#13;
this course?&#13;
1) It lets me keep my Social&#13;
Security benefits.&#13;
2) I'm in love with my professor.&#13;
3) It was the only class I could&#13;
take at this certain time.&#13;
4) It's an easy class.&#13;
5) My mother told me to.&#13;
What grade do you expect to get&#13;
in this course?&#13;
1) A&#13;
2) You've got to be kidding!&#13;
3) B&#13;
4) Don't ask!&#13;
5) That's classified information.&#13;
What is your overall grade point&#13;
average?&#13;
1) Doesn't register on scale.&#13;
2) What's a grade point&#13;
average?&#13;
3) 4.0&#13;
4) 0.0 (At least I'm consistent.)&#13;
5) refer to #3 in the next question&#13;
What is your class level?&#13;
1) Punky freshman&#13;
2) Snotty sophomore&#13;
3) Jerky junior&#13;
4) S uperior senior&#13;
5) Eight year wonder&#13;
Are you employed any hours&#13;
outside school?&#13;
1) What's employed mean?&#13;
2) 40 h ours/week&#13;
3) Does doing housework count?&#13;
4) What's outside school mean?&#13;
5) I burn textbooks for a price.&#13;
How many credits are you&#13;
registered for this semester?&#13;
1) 21 (Pre-med)&#13;
2) 19 (Professional student)&#13;
3) 9 (Graduating senior just&#13;
putting in time)&#13;
4) 3 (Dropped eight classes&#13;
since first week.)&#13;
5) Where do you register?&#13;
Silly questions&#13;
There are some questions that I&#13;
would like answered. They may&#13;
seem like silly questions to you,&#13;
but to me they are very important&#13;
to the meaning of life, as I see it. I&#13;
figured that a newspaper would&#13;
know the answers to these&#13;
questions, or if you didn't, there&#13;
will be some all-knowing person&#13;
out in the university that can help&#13;
me.&#13;
Why do they call those stupid&#13;
things in which different clubs sell&#13;
cookies and what have you bake&#13;
sales? I was taught that bake was&#13;
a verb. What does a bake look like&#13;
and what are they going for now-adays?&#13;
Can I get them in all of the&#13;
popular decorator colors?&#13;
Why do some people tell you&#13;
when you ask them what time it is&#13;
that it is five minutes of ten, if&#13;
that is what time it is? What does&#13;
this mean? I am totally confused&#13;
by the whole concept. It isn't&#13;
five minutes OF ten, it's five&#13;
minutes TO ten. </text>
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              <text>Thursday, Sept. 18, 1980&#13;
ijf University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 3&#13;
Aspin brings re-election campaign to Parkside&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Representative Les Aspin, a&#13;
Democrat seeking his sixth term&#13;
in Congress, addressed a small&#13;
group consisting mainly of&#13;
Parkside students and faculty on&#13;
campus last Friday.&#13;
Aspin spoke on the media's&#13;
coverage of the presidential&#13;
campaign and then answered&#13;
questions about topics such as tax&#13;
cuts, military spending and the&#13;
situation at Fort McCoy.&#13;
Presidential Campaign&#13;
"It's an interesting&#13;
phenomenon," said Aspin, "that&#13;
we have three people running for&#13;
President and not a lot of enthusiasm&#13;
being generated." Aspin&#13;
offered three possible explanations&#13;
for the apathy: the&#13;
system of electing th$ president is&#13;
so horrendous that nobody good&#13;
wants the job, the primary system&#13;
is so "screwed up" that the&#13;
winners are not the best people,&#13;
and the media does such a job on&#13;
all the candidates that even Abe&#13;
Lincoln, if he were running in 1980,&#13;
would look a little shabby.&#13;
The question of the media's&#13;
effect on people's perceptions of&#13;
the candidates is a tough question&#13;
to answer, said Aspin. "I believe&#13;
the media has a large impact and&#13;
the role the media is playing now&#13;
is very, very different and is, in&#13;
some sense, rather destructive."&#13;
Polls show that more and more&#13;
people aren't voting. "When you&#13;
poll those people," said Aspin,&#13;
"and ask why they aren't voting,&#13;
it inevitably comes back to that&#13;
they just don't like what they have&#13;
as alternatives, that they don't&#13;
like the presidential candidates.&#13;
When asked 'Who do you admire?'&#13;
the most frequently mentioned&#13;
name is John F. Kennedy. 'And if&#13;
John F. Kennedy were running&#13;
again,' they say, 'that's the kind of&#13;
person I could vote for.' It's by no&#13;
coincidence that Kennedy was the&#13;
last president to run before investigative&#13;
journalism went&#13;
berserk and started to take over&#13;
the way we perceive politicians,"&#13;
he sai d.&#13;
Aspin went on to say that if John&#13;
Kennedy were running with the&#13;
same kind of media attention that&#13;
candidates get now, he would not&#13;
have been elected president and&#13;
would not even have received the&#13;
nomination.&#13;
There are three facts that never&#13;
came out during the narrowlydecided&#13;
election between Kennedy&#13;
and Richard Nixon. They are:&#13;
Kennedy had Addison's disease, a&#13;
disease that eats away at the&#13;
nervous system; Kennedy didn't&#13;
write Profiles in Courage, but he&#13;
still accepted a Pulitzer Prize for&#13;
writing it; and Kennedy was&#13;
almost cashiered out of the Navy&#13;
for having an affair with a&#13;
proposed Nazi agent and telling&#13;
her things he shouldn't have while&#13;
he was working for Naval Intelligence.&#13;
&#13;
"The role of the press has&#13;
changed," said Aspin. "Maybe&#13;
that's one of t he reasons why it's&#13;
so difficult to get presidential&#13;
candidates who we admire and&#13;
look up to. Maybe it's a good thing&#13;
that we have this lower expectation&#13;
of presidential candidates."&#13;
&#13;
"The things that brought us&#13;
investigative journalism are not&#13;
hard to understand," said Aspin.&#13;
"It was Vietnam, Watergate, and&#13;
the lies and deceptions of a series&#13;
of administrations. First, trying to&#13;
cover up the ever-wider involvement&#13;
in an immoral,&#13;
illogical and irrational war. But&#13;
secondly, the attempt to cover up&#13;
criminal wrongdoings and a lot of&#13;
stuff that was heavily impinging&#13;
in civil liberties and civil rights of&#13;
a lot of American people."&#13;
"So you understand why the&#13;
change occurred," Aspin concluded&#13;
about the media's&#13;
coverage of politics. "The&#13;
government had blown the trust of&#13;
the American people."&#13;
Tax Cuts&#13;
Aspin then answered questions&#13;
from the small group of a bout 36&#13;
people. "I think that's goofy,"&#13;
Aspin said about the Kemp-Roth&#13;
tax bill, a bill calling for a 30%&#13;
Continued On Page Six&#13;
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
REPRESENTATIVE LES ASPIN addresses a Parkside group.&#13;
Boker: "No liberty under Chilean military regime"&#13;
by Leslie J. Thompson&#13;
As Americans, we have been&#13;
brought up in a society where&#13;
freedom of the press has been&#13;
included in our rights as citizens.&#13;
Carlos Boker, assistant professor&#13;
in Communications at Parkside&#13;
says that the same has not been&#13;
true for Chileans since the take -&#13;
over in 1973 by the current&#13;
military regime, headed by&#13;
Chile's president General August&#13;
Pinochet Ugarte.&#13;
"The mass media have been&#13;
completely controlled by the&#13;
regime", said Boker. "There are,&#13;
however, two dissident voices in&#13;
the written media that are, within&#13;
their own limits, very critical of&#13;
the government," he said.&#13;
"Although the regime has closed&#13;
them a few times, they have not&#13;
dared to close them completely, so&#13;
it is possible to find out some of the&#13;
things that are happening there."&#13;
There is one radio station&#13;
controlled mainly by the Catholic&#13;
church that contains many people&#13;
who are in opposition to the&#13;
regime, Boker said. They are&#13;
relatively vocal in their critque,&#13;
relatively only because they must&#13;
be very careful in what they say,&#13;
he says. "One word too many and&#13;
they'd be closed forever."&#13;
Only half as many papers are&#13;
sold now a s were sold before the&#13;
regime took over, according to&#13;
Boker. "This is in part because&#13;
the people are, at the moment, too&#13;
poor to buy the paper and in part&#13;
because they know that the papers&#13;
are not saying anything."&#13;
Commenting on the recent&#13;
referendum in Chile that will keep&#13;
General Pinochet's regime in&#13;
power until 1998, Boker remarked,&#13;
"How can you have a referendum&#13;
as they had in Chile two days ago&#13;
when there is absolutely no&#13;
liberty? When there is no liberty&#13;
to dissent, there is no liberty to put&#13;
to the contrary point.&#13;
"There are no inscribed&#13;
voters," said Boker. "You just go&#13;
and vote. The same person who is&#13;
for the regime can go and vote ten&#13;
times. The ballots are transparent,&#13;
so you can just put them&#13;
to the light to know whether they&#13;
voted 'yes' or 'no'. The regime is&#13;
absolutely regressive. If you say&#13;
that you are against them, they&#13;
will put you in prison or cause you&#13;
a lot of trouble.&#13;
"The government says, 'We&#13;
have won the referendum four to&#13;
one' even before the first ballots&#13;
are opened. The whole thing is a&#13;
tragic farce. How c an you, in an&#13;
absolutely controlled society,&#13;
have a referendum?&#13;
"The regime, by staying in&#13;
power for another 17 years, is&#13;
reshaping the country into a&#13;
fascist model of non - participation,"&#13;
Boker said. "The&#13;
regime's influence on the children&#13;
who were, say twelve in 1973, h as&#13;
led them to believe that this is a&#13;
natural state of affairs. These are&#13;
the people entering the universities&#13;
today and they think that&#13;
things should be as they are&#13;
because they know of no other&#13;
way."&#13;
"The Chile that I was brought&#13;
up in, the Chile that I believed in,&#13;
the Chile that I love when I say&#13;
that Chile is a remarkable&#13;
country, doesn't exist anymore,"&#13;
said Boker. "Ours was a Chile&#13;
with a very free press, a very good&#13;
educational system including&#13;
extremely fine universities, with a&#13;
very high intellectual level&#13;
amongst it's intellectuals, a&#13;
parliament where things were&#13;
debated, a very well organized&#13;
labor union, and mainly a country&#13;
with hope.&#13;
"Now the parliament is closed,&#13;
the press, radio and television are&#13;
not free. All of the intellectuals,&#13;
with scarcely any exception, have&#13;
left the country, as have all the&#13;
artists, too. Nothing is produced in&#13;
Chile.&#13;
"And so, that which I was&#13;
brought up to think of as Chile is&#13;
no more. Lots of the things that&#13;
were the essence of my country&#13;
aren't there anymore, and it will&#13;
take a long time to recreate them.&#13;
More were killed than President&#13;
Allende and his government. A&#13;
whole set of values, a whole view&#13;
of life was killed," says Boker.&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Big Brothers needs you&#13;
• Review: "My Bodyguard"&#13;
• Volleyball splits pair &#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
I would like to address the issue&#13;
of pa rking fees at U. W. Parkside.&#13;
Parkside's students, faculty,&#13;
staff, and visitors are necessarily&#13;
commuters. The overwhelming&#13;
majority of the students rely on&#13;
private transportation. How can&#13;
the university justify charging the&#13;
fees it does for parking considering&#13;
this? The university is&#13;
taking unfair advantage of its&#13;
students. Parking on campus is&#13;
not a privilege, but rather a&#13;
necessity. Alternative parking&#13;
facilities do not exist. I'd venture&#13;
to guess that the administration&#13;
and enforcement of parking&#13;
regulations (including the&#13;
collection of fees) use a great deal&#13;
of the money that the fees&#13;
generate.&#13;
I'd like to strongly suggest that&#13;
the fees be eliminated entirely. I&#13;
am relatively certain, however,&#13;
that since the university has put in&#13;
its thumb and pulled out a plum&#13;
that the fees are here to stay!&#13;
Terri Appleget&#13;
Tell us what YOU think!&#13;
Do you have something you want&#13;
everyone to know? Or something&#13;
everybody should know? If you do,&#13;
the RANGER WOULD LIKE TO&#13;
HEAR FROM YOU!&#13;
The RANGER feels that it is&#13;
important for students to voice&#13;
their opinions, and what better way&#13;
is there than to write a letter to the&#13;
editor? Whether it's about a group&#13;
that you think deserves praise,&#13;
something you feel is unfair, something&#13;
you read in RANGER that&#13;
you stronly agree or disagree with,&#13;
or anything from the presidential&#13;
election to the food service — let us&#13;
know about it! Let your voice be&#13;
heard by your fellow students.&#13;
All you have to do is follow these&#13;
simple guidelines:&#13;
— keep your letters under 500&#13;
words&#13;
— type them, double-spaced with&#13;
one-inch margins on standard&#13;
size typing paper&#13;
— sign the letter and include your&#13;
phone number for verification&#13;
purposes&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid&#13;
reasons, but any letter received&#13;
without a signature and phone&#13;
number will be thrown away.&#13;
The RANGER will publish as&#13;
many letters as space allows, but&#13;
has the right to refuse publication&#13;
of letters with defamatory content.&#13;
Letters will not be editied, so&#13;
misspelled words and grammatical&#13;
errors will remain intact. If you&#13;
need help or have any questions&#13;
about letters, contact Ken Meyer&#13;
editor, in RANGER office.&#13;
The deadline for letters to the&#13;
editor is Tuesday, 9 a.m. for&#13;
publication Thursday.&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
«&#13;
Ff . . Executive Business Manager&#13;
Dan Galbraith Business Manager&#13;
Sue Michetti News Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Dave Cramer ;; Spor1s Editor&#13;
Mike Holmdohl Editor&#13;
Mike Farreil, Bruce-Preston . Advertising Managers&#13;
pQ. - STAFF&#13;
dTi .. ic!&#13;
am^T' Sharon Charlton, Thomas Delany, Patty&#13;
Hefoocnn „&#13;
Edenhauser, Ken Eschmann, Ginger&#13;
McCormi^i?&#13;
e&#13;
f&#13;
n Hervat&#13;
' Caro! Klees, Gary Ledger, Dan&#13;
Schnpirform i-,&#13;
Meyer&#13;
' Br&#13;
'an Passino, Joe RipP/ Art&#13;
Vollrner Stougaard, Leslie Thompson, Dave&#13;
bv&#13;
J&#13;
tuden,s of UW-Parkside and they are solely,&#13;
RANG^fs^Tn^&#13;
-&#13;
ffK:S!4,&#13;
be Parkside Ranger, WLLC ParkViH«T snould b&lt;&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wl 53141&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be&#13;
paper with one-inch margin^&#13;
tor verification,&#13;
DeadIInDor^etters '"tm^ d*''&#13;
d&#13;
, !l&#13;
easons Maximum length accepted is&#13;
reserves all editorial nnwn at a m' for Publication on Thursday. Thi&#13;
defamatory content prlvile&#13;
0&#13;
#s In refusing to print letters which cqnta&#13;
° -~GEdi,or&#13;
wi&#13;
" be accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on stc&#13;
'• All letters must be signed and a telephone numb&#13;
Presidential candidates differ&#13;
I feel that the presidential&#13;
election is the most important&#13;
issue around for the simple reason&#13;
that all the other issues are (or&#13;
can be) affected by our president.&#13;
Many people are regularly&#13;
turned off by politics, but an&#13;
enormously higher number are&#13;
this year, according to the polls.&#13;
But a choice does have to be made&#13;
— a very important choice, too,&#13;
considering the messed up world&#13;
of the 1980s.&#13;
Most of th e disenchanted voters&#13;
are unhappy with the three major&#13;
candidates — a second - rate&#13;
president, a right - wing ex - B -&#13;
movie actor and a self - righteous&#13;
10 - term Congressman. Many&#13;
votes will be cast half - heartedly,&#13;
only because the alternatives are&#13;
even more frightening.&#13;
A recent Time magazine poll&#13;
shows that 34% of Carter's support&#13;
is anti - Reagan, 43% of&#13;
Reagan's backing is anti - Carter,&#13;
and 61% of Anderson's support is&#13;
anti - Carter - Reagan. The same&#13;
poll shows that Carter and Reagan&#13;
are deadlocked with 39% and&#13;
Anderson at the "debatable" 15%.&#13;
So, as it stands now, the election&#13;
is a toss up. But considering the&#13;
previous polls showing Reagan&#13;
way ahead of Carter, it appears&#13;
that Reagan's foot - in - the -&#13;
mouth campaign is bringing him&#13;
down.&#13;
One of the theories I disagree&#13;
with is that voters don't see any&#13;
difference between the candidates.&#13;
Many similarities can be&#13;
found between President Carter&#13;
and John Anderson, with the&#13;
major difference being that&#13;
Carter has shown himself to be a&#13;
second rate president while Anderson's&#13;
presidential abilities&#13;
have not been tapped. But&#13;
anybody who doesn't see any&#13;
difference between Carter and&#13;
Reagan has to be crazy.&#13;
Carter is not the liberal that his&#13;
supporters are trying to pass him&#13;
off as, and neither is Anderson.&#13;
But their places on the political&#13;
spectrum are a few light years&#13;
away from Reagan's place on the&#13;
right. He isn't on the extremist&#13;
right, but too far right just the&#13;
same.&#13;
Just look at the Republican&#13;
party platform that was custom -&#13;
made to fit Reagan's old -&#13;
fashioned views. The platform&#13;
states that they "Support a constitutional&#13;
amendment to restore&#13;
protection of the right to life for&#13;
unborn children." (That's a nice&#13;
way of saying that they favor&#13;
banning all abortions except in&#13;
order to save the mother's life.)&#13;
Instead, why don't they consider&#13;
the life of the unwanted child.&#13;
The Democratic platform states&#13;
that they "Oppose any governmental&#13;
restrictions on abortion or&#13;
the federal funding of abortions&#13;
for the poor." That seems to be a&#13;
statement for the 1980s, unlike&#13;
their political counterparts who&#13;
want to return to the impossible&#13;
dream world of yesteryear.&#13;
Another item in the Republican&#13;
platform: "To achieve overall&#13;
military and technological&#13;
superiority over the Soviet&#13;
Union." Trying to achieve&#13;
"overall superiority" will only&#13;
create an unneeded arms race. A&#13;
better goal would maintain&#13;
equality, which the Democratic&#13;
platform calls keeping America's&#13;
military strength "unsurpassed."&#13;
As you can see, there are differences&#13;
between the candidates&#13;
position. Now the voters just have&#13;
to decide America's future.&#13;
We can progress into this&#13;
decade of the 1980s like we should,&#13;
or we can savor the "good old&#13;
days" and move backwards,&#13;
making it necessary to start all&#13;
over again.&#13;
Case of the vacant&#13;
P.S.G.A. veep&#13;
I wonder what is going on over&#13;
at P.S.G.A. about the vicepresidency&#13;
now that Claire&#13;
Tolstyga left the position vacant.&#13;
Nobody's absolutely sure about&#13;
what the requirements are to fill&#13;
the position unless the vote of t he&#13;
Senate is unanimous, as it was last&#13;
spring when Dave Hale became&#13;
vice-president. But these circumstances&#13;
are different because&#13;
the Senate is not unanimous in its&#13;
vote.&#13;
The procedure to install officers&#13;
of the executive branch is for the&#13;
President to nominate somebody&#13;
for a 2/3 Senate approval. The&#13;
vote has been taken, but the 2/3&#13;
goal of the entire Senate (there&#13;
are about 12 Senators) has not&#13;
been achieved.&#13;
The reason the nomination&#13;
hasn't been approved by the&#13;
Senate is because the Senators are&#13;
divided over who should become&#13;
Vice-President. The President is&#13;
tentatively endorsing one certain&#13;
Senator who was elected only in&#13;
March while some Senators want&#13;
a different Senator — one of whom&#13;
ran for the office, wants • the&#13;
position and is the most qualified&#13;
for the vice presidency.&#13;
Letter to the Editor&#13;
Parking fees should be eliminated&#13;
Thursday, September 18,1980 Ranger&#13;
A personal opinion column&#13;
by Ken Meyer, Editor&#13;
Viewpoint&#13;
Photos by Brian Passino&#13;
Have you noticed any difference in the food service this year?&#13;
Colleen Wishall, sophomore&#13;
"No, it seems to be the same."&#13;
Dan Passino, senior&#13;
"I haven't had the courage to&#13;
oat horn vot "&#13;
Sondra McCants, sophomore&#13;
"No, I don't think so. Just the&#13;
pices."&#13;
James Allen, senior&#13;
"What I ate seemed worse than&#13;
last year." &#13;
Ranger Thursday, September 18,1980 3&#13;
Career resources available&#13;
On Monday, Sept. 22, over 70&#13;
Parkside alumni will return to&#13;
campus to share career info with&#13;
students during the first Alumni&#13;
Career Resource Night. These&#13;
alumni will serve on various&#13;
career panels that will provide&#13;
info on what students can expect&#13;
in specific occupations. The UWParkside&#13;
Alumni Ass'n. and the&#13;
Office of Alumni and Placement&#13;
Services are co-sponsoring this&#13;
event.&#13;
"There is a tremendous need for&#13;
up-to-date career information for&#13;
today's students," said Rex&#13;
Brown, Chairman of the Alumni&#13;
Ass'n. Career Planning and&#13;
Placement Committee and VicePresident&#13;
of Human Relations at&#13;
St. Luke's Hospital in Racine. "It&#13;
is impossible for counselors to&#13;
keep abreast of the thousands of&#13;
ever changing careers available&#13;
today. For example, in the health&#13;
care area alone there are over 200&#13;
different professions. We find that&#13;
the best way to help these students&#13;
with their career questions is to&#13;
put them in touch with people&#13;
working in the specific careers in&#13;
question. Through the Alumni&#13;
Career Resource Night we hope to&#13;
begin developing a career&#13;
resource network between our&#13;
alumni and current Parkside&#13;
students."&#13;
The career panels will help&#13;
students make plans to enter the&#13;
work force or continue their&#13;
education at the -graduate level.&#13;
Alumni can address the concerns&#13;
these students have through&#13;
recent experiences of their own.&#13;
The panel concept is being utilized&#13;
to offer students a broad view of&#13;
the various career avenues one&#13;
can follow with a particular&#13;
major. This event is not meant to&#13;
provide help in finding jobs for&#13;
these students but rather to help&#13;
inform them of the variety of&#13;
opportunities that exist in a&#13;
particular career area. A&#13;
reception, featuring free refreshments&#13;
and informal discussion&#13;
will follow the panel presentations.&#13;
&#13;
This event is open to all&#13;
Parkside students but space is&#13;
limited in each of the sessions.&#13;
Register in advance through the&#13;
Placement Office (WLLC D175).&#13;
Walk-in registration is possible&#13;
starting at 6:15 p.m. the evening&#13;
of the event.&#13;
The program begins with the&#13;
6:15 p.m. pre-registered student&#13;
check-in and late registration&#13;
(concourse bridge between Union&#13;
and Molinaro Hall).&#13;
Session 1, panels involving&#13;
Behavioral Science, Social&#13;
Science, Communication&#13;
(Humanities), Fine Arts and&#13;
Environmental and Energy&#13;
Careers of Earth Science, and&#13;
Physics Alumni will run from&#13;
6:45-7:10 p.m.&#13;
The following panels run from&#13;
6:45-7:40 p.m.: Personnel/Labor&#13;
Relations, Accounting, Information&#13;
Systems, Marketing,&#13;
Production/Operations Management,&#13;
and Finance.&#13;
Session 2, panels involving Law,&#13;
Engineering, Chemistry, Life&#13;
Science, Education; Graduate&#13;
School Options and Job Placement&#13;
Tips will run from 7:15-7:40 p.m.&#13;
Session 3, panels involving&#13;
Health Professions will run from&#13;
7:45-8:10 p.m.&#13;
The reception, limited to those&#13;
attending panel discussions, will&#13;
beheld from 8:10-10:00 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Dining Room. Further&#13;
information can be obtained from&#13;
the Alumni Office, 553-2515.&#13;
The National Research Council&#13;
announces its 1981 Research&#13;
Associateship Programs for&#13;
postdoctoral work in the sciences&#13;
to be conducted in 16 federal&#13;
research institutions with&#13;
laboratories located throughout&#13;
the United States. The programs&#13;
provide postdoctoral scientists&#13;
and engineers of unusual promise&#13;
and ability with opportunities for&#13;
research on problems largely of&#13;
their own choosing yet compatible&#13;
with the research interests of the&#13;
supporting laboratory.&#13;
Initiated in 1954, the&#13;
Associateship Programs have&#13;
enhanced the career development&#13;
of over 3500 scientists ranging&#13;
from recent Ph.D.'s to&#13;
distinguished senior scientists.&#13;
Four hundred or more full-time&#13;
Associateships will be awarded on&#13;
a competitive basis in 1981 for&#13;
research in chemistry,&#13;
engineering, and mathematics,&#13;
and in the earth, environmental,&#13;
physical, space, and life sciences.&#13;
Most of the programs are open to&#13;
both U.S. and non-U.S. nationals,&#13;
and to both recent Ph.D.'s and&#13;
senior investigators.&#13;
Awards are made for a year&#13;
with possible extension through a&#13;
second year; senior applicants&#13;
may request shorter tenures.&#13;
Stipends range from $20,500 a year&#13;
(approximating GS 11, Step 1&#13;
salaries) for recent Ph.D.'s to&#13;
approximately $40,000 a year for&#13;
Senior Associates. Allowances are&#13;
made for relocation and for&#13;
limited professional travel during&#13;
tenure. The federal laboratory&#13;
provides the Associate&#13;
programmatic support including&#13;
facilities, support services, and&#13;
necessary equipment.&#13;
Application to the Research&#13;
Council must be postmarked no&#13;
later than January 15, 1981.&#13;
Awards will be announced in&#13;
April.&#13;
Information on specific&#13;
research opportunities and&#13;
federal laboratories, as well as&#13;
application materials, may be&#13;
obtained from the Associateship&#13;
Office, JH 610-Dl, 2101 Constitution&#13;
Avenue, N.W.,&#13;
Washington, D.C. 20418, (202) 389-&#13;
6554.&#13;
Patronize&#13;
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Doston tenure appeal denied&#13;
The faculty Hearing and Appeals&#13;
committee at Parkside has&#13;
found no evidence of procedural&#13;
violations in the tenure review&#13;
process which denied tenure to&#13;
Glenh A. Doston, a black assistant&#13;
professor of education who has&#13;
resigned from UW-P to accept a&#13;
position at Ohio University in&#13;
Athens.&#13;
In a unanimous decision, the&#13;
three-member committee which&#13;
heard Doston's appeal said that it&#13;
found ". . . no appropriate&#13;
evidence qualifying as proof that&#13;
any procedure in this case has&#13;
been other than properly and fully&#13;
observed." The committee, which&#13;
is the final campus appeal&#13;
procedure, concluded that "It sees&#13;
no ground for remanding the case&#13;
back to any of the levels in the&#13;
tenure review process." The&#13;
committee's report was directed&#13;
to Chancellor Alan E. Guskin, who&#13;
accepted the findings.&#13;
Doston, who submitted his&#13;
resignation to UW-Parkside officials&#13;
this week, has begun his&#13;
new duties as an assistant&#13;
professor in- Ohio University's&#13;
School of Education.&#13;
Duffeck named DVR rep.&#13;
The Division of Vocational&#13;
Rehabilitation, an agency of the&#13;
State of Wisconsin which provides&#13;
training and employment services&#13;
to the emotionally, mentally or&#13;
physically disabled, has assigned&#13;
David Duffeck as its new Parkside&#13;
campus representative.&#13;
Duffeck, a vocational&#13;
rehabilitation counselor, will be&#13;
on campus Tuesday afternoons,&#13;
from 2 to 4 PM, in WLLC D 198,&#13;
Ext. 2366, for the remainder of the&#13;
semester. Duffeck can also be&#13;
contacted at his Racine office,&#13;
phone 636-3462.&#13;
Clients of the Division of&#13;
Vocational Rehabilitation are&#13;
eligible to receive a variety of cost&#13;
free services, all geared toward&#13;
eventual entry into competitive&#13;
employment. Payment of post -&#13;
high school training costs (tuition,&#13;
books, fees), job placement&#13;
services, medical and psychiatric&#13;
treatment, physical restoration,&#13;
and vocational counseling and&#13;
guidance are a few of the services.&#13;
Roundtables&#13;
talk issues&#13;
by Sue Michetti&#13;
Social Science Roundtable, co -&#13;
chaired by Oliver Hayward&#13;
(history) and Ken Hoover&#13;
(political science), will be&#13;
meeting, contrary to earlier&#13;
reports, at noon on Mondays in&#13;
Union 106. It is free and open to all&#13;
interested. The Roundtable&#13;
presents an opportunity for&#13;
students to be brought together&#13;
with faculty in shared discussion&#13;
outside of the classroom. The&#13;
Roundtable brings the resources&#13;
of the university to bear on&#13;
current issues. This can provide&#13;
people with more perspectives&#13;
than they can get from radio and&#13;
TV. This can also expose people to&#13;
current research and new&#13;
developments in the social sciences.&#13;
&#13;
Other programs in the series&#13;
are "Criminal Insanity: Moral&#13;
Soundness, Conceptual Confusion,"&#13;
by Prof. Aaron Snyder,&#13;
philosophy, Sept. 22; "Incentive&#13;
Systems for Public Sector&#13;
Organizations" by Prof. Anne&#13;
Gurnack, behavioral science,&#13;
Sept. 29; "The Role of Perceptual&#13;
and Semantic Elaboration in the&#13;
Recall of High and Low Imagery&#13;
Sentences" by Prof. Donald&#13;
Walter, psychology, Oct. 6; "The&#13;
Founding Father: George&#13;
Molinaro of Kenosha" by Prof.&#13;
John Buenker, history, Oct. 20;&#13;
and "The 1980 Elections," a&#13;
discussion chaired by Prof.&#13;
Kenneth Hoover, political science,&#13;
on Oct. 27.&#13;
Roundtable programs are free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
Be Another Parkside Success Story !&#13;
Research programs available&#13;
GET FIRST HAND INFORMATION&#13;
FROM M ORE T HAN 70 SUCCESFUL&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE ALUMNI WHO WILL&#13;
BE TELLING THEIR CAREER&#13;
STORIES AT:&#13;
Alumni Career&#13;
Resource Night&#13;
Monday, September 22 6:15 — 9 :00 PM&#13;
Panel Discussions followed by&#13;
Complimentary Refreshments&#13;
TO REGISTER:&#13;
SEE TH E P OSTERS ON C AMPUS OR S TOP IN THE P LACEMENT OFFICE&#13;
(WLLC D175). CALL 553-2515 FOR M ORE INFORMATION.&#13;
ADVANCED R EGISTRATION D EADLINE IS FRIDAY SEPT. 19, WALK-IN&#13;
REGISTRATION WIL L BE HELD ON T HE CONCOURSE B RIDGE FROM&#13;
6-6:30 PM o n SEPT. 22. &#13;
Racine Big Brothers need volunteers&#13;
Big Brothers of Greater Racine,&#13;
Inc. serves all of Racine County&#13;
with two basic programs. The first&#13;
program is the Big Brother&#13;
Program itself.&#13;
Big Brothers is an organization&#13;
of volunteer men that works with&#13;
boys six (6) to fifteen (15) years of&#13;
age who have no father in their&#13;
homes. Each volunteer man is&#13;
expected to see his assigned Little&#13;
Brother at least once per week.&#13;
Usually he engages in some sort of&#13;
activity with the boy during this&#13;
contact. The purpose of a Big&#13;
Brother is to provide adult male&#13;
companionship and guidance to a&#13;
fatherless boy. He need have no&#13;
special background or training to&#13;
be a successful Big Brother. He&#13;
should be interested in children, is&#13;
generally over 18 years of age,&#13;
single or married.&#13;
The Big Brother Staff interviews&#13;
mothers and boys&#13;
referred to our Agency for service.&#13;
They match men and boys on&#13;
the basis of personality and interests&#13;
so that they have a common&#13;
basis on which to build their&#13;
friendship.&#13;
1&#13;
The primary emphasis in the&#13;
Big Brother Program is "one man&#13;
— one boy." However, there are&#13;
some group activities available&#13;
for all Big Brothers and Little&#13;
Brothers to attend.&#13;
Our second program is Project&#13;
Acceptance which uses male and&#13;
female volunteers to give&#13;
guidance, counseling and companionship&#13;
to boys and girls&#13;
between the ages of 11 and 18 who&#13;
are having trouble with the&#13;
system in some way. "This is&#13;
basically a volunteer in probation&#13;
program which has been expanded&#13;
to accept referrals from&#13;
not only the juvenile Court House,&#13;
RUSH and other such agencies.&#13;
People wanting to be volunteers&#13;
in our programs must go through&#13;
similar interviews as a Little&#13;
Brothers referral would. Our&#13;
social worker interviews the&#13;
prospective volunteer in the office&#13;
and in their home. The volunteer&#13;
must attend an orientation session&#13;
and pass through a screening by&#13;
our Board of Directors. We get&#13;
three written references and run a&#13;
police check on every applicant.&#13;
Big Brothers of Greater Racine,&#13;
Inc. is an accredited social service&#13;
agency, open over 40 hrs. a week&#13;
for your convenience; we have a&#13;
24 hr. answering service. We are a&#13;
member agency of Big Brothers of&#13;
America and funded by Racine&#13;
County and the Racine United&#13;
Way. What we need are more&#13;
people who want to get involved.&#13;
There are a number of boys and&#13;
girls who need help. Again, the&#13;
volunteers that are needed do not&#13;
have to have any special&#13;
background.&#13;
However, we want people who&#13;
are serious and would like to&#13;
spend 5 or 6 hrs. a week with a&#13;
child who needs someone. This&#13;
would be ideal for tbose students&#13;
who are in the Social and&#13;
Educational sciences where involvements&#13;
of this kind prove to&#13;
be positive and enriching learning&#13;
experiences. But of course the&#13;
programs are open to all individuals&#13;
who are sincere and&#13;
want to get involved.&#13;
For more information give us a&#13;
call day or night at 637-7625. In&#13;
Kenosha call 652-0151.&#13;
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including:&#13;
Reuben&#13;
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Polish Sausage Stuffer&#13;
Italian Sausage Stuffer&#13;
Italian Meatball Stuffer&#13;
8 different subs&#13;
Free delivery on&#13;
purchases over$10&#13;
INTRODUCING . . .&#13;
SUMMER SALAD SELECTION&#13;
BY THE OZ.&#13;
(Minof 9 Items Daily)&#13;
COTTAGE CHEESE&#13;
MACARONI SALAD&#13;
THREE BEAN SALAD&#13;
KIDNEY BEAN SALAD&#13;
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Contact&#13;
SOC represents interest clubs&#13;
by Chris Hammelev&#13;
The Student Organizations&#13;
Council (SOC) represents all the&#13;
student interest clubs here at&#13;
Parkside. In the past, SOC has&#13;
been responsible for handling&#13;
Winter Carnival and will continue&#13;
to sponsor other student activities&#13;
in the future. However, student&#13;
activities are not the only&#13;
responsibilities of the&#13;
organization. The main functions&#13;
of SOC are to set up club&#13;
guidelines and budgets. SOC has&#13;
already allocated $19,500.00 to&#13;
sbme 33 different organizations.&#13;
These organizations include&#13;
everything from academic to&#13;
recreational interests. The clubs&#13;
that have been budgeted for are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
Anthropology Club, Art Addicts,&#13;
Adult Student Assoc., Bowling&#13;
Club, Boxing Club, Chess Club,&#13;
Earth Science Club, Hodag, I&#13;
Phelta Thi, Life Science Club,&#13;
Marketing Club, Math Club,&#13;
Minority Student Union, Accounting&#13;
Club, Parkside Concourse,&#13;
Parkside Area&#13;
Wargamers, Data Processing&#13;
Club, History Club, Philosophical&#13;
Society, Parkside Players, PreMed&#13;
Club, Nordic Ski Club,&#13;
Physics Club, Volleyball Club,&#13;
Political Science Club,&#13;
Psychology Club, Sociology Club,&#13;
Students for Nuclear Rationality,&#13;
Student Mobilization for Survival,&#13;
SWEA, Women in Business,&#13;
Cheerleaders, Union Lifers.&#13;
New clubs are always welcome&#13;
so if none of the existing clubs&#13;
appeal to you it's easy to start a&#13;
new one. About all that is required&#13;
to start a club are a few filled out&#13;
forms, three student members, a&#13;
statement of purpose, and an&#13;
advisor. SOC has a special fund of&#13;
$1,600.00 that is set up specifically&#13;
for new clubs so it's still possible&#13;
to get student funding for a new&#13;
organization.&#13;
If ygu are interested in an&#13;
existing club, forming your own,&#13;
or in SOC activities, contact Jan&#13;
Oechler in the SOC office or call&#13;
553-2594.&#13;
'80 grad salaries&#13;
are up over *79&#13;
Average salary offers to 1980&#13;
college graduates are higher than&#13;
those made to 1979 graduates,&#13;
according to the annual Salary&#13;
Survey by the College Placement&#13;
Council. Despite the economic&#13;
downturn, the CPC found increases&#13;
in starting salary levels in&#13;
all 24 curricula surveyed. Leading&#13;
the field were engineering&#13;
graduates, as petroleum&#13;
engineers attracted average&#13;
starting offers of $23,844 annually&#13;
while chemical engineers were&#13;
offered an average $21,612.&#13;
Computer science graduates&#13;
found average salary offers up&#13;
11% to $18,696.&#13;
Deport working Iranian students&#13;
Eight Iranian students caPan be hpVirninio in/lnn — n .&#13;
deported for taking full or part -&#13;
time jobs without permission from&#13;
the Immigaration and&#13;
Naturalization Service (INS), a&#13;
Virginia judge recently ruled.&#13;
The students were attending&#13;
Norfolk State U., Old Dominion U&#13;
and Tidewater Community&#13;
College and were apparently&#13;
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caught in a money crunch when&#13;
they could no longer get funds&#13;
from home. Now they must leave&#13;
the country voluntarily or be&#13;
deported. Some 2,100 students&#13;
have undergone hearings since&#13;
the INS began its crackdown on&#13;
Iranian students last year. As a&#13;
result of that action, 3,183 Iranian&#13;
students have been granted&#13;
voluntary departure, 159 have&#13;
been ordered deported and 417&#13;
students have actually left, say&#13;
INS officials.&#13;
TY\v)*&#13;
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our monthly specials sheet. Send now and&#13;
find out how to buy current $7.98 list IP's&#13;
for $3.69. Stereo Clearance House Dept&#13;
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Ranger Thursday, September 18,1980 5&#13;
Review&#13;
My Bodyguard' portrays friendship&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
"My Bodyguard" will succeed&#13;
because of two things: realism&#13;
and a true friendship. The first&#13;
mentioned is rare among films&#13;
dealing basically with non-adults&#13;
and the latter os something&#13;
needed in this time of trouble.&#13;
It is the story of Clifford Peache&#13;
(Chris Makepeace) a boy who&#13;
refuses to "give in" to the school&#13;
bully, and also of Ricky Linderman&#13;
(Adam Baldwin) a boy&#13;
battling inner-strife.&#13;
Ruth Gordon plays Cliff's&#13;
grandmother, a woman who tries&#13;
to "pick-up" men who range from&#13;
a TV Evangelist to a married man&#13;
to a hotel owner. She's a lush, a&#13;
swinger, and an absolute delight.&#13;
Makepeace is good, but not&#13;
great. He plays his character well,&#13;
but does not overwhelm, as does&#13;
Baldwin. He is brilliant as Ricky&#13;
Linderman, a withdrawn high&#13;
school sophomore, whose&#13;
emotions are scarred by the&#13;
memory of seeing his brother&#13;
accidentally shoot himself. The&#13;
entire school body is afraid of&#13;
Ricky, and most of that fear is&#13;
attributable to his height (he&#13;
towers over his peers). It is also&#13;
hinted that he once tried to&#13;
commit suicide. Baldwin really&#13;
makes us believe that he is this&#13;
disturbed young person.&#13;
Matt ("Little Darlings") Dillon&#13;
is very good as Melvin Moody, a&#13;
student who extorts lunch money&#13;
from other students to supposedly&#13;
protect them from Ricky. He adds&#13;
to the movie's reality by playing&#13;
the type of bully we've all come in&#13;
contact with and hated.&#13;
'Cyrano de Bergerac' opens&#13;
The Milwaukee Repertory&#13;
Theater will open its 1980-81&#13;
season Sept. 12, with a spirited,&#13;
full-scale production of Edmond&#13;
Rostand's romantic masterpiece,&#13;
CYRANO DE BERGERAC. This&#13;
special presentation will be&#13;
performed in Milwaukee's&#13;
historic Pabst Theater through&#13;
Oct 5.&#13;
With its colorful 17th century&#13;
setting, CYRANO DE&#13;
BERGERAC is the story of on e of&#13;
the theater's most splendid&#13;
heroes. Cyrano is the brilliant&#13;
swordsman, poet, musician and&#13;
philosopher whose many talents&#13;
and triumphs are exceeded only&#13;
by the length and shape of his&#13;
enormous nose. It is this unfortunate&#13;
deformity that&#13;
threatens to keep him from&#13;
winning his greatest prize — the&#13;
love of his beautiful cousin,&#13;
Roxanne. Since is premiere,&#13;
CYRANO DE BERGERAC has&#13;
continued to delight audiences the&#13;
world ove r with its rousing blend&#13;
of romance, comedy and adventure.&#13;
&#13;
In mounting this extensive&#13;
production, the MRT has&#13;
assembled one of the largest&#13;
companies in its 27 season history,&#13;
including a 28-member cast.&#13;
Richard Cottrell, a distinguished&#13;
guest director from England, is&#13;
staging CYRANO, and veteran&#13;
actor William Leach is cast in the&#13;
demanding title role.&#13;
Cottrell, who recently completed&#13;
a five-year stint as&#13;
Director of the Bristol Old Vic&#13;
Theater in England, is making his&#13;
American debut with the MRT.&#13;
His theatrical career as an actor,&#13;
director of over 30 major&#13;
productions and translator of&#13;
three of Anton Chekhov's plays&#13;
spans two decades.&#13;
William Leach, who begins his&#13;
second season with the MRT, is no&#13;
stranger to the role of C yrano de&#13;
Bergerac. His most notable&#13;
performance with the Asolo State&#13;
Theater earned him the South&#13;
Florida Critics Award for Best&#13;
Actor of the Year. Last season he&#13;
performed in five MRT productions.&#13;
&#13;
CYRANO DE BERGERAC will&#13;
be performed Tuesdays through&#13;
Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at&#13;
5:00 and 9:15 p.m., and Sundays at&#13;
7:30 p.m. Matinees are on selected&#13;
Sundays and Wednesdays. Tickets&#13;
range from $3.50 to $9.00, with a&#13;
$1.00 discount available for&#13;
students and senior citizens.&#13;
For single and group ticket&#13;
information, call the Pabst&#13;
Theater box office at (414) 271-&#13;
3773.&#13;
One of Cliff's school friends,&#13;
Carson (Paul Quandt), catches&#13;
many laughs as he spews forth&#13;
satirical jems on death and&#13;
destruction (mainly his own)&#13;
throughout the film.&#13;
It is a long awaited relief to&#13;
finally see actors and actresses&#13;
playing high school students who&#13;
look like high school students, not&#13;
college graduates.&#13;
When Cliff refuses to pay Moody&#13;
"protection money," he falls&#13;
subject to a barrage of s enseless&#13;
pranks that show the immaturity&#13;
and destructiveness of some&#13;
students (garbage and food&#13;
thrown on the street clothes and&#13;
books left in Cliff's gym locker, for&#13;
example).&#13;
In a desperate move of genius,&#13;
Cliff tries to hire Ricky as his&#13;
bodyguard. After some reluctance,&#13;
Ricky accepts, but quits&#13;
when he realizes he's being used&#13;
to humiliate Moody and his gang.&#13;
Cliff re ally wants to be a friend&#13;
to Ricky, and attempts to learn&#13;
about his mysterious past (it is&#13;
rumored that he has raped&#13;
teachers and murdered people).&#13;
Little by little, Ricky opens up and&#13;
allows Cliff to become his friend.&#13;
What follows is a close relationship&#13;
that we've all experienced at&#13;
one time or another.&#13;
This friendship succeeds&#13;
because both boys have a need for&#13;
someone. Cliff's mother died when&#13;
Imagine a school where the&#13;
students' main concern is a wellpaying&#13;
job after graduation and&#13;
where the primary disciplinary&#13;
problem is drunkenness.&#13;
That description fits many a&#13;
modern university. But, says USC&#13;
history professor Paul Knoll, it&#13;
also depicts Poland's U. of Cracow&#13;
... in the 14th century.&#13;
Through ten years of research,&#13;
Knoll has learned that campus life&#13;
in that time period is uncannily&#13;
similar to that of t he present day.&#13;
Old disciplinary records show&#13;
students were punished most often&#13;
for drunkenness, but also for&#13;
being disrespectful to teachers,&#13;
stealing and cavorting with&#13;
women. Cracow also had&#13;
problems with racial tensions on&#13;
campus. The discord reached&#13;
such proportions that different&#13;
sects, including Hungarian,&#13;
German and Czechoslovakian&#13;
students, were housed in separate&#13;
dormatories.&#13;
Knoll be lieves there is much to&#13;
be learned from the 14th century&#13;
and plans to write a book on&#13;
Cracow's history and its&#13;
relationship to modern institutions.&#13;
His work already&#13;
reaffirms the basic notion that&#13;
some things never change — the&#13;
typical student letter home, for&#13;
example, was punctuated by the&#13;
familiar phrase "Please send&#13;
money . . . ."&#13;
EARN EXTRA INCOME&#13;
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Get The Whole Story&#13;
PHONE&#13;
859-2808&#13;
WOODY ALLEN&#13;
DIANE KEATON&#13;
MICHAEL MURPHY&#13;
MARIEL HEMINGWAY&#13;
MERYL STREEP&#13;
ANNE BYRNE&#13;
Showing in the UNION CINEMA&#13;
Friday/ Sept. 19 at 8 p. m.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 21 at 7:30 p. m.&#13;
he was young and his father's job&#13;
(hotel manager) is a 24 ho ur job.&#13;
Hotel personnel become substitutes&#13;
for his parents (he is&#13;
driven to school in the hotel&#13;
limousine and eats many of his&#13;
meals in a corner of the hotel&#13;
kitchen). Because of his brother's&#13;
accident, Ricky has alienated&#13;
himself from all others and has&#13;
regressed into becoming the&#13;
school freak. Through this&#13;
friendship, however, Ricky meets&#13;
more and more people and gains&#13;
more friends at school.&#13;
But good things don't last&#13;
forever, and something happens&#13;
to Ricky to put him back into his&#13;
"shell" (telling you would be&#13;
giving away part of the movie). In&#13;
a dramatic scene, Ricky describes&#13;
to Cliff how his brother really died&#13;
and why he feels so responsible.&#13;
This scene is so intense and so well&#13;
acted by Baldwin that it actually&#13;
numbs you.&#13;
The end sequences may seem to&#13;
violent for some, but it is symbolic&#13;
of both Ricky breaking out of his&#13;
shell for good and Cliff realizing&#13;
he can fight his own battles. Not&#13;
only are these scenes well&#13;
executed, but they are also very&#13;
realistic.&#13;
"My Bodyguard" will have you&#13;
cheering for the "good guys,"&#13;
booing the "bad guys" and&#13;
clapping at the end, it's something&#13;
we've needed for a long time.&#13;
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30 SEP —1 OCT &#13;
Thursday, September 18,1980 Ranger&#13;
Aspin visits Parkside&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
across-the-board income tax cut&#13;
over the next three years.&#13;
"If you're going to cut taxes,"&#13;
said Aspin, "don't cut the income&#13;
tax, cut the Social Security tax."&#13;
Aspin favors tax cuts that would&#13;
increase productivity and bring&#13;
jobs. But he feels that an acrossthe-board&#13;
income tax cut of those&#13;
magnitudes is not going to&#13;
generate productivity, but will&#13;
instead generate inflation.&#13;
Democracy in Action&#13;
"It's a common misconception&#13;
that in order to decide something&#13;
in a democracy you need over&#13;
50%," said Aspin. "The general&#13;
kind of tho ught is that if you have&#13;
50% of the people for something,&#13;
it'll happen. No way! In our&#13;
system of go vernment we have so&#13;
many access points for people who&#13;
are opposed, that there's no way&#13;
it's going to happen if only 51%&#13;
(support it). Nothing happens in&#13;
this country unless it's somewhere&#13;
in the crder of 85-90% approval.&#13;
And even then, if the remaining 10-&#13;
15% really is determined to stop it,&#13;
it probably will be stopped. The&#13;
majority does not rule at the&#13;
current status."&#13;
Military Spending&#13;
"There's an unbelievable&#13;
amount of w aste in the military,"&#13;
said Aspin. "It's not to say that&#13;
other large bureaucracies are&#13;
immune from it, it's just that the&#13;
military seems to have a special&#13;
affinity for it."&#13;
Aspin doesn't feel that we have&#13;
to massively increase defense&#13;
spending in order to get a better&#13;
defense. He said that if we want to&#13;
improve our defense, the money is&#13;
already there. It just has to be&#13;
spent more intelligently.&#13;
Aspin doesn't think that the&#13;
military pension plan affects&#13;
people's decisions until they've&#13;
been in the service 10 or 12 years.&#13;
"The 17 or 18 year old enlisting&#13;
isn't thinking about the pension&#13;
plan, he's looking at the pay. The&#13;
less that pay is good, you're not&#13;
going to be able to attract good&#13;
people. This year we're going to&#13;
be spending $12 billion on that&#13;
pension. You can raise pay a lot&#13;
with that and also buy some tanks,&#13;
ships and planes."&#13;
The military doesn't take itself&#13;
seriously enough, according to&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music-&#13;
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Aspin. "Look at the way we fought&#13;
the war in Vietnam. People got&#13;
command positions for six months&#13;
and then they were moved out and&#13;
somebody else moved in. Well,&#13;
that's treating the war in Vietnam&#13;
like a training exercise. We didn't&#13;
have seven years of e xperienced&#13;
fighting in Vietnam, we had six&#13;
months of experience 14 times&#13;
over."&#13;
Fort McCoy&#13;
The federal government is&#13;
paying the entire cost of Fort&#13;
McCoy," said Aspin. "The controversy&#13;
arose over whether the&#13;
federal government would pay&#13;
100% cr 70% or some lesser per&#13;
cent of the resettlement costs of&#13;
the refugees being settled in&#13;
communities."&#13;
"Basically, I think what (Gov.)&#13;
Dreyfus was saying is correct,"&#13;
Aspin added. "The federal&#13;
government ought to pay 100% of&#13;
the resettlement costs. But it&#13;
doesn't really affect Wisconsin&#13;
much. The effect is going to be felt&#13;
on states like Florida and other&#13;
southern states. The number of&#13;
Cubans who will want to settle in&#13;
the northern climate, like&#13;
Wisconsin, is very, very small. RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
Socialist presidential&#13;
candidate to appear here&#13;
Dave McReynolds, Presidential&#13;
nominee of the Socialist PartyUSA,&#13;
will be campaigning in the&#13;
Racine-Kenosha area on Tuesday,&#13;
September 23. McReynolds, a&#13;
long-time pacifist has most&#13;
recently been working on the staff&#13;
of the War Resisters League in&#13;
New York City. He will appear on&#13;
the Wisconsin ballot next to&#13;
Carter, Reagan, Anderson, and&#13;
the other Presidential candidates.&#13;
McReynolds is scheduled to&#13;
speak at several classes at UWParkside,&#13;
including a class on&#13;
American Foreign Policy, which&#13;
is scheduled from 12:30-1:45 p.m.&#13;
in Room D-105 in Molinaro Hall.&#13;
He is also scheduled to speak at a&#13;
public meeting at 625 College&#13;
Avenue in Racine at 7 p.m. The&#13;
public is invited to both events.&#13;
The Socialist Party is the party&#13;
of Eugene Debs and Norman&#13;
Thomas. They stand for the&#13;
democratic control of the&#13;
economy, significant reductions in&#13;
military armaments, and full civil&#13;
rights for all. They believe&#13;
capitalism is at the core of&#13;
racism, sexism, and the economic&#13;
disasters of continuous unemployment&#13;
and inflation. Diane&#13;
Drufenbrock, a Catholic nun and&#13;
presently a mathematics instructor&#13;
at Parkside, is the&#13;
Party's Vice-Presidential&#13;
nominee. For more information&#13;
call 878-2639 or 637-6021.&#13;
Earn Up To s800 A Month&#13;
Your Junior And Senior Year&#13;
In A CASH Scholarship Program&#13;
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uclear technology training that would cost&#13;
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0 THE PLACEMENT OFFICE&#13;
30 SEP - 1 OCT&#13;
OR CALL CO LLECT&#13;
414-291-3055&#13;
Menter Parkside 200&#13;
Mention this ad! %^7Ph&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Fnona 454-0774&#13;
All MAJOR CREDIT CAR DS ACCEPTED&#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 Preston&#13;
In the Ranger Office&#13;
WLLC D139 — 553-2295 &#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
Can't score&#13;
Soccer blanked twice&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
After a big opening victory over&#13;
Indiana State-Evansville two&#13;
weeks ago, the Ranger soccer&#13;
team has dropped two straight&#13;
games without scoring a single&#13;
goal. The team lost to NCAA&#13;
Division I opponent Northern&#13;
Illinois 3-0 in a game marred by&#13;
mistakes and then traveled to&#13;
Beloit and were upset 1-0.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson, though&#13;
his team lost, was still impressed&#13;
with his players in the Northern&#13;
Illinois game. "The problem was&#13;
experience (Northern Illinois)&#13;
against inexperience (Parkside).&#13;
We made a lot of inexperienced&#13;
mistakes and they hurt us." All&#13;
three Northern Illinois goals could&#13;
be attributed to Ranger mistakes.&#13;
Their first goal was scored on a&#13;
corner kick when a Ranger&#13;
halfback misplayed the ball. The&#13;
second score was on a penalty&#13;
kick and the third on a "missed&#13;
clear".&#13;
"We didn't play badly, but we&#13;
made a lot of young- mistakes. I&#13;
wasn't disappointed in the play,&#13;
but by the fact that we lost 3-0."&#13;
The Rangers, who were outshot&#13;
24-14, "aren't creating what we&#13;
could offensively. We just don't&#13;
finish an offensive play that we&#13;
begin."&#13;
That summed it up against&#13;
Beloit because although the&#13;
Rangers outshot Beloit 24-5, they&#13;
lost 1-0. A dejected Henderson&#13;
couldn't find an explanation why&#13;
his team was beaten. "We did&#13;
everything to put the ball in the&#13;
net. We completely dominated the&#13;
game and spent 80% of the game&#13;
in their half of the field. They&#13;
played kick and run, and in this&#13;
case it worked because we made&#13;
one mistake."&#13;
That one mistake v/as a break&#13;
away goal in which Ranger goalie&#13;
Dan Opferman made a spectacular&#13;
save only to have a&#13;
rebound shot go in.&#13;
As for the lack of scoring,&#13;
Henderson said, "It should have&#13;
gone in, it just didn't. If, and I&#13;
mean if we have a problem, it&#13;
would be scoring goals. But then&#13;
everyone has that problem. We've&#13;
got a ways to go but we're going to&#13;
bust open pretty soon."&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
JAY, I lov e you! Have a good semester! Mary&#13;
Jo&#13;
CIN, want to go with Buzz-Band burn one!&#13;
MARY ROLE, get well soon. P.V. 205&#13;
Q- W hy did the Pre - med chicken cross the&#13;
road? I do n't know, Why? A. Because it was&#13;
required. "The Student Militants"&#13;
FREEdance lessons in Union Square; ask for&#13;
Mondo.&#13;
WELL-OFF farm boy seeks anxious cow -&#13;
milking techniques. Ellis Charmer&#13;
PEE WEE: Do you always treat your .friends&#13;
so nice. Werble I&#13;
"THE GANG": Thanks for the best summer&#13;
ever! I'll never forget the "camping trips"&#13;
and all the good times (especially at&#13;
Paula's house!) Have a great year. Love&#13;
"Cin" Quazar&#13;
ETHYL - you're the greatest! — Irvinp&#13;
ROUND TABLE to meet in Union Square&#13;
September 18, 6:3 0 p. m.&#13;
J-Z. — Do you want to go to the beach and&#13;
wait for the green light. Dave&#13;
"I GANG — Werble, Jody, Quazar, Pooh,&#13;
Peewee, Debbie. From Bandit&#13;
LESLIE J. THOMPSON — stop by the dining&#13;
room at noon.&#13;
WAVE upon wave of fermented sick animals&#13;
marched cheerfully out of the Union into the&#13;
dream. lOP's and Pink Floyd.&#13;
"RIS KERMGARD, sophomore • Free&#13;
Problems, inquire MOLN 115. Chain Gang&#13;
RE NEE JONES, sophomore — have you&#13;
'ound any professors? Chain Gang&#13;
"ARKSIDE'S Three Stooges Bill, Tom &amp; Ron&#13;
Inquire CA 120. lOP's&#13;
ANIMALS, you will once again be challenged.&#13;
Guess Who!&#13;
SUPPORT the RANGER, increase its&#13;
readership. Write an ad. lOP's&#13;
FORMERLY Furry Frick finds french - fried&#13;
K M6 ,unny. Ten times fast&#13;
• — Not only ads, we read crummy&#13;
editorials too! lOP's&#13;
'OP S I b et they are the editorials you write&#13;
•or one of your comp. classes!&#13;
IF YOU MORONS, can write that is.&#13;
Hf..&#13;
v&#13;
\&#13;
QUAZAR! Wanna take intro to Moe's&#13;
Wednesday and get tipsy? — Bandit, P. S.&#13;
Your nose is sooo in line.&#13;
F®R ALL you incoming freshmen — lOP's&#13;
means (the undisputed) Idiots of Parkside.&#13;
HARVEY is a Mucko and likes little girls.&#13;
Signed Ranger the dog.&#13;
HARVEY, I'm telling Barb about all the&#13;
things you do while she is away. Ranger the&#13;
dog&#13;
I NEED another hotdog. Ezra&#13;
I REALLY DIG Lee Harvey Oswald. KGB&#13;
SUE MICHETTI, I l ove you. Please join me&#13;
on the Tri - lateral Commission — J. Anderson&#13;
&#13;
WELCOME HOME Chris and Karen. Doug.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
ALTO SAXOPHONE call 694-1964 after 6 p.&#13;
m. $300&#13;
MGB PARTS, many new engine parts. After&#13;
4:00. 639-6413&#13;
PIANO — needs work. $50. Call 694-4730&#13;
'74 AMBASSADOR WAGON — AM/FM&#13;
stereo cassette, PS/PB, good tires, good&#13;
runner. Cheap! 654-2492&#13;
WANTED&#13;
ROOMMATE WANTED. Furnished apt. 1&#13;
mile from campus. 553-9433&#13;
USED CARPETING, whole or pieces. Call&#13;
Marie 889-3319&#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;
MEETING/EVENTS&#13;
BIBLE - STUDY (Inter - Varsity). All interested&#13;
welcome. Mondays, 1:00, Moln 217&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
REWARD for anyone who has information&#13;
leading to the apprehension and conviction&#13;
of person who hit and run a white '79&#13;
Camaro last Thursday (9-11) night in Union&#13;
parking lot. Alarm was set off. Please&#13;
contact Neil Nelson, 554-5282.&#13;
The Rangers travel to Chicago&#13;
tomorrow to play Roosevelt&#13;
University with hopes of improving&#13;
on their 1-2 record.&#13;
Women's team&#13;
Tennis&#13;
bounced&#13;
by Pete Cramer&#13;
The women's tennis team had&#13;
tough going last week as they&#13;
dropped a dual match with UWMilwaukee,&#13;
6-3; and then placed&#13;
sixth in team standings at the&#13;
Oshkosh Doubles Tournament.&#13;
Against Milwaukee, the&#13;
Rangers found themselves outclassed&#13;
by better talent. Said&#13;
Coach Goggin, "Milwaukee is a&#13;
strong overall team. Losing 6-3 is&#13;
nothing to be ashamed of." As for&#13;
her own team, Goggin was&#13;
pleased by their performance. It&#13;
is this fact that leads her to think&#13;
that the team will have nothing&#13;
but success in the future. "I think&#13;
we're as good as the rest of the&#13;
teams we're going to play this&#13;
year. We're just as good if not&#13;
better."&#13;
Winning for the Rangers were&#13;
number one and number two&#13;
singles players, Lisa Lindsay and&#13;
Kathy Thomas. Thomas and&#13;
Nancy .Kivi teamed up for the&#13;
other win in number one doubles&#13;
play. Both Lindsay and Thomas&#13;
SPORTS CALENDAR&#13;
Friday, Sept. 19: SOCCER at Roosevelt Univ., Chicago (1:30 p.m)&#13;
Friday-Saturday, Sept. 19-20: VOLLEYBALL at Wright State Tournament,&#13;
Dayton, Ohio; GOLF atUW-Green Bay Phoenix Invitational,&#13;
Northbrook C.C., Luxemburg (8:00 a.m.)&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 20: TENNIS at UW-Green Bay (9:30 a. .) with UWStevens&#13;
Point; CROSS-COUNTRY (men) at Hillside College, Mich.&#13;
(11:00 a.m.); CROSS-COUNTRY (women) at Marquette Invitational,&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Saturday-Sunday, Sept. 21-22: GOLF at Mascoutin Collegiate Invitational,&#13;
Mascoutin C.C., Berlin (9:30 a.m.)&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 23: VOLLEYBALL at Marquette with UW-Oshkosh (7:15&#13;
p.m.); SOCCER vs. AURORA COLLEGE (3:30 p.m.); TENNIS at&#13;
Carthage (3:00 p.m.)&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
FRIDAY, SEPT. 19&#13;
SEMINAR — "A Total Program Approach for Community Board Group&#13;
Homes" at 9 a.m. in Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312 for more information.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
MOVIE — "Manhattan" will be shown at 8 p.m. 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;
FILM — "War Games," a simulation of a nuclear attack on a British&#13;
town. Shown continuously from 9:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. in Union 106.&#13;
DANCE — Back to school dance sponsored by the Minority Student&#13;
Union at 8 :00 p.m. in the Union Square. Live D.J. General Admission&#13;
$1.00. Member free with membership I.D.&#13;
SUNDAY, SEPT. 21&#13;
MOVIE — "Manhattan" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
MONDAY, SEPT. 22&#13;
WORKSHOP — "Test Taking Tips" from 1-1:50 p.m. in MOLN 107,161,&#13;
163,165 &amp; 167. Admission is free for Parkside students.&#13;
CAREER NIGHT — for Alumni with a dinner starting at 5 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Dining room. Call ext. 2515 for more details.&#13;
TUESDAY, SEPT. 23&#13;
COURSE — "Behavior Modification Techniques" starts today at 7:30&#13;
p.m. Call ext. 2312 for more information. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
THURSDAY, SEPT. 25&#13;
LECTURE — at 11:45 a.m. in Union 106. Mary Lou France will talk on&#13;
"How Our Union Began." The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
are undefeated this year in singles&#13;
play.&#13;
The Oshkosh tournament was&#13;
doubles play only. The doubles&#13;
team of Thomas-Kivi won the&#13;
number one consolation bracket,&#13;
Pam Sumi-Lisa Lindsay were&#13;
ousted by Marquette after having&#13;
lost earlier to Carroll, Lori&#13;
Bleashka-Laura Bianco won their&#13;
consolation bracket, and Barb&#13;
Pruett-Emily Modiz placed fourth&#13;
in the winners bracket.&#13;
The team's next match is&#13;
Saturday at Green Bay.&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
YASOU PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
EVERY&#13;
THUR.&#13;
IS GREEK&#13;
GYROS&#13;
DAY&#13;
Spiced Greek meat slices in&#13;
folded pita bread, topped with&#13;
sliced onions, tomatoes and&#13;
a creamy dressing. $ 1.89 &#13;
ONLY&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION REC. CENTER&#13;
by Dan McCormack&#13;
The Parkside women's&#13;
volleyball team opened their&#13;
season last Wednesday by&#13;
defeating UW-Whitewater in a&#13;
real mismatch, 3-1. On Thursday&#13;
they then played host to Division I&#13;
school UW-Madison.&#13;
Game one started promptly at&#13;
7:00 p.m. with both teams looking&#13;
equally matched. The Mad-City&#13;
team controlled the net and won&#13;
the first game 15-6. Co ach Linda&#13;
Henderson remarked later, "we&#13;
made certain fundamental&#13;
errors" and that "we played well&#13;
in spurts."&#13;
Game two was an example of&#13;
one of tho se spurts. The Rangers,&#13;
showing top form, easily won the&#13;
game, 15-3. T he action cooled a&#13;
little during game three with&#13;
Parkside losing 15-4.&#13;
In a dual match, you need to win&#13;
three out of five games, which, at&#13;
this point put Madison within&#13;
range to win the match if they won&#13;
the fourth game. The Badgers&#13;
took an early lead before the&#13;
spectators got into the flow of the&#13;
game. When Parkside senior&#13;
Roxanne Nelson took her turn at&#13;
the serve she blasted one over to&#13;
Mad-City's mid-court where it&#13;
proved to be too hot to return. The&#13;
Rangers then seemed to gain&#13;
consistency and went on to win&#13;
that game, 15-12. They lost the last&#13;
game, 17-15, wrapping up the&#13;
Madison victory.&#13;
Henderson was very pleased&#13;
with her team's performance. She&#13;
said "the freshmen looked&#13;
poised." She was also very&#13;
pleased with the crowd.&#13;
Parkside travels to Dayton,&#13;
Ohio this weekend to play in the&#13;
Wright State Tournament.&#13;
AAIIOVV&#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;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dave Vollmer&#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;
I Enclosed is $1.00.&#13;
| Please rush the catalog.&#13;
j Name&#13;
| Address&#13;
j City.&#13;
• State&#13;
During The Day&#13;
Mon.9:00am -noon&#13;
Thurs. 1 - 5 p. m.&#13;
Friday Afternoons&#13;
3:00 -6:00 pm&#13;
Introductory&#13;
Special!&#13;
Strike when&#13;
the head pin&#13;
is red ...&#13;
Win a Free&#13;
pitcher of.be^r&#13;
or soda&#13;
One customer per day&#13;
Ranger needs&#13;
sports writers&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
EVERY&#13;
TUE.&#13;
IS MEXI-FOOD DAY&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
• TACOS&#13;
• BURRITOS&#13;
• TOSTADOS&#13;
• ENCHILADAS&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
FRESHMAN LAURIE HESS (13) delivers a vicious spike as her teammates look on.&#13;
Volleyball splits pair </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 9, issue 3, September 18, 1980</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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            <name>Date</name>
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                <text>1980-09-18</text>
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                <text> Student publications</text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 25, 1980&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 4&#13;
Resolve over-crowded bus situation Kv nQftr T AflrtAi. • by Gary Ledger&#13;
Racine Parkside bus riders now&#13;
have two express runs serving&#13;
them. The buses will transport&#13;
riders from Downtown Racine to&#13;
Parkside non-stop. The regular&#13;
Route 9 bus will run as usual,&#13;
picking up students and others&#13;
along the way.&#13;
This solution is the result of&#13;
overcrowded conditions during&#13;
Route Nine's first two runs. "It&#13;
was just full," explained Junior&#13;
Mary Ann Phelps, "even by the&#13;
time the bus left downtown."&#13;
Upon reaching its last stop,&#13;
students were packed so tightly&#13;
that driver Diane Olson frequently&#13;
called the bus office notifying&#13;
them she would have to bypass&#13;
Tallent Hall, and therefore&#13;
eliminate half the shuttle run.&#13;
The all-time record occurred&#13;
Wednesday (Sept. 17) when 86&#13;
students were packed in. After&#13;
relaying this information to the&#13;
dispatcher, she was instructed to&#13;
pull over. Five students were&#13;
pulled off t he bus and transferred&#13;
immediately to a bus supervisor's&#13;
car.&#13;
Through the efforts of Dave&#13;
Habegger, Parkside Student&#13;
Government Senator, the present&#13;
solution is in progress. According&#13;
to Parkside Security Director&#13;
Ronald Brinkmann, an extra&#13;
express bus will run the first two&#13;
runs of the morning during the&#13;
week of September 22. Statistics of&#13;
ridership will be taken, with the&#13;
express run continuing on the&#13;
days and times they are needed.&#13;
As Mike Glasheen of City Hall&#13;
Transportation Department&#13;
describes: The express run will&#13;
wait downtown. It will leave when&#13;
filled (approximately 7:20) and&#13;
travel to Parkside non-stop under&#13;
the "Express" banner. Upon&#13;
arriving at Parkside, the express&#13;
will return downtown, pick up&#13;
riders, leave when filled (about&#13;
8:30), and again travel to&#13;
Parkside non-stop. From campus,&#13;
it will return to the garage. The&#13;
regular Route Nine will leave&#13;
downtown as scheduled.&#13;
According to bus officials,&#13;
average ridership for the first two&#13;
runs, before the express service,&#13;
was 70 to 80 riders each. The bus&#13;
has a seating capacity of 41. "S he&#13;
couldn't stop fast enough; it was&#13;
just really dangerous" explained&#13;
Phelps. Olson said, "Relief; it's&#13;
taken a lot of pressure off me,"&#13;
having the express run.&#13;
As for students' reactions,&#13;
"Some of them didn't believe it&#13;
was really going to happen (the&#13;
express service), and were&#13;
amazed at how empty the bus&#13;
was," remarked Olson.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
THE RACINE BUS SERVICE has begun express runs to help alleviate the over - crowded buses&#13;
coming to Parkside.&#13;
Student Bill Stougaard said, "I&#13;
like it. I can sit down now."&#13;
"I was elated" exclaimed bus&#13;
rider Karen Bolander. "It felt&#13;
good; I didn't have to balance&#13;
myself in the middle of the aisle."&#13;
Express bus driver Jesse&#13;
Mendoza described the first day:&#13;
"Real smooth. I think it ran very&#13;
good."&#13;
German Professor Seigfried&#13;
Christoph observed, "One week it&#13;
was consistently 7-10 minutes&#13;
late." On Monday, the first day of&#13;
the express run, he said "I think&#13;
it's working just fine."&#13;
Explains Habegger, the&#13;
problem now is to make sure&#13;
Parkside riders continue to ride&#13;
the bus. If riot, the express service&#13;
will be dropped on the runs/times&#13;
ridership is low. But as explained&#13;
by Brinkmann and bus officials,&#13;
the express will run when needed.&#13;
Anderson, Reagan debate without Carter&#13;
by Susan J. Aluise&#13;
Despite the absence of Jimmy&#13;
Carter at Sunday night's League&#13;
of Women Voters Debate, the&#13;
show did go on and seemingly&#13;
well, at least from the viewpoint of&#13;
the Reagan and Anderson cairips.&#13;
Both Reagan and Anderson&#13;
seemed to achieve from Sunday&#13;
night's debate exactly what they&#13;
sought to accomplish; Anderson&#13;
got the media exposure critical to&#13;
the sustanance and growth of his&#13;
campaign and Reagan succeeded&#13;
in convining many skeptics that&#13;
he could go out in public unchaperoned&#13;
and not commit a&#13;
major gaffe. Both men handled&#13;
themselves coolly and were very&#13;
composed in their delivery but,&#13;
perhaps surprisingly in view of&#13;
Reagan's many years of television&#13;
experience, it was Anderson who&#13;
was said by debate judges to have&#13;
scored a slight victory.&#13;
The substance of the debate was&#13;
rather predictable, with both&#13;
Anderson and Reagan&#13;
regurgitating previous campaign&#13;
statements in answer to the&#13;
Analysis&#13;
panel's questions. It is of particular&#13;
significance that the&#13;
majority of Reagan's answers,&#13;
including his three minute closing&#13;
statement, were heavily scripted,&#13;
almost verbatim repetitions of&#13;
previous campaign speeches,&#13;
which could, perhaps in analysis,&#13;
lessen the impressive effect of&#13;
Reagan's overall appearance.&#13;
Anderson, while saying nothing&#13;
new, impressively took the offensive,&#13;
criticizing Reagan's&#13;
understanding of national oil&#13;
reserves, support for MX missile&#13;
funding, advocacy of the Kemp -&#13;
Roth tax proposal, and even&#13;
leveling a charge against&#13;
Reagan's record as governor of&#13;
California; asserting that state&#13;
spending doubled and rose percentagewise&#13;
at a higher riate than&#13;
at any time previously to the&#13;
Reagan term of office.&#13;
Reagan adeptly answered&#13;
Anderson's critiques by saying&#13;
that his statistics on national oil&#13;
reserves were Department of&#13;
Energy figures, maintaining the&#13;
MX system is necessary to the&#13;
preservation of national security&#13;
but that rotating silo construction&#13;
was a waste of taxpapyers money,&#13;
reminding Anderson that he,&#13;
Anderson, had supported and&#13;
signed Kemp - Roth 15 months&#13;
ago, and Reagan defended his&#13;
record as governor of California&#13;
by saying California's rate of&#13;
inflation during the Reagan term&#13;
was well below the national&#13;
average.&#13;
Perhaps one of the more sensitive&#13;
issues raised in the debate&#13;
was in response to the final&#13;
question; whether directives of&#13;
moral majority and church&#13;
organizations should influence the&#13;
decisions and policies of a&#13;
president and if that influence is a&#13;
violation of the separation of&#13;
church and state. The obvious&#13;
issue, that of abortion, was raised&#13;
and the responses reflected the&#13;
greatest degree of emotionalism&#13;
seen in the debate. The Reagan&#13;
response was reflective of the&#13;
Republican Party Platform stand&#13;
on abortion; the belief that a&#13;
constituational amendment to ban&#13;
all abortions should be enacted.&#13;
Anderson predictably, favored&#13;
the woman's right to choose,&#13;
citing the decision by a woman to&#13;
carry a pregnancy to term as the&#13;
most critical emotional decision a&#13;
woman can make in her life and&#13;
that decision should not be dictated&#13;
by government. Reagan,&#13;
almost emotionally defended the&#13;
right of an unborn child to be born&#13;
and Anderson then countered with&#13;
the right of a child to be wanted.&#13;
This emotional exchange of&#13;
opinion on the issue of abortion&#13;
was predictable, but the way in&#13;
which the candidates became&#13;
deeply involved was reflective of&#13;
the intensity of t he issue, and the&#13;
importance a candidate's beliefs&#13;
bring to his campaign and&#13;
inevitably, if the candidate is,&#13;
successful, to the office to which&#13;
he aspires.&#13;
In general, the debates had a&#13;
positive effect for Anderson and&#13;
Reagan and a somewhat negative&#13;
effect for the man who was not&#13;
there, Jimmy Carter. Anderson&#13;
and Reagan seized the opportunity&#13;
to level criticism at&#13;
Carter's absence and made&#13;
references to the failure of Carter's&#13;
programs and policies, but&#13;
whether this negative effect is&#13;
significant in terms of lasting&#13;
injury, it is yet too early to conclude.&#13;
The Carter campaign has,&#13;
and will continue to minimize the&#13;
importance and the impact of&#13;
Sunday's debate and the Reagan&#13;
and Anderson camps will continue&#13;
to play up its significance and&#13;
relevance. But in the end, it is not&#13;
what these campaign&#13;
organizations feel about the&#13;
importance of the debate, but how&#13;
the American voter perceives the&#13;
event and how he applies those&#13;
perceptions in making his decision&#13;
on November 4.&#13;
O'Neill formally inaugurated&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
On September 5th, the&#13;
Inaugural Convocation was held&#13;
at the Memorial Union Theatre in&#13;
Madison. Robert M. O'Neil formally&#13;
accepted the office of&#13;
President of the UW System.&#13;
"The University System should&#13;
be more than simply the sum of its&#13;
parts," said O'Neil. "although the&#13;
constituent institutions are . . . its&#13;
core and its reason for being. The&#13;
System has a responsibility to&#13;
shape and apply policies, enhance&#13;
relations among institutions,&#13;
facilitate contact between institutions&#13;
and state government,&#13;
and represent to the citizens and&#13;
the state the needs of higher&#13;
education in Wisconsin."&#13;
O'Neil said that the diversity of&#13;
our system is a quality of great&#13;
value. He said that we should&#13;
maintain what is special and&#13;
distinctive while resisting&#13;
pressures for commonality.&#13;
"Students in this state enjoy an&#13;
unusual range of choice because&#13;
of the differences among our&#13;
institutions," said O'Neil.&#13;
"Recently there have been&#13;
suggestions that such choice&#13;
should be artificially constrained.&#13;
While I recognize behind these&#13;
suggestions the laudable desire to&#13;
balance enrollments among institutions,&#13;
I would prefer to seek&#13;
that goal in ways that maintain a&#13;
high degree of student choice. We&#13;
should take positive steps to encourage&#13;
study at those institutions&#13;
with greater capacity, rather than&#13;
barring students from more&#13;
populous campuses Freedom&#13;
of choice is a precious value in our&#13;
society, and one that has special&#13;
meaning in a university system of&#13;
which variety and diversity are&#13;
hallmarks."&#13;
O'Neil stated a commitment to&#13;
freedom of inquiry and expression.&#13;
"The next decade will&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• From the Parking Lot:&#13;
Reagan and abortion&#13;
• "Review: "Middle Age Crazy 99&#13;
• Soccer team wins two &#13;
2&#13;
RANGER blasted for column on P.S.G.A.&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
In the best interest of the&#13;
studente at UW . Parkside; the&#13;
nf P Q O ;&#13;
A i&#13;
new Vice • President&#13;
?L k t '•Kay Mullikin; and in&#13;
the best interest of critical&#13;
journalism: I'd like to respond to&#13;
Ken Meyer's article, "Case of the&#13;
vacant P.S.G.A. veep".&#13;
. Meyer, as editor of the Ranger,&#13;
is allowed an opinion but, doesn't&#13;
he have the responsibility to base&#13;
his opinion on fact. Meyer wrote&#13;
an ambiguous, gossipy article&#13;
which puts the credibility of the&#13;
Ranger in competition with the&#13;
National Inquirer.&#13;
The requirements to fill the&#13;
vacancy of Vice - President, open&#13;
since Claire Tolstyga resigned to&#13;
pursue a career decision which&#13;
took her to another campus, are&#13;
stated in the P.S.G.A. constitution.&#13;
The constitution is ac-.&#13;
cessible to every student since it is&#13;
published twice a year in the&#13;
Ranger. The requirements are&#13;
very simple. The candidate must&#13;
be nominated by the President of&#13;
P.S.G.A. with the advice and&#13;
consent of the Senate. This is a&#13;
great responsibility given to the&#13;
President by the students that&#13;
elect him/her; and one that I have&#13;
taken seriously.&#13;
My nomination of Kay Mullikin&#13;
was not approved by the Senate&#13;
the first time it was introduced.&#13;
The reasons were many. When the&#13;
nomination failed, a senator introduced&#13;
the candidate endorsed&#13;
by Meyer without consulting me in&#13;
any way. This is in direct conflict&#13;
with the constitution he must&#13;
follow as a senator. The result was&#13;
a Vice - Presidential race.&#13;
The next time Meyer writes an&#13;
opinion, think about its base.&#13;
Meyer didn't read the P.S.G.A.&#13;
constitution, never consulted me,&#13;
has never even met Kay Mullikin,&#13;
didn't ask the senators that endorsed&#13;
Mullikin their reasons, or&#13;
attend the senate meeting where&#13;
the issue was discussed. From&#13;
where did he draw his conclusion?&#13;
I think the Editor should keep his&#13;
personal life and friendships out of&#13;
the Ranger.&#13;
The students have the right to&#13;
know what is happening in their&#13;
representative body, therefore,&#13;
I'd like to challenge Meyer to&#13;
report critically anything that&#13;
happens in PIS.G.A. but, to base it&#13;
in fact and research.&#13;
Tracy Gruber&#13;
President,&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
Presidential and Parkside politics&#13;
In last week's column I showed&#13;
two differences between the&#13;
Republican and Democratic&#13;
platforms. The two issues I chose&#13;
as examples were abortion and&#13;
the United States' military&#13;
competitiveness with the Soviets.&#13;
After the column was printed, I&#13;
was informed by someone that&#13;
abortion wasn't an issue in this&#13;
presidential campaign.&#13;
Bull.&#13;
Everything that the president&#13;
can effect is an issue in this — or&#13;
any — presidential campaign. Of&#13;
course, some issues weigh more&#13;
heavily than others but all issues&#13;
should be considered, expecially&#13;
ones that show vast ideological&#13;
differences between the two&#13;
major political parties.&#13;
mhn»n in no hotfnr oitnrtipia of.a&#13;
A column of&#13;
personal opinion&#13;
by&#13;
by Ken Meyer, Editor&#13;
difference of opinion than the&#13;
issue of abortion. The Democrats&#13;
oppose any governmental&#13;
restrictions on abortion or the&#13;
federal funding of abortions for&#13;
the poor while the Republicans&#13;
favor a constitutional amendment&#13;
banning all abortions except in&#13;
order to save the mother's fife.&#13;
Abortion, military competitiveness&#13;
and other issues show&#13;
how different the two parties are.&#13;
On issues like these, the popular&#13;
opinion should prevail because&#13;
these issues are what the people&#13;
should vote on — n ot who is the&#13;
'nicer' candidate.&#13;
In response to P.S.G.A.&#13;
President Tracy Gruber's letter&#13;
on this page:&#13;
Forgive me if my column on the&#13;
P.S.G.A. vice-presidency sounded&#13;
gossipy. It wasn't meant to be, but&#13;
I don't think it was, anyway.&#13;
I was asked my intentions for&#13;
writing that story ; the reason was&#13;
to let the student be aware of what&#13;
was happening with the vicepresidency&#13;
before the position was&#13;
fillftfi- Oiay Mulliki.&#13;
proved at Monday's Senate&#13;
meeting.)&#13;
I hold nothing against Kay&#13;
Mullikin personally; I'm sure&#13;
she'll do a fine job. It's just that I&#13;
don't think she was the most&#13;
qualified candidate for that&#13;
position.&#13;
Contrary to what was stated in&#13;
Gruber's letter, the column was&#13;
not based on my personal life and&#13;
friendships. I believe that the&#13;
most qualified person for the vicepresidency&#13;
is Chris Hammelev.&#13;
Yes, she happens to be my friend.&#13;
No, that isn't why I feel that she&#13;
deserves the position.&#13;
The reason is because Chris has&#13;
been in student government,&#13;
through high school and Parkside,&#13;
for five years; the new vicepresident&#13;
has been in student&#13;
government for only six months.&#13;
It doesn't appear to be my&#13;
personal life that is interfering;&#13;
maybe it's the personal life and&#13;
friendships of the President who&#13;
wants to work with a vicepresident&#13;
that she likes personally&#13;
rather than with one who doesn't&#13;
always agree with her.&#13;
;-A£ter._«uiT student government&#13;
urn• t supposed to be a place of&#13;
differences of opinion, discussion&#13;
and resolutions.&#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;
ganger&#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;
Viewpoint&#13;
If the election were held today, who would you vote for&#13;
Carter, Reagan or Anderson?&#13;
Ann Daniels, freshman — "Anderson.'&#13;
Richard Altergott, sophomore&#13;
— "I'd let Carter mess it up some&#13;
more."&#13;
Keno-Kid, senior — "Carter.'&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
Dan rn?hra?th Executive Business Manager £SSS5&#13;
h&#13;
:;:::: Busln&#13;
;&#13;
!L&#13;
M."&#13;
E&#13;
n&#13;
dT&#13;
r&#13;
Da°edCram,Phal • •• A Ed&#13;
"oI&#13;
sszz,&#13;
szToizz&#13;
Mike Farrell, Bruce Preston Advertising Managers&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Pete Cramer, Sharon Charlton, Thomas Delany, Pattv&#13;
2!in1&#13;
,Sa&#13;
' Edenhauser&#13;
' Ken Eschmann, Ginger&#13;
Helgeson, Dean Hervat, Carol Klees, Gary Ledger, Dan&#13;
McCormick, Lori Meyer, Brian Passino, Joe Ripp, Art&#13;
VoNmer&#13;
erman/ Bl&#13;
" Stougaard&#13;
' Les,ie Th&#13;
°mpson, Dave&#13;
RANGER'is written and edited by students of UW-Parkside and they are solely:&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content j&#13;
RANGER fsVnr7nLhHUh&#13;
Sv&#13;
d&#13;
t&#13;
aJu&#13;
Urin9&#13;
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mic&#13;
*&#13;
ear e&#13;
*«pt during breaks and holidays,&#13;
WriM»n ... • V the&#13;
,&#13;
Un&#13;
!°n Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER&#13;
,0: P,rk!id&#13;
» WLLC UW.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
to^veHf[cahwi'nC mar&#13;
°&#13;
mS' A" le,ters must be si9ned and a telephone number included&#13;
'Si&#13;
Sne^or^t^&#13;
h&#13;
c&#13;
ldT&#13;
,0&#13;
^&#13;
Valid&#13;
,o&#13;
eaSOnSMaximum&#13;
le&#13;
"9th accepted is S00 words.i&#13;
rp«r! « ® ,&#13;
TuesdaV 31 9 a m- tor publication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content PrMlegeS re,USin9 ,0 print which ^ntain'S" &#13;
Ranger Thursday, September 25,1980&#13;
O'Neil inaugurated&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
not I expect, bring crude or&#13;
blatant threats to freedom of&#13;
thought or inquiry, but may&#13;
threaten liberty in subtler ways&#13;
We must be alert to such threats&#13;
whether they be burdensome&#13;
federal restrictions on research&#13;
activity, intrusive state or local&#13;
government controls, or even&#13;
well-intentioned but clumsy rules&#13;
of System Administration."&#13;
He stressed integrity and&#13;
cooperation with colleagues,&#13;
students, other institutions of&#13;
higher learning, and with the&#13;
public.&#13;
O'Neil stated a commitment to&#13;
access and equal opportunity by&#13;
minority and disadvantaged&#13;
students as well as for nonminority&#13;
persons — those in rural&#13;
areas and less advantaged white&#13;
ethnic groups who have been&#13;
denied a full range of educational&#13;
opportunity. He wants to increase&#13;
participation by women in&#13;
.university curricula.&#13;
O'Neil felt that the quality of our&#13;
institutions, their faculties, their&#13;
facilities, and their programs is&#13;
most vital. "Throughout the last&#13;
century, the quality of these institutions&#13;
has steadily improved. I&#13;
cannot believe that the investment&#13;
which the citizens of this state&#13;
have made in higher education&#13;
through more than a century of&#13;
generous support would be&#13;
allowed to atrophy through half a&#13;
decade of neglect. Higher&#13;
education is too central a priority&#13;
for Wisconsin and its citizens to be&#13;
jeopardized by inadequate support."&#13;
&#13;
Boker films social change&#13;
by Leslie J. Thompson&#13;
Last week Carlos Boker,&#13;
assistant visiting professor in&#13;
Communications at Parkside,&#13;
assisted in documenting the&#13;
ChiVano's traditional Mexican&#13;
pelebration along Milwaukee's&#13;
lake front.&#13;
"The point of the whole project&#13;
is to show how important the&#13;
culture of these people is," he&#13;
said, "and to show how, in order to&#13;
preserve this culture, that&#13;
bilingualism is important." Boker&#13;
feels that people should continue&#13;
their own culture, while learning a&#13;
new one, because from the shock&#13;
of the two cultures something new&#13;
will emerge.&#13;
While in his native Chile, Boker&#13;
made a number of documentary&#13;
films dealing with the preservation&#13;
of national values. He&#13;
would go to a community where&#13;
something important and worthwhile&#13;
was going on, however,&#13;
"the people were not quite certain&#13;
of how it was going, of who they&#13;
were, or of how they'd react to it,&#13;
so we filmed them," he said. "We&#13;
showed them what we had filmed,&#13;
so that they could see themselves&#13;
from the outside. Then we filmed&#13;
their discussions so that they got&#13;
an immediate feedback on what&#13;
they were doing," Boker said.&#13;
"This film was then shown on&#13;
television. Because this media has&#13;
a particular legitimizing quality,&#13;
people saw themselves and&#13;
discovered, 'My goodness, this is&#13;
who we are, we are important, we&#13;
do exist," Boker said. "It was a&#13;
very interesting experience for&#13;
me and a fascinating experience&#13;
for them," he said.&#13;
"My main interest is in social&#13;
change," said Boker. "The people&#13;
have to know that a change is&#13;
possible, and in which direction it&#13;
can go before taking any definite&#13;
steps. The mass media can not by&#13;
themselves bring the change&#13;
about, although they are one of the&#13;
ways in which the change can be&#13;
helped," he said.&#13;
Another type of film that Boker&#13;
has worked with is the social&#13;
documentary. These films show&#13;
the ills in the lives of a determined&#13;
group in society, he said. One&#13;
example is a film he made about&#13;
the children who lived in a slum&#13;
area. The film depicted the&#13;
existing problems, focusing&#13;
primarily on what was being done&#13;
and on what should have been&#13;
done. "You can not go and throw&#13;
ashes over your head and say,&#13;
'Great goodness, look at how&#13;
Enrollment&#13;
increases&#13;
A large class of new freshmen&#13;
accounts for more than half of the&#13;
increase in the fall enrollment at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Parkside's enrollment is 5,408&#13;
1 students this fall, up 116 students&#13;
(or 2%) from last fall's final total&#13;
of 5,292. New freshmen total 1,053&#13;
which is 65 more than last fall's&#13;
frosh class of 988, a gain of seven&#13;
percent.&#13;
Parkside's full-time equivalent&#13;
(FTE) enrollment, a theoretical&#13;
figure which is used in UW System&#13;
funding formulas, increased even&#13;
more, from 3,443 to 3,583, a four&#13;
percent overall gain which is&#13;
double the increase which was&#13;
projected.&#13;
Parkside continues to maintain&#13;
a close balance between full-time&#13;
students (those taking 12 or more&#13;
credits) and part-timers. About 52&#13;
percent of UW-P students are&#13;
attending full-time. '&#13;
Film shown Wed.&#13;
"Footprints in Stone", to be&#13;
shown Wed., Oct. 1, takes into&#13;
debate the origin of Man. The film&#13;
analyzes the 130 year old&#13;
Evolutionary Theory in contrast&#13;
to the much older biblical view of&#13;
creation.&#13;
Original scientific research in&#13;
Paluxy River of Texas has&#13;
revealed human footprints in the&#13;
same rock stratum as dinosaur&#13;
tracks. This would seem to shatter&#13;
the widely taught geological table&#13;
of evolution, and the debate accelerates.&#13;
The film discusses&#13;
whether the table needs to be&#13;
totally reassessed, or only altered&#13;
chronologically.&#13;
"Footprintsin Stone" is meant to&#13;
present certain sides of evolution&#13;
that need to be recosidered. The&#13;
movie will be shown from 1:00 to&#13;
2:00 on Wed. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
It is free and sponsored by the&#13;
I n t e r - V a r s i t y C h ris tia n&#13;
Fellowship.&#13;
horrible this is!; you want to go&#13;
further and say, 'This is awful, but&#13;
things can be done to change it,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
In addition to his work in film,&#13;
Boker has directed several&#13;
political plays. This genre of the&#13;
theater deals with political or&#13;
ideological issues. "Be it a cry or&#13;
a shout against fascism, or the&#13;
presentation of a certain reality in&#13;
a certain point in time," he said,&#13;
"it lets people know that we are&#13;
participating in the change, and in&#13;
the reshaping of the ideas that&#13;
should change them."&#13;
Socialist to speak here&#13;
Michael Harrington, founder of&#13;
the Democratic Socialist&#13;
Organizing Committee and author&#13;
of numerous widely acclaimed&#13;
books on politics and the economy,&#13;
will speak at U.W.-Parkside on&#13;
Friday morning, October 3, at&#13;
10:00 a.m. in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theatre. Harrington's address,&#13;
"A Socialist Agenda for the&#13;
Eighties," is sponsored by the&#13;
Political Science Club and the&#13;
Mobilization for Survival. The&#13;
meeting is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Harrington's book, The Other&#13;
America (1963), played a crucial&#13;
role in generating public support&#13;
for Lyndon Johnson's "War on&#13;
Poverty". His subsequent books&#13;
include The Vast Majority: A&#13;
Journey to the World's Poor (1977)&#13;
and The Twilight of Capitalism&#13;
(1976).&#13;
The Democratic Socialist&#13;
Organizing Committee came&#13;
together in 1973 around the&#13;
principles of "social ownership&#13;
and democratic control of the&#13;
means of production and&#13;
distribution," and "the peaceful&#13;
extension of democratic rule for&#13;
all the peoples of the world."&#13;
DSOC includes John Kenneth&#13;
Galbraith and Robert Dahl,&#13;
among other economists and&#13;
political scientists, in its membership.&#13;
&#13;
Harrington was chairperson of&#13;
DSOC until 1976 and currently&#13;
serves as editor of its newsletter,&#13;
The Democratic Left. In 1973, he&#13;
received the Eugene V. Debs&#13;
Award. This year the Debs Award&#13;
was presented by Harrington to&#13;
Ray Majerus, Secretary&#13;
Treasurer of the United Auto&#13;
Workers, and University of&#13;
Wisconsin Regent.&#13;
Mather to give recital Tues.&#13;
A program by Scott Mather,&#13;
trumpet, will open the fall series&#13;
of faculty recitals at Parkside at 8&#13;
p. m. on Tuesday, Sept. 30, in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theater. Mather&#13;
will be assisted by carol ecu&#13;
(piano), Frances Bedford (harpsichord),&#13;
Daryl Durran&#13;
(bassoon), and Timothy Fox&#13;
(trumpet). The program is free&#13;
and open to the public and will&#13;
include works by G. B. Viviani,&#13;
iXonri Stanley, j. a. cj. fYeruda,&#13;
Alberto Ginastera and Marcel&#13;
Bitsch.&#13;
PARKSIDE FOODSERVICE&#13;
announces&#13;
THE INTRODUCTION OF COUNTRY FRESH&#13;
CHEF'S SALAD&#13;
IN THE SQUARE&#13;
$1.59 — AFTER4:0 0 P. M. DAILY&#13;
UNION SQUARE GRILL&#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;
Fall Semester Bowling Leagues&#13;
Forming Cost includes bowling, shoes, awards&#13;
- Red Pin in effect for all leagues&#13;
LEAGUE TIME TYPE&#13;
BOWLERS PER&#13;
TEAM WEEKS * COST&#13;
LEAGUE&#13;
BEGINS&#13;
Doubles League Mon. 1 p. m. - 2 p. m. Men's 2 player/2 games 9 $1.50/person Oct. 13&#13;
Mixed League Tue. 7 p. m. - 9 p. m. Mixed 4 player/3 game 9 $2.50/person Oct. 14&#13;
Bowling Club Leagues Wed. 1 p. m. - 2 p. m. Mixed 1 player/2 game 10 $1.50/person Oct. 8&#13;
Varsity League Fri. 1 p. m. - 3 p. m. Mixed 1 player/3 games 9 $3.50/person Oct. 10&#13;
Sunday Mixed League Sun. 7 p. m. - 9 p. m. Mixed 4 player/13 games 9 $2.50/person Oct. 12&#13;
For more information and to sign up:&#13;
stop down at UNION rec center counter&#13;
, — &#13;
Thursday, September 25,1980&#13;
Bedford Duo to perform&#13;
ThThe e BReHf ed nrH Hua nAmnmn^/1 *£ 1 « ^ . ford Duo comprised of&#13;
Monte Bedford, oboe, and Frances&#13;
Bedford, harpsichord, will present&#13;
a free public concert at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Saturday, Oct 4, at St. Luke's&#13;
Church, Racine.&#13;
The Bedfords recently returned&#13;
from Edinburgh, Scotland, where&#13;
they performed the European&#13;
premieres of three works written&#13;
especially for the duo at the annual&#13;
meeting of the International&#13;
Double Reed Society. Frances&#13;
Bedford is a member of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
music faculty and Monte Bedford&#13;
is a member of the Capstone&#13;
Woodwind Quartet, the resident&#13;
faculty ensemble at the University&#13;
of Alabama.&#13;
Their program at St. Luke's will&#13;
include works by Handel,&#13;
Cpuperlin, Scarlatti, Britten and&#13;
J.S. Bach.&#13;
Scott Mather, trumpet, will be&#13;
guest soloist for Handel's Suite in&#13;
D Major, assisted by Daryl&#13;
Durran, bassoon. A chamber&#13;
orchestra including S. Eden&#13;
Vaning and Terry Naidicz, violins,&#13;
Patience Balcom, viola, Janine&#13;
Roth, cello, and James Seay&#13;
Dean, bass, will assist the duo for&#13;
the concluding work, Bach's&#13;
Concerto in G Minor.&#13;
Concert-goers are invited to a&#13;
post-concert reception in the&#13;
church library.&#13;
Business fraternity re-instituted&#13;
TT&#13;
hp TT W - Parlreirin T* :n • i he U.W. - Parkside Marketing&#13;
Club is attempting to re-institute&#13;
the business fraternity - PI&#13;
SIGMA EPSILON, chapter&#13;
Gamma Beta. UW-P was&#13;
originally chartered in 1974.&#13;
PI SIGMA EPSILON - is a&#13;
national business fraternity&#13;
designed to provide students with&#13;
opportunities to apply classroom&#13;
nrartiral situations.&#13;
It also will provide an atmosphere&#13;
of social interaction between&#13;
students, faculty, administration,&#13;
and business executives. The high&#13;
point of the academic year will be&#13;
the national convention in&#13;
Houston, Texas, April 3rd - 5th.&#13;
Men and women, who are&#13;
academically successful, and who&#13;
manifest an interest in sales and&#13;
"IT1&#13;
'"""" "•*" eligible for&#13;
membership in PI SIGMA EPSILON.&#13;
&#13;
Support for the chapter has been&#13;
received from Parkside administration&#13;
and the business&#13;
department. Officers include Pete&#13;
Regnery, President; Alane Andresen,&#13;
Vice President; Victoria&#13;
Waisman, Secretary; Josie&#13;
Shema, Treasurer; and Glenn&#13;
Bozon, faculty adviser.&#13;
THE POWER PLANT&#13;
5 3936&#13;
157&#13;
43i01&#13;
St&#13;
'&#13;
/\ ^ LIVE BAND S&#13;
%•/ &gt;0 -i - Fridays, Saturdays&#13;
"7 ^&#13;
unc*&#13;
ay&#13;
s ^ Wednesdays&#13;
\ c&#13;
;SS \4&#13;
Contact&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
Reaganand&#13;
abortion issue&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
During the recent Presidential debates, the abortion issue came up.&#13;
And, predictably Ronald Reagan relied on sentimentality in formulating&#13;
a platform" from which to evoke decent Americans' sympathies&#13;
for a most profound question. At what point, Reagan asked us&#13;
all, does an unborn fetus become a human being? After a heavy pause&#13;
P&#13;
r&#13;
?&#13;
misedAmerica that if he becomes President, abortions will&#13;
I hW available until that moral issue is cleared up, if ever and&#13;
p-obably after a good cry as well.&#13;
I woulcjflike to know how Reagan proposes to decide the question. He&#13;
cannot possibly hope to get away with setting an arbitrary date (three&#13;
days, six months?), and the word of God, even in these born-again&#13;
times, won t hold water in the House or the Senate.&#13;
The scientific method seems to be his best bet. As a matter of f act if&#13;
Reagan can scientifically prove the exact point of fetal development&#13;
that corresponds to humanness, he could probably be a lot more to the&#13;
history scholars than a movie actor, or even a President; if he plots his&#13;
campaign brilliantly, he could make Messiah.&#13;
With all that opportunity waiting, and the man so obviously unable to&#13;
see anything beyond the tears running off the end of his nose, I have&#13;
taken pity on him. Ronald Reagan needs help. So, being a typically&#13;
greedy opportunist, I have devised the following test for Reagan to use&#13;
on an initial sampling of unborn fetuses. The test, I believe, is unbiased&#13;
and reliable because it tests for abilities and traits that can be predicted&#13;
to develop mto human qualities and skills that not only separate the&#13;
human from non-human, but could also be applied at a later date to&#13;
separate American from non-American. And it's so easy to administer&#13;
even Reagan himself could interview the initial sampling. I think he'll&#13;
like it:&#13;
TEST TO DETERMINE THE RELATIVE HUMANNESS&#13;
OF THE UNBORN FETUS&#13;
Section I: Social Security Administration Recognition&#13;
a. Will SS issue a number to subject?&#13;
b. Will SS issue benefits to subject?&#13;
c. Will SS cancel benefits if subject is spontaneously aborted?&#13;
Section II: Following Directions&#13;
a. Subject's handling of computer card test materials&#13;
b. Subject's handling of federal tax materials&#13;
c. Subject's response to draft registration.&#13;
Section III: Recognition of major credit cards&#13;
Section IV: Media Potential&#13;
attention span property regulated to thirteen-minute&#13;
segments of viewing material?&#13;
Can subject recognize products in fifteen-minute segments?&#13;
Of course, the complete test is a bit more complicated than this one&#13;
When you have a good idea, you don't reveal the whole of it to iust&#13;
anyone until you're on the way to the bank. ^&#13;
Positions open on P.S.G.A.&#13;
bv Tracv Gruhpr —ni&#13;
Looks Great.&#13;
Feels Great.&#13;
by Tracy Gruber&#13;
President, P.S.G.A.&#13;
The P.S.G.A. fall elections will&#13;
be held Oct. 15-16, in Molinaro&#13;
Hall. At this time, nine senate&#13;
seats will be up for re-election as&#13;
will one SUFAC position.&#13;
What can an individual gain by&#13;
becoming a member of P.S.G.A.?&#13;
1. Experience in decision&#13;
making: A senator must vote&#13;
his/her conscience while acting&#13;
in the best interests of the majority&#13;
of UW-P students.&#13;
2. Experience in organizational&#13;
structure, procedure, and&#13;
problems.&#13;
3. The change to learn how the&#13;
University system and the&#13;
campus is run and governed.&#13;
4. The opportunity to meet&#13;
students, professors, and administrators&#13;
at UW-P and in the&#13;
UW system.&#13;
5. Proof of your leadership&#13;
abilities. Many employers hire&#13;
graduates who have had&#13;
responsible positions during their&#13;
college years.&#13;
If you are interested in running&#13;
for one of the open positions, the&#13;
first step is to stop in the P.S.G A&#13;
office, WLLC D-137, and pick up a&#13;
petition for nomination form. The&#13;
petition must be signed by 25&#13;
students in order to place your&#13;
name on the ballot. The signed&#13;
petition is due in the P.S.G.A.&#13;
office on Fri. Oct. 3, by noon.&#13;
P.S.G.A. welcomes interested&#13;
persons to stop in and discuss any&#13;
questions you may have.&#13;
Do you think parking permit&#13;
costs at UW-P are out of line for a&#13;
commuter campus? According to&#13;
a Board of Regents policy, all&#13;
parking facilities must generate&#13;
enough revenue to pay for&#13;
themselves.&#13;
The money generated by selling&#13;
parking permits totaled $135,467,&#13;
while $172,167 is generated by&#13;
parking fines, meters, bus tokens,&#13;
and interest income. All of this&#13;
money is used to cover the expenses&#13;
of the Campus Security&#13;
department. The services of this&#13;
department revolve around&#13;
security, parking, and busing. The&#13;
breakdown of expenses are:&#13;
$36,784 — Salaries; $16,000 — Lot&#13;
maintenance, including snow&#13;
removal, clean-up, and lighting;&#13;
$18,471 — Supplies; $32,432 — Bus&#13;
service; $68,480 - Building and&#13;
equipment mairitenance; $172 167&#13;
Total revenue.&#13;
(All these figures are taken&#13;
from the 1980-81 Auxiliary Budget&#13;
booklet, published by the UW-P&#13;
business office.)&#13;
Parking permit costs have&#13;
increased only when, and by an&#13;
amount absolutely necessary to&#13;
meet repair, expansion, and inflation&#13;
demands. Therefore, if you&#13;
Privilege of parking on&#13;
the UW-P campus, you will have&#13;
to pay the expense of maintaining&#13;
the facilities. &#13;
Middle Age Crazy' lacks continuity&#13;
"Middle Age Crazv" comp* y&#13;
.-&#13;
ee s halucinated —— m&#13;
by Bruce E. Preston&#13;
"Middle Age Crazy" comes&#13;
across as though a lot of people got&#13;
drunk, wrote the first hour, then&#13;
sobered up and wrote the last&#13;
twenty minutes. You don't have to&#13;
be middle aged to enjoy this film&#13;
just crazy.&#13;
It attempts to tell the story of&#13;
Bobby Lee Burnett (Bruce Dern),&#13;
a rhan who builds taco stands for a&#13;
living. Upon turning 40, Bobby Lee&#13;
decides he doesn't want the&#13;
hassles and responsibilities of&#13;
growing old. He's just a middle&#13;
aged man who wants to prove he&#13;
still can (as the song goes).&#13;
Along with the fears of o ld age,&#13;
Bobby Lee begins having&#13;
daydreams. Having sex with his&#13;
son's girlfriend, dying, hot rodding&#13;
in a Porsche and having an&#13;
affair with a Dallas Cowgirl, to&#13;
name a few. The latter and the one&#13;
preceeding it become realities&#13;
when he tries to regain his lost&#13;
youth.&#13;
Dern, who turns in some notable&#13;
performances here, is truly this&#13;
film's "diamond in the ruff" (and&#13;
do I mean rough). Many a scene is&#13;
saved by his talent as an experienced&#13;
actor.&#13;
Executive producers Sid and&#13;
Marty Krofft (whose credits include&#13;
such movie and television&#13;
greats as "H. R. Puffenstuff" and&#13;
"Sigmund and the Seamonsters")&#13;
have definitely left their mark on&#13;
the Mickey Mouse beginning of&#13;
this film. It has a great lack of&#13;
continuity.&#13;
Practically no plot is detectable&#13;
for about the first half - hour. A&#13;
theme can then be scraped out of&#13;
Bobby Lee's halucinated&#13;
graduation speech: "the future&#13;
sucks so stay 18 for the rest of your&#13;
life." Some theme.&#13;
Graham Jarvis merely&#13;
regurgitates the weak "country&#13;
bumpkin" role he created for&#13;
TV's "Mary Hartman, Mary&#13;
Hartman" when he appears as&#13;
Bobby Lee's best friend.&#13;
Ann - Margret plays Sue Anne&#13;
Burnett, Bobby Lee's wife. In the&#13;
beginning she's just there as a&#13;
mindless body, but the last half&#13;
brings her to us as a, woman with&#13;
real character. She executes her&#13;
end performances nicely.&#13;
"Middle Age Crazy's" only&#13;
humor (a few laughs now and&#13;
then) comes when it points out the&#13;
real humor of e very day life.&#13;
Carl Kleinschmitt (screenplay)&#13;
must be schizophrenic, for as I've&#13;
mentioned the last 20 minutes or&#13;
so takes on a totally new&#13;
dimension from the boorish first&#13;
hour.&#13;
A mellow song, penned by&#13;
dynamos Burt Bacharach and&#13;
Carol ("They're Playing Our&#13;
Song") Bayer Sager sets the mood&#13;
for some good serious acting by&#13;
Dern and Margret.&#13;
It's a real crime to see such&#13;
potentional (both acting and&#13;
story) actually wasted in an effort&#13;
to gain a few cheap laughs. This&#13;
really could have been a good&#13;
comedy.&#13;
The over glorified advertising&#13;
campaign states, "Science has yet&#13;
to discover a method to prevent&#13;
Middle Age Crazy . . ." Oh well,&#13;
one can always hope.&#13;
Astrologer casts&#13;
students' futures&#13;
by Sue Michetti&#13;
On September 22, Marcella&#13;
Ruble Rook, an astrologer, spoke&#13;
to a group of about twenty&#13;
students in the Union Bazaar.&#13;
She introduced basic&#13;
astrological concepts flippantly&#13;
and superficially. However, there&#13;
was some sense to the rapid&#13;
dissemination of incomplete inf&#13;
ormation.&#13;
ftook explained how the sun&#13;
deals with the inner nature, the&#13;
moon with emotions and women in&#13;
the life, Venus with the emotional&#13;
aesthetic nature and style,&#13;
Mercury with mental qualities,&#13;
Mars with the physical and sex&#13;
drives, Jupiter with financial&#13;
matters as well as the perspective&#13;
and philosophies on life, and&#13;
Saturn with responsibilities.&#13;
"Never give orders, only&#13;
suggestions to Aquarians and&#13;
Pisces," Rook said. "Sagittarians&#13;
and Capricorns can be disarming."&#13;
She said that Gemini's&#13;
often go into PR, communications,&#13;
or computers, but&#13;
that Virgos also can become involved&#13;
with computers.&#13;
"Pisces are good with details.&#13;
They are the best of actors and&#13;
actresses," she said, "because&#13;
they have the ability to absorb or&#13;
become a situation."&#13;
She said that Leo's are the most&#13;
flamboyant and have the best&#13;
personalities; thus, they do well&#13;
on radio and TV.&#13;
Discussing political astrology,&#13;
Rook said that people often&#13;
mistakenly cast election day as&#13;
containing the deciding factors&#13;
when they should look at the&#13;
inauguration day chart. Rook said&#13;
that Carter had good aspects for&#13;
Need students for hunger walk&#13;
"For the people of the Third&#13;
World, walking is more than a&#13;
pass-time. It is the only way to&#13;
survive! In Madagascar, they&#13;
walk seven miles to the well or&#13;
river for every drop of water they&#13;
use. In Peru, they walk fifteen&#13;
miles down the mountain and&#13;
back for medical care. In Haiti,&#13;
they walk twenty miles to the&#13;
market to sell the vegetables from&#13;
their gardens.&#13;
"We walk because more than&#13;
inauguration day.&#13;
In the near future, Rook said&#13;
that people born in the end of&#13;
Gemini, Sagittarius, and Pisces&#13;
should have more stress involving&#13;
authority figures over the next&#13;
few weeks. People born in the last&#13;
six or seven days of Scorpio,&#13;
Cancer, and Pisces will go&#13;
through changes until the end of&#13;
the year. She said that these&#13;
changes will cause the breaking&#13;
away from ruts and that they will&#13;
be finishing up happenings which&#13;
occurred earlier in February.&#13;
Jody Bedore,. a student,&#13;
remarked, "She seems to be&#13;
pretty good."&#13;
"I thought she was fantastic,"&#13;
said Cindy Stokman. "She got me&#13;
thinking about the future. We're&#13;
planning a trip and she told me&#13;
that I'd be getting bruises during&#13;
that time. She gets you thinking."&#13;
Chris Mayeshiba, a junior&#13;
classman, said, "It sounds like&#13;
she knows what she is talking&#13;
about. She seems very experienced.&#13;
She presents astrology&#13;
very fluently."&#13;
Continued On Page Seven&#13;
460,000,000 of these men, women,&#13;
and children are hungry. We walk&#13;
to provide food, seeds, tools. We&#13;
walk to provide wells, roads, and&#13;
schools." This is the message of&#13;
CROP according to Rev. Tony&#13;
Larsen of the Racine hunger walk.&#13;
Walk representatives plan to&#13;
contact church leaders, youth and&#13;
student groups, and civic leaders&#13;
to recruit walk participants and&#13;
sponsors. Sponsors will be asked&#13;
to make a financial contribution&#13;
for each kilometer walked.&#13;
Families, old and young, will be&#13;
asked to participate. For further&#13;
information regarding the hunger&#13;
walk, contact Tom LoGuidice in&#13;
the education office of Carthage&#13;
College. Racine people may call&#13;
552-8520, Ext. 257, Kenosha people&#13;
call 551-8500, ext. 257.&#13;
The 20 Kilometer walk is&#13;
scheduled for Sunday, October 5&#13;
beginning at 12:30 at the Racine&#13;
YMCA. The walk will follow the&#13;
familiar "Lighthouse Run." See&#13;
you there!&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction MusicLowest&#13;
Price Always&#13;
BIDINGER&#13;
MUSIC HOUSE INC.&#13;
626 56th St. 6542932&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents&#13;
"She can wail as well as she can whisper"&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1 st&#13;
1 - 3 p. m.&#13;
Dur ing A c tiv iti es P e r i o d!&#13;
U NION R OOM 1 0 4 - 1 06&#13;
FREE&#13;
PARKSIDE FOODSERVICE&#13;
announces&#13;
BY POPULAR REQUEST&#13;
THE CONTINUATION OF&#13;
*1.00 OFF&#13;
PIZZAS&#13;
(MEDIUM&amp; LARGE)&#13;
DURING ACTIVITIES PERIOD&#13;
1:00 to 2:00 P. M. — Mon., Wed. &amp; Fri.&#13;
UNION SQUARE GRILL &#13;
Thursday, September 25,1980 Ranger&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
I FCTI tri? . „ THURSDAY, SEPT. 25&#13;
7 a&#13;
„ 3 V.&#13;
a min&#13;
Union 106&#13;
• Ron Kent of AFSCME In-&#13;
?"**.&#13;
,How 0ur Union Began&#13;
"&#13;
The program is free&#13;
. c_,_ FRIDAY, SEPT. 26&#13;
^ T,&#13;
LOG"^77&#13;
adings bY Marcella Rubel Rook starting at 1 p.m. in&#13;
tne union Building. Admission is free for Parkside students. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
CONCERT — at 8 p.m. in Union Square with O'Brien and Sevara and&#13;
featuring Josh White, Jr. Admission at the door is $2.00 for Parkside&#13;
students and $2.50 fo r a guest. State and Parkside ID cards are&#13;
required. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
MOVIE — " The End" will be shown at 8 p.m. 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;
SUNDAY, SEPT. 28&#13;
MOVIE — "The End" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
MONDAY, SEPT. 29&#13;
ROUND TABLE — at 11:45 a.m. in Union 207. Prof. Ann Gurnack of&#13;
UWP will talk on "Incentive Systems for Public Sector&#13;
Organizations." The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
WORKSHOP — "Getting Involved" at 1 p.m. in Union 104. The program&#13;
is free for Parkside students.&#13;
VIDEO TAPE "Recording Session" will be shown at 1 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square. Admission is free for Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
TUESDAY, SEPT. 30&#13;
COURSES — "Parenting in Divorce" and "Winners are Communicators"&#13;
start tonight in Tallent Hall at 7 p.m. Call ext. 2312 for&#13;
more information. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
RECITAL —by faculty members Scott Mather and Carol Isell at 8 p.m.&#13;
in the Union Cinema. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
*&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 1&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE — featuring Betsy Kaske at 1 p.m. in Union 104-106.&#13;
Admission is free for Parkside students. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
WORKSHOP — "Math Anxiety" at 1 p.m. in MOLN 223. The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
VIDEO TAPE — "Recording Session" will be shown at 1 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square. Admission is free for Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
COURSES — "Watering and Thirsting" at 7 p.m. and "Cash&#13;
Management" at 7:30 p.m. in Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312 for details.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
MOVIE — "Footprints in Stone" challenges the authenticity of the&#13;
evolutionary theory. Union Cinema Theater 1:00 p.m. Sponsored by&#13;
IVCF.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
ROXANNE NELSON spikes the ball as Parkside waltzed by Chicago St. and Carroll.&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Rangers split in tournament&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The Parkside volleyball team&#13;
hosted Chicago State and Carroll&#13;
last week and totally humiliated&#13;
both teams. The Rangers defeated&#13;
Chicago State 15-13 and 15-4. They&#13;
then demolished Carroll 15-13 and&#13;
15-6. Co ach Linda Henderson had&#13;
praise for her opponents.&#13;
"Chicago State was better than&#13;
expected. They are vastly improved&#13;
from last year. They have&#13;
a very good defense but unfortunately&#13;
for them, no offense."&#13;
Tough trips for tennis&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
Last week the women's tennis&#13;
team ventured into Milwaukee for&#13;
a match against Marquette&#13;
University and came away on the&#13;
short end of a 7-2 team score. The&#13;
only bright spot for the Rangers&#13;
was the play of s ensational freshman&#13;
Lisa Lindsey. She continued&#13;
her unblemished number one&#13;
singles record with a hard fought&#13;
6-4,- 4-6, 6-4 victory over highly&#13;
regarded Marquette star Andrea&#13;
Foeller. The other Parkside&#13;
victory was the number two&#13;
doubles team of Lindsey - Pam&#13;
Sumi.&#13;
Coach Noreen Goggin took the&#13;
loss in stride. "Marquette is an&#13;
excellent team. To get two matches&#13;
against them is nothing to be&#13;
ashamed of. I'm very satisfied&#13;
with the way our people played."&#13;
She may have been satisfied&#13;
with the way her team performed&#13;
against Marquette, but she had&#13;
other thoughts about the team&#13;
when they took to the road against&#13;
Green Bay with Stevens Point.&#13;
The Rangers beat Green Bay 7 - 2&#13;
and was then upset by Stevens&#13;
P o i n t 5-4 .&#13;
"It is hard to play Green Bay&#13;
EXCEPTIONAL&#13;
MANAGEMENT&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
WE OFFER:&#13;
• starting salary up to $14,500;&#13;
increases to $24,000 in 4 years&#13;
• 30 days paid vacation annually&#13;
• fully financed graduate programs&#13;
• superior family health plan&#13;
• more responsibility and leadership&#13;
opportunities&#13;
• world wide travel and adventure&#13;
• prestige and personal growth&#13;
potential&#13;
CURRENT&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES:&#13;
• NUCLEAR ENGINEERING&#13;
• BUSINESS MANAGEMENT&#13;
• AVIATION • LAW • NURSING&#13;
• MEDICAL SCHOOL&#13;
SCHOLARSHIPS&#13;
• INTELLIGENCE&#13;
• CIVIL ENGINEERING&#13;
• SHIPBOARD OPERATIONS&#13;
Ask your Placement Officer to set up an interview with a Navy representative when he&#13;
visits the campus on:&#13;
30 Sept. — 1 Oct.&#13;
or contact your Navy representative at 414-291-3055 Co llect&#13;
NAVY OFFICER PROGRAMS&#13;
611 N. Broadway, Milwaukee, WI 53202&#13;
On Friday and Saturday the&#13;
team participated in the Wright&#13;
State Tournament at Dayton,&#13;
Ohio. Ten schools were invited&#13;
and the format was set up so there&#13;
were two divisions of f ive teams.&#13;
The Rangers were pooled with&#13;
Mount St. Joseph College of Ohi o,&#13;
Franklin College (Indiana),&#13;
Northeastern Illinois and the&#13;
University of Akron, Ohio.&#13;
The Rangers got off to a slow&#13;
start on Friday. "We played&#13;
poorly on Friday. It looked lifce we&#13;
were playing something other&#13;
because they aren't very strong.&#13;
They were very weak overall. It&#13;
just doesn't help to play £ team&#13;
like them. They could barely keep&#13;
the ball in play."&#13;
Stevens Point was a different&#13;
story. "I don't think we should&#13;
have lost. We played sloppy and&#13;
made a lot of mistakes. We just&#13;
should not have lost."&#13;
To be fair to the team it should&#13;
be noted that Nancy Kivi didn't&#13;
join the team on the trip because&#13;
she was down due to illness.&#13;
"Everyone had to play up one to&#13;
make up for Nancy's absence.&#13;
Another thing was that it was&#13;
raining outside so we had to go&#13;
indoors. Then if it stopped raining&#13;
they would make us go outside&#13;
Continued On page Seven&#13;
than volleyball." The Rangers lost&#13;
to Franklin College, 15-6 and 15-9.&#13;
They also lost to Northeastern&#13;
Illinois on Friday, 15-11 and 16-14.&#13;
"We started to show some signs of&#13;
life on Friday and that may have&#13;
started us off for Saturday."&#13;
On Saturday the Rangers beat&#13;
Mount St. Joseph 15-7 and 15-12.&#13;
They followed that up with a 15-1&#13;
and 15-3 killing of Akron. However&#13;
the 2-2 record wasn't good enough&#13;
for the team to advance.&#13;
"If we could have played well on&#13;
Friday we would have advanced.&#13;
It's our own fault." It wasn't a&#13;
complete loss because Henderson&#13;
found out some things ability-wise&#13;
about her players. "I found out&#13;
who can do what best. Each&#13;
player has a role on this team.&#13;
Everybody does something best&#13;
and a tournament can show it.&#13;
Now what we have to do is&#13;
maximize people's strengths. We&#13;
also know what we have to work&#13;
on more."&#13;
This Friday and Saturday the&#13;
Rangers host their own Ranger&#13;
Invitational. The Rangers host&#13;
Stevens Point, St. Xavier,&#13;
Valparaiso, St. Francis and&#13;
Carthage. On Friday evening the&#13;
women play St. Xavier at 6:00&#13;
p.m. and Carthage at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Next Tuesday evening the team&#13;
hosts Milwaukee and Lewis&#13;
starting at 6:00 p.m.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
Personals&#13;
Pavarotti sings UFO. "A resiliant Doctor,&#13;
Doctor" — The Times&#13;
Have bike — will hang I&#13;
B lT^c s M°'&#13;
eCUlar AC'&#13;
d Sfrikes A98in!&#13;
Don S. — Give me a call sometime. I w ant to&#13;
see if you're really the "Hulk". Felicia&#13;
Ken — You have the Ranger staff, but we've&#13;
got YDATE I&#13;
Please bring all dead animals to GRNQ 357&#13;
Thank you&#13;
Lisa: A toast to your twentieth. Happy Birthday.&#13;
NCA&#13;
Ray C. Look-alike and Art Contest. TodayMoln&#13;
115.&#13;
"I Do The exponential to insure my differential."&#13;
Laplace Trans Form&#13;
Tsh??°n P&#13;
"&#13;
e 2 Ke&#13;
" MeVer ' Sh0U,d be lit,le&#13;
(All five of us read it! lOP's/Chain Gang)&#13;
- week? ^pV01&#13;
" ,hfee 8dS P9id ,0r ,ast&#13;
Why do you assume that all three were put in&#13;
by him?&#13;
Hey Mikey, Would you like to help instruct a&#13;
Tushology Seminar? Mom and Jensv&#13;
Admit it Ranger! lOP's ads increase your&#13;
readership 10 percent!&#13;
lOP^s — You're all Muckos. Peepee Caca&#13;
Anxious cow seeks farmer with warm hands.&#13;
M"™l&#13;
|!!'J®Marv&#13;
"&#13;
,ake&#13;
s&#13;
me&#13;
|t&#13;
edma&#13;
r&#13;
shimallows&#13;
morbidly mushy. Ten times fast.&#13;
Are the Student Militants into S&amp;M'&#13;
Frenchfried firefly eating contest&#13;
dining room.&#13;
Dave Vollmer - we like the legs on page 8&#13;
Chain Gang w&#13;
°&#13;
-&#13;
lOP's — Idiots of Parkside? More like&#13;
Ignorant Ovulating Pukeheads.&#13;
S'mTlSpThave""&#13;
H°"&#13;
Gr"' &lt;*-»&#13;
i°f a f&#13;
£&#13;
ather ,,ock t09ether. I&#13;
in ,ove&#13;
- ^eddy Fairy&#13;
i™&gt;».&#13;
C°&#13;
U,d PU&lt; more than 10 wis into a&#13;
Lmp to nfT?®' ,hev would ei,her n&#13;
°' be&#13;
Lif the'r "copy °" " Ran96r&#13;
"°&#13;
Uld h&#13;
° V* ,0&#13;
ri5h&#13;
'&#13;
,0&#13;
-&#13;
1&#13;
Union&#13;
For Sale&#13;
350cc Honda $325. Ph. 885-1214&#13;
72 Ford Maverick, am/fm stereo 8-track,&#13;
ps/pb, 554X10 m iles, good tires and brakes&#13;
637-4312&#13;
Baldwin console piano - like brand new. Call&#13;
633 3964&#13;
Stereo system, Yamaha-AIWA, mint condition.&#13;
Reasonable offer. 886-9126&#13;
West High land Whit e Terri ers. AKC&#13;
registered. Excellent pedigree. $300. Ph.&#13;
859-2808&#13;
Wedding rings — 3 ring set. Appraised $600.&#13;
Best otter. 554-8134&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
"frs.r"&#13;
1&#13;
?&#13;
1&#13;
""&#13;
Address and stuff envelopes at home. $800 per&#13;
o°&#13;
S&#13;
,&#13;
Sible&#13;
' Any a9eor location. See ad&#13;
under Business Opportunities. Triple "S".&#13;
Business Opportunities&#13;
Address and stuff envelopes at home. $800 per&#13;
month possible. Otter, send $1.00 (refundable)&#13;
to: Triple "S", 869-C Juniper Rd ,&#13;
Pinon Hills, CA 92372&#13;
Meetings&#13;
esP&#13;
ano1&#13;
"- Thursdays &lt;&#13;
.00/ Mo In D128. Come and try it! inte&#13;
Varsity Christian Fellowship.&#13;
Miscellaneous&#13;
Ginger — 18 Sept. Parking Lot divided by&#13;
zero? Chain Gang&#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;
Ranger Thursday, September 25, 1980&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Gerhartz makes his point&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
After being shut out its two&#13;
previous games, the men's soccer&#13;
team came out smoking last week.&#13;
The team journeyed into Illinois&#13;
twice and came away with two&#13;
victories. The men defeated&#13;
Trinity College 2-0, and then in&#13;
overtime smashed Roosevelt&#13;
University 3-1.&#13;
Against Trinity the Rangers, as&#13;
coach Hal Henderson put it,&#13;
"played in the monsoons. It was a&#13;
cold, windy, wet day. It started&#13;
raining in the first 15 minutes and&#13;
it just got worse." The Rangers&#13;
played into the wind in the first&#13;
half and were fortunate to hold&#13;
Trinity scoreless although they&#13;
themselves were blanked.&#13;
The Rangers had the wind and&#13;
rain on their backs in the second&#13;
half and they utilized them to their&#13;
fullest extent. The Rangers were&#13;
able to apply unmerciful pressure&#13;
and scored their first goal on a&#13;
penalty kick by Mike Kiefer. The&#13;
kick followed a hand violation by a&#13;
Trinity player who hit the ball&#13;
with his hand out of frustration&#13;
after he was unable to clear the&#13;
ball because of the weather.&#13;
The second Ranger goal was&#13;
scored when Brad Faust received&#13;
a perfect pass from Jeff Dennehy&#13;
and drilled it into the net.&#13;
"It was just miserable playing&#13;
conditions. The keepers couldn't&#13;
hold the ball, the ball skidded and&#13;
the wind blew the ball. We were&#13;
fortunate they didn't score on us in&#13;
the first half. I was extremely&#13;
pleased with the defense considering&#13;
the elements."&#13;
Although the Rangers outshot&#13;
their opponents, 18-11, and the&#13;
Rangers scored twice, Henderson&#13;
wanted more offensively. "We&#13;
built well but we still don't finish&#13;
well. We've got to get more shots&#13;
off."&#13;
When the Rangers went to&#13;
Chicago to play Roosevelt, the&#13;
offense finally came alive.&#13;
Parkside outshot their opponents&#13;
21-9, and put three of those shots in&#13;
the goal. "We controlled the&#13;
majority of the game but we had&#13;
the same problem as we did with&#13;
Beloit in that we controlled it and&#13;
had opportunities but couldn't&#13;
finish."&#13;
The Rangers almost proved to&#13;
be their own worst enemy because&#13;
their offensive penetration led to a&#13;
break-away goal by Roosevelt.&#13;
Because they controlled the game&#13;
Henderson substituted freely. "I&#13;
substituted freely because of the&#13;
confidence we controlled the&#13;
game. It back-fired." Roosevelt&#13;
scored with 30 seconds left to play&#13;
in regulation to tie Parkside 1-1,&#13;
forcing an overtime.&#13;
Brad Faust scored the only&#13;
Ranger goal in regulation time&#13;
early in the second half. Freshman&#13;
Scott Gerhartz scored three&#13;
goals in regulation time that were&#13;
disallowed. Said Gerhartz, "two&#13;
hand balls were called back and&#13;
one free kick." Of his overtime&#13;
heroics he said "one score was a&#13;
head shot and the other was on a&#13;
break-away and I beat two guys.&#13;
I've been getting a lot of garbage&#13;
goals but I earned the breakaway."&#13;
&#13;
Gerhartz, a freshman from&#13;
Kimberly, has great pride and&#13;
praise for him teammates.&#13;
"We've got a lot of talent this&#13;
year. Our defense has been doing&#13;
a hell of a job so far. Defense is&#13;
keeping us in the games so us guys&#13;
on offense have to score more."&#13;
The men's next game is Friday&#13;
against Whitewater at home. The&#13;
game is scheduled for 4:00 p.m. in&#13;
the Bowl.&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Want to win two free pitchers of beer? All you have to do is fill out this&#13;
entry form and bring it down to Ranger office, D139 WLLC Put a check&#13;
by your pick.&#13;
Houston at Cincinnati -&#13;
N.Y. Jets at Baltimore&#13;
Oakland at Buffalo&#13;
San Diego at Kansas City -&#13;
Atlanta at San Francisco —&#13;
Dallas at Green Bay&#13;
Los Angeles at N.Y. Giants&#13;
Minnesota at Detroit&#13;
Philadelphia at St. Louis —&#13;
Chicago at Pittsburgh&#13;
Cleveland at Tampa Bay —&#13;
New Orleans at Miami&#13;
Seattle at Washington&#13;
Denver at New England —&#13;
Tie breaker:&#13;
Philadelphia-St. Louis game.&#13;
will be the total combined points scored in the&#13;
Name:&#13;
S.S. No.&#13;
Rules: 1&#13;
1) One entry per person&#13;
2) Must be a student at UW-Parkside&#13;
3) Person with most correct picks wins (in case of a tie, the total&#13;
pints 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 2:00 p.m on the&#13;
Friday preceeding the games&#13;
7) Winners will be announced the following week in Pro Picks. Come&#13;
to the Ranger office to collect winnings.&#13;
SPORTS CALENDAR&#13;
Friday, Sept. 26: SOCCER vs. WHITEWATER (4 p.m.); GOLF&#13;
RANGER INVITATIONAL (9:30 a.m.)&#13;
Friday-Saturday, Sept. 26-27:&#13;
VITATIONAL (5 p.m.)&#13;
VOLLEYBALL — RANGER INSaturday,&#13;
Sept. 27: TENNIS at Whitewater Invitational (8 a.m)-&#13;
CROSS-COUNTRY — TF A/USA MIDWEST COLLEGIATE&#13;
CHAMPIONSHIPS (12 no on)&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 30: VOLLEYBALL vs. MILWAUKEE &amp; LEWIS (6 p.m.)&#13;
Astrologer . . .&#13;
Continued From Page Five&#13;
"Everything she said about me&#13;
was right. Some of it was uncanny.&#13;
She said that I was very&#13;
visual as far as color and art are&#13;
concerned. And that I have to&#13;
visualize things to understand&#13;
them. Art is my major and there is&#13;
no way she could have known that.&#13;
She said that I was going to spend&#13;
a lot of money this weekend on&#13;
pleasure, and I'm going to Octoberfest&#13;
this weekend, and it will&#13;
cost a lot of money," remarked&#13;
Kelly Nichols.&#13;
Rick Folsom said, "Some of th e&#13;
observations she made after I&#13;
gave her my birthday were very&#13;
accurate. I was surprised most&#13;
things were complimentary. Most&#13;
people don't tend to deny complimentary&#13;
things."&#13;
Tennis . . .&#13;
Continued From Page Five&#13;
again. It was a matter of a lot of&#13;
things contributing to our loss."&#13;
On Saturday the team travels to&#13;
Whitewater for the Whitewater&#13;
Invitational. Last year the team&#13;
finished third and Goggin has&#13;
hopes of d uplicating that feat. In&#13;
the Whitewater Invitational a&#13;
player is allowed to play in only&#13;
the singles or only the doubles&#13;
competition, but not both. Goggin&#13;
plans to use Lindsey, Pam Sumi&#13;
and Char Hall in singles play and&#13;
doubles teams of Kathy ThomasKivi,&#13;
Lori Bleashka-Laura Bianco&#13;
and Barb Pruett - Emily Modiz.&#13;
(euf/nm/A''&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#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;
PARKSIDE FOODSERVICE&#13;
HAVE YOU TRIED&#13;
OUR&#13;
NEW1&#13;
.&#13;
English&#13;
Style&#13;
FISH N CHIPS&#13;
IN UNION SQUARE? &#13;
Fashions and a&#13;
wholo lot moro&#13;
WE OFFER:&#13;
GRAND OPENING AND&#13;
SALE*A*BRAHON SALE STARTS&#13;
WED. SEPT. 24TH&#13;
"LAYAWAY&#13;
AND&#13;
EXCHANGE&#13;
PRIVILEGES"&#13;
GIFT CERTIFICATES&#13;
7AM-10PNI&#13;
AND CONTINUES ALL WEEK.&#13;
REGULAR STORE HOURS&#13;
RACINE I KENOSHA&#13;
MON.-FRI. 9AM-10PM I MON.-FRI,9:30AM-9:30PM&#13;
SAT.19AM-9PM I SAT. 9:30AM-5:30PM&#13;
SUN. 10AM-6PM | SUN. 12 NOON-5PM&#13;
TWO LOCATIONS&#13;
Westgate Mall,&#13;
Washington at Ohio&#13;
Racine, Wl 53406&#13;
Phone No: 632-3399&#13;
(GRAND OPENING)&#13;
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8600 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wl 53140&#13;
Phone No. 552-8850&#13;
SALE«A«BRATK)N SPECIALS&#13;
FAIR ISLE&#13;
SHETLAND&#13;
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ELSEWHERE $20-22&#13;
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ELSEWHERE $12 </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;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
BIDINGER&#13;
MUSIC HOUSE INC&#13;
626 56th St. 654-2932&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Here's your chance to win two free pitchers of beer. All you have&#13;
to do is fill out this entry form and bring it down to Ranger office,&#13;
D139 WLLC. Put a check by your pick.&#13;
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;
San Francisco at Los Angeles&#13;
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>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;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
—Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
BIDINGER&#13;
MUSIC HOUSE INC&#13;
626 56th St. 654-2932&#13;
PRO PICKS&#13;
Here's your chance to win two free pitchers of beer. All you have&#13;
to do is fill out this entry form and bring it down to Ranger office,&#13;
D139 WLLC. Put a check by your pick.&#13;
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;
San Francisco at Los Angeles&#13;
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> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</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;
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aron Charlton, Thomas Delany, Patty&#13;
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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;
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essed to: Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139.&#13;
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or Publication on Thursday. The RAI&#13;
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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, $100&#13;
Call 551-9544 after 5:00.&#13;
1975 O PEL 1900 - am/fm, air, new radials.&#13;
Gerry 654-1765.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
WALK, TALK, and assist retired (blind)&#13;
college teacher In straightening out his&#13;
I'brar-y. Earn while you learn. Mature&#13;
Liberal Arts major preferred. Call 694-2251&#13;
for appointment.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
ErT,Vo&#13;
D'f ,&#13;
BIBLICOe&#13;
" Espanil. Jueves. Moln&#13;
D128. A la una.&#13;
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Research&#13;
catalog - 306 pages - 10,278 descriptive&#13;
51,00 (FUNDABLE) BOX&#13;
25097C, Los Angeles, 90025. (213) 477-8226.&#13;
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POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization I&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads —&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30$ will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words i&#13;
or less.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
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DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!&#13;
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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;
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Seattle at N. Y. Jets&#13;
Atlanta at New Orleans&#13;
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Tie - breaker: will be the total combined points&#13;
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Last week's winner: Dave Schmierer, 11 correct, 28 points&#13;
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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;
All Dancing Supplies &#13;
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;
LAMPS&#13;
Starting At&#13;
Student Prices&#13;
We Also Have&#13;
LUXO BRAND&#13;
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(Pictured) which come&#13;
in ten color choices&#13;
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H KEN0SHA. WIS. 652-0034&#13;
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>W University of Wisconsin - Porkside 'anger&#13;
Thursday, October 23, 1980&#13;
Running against Aspin&#13;
Vol. 9 -No. 8&#13;
Canary wants change in representative seat&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Republican Kathy Canary, a&#13;
small-business woman and&#13;
presently supervisor in Delavan,&#13;
is challenging incumbent&#13;
Democrat Les Aspip for his seat in&#13;
the U.S. House of Representatives.&#13;
Canary was an assistant to&#13;
Congressman Henry Schadeburg&#13;
in 1967 and has been a member of&#13;
the Small Business Administration&#13;
Advisory Council for&#13;
11 years. She is currently chairperson&#13;
of the council.&#13;
"I've worked on local government&#13;
for four years," said Canary&#13;
during a recent visit to Parkside,&#13;
"so I think the combination of&#13;
having worked in Washington and&#13;
understanding the importance of&#13;
the function of local government&#13;
gives me a strong background to&#13;
go to Washington."&#13;
Canary won the Sept. 9&#13;
Republican primary over three&#13;
opponents after a late campaign&#13;
start on June 25. "Although the&#13;
hour was late," said Canary, "the&#13;
issues were there and there was&#13;
an opportunity to win the primary.&#13;
As I watched their (opponents)&#13;
campaigns move along, I felt that&#13;
they just weren't gaining the&#13;
momentum, the speed and all the&#13;
things that are involved in having&#13;
a victory."&#13;
"So we had an unconventional&#13;
race," said Canary, "because so&#13;
many times they're months and&#13;
months long and people spend&#13;
upwards of $80,000 on the race.&#13;
But we (campaigned) 76 days and&#13;
only spent $12,000. We had an&#13;
example of a real grass-roots&#13;
campaign where we came back&#13;
with friends, neighbors and family&#13;
and everybody got involved in the&#13;
campaign."&#13;
After her victory Sept. 9 Canary&#13;
went to Washington and participated&#13;
in the Capitol steps&#13;
ceremony. There, all the&#13;
Republicans who were in office or&#13;
were running for office met with&#13;
Ronald Reagan and George Bush&#13;
and made certain pledge to the&#13;
American people of cutting taxes,&#13;
reducing inflation and achieving&#13;
higher employment.&#13;
Said Canary of her opponent Les&#13;
Aspin: "Philosophically, we're&#13;
separate. He believes the&#13;
government holds the solutions,&#13;
can answer your problems, can&#13;
give the direction. I believe we&#13;
have to return to individual rights&#13;
and individual liberties. And we&#13;
can't have,those unless we have&#13;
economic liberties. The size of t he&#13;
government has to pull back and&#13;
the cost to the taxpayers has to be&#13;
reduced."&#13;
The size of t he government can&#13;
be pulled back, says Canary,&#13;
through better management and&#13;
by business people going to&#13;
Washington. "I have a list from&#13;
the Government Accounting&#13;
Office of $34 billion worth of&#13;
spending that's strictly in the area&#13;
of waste, fraud, misuse and&#13;
mismanagement. So we're talking&#13;
here not about cutting out&#13;
necessary programs, but&#13;
programs that, as pointed out by&#13;
the government, contain waste,&#13;
fraud, misuse and mismanagement."&#13;
"If I didn't think it was still&#13;
possible to pull back the size of the&#13;
government," said Canary, "I&#13;
wouldn't go to Washington. But I&#13;
believe that it is possible. I think&#13;
we have a real opportunity, so&#13;
when I talk to the apathetic voter,&#13;
I say, 'Look, there's a reason to&#13;
vote. Vote for me. Go one more&#13;
time. Let's do it together — the n&#13;
hold me accountable. Check in two&#13;
years.' If people are not fulfilling&#13;
Election results&#13;
P.S.G.A. Senatorial elections were held Oct. 15 - 16. The top nine&#13;
vote getters of the 10 candidates are the new senators:&#13;
DAVE HABEGGER-197&#13;
CHRIS HAMMELEV-194&#13;
RANDY KLEES -174&#13;
KATHY BAMBROUGH -166&#13;
RENEE GILLMORE-165&#13;
JAMES DOUCETTE-157&#13;
TODD LASZEWSKI -151&#13;
ERIC KLINKHAMMER -144&#13;
CHARLES PERCE-138&#13;
LOUIS VALDEJULI -124&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• 'Absent Friends' opens&#13;
• Review: "Private Benjamin"&#13;
• Tennis - third at state&#13;
KATHY CANARY,&#13;
the promoises that they made to&#13;
you while they were running for&#13;
election, fire' them."&#13;
"Les Aspin has had 10 years in&#13;
office," said Canary. "Ten years&#13;
to make changes and to improve&#13;
your life. What has happened? He&#13;
hasn't demonstrated the&#13;
leadership to do that. Seniority is&#13;
not the major factor in Congress&#13;
Senate race&#13;
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
Republican nominee for 1st District Representative.&#13;
anymore — now it's clout and&#13;
leadership. And Les Aspin has not&#13;
demonstrated that."&#13;
One of the major problems we&#13;
have today is voter apathy, said&#13;
Canary. People blame the&#13;
government for the problem yet&#13;
they keep looking to the government&#13;
for the solution. "And yet&#13;
what do they get from the&#13;
politicians over the years?"&#13;
Canary asked. "Lip service,&#13;
political double-talk, political&#13;
rhetoric saying 'I'll cut taxes, I'll&#13;
reduce spending, I'll pqll the size&#13;
of the government back' and yet it&#13;
doesn't occur."&#13;
Canary believes voters are very&#13;
serious about politicians'&#13;
Continued On Page Six&#13;
Kasten challenges Nelson&#13;
by Susan J. Aluise&#13;
"I feel that Gay lord Nelson has&#13;
been in office 18 years and he's no&#13;
longer concerned or aware of the&#13;
problems facing working men and&#13;
women in the state of Wisconsin ..&#13;
. I feel he has lost touch with the&#13;
people of the state of Wisconsin&#13;
and that they understand that&#13;
there is a need for a change, a&#13;
need for new blood, a need for new&#13;
ideas."&#13;
That is the reason Robert&#13;
Kasten gives for his challenge to&#13;
incumbent Gaylord Nelson in the&#13;
race for United States Senate.&#13;
Kasten, who is 38 and has an&#13;
MBA from Columbia School of&#13;
Business, has a great deal of&#13;
government experience. He was&#13;
elected to the Wisconsin State&#13;
Senate in 1972 and in 1974 he was&#13;
elected 9th District Congressman.&#13;
In Congress, Kasten sat on the&#13;
Small Business Bommittee, the&#13;
Government Operations Committee&#13;
and the Select Committee&#13;
on Intelligence. After being&#13;
defeated by Lee Dreyfus in the&#13;
1978 Republican primary, Kasten&#13;
became a partner in a real estate&#13;
investment business in&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Recognizing that inflation and&#13;
unemployment are the two most&#13;
critical issues facing the United&#13;
States and the state of Wisconsin,&#13;
Kasten has proposed a multi-step&#13;
program to ease the burden and&#13;
solve the problem. "Step number&#13;
one," Kasten said, "is across the&#13;
board tax cuts for businesses,&#13;
small businesses, farms and individuals.&#13;
Step two, I'm calling for&#13;
regulatory reform. I think we&#13;
need massive governmental&#13;
regulatory reform to stop the&#13;
growth of the regulators as well as&#13;
the regulations. Number three,&#13;
I'm in favor of balancing the&#13;
federal budget and I will work for&#13;
a balanced budget by voting&#13;
against individual programs. I&#13;
will work for a balanced budget by&#13;
voting for a total balanced budget&#13;
resolution and I also support a&#13;
constitutional amendment for a&#13;
balanced budget."&#13;
One issue of great controversy&#13;
is military strength and how the&#13;
United States can maintain&#13;
adequate defense capabilities.&#13;
Kasten sees a strong defense as&#13;
being of primary importance in&#13;
preserving world peace. "I feel&#13;
that the United States can lead the&#13;
entire world toward peace only&#13;
from a position of strength or&#13;
parity," he said. "I believe that&#13;
we want to make the volunteer&#13;
army work and so we've got to pay&#13;
them. I would support military&#13;
pay raises and I would support&#13;
increases for the reserves and the&#13;
active duty personnel ... On the&#13;
other hand, I would also support&#13;
the cruise missile ... a new&#13;
carrier, so that we would have a&#13;
fleet in the Mediterranean and I&#13;
would support increased efforts&#13;
toward tactical conventional&#13;
armaments."&#13;
The Cuban refugee situation has&#13;
generated extreme concern of&#13;
many people in Wisconsin, particularly&#13;
in light of the large&#13;
numbers of criminals who seem to&#13;
have been sent here. Kasten feels&#13;
that "I believe that they (the&#13;
criminals) should have been&#13;
identified and separated and we&#13;
should have returned these people&#13;
to Cuba ... If Castro would refuse&#13;
to take these criminals back&#13;
through normal diplomatic&#13;
channels, I would fly a plane down&#13;
to Guantanamo and let them out&#13;
the front door."&#13;
Kasten also seems to have a&#13;
clear cut stand on a very controversial&#13;
issue — abortion. "I'm&#13;
opposed to abortion and I consistently&#13;
voted for the Hyde&#13;
Amendment, which prohibited&#13;
federal funding for abortion . . . I&#13;
would vote for a constitutional&#13;
amendment banning all abortion&#13;
if I am elected."&#13;
In the potentially explosive&#13;
Iranian-Iraqi war, Kasten feels&#13;
the wisest stance by the U.S.&#13;
government is one of neutrality.&#13;
"I don't believe that our country&#13;
should be involved on either side&#13;
of this conflict," he said. "If either&#13;
party were to obstruct the shipment&#13;
of oil to the free world we,&#13;
working with our NATO and&#13;
Japanese allies, would have to&#13;
guarantee passage of the oil&#13;
tankers through that important&#13;
area of the world."&#13;
Thursday, October 23,1980&#13;
A vote for Anderson not necessarily a waste There is less than two wweeeekkss lleefftt fienol AAnaAmmUnMM J • _ 1&#13;
until the Presidential election and&#13;
the result is still a toss - up. The&#13;
only major change since the&#13;
parties' conventions has been&#13;
John Anderson's predicted drop in&#13;
the polls. x&#13;
Jimmy Carter and Ronald&#13;
Reagan have campaigned evenly&#13;
and neither can claim an easy&#13;
victory on Nov.* 4. This election&#13;
will be decided during the last few&#13;
days of the campaign when the&#13;
large number of u ndecided voters&#13;
— nearly one - third — will make&#13;
up their minds and the many weak&#13;
supporters will switch their&#13;
support to the less objectional&#13;
candidate at that time.&#13;
Having to choose the lesser of&#13;
the two evils was the reason&#13;
behind Anderson launching his&#13;
independent campaign after his&#13;
failure to catch on in the&#13;
Republican primaries. He never&#13;
had much of a chance of taking the&#13;
GOP nomination away from&#13;
Reagan. Anderson's blend of&#13;
fiscal conservatism and social&#13;
liberalism didn't mix with the&#13;
right - wing mood of his party.&#13;
When Anderson launched his&#13;
independent quest for the&#13;
presidency in late April, he faced&#13;
many insurmountable tasks. But&#13;
he achieved what many experts&#13;
deemed impossible: he collected&#13;
two million signatures on petitions&#13;
to put his name on the ballot in&#13;
every state.&#13;
Money was the major problem&#13;
for Anderson from the start. He&#13;
has collected more than $8&#13;
million, but both Carter and&#13;
Reagan received $29 million&#13;
without any of the fund - raising&#13;
that Anderson's forces had to do.&#13;
That enables Carter and Reagan&#13;
to concentrate on more important&#13;
things, such as name calling and&#13;
mud slinging.&#13;
A la ck of fu nds means the lack&#13;
of commercials and advertising.&#13;
A politician with no TV money has&#13;
no chance of winning in the media&#13;
- oriented campaigns of today.&#13;
A column of&#13;
personal opinion&#13;
by&#13;
by Ken Meyer, Editor&#13;
To add to the setbacks: Anderson,&#13;
once at 20% in t he opinion&#13;
polls, was in a Catch - 22 dilemma&#13;
where most voters wouldn't vote&#13;
for him unless they were convinced&#13;
he had a chance of winning.&#13;
But he had no chance of&#13;
winning unless enough voters&#13;
backed him in the polls so other&#13;
voters would think he could win.&#13;
I, personally, respect Anderson&#13;
for bucking the system and for&#13;
sticking out until the end.&#13;
Hopefully his "national unity"&#13;
campaign will have wide -&#13;
sweeping effects on our political&#13;
system of th e two parties and the&#13;
primaries. Both of them need an&#13;
overhaul, and if Anderson gives a&#13;
decent showing on Nov. 4, i t will&#13;
reflect that fact.&#13;
But will he do well enough? Or&#13;
will his slipping support drop even&#13;
further when people won't want to&#13;
"waste" their vote on a spoiler*'&#13;
But who is there to spoil? The&#13;
failure of Carter and Reagan to&#13;
attract much more than 35% in the&#13;
polls indicates that about two -&#13;
thirds of the people are opposed to&#13;
each or both of them.&#13;
Now it's up to each Anderson&#13;
supporter to decide which path to&#13;
take. They can either register a&#13;
protest vote and stick with Anderson&#13;
or concede the point that&#13;
he has no chance of winning and&#13;
choose the lesser of the two evils.&#13;
Hopefully enough Anderson&#13;
supporters will not want to regret&#13;
having helped select Ronald&#13;
Reagan or Jimmy Carter. A big&#13;
enough protest vote is just what&#13;
we need to show Congress that the&#13;
people want to change the&#13;
ridiculous system in which we&#13;
choose our presidential nominees.&#13;
Anthropology Club describes past and future events&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
To begin with I would like to&#13;
thank Chavez Epps (current&#13;
President of the Minority Student&#13;
Union), for creating what I hope is&#13;
a trend. As most of us know&#13;
student participation here at&#13;
Parkside is LESS tlian adequate.&#13;
As we progress into the academic&#13;
year I would hope that the Ranger&#13;
will create a "Club Corner" so&#13;
clubs could communicate to&#13;
students the various academic&#13;
and social events taking place.&#13;
The expressed purpose of this&#13;
letter is to aquaint students with&#13;
the glories of past Anthropology&#13;
Club events and to inform conclub&#13;
events.&#13;
Anthropolgy is a "holistic&#13;
science encompassing all&#13;
disciplines within its scope. Anthropology&#13;
club has tried to do the&#13;
same. We have in the past&#13;
sponsored such distinguished&#13;
faculty as Dr. Francis Jennings.&#13;
Who at the time was the director&#13;
of the Newberry Library in&#13;
Chicago. His book The Invasion of&#13;
American is an excellent&#13;
discusstion of the Euro - American&#13;
encroachment on Native&#13;
American soils. Dr. Jennings is a&#13;
noted historian.&#13;
But Dr. Jennings is not an&#13;
unusual case for example we have&#13;
sponsored Dr. Michael Agar who&#13;
at the time was the first anthropologist&#13;
to study the drug&#13;
culture. His book Ripping and&#13;
Running is an excellent&#13;
ethnographic presentation of the&#13;
life of a Heroin addict.We have&#13;
also sponsored Dr. Alfred Crosby.&#13;
Dr. Crosby spoke to Parkside&#13;
students on "Epidemics and&#13;
Human History". The session was&#13;
attended by many of the pre - med&#13;
students and faculty. His book The&#13;
Columbian Exchange is one of the&#13;
few texts to discuss the biological&#13;
and cultural consequences of 1492.&#13;
There are more like Dr. Henry F.&#13;
Dobyns and Nancy 0. Lowrey&#13;
both outstanding academians.&#13;
But our greatest year to date&#13;
was last year. In which thanks to&#13;
SOC members and Soc. - Anthro.&#13;
faculty we sent eight students to&#13;
the Society For Applied An-&#13;
Jjitecei^..meetines in genvery,&#13;
Six of these Anthropolgy students&#13;
had prepared and presented their&#13;
papers at this conference. Including&#13;
our faculty and guests&#13;
Parkside's delegation was one of&#13;
the largest attending the&#13;
meetings. Later in the year the&#13;
President of the Society for Applied&#13;
Anthropology called&#13;
Parkside's Applied Anthropology&#13;
programs one of the best undergraduate&#13;
programs in the&#13;
country. Because of the lack of&#13;
publicity I would like to list the&#13;
presentors with the titles of their&#13;
papers.&#13;
1) Cheryl A. Last, "Reservation&#13;
- Based Tourism and Energy&#13;
Development: New Survey&#13;
Findings From The Arizona&#13;
Strip".&#13;
2) David B. Halmo, "Applied&#13;
Archeology in the Development of&#13;
a Native American Tourism&#13;
Program".&#13;
3) Sally A. C. Wood,&#13;
"Educational Hiking Trails:&#13;
Attracting Arizoha Strip Tourists&#13;
and Providing Them on Alternative&#13;
Historic Perspective".&#13;
4) Danny L. Rasch, "Applied&#13;
Visual Anthropology: The Use of&#13;
Videotape &amp; Still Photography for&#13;
Native American Cultural&#13;
Preservation &amp; Tourism".&#13;
5) Florence Jensen, "Campus&#13;
And Prisons: Are They Compatible?"&#13;
6) Carole Trolle, "Consequences&#13;
of a Deficiency Preliminary&#13;
E n v i r o n m e n t a l R e p o r t :&#13;
.University ... Campus Recommended&#13;
As A Site For Correctional&#13;
Facilities".&#13;
Also a note of thanks to Dr.&#13;
Richard W. Stoffle who chaired&#13;
the symposium of the first four&#13;
papers, and to Dr. Florence&#13;
Shipek whose Social Impact&#13;
Assessment course was the&#13;
vehicle for data gathering for the&#13;
last two papers. Also a special&#13;
thanks goes to Assistant Vice&#13;
Chancellor Carla Stoffle whose&#13;
efforts cannot be overlooked in the&#13;
success of the symposium.&#13;
As our past was indeed exciting&#13;
so too will be our future. The&#13;
Anthropology Club refuses to rest&#13;
on their past. This year's "Latin&#13;
American Speaker Series" will&#13;
provide insite to this potential&#13;
p o l i t i c a l l y i m p o r t a n t&#13;
geographical area.&#13;
The so called "Third World&#13;
Countries" are on the dawn of&#13;
recognition by all U. S. citizens.&#13;
Our first speaker was Dr. Thomas&#13;
G. Sanders (on October 8th which&#13;
the Ranger failed to mention).&#13;
The topic for Dr. Sanders lecture&#13;
was "Population Issues and&#13;
Policies In Latin America". This&#13;
was indeed an interesting session&#13;
lasting for two and a half hours!&#13;
Our second speaker continues in&#13;
the holistic pattern. Dr. Margo&#13;
Smith will present two different&#13;
lectures in the same day. The first&#13;
a vitally important issue to all&#13;
Behavioral Science Students "Job&#13;
Opportunites in Anthropolgy and&#13;
Related Fields". This session will&#13;
be held in Moln. Ill at noon.&#13;
The second lecture entitled&#13;
"Women In Latin America:&#13;
Migrants in Lima, Peru. This&#13;
session will be held in Moln. 105 at&#13;
two p. m. Our third speaker will be&#13;
here November sixth and seventh.&#13;
He is Dr. Paul Aspelin a noted&#13;
Brazilianist. Dr. Aspelin will be&#13;
particularly interesting because&#13;
he will have just returned from&#13;
the field (Brazil). Dr. Aspelin's&#13;
lecture is entitled "Managing&#13;
Human Rights: Economic&#13;
Development arid the Disappearance&#13;
of Brazilian Indians".&#13;
The lecture will be held Nov. 6th at&#13;
1:00 in GR. 103.&#13;
Then on November the seventh&#13;
Dr. Aspelin will lead a discussion&#13;
"Public and Private Policies&#13;
Effecting Poor People". The main&#13;
issue of this presentation will be a&#13;
discussion on activism. The fourth&#13;
speaker in the series will be from&#13;
Parkside. Dr. Carlos Boker&#13;
(communication) will hold a&#13;
public lecture on ethnographic&#13;
film making. He will also show the&#13;
documentary film he made in&#13;
Panamar&#13;
The second semester's speaker&#13;
list has not been completed but,&#13;
we will be hosting two field trips.&#13;
The first to the Newberry Library&#13;
in Chicago. The second field trip&#13;
we will visit Old World Wisconsin&#13;
in Eagle Lake, WI. Both of these&#13;
events should be fun and a great&#13;
learning experience.&#13;
In conclusion, I would like to&#13;
thank Dr. Lillian Trager our club&#13;
advisor for all of the extra hours&#13;
she puts in on the club. Also a big&#13;
thanks goes out to Dr. Richard W.&#13;
Stoffle and Dr. Florence Shipek&#13;
who both help maintain a&#13;
professional atmosphere when&#13;
working with students. And last&#13;
but not least the_ students whose&#13;
efforts can never be taken lightly.&#13;
We have among the students in&#13;
Anthropology Club a high regard&#13;
for education. Most of our&#13;
students spend 50 to 75 dollars for&#13;
scholarly journals. This is their&#13;
own money. This type of&#13;
dedication cannot go&#13;
unrecognized. I hope that in future&#13;
editions of the Ranger other&#13;
students will present their interests&#13;
and achievements.&#13;
Danny L. Rasch&#13;
Anthropology Club President.&#13;
Write a&#13;
letter&#13;
to&#13;
RANGER&#13;
ganger&#13;
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(next to the, Coffee Shoppe) or&#13;
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ganger&#13;
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Brian Pollanrl editor&#13;
Dan Galbraith Executive Business Manager&#13;
Sue Michetti Business Manager&#13;
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Dave Cramer Feature Editor&#13;
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RANGER is printed^ylhe Union CooDwal*'ido ^ except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
Written permission is reJuiS ,or r«rTnfo(Vae Publis,hing Co- ^nosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
All correspondence should be ad^resslrt V T"?" °f RANGER&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, WI 53141. ddressed t0- Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UWpaper&#13;
with one^n^^margjns6Abetters rnust doub,esPaced on standard size&#13;
for verification. u designed and a telephone number included&#13;
Deadline for letters ?s'^Tuesd^y'at m°Sf Max^um length accepted is S00 words]&#13;
reserves all editorial privileges in ,Z, Publication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content. refusing to print letters which contain false or&#13;
Voluntarism vital in Wis. campaign&#13;
bv Susan Miohn«ti "&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 23, 1980&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
John Maclver, a Milwaukee&#13;
«!' 5?-y •is co " chairman of&#13;
the Wisconsin Reagan - Bush&#13;
Campaign, spoke on "You're&#13;
Stepping on My Grass Roots or S°ef, Y,oluntary O rganization&#13;
Really Matter?" at the Wisconsin&#13;
Political Science Convention here&#13;
on October 10.&#13;
According to Maclver, exercising&#13;
voluntarism becomes more&#13;
significant in determining the&#13;
results of the Presidentital&#13;
elections since Eisenhower was&#13;
elected.&#13;
He said that voluntarism gains&#13;
increased importance because of&#13;
the low projected voter turn - out'&#13;
in the 1980 election. Therefore&#13;
political effort which is organized&#13;
to get more voters out becomes&#13;
more significant.&#13;
"Depth of support is shallow in&#13;
this election," Maclvers said.&#13;
More voters are undecided, which&#13;
means that campaign techniques&#13;
that appear to be meaningful to&#13;
the voter may have a greater&#13;
impact on him or her according to&#13;
Maclver.&#13;
"For the first time under the&#13;
spending laws, there are some&#13;
controls being put on the amount&#13;
of paid political advertising," said&#13;
Maclver. "Here again alternative&#13;
methods of reaching the voter&#13;
become more important."&#13;
"In Wisconsin voluntarism is&#13;
even more significant than it&#13;
might be in other states," said&#13;
Maclver. "Look at the states that&#13;
run in a line basically along the&#13;
Ohio Valley and loop up (don't&#13;
include Illinois) and go directly to&#13;
the West Coast, covering Minnesota&#13;
all the way out to Oregon&#13;
and Washington, and you will find&#13;
JOHN MaclVER&#13;
RANGER photo by Sue Michetti&#13;
states where voluntarism is important&#13;
and patronage is not&#13;
important. Wisconsin is a prime&#13;
example... where there isn't a lot&#13;
of patronage, (so) the volunteers&#13;
"efforts can be very meaningful."&#13;
"In the Reagan - Bush campaign,"&#13;
said Maclver, "we have&#13;
tried to structure a voluntary&#13;
effort which ... is focusing almost&#13;
entirley on the undecided . . .&#13;
(voter) in a combination door to&#13;
door and telephone effort which is&#13;
underway right now." Maclver&#13;
expects that the volunteers will&#13;
reach between 225,000 and 250,000&#13;
voter residences.&#13;
Maclver believes that a&#13;
volunteer appearing at a door,&#13;
identifying himself or herself as a&#13;
volunteer, not pretending to be the&#13;
expert, and handing a well&#13;
prepared issue piece to the&#13;
resident, speaks well showing&#13;
commitment and enthusiasm for&#13;
his candidate in the 1980 elections.&#13;
National security challenges free speech&#13;
by Sue Michetti&#13;
Samuel Day, Jr., Managing&#13;
Editor of The Progressive and&#13;
formerly Editor of The Bulletin of&#13;
the Atomic Scientists, spoke about&#13;
First Amendment Rights at the&#13;
Wisconsin Political Science&#13;
Association Convention here on&#13;
October 10.&#13;
Day said that the U. S. vs. The&#13;
Progressive was a unique case&#13;
because it was the first time in the&#13;
history of the U. S. that the&#13;
government succeeded temporarily&#13;
in preventing free speech&#13;
by prior restraint on the grounds&#13;
of national security.&#13;
Howard Morland undertook a&#13;
reporting assignment to sketch in&#13;
the details about what goes on in&#13;
the hydrogen bomb industry. Day&#13;
said, "He soon discovered that the&#13;
proprietors of information, the&#13;
Department of Energy, were in&#13;
the habit of deferring hard&#13;
questions with the magic words&#13;
that 'It is secret data and&#13;
therefore the law prevents us&#13;
from telling you about the&#13;
plutonium emission rate because&#13;
if we did then you could take that&#13;
data and deduce what the&#13;
plutonium reduction rates are and&#13;
that is a military secret.' " The&#13;
mere citation of the concept of&#13;
secrecy awes and satisfies most&#13;
people.&#13;
However, Morland was not put&#13;
TV station&#13;
good&#13;
investment&#13;
An investment in a television&#13;
station earned Grinnell College&#13;
$35 million in four years. The&#13;
small Iowa liberal arts school&#13;
bought station WDPN in&#13;
Dayton, Ohio, four years ago as a&#13;
hedge against rising costs and&#13;
declining enrollment. Trustees&#13;
risked one-quarter of Grinnell's&#13;
endowment and borrowed more&#13;
than $5 million to buy the station&#13;
in 1976, then sold WDPN for $50&#13;
million to the Hearst Corporation.&#13;
off. He read the material in the&#13;
Congressional Records and the&#13;
Senate Arms Hearing Committee&#13;
testimony.&#13;
"Morland's mission changed,"&#13;
Day said, "into a story to try to&#13;
demonstrate that the misuse of&#13;
secrecy in the hydrogen bomb&#13;
program was to suit the&#13;
bureaucracy which has interest in&#13;
the growth of that industry."&#13;
Day said that Morland showed&#13;
how an ordinary person without&#13;
any scientific training could, in&#13;
fact, come up with the deepest,&#13;
darkest secret —• how to build a&#13;
hydrogen bomb. He operated&#13;
under two rules to demonstrate&#13;
that this material was within the&#13;
public domain: he never looked at&#13;
any classified documents — o nly&#13;
the public record, and he always&#13;
identified himself as a reporter.&#13;
Day explained that there is no&#13;
reason why anyone should fear&#13;
spilling secrets. He said that the&#13;
only reason for secrecy is to&#13;
discourage the public itself from&#13;
asking questions about what is&#13;
going on in this very important and&#13;
very dangerous public program.&#13;
Day said that the public ought not&#13;
to be intimidated from asking&#13;
questions.&#13;
Day said that before publication&#13;
the story fell into the hands of one&#13;
of the friends of a scientific advisor&#13;
who was sent the material to&#13;
double check the scientific facts.&#13;
The Dept. of Energy confirmed&#13;
the accuracy of the story and then&#13;
asked The Progressive not to&#13;
publish it.&#13;
The Dept. of Energy was told&#13;
that changing so much as a single&#13;
word of technical information&#13;
would destroy the point that there&#13;
are no secrets, and that The&#13;
Progressive didn't agree with&#13;
their framework that national&#13;
security was involved.&#13;
There was an injunction but the&#13;
government abandoned the case&#13;
because it stirred up so much&#13;
interest by both the public andihe&#13;
media.&#13;
Day said that the government&#13;
can't exercise prior restraint in&#13;
such a case as The Progressive,&#13;
but that it would be different if the&#13;
story were about the sailing of a&#13;
troop ship in wartime which would&#13;
be directly linked to national&#13;
security.&#13;
Day made the point that&#13;
freedom of speech will be lost if it&#13;
is not exercised.&#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;
SOME as&#13;
Phono 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
Parking policy changed&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
Green parking permit&#13;
holders can now start parking&#13;
their cars in the Union and&#13;
Communication Arts parking&#13;
lots after 1 p. m. instead of&#13;
waiting until 3 p. m. as in the&#13;
past, according to Ronald&#13;
Brinkmann, Director of&#13;
Campus Security.&#13;
Since this will be effective&#13;
for the remainder of the school&#13;
year, the parking entrance&#13;
sign has already been changed&#13;
to reflect this fact. The change&#13;
should aid students who have&#13;
both afternoon and evening&#13;
classes.&#13;
Brinkmann said that this&#13;
change is most likely due to&#13;
the combination of class&#13;
scheduling and the one hour&#13;
activity period from 1 - 2p . m.&#13;
on Mondays, Wednesdays, and&#13;
Fridays.&#13;
Career workshop to be held&#13;
Student Development and&#13;
Community Student Services are&#13;
offering a Career Planning&#13;
Seminar for students who want&#13;
some help in making career&#13;
decisions/Students who attend the&#13;
seminar will evaluate their&#13;
values, personal characteristics,&#13;
interests and skills and learn how&#13;
to relate this informaion to occupational&#13;
decisions. The seminar&#13;
will also cover methods and&#13;
sources for career research.&#13;
The Career Planning Seminar&#13;
will be from 1 p.m. to 1:50 p.m. on&#13;
October 27 , 28 and November 3, 5,&#13;
10 and 12.&#13;
Enrollment in the workshop&#13;
will be limited. Students interested&#13;
in participating should call 553-&#13;
2573 and talk to either Wendi&#13;
Schneider or Barbara Larson&#13;
before October 22.&#13;
Citizens utility group formed&#13;
The Citizens Utility Board has&#13;
begun publishing a statewide&#13;
newspaper, CUB Prints.&#13;
"One reason the citizens of&#13;
Wisconsin established CUB was&#13;
because we need information&#13;
about energy issues and about&#13;
who is making energy decisions.&#13;
Over 5,000 Wisconsin residents —&#13;
the current CUB members — will&#13;
receive this newspaper and begin&#13;
this vital process of communication,"&#13;
said Hector de la&#13;
Mora, vice - chairman of the interim&#13;
board of directors of CUB.&#13;
The Citizens Utility Board will&#13;
conduct a statewide membership&#13;
drive this fall. Wisconsin residents&#13;
throughout the state will receive a&#13;
membership application with&#13;
their November telephone bill.&#13;
Membership is expected to reach&#13;
25,000 by the end of the year.&#13;
The first elections for CUB&#13;
directors will be held by mail&#13;
ballot in January. To vote or run&#13;
for office, you must join CUB.&#13;
Nomination papers are available&#13;
at the CUB office, P. O. Box 8003,&#13;
Madison 53708. For further information,&#13;
call CUB, 608-255-2971.&#13;
The Marx Bros.&#13;
DUCK SOUP&#13;
Hail! Hail! Fredonia!&#13;
THURSDAY,&#13;
OCTOBER 30&#13;
7:00 p.m.&#13;
Admission:&#13;
$1.00 from Club members&#13;
$1.50 at the door&#13;
UNION&#13;
CINEMA&#13;
- THEATRE SPONSORED BY SWIM CLUB&#13;
ic Tanning&#13;
^Studios LTD.&#13;
1736 -22nd Ave. 551-9568&#13;
1st VISIT FREE&#13;
Tan Year Round&#13;
4 Thursday, October 23,1980 RANGER&#13;
Magic comes to stage From the Parking Lot&#13;
The first concert of the 1980-81&#13;
season on the New Music at&#13;
Parkside series at the University&#13;
o f " Wisconsin - Parkside will be&#13;
presented on Sunday, November&#13;
2,1980, in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. The featured work will&#13;
be Maurice Ravel's Piano Trio,&#13;
performed by the Oriana Trio: S.&#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;
Captive Audience&#13;
In Old Market Square&#13;
Casual Clothes for Men and Women&#13;
• Designer Jeans by&#13;
Calvin Klein, Sassoon, Jordache, Bon Jour, Chic&#13;
• Shirts • Bib Overalls&#13;
• Sweaters • Blazers&#13;
• Cords • Accessories&#13;
We're open come in and browse soon.&#13;
Old Market Square on South Sheridan Rd., 694-8808&#13;
Shop daily 9:30 to 9,&#13;
Saturday 9 to 5&#13;
Sunday 12 to 5&#13;
by Wendy Westphal&#13;
Have you ever experienced the&#13;
magic of the stage? Where a&#13;
wooden floor is suddenly tilted, a&#13;
brick wall stands instead of a&#13;
concrete wall, and a bare space is&#13;
now a comfortable living room?&#13;
All this has happened to the stage&#13;
in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre to prepare for Alan Ayckbourn's&#13;
Absent Friends.&#13;
The cast has been rehearsing&#13;
constantly. They are: Andrew&#13;
Brhel of Cudahy as Colin, the&#13;
central character; Scott&#13;
Reichelsdorf of Kenosha as Paul,&#13;
the host; Patricia Casciaro of&#13;
Kenosha as Diana, his wife; and&#13;
Mary Beth Kelleher and Robert&#13;
Cash, both of Kenosha and&#13;
Rebecca Julich of Racine, as the&#13;
other guests. Director Leon Van&#13;
Dyke has been preparing them for&#13;
this opportune moment to create&#13;
laughter.&#13;
With all the preparation going&#13;
on, the most important part of th e&#13;
theatre was left bare: the&#13;
audience. This is where you are&#13;
casted. Absent Friends opens&#13;
tonight through Oct. 25 at 8 p.m.&#13;
and Oct. 26 at 2 p.m. Tickets are&#13;
$2.00 for students, senior citizens,&#13;
and UW-P faculty and staff ; $3.50&#13;
for the general public. Reservations&#13;
can be made by calling&#13;
553-2345 or 553-2042.&#13;
Fill in the&#13;
blank ethnic jokes&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Fill in the blanks. You win&#13;
absolutely nothing, no matter how&#13;
clever you are.&#13;
--In our town, there is a —&#13;
who found himself&#13;
locked in his car and had to break&#13;
three windows before he could get&#13;
out.&#13;
section.&#13;
They're building diving boards&#13;
over the cesspools.&#13;
-Where to the&#13;
— keep their armies? (Up their&#13;
sleevies.)&#13;
How did the&#13;
— A in our&#13;
— drown while getting a drink of&#13;
water? (The toilet lid fell on his&#13;
head.)&#13;
town was never able to develop a&#13;
liking for — s.&#13;
So, I was surprised one day to see&#13;
the ~ give *&#13;
coin to a monkey perched on the&#13;
shoulder of an organ grinder. "I&#13;
thought you.didn't like —&#13;
1 s," I said. "That's&#13;
true," replied the&#13;
. " But they are so cute when&#13;
they're little." _&#13;
— A was&#13;
— A s mart ,&#13;
dumb — , and&#13;
Santa Claus started walking&#13;
toward a $100 bi ll. Which one got&#13;
it? (The dumb&#13;
—. T he other two are fictional.)&#13;
— In the suburbs of a large city&#13;
there's a project going on in the —&#13;
hired to paint the center stripe&#13;
down the middle of a new highway.&#13;
The first day he completed&#13;
three miles of stripe, the second&#13;
day he completed two miles, and&#13;
the third day, only one mile.&#13;
Noting the difference, the&#13;
superintendent asked for an explanation.&#13;
"I dunno," puzzled the&#13;
: . "I guess it&#13;
just kept getting farther to go&#13;
back to that can of paint."&#13;
is&#13;
someone who in Easter will&#13;
dye Easter eggs white.&#13;
-- Why don't —s&#13;
eat M &amp; M's? (Because they're too&#13;
hard to peel.)&#13;
REALIZING every wife's dream, Diana, played by Patricia&#13;
Casciaro, pours a pitcher of cream over the head of her wayward&#13;
husband, Paul, played by Scott Reichelsdorf.&#13;
New music at Parkside&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Theatre&#13;
performs Mother Courage&#13;
Eden Vaning, violin; Harry&#13;
Sturm, cello; and Carol Bell,&#13;
piano. Also on the program are the&#13;
Sonatina for Clarinet Solo by&#13;
Miklos Rozsa; performed by&#13;
clarinettist Timothy Bell; Five&#13;
Dances for Small Spaces for piano&#13;
and magnetic tape by Walter&#13;
Ross, performed by pianist&#13;
Barbara English Maris; and&#13;
Movement for brass instruments&#13;
and piano by Wallingford Riegger,&#13;
performed by Nicholas Drozdorff&#13;
and W. Scott Mather, trumpets;&#13;
Stephen Miller, trombone; and&#13;
August Wegner, piano.&#13;
The series is directed by Harry&#13;
Sturm and August Wegner. Admission&#13;
is $2.00 for adults and&#13;
$1.00 for students. Concert-goers&#13;
are invited to stay for a wine and&#13;
cheese reception immediately&#13;
following the concert. For further&#13;
information call August Wegner&#13;
at 414-553-2528.&#13;
by Wendy Westphal&#13;
The Milwaukee Repertory&#13;
Theatre opened its return home&#13;
performance last "week. Performances&#13;
of Bertolt Brecht's&#13;
masterful epic, Mother Courage,&#13;
will continue through November&#13;
23 a t the Todd Wehr Theatre in&#13;
Milwaukee's Performing Arts&#13;
Center.&#13;
Written in 1939 a nd set in the&#13;
first half of the 17th century,&#13;
Mother Courage is the heroic tale&#13;
of Anna Fierling, an iron-willed&#13;
canteen woman who stubbornly&#13;
struggles to keep her family&#13;
together as the Thirty Years War&#13;
rages about her. Mother Courage&#13;
provides for her children by&#13;
selling goods to the troops from&#13;
both sides of the conflict. Unfortunately,&#13;
she realizes too late&#13;
that the war she depends on for&#13;
survival will eventually cause the&#13;
destruction of her family.&#13;
The Todd Wehr Theatre offers a&#13;
unique experience for first time&#13;
visitors. The thrust stage provides&#13;
for a close, intimate setting. Being&#13;
so close to the action draws you as&#13;
an audience into the physical&#13;
atmosphere of the play. Most of&#13;
the time the actors were situated&#13;
adequately on the stage allowing&#13;
for a good vantage point. Trouble&#13;
occurs with the scenes staged on&#13;
the side platforms. The view from&#13;
the opposite side of the house is&#13;
often limited.&#13;
War time is not very colorful.&#13;
The scenery for Mother Courage&#13;
is a dull gray. It releases a sad,&#13;
depressed mood which is ap-&#13;
A REHEARSAL with (left to right) Larry Shue, Rose Pickering, Ellen Dolan and Leland Crooke.&#13;
propriate for the plot. The&#13;
wagon's versatility is seen&#13;
through many sets. A covered&#13;
wagon, side wagon, tent wagon,&#13;
and empty wagon is all one&#13;
wagon. After a while a change is&#13;
expected but never materializes.&#13;
In all plays realism is sought&#13;
after but some costumes and&#13;
properties in Mother Courage are&#13;
quite modern. Clothing which was&#13;
supposed to be 17th century could&#13;
have been worn on the street&#13;
today. The most unrealistic&#13;
property was a bullhorn. The&#13;
actress at which it was directed&#13;
was about five feet away from the&#13;
soldier using it. An extra loud yell&#13;
would have given a better effect.&#13;
Fine acting roles are performed&#13;
by the MRT Company. Rose&#13;
Pickering, an eight year veteran&#13;
of the MRT, portrays Mother&#13;
Courage. Her rough and&#13;
courageous outer self comes out&#13;
loud and clear. Some inner&#13;
feminine features surface later in&#13;
the character. Also C.C.H.&#13;
Pounder portrays the willing&#13;
Yvette with style. Her previous&#13;
movie debut this year was with&#13;
the Academy Award - winning&#13;
film, "All That Jazz" as Nurse&#13;
Gibbons.&#13;
Laced with irreverant humor&#13;
and song, Mother Courage is a&#13;
powerful statement on the&#13;
irrationality of war, the irony of&#13;
life, and the unbreakable strength&#13;
of t he human spirit. The play is a&#13;
pointed message Brecht originallv&#13;
aimed at Germany as it slipped&#13;
Jeadily toward world war. Given&#13;
the frightening realities of today's&#13;
turbulent world, Mother Courage&#13;
is as relevant today as it was forty&#13;
years ago.&#13;
The Milwaukee Repertory&#13;
Theatre does a nice job on Mother&#13;
Courage. Performances are&#13;
Tuesdays through Fridays at 8:00&#13;
p.m., Saturdays at 5:00 p.m. and&#13;
9:15 p.m. and Sundays at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Matinees are scheduled at 2 p.m.&#13;
on October 29 and November 9,12&#13;
and 19. A signed performance for&#13;
the deaf and hearing-impaired&#13;
will be presented at 2 p.m., Nov. 9.&#13;
Ticket prices range from $3.50&#13;
to $9.00, with a $1.00 discount&#13;
available for students and senior&#13;
citizens. Tickets may be purchased&#13;
at the Performing Arts&#13;
Center box office, 929 North Water&#13;
Street, or charged to Master&#13;
Charge or Visa by calling 273-?206.&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
It is very rare that a truly good&#13;
comedy comes along; they're&#13;
either cheap, tacky, or they try so&#13;
hard to be funny that they can't&#13;
even steal a snicker. "Private&#13;
Benjamin" is one of the better&#13;
comedies to come along in some&#13;
time, but it's still not a great one.&#13;
This movie has a lot of comic&#13;
potential (a rich woman enlisting&#13;
in the Army) but When it gives way&#13;
to a transparently failing romance&#13;
it loses the viewer's attention as&#13;
they take advantage of this&#13;
situation to buy more popcorn.&#13;
Judy Benjamin (Goldie Hawn)&#13;
who has "never got belonged" (to&#13;
someone or something) suddenly&#13;
finds herself all alone after her&#13;
husband has a heartattacleand dies&#13;
on their wedding night. A shady&#13;
Army recruiter cons her into&#13;
joining the "Army of the '80's" by&#13;
telling her she'll have her own&#13;
condo and that if she doesn't like it&#13;
she can quit.&#13;
Hawn is bright and vibrant as&#13;
the confused Private Benjamin.&#13;
Her talents as a commediane as&#13;
well as a serious actress are&#13;
wonderfully exhibited here. A&#13;
humorous example of her ability&#13;
is her audacity to ask if green is the&#13;
only color that the fatigues come&#13;
in; her professional delivery js&#13;
well rewarded by the audience's&#13;
laughter.&#13;
Eileen Brennan is the macho,&#13;
bitchy captain in charge of J udy's&#13;
platoon. She is very good and&#13;
keeps her character constant&#13;
ShC There is a lot of unnecessary sex&#13;
when shp hfls H immediately in this movie. Although some of it&#13;
bathronm L uWn SCrub the 1S needed for the story (the&#13;
(it's electric'nf1 r to°thbrush seducing by Henri and finding the&#13;
Wh6^11 T commander in bed with another&#13;
hercomSfn« k t0 stop private) it would have been just as&#13;
in rP A 8 !beingstuck g00d (better) without m the Army and becomes scenes like&#13;
someone, the humor of Hawn's&#13;
character is changed from that of&#13;
a confused person to a take -&#13;
charge person. She becomes the&#13;
first woman "Thornbird"&#13;
(parachuter). In keeping with&#13;
Judy's character change, when a&#13;
pass is made at her by the commander&#13;
of the "Thornbirds" she&#13;
demands a transfer which lands&#13;
her in Paris.&#13;
the "headache" one.&#13;
In Paris Judy falls in love&#13;
(doesn't everyone who goes there)&#13;
with Henri Tremont • (Armand&#13;
"Little Darlings" Assante).&#13;
Assante is once more cast as a&#13;
male sex symbol but this time is a&#13;
demanding, dominating European&#13;
(complete with a deep, seductive&#13;
accent) who transposes Judy into&#13;
a confused, lost soul.&#13;
The movie loses some time with&#13;
this obvious romance. A few&#13;
laughs are to be had, but not&#13;
enbugh to save this portion.&#13;
In the end Judy regains her self -&#13;
esteem and the movie's type of&#13;
comedy along with it. If more of&#13;
this comedy would have been&#13;
present instead of the romance,&#13;
the audience wouldn't have had to&#13;
gorge itself on concessions.&#13;
Some good supporting roles are&#13;
put in by Mar Kay Place (a much better.&#13;
rhfpann" h -vTfSi ?alem (a "Private Benjamin" is good for&#13;
g00o1in'ng« 7to j—ail^) , D£ amitay ovJeor 8o0r1 1h16a vlapu 8hs (esi pecially if you ar.e\&#13;
Freeman, Alston Ahern, and P. J.&#13;
Soles who play the other close&#13;
members of Benjamin's platoon.&#13;
If more time had been given to&#13;
these ladies and their antics (such&#13;
as putting blue die in a shower&#13;
cap) the film would have been&#13;
or have served in the military)&#13;
Contact&#13;
and it's worth seeing just for&#13;
Goldie Hawn but I'm still waiting&#13;
for Hollywood to give us a real&#13;
comedy.&#13;
P.S.G.A. Update&#13;
by Tracy Gruber&#13;
P.S.G.A. would like to take this&#13;
opportunity to inform you of some&#13;
of the things going on.&#13;
*** Thanks to everyone who&#13;
voted and all the candidates that&#13;
ran in last weeks P.S.G.A. Fall '80&#13;
elections. We now have six new&#13;
freshmen Senators, hopefully with&#13;
new ideas and a lot of ambition.&#13;
*** SUFAC (Segregated&#13;
University Fee Allocations&#13;
Committee) will begin reviewing&#13;
budgets the first week in Nov. This&#13;
is an important process whereby&#13;
the committee allocates approximately&#13;
one - half of a million&#13;
dollars to student organizations&#13;
and interest groups. There is&#13;
presently one open student - at -&#13;
large seat. If you are interested in&#13;
serving on this committee, you&#13;
may speak to the President of&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
*** Th e SOC Fair, which was&#13;
held Oct. 8-9, was very successful.&#13;
Twenty - five clubs participated&#13;
with displays and presentations.&#13;
Many clubs attracted new&#13;
members. If you are interested in&#13;
joining any club, you can get information&#13;
about the many types of&#13;
clubs in the Student Life Office,&#13;
Union 209.&#13;
*** The Winter Carnival&#13;
Committee met for the first time&#13;
Fri., Oct. 17. They elected Chris&#13;
Hammelev chairperson.&#13;
Discussion of possible themes has&#13;
led to a contest. The student&#13;
submitting the best theme for this&#13;
year's Winter Carnival will&#13;
receive a season pass to Parkside&#13;
basketball games. If you are interested&#13;
in serving on this committee&#13;
there are open seats, talk&#13;
to Chris Hammelev or Tony&#13;
Totero, Union 209.&#13;
M' Yesterday was ,the last day&#13;
to register to vote before election&#13;
day, Nov. 4. You can still register&#13;
at the polls, Nov. 4, when you vote.&#13;
You must have identification with&#13;
proof of your current address.&#13;
*•* As always, P.S.G.A. is here&#13;
to serve you. If you have any&#13;
problems, please stop at our office,&#13;
WLLC D-137, to discuss them.&#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;
James presents 'doomsday talk'&#13;
A man who claims to have&#13;
served secretly as a CIA spy for&#13;
five years and to have "inside&#13;
knowledge" of Russian military&#13;
p6tential will speak at UWParkside&#13;
Oct. 23 at 8 p.pi. in the&#13;
Union theater under sponsorship&#13;
of the student organization,&#13;
Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
Peter N. James, who describes&#13;
himself as an "author, physicist,&#13;
adventurer, world traveler,&#13;
muckraker, rocket engineer and&#13;
publisher" as well as a former&#13;
spy, will present a lecture/slide&#13;
program titled, "Russia's Secret&#13;
Doomsday Weapon: World War II&#13;
and You."&#13;
His booking agency (Peter N.&#13;
James Associates) says he has&#13;
written two books, Soviet&#13;
Conquest from Space and The Air&#13;
Force Mafia. The latter work&#13;
suggests a connection between the&#13;
CIA and the Mafia, a "disclosure"&#13;
which his publicity materials&#13;
claim resulted in a "European spy&#13;
chase to get James."&#13;
James is scheduled to return to&#13;
Kenosha a week after his UW-P&#13;
appearance to speak at Carthage&#13;
College. James gives sponsors a&#13;
choice of two programs; the&#13;
"doomsday" talk or one called,&#13;
"The Embryo of an American&#13;
Police State." Tickets to the UW-P&#13;
program will be available at the&#13;
door ($1).&#13;
Recital features bassoonist&#13;
Bassoonist Daryl Durran will&#13;
present a faculty recital at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Wednesday, Oct. 29 at UWParkside.&#13;
The recital, free and&#13;
open to the public, will be held in&#13;
Cqmmunication Arts room D118&#13;
(music rehersal room).&#13;
Performing with Durran, who&#13;
teaches at UW-P, will be pianist&#13;
Michael Boyd,bassoonist Lori&#13;
Bowers and the Wayte Wind&#13;
Quintet. The Milwaukee&#13;
musicians will perform a program&#13;
of music by G.P. Telemann, C.M.&#13;
von Weber, Elliot Carter, Walter&#13;
Piston and Camille Saint-Saens.&#13;
Durran previously has held&#13;
positions with the Tucson Symphony&#13;
and Arizona Opera, and has&#13;
an extensive chamber music&#13;
background. He has performed in&#13;
recitals of baroque champer&#13;
music in Chicago and New York's&#13;
Carnegie Hall.&#13;
Thursday, October 23, 1980&#13;
Canary visits UW-P r,CAonnttiimnuine/dl FDMroAMmA nP~a g—e_ rOv.n e.&#13;
statements this time. "They&#13;
really want to know how they're&#13;
going to stand and, better, how&#13;
they're going to vote because it's&#13;
one thing to say something here&#13;
and it's another thing to go to&#13;
Washington and say something&#13;
else.&#13;
' 'And Les Aspin is a perfect case&#13;
in study of a professional&#13;
politician who's a Washingtonite&#13;
by nature," said Canary. "He&#13;
wears two hats very well. He&#13;
wears one hat back in the district&#13;
where he tells people we're going&#13;
to cut spending and we've got to&#13;
balance the budget and we have to&#13;
increase defense spending —&#13;
common lines that he gives out in&#13;
speeches. Yet when he goes back&#13;
to Washington he votes against&#13;
defense appropriations.&#13;
"I don't think there's any&#13;
question that we have to spend&#13;
more on the military than we are&#13;
now," said Canary, "but I would&#13;
certainly agree that we have to&#13;
examine exactly how that money&#13;
is spent to make sure we just don't&#13;
take money and throw it to the&#13;
problem."&#13;
More money is spent each year&#13;
on the military and Canary says&#13;
the question now is "Is our&#13;
military outmoded, outdated,&#13;
obsolete?" The harder phase of&#13;
the question is "What should we&#13;
do? Should we build the MX&#13;
missile system that may be obsolete?&#13;
Should we rebuilt the&#13;
Trident submarine?"&#13;
"Aspin, for example," said&#13;
Canary, "voted against the B-l&#13;
bomber and the MX missile. OK.&#13;
What has he got as an alternative?&#13;
What does he suggest? I tend to&#13;
favor the building of the MX&#13;
missile system because I haven't&#13;
seen a better solution."&#13;
Canary believes military pay&#13;
should be increased because the&#13;
military has become more&#13;
sophisticated and technical. "We&#13;
have to pay similar to what they&#13;
would earn in private industry.&#13;
We have to keep people from&#13;
leaving the military after they're&#13;
trained."&#13;
"We have to provide tax incentives&#13;
to American industry to&#13;
reinvest in industry," said&#13;
Canary. "The average industry in&#13;
the United States is 20 y ears old.&#13;
In Japan it's 10 y ears old and in&#13;
West Germany it's 12 years old. I&#13;
feel it's a vital job to build a free&#13;
enterprise system where we have&#13;
tax credits such as the 10-5-3&#13;
program, which is an accelerated&#13;
depreciation opportunity for industry&#13;
to reinvest."&#13;
Canary supports limitations on&#13;
University funding squeezed&#13;
nf „n i . .&#13;
automobile imports, but she's not&#13;
sure where the specific number&#13;
will land or how the limitations&#13;
would be established. The&#13;
American automotive industry&#13;
should be given an opportunity to&#13;
reposition itself and recapture the&#13;
American market.&#13;
Canary was "very disappointed"&#13;
with the Republican&#13;
platform on the ERA amendment.&#13;
"I'm going to go to Washington&#13;
and I'm going to work actively for&#13;
equal rights," said Canary. "But&#13;
we have to look at all the issues —&#13;
unemployment, deficit spending,&#13;
taxation, regulation, defense, etc.&#13;
— the 10 major issues. And put&#13;
that on a horizontal plane and say&#13;
'If we're together on nine out of&#13;
the 10, I'll vote for you.' What is&#13;
bad is one issue campaigners.&#13;
Instead of putting (the issues)&#13;
horizontally, they put them&#13;
vertically and we can't get by the&#13;
top issue."&#13;
"We've had 25 years of&#13;
Democratic leadership that hasn't&#13;
provided the answers or&#13;
solutions," said Canary.&#13;
"Congress is where the problem&#13;
sits at and Les Aspin is part of the&#13;
problem. We've had six different&#13;
presidents in the last 25 years but&#13;
we haven't changed the leadership&#13;
of Congress.&#13;
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdoh!&#13;
KATHY CANARY&#13;
"Instead of more of the same,"&#13;
said Canary, "change the people.&#13;
Elect me. Elect new people and&#13;
hold them accountable. If people&#13;
aren't satisfied with the way&#13;
things are .. . vote for a change."&#13;
Of all state general purpose&#13;
revenue (GPR) operations expenditures&#13;
during the decade&#13;
from 1969-70 to 1979-80, the&#13;
proportion represented by the UW&#13;
System budget declined from&#13;
45.6% to 35.2%. As a proportion of&#13;
all state GPR expenditures including&#13;
local assistance, the UW&#13;
System declined from 25.8% to&#13;
17.9%. Over this same span of&#13;
time the system gained about&#13;
23,000 st udents.&#13;
The biennial operating budget&#13;
document states that in every&#13;
year since the merger (1972-73)&#13;
the UW System GPR budget has&#13;
grown less than personal income&#13;
in Wisconsin. In 1972-73 the&#13;
university system's GPR budget&#13;
was 1.37% of Wisconsin personal&#13;
income; in 1979-80 i t was 1.09%.&#13;
For libraries and supplies and&#13;
expense, the real spending power&#13;
per student has declines to 63.9%&#13;
and 66.9% of what it was at the&#13;
time of merger.&#13;
In 1972-73 GPR/fee support per&#13;
student for instruction and related&#13;
costs was $1,764 for undergraduates&#13;
and $3,123 for&#13;
graduates. In 1979-80 GPR/fee&#13;
support per student for these&#13;
same costs, using 1972-73 dollars,&#13;
was $1,659 for undergraduates and&#13;
$2,957 f or graduates.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
NO&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
WHO IS Bert's mystery date?&#13;
UNIVERSITY of Wallamaloo Rule #1&#13;
Poofdahs.&#13;
BRIGHTEST STAR has shined in the darkest&#13;
places — Moldy.&#13;
ROUND TABLE. Find Joseph of Arimethla&#13;
and you will find the holy grail. In the&#13;
corner in the back.&#13;
E.C. When will we see a little E.C.?&#13;
S.J. WAYNE — Busco un pow - pow. Cuando y&#13;
donde? — Osa Cantor.&#13;
H&lt;^?~E Parkin8 Permits now available.&#13;
DMD •&#13;
W|OP'f!TE W',h 9ir' °' V°Ur Ch0ice; name ,he&#13;
PAB 'or your convenience we'll play&#13;
during health office hours. Coach Ham the&#13;
Scram.&#13;
ANNE ELK — was semihit, in hospital, and&#13;
out again. W.T.&#13;
BOUNCE, BOUNCE, Your Court or Mine?&#13;
Todd H. ,&#13;
Q. WHAT is Jamey's favorite dring? A&#13;
Danko's milk.&#13;
L^T'.? ?° ,he time warp a9ain! Mollnaro&#13;
Hall at 8:46. Riff Raff and lOP's&#13;
TONY, JOEL, AND RANDY: Used&#13;
Less than one-half of the money&#13;
to operate the UW System comes&#13;
from state taxes, and this&#13;
proportion has declined&#13;
significantly in recent years. In&#13;
1980, 43.9% of the UW System&#13;
authorized budget ($462 million)&#13;
was state GPR money. After the&#13;
4.4% cutback for 1980 this was&#13;
further reduced to 42.9% ($444&#13;
million). At the time of merger&#13;
50.7% of the UW System budget&#13;
was GPR. Since 1972-73 the&#13;
federally - funded portion of the&#13;
UW System budget has increased&#13;
from 13.7% to 17.1%, but prospects&#13;
for the continuation of this pattern&#13;
are not considered promising.&#13;
It would appear there has been a&#13;
major reordering of public&#13;
priorities over the last decade —&#13;
without much public discussion.&#13;
Asserfiveness group offered&#13;
The Office of Student&#13;
Development is providing a group&#13;
experience for students interested&#13;
in improving their assertiveness&#13;
skills. Participants in the group&#13;
will have opportunities to improve&#13;
their skills in expressing their&#13;
feelings, thoughts, and needs.&#13;
They will learn how to identify and&#13;
practice assertive behavior and&#13;
how to recognize and claim their&#13;
individual rights without violating&#13;
the rights of other people.&#13;
Enrollment in this group is&#13;
limited. In order to join, you must&#13;
be able to attend all six sessions,&#13;
which occur on Tuesdays and&#13;
Thursdays, from 2:00 to 3:15 p.m&#13;
(November 4, 6,11, 13, 18, and 20)&#13;
and you must contact Barbara&#13;
Larson by October 30. To do this,&#13;
call 553-2122, or stop by WLLCD175.&#13;
Parkside accepts grants&#13;
-if&#13;
II tbe&#13;
Could I have some more?!&#13;
to&#13;
toilet paper&#13;
Julie&#13;
MIKE, wear your yellow underwear&#13;
Orgasmal class? Monkey Buns&#13;
J JO — What's Mickey doing with a picture on&#13;
his finger?&#13;
VISIT Cockroach Kingdom (Parkside&#13;
Village). Races daily. Admission 5 bucks.&#13;
EXE BITMAP. D501 Ray Cameron.&#13;
A.P.: Is DPMA the dimwits programming&#13;
meaningless assignments? Chain Gang&#13;
JACQUES, Thanks for the hielp with&#13;
gastroanemic and sunsoleus, but Where's&#13;
your earring?—Ripper&#13;
JANE, If you can't afford a belt we'll buy you&#13;
one.&#13;
FRESHWOMEN, report to library's second&#13;
floor animal room — Animals&#13;
KENNY MEYER, Tom Shulak, and Ron&#13;
Parker — We won't mangle anything important.&#13;
Coach Ham the Scram.&#13;
I?'.?®1?.° cobolers cobo1 with? — Chain Gang&#13;
ATTENTION Paul Missurell; Why do the&#13;
Canadians suck? — Blackhawk booster&#13;
ALAN GUSKIN is an IOP. Right Al? — lOP's&#13;
MIKE, Guess what!? It's my birthday'&#13;
Monkey Buns&#13;
FOOTBALL POOL money due; Leader Pat&#13;
Weber must be caught.&#13;
J.O. What does your watch say?&#13;
IT HAS to get orange, just like a "punkin"! —&#13;
Kim .&#13;
BILL, How is your dill? You stud you! — K8.J&#13;
K.H. — Turn Catholic. J.C.&#13;
LAURIE, Holy shit! Oh God, Oh God! R-r-r-rr-&#13;
r-r! Toga! — Julie&#13;
NOTE: She is a virgin! BEEP BEEP BEEP&#13;
Patrick Hagerty.&#13;
YELLOW BELT, need help with your kicks?&#13;
Inquire Animal Room.&#13;
START trembling PAG, MENC, Ranger —&#13;
PSGA is ready to play football. Coach Ham&#13;
the Scram.&#13;
SUPERCHICH, Glad you're back — fill&#13;
up. The Chiches&#13;
AI?™,YOU on Villa9e's Man of Semester list?&#13;
#201 knows!&#13;
CHAIN GANG an3 lOP's: Your classifieds&#13;
are getting boring. Time for a chanqe in&#13;
your PROGRAM! "The Business&#13;
Manager"&#13;
CHAIN GANG for sale. Package deals only,&#13;
send promo, materials to Parking Lot c/o&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
CHAIN GANG: I have been waiting for weeks&#13;
for you guys to get clever. Now I'm bored,&#13;
so go suck a rock.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
ALTO SAXOPHONE. Call 694-1964 after 6 p&#13;
m. ^'&#13;
19711 OLDS CONVERTIBLE. Immaculate.&#13;
Call Jerry 634-2957.&#13;
1977 DODGE ASPEN WAGON. Always starts,&#13;
never dies. 634-0988, 632-3893&#13;
" " d " " «, 2 M U " , e " ' A M /™ '&#13;
T™5,™«Y0E4"T'RES '4I, 'S URe"™'&#13;
S Howard. Needs work. $50. Call&#13;
6y4-4730&#13;
"o82J5c0.n 0"0 VAN' Econol'ne 150 for sale. 554-&#13;
NEW AM/FM TAPE car stereo. $60. 40 Watt&#13;
Graphic equalizer amp $45. Tri . axial&#13;
ofui 6rS ea- Call after 6 p. m. 554-&#13;
9003.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
C°c.LwGFr.REP wan,ed 'o distribute&#13;
Student Rate" subscription cards at this&#13;
campus. Good income. No selling involved.&#13;
.°r '",ormati°n and application write&#13;
toTIME, INC. College Bureau, 4337 W.&#13;
Indian School Rd., Phoenix, AZ. 85031&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
RELIABLE BABYSITTER, occasional eves&#13;
5709 Canarran9e overnight stays. 634-&#13;
E^TERTA,NING? Wi)l cook, serve, cleanup.&#13;
Children s parties. Call Melanie 633-9141&#13;
i uF,Tf R"SCH00L' wee«end high&#13;
school help? Call Melanie 633-9141.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
RENTER (female) to sublease apartment&#13;
Parkside Village. Ph. 552 7889, ask for&#13;
Jeannie.&#13;
ROOMMATE NEEDED: beautiful 2 bedroom&#13;
apt. in large stone castle on Cross LSke&#13;
(Antioch). Huge fireplace, circular stairs, 3&#13;
car garage, beach property, and nice&#13;
turret. $165 includes heat and water. 20 min.&#13;
drive from P.U. Male or female. 312-395-&#13;
2603.&#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;
Gifts and grants totalling more&#13;
than $320,000 were accepted for&#13;
Parkside by the UW Systems&#13;
Board of Regents Friday (Oct.&#13;
That sum included $316,670 from&#13;
Patronize&#13;
our Advertisers&#13;
the federal Office of Education for&#13;
the Basic Educational Opportunity&#13;
Grants Program.&#13;
Gifts accepted included $6,437&#13;
for athletic or other scholarships&#13;
from multiple donors; $100 for the&#13;
George and Madeline Molinaro&#13;
Scholarship Fund from Elsie D.&#13;
Mosca, Jefferson, La.; and $50 for&#13;
the Kenneth L. Greenquist&#13;
Memorial Scholarship Fund from&#13;
Mark Madsen, Somerdale, N.J.&#13;
The regents also accepted $250&#13;
in support of synthetic peptide&#13;
substrate research at UW-P and&#13;
$100 in support of the life science&#13;
seminar series.&#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. 30c 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;
SSSSSs:&#13;
Classification:&#13;
Name&#13;
SS No. Ranger&#13;
WLLCD139&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 23,1980&#13;
Photo by Brian Passino&#13;
Photo by Brian Passino Winless streak at three&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The men's soccer team is still in&#13;
search of its ninth victory this&#13;
year. The elusive ninth victory&#13;
would set a new Parkside single&#13;
season victory mark. Parkside&#13;
was unable to earn that victory&#13;
last week as they dropped one&#13;
game and battled to a tie in&#13;
another game.&#13;
The men travelled to Lake&#13;
Forest and were overwhelmed by&#13;
a 3-1 score. "We stunk" said&#13;
goalkeeper Dan Opferman. Those&#13;
two words perfectly described the&#13;
way the Rangers played. The&#13;
defense played as if it was a sieve&#13;
and the offense, apart from a Mike&#13;
Kiefer penalty kick, was non -&#13;
existent.&#13;
The team took another journey&#13;
into Illinois later in the week and&#13;
fought to a 2-2 tie with the Illinois&#13;
Institute of Technology (IIT). The&#13;
tie was disheartening to a lot of&#13;
the players. "We should have&#13;
beaten them" captain Mike Kiefer&#13;
said. "We should have beaten both&#13;
those teams (referring to the&#13;
earlier loss to Lake Forest). We&#13;
just seem to be having our&#13;
problems, especially the last three&#13;
games." The Rangers have now&#13;
lost two with one tie in their last&#13;
three games.&#13;
The problems Kiefer alluded to&#13;
are the inability to score, not&#13;
playing up to their potential, and&#13;
the old cliiche of inconsistency.&#13;
"We're having trouble putting&#13;
the ball in the net. We're just not&#13;
finishing. We build well but don't&#13;
finish. We're not going to win if we&#13;
don't put the ball in the net."&#13;
"Another thing is that we're not&#13;
playing up to our potential. We&#13;
should be blowing a lot of these&#13;
teams out if we just get our act&#13;
together. It seems as if we're&#13;
playing to our competition's&#13;
level" Kiefer said.&#13;
Although the Rangers are&#13;
winless in their last three games&#13;
there isn't any need to panic.&#13;
"We're going to come out of it. No&#13;
doubt about it, we'll come&#13;
through" Kiefer promised.&#13;
"We're going to win the rest&#13;
of our games this season."&#13;
Hopefully Kiefer's prediction&#13;
will come true because the team&#13;
picked a most inopportune time to&#13;
go into a slump. There are only&#13;
three more regular season games&#13;
left before play - off competition&#13;
begins.&#13;
RANGER photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
Volleyball flops&#13;
by Dan Rasch&#13;
"We stunk. We played terribly,&#13;
we played like six individuals."&#13;
Those were the words of women's&#13;
volleybal coach Linda Henderson&#13;
after her team was demolished by&#13;
Loyola and embarassed by&#13;
Marquette. Loyola won 12-15,15-9,&#13;
15-11 and Marquette won 15-11, 15-&#13;
0. The two defeats drops the&#13;
Rangers overall record to 15 - 15.&#13;
The humiliating loss to&#13;
Marquette throws the number one&#13;
seed in state play up for grabs.&#13;
Considering the way the team has&#13;
been playing they shouldn't even&#13;
worry about the playoffs. They&#13;
must regroup and regain their&#13;
winning form or they won't even&#13;
be recognized as a formidable&#13;
opponent.&#13;
The Rangers finally had an off&#13;
weekend and it may prove to be&#13;
what they needed. The team has&#13;
been playing every weekend and&#13;
once a week since school began.&#13;
The busy schedule may have&#13;
affected the team.&#13;
The team is in action this&#13;
weekend at the Carthage Invitational.&#13;
'&#13;
^ H E I L L M A N S&#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;
APPLICATIONS ARE&#13;
BEHW ACCEPTED&#13;
COPY EDITOR&#13;
A a a m c t n , - _ J 0 B REQUIREMENTS&#13;
• MUST B E STUDENT ENROLLED WITH 6 CRFniTS&#13;
• MHA0T^C°SUGH KNOWLEDGE OF EWNGL.SHCRGERDAMS&#13;
• MUST KNOW PROOFREADING SYMBOLS&#13;
• MUST TAKE P ROOFREADING TEST&#13;
THIS IS A PAID POSITION&#13;
Drop Applications Off At The&#13;
RANGER OFFICE, WLLC D139&#13;
NEXTTOTHE COFFEE SHOPPE.&#13;
8 Thursday, October 23, 1980 RANGER&#13;
Working Out&#13;
Power builds muscles&#13;
and deviates from the norm&#13;
PRO PICKS 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;
Cincinnati at Houston —&#13;
New England at Buffalo&#13;
Pittsburgh at Cleveland •&#13;
Seattle at Oakland&#13;
Chicago at Philadelphia&#13;
Los Angeles,at Atlanta&#13;
Minnesota at Green Bay&#13;
New Orleans at Washington&#13;
Tampa Bay at San Francisco&#13;
Denver at N. Y. Giants&#13;
Detroit at Kansas City&#13;
St. Louis at Baltimore&#13;
San Diego at Dallas&#13;
Miami at N. Y. Jets —&#13;
Tie - breaker: will be the total combined points&#13;
scored in the Miami - N. Y. Jets game.&#13;
Last week's winner: Rory Spears, 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;
Tennis&#13;
Third place at state&#13;
picking up the bar with a one hand&#13;
underhand one overhand grip —&#13;
until the back is vertical — will&#13;
give you a stronger back, legs,&#13;
biceps and forearms. Again,&#13;
physical structure: (long arms&#13;
and short legs) determines how&#13;
much weight you will handle in&#13;
this exercise. Keep the back&#13;
muscles locked so that the legs&#13;
will help to lift the weight.&#13;
The squat is another recommended&#13;
exercise, as is the power&#13;
clean (andpress) — lifting the bar&#13;
from the ©round and swinging it&#13;
up to the shoulders. From this&#13;
position you should be able to&#13;
execute a standing barbell press.&#13;
Power exercises incorporate&#13;
many muscles, developing&#13;
coordination between them rather&#13;
than isolating a specific muscle,&#13;
thus enabling very heavy weights&#13;
to be used. Because the expenditure&#13;
of energy is so great,&#13;
low reps and sets are advised&#13;
after an initial warmup. After one&#13;
or two light sets of 6-8 re ps to get&#13;
should be heavy enough to permit&#13;
only about 4 reps maximum. A&#13;
fourth set should allow only 1-2&#13;
reps. The final set should be light&#13;
enough for about 4 - 6 reps.&#13;
Five sets of each of the above&#13;
four power exercises would, in&#13;
itself, be an adequate workout&#13;
done two or three times per week&#13;
only. And once a month, try to&#13;
exceed the previous month's&#13;
maximum poundage for a single&#13;
rep. Remember to wear a weight&#13;
belt when going heavy on all&#13;
exercises.&#13;
When incorporating this power&#13;
routine, all other exercises such&#13;
as curls, leg extensions, lat&#13;
pulldowns, flyers, etc., should be&#13;
omitted for peak performance and&#13;
rapid recovery, dr one power&#13;
exercise may be included in your&#13;
routine in the place of arm&#13;
training for a week or two. A gain&#13;
in power may result. Adjust your&#13;
workout to suit your own physique&#13;
and training goals.&#13;
by Pete Cramer&#13;
The women's tennis team&#13;
concluded its 1980 se ason with a&#13;
third place finish in the state&#13;
tournament last week. Coach&#13;
Noreen Goggin was pleased with&#13;
the team's tournament play as&#13;
well as the entire season play.&#13;
Parkside finished third in state&#13;
play with 22 points. Marquette&#13;
was the run away winner, with 78&#13;
Cross-Country&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The women's cross - country&#13;
team has proven numerous times&#13;
this year that they are one of the&#13;
better teams in the state. Last&#13;
week they journeyed to Waukesha&#13;
where they ran against Carroll,&#13;
Beloit and Carthage and came&#13;
away with first place.&#13;
The Rangers were allowed to&#13;
enter two teams. Kellie Benzow,&#13;
Wendy Burman, Sharon Keller&#13;
and Dona Driscoll comprised one&#13;
team while Barb Osborne, Sandy&#13;
points, Milwaukee was second&#13;
with 40 points, Carroll was fourth,&#13;
Carthage fifth and Green Bay last.&#13;
Goggin had reason to be&#13;
satisfied with her team's performance.&#13;
They went 8 - 6 on the&#13;
regular season and finished third&#13;
in state. They accomplished all&#13;
their pre - season goals and&#13;
anything beyond that would have&#13;
been a pleasant surprise.&#13;
Venne, JoAnne Carey and Linda&#13;
Pfeilstifter made up the second&#13;
unit.&#13;
Benzow, Burman and Keller&#13;
stayed together stride for stride&#13;
throughout the entire three mile&#13;
race. Benzow won the race in a&#13;
time of 19 minutes and 19.5&#13;
seconds. Burman finished a half&#13;
second behind Benzow for second&#13;
place and Keller was third in a&#13;
time of 19 minutes and 23.9&#13;
seconds. Driscoll finished the race&#13;
in fifth place. The Ranger "A"&#13;
unit won the meet with a total of&#13;
by Donald Scherrer&#13;
Power. As it is elusive, so is it&#13;
accumulated. Power is a&#13;
deviation, from the norm. Power&#13;
comes from the inside. Knowledge&#13;
is power.&#13;
Power is physical might. It is&#13;
also the time rate at which work is&#13;
done or energy emitted or transferred.&#13;
To complete a workout in&#13;
a shorter period of time than the&#13;
last is to increase one's power.&#13;
Concentrating on power&#13;
exercises for a month or two at a&#13;
time may also increase the&#13;
poundages used in your exercises.&#13;
When a power routine is followed&#13;
for longer than that, your training&#13;
may go stale, poundages may fall,&#13;
and you will probably not want to&#13;
work out because you will be using&#13;
up too much of your body's energy&#13;
reserves by overtraining.&#13;
The bench press is the most&#13;
popular of the power exercises, it&#13;
may increase shoulder and tricep&#13;
as well as pectoral strength, if&#13;
your arm length and chest girth&#13;
are best suited for the exercise. If&#13;
your arms are very short and your&#13;
rib cage very large, the bench&#13;
press will be to your advantage.&#13;
However, most people will never&#13;
be able to bench press 300 pounds&#13;
no matter how hard they try.&#13;
The deadlift — squatting and&#13;
"Everyone played well at state.&#13;
They worked real hard. Overall&#13;
we did a good job and we had a lot&#13;
of fun this year" Goggin said.&#13;
Freshman Lisa Lindsay&#13;
finished the season with an 18 - 3&#13;
singles record to lead the team in&#13;
victories and the doubles team of&#13;
Kathy Thomas and Nancy Kivi&#13;
finished 15-6, tops of the Parkside&#13;
doubles teams.&#13;
11 points. The Beloit "A" unit&#13;
was second with 35 points.&#13;
Parkside showed their depth&#13;
and talent in this race as the&#13;
Ranger "B" unit of Osborne,&#13;
Venne, Carey and Pfeilstifter&#13;
finished in third place. The other&#13;
teams in order of finish were&#13;
Carroll fourth, Carthage fifth and&#13;
Beloit "B" unit sixth.&#13;
The Rangers prepare for the&#13;
State Championship this Saturday.&#13;
The WWIAC Championship&#13;
will be held in River Falls.&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
Swimming&#13;
The UW-Parkside Swim Club is&#13;
sponsoring a Swim-a-thon to raise&#13;
money for a training trip to the&#13;
International Swimming Hall-of-&#13;
Fame in Ft. Lauderdale over the&#13;
semester break. Members are&#13;
asking for pledges for each length&#13;
swam with the money being&#13;
divided between the Swim Club,&#13;
the Arthritis Foundation, the&#13;
Swimming Hall of F ame, and the&#13;
International Travel Fund for US&#13;
Swim Teams. The Swim-a-thon&#13;
will be held at the UW-Parkside&#13;
pool on Saturday, Nov. 1 at 1:00&#13;
p.m. Each swimmer will be trying&#13;
to swim 200 l engths in the 2-hour&#13;
time limit. Anyone wishing to&#13;
contribute or pledge should&#13;
SHORTS&#13;
contact Barb Lawson, the swim&#13;
coach, at 553-2257.&#13;
The Swim Club is also showing&#13;
the movie "Duck Soup" starring&#13;
the Marx Brothers on Thursday,&#13;
October 30 in the Union Theater at&#13;
7:00 p.m. Tickets are available&#13;
from the Swim Club members or&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson for $1.00.&#13;
Tickets at the door will be $1.50.&#13;
Track&#13;
Anyone interested in joining the&#13;
men's or women's track teams&#13;
should contact coach Bob or Barb&#13;
Lawson at the Physical Education&#13;
Building. The team's first meet is&#13;
in December. All interested&#13;
parties are encouraged to contact&#13;
the coaches as soon as possible. Women humble opponents&#13;
WIN A PAIR OF RANGER&#13;
SEASON BASKETBALL&#13;
TICKETS&#13;
Name Hn 1981 Winter Carnival&#13;
1981 WINTER CARNIVAL THEME&#13;
Carnival Theme Name&#13;
Student Name.&#13;
SS No.&#13;
13,&#13;
—RULE S &amp;INFORMATI O N —&#13;
0 Winter Carnival will be held Feb. 9&#13;
1981.&#13;
• Must be a Parkside student to enter.&#13;
• Deadline: Friday noon, Nov. 7&#13;
• In case of 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;
SPORTS CALENDAR&#13;
Friday, Oct. 24: Soccer at St. Norbert College&#13;
Friday - Saturday, Oct. 24 - 25: Volleyball at Carthage Invitation;&#13;
pionslvip 251 Cr°SS " Country (women) at WWIAC Chan&#13;
ADVERTISING&#13;
REPRESENTATIVES&#13;
NEEDED&#13;
Will receive&#13;
15% Commission&#13;
on every Display Ad you sell&#13;
Applicants must be dependable a&#13;
have some type of transportatior&#13;
No experience is necessary&#13;
but would be beneficial.&#13;
Mike Farrell or Bruce Preston&#13;
In the Ranger Office&#13;
WLLC D139 — 553-2295</text>
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