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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 7, issue 9</text>
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            <text>Library Receives Statewide Recognition</text>
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            <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
ri Univi&#13;
waxiget&#13;
vol.7 no.9 Wednesday November 1,1978&#13;
association, acknowledges "outstanding&#13;
service to the library&#13;
profession in the state."&#13;
According to Mr. Boisse, the&#13;
WLA seldom gives more than&#13;
five awards each vear, and this&#13;
year Parkside has received two.&#13;
In the past, the Library/Learning&#13;
Center has received the&#13;
Library Public Relations Award&#13;
(1976) for its "effective use of&#13;
graphics and displays in&#13;
communicating library services&#13;
and resources."&#13;
The library of the year award&#13;
will be on display on the first&#13;
floor of the Wyllie Library&#13;
Learning Center.&#13;
special, and academic — were&#13;
evaluated. Libraries nominated&#13;
for the award were not compared&#13;
to one another but were judged&#13;
individually, according to the&#13;
services usually provided by&#13;
libraries.&#13;
Mr. Boisse commented that&#13;
the Library/Learning Center&#13;
received the award because of its&#13;
"outreach efforts." He stated&#13;
that the Library has one of the&#13;
"most open policies for use of&#13;
the library by community&#13;
residents." Local school districts&#13;
are able to check out films free&#13;
of cost. Almost anyone can&#13;
obtain a special borrowers card&#13;
and check out materials. The&#13;
Library/Learning Center also&#13;
serves as the "first recourse" for&#13;
area libraries. Through WILS&#13;
(Wisconsin Interlibrary Loan&#13;
Service) the library is able to&#13;
borrow materials from other&#13;
libraries including UW-Madison.&#13;
Mr. Boisse pointed out that it is&#13;
"the second time in history that&#13;
an academic library has received&#13;
the Library of the Year award."&#13;
When asked what this means to&#13;
Parkside students and faculty,&#13;
Boisse stated that the award was&#13;
a "recognition of dedication by&#13;
the entire staff of the&#13;
Library/Learning Center." He&#13;
also emphasized the fact that the&#13;
award has helped Parkside&#13;
achieve state and nationwide&#13;
recognition. Mr. Boisse mentioned&#13;
that the library was also&#13;
visited by people from England&#13;
and South Africa.&#13;
Mr. Boisse, himself, received&#13;
the WLA Distinguished Service&#13;
Award for planning the WLA&#13;
annual conferences during four&#13;
out of the past five years. This&#13;
award, rarely given to an&#13;
individual member of the&#13;
by Mollie Clarke&#13;
Joe Boisse'&#13;
Thursday (Oct. 26), Chancellor&#13;
Guskin accepted the Library of&#13;
the Year award on behalf of the&#13;
Library/Learning Center.&#13;
Director of the library, Joseph&#13;
Boisse, explained that all types&#13;
of libraries — public, school,&#13;
Though most Parkside students&#13;
at one time or another&#13;
have had to struggle through&#13;
those green library workbooks&#13;
while taking English composition&#13;
classes, this kind of bibliographic&#13;
instruction has helped U.W.&#13;
Parkside's Library/Learning Center&#13;
receive statewide recognition.&#13;
During the Wisconsin&#13;
Library Association annual&#13;
banquet held at Lake Geneva last&#13;
Good Showing For Elections&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
Every fall half of the Student&#13;
Government Senate seats and&#13;
half of the Student Allocations&#13;
Committee seats are up for&#13;
election.&#13;
The Fall student government&#13;
elections were held last&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday and&#13;
the count was made Thursday&#13;
night. Two constitutional Referendums&#13;
were also on the ballot&#13;
Both passed.&#13;
Approximately 22b votes were&#13;
cast in the election; a decent&#13;
turnout for the fall semester.&#13;
The Senate Seats that were&#13;
open were those representing&#13;
students with majors. No one ran&#13;
for the social Science, Humanities&#13;
or Behavioral Science seats&#13;
but anyone interested in them&#13;
should contact the Student&#13;
Government Office down by the&#13;
Library cafeteria. The Engineering&#13;
Science Divisional seat was&#13;
won by a write-in candidate,&#13;
Doug Shubert with five votes.&#13;
Tim Zimmer won out over Shaun&#13;
Helgesen, 49 votes to 9, for the&#13;
Science Division Seat. The Fine&#13;
Arts Division seat was taken by&#13;
Pat O'Dell with just one vote and&#13;
Dave Hall won the Business&#13;
Administration seat.&#13;
The unfilled positions will&#13;
remain open till s omeone shows&#13;
interest in them. These senators&#13;
most appointed to the senate by&#13;
Rusty Smith, the Student&#13;
Government President.&#13;
Besides the divisional seats&#13;
there are also eight other&#13;
non-aligned senators seats. They&#13;
are elected each spring along&#13;
with the President, Vice-President&#13;
and the other half of the&#13;
Allocations Committee.&#13;
The five Allocations Committee&#13;
seats that were open this Fall&#13;
were filled by Mark DeCheck&#13;
with 111 votes, President of the&#13;
Pre-Med and Modern Language&#13;
Clubs; Tom Marschner with 98&#13;
votes, President of the Chemistry&#13;
Club; Doug Edenhauser with 90&#13;
votes, Sports Editor of the&#13;
Ranger; Terry Zuehlsdorf with 80&#13;
votes, co-chairman of the&#13;
Student Organization Council&#13;
(S.O.C.) and Freddie Barclay&#13;
with 76 votes.&#13;
The five new Allocations&#13;
Committee members will soon&#13;
start work with the cither five&#13;
members already on the&#13;
committee. They will begin the&#13;
job of allocating the half a&#13;
million dollars that is segregated&#13;
from the total tuition monies&#13;
that the University takes in each&#13;
semester. The budget for these&#13;
allocations is due on the&#13;
Chancellor s desk in February.&#13;
However, before that happens all&#13;
of the various groups that&#13;
receive funding must present&#13;
their requests. The requests must&#13;
then be examined, decided upon&#13;
and passed by the student senate&#13;
and the Student Government&#13;
President.&#13;
Survival Workshop&#13;
Nov 11&amp; 12&#13;
Glen Haven, Wis. — Suppose&#13;
you were lost in the woods or&#13;
stranded on a lonely highway&#13;
during a howling winter storm?&#13;
Suppose you fell down a cliffside&#13;
and broke a leg and had to .wait&#13;
for help to come? Would you be&#13;
able to survive?&#13;
You can learn techniques to&#13;
survive in emergency situations&#13;
like these at the annual Survival&#13;
Workshop, sponsored by Eagle&#13;
Valley Environmentalists, to be&#13;
held November 11 &amp; 12 at EVE's&#13;
Nature Center south of Glen&#13;
Haven.&#13;
Topics at the Workshop will&#13;
include requirements for survival,&#13;
emergency first aid,&#13;
preparing your car for survival in&#13;
a blizzard, direction finding with&#13;
or without a compass, telling&#13;
time and direction by the stars,&#13;
finding and preparing shelter,&#13;
learning to read a topographic&#13;
map, treatment for stress and&#13;
shock, and preparing for a winter&#13;
wilderness journey. EVE's E xecutive&#13;
Director, Terry Ingram, will&#13;
iead group instruction in survival&#13;
techniques. The Workshop will&#13;
culminate with a mock rescue&#13;
operation in which participants&#13;
put into practice the survival&#13;
lessons they have learned.&#13;
For information and reservations&#13;
contact EVE, Box 155,&#13;
Apple River, Illinois 61001 or&#13;
phone 815-594-2259. &#13;
Lili Crnich: Dorms.&#13;
How do you think the half million dollars of segregated fee&#13;
tudent life monies should be spent?&#13;
Lawrence Herndon: More money&#13;
should be spent to bring in at&#13;
least one first rate entertainment&#13;
act to Parkside each year.&#13;
Something like the Commodores&#13;
or Bootsy.&#13;
Shaun Helgeson: I think mo&#13;
money should be distributed&#13;
the student groups.&#13;
Wednesday November 1,1978 ganger&#13;
JSHOCE you ToPiUED&#13;
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HE THIS?&#13;
^ o n!&#13;
Sssmss §## mm&#13;
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§m m Mill&#13;
J UOULO'VE mo&#13;
JT IF&#13;
HAO.ClUEH ME&#13;
^fiAX)THE*&gt;\ A&#13;
MINUTE, 6h&gt;1\\&#13;
THANKS A UY-*&#13;
uay!!&#13;
Pamela Mitchell: More money&#13;
should be spent on the&#13;
Cheerleading program: more&#13;
road trips and a trip to Kansas&#13;
City.&#13;
Roundtable Worth It&#13;
iELiEVE&#13;
THIS&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
The Social Science Division&#13;
has begun a speaking program&#13;
that runs every Monday at noon&#13;
in the Student Union. They call it&#13;
the Social Science Roundtable.&#13;
Faculty, students and offcampus&#13;
persons are given this&#13;
forum to lead discussions on&#13;
Follow-up On Clocks&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
Ranger has done a follow-up&#13;
concerning the confusing state&#13;
of Parkside's time pieces. As the&#13;
photo essay on the cover of our&#13;
October 4th issue implies, many&#13;
of Parkside's clocks are out of&#13;
sync.&#13;
A conversation with the&#13;
Physical Plant Department last&#13;
week, revealed that the main&#13;
control circuitry in the Greenquist&#13;
Building, for the 100 or so&#13;
clocks on campus are working&#13;
fine. However the clocks in the&#13;
extreme portions of the campus,&#13;
like those in the Communication&#13;
Arts Building and the Student&#13;
Union, seem to slow down&#13;
mysteriously. Clocks that work&#13;
fine in Greenquist are taken to&#13;
these places installed in place of&#13;
faulty clocks and then they too&#13;
begin to run slow. It is as if the&#13;
current or impulse from the&#13;
central control unit peters out by&#13;
the time it reaches the CA or&#13;
Union clocks.&#13;
Physical, plant works on the&#13;
clocks from these two places&#13;
continually, although the clocks&#13;
that are faulty in the Union must&#13;
first be reported to Physical Plant&#13;
by the Union Staff before&#13;
Physical Plant can work on them.&#13;
Tallent Hall also has problems.&#13;
Its clocks are on a different&#13;
system which has also recently&#13;
broken down.&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Mike Murphy Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan General Manager&#13;
Tom Cooper. Student Advisor&#13;
John Stewart News Editor&#13;
Sue Stevens Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Sports Editor&#13;
Kim Putman Copy Editor&#13;
Chris Miller Ad Manager&#13;
Nancy Szymanski Circulation Manager&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Carolyn Bresciano, Cathy Brownlee, Bob Bruno, Mollie&#13;
Clarke, Dave Cramer, Tom Fervoy, Rob Gardner, Pete&#13;
Jacket, Thomas Jenn, Nick! Kroll, Kim Ruetz, Jeff&#13;
Stevens, Lester Thompson.&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
Susan Caldwell, Denise D'Acquisto, Mike Holmdohl, Julie&#13;
Orth, Tony Raymond and Brian Taggart.&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig Dvorak, Rob Miller and Matthew Poliakon.&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
John Cramer and Dawn Thomas.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted for publication if they&#13;
are typewritten, double spaced with one inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be included&#13;
for purposes of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
publication, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and refuse&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All material must be received by Thursday noon for&#13;
publication on the following Wednesday.&#13;
important and interesting topics&#13;
relating to the Social Sciences.&#13;
Discussions of this type are&#13;
much more enjoyable learning&#13;
experiences for everyone involved&#13;
than the standard lecture&#13;
situation. Hopefully this innovation&#13;
can be implemented by&#13;
other disciplines as well.&#13;
Although most of the people&#13;
attending and participating in&#13;
these discussions . have been&#13;
faculty, the Roundtable concept&#13;
does seem to be a feasible and&#13;
imaginative way to make&#13;
communication between students&#13;
and faculty more productive.&#13;
It would give students a&#13;
better insight into important&#13;
issues and at least in this case,&#13;
would give History, Political&#13;
Science, Sociology and other&#13;
Social Science students the&#13;
chance to learn more about their&#13;
own fields in a very interesting&#13;
and worthwhile fashion.&#13;
It seems that the Social&#13;
Science Division has defined the&#13;
range of the Social Sciences as&#13;
being very wide, encompassing&#13;
many subjects in order to&#13;
interest as many people as&#13;
possible without crossing any&#13;
interdisciplinary borders. Thus&#13;
we may never see such a&#13;
program devoted solely to some&#13;
very specific area of study but I&#13;
should think that there is enough&#13;
interest on campus to keep at&#13;
least a few programs of this sort&#13;
going. The Social Sciences is one&#13;
subject area. Another might be&#13;
the general area of Communication,&#13;
dealing with the arts,&#13;
literature and Communication&#13;
theory. The Sciences and&#13;
Finances might be others.&#13;
There are many speaking and&#13;
discussion events held at&#13;
Parkside each year, Sponsored&#13;
by many different academic&#13;
groups. Perhaps permanent&#13;
programs like the Social Science&#13;
Roundtable could co-sponsor&#13;
certain events with the particular&#13;
university or student group&#13;
concerned. This would make&#13;
such activities much more&#13;
successful and much more&#13;
popular on campus. Advertising&#13;
for the events would become&#13;
more efficient and the various&#13;
groups would find a focus for&#13;
their interests. Furthermore,&#13;
communication would improve&#13;
between people interested in the&#13;
various subject areas and who&#13;
knows what interesting work&#13;
could issue from this tossing&#13;
back and forth of ideas.&#13;
Any comments about this&#13;
issue are encouraged and all&#13;
letters will be published in an&#13;
effort to develop the idea's put&#13;
forth here.&#13;
UITH A LL THE S UFFELIAJC IV&#13;
THE O o*LD toPAY THtoooH&#13;
uM ANO POVERTY CKEED&#13;
AMD OECEfT/ON A MD H 4TeED&#13;
A/OP ALL T HAT S TUFF, ...&#13;
' WE AL L THE S/M NEES ADO&#13;
SHIP TH EM O FF S OMEPLACE&#13;
-SO HE COULD CI\}£ US&#13;
PEACE ?!?&#13;
. HMH.&#13;
' / &#13;
Wednesday November 1,1978&#13;
Blood Drive Draws 93 Pints&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
Last Wednesday, the University&#13;
sponsored its 3rd Annual Fall&#13;
Blood Drive between 11:00 a.m.&#13;
and 3:00 p.m. in the Student&#13;
Union. The Milwaukee County&#13;
Blood Center, the Parkside&#13;
Health Center and the Pre-Med&#13;
Club from Parkside provided all&#13;
the man-power and equipment&#13;
necessary for the event.&#13;
This Fall's drive collected 93&#13;
pints; an improvement over last&#13;
Spring's total of 79 pints.&#13;
Forty-three of the donors were&#13;
first-time blood donors. This is&#13;
encouraging since according to&#13;
Professor Pomozal, Parkside's&#13;
coordinator for the drive, one&#13;
major purpose of the drive is to&#13;
make it easier for people to give&#13;
blood and to learn that is is an&#13;
easy thing to do. However, there&#13;
was a noticeable lack of faculty&#13;
and staff participation in the&#13;
event. All parties involved,&#13;
including the Milwaukee Blood&#13;
Center were pleased with the&#13;
turn out and plans are already&#13;
being made for the February 14th&#13;
(Valentine's Day) Blood Drive&#13;
this Spring.&#13;
Donors reported no discomfort,&#13;
although the blood Center&#13;
Instruction pamphlet mentions&#13;
occasional discoloration on the&#13;
arm when a little blood gets out&#13;
under the skin. This disappears&#13;
like a regular bruise in a short&#13;
while. It is advised that strenous&#13;
or unusual physical exertion be&#13;
avoided for the remainder of the&#13;
day after giving blood.&#13;
The process of donating blood&#13;
takes at the most about forty&#13;
minutes. Recording your medical&#13;
history, taking your blood&#13;
pressure and testing a single drop&#13;
of blood from your earlobe takes&#13;
about 15 minutes. The actual&#13;
drawing of blood from your arm&#13;
only takes about 10 minutes. It is&#13;
recommended you allow 10 to 15&#13;
minutes after you donate to&#13;
relax.&#13;
It is important to note that the&#13;
most common blood types are&#13;
the most widely needed and so&#13;
no one should feel that their&#13;
blood types are not needed.&#13;
Furthermore, the ratio of male to&#13;
female donors is about one to&#13;
one. This dispells another myth&#13;
about the macho image of giving&#13;
blood. It is and should be a&#13;
familiar and frequent event.&#13;
The purpose of the Blood&#13;
Drive is two-fold: to make&#13;
people aware of the constant&#13;
need for blood that exists in our&#13;
area and to get people in the&#13;
habit of giving blood on a regular&#13;
basis. The Milwaukee County&#13;
Blood Center supplies blood for&#13;
Milwaukee, Ozaukee, Racine,&#13;
Washington, Kenosha, and&#13;
Waukesha counties. Two thousand&#13;
pints of blood are needed&#13;
each week to run the 34 hospitals&#13;
in this area.&#13;
The reason that there is a&#13;
constant need for blood is also&#13;
twofold: a constant flow of new&#13;
patients and the natural&#13;
depomposition of blood over&#13;
time. Red blood cells can only be&#13;
kept for 21 days and thus, new&#13;
The Consumer Cooperative Bank Bill&#13;
by friends of the food&#13;
and book co-ops&#13;
The National Consumer Cooperative&#13;
Bank Bill was&#13;
developed to finance self-help&#13;
consumer enterprises and to&#13;
enhance already existing co-ops&#13;
so they could provide better&#13;
quality goods and services at&#13;
lower prices.&#13;
On July 13th the Senate passed&#13;
it by a margin of 60-33. (It only&#13;
passed by 199-198 in the House.)&#13;
The Cooperative League of the&#13;
USA, the main lobbiest, spent&#13;
nearly one-half million dollars&#13;
since 1975 to pass this bill.&#13;
Consumer co-ops are formed&#13;
by member-consumers who feel&#13;
the need to have something to&#13;
say about the goods and services&#13;
they buy and use. Housing,&#13;
health and dental care, optical&#13;
services, consumer goods, legal&#13;
services, television repair, auto&#13;
repair and insurance are all&#13;
potential areas for consumer&#13;
co-ops.&#13;
There has never been&#13;
significant legislation to give&#13;
cooperative groups financial or&#13;
technical assistance. Many&#13;
people who have tried to get a&#13;
co-op going found that usual&#13;
lenders — banks and mortgage&#13;
firms — d idn't even know what a&#13;
co-op was or how to lend money&#13;
to one. And, they mistrusted&#13;
them because they weren't trying&#13;
to operate for profit.&#13;
The Cooperative Bank Bill&#13;
creatively should provide the&#13;
technical help and supplemental&#13;
financing co-ops need to form,&#13;
develop and expand in the same&#13;
Chiwaukee Naurs&#13;
manner that farm cooperatives&#13;
have with the Farm Credit&#13;
System that began ten years ago.&#13;
The law authorizes up to $300&#13;
million in federal seed money&#13;
over the next five years, which&#13;
can be leveraged into $3 billion&#13;
worth of loans.&#13;
Successful cooperatives will&#13;
have the funds to expand,&#13;
faltering ones can put themselves&#13;
on a sounder operating&#13;
basis. Seed money and low&#13;
interest loans will be available to&#13;
new co-ops, especially those in&#13;
rural areas and the inner city.&#13;
This new Bank Bill would&#13;
attempt to create more co-ops in&#13;
low income areas with .money&#13;
and expertise that would shift&#13;
the emphasis to communities&#13;
with real need and not just stable&#13;
businesses that could get&#13;
financing.&#13;
TITLE I: National Consumer&#13;
Cooperative Bank&#13;
—Creates a National Consumer&#13;
Cooperative Bank with an option&#13;
for establishing regional banks at&#13;
the end of the first seven years,&#13;
— Provides for Federal Goverrir&#13;
ment control over the bank until&#13;
66 2/3 percent of Class A stock is&#13;
held by private stockholders.&#13;
— Provides for initial capitalization&#13;
of $100 million and such&#13;
sums as many be appropriated&#13;
for the next four fiscal years,&#13;
subject to a total limit of $500&#13;
million.&#13;
— Excludes credit unions, mutual&#13;
savings banks and mutual&#13;
savings and loan banks from&#13;
eligibility for loans.&#13;
— Provides a restriction on&#13;
housing cooperatives' eligibility&#13;
for loans by adding the&#13;
Department of Housing and&#13;
Urban Development (HUD) and&#13;
Farmers' Home Administration&#13;
(FMHA) to the list of agencies&#13;
which have to consider&#13;
applications for assistance prior&#13;
to the bank's consideration of an&#13;
application.&#13;
—Makes interest rates on bank&#13;
loans competitive with market&#13;
rates.&#13;
TITLE II: Office of&#13;
Consumer Cooperatives&#13;
, —Creates in an existing&#13;
governmental agency—ACTION&#13;
—an office to administer the&#13;
Self-Help Development Fund&#13;
and Technical Assistance Program&#13;
authorized by Titles III and&#13;
IV. ACTION was chosen because&#13;
many of its functions include&#13;
self-help programs in inner-city&#13;
neighborhoods and rural areas&#13;
expected to utilize the benefits&#13;
of consumer cooperatives.&#13;
TITLE III: Self-Help&#13;
Development Fund&#13;
—The Self-Help Development&#13;
Fund provides needed financial&#13;
assistance —in the form of&#13;
interest subsidies or capital&#13;
contributions—to fledgling cooperatives,&#13;
expecially for the&#13;
poor, inner-city residents and the&#13;
elderly, and is funded initially&#13;
with an authorization of $10&#13;
million and such sums as may be&#13;
appropriated for the next four&#13;
years, not to exceed $240&#13;
million.&#13;
TITLE IV: Cooperative&#13;
Technical Assistance&#13;
— The technical assistance&#13;
program provides information&#13;
and assistance to developing&#13;
cooperatives and is a cener for&#13;
expanding information on the&#13;
organization and services of&#13;
consumer cooperatives.&#13;
This bill is not only a giant step&#13;
for the development of cooperatives,&#13;
but is also a chance for&#13;
the development of people. Ten&#13;
or twenty years from now we&#13;
may all be members of co-ops,&#13;
where we may get our food,&#13;
drugs, and other large volume&#13;
consumer goods in a cooperative&#13;
atmosphere with our friends,&#13;
family and neighbors, in a close&#13;
community attitude.&#13;
Parkside and it is hoped that the&#13;
old faces as well as the new will&#13;
turn up again; consistent&#13;
donations are the goal.&#13;
A special program designed to&#13;
help heart patients is also&#13;
available. "On-Call Donors" is&#13;
the name of the program and it&#13;
involves being called in by the&#13;
Blood Center to donate when&#13;
your blood type is needed for&#13;
heart surgery. Milwaukee is a&#13;
major heart surgery center in the&#13;
U.S. and an average of ten heart&#13;
operations are performed each&#13;
day. Each operation requires 5 to&#13;
10 pints a piece.&#13;
donations are needed daily to&#13;
maintain an adequate community&#13;
supply of blood.&#13;
The blood drive is an&#13;
important part of a new&#13;
"community responsibility"&#13;
approach to recruiting blood&#13;
donations. In June 1977, the&#13;
regional blood system changed&#13;
from an "individual responsibility"&#13;
approach, wherein patients&#13;
were obligated to replace the&#13;
blood they used and needed, to&#13;
the present approach wherein&#13;
donations are solicited from the&#13;
whole South Eastern Wisconsin&#13;
community.&#13;
Once a person has gone&#13;
through the experience of giving&#13;
blood it is no longer such a&#13;
frightening thing. There are&#13;
blood drives every semester at&#13;
Collective&#13;
Bargaining&#13;
and the&#13;
Governor's&#13;
Race&#13;
An.&#13;
by John W. Co*&#13;
WEAC Higher Education Consultant&#13;
The right of the faculty and academic ataff&#13;
in the UW system to decide whether or not&#13;
they wish to participate in collective&#13;
bargaining has been debated for some time.&#13;
A number of studies all indicate that a&#13;
significant majority of the faculty and&#13;
academic staff on the old WSU campuses&#13;
want to bargain collectively over a range of&#13;
issues. Just as significantly, an even larger&#13;
percentage indicate that they feel the faculty&#13;
and academic staff ought to at least have the&#13;
right to make this choice. This year's&#13;
gubernatorial election has some significant&#13;
ramifications relevant to the faculty and&#13;
academic staffs right to participate in&#13;
bargaining or, indeed, to even be afforded&#13;
the opportunity to make a choice.&#13;
Faculty and academic staff in the UW&#13;
system ought to look long and hard at the&#13;
two candidates for governor and what it will&#13;
mean to their right to have a choice whether&#13;
or not to bargain. Earlier this year, each of&#13;
the two gubernatorial candidates appeared&#13;
before the Wisconsin Education Association&#13;
Council's Political Action Committee to&#13;
respond to a series of questions. The results&#13;
of the interviews, coupled with a&#13;
demonstrated track record on educational&#13;
isauee, led to the overwhelming endorsement&#13;
of Acting-Governor Martin Schreiber.&#13;
For our purposes, it will be useful to compare&#13;
Martin Schreiber and Lee Dreyfus' position&#13;
on collective bargaining for higher education&#13;
faculty and academic staff.&#13;
Martin Schreiber indicated during his&#13;
interview that he would support a higher&#13;
education collective bargaining bill. Further,&#13;
Acting-Governor Schreiber's support of third&#13;
party binding arbitration in municipal&#13;
employee contract disputes afforded us&#13;
another barometer of Schreiber's attitude&#13;
toward the rights of faculty members in&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
During the interview of Lee Dreyfus, he&#13;
stated that "as a faculty member, I am&#13;
opposed to bargaining at the university&#13;
level". In addition to the negative attitude&#13;
toward collective bargaining, we were&#13;
further puzzled by his reference to himself as&#13;
a "faculty member", thereby purporting to&#13;
speak for the faculty.&#13;
As governor, Mr. Dreyfus would have the&#13;
power of veto. Given his background as an&#13;
administrator, it seems reasonable to assume&#13;
that Mr. Dreyfus may veto any collective&#13;
bargaining bill for higher education that&#13;
reaches his desk. To date, Lee Dreyfus has&#13;
been silent on whether or not he will, indeed,&#13;
veto a collective bargaining bill for higher&#13;
education. I believe that this question has to&#13;
be answered to the satisfaction of the some&#13;
86% of the faculty who wish to bargain&#13;
coHectivety, or, at the very least, have a law&#13;
which would provide them the opportunity&#13;
to make a choice.&#13;
The future security of the faculty and&#13;
academic staff in the UW system may&#13;
depend to a great extent on collective&#13;
bargaining. Where does Lee Dreyfus actually&#13;
stand on this issue? We know Martin&#13;
Schreiber's position very well.&#13;
ft&#13;
WEAC-PAC Is the sols source of this ad&#13;
and It Is mads without the&#13;
encouragement direction or control of&#13;
the candidate.&#13;
Authorized and paid for by the&#13;
Wisconsin Education Asaociation Council/Political&#13;
Action Committee. Paul du&#13;
Valr, President. &#13;
Wednesday November 1,1978&#13;
Bellind The Woodshed&#13;
Scarf: Broke&#13;
Iand&#13;
Busted&#13;
by Scarf O'Toole&#13;
Down on my luck, with only a The hot spot that week around&#13;
handful of credit cards to my Loyola was a punk rock bar&#13;
name, I stumbled back to my called Anthrax Black Leprosy. It&#13;
motel room and poured myself a will featured a vibrating dance&#13;
stiff glass of water. It was stiff floor. The house punk band&#13;
because of all the iron in it. It Open Chain Lube, churned out a&#13;
was a "cheap" place. reggae version of "P.S. I Love&#13;
I w as back in the Midwest at You," for the first twenty minutes&#13;
last. I h ad just returned from my I was there. I can't say that I&#13;
last speaking engagement at recognized any of the beautiful&#13;
Loyola University and while I coeds jiggiling and bouncing&#13;
had been allowed to finish my around but I could sense that&#13;
talk they had struck me with a white existential screaming&#13;
huge bill for dry cleaning and everywhere: "Take me; take me;&#13;
damages. Oh, well the Ranger use me; use me!" So I did&#13;
would pick up the bill. And if The sheriff wouldn't let me&#13;
they didn't I had been thinking call my editor but he did let me&#13;
of checking out New Orleans this use his typewriter and so I've&#13;
winter anyway. sent in this story. I h ope it makes&#13;
I gave Chico, my personal the deadline. The food here is&#13;
cabby and critic when I'm in very good and if I keep saying&#13;
Chicago, a quick call. "Pick me that Mayor Daley was the&#13;
up Chico. I wa nt to see the bright greatest man who ever lived&#13;
lights tonight. Chico didn't say maybe they will let me out of jail&#13;
anything. He was still mad at by Christmas. My speaking tour&#13;
me for the last blind date I h ad is over. My prison life has just&#13;
gotten him. begun.&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED&#13;
ganger&#13;
PAB Mini Movie R eview&#13;
"Flesh Gordon — not to be&#13;
confused with the original "Flash&#13;
Gordon" is the interesting phrase&#13;
that appears on any and all&#13;
advertising of this movie. One&#13;
can't be sure whether this&#13;
statement is used as a teaser by&#13;
advertisers toward hard core (no&#13;
pun intended) Flash Gordon fans&#13;
or whether the producers of the&#13;
film are honestly fearful of&#13;
people mistaking it for the&#13;
original classic serial.&#13;
Whatever the motive, the&#13;
makers of Flesh Gordon go all&#13;
out to authentically recreate the&#13;
atmosphere and campness of the&#13;
original serial in a broad and&#13;
boistoiuious parody. The silver&#13;
coated plywood sets have been&#13;
faithfully erected and the shoddy&#13;
special effects have been&#13;
admirably recreated. Even the&#13;
characters are the same (well,&#13;
sort of) although the names have&#13;
been changed to protect the&#13;
innocent. (Although in his&#13;
seventies Buster Crabbe is still a&#13;
model of health, pushing his own&#13;
brand of exercise and eating&#13;
habits, and could probably beat&#13;
the bootstraps off any extraterrestrial&#13;
being.)&#13;
Most parodies of classic film&#13;
genres are fun but forgettable&#13;
and Flesh Gordon falls happily&#13;
into this categorie. But what the&#13;
hell; if they can take childrens&#13;
stories like Cinderella and Snow&#13;
White and the Seven Dwarfs and&#13;
turn them into "adult" sexploitation&#13;
box office then why not&#13;
ripoff good ole Flash Gordon.&#13;
What's next Huey, Deuy and&#13;
Louie in Denmark?&#13;
'Flesh Gordon'&#13;
Second City First In Comedy&#13;
Chicago's Second City, whose&#13;
alumni roster reads like a who's&#13;
who of comedy, will bring its&#13;
unique blend of s atirical comedy&#13;
and improvisational theater to&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Communication Arts&#13;
Theater at 8 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 8 under sponsorship of the&#13;
student Parkside Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
In the nearly 20 years since its&#13;
founding/Chicago's home-grown&#13;
satirical troupe has been the&#13;
front-runner in its field. Its e arly&#13;
graduates included such talents&#13;
as Mike Nichols, Elaine May and&#13;
Shelley Berman. Recently, it has&#13;
spawned most of the wild bunch&#13;
from "Saturday Night Live,"&#13;
including John (Animal House)&#13;
Belushi, Gilda Ratner, Billy&#13;
Murray and Dan Aykroyd.&#13;
Others who have walked the&#13;
Second City stage include Joan&#13;
Rivers, David Steinberg, Valerie&#13;
Harper, Jerry Stiller and Ann&#13;
Meara, Avery Schreiber and Jack&#13;
Burns, Alan Arkin, Robert Klein,&#13;
Linda Lavin, Peter Boyle and&#13;
Barbara Harris.&#13;
Advance admission is $3 for&#13;
UW-P students and $4 for the&#13;
general public; all tickets at the&#13;
door are $5. Tickets are available&#13;
at the Parkside Union Information&#13;
Center (the only outlet for&#13;
student tickets), Sears in&#13;
Kenosha and Team Electronics in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
From its beginning, the&#13;
company has stayed with its&#13;
"magic formula" of letting six or&#13;
so actors with very few props —&#13;
primarily cane back chairs, the&#13;
company fixtures - poke fun at&#13;
manners and mores and&#13;
individual and institutional&#13;
pomposities,&#13;
Its style is essentially&#13;
•burlesque — a series of short,&#13;
unrelated scenes whose subjects&#13;
range from pplitics to movies,&#13;
from great books to puppy love.&#13;
The basis of the material is&#13;
improvisational, developed from&#13;
suggestions by the audience, the&#13;
director or the actors themselves.&#13;
&#13;
After winning instant success&#13;
in Chicago, Second City has built&#13;
an international reputation with&#13;
three revues in London since&#13;
1963. It added permanent&#13;
companies in Toronto in 1973&#13;
and in Los Angeles in 1975.&#13;
Annual Broadway and off-Broadway&#13;
appearances and tours of&#13;
major U.S. cities have added to&#13;
its reputation.&#13;
Second City's Toronto-based&#13;
company is featured in a&#13;
television series, SCTV, which&#13;
began airing in 5 0 U.S. cities last&#13;
season.&#13;
The company takes its name&#13;
from the title of the late A. J.&#13;
Liebling's derisive profile of&#13;
Chicago in a 1959 issue of New&#13;
Yorker magazine. In the words of&#13;
New York Times critic Clive&#13;
Barnes, "The entire recent&#13;
tradition of satire in the&#13;
American theater can be&#13;
summed up in three words —&#13;
The Second City."&#13;
The irreverence of some of the&#13;
company's satirical revues&#13;
doesn't appeal to everyone. It is&#13;
inevitable on tours that a few&#13;
members of the audience, who&#13;
have not heard or understood&#13;
Second City's self-description as&#13;
"America's single-finger salute to&#13;
society," will walk out during the&#13;
performance.&#13;
That has happened during&#13;
each of Second City's several&#13;
appearances in Kenosha, but&#13;
without the flair exhibited by a&#13;
customer in Chicago who&#13;
became outraged at the troupe's&#13;
depiction of the nativity. He&#13;
began thrdwing glasses at the&#13;
actors, who quickly fled the&#13;
stage, but failed to unnerve the&#13;
piano player, who kept pounding&#13;
the keys with one hand while&#13;
opening an umbrella with the&#13;
other to hold off the shower of&#13;
glass.&#13;
c sa'&#13;
jAI&gt;&#13;
V&gt;*&#13;
6&#13;
°&#13;
{r°&#13;
GOOD&#13;
MON - FRI&#13;
11 - 2&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10% OFF ON ALL&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS WITH&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFICATION.&#13;
TERRACE ROOM&#13;
436 LAKE AVE RACIAE&#13;
presents:&#13;
JaM for Sale&#13;
(Parkside's own Musicians)&#13;
Opus&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. Snopek&#13;
entertainment 9 p.m.&#13;
JAZZ SO GOOD"&#13;
COMING&#13;
I ATTRACTION&#13;
| SAT., NOVEMBER 1&#13;
: Short stuf&#13;
FOR RESERV ED SEATING&#13;
CALL 632-4206 &#13;
Wind Ensemble In Concert&#13;
by Sue Stevens&#13;
The Parkside Symphonic Wind&#13;
Ensemble will take to the stage&#13;
for the second time this year on&#13;
Tuesday, November 7 at 8 p.m.&#13;
in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Thomas Dvorak, conductor of&#13;
the ensemble, calls this concert&#13;
"unique" in the fact that it will&#13;
consist of a series of small&#13;
ensemble pieces. The music to&#13;
be played is special because&#13;
each piece varies the number of&#13;
Theatre Review&#13;
instrumentalists — from 8 to 50&#13;
with one player to a part.&#13;
One feature of the concert will&#13;
be Joseph Haydn's English&#13;
Military Marches. According to&#13;
Dvorak, this piece should be a&#13;
highlight with its "light, tasty,&#13;
and aesthetic" qualities.&#13;
Jan Sweelinck's Variations on&#13;
"Mein junges Leben hat ein End.&#13;
(My young life has an end) is an&#13;
arrangement for an ensemble&#13;
transformed from Harpsichord&#13;
and organ music.&#13;
Little Three Penny Music by&#13;
Kurt Weill will be performed by&#13;
13 musicians. Also to be&#13;
presented will be carlos&#13;
surinach's Ritmo Jondo.&#13;
If the wind ensemble's first&#13;
concert is any indication,&#13;
Tuesday night's performance&#13;
should be a treat for all concert&#13;
goers. Parkside students and&#13;
faculty should take advantage of&#13;
this opportunity to listen to this&#13;
first rate musical group.&#13;
Admission for the Tuesday&#13;
night concert is complimentary.&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Electro Scores High&#13;
by Nicki Kroll&#13;
The Parkside Dramatic Arts&#13;
Discipline presented their production&#13;
of Electra by Sophocles&#13;
over the weekend, and the few&#13;
who viewed it (if Saturday night&#13;
was any indication of other&#13;
performances) were treated to a&#13;
professional performance. Everything,&#13;
from the set design to the&#13;
costuming, to the music, took&#13;
the production beyond the&#13;
classification of "just a college&#13;
production."&#13;
As the lights went up slowly on&#13;
the sparsely but well made set&#13;
the audience was struck by its&#13;
stark sophistication. From comEgyptian&#13;
History&#13;
Course Offered&#13;
5,000 years of Egyptian&#13;
history, including a special&#13;
segment on King Tut, will be&#13;
reviewed in a slide-lecture series&#13;
offered through the University of *&#13;
Wisconsin-Extension.&#13;
Omar Amin, associate professor&#13;
at UW-Parkside, lived in&#13;
Egypt for 25 years and is an&#13;
amateur Egyptologist. His lectures&#13;
and slides will cover Egypt&#13;
in history, art and culture leading&#13;
to modern Egypt with its&#13;
economic and political burdens&#13;
and contributions.&#13;
The course will meet on four&#13;
Thursdays, beginning November&#13;
2, 7:15 p.m. at UW-Parkside. Fee&#13;
is $12.00. Register with University&#13;
Extension at (414) 553-2312&#13;
by October 30.&#13;
ments heard after the performance,&#13;
it ranked with any&#13;
professional production of&#13;
Electra that has been or will be&#13;
done. The basically colorless&#13;
gray stone scenery and the&#13;
unobtrusive blue backlighting&#13;
heightened the dramatic tone of&#13;
the dialogue that followed.&#13;
The dialogue of the play began&#13;
and ended with a chorus of city&#13;
women who served as advisors&#13;
and the voiceof conscience for&#13;
the tormented Electra who was&#13;
played well by Mary Stankus.&#13;
Clearly, the play was her vehicle&#13;
and she steered the rest of the&#13;
cast along on a sometimes&#13;
bumpy path. Despite a competent&#13;
performance of Orestes,&#13;
Electra's brother and saviour,&#13;
Gary Eckstein seemed, a few&#13;
times, to be a bit confused by the&#13;
action going on around him.&#13;
Catherine Casselman as Chrysothemis,&#13;
the younger, better&#13;
favored sister, proved an&#13;
interesting contrast to Ms.&#13;
Stankus. Her lack of concern at&#13;
Elpctra's unrelenting campaign&#13;
to seek revenge upon her mother&#13;
and stepfather for the murder of&#13;
her father was convincingly&#13;
done.&#13;
Lastly, but certainly not&#13;
leastly, Gail G. Ross as the&#13;
queen, Clytemnestra, gave a fine&#13;
performance. Although she was&#13;
not long on stage, her tremulous&#13;
tones related the anguish of a&#13;
tortured woman torn between&#13;
the love for her husband, gained&#13;
by the murder of her children's&#13;
father, and the accusations by&#13;
her children of revenge for their&#13;
father's death.&#13;
In the background of the&#13;
dialogue, Geoffrey Stanton's&#13;
music wound eerie webs around&#13;
the spoken words. Again,&#13;
comments overheard indicated&#13;
the professional quality of the&#13;
score. It made a perfect&#13;
complement to the play. Truly,&#13;
the Greeks couldn't have done&#13;
better.&#13;
The Parkside Dramatic Arts&#13;
Discipline is progressively showing&#13;
its ability to present good,&#13;
competent performances. Parkside&#13;
has succeeded in making&#13;
this ancient work accessible to a&#13;
modern audience.&#13;
SECURITY OFFICERS&#13;
FEMALE - MALE&#13;
FULL &amp; PART - TIME PERSONNEL NEEDED&#13;
MINIMUM AGE 19 YEARS&#13;
GOOD PHYSICAL CONDITION&#13;
CLEAR POLICE RECORD&#13;
MUST HAVE PHONE AND TRANSPORTATION&#13;
IN-SERVICE TRAINING PROVIDED&#13;
APPLY IN PERSON&#13;
SCHMITT SECURITY POLICE&#13;
625 - 57th St. SUITE 600&#13;
KENOSHA, Wl 53140&#13;
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F&#13;
Last semester saw the first&#13;
official public screening of The&#13;
Smith here at Parkside. Written&#13;
by and starring Bill Barke The&#13;
Smith remains the most&#13;
ambitious undertaking to come&#13;
out of Parkside's video Studio.&#13;
Now, thanks to the miracle of&#13;
cable TV channel eight in Raine,&#13;
The Smith is coming to the home&#13;
screens Of Racine.&#13;
The Smith, an introspective&#13;
thought provoking video production&#13;
set in the future, was several&#13;
years in the making. Bill Barke&#13;
along with The Smith's director&#13;
Jack Murray maintained a long&#13;
and lucrative association in&#13;
video before embarking on this&#13;
major project. Barke, in 1976,&#13;
work on a program called&#13;
Campus Bizzare, a series of half&#13;
hour comedy sketches shown on&#13;
TV sets through the campus.&#13;
Both Barke and Murray a string&#13;
of individual half hour programs&#13;
under the auspicious title of&#13;
Bizzare Bizzare. The series&#13;
included such classics as Killer&#13;
Bologna and Blood at Blarney&#13;
Stone Manor.&#13;
The production of The Smith&#13;
was originally to be shot and&#13;
edited in three weeks but Barke&#13;
is still working on refining his&#13;
product. Its been over two years.&#13;
The SMith concerns a gigantic,&#13;
single manned space freighter&#13;
which, by some freak accident,&#13;
collides with what is thought to&#13;
be a meteor. Mission control,&#13;
alerted to the pressence of the&#13;
foreign object through a&#13;
computer malfunction later&#13;
discovers that the meteor is in&#13;
reality an entity from another&#13;
world. The remainder of the plot&#13;
has mission control supressing&#13;
the reality of the "object" that&#13;
collided with the space freighter&#13;
from its pilot.&#13;
The production, which Barke&#13;
describes as an exercises into the&#13;
phenomenon of the Fear of the&#13;
unknown and man's relationship&#13;
to his own nature, contains&#13;
original special effects and a&#13;
musical score created specifically&#13;
for the production.&#13;
The Smith will be shown on&#13;
cable television, channel eight,&#13;
Friday, November 3rd at 7:00&#13;
p.m. and again on Tuesday,&#13;
November 7th at 9:00 p.m.&#13;
'Woman of the Year'&#13;
at Rondelle&#13;
The classic T942 version of&#13;
"Woman of the Year" starring&#13;
Spencer Tracy and Katherine&#13;
Hepburn will be shown at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater on&#13;
November 8. Three showings&#13;
have been scheduled at 9:30&#13;
a.m., 1:00 and 7:00 p.m. The&#13;
program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
"Woman of the Year" is part of&#13;
the Wisconsin Artists on Film&#13;
Series. The film is described as a&#13;
wonderfully relevant, marvelously&#13;
perceptive comedy. The story&#13;
tells of Hepburn, a distinguished&#13;
and charming international&#13;
reporter who speaks a wide range&#13;
of foreign languages, and Tracy,&#13;
a nonchalant sports writer who&#13;
woos and wins Hepburn as his&#13;
wife and then tries to introduce&#13;
domesticity into their homelife.&#13;
Evenly matched, Hepburn and&#13;
Tracy battle until they reach an&#13;
acceptable compromise. The&#13;
delightful scenes between the&#13;
two distinguished stars make the&#13;
film especially entertaining.&#13;
For reservations, contact the&#13;
Rondelle at 554-2154. This&#13;
program is sponsored by the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Humanities Division, Kenosha&#13;
Evening News, Racine&#13;
Journal Times and the Golden&#13;
Rondelle Theater.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On Tap A t U nion S quare&#13;
'The Smith' Returns&#13;
Wednesday November 1,1978 &#13;
ganger 6&#13;
Tennis&#13;
6th Place At State&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Coming off of a bad week of&#13;
play, Coach Linda Henderson's&#13;
women's volleyball team proved&#13;
they could come back with the&#13;
best of them as they won three of&#13;
four matches last week.&#13;
With only one regular season&#13;
match left on the schedule the&#13;
Rangers concluded their home&#13;
season last Thursday night with a&#13;
19-19-3 record overall. The final&#13;
match of the season will be this&#13;
weekend at the Carthage&#13;
Invitational.&#13;
Last Tuesday the women split&#13;
a pair of matches, losing the first&#13;
one to Lewis College and&#13;
defeating Carroll College in the&#13;
final Match. Lewis took&#13;
advantage of a slow start by the&#13;
Rangers to defeat them for the&#13;
second time this season by&#13;
scores of 10-15 and 12-15.&#13;
Carroll presented no real&#13;
threat as Parkside easily defeated&#13;
them for the second time this&#13;
year. Scores of that match were&#13;
15-9 and 15-8.&#13;
Thursday against Marquette&#13;
the girls got their chance to&#13;
avenge an earlier loss this&#13;
season. The Rangers won in two&#13;
straight games by scores of 15-5&#13;
and 15-3. Coach Henderson&#13;
mentioned that this past week&#13;
was the best we've played this&#13;
year." Later that night Parkside&#13;
humiliated a very weak North&#13;
Central College team by scores&#13;
of 15-4 and 15-11.&#13;
"We must concentrate on&#13;
Carthage right now." This match&#13;
which will have taken place at&#13;
the time of publication by the&#13;
time you read this will pit the&#13;
Rangers against Northeastern&#13;
Illinois and Carthage, the&#13;
possible number one ranked&#13;
team in the state.&#13;
The rankings will be made&#13;
before the result of the matches&#13;
with Carthage. As a result of this&#13;
method of ranking Henderson&#13;
expects the Rangers to be ranked&#13;
number 2 right behind Carthage&#13;
at the end of the season.&#13;
This weekends Carthage Invitational&#13;
give the team another&#13;
chance to beat Marquette. Past&#13;
this weekend Henderson is&#13;
looking for her team to peak at&#13;
the WWIAC Tournament in&#13;
Milwaukee next weekend.&#13;
by Peter Jacket&#13;
The women's tennis team&#13;
concluded their successful&#13;
season on a happy note* by&#13;
posting a 6th place finish out of&#13;
12 teams at state. Freshmen&#13;
Kathy Logic, the Rangers top&#13;
seeded singles player, was&#13;
among the strong finishers at&#13;
state along with Parkside's top&#13;
seeded doubles team consisting&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
"From our standpoint we&#13;
consider this game a mild upset.&#13;
However they considered it a&#13;
total upset." Those were the&#13;
comments of coach Hal&#13;
Henderson after his team battled&#13;
an outstanding Western Michigan&#13;
team to a 0-0 tie after a&#13;
period of overtime.&#13;
Western Michigan was ranked&#13;
ninth in the Mideast before their&#13;
trip to Parkside, but. faced a&#13;
Ranger team that "played the&#13;
best game we've played in four&#13;
years", as Henderson put it.&#13;
Statistically, Parkside was&#13;
outshot 19-14 but the saves by&#13;
each goaltender was about even&#13;
with The Rangers have six saves&#13;
and the Western Michigan goalie&#13;
of Logic and sophomore Kathy&#13;
Thomas. Coach Sue Tobachnik&#13;
was pleased with her young&#13;
squad's performance proclaiming&#13;
that "it was good for our&#13;
team. We did very well overall."&#13;
Logic and Thomas will now set&#13;
their sites on this Saturdays&#13;
tournament which could qualify&#13;
them to compete in the small&#13;
schools championship to be held&#13;
later in the year.&#13;
saving five. The game was&#13;
continually up for grabs with the&#13;
Rangers hitting the crossbar a&#13;
total of three times throughout&#13;
the game.&#13;
This game left the Rangers&#13;
with an overall season record of&#13;
3 wins 8 losses and 3 ties.&#13;
Western Michigan came out of&#13;
the game with a record of 5-2-2.&#13;
Parkside has one game left on&#13;
the schedule before the playoffs&#13;
begin. That will be against&#13;
UW-Platteville this Saturday If&#13;
the Rangers beat or tie Platteville&#13;
then they will have won The&#13;
NAIA District 14 championship.&#13;
NAIA District 14 consists of&#13;
three teams; Parkside, Platteville&#13;
and Whitewater. The championship&#13;
of the district is decided&#13;
through play between the three&#13;
teams during the regular season.&#13;
The Rangers have beaten&#13;
Looking ahead to next years&#13;
prospects, Tobachnik says&#13;
"things don't look as good as&#13;
they could." High seeded Marge&#13;
Balazs and Kathie Feichtner will&#13;
be swept away by graduation&#13;
while junior transfer Pamela&#13;
Blair has exhausted her remaining&#13;
eligibility. Tobachnik looks&#13;
upon Logic Thomas, and&#13;
freshman Laura Bianco as her&#13;
leading returnees.&#13;
Whitewater already and Whitewater&#13;
has been kind enough to&#13;
beat Platteville once. Sounds&#13;
kind of confusing, but what it&#13;
boils down to is that all Parkside&#13;
has to do is come away with a&#13;
win or tie against Platteville then&#13;
they wiH have won the district&#13;
championship. If the Rangers b/&#13;
some fluke should lose to&#13;
Platteville that would force a&#13;
playoff between the three teams&#13;
for the honor of advancing to the&#13;
area playoffs which will be&#13;
against teams yet unknown from&#13;
Minnesota and Illinois.&#13;
Parkside definitely has the&#13;
edge going into this weekends&#13;
game as they haven't lost to&#13;
Platteville in four years.&#13;
Platteville has a season record of&#13;
2-8-2 although their competition&#13;
hasn't come close to matching&#13;
that of the Ranger's In an earlier&#13;
match this year during the&#13;
chancellors Cup Tournament&#13;
held at Parkside the two teams&#13;
played to a 1-1 tie. That Game,&#13;
because it was held during a&#13;
tournament does not count&#13;
towards district standings.&#13;
Coach Henderson does not&#13;
expect any of his team to be&#13;
missing from the lineup this&#13;
weekend but said that earl&#13;
Campbell is nursing a groin&#13;
injury and Niall Powers, who has&#13;
been playing in pain all season,&#13;
is still suffering from a thigh&#13;
injury.&#13;
Wednesday November 1,1978&#13;
Volleyball Looks Good&#13;
With One Game Left&#13;
— BACKGAMMON&#13;
Where: at the SPAGHETTI STATION&#13;
2703 - 63rd STREET - KENOSHA&#13;
When: first and third Mondays of each month&#13;
ENTRY FEE: $3.00&#13;
REGISTRATION: 6 - 7 p.m.&#13;
PRIZES: 40% - 25% - 15% - Champagne -&#13;
consolation round&#13;
ABPA Sanctioned&#13;
KEEP THIS COUPON ••"••••••&#13;
With this coupon and the&#13;
purchase of any new TR7 you&#13;
will receive an AM-FM cassette&#13;
or 8 track. Come in and test&#13;
drive our exciting new TR7's.&#13;
Buds Imports also carries the&#13;
Jaguar, Volvo, MG and of&#13;
course, TRIUMPH. Buds&#13;
z&#13;
o ft.&#13;
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EE&#13;
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ft. Ui&#13;
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Imports located 1 mile south of o&#13;
Hwy. 38 on Hwy. 31 Racine. |&#13;
632-0970 |&#13;
Pam Ybemal&#13;
sales&#13;
manager {&#13;
NOdflOD SIHl d33M •••••J&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
— The college basketball&#13;
season is just underway. The&#13;
men's team started practicing&#13;
several weeks ago and the&#13;
women's team started last&#13;
Monday. I'm sure that both&#13;
teams will generate the action&#13;
and excitement of two high&#13;
caliber teams. The men have a 27&#13;
regular game season with 14&#13;
home games, while the women&#13;
have 20 games with 10 at home.&#13;
Six of the women's home games&#13;
will proceed the men's games.&#13;
— I went to the WisconsinMichigan&#13;
football game a couple&#13;
of weeks ago and believe me, the&#13;
Badger fans are the most&#13;
dedicated fans in the country.&#13;
Even with the tendency of the&#13;
Badger team to make their&#13;
opponent look good, the fans&#13;
turn out in an average of 70,000&#13;
per game. Speaking of the game,&#13;
it was a pathetic example of big&#13;
time college football by the&#13;
Badgers. They couldn't run, pass,&#13;
block or tackle. The sad part was&#13;
that Michigan wasn't really&#13;
trying to run the score up (final&#13;
score Michigan 42, Wisconsin 0),&#13;
it was just sheer ineptitude on&#13;
the part of Bucky Badger. But I&#13;
have to keep this in mind, the&#13;
Badgers probably have the&#13;
youngest starting team in the Big&#13;
10 so they should be pretty tough&#13;
in the following years.&#13;
— I just sat through the&#13;
Packer-Tampa Bay game and the&#13;
punchless Pack (7-2) have just&#13;
proven to me that they are not&#13;
play-off material at this time. I&#13;
won't argue the point that the&#13;
Pack haven't improved over last&#13;
year because they have. They&#13;
just haven't improved enough to&#13;
be qualified play-off contenders.&#13;
I'd hate to see them get to the&#13;
play-offs just to be outclassed&#13;
and get blown out like the Bears&#13;
did last year. Don't get me&#13;
wrong, I'm a die hard Packer fan&#13;
but I'd hate to see the team be&#13;
em harassed.&#13;
— In the women's state tennis&#13;
tournament held on the October&#13;
20th weekend, one individual&#13;
accomplished something for the&#13;
team that hadn't been accomplished&#13;
for at least four years.&#13;
Senior Marge Balazs competed&#13;
in the winner's bracket and&#13;
captured Six points in the team&#13;
effort. This was the first time in&#13;
at least four years that a Ranger&#13;
played advanced and placed&#13;
inthe winners bracket. I&#13;
personally salute Coach Sue&#13;
Tobachnik, Kathy Logic, Kathy&#13;
Thomas, Pam Blair, Kathie&#13;
Feichtner, Marge Balazs, Cathy&#13;
Brownlee, Laura Bianco and&#13;
Celeste Widmanich on their fine&#13;
season. Congratulations Ladies.&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Rangers Nearing Championship&#13;
NOW AT 2 LOCATIONS&#13;
6100 Washington Ave.&#13;
Pioneer Village&#13;
886-5077 • 886-0207&#13;
2615 Washington Ave.&#13;
634-2373 • 634-2374 &#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
A J AZZ C ONCERT W ITH&#13;
MONTAGE&#13;
Film Series Presents&#13;
FLESH GORDON&#13;
Fri, Nov. 3 - 8:00 PM&#13;
Sun, Nov. 5-7:30 PM&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
$1.00&#13;
PAB Outdoor recreation Presents&#13;
Miller Brewery Tour&#13;
Fri, Nov. 3&#13;
Leave Union Lot 1:30 PM&#13;
Return 5:30 PM&#13;
SAT. NOV. 4 9:00 PM&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
$1.00 U.W.-P. STUDENTS&#13;
$1.50 GUEST&#13;
MIXED DRINKS AVAILABLE ID'S REQUIRED&#13;
_7&#13;
Women's Basketball&#13;
Now Recruiting&#13;
All women interested in&#13;
participating in women's varsity&#13;
basketball forx this upcoming&#13;
season are urged to contact&#13;
coach Sue Tobachnik at&#13;
553-2318 or stop up in her office&#13;
in PE 127 as soon as possible.&#13;
Practices are starting this week at&#13;
3:30 in the gym. The season will&#13;
be starting the last week of&#13;
November.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 1&#13;
Coffeehouse starting at 1 p.m. in Union 104-106 featuring&#13;
Betty Kastke, a blues folksinger. Admission is free. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 2&#13;
Workshop "Me, for a Change" at 9 a.m. in Union 104. Call ext.&#13;
2312 for more details.&#13;
Slide Lectures "Egypt in Perspective" starts at 7:15 p.m. in CL D&#13;
128. Registration information available at ext. 2312.&#13;
Recital at 8 p.m. in the CAT. Featuring Brian Skowronski on&#13;
tuba and Tim Urness on sax. The program is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
Concerts 11-1:00. See in Concert, Meatloaf, Genesis and&#13;
Journey on the Advent Screen in Union Square.&#13;
Debate Lee Dreyfus vs. Martin Schrieber. 8-9 p.m. TV&#13;
broadcasted Milwaukee channels 4 &amp; 6. Sponsored by the&#13;
League of Women Voters and United Council of UW Student&#13;
Governments.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 3&#13;
Seminar Chem/Life Sci. at 2 p.m. in CL 105. The program is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
Movie "Flesh Gordon" will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre. Admission at the door is $1 for a Parkside&#13;
student and $1 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Sports Swimming (Women's): at Lawrence University,&#13;
Appleton( 4 p.m.)&#13;
Volleyball (Women's): at Carthage Invitational.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 4&#13;
Kiddie Flicks "The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes" at 10 a.m. in&#13;
the Union Cinema Theatre for the Parkside community and&#13;
their families. Admission for children is $1 and parents&#13;
accompanying children are admitted free.&#13;
Dance at 9 p.m. in Union Sqare featuring "Montage," a jazz&#13;
band. Admission is $1 for Parkside students and $1.50 for&#13;
guests. ID cards will be required at the door. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
Sports Volleyball (Women's): at Carthage Invitational&#13;
Cross-Country (Women's): Midwest AIAW Championship,&#13;
Macomb, III.&#13;
Soccer (Men's): UW-Platteville.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 5&#13;
A/E Series Vincent Price as Oscar Wilde in "Diversions and&#13;
Delights" at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. Tickets are available at the Union Information Center.&#13;
Admission is $7.&#13;
Movie "Flesh Gordon" will be repeated at 7,30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Monday, Nov. 6&#13;
Round Table at 12 noon in Union 106. Prof. John FJarbeson will&#13;
talk on "The Middle East After Camp David." The program is&#13;
free and open to interested students and staff.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 7&#13;
Concert at 8 p.m. in the CAT. Tom Dvorak will be conducting&#13;
the band. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Classified Ads&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
BSR 2620W Turntable $45. See Prof.&#13;
Williams GR 315,553-2488.&#13;
To Theresa F.: I hope you had a good trip&#13;
and you thought about me when It was cool,&#13;
next time I'll keep you warmer than the&#13;
sleeping bag. Chucky&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Beginning (or very patient) Bluegrass banjo&#13;
player to play with beginning guitar player&#13;
and mandolin player. Serious novices.&#13;
878-4024.&#13;
Lee Dreyfus enthusiates. Anyone wanting to&#13;
donate a couple hours for literature drops,&#13;
call Frank Miller633-4273.&#13;
Woman for retail sales position in small,&#13;
unique northslde gift shop. (Racine)&#13;
Part-time evenings and weekends thru the&#13;
Christmas Season. For more Information&#13;
call Rita at 639-8893.&#13;
1972 Toyota Corolla — Excellent condition,&#13;
no rust, great gas mileage. Only 60,000&#13;
miles. Starting price $1800. Call 634-1792 at&#13;
night or Mr. Thomas 8-5 at 636-9185.&#13;
1969 Chevy Mallbu. Needs a new battery.&#13;
$300. Call 633-3444. Racine.&#13;
Skis and poles: Frltzmelr 195 cm downhill&#13;
skis. Brand new. $240 value. Asking $200.&#13;
Call 633-3767 after6 p.m.&#13;
PERSONAL&#13;
important message: Mike of apt. 205. Why&#13;
haven't I seen you lately, try coming to&#13;
class. Your Secret Admirer.&#13;
Thanks Mary Braun and Bruce Weaver for all&#13;
your work on the tournament. UW-Parkslde&#13;
Debate and Forensic Club.&#13;
Lost: A pair of prescription glasses. Lost In&#13;
one of three places: third floor CLRM,&#13;
reference section of library or Union Square.&#13;
If you find a pair please call ext. 2219 on&#13;
campus and leave the message. Need them&#13;
back desperately, I can't see! 11&#13;
To Theo In Wyo, So you called the office and&#13;
I wasn't there — sorry, but Dawn wanted to&#13;
talk to you. Chris &amp; me, Dawn.&#13;
A contributive&#13;
work of art&#13;
to Parksides&#13;
mainplace was&#13;
unfortunately ticketed&#13;
for lack of a&#13;
parking permit&#13;
last Sunday&#13;
I sTarTed as&#13;
a Ranker&#13;
'-p o&#13;
ujriler &#13;
Wednesday November 1,1978 *Ranger&#13;
(5)1978 Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. </text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 7, issue 9, November 1, 1978</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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