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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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            <text>Volume 8, issue 2</text>
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            <text>Kirk new UWP library director</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>University of Wismn«in . p a rkside&#13;
Wednesday September 12, I979&#13;
Kirk new UWP&#13;
library director&#13;
by Donald S cherrer&#13;
Tom Kirk, 36, is the new&#13;
acting director of the Library&#13;
Learning Center here at U.W.&#13;
Parkside succeeding Joseph&#13;
Boisse. Boisse succeeded the&#13;
founding directo r of the library,&#13;
Philip B urnett, in 1973.&#13;
Under Boisse's direction, the&#13;
library achieved national recognition&#13;
for its bibliographic&#13;
instruction program, was recognized&#13;
as one of the ten best&#13;
teaching libraries in the nation,&#13;
and was named Wisconsin's&#13;
"Library o f th e Year" for 1978.&#13;
Boisse is now director of&#13;
Libraries at Temple University,&#13;
Philadelphia, a library which&#13;
serves abo ut 35,000 students, has&#13;
an annu al budget of $4 million,&#13;
houses a collection of 1.5 million&#13;
volumes, and employs 165&#13;
full-time staff m embers.&#13;
On leave from his position as&#13;
science librarian at Earlham&#13;
_College, Richmond, Indiana, a&#13;
college als o noted for its teaching&#13;
library, Kirk will serve as acting&#13;
director of the L/LC while&#13;
Chancellor Guskin meets with&#13;
faculty and staff leaders to&#13;
organize a national search and&#13;
screen committee to seek a&#13;
permanent succ essor to Boisse.&#13;
Born in Philadelphia, Kirk&#13;
graduated from Earlham College&#13;
in 1%5 with a degree in biology,&#13;
and accepted an offer for the&#13;
Position of science lib rarian while&#13;
at Earlham in his final year. He&#13;
received his M.A. in Library&#13;
c&#13;
'ence from Indiana University&#13;
in 1%9,&#13;
Eo&#13;
"&#13;
ows professional&#13;
0 s&#13;
' runs, swims, and plays&#13;
soccer. He also has a solid&#13;
background of institutional responsibilities&#13;
in athletics, from&#13;
junior varsity soccer coach&#13;
(1968-1978) to serving as the&#13;
Athletic Committee Chairman.&#13;
He likewise values his teaching&#13;
experiences, something which he&#13;
had at first intended to spend his&#13;
life with. He has taught library&#13;
science and science courses,&#13;
among them: the History of&#13;
Biology, Bibliometrics, Literature&#13;
of Science and Technology, and&#13;
'Information Sources and Services.&#13;
&#13;
Among his prodigious list of&#13;
credits are the presentations he&#13;
has given at conferences nationwide.&#13;
These presentations are not&#13;
only an expression of his&#13;
knowledge of bibliographic instruction&#13;
but, as Kirk believes:&#13;
"It's part of the professional&#13;
commitment that I feel about&#13;
making academic libraries more&#13;
of an integral part of the&#13;
institutions that they service; and&#13;
being more agressive and making&#13;
their services available, trying to&#13;
make sure that the university gets&#13;
its money's worth. It's an&#13;
investment in the long run."&#13;
Among his professional activities,&#13;
Kirk serves as:&#13;
1. Co-editor of the Library&#13;
Research Guide Series, put out&#13;
by Pierian Press, Ann Arbor,&#13;
Michigan, 1972. 2. Project Director&#13;
of the National Science&#13;
Foundation (NSF) grant for the&#13;
Development of Course-related&#13;
Library and Literature Use&#13;
Instruction in Undergraduate&#13;
Science Programs, 1976-80, and&#13;
3. Member of the Biosciences&#13;
(lom. on pp. 3&#13;
Basics program&#13;
read&#13;
inR,anriPPr0aCh t0 teachin8&#13;
being detel T skills to adults&#13;
ofwisconvi°PD at&#13;
.&#13;
the University&#13;
breaLine&#13;
arks&#13;
'de, is aimed at&#13;
Iow-Pavino e&#13;
,&#13;
cycle of low-skill,&#13;
have a&#13;
J&#13;
° s Eor P&#13;
er&#13;
sons who&#13;
""^PloymeTTn hiSt&#13;
°&#13;
ry&#13;
°&#13;
f&#13;
Vocational A•' economic and&#13;
0r 2 'Advantage.&#13;
Professor^ ^&#13;
ah&#13;
' an assistant&#13;
3nd a specialist ti0n * UW"&#13;
P&#13;
andread&#13;
inedlmCOntentreadin«&#13;
•earn which 8nostlcs&#13;
' heads the&#13;
•&#13;
nitial Phase nfV°mp&#13;
.&#13;
,etin8 the&#13;
ls aimed „ • Project, which&#13;
(ComPfehe1&#13;
PrmCipally at CETA&#13;
Trainino Ap'&#13;
Ve&#13;
1 Ed&#13;
"cation and&#13;
The cl,ents.&#13;
deVeloPme°ng&#13;
,&#13;
rani&#13;
r haS invo&#13;
'ved&#13;
fading c. .&#13;
a self-paced&#13;
Caree&#13;
r-orien?&#13;
C"&#13;
lum based on&#13;
Elijah d materi a&#13;
'-&#13;
*111 be dem'd the&#13;
"&#13;
ew curr&#13;
iculum&#13;
Re by thr&#13;
°&#13;
U8h ,rial&#13;
"acine iIrK ' J0 cl|&#13;
ents in the&#13;
^Entry a&#13;
" Lea&#13;
f&gt;ue&#13;
'&#13;
s Project&#13;
asked hents a'so will be&#13;
eva|uate the material.&#13;
Parkside&#13;
behind&#13;
How would you like to have a prison on ihe&#13;
Parkside ram pun? If you don't like the idea,&#13;
pi to the public hearing about it thin Friday.&#13;
September I I. at 7pm in the Communication&#13;
Arm Theater&#13;
which is designed to prepare them&#13;
to enter programs leading to the&#13;
GED (General Educational Development&#13;
or high school equivalency&#13;
degree). The study so far has been&#13;
funded by a $12,888 grant from&#13;
the Governor's Employment and&#13;
Training Office. Elijah said he was&#13;
hopeful that an additional grant of&#13;
$36,000 to $42,000 from the&#13;
Employment and Training Office&#13;
will be awarded for development of&#13;
a math cirriculum to parallel the&#13;
reading cirriculum and for&#13;
evaluation of both programs.&#13;
Involved in developing the program,&#13;
in addition to Elijah, are&#13;
Philip C. Gonzales, a former&#13;
UW-P faculty member now&#13;
involved in the bilingual education&#13;
program at the University of&#13;
Washington: Stuart L. Rubner,&#13;
director of the UW-P Office of&#13;
Community Student Services for&#13;
adult students: and Kiyoko&#13;
Nielsen, a UW-P graduate who&#13;
now is director of the Urban&#13;
League's Project Re-Entry.&#13;
Dual degrees decision&#13;
Many students have been&#13;
wondering about the policy on the&#13;
granting of a second Bachelor's&#13;
degree.&#13;
The University of Wisconsin&#13;
awards a Bachelor of Arts degree&#13;
and a Bachelor of Science degree.&#13;
The degree awarded depends upon&#13;
the student's major. If a student&#13;
has completed majors which lead&#13;
to both of these degrees he/she&#13;
must indicate on the senior&#13;
summary which one of the two&#13;
degrees is desired. All majors&#13;
completed, whether before or after&#13;
graduation, will be shown on the&#13;
transcript.&#13;
Anyone holding a bachelors&#13;
degree from another institution&#13;
wishing to obtain another one&#13;
from UW-Parkside. has to follow&#13;
all of the rules and regulations&#13;
regarding transfer students.&#13;
If one receives a bachelor's&#13;
degree from Parkside he/she can't&#13;
be granted another of the same&#13;
kind (Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor&#13;
of Science) a person holding one of&#13;
these degrees may receive the other&#13;
bachelor's degree provided he/she&#13;
does the following:&#13;
1. After receipt of the first&#13;
degree, enrolls in UW-Parkside as&#13;
a matriculant, declares a major&#13;
leading to the desired degree, and&#13;
fills a senior summary indicating&#13;
intent to receive the second&#13;
bachelor's degree.&#13;
2. Completes an additional 30&#13;
credits of work at UW-Parkside&#13;
after receipt of the first degree and&#13;
satisfies all graduation requirements&#13;
in effect at the time of first&#13;
enrollment as a matriculant&#13;
student following receipt&#13;
first degree.&#13;
3. Completes a major leading to&#13;
the degree sought, with at least 15&#13;
credits of advanced work for the&#13;
major completed at UW-Parkside&#13;
following receipt of the first&#13;
degree.&#13;
This policy was approved by the&#13;
Faculty Senate. March 20, 1979,&#13;
and overrides any earlier policies&#13;
dealing with the dual degrees.&#13;
of the&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Kinesis moving!&#13;
• 'Breaking Away'&#13;
• Volleyball outlookj &#13;
2 Wednesday September 12, 1979 Ranger&#13;
OPINION&#13;
Who do you see as the most powerful&#13;
presidential candidate right now?&#13;
Linda Adams, Senior -&#13;
Who's running??&#13;
Michelle Crespo, Sophomore —&#13;
President Carter because he helped&#13;
Sadat and them get the peace&#13;
talk over, and he's trying to help&#13;
everybody, so I think he might get&#13;
re-elected in 1980.&#13;
John Voclno, Junior — It's either&#13;
between Kennedy or Carter. I see&#13;
nobody from the Republican Party&#13;
being a strong candidate. What&#13;
most people go for is the personality,&#13;
and right now it's between&#13;
Kennedy and Carter.&#13;
Ron Parker, Senior — I'd&#13;
probably take Kennedy. Even&#13;
though he hasn't declared, he has&#13;
the most powerful support.&#13;
Randy Willis, Freshman — I'd&#13;
have to go with Carter.&#13;
To the&#13;
Editor&#13;
Attacking editorial&#13;
TO THE EDITOR:&#13;
May I point out one thing to you&#13;
about a university — the reason it&#13;
is a university is that it grants&#13;
advance degrees. If you want a&#13;
"traditional" college setting, without&#13;
all those "non-traditionals"&#13;
around, may I strongly suggest&#13;
that you attend a college that can&#13;
just grant the baccalaureate. Most&#13;
are private, and therefore very&#13;
costly — it is, by the "non-traditionals"&#13;
via their taxes that afforts&#13;
(sic) most of the "traditional"&#13;
students here that superior&#13;
educational background by which&#13;
Parkside is becoming nationally&#13;
known. In your rather childish&#13;
editorial STUDENTS LOST IN&#13;
SHUFFLE, you take minor issue&#13;
with the Chancellor's comments&#13;
about Parkside's mission.&#13;
Remember, Parkside is a public&#13;
institution — and the mission&#13;
MUST be to serve the total public,&#13;
and whether you like it or not the&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin district is&#13;
a modern industrial community&#13;
with hundreds of "non-traditionals"&#13;
who could not be&#13;
"traditional" when their %&#13;
Perhaps your parents are J&#13;
less, or an aunt who stay (sjjy&#13;
to play the then "traditional"!&#13;
of housekeeper-mother.&#13;
As for your AS I SEE It&#13;
don't insult we traditional;&#13;
read the papers, we listen J&#13;
national news, we talk J&#13;
ourselves, and if we didn't dj&#13;
of these things — the fa&#13;
wouldn't let us miss the „&#13;
issues of the day. May I ^&#13;
that you yield you (sic) space,&#13;
faculty member, a sport/j&#13;
organization leader, a natb&#13;
political leader (maybe one r&#13;
presidential candidates),&#13;
leading businessperson&#13;
Nation.&#13;
There are many who wonldl&#13;
to see our paper be a strong&#13;
positive, judiciously coupled&#13;
intellectual in-put, product;&#13;
talks, maybe even yells, ft&#13;
what is right about our univ«&#13;
instead of the editor's cry s fc&#13;
Lets (sic) try to make Ranger#&#13;
than something to rap (sic) fish&#13;
R. Aloysius Chart&#13;
As I It S P. S. G. A.&#13;
• # •&#13;
by So* Stevens&#13;
During the past few weeks there&#13;
have been reports of violence&#13;
between some American citizens&#13;
and some Vietnamese refugees&#13;
here. What has been the cause of&#13;
this small uproar? It seems that a&#13;
few of the American people are upset&#13;
that the newcomers are&#13;
outdoing them.&#13;
For a long time now the&#13;
American people have been&#13;
becoming less productive. Everyone&#13;
is pushing for what has been&#13;
called a "post industrial" society.&#13;
But along with the four-day work&#13;
week and more leisure time has&#13;
come a serious economic crisis.&#13;
Could it be that we Americans&#13;
don't like seeing what we could do&#13;
to better our economy?&#13;
These refugees, who have never&#13;
really had a chance before to do&#13;
for their country, are trying to&#13;
work hard because that's how&#13;
they've been brought up. Can it be&#13;
that some of the American people&#13;
have forgotten that their ancestors&#13;
had it a little rough here when they&#13;
came, or has our narcissistic&#13;
society just closed the doors?&#13;
The majority of our people have&#13;
welcomed these refugees with open&#13;
arms. Those who would wish them&#13;
back on decrepit boats to rot are&#13;
thankfully in the minority.&#13;
When speaking of the majority&#13;
in America, we all wonder who will&#13;
vote for who in '80. Better yet we&#13;
wonder, "who's running?" Ted&#13;
Kennedy's family has okay'd his&#13;
candidacy, but as he says, he's still&#13;
supporting Carter "at the present&#13;
time."&#13;
Finally, I see that Lee Dreyfus&#13;
has jumped on a bandwagon for&#13;
the consumer that MacDonald's is&#13;
leading. He recently vetoed a&#13;
proposal for his own pay raise.&#13;
Nobody can do it like Dreyfus can!&#13;
Jbra:&#13;
that,&#13;
also&#13;
by Maiy Arnold&#13;
Student involvement in campus&#13;
policy and decision making is the&#13;
largest responsibility of any&#13;
student government. Though&#13;
students have not always been&#13;
able to express their thoughts&#13;
from positions respected by their&#13;
counterparts in the administration&#13;
and faculty, Parkside&#13;
students have such positions&#13;
available to them.&#13;
There are positions available,&#13;
depending on an individual&#13;
student's interests and background,&#13;
that deal with the&#13;
Athletic program on campus or&#13;
with problems in the Bookstore.&#13;
A total of 22 positions on faculty&#13;
committees are reserved for&#13;
student representatives, and&#13;
dozens of seats are now vacant on&#13;
student committees waiting for&#13;
students with an interest in&#13;
budgeting or in the directing of&#13;
Student Union operations.&#13;
This is a brief list of the&#13;
opportunities for student involvement&#13;
in campus operations: two&#13;
seats each on Academic Actions&#13;
and Academic Policies Committees,&#13;
four seats on the&#13;
Library/Learning Center Committee&#13;
(this also deals with media&#13;
services), two seats on the&#13;
Athletic Board, the Campus&#13;
Planning Committee, and also&#13;
the Bookstore Committee. If any&#13;
of these opportunities interest you&#13;
please contact Tim Zimmer at&#13;
the P.S.G.A. office in lower Main&#13;
Place or call 553-2244.&#13;
Other Stuff&#13;
A large number of studs&#13;
have stopped to complain A&#13;
the hassle they encountered&#13;
registration. If you registered&#13;
the last two weeks we wi&#13;
to hear your suggestions&#13;
improve the registration proces&#13;
Parking is also at the to p&#13;
the complaint list, as soon&#13;
oversell figures are available fc&#13;
Security Director Ron Brink®&#13;
we will let you all know. Bit&#13;
cite&#13;
toil&#13;
politi&#13;
addi&#13;
certa&#13;
area,&#13;
be a l&#13;
in&#13;
unde&#13;
may direct ah complaints&#13;
parking to Ron Brinkma®&#13;
553-2455, or deposit any"&#13;
complaint in the&#13;
suggestion boxes in WLlf&#13;
Molinero Hall.&#13;
kANCEUi&#13;
,nd «iitcd by Undents of U. W. Parkside t&#13;
content. ~ '&#13;
,Ky are soW*&#13;
r r«ponsibt&#13;
rv«ry Wednesday durino th A&#13;
r°Et rdLzzzir^rrr' breats&#13;
-&#13;
* fMicn per illusion u ——• » -&#13;
jOrrttpoadcnoe should * AI1&#13;
W| 53141. Kangcr, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D-139&#13;
Ldtm to the Editor will hr :r.&#13;
IS* one-inch martins AO letters must be &lt;&#13;
'&#13;
,andard ,i,c Paper&#13;
. leVphooe number for — * **»*»&#13;
Deadline for letter, n Frida, M 1 0 am for n. hi " g accepted is 500 words&#13;
°ay al 10 am for publication the following Wednesday.&#13;
Mryw&#13;
TIUIIMI&#13;
j*fi *i&#13;
I Jr A ftmkl. Dan Cramer&#13;
» Kai Na«. Wth&#13;
« PORTING STAFF&#13;
C'nmt.O.Da.Cdbraitb, Marci.&#13;
Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
.Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
ton Seberrer. Joe «&lt; Harris. Renee Jones,&#13;
, "WTOORAPHV&#13;
Bria. Persian&#13;
Sykom. View Wellens&#13;
LAYOUT&#13;
Hernandez, N.ne, Mikaelian,&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
presents&#13;
Jazz great&#13;
STANLEY&#13;
TURRENTINE&#13;
M?£JLAY' SEPT&#13;
EMBER *4-8:00&#13;
COMM. ARTS THEATRE&#13;
Adm: UW-P Students $s.oo General $6.50&#13;
Tickets available at Rr,^h. ^&#13;
abou&#13;
lo&#13;
with&#13;
outsi&#13;
ton&#13;
wnnr&#13;
Wive&#13;
uissi&#13;
Wiqi&#13;
tosei&#13;
"1&#13;
°Pera&#13;
»,y.&#13;
'tone&#13;
s co!&#13;
"ent&#13;
for t)&#13;
have&#13;
"If&#13;
*&gt; fa&#13;
*hat',&#13;
done;&#13;
'lie&#13;
u.w&#13;
of the&#13;
Hn,&#13;
H&#13;
pas (&#13;
"hie&#13;
s&#13;
%i,&#13;
'e i:&#13;
«a, Ahj&#13;
•&gt;&#13;
KE&#13;
&gt;bsdilv&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
FUi U;i &#13;
Mara&#13;
ence Series,&#13;
iblishers New York, 1976.&#13;
ic Instruction&#13;
Workbook Series, N eal-Schuman&#13;
publisher. N ew Y ork, 1978, and&#13;
3 Journal of Academic Librarianskip,&#13;
1"®' .. t.&#13;
whye his positions on the&#13;
editorial boards are mostly&#13;
advisory, is&gt; on occaslon&#13;
'&#13;
called upon to edit science manuscripts,&#13;
or review those of the&#13;
journal of Academic Librarianship,&#13;
When questioned about&#13;
how he secures the time for these&#13;
vast en deavors, Kirk admitted, in&#13;
confidence: " You work a lot on&#13;
weekends and evenings."&#13;
He has also been called upon&#13;
many tim es as a consultant to&#13;
evaluate oth er university library&#13;
programs, including Ripon&#13;
College and U.W. Whitewater.&#13;
Among his ideas on a&#13;
librarian's duties, Tom Kirk feels&#13;
that, "To be a good lib rarian you&#13;
also have to stay in touch with&#13;
subject areas. You have to&#13;
cultivate a certain amount of&#13;
familiarity with what's going on&#13;
politically a nd cu lturally, and in&#13;
addition, have cultivated a&#13;
certain ex pertise in the subject&#13;
area, Th ey (librarians) ought to&#13;
be able t o conv erse with faculty&#13;
® a way that they can&#13;
understand what the faculty is&#13;
about, and what the students are&#13;
about."&#13;
Looking down on the library&#13;
*ith the objectivity of an&#13;
outsider, commenting on its&#13;
strengths, Tom r emarked, "The&#13;
commitment of the li brary to the&#13;
university, an d to the university's&#13;
"j80®1 is a strength; it's a&#13;
uniqueness, — the commitment&#13;
to serve,&#13;
owl118&#13;
'&#13;
nst&#13;
'&#13;
tu&#13;
tion tends to&#13;
»av Tk 3 mUC'&#13;
1 more&#13;
'&#13;
nborma&#13;
'&#13;
friendlier mUe h&#13;
i coh ' e s mucb more of&#13;
-&#13;
e about the committor&#13;
t he" °&#13;
f gettmg thin8&#13;
s done&#13;
^antiSty tha" 1 W°&#13;
Uld&#13;
10 fj&#13;
il Tni" VCry MSy for me&#13;
'&#13;
hat&#13;
'&#13;
s eoin!3Ce and t0 learn&#13;
done." °&#13;
n&#13;
' to 8&#13;
e&#13;
t things&#13;
^Njects which&#13;
U.W.&#13;
lmPlement&#13;
parkside&#13;
Kirk plans&#13;
'&#13;
ng his year at&#13;
ttclud,&#13;
"orki&#13;
areas&#13;
the Lih ,r 35 acting director&#13;
y Earning Center&#13;
"nprovin&#13;
"8 relati,&#13;
°f the&#13;
'§ l ibrary-faculty&#13;
the f '°I1Ships&#13;
-&#13;
Cef&#13;
tain&#13;
r^heomm &lt;y Have not had&#13;
as o,h ?niCation from «he&#13;
,hers&#13;
Scie " Particularly in nces,&#13;
'"tends t&#13;
faithin&#13;
0 make&#13;
ibli°uranK-C°&#13;
mpUter&#13;
,&#13;
hlc data&#13;
°'°gical&#13;
'"dexes&#13;
le by&#13;
and&#13;
•tfailal&#13;
computer&#13;
access to&#13;
Chemical&#13;
Abstracts and&#13;
j , - oy , °' that kind&#13;
"ill 1&#13;
l!.ava&#13;
'Iable,0&#13;
"~Uter&#13;
'" more&#13;
%», S° Cover t v,Tht data bases&#13;
'y benefit °&#13;
ther f,e&#13;
'&#13;
ds.&#13;
f'ng all faculty."&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
gCF Wednesday September 12, 1979&#13;
continued&#13;
from P9'&#13;
..-ion Service o f Biological&#13;
!tc User Education CoAbstta&#13;
1976 ^rative, ^&#13;
/0,&#13;
rirk also serves on the&#13;
jjlorial boards of:&#13;
Audio Visual Library Refer&#13;
"&#13;
Jeffery Norton&#13;
Flowers, nuts&#13;
gathered&#13;
Fall activities at Eagle Valley&#13;
Nature Preserve include a weekend&#13;
for enjoying fall wildflowers and a&#13;
weekend for gathering some of the&#13;
many nuts that grow in the&#13;
preserve. Fall wildflower weekend&#13;
will be September 15th and 16th&#13;
and nut-gathering weekend will be&#13;
October 6th and 7th.&#13;
Wildflower weekends give&#13;
visitors an opportunity to study&#13;
and photograph wildflowers growing&#13;
undisturbed in their natural&#13;
habitat. Goldenrods, asters, and&#13;
gentians should be at their height&#13;
of bloom during this weekend. A&#13;
few species that may be seen&#13;
include: stiff and downy gentian,&#13;
nodding ladies tress orchid,&#13;
panicled aster, blazing-star, hairy&#13;
wormwood, great blue lobelia and&#13;
yellow flax.&#13;
During nut-gathering weekend&#13;
nuts will be gathered from walnut,&#13;
hickory and butternut trees. The&#13;
nuts gathered will be sold to the&#13;
public to provide funds for&#13;
building improvements at Eagle&#13;
Valley Environmental Center.&#13;
Field trips for these weekends&#13;
will begin at 9:00 am on both&#13;
oaturday and Sunday morning.&#13;
Visitors are invited to come for the&#13;
whole weekend or to join the field&#13;
trips on either day.&#13;
Advance reservations for food&#13;
and lodging must be made by&#13;
writing: EVE, Box 155, Apple&#13;
River, IL 61001 or calline&#13;
815-594-2259.&#13;
Need student&#13;
for Bose&#13;
intramurols&#13;
Bose Elementary School, 1900&#13;
15th Street, Kenosha (just east of&#13;
Casa Capri Restaurant) needs a&#13;
university student to direct/teach&#13;
an intramural program for&#13;
elementary children.&#13;
For further information or an&#13;
interview appointment, please&#13;
contact Mr. Larry Maurer,&#13;
Principal, 551-8313.&#13;
Enrollment&#13;
figures up&#13;
As 0f last Friday morning,&#13;
Parkside s enrollment is 5,230&#13;
students. This figure, as compared&#13;
to last year's final figure of 5,241 is&#13;
up considerably.&#13;
According to Dave Voet&#13;
Director of Institutional Analysis&#13;
and Registration, the final figure&#13;
this fall is expected to rise by 100&#13;
more students by the end of&#13;
registration, the tenth day of&#13;
school.&#13;
V°gt added, "We're possibly&#13;
going to break a record this year&#13;
with new student and freshman&#13;
enrollment. This year looks as&#13;
though it'll be higher than any&#13;
other."&#13;
The upper class enrollment is&#13;
remaining about the same as in&#13;
past years," Vogt said. "All&#13;
around, Parkside's full time&#13;
enrollment is up, but that's true of&#13;
all the UW campuses this fall."&#13;
Final enrollment figures will be&#13;
in within the next couple of weeks.&#13;
The Ranger at that time will&#13;
publish a total breakdown ot this&#13;
tail s enrollment.&#13;
Hear ye!&#13;
There will be an&#13;
open Ranger&#13;
Board of&#13;
Directors&#13;
meeting on&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
Sept. 13, 1979&#13;
at 5 pm&#13;
in the WLLC&#13;
conference room&#13;
D174.&#13;
CO-OPERATIVFS&#13;
democracy action&#13;
Support Parkside's Co-ops&#13;
CO-OPS ARE NOT PRIVATE BUSINESSES;&#13;
THEY ARE OWNED &amp; OPERATED BY THE&#13;
PEOPLE WHO SHOP IN THEM&#13;
BOOK CO-OP: C.S.C's Book co-op is a textbook, paperback and album&#13;
exchange service. You can save on your textbooks&#13;
for this semester by using the Book Co-op instead of the Bookstore. By buying your books fro m other students, rather than a large corporation&#13;
you eliminate many costs and help other students through co-operation. The Book Co-op is located on the L-l level of WLLC across&#13;
from the Library.&#13;
FOOD CO-OP:&#13;
The Chiwaukee Prairie Food Co-op is one of the nicest co-ops in&#13;
Wisconsin. The Food C(H)p is the best way to fight the rising costs of&#13;
food these days and it is a plesant way to shop. Convenient hours and&#13;
parking right in front make it easy to shop after a class, especially for&#13;
night students. We carry a wide variety of foods, including: Dairy&#13;
Products, Produce, grains, dried fruit, nuts, vitamins, pasta, juices,&#13;
bread, frozen goods and a whole lot more, stop in and look around!&#13;
Fall Hours:&#13;
Mori. . 10 to 6&#13;
Tue., Wed., Thur. - 10 to 10&#13;
Fri., Sat 9 t0 6&#13;
•PEN:&#13;
Food Co-op'&#13;
Mon. , Wed. 3-7&#13;
v Tue,, Thur. 2 - 5y&#13;
C.S.C.:&#13;
The Co-operative services&#13;
collective is made up of members&#13;
who own and operate these&#13;
projects. To join, just stop i n at&#13;
either the food or book co-op.&#13;
ANNUAL&#13;
Memberships&#13;
ImJDENTS&#13;
Only $3.00&#13;
( Me w Rate! )&#13;
$ 7- F a c u l t y &amp; Staff&#13;
$10 - N o n-s t li dents &#13;
« her 12, 1979 Ranger&#13;
I I I • I u # AyiAflC&#13;
Kinesis film series p&#13;
Sat, h&#13;
of&#13;
A new campus nt. the&#13;
KINESIS film program, will ho ld&#13;
Its gala opening Saturday with&#13;
the presentation of the film&#13;
"Cabaret" in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theater at 7 p.m. Single&#13;
admbaioe a SI.&#13;
KINESIS, a campus/community&#13;
film tenet, intends to "foster&#13;
an appreciation of film art.&#13;
according to Walt Ulbricht,&#13;
Lecturer of Humanities. The fall&#13;
series' schedule consists of 20&#13;
screenings showing 24 feature&#13;
films and 16 short films.&#13;
"We hare a little bit of&#13;
everything." said Ulbricht. "including&#13;
classic Hollywood musicals,&#13;
experimental films, play&#13;
adaptations, documentaries and&#13;
foreign films. 1 call it a good&#13;
grab bag of titles, film selections&#13;
and film styles."&#13;
A 10 member advisory&#13;
committee comprised of community&#13;
members, faculty members&#13;
Thayer,&#13;
cations, and&#13;
man. Assistant&#13;
and students selected the films in&#13;
the fall series. Ulbricht, Lee&#13;
Professor of CommumLaurence&#13;
KruckProfessor&#13;
of&#13;
Anthropology, represented the&#13;
faculty. Stephen Schwartz, Ken&#13;
Kuenhl. Bruce Peptch, Rosemary&#13;
Strand and Gloria Bolm represented&#13;
civic organizations. Mike&#13;
and Sue Stevens were&#13;
involved with film&#13;
Murphy&#13;
the students&#13;
selection.&#13;
KINESIS is aimed towards&#13;
both the campus and community.&#13;
The series offers a broader&#13;
variety of films than that of a&#13;
campus-oriented series, according&#13;
to Ulbricht. "The film series&#13;
sponsored by the P.A.B. is&#13;
primarily a student-organized&#13;
and a student-run operation," he&#13;
said. "(KINESIS) is intended to&#13;
draw not only the students,&#13;
faculty members and staff people&#13;
on campus, but also the&#13;
community at large.&#13;
"What we tried to do is not&#13;
only offer a wide selection&#13;
feature films," said Ulbricht,&#13;
"but also offer a wide selection ot&#13;
short documentary, animated,&#13;
and live-action films. These short&#13;
films are worth seeing and -worth&#13;
reflecting. They aren't shown on&#13;
commercial television."&#13;
Ulbricht said, about the entire&#13;
series, "I'm sure quite a few&#13;
people in the community would&#13;
like to see these films. We want&#13;
to draw people here, and we want&#13;
ta encourage them to come out&#13;
here on a regular basis."x&#13;
The screenings will be held on&#13;
Wednesdays, Saturdays, and&#13;
Sundays. Wednesday's 7 p.m.&#13;
program is shown once. A&#13;
different program is presented 7&#13;
p.m. Saturday, and repeated 1:30&#13;
p.m. Sunday.&#13;
"1 think it will be successful&#13;
several reasons, said for&#13;
Ulbricht. "The films we have&#13;
selected are films that are rarely&#13;
seen on television for one reason&#13;
or another and films that have a&#13;
varying amount of appeal. I think&#13;
the people will be drawn to the&#13;
films by the substance of the&#13;
film itself. Secondly, it's becoming&#13;
more and more difficult for&#13;
people to see films on a regular&#13;
basis because of cost, whether it's&#13;
transportation or admission&#13;
prices. That brings me to the third&#13;
point — the cost is quite low."&#13;
Single admission is $1 for the&#13;
opening night show and $1.50 for&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave. at 62nd St.&#13;
EutMnH «i 1930&#13;
John Wayne »tar« in 'Stagecoach,'&#13;
one of many great movies featured in&#13;
the Kinesis film series that begins this&#13;
JUNIORS AND SENIORS:&#13;
Looking for a part-time job with&#13;
good income, flexible hours&#13;
and real experience in the&#13;
business world?&#13;
Donald .J- Br ink CL U&#13;
Northwestern Mutual - Racine 632-2731&#13;
Eugene F. So ens CLU&#13;
Northwestern Mutual - Kenosha 654-5316&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Natural foods course&#13;
all other programs. "There »&#13;
also two coupon books available;'&#13;
$10 (10 admissions) or $15 (j m&#13;
admissions)," said Ulbricht, "«fo&#13;
our admissions are actually s sc&#13;
little as 75 cents a seat. How c ai » i&#13;
you go wrong at that?" us&#13;
"What we hope to do is b real te&#13;
even," said Ulbricht. "Whatevebt&#13;
income we earn from this falls on&#13;
series will be used for the spring&#13;
series. We could offer more film co&#13;
of a greater variety and choosstic&#13;
films that are more expensive.'?®&#13;
Film rentals for the fall series ^&#13;
totaled $3800. |hi&#13;
The number of people selecting,ic&#13;
future film series should increase&#13;
"We want to involve people ft®K&#13;
the campus and the community ii *'&#13;
the organization's film selectionsw&#13;
for the spring series," saiiar&#13;
Ulbricht. "We want to include SP&#13;
E:&#13;
Tramping through the fields&#13;
and woods, while at the same time&#13;
collecting natural foods to help&#13;
conserve your food budget, can be&#13;
a pleasant way to spend a few&#13;
hours on a beautiful fall day.&#13;
University Extension at UWParkside&#13;
is sponsoring the course,&#13;
which begins on Thursday,&#13;
September 20 at UW-P Molinaro&#13;
Hall at 7:30 p.m., and will meet for&#13;
3 Thursday evening lectures and&#13;
slides, and 3 Saturday morning&#13;
field trips.&#13;
A similar course on mushrooms&#13;
will begin Thursday, October 11.&#13;
Call University Extension for&#13;
registration information, phone&#13;
553-2312.&#13;
people who have an interest a!&#13;
films."&#13;
Summing up the main purpos ^&#13;
of KINESIS, Ulbricht said, "Iticc&#13;
another case of Parkside offering&#13;
the community a very interesting&#13;
cl schedule of activities. A person&#13;
the community can attend theaterv 1&#13;
concerts, and the Accent or&#13;
Enrichment series. I think this s&#13;
one area that has been neglected&#13;
We hope to fill that hole."&#13;
NOTICE!&#13;
ALL FRESHMAN &amp; SOPH.,&#13;
JR. &amp; SR. W OMEN&#13;
GET TOUR&#13;
FREE&#13;
STUDENT GIFT PAX (Manufacturers Samples)&#13;
UNION INFO. CTR. - SEPT. 17 THRU 21&#13;
STUDENT I.P. NECESSARY • ONE PER STUIMMT&#13;
TV' v&#13;
M ? V ! • j &lt;&#13;
245 * HUl PMC£ \&#13;
AKTATRANT HAS fit&#13;
S1N&lt; E 1918&#13;
-SL i&#13;
wA,&#13;
&#13;
LUNCH&#13;
Mon-Sat&#13;
11-2&#13;
BRUNCH&#13;
10:20 - 2&#13;
633-7744&#13;
DINNER&#13;
Thurs-Sat.&#13;
5-9 &#13;
Ranger Wednesday September 12, 1979&#13;
Thematic Breaking Away1 extraordinary&#13;
l&#13;
h&#13;
l&#13;
raCl^" b&#13;
L°&#13;
y&#13;
.&#13;
Wh&#13;
? lives in his affection thev have for M„„&#13;
W&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
,Breaking Away" »"« has a special&#13;
that is rare in today's&#13;
Stream of movies. It is simply&#13;
t1 "average" people whom&#13;
2Us can relate with and care&#13;
^Jand filmed in Bloomington,&#13;
,"Breaking Away" deals&#13;
i fc«r buddies who are a year&#13;
. „f high school and have no&#13;
for the future. The buddies'&#13;
raderv is one of the many&#13;
cotn&#13;
that the film explores.&#13;
^friendship develops through&#13;
the film and embodies things that&#13;
are in real-life friendships.&#13;
The four buddies are: Mike, a&#13;
hieh school qu arterback with no&#13;
chan« for a foo tball scholarship:&#13;
class clown who is still&#13;
has no ambitions;&#13;
Cyril, a&#13;
funny but&#13;
Moocher, a boy sensitive about his&#13;
small size ; and Dave, the main&#13;
character, a boy who lives in his&#13;
own world, which is Italian bicycle&#13;
racing.&#13;
Dave is into his world so much that&#13;
he talks Italian, plays opera&#13;
records full blast and always rides&#13;
his ten-speed bike dreaming about&#13;
the champion Italian bike racing&#13;
team that will be coming to town.&#13;
Dave also dates a girl under the&#13;
impression that he's an Italian&#13;
exchange student. He goes as far&#13;
as to serenade her from under her&#13;
dorm window.&#13;
At mealtime, Dave's father&#13;
finally gets so fed up with his son's&#13;
infatuation that he declares, "I&#13;
don't want any zucchini, linguini,&#13;
or fettucini. I don't want any "ini"&#13;
in this house."&#13;
Another theme that "Breaking&#13;
Away" examines is that of family&#13;
relationships. Dave's father is&#13;
forever complaining about his&#13;
son's actions, but the mutual love&#13;
Superman!&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Superman cost an estimated $30&#13;
million, was on the d rawing board&#13;
for four years, and used five&#13;
screenwriters. When that many&#13;
writers a re involved, the movie is&#13;
usually confusing and inconsistent.&#13;
Superman has that problem,&#13;
but not to the point of ruining it —&#13;
only weakening it a little. "&#13;
The movi e follows the original&#13;
comic book story almost identically.&#13;
Jor-El, one of the top&#13;
scientists on the planet Krypton,&#13;
rockets his son to Earth to save&#13;
him from the impending destruction&#13;
o f Krypton.&#13;
The youn g boy is a dopted by a&#13;
Kansas couple named Kent who&#13;
witness the rocket's crash landing.&#13;
• When he's 18, he leaves Kansas&#13;
Md goes north, where Jor-El's&#13;
spirit tells him th at he was sent to&#13;
Earth to battle evil. He then goes&#13;
to M etropolis, gets a job at the&#13;
My Planet and fights crime and&#13;
corruption.&#13;
The star of the picture,&#13;
Christopher Reeve, is a perfect&#13;
choice for the role: big, strong and&#13;
&gt; virile —&#13;
. you j««iviivjw kno. . .the m&#13;
huperman type. What's surprising&#13;
ough, is that Reeve plays the&#13;
of steel 's counterpart, milk&#13;
nnered reporter Clark Kent,&#13;
vSfiT"—•&#13;
has to h 6 time SuP&#13;
erman&#13;
leot^7;nto his famous b.ue&#13;
v- • . ' '""hs for a phone&#13;
*h&gt;ch to change in, but&#13;
he can only find one of those&#13;
walk-in phones without any walls.&#13;
There are quite a few other laughs&#13;
without ruining the Superman&#13;
myth.&#13;
Not all the comedy is like that,&#13;
though, and that's what's wrong&#13;
with the rest of the script. The&#13;
villains, played by Gene Hackman,&#13;
Ned Beatty and Valerie Perrine,&#13;
are moronic and silly criminals in&#13;
the mold of the old Batman TV&#13;
series. These characters appear to&#13;
have been written for a different&#13;
movie. That's what happens when&#13;
too many writers are brought in for&#13;
rewrites.&#13;
With the size of the budget, one&#13;
would think that the special effects&#13;
are going to be overpowering. They&#13;
aren't. The flying sequences are&#13;
done without any visible wires, but&#13;
they aren't that great. The other&#13;
special effects are worse. When a&#13;
dam breaks and water rushes&#13;
toward a nearby town, it can easily&#13;
be recognized as a small-scale&#13;
model. Whatever cost $30 million&#13;
is a mystery to me.&#13;
There are only two action&#13;
sequences in the picture. Between&#13;
these two parts is what makes or&#13;
breaks the movie. Does the movie&#13;
fall apart without Superman flying&#13;
around saving people? Almost.&#13;
Reeve's performance makes sure&#13;
that doesn't happen, but whenever&#13;
he gives the villains the screen the&#13;
move bogs down and becomes silly&#13;
and downright stupid.&#13;
These villains want to mess up&#13;
everything, even an otherwise&#13;
entertaining movie. But as always.&#13;
Superman saves the day.&#13;
This&#13;
is&#13;
tour guide&#13;
*&#13;
n on staff of J ohnson's Wax Golden Rondelle&#13;
Hany'sPv ^.Sponsible for conducting tours of the comass&#13;
istinp ^ Wri8ht buildings and other facilities and&#13;
and i theater activities including coorespondence&#13;
ral clerical work.&#13;
able to"'8 Sbou^ '&#13;
lave experience in public contact work, be&#13;
communicate effectively, and be comfortable&#13;
•&#13;
10 groups.&#13;
Iliis i&#13;
Per Week In I"1*&#13;
1116 p os&#13;
'^&#13;
on offering between 10 and 20 hrs.&#13;
didates mi t k&#13;
1® some evening and weekend work. Candays&#13;
eac- "&#13;
e available to work the same two scheduled&#13;
Week excluding Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
'I Sendresmv, »&#13;
e or letter including past work experience to:&#13;
Employment Office&#13;
SC Johnson and Son, Inc.&#13;
Mail Station 328&#13;
Sturtevant, Wise. 53177&#13;
^^^^^^^Equal Opportunity Employer&#13;
and affection they have for each&#13;
other is evident. It builds until the&#13;
touching scene of Dave's realization&#13;
that his admiration for the&#13;
Italian racing champs has been&#13;
misplaced. It's a fine commentary&#13;
on family relationships.&#13;
The third theme that "Breaking&#13;
Away" deals with is class&#13;
distinctions. In the university&#13;
town, the college students&#13;
derogatorily call the townfolk&#13;
cutters (the town's industry is&#13;
centered around stone cutting) and&#13;
the townfolk don't think highly of&#13;
the college students. When Dave&#13;
and his friends drive through the&#13;
campus they look at the students&#13;
as if they were from a different&#13;
country.&#13;
The social class struggle&#13;
culminates with the Little 500, a&#13;
very exciting bike race in which the&#13;
"cutters." represented by Dave&#13;
against the campus compete&#13;
teams.&#13;
The reason no actors have been&#13;
mentioned thus far is because the&#13;
script is so beautifully written that&#13;
the movie sems like a documentary&#13;
if's just too realistic to think&#13;
that somebody wrote it and that&#13;
the actors are playing characters.&#13;
That is the highest compliment&#13;
that can be paid to the&#13;
screenwriter and actors. Dennis&#13;
Christopher as Dave and Paul&#13;
Dooley as his father are the most&#13;
outstanding of the entirely good&#13;
cast.&#13;
The magic of "Breaking Away"&#13;
is that it's a series of interesting&#13;
events occurring to interesting&#13;
characters whom viewers like and&#13;
care about. It's quite an&#13;
extraordinary experience.&#13;
MEN and WOMEN'S&#13;
VARSITY BOWLING TEAM&#13;
Participating Schools Organizational Meeting:&#13;
• U W-Parkslde&#13;
• UW-Mllwaukee&#13;
• UW-Madison&#13;
UW-Oshkosk&#13;
• UW-Whltewater&#13;
For more information&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 13&#13;
5:OOpm in the&#13;
Union Rec Center&#13;
and his pals, finally get a chance to • Center Or&#13;
stop by the Parkside&#13;
553-2695.&#13;
Rec&#13;
FALL SEMESTER BOWLING LEAGUES&#13;
SIGN UP FOR: MEN'S&#13;
WOMEN'S&#13;
MIXED COUPLE&#13;
FAC/STAFF&#13;
STUDENT ORGBOWLING&#13;
L EAGUES B EGIN THE WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 16t h. f'GN UP A T&#13;
THE U NION B OWLING D ESK B Y SEPTEMBER 14 th.&#13;
FREE BOWLING COUPON&#13;
GOOD FOR ONE FREE GAME OF&#13;
BOWLING AT THE PARKSIDE&#13;
UNION LANES BETWEEN SEPT 5&#13;
SEPT 14.&#13;
COUPON VALID FOR OPEN&#13;
BOWLING ONLY LIMIT ONE&#13;
COUPON PER D AY PER P ERSON&#13;
REDEEM COUPON A T THE P ARKSIDE U NION R ECREATION CENTER &#13;
r I.v September 12,&#13;
Volleyball starts&#13;
by Wall&#13;
Dopite having to face the&#13;
toughest tchcdule In the teams'&#13;
history. Coach Linda Henderson&#13;
eaters the 1979 women's volleyball&#13;
season filled with optimism.&#13;
Coach Henderson has good&#13;
reason to he looking forward to the&#13;
season. She brings back with her&#13;
eight returning players from the&#13;
28-21-3 squad of a year ago.&#13;
Included among these eight&#13;
players are five starters led by&#13;
seniors Cindy Henschel and Tess&#13;
Manzano.&#13;
"We have an excellent core&#13;
returning from lkst season states&#13;
Henderson. "1 am very comfort­&#13;
/Sh) Presents&#13;
In Concert&#13;
Josh White Jr.&#13;
PLUS COMEDIANS&#13;
Ted &amp; Ed&#13;
As Seen On The Tonight Show&#13;
Friday,&#13;
Sept. 14&#13;
Union Square&#13;
8 PM&#13;
UWP Students&#13;
82.00&#13;
Guests&#13;
82.50&#13;
I.D.'s Required&#13;
able with the people we have," she&#13;
adds. . .&#13;
Also back as starters are juniors,&#13;
Liz Venci, Roxanne Nelson, and&#13;
Tern Bieser.&#13;
New to the team are tour&#13;
freshman to help offset the loss of&#13;
three players from last years' team.&#13;
"The frosh look very promising&#13;
this year," says the three year&#13;
coach. • - they are learning very&#13;
much in a short time.&#13;
Although the returning players&#13;
will provide a solid base for the&#13;
team, Henderson is careful to note&#13;
that the bench may hold the key to&#13;
the success or failure of the team.&#13;
To point out the importance of&#13;
bench, coach Henderson cited&#13;
statistics from last season,&#13;
fifty-two matches consisting of 123&#13;
games were played. With each&#13;
game lasting approximately twenty&#13;
minutes that adds up to over forty&#13;
hours of court time over the span&#13;
of a season.&#13;
Coach Henderson, though, is&#13;
very enthusiastic about their&#13;
abilities. "The bench has been&#13;
phenomenal in the past and I am&#13;
sure that they will be just as good&#13;
this year," she says confidently.&#13;
Several Division I schools will be&#13;
on the Ranger schedule this season&#13;
including Marquette and Northwestern.&#13;
The true test for the team&#13;
will be in the invitationals slated&#13;
for this season. Included are&#13;
invitationals at Michigan State,&#13;
DePaul, and Parkside's own on the&#13;
weekend of Oct. 5-6.&#13;
"To finish in the top half of the&#13;
Ranger Invitational would be a&#13;
real plus."&#13;
"The mental state of the team&#13;
going into matches will be&#13;
important, right now we have to go&#13;
into the season playing it game by&#13;
game."&#13;
The first big test for the team&#13;
will come this weekend at the&#13;
DePaul Invitational in Chicago.&#13;
Coach Henderson invites and&#13;
encourages all to support this&#13;
years' squad and enjoy an exciting&#13;
fast-paced sport.&#13;
1979 Home Schedule&#13;
Date Opponent&#13;
10/5 Parkside&#13;
10/6 Invitational&#13;
Tournament&#13;
10/9 Marquette&#13;
10/16 Trinity &amp;&#13;
UW-Whitewater&#13;
Time&#13;
5 pm&#13;
6 pm&#13;
6 pm&#13;
NOW . . .&#13;
Bank at the&#13;
Parkside Union&#13;
with&#13;
t|M E, (Vlii i -ij&#13;
See A Live Demonstration&#13;
And Get Full&#13;
Information On ...&#13;
Tues. Sept. 18 &amp; Wed. 19&#13;
9:00 am to 3:00 pm And 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm *&#13;
^^ecn^rh^iorth Lobby Of The ForlcsiHa Union&#13;
-iComing Events&#13;
,• „f campus events sponsored by the university or r«,w&#13;
Coming Events .s a for ev(.n(s js Thursday at 10 am in order l„ app,,,, '&#13;
student For[m are avai.ab.e in the Ranger office. WLLC l,,^&#13;
Ranger the following&#13;
WORKSHOP - union 104005 at 6:30 pm. Call ext. 2008&#13;
-..... —&#13;
Friday, September 14, 197V&#13;
nFFFNSlVE DRIVING COURSE - 7:30 am to 5:00 pm. Call ext. 2455.&#13;
™ c VI[.'FT _ UW-P vs UW-Oshkosh at Oshkosh.&#13;
GOLF MEEI _ uw_p vs. uW-LaCrosse at Parkside, 3 pm.&#13;
WOM®, VOLLEYBALL - DePaul Invitational at Chicago. (Sat. also.)&#13;
™0™S?&#13;
Uten"s'Sp «.w—.«&#13;
Sunday, September 15, 197ft&#13;
„_i P wpp-r _ nW-P vs. UW-Eau Claire at Eau Claire. (Monday also.)&#13;
MOVIE - Superman" a. 7:30 pm in the Union Cinema. PAB sponsor.&#13;
Tuesday, September 16, 1979&#13;
WOMEN'S TENNIS - UW-P vs. Marquette at Parks.de. 3 pm.&#13;
issed&#13;
by Edith Isenberg&#13;
Campus Nurse&#13;
In today's society, we tend to be&#13;
content to let the physician and&#13;
other health professionals take&#13;
sole responsibility for our health,&#13;
rather than assume an active role&#13;
in determining our own health&#13;
maintenance and care.&#13;
Since doctors treat primarily&#13;
illness and disease, the responsibility&#13;
for maintaining good health&#13;
lies with the individual. Unfortunately,&#13;
there is no vaccine for&#13;
achieving and maintaining wellness.&#13;
It is a day to day individual&#13;
task, demanding knowledge,&#13;
careful planning, organization,&#13;
and a positive outlook.&#13;
One of the primary goals of this&#13;
column throughout the coming&#13;
year will be to offer information to&#13;
help you improve and maintain&#13;
good health, and in this spirit I&#13;
offer the following Ten Commandments&#13;
for Good Health.&#13;
1. Assume the responsibility for&#13;
your own health. Take time to&#13;
learn about your body and learn to&#13;
prevent injury and disease through&#13;
a reasonable lifestyle and health&#13;
behavior.&#13;
2. Plan for a realistic daily&#13;
routine with time for rest. Avoid&#13;
excesses.&#13;
3. Maintain a manageable&#13;
psychological stress level. Be aw®&#13;
that stress beyond your ability t&#13;
handle leads to illness and heali&#13;
problems.&#13;
4. Establish good nutritiont&#13;
and exercise programs — they t&#13;
hand in hand. Avoid fad diets,fa;&#13;
exercises, fad cures, fad etc!&#13;
5. Check your blood pressat&#13;
regularly; once every six montk&#13;
unless you have a problem.&#13;
6. Be aware of Cancer's Sew&#13;
Warning Signals: (America&#13;
Cancer Society)&#13;
• Change in bowel or bladdei&#13;
habits.&#13;
• A sore that does not heal.&#13;
• Unusual bleeding or dr&#13;
charge.&#13;
•Thickening or lump&#13;
breast or elsewhere.&#13;
•Indigestion or difficulty i t&#13;
swallowing.&#13;
• Obvious change in wart&#13;
mole.&#13;
•Nagging cough or hoars&#13;
ness.&#13;
7. Be sure your immunization&#13;
are up to date.&#13;
8. Be sure you have adequat&#13;
insurance coverage.&#13;
9. Seek help when signs a#&#13;
symptoms indicate a healt!&#13;
problem.&#13;
10. If you are a smoker, stop:&#13;
you don't smoke, don't start.&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
PART TIME WORK AVAILABLE&#13;
Retail Inventory Auditors needed on weekends - and&#13;
occasional w eekdays - flexible scheduling to fit your&#13;
school requirements. Hourly wage. Paid travel,&#13;
transportation provided. Area crew services Kenosha,&#13;
Southeastern Wise. &amp; Northern Illinois. No experience&#13;
necessary&#13;
For more info please call 694-1447&#13;
or apply in person&#13;
Thur.-Sept. 13, Fri.-Sept. 14,&#13;
Mon.-Sept. 17 or Tues.-Sept. 18&#13;
10 A.M. - 6 P.M. at&#13;
GENERAL BUSINESS SER VICES&#13;
2135 91st Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wise. &#13;
Cramer's Corner&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
Chris Hansen and Jim Heiring.&#13;
The names are familiar to people&#13;
in the Racine and Kenosha area.&#13;
Perhaps these names will be&#13;
familiar to the entire world next&#13;
summer, because that's when they&#13;
will hopefull y be participating in&#13;
the 1980 Summer Olympic Games&#13;
which will be held in Moscow.&#13;
Chris and Jim, two Parkside&#13;
graduates, are track stars. However,&#13;
they don't compete in the&#13;
glamour events such as the sprints,&#13;
or other headline making events.&#13;
They are walkers and according to&#13;
their former college coach,&#13;
Parkside's Bob Lawson, they both&#13;
stand a chance of making the U.S.&#13;
Olympic squad, "They take three&#13;
guys for each event and right now&#13;
Jim and Chris are two of the top&#13;
four guys." Both already have&#13;
experience in international competition&#13;
and this can only enhance&#13;
their chances of making the U.S.&#13;
team.&#13;
So when you're driving down the&#13;
road and see two guys walking at a&#13;
swift pace, give a wave. Who&#13;
knows, maybe you're waving to&#13;
two future world champions.&#13;
******&#13;
There is a dire need of recruits&#13;
for men's and women's crosscountry&#13;
and track teams. Anyone&#13;
interested in competing in these&#13;
sports should contact Bob or&#13;
Barbara Lawson at the Physical&#13;
Education building. The crosscountry&#13;
seasons have already&#13;
started. If interested, report&#13;
immediately.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson reports&#13;
that the men's soccer team is&#13;
looking good but that he needs a&#13;
manager. Anyone interested&#13;
should contact Coach Henderson&#13;
in the Physical Education building.&#13;
&#13;
******&#13;
THIS WEEK'S PACKER PICK—&#13;
Tampa Bay 17; Green Bay 13. The&#13;
punchless Pack will have great&#13;
difficulty scoring against the stingy&#13;
Buccaneer defense.&#13;
******&#13;
Know of anyone who plays in an&#13;
unusual sport on or off campus? If&#13;
so, send them down to the Ranger&#13;
office and have them talk to me!&#13;
Personals&#13;
are back!&#13;
FREE CLASSIFIEDS!&#13;
Any registered students or student organizations may&#13;
run one ad at no cost if under 10 words. An additional&#13;
cost of 30 cents for each additional 10 words or under.&#13;
DEADLINE: Thursday mornings 10:00 A.M.&#13;
Name&#13;
SS No..&#13;
Ad&#13;
ganger WLLC D139&#13;
A UW-Parkside and Community Film Series&#13;
In the next few months KINESIS will&#13;
present a program of outstanding films&#13;
at the Parkside Union Cinema on the UWParkside&#13;
cam pus. A broad selection of&#13;
internationally acclaimed feature films,&#13;
documentaries, comedies and short&#13;
films have been selected for this fall&#13;
series.&#13;
The work of Charles Chaplin, Francois&#13;
Truffaut, Judy Garland, Robert Gardner,-&#13;
Alfred Hitchcock, Sophia Loren, Tom&#13;
Palazzlo, Cicely Tyson, Stanley Kubrick,&#13;
Busby Berkeley, Roman Polanski, John&#13;
Hostetler, Errol Flynn, John Whitney,&#13;
Federico Fellini and Marlon Brando will&#13;
be featured.&#13;
Admission is $1.50 for single seats.&#13;
Discount coupons of $10.00 (10 admissions)&#13;
and $15.00 (20 admissions) are&#13;
aso available at each screening and by&#13;
hva/'1&#13;
' ^&#13;
rite: Union Information Center,&#13;
UW-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Call 553-2345 for further information.&#13;
-abaret (1974) 7:00 p.m. Sept. 15&#13;
greeted by Bob Fosse.&#13;
'tarring Liza Minnelli, Joel Grey, and Michael York.&#13;
Opening Niaht fi*ia- nil Seats $1.00&#13;
" HaPPened One Night (1935)&#13;
^cted by Frank Capra.&#13;
Screenplay by Robert Riskin.&#13;
His Girl Friday (1939)&#13;
BasM* bY Howard Hawks.&#13;
Charles MacA th^ Fr&#13;
°&#13;
n&#13;
' Page by Be&#13;
" HecM and&#13;
Th« Fantastic Animation Festival (1976)&#13;
A nin 7:00 p m' Sept&#13;
' 26&#13;
shnr?6 y&#13;
'&#13;
minu,e program of animation which presents 14&#13;
award-winning films.&#13;
I&#13;
7:00 p.m. Sept. 22&#13;
1:30 p.m. Sept. 23&#13;
Sunder (1972)&#13;
Ober.iV,by Rober&gt; Radnitz.&#13;
Starr Ralph Nelson.&#13;
field, Cicely Tyson, and Kevin Hooks.&#13;
7:00 p.m. Sept. 29&#13;
1:30 p.m. Sept. 30&#13;
The Wizard of Oz (1935) 7:00 p.m. Oct. 6&#13;
1:30 p.m. Oct. 7&#13;
Produced by Mervyn LeRoy.&#13;
Directed by Victor Fleming.&#13;
Starring Judy Garland, Frank Morgan, Ray Bolger, Bert&#13;
Lahr, Margaret Hamilton, Jack Haley, and Biitie Burke.&#13;
Ethnographic Film Program: 7:00 P-m-&#13;
"Amish: The People of Preservation" Oct. 10&#13;
"The Land Divers of Melanesia"&#13;
"Kypseli: Men and Women Apart" (1976)&#13;
Frenzy (1972) 7:00 p.m. Oct. 13&#13;
1:30 p.m. Oct. 14&#13;
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock.&#13;
The Lodger (1926) Hitchcock's first suspense film&#13;
42nd Street (1933) 7:00 p.m. Oct. 20&#13;
1:30 p.m. Oct. 21&#13;
Directed by Lloyd Bacon.&#13;
Music and Lyrics by Harry Warren and Al Dubin.&#13;
Starring Warner Baxter, Dick Powell, Ruby Keeler, Ginger&#13;
Rodgers, Guy Kibbee, and Una Merkel.&#13;
Footlight Parade (1933)&#13;
Directed by Lloyd Bacon.&#13;
Music and Lyrics by Harry Warren, Al Dubin, Sammy Fain,&#13;
and Irving Kahal.&#13;
Starring James Cagney, Joan Blondell, Dick Powell. Ruby&#13;
Keeler, Guy Kibbee, and Frank McHugh.&#13;
A Doll's House (1973)&#13;
Directed by Joseph Losey.&#13;
Screenplay by David Mercer.&#13;
Based on the play by Henrik Ibsen.&#13;
7:00 p.m. Oct. 24&#13;
Amarcord (1974) 7:00 p.m. Oct. 27&#13;
1:30 p.m. Oct. 28&#13;
Directed by Federico Fellini.&#13;
Starring Magaii Noel, Bruno Aznin, and Pupella Maggio.&#13;
Two Women (1961) 7:00 p.m. Nov. 3&#13;
1:30 p.m. Nov. 4&#13;
Directed by Vittorio DeSica.&#13;
Screenplay by Cesare Zavattini and Vittorio DeSica.&#13;
r&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Stagecoach (1939) 7:00 p.m. Nov. 10&#13;
1:30 p.m. Nov. 11&#13;
Directed by John Ford.&#13;
Starring John Wayne, Thomas Mitchell, John Carradlne,&#13;
and Claire Trevor.&#13;
The Shootiat (1976)&#13;
Directed by Don §legel.&#13;
Starring John Wayne, Lauren Bacall, Jamea Stewart&#13;
Jules and Jim (1961) 7:00 p.m. Nov. 14&#13;
Directed by Francois Trulfaut.&#13;
Screenplay by Francois Truffaut and Jean Qrueuit.&#13;
Starring Oakar Werner, Jeanne Moreau, and Henri Serre.&#13;
7:00 p.m. Nov. 17&#13;
1:30 p.m. Nov. 1 8&#13;
On the Waterfront (1954)&#13;
Directed by Etia Kazan&#13;
Music by Leonard Bernstein.&#13;
Starring Marlon Brando, Karl Maiden, Rod Steiger, Eva&#13;
Marie Saint, Lee J. Cobb.&#13;
Hearts and Minds (1974) 7:00 p.m. Nov. 21&#13;
Produced by Bert Schneider and Peter Davis.&#13;
Directed by Peter Davis.&#13;
The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938)&#13;
7:00 p.m. Nov. 24&#13;
1:30 p.m. Nov. 25&#13;
Directed by William Kelghly and Michael Curtiz.&#13;
Photography by Tony Qaudlo, Sol Pollto, and Howard&#13;
Green.&#13;
Starring Errol Flynn, Olivia de Havllland, Basil Rathbone,&#13;
and Alan Hale.&#13;
Robin and Marian (1977)&#13;
Starring Sean Connery, Audrey Hepburn, and Robert Shaw.&#13;
DrStrangelove (1963) 7:00 p.m. Dec. 1&#13;
1:30 p.m. Dec. 2&#13;
Directed by Stanley Kubrick.&#13;
Starring Peter Sellers. George C. Scoff, and Slim Pickens.&#13;
The Wild Child (1970) 8:00 p.m. Dec. 5&#13;
Directed by Francois Truffaut.&#13;
Screenplay by Francois Truffaut and Jean Qruault.&#13;
Starring Jean-Pierre Cargo!, Francois Truffaut.&#13;
Macbeth (1971) 7:00 p.m. Dec. 8&#13;
1:30 p.m. Dec. 9&#13;
Directed by Roman Polanski.&#13;
Starring Jon Finch and Franceses Annls.&#13;
Limelight (1952) 7:00 p.m. Dec. 15&#13;
1:30 p.m. Dee. 16&#13;
Written and directed by Charles Chaplin.&#13;
Starring Charles Chaplin, Claire Bloom, and Buster Keaton. &#13;
Ranger&#13;
Soccer kicks off&#13;
new season&#13;
starting spots."&#13;
The schedule for this year is a&#13;
tough one with a strong&#13;
UW-Madison team heading up the&#13;
home schedule for September 22.&#13;
Other midwestern powers on the&#13;
slate include Northern Illinois,&#13;
Aurora College, Marquette and&#13;
Western Michigan.&#13;
The Rangers will again take&#13;
part in the UW chancellors Cup&#13;
Tournament, Last year s irney&#13;
was held here at Parkside.&#13;
The Rangers first home match&#13;
will come this Saturday at j&#13;
against Beloit College.&#13;
Anyone interested in beCo,&#13;
a manager for the soccer&#13;
should contact Hal Henders&#13;
553-2311 or stop in at his 0f{&#13;
the P.E. building.&#13;
by D oug Edenhan&#13;
Around the country soccer is an&#13;
up and coming sport. It's finally&#13;
just catching on . Much the same is&#13;
happening here at Parks.de as&#13;
coach Hal Henderson embarks on&#13;
what may be his most successful&#13;
season here.&#13;
"We re just turning the corner,&#13;
u f&amp;r as the future is concerned,&#13;
commented. Henderson. "A lot of&#13;
kids are coming to us right now.&#13;
This years team shows a bright&#13;
future with 13 new freihman on&#13;
the team, many of which will be&#13;
competing for starting spots.&#13;
This year's top recroits for the&#13;
Rangers include Brad Faust, from&#13;
White Bear Lake. Minnesota,&#13;
Steve Engel from Milwaukee&#13;
Marquette. Alan Gibson from&#13;
Racine Lutheran and John&#13;
McNulty from St. Paul, Minnetota.&#13;
Henderson says that he looks&#13;
for a lot from these four and&#13;
expects them ill to start.&#13;
Faust is a midfielder prepped at&#13;
Mariner High School and as a&#13;
senior was choosen to Minnesota s&#13;
All-State team.&#13;
Alan Gibson is the son of Jim&#13;
Gibson. Parkside's&#13;
last year's district champion team.&#13;
Earl Campbell, last year's leading&#13;
scorer and Niall Power of&#13;
Waterford. Ireland are returning&#13;
for their fourth letter in as many&#13;
years. Lee Cielonko and Ray&#13;
Coquis are the other returning&#13;
seniors.&#13;
Two junior lettermen returning&#13;
are Ale Mora and Karl Goetz.&#13;
Sophomores returning include&#13;
Claude Cielonko, John Momoima&#13;
and Steve Borggren.&#13;
Other new freshmen rounding&#13;
out the squad are Beejan Beheshti,&#13;
Carlos Duchicela, Adrian Rietveld&#13;
and Thanh Nguyen.&#13;
"In order to maintain this year s&#13;
high level of recruiting, we must&#13;
win more games than we lose,&#13;
said Henderson. That would be a&#13;
great improvement from last years&#13;
record of four wins, nine losses,&#13;
and four ties.&#13;
"We have the nucleus. Things&#13;
new to us from last year's squad&#13;
are added depth and more speed.&#13;
In addition all of our freshmen&#13;
have experience with credentials.&#13;
We have 15 men battling tor 11&#13;
classifieds COLLEGE STUDENTS&#13;
Room-mate wanted: to share rent&#13;
and expenses on 2 bedroom&#13;
upper Kenosha. Available Oct. 1.&#13;
Call 654-7235 or 553-2244.&#13;
Car: 1974 Fiat. Very good condition,&#13;
excellent mileage, best offer.&#13;
Call 657-9198.&#13;
Car: 1975 Triumph TR-7.&#13;
clean. 30,000 miles. Call&#13;
2497.&#13;
Very&#13;
843-&#13;
RARE opportunity for the right&#13;
Parkside student. Retired college&#13;
professor requires part-time help.&#13;
Ideal for teacher, student or&#13;
nurse. Chores include making&#13;
breakfast, walking, reading. No&#13;
housework. Excellent chance to&#13;
advance one's education. Call&#13;
afternoons or evenings 694-2551.&#13;
Improve your grades! Send!&#13;
for your up-to-date, 306 page[; I&#13;
legiate research paper catair I&#13;
10,250 papers on fj|e. ,&#13;
academic subjects.&#13;
Research Assistance, 11322 It&#13;
Ave. #206Z, Los Angeles,&#13;
90025 (213)477-8226.&#13;
Television: small portable. Older&#13;
model. Phone 658-1932.&#13;
Tires: 2 polyglas snow tires, 2&#13;
polyglas road tires, 1 nylon cord.&#13;
All G 78-14. Call 658-1932.&#13;
Secretary needed for P.S.G.A.&#13;
Senate. Apply at P.S.G.A. office&#13;
WLLC D137 or call 553-2244. Paid&#13;
position.&#13;
Explore the possibilities of&#13;
volunteer work! Call Paulette&#13;
Kissee, Volunteer Coordinator; or&#13;
Dawn Peck, Activities Director, at&#13;
657-6175, or attend a volunteer&#13;
coffee to be held Tuesday,&#13;
September 18,1979 at Woodstock&#13;
Health Center, 3415 Sheridan&#13;
Road, Kenosha, Wl 53140, from&#13;
9:30-10:30 am or 2:00-3:00 pm.&#13;
Part-time work, on c ampu&#13;
distributing advert ising m ateria&#13;
Choose your own schedu le, 4&#13;
hours weekly. No selling, your pa,&#13;
based on the amount ot ma ter,&#13;
distributed. O f ou r 310 c urrent cm&#13;
pus reps, median ear ning is $ 4,&#13;
hourly,&gt;Np special skills requircri'&#13;
just the ability to wo rk c onsister&#13;
and energetically without ;u pe&#13;
sion. For further information, conta:&#13;
America* fas,sage Corporation r 7Q8C W arren Avenue North, Seati&#13;
-Washington98109 (206) 282-811&#13;
ic's first ever soccer&#13;
coach ten years ago.&#13;
Two other freshmen battling for&#13;
a starting spot are also Minnesota&#13;
products. T hey are forward Tom&#13;
Kaju of Edina and mid fie id erforward&#13;
Bob Newstrom of Robbinsdale.&#13;
&#13;
Dave Farin, a freshman from&#13;
Neenah Armstrong will be the&#13;
starting and only goalkeeper this&#13;
season. "He's a good one, and if he&#13;
stays healthy, we'll be alright.&#13;
That's our one weak spot this&#13;
year." said Henderson.&#13;
Four seniors are returning from&#13;
Going to&#13;
the game?&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selection&#13;
ge ©Ibt&#13;
i t»u rtet £boppr&#13;
PARKSIDE U NION&#13;
10:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.&#13;
RUTTCRSCOTCH DISCS&#13;
STAALlOHT MINTS&#13;
tOCT IKK A IAAKIIS CINNAMON DISCS COTPIC CANOY SOUR IAA.US JELLY IFANS CANOY CONN&#13;
C&#13;
Weekends&#13;
were made&#13;
for Micheloh&#13;
By ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • SINCE 1896&#13;
SA4.TIO C ASHEWS SPANISH AKANUTS&#13;
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CHOC MANUT CLUSTERS&#13;
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l»«AAMJNT LEAVES&#13;
ORANOI S LICES&#13;
NATURK NUT MIX&#13;
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COCONUT TOASTl«S&#13;
VANILLA CARAMELS&#13;
•4/TTtx Rum DISCS&#13;
Distributed by E.F. MAORI GRAN0&#13;
1831- 55th St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wise.&#13;
658-3553&#13;
•VO*A V AIN C UM&#13;
aatATw MINT}&#13;
AND MORE!&#13;
Michelob&#13;
NOW AVAILABLE "ON TAP" AT UNION SQUARl </text>
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              <text>The Ranger, Volume 8, issue 2, September 12, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
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            <elementText elementTextId="89363">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89364">
              <text>1979-09-12</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89367">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="89368">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="89369">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89370">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89371">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89372">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89373">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89374">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89375">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4547">
      <name>chiwaukee prairie</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="148">
      <name>film</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="96">
      <name>library</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="234">
      <name>parkside activities board (PAB)</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="222">
      <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
