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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 18, issue 2</text>
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            <text>Excel '89 stresses leadership and critical thinking</text>
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            <text>Excel '89 stresses leadership and critical thinking&#13;
By Suzanne Mantuano&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Any Parkside student who&#13;
feels the need to learn anything&#13;
about critical thinking,&#13;
creativity, and appreciating&#13;
differences may want to be a&#13;
part of Excel '89.&#13;
Excel '89 is a leadership adventure&#13;
for all Parkside students.&#13;
"It's (Excel '89) a two day&#13;
retreat for Parkside students.&#13;
It's designed so that it will&#13;
benefit brand new students of&#13;
students who have just accepted&#13;
positions of leadership&#13;
or experienced student leaders&#13;
who come to me from a&#13;
major organization," said&#13;
Diane Welsh, Assistant Director&#13;
of Student Life.&#13;
The leadership retreat offers&#13;
participants the chance&#13;
to know other campus leaders,&#13;
share experiences, and&#13;
begin establishing valuable&#13;
networks with them.&#13;
"I wanted to make sure&#13;
who was running the Ranger,&#13;
who was in charge of PSGA&#13;
and I wanted to familiarize&#13;
myself with the orginization&#13;
itself," said Franca Savaglio,&#13;
vice-president of PAB, who&#13;
attended the seminar last&#13;
year.&#13;
The seminar is an overnite&#13;
program which is held in&#13;
Delafieid, WI. The participants&#13;
ride on a bus with each&#13;
other and leave from the&#13;
Parkside Union. The retreat&#13;
is being held at Camp Sidney&#13;
Cohen which is on Lake&#13;
Nemahbin.&#13;
"There's a lot of sharing&#13;
with each other," said Welsh.&#13;
"For freshman it's good beleaders&#13;
of organizations,&#13;
Excel *89 helps it's participants&#13;
become better leaders,&#13;
and also helps them to get to&#13;
know other leaders and organizations.&#13;
The retreat is&#13;
based on a series of educational&#13;
sessions_throughout the&#13;
"We networked and we&#13;
talked about the university as&#13;
a whole. We talked about how&#13;
we could get together and&#13;
work together," Savaglio&#13;
said. "We really brought our&#13;
ideas together.&#13;
Some of the sessions that&#13;
\(l Iwfa&amp;hip&#13;
cause they get to see what the&#13;
organizations are about.&#13;
Some of the goals that&#13;
Excel '89 tries to get acroess&#13;
to it's participants include&#13;
such things as personal skill&#13;
development, and leadership&#13;
qualities that students need&#13;
when they graduate. For&#13;
two days. Some of the sessions&#13;
are interactive type of&#13;
sessions such as a low ropes&#13;
course where participants are&#13;
challenged mentally and are&#13;
urged to come up with a solution&#13;
to a problem collectively.&#13;
Working together is one of the&#13;
major aspects of the retreat.&#13;
are being held primarily for&#13;
leaders of organizations include&#13;
critical thinking, decision&#13;
making, ethics, creativity,&#13;
communications, presenting&#13;
yourself and dealing with&#13;
difficult people.&#13;
"There is a big focus on various&#13;
types of communication&#13;
and assertiveness and self&#13;
image," said Welsh. "There&#13;
is a wide range of topics.&#13;
There will be presenters&#13;
from all aspects of the&#13;
campus, those who have a&#13;
good knowledge base in certain&#13;
topics. Though the seminar&#13;
is for any Parkside student&#13;
who feels the need to&#13;
learn more about leadership&#13;
and networking, participation&#13;
is limited. Excel '89 is limited&#13;
to about forty people. However,&#13;
attendance has never&#13;
gone over it's mark. The&#13;
main reason the seminar is&#13;
limited to attendance is to&#13;
help maintain the one on one&#13;
basis that helps participants&#13;
get the most out of the seminar.&#13;
"We wouldn't ever be able&#13;
to have a real big group because&#13;
then it just defeats the&#13;
purpose. If you get more than&#13;
forty you could go the whole&#13;
weekend without really getting&#13;
to know some of the&#13;
other individuals," said&#13;
Welsh.&#13;
Sign up for Excel '89 ends&#13;
Friday, September 23. the&#13;
cost of the seminar is ten dollars&#13;
and that includes transportation,&#13;
lodging, meals,&#13;
workship materials, and an&#13;
Excel '89 souvenier.&#13;
"It's one of the best workshops,"&#13;
Savaglio said. "It's&#13;
very comfortable, it's fun and&#13;
vou learn so much."&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center provides valuable service for students&#13;
by Dan Chiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
"We are proud of our service.&#13;
We feel that it provides&#13;
children with what they need&#13;
and that's their childhood,"&#13;
explained Sherry Thomas, Director&#13;
of Parkside's Day Care&#13;
Center.&#13;
The day care center is considered&#13;
to be a developmentally&#13;
oriented program. A&#13;
program that looks at where&#13;
children are at their various&#13;
levels of development and&#13;
from there they are encouraged&#13;
to do what they are capable&#13;
of doing.&#13;
The day care center teachers&#13;
are a combination of a lot&#13;
of students and certified individuals.&#13;
The students come&#13;
from diverse backgrounds&#13;
and diverse majors. Such as,&#13;
business majors, nursing&#13;
majors, sociology majors,&#13;
psychology majors, and&#13;
education majors. Thomas&#13;
also conducts a monthly staff&#13;
meeting making sure all&#13;
teachers are putting in all the&#13;
necessary hours required by&#13;
the state.&#13;
"The teachers are well&#13;
trained and perform their job&#13;
very well," answered&#13;
Thomas.&#13;
"The support of parents is&#13;
very important," explained&#13;
Thomas. "We have excellent&#13;
parental support. The parents&#13;
are very active."&#13;
The day care center has an&#13;
Active Parent Group, which&#13;
conducts fundraisers, social&#13;
activities, such as family picnics,&#13;
and bring speakers. Due&#13;
to the groups fundraisers the&#13;
center was able to receive&#13;
helpful and beneficial equipment.&#13;
1. Flower Garden - children&#13;
from two weeks of age to&#13;
eighteen months.&#13;
2. Munchkin Manor - children&#13;
from eighteen months of&#13;
age to twenty-four months.&#13;
3. Pumpkin Patch - children&#13;
from two to three years&#13;
old.&#13;
4. Sunshine Room - children&#13;
from two and a half to&#13;
three and a half years old.&#13;
5. Rainbow Room - children&#13;
from three to four years old.&#13;
6. Apple Tree Room - children&#13;
from four to five years&#13;
old.&#13;
The children follow daily&#13;
routine schedules to give the&#13;
children anticipation to what&#13;
is going to happen next. The&#13;
teachers all share and conduct&#13;
the same responsibilities.&#13;
"We work together as a&#13;
team. We are very much&#13;
unique in that," said Thomas.&#13;
The teachers are paid employees.&#13;
Parkside's Day Care Center&#13;
has something most centers&#13;
don't have and that's the use&#13;
of a campus. The center uses&#13;
the campus for beneficial information.&#13;
"The campus is&#13;
full of enriched information,"&#13;
stated Thomas. The use of the&#13;
library, the police department,&#13;
the theater, the physical&#13;
education building, and&#13;
the kitchen all prove to be a&#13;
learning experience for the&#13;
children. "The campus is&#13;
always grateful for helping in&#13;
anyway, they love having the&#13;
children around."&#13;
"The teachers are well experienced&#13;
with a good background,&#13;
the parental involvement&#13;
is high, and a good surrounding&#13;
atmosphere provides&#13;
our center with good&#13;
quality service," emphasized&#13;
Thomas. "We provide an outset&#13;
where children can be&#13;
children. We provide them&#13;
with a childhood."&#13;
The center has 117 full and&#13;
part time children enrolled,&#13;
and has forty five trained&#13;
staff members. The hours are&#13;
Monday-Thursday from 7:30&#13;
a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and Friday&#13;
from 7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.&#13;
The center has also an eveing&#13;
program that was just recently&#13;
put together. The evening&#13;
program provides services&#13;
on Wednesday and&#13;
Thursday night from 5:30&#13;
p.m.-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Page 2... Page 11...&#13;
Parking Player of the&#13;
week&#13;
2 Thursday, September 14, 1989 Ranger&#13;
Parking at Parkside&#13;
Many of us are used to the parking crunch that normally&#13;
occurs at the start of each new semester. However, we&#13;
expected that the problem would be rectified by the revamping&#13;
of the university parking procedure. What actually&#13;
happened is quite the opposite.&#13;
Prior to this academic year we received notice in the&#13;
mail which said that there would no longer be different&#13;
types of parking permits for students. The green permits&#13;
have been done away with in an effort to improve the&#13;
parking situation. So far, we at the Ranger have not seen&#13;
any improvement made by this change. Instead what has&#13;
resulted is a dog fight for parking spaces. Cars circle the&#13;
lots like vultures waiting for a spot to open. This causes a&#13;
hazard to pedestrians and motorists alike. The abolition of&#13;
the green permits also caused the hundreds of students to&#13;
pay an extra twenty dollars only to find they still have to&#13;
wait in the Tallent lot for the shuttle bus. Why even park&#13;
at school if you end up taking a bus for part of the way&#13;
anyway. In our opinion, it is not worth sixty dollars a year&#13;
to park that far away.&#13;
What the situation essentially boils down to is this. The&#13;
students that end up parking in the Tallent lot are always&#13;
going to be in the Tallent lot for the remainder of the&#13;
semester. Why should these people pay the same amount&#13;
for parking privileges as the people who park in the closer&#13;
lots.&#13;
To some people, the new system may seem more fair&#13;
than the old system based on a first come, first served&#13;
basis. We feel that if most students know that their&#13;
classes begin later in the day, they should have access to&#13;
some form of alternative parking.&#13;
South African police f hen&#13;
exercising restraint: [&#13;
A look at the Parkside parking rit-ual&#13;
by Lyna Paukstelis&#13;
Picture yourself on a journey, a journey beyond sight&#13;
and sound. A journey whose wonderous lands are that of&#13;
imagination. You are about to enter the Parkside Parking&#13;
Zone.&#13;
Submitted for your approval, one Connie Swale, the&#13;
kind of person that's never late for class, doesn't eat&#13;
sweets, doesn't drink and flosses after every meal, your&#13;
average run of the mill student. She thought it would be&#13;
just another day, she thought she'd find a parking space.&#13;
But what is awaiting Connie ahead will take all of her&#13;
skills as a driver, all of her patience, all of her courage,&#13;
for she is about to enter something so terrifying that&#13;
you'd only read about it in the Ranger. Look a little&#13;
closer, signed on her ticket, given by the kiddie kops, Welcome&#13;
to the "Parkside Parking Zone!!"&#13;
The early morning sun glistens off of Connie's parking&#13;
sticker. Life is good. No worries to cloud her mind, just&#13;
the brisk feeling of the wind on her face as she sings Bon&#13;
Jovi with the radio.&#13;
And then she sees 52 Parkside students fighting for the&#13;
only remaining parking space. Her heart begins to beat,&#13;
her palms begin to sweat, her chest begins to heave and a&#13;
prayer escapes her lips. "Oh God, why did I pay $60 for a&#13;
sticker that was suppose to serve me better! Please God,&#13;
just this once, let me find a parking space only a mile&#13;
from my class!!"&#13;
Soon, the sky darkened and as if God had considered&#13;
the request and refused it, like so many parking appeals,&#13;
the clouds parted and a thunderous voice bellowed, "Are&#13;
you kidding?"&#13;
So, disillusioned and disheartened she went on her way.&#13;
Bon Jovi was replaced with Metallica and a new road&#13;
warrior was born.&#13;
She drove for what seemed to be like hours, days,&#13;
months, years...to Tallent Hall.&#13;
"O.K. Even Phy. Ed. was full! This is war! I'm mad as&#13;
hell and I'm not going to take it anymore!!!"&#13;
Her foot hit the gas as she flew through the parking lot,&#13;
past the signs that said "We really feel sorry for you!",&#13;
even past the shuttle bus fothe shuttle bus, but there was&#13;
not a space to be found. Connie glanced at the shuttle bus&#13;
for those students who were lucky enough to be packed in&#13;
like sardines. Then she saw it, the overflow parking signs.&#13;
She followed the signs for miles, not knowing where&#13;
they would take her. She started to worry once she passed&#13;
the "You are now leaving the state" marker, but then she&#13;
saw it, the end of her journey. On the horizon she saw university&#13;
buildings!&#13;
When she got there, there were no lines, no car wars,&#13;
there were enough spaces for everyone. "This must be&#13;
heaven!" she exclaimed. "Look I can actually see the&#13;
buildings! What a great day! And I only had to leave&#13;
three hours before my class to make it here on time!''&#13;
She locked her car, like any responsible motorist, and&#13;
whistled "Wanted Dead or Alive" as she entered the&#13;
building. Soon, she realized that everything looked&#13;
strange to her. There was no Main Place, no Comm. Arts,&#13;
no Greenquist Hall. She wandered around feeling wierd&#13;
and alone.&#13;
"Could they have remodeled in just one weekend? At&#13;
Parkside? No way!"&#13;
She thought and thought, and then she past a sign that&#13;
said, "Welcome to Carthage College, your parking space&#13;
away from Parkside."&#13;
"What?! Carthage College? Maybe that's why I parked&#13;
my car with a great view of the beach. Maybe that's why&#13;
they handed me a life preserver as I drove in, in case I&#13;
slipped and fell into the lake. Maybe that's why I'm late&#13;
for my 'Parking is no excuse to be tardy' class!!"&#13;
As she walked back to her car, she thought of the nightmare&#13;
that awaits her back at Parkside. She thought of the&#13;
kiddie kops smiling as they happily give out their quota of&#13;
"illegal parking" tickets. She thought of what was meant&#13;
by "to better serve you" in the letter she received. She&#13;
thought of how nice it would be to actually park on&#13;
campus. She also thought that if she transferred to another&#13;
university she might not have to get to school six&#13;
hours in advance, or that she wouldn't have to sleep in&#13;
her space all night. ,&#13;
As she drove back, she had that strange feeling of deja&#13;
vu when she saw Outer Loop Road backed up to the Regency&#13;
Mall.&#13;
Taken with as much anticipation as waiting to-hear the&#13;
sound of "have a nitie Christmas" on the last day of&#13;
finals, Connie waits for a parking space, and she will continue&#13;
to wait in the outer terranian lots that can only be&#13;
found in the Outer Limits...oops, wrong show, in the lost&#13;
chapters of, "The Parkside Parking Zone."&#13;
Apology...&#13;
An open letter of a pology:&#13;
The 1989-90 Ranger Editorial&#13;
staff would like to take this&#13;
opportunity to apologize to&#13;
the students, faculty and staff&#13;
of UW-Parkside for articles&#13;
that appeared in the final&#13;
issue of the 1988-89 Ranger.&#13;
We hope that any misunderstandings&#13;
that arose due to&#13;
the content of the articles and&#13;
other sections of the paper&#13;
are laid to rest. We, on the&#13;
1989-90 Ranger staff, hope to&#13;
bring you objective articles&#13;
and editorials about the&#13;
campus and community for&#13;
whom we serve. What occurred&#13;
in the last issue of t he&#13;
1988-89 Ranger should not&#13;
occur in a professional newspaper&#13;
or any paper which is&#13;
liable for what it prints. A&#13;
newspaper should be a source&#13;
of information; it should not&#13;
be a forum.to print views of&#13;
personal expression, except&#13;
in cases where it is in editorial&#13;
form and well researched.&#13;
We apologize for any misunderstandings&#13;
and hope your&#13;
readership continues.&#13;
1989-90 Ranger Editorial Staff&#13;
Advertising doesn't cost&#13;
in the Ranger, It pays, call&#13;
553-2295, for a tailored&#13;
ad package just for you.&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Steve DeAngelis Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Dan Chiappetta News Editor&#13;
Dan Pacetti Copy Editor&#13;
Suzanne Mantuano Feature Editor&#13;
Dawn Mailand Entertainment Editor&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann Sports Editor&#13;
John Kehoe Photo Editor&#13;
Scott Singer Asst.News Editor&#13;
Jeff Reddick Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Craig Simpkins Business Manager&#13;
Teri Fortney Ad Rep.&#13;
Carol Curi .....Ad Rep.&#13;
Barbi Keller Ad Rep.&#13;
cv and content "ins nnhikhprl W-IJitaHe. wf° solely responsible tor its editorial poll-&#13;
,jayS published every Thurs day during the academic year except over breaks and ho iileSmus/&#13;
be s?a r^dWwit?f a3fpi ifhthey are.typed&lt; double-spaced and 350 words or less. A ll&#13;
held upon request ' P ber included ,or verificat'on purposes. Names will be withfamat9oryreSerVeS&#13;
th® r'9ht t0 edit letters and refuse those which afe false and/or de-&#13;
Thursday. f°r a" 'etterS' a"d C,aSSified ads"is Monday at 10 a-m- tor publication&#13;
Ranger Thursday, September 14,1989 3&#13;
Student Community Services encourages student involvement&#13;
Suzanne Mantuano&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
The main reason Student&#13;
Community Se vices (SCS)&#13;
began is because Gloria&#13;
Ramirez, executive director&#13;
of Kenosha Voluntary Action&#13;
Center (KVAC) felt the need&#13;
to get students involved in the&#13;
community.&#13;
"It (SCS) started because&#13;
Gloria and her board felt the&#13;
need for the student population&#13;
to be more involved in&#13;
the community," said Carol&#13;
Engberg, Director of SCS.&#13;
SCS, which is located in the&#13;
Career Center at Parkside,&#13;
began on August 1, 1988, and&#13;
it's been growing stronger&#13;
ever since. One major goal&#13;
that Engberg had set for herself&#13;
was to have at least 120&#13;
students participate in the&#13;
program. The total number of&#13;
students actually participating&#13;
in the program in its first&#13;
year of operation was 140.&#13;
Though the majority of the&#13;
students who are involved in&#13;
SCS are Parkside students,&#13;
there are also volunteers&#13;
from Gateway and Carthage.&#13;
"I've had two students&#13;
from Carthage, only because&#13;
I'm not over there. I made&#13;
contact through a club, went&#13;
over there and did recruit two&#13;
from one of the clubs," Engberg&#13;
said. "I also have four&#13;
from Gateway. It was just&#13;
word of mouth. They heard&#13;
about it, I met them, interviewed&#13;
them, and placed&#13;
them in agencies."&#13;
There are four main reasons&#13;
why college students do&#13;
volunteer work. First of all,&#13;
some college students want to&#13;
be of service to others, without&#13;
thought of reward.&#13;
"Believe it or not, there are&#13;
many who come in and say, 'I&#13;
just want to do something&#13;
good for somebody,' " said&#13;
Engberg, "I didn't know how&#13;
much of that type of response&#13;
I would actually get."&#13;
Secondly, they are interested&#13;
in career development.&#13;
College students often ask&#13;
themselves, "Have I made&#13;
the right choice?" SCS helps&#13;
them answer that question&#13;
through volunteer work.&#13;
The third category includes&#13;
students who want experience&#13;
in a specific field for future&#13;
employment and/or to gain&#13;
entrance into certain studies.&#13;
Engberg said, "Seniors will&#13;
come in and say, 'I'm graduating&#13;
in psychology, but I&#13;
don't have anything on my&#13;
resume'.' I put them into&#13;
community centers, agencies&#13;
that are working with alcohol&#13;
problems, battered children&#13;
or women, and all of this&#13;
looks great on a resume'.&#13;
They have hands-on experience&#13;
and great references."&#13;
Last but not least, students&#13;
may also be required by professors&#13;
to complete a specific&#13;
number of hours of volunteer&#13;
work for class credit.&#13;
"There is a direct link between&#13;
what they (professors)&#13;
are teaching and what the&#13;
community is offering their&#13;
students," Engberg said.&#13;
Some of the professors&#13;
using the program include&#13;
Bruce Strom for Human Development,&#13;
Lana Rakow for a&#13;
Communications and Social&#13;
Change class, Carol Lee Saffioti-&#13;
Hughes for her Freshman&#13;
Seminar in Women's&#13;
Studies and Venkat Subramanian&#13;
for his Management Information&#13;
Systems class. SCS&#13;
was originally started to aid&#13;
college students in the Kenosha&#13;
area. Engberg immediately&#13;
saw a problem with this&#13;
when she realized that sixty&#13;
percent of Parkside students&#13;
are Racine residents. As a result,&#13;
Engberg added agencies&#13;
in Racine to her list of active&#13;
Kenosha agencies. The stu-&#13;
• d ent program agency list includes&#13;
the Alcohol and Drug&#13;
Council, Bradford High&#13;
School, Girl Scouts, Kenosha&#13;
Youth Foundation, Kenosha&#13;
Hospital, Women's Horizons,&#13;
Big Brothers/Big Sisters, Orphan&#13;
Kanines and the Red&#13;
Cross. Kenosha is represented&#13;
by about eighty agencies&#13;
and Racine by about fortyfive.&#13;
The agencies involved in&#13;
SCS submit requests to Engberg&#13;
regarding the volunteer&#13;
work each agency most&#13;
needs. The requests run the&#13;
gamut from animal care to&#13;
music coach, from interpreters&#13;
to AIDS presenters.&#13;
An AIDS presenter is someone&#13;
who gives presentations&#13;
on what AIDS is, how it is&#13;
contracted and what precautions&#13;
can be taken in dealing&#13;
with it. Through the Red&#13;
Cross, videos are used and&#13;
handouts given by the volunteer&#13;
presenter.&#13;
"In the Milwaukee and&#13;
Chicago areas, AIDS facilitators&#13;
start at somewhere between&#13;
$25,000-$50,000 a year,"&#13;
Engberg said. "There is one&#13;
bonus that I don't promise,&#13;
but I can see it down the line&#13;
already. When a good student&#13;
goes into an agency and does&#13;
a great job as a volunteer,&#13;
they may have a job waiting&#13;
after graduation."&#13;
In order to become a volunteer,&#13;
a student must adhere&#13;
to the policies of the program.&#13;
First, the student is interviewed&#13;
by Engberg to&#13;
determine interests, skills&#13;
and the student's choice of&#13;
placement Then a telephone&#13;
contact Is made by Engberg&#13;
with an agency, and a time is&#13;
set for an interview between&#13;
the agency and student.&#13;
Hours of work are arranged,&#13;
and a training session is set&#13;
up, if necessary. A volunteer's&#13;
work day can onlyrange&#13;
from one to three hours&#13;
a week, depending on the student's&#13;
schedule. Next, there&#13;
is a follow-up call from Engberg&#13;
to inquire about the volunteer's&#13;
progress. Often,&#13;
Engberg visits the volunteer&#13;
on the job.&#13;
"I do stress to students that&#13;
if they can't make it and they&#13;
(the agency) were expecting&#13;
you, always call, never just&#13;
not show up," Engberg said.&#13;
"It's a job and they are part&#13;
of a staff. They must treat it&#13;
that way."&#13;
Though SCS began one year&#13;
ago, there are no signs of it&#13;
or Engberg slowing down.&#13;
"I think we are on the edge&#13;
of something great. It (SCS)&#13;
could be an example for other&#13;
universities that want to get&#13;
involved in something like&#13;
this," Engberg said. "This&#13;
program was evaluated in&#13;
February by our main office&#13;
in Milwaukee, and they feel it&#13;
cannot fail."&#13;
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Ranger Thursday, September 14,1989 5&#13;
Gerard makes first dance of the year one of Parkside's best&#13;
By Dawn Mailand&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
For those of you who were&#13;
not at the dance last Friday&#13;
night, you missed an excellent&#13;
show. "Gerard" surprised&#13;
everyone that came to&#13;
the dance. They started playing&#13;
around 9:15 p.m., and&#13;
didn't stop until after 12:30&#13;
a.m. (under protest from the&#13;
audience). The attendence&#13;
was well over 300 people.&#13;
What did they do that was&#13;
so surprising? Well, it was a&#13;
number of things. First, when&#13;
they started to play, groups&#13;
of people came right out onto&#13;
the dance floor instead of&#13;
waiting to hear what the band&#13;
sounded like. Second, they&#13;
stayed out there for the entire&#13;
dance. Very few people sat&#13;
down between songs. Next,&#13;
"Gerard" played an entire&#13;
set of original music, and&#13;
everyone was still dancing.&#13;
Anyone whose been to our&#13;
dances knows how hard it is&#13;
to keep the crowd on the&#13;
floor.&#13;
When asked how and why&#13;
they chose certain music for&#13;
the group, Todd Michael, or&#13;
"Science" (his stage name),&#13;
replied, "personal taste is a&#13;
large part." Bob Rouse,&#13;
("Bob Condo") added, "We&#13;
listen to the music that is currently&#13;
popular, and see if it&#13;
would work for us."&#13;
"Gerard" just started playing&#13;
a full set of original music&#13;
about three weeks ago. At&#13;
first they were unsure how it&#13;
would go over with the&#13;
crowds, but Mike Heidemon,&#13;
("Mr. Hyde"), mentioned&#13;
that every place they've&#13;
played has loved it.&#13;
The band was originally&#13;
formed eight years ago by&#13;
two brothers and has slowly&#13;
evolved from there. The only&#13;
true veteran is Bill Gerard,&#13;
the sound engineer. However,&#13;
the "new Gerard" is only&#13;
four and a half years old.&#13;
Keedy, the lead female&#13;
singer, has been with the&#13;
band since this change.&#13;
For anyone interested, here&#13;
is a complete listing of all the&#13;
members in the band. They&#13;
are: Keedy, Becky Smith&#13;
(Ms. Thang), Eric Jordon&#13;
(Benet), todd Michael&#13;
(Science), Mike Heidemon&#13;
(Mr. Hyde), Bob Rouse (Bob&#13;
Condo), Tony Roland, Bill&#13;
Gerard and Gran Bourne.&#13;
"Gerard" put out a record&#13;
a few years ago, but has not&#13;
made anything recently. They&#13;
are, however, making some&#13;
demo tapes and trying to put&#13;
together a record deal.&#13;
With "Gerard's" sound,&#13;
they shouldn't have too much&#13;
trouble. Those of you who&#13;
were at the dance might have&#13;
seen the computer that was&#13;
on the stage. They started&#13;
using the computer a few&#13;
years ago when technology&#13;
became more modern. Sometimes&#13;
they have trouble getting&#13;
a full rehearsal in, and&#13;
they are able to simulate the&#13;
sound of those missing by&#13;
using the computer. The&#13;
music played by the drums,&#13;
keyboards and guitars is programmed&#13;
into the computer&#13;
so if members are missing,&#13;
the sound is still the same.&#13;
"Gerard" mentioned that&#13;
they remember things about&#13;
each gig that they play.&#13;
They've played in some&#13;
unique places, including at&#13;
the racetrack and on a beach&#13;
five feet from the water.&#13;
When asked what they would&#13;
remember about Parkside,&#13;
they said that the open, responsive&#13;
welcoming of the&#13;
crowd will stay in their&#13;
minds.&#13;
We'll be in great shape if&#13;
every dance is as successful&#13;
as this one. "Gerard" was&#13;
definitely a hit!&#13;
Anthony Brown named new director of CECA&#13;
by Scott Singer&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
A new director has been appointed&#13;
to the Center for&#13;
Educational and Cultural Advancement&#13;
(CECA) this year.&#13;
Anthony Brown is the new director&#13;
for the organization,&#13;
which provides a wide array&#13;
of educational and cultural&#13;
services.&#13;
Brown has had a successful&#13;
and varied career before&#13;
coming to Parkside. After&#13;
graduating from the State&#13;
University of New York at&#13;
Buffalo, Brown went on to&#13;
work there as an admissions&#13;
advisor for seven years. He&#13;
then took a leave of absence&#13;
to seek other possible places&#13;
of employment. Although up&#13;
for permanent appointment,&#13;
Brown said he "wanted a&#13;
change of scenery...I was&#13;
ready to see other university&#13;
systems".&#13;
His search lead him to the&#13;
UW-System and then specifically&#13;
to Parkside, where he&#13;
became the director of the&#13;
Educational Opportunities&#13;
Center from December 1988&#13;
to August 1989. He moved on&#13;
August l, filling the vacancy&#13;
of the position he now holds.&#13;
In addition to his work experience,&#13;
Brown holds a degree&#13;
in Business Administration&#13;
and a Masters in Vocational&#13;
and Technical Education.&#13;
He was also the director&#13;
of the Upward Bound program&#13;
while at Buffalo.&#13;
Already Brown has been&#13;
busy in his new position.&#13;
After taking over for Elaine&#13;
Miller, who was acting director,&#13;
Brown said "tutors have&#13;
been hired, and we are the&#13;
only department on campus&#13;
that puts out information on&#13;
student support to the entire&#13;
campus".&#13;
Another program that&#13;
"CECA and Brown have been&#13;
working on is the Minority&#13;
Admissions Review Subcommittee&#13;
(MARS). Brown commented&#13;
that CECA will be&#13;
"looking for more students&#13;
working with MARS. The&#13;
number of minorities has increased,&#13;
partly because of the&#13;
MARS program".&#13;
Brown hopes to help minorities&#13;
to become more involved&#13;
on campus, including,&#13;
"helping them find work on&#13;
campus, and trying to center&#13;
on campus based activities".&#13;
Besides co-advising such organizations,&#13;
as the Black Student&#13;
Organization (BAO),&#13;
Brown wants to develop "on&#13;
campus internships"&#13;
Other activities that Brown&#13;
wants to work on include:&#13;
sensitivity workshops, career&#13;
planning and placement, and&#13;
National Hispanic Week. For&#13;
more information on these or&#13;
other activities, interested&#13;
persons can contact CECA&#13;
and Anthony Brown in the&#13;
CECA office, located in&#13;
WLLC D194.&#13;
Parkside minority student population increasing&#13;
by Karen Colvin&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
By the fifth day of classes&#13;
last year there were 120 Hispanics,&#13;
161 blacks, 12 Indians,&#13;
and 56 Asian students enrolled&#13;
at Parkside. As of the&#13;
first day of this year there&#13;
are 132 Hispanics, 168 Blacks,&#13;
13 Indian, and 61 Asian students&#13;
on campus. This is an&#13;
increase of 21 percent in just&#13;
one year. There has also been&#13;
an upswing in the number of&#13;
minority faculty and staff.&#13;
Anthony Brown says that&#13;
the Design for Diversity plan&#13;
is the reason for this. It is&#13;
also the key to persuading&#13;
minority students currently&#13;
enrolled in the U.W. system&#13;
to stay here. There are several&#13;
steps to the Design for&#13;
Diversity plan, and it is their&#13;
combination that make it&#13;
work.&#13;
The Ethnic Studies Center&#13;
blends racially associated&#13;
material into courses already&#13;
taught here. One such class,&#13;
call American Minorty&#13;
Groups, is in very high demand.&#13;
It is so popular that&#13;
teachers and staff are currently&#13;
enrolled as students.&#13;
Parkside has developed a&#13;
special administrative process&#13;
for minority students.&#13;
The process involves carefully&#13;
monitoring special&#13;
tutors and study groups available&#13;
to keep the students on&#13;
the right track. Enrollees admitted&#13;
through this process&#13;
can also receive special counseling&#13;
about day to day problems&#13;
that majority students&#13;
won't normally face.&#13;
Dorm life is changing too.&#13;
Fully ten percent of students&#13;
living on campus are nonwhite.&#13;
To make is easier for&#13;
them, the dorms have&#13;
adopted a minority student&#13;
advisor. .&#13;
The state and federal governments&#13;
are also mandating&#13;
ways to persuade minority&#13;
students to stay in the UW&#13;
System. They provide 85 percent&#13;
of the financial aid funds&#13;
available for minority students.&#13;
There are special&#13;
scholarships available only to&#13;
non-white students.&#13;
There is a new discipline&#13;
system at Parkside. The&#13;
UWS-17 states that racism&#13;
will not be tolerated. "This is&#13;
one thing that I hope we&#13;
won't have to experience,"&#13;
said Brown. "Design for Diversity&#13;
is a step in the right&#13;
direction."&#13;
College Students&#13;
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M-W-F 8:30-3:30 T-TH 10-5:30&#13;
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6 Thursday, September 14,1989 Ranger -&#13;
Cluh Monday Night Football begins in Union Square&#13;
** The Drizes to be given away&#13;
est, there a possibilit Events CLUB EVENTS&#13;
International Affairs:&#13;
Yes, gang, It's time to regroup. CIA&#13;
will be holding Its first meeting on&#13;
September 15 at noon. In Molinaro 112.&#13;
Slated for this meeting are the election&#13;
of 1089-1090 officers, and some&#13;
work on the Model Organization of&#13;
American States. Any Parkslde student&#13;
or faculty member interested in&#13;
international affairs or the Model OAS&#13;
should attend this meeting or call&#13;
Laura Klrchoff at 633-3765.&#13;
Parkslde Adult Student Alliance:&#13;
PASA's first meeting of the year will&#13;
be held on September 20 at 12:00 in&#13;
Molinaro 111 (Faculty Lounge).&#13;
Please attend and help us start the&#13;
year right.&#13;
Molecular Biology Club:&#13;
The Molecular Biology Club will hold&#13;
their first meeting on Tuesday, September&#13;
19 In Molinaro 161 at noon. All&#13;
present members are encouraged to&#13;
attend and a warm welcome is extended&#13;
to any prospective new members.&#13;
Those wishing to join need only&#13;
to be a registered student at Parkslde&#13;
In the area of biological sciences. This&#13;
meeting will give everyone a chance&#13;
to meet the new officers and brainstorm&#13;
on new activities and programs.&#13;
Bring a sack lunch, and the&#13;
pop and dessert will be furnished!&#13;
Submitted by Katherine Turk, President&#13;
of the Molecular Biology Club.&#13;
Correction&#13;
PI Sigma Epsllon - Marketing Fraternity&#13;
meets every Wednesday at noon&#13;
in Molinaro D137 instead of the aforementioned&#13;
Sept. 5 issue stating that&#13;
meetings occured on a monthly basis.&#13;
We're starting an Al-Anon group at&#13;
Parkslde. We will meet on Mondays&#13;
from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. in Molinaro 217.&#13;
SOG would like to apologize for omitting&#13;
the following clubs:&#13;
Anthropology Club:&#13;
Purpose of Club: To share information&#13;
and ideas about anthropology&#13;
with interested faculty, staff, students&#13;
and members, as well as giving the&#13;
same ability to hear speakers in various&#13;
topics and doing projects which&#13;
will help In future field experiences.&#13;
Black Student Organization:&#13;
Purpose of Organization: To organize,&#13;
motivate and unify minority students&#13;
to speak to the Issues and policies affecting&#13;
them as students at Parkside.&#13;
In addition, BSO plans a variety of Intellectually&#13;
stimulating cultural,&#13;
social and recreational activities to&#13;
meet the needs and Interests of minority&#13;
students at the university.&#13;
"NEW CLUB" - Volleyball Club:&#13;
Purpose of Club: To create a social,&#13;
recreational and semi-competitive environment&#13;
for UW-Parkside students.&#13;
In other words, have a good time,&#13;
meet people and play some serious VBall.&#13;
"UPCOMING CLUB" - Photography&#13;
Club:&#13;
Purpose: Remains to be seen! If&#13;
you're an Interested photo buff, contact&#13;
John Kehoe In the Ranger office -&#13;
553-2295!!&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
Joe Cool: The whimsical and fanciful&#13;
one has a name. It's Woodstock!&#13;
Rick and Kim Hendrlckson: Have a&#13;
nice life together. The gang!&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
DISC JOCKEYS, weekends. Male or&#13;
female. Will train qualified people.&#13;
639-7480.&#13;
WANTED. SPRING Break sales representatives.&#13;
Earn free vacations to&#13;
Cancun, Nassau, Bermuda, and other&#13;
exciting resorts. Plus, you can earn&#13;
an average of $3,500 In commissions&#13;
working part-time. Call Vacation&#13;
Planners at 1-800-47PARTY.&#13;
BABYSITTER. Female, 15-20 hrs. a&#13;
week. Must have own transportation,&#13;
or live In Racine. 6 month-old infant.&#13;
Experience preferred. Salary negotiable.&#13;
Call 632-4835 anytime.&#13;
COLLEGE CAMPUS representative.&#13;
Earn $. Flexible hours. Fun, Enjoyable.&#13;
Rewarding. Gross up to $20,000&#13;
per year by helping friends receive&#13;
grants or scholarships. For information,&#13;
please call: (213 ) 967-2115.&#13;
Classifieds, cont. on page 9&#13;
by Brad Janowitz&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Nothing to do Monday&#13;
night? Come to the Union&#13;
Square and watch men in&#13;
football uniforms clobber&#13;
each other on a big screen&#13;
T.V. What is it? It's Monday&#13;
Night Football a £ Parkside!&#13;
That's right. Monday Night&#13;
Football has come to the&#13;
Union Square in Parkside.&#13;
Best of all, you can register&#13;
to win prizes, and even better,&#13;
it's all free.&#13;
Monday Night Football is&#13;
the brainchild of Chuck Petrach,&#13;
PAB's Sports and Recreation&#13;
Chair. Mary Ellen Wesley,&#13;
PAB Advisor, Bill Nieber&#13;
and Mike Metzenhuber, Union&#13;
Coordinators. Petrach said,&#13;
"Monday Night Football is&#13;
meant to get people involved&#13;
and make them aware of&#13;
Parkside's social facilities."&#13;
From September 11th to&#13;
December 11th, you can&#13;
watch football Monday&#13;
nights, on the Union's giant&#13;
screen T.V., and win great&#13;
^prizesjfwdoing^t^&#13;
prizes each Monday night are, a jersey&#13;
with the logo of o ne of the&#13;
teams playing that night, a&#13;
team hat, team pennants and&#13;
several food prizes. At least&#13;
one hundred dollars in prizes&#13;
will be given away each Monday&#13;
night. There is a one in&#13;
ten chance of winning. Plus,&#13;
in a few weeks, all the winners'&#13;
names will be placed in&#13;
a hat, and one name will be&#13;
drawn for tickets to the October&#13;
29th Packer's game at&#13;
County Stadium.&#13;
"If there's a strong interest,&#13;
there is a possibility of a&#13;
Pro Bowl, or Super Bowl&#13;
party," mentioned Petrach.&#13;
To find out which team is&#13;
playing on which night, you&#13;
can check the listings posted&#13;
in the Union Cafeteria, or by&#13;
the PAB office. "Hopefully&#13;
we can get lists posted in&#13;
Main Place, and in some&#13;
other places," Petrach commented.&#13;
" Monday night football is&#13;
brought to you by the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board, Parkside&#13;
Union and Parkside Food&#13;
Services.&#13;
At BANK ONE, we know&#13;
what ifs like to be a student.&#13;
Wfe also know what students lite.&#13;
So now when you open any&#13;
checking account, youH get a&#13;
free Pizza Hut pizza.&#13;
Ifs our way of introducing&#13;
you to our Student Banking program.&#13;
It features money-saving&#13;
services like our no-minimumbalance&#13;
Economy Checking&#13;
account, perfect for today's&#13;
student.&#13;
Low-interest student loans&#13;
—with approval in 24 hours&#13;
or less.&#13;
Plus a Jubilee/TYME®&#13;
pfirzezea!,&#13;
Card for easy access to your&#13;
money. Or, a student VISA&#13;
for those unexpected expenses.&#13;
Take advantage of Student&#13;
Banking by cutting out the&#13;
coupon below. Then tear into&#13;
a Pizza Hut pizza at our expense.&#13;
BANKSONE Eighte en Thousand People Who Care.&#13;
r&#13;
me^^^E^EIeg^Fi^d^Surv'iv^'^K^t0 ^ m0St °f my m°ney whUe Fm at co,le8e! Please send&#13;
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Member FD1C ©1989 BANC ONE WISCONS.N CORPORATION VISA card subject to creflt approval&#13;
Ranger Thursday, September 14, 1989 7&#13;
—————— —.i ggMggi&#13;
Parkside tries to improve parking procedures&#13;
By Michelle Renee&#13;
Degenais&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
By now, you will have&#13;
found out that a Parkside&#13;
parking permit does not guarantee&#13;
a parking space, only&#13;
the opportunity to park legally&#13;
in the Comm/Arts, Phy.&#13;
Ed., Union, or Tallent Hall&#13;
lots. You may have also&#13;
found how frustrating that opportunity&#13;
can be, especially if&#13;
you arrive late and find you&#13;
have to park a lot farther&#13;
from your classes than you&#13;
had planned. If you parked&#13;
illegally and only received a&#13;
warning ticket, consider yourself&#13;
lucky.&#13;
One of the many changes in&#13;
the system this year is the ay&#13;
tickets are being issued. Dave&#13;
Ostrowski, director of&#13;
Campus Police and Public&#13;
Safety, said there sould be&#13;
more instances of enforcement&#13;
of parking regulations&#13;
this year. In previous years,&#13;
parking violations were&#13;
issued by the full time&#13;
Campus Police officers who&#13;
were often called away to&#13;
perform other duties. This&#13;
year student officers will be&#13;
assigned specific lots to patrol&#13;
so there will be more&#13;
coverage of the parking lots&#13;
then before. This also means&#13;
a greater chance of being&#13;
ticketed if you are illegally&#13;
parked.&#13;
The use of warning tickets&#13;
has also been changed. Dur- •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Attention Students Reserve your copy now for the first day of school!&#13;
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(thicap (Tribune&#13;
3211 Washington Road Kenosha, Wl 53142 (414) 552-8211&#13;
ing the first week of school,&#13;
generally only the most flagrant&#13;
parking violations were&#13;
ticketed. The rest received&#13;
warnings. Contrary to popular&#13;
belief it is not necessary&#13;
for an officer to issue you&#13;
three warning tickets before&#13;
you can be fined. Warning&#13;
tickets are issued at the officers&#13;
discretion. An effort has&#13;
been made to ease the confusion&#13;
as to just where and&#13;
under what circumstances&#13;
you can park here on&#13;
campus.&#13;
Parking permit fees have&#13;
not increased. Green and Reserved&#13;
student permits have&#13;
been discontinued to make&#13;
the parking situation more&#13;
equitable. This means that all&#13;
students will be paying the&#13;
same fees and will have the&#13;
same opportunity to try and&#13;
park their car. This new system&#13;
has allowed the removal&#13;
of 25% of the reserved parking.&#13;
Some of which has been&#13;
converted in to regular parking&#13;
and the rest into more&#13;
Handicap parking.&#13;
There are many student&#13;
who question the need for the&#13;
amount of handicapped parking&#13;
that has been added.&#13;
What one must keep in mind&#13;
is that the number of spaces&#13;
set aside for handicapped&#13;
parking is determined by&#13;
state statue and not by Parkside.&#13;
One of the proposals Ostrowski&#13;
has introduced is the"&#13;
removal of the meters and&#13;
the establishment of a visitors&#13;
lot. This would open up&#13;
more prime parking spaces.&#13;
There are no current plans&#13;
for any other additional lots.&#13;
Here are some solutions for&#13;
coping with the current system.&#13;
Come early if you want&#13;
a space in the closest lots.&#13;
Remember Monday, Wednesday&#13;
and Friday mornings are&#13;
the worst and that the Phy.&#13;
Ed. lot is the last to fill. Be&#13;
prepared to use the shuttle,&#13;
and after shuttle hours, the&#13;
Racine bus. Part of your&#13;
parking fees go to pay for&#13;
these free services. If you&#13;
feel it is unsafe to walk to&#13;
your car at night, call for an&#13;
escort, or you can ask that&#13;
there be a patrol car out in&#13;
the lot when you leave. If&#13;
there is a reason you must&#13;
park illegally, call the&#13;
Campus police and tell where&#13;
and the reason, so that arrangements&#13;
can be made.&#13;
Car pooling and the bus are&#13;
also possibilities to be considered.&#13;
This year's new parking&#13;
system may not have solved&#13;
the problem, but it has given&#13;
all of us the same opportunity&#13;
to find or not find a parking&#13;
space.&#13;
Recruitment fair encourages&#13;
student involvement&#13;
By Dawn Mailand&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Imagine this: you hear&#13;
somebody yell, "Hey you,&#13;
come over here. Come on,&#13;
don't walk away!" No, it's&#13;
not the Bahamas or even a&#13;
nearby bar. It's the fall&#13;
semester recruitment faire.&#13;
The faire will be held on&#13;
September 20 from 9 a.m. to 3&#13;
p.m. in Main Place, this location&#13;
was chosen since most&#13;
people pass through it at least&#13;
once throughout the day.&#13;
This year's committee&#13;
chair is Paul Ziemer. His&#13;
first involvement with the&#13;
faire was last spring, and he&#13;
was asked to carry on this&#13;
fall. Some of his work functions&#13;
include reserving the&#13;
large amount of tables&#13;
needed to hold the faire and&#13;
promotional artwork.&#13;
This year, there will be&#13;
prizes given for the best-looking&#13;
tables. Based on originality&#13;
and appearance. Amounts&#13;
of $25, $15, a nd $10 will be put&#13;
into the winning club or organization's&#13;
account.&#13;
Ziemer believes that everyone&#13;
whould become involved&#13;
with the clubs on campus.&#13;
"It'll help you grow and meet&#13;
people, especially if you're&#13;
new to Parkside."&#13;
While you're walking by&#13;
that day, stop at some of the&#13;
tables and talk with the people.&#13;
They're there to help you&#13;
find the feeling that you "belong."&#13;
m NDEE&#13;
LIQUOR MART&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
FOR PARKSIDE STUDENTS&#13;
* Present current Parkside I.D.&#13;
at time of purchase.&#13;
(Offer does not include items currently sale priced)&#13;
Dandee Liquor Mart • 4701 Taylor Ave.&#13;
• One mile north of KR on 22nd Ave. (Meachum)&#13;
Offer good throu October&#13;
i&#13;
8 Thursday, "September 14,1989 Ranger BS&#13;
Is druagn d alcohol abuse a problem at Parkside?&#13;
Kbyv MMQaI*rIr*yV LT . 1WX/«e*£eWd1 —I_ —. Tv»A £r% nf 4-V*4-&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
President Bush recently&#13;
* proposed a $7.9 billion national&#13;
drug strategy. This brings&#13;
up the question, is chemical&#13;
dependency a problem at&#13;
Parkside? And if so, what is&#13;
being done about it?&#13;
When interviewed, Chancellor&#13;
Kaplan stated, "We know&#13;
we have a problem with alcohol&#13;
on campus and underage&#13;
drinking in the residence&#13;
halls." This is a common&#13;
.problem in many schools and&#13;
is always an issue when mixing&#13;
underage students with&#13;
students of legal drinking&#13;
age.&#13;
"We're not going to run the&#13;
residence halls like concentration&#13;
camps. Students deserve&#13;
privacy, but if underage&#13;
drinking is taking place,&#13;
action will be taken." Depending&#13;
on the frequency of&#13;
abuse and the seriousness,&#13;
action will range from confiscation&#13;
of the alcohol to fines.&#13;
If caught drinking and driving&#13;
on campus your license&#13;
may be revoked by the&#13;
campus police.&#13;
Several students stated that&#13;
alcohol is available to underage&#13;
students if they want it.&#13;
No amount of security can&#13;
prevent all underage individuals&#13;
from obtaining alcohol.&#13;
Overall, students do not appear&#13;
to be severely abusing&#13;
alcohol in the residence halls.&#13;
It is well known that campus&#13;
police will confiscate alcohol&#13;
and issue fines if the matter&#13;
gets out of hand.&#13;
"We would be naive to assume&#13;
that we don't have people&#13;
here that are using&#13;
drugs," stated Kaplan. It has&#13;
been several years since an&#13;
arrest has been made on&#13;
campus pertaining to drugs.&#13;
Immediate action would be&#13;
taken if it was thought that&#13;
drugs were being dealt on&#13;
campus.&#13;
Punitive action will be&#13;
taken if necessary, but educational&#13;
programs are the main&#13;
emphasis. If someone is&#13;
caught using drugs, campus&#13;
police would arrest them and&#13;
turn them over to the KenoffOffiff&#13;
MHffltB&#13;
First (Financial Bank&#13;
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First Financial Bank wants to help pay your tuition! Just bring the&#13;
coupon below to any branch, or drop it in the mail-no transaction is&#13;
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is just one example of our commitment to helping Wisconsin's students—&#13;
and it offers a great way to help pay for your education.&#13;
Another example of that commitment is our easy-to-obtain Student&#13;
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Student loans are also part of our commitment. We can arrange a&#13;
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• Student MasterCard&#13;
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Please complete the following information.&#13;
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• freshman • senior&#13;
• sophomore • graduate student&#13;
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Deposit your entry at any First Financial office, or mail to:&#13;
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One entry per student. Maximum prize is S700. Entries must be received by&#13;
October 20.1989. Drawing will be held on October 31. 1989. and winner will be&#13;
notified by mall. Sweepstakes void where prohibited by law. You must be a pari•&#13;
or full-time college student to enter.&#13;
KN&#13;
sha Police. The fact that we&#13;
are a non-residential university&#13;
may be a reason the arrest&#13;
rate is so low. This may&#13;
be due to a lower student concentration.&#13;
Students stated that marijuana&#13;
is not obviously apparent&#13;
at residence hall parties,&#13;
but students do smoke pot.&#13;
The majority felt that pot was&#13;
used but was definitely not&#13;
sold on campus.&#13;
Federal law dictates that a&#13;
federally funded school must&#13;
develop educational pro-&#13;
Drugs, cont. on page 9&#13;
Should Cocaine&#13;
be legalized?&#13;
The notion of legalizing cocaine&#13;
and other drugs to solve&#13;
the country's drug problems&#13;
has generated just as much&#13;
debate as President Bush's&#13;
war on drugs.&#13;
Recently, some local governments&#13;
have reduced the&#13;
penalties for possession of&#13;
small amount of marijuana&#13;
becaust strict enforcement of&#13;
marijuana laws did not seem&#13;
to be worth the financialand&#13;
social costs.&#13;
The legalization of cocaine&#13;
and other drugs would simply&#13;
increase the availability of&#13;
cocaine. Some individuals&#13;
think there are potential&#13;
benefits in the legalization of&#13;
cocaine and other drugs. The&#13;
reduction of violence associated&#13;
with illegal drug sales is&#13;
one possible benefit. Other&#13;
reasons are that society&#13;
would save money on both&#13;
drug enforcement programs&#13;
and educaitonal and treatment&#13;
programs.&#13;
The Parkside community&#13;
has their own views on the&#13;
notion of legalizing cocaine&#13;
and other drugs.&#13;
"Legalizing cocaine would&#13;
make it more easier to receive&#13;
it and would definitely&#13;
lead to greater addiction,&#13;
society wouldn't be safe",&#13;
stated a junior, communication&#13;
major.&#13;
"I think cocaine should be&#13;
legalized, it would stop a lot&#13;
of violence and illegal sales.&#13;
If the person wants to use the&#13;
drug, why not, it's their&#13;
body", stated a senior, political&#13;
sience major.&#13;
Well over the majority of&#13;
the students I spoke to agreed&#13;
that the legalization of cocaine&#13;
and other drugs would&#13;
cause a more serious crisis.&#13;
To legalize cocaine would not&#13;
only cause easier availability,&#13;
but also more addiction,&#13;
which could possibly cause&#13;
more serious crimes and possibly&#13;
more deaths.&#13;
Legalizing heavy drugs,&#13;
such as cocaine and heroin&#13;
would be a major mistake,&#13;
because if it was made more&#13;
'available, more people would&#13;
use it", explained Chancellor&#13;
Shiela Kaplan. "You can easily&#13;
get addicted to alcohol and&#13;
cigarettes. Cocaine would be&#13;
twice as easy. The population&#13;
would destroy itself."&#13;
Ranger Thursday, September 14,1989 9&#13;
Suplemental Instruction gives students chance to teach others&#13;
by Scott Singer&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
Looking for a way to improve&#13;
grades this semester?&#13;
Or hoping to ease the transition&#13;
from high school to college?&#13;
Supplemental Instruction&#13;
(SI) just might be the answer.&#13;
Currently offered for a&#13;
small selection of classes, SI&#13;
is run by Sandra Burmeister,&#13;
Director of Learning Assistance,&#13;
and Doris Nice, Mathematician.&#13;
Started 12 years&#13;
ago at the University of Missouri-&#13;
Kansas City (UMKC),&#13;
SI is not a remedial program,&#13;
but a program to bring together&#13;
students in a group to&#13;
help each other learn.&#13;
At Parkside there are currently&#13;
five classes which SI is&#13;
available for. These classes&#13;
are: "The Evolution of the&#13;
U.S. 1607-1865" (86-101 sections&#13;
03 and 04), "General&#13;
Physics I" (67-201-01), " Intro&#13;
to Humanities" (40-101-01),&#13;
"Calculus and Analytical Geometry&#13;
I" (66-221-03), and&#13;
"Calculus and Analytical Geometry&#13;
II" (66-222-01).&#13;
Each of these groups is&#13;
lead by a student who is well&#13;
versed in the area. These&#13;
group leaders attend class,&#13;
follow the readings, and take&#13;
notes to keep up to the class.&#13;
These students are: Donna&#13;
Bahr, Ron Gaffney, Christine&#13;
Henning, Dan Mattson, and&#13;
Laura Dallas.&#13;
Each leader is trained in&#13;
methods of stimulating the&#13;
students and leading discussion.&#13;
The leaders are reimbursed&#13;
for their services&#13;
through either a wage or&#13;
through credit in the -form of&#13;
an Independent Study credit.&#13;
Also, some of the leaders who&#13;
are doing it for credit do not&#13;
need the credit, and are doing&#13;
it to help the other students&#13;
out.&#13;
"It's one of those things&#13;
that if I had the money I&#13;
would love to have a larger&#13;
program and staff," Burmeister&#13;
said. The classes that are&#13;
selected are ones that the supervisors&#13;
of the program&#13;
have choosen because they&#13;
are "difficult classes, but&#13;
good solid classes that are&#13;
necessary for students to succeed&#13;
in to be able to continue&#13;
in the major or discipline that&#13;
that they have chosen," Burmeister&#13;
said.&#13;
"Students can begin coming&#13;
to SI anytime, they don't&#13;
have to feel that because they&#13;
didn't come the first time&#13;
that they can't start any&#13;
time," Burmeister said.&#13;
While the SI sessions are&#13;
there to help the students,&#13;
penalty will not be given for&#13;
not attending. Burmeister&#13;
also stressed that no extra&#13;
credit would be given to the&#13;
students who did attend SI&#13;
versus those who do not.&#13;
The benefits of SI have&#13;
been shown to be great. In&#13;
the past, students who have&#13;
participated in the program&#13;
achieved "a half to a full letter&#13;
grade higher," than students&#13;
with similar situations,&#13;
but that did not participate,&#13;
said Burmeister.&#13;
To participate in SI, youmust&#13;
be in one of classes it is&#13;
offered for. To find out more&#13;
information or to participate,&#13;
contact your instructor, or&#13;
the SI group leader.&#13;
Professor Kummings publishes book of poetry&#13;
Professor Kummings&#13;
Compiled By&#13;
Craig Simpkins&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Dr. Donald D. Kumminhgs&#13;
professor of English and a&#13;
recognized Midwest poet, is&#13;
the author of a collection of 20&#13;
poems titled "The Open Road&#13;
Trip" recently published by&#13;
Geryon Press, Tunnel, N.Y.&#13;
The work explores the joy&#13;
and despair of intimate relationships,&#13;
the deaths of Kummings'&#13;
father and son, travel&#13;
experiences in Mexico and&#13;
the Bahama Islands and the&#13;
excesses of modern culture.&#13;
Kummings, who came to&#13;
UW-Parkside in 1970, has had&#13;
his poetry published in such&#13;
magazines as Bitterroot,&#13;
Poetry Now, The Spoon River&#13;
Quarterly, The West Hills Review,&#13;
and The Wormwood Review,&#13;
and in several anthologies&#13;
including Mandala (Harper&#13;
&amp; Row), The Landlocked&#13;
Heart (Indiana University)&#13;
and LIT (Harper and Row).&#13;
An international authority&#13;
on the American poet Walt&#13;
Whitman, Kummings has lectured&#13;
at a Modern Language&#13;
Association convention in&#13;
Comics... Jim's Journal&#13;
I'm &lt;T»w\.&#13;
A"""&#13;
TKis i* +K*&#13;
journal of my&#13;
liftto&#13;
d*tt. X+&#13;
via* o|e*y.&#13;
X cavne home&#13;
a*A vm+ohod TV&#13;
e*t* +Kou$k X&#13;
like&#13;
if. _ ^&#13;
Today X went to&#13;
my €K«*ese KistnrtJ&#13;
cla**-&#13;
Then X ordered&#13;
*p»*ia and it&#13;
tvatty kit tkt&#13;
epot.&#13;
•"A&#13;
Thepnfesorwrcte&#13;
on an oterken*&#13;
projector.&#13;
1\ w«svi-t focused&#13;
&lt;i€fy well, «*at&#13;
k*i ftvAte se*i*9&#13;
wVust sk« Mi&#13;
Vtrttifc)*&#13;
All tke takt*&#13;
wet off -too, ««J&#13;
1 r e c s W s&#13;
d««PT&#13;
L*s"t wi^Wt wsy&#13;
roowvwxtfe&#13;
ffowiUed i*&#13;
«Vwl l**1'&#13;
L1J1r1Jj fil&#13;
He tkreviopand&#13;
'then passed out&#13;
1W\S moraine ke&#13;
aot vp and told&#13;
me tWe it wbat&#13;
fell naild be like&#13;
He alco raid he&#13;
Had a pretty&#13;
9*«d time.&#13;
rlH&#13;
Washington D.C., the Walt&#13;
Whitman House in Camden,&#13;
N.J., and the Gorky Institute&#13;
of World Literature in Moscow,&#13;
USSR. He has published&#13;
more that 20 articles on Whitman&#13;
and two books: "Walt&#13;
Whitman, 1940-1975: A Reference&#13;
Guide" and "Approaches&#13;
to Teaching Whitman's&#13;
Leaves of Grass."&#13;
Kummings has bachelor&#13;
and master's degrees in English&#13;
from Purdue University&#13;
and a doctorate in English&#13;
and American Studies from&#13;
Indiana University. At Pur-&#13;
Drugs, from page 8&#13;
grams related to alcohol and&#13;
drug abuse. Parkside has recently&#13;
hired an alcohol and&#13;
drug specialist to develop&#13;
educational programs for&#13;
staff and students.&#13;
Parkside has an excellent&#13;
program to help staff if they&#13;
have a chemical dependency.&#13;
There is not a mandatory&#13;
drug test for staff or students,&#13;
and Wisconsin law does not&#13;
state that there be one. Parkside&#13;
is currently emphasizing&#13;
educational programs and&#13;
chemical dependency prevention.&#13;
due he received the Frederick&#13;
L. Hovde Award for poetry&#13;
and at Indiana University&#13;
was the recipient of the Academy&#13;
of American Poets&#13;
Prize.&#13;
"The Open Road Trip"&#13;
comes in both paperback and&#13;
hardbound editions and is&#13;
available through Birch Bark&#13;
Books, 4101 Fifth Place,&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53142. Indiana&#13;
University was the recipient&#13;
of the Academy of American&#13;
Poets Prize.&#13;
Classifieds, from p age 6&#13;
LOOKING FOR a fraternity, sorority&#13;
or student organization that would like&#13;
to make $500-$1000 fo r a one week on&#13;
campus marketing project. Must be&#13;
organized and hard working. Call&#13;
Mark or Myra at (800 ) 592-212 1.&#13;
DEATH ROW prisoner, Caucasian&#13;
male, age 42, desires correspondence&#13;
with either male or female college&#13;
students. Wants to form a friendly&#13;
relationship and more or less just exchange&#13;
past experiences and ideas.&#13;
Will answer all letters and exchange&#13;
pictures. Prison rules require your&#13;
full name and return address on the&#13;
outside of the envelope. Write to: Jim&#13;
Jeffers, Box B 38604, Florence, AZ&#13;
85232.&#13;
CLASSIC CLEANERS in Racine is offering&#13;
a perfect job for Parkside students.&#13;
Need front counter help. Must&#13;
be neat, organized and personable.&#13;
Flexible hours to meet your schedule.&#13;
Interested persons should call Jan at&#13;
554-5150 daily 7:00-6:00.&#13;
LA &amp;C Workshops&#13;
/!r&#13;
PASSPORT&#13;
TO sums.&#13;
Organizing&#13;
for Exams&#13;
Wednesday, Oct 11&#13;
3:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m.&#13;
Monday. Dec. 4&#13;
12 noon-12:50 p.m.&#13;
How to Toko&#13;
Objective Testa&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 25&#13;
12noon-1250 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 13&#13;
3:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m.&#13;
How to Take&#13;
Essav Tests&#13;
Monday. Oct. 2&#13;
12 noon-1250 p.m. or&#13;
5:00 p.m.-5:50 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 29&#13;
12 noon-1250 p.m. or&#13;
5:00 p.m.-5:50 p.m.&#13;
NQtetaKIng&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 28&#13;
5:00 p.m.-6:30 p.m. fit&#13;
Monday and Wednesday&#13;
Sept. 25 sod 27&#13;
12noon-12:50p.m.&#13;
Meets In WLLC D150&#13;
Sign up In ARC&#13;
WLLC D150 -4&#13;
10 Thursday, September 14,1989 Ranger&#13;
Balance a key for Ranger cross-country men&#13;
by Ted Mclntyre&#13;
UW-Parkside men's coach&#13;
Lucian Rosa is not sure who&#13;
will be his top runners this&#13;
season, but so far he is not&#13;
worried. "We have no specific&#13;
top runners yet, but I'm&#13;
quite certain we will have a&#13;
good season," said Rosa.&#13;
Last year the Rangers finished&#13;
2nd in districts, qualifying&#13;
them for nationals — t hen&#13;
placed 22nd nationally.&#13;
This year the team will&#13;
start with a somewhat uphill&#13;
battle as two of its top runners&#13;
are out with Injuries.&#13;
Senior Deric Brown hurt his&#13;
back at seasons end last year&#13;
and is still sidelined. Another&#13;
injured runner is senior Chris&#13;
Henkes who is recovering&#13;
from knee surgery. Rosa is&#13;
hoping to have both of them&#13;
back by mid-season.&#13;
As far as the rest of the&#13;
team goes, Rosa was deliberate&#13;
to not give specific&#13;
names. "Everyone is running&#13;
so close that it's tough to tell&#13;
who the top seven runners&#13;
will be." It's good for the&#13;
team that they are running&#13;
closely because Rosa thinks&#13;
they are running well.&#13;
The first couple of meets&#13;
will be an indicator to Rosa&#13;
as to who has the legs to&#13;
carry Parkside to success.&#13;
"There will be no pressure&#13;
on the team and I'll use these&#13;
first couple meets to learn&#13;
about the team and get them&#13;
to work hard in the first&#13;
month," added Rosa. As far&#13;
as the teams goals, "Oh yes,&#13;
I'm very optimistic. I'm certain&#13;
we will do better than&#13;
last year."&#13;
Women eye top ranking&#13;
by Ted Mclntyre&#13;
In the past four seasons the&#13;
Parkside women's cross&#13;
country team has placed no&#13;
worse than fifth nationally,&#13;
and was first in the nation in&#13;
1986. It seems as if a tradition&#13;
of excellence has become par&#13;
for coach Mike DeWitt.&#13;
"Our number one priority&#13;
is to be in among the top four&#13;
teams in the nation", said De-&#13;
Witt of his 1989 cross country&#13;
team. Three juniors will&#13;
spearhead the effort for the&#13;
Lady Rangers. Paula Stokman&#13;
who placed 6th as an All-&#13;
Am erican last season, Jenny&#13;
Gross who was 6th in the mile&#13;
in track last season and Lori&#13;
DeBlieck who was 13th as an&#13;
All-American in cross country.&#13;
Paula's twin sister Ann&#13;
Stokman, also a junior, and&#13;
MONDA Y SPOTLIGHT&#13;
Kelly &amp; Co. to round-up Broncos&#13;
Men's Cross Country&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
Tricia Breu, a sophomore,&#13;
are going to red shirt the season&#13;
until October, but are&#13;
very promising potential. "If&#13;
these two are healthy, they&#13;
may be as strong as the other&#13;
three", remarked DeWitt.&#13;
DeWitt also mentioned&#13;
sophomore Marilynn Meyer,&#13;
and senior Stacy Kisting as&#13;
two who could possibly make&#13;
the team's top seven runners&#13;
by the time nationals roll&#13;
around. Jill Spagnolo and&#13;
Jennifer Zalewski are the&#13;
teams top freshmen.&#13;
"We should have another&#13;
strong team", said DeWitt.&#13;
"We have good depth".&#13;
Parkside will get a chance&#13;
to prove it's depth as the season&#13;
opens at noon Saturday&#13;
the 16th, at Parkside.&#13;
by Jeff Roddick&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
On Monday night two of the&#13;
fourteen undefeated teams in&#13;
the NFL will go head to head&#13;
as the Buffalo Bills take on&#13;
the Denver Broncos. The Bills&#13;
come into this game riding an&#13;
emotional high after beating&#13;
the Dolphins last Sunday on a&#13;
touchdown dive by quarterback&#13;
Jim Kelly with no time&#13;
on the clock. The Broncos&#13;
come into this game 1-0 having&#13;
turned back the Kansas&#13;
City Chiefs in a very sloppy&#13;
win.&#13;
The Bills are going to show&#13;
a slightly different look on offense&#13;
Monday as they will use&#13;
a more wide open passing offense,&#13;
something many experts&#13;
have been looking for&#13;
Marv Levy for a couple of&#13;
years. On defense the Bills&#13;
have the same members&#13;
which found them no lower&#13;
than ninth in any defensive&#13;
category last year.&#13;
The Broncos on the other&#13;
hand have a new look and its&#13;
on offense and defense as&#13;
they have 17 new faces on&#13;
this year's roster. Heavy&#13;
changes were made on the&#13;
defense which finished a miserable&#13;
27th place, but don't&#13;
look for any big improvement&#13;
this year. The offense is going&#13;
to have to put a lot of points&#13;
on the board and their going&#13;
to have to do it without a&#13;
workhorse in the backfield&#13;
(Dorsett out optimistically 8&#13;
weeks). So that leaves the&#13;
weight of the offense on, you&#13;
guessed in, John Elway and&#13;
he's proven he can't carry a&#13;
team (Superbowl XXII and&#13;
XXIII).&#13;
The keys to the game for&#13;
Denver are to prevent Jim&#13;
Kelly from picking apart the&#13;
secondary and the linebackers&#13;
to prevent Thurman&#13;
Thomas from beating them to&#13;
death out of the backfield. On&#13;
offense Elway needs time to&#13;
set up in the pocket and if his&#13;
line doesn't provide protection&#13;
it could be a long night.&#13;
The keys for the Bills will&#13;
be for Jim Kelly to be patient&#13;
in the first half and take the&#13;
short passes and draws up&#13;
the middle that the Denver&#13;
dropback zone will give him&#13;
early. On defense the Bills&#13;
must stay at home and look&#13;
for the pass and depend on&#13;
their front men to stop the&#13;
run.&#13;
But while Denver is in the&#13;
zone trying to prevent Kelly&#13;
from making the big play,&#13;
he'll be connecting on short&#13;
passes to Thurman Thomas,&#13;
which will provide long sustained&#13;
drives in the first three&#13;
quarters. And once Reeves&#13;
decides to close off the&#13;
screen, probably around half&#13;
time, there will be an air raid&#13;
in Buffalo as Kelly pummels&#13;
the Denver secondary. Elway&#13;
will still get some points on&#13;
the board, but it willbe long&#13;
after Kelly is through with&#13;
them. Look for a big first half&#13;
by Jim Kelly and Thurman&#13;
Thomas and a final score of&#13;
Buffalo 34 - Denver 14. All of&#13;
this can be seen in the Union&#13;
Square at 8 o'clock on big&#13;
screen TV.&#13;
Bowler qualifying dates set&#13;
by Jeff Reddick&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
During the Bowling Club's&#13;
most recent meeting, this&#13;
year's policy for making the&#13;
Intercollegiate Bowling Team&#13;
was finalized. In order to&#13;
qualify for this year's men's&#13;
or women's team, an individual&#13;
must have a minimum&#13;
GPA of 2.00 and carry a full&#13;
load of 12 credits. In addition,&#13;
every bowler who wishes to&#13;
bowl this year for the team&#13;
must go through a rigorous 18&#13;
game qualifying block. Those&#13;
18 games must be bowled&#13;
over the next two weekends&#13;
on any five days which have&#13;
been set aside for qualifying.&#13;
The days and times are as&#13;
follows: Friday, Sept. 15, 2-6&#13;
pm; Saturday, Sept. 16, 12-5&#13;
pm; Friday, Sept. 22, 2-6 pm;&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 23, 12-5 pm;&#13;
and Sunday, Sept. 24, 3-11 pm.&#13;
After which, each bowler&#13;
must throw six games a week&#13;
to keep a current record of&#13;
the hottest and most consistent&#13;
bowlers in the club. From&#13;
which, a bowler's 36 games&#13;
will count towards the following&#13;
event. For the first&#13;
semester, the events include&#13;
trips to St. Louis, Minneapolis,&#13;
Ohio and Las Vegas. If&#13;
you have any questions, or&#13;
would like more information,&#13;
stop down in the Rec Center&#13;
or call John Brooks, 553-&#13;
BOWL or Jeff Reddick, 553-&#13;
2876.&#13;
"THERE'S HOPE-WE CARE"&#13;
24 HOUR HOTLINE&#13;
414-658-2222&#13;
FREE PREGNANCY TEST&#13;
FREE COUNSELING ON OPTIONS&#13;
COMPLETE CONFIDENTIALITY&#13;
BABY &amp; MATERNITY CLOTHES&#13;
CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER&#13;
2222 ROOSEVELT RD. KENOSHA&#13;
Ranger Thursday, September 14, 1989 11»&#13;
Lem's Line&#13;
It's anybody's race again in AFC ' by Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
alas football fans, another&#13;
season of Parity and Prejudice&#13;
is upon us. The NFL has&#13;
definitely reached its goal of&#13;
parity as the mad scramble&#13;
for playoff spots gets underway.&#13;
Some minor changes to&#13;
contend with in the coming&#13;
weeks: penalties on the defense&#13;
if their fans cheer too&#13;
much (golf course workers&#13;
are currently being scouted&#13;
by teams to find capable personel&#13;
to hold up "quiet&#13;
please" signs in grandstand&#13;
areas), and penalties for enjoyment&#13;
in the end zone after&#13;
touchdowns (face forward&#13;
and return quietly to your&#13;
bench after reaching the end&#13;
zone, please.)&#13;
Will a .500 team again capture&#13;
the division title in the&#13;
AFC East? Will either of last&#13;
year's super two reach the&#13;
playoffs this year? Will the&#13;
Roller Domers finally put a&#13;
cage around Ditka's Cave&#13;
Dwellers? Will the once&#13;
"America's Team" ever&#13;
learn they can only play one&#13;
quarterback at a time? These&#13;
answers and more will be answered&#13;
as the NFL looks to&#13;
its January classic.&#13;
My picks? Well, since you&#13;
asked...&#13;
AFC EAST&#13;
Buffalo - An incredible defensive&#13;
line should keep things in&#13;
control for the Bills. Jim&#13;
Kelly is due to bust out for&#13;
the Bills, if he gets the time.&#13;
Will stay atop division.&#13;
Miami - A sleeper pick to&#13;
challenge after last year's&#13;
dismal showing. Marino's&#13;
"off" year should lead to big&#13;
things- in '89 with healthy&#13;
Marx brothers combo. If they&#13;
only had a D.&#13;
Indianapolis - why this team&#13;
isn't better than they play is&#13;
a mystery. With a super&#13;
charged offense featuring&#13;
Eric Dickerson and Albert&#13;
Bently, and a good defense,&#13;
this team just hasn't learned&#13;
how to win.&#13;
New England - injuries will&#13;
hamper the Pats, especially&#13;
with the pre-season losses of&#13;
Andre Tippet and Ronnie Lippet.&#13;
Stephens is impressive&#13;
on the ground, but Pats offense&#13;
lacks punch.&#13;
New York Jets - no pass&#13;
rush, average linebackers,&#13;
week offensive line. Could be&#13;
a long year for Jets. Deep&#13;
threat A1 Toon will be loan&#13;
star in long season.&#13;
AFC CENTRAL&#13;
Cleveland - the 'DOGS' may&#13;
have enough this year to pull&#13;
off the division title this year.&#13;
Offensively, they have mor e&#13;
young backs than the Black&#13;
forest has trees. Could be big&#13;
surprises this year for opponents.&#13;
Healthy QB is key.&#13;
Houston - it's time to shoot&#13;
for the Moon in the 'House of&#13;
Pain' in Houston. Talent rich&#13;
Oilers have the offense to run&#13;
Player of the Week&#13;
m Calm in the crease&#13;
For the week of September 4th through the 10th, the&#13;
Parkside Ranger salutes soccer goalkeeper Stan Anderson&#13;
as the Parkside Player of the Week.&#13;
Anderson, at 5'11", 180 lbs., is one of the three tri-captains&#13;
which head this year's soccer team. His leadership&#13;
on the field has helped the Rangers to a 2-0-1 start in&#13;
which he has given up just one mark while turning away&#13;
22 shots on goal. His most impressive outing: a 120 minute&#13;
blanking of the Wisconsin Badgers in Racine last Wednesday.&#13;
Anderson, out of Palatine High school in Paletine, Illinois,&#13;
is in his senior year at Parkside, majoring in business&#13;
management. Coming into the season, he had recorded&#13;
a 21-8-2 record in 31 games as a Ranger. He had compiled&#13;
a 1.23 goals against average and owned 15 career&#13;
shutouts before this season. Anderson is also a 30-time&#13;
Prairie State Game participant and plays for the Croation&#13;
Eagles club team.&#13;
For going 1-0-1 and shutting out the Badgers, we congratulate&#13;
Stan Anderson as this week's "Player of the&#13;
Week."&#13;
Meeting the specific&#13;
needs of Parkside&#13;
employees and&#13;
students&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
Room 286&#13;
553-2150&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 10-3&#13;
circles around division, but&#13;
defense could remain shortcoming.&#13;
Cincinnatti - Bengals must&#13;
reach deep into their pocketbook&#13;
if they want Eddie&#13;
Brown back and they must to&#13;
win. Boomer needs second&#13;
threat to pair with McGee.&#13;
Good running game will help,&#13;
but defense remains question&#13;
mark, especially the line.&#13;
Pittsburgh - team has no&#13;
where to go but up, 5-11 campaign&#13;
last year. They'll be&#13;
better, but Bubby will eat a&#13;
lot of turf again.&#13;
AFC WEST&#13;
L.A. Raiders - the real question&#13;
is how long will they be&#13;
in L.A.? Raiders ground&#13;
game, especially in AB times&#13;
(after Bob), is second to&#13;
none. If a QB could ever&#13;
produce here, team would be&#13;
unstoppable. Age in linebacking&#13;
core is major concern.&#13;
Denver - days of the Orange&#13;
Crush are long gone, and running&#13;
game received major&#13;
blow with loss of Dorsett.&#13;
Yet, in this division, never&#13;
count out any offense with&#13;
John Elway at the helm.&#13;
Seattle - at times, they look&#13;
like the class of the NFL.&#13;
Other times, they look like&#13;
they all skipped class all&#13;
year. Another stellar year by&#13;
Krieg and Largent (household&#13;
names since before electrici^&#13;
ty) is needed for the Hawks&#13;
to take title.&#13;
Kansas City - many have&#13;
finally shaken their 'kick the&#13;
dog' years in division with&#13;
changes in front office and at&#13;
helm. Will be competitive,&#13;
but still a year or two off.&#13;
San Diego - RB Gary Anderson&#13;
recorded the only 200&#13;
yard day by a back last year,&#13;
but durability is a question.&#13;
Addition of McMahon could&#13;
make this team a sleeper,but&#13;
defense must play over their&#13;
heads to really compete.&#13;
out \t\ \\t crowd&#13;
% A V 0LUMT£EK&#13;
Oshkosh Country Club&#13;
Men's Result&#13;
Individual&#13;
Steve "Dealer" Gerber 71-77-144&#13;
Rob Schultz 78-75-153&#13;
Scott Frosch 78-82-160&#13;
Scott Schuit 82-78-160&#13;
Jeff "Lewie" Lewis 76-86-162&#13;
Tom Agassi 83-81-164&#13;
Team Results:&#13;
UW-Oshkosh&#13;
UW-Stevens Point&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Marquette&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
NIGHT&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
in the&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Union&#13;
WIN!&#13;
over $100&#13;
in prizes each game&#13;
• Pro Jerseys &amp; Caps&#13;
• Team Pennants&#13;
• Food (Pizza, Burgers, Etc.)&#13;
• Rec. Cir. Activity Coupons&#13;
• Packer Game Ticket Drawing&#13;
FREE&#13;
ADMISSION&#13;
But you must sign in,&#13;
get a door ticket&#13;
and be in attendance&#13;
to be eligible to win.&#13;
Union Square&#13;
8:00 p.m. - Parkside Union&#13;
Monday, Night September 18&#13;
DENVER BRONCOS -VS- BUFFALO BILLS&#13;
THE WEEK AHEAD&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Sept. 16 Home vs. Rosary College-1:30&#13;
Sept. 20 Home vs. Lawrence U.~4:00&#13;
J.V. Soccer&#13;
Sept. 14 Home vs. Wheaton--4:00&#13;
Sept. 18 Home vs. National College~4:00&#13;
Golf&#13;
Sept. 17-at UW-Green Bay Invite-TBA&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Sept. 15-16 at I.U.P.U.1.-6:00-10:00&#13;
Men's Cross Country&#13;
Sept. 16 Home-Midwest Collegiate Open~12:45&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
Sept. 16 Home-Midwest Collegiate Open-12:00&#13;
Lady netters look for big results this year&#13;
by Ted Mclntyre&#13;
If volleyball matches were&#13;
won on optimism, then Park's&#13;
1989 women's volleyball team&#13;
should have great success.&#13;
; 'We're looking to have a&#13;
good season, better than&#13;
last", said head coach Terry&#13;
Paulson. Paulson was referring&#13;
to the teams 31 and 23&#13;
record last season. While&#13;
those numbers are not too impressive,&#13;
Paulson thinks of&#13;
his present team as "Having&#13;
a good nucleus", this nucleus&#13;
consists of four key returning&#13;
players.&#13;
Senior Nancy Hoch was an&#13;
Ail-American last season and&#13;
is an excellent outside hitter.&#13;
Senior Nicole Pacione, was&#13;
an All-District player, who&#13;
led the nation in assists as a&#13;
junior. Colleen Ryan, a junior&#13;
this season, is a 5'11" middle&#13;
hitter who was All-District&#13;
last season. This trilogy will&#13;
also serve as team captains.&#13;
Paulson also cited Lara&#13;
Niecula as pivotal in the&#13;
team's success.&#13;
Besides those four players,&#13;
coach Paulson is relying on a&#13;
good attitude by the rest of&#13;
his team to key victories.&#13;
"This team is very hard&#13;
working and enthusiastic",&#13;
said Paulson, expressing&#13;
more optimism of his girls.&#13;
The team has already&#13;
played two matches and now&#13;
possess a one and one record.&#13;
September 1st, they opened&#13;
the season by losing in&#13;
straight games to Madison's&#13;
Badgers. "Our team was too&#13;
tired for that match", said&#13;
Paulson. Parkside recovered&#13;
to beat Oshkosh by what&#13;
Paulson referred to as;&#13;
"Playing well in spots".&#13;
If the team is going to fulfill&#13;
it's goal this season, it will&#13;
need to play well not only in&#13;
spots, but for a majority of&#13;
the season. "Our goal is to&#13;
win districts, bi-districts and&#13;
eventually qualify for nationals",&#13;
said Paulson.&#13;
Ranger defense packs blanks in Badger guns&#13;
by Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside Ranger soccer&#13;
team played 120 minutes&#13;
of shut-out defense last Wednesday&#13;
in gaining a draw&#13;
against the Wisconsin&#13;
Badgers.&#13;
In what coach Rick Kilps&#13;
deemed a "moral victory,"&#13;
Ranger goal-keeper Stan Adnerson&#13;
recorded 14 saves in&#13;
blanking the Cardinal &amp; Red.&#13;
The tie also broke the&#13;
Badgers string of 10 straight&#13;
over the Rangers.&#13;
Despite the score, much of&#13;
the game was wide open and&#13;
end-to-end, with the Rangers&#13;
pressure defense limiting the&#13;
Badgers scoring opportunities&#13;
to just 14 shots-on-goal and 9&#13;
corner kicks.&#13;
Offensively, despite being&#13;
outshot 13-6, Parkside put together&#13;
some impressive&#13;
drives. Freshmen Ron Knestrict&#13;
and Morten Aksglaede&#13;
set the tone with strong shots&#13;
that missed the mark 10&#13;
minutes into the game. "I'm&#13;
impressed with the play of&#13;
the freshmen so far this&#13;
year," said Kilps after the&#13;
draw. "We had more offense&#13;
in this game than we've had&#13;
in a long time against Wisconsin."&#13;
But the Ranger defense was&#13;
the story. After allowing the&#13;
Badgers to get of three shots&#13;
in the first three minutes,&#13;
Parkside's defenders, led by&#13;
the play of Mike Riley and&#13;
Chris Ryan, settled down to&#13;
take some of the pressure off&#13;
of Anderson. With just seconds&#13;
remaining in the game,&#13;
a Ranger defensive wall&#13;
turned away a Badger free&#13;
kick to preserve the shut-out&#13;
and gain the the tie.&#13;
Parkside, who is already&#13;
without all time leading scorere&#13;
Jens Hansen (sprained&#13;
ankle), faced a few anxious&#13;
moments when Anderson collided&#13;
with Badger forward&#13;
Brett LaFerrera in the waning&#13;
moments of the final&#13;
overtime. Anderson, after&#13;
being down for several moments,&#13;
was able to finish the&#13;
contest.&#13;
The tie was Anderson's first&#13;
complete game shut-out of&#13;
the year, raising his record to&#13;
1-0-1, moving the team's&#13;
mark to 2-0-1. Wisconsin, the&#13;
first of seven Division I&#13;
teams Parkside will meet this&#13;
year, moved its record to 1-0-&#13;
2.&#13;
"I can't say enough about&#13;
the kids for following the&#13;
game plan, having a few good&#13;
chances, and shutting them&#13;
down in the back," added&#13;
Kilps. "Sure, I would have&#13;
liked to win but I'm very&#13;
Anderson at goal happy with the tie,"</text>
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